<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/items/browse?output=omeka-xml&amp;page=108&amp;sort_field=added" accessDate="2026-05-22T13:18:19+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>108</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>22803</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="1206" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1078">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/648a9fa51cb140ddc5dff05f9747f726.pdf</src>
        <authentication>00951177a72deda903bc38cff8323930</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11915">
                    <text>IN TIl£ HBAfiT O r TUE WORLD’8 GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
NUMBER 108

SANFORD, FLORIDA, TUESDAY# /MARCH 2. 1920

v JOLUME i
__ nrz

’S TREATY SEEMS DOOMED
SANFORD
_
UNDER THE FORMER HIGH SCHOOL GREATEST ACCORDING TO LEADERS
VIEWING THE QUESTION
DELEGATED POWERS CHAMPIONS SHIPYARD

trains n o w

GIRLS
O F ! .SANFORD
HIGH HOG ISLAND WILL LAUNCH which eventually will mean larger
LAST S H II’S IN JU N E AND liroduction.
’
ARF. T H E LEADERS IN THE
•In *tfie 'United States available
THEN
QUIT'
..
IT
STATE
AND
PROVE
lands ure sc arij and all lands gen­
The Sanford High' School ' i s re­
Philadelphia, Mar. 2. (By Associa­ erally expensive. It is reasonable to
presented this year by the strongest ted Press) " T h e world’s greatest believe, government stientists say
girls’ basketball (cam in th e £tkto. ©iHfiyard a t . Hog Island, built to that in the future production will,
V
This school has jn previous yeahe overcome the ravsges of tljo *5ermsn nut • increase in proportion to the
been- favored- with very
strong submarine anil help win tno war for population, as the greater part of
basketball teams, hut the one * re­ the Allies, wilt launcM its Inst par- the really productive land is now
presenting Sanford at- ■p resen t ii time ship in June and tu rn it over utilized. Resumption of the inyiortabelieved' to be the major.
‘ * • tfiVthe government in Scnttembcr. tion cf European b u tte r . i s ” again T H E QUESTION S E E M S DESa NI)
WILL
be
EFFECTIVE
T
FROM
TH E T IM E *. DESIG­
TIN ED TO BE L E P T TO THE
Upon her record for th e basket When th e Inst of the fabricated giving teal . competition to our pro­
T H E VOTES OF TH E PEO*
NATED
^
ball leason to date, Sanford declares •hips of the war-time co n tra ct
duces.
\
leave! th e vast plant on the Dela­
ple
; * *
*
herself
»
claim
to
the
State
C
ham
pion­
Washingtdh, Mar. 2 .— Railroads
■
ship. The fudiedule to the present ware, Hog Island will-have turned
To Control Liquor Traffic
„f the country, operating for the
\L Washington, Mar. 2.--A n early
.
over
to
th
e
government
122
vessels
has probably* fcren the heaviotft.of*
first time in £G n i n t h s under their
Birmingham, Eng’. Mar. 2 . —Lady ami unfavorable vote on ratification
any High/School in the S ta to . San­ a rerord "of* more than oner ship n
own management, were formally
Aalor'addressed.the
opening meeting of the treaty was forecast today when
ford has /-am os schedule*! a n d
iq- week, since the first .boat wps sent
notified today by the Interstate
here
.the
other
night
of a women’s the leaders,* replying, to demands of *
tends /&gt; .schedule other contests pverboard in August. l'908." There
-Commerce C o m m M o n of. 4 hfe new
campaign
for
state
.puebaso
nnd con- the treaty’s irreconcilable republican V-i-t
with y/fonatldtr claimant*— t o — th e have L^n-soV cral duuhlc luuacJiing*
\
roTyiT
iTfe_Tui'iforTradeS
h TBP- .opponp n r? r reatfirimtl th rir decision
powers delegated to t h a t body and
Championship. Any High School in' cine d a y , , and on Memorial Day
of the rigbs and- privileges aeporded
•terized
.the
plan
as
"practical"
but not to accept any change in the sub- *
making an ellgiblo c'aim for the last year five si.ipx’ were-launched
jt by the new railroad law. The
stiid
,po
government
In
England
at stance or language of the republican * :.*5ij
honor will piouse necept Jhis cballrnge in a b ttlo more than an hour,
reservation to article 10. Both sldeq^J
tilo’
.
p
r
c
‘cnt
time
could
hope
to
win
commission's announcement^
ex­
for two gurnet', one to lie played on tahliaking u worldVT^cord.
depiocratic
an lection. with prohibition as'd-t conccdt riiat enough
plained that provisions of the Jaw
your court add - one in Sanford,
When Hog Island was going nt
khutors to defeat ratification are
main platform plunk.
against rate reductions prior to
If a third game is nere-i-ary the top 1 1 1 i d duririg'the .war with 5Q
determined to stand with. Mr. Wil' Sept. I without the cQmmlaqprjV
Snnford Girls M-fl] mrc-t y o u half jta y a -i ecu pled approximately 35,000
sou and vote against the treaty un- .
approval, were mandatory, lmt •that
way, In answering this .challenge mcii were cniplnyivi. This .force .has
less the republican reservations {o
'changes in rate regulations, classifi­
plua.«c s ta te your claims •ineludimr r,. been re d u c e d ‘ to about 22.000 ’nipt,
article 10 n y modified. All elements
cations and praetbe* in which a
reeprd of yoilr schedule to tli6 time jafter t lie last - s lip is Iqum-hed in
in the ‘enate treaty ffglit seemed,
decision bad l|cen -entered by tho
iif your acceptance of *ihe clt-dHc'hgf. [Tuite t ,o Torce will !&gt;&lt;• reduced Ao
ready to co-operate tq end tho «li»commission would fto effective when
Ac|drcv* iill eorrespnndenrO t o . MU* 125. percent nf t i i ( number. Tho«e
cuasion And allow the matter to go
desfgnated.
‘
. '
*
.(tilia Za* Igary, Mgr: Sanford High tmc-i \\"J ^ji»mj'bttes and equip ihe
before the national conventions und*
Changes in rates anil rlanificaScluHil G i *! - Basketball Team,
ips 1 1 . 1e—
w-ft to be turned over tu
tfi
thence to the peo'ple in tho fall
licins effective prior to today will
Sanford, Kin.
the government
gkxlluus,.
vi:uiil. the statement M d , . . ________ :
* The—itiri-r1- BasketIwll—Te a w —of---- AVToii is s-) tiecolue br TTbg T-llUTll
Under the ngceement between ro"REPORT
TO
ACCORDING
EARLY
SETTLE­
Stetson University ii the o n ly team i* the great tirobb-m confrortting the PR O M ISED
publicans
and irroomcinhle*. .the
JAPANESE*
IIY
RECEIVED
ment
Wi t h
several
in the.slate tline*b.»s score 1 a vic­ owners of the yard. (Recently the
lutter will not carry out the program •
NEWSPAPER
PO
IN
T
S
TO
BE
CONSIDERED
tory against Sanford. A series of United States Shipping. Iloatd took
of prolonged deimte. They, will sup1 * • *
llonululu Mar. 2 (ISy Associated! two gWnes were played, one in De­ over the title to the ground Philo-,
Paris, Mar. 1, (By Associated port the republican revision program,t
*
Press) The Premier .of China has Band 'a n d - one in Sanford each dclpl • Jia.s been urged to lake over Press&gt; The railway strike settlement as they did at the last session, b u t. .
resigned according to a specinl Tokio team adding a victory to th eir list the yard and continue it either as a provides the right fot the men to will vote, as they did then, against
. . •
cable to Nippu Jiji the Japanese .when playing on their hom e floor. shipbuilding plant or convert, it into organize and arbitration points are ratification. Toduy’s derisioi) ^grew
Stetson University is not an eligible n gre.it termiij-il Efforts to interest not yet settled nnd immediate study
FRUIT SH O W S IM P R O V E M E N T paper here.
out of a conference'between Repub­
contestant for the Higlf School the state have ul-o been made, huf] 0j
ANI)
VEGETABLE - SEASON
fut ure- railroad rules are con- lican Leader Sen. Lodge,- of M assa­
Championship, ntvl should ih i- team nmwxrf o f . money required to buy j nqnplated. Normal conditions are chusetts. nnd Sen Borah, republican
AT TH E
PEAK . OF S H I P ­
Shipped Much IIooze
have won both games th e chances ((h,. Kr,.nt plant i.m been a stumbling j pxj)eclp(| tomorrow.
MENTS
Idaho, a spokesman for the irrecon­
Washington, Mar. 1
Aine/ira’s
for Sanford Would have ln-» n just as Wo.-k. It w-.iv proposed that, the
cilable*. Previously. Sen. .Borah nn^I
Jacksonville, Fin. Feb. 28.—FJori- last year of export trade in alcoVyilic
gn at.-B ut. Sanford intends to-play
the 9U0. hundred
it* ptirrh»Ht
Sen. Hitchcock,' of Nebraska, the
,ila citrus fryit shippers have nlrehdy beverages, before the advent of |&gt;
Scotland's Loral Option Law
u third ynme with Stetson titul t'herewith
2
miles
o' water front
in"-, t 'TT?i'ore’*thfin' G.500,00 boxes of liitTfrdn ’ redlRed In an increase «»f
'Edinburgh. M a r . 2. Scotland's democratic lender, conferred and t h e —
lijNjirovc.herself to lie the fastest in awn lease them out to manufactur­
result, lniil before Sen. Lodge, con­
,fnm . tills season. The c u rlo t' move­ nearly f 10,000.000 in the value of
the entire sta te .
" 1 ing nnd other concerns.
. iiow loro) option Jaw will come into vinced him thnt no agreement was
ment of Florida grapefruit up to and spirjtsi wines nnd liquors shipped
effort on June 1, and the prohibiThe Vollowlng schedule' will sup­
• irrluding February 22 won 6.245 cars out of the country, in 0909 compared
lionisti ure projecting a lively rrtin- possible eilhet with or without modi- .
port th j -claims of SaiJ&lt; rd:
i • compared with 5,684 cars last y e a r with 1918. according to foreign trade
patgn throughout the • country to fication of article t«n‘s servation. If .
Sanfird-5-')— JUislmjriee 7*
to the corresponding dute. Likewise reports Issued by th e Ilepprtment of
persuade the people tu vote their modified, if was pointed out, the IrrcSanfoi'd 20—.Sechreeze 11
,
the movement of oranges was 12,183 Commerce.
(districts
"dry'* nt the next election roncitables might feel disposed to op­
Sanforil 15 Kis-immee 14
•cars compared with 11,183 cars, a to ­
During 0909 a total &lt;.( l.'v4G5,X51
The prohibitionists express the hope pose a ratification vote: if not modi­
Sanford 0) -Rollins College 12
rsi excess over last year's moveent
gallons of spirits.‘ wines and’ liquors
that if Scotland can In made dry fied n combination of irreconcilahlea
Sntdord
8 Leesburg 8
of 1 Mil cars. The movement of
valued at tl8.Tut.4R4 were exported
u n d e r this law, England and Wales nnd adm ihM ration senrttors would
Sanford 24 Cuthedral 9
grapef'uit lust week was 379 curs; of against 20.042, 220^—galloi|s
lots n ratification.
*
at
may demand fimilar legislation.
Sanford 21,- Seabreeie 08
. oiangi.&gt; 731. compared with 293 and 49,POO.G00 in 0908. Whiskey was th e
The
unyielding
stand
they
have
Railroading In G rrm any
.
Snnford 16 Stetson University 20
306 respectively -during* .l?»c rorres- heavist item of alcoholic exports f&lt;w
Berlin, Mar. 2. As instancing the taken on nrticle 10 py the democrata •
§antord 24 -Or.lamlo 16
• ponding week, last year.
the year. 6 V , -936 gallons of bour­
the Prussinn state ! I* «aid to have been bnckeii by th ejie laxity with which the
Sanford 30—Hollins CoTlege 23
Practically ev,ry citrus fruit ship- bon valued n*-s.$0,660,664 * and
railways are now administered the t^rmlnatlon of President Wilson n o t
Sanford 2G—Stetson U niversity 13
’
lung point in the s t i l e is now m ov­ 247,553 gallons of ryo nt ‘$079,769
Tngeblutt cite* th e rase of a Bremen to acrept the reservation..- - *
Sanford 74—Orlando 8
ing, citius fruit, with |k e exception of being exported.
(
ngliieer
who
took
an
idle
engine
IN
DAIRY
PRODUCTS
CANADA
Leesburg forfeited one game in
a fpw which haVc already completed
failing to appear for a re tu r n game AND SOUTH AMERICA WILL unil rode to a point nearby tu buy
their picking. The oauiily of fruit is
yeast for hH' wife und to cisit his
in Sanford.•
k . —MEAT US IN RACK
nlnio-t invariably good, alt hoy gh
aunt. Then he r ^ i r n e d tht; egine
he ivy rains last week made seme fruit
Washington, March 2. -C a n a d a U&gt; the Bremen roundhouse.
r t c e s c - M e I. l i r a s
.
fruit sqft. There is no a tte m p t on the
and Argentina may soon prove «crMr*. KfTie McLuras nnd Mr:
.p u t nf shippers t o delay picking uny
^—
Celery Is Fine
Charles F. Reese were united in iou* compiuitors of the United Mates
longer The new bloom is appearing
A.
Chorpany
who owns the farm i
marriage last^night at 7:30 at the in the dairy industry. Government
and in may places now already on.
on
Beardall
avenue
formerly, owned ;
PreshyteriarT manic Dr. Brownie* ofllrialn believe. The industry in
and the old..fruit m u tt be removed
by
the
editor
of
the
Herald- sent US j
performing (he ccrmon^ . in Dir both roiintrica ia in its infancy Jie.t
. to' make room for th e new. Prices
MEXICAN CONSULS TO VISE
id
som
e
flr.e
swbry
the
othpr’ day
presence of A few friends nn'd the
during thr, past week have "been food,
PASSPORTS FOR AMERICAN
persent os just to show uj . whut w-e njiised by
immediate family. The b rid e has Canada is producing
and the movement therefore corrda.
.
TESTI^YIf4G
. '
been a resident of this city for many much nhocse and .12 percent aa much not icmainlrR a* farmer.. Ojhera in
pondingly heavy. - *
' '
the
celery
delta
have
*i»nt
some
fipe
butter as the United States," while
The cabbage movement is break- TAKEN UP FO R DISCUSSION years, n n d is well nnd favorably
Mexico Sity Mgr. 2 (By Associa­
Ywnrn. in a large circle o f friends. Argentina is producing 08 perrent ■tuff into the Herald office but did
• ing all recotds,* 1,2(15 cars had bepn
ted
Press) Another request that tHe
not
w
ant
their
names
used.
T.he
IN' S U P R E M E COUNCIL. AT
The groom .has lived h e re for the a* much cheese and nc.ven percent
shipped to IwkC Saturday. The 'rfiovecelery
ia*
excellent
this
ypar
and
Mexican Consuls in.'.the United '
PARIS
• . .
past eight years being nn employee as much butter. Candu'* b utter ex­
ment to the same da(e last year was
&gt;
•
i of the A. C, L. for many year* but ports were 41 percent a* lurge os should bring good prices and while Stales vise passports of Americana
353 cars. The output- last week was
Parifi, Mar. T (By AssociaU-d
you are ccming to town drop’ off a
for the past eight m onths an em­ those of-th e Unite States while her
testifying before the Senate Com­
247 cars. A year ago it was 89 cars
Press) Joint bayiwg and distribution ployee of Qie Southern U tilities Co. cheese .exports greatly eoroeded ex­ few bunchei for the Herald force. We mittee investigating Mexican condl-. The quality of cabbage this season is
..
They will reside at t h e borne of ports .from the United Ftates. Ar­ like it.
tlona have been presented by th e .
also, breaking nil recojrtfio Shippers according to t»ecca*iates and super­
g
en
tin
a's
butter
exports
were
double
American Embassy here. Data re­
and receivers alike, are repotting good vision of selling prices are provided Mm. p£eac at .309 W est Second
yes­ street nnd the best wishes of their those of the United States anil her M e m b e rs Executive- Council Of - lative to recent ’putrages and alleged
' quality. Sales are g6od except e t in tentative plan reach**!
cheese export! were equalled 32 per
A. F. I.. Arrive At Miami
murders of Mexicans in southern
points where bad weather has inter- terday in a nesaion of the Supreme many friends Is extended t o them.
rent of those of the United Statei.
M
iam
i, Mar. 1.—Samuel Gompcra, U. S. are being gathered by th e
Council
says
t
h
e
PeUt
I’arisienne
% fered with distribution. Particularly
It i« generally believed, govern­ president of the American Federa­ Mexican Embatay a t Washington
IS 000 Cara of Toma toe*
. heavy receipts are ahoVn on all Thfe pl«n will be submitted to
ment
official* «ay, t h a t Argentina tion of Labor, Frank Morrison, se­ for protests.
Premier
Millermnd
before
becoming
.
Soi/thcrn markets which has to some
Miami, Fla. Mar.!.—The East
and
C
a
n
a
d
a
are
capable
of
extensive
cretary
and
other
members
of
the
effective.
•
.,
' degree caused a depression of prices
coast, tom ato acreage is t h e largest
•
development of their industries and executive council jpf &gt;he American
on record. Around 15.0Q0 acres has
Federni off ctrr in. V ii.n i ar.d F a in t
One hundred and sixty cars of cel­
it ia probable,’ therefore, th a t the Federation o f ''L a b o r , arrived in
ery were shipped from the state last Florence iReed In " W I tm* of M e n " been planted Ip tomatoes, 60 can United S ta tfs may experience In the Miami today to .c o n tin u e the con­ Palm B each t o r n , to k’tcp l u i y nab- '
At The P rin te s e To-day
already being shipped. T h e acreage
b i n g 'b o o z c boats. Sixty c a m of H'
. week^ compared with 85 cars duiing
future particularly energstic competi­ ferences begtin in Jacksonville* last
ia
both
larger
and
earlier
t
h
a
n
usual
q
u
o
r
and
a
Jug
of
choice
"old
i
t
c
c
k
"
’
"
H
e
r
husband
had
gone
to
catch
the corresponding week last year.
tion. Argentina, 2 f / daya distant week. T he visiting labor leaders were
'
The toatl to S a turday, 388 cars in th e midnight trtaln. She ruahed to as the weather has been v e ry mild from New Y ork.^ hey s a y , ' may not welcomed by a delegation from thfi' was taken a few days ago and tw o .
J
^expess of last year's movement, was t h e telephone end'c*H*d-up another all Fall. Most of the early acreage Is be th o u g h t of-seriourly at this time M iam i Central Labor Union and w h ite men and a negro placgd lnK"
the city jail in W est Palm B ench.' *
m an, making an appointment for south of Miami qt Perrlne. Home-' •a a d.irect competitor in the domes­
*827 dars.
all enjoyed an automobile ride to
stead, Goulds, Florida C ity; and NarT
* '
The large acreage of early tom a­ him to cell upon her. The lighta
tic
m
arket,
but
indirectly
Argentina
pojnta of interest this afternoon.
anja. There la also a m uch larger
were
low.
A
rpen
etered.
ahe
ran
to
toes which had It not been knocked
buttey m ay supplant Canadian but­ Tho seasiona of. th e council will be
• to pieces by the freeze of Ja n u ta y 3 hind threw her erma about him acreage of cabbage on the Eapt coast ter in th e Engish m arket, in which restnrted tomorrow.
•
.to 6, and later InjurecJJiy. j-aJns, so kissed him passionately. Then she than ever before. Good, acreage on case Cnndian butter would find a
cabbage a t Florida City, Delray, Ft.far hnd only reached a total of 64 suddenly discovered it ws* h°t the
United States.
Leaders In the Young Women's
a
l l a
q
- e,
m
an
she
t
h
o
u
g
h
t
,
b
u
t
her
hUsbsnd.
• car*. Tht^ movement last week* was ----- --------- - - ,
. Luudordalo, Boynton. Danfa. H
r
p
q
f
it
ib
h
w
g
C
anada
Is
in
a
b
e
lie
f
Christian
Association campaign who
"
91 cars, which would not have been ! W hat would a woman do under such dele; also cabbage at Hom estead and
k e t s \ i t h ‘ her are striving strenuously to raise $30,­
day in the world’s markets
Fuf. Florida generally fair .tonight
Goulds,
bealdea
West
P
a
lm
.
Beach
* half da y ’4 movement had copdi jcircumstances? W hat wou you o7
butter and cheue than is. the United 000, went to St. Auguitine Wednes­ a n d ; Wednesday with, slowly rising
Moore
Haven
will
hive
b
o
th
,
a
good
tions been favorableACompared with I You *ean find out
»bout 11 W
States, officials declare. \ Moreover, day for a day’s outing. Failure to t emp&lt;!rat utc:. - Light - froit probably ■
iMt year's output* toother correspond- seeing Florence Ryed in the grea cabbage crop and Irish p o t a t o crop.
Canda’a policy with h e r ’ returned raise thi* amount will mean curtail­ tonight Interior of north and c e n tr a l) ; ' *
First
cart
of
cabbage
will
move
lag date, of coune the movement this aeven part photodram a
w iv m o i
soldiers and Immigrant# tpxiard land m e n t of actlvltlas gf the association portion. G entle^ to ‘moderate n o r th
this year la over* 400 cam h e a v i e r .‘M en" at the Prince*** W V w lth shortly from the E u t ‘c o a s t points.
'
'development'
Is bringing
results this year.
• a r t windr.
Express.sbipmenls now moving.
B u t,list year's-cro^w ka not planted another *'«•*••«•*

More-Authority Given To
Commerce Com.

RATES W ill STAND

to begin movement before February
25. T he quality of the tomatoes now
moving is variable. There is no other
truck or fiuit crop moving from th e
sta te t h a t ’showy as .much variation
in. quality. T h e -g re a t bulk of atufT
moving is small in size. Nevertheless
prices have remained Yery good And
sales show that demand is MronK*
There is some good fruit moving,
and fancy prices have been reported
for this grade. .
V
T here were 67 cars of mixed vege­
tables shipped last week. The move­
ment to last S a tu rd a y wns 755 cars
compared, with -157 cars last year.
T he lettuce shipping .season is
drawing to a close, only 66 cars-Aaving been loadedrijst week. This aurflm ary covers the solid cariot move­
m ents 'The express movement has
been ,very heavy during the entire
season, both In fruits and vegetables.
T he. movement by local ..freight is
nlmost a ‘uegligitUe quantity..—-N. V.
Packer.

posed To Yield

LEFT TJP TO VOTERS

.

FRENCH
RAILROAD^
STRIKE

CHINESE
PREMIER
RESIGNS

VEGETABLE AND
. F R U IT J M N T S

NEIGHBORS
OUTCLASS
AMERICA

BUYING
AND SELLING
ARE POINTS

•

,

1 (■

'

' *“

INVESTIGATE
MEXICAN
. ; OUTRAGES

Weather Report

1

�■ VL
**.
\

•«?.

-W j-rf

PAGE 2

**•* !

H

S A N P O K D D A IL Y H E

Jer-

Was nobody who cofild ’’fire him."
tha matter that the city hAi a right,
liiinnill
That. was.Jh e .attitude of.some of
to grant a permit to a home conlphny
the employes.
rfjjf
to erect, cohstruct, and equip a plant
r * - - * tttrf a /1 « * M UMfl ItaadM il
When the owners.take hack tflFir
.- 'I :
Tfc*353Sw“ ,r** fW
*'*■*•. «•»- of a similar character—only one that*
property, 'everything/wi11 J)w«»hawged
tm*. fl«M*. ______ .___________ r. - would he a real’company and" rendei
except the higher Mates. Employes
real aervico—and the proper stops ire
PUBLISHERS
will be polite; paywngers on trains
now to be taken hy those who haVe
; i 'V
THE
HEKALDPRINTING
COM
PANY
.will
get enough to 'e a t and the. v ic ­
the good of the city at heart to get
’ ' i .
INC.
tuals will he fit to i-at.rThcre will
in
n
concern
that
will
be
right.
Th{*
R. J, rfOLLY, Editor
*
he^om pptition, and efforts will he
Vlegnl*' decision thnt another fran­
•
W.
M.'
HAYNES^41*alne««
Manager
maiee.to please p a tro n s.. With the
s-v - - •
!
chise can he granted was* a foregone
excepfipn
of a group of employes of
« , t U a | a&gt;IM. M a l t It— » ■« Ap^lkatl.B
conclusion. These " j j e m l u " granted
railways
wha
wUh to run the roads
ifll utilities are no "franchises" in
IWRCBIPHONIPIUCE IN ADVANCE
themselves,
▼yeryone
will ,be xatisr
r o « on * tea*—
. —i . ' . . .«'-a.'..as.i&gt;o the teal meaning of the worjl}.they
.*j.ee are merely permits—and carry with
fied w ith-private ownership.'■Travel?
TOB SIX MONTllS**
DEUVKBED IN CITY U» CABR1EB
era will begin to make plarv* for
qMK WKtK—------- ----------------r t--T*r*l1 them no exclusiveness of any Bort.
trips and all wiIMm well. .
There is probably, no exclusive fran­
CaUrrJ u f m N ciMi Mailt* Otl*b«» 27, chise gjvc’n any proposition in Flori­
ltll,Hlkt|NlWlN alHubni, fWII* M l "
Edward ftrigham Slelnwajr Hall
da. There are "perm its"— hut in no
art «T Mart* U »•7
,
New&gt; York, Conies To Sanford.
case ran. there he an "exclusiveness"
MEMIIKBjor THE ASSOCIATED TUEHS
which would make too stro n g ’'class
M r. Edward . Jkigham .
Basso
legislation. And'after wfiat the San­
profundo and Dram ktic reader of
We wlxh to .comment the City ford Herald has suffered, I think tho
New .York C ity has been engaged
throw
Commi»»ionera for tho glaring of the people of ftanford. should
hy the Pipe Orgnn f-Iuh. for the
n e w street xignx a t the intersection enough maxuma in to the pot to
evening of March 111 h.
of nil the streets. These new sign* build a nice, up-to-the-minute plant
Th e following prr^s comments
w ere badly rwedefl by the strangers for their city. I cer-tain-ly do .—Thorn 235348532353305348534853234848532353485353534853234800534823235353
w ill give you an Idea- of the treat
to th e city. Sanford is an easy city in Palm Beach Post, .
aw litin'^y^anford Music tovefs.
In which to loca’te the homes of the
------ 0 -----' “fidw anl Brigham, who is a highly
p e o p le if the stre e ts are plat-aided. FARM ERS WILL TA KE A PART
gifted ami accomplished musician
. . a . T h o old signs h a d fallen down or^
and reader, gave the best program
*’ . w e r e removed in mnny places and • The labor unions any they will
tbaf lias "been’ offered qpr people
t h e bright now sig n s are no^ only a organize this year and will not sup­
in amnfc.-srasons.— Ln Grange, G a„
g r e a t convenience but they are ap port any man for office w ho'js in­
•Reporter.
.
mica! to labor:* That has nothing on,
ornam ent to the city.
.
Aa
a
dramatic
reader
Mr. Brigham(
the fanners for they are waking up
. ------o -----1
har;
n
i^
nn
equal
on
the
American
at - loJ\t to their own importance. The
d o in g
g o o d
I l k Cplatforln.
Terre
Haute.
Ind.
Po^t.
fnrmprs of this country, the farmers
T I O N E E I t l Nu
Edward
Brigham
gave
one
of
the
Forest Lake, of Sanford, together of’ this state apd oven the farmers
mqat
retnarknble
enter
l
tin
merits
w ith his associates, has taken over of this county of .Seminole want to
over given in this city. Mr. Brigham
' *. t h e immento holdings of the. Union. know -something about the candida­
possesses a basso-profundn veir*te*
this-year
not
only
the
local
can­
Cypress- Com pany, whose mill was
trr h ns has never befo-o !,rpn he I
'/
, destroyed hy fire and which showed didates, hut those who arc xeokittg
in
this part of the F l'jle .-.C am 'y
, .
no indications of being re-built, ami state and national offices,. They
-K* If. Daily:
’plana to* Immediately put the plant ■%nnt
BAxured th.i^ these men
I n t o working shape Ah Fq.-.-i Luke i know something of tho needs of
Tit- l.irpn r .and lliqt they will get. a
’ in a candidate for enngre -man
square
di-al when the question of the i
TRC*,
• c a n nee where
JP^ ' 4•*» ♦
s h e ’s going to rim-li .1 fanner’s intgresU come up. And j
m ultitude id votes while tie rim
in g is exie.i’iii arid Lf-iiU-.s mai l when you on mo m think about it J
a ’good thing for Uto-e with w^mm the farmer is the real than behind,
the sounfry. today. He is hway
ho Is axioiiated. Palm Beach
above everything when fL-corrfes to
——O
impurtame and the farmer is aiming
. SA N FO R D T N S O R E STRAIGHTS
to realize his importance. He- i
T h e people of Sanford have s’ur-dy w .d.ing up to l ill- fai t (f at too long
been -up again.-,!, it-fun ieveral week* Ha. he fain dornpirit and altrtwt*d t lie
Lot-l "Punrh of keys.. Finder *

fig

SANFORD DAILY

%

-

-

r

*

" '■ ■~

-

-

the electric

ONLY

pt anut poittieiaiis fo •rtin over Itini

p la n t rlyled hy the IL-ribt a« .1
The farmer Is tajiiriy u part in
"junk-pilr de luxe-" I :&gt; he-, ,,ui
politiiH and the farmer wtfl speak
’ of curnmiiudon. T h e n s-m &gt;n of .-orami tin- farmer wifi lie h e a rd .. And
vivo ha a prtHed
•
to ask the growers of

jft ■ H r:
:

.

*

•
S '

getting on! a daily paper it nd it
’ looks to me as if there could lie «!&gt;tainfui ful^ reparation in a firiumlul
w ay for tire loss th a t liar- been su«._. . i . , 1
t
.
tained.
It h:a juat trecn
as.i rUim d
b y those of the more interested in

t itt&gt;( S tiofttrii

-t*t litio

tt,

SUGGESTIONS
FOR S )P R I N (i1

B EA N S
LIMA BEANS
* B E ETS
EGG P L A N T
SQUASH
TOMATOES
C U C U M B ER S
SW E E T CORN
PEPPERS
-V-w'**

KM*?F
i*

Wc Have The SEED—FRESH
Mf-* *

C H A SE &amp; C O .
SANFO'lU), FLA.
BBffis ■.- m
jti
Ml*
■■
Bihi=k

I h f *1 1

EVERYTHING
.

YOU W A N T KOI!

V

. . A -

G OO D
M E A#L
-

*

YOU
*, M AY FIND
i

’

AT T H E

C ity M a rk et
Famous Dixie Cakes
Fresh Date*
*

*

**

F ig s a n d N u ts

Phone 106
&gt;

.

V

--

FOR QUICK SERVICE

P hone 2031

Rent — Furnished
housekeeping.

.

8

Shop.

lOV-Utc.

L ost—Scnie - wheie Itetween SI
Johns river bridge at Monroe ami
Orange City, dark blue leather bag
conttdning money and keys and card
with narhe Mrs. Win. Pauli Howpll.
Liberal reward if returned to recod
Office. St. Augustine.
107-!Up

s
s
s
~
=
S
3

For Sale —House and
Magimli- avcniHGood
I* O Box :i‘J9

day* and traw l from .place t./ place
will rejoice to know 'that thtfow nira
of-the lima will .-receive bark their
:
proprty thi* morning. If anything
were needed to kill the government
ownership idea the oi*ef»tiun«®f the
railways by Uncle Sa'm would do it.,
No one waa aatUfimi while offifcni of
th e country ran the roads. T he pa*sPngor and freight service was usually
had; the food served on'dining cars
was tint what perKons wished; the
employes of the roads were impudent
net n|I of them! hut many. And
tho reason It obvious: 'Tho man who
said to a woman) " D o n 't bother me
wit your, fool q'liestle/i. If you g o t1
any kick to make tell It,tci M eAdoo"]
wci in evidonee This w a s 'right tiftir
t he govi-rnmenl had taken over cop- [
trnl of the roads^and’ Mr. AtcAiloo'
■vriiH in charge. The/impudent railway j
man wn* wofklng for’(he government j
there was r.o Imrrcdiatc one over him
who could summarily discharge him.
He was working for Uncle Sam. No
ono must look for courtesy, (or there

•

.A

Lot on
bargain
107-fit p

For Sale . Nice 11 -room house.
Park live. Addfraa-' Box .'129. City.
105-fitp
*

For Sale—Oi\e . 1H Horae .Power-,
Kerosene. Oil Engine.' CRase &amp; Co,k
Sanford.

Fla.

lo.v-tf.

For Rent Two nicely furnished
housekeeping r tpnir ft07 Magnuita
a vert tin,
• 1(Ni-.1l c.

£89

K

Motor I
Co.

i-'or Sale Fre-ih Milk Cow, Sent
y Taylor. 107 Magnolia avenue.

DO YOUR SHARE FOR CONSERVATION

For Sale H oulc* «*f lour to live
rooms. Easy terms. .1, Mtisson*
. , '*___________ *
IPU-dtp
W anted—To buy good1 horse, ■
harness and wagon. Must he bargain
for- caslj{ Address Box 205. Sanford.'
' '
•
■ 104-5tc.
Ford For £ale -1918 Ford Touring
ca^.for sale at a bargain. Call at the*
B. &amp;. O. Motor Co.* and look this
Ford over.
.
lOI-tfc?

The savings of a single family are neRlible, but
the easily avoided wastes of twenty million house­
holds will.nnnually purchase squadrons of battle '
.sliips, acres of hospitals, feed tliousande of (roops
and help the orphans of Europe. THINK OF
IT and SAVE your food, your .useless luxuries
and your MONEY.
‘

Apperson 8 .For Sale--We have
on
hand one Apperson 8 se\en jiasii— /"*
H n l r a n d 9 A Cl3
z=r - V ^ t * v d l v (Hill u ( l u l , j —; enger touring car'. We can sell this
O.'Motor Co.
SB
...._ .
S car at a sacrifice. B.
a^ 5
•
P
i
i
n
v
r
9
Also
a
few
othi^r
second
hand cars
P IIO N E 3
at
reasonable
prieea.
104-tfo.
3

Per non a who arc- patron* of rail- &amp;

&gt;

Cotton Seed Meal
N ITR ATE
SODA
Potash Nitrate
ASHES

riHims for

French

•-

•i

Vor Safe ’ Five gallon gasoline
how water heater,
m*W- Cheap.
I*. O. Box 117 .
107-.'ltp.

=

ISAN FO R D |

Ttl - ; = 5

of Rowland Dairy Milk, and you
will’undent tand why it is prefer*
rwl by mothcrs’Who demand the
*purest and best for their children.
The high-cost-of-food need never
alfect the children so long as
Roselnnd Milk provides the nmirishment it does rui Ihe smnll
amount it costs. .We .make’ two
deliveries daily.

I n- &lt;1

•

5

. It is worth (juite a
§ bit to be able to-get
S -p a rts when you need
S them, and not have to
n wait and pay addi3 tional expense for. spe3 cial factory shipmehts.

R A IL R O A D TO O W N E R S
.
DAY

j Sight

Dodge Cars 1
^ :

Sanford, Florida

Note The Richness

.F o r Sale; Pu*U Curil Ctdlecion^
•world wide, afro refrigerator ami
nd Is and end- In furniiurV*'
*
Kim \ve.
lOH-tf.

P A R T S

. ---- - O ——

-i~7C
Jy
-«i - f

s u will’ i oiTildiir furniTT'e T Afri *R.

For

for

1.

WaiiWd*\fl or t mifiin fo* ' (sum-

~

Crystal Springs, Fla , hoard of
trade is beginning a campaign
against the free range- law under
which the rattle td the state have
the privilege to grate an wilj -and
sleep on highways to their own «ati*
faction. The rc*n!utiutl which the
Triple Cities Cham her of Commerce
is asked to pass states^ that free
ranges cause much lawlessness, inrijc tpiam-is, thefts and murders^
The value of 'range cattle -#in
thp
•stale i- rpoiletl at $10 30 fl.1 .Hl tluring tit pa-t \eitr whits- the lot a I
farm ra- et| live-.lock is t|ltnlt*d j,t
i 1K fiti.tt Iti 1 The resolution demands
a "rm fence hi-w" declaring that free
range has tlixemirageil .tlic farmer,
the grower, the trucker and the mm
who would rat e th*- best stork. Re­
lative t&gt;* t hr- -measure, a member of
tit.' I"&lt; il chatilb- f **f colUtner,,» .pnke
nf t|.i 1-t,- rlogi as a rm rtate ,,n
*t t-,»
iil-iitvavs alter, tattle
I .i *
- r ivlit ■f
a
\ nu in her of
■lie itItl ■to1tie It - wen t iT“d as ). ti i ing
!■ &gt;• "
'I hi , til!, on . jt^ riigl t
"Lett , utt e have ht-eo ' It I ’line in
I t -.. i,.I• ij- I In -i|n tk iif |* ,- fright
w i leti
iiainntily rt*auiP-&gt;l irp tin,
fia-t #of tK/i-e in the marhine The
nm’tcri ts have been fn-e to declare
that if lire pitrrHf ttop iit {he mo t
prbtitalde In Florida, the "no fence"
law niii -1 come ami the i b-a of- frjre
range must go. }V. I! Br.»|,liy. *eiqetaty,' Is issuing the Crystal . s s
Springs rt’solulinn.

fc; -0

keeping Unfii'fiishcti preferably but

.Complete Line of

*•

A Cordial Welcome Awaitsw»vYou

1#

Ti-rhcurf.

[B O A R D O F T R A D E P R O T E S T S
■t S T A T E ’S " F R E E R A N G E " LA W

"W alk in g " is then eaay and you’ll Boon find yo u r­
self Id the "running".

i-ns.qj,
•________________________
v

hi- w a l e l t f u l

O

I t m ay aeem like " toddling" to open an account
w i t h . a deposit of one dollar—b u t i t ’s a start.
Furthermore, it’s an im portant step. .

i return to Herald (Klim

i and alive amt on the job when
; comes to voting for they ha vs- t-cr1
1 ^
(
1tainly bes-n imposed upon in the
rPa!*t and they nfmuis! know w lio is
, ,
. ....
their friend anti who is not.

T he humble beginning of Savings Account has
started more enterprises, more business, more for­
tunes th an Anything else in this world!

♦ CLASSIFIED ♦
ADVERTISING
■
, 41—■■■ k--- *■ 1- —»

MOTOR
CARS

time

*v

•

4i i

which

.;

*'

*

T-iluring

v

SANFORD

FOR SALE. Fresh Milk Cow. R. L.
Garrison.
’
., * 102-6tp.

" v

For Sale—Kiddie-Koop, In fair
Condition. $ 10.00 cash. Can he seen
a t 214 Elm* avc. ' *

■-J- j .

&gt;

For Sale—Two story 8 room house
atid garage. Sanford Heights. Apply
Now 402, Si|g|ord Avo.
■* 90-tfc
Wanted—Lady, waitress- KxjsTicnn-d
V •
*
Bell Cafe 79-tf

lilHidi lllilrim&gt;11

FYIUNI) On first St. w
Sitnfortl $4437.f&gt;0 Fnmjjj
on brick hiRhway jusyfiwt of |he
lirtcsian Spring hnlfrnilp wt*st» of
MortroeYoad.
ncreaof ideal
home site and irriKnble farm land.
Worth $200 per ncre ofT»*red fo»*
I$75 per ucre xash Direct from
own&gt;l. Enqufre at Phone 352 rcfis lating abstract and deed. 94-jK. **J*,
■*.' ’

J,

BANE OF
SANFORD
A- H E ffija j) W A N T A D
■

*■
■,

i '
■

i i/kyit.1

- ; --

'

•
■

■-

1

M
*

�SANFORD D A IL Y HERALD
Miss Dordifey Humph I* home from
Sommarf of the
from TaliahudeC for an extended
. Meiflonof
visit with th* family.
Floating Small
Matters In.Brlef
Talks S a e d n jtlj
Mis? Helen 'Brigham, principal
Personal Itqraa
Arranged for
of
the West Side P rim ary school has
of Intaraat
Herald Jtcadeffr" "Kliimed from Wlndmere where she
ban been spending th e enforced va­
Among^thc vEifors. to&gt;+h? city aie ii-Bouaimn nero several years Sgo. cation With her mothe^. '
Hr. And Mrs. L, Emendola and son
Ge'orgo Earl, is the .name of the1
The m any friends nf Zcb Ratlilf
ij Nett York. M r ' Emendoln is the
are glad to see him back to- his ac- little son horn to Mr. and Mrs.
fa/kir member of -the w e ll-k n o w n customed duties as superintendent G v y n n 'F d x , UPliruary 22nd..
gjp; cf L. Einondoln &amp; 'Co,, an d he
Mrs. K. A, Nowmnn and Olive
of the 'H e ra ld Printing •Co., after a
,coiA«&lt; to Sanfoitl every ye a r to buy severe .Illness.. • .
..
accompanied by Mary ,Elizabeth andSssard vegetables. l i e ‘ reports t h e l
A. \ . French li visiting home folks Camilla Puleston returned from'
snow storm in New’ York its
for,
a few days, lie is now ,in the Miami last night. Dr; Puleatan and
boleAthe* heaviest, of tho kind in
Mrs. * Puleston are expected next
government sec
veers and traffic was blocked
‘
4
*-week
and will reside at the, Valdez
headquarters at
.for nany days. They are cqmfortwhere D'r. Puleston will have his
,bly located a t the Valdes and will
d offices. •
be hr* several weeks.
\
*
Lct»&gt;* .B (Hies of Orlando is* a
Woman’* Cfub RiudncKs Meeting
buslntft visitor in Sutiford today.
The regular business meeting of
F.
lecrical "Vixtures, House Wirethe W oman’s Club will be held to­
log. &gt;t fact lull kinds of electrical
morrow ( Wednesday) a t 3:30 P. M.
work, -hone 442. W. II. Treadwell,
A full attendance of members is
E lectron. 'V __
•
83-tf.
urged as this will be th e an mini
election of officers am t chairmen of
G. A s ta p le tom, representing th e
the club.
* •j .i
Peacock Nothing. Co., of ColumbuH,
G,v, is o^bc ftotre-of Perkins &amp; Brifjtoday art tomorrow with a line of
Benefit Show nt P rio re ss Thrntre'
samples lc men's clothing.
Fernntd-I.aughton M emorial
.Floor cterings. Gold Seal G ua rc n . .
Ho-p’tal
teed Con|ieum Art Squares. Hall
T hru the' courtesy of manager
runnera fld y a rd goods. * Uost6n |
Kitner, a-ficnefit show will be given
at the
Princess T heatre, . Friday
night, fifty per e&lt;?.nt of th e receipts
going into the treasury of th« Kef*
llenturanl For Sale
h aid-Laughton Memorial HiHpitnl
• On ac co u n t ,of. (lines*
Under t h e ' dhcetion of Mrs. A E.
meceuitating
removal to Georgia Hill, h committee of ladles wilF+ell
the Pur’ * i ’non Cnfc nrwl all'Tiir? tickets for Friday night.so u rccrjrd
liiture.
y^jje.mnt is offered for breakjgf! audience
expeted to
sal it, G o o .fn TiiC'- ill^iajLd-JtKmtion^orrrtlliW the . D’niiuMp’ITTs building.
Tor particulars sro*' Miss Can-id The hospital
already proven n
Gray. Park Avenue Cafe.
’
valuable a--&gt;el in^ the town end
JJQH-tf
nothin': further need to be s.iid' in
support of the pre i nt «•fTt»rt f«f ee- V
dure lurtd-i liny ;&gt;mir t tickets from
the lady \Vh.ft-ftfiN,S (qi otily ten per
cent of - t he door rccelptu to to .the
hospital fund.
yul« Happenings

PAGE 3f

In arid About

T

^

-

”

'

*

has furnished1two members ,o^the “ Lucky* 13/* Mayor Stevens and Mr. Henry,
both Directors in the Sanford end of the Florida State League, and if you hav&lt;
your doubts about who ifc going to win the pennant this year, ju s t ask Mr. Henry.

have your doubts about who should fit you out in that spring out-fit, ju st ask
any tyie that trades with us. Nothing but the beat will' be found a'b Displace
and that is because \ve have found that the best is the cheapest in the' long run.
And the new lot of spring goods arriving At our place daily is of the kind th a t willmake you want td become full fledged customers of

The, Store That Is Different

. i#,

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxjocxxxxxxxxxxxxixxxx

I
A n i C C I See the S T U N N I N G 7
B k A D I C . 1 ^ .
G O W N S from \\

l

Mrs. R. A. Terhcun, Editor
Plume 395

LtST H I FORGET
*
. J

Per*.unnl
Mrs, J. K. Iltilii-r is Iktc frpen
Waycniss for a visit wHit ]u-r mother
Mrs. Woodcock.

M ilv is k rble C o .

F. L. Mill: IL-Owoer___ _

t

11

For.Ueitefit Of The Hn«pl'a
v Piir.it- .* T heater is 111 in;

Monumenl Copings
In Marble Ir Granite

1

M ay

(t D o e s

H ap p en

to

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

T h e Prioie-s a PJ give _several nf th*
the*i*. henerit- during t ' p o.-st /,»»•
month- all.I fhe ladles u ill -,-|| ....
tickets Hii.l i: i. t-xtie.-ted itiat a
lar^o irow ti will be the result.

Y ou

{.ridiminary
rmfeling

arrnnt'einr-rtls

lor

SEND US TlfAT ORDE
wlirs tut) NKKI» ANTTHINQ IN .

AnnonI Meeting Kn Womnn'n ( lull
The annnnl meeting of tho Wdrhan
Club v.-ill be hpfd Wednesday ct
3

mu

H boen

x At the PRI N C E S S W e d n e s d a y Afterrfoori Only

Rev. G, H. Waldrott was aAtencra! Friday for t 1 i * beret’t being I’r lm?
visitor in tow n on Monday." He is! Clayton in the "Y ount' .Mrs. Wintrop" ;f-i t 1’i.tli Roland in th e I ir t
driving a new Ford,
E|d ode of the "Kpt-ndps of Riitfi.”. tin-

•| “

■ whe ..

Yankee Doodle in Berlin__ __

,

In S p ite o f jv cry thing You May H appen to D o

- Be Prelred

x

"Miss K athleen Brady sppnt the)
week-end at borne. Six- is a student ! A f|Mi pro;;r,t,!i Wtii btLjiii c:» at tipi
nt Rollins’ College. , *
v matinee nod night perform a a e*

It TIa Happened to Others
A n

X Displayed bn THE B A T H IN G B E A U T IE S with

•••

.Like td Try ItT

= J=

Powdered Jo| (nixed with tv Ino
ronsldcred n toothache remedy pj
Qreek*

Fire Insunnce

J FRANK H I N D

Ofilce Furniture and S u p p lies
- Commercial and Fancy Stationery
Printing, Lithographing, Engraving
B ooks~A H Kindti
Artists’ M aterial
Athletic G oods
Kodaks
. ’• •

ALL

Thai New Factory- Finish

KINDS

fc
^
*

»

|

f-i
fe

CHIJLUOTA INN
C H U LU O TA, F L O R ID A "
(Ipcnri)e'cemher 7th for 4hc Scaaon.
-MRS. ( ’HAS. I). HRUM L E Y , Mgr.

have it talked a '&lt;mt us a new model
rpirk ami ■pan? ( I cptirsp! dur
auto p .iin m .’ in ' nishnig Ju-.pg
jt-e e v p i ’ t k i n ’, will give your inr
tlfit fa .-I ur y ( niah so raii-li d* died,

OF

. M
m

.45*40 "&gt;»t Pay Street
JACKSONVILLE
WE V ILL TAKE PI KaSUHE IN ANSWERING YOUR INQUIRIES

Wouldn’t you like to h a v e it on
your old car? Wouldn't you Rl.e tc

if*

'

The H. &amp; W. fi. Drew Company

NO TED DBA
TOH

S c im t.y o u m a y ii be t h e
loser, fin a n c lly

Ufc!

REHKIt BROS., Sanford I It itch's

lU S U C A N C E .
l U l f f A L ESTATE.
gW aNFORD^FLA.

iii

K i l l L U ifc u iG ii i w *

si :1i i

^ ti e i

COLLISION

EVERYTHING

«x»cxxp c x x x x x x x x x x x x x x

RYl A SURE CROP

8

.OLD B lF O K R .VOU P L A N T
I
1

Ameri
Colpe Bean Company will contract
X 100 Ves onHat-Saaord and will pay four dollars x
X ($4.1 per b l of 64lpounds delivered a t shipping x
-re cash. • The boana Iiegin to mature in
three itha after Imting t i l should yield not less than 100 bushels
per acLllowing ctry wit hi it additional fertiliser. Tho 1x^*1 nltroRon.Raling.crop At can li planted Only aueh farmers a sn ro in
P°sitM*l plant nn-fliarv»st|ho crop proiwrly need appl&gt;’. Call on

To II; In Hj .

. Hun. .1 l-’t . n ’i Ilitui.* ck Indi.ino:
poiin (f . riner Guvcirtnf1 of Ihfe Stale
tif . lm i e ’t \ I n ' a k to it mu &gt;
meofin.P, nf ti.cn Drill wfui ctt at Tl e
llapii-l 'ii .np’e.on Lriduy M arch f.’lh
under th e Atthpieea of t h e I lying
Squandton- Found at Ion. Govnrnor
•Hardy is Per, ilJent of .t he Fdunda
lion and"' E ditor (if -thu Natinnul
A listvyi r of 1 ility, a n d nn ady{v
ra le *.f n-m art ublu-forc*- a n d |H»wcr,

Mma(tr *M
riorld*

Le La • ; iion up 1 i pc(*?y ton Io de­
vote I i:* time and Uh-nt t to the
Tiiti e i-f probfidtton »nd s tvjd betrtvmenL
M r. Iliiuty

|/av|r*t|F4v|f4i|F-

UOTA IN N
Oh thpkecchoi Branch of the Florida East Coast
I
l
Railroad

Sped Attenti Given to Automobile Parties
Manager,

CHULUOTA, FLORIDA

• ( n Friday Mnrrh

^

I

L it

teecntly- -i

t r'nezi from 1
u • * &gt;*«: i»K in***
.-1
id i
'•
&lt; &gt;• an
EJkjKidiltt&gt;h»ry J-oru
there, going
under tl’e am pL c: of tho Flying
S’quanilrnn JYiundatlon a«nl tise .
Ur.iU-d Committee j.n Wur Ternpurntiti; AcItvRh ■ in rTe A rm u stnd
Navy. Hn-addre it d many tliouvan.‘ii
o f , ll e men rcturfic l irboaYd uilp
«ith :U6&lt;K of tiwjin.’ 7i tra in e d and
thoUp.hllul Ob i r i |T er,pffaira and of

nu-rt

hvon} -, he hMngsvhacki a

Face the F u tu re

G rocefies

z___ r

. .

-

■

,

•____ * a _- _ ♦

_

■_

_

, :1 »

Forget the P ast
' A fortune cannot be made with the
money you have spent.
. Deposit y o u r money In ’ th is bank

■,

/

! .

.- * *

. ,

and pay y o u r bills w ith checks.
You w ill t h e n : know w h y and

; KINGAN .
Breakfast Bacon
In 1 -lb. Packages

where y o u spend y o y m o n e y .
You can a lso take advantage o f
an opportunity to buy a t th e right
time, w ith o u t the risk o f carrying
money in y o u r pocket
WE PAY

SAVIfli

"H O M E IH S T lT U T iO /t

SANFORD.:, FL/i

SERVICE

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="13">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10754">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1920</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11906">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 02, 1920</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11907">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11908">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 02, 1920.  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="11909">
                <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="11910">
                <text>Original 3-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;, March 02, 1920; &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="11911">
                <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="11912">
                <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="11913">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11914">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1207" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1079">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/e57847f65e70cd305015d602c3b64b62.pdf</src>
        <authentication>c8d6b510b49a405a621c245b9c15f172</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11925">
                    <text>• f

_ * •-%
r . - •
. r 1. r* :■
•■■’
*■
• a*i*vv
.

•
__ .. J

••
• • i1
- • '■ - • ■ V,
-

’

'•

-

*

.

* ir * *.

•• A

•

.

iN THE HEART OP THE W
VOLUME I

WE K I WA B R I D G E
.ORIDA

ENGINEERING
Giv e n c o n t r a c t
fo r
I . AKE
JESSUP
DRAINAGE d i s t r i c t

com pany .

SANFOBO. FLORIDA, W

dressed the Board in reference to
the Woklva River Bridge, -.and alSo
In reference to ’ t’he hard surfaced
ro ad s.. .
.•
Sheriff E. E. Brady, is instructed
to notify persohs moving d irt from
right of way on Geneva Ave. to
discontinue same, unless authorised
lo do so hy this Board.
; Motion of, Comr. C. W. Entzmingcr, and by Comr. E. H ., Kilbee,
and carried, Clerk of this Board is
instructed n o t- to issue w a rra n t-to
tho City of Sanford ’for 1918 road
ta x w m n til further Instruction from*
th is ’ BoaYd.
*,
Motion of Comr. C. \\ \ E ijg f t
mlnger, and by Comr. E. IJ. Kilbee.
aod-carried, Tax Collector Jno. p .
J in k in V L Instructed to deliver the
list of liehnquent Licences to A tty.
Schelle Maim--, f&lt;»r emit . tiotj.
.
Motion of Comr. C. W-. Entzmingcr, nd by E. i II. Kilbee, and
carried, th&amp;t upon the approval ol
the e'lAUted Cofttracts, for Seminole,
County hard road construction work,
j»nd the sufficiency of the bonds to

.
Sanford, Fla. M arch 2nd,- 1920
x Hon. Board of C ou n ty Commis­
sioners in. Ifftt' for'Scm inole* county
Florida, met In regular sesnion, u,
10 o’clock A. M. P resen t;. Com r’at
0. -P. Swope, C. W. Entzir.ingor,
and E. II. Kftbee, with C, E j Pouglass, Deputy Cle.k, and Roy Tillis,
Deputy- Sheriff, in
attendance.
Absent: Chairm an L. A. Brumley,
and Comr. L. P. H agan.
f Motion of C. W. Entzmlnger', 2nd
by E‘ H. Kilbee, nnd carried, Cu£
i). p. Swone. is elecCed Chair
Pro. Tem to serve until the u-turn E .'C . Langston abda!Noll.R N ull;'by
A tty. Gen. A.*. D eC ottrs, the Clerk
of the Chairman
of
this Board i» im-truct«4 to - re­
Minutes of the lust regular-m eet­
turn
to. said contractors their certi­
ing. also special m eeting held Toby.
fied
checks
filed p ith their bids.
10th. 0920, w eroread and approved.
Mr B. M. Basa,' representing the • Notary Public* Bond of Jno. N.
Southern Paint .x n d Oil Co.,- of Searcy, was approved.---- -Carrolton. 0 a „ addreated the Board _Iloniii of thu JoHowitijujiuraoba-tQ
in reference to tne purchase by the carrjr Fire Arm«, were approved
County of Steel a n d Wood Bridg*1
Paint,, nnd on motion of Comr. C. Douglass, Jno. D. Jinkins,' H. .8,
W. Entzmingor, 2nd b y . Comr.. E. Parrishk C. W. Entzniinger, V.-'C*
orden from . M $ Bass', 4 bbls. or Colier, T. W .’Jo n e s It. J. Starling.
i
*
metal paint (fb- 429, and 1 bill, of
Communications from other perwood paint No. 115, a t 85 cents per sons wero rcad and^-ordered Tiled,
gal. delivered.
•
of the several County
nnd approved.
Supt.*J. M. W ynn, addrosspd the Ofllriuis were
Board in reference to sanitary con­
W arrants fffiTd- ihiring' the month
ditions of the Seminolo County of February. w:ere ordered cancelled
Road Gamp.
.
.
o f . Record.
.
On Motion of C om r.’ C. E. E o timinger," rid hy Com r. E. II. Kilbee
and carried, A tty. Geo. A. DeCottes
is . instructed to '-w rite Mr. J. E.
Parterfield regarding dam age done
to the bridge- over Econfockhntchee
Creel, between Geneva and.C huluota,
by floating lo|*s, ordering- bint to
ret air nt once the dam ages done to
this bridge.
RY ANARCHISTS W HO WOULD
Communication- from Mr. J. Ill
NOT
ALLOW
T H EM
TO
Cowan, offering to ’ repair th e Jai
R E SU M E / W ORK
’
roof for the aum of S70.00 Was read
and «?n' motion of, .Com r. C. W.
M ilan, Ma^ch l, (By Associated
Ent-rninger, 2nd l y Comr. E.. II. Press) Workers on the general strike
Kilbee, 'r\nd carried, th a t above offer attem pted to return to work yosterbe accepted, . and M r. C d ia n au­ d ry b u t anarchists attacked the
thorized to repair t ) e roof..
factories, tram w ays .and stores com ­
Com m unication from J. Goldstein pelling the strike continuation. Ti e
Co. of Jneksonville, Fla., offering 'R adicals seized n -numlrer of eaftal)
''** rum‘7 f f2p0,0(7 fc » ,tlie ebl 10 j liihm ents and proclaimed' 'a soviet
ton roller, wag read, nnd on. motion ! but were expelled by th e troop*. The
‘•f Com. G. W, En.tzminger, 2nd nnurrhifts also attacked th e ' Labor,
by«t’dm r. E. H. Kilbee, and carried, Exchange but were repulsed by the
ramo was accepted.
m ilitary.
•. ..
;•
*'
. Motion jot Comr. C. W, E ntzfninger,t 2nd by Comr. E. H. Kilbee

ITALIAN
W ORKERS_
BALKED

SWISS TO
"ADHERE
TO LEAGUE

VOTES
COUNCIL
NATIONAI
TO STAND I1Y * I EA CUE OF
• NATIONS
. .
Berne;. Sw itzerland, M ar. JL.fBy
Associated Press} T he Swiss National
Council voted -to adl-.ero to the
League of Nations by recommend* a
plebiscite for the people to voice
their desires in the m atter. The
Council is -ncked to approve Switzer
land * entratoce after the governm ent
had decided not to wjdt until t'u&gt;
United States Senator • ratified . the
tre.vty.

REGARDING
THE
• RAID:
' INTO ARIZONA AND BOR
DER PURSUIT
.
&gt;
•Mexico C ity, M ar. 3 (B7 Associa
te d -. Press)' The Mexican ’foreigij
oflico-ttquested full Inform ation.'ol
the raids o t Mexicans in A lontanj
Camp Arizona, Feb. 7th. Unoffi!
daily sta te d hero th a t .no America!
troops had crorsed the border U
pursuit of banidts.
' •'

8 0 CLAM ST 8
WILL
TA K I
R A IS E R 'S MONEY
BECAUSI
HE WAS A COW ARDPress) A tight to deprived he former
Em peror of his fortune I.egurutodttv
w•ith the m a#jo rity
• .of * the
I* Socialist')
on a motion in tho *4)ict to refer the
iisue tu th e M ational Assembly. T he
charge is. made th a t Wilhelm failed
to live up*To~t}ie prectdefiL* of lint.
raee-w hen—hte-failml - to -d ip *aS th e
head of Ills troops.

FIFTEEN
ARE
JUDGE

M ORE DEFENDANTS
DISCHARGED
BY

.TEST VEGETABLE SECTION

IESDAY, -MARCH 3. 1920

IT
IN D EPEN D EN C E
M ITTEE IVILL NOT

CO M . (h a t public interest .must be consid­
STAN I) ered in applying the law, T he public
interest, it was held, would not be
New Y ork March 3 (By -Associa­ served and might be injured, by
ted 'P ress) American eonim itfto for dfssolvlng tho uteol concrer\.
independence of America headed by
- S e n a to r Bankhead Dead
James *W. Gerard charged* today
that the allied premiers tentatively
Washington, .March 2.—John H.
fiad^ decided to partition Armenia Bankhead of Alabama, the oldest
and appealed tq Americans- in pro- member of th e U nited-States Senate
TH A T
LOW ER
and the l&amp;st veteran of the Confeder­ PROBABLE
H
N
M
k
'C
O
A
S
T
HAS
NOT
ate, armies to serve in it, died today
B
^
P
^
U
A
D
L
Y
HURT
A
S
RE.
ffit^hls home in,- W ashington, of
PO RTED
myocarditis:-.-He was' serenty-eight
years old. .
•
‘ I t is proKabte th a t as the grower*
Td-~Tbgrst*lVr*
His colleague, ^nator-U ndT rw rrod. of. th e umlt hern
Inhounced,"the"Tael "(o' the senate, 1 rav o ^ lm trrtr-t# k « i“ sib«^TTHcy7*^fe(
eulogizing him as the "foremost find th a t.‘the loss ns first p re d ic te d /
Figure’in Alabama for the Inst q’uar- by the cold sjiap «/ Sunday a n d /
of. a century." The senate adjourned M onday -night won not .as bail ag
immediately «n. a ’ mark* of resport. predicted but late reports say th a t J
Later Virr-President M arshall, ap­ the tom ato grower* of the lo w e r‘c ast ’
pointed a* com m ittee of the senator coast have suffered severely. ! '• : :}
consisting of Senator* Underwood,
.In th e Sanford section1 th e ri v as
PR ESI Nelso, Pomerhnn, -Townsend, Ash, vdry little tender stuff killed as
DKNTIAL
CANDIDATE * TQ hurst,- Kernuld, M cKellir, Harrison, very little of it had been set in I Kc
and Ball, to uttmul the funferal. The fields. Hero and, there wero no ne
INVADE TEXAS ’
’ • •
body, sccainpnrtied by members of peppers, sqftnh. beans, etc , th a t W itt
— Ffrrt W or th " M a r i r fn jm tT x n rtn r TTie ~ fHmtly wlir? 1oa ve, Was hI n gton killed some report that,Their peppi'rr
ted. Press).Senatoz (larding of-Ohio to-m orrow ' ni^ht. for, Jasper - Ain.
escaped "and from all report* Ih f
set (he precedent today ns tlie first where th e 'funeral will'be held,
dam age here Was tliglTt .compare i
republican qandi&lt;)Atn ever personally
to other quarters’.
conducting a campaign in Texas and
The therm ometer went down! s
is speaking' here.
**
..
f u r 'ns 28 during the coldest p a r t, f
the ni«ht--t)imday and .early M o u th y - ’
morning,
SO VIET IN PORTUGAI
h u rt b y cold w eather Uhltfsz irt .
freemen and the g r e a te r .p a jt of th e
lettuco crop has been shipped. IrDb,'
potatoes here were nipped - in tbo
tops but it is thought they '-will
Bay
t r a e t y w il l . itir
r a t i - Vomo out again although It- is liable
-lu cuCstkc. xr»&gt;p ,wumu and retard, tbo
FIKU AND
** . ■
OF -ROLL CALL
* * grow th. .
FVars
ento*rtained
M onday -lor
' Washington, March 3 (By'Associa­
tjio
c
ilru
\.rro
p
‘
y
.Wgr?
w
ithout foun­
ted PrFsW)' Thtf Shantung reiblpti«Mi
dation i»nd n^it even th e ’early bloom
i u .th e Peace Treaty ht before,'the
. • N /
Senate today. A'dVocatea. of the was killed. ’ • .’

PEACE
TREATY
ADVOCATES

ratificatidn w ithout • reservation*
said they feel tlpit the adoption c(
the m ajority' resevklions is. only a
m atter of the roll rail and tho final
ratification will not long bo delayed.

Grand Rapids, Mich. Mar. 3 ’(By
Associated Press). Fifteen ny^c de­
fendants-w ore discharged by Judge
Sessions in the Newberry election
conspiracy trial leaving eighty-A\e
defendant* *»f the fifth count i.t’dfetm ent based on * the Fedor I
statute. October lG, 1918, dismissed.
At The Valdez
Wooster and wife, Middlctown, N . Y.; J. Clary and wife
Syracuse N . Y.; W. II. Wright and
wife, Binghamton, -N. Y.; B. II.
Choydlem nod wife, Norwich, Conn.;
Fi L. Waldorf nnd wife, Clyde, N. V*
ChaH.G. Roy and wife, Cidye, N. Y ;
Miss C. L. O’Brien, Syrnruse, |N. Y'.;
Mr*'. ’ F. J.. DubelMes*; Rochester,
N. 1^; Mm. C. A.. Corv'in, Bingham­
ton, Nv Y .; Miss Mae Y’ettcr, BinghamptAn, N . Y'.; ML* 8. D. Crnfts,
Bingbam pton, N. Y. ML* Effic
A. Allen, Bingham pton, N*'Y.; J . J.
Glass and wife, Syracuse, N. Y.;
Miss Florence Glass, Syracuse, N. Y.
Mrs. E-. E. Johnson, C ourtiand, N . Y
Mr*. C. F . Rhodes, C ourtiand. N . Y :
A. K. C arter, Syracu***, N. Y.) C . H .
Bivbln, Syracuse, N . Y .; C.
H ard­
wick, A tlanta, Ga.*, A. Oiemdolnr
and wife. New York. N. Y.; ’ R.
Esposito, N*w Y’Ttrrk. N . Y.; B. W.
Y'oung, P hiladelphia,' Pa.; A. B.
Murdoch, 8an Franclaeo,, CaL; E . J;
DesM inncauz, New York, N. Y.
Dr.. W. A*. Koifte Hnd wife, S t. L« Is,‘
Mo.; B. R. Wollard, New York. N . Y
L. Slifer. Philadelphia. Pa.; M. K.'
Chahery, Philadelphj
Dean*, Chicago, D
M. Lloyd,
/ M eredith
Pa.; M rs
Bruca M adm aduke Munsell, G reen
Cove Springs, Fla- *
*
•

Calls For Bank R fatem ent.
W ashington Mnr.-.JI &lt;By ‘Associated
Press) Thd C om ptroller of
th e
NORTH CAROLINA REPUBLICAN Currency has Lrued a call of the
condition of all national banks a t
Hold Stole Convention To Appoint th e close of business Saturday F eb ­
Delegates
ruary eighth. Greensboro N. C. March 3 (By
Dr. H. T . Chisholm, of San Joee,
Associated Press) Fifteen hundred
.Republicans* met .In rts te -con vehtion Cal., haa been called to th e pastorate
here taday to choose the sta te tic of the Hyde Park Presbyterian church
k et and delegates a t large to the1 in T am pa, and haa accepted the call
He will be Installed as pastor of .th e
N ational Convention.
churcli th e second Sunday in M arch.
Mrs. IL ■P. Griffith and little For years D r. Chisholm wa* pa*tor
daughter, Eliza beth of AtTkrita,’ Oa., of one of th e largest, churches in Los.
are the guesti I of Mr. ahd Mrs. Angeles, and is said to be a very elo ­
quent p u lpit orator.

UST
HAVE
ENOUGH
KEEP
ORDER* BUT I
THEM
OUT
OF
El
■ Paps, M acrh 3 (By Associated
Press) T urkey's army will ju* limite
to the num lier j»f troops necessary
to m aintain order in- A*ia Minor
according to. the Journal, -w-liicli
says th a t T urkey -will lie compelled
tor "keep her forces on tho. Asiatic
side'of th e Borphnrus.

W ashington, March 2 .—Jn a"-4 *o
3 decision to d ay the suprem e court
refused tn dissolve the* U nited S tates
Steel C orporation and its numerous
subsidiaries compYLing the ao-cpllcd'
'steel tru st
The governm ent's long lough
auit for dissolution of th e iron and
steel tra d e combination, for alleged
violation of th e Sherm an a n ti-tru st
la v was dismissed with absolution
for th e corporation from all e x is tin g
charges
Placing th e high court,a n " 0 . K ."
cm the steel corporation were Chief
justice White* and. X asodate Justices
McKenna ' Hclmes and Van DevoJJustice Day gave the dissenting
opinion which was joined by Justices
Pitney and Clarke, Justice McReynolds and Brandeis took, nff*part, the
iorm er Raving been attorney-general
during th e litigation and tho latter
having expressed opinions regnr'dlhg
It before appointm ent to th e bench.
Prim arily, the -deere^ official!.”
brand* th e steel corporation aa a
"good vom blnatlon". with ita legality
established.
1
Further the court held th a t mere
size, bigness - of preponderance in
industry of corporate com blnatlonf
to not alone sufficient cause for IbH r
dissolution.
*•
.
The c o u rt also gave a neiz add farreaching hjdtcLI interpretation or
application*'of }th e Sherm an liw .
annlagohs to to famous "rdl* of

Washington, March L — Atforney
Gnneral. Palmer has dec’.ared himself
ra.t a Demorrollc pre»ldeiitlal eandiUate, Icadiiig the list of aspirant* for
the Democratic nomination if formal­
ly coming p u t into the open.*
In a tc!egrajn•to Hiram L. G ard­
ner, secretary of the Georgits state*
Dcnioctulfc committee, Mr. Palmer
declared th at ‘ if tho D em ocrats of
Georghi see it to select mo as their
choice'I shall receive the honor with
deep appreciation’," holding it to be
highly im p ro u n t t h a ta u opportunity
be given in thft prim ary "to ;d irectly
pass upon t i e record’ made by tho
pnetent adm inistration.”
.Mr. Palm er’* announcem ent, It was
■wh-i bfliFvcJ will ofen the. way for
o th er- Dcmoetnta to announce ther
candidacy, A llhuugh’the Republican
campaign bus been oil for some tim e
M r. I’nlmer is the first.. Dem ocrat
to declare h im self,,'.
.

TAKES’ AUTO
R ip E
F IR S T
T IM E HE /H A S BEEN - OUT
SIN C E
OCTOBER
*
.
;
‘ t&gt; .
'
*
W ashington M arch 3 (By Associa­
ted Tress) President WtMon .w en t
nutomohlling today this being th a
first tim e he ha* been out since bis
retu rn -to )Va»liir\gton from h it
W estern tour. Ho lias been III slpco
October.
*
’
•
W eather And Crop . Conditions ' In
Florida For ' The Week Ending
‘ M a r c h 2 . 1920 .
- f,
i

- &gt;!
■».. Mfl

Tem perature. T em perature a v er^
aged much helowx the normal, with,
freezing.ove( m ost of .th e 1 section
on-seyeral’days. T he lost of.the week
was especially cob) with killing frost
to th e -soulh of M iami. . .
Precipitation. Showers - occurred'
over all dlvbinn* heaviest In the
northern and wVstern Counties, anleast in the south, rain being-defi* crent and needed I n 'the lower protion of the stytn. Snov. Hurtles were
reported in Jacksonville and vie inity—^
during early M onday, M arch 1
Condition of Crops. The week was
the most unfavorable of the w inter
for crop growth, erpcdaliy truck.
Dam nrJng frosts occurred over much
of th e section on 4 or 5 m ornings;
INVEHTIGATOR OP
WHISKEY much truck was killed or severely
REBELLION *
C H A R G E D dam aged, and prnertcaljy no growth
was m ade during the weej,-. Most of
WITH GIVING ' OUT PR IN K S
th e toil was too Wet and cold; rnme
. Grand Rapids, March I (By Assimi­ seed -failed to germ inate. Beans,
lated Prexs) George F. Cummerow, to m a to e s melon*, b erry bloom, and
th e D ep artm en t of Justice agent white potatoes suffered to a great
who Inve«t!gnted the
aorcallei! extent. Celery, lettu ce ar/TX rbbngo
Whiskey Rebellion of IronC ounty were not so baflljr ;,***i=*&lt;Q nbw in g
appeared in tho police court today was d e lv e d , although } h e V o il\h a a
rharged with giving n drink of been goncrally prepared for .cVrn
whiskey to a atato official in a' hotel and peanuts. Sotne - groves veV&lt;,
room.
'
‘
" fire d " to save citrus bloom, b u t
bloom suffered to some extent. Farm
PfOni Ja n u a ry . 31 to February 7, w6)It is backward.
. .
%
. ..
•*’
16,904 hoxea.of cltrua fruit compris­
.
J. A. M IT C H E L L .
ing forty-three carloads, were
, .-•
f----------------- ,_______ &gt; *;*►)
northw ard from Fort Myers.
ThU 1 M ra. b . D. HollyVwho has been
IhfortqtUon was o b ta in e d - today th a . guest of M r/ and M rs. D. L etch
frobj Mack H arper, the genial agent,■ aince th e flrat of th e year, left foe
« hom e In D e tro it, Mich la s t

�1

• •

.

•'■

&gt;

; •

. .

.

?t.

'

:
•
■

1■

*

•^ r ii - —

^

:

•

•
• k "J , • __ _____________
•
_ • &gt; _________
r

•

•

y♦

•

•

•

•

.

• "

•

'
1

.

.
v

*
'

v
'.

.

•

•

-

, ■
.

u

*•

.

.

\

■

’
*

.
i

.

.

*

U

. *L# .

’

•
1

•

*

’

W
;

'

•*

^

.

‘
_______ _________________

One (Day Only

A FT E R N O O N 2 to 5

Thursday
ADULT 8 -50 c —c 'HMd R EN Z G S ~ ~
PLUS WAB TAX

Your last chance to ace

AFTERNOONS TO 5; NIGHT 7 TO 11

L IO N E L B A R R Y M O R E

ily Opportunity of
ini' the Original '

in the seven part ‘drama

BERLIN
IN PERSON

lie waa Abraham Uncoln’a Friendlb* l»»S lb*t U&gt;rd b» ls*t bit I
iii MM ih iwH it ibt **&gt;M at t trill

Extra---------o

•% t%
# -•

ADULTS » CENT?! ■

-

BOUfW tU BKOWMC

CHILDREN 20 CENTS

i

.

Yankee Doodle

T O M O R It O W
The great actress

ll‘*n ' S k' i v- as II sT M »r i!ft
\}1 U tUMHiN
*'*«L ffw v

t

In conjunction with Ben
&gt; nettTs big Comedy

BABY (C o m ed y ) -------- Extra

The savings of a single family are -neglible, but
the easily avoided wastes of twenty million houses
holds will annually purchase squadrons of battle
ships, acres of hospitals, feed thousands of troops
and help the orphans of Europe. THINK OFIT and SAVE your food, ypur useless luxuries
and your MR^EY.
#

/ENNETT/ORIGINAL
BAT MING BEAUTIES
APPEARING IN PEdfON

«

FLORENCE REED
In the Great Drama

You owe it to yourself
to see.this novel attraction

WIVES
----- ALSO——■ •

The Girls appear at - 4,
8:15 and 9:45 p. m.

•

Ambrose in Turkey
s cam e
•
Hr ■turned to me .and grumbled,
&gt;ou ^ noon 1“ Nothing unusual-*' Alter lighting
len'.Idn Gfj'j fondle Tie trld riuTtiTfOnTe out in to
my fam ijy(thc kitchen. "A nyw sv we gin eat**,
wa* about 'He* laughed. He went to the rink to
•k when I i wasU Jbl* ban Is.' tu rn e d -the faucet,*
m&gt;‘ w a te r. rathe
| vlted me to go homo with him.. He exclamation 1 shall not repeat h e 'e
Infurm ail.tne.lhet his wife was S fey
home. su l
p a bnrY.i*lor‘s shipper*. 1 was. qtfite No ga*-.either.!* So a - bachelor's
willing for 1. rem ?mbar/d. Charlie*» ip i’f 'f'w f had- cold beans and «arV cooking a t camp.
.
,
- ‘ W* drove up to his home and' af­ ’ A? I was going.out on ?5 he ru«hed
ter parking the car in the back yard me to the depot but the train being
house. ChArlie* pushed late o r spent a plpa»ant half hour
in the depot well lighted by a single
! lantern hanging in the ticket office
I f. boarded.-the train with a firqi
resolve never to bring my family to
a lightlMsi, waterieas, ’ git-desa • cdty.

P. S .~ T h e little girl In gray
on the left is Ruth Conly. One
of the aix reasons why beaches
are popular.-

S O M E G IR L S !

Princess

- gm

w B ^

presents

* wjr l F J u *

Cecil B. De Miller'
tipPCUCWOk

WHY CHANGE
YOUR WIFE?"

Potash Nitrate

wrrii

• TltOS. MIHUIAN
&lt;;U)RU SWANSON U t o i l m

mijaidn for President Lincoln li!
particularly tim e ly - in these post-!
war days. The picture is a Param ount j
A rtcraft.
"
.
Gne more ,rrel also given.

th e

piovt

A. HERALD YftNT AD

accurlile ^iM ire^n ta.tio n s

of the HolepxoUfrn family ever
shown or. the screefn is ir» ‘ M ack
Sennett'a ricVv five-part super-comedy.
Yankee Doodle in Kerin*’ Alt the
uniforms are actual war-worn soldier
dotr.es that were a orn jn b a ttle .
Kurd Sterling . who take* the para of
the Kai»er spent several, months on a
•stu d ) of the character of the All
Highest He also studied* thousands
of photograph*. The result i« a make­
up so graphic th a t it would alm ost
f.ool Miw. Hohcmollern herself. Sim i­
lar pwiha were taken- by M ai S t.
CUir who takes th e ’ p u t of the
Crown Prin'ce and IWrt Roach, as
; General Von Ilindenburg and Baldy
Hcirr.ont as'Not*. Tirpits. •
F lorence Reed in “ Wise* of M e n "
At the P r i n t e * s Tomorrow

In “Dove” Undermuslins and Cotton Blouses
Here are two beautiful
numbers
of soft Nain% •
, •mad^
•
sook trimmed with nice Val
Lace, for March at
•

Teddies: and
match. Made
White muslin

This is oneoLihe -many styles W Welworth.Waists
March. The Quality is better so are the Styles.
i
■•• 4 . t

These Numbers are on display in our Blouse De
partment, all sizes

starring beautiful
a r J talented Florence R«wd

the dash, the fashion, the [vivid
intimate nwlatioas cf this sensatkmal companion picture to “The Osggethead" With U sa el
Cecil -B; DeMille’a “ Don’t
Barry mart a* -The Priacee* T»Change Your Huiband.”
. wight. : *

• &amp;c
9*

Cotton
N ITR A TE

ju m n lf

these two beautiful wom«n
culture, manners, breeding bung
in an instant to fhe wind* fight1 1 -hlag Tike maddeowd tigresses* in
hts room-for the man they loved.

•LTS

March
3rd-4th

Although! it i* an-' uproariously
funny comedy. it i« safd that’ one cf

just been m arried, j
W there who to»e w*&gt; if we only the minister had but a few m om ents j
,. ,
„
before said the words that m ade
m tA
them man and w,fe. He « u waiting
A Butterfly Woman's toast to the hus tor his bride to join him so they
might start on their honey moot).

HOMAS ME1QUAN GLORIA SWANSON
BEBE DANIELS
THEODORE KOSLOFF

SO M E SH O W

Theatre

Ya nkr c Hoodie in IteHin'.* wilh t h e
(lathing R e a m * in P c tso a at t h e
Prince s s T h u r t t l a j

m

SANFORD

lionet Barrymore repeats in th e
screen version of “ The Copperhead”
the sinking impression which he
made in this great drama of .Civil
War time* w h en 'it was produced aa
a stage play. T he picture is shown a t
the Pn-.ces* to-day. and i* well
worth the attention of every adm irer
of really fine photoplay*.
Augusti-s T hom a«\ story has beew
given a sympathetic, interpretation
or. the screes and a setting rem ark­
able realistic iq its detail th a t a d d s
rouidersA lr to th e eaierm est of th e

Wirthmor Waists
; For advance numbers for March, these are the only
real Snappy, Stylist-C otton Waists on t h e ‘market th at
retRil'for
$ 1*.5 0 , ,, *C“*
'
"
..
•
. -- « %
They are ail made of good quality Voile and are trimmed
with Round thread and Val Lace the kind that Wears.

See o u r line of New
Silk Gloves, Long

�SANFORD D A t t t HERALD

A d u lts 50 o
C hil’n 25 c

Special M eetin g at . The Baptist
Churcht' April 4 through^ l lt b .
- In accortreee with tho general
p la n 'f o r Mmultsnrou* .meetings in
?4800 p a p th t church&gt;i in the. South,
arrangement* hare -been made for q
;al- Trusting ti&gt; 1» held in ‘the
Bapt&amp;t church beginning on F u ^ e r
Sunday S p r i! ’ ’4th . and
hinning
through Sunday April H 'th.
The natnp cf the R v ao g tm t and
the sperfU chorus d i m tor Will be
announced later.
Mr. an d M rs. D. Lea^h and Mr*.
C. D. Hoily were w rtk end guests
of Governor at\d MrAr~S!teper a t
the Ridycwdod( Hotel. D aytons.
Seen* M o n ik er!

Lost—A bunch of keys, finder
return *to Herald QBcC
109-3tc.
For R ent—O ne Urge well fur
nirhed. room .'717 Patlc A w . -»C?-gl

THRIFT IN WAR TIME

For J&gt;ale—Kijldie-Koop, In fair
condition. 110.00 cash. Can be aeen
at J l l - U m t t f . . ■
. For Sale—Tw o story 8 room hoyac
and garage. Sanford Heights. Apply
No. 402, Sanford Ave.
Sb-tfe
Wanted—La fy waitrem Kxperieneed
. .
Bell Cafe 70-tf

FOUND* On first S t west of
Sanford $4437.50 Fronting north
on brick highway just east of the
artesian Spring half mile west of
Monroe road. 35] j acres of ideal
home site and irrigable farm land.
Worth '$200 per qcre offered for
$75 per acre cash Direct from
ownes. 'Enquire at Phond 352- re­
lating abstract and deed. 94-tf.

T he first req unite for jo u to do is to th in k —thi*
will tiring forth ideas of two kinds; via: Im perft
and PerfeUed Ideas. The 1 in perfected Idea Is one
wl rre y o u 't* ink y o u ‘will sofne day s ta rt to save
b u t’ just seem never to do it. The .Perfected is
where you A C T ’ AT ON CE .and .sard for th rift’p
iakeS»Whlch course will you. take? You
know
which U best und We Know where we can-help
you. Wl^l you Come H E R E ?

Speaking of name*, a* the Noroad
baa hren in reerrit t*»"K*a, we oate read
of an English huh* being HirWened
“Artsofthca^riMlr* Kevmett." Which
l* *onie moniker. you II admit. No
doubt It was considerably abbreviated
later, and It Is not-difficult to Imagine
'F o r R ent—Furnished room s for
the lad*a mother exclaiming In a ’.race
light
hourekeepiag. French Shop.
taeitit of exa.5p**ratlon: ' **AcUo. how
«
■ 107-Stlr.

CHANGE
Your Only Chance lb See this
THOMAS MKH.it v \
GLORIA SWANSON

KOSLOFF

The Bslblag •B e a n tie a ^ a ’ ''P crsoa this u lrt$ sub-title. The disclosures
. With *'VanVee Boodle ln*B erlla" m ade'einre the abdiratiou of the AH
ilig h e s t indiate th a t M r. Senaett has

Seaneit gnraedians were perm itted
t l go .to th e BatloorT"ischool f at Ar7
cadia. near lew Aagele*. The.** the
a v isin g helped them ' to stage- an
artisl show th at 'brityga your heart
- - - into-' j^our racuth, and givei you
-, ' i i i s e ldea of what the .Yn V airui'n
- w.»nt Ah*&gt;a^h in France. T he horaedy
r#,T‘ ’
He»r **i^Weenffw*^gere»-* youn g
American gviator who

For SaW—Five ’gallon gasoline
&gt;w water heater, new. Cheap.
Lo»t-*-Soms where between St
Johns rivlr bridge at Monroe and
Orange City, dark blue leather bag
containing money and keys and card
with name Mr*. Wm., Pauli Howell.
Liberal reward if returned tQ_ recod
OiSev. St. Augustine.,
- J07-3tp

PEOPLES BAN K OF
===== SANFORD =

•. ‘T o r Sale—House and
.’.Tcgnojlri avenue." Good
Pr—O. Bos 329____

Wonderful P h o to - Play Featuring

ONE MORE REEL ALSO

Some ^P* the wi’ide't 4V illi ever
12 Mae’&lt;
' •
■ shown on the screen
^Sen net t’s- five-part si
i i p ;' ■ ’‘Yankee Doodle is Berlin” whirl
BjpS
W. coming to the P r ia m * tomorrow
By sp-ria! p^rmi sibii and co-opera-

'
Last of t v F.ree Eats.
Xlj neighbor sent In mniu pudding
for i»nr dinner. Neither of u» fancied
It. •&lt;&gt; rtf nmr«*- It frtH*jnid for the
garbage can. Jn it as 1 was emptying
It Into the garbage enn ah* came uj«on
tin* *;vne pn-Mhly lb a«k how «*
liked It. as It crus a new dish. Too
can Imagine ray embarrassment. and 1
might say that was (tie end of hand*
outs front her.—Chicago Tribune.

CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
Lost—Bunch
Findertilu t a to : Herald .OfiSce.___ lOi-.i

For Sale—One lot. GbOitlocatinn.
W anted’—^ 'o r 4 rooiha fo r house­
197 - 6''tp
keeping U n fa rn 'ia e i preferably but A pply 406 M yrtle-A ve
wfll consider ( j r 2ished.M rs.vIL A.
For R ent—N ice'y furnished front
Terheun
K rraiene' Oil Engine. Chase &amp; Co.
room. d fe f Ten cent Store. lOjLJtc
105-tf.
Sd’p.—P p 't C a rd C o ilr^ p n ,
lie—Ileu ses of four to five
,. For Sale—Fre*b Milk Cow. See
ride* also'' refrigeratbr and
Easy, term s. J. Musson
E. i . ' Taylor, 407 Magnolia avenue.
rfd ends in fu rn itu re. 206
•:—'-------- ------------- *“------- :

-lO d-tf .

jn tth fe i angle of th e Kaiser’s chab
acter. *
Several instance* t a v e been record­
e d —now -that th e gossip of the palare has been released to th e world—
where the, Crown Prince and the
K aiser were -rrewbi. for -fa ir, ladies
just u s l ^ a s to -th is com edy.-----In Mr. Sen n e tt’s photoplay: the
“girl” .for w hom .they were eontendan American aviator in
disguise

INSURE LUCK

hlam tP a* a girl hr order f t, vamp
amorous

Happenings That Foretell Coming Good
Fortune Are Worth Keeping
v
In the Memory.

. Rdihwgll Browne, the well kpbws
female im peresnatorr .Marie CreAost,
Ford S terling.' Mo! S t. Clair, Be*&gt;
T u rp in and other^w ^l know n come­
dian* are featured.
‘
* Special fo r the matinee only, the
bathing beauties will sfisplay coi^
tames froca-Tbs; French S h op.

We must aU have noticed bow many
unlucky omens there are: and how few
sighs that fe m ril good fortune. It
has been well^explitoed TfcarVe need
to be prepared for bod lock, but that
good fortune- does not require to be
gtlarded against. .. •
All tbe wme. It wouhl cyTtalhly add
to i t f cheerfulness of life In general If

CECU B DeMlL* V S NEW
, PRODL-CTION IS . STRIKING
THEM E

saj* Londoq Answers. How -murk
brighter things look lo.Aa If we b a re

Matinee

0g iM
1 ;
,* 11

lucky ream* were more Widely known/

1

11
: -j

.

.

” Story s f

r / C e c i l y B.

D e U D e's

on

Lavish

U to t

Para-

yareat 'A r ttr a f t' pr; durtiou. '^v Why
Chasgo Y our Wife?” wul come | j
th* Priseess T heatre to-morrow* It
it tecib td ax a itdlbg dpm i of

THE LAUGHABLE SCREEN COMEDY OF THE YEAR
FEATURING
«

*

**

BOTH WELL BROWNE, FORD STERLING, MARIE PREVOST, BEN TURPIN AND AN ALLSTAR CAST—.ALSO WHY BATHING BEACHES ARE POPULAR

TWOSHOWS INAFTERNOON
VILHJ?L¥L*R STEF *v SS0.*f

TWOSHOWS ATNIGHT

.

EXTRA A D D E D M ATINEE ONLY

All of ih e^ atcst Ultra-Fashionable Domestic and Parisian Suits, Gowns, etc.,
and a complete display of the Daintiest. Film y Lingerie. This display
*

_. I . . _______ : .

A d m issio n : Adu^lts 50 C e n ts

• _ .e

-

*

*

C h ildren 2 5 C e n ts

�MARCH 3, 1920

SANFORD DAILY HERALD
ittriid Bitwise* itn
PUMXHHEILS

R. J. HOLLY, Editor
M. IIAYNES, Buslneaa M anager

aaurpR P
t h e Pqat—gets right up on its Kind
legs and s n o rts1 in four languages
until patience a n d ' the entire ton
commandments arc fractured, -a m i.
shattered. ;B ut lacking light *for
"three .w eeks"— shadnsko( Eleanor
Glyn!—Palm Beach Post.
WHO SH OU LD BU ILD ROADS?

because they hope tg profit by it; to
sit down hard on those who 'aUmlmulute discord and d istrust o(_ mate for
n u n and who.would incite prejudice
and class hatred .for the promotion
of their own British ends.— Lake­
land Telegram.
W ASTEFUL B IL L B O A R D S '

It is adm itted thnt this country
m u st be linked In every part by u
•*
■ «
"*
complete system of goad roads. Se­
ven out of every ten men; if asked
"where, “shall we get the money to
build , those reads?" woutd reply,
"let congress appropriate it.” At
leust one of tjie p th er three, would
say "I don’t know ." while the re‘inaining two would probably* say
"sta te mid federal government aid.
B o th 'th e plans suggested by the
nine out of ten mean additional
taxes on the people. While it is un­
doubtedly true t i n t the people as n
w hole. profit*'by fbe exuThsion of
good roads, still it is also evident
th at certain people profit m oresthan
others, and among these greater
profiting ones* we would say are to
be found the land-owners in the
improved, districts, and the m anu­
facturers of. autom obiles and au to ­
trucks nnd the owners of these
pleasure or profit cars.
,
..The Chicago D ally News, in com­
menting on thh action of the confer
cnees"of1 delegdtet from the Mississshjjpi' A a lk y slates in demanding a
hundred million dollar*appropriation
from con: :ocs for roads work d u r­
ing. 1 ho next four yent’s, snys't

.

The artist, Joseph Pennell, has
attacked the ugly billboard from a
new a n d 'V ery practical angle. He
------uauciueVioNiraicE in advance
says: " T h e 'lu m b e r expended in un­
roR
1*0It hn*MONTHS, ---------------------—■■-■-■■■" ------- ♦!
necessary and unsightly ‘ billboards
nfeuvKKKiyN cirr nr cjuirirb
In this country woujd rebuild nearly
ONE WEEKeverything destroyed abroad. The
paint wasted here would cover all
- ,„ ,d aa aotand claoa natter October *7,
1, 1, iltha foUoXSco at Hanford. Florida nndar
the new buildings, and the labor
tl,VIrM «rhTlUl
tvould. be of incalcuable benefit in
what we hear i' b the great essential
w otnunjor tub associated ruEss
of-'jjroduclng morx."
Mr. Pennell’s statem ent seems exWinter is lingering In th e Inn of
aggreated, yet it suggests the simple
dng. the son of a gun.
tru th thnt in this d ay when there is
such a grave need of lumber cpnservutinn and of tlrrift in its proper
The frost was not on th e. pumpuse, a vast niiTount of good wood Is
n this morning-but, It was on the
put - into unproductive billboards.
And vast quantities of (mint m ight
be used in freshening up and cheering
ji The' people are coming to Sanford
a
faded work], arc used simply to
]W train, boats and autom obiles and
rnake-tho
nation’s highway nnd spots
Wc should do everything In our
of
scenic
beauty • places of ugliness.
nower to make their stay pleasant.
The campaign gainst billboard
advertising has beep making steady
progress and achieving success in
m any communities. .So far i t _lias.
been wiiged chiefly on aesthetic
grounds. .If now the extravagance
and wastefulness of the huge, glar­
ing bill board is added to the char­
ges against it. surely a n ew im lelu s
Not. .enough gas at the* school
will be given .1 o tls eventual disapi ■■■~~ A——-----Jfnps lif heat lhe rooms yc.-der* Tecogt|i;Tii l.y. all that congfe.'s jionrnUce from the public gate. ,
th r schools weru biased fop
cannot 1 ; oil nPi.rapnaU ng t**r—Die
day which wu's thu ii^ h t move
To a Flve-Dollnr Bill a *
making of such improvement* as good
the sehiifl-.boards Tinner prernatla va**t4 cUrps wrung from tax­ Crinkle, crinkle, little bill:
tfindjtin'ns there is. no chance
payer* utitjci* bnr.ileiooine laws.
Goodness gracious you look i
icoTliy gas nnd other at/an g e,
Bond-building in the proper t:vx(c of Are you losing all your power?
will probably be m ade for
local' Or i Pile iujtl oriliei. Ft ate *nt|~ You seem weaker lumr by hour.
i es j tm i
an
toil o b i l e !.••* e
a i prtipt_i:i!c ir*'iui
in. r:.v fur good llXmw-Uiat—pti&gt;io*-af««-nt»-bigbr
iV-.iT- wp- nre wtionf.iriT'Thcm up ■
tuf the coonlry. I'm so lircil th at 1 rould-die,
• fismer for lime ball th e oitiI lust* c irc u la te at! d a y :.
' n.lil net overlook the f a d m outh: 11-• r* t-mu* trotu t his Hittircc N’o one dares put me away.
it ** 'tford'needs a ' golf links and ts‘ 'fu&gt;w -xupr* ircglv large. If wi.-ely
ii.inury club for the tourists who .tired it ; i,* t Id | btee each s ih te in
"W hen the e v e n in g board is ’ set
i n f ting to come b**rt* next prt-iti'Mi if&lt; ■ inf * r r e r n,oj m a d
With the, fruits of ^fnthrrV s s r n t,
T ‘ i is something th a t is b tu in e v . c '.ten .v o iy .n m l s tric tly on,
My small voice is hushed and still —
]y needed nnd some of the energy iLs ow n‘ a v e o u n t."
I
a m 'ln 'th e butcher's till.______. ~~
b ^ r L a l l fu r our.
am nave already provitiCert*; in
b e . s pe nf i P d
pwn
caMire h
cd tin Til TVrrr «l*_h ronthroriiis wboHy- "A nd no maiy-oe-whero 1 go,
cid t he golf links for the visitor’s
at their own expense. Florida bad I’eoifTJT disregard mo so;
spent probably more for good rouda 1 don’t seem to count for much
than :u.v other -tail* of its popula­ ‘Mongst the profiteers find such."
While we arc ronding the reports tion tiefore it re ijiie il nr I*VIU|
ulitmt tin damage to cmj»s in Florida tbought of g e t t i n g u cent (ruin t h e
Itili. take heart, ymir luck may chnngt
by tiic re e n t frost it would be well federal .tyiverm nenl- llluiuLi 1* ainuL’lL wdguUU'.a.Utrrrs am strange,
dfi rememfier' tTiiil Ibese reporr-r arc I ’J tely about to i lunch a plan whereby
Though you’re weak, 1 love -you
gun'rally more lurid than the «c- it will finance its own godd rouds.
still —
rat in r, raSU for and while the reports Counties and road dirtrirts ami
Crhtkle. crinkle, little billm«;. be thought authentic they are stales are realising tiist it is- the
- Chicuo Tribune
ijsyaliy highly colored. U . takes a best thing they can do when they
hard cold spell to do much dam age atinminro th e completion of a good
&gt; .Wauchula Development
an" Florida and in looking around road. The work tmiet lie kept going
Wauchula, Fla. M ar. 1,—T
jmlr owm fmmoiliate section and until the country is connected with
eeing the slight loss it lx haril to roads thnt perm it of the best averwlieve that the loss farther south age speed and the highest tonnage (
*a- ariytl.inv to t_ '&lt; about.
capacity for hauling. And, in the
meantime il is w, ^j that, we begin
M I S T H A Y K Sfvtl Y I t ' S
to look abo'il how wo nr** going to
D* cn to it by inefficient service*— finance this program witpui* lumpily
Iwruii- which has been no service a- burdening the people. For be it re-*
li\H, accm iing.to the Herld of that membered, every tim e we get a d«»lcity, the people of Sanford are now lar from th e , federal government ’ in
about to commence th e eon: Unction appropriations w ef have, first dteen
and equipment of in municipal elec­ made to hand over a live dollar bOt'
The Chi m en Daily' News thinks
tric plant. For several weeks the
br&lt;*-i nt‘ plant which j** described by a tait on automobile** wituld *lo the
t fie Herald ns a jumble of junk, has
refused t&gt; r irry nlit tin* scriptural
c .iie u t of " Let there, be light" —
iiint It,, fol'.s there ar»* 'iniglitily
ieeti-1 ovnr the whole works. If the
litlm IlstM Made Known on Apolkalian

d a il y h e r a l d

PAGE 3

Wauchula Development; Comapny
is rapidly entering an a c ti w develop*
ing and selling land campaign. H. B.
Rainey,* general m anage^jand chief
booster, has adapted a different plan
of id lin g from tfsat of an old com­
pany.' He will cleijr and Improve the
land and sell to buyers who have
sufficient .capital to make a success
of trucking and fruit ^'rowing. With
th is . in view ho hah purchased a
tractor; a palm etto plow and a sod
plow and will soon buy a battery of
disc harrows.
Recently a was mill was, put to
twork and its entire ou tp u t will be
used for building bungalows, garages,
stables, thicken houses, etc., on ten
and tw enty acre tracts of land. The
houses will not be mere shacks, but
pretty bungalows, everyotyj'jof them
being built according to plans of
competent architects, Mr. Itniney
expects the erection of these houses
to commence within ten days.

T he humble beginn^ing of Savings A ccount ’ has
started more entcrpri3os( moro business, more for-*
tunes than anything else in th is world!,
•

I t m ay seem like "toddling" to open an account'
w ith a deposit of o n e . dollar—-but it’s . a s ta r t.
Furtherm ore, It’s an im p ortant-step.
"W alking" is th o n easy nnd y o u ’ll soon find y o u r­
self In the "ru n n in g ” .
. • •
J •*

Heard In a Cafe.
. Impatient Diner — "Walter, on#
would think that ‘salad wns a woman,
from the time Its dressing takes.*’—
Boston Transcript.

COLONEL Dl BERNEZZO

Sanford, Florida
Imitation Of'PrctljJU* Stonef..

The opal; In more dlllb lift (•&gt; ubltnio
thkti'ta the diamond. -But' from nrtlfl*
cinl eo^imdum/ ilAlmnl oyllh chrome
nlunt, reltl t'Uhljv** can be "made, and
very clu-aplr. If tbe coloring agent Is
tltunbpn oxlih*. tin* product* becomes
n genuine nrlllb'lal' sapphire._________
Lincoln's

L. i t l e

Joke.

men

P o sitiv e ly H em ovcd
r. Berry's F rbcklc O intm ent
Your Drutiln or by Moil 65c
Semi tor Vto UiKiUd

DiX-TTRIToT;

*-'

■Once In tils imi ituvs nl|ilt&gt; l.loculi)
salt In (.'Idcm go i r i m ^ a suit, bis wife

mid t h e rfuif taken niT tbclr bouse to
Quike tin* liniis,. hlctnT

ini t . i n . o t n ’s

THEO. J. MILLER&amp;SON

r t l u u i Im ^juauilf.sJm l riv a l , s m tirlae.

mil asked a passerby. .“Stranger, can
fmi toll in)1 n iiyrc Lincoln, lives?" Hex
relv mu ' Mie' iiosir.'it ttiforimiHidi. Iiu
ito n liiwieli . i Hvi c.1 (tie il.iluli lle.

VAirt Poi at

. ’ slruct.cn.

The iiiiti 'e i.l 1ii'ij tid mu nl West
I’nint 1- bi’%el&gt; iiiiiilietmiMi lit a ltd pro
f e-**i* &gt;n." I

Col. Vittorio Asinarl di Bernerio
has arrived at. Washington to b# the
military attach# of the Italian em­
bassy. He had a distinguished ca­
reer In the war.

I '&gt;&lt;■

Furniture and.- Complete
House Furnishings

[it 11, el J&gt;ut

m iltjerts

(itoghi it r i’ iii.il liemnllhs. Kogllsli,
f*ri*iTr|i. "Tfriw Hig. &lt;!i 1)1 regllbittoiifsof
alt iirne* nf llie i-ervlee. natural nmf
expcrliiieit'al pbPiimjttiy, clicmlst ry,
rlo'iiilenl | iIiin Ics, mlnernlogy. geology,
electricity^ history. Intcnintlunol, con­
stitutional nnd military Inw, Spanish,
rlvtl ami military engineering, net nnd
science of war nnd ordnance and gun*

T

'

Stoves and Ranges

Our Stock is Complete
Prices and Terms
Reasonable
34 years, service to San

t

Three Big Lines—American Lady, Gossards and
Nemo for Stout Figures
Qur Corset Department was never more complete
for every figure. American Lady Corset

15 New Models in Gossard’s Corsets, white pink and flesh
You can select any style at any price from our stock of Gossards
white and flesh, price1f
~
’

EVERYTHING
YOU WANT FOR

GOOD
MEAL
YOfl MAY FIND •

Tam pa

Tribune,

TOO MUCH TALK
If everybody would just deride to
settle down to pU**n*H(ig to his own
buxine , »'irl let other people's alone,
eut out lids ct*rU: tin:! propaganda
and promi fuoua meddling, and work
eight hours a day —If everybody
would fnjlbw out “.;ch u program for
n few inontS -. the old world would
right it.-elf with a -tnnlshlng: celerity.
But no—we must rave about the up­
lift of i eopV who c.in’t and won't bo
uplifted: we m ust work ourselves in­
to o.frenzy about drives for then thing
and th a t thing; we must spend
enquyb t rpr ?'*T° build a city in eolfecljng lnformat?uii th a t is w orthies
when pfS^urei: w e'ibust impose our
ideas ami preferences upon ,our

A model

TREO GIRDLES,” the ^11 elastic Corsets, white and pink

MEMO CORSETS, self reducing, the Corsets .for stout figures

/

No. 327 is a Model for Medium Stouts. Comes in white and pink.
We have evety good liite of Brossiers, Gossards, H. &amp; W.I)evoise
imd Nemo, with all the new styles front and back fastening Ask to see these new styles in Corsets and Brossiers

Price
vj

ODC 1

Fresh Dates

Figs and Nuts

.*
f

Phone 106
fo r

QUICK SERVICE

on the 17th of March

\

■

n A # TP i
171
¥ fl t■Jl lW
A j -tn I
i 1ur f f ^ .k

�•

Little Happenings
Mention of
Matters tp Brief
&gt; Personal Items •

In and.'About
The City &lt;£

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schwartz. En­
sign Schwartz served his country all
during the war on the transports
and is now on th£ battleship'ConnCctIcut acting a&gt;i personel officer. Hu
has made a fine record in the navy
and his friends here are proud of him.
• Electrical Fixtures, House WjreIng, in fact all kinds of ’elecirlcal
work. Phono 442. W. H. Treadwell,
Electrician.
83-H.
M r. and Mrs. 4t. A. Newman and
daughter Olive have returned from a
visit with Dr. and Mrs. Samuel
Puleston at Miami. They brought
M ary Elizabeth and Catnilin PuJeaton back with them and Dr. and
M rs. Puleston H-xpert -to* Fome to
Sanford in about two weeks to again
become residents of Sanford.
F loor coverings. Gold Seal Guaren*
toed Congoleum A rt Squares. Hpil
runners and __yard goods. Boston
Bargain House, A. . Kannor Prop.
218-216 Sanford Avc.
68-tf
*
**
^
C har. A- Brabham , who holds a
poiltTon In the office of The Sanford
Herald, spent a few hours here Suturday afternoon, being cn route fu
Hradentown, where be formerly lived
and wkqte be spent the week-end
with ids wife, who was visiting there.
Plant City Courier
For Klim Powdered Milk. Phone. 2412
W. W . Drcssor.
108-Ctp
Mrc, W llmott will he at The
French Shop T h u rsd ay March 4th
and will bo *;lad to meet lie f (Hind*
and customers

.

ii
[PL *...*"

m a rch

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

PAGE i
Saramsry of the
Floating Small
Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
j
Herald Readers

V
several days and gir. to Jacksonville
on th e St. Johns river trip. T h jre
th ey .w ill remain a week taking in
S t, Augustine und other p o in ts of
interest and go home vlH*Southorn
Fines and W ashington and o.t^ect
to arrive home about the 19th of
M arch. Mr. C arter i t i g i d yesterda
{hat they
pleased with .Sanford,
and especially their accomodations
ut the Valdez Hutt‘1. and tliut his
ltour next season will call for at
•east a week at’ Sanford. While hgre
the p a rty took in the cqjory fields
a n d held a picnic on Iho riser and
saw m any of the sights of this region
They are anxious next year to take
a trip on the topper St. Johns river
the finest trip In Floridn and they
will receive a warm welcome when
they conic again. Tift! p a rty personal
includes the following:
J. T. Wooster and wife, Middlevillo. N Y .j W. H. Wright and wife,
Ilingham pton, N. V.; F. I.. Waldorf
and wlfeTTiyde, N. Y.; C. G. Roy
and wife, Clyde, N. Y.; Jam es Clary
nnd wife, Syracues, N. Y.; J. Jay
Glass and wife, Syracuse, N. Y.j
Ml"-.* FinreuPP THa-n, Syracuse; N, Y.;
M rs. Sullivan, Syntcnie, N. Y.; MU*
C. r;. fPPrfen, Syracuse
Hi It liens, Syracuse, N:
rtcr, Syracuse, N. Y
Corbin. Hingbampton,

in te rest’ In the developm ent of th e
town; Ho’ la * useful man and haa a
charm ing wife and fcrifcht little giW,
nbd the family httvc a host of friends
among our' people.
• ,
Mrs. Dood'jl health has not beengood for some tim e, and the move
la mostly for her benefit, ami then
they have, people and peihonal in­
terests in Florida’, which made it
to their interest to loCato in thrfl
state. *.
.
•
T hey have sold their beautiful
new homo in East End to Dr. It.'
A. Douginas, who will move to,
the place ns soon as the doctor and
family move out.— Huntingdon, Tenn
Tenn. Democrat. ‘
D r.-a n d Mrs. -Doodds have lo­
cated in this, city having purchased
the Walsman ^ home on Mugnbila
avenue. Dr. *Dbdds has *rented an
office in the. Firsts N ational Hank
building and entered upon, the

a,

have your doubts about who should fit you out in that spring out*-fit, ji}st ask
any one that trades with us. Nothing but the best will ^be foun$J,/at our place
and that is because we have found that the best is the cheapest in the long run.
And the new lot of spring goods arriving at our place daily ip of the kind that will
make you want to become full fledged.customers of
A
s

meeting Thursday evening March
4th at 7:30. Inifation of candidates,

REBUKED FROM THE PULPIT
pastoral Admonition, Gently Conveyed,
Should Have’Been Enough for
Even Choir Boys.
The pastor of n small phiifih In a
New Jersey town w as known far and
wide about the countryside for hts
fptntnt-wnys.nnd r*T*-ntrte hnldti*.--He
bad n small.ijlolr which lie augmented
on special.’•o'en«lfins with boys from
the iffiTgfilmrliood. These recruit^ were
sometime* unruly nod lie dltkjjot al­
ways find It easy lo hfild them within
the proper bounds,
In the course of a Christinas morn­
ing seriiion'sevcnil elinlr boys begun to
ear ’ peanuts surreptitiously timl the
—of—the . tdiolls—w(»h—p!«,Utlvnudlble to the cnngfegittlon. At Jlrst
(tie rector (tilId ru&gt; attention to lliein,
bur finally they gut on his nerve*.
Pausing after an linpnsidonnte out­
burst of oratory, bo fixed Ills gaze
sternly tipnti them and ttius nddres-wul
them In reproving tones:
“Hoys—yon choir-boys, I mciinyvTlf
you must eat peanuts In church-.j ill, please, do not cnmcii the tdit-ll*,'tlien turning again to the congregation,
he tesutued Ills discourse.
:

The Store That Is Different

the

or a
Thursda c March lilr
at *1be m atinee will tu- on display
afterward* at The Fn-tudi Shop
109-Otc,
L. . A. Crawford of Hrad(*ntuwit,
repre*enting The Produce Reporter
Co,* of Chicago w ar in I hi- i- ’\ l-i-tav
*!
w
- " - i v:. !,i IMrs. C. Ai Brabham who has l{pen oneT with h k sso n u und ripe fruit
visiting her parents Mr. and Mm . were open to the party. Mr. Brown
W r^C. •‘ftijrek at Pstmerr
p a st week re tu rn e d hom e to -d ay . j &gt;'im~^nvT|lLr.,trt^.q.v*- tjirn a 1 arty
H. C. l)tillo»e ho* rM.jri.i-d from ; voto^uT^uiimiry and rr»*o| v»d that
Arcadia, Wiiui-iuda a r -1 Ft
: timrj their m*\( vidt In pl'irblfl'mdre
Maine Liquor Laws.
where be und Mr. Js 1*. \
1 jtirru' will bt- s e n t ni Sanford nod
have been_ prr«v-iif •ng lie- P *-d)yVa'.fe*' r.-f r-i- MM , TSf-i!
"Malm* law"-wiis tin* name given. In
ft I'll i: D A M lil.S AMI CI.OltIA
Jx^jait Progressive Program to the , ma&gt; .(■
v. i! h I,, j-i-ni il a te l nil tin* state of Maim- to nil nri “t« pro­
SW ANSON IN H U lt-P l U-INt*
Presbyterians.
Mr Mar.fiudiiiiii with Mr* P'df-r hibit drinking houses -and tippling
IIKK .
*lio|w."
It
was
passed
tu.
May,
18
11
;
_lu look a ftt-r I !)•• interest t of the
received
the
slgnattipp
of
ilu*
governor
iiulica have done so tntich to make
Best lira nl ’For Sale
oil-June 2 and was Meal enforced at Pretty Si reed Plaices HaMle In
their *tay hert* nil eniuyuhle one. Bangor on July t -of the mime year
On nr, mint rd :!!ne-* in family
l u l l 111 lie Mdie's ' Latest* Pro-,
Tilts law wns re enacted, III alt Its
dllition At The iVinepss Toiln*.
necessitating
removal to Georgia
Varts, In 1858, and was ninilrv more
the Park Avenue Cafe and all fur­
I ntroducin- (Jleii-t Fwan»**n nnd
stringent In 180* ami again hi 187(1, it
niture and cquipeninl h oHerod for
was so amended m 1872 ns to tiring Belie Duuiels, ciAch*as-cJ\Js )i-can
sale. Goid business In good location,
elder.nnd win© from griijh** grown III battlers extraordin irv!
p’nr particulars see Miss Carrie
the slate within the prohibition. In
Mrs.
R.
A.
TcrliL'iin,
Editor
I i r the hf'nelit i f a .b a tte ry «ff
Gray, Park Avenue Cafe,
1881 an amendment wan added to the cameras, 1 1 e;e lu ,i l i le ! iw- ii' i'h
Rhone
’constitution prohibiting forever tlie of Cecil II Di*V ’ll-" aTr ’ .ir Tboilon
sale of inioxlciitjng liquor* wltlifn the pi&lt; 1 1 »e in ii. nun, 'i -fly •-1 n;i"l a
limits of the slule. Strict- 18,11 the ev
It;, i tie l ba t in i * i ti- s ; ui - - . i *-n
Ifr il'im phrey (iw m ri and mother ITension- “Slnliie law" has been used
!!•' irv a- one ef Ilu- v dtii- * and
Prom inent New b irk S lule People Mr.. Clifton tiwyno of Orlando are colhspilally to denote an&gt; state enaei- ino-t destructive hand-to-hand con­
pient
(iroliltdtIqg
the
sale
of
intoxicat­
‘ Touring Hurl da Stats Here For the guests to-day of ,Mr. and Mrs. ing drinks.—Boston (llobik
flicts. evi r filmed.
Geo. .Fox. -v.
Several Davs
•
The figlit was promoted by Cecil
After an extended visit with her
A. p arty of prom inent Hork State
II. DeMille in the interest ,gf lift
iet*p\c under ilu* ehrrjieroiince if* A." si°ter, Mrs. ' C. E. StnlTdrd, Miv's Maine’s Indian Named Rivers
Inte-t ‘Paramuirnt Arlcraft pr.vlurK. C arter of t 1e C arter Florida- four Ellen Proctor lias returned .to her
Arc Numerous— Hard to Spell lion. *“ \\ l j Clluiiiie Ypiir V ’.V? ’
f
ate in tie*, city the p u n ts ef t ’ e 'home in Greenville, N C.
which i* roll ing to the Priori lo-d«y
Tin* nom eiichiture o f M.-finc jiroli
(iiieitc of M-&lt; Cecil
Gabfiett
Vnlde? Hotel T;iey left Syracuse
Mr I'eM 'B e jictr-l os referee, time
hew Ari:1. in t ■c- 1P11 id .January are Mr I I Irv in .Ir. and Mira ably ntddoes that o f any o ther stall/ I eeper uti-l iot idi nt.-.lly, director.
and lift C \iiite d on til- i-.-.^t c-i&gt;m ' Mary Irven of Wa*hington. Ga., In furnishing m em ory tests* In sjiollCf reiirm- tic l l f . 'e wu* r \ , r a
as far. south ns Key “W o t ’ll ey; n!*u and. ('ap t t'eeil M, Gabhett of New trig. Among its Indian linintul riv ers limn 'I he ef-ei *• t -n wn* Tb'iieV’*
*iie th e IVtmhsciit. Ketincln-c, Andrus
\ii-ited *t1(* wic i ri-nrt li'it- e in:
uoggil], Allngnsli and Soeo. and am ong Mli-,.1 -i*l nnil l.e * m a bin, I tin o ‘y
T n tjjn lin'd St I i-ter. hurv n n-I ill-,i tj
Mr I&gt;i vi&gt;i Mi-Nabji of Doir'ias, the lokes and points MiMisolucuicguil per - n n! ! i - 1uiji , wi ii ,'id in * vilresorts in 1 can e here vfa I. tU*l cn.r | Ga., ; vi-uing hi.* daughter, Mrs. lie, Syslndmlolfsis. N eluigo,‘ s&lt; hooilic, iiis* one er int-ri rmunls if the* - ^-i -innd Orlando. They will remain hen- C. D. piirrcuter.
t ’lipsuptlc. Cm nftiim inoc,
PumgisMb ning-. Hi: rnfr#jemured him to .-ium_ ... •
Scott D u a n e ;' Plant superinten- knmock. 11n«kehegfi n. Conlntsseefieii- lifr, |n arefully fkrough tin* .efies of
Mole- scenes.
N,
dant td i lie. Western Dnfon with- ln - ,- . fhlftiqunsstlinm tueonk:
clitm knnuink. Penttvssev\ 11see, M aninhearlqn'irteri at lackxinvllle, was
-, “ Wfiy. CJiaf&amp;p \ \ r
•:
V hteh
'mswk, Aninrlsengglii. Chesitucook an d
in J iiwii T tic*dey.
W’nleketmhamnU.
i has i t i n t'inied oit-i ii:'&gt;lSaspeMiIb&gt;
iirt i try am! *;•-• fi n • -y vvYs,v.rir.Mr. ;tn«l Mr*. C .U". Forrester of
ten bj U illiam l i e '' t;c&gt; artii t erenaD ecatur, Ga.. are, visiting their,
riz e il'.h j’ Sa.f.t Cowan anti Olga
suit. Mr. C. D.. Forrester. *
Printzlmi.
SAYINGS
OF*WISE
M
EN
Mr*. I„ P. MeCuller has returned
EVERYTHIN
G
IN
AIi-o one more r* !.from n brit-f vi i» to Jackvonvllln.
»
. * **
Jl
Felicity eats up cl minis pec­
Mr*. D. D. Caldwell and G-dor, ’s I loti.
.
REV. J. M’GUIRE
M rs.’ T . II. Sandt-rs left on the jj
A good fellow IlgbiH Ills cansteam er for Jacksonville yesterday,
die at both ends.
Full &gt;ve**.‘l* give tin* least
the la ttfr »-n route .to ,T-cr home in S
.sound.—Ueniiun imiverli.
Tarboro; N. C. Mrs. Caldwell will
Wlmtever Is fortlhed will in*
return Sunday.
*t nttucked, nrnl whatever' I* al­
Mr. and~MrS. M. II. Itmvjor 1(;i \*i&gt; ls tacked vttll he ’deatniyed.—Ulhmoved into their, home on Magnolia Ji Imn.
avenue, recently purchased.
;t
-When a mint -finds 20 'gAod
Mr. nnd.M m . L. Y. Bryan having ■&gt; u-asops fur Maying nvvny from
slald their home on Sanford Heights t home yop imu be sure he tin*
w—
moved into their recently purchased ( t T&amp;a*' ot e fa'll uii#..
home on ‘Palm etto avenue.

STUNNING

&gt;n TH E BATHI NG B E / \ U '

Yankee Doodle in Berlin

At Ae PRINCESS Tomorrow Afternoon Only

p . SEND US THAT ORDER
WIIKN r o ll NEKI) ANm i INC IN

¥

Oflicc Furniture and Supplies
Commercial and Fancy Stationery
Printing, Lithographing, Engraving
Books—All Kinds
Artists’ Material
Athletic Goods
Kodaks

The II. &amp; W. B. Drew Company
45,49 West Hay Street
JACKSONVILLE
WE WILL’TAKE PLEASURE IN ANSWERING YOUR IN(JPIKIES

CHULUOTA INN
CIIULUOTA, FLORIDA
OpcnlDcccmbfr.Tth for the Season.
MRS. CHAS. I). BRUM LEY, M«r.

&gt;1

Every Cloud H as a Silver
Lining .

Grocerres

NICE FAT
MACKEREL

-

W e w ill line y o u r darkest
clpuds. w ith SILV ER , if y o u
m aintain a ch eck a ccou n t w ith
this bank.
A little talk w ith us m ay
mean DOLLARS
su n n y
sk ies to YOU in d ays to co m e.

DR. B. C. DODDS/ WILL ,MOVK
. TO FLORIDA
Hunligdon 15 to Lone One of 'H*
Beal I'hj sit Inns and Most
Excellent Families^
,
The friends of Dr. B. O. Dmidj
and family regret exceedingly th at
they have derided to leave Hunt­
ingdon. They will go between the
10th nnd 16th, of th ij month to
Florida where they will reside in
the future.
.? * t
Dr. Dodds entered the practice
of medicine Jscre about nine years
ago arid has a fine pMctice, and has
made a host of friends among our
people,..H e Is n progressive, enter­
prising citizen, and takes an- active

•

^J|

B efore m aking in v 9 stm ents
con su lt .the officers o f this

HOME

IN S T IT U T IO N

Rev.
McGuire, secretary of th
party cf sntl-S!nn Fc|n ministers who
, came from, England to oppose the
3inn Fein doctrine preached by* Du

Y01IU EYE
•

ON THE
j

HERALD WANT CO

�v*

■«. V-

*
t

*

-

MARCH 3- 1920
OAMAGE
.#

to

" 'V L~_= rr

"

BIG INCREASE IN
PAPERKONEY

FIGURES ARE ILLUMINATING

B. C. DODDS, M.D.

That NewFactory Rnish

SUGGESTIONS
- BEANS
LIMA BEANS
BEETS
EGG P L A N T
SQUASH
TOMATOES
CUCUMBERS
SWEET CORN
PEPPERS

CH ASE&amp; CO .
LEST YOU FORGET
. F, L/MILLER, Offner^
.

Monmnenls,, Copings;
In Marble*ror Granite.
V*;:

«

SELL ARMY SUPPLIES
5760,000.000 Is Realized on U.
S. Stuff to France.

LOOK CUT FOti
IS POISON IN FOOD

Value of Entire Property Is Estimated Federal Food Offibials^Varn Con
at $1,700,000,000 by Qeneral
sumers to Watch Tor Signs
Connor.
1.
of Spoilage.

'----—*

It Has .Happened to Others
And May Happen to You
In Spite of Everything You M ay Happen to Do

Be Prepared

W hen
It Does Happen

. * .-Antwerp*—The sum of $760,000,000
'w as realized from tho sale of Ameri­
.
with nmilti
can stocks remaining In France after
the departure of the American army, ■*
__ , * _
•.
said Brig. Gen. W. D. Connor, chief
.
*
%
*
of staff of the American department Bot.ullnua Poison Responsible fo r Fa\ i'1
--2 *4*
or supply. lie estimated the value * tallttce—No Method of Preserving
So that you may net be the *.;
of the stocks nt $1,700,000,000. and de­
Food Found That Eliminates
• loser, financially
clared It would hove cost- $75,060.000
', Occasional Spoiled Package.
to take them hack to America.
AS E E US FOR
Had they been, retailed In various
Washington.—Bolullnus poisoning,
countries great losses would have been which recently killed six In one fam­
FIR E IN S U R A N C E
eutnlled. ns the expenso would have ily In "New York; Is caused by eat­
* ;
been' heavy, he said.
• 1 .
ing" rfpolled food Infecteil with tho bn*
“France
paid
$400,000,000 for cl'lus botullnus, shy the officials 'o f
storks It took ov£r, while other allies -The bureau uf chemist^-. United Htales
and smaller nations purchased sup* department of- agriculture, who have
■pWes for $300^00,000. As an offset InyesttgHtdd this nt)d other poisoning
against tho stocks bought by France t-it'scs In connection with the enforce­
that country undertook to pny dntnnge ment of the. food and drugs net. In
claims amounting to several million the New York case death wns cmisnl
doUars ns-w-rrsult-of Atileries it, ojwra- ny holffirntiupolsott In Hpv olives.
tlori-Y In training judhs. \Vhen the The olives remulnlng In thcflm ttle In
Amerlcnn aruiy wcnTto France It wns this enst&gt;*hnd itii offensive odor. The
agreed ttm t’farnis nnd buildings used same condition was found In tin* food.
by It In training would Jbe left In Die In other cases Investigated by the de­
samo condition ns found. Miles of partment, All spoiled food does hot
trenches were dug mid buildings were conlnln Ilds poison, but liny spoiled
demolished nnd Am erican'forces' were food, even though the spoilage Do
Tap'a C loth;'
I ; r“
•What Bscorncs of.Old Cara?
rushed Into Germany before the Imid slight, p in y centnbi It, and *for this
m
.
..... decorative mulerlnl known ns
could he restored to Its former condi­ reusmujuiy the odlelals, nfi fis»l shew­
It has
^
i« 1« reality.Wt clo th at
In „,0 .
tion.
* ,
ing even ihe ittgbtfist ininiitural odor, wlicn nn nn omoldle cglns to s .mv u „ „ ,M „ form ()f ^
J im
General Connor ngalft denied tfie imnnjiirnl color, swelling o f the conbid story that the French randc the
pay-for'ttTO“rrnnrffPJt of decomposition
fonu 1in
every ~
■composttlon whatever, should ho Um average farm er Jlkeiin new «t a. tim j, (,'cm |rR^Ln _Mrtnv fa
a - overy—
well ns Die city mnn; It Is evident Unit troplrnl country iii tint world, j in the
it occupied In France.
dlscnnlerl. - ’
the fate of used ears, nml tin* reason Jungles of B null,,K
4 “The whole truth,'* ho snltl, “Is Hint
Trace Poisonous Food.
tn tlio' Memdlng
J h o Afncrlcnn army has not pnld n
The departm ent’.uf agriculture hns for the comparatively strong price ■v.n tips &lt;-f Africa, nnt Ivys Filjl' ninko '
cent for any ground used or for any- liseil every posslhle effort nnd gone to ntnlrnntmMt on tlrrmrtnu»l he Miu'ght Ip titim. The- hnvlcnl. As ec nnd' Mityas*
■thing destroyed nt tho front. , .V • .. llie'llm lt o f It* legal nuthorUy to re­ other direction*..
,
..
. nml-Kgyiitlatut. the curl; Inhabitants *f,
General Connor Balled on tho liner move all dangerous fo,^ls from tho
Mnny vecnntl/tiniid cars,are bought (jhlnn and Japan, bad earneddhe u*o
Lapland, which .was tho first ocean market by seUure under tin* food ‘and by Hinnll tradesmen, who convert them *0f i„pn' p,
modern farm of pnper
passenger Steamer to clear from Ant- drugs net, say the otlletnls. Each tlnnt to rommercliil uses; hat by fa r the
convey literary Uim ght'im well ns
,wefp for Aroerlcn since August, 1014. ■when botullnus poisoning limvoceurriHl larger number returif la Bielr makers t nrtlR„ c efforl». An\l In M«xlco*njuJ tho
There.w ere 450 passengers, Including fowl. Inspectors have Imced through or to.tho viirloits branches, wlicro tlioy ciilno»o republic It tttll hojds It* early
1he--chaM iebt-of-foitim eree-the-bateh—ora-dlsscrlud-fuc-lhi; hlupy. pur La 1hU
t
. ^
, tjde-xmd-jea!
general nt Brussels, nml Mrs. Morgan, from which the polsoriOim food nt mo with n little cleuulngf qnu be
t ilecorutc^l imilcrlnl for *eraniodli I.cos-.
Just before Mr. Morgan left tho cap­ ilnd- have ttswl till tnensiiras under nguhit tiius freeing tho shops frotp Hie) tumes.—M. D. C. Cm font Ini Asia
ital ho' was received In special audi­ the law to remove It from .the market. necessity of turning out i|Uiintttles of £fjgnzinc.
ence by King Albert.
.Samples from nil other brands put parts for replacement stock.
out hy the packer have been examined.
ABItiVAL AND DBP|LRTURU OP
'Specially In.Winter.
WOMEN S E E K W EALTH IN OIL Since the law nntliorlKj** M-lztire |n
»
,
TRAINS
such cases only when the foods nro
"I see you have a grant many niui*
"
N
- ------~ I T - 1 vv *;
Take Thslr Chances With Men Specu­ actually found to be .decomposed or helium homes nbnut here,*' reniprkyd
do cmitnin poisonous Ingredients, glnco the visito r.--------- -- — ---------Southbound : .
lators In New Field Being Devel­
rm lw u n o rrn H im n i^ rk n rcin m illln iis
oped In Pennsylvania.
“So we. have." replied (tin •S o iith ern 4'TraRl- &gt;fo
Dcpr.rtsIs lpf&gt;*cted with bacillus hntullnus.
No. 83
planter.
"Mrtst
of
them
are
fnlllnp
McKeesport, Pn.—Woman finiincleni anil since It Is physIcaUy possible to Into ruins. 1 hough.** .
No. 27
S:40;a. m.
hnvo entered the nfttupd gna pew de­ open nnd examine but a comparatively
No.
91
."Bllt
I
thought
the
Routli
hnd
struck
I2:28p. m. 12:48 p.ro.
few
of
tin*
millions
of
cans
entering
veloped during the Inst few monthViu
Its slrhlo nml was now progressiver No. 89.
3:95 pi nt. 3:25 Sp/ m.
,Snnko hollow, almost within the city- Interstate commerce.. It Is beyond tho
•Thnt’s the very reason why tliosf No-. 85'
7:30 p.m v 1:4i&gt; p.m.
power
of
the
authorities
to
protect
limits, mid Jire drilling tlielr first well.
ntitelielluiii niansloni nrfi being desertthe
puhllq
completely.
;
For
this
rea­
Tho pioneers were M iss Isabella Mil*,
.M a i
M. ■They are long on looks
moe, assistant to tho city treasurer, son they emphasize the necessity for short on 'comfort.” “
No. 82
1:48 a.m.
2:fi8 a.ro.*
scrupulous
care
on
the
pnrt
of
perand Miss lrmn Atwnter, assistant to
No.
84
11:46
a.m,'
133)5
p.m
somf opening and serving foods to dis­
the city solicitor.
hP-"
tr
No. 80
2:35
p.nj.l
card
anything*
which
Is
spoiled.
In
Make l-fvln} From Flint Pebbles.
They lin'd heard so many stories of
No.
92
.
3:45
p
.m
j
3 % p.ro. .,
fortunes being mntlo Ju the now devel­ products not obviously spoiled, If there
The Hint pebble Industry-gi t-s em­
1,
No. 28
• lOiOO-p.m !
opment that they found- n bit of land Is doubt In the recognition ,pf the odor, ployment to mnny wmthsf nml children
proper
to
the
product,.thorough
cook*.
Leesburg Branch!
nrtt undoV lease, contracted fo r o der­
along Mu* French const between Havre
rick, and organised a company. Drill Ing will remove Ihe possibility of dnnV and Dieppe. The pebbles coBoetiul la &gt;Jr, 1SB
7:30 a.ro.
-Ing Is to he commenced ns soon os the ger from lioBilfstii. If spoilage Is ap­ &gt;pid near Havre are select yd fo r tlieli No. 22
\
*7:80
p.m.
’
1
*
I
i
m
I
H
B
parent, dost ruction-Is recommended by spherical shape, nnd are used for pul­ No.1 167
plant Is on the ground.
3.:10 p&gt;m
verizing in certain Industries, pnrtleu No." 21
Development In the Snake hollow Ihe specialists.
*11:66' a.m
Mystsry About -It.
^
hirly In-the mnnufnctureof cement am)
field Is going on, with every evidence
Trilby
Branch
Nobody knows Just IioW the bacil­ In copper mines, being employed In the
of tho old-time “wildcat’* oll'm id'gns
No. 100
boom. Town lots on the edge of the lus liotullnns gets Into any particu­ Interior of large cylinders.
No. *24
city which three mouths ngn were next lar food. It has been found In arti­
No. 101
to.worthless are selling for. as moch as cles put up In the home hy Ihe rare6:3 l p.m.
Cut Hesrt Out of Patlerit,
$10,000 each, and every time n new fjjl Tiopscwlfe "nnd In goods packed In
No.
25
2:01 p.m.
Gmnhn. Neh.—Physicians cut the
commercial* establishment*. ■ It may aenrt nut of Steve Z"klch. an Atiswell comes In tho price goes up.
Oviedo Branch
A numticy of Important wells hnvo he present In n few packages only of •risn. then placed II hscz In his body.
No.
126
u.4o a.m.
been brought In by companies whose any lot. There Is no method, (lie off! 7nklcli, who had shot- himself. Is exNo, 127
business- U l|a to search for nml find 11 ill - say,’ by whlrh the packers -or ■ected to .live.
1:49 p.ro.
T
rains
Noa.
163
and
16^,
natural gas. But spectacular and pic­ home runners can assure ‘Iheinselves
Leesburg
Thejln-nrl wns lifted completely oui
turesque speculation and financing are by casual examination before rnnnlng •tf the body, a bullet Imbedded In II Branch daily exedpt Sund ty]
thnt the product docs riTd contain the -emovoti. tin* heart replaced In Its
not lacking.
T rains Nos., lpff, 21, 10 and 26,
bacillus iKitullnn*.
nafiiral.,place and the Incision serted Trilby B ranch, dai'y c u n p l Sunday.
If the foml wns In 71JI cases proper­ -|n. Znkh'h Is now cntlng. solid foot!
^ a in
Trains Nos. 120 und ,1 r Oviedo
ly sterilized and perfectly sealed, the ■nrl l« oo flu* high, rand fo rccurery.
Branch,
daily except
day.
Occr Is Caught Fast in k, development id* the |&gt;ols&lt;m would he

fl(PEOLIVES KILL SEVERAL

Fire Insurance

..

Ice in Trinity River

: Chico.—B. N. To&lt;ld. a atockmnh near Paulsen ranch, reports
catching a forked-horn deer, th at
was held Icobonnd In the middle
of the Trinity river,
- Todd believes the deer wns
chnsed by coyotes mvl ran out on
theTco, hrenklng through when
near the middle of the stream.
The deer lAmlrt not get out and
was frozen id during the-night,
lenvlng.onty Its hend'and a pnrt
of Ita’nnck alwve tho Ice.
The dc(»r wns pulled out anil
taken to 0 stable, whore It Is re,'ovi-rln.T from the effects of the
cold. Todd" will give tho buck an
eanngrk and brand before turn­
ing It loose.
! • . _,

Impossible, hut no method of preserv­
ing fowl has yet been found, tlia
■qieclnllsls say. Mint eliminates the oc­
casional spoiled, package*. “Failure to
sterilize may nob become apparent for
weeks, or even mpitlhs after tfie 'can­
ning of the article. If signs of spoil­
age Ittive appeared when Ihe ran Is
opened. It .Ls clear warning that the
product Is no lontrer. edible.. There Is
no greater prnhahlllty. of hottillnus
poisoning In olives than In ninny other
•food products, either .commercial nr
domestic. Until Mils year It Ims been
more commonly found In string beaus,
asparagus, nnd the like. It wns original­
ly found In sausage. It has been found
In che***e: It U present sometimes
In*slock fond, such ns moldy liny and
other kinds of spoiled forage, hut It
has never been foundTn Hie depart­
ment Investigations In any kind of
food that wns not spoiled,

Jazz music not a -nuisance noted factory open? soon
Loa Angeles County Judge Refuses to Famous Chauny (France)
Mirror
(live -Relief to Disturbed
P lant Prepares to Operate
Nerve*
Again.

Los Angeles. Cat.—Jazz music Is
.Clinttny,-France.—The historic mir­
not a nuisance, according In n decision ror factory established hero by Jrnn
by Judge Lewis B. Works, In-the I^&gt;s, Baptiste Colhert, famous minister pf
Angeles county superior court. T.
Zulu Brides Chssply Clothed.
r XIV, which gave employment lie' pf0W York.—7-ulu women have solved city of -Pasadena hnd brought
fate w ar lo 2,000 employees.*wHl
their country's high cost of living prob­ agn'nst a social club, whose pelghl
me operations ftlthln n short time.
lem by wearing the same dress, nfi complained Its- Jozz tnusld "Jn
Inforuinilon was given tho cor' their nerves.”
through life!
*
dept of the Associated Press
“Once Jazz music, might hnve been
Tills is the statement In “True
hT vlsltfd Hie quaint old town tn
Kcnnomy" Issued by tho iliterchurch construed as a nuisance," JUdg.- Works the devastated regions of France,
Mild. "It Is ho longtt so consirutsl. where he Is observing • reconstruction"
World Movement of North America..
Hut this I* not all- ‘A Zulu, parent If the music disturbed the mddcntjTof w.trk under special arrangement of the
does not furnish his charming daugh­ the nelglihorhoml, I nm sorry, but tills French government. ^
ter a drewi until her wedding day, court cannot give them"relief.*- .*
- In trior? recent U m # a chemical fac ­
and then m Is .considered »julle ex­
tory was established at Chauny, nnd
Stray Cat Has $100 B reakfast
pensive for her trousseau.
Since
this also Is being rebuilt It will sup­
New York.—A stray .rat allpned lhto ply employhient .for nhout 1.000 perfashions in Zuldland remain constant,husbands do not bother about fur* ‘'t h e annual pijullyy show. In thd Madi­ tons.
t
^
nlshlhg their wives w ith1 anything son Square Garden and had a $100 . **Bo|h Qlant* were heaps of atones
breakfast on two carrier pigeons ex­
now I n ’wearing apparel.
and tangled masse* ,of debris when
But who w*aoU to be a Z U l j i l __ _ hibited by a Baltimore fancier,
hostilities ended. , *
,'v &lt;*
, '
Mr ■ li ’niVhvTwnfW*'wA3.
.
'.
■ •
. , - . Vf - -i .
"r m
'
•
■! *

•

'*

*g^j^=?rr±

V

u
■-,*1,V.*
.i , ♦

V• . .

=?

o.M To Be n « l 'O n Grower* O f
h*
' : South Florida
Miamif M ar, 2 ' (By. Associated
- press&gt; Damage estim ated at more
ll
'
th a n five million dollars was dohe
*-a fruit and vegetables fields oT
^ u th Florida by the extremely low World’s Supply Is Seven Times
uroperatore last .n ig h t. Vegetable
What It W as in
fields north of Mihrnj were virtually
19U.
‘
wiped out and dam age south is roported at seventy five per cent. T he
lt&gt;n&gt;peroture- a t th rity .five dqgroes
• u the lowest on rero-iL hero. •
*
- *~ ' ** -A■
/
______ _
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT by
Statistic* Give an Idea of Inflation of
TELEPHONE . n o t l e g a l . .
Worfd'a Currency—Central Powera
Worst Off—Increase Mostly In
Bellgerent Countries.
‘ Prccrdcnt For Florida .Is Set By
*
■ Hillsborough Case;
New York.—The.world** paper mon­
Tallahasstop, Mar. 1 .--T h e suprem o ey Js how Bovcn times the nmount It
copfcWiW reversed the decree of th e whs In JJ114, while the** gold supply,
circuit court for Hillsborough county hack of the paper, hns Increased less
thun one-hnlf In the flvdy years since
In the esse of C. J. Hutchinson and
the war started.
Jfhls comparison
* H arriett
H utchinson, his wife, conveys n faint file ao f the Inflation
appellants, V# K. Stonq&gt; appellee. of the wortdV-cyrrency, whlrh econoThe opinio® is by Ju d g e 1 Whitfield. mlits reckon nH olio, of the chief-enusIn this case the suprem e court de­ es of skyrocketing prices nnd high
cided the law in Florida to 1bo th a t a cost of living.
Tho 700 per cent Jump lu paper
notary public or o th er oflicer *umoney,,
too, Is exclusive of the Issues
* thorued to; take acknowledgem ents
of currency by tho bolshevlst govern-cannot .ta k a the acknowledgem ent
inent of .Russia, which, has kept the
—-of a msrrietj woman to an instrum ent printing presses turning out shlrtplns
undertaking to 'co n v ey , her interest tors by tho hale. The sit tin t Inn Is
- in homestead real e sta te over a te le ­ brought right do\vn to1dote by the sta
phone. It Is held th a t the taw m an­ tmthnl department of the ‘ National
dat orily re&lt; uircr a n0tff{63~w6man' C U yhank of New York, which lias
ip maklag r uch acknowledgem ent to Just Issued world figures .to the be­
appear In person before ..the officer ginning of 1020. Tito tables nro Jl*
f ;' T f *
piking the' i cknowiedeem eyt th a t is, lunilnutlng.
When the wnr started In 1014, tldrin the pcrsoi .al presence.of th e officer
ty principal countries of the \anr|d
had, In round numbers, about $7,009,on him by ;er.
000,000 of pirper currency.
At the
The app 04a te -co u rts of only f o n t armistice {i had Juinpwl to about $40,
ststp.’, Tenr essee, Texas, California 000,000,0001 or .more than five times as
and Michigan, have heretofore pnss- hlglt. Since the armistice It has gone
tip to about $o1,000,0(V),OOO. This Is
o upon this question".
outside1tho $34,000,000,000 which. It Is
estimated, tho holshevlst government
;,
The P.lan.
tins Industriously turned nut.
Bnlnic |pfi lu mamiHcript n .chapter
$2,000,000,000 Mors Gold Reserve.
—wbl. lt liu ■culltid . ^T iuiot'Xo—&gt;ta-|a P .
,; .\Yetmwhllo what wns happening lo
usrehe." In ivlildi ho sn.vs. '"Tin* look,' the gold reserves buck of th.e notes In
fite voice, tin* respiration and'the mtltho.tblrly cottnlrlesl ’ In lllil they
tudr nr walk tire tdoiiilrul. Bui, ns It nrnountL'd, roughly, to $5,000,000,000.
bo* not been given to m an.the power They are now. niiput $J.UXb000,000.
to siatnl Kuanl ut once over these four Notes have thus Increased nrore than
Ilirprent slmiiltni|eoiis expressions of 700 per.oent nnd gnh! less than 50 per.
his ihmighb watch Unit, line* which
cent.
•peaks out the ' truth, nnd
* Back in 1014 ihe- ratio nf gnhl retnow the whole iitith-"—I.ifr fff BAUj(E.~
servcs.to outstanding notes in ‘the thlrty countries were 70 per cent. By the
time of the nrmlstlco It had fnllrn to
18.4 per. cent, while last Christmas
ilmo It had dropped still lower to 18.7
Residence: 905 Magnolia Ave.
Phone 401
per cent.
The allies, ao the tables- of- the Na­
■ Office: First National Bonk Building
.
Phone 462
tional City hank show, taken ns a
group at tho start oT tho war,* had
$3,763,000.(JftO of gold nnd $f,000.000,•i
000 of paper. Al Uh (Irtish they had
$ 5,217,000,000 of gold-nnd $25,000,000,.000 of paper, nnd now they have of
gold $5,071.000,000 and of paper $20,
000.000.000.
The central powers—Oermnny, Aitstrln-llungnry,4Bulgnrln. and Turkey-went Into the wnr with $000,000,000 of
gold'and $1,200,000,000 of paper. At
the sm itstlee they hnd-$0.80.000.000 of
gold and $12.305,OGOO.OOO• of paper,
while now tlielr paper has gone up1fo
' 771.000.00a p
To reduce It to percentages,'the ra­
tio of gold to paper nt the stnrt of the
war was: Allies, 70.0 per eentj ecn
tral powers, 49.7 per cent. At Ihe a r­
mistice the ratio was:
Allies, 20.fi
per cent; central powers. 3.5 per eetit.
.Wouldn'A you like to have It on
At the outset of 1920 the ratio stood:
your old car? W ouldn't you like to Allies, 17.i per cent;1central powers,
have it talked about asm new model 1,7* per cent.
"* ■
spick nnd. span? Of course! -O ur
Increase In Bslllgerent Countries.
auto painting and finishing being of
• Naturally tapst of lids Increase oc­
the expott.'klnik will give your car
curred In. the belligerent countries.
that factory finish ~f.o m uch d c s i i ^ The ratio between gold nml notes In
RKHER BROS., Stir,ford HdghW the -twenty-three countries nnd col­
onies which participated In the war
felt from 71-3 per cent In July. 1014,
to 158 per te n t In November, 1918,
nfnl to 11.2 ’last December. Among
the eight principal neutrals the .move*
ntent xvns the other way, tlielr goTd InFOR SPRING
erenstng faster than tjie lr currency.
The ratio rose from 44Jl.per cent In
1014 to 59.0 per rent hist December.
From 1011 to'lnst December the ra­
tio of gold reserve to currency notes,
the tnhles/show, fell hi France from
02 per c e n t‘t o l 0.9; In Grant Britain
from 131 to 22.9 per cent: In Italy
from 70 per cent to 7J5; In the Hnlfed
State* from 00.0 per rent to 52.3.
While world paper currency W l In­
creasing sevenfold nntlounl debt*,
represen ted by bonds and other prom­
ises to pay, rose from $40,000,000,009
to $290,000,000,000; hank deposits and
the use of checks nnd other circulat­
ing media mntlo a corresponding ad­
vance while meantime gold produc­
tion fell off from $100,000,000 a year in
Wc Have The SEED—FRESH' 1914 to $350,000,000 In 1910.
'The statisticians say Hint tlic-nujit
astonishing, md m say Incompratynallrte. feature In the world’s finances
’has been the Inflation occurring In the
year following the armistice.
SANFORD, FLA.. „
■

\^

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

vegetables

v!:“ ~ :■- J

f ,* \

' -eT

Note The Riel
of Rowland tlalrj' Mil to Jird you
will underetand why it m p-eforred hy moll i rs who dflfrrd the
purent and bett for.their cK.lt.Yen.
Tho htoh-cofi’-of-food m td never
nffect tho Vhildrcn so lenfi os
Rraolnoti Milk provides ihe nt ur- .
iflhmont it dots ;for the stnaU .

: nicunt it &gt;&lt; .s!l We mnke two
deliveries .daily.
Phone 2011

••

.

• /

W m m

*•■
: - 1C * *
• • -

Seed Meal
N IT R A T E
Potash Nitrate
■ ASHES
*

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="13">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10754">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1920</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11916">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 03, 1920</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11917">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11918">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 03, 1920.  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="11919">
                <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="11920">
                <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;, March 03, 1920; &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="11921">
                <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="11922">
                <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="11923">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11924">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1208" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1080">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/32b0411eb9d089e705938c81be4e6ef6.pdf</src>
        <authentication>1c8fd326c31192fe2b8d86737b7576c0</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11935">
                    <text>1%

I

&lt;M

PCJ

r l
►h

i . l
m THE HEART OP THE WORLD'S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION

VOLUME 1

SANFORD, FLORIDA, THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1920

Three Fort M yers Clt lien* Perish
When Plane Burnt
ti
Fort Mydrs, M arch 2.—Ca|&gt;t. R.
C. M. Pago. nvintion pilot; Thom as
II. .Colcord, n\erpber of .the F o rt
Myers C ity Council, and G. ifu n trr
Bcyanl, Lee county- thx assessor, nil
citizens of Fort Myers, were burficd
to death when llames destroyed
Captain* Page's seaplane in an acci­
dent near Everglade, sixty 'miles

FORECASTER
SAYS
IS COM ING SOUTH
Chicago M arch A (By A ssociated
Press) W inter's worst stornu swept
J eaitwa rd from m a in ta in and piajn
- states where yeatertkiy i t reached
blizzard proportions isolating towns
in Colorado, N ebraska and South
Dakota a nd wire comm unications
' |n Oklahoma, Missouri, Iowa, Ar­
kansas, North Texas a n d Arizoha.
r. - ThyMlzzard will ftpread rapidly east
and south today and t b n lg h t th e
■! ' forecast says sharply reducing tem ­
peratures. Twelve t° tw enty feet of
Tmmr-fv-reported-in th e - L-aplata-rTrstrirt in Colorado. B elief. parties on
snowshoes "carrying provisions left
f Cumbrcs Pass where trains are
snow bound and are unable to pro­
ceed -until ' th e hedvy snows are
cleared away.
•

Washington March 4 (By Associa
te l Press) Extension preferential
rights entry all public lands to far­
mer service nich' urged before house
Ways and Means Com m ittee by
D. W Ross, Berkley Calif. Clarence*
J. Owens, southern
commercial
congress, urged southern cut over
lands to be utlized for soldiers settle­
ment.
•
•
London* March 4 Lloyd .(Jeorge
announced in Commons
* Allies
reached decision regarding Armenian
massacres,, which dispatched their
representatives to Constantinople.
Not advisable publish decision, but
fully alive to the gravity of position
and ifhiil strong measures to protect
minorities.*
. •
Elpa«o, March 4
Instrucjion
transmitted L ieutenants Woff, and
Uaper, American, aviators
been
at Sonora airice Feb. Cqd return to
United .States .im m ediately without
waiting for release of • airplane.
Question of - release cf . .airplane
which m ade, forced' landing ' taken
up later.
,
*
.
Chicago, March .4 Federal officials
continue! seizures spoiled im pure
food*
Chicago warehouses,** while
district attorney prepared ask war­
rant* to arrest' owners food stuffs
confiscated yesterday. Food held
warehouse export Europe spoiled
while waiting settling
exchange
London, March 4 Evening S tan­
dard my# allied suprem e council
decided to allow Germ any float inW n a t’onal loan because Germany
ruined'meam danger spot in Europe.

UNION OFFICIALS IN CHICAGO
. TODAY TO
DISCUSS T H E
WAGE" SITUATION *
.
Chicago M arch 4 (By Associated
Press) The representatives of four
hundred thousand m ajntainance of
daymen and* shop laborers of. the
tunion are here to diacusa th e wage
Acale officials of th e union say the
rfnen are underpaid and tired "of
*promisee.
•
-

All three men were members Of
prominent t Lee county families and
were wrt!-known th rrd g h o u t~ this
county7 havlng~irvetl here 7 o r m^rly
year.?. Captain Page is said to havp
been ~tho lirsi KfprTda~ fiuin .liT 'go
overseas with tine aviation cor|»s,
sniling Oet. Lv 09.07, from Mineoln.
He has the Credit oK bringing down
three German airplanes,whtjc a t the
front. .Since liis return he bad l&gt;, i-:i
carrying* passengers^ lextenn’vely - in
his flying boat nr Fort— Myers.
Naples, Sanibul, Useppu ulund nml
other points along the coast.
The seaplane left here yesterday
m fling__e a rn ing- -Mr— Bxyaou* .t»v
a tte n d - to hU duties In'connection
with assessment of road taxes in
(he southern -pail of Lee county,
lie chore the air route because the
roads were *ih bad eondilion. Mr
roads were in bad *eondil.on. Mr.
Colcord m ade th e trip in plate of

St. Petersburg and D a y lo n a T a k tn
In —112 Games To RcglnffffayiOlh
Orlando, March 3 .—By unanim ous
vote* the directors of the Florida
S tate League with W. W. Rose,
president;, presiding nt thp mectin
here tonight, voted to take In St
Petersburg and D aytonn us members
of th e League. 8. B. Denton' and
Edward C. Darlington, owners of
tile T am pa, club, asked for a frnnchiso f o tJ ia v u n u ,' but this request
was refuses! on th e grounds th a t the
league is a state organization. " '
T he meeting was held in the Elks
home and was attended tljT about
th irty directors, it wak'decidcd that
the aeftaon sholild commence each
year on the second Monday in -May
and continue to .Septem ber 2, nt&gt;d
tho schedule to be 112 games plnyed
. T he guaranteo for each -gantc was

HON. BRAXTON BEACHAM

----—‘or Orlando. Fla.
Ont* of the* f o r t m o s t 'm e n in F lo rid a , who in l&gt;eing u rjp ’d b y his
m afiy frie n d s to m a k e th e race fo r C o m m issio n e r of A g r i c u l t u r e an d
w h o w r t h b tn d c r m H f —h r ~ d r d d cK~ 't n n i n r ~ M r r T W u hahi w as here
y e s te rd a y a n d (Jfe?)incd to b e i^ .u e n c a n d id a te o n n c ro u n t of a recent
o p e ra tio n , b u t h is frie n d s.s a y he m B st ru n a n y h o w . - *

hedges were brought lierp to ­
ur burial.
.
.
High Scltool Notes
“ Much Ado AAbout
Metty’“
*
The seniors have started rehearsing
on their class play. It will be given
in the High School Audiloriuty.
EXPLODED
UNDER
H E II )
ENTHUSIASTIC
MEET* ifOMR
datp announced Inter- Watch the
CORNER
OP
CrtNNULATE
ING * LAST
NIGHT
AND
Daily Herald for announcem ents. All
RUILl/lNG
•.
-r
GET
READY
FOR
BIG
THING
star cast including 22 members ol
the sonigr class.
•
rich,* March 4 (By 'Associated
Lsyt evening th e annual election
Press) A bomb was exploded yester­
of officers of the Sanford Lodge of d a y under* th e porch of the Ameri­
Elks wan* held, a n d the following can consulate \ building* and the
officers were elected to serve during building was seriously damaged*. -No
one was hurt. The police believe
the current years***they have clues ,tji the guilty ones.
• Exalted Ruler,' Roy C. Bower.
Washington, March 4 (By Associ­
Esteemed L ||u jk )^ -K n i|;)il, W. E
ated Press- No government property
Watson; Esteemed Loyal Knight,
was destroyed at Zurich in the ntChas. L. B ritt; Esteem ed. Lectuting taek on the American consulato and
Knight, Edw. - Higgins.* Secretary,
M ONARCHISTS •
GATHER! NG E .—F. Housholder; Trejtjurcr, L. Pi th e report says th e attack is -attri­
buted to anarchists.
•
ON
UOKDER
READY
TO M cCullcr; Tilpr, E. B.
Rourke;
Trustees, ono year* .each: £. A.
GOVERNM ENT
S1EZE
Douglass nnd Geo. C. Chamberlain,
London,-M arch 4 (By Associated new men in th«j official life of Elkdom
Press) Portuguese m onarchists are with exception of Bro. McCuHer
gathering on th e Spanish frontier nnd Bro. Rouke who have ffile&lt;l their
and several including one who is respective offices since 1913,*' and
prom lneht have, entered Portugal Brcj. Houijhohipr, the secretary' kbo
says the Daily Mail despatch. The has filled bis position sinco 1917.
I VIEW O F THE - GRAVITY
Railroad strike is spreading mid
OF
P R ES EN T ' SITUATION
Thorn will be other officers ap­
large bod.ies of troops are said to be
AND
FO RMING
OF
NEW
moving towards, th e frohtier. The pointed- by t"he Exalted Ruler, nnd
CABINET
reports th a t the workers have pro­ with, th# new officers Sanford Lodjjw.
Constantinolpo Match 3.(B y Assoc
claimed a soviet governm ent have of .Elks expect to tak e' a new lease
not yet been cofTflrmed.. .
' • on life, and hope again in :the near iatod Press) In view of the gruvity
future to bo in n home that, they of thn situation th e Turkish cabinet
can call their own.
.i '
1tas resigned. T he Sultan has rooueste
Vnldrx Arrivals
T he Klks Lodge Rooms nfter tjils ed th a t Marshal Izzeti Pasha form
week wjll be located in ^ th p Seminole a new cabinet. It is regarded as a
C ounty Bank Bldg; nnd all Elks victory for th e Natiqnalistgovcrm ent
are expseted to come up and t a k e 1 os Isfe tt .p ash a ii a partisan bf
Shathroy, Canada; J. W. I’opi part in tho ceremonies.
••
M ustapha Pasha, the leader.of the
Jacksonville, Fla.;. H. W. Fagu'r
N ationalists in opposition to the
Jackronville, Fla.; S. W.. ^Coope1
Sultan and the conservatives.
Mobile, Aln,: M. Bohm sn, Savanna
Ga.; M\ H alirap, Milwaukee,' Wiv
Tho Haines City.* Herald has been
Tracy 1. Smith, I hilndelphls, Pc
bought
by its com petitor, the Cen­
Trcdwell Woolley. Philadrlphln, Pu
tra
l
Florida
News, and only one p /W
F. W. Cool:, Jacksonville,
Fla
paper
will
bloom where two "have
Fred Weiss, Jacksonville, F la .i W
bloomed
beforo.
_ Gf course Haines
SAID
TO
HAVE
ALLEGED
A. Bramxworth. Jacksonville, Fla
DEALINGS W ITH
T H E RE­ C ity had as much business with two
Jam es Kerr, Indinnapnlis,
Ind.
newspapers a s . th e proverbial eat
BELS ,
Samuel A. Shell, Jacksonville, Fla.
had
with two tails and. the publish­
A. B. Murdock, Jacksonville, Fin
Mexico City M arch 4 (By Associ­ ers are to be congratulated on their
Chnrles Wheflcr, Jacksonville, Fir
a t e Press) W. O. Jenkjns, lormer good sense in getting together.—
A. C. Harris, IndianttfH is. Ind
American consul will bo* expelled Tho Evening Telegram .
R. F. Lewis, .Tam pa, -Fla.; R. .1
from Mexico as th e result of hb
Sackett, New Orleans, La.; C. F
alleged "dealings with th e rebels it
Bennel, S a\an n ah , Ga.
is reported.
-

For Muslegl Beginners.
Builders of modern fiats nilKht well
. take a hint from a unfque feature In
Ruckland'a holey In ltj*nok street, now
undergoing trnnsfonnatloii to nm au
modnte the new Otinnls dub. -This
w as-a suite of *"sound-proor* rooms
called the "Handel suite." after the
' composer, who lived and died In Brook
Florid* probably local rain1 street, for th e'u so of musically Intot««ht and Friday except fair ex- cllned visitors. This admirable erHerne south portion. C older' Friday1 rnngement enabled am efeuri of aueh
n°rth and central portion. Muchi distressing instniim-ntH in the hands
folder Friday night. E ntire peninsulal of the novice as the piccolo nr the hoc*
probably, freezing tem perature northi pipe# to practice wlthont dlstarhln*
1their feUow.guests.—lxmdofl Times. .
Portion and froat south.
- .,
. i! u
, :|l
;•
.
.■•
1

Weather Report

EIG H T CLUIIS IN STATE LEAGUE

Meta That Afford Protection.
The natives of the I’lilllppli.es and
South Sea lalands wear large sun hair
«• a protection Jrotn the heat. Putin
■U-sves or various kinds furnish tinmaterial generally used; hut the shnpedlffer. Rome are woven flat niid^somr
Wlth a peak. The ronmloneet form In
the Plilllpplnes la .made of palm leaves
covered with cane. » cane hsndesu giv­
ing an air space above th e head.,TUe
ornamentation of these hnta Is very
sim ple: no colon are used with the ex­
ception g( brown, which fa occasionally
Introdaced io the use of hemp.—Asia
Kagaslhe.
.
.
\

* A motion to reinstnfe Chapman
of Sanford and -D u n frr of Orlando
wns voted down, these two plnyecs
violated league rules l&amp;st season and
will be not perm itted to play.
T h e addition of SI. Petersburg
and Daytona makes the circuit con­
sist of eight clubs.
' lion Forest Lake at id L. ,P. MeCuller of Ibis city represented the
Sanford Club at tb e m e e tin g

FOR ACTIVE
JLL BE
PLACED
IN
FIELD
TO
LOOK
PEO PLE'S IN TER ESTS
There are a t least two nhupdre
men in Scminolo County whb b
lievc th a t a Hoard of T rade -l*-ii
dispensable In prom oting thn w^lfa
and* th e uplifting of flic coinmuni y
and thut no real progress j can I e
made w ithout such a body and b v.
lieving Inis a m eeting is called'L r
next T uesday night, a t Vthe C^u t,
House nt 7:30 to reorganise tme
Hoard of Traile, elect ijlllcera fof
tbe^ensuing year and takolauch qthi
er steps ns will put new lift
body of m en- who ^hnve &lt;1
good work in tlh e past but \
certainly . languished for i
few m onths This is not only rtui
of this com m unity but of others and
almost fifty per cent of the stilt
papers a re urging u better a tte n d a n t
at the Board of Trade* meetings' oi
asking for reorganizing or tljo ior
ganizing of new trade bodies all oVei

Prominent Hoosler Here
Among the prom inent vti
the city tills week is C. D. Porter of 1 way hack and sit down for som*
Indiana whose wife is Gene Stratton time "to come nnd forget all aciivlK
Porter the well known writer of tics in the line of com m unity wqrkV
Freckles unit many other popular This is the wrong idea for this kindj
novels ami short stories. Mr. Porter of work should ^ f f i r stop and wjicjij
is comfortably located nt the J. A. n com m unity thinkr, they can jge*!
Ilnrrold home and will spend a.’fi*w "along without n live trade hotly olj
weeks here enjoying the fishing and some kind that com m unity is slid*]
the Florida sunshine.
ing backward or is not gettingIw haf
is coming fo them .
# It is useless to enum erate the Riany&gt;
good things brought to Sanfofd by^
the Board of T rade or to cnumftat«t
the many good things th at can heft
brought here now. • Every citizen]
admits -that our oily needs gut'll ii]
body now* nnd needs it more than*!
it ever did and it is expected th a t
at least tifty per cent of the real
ONE. WHO -KILLED FORMER men, of* the county will he presentiat
CONSUL MEETS HIS FA TE the meeting .next Tueadaj; night."
We can at least judge tncra by
Mecico City M arch ,4 (By Associ­ their works.*
'
i **
ated Press) Manuel Gonzalez the
leader 'of the hand who murdered
Augustus Morrill, former Ainericnn
consul at Mannanzillo on February
twenty sixth was killed by govern­
ment pursuing troops it is semi­
officially announced. Other linndks
were killed and wounded , during
WEALTHY
PH ILA D EL PH IA
the battle.
\O D T H
BEFORE
COURT
MARTIAL
FOR
SLACKING
Florida leads all Southern ."States
except Texas In the num ber of auto­ * N ew York M arch 4 (By Associa­
mobiles per capita, according to s ta ­ ted Press) Grover Cleveland Bergoll
tistics recently compflFd by the Oma- u wealthy PhH ad^phian faced court
hn Cham ber of. Commerce. Figures m artial nt G iv ern o r's Island today
were Secured direct from the persons charged With desertion
through
in each State in charge of autom o­ cluoing th e uti*f*- Army official*
bile regiKtrntion. The figures are In believe th e outcom e will have a
tt-resting nnd arc as follows: Tcxnr- henring on th e 170,000 drs^t dodging
one for,every 13.C persons; Florida, cases in th e country. '
one for every 16.fi persons; Georgia
oho for every *21.4 persons;’ N orth
Carolina, one for every 21 9r*-Sou4h
Carolina* one for every 23.6; Virginia
one for every 23.6&gt; Kentucky, one
for every 26.6 ; Tennessee, one for
every 26 .8; Arkansas, one for every
36.4; Alalhama, one for every 40.1;
Mississippi, one for every 41.1.—
RFSTOR V
T ° ALI0W T,,E
Tn’llaharsee Democrat.
H iP HMIU flRQfj
iltlO N
T « E.
HA1
v
Important News,
l ^ ’j d r n ‘ M arch 4*‘ (By Associated
." Jack’s little, playmate; Ben, was
Tho Suprem e Allied Council
called home to Ood, so Jack was told nas resolved to aiihero to th e t when Ben died. A few nights Inter
losal to allow th e restoration of th e
when Jack-was say|ng hla prayers Ids
H
apsburgn either in A ustria or H un­
mother heard, "And please, God tell
gary
ja stated in conference circlea
Bennie that one of his rabblta died toin answ er to inquiries regarding th e
Rum anian feats cf tho appointm ent
.of ..iio r th y
Hungarian regent

means th«f return cf former rulera.

make the methods. AVe talk uhout eye- tenth part of, their lime, to tie nntem, wjiep we should he tnlklng nlmul ployed In Its service, . Hut Idleness
pien, for men mnke »y*fem. And so.
n,any 0r .u s much more. If we
let'e talk more about men. When yoo reckon all that la spent In absolute
a re not satisfied with policies, method*, aiofh; 05 In doing nothing: with that
o r systems, look to yon* men. Tbi ;wf,lrh la speQt in Idle eraploymentif or
human element It nesponaible. flo to amusements, that amount to nothing,
tb s source of them that need remedy Hloth. like rqat. consumes faster than
dlaoapolls Star.

over this .“ d riv e '’ for money to pay
some job hunters to help our legally
elected and empowered off cert to en­
force th e prohibition law. I t would
be .0 m uch cheaper And simpler,
more direct and Ian open ta auapidon
of graft to devote thg. same effort
to electing officers who «JII do th e ir
du ty , Leesburg Com m ercial"
#

�. 1-

V . ’*

•

"

.

.

.t

*’
•

• . •

/

GIVES

jm

mm

m m p se v

om cB

an

is

s w e iie n

.

*

♦

•,.
•

A -i
Mi

•

'

**

•7

ate

.

• ‘ *’

■

£ " * i

* .

'

M sgqM , w o

.♦

r♦ * * i »

=

■U/%M
I. ATE W IR ES:

PLAN WAR ON FRANCE only, reucs. or lost race

Musical Instruments of Insect*
Bussing or hbmmlug of Insects !•.
mainly due to the rapid vibration of
the wings, which often strike the air
more than 100 tlmso a second, but there Is sometimes a special quivering
Instnrmrnt near tho haao df the wing.
Chirping or trilling is dm- to eora#
sort of "atridulatlng- or^nu, one hard
part being scraped against another, at
the bow of a" fiddle—It may bo leg
against wlngt .
.- .

■•
Chamgloa Will Be Put In Dluc-ori Received Just .Before Going To
Network of Canals All THpt Ramalns
P re sa From All P a rt a Of The
ef Early Dtssslltre. In %
tha
• • In America^,
Presbyterian* Can G et The H eard
Germany
said
to
B*
Preparing
World
*^ *'..
Arizona
Osssrta.
San
Francisco,
Mar.
1.—Jack
•
«
I
T
National Bank Building
for Next Conlllot
W arsaw, M ar. 2 (B y Aaaoeiatod
Louisville, Ky. M ar. I —The Pres­ Dempsey, heavyweight champion,
fly W i f o mod Intereii^nfr remn'iiH
byterian church in (he United Statps of the world, and his mAnagerVJack Preaa) Although official quarters
of the lost people of Arizona are tbrlr
troops a t Time Will Bring on Clash, la Word
h al bec9?ne tjie recipient of a 11.000,­ Kearns, were Indicted by th e fedeqri report m utiny ofnptwor': of canals, which prevail
grand
jury
to
d
ay
,
on
the
charge
of
Kovo
suppressed,
newspaper
nteao000 olUce building To be vsid u an
iti.xdi;;h the valley*..,. The longest 1«
.
of Old and Young o f
endoyijnent fund for aged and infirm having conspired to cause Dempsey agea declare trouble continuing and
that one tapping the Gila river and
l h ,N « l .n .
.which, supplied with water, the ahrlent
pastors, contingent upon the raising to evad* the selective draft. Another upriaing in many caaea has taken
-------------- 7 ' "'r K". ' ‘
Berlin.—Germany la 'preparing for dty, nod marked with the one stand­
of |4 0 0 ,000 to pay p a rt of Its cost. Indictment against Dempsey charges on Bolahevikl vharacteHatics.
Flrat Negro Clergyman.
actusl
evasion
of
the
draft.
W
arrants
ing
building.
This
Is
the
.Coxa
Grande,
Its
next
war.
...
.
.
T he building is th a t occupied by the
W ashington. Mar, 2, James. H enry
In 1780 nil Novemlror 20. 8arnuri
And Franca* la the. Intended victim. about which so much has been'written
H eard National bank, Jacksonville, ware sw orp.out and their bonds fixed Jackson,'negro was hanged today for
Haynes,
n mulatto, wits licensed to
a t $1,00(1 each. The conspiracy m urdering MU« Lillian Hood, .war
Just when this attack on the FrenclP and which has so excited much IriteC’
Fla.
preach.He uns the first negro
T he structure was given to the charge carries a maximum penalty worker of Brownsville, Tonn, who l« to. lakg*'place haa not been settled cut among nrcheologlsta In tne Inst ten clergyman- in the United Rtatea.
In the German mind—bnt cTery Ger­ yeare.
.
church by Q. F.. G raham , a wealthy of two years and a $T,000 .fine.‘*The surprised, him robbing a boarding
Haynes wnq hunt at West Hartford.
man, no m atter what hla nge or. sinThe
Tolunte
of
water takon out by Cohn.. In 17-Vt. lie served n« a sob
maximum
sentence,
for
evasion
[§£ resident of Spartanburg, S. C. For
house a year ago. *
.
lino, says (hat time Is coming—maybe this cannl must havo been Immense,
- ,
. . .
m any years he has been n liberal •Is one year. ^
In ten yeais, tnaybe twenty or maybe for It supported millions of. acres,. In tiler In the revnluibm, nnd after the
H
alifax,
Mar.
2,
Seven
lives
be­
w ar Imenrnr u ty*rrnnt In the bouse of
The Indictm ent followed weeks of.
friend a t th elF reab y terlp n depart­
most places the canal hag been filled the Iley. Dnn|el Fernind.- n Congrelieved to liavo been lo st when Crow- ihlrty.
ment o’f ministerial relief, and the investigation conducted by th e De­
leyland lin er Bohemian,- abandoned ’ But even U .tbere la doubt na to the with drifting sand, but Its course Is gn IIona I minister nt Granville, Conn.
•'G raham Trust" aa hla gift will be partm ent of Ju stice’s Bureau -of In­
exact tlmo of OertaaDyV* effort to easily traced. -Engineers wlio located
know n, will serve to pcrpdU ite hla vestigation here and'the-foderal dis­ ship as she sank off Sam bro Hedges nvengo the lose of the world war, there the Mnrlcopn canal made use of the Doctor Fernind tntrght llaynea Lntln
nnd GrtU’k and lu-lpe«l him to study
today, Cotton cargo tas thrown, does not aeern to he’ felt the lenat'*
generoaity. Th«v.building i» tho'm Cst trict attorney’s office. It wo* prom pt­
old Aztec ditch nnd today water runs fdr the ministry. In 1785 ho wns foroverboard
In
an
effort
to
savo
vessel
doubt
that
vengeance
will
be
visited
ed,
by
the
public
charges
of
Maxine
beautiful office stru c tu re in Florida.
over Its pebbly laitlom Just ns It did m'ally nrilnlnetl.n'Cnngregntlonol min­
.
. Ister at Lllchdeld. Conn.,' and shortly
A movem ent will be inaugurated aoon Dempsey, ' divorced ..wife of the Loss of life believed to havo occurred tqton the French and that Germany 2,000 or 8,000 years ago. ■
to raise the 1400.000 necessary be­ pugilist, th at she had been compelled In th e atte m p t to transfer part of* will be successful In the attempt.
- For'm iles and miles arAuml mounds
Germany Is not - forging arms or tell the talc of houses destroyed by after was n&lt;Hgnii! to the parish of
fore ownership of th e property by to attest Dem psey's g|alms for ex the crew to tpg by lifo llnei. Three
Torrlngton. lie, resigned nfter two
boats g o t away safely b u t remainder nmklng munitions with thnt eud In the ravages of time.
Phoenix &lt;vai years &lt;in necount of the prejudice of
the board of m inisterial relief be­ emption. , ,
view
just
how,
for
that-would
be
ImSubsequently, in an afTadavit, she of th e hundred' and .tw enty of the iHisvIble. Blit through propaganda of built on ihe ruins of this ancient city hla puHaboner*.
lie was ntllyil im.
comes assured.
retracted
the charges, saying that crew were unable to ' fake boats. the most poisonous klqd the tire of nnd there rellca frequently nre found m.-illai. ly to 11 ihiirch nt Kutlnnd. Vt,
T h e total endowm ent fund of the
Passngere removed yesterday after
of this ancient civilization.
:
where he preached for 18‘years.
southern Presbyterian board of m in­ 'th e y were caused by pique against liner h it rocka during blizzard. - ' t .hnlrea Is being kindled In Ihe German •*“
' l, , , 1 ■■■ ■ ■—■
’ *
Dempsey,
T
his
affadavit
figured
In
n
lm
l
.
•
isterial relief, Including the Jackson­
Early Mvstlng Houses.
Every German 1 met voiced’ to me . '
London, Ajar. 2 D cnkine’s army
ville property will be 11,100,000,00 tho grand ju ry inquiry.
t
ls
Lptred
of
Kfnnce.
Every
misfor­
The
earliest
New England meeting
trapped
in
Kuban
Peninsula
south-'
Dempsey
Is
charged
with
having
the yearly Income of whlrh will be
approximately $66,000. I t will be falsely eworn th a t his father, mother oast of Azov Sea claimed in a soviet tune-the Germ ant'have met with has houses were Imllt In TiTTtjs and
In en laid to the door of the French. meadow land*, much, the same as the
used for the support of ministers who widowed sister and the la tte r ’a two official statem ent. First Kuban'corp*
J'render ClcmcnceuU.li hated In Ocr-1 first Old F irst church In Springfield,
annihilated.
have rendered worthy service to th e children were dependent upon him . Te
many as no other mnn ever was. for here It. was that the homes were
church but have been called from T ne Indictment declared th a t Demp­
Paris, M ar , Allied countries will The mgrt? mention of hla name brings located., For' a time It was required
active work-Tiy ago or Infirmity^ sey’S stulom ont that_his_**ife, liver be called upon to develop to utmost fo r,h direct th reats-o f what la--to th a t pit homes, should’ he built wtthtn
with him for eighteen m onths pre­ their {iroductive forces and advistd harpen to France.
’• ‘
L
half a - mile of*thc meeting house, for
.
The.evil
propag
indlBt
hr
dotng his JluL -ranit-m rtioJiffbnL D rntiictiflnJo.
it..1’ ’•
vious
to
hla
appearance
before
the
— ,— Credits Overstrained——
that - l« w » - im proving- condition of
d raft board, and that his parents workers m ust he. applied to that end work well,.- Ho Is reaching not only the settlers, since the building dljl
W ashington, M ar. 1.—Early end­
the folnjl of the.ndult.Gennan, but Ids'
ing AY the general expansion' which and widowed sister made th eir home in m anifesto prepared by the econo­ pmsor Is sinking deep Into the mind .duty ns a fort a* well ns house nf
Worship.
•
has characterized war and immediate w ith him for four years,’ was false. mic section supremo council, says of the rising generation.
•
As
tho
population
Increased gji.d new
•
Sac? '
I" post-war periods were forecast in n It says that hp wrote his wife Hi Echo dtf ^ a ris .
Even yonng boy* give rise
their
selMers'rnnie Into the vlllnges the half­
0911*
asking
her
if
she'w
ould
swear
W ashington, Mar. , President is tintrod and tell liow, when they grow 1 mile radius became too crowded-to
l* ,.
- ' statem en t summarizing February
•
•
Lbusiness conditions issued rtonight ho,w as supporting h'er.
preparing to sH up tribunal provided op. they will drive the Frenchman permit this to continue.* It was nece*by th e Federal Reserve Board. The'
by th e railroad hill to consider wage from conquered German territory and rnry to gn some distance to pasture
Upward movement of prices aa far . . .. . Major G eneral Dead
demands twq .million railway men. ih’Niro) |ho French' nation. the cattle and for tills reason the law
"Germany soon will Ih» stronger than
San Diego, Cal. Mar. 2 (By Assoc­ Hifs w riting union and railroad heads
was cnnceletL
.
as the Hoard could ascertain gener­
GLASSES ADJUSTER]
I'rnnee. despite our present condition.**
.
ally had not met with any check. iated Press! M ajor General William heads asking them fa nom inate re­ i»ld n German student, to uie a few
and. REPAIRED
Financing and banking authorities P. Duvall aped iry rn ty three, rc- presentative'^ Wage board. •Inyg ngo. "Theti France hod better
Origin of (ha Jazz Band.
tlred,
is
dead.
'
everywhere wore asserted to be Hook­
\\La;.hingtnn.Mar. 1 fit AiaacUtad 1 tvniclfjbut
-The Jazz baud Idag, aoeordlact to a
ing more reriously at the genera',
French paper,' originated In .qftc tiros
Press) Commander
U’Olier, and
of tho Directory, At the concerts of
situation in credit anil beginning TAX ON GASOLINE IN -STATE other American legion officers re­
tho Cat orchestra were twenty cat 4
to urge the adoption .of conservative
OLaWINDMILLS
commended to House waj;a means' GIVE ' UP
YIELDS S30.000*
Oplomdrist-Optldan
beads
In n row on the keyboard of a
policies. While the review asserted
*i*r
com m ittee .soldiers relief legislation
------sHolland Being barpslchonh -The performer l&gt;» .plrifcthat this could n o t‘be accepted nJ Auditor Makes Report On Ilalanie in form of land settlem ents aid -to Quaint 8tructur#s
221 E. First Street
Ing the keys pujk-d tiro cats' tall?,''
Replaced
by
Practical
Modern
meaning, that "the* orgy of apvculaencourage home purchases. Voca­
Due
canfttg n caterwauling which sounded
Opposite Foatofllce
■ »"'
Power Planta,
. tlon" had .beuti absolutely checked,
tional training and adjustm ent com-’
• &gt;
• '.
like a Jazz hand. *
Tallahassee. M ar. 1.—J. Will Yon,
there was said to he th e Indisputable
i - it ion based on length ofservictr
Amsterdnm.—Holland Is slowly bnt
sta te -auditor, has just-filed his re­
“ evidence7 ihal “banks were exercising
for th o s j not desiring n vocational surely losing the one characteristic of
2
port with the.governor on collection
’groatur dvgrwi-uf ilLujiminatiou
or other t h ree features._______’
Us
Inndscnpc
mode
famous
In
a
rt
and
by the &gt;
rnt.yjtmter^of ngriculture
and judgement in complying with
\Va«hlifgton, Mar. 2, On recom­ known lo every schoolboy—the squat
of
Us
fax.oh
orie-eighth of a cent a
the demands of- th eir customers.’
gallon on g&amp;unlinb and. oils sold in m endation' of secretary of agriculture fut. lazy looking windmills th it for
centuries Imre stood out all.ovcr the
__ J
..
*
W orithf-under UWwptrr 7605 -of the sla a tc _a't’rivuluue. conuui$u-e eli­
country's
lint
surface.
.
**,
.
minated
apiuropriations
for
congress­
Cyclone Reporlrd E ast Of Florida A its of the Legislature* of.0d09. The
These qnalnt structures are gradualman distribufe free seed to consti­
tv giving way to highly practical hut
* Waabington, Mar. I .- A cyclone law became_eilective last Septem ber
tu e n t* .
— :---ngty steam nnd electric plants. Dutch
•disturbance was reported tonight 2 and since the date, up to January
W
ashington,
Mar.
2.
Senate Nava) technical men say the windmill Is
by the- weather bureau ’east rof Flo­ 31, it is shown, according to sworn
••
rida and apparently moving cast. statem ents of th e Standard Oil Com­ com m ittee ordered full investigation doomed • - •
Now
nnd.then
n
Inrge
group
of them
inm
ediatcly
of
Indecent
praticeaof
pany
and
o
th
er
•
-wholesalers,
that
- “ Tho outstanding features ol Sun­
Is
replaced
by
one
electric
plnnt,
pnd
naval
intelligence
tico
squad
naval
there
was
^old
in
the
state
a
total
day night's weather iiiap." the re ­
in the course of eitch'jenr a number
training
station
at
N
ew
port.
of
24,009,223
fallopa,
yielding
a
r
e
­
-port-r*ad_llw is _&amp;_g! roh g a re a of high
destroyetl by
lire—presenting a
r 2- ^ n..:ti_ o '/• \t , . o -r
u ’ "nre
re ncstroym
uy ore—presenting
pressuie attended by moderate cold venue, of $30,011.47.-.
Greenv.ll.- S &lt;?.- M .r. 2, Two hun- , ^ rtn r,„Br Maze with the big burning
wave which haa overspread the west
nn,H.||ng around like flery arms.
In hia r e p o r t,.th e state auditor dred thousand dolloar.t damage was
done be fire destroying, Meyer* ' They are never reconstructed.
gulf s ta tis t and the* south Atlantic has the. following to ray:
states. Pressure is low to the east­
The existing type of Dutch windmill
Section 10 of the act directs the Arnold * departm ent store, . also
ward of Florida and along the coast rommissinner of agriculture to pay damaging Garing T heatre today. wns Invented about the yenr 1400. The
•
•
•»
.t
thence no'rthwnrd to New England. over to the s ta te .treasurer m onthly _W ewonka, Mar. 2. Sheriff Drown great disadvantage of the windmill, of
"T h e temperature will moderate all moneys Revived by him here-1with -prisoner Cap Davis, negro i rounro. It It* a)Molute«.depemlence on
BOY’S WASH SUITS
LADIES’ DRESSES
some what Tuesday In the gulf slates under, &gt;uch paym ents into the state eluded lynching party after Davis' weather condition*. For this reanon
From $2.25 • to - $8.50
Fr6m- $2.00 lo $4.00. The Best
It Is being replaced, when possible, by
treasurer)- to constitute a fund to be had beyn rentenced forty five years mbilern machinery.
: Line You Ever Saw
known as the "gasoline inspection for an a tta c k on a w hite tnacher
The Dutch wlndmin, however much
KIMONAS
.
...
fund" After paying all.expenses out Mob took another negro from
It may look In pictures to be a toy.
’ HOSIERY!
From $2.90 • (6 - $10.00
of this fund incident to the adm in­ Chandler 'J a il yesterday night but ts far from tjiat. ft la a sturdy struc­
•
Oh,
Well!
f f you want Ho*e
fate
undeterm
ined;
k
•
istration o f 'th e law, whateVei b a l­
ture. as big as n good sized house, and
LADIES’SHIRTWAISTS
the
machinery
Inside
Is
extremely
pow­
ance remains to said fund on January
£ou won t go any
T re n to n , Jdar. 2, Governor Ed­
all the latest styles and fahrlrs
•
i
I shall be placed at the disposal of wards signed hill l»baiiting three erful.
• Further •
See
the state road departm ent for con­ half per ' cent beer in Now Jersey. • Naturally a groat many at them re
this
Hue
and
be
convinced
ntnln. hut the ‘numlier becomes k**«struction and m aintenance of public • W ashington, Mar. 2, . .
LADIES’ SKIRTS
i
,
.
,
.
.
,
.
r°*‘l
I
year
by year, nnd so far as ntt. Yie u*
roads. The commissioner of agricul­ unions understood voted- give new r „ rtnlnri,.
HATS AND CAPS. GALORE * A Complete Line from $3 to I10.5P
(he erection of « new e n d s
ture has failed or neglected to .make- rsilroad law trial in settling wage, seldom undertaken.
• -.-t ,
payments to th e state, treasurer as dbhtands, removing for tim e danger ]
_____’
‘
&lt;
»*
*
*
•
'
directed by the act. Dp to Jan u ray , of a s tr i k e .1 he had collected a total of $22,047.Father Missing, His
QR and llacV^jroid 'ovfcr to the state
HENRY
M.
ROBINSON
treasurer only $6,500. All collections
Family Lodges in Jail
not yet tbrnbd over to th e atate
*Uv* A ngrier—Arrlvln- front
treasurer are, on deposit in Lewis
I.liut, Cement. IMastor
Cor. 4th St. and Sanford Ave. - Sanford, Florida
Seattle
to mert her husbnml
S tate Rank afid Citizens Bank. U s ­
brick, Drain Tile and
here,
Mr*.
Ruth
Anderson,
tldrty
ance in these banks he is d u t l o pay
____
.
.,
•!
••
Sewer Pipe.
four.ycor* old. with he? four
mm
over to tlje a ta te treasurer L* now
•young children, spent a night In
—
$28,143.37.
the ntre of (he matron at the,,
d ty jail. Anderson jlld pot meet
"After paying • all expense! 'inci
i x x x x m
m
m
her.
«* she had telegraphed him
dent to the adm inistration of the
to d a
, .
law, there was a balance on January
The only cine to her huchand
I due to the s ta te highway fund of
which the woman had wns that
a. .’ »
I17.d50.32 which am ount wg-jld have
SOLD BRFORK YOU PLANT
be had been working on the l.&lt;x
placed at the disposal of the state
Angeles flood control project.
The American CoITee Bean Company will contract !
raod departm ent for ' construction
. Mr*. A rderm a nml the four
100 acres only at Sanford and will pay four dollars ‘
children, ranging In ages from
and maintenance, of reads, on th a t
ten to fourtm-n. were taken In
date, had the. commissioner of agri­
($4.00) jkt bu. of €4 pounds delivered at shipping
rhnrge at the Southern I'ac'fir
culture mad e his payments p n m p tly
point in two bu. sacks.
*
depot by Police Officer A. A
to the state treaaurer as directed by
Snyle*. They had bad nothing
Wi“
*8.iper aci* ^
, Til* l**n* »*Tin to m ature in
the act. I jud(* t h b amount will be
t planting and should yield not b*s than 100 bdshcla
to e*» nil day and were wlrhon*
transferred by th e state treasurer to
celeo’ without additional fertilizer. The beat nitmfund*. S*)l«-» gwve Ibent a me*'
1 1 c*n y®, planted! Only such farmer* as are in
the state highway fund- in. a short
and then took them to Central
harvest the crop proper!;
ruperty need* apply. Call on
tirtir. just as soon as the commis­
ntntlon.
ti
sioner of agrivulture pays oyer to
him the amount due.
W A R D , S r 1'

l c i a n

Eyes Teste#
Lens.es Ground

L. A.

mi

THE NEW DRY GOODS STORE
New Goods.— — — a n d

— New Styles-

The Latest in Everything--'Not One
Piece of Old' Cut of Style, Shoddy,
Shop- Worn Goods Offered H ere 1

\

u

Building Material
Roonng of All Descriptions

TRY A SURE CROP

H ill Lumber

Got Horntd Da*.

AFTER OUR PAINTING*

much desired'by motorists. It b
•taler to wash and clean when It
has been pointed and finished by
M»- Aide us for an estimate on
Four par.-1 * •,
REHER BFfos., Sanford Height*

„
!. '*•

•

•

-

•

Lqvtll For Adjuhtant G e n e ra l.
Col. C. P. Lovell, Ung prom inent
Iq business and m ilitary circles of
the atate haa announced hla candi­
dacy for adjutant general of Florida
subject to the Democratic prim ary
In June. A Floridia'tF o f' education
xpelendid ability, extended m ilitary
training, a successful business'than,
liberal and progm aive in all line* of
usefulness he possesses every quali­
fication for m aking a moat success­
ful official, *and his candidacy will
mefjl with cordial support of tb«
conservative rlenqent
«
flf th e p a rty .
— Palatka Til
•-t.
* . *■.0 .

Renfrew. Panada.—A ipottrd fawn
another fm rk of nature, wga shot on
•he Madawaaka river, where Jo h n -8
Ihix of Paiabogte last we« k *hot' a
horned doe. It fell before the rlfie of
Thonia* Fraser, whose homo la near,
rytaboglb. Hunter* and other* have
vlewcl tfce *po^t,,, f»wn with a treat
deal of Interest, and old hungers re
port that on two former occasion* *
Henry M. Robinson, former assist­ freak of nature, of a* similar kind wa«
ant to Chalnnan Harley of the United brought down from the same part of
States C iifp lhg board
the Madawnska. The amount nf gam,
shlpploq repcoaentatlv* at tho Parts secured In. that country n * large
ptaeo conference and latnr member of this season than ever before. T
the eh Ipp In■'board, repreoonts tho pdb- hundred* of hunter* were In a
llcoii
l«njitrety small prvji nm an
-trike
-»f any kind I* rttioriru.
■,
,• .

.
•

AND

bK EECH O BEE

On the Okeechobee Branch of the Florida
* Railroad
.SdZs-M
1 .

-

HSS. C. D. DBUMLST,

'vv

.

• •*

*•

j ,

*

•

• «
••

■

■•
■

t.

•

CHVtBOtk. rLOElD*

-

A

Coast

• Special Attention Given to Automobile Parties
l ’* • ■»« .____

.
•

.

“

•
*

•
•

. I

�If,

*■-

**

./

* ‘■

»r
f -

JnSf**-'

-

PAGE2

COUNTY HAPPENINGS
t ■■■

.j^iaas ■
at
-j-

A B U N C H O F IN T E R E S T IN G I T E M S F R O M C O R ­
R E S P O N D E N T S — E V E N T S O F S E M IN O L E C O U N ­
T Y __ E F F IC IE N T R E P O R T E R S F O R T H E H E R A L D

r

_

I

Efc-V- - « K

V

• T"I
KV _
m
1 ■id
i d »a * *
*-* j
1

1

I

1 si

-

OVIEDO
Mrs. M ary West o p Nashville
arrived T hursday, -having been sum ­
moned to th e bedside of her son C.
L. W o t. The friend* of Mr. W o t
arc glad to Itndw th a t he is im prov­
ing rapidly.
Mr. -and Mr*. Ed Jordan have
rented th e homo of W- L. Luther
for the season.
Mrs..,, Thompson A was called to
Island G rove Saturday by Ihe Illness
of her s is te r.M r s .' Hendrix, During
Mrs. Thom pson's absence tier place
* in school is being filled by Mrs. It.
W. Law ton.
Mr. and Mrs. S. * W / Swope,
• Francis Swope and Mrs. 'W . E.
Young spent Saturday in Orlando,
Mrs. It. W. Lawton sp en t T ues­
day in Sanford.
Owing to the inclemency of the
weather Sunday there was no-preach­
ing -at either church, \h o there were
enough for Sunday school ut both
the M ethodist-and B aptist chttrchea
—*—Mrtf7 S. W. S-wope M itertaihei the
- C. and B. Club d f Thursday aftern o o n /T h e re was an u S a m ^ y lnrge
crowd present. Mis. 7&lt;u-ope scrve&lt;l
delightful pineapple cream and cake
ing by M rs. c. B.'Lee, Misses MoImT
S wojh* and Ruth Young.
Mr.’ and Mrs. C. A. Brannon are
spending th e week with Mrs. A.
Iupinhiiirt,
*^
^ _ _ M r.-an d ,Mr»*- Gove and children
and Doc Malcolm S|K*nt Sunday In
Daytona.
» '• Mrs. A. Leinhnrt spent Saturday
In Orlando.*

LAKE MARY ITEM S
Our village has missed the Flu
so far.
Mr. G uthrie with a force of men
wks here Tst week shipping .the fruit
from the Camertin placei there was
—•bout five thousand boxe*,-the fruit
from the Dr. Philip grove also being
flhfpjied.
— ’ Mr. nml Mrs. Cadman anil chil­
dren have moved to Orlando where
they have recently purchased a
Ijoine. The-- people here regieted
Very-much to have them, go,
Among the new people,coming here
this-winter are Mr. und Mrs.-W . II.
- Olson of. New York, they having
purchased the Applegate place.
Also* Mr. and Mr?. W. P. Monorc
nnd children of Newberry and Mr.
and ‘Mrs. Bitty and bnby of Mait, land.
Mr. Tuxworth is out again nfler
being on the sick list for a couple
of weeks.
Q r_
Melvin Dunn had the mis fortune
*of. having bis arm fractured Monday
.'o n ( b e 'school ground^.
The viilr-ge' was shocked Saturday
. morning tb learn ■of the death of
Mr. Charlie J,undqui»t. having pars
away.fn th e early part of the murfi,ing at the house of his son Axel
Vi
Its had not .been in the best of
health f tr some lim e hut kept up
and came up to the village two weeks
prior to his. death. He wns a good
peaceable neibbor havinglived around
this vicinity far a good rnz-iy y r»
and was nearing his tK'th p d r *r t
He is survived, .by ohe son and
.three daughteis bf_L.es u good m any
grandchildrt-n r.nd several
great
■ .W grandchildren The ’remains
.‘were
■&gt; 1Aftl to rest in -th e Upsttla cemetery
and the sym npathv of the community
goes to th e family in the loss of
their fath e r..
Jam es Heed returned home some
tw o ‘weeks tfgo after* having spent
several months with" his children
-in different parts ef the notth,
*.
f o r d of T hanks
I wish to extend triym&amp;M sincere
thanks to tlie people of Upsata,
Grapeville-and Lake' M ary, who w o e
ao kind And good during the illness
and death of m y father.
A£cl Lundquist.
/

MARCH 4, 1920_

SANFORD PA1LY HERALD

___

dent of this section, coming over
from Sweden in &lt;87L' being born in
1841 a n d -leaves a b ro th e r, , J. E,
L undquljd/^a *on Axel * and , three
daughters. Nfrs. Louisa^Kylurul.* who
was with him during his illric.4s
which lav ted about nine days and
Mrs Lottie ‘ Kerry ' nnd Mrs. Km a
Drown ml ■ number -of
grand
tlaughtcrs,' Mr*. LouL«a Nylimd, (w’.u
was with him dUTuig hLs |illnos»
which lasted iibout nipc days fund
Mr*. Lottie Ferry and Mra. Em m a
Brown, ad n number of 1 grand
children’.
We. bad n number of Rems for
last week but was to ill to write
them. *, - *
Dr.’ Brower came U|k threatening
as H was to preach last Sunday, but
for lack of n sto v e' the meeting
could not be held nnd so be has
offered to try it ngain next Sunday
at 3:00 o'clock. ,
Sunday sdiynl a t 2:00 - as usual
with a warm w'elcotne . for all.
Dr. Brower called - at the home of
Mr*. DcKorrest nnd she kindly, had
him taken homo "as th e. roads were
dreadful,
*
i

LONG WOOD PU 'K -U PS
r* Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Range* of
MHton, M aine who have been the
guests of 'M r. and Mrs. hfardy for
the p a s t- ten days left Monday for
Fi-lsmere; Fla.
E/iward Golden of Choes, N. V.
is the guest of Mf. and Mrs. J. p i .
Waits.
Miss M a ry Smith of Fern-irdiina
returned' to hrr home on Monday
after s’pending several days the gymt
of her aunt Mrs. J, M. Waits.
- C, W. .Enttm ingcr spent Ttieliday
in Sanford attending county com­
missioners meeting.'
f&lt;
School work w a s . resumed
pn
Monday having been dosed for to
weeks on uhcount of Influenza.
Willard M. Me,Workman went
EAST ..SANFORD
down to- Orlando on Monday
- I
‘ Mr. and M rs . J. S. D inkel, were
M r, nml Mm, 1 D. M a rtin ’ and
in Sanford on Saturday and ‘drove Mr. and Mrs. A, II. Porter plan to
home ifi their new Chandler.
drive to M U Dora for the day
-‘ :
Friends of- Mrs. QDic&amp;n w lll.be Sunday.
lorry -to . hear.'of her fllne-i at hrr.
Sam uel Schwartx ft !c;»\[jije. . in «
home.
,
’
hnrL tim e for Chicago after spending
Mr. Lucas and family are located the sm tfiA at hU hom e-on Lake
in one of the Bry ant-Smith' cottages Golden. ._■-*•
'
.
in South Longwooli.
__
•
Me«srs. George-, ilridgford and
I,. H. D unbar is spending a few* Louis, Knelling who have Upon «(iend
days over at-C osonado . beach.----- ,— ing liie-'winter a t Xehotls-wJ- Geneva
l)r. Edwards of Orlando was Ferry are leaving this week for their
vmllc.l to uIUmuI the little'-aun of hom e'in Willoghliy, Ohio. (‘
Hollis Luiif of Ki*silnmce .is the
Mr. and Mrs. Del mar M r Work map
who was suffering from potomnfne gue-t of l^is aunt Mrs. I. E. E d rid g e
of Cameron nvp.
t ,
,
poisoning.
G.
G.
Chamherlain
has
-a
new
r MBs ArtnKT Coleman of Wildwood
Chandler touring ear.
"Shlnd; Curry Hasty, Uayrhond
.Miss Lillian Waits and Miss Mary
Hende'son and Alvin R uhiirv/invn
Smith wire visitors in Orlando on
enlisted in- the U. SI rcgulara for
Saturday..
■1 year* and are ut Camp Brag#,
Fiiyittc»vllle. N. C.
will lie glad to know that she has
Word cyme* Jroin Dunellen that
r.evovercd from influenza nnd has a n o th e r'son hns.bcen horn to Mr.
returnud t o -h er libnu* in Jackson­ and Mr*. W. A. Knight our -former
ville. Miss Singe!to n Jius been in the neighbors’ their* daughter .M r*. S.
Ftorida Sanitarium for the past ten A M urphy is with them, for a few
dayer—-— —
———i---■----------------- week^~x-isTr."
Mrs. W yatts left Monday for
T. II. Kinard a former resident
Fernandina where* she will he the hrre now of th e - West Side is said
guest of her daughter Mrs. Smith-. to e very ill with pneumonia. Kovqrul
Miss Mary Cummings of Orlando of his family have been ill with flu.
is the guest of Mis* Harriett ‘Grist.
Mrs. I. D. H art is quite ill,
The ladies of the Civic League threatened with pneumonia. I. E.
held their regular monthly meeting Estridge *hai been quite ill with flu.
Tuesday aueTpoon.
A son was born last week tb
The ladies of the Civic League- and Mrs. LloneJ Sipes.
The most severe fro't «*f the sea­
will give a pio socinl at the Library
Tuesday evening March 9th, th e son* came here Monday night.* Many
proceeds to go to the building fund. tender “thitigs were more or lets
damaged. The frost Usually goes in
waves or* streaks nnd the ‘damage
GRAPEVILLE AND UPftALA
cannot
lie estim ated at first but Irish
Mi. and Mrs. Emil Mngnuson
pntatorj.
all kinds of beans, squab
who have
been at Co'urtnoy. on
popper*,
nnd
all spring clops wore
Merrits LHnnd since the. holidays,
sorne-'Vbal
hurt.
It could of been
returned home the latter part of
much
w
orse."
last week.
M /.arid Mrs. tint hart Swanson of
DONATE TO HOSPITAL
^ i
Colorado, who have- been touring the
southern part of the state, came up Jewish People of Sanford, Orlando.
in their cnV, which Is arranged to
M aron and Savannah Raise $ft0(&gt;.
e&amp;mp'out in and are (topping with
The Jew* of Sanford are nothing
their unde and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
If not .progrosfive and at- n dinner
August Swanson.
party a t . the ryidenco of Mr. nod
Mr. und Mrs. Henry Peterson Mrs. A-. H. M otes Yomc time ago a
tnd daughters Idnllnn and Ed wins large sum of money was rat-eil fqr*
oft Holly* Hill nnd Mrs. Christine the Formrid-Langhton llbjpitftl • in
PatmlpiiU of Miami name over by this &lt;ity. The Jews of Orlando nnd
auto Sunday to visit their relatives of other citirs nbm re-ipohdcd Orlando
here. .

coming ncro-is handsomely, in the
M r-.^ Ja ln ly u b t. who lias ‘been sum of £o0.0f&gt;. The following are
ailing Tor
time has been visit­ the donors and tin* *unvt set oppo­
ing witli Mr’, and, Mrs. Peterson site their name):
, f
this winter, * her m an y friends are * A , II. MAaes, .1100.00,, by check
glaii to see her aide to be about again M. Flcl'cher, JIOJ.OO b y clu-ckr
Mrs. fleo. Clark nnd Mrs. Wester- C. Banner, $50.00, by check; A.
diek went with their Sabbath school Banner, $25.00, by clrpck; i‘. Mo « ,
to Genetra Saturday and spent the S2JS.00, by chrek: M* Mnsm, $25.00day with Mr. und Mrs, Teitmnn.^
by check; S ’ Bobbtni, $25.00. by
Mri Williams and hahy apent check; A KMfeld,*$20.00. by rheuk:
the week fend hi -Orlnndo with her L. (ioH b’cr'g, $5.00, by cash; I*.
father,_ ijccompanied
friend*, Fleischer, $5.0d, by cash; C. Klbwerti
going down In their fine new- Packard $5.00 by check; Gnpg. AhovSholom*
car.
.: $50.00. by check,* nf 'Orfntido; L ‘
Mr. and Mrs, Jesse Thompson Moore, $1.00, by ci*h; ef Sava art ah;
apd littlo daughter went over to It. Kcjsler, $.1.004&gt;y caslt,cf Savannah
DeLand Saturday und hi* brother F. Schwartz,’-$10.00, liy Nieck . S.
by
clipck:
Jack brought them hack late Sunday Benjamin, $10.00,
K. Frank, $10.00, by check;. Dr.
We understand that Alfred Ericson is laid up with lumbago. Too Brown. SIO.Oll, hy check; Ix*3n.
$5.00, b y ^ g h e c k ; L. Hnmher.^jr,
bad, but the s o rt’of weather we have
$1)00; Mr. Schrcier, $5.00, hy check
been having is bn on young
and
Total,
$500.00.
’
’&gt; old. A number of the A. C. L. Iioya
have been ailing fori one cam e or
at) other. ‘
We are certainly thankful th a t
b.
the influenza V’enm ,to bn_dying o at
again, a num ber in Mr. Yiltlen'a
family us well a I all in Air. Borcll's *
were down wilji it. among the rest
nearly-glj were .very *ick hut there
were no deaths we ale. happy to
note. '
'
.
.\ .
We were sorry to hear of the &lt;loath
o f . Mr. Charley Lurfdqui*l. who I F(U Sn!(, _ E xlra Fine White
s petit the
j W y a n d o tte eggs. T w tf dollars per
OU.R P R O C E S S
-but »ilice the death of hi) wife, Fe In. W. B. Ballard, Altam onte
\
or '
ba* been Hving will* his ‘non Aval
110-tG
Wuhln^fnd Polishing Automobiles near Lake Mary. He parsed away on Spring*. Fin.
For S ale—Al( Sanfotd, by W estern
the Fth of February and InterrMake* Them Look Like New
mrnt took place' at the Swedish Union Co., twenty, five or thitfty
’Eipe-rienef d workmen, high grade Lutheran church
Sunday, Rev. tmdersize heart cypres* telegraph
Poliah. *Pricts very reasonable. Alfred Erireon preaching
the funeral pole* 20 and 25 feet long. Suitable
• Sec us for-quick actioh.
for fence posts -five or six fence p o s t«
sermon.
: BEHER BROS., Sapford Heights He was an aged, respected resi- ctn Le made of each poIe.„ lT0-6tc.
=_ Vi' *A
■'
'
1
'-.

a

CLASSIFIEDADVERTISING

: ■- •

A N D E V E R Y F R ID A Y F O R 15 W E E K S

Like An Invisible Octopus Workingf in the Dark

Did this mysterious band of Crooks work th^ir dech laid plans -Mt-n of Po&gt;vvor-i
in their Councils—They onm? front nil wajks of lifc4-’Ahey committed the ifi w parink'
Robbjsira—Tht* Boldest Murdofs—Everyc-ne feared them.
&gt;

,

V

But a Girl Whom They Tried to Enmesh

Turn»*d th&lt;* Tables on them. How? Why? Who? When? Where? Which!
The Girl is
’ *

RUTH ROLAND

.

| | |j

nnd these Romantic Adventures of Dramatic Interest happen with mile-a-minute cliR in .

“THE ADVENTURES OF RUTH1 *
EPISODE 1—“THE .FALSE COUNTESS"

------- jf

See One Episode and You’ll Want to See Them A ll
---- A L S O — -

A Ileal Life Story of Love
a n d Misunderstanding,
that Bares th? Soul of a
Million Homes. ,

Her
Husband
Said
She
W asn
’t
**

Fit to
Be the
Mother
~ of His
JE5SL L .L A 5K Y

c h ild
A Great Supporting Goat, in­
cluding Harrison Ford, Wini­
fred Greenwood. Raymond H at­
ton, Walter Hiern, and J. M.
Dumont, "The Dope" In “The
Miracle Mnn.M

Adults 20 Cents’
Children 10 Cents

INS

*6

T O O N S MRS lW I N T H H O P
j£

&amp;dtamountflrtcraiiCfiLutv * ,

REMEMBER: This is Benefit Day for fernald-Laughton Memorial Hospital
For S ale—-Pair of ponies weighing
800 ami 900 pound*,- five yoira old.
A. K. Appleby, Sanford Tfelgjita.
IM M tc.

Wanted—Lady1waitress Experienced
For Sale—Two tftory 8 room
' Bell Cafe 79-tf
and garage. S anford'H eights. Appu
No. 402, Sanford Ave.
9®-trc

FOUND On first St. west of
Sanford $4437.50
Fronting
north For Sale—Post Card Collect
------------------------„ -------For R en t—Unfurnished room in
on
brick
highway
just
east
of
the world-wide, also refrigerator »««
Bishop Block. A P. Connolly.
artesian Spring half mile w e s t of odds and ends In furniture.. 2"f1
110-,'Hc. Monroe road. 3&amp;&gt;£ acres.of ideal
Elm Ave.____________ 108-tf.
-v - homo site and irrigable farm land.
For Sale—6 room house,. p*i**o
For Solo—-Ileuses of four to 8$
sion March 23rd. A P Connelly i S f f i p $200 per acre offered for
Easy terms. J. Mum®
no-:itc.i^&lt;5 Pcr acre cash. Direct from
I0G-4tp
jownes. Enqummt Phone 352 reT
"
For Sale—Or will exchange for lating abstract and deed. 94-tf
(i,it n n

L „ I f

*

!

r.

a

P

k m

i

«■ •

For Sale—House and
L ib erty Bonds a Riilck c a r -in spltfr.- — *— '
did-condition. -1 new tirt&gt;*. I -extra-.
F o r Sale—One lot. Good location. hfagnolir: avenue.. Good
Can be seen a t * 107 W Tt nth S t./A pply 40G M yrtle Ave
107 -fiptp P. O. Pox 328. *

4 As

Lt&gt;t
barg*
' yOT-gg ,

-

110-3tp j

For Sale—Nice 11-room hour*-]
W anted —3 or 4 rooms for heuscFor" Sale—Stablt*' M anure In c rr j keeping Unfurnished preferably b i t P ark ave. Address Box 32$. ^'*7-t
j 05-6*F]
lots. RufTkjn Si Glrvirv. Ilisbre Bldg, will consider furnished Mr* R A
rf
Jacksonville, ”Fla.
•
I10-50le^ Terheun.
108-tf,
For Sale—One 18 * Horse
For
Sate—Typew
rtlet.
rtandard
,
_ „
,,
__ „
. For R e n t—One lnrge ■well fur- Berosene Oil Engine. Chase &amp;
™ .k .. Call or M m , 505 K 3 r a .|„ |, t . d r00m,
P . rk Av, 10S 6rt Sanford, Fla. ■
L, **
L O ..-A b u n.h or k *f*
1 ^
i “
fill
return to Herald Office
109-3tc.|tt 214 Elm vI

2 ^

£

,,lr!

w m

s tfflm

o seen E. J. Taylor, 407

i*

�MARCH 4, 1920

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

PAGE 3

Jveck and em itted dire predictions
of an approaching panic. It broko
when he returned home and his wife
(net him' at the door. Poor devil.
PimLLHIIKUS

K. J. HOLLY, Editor
W. M. HAYNES, Businos* Manager
* 0 , lag IUIM i l l d t Known on Application

'
nwlCBIPTIONJFlUCK IN ADVANCE
pol! ONE TEAK..-------»
ro u SIX MONTHS-----------------*
DEUTBUD IN CITY DY CABHIEH

When you are weary, ttnd your
spirits are droopjrtjj. and. you want
to enjoy a good old-fashioned ■laugh,
Just think of the agony ofx.mind of
our distinguished crop of presiden­
tial aspirants. The suspense must
sim ply he h-*-K *

AS OTHERS S E E . US
A stranger judges this
town
m ainly by its appearance. .
If it is clean, sanjtnry and invit­
ing, he carries the good word afnf
B ut if it is dingy, and ,111 kept, he
carries the had record to even
g tcater distances,
•We shoald have a reputation se­
cond to none—superior- to many
h u t wo *'fc»U«Jiavo o n ly -th a t which
we carve out by our own efforts.
^L et’s ail pitch in nnd make this
the cleanest and . the
brightest
th e m ost progressive year in our

MEMBER o r THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

* TOO MANY M IL LIO N A IR ES
There is one sure m ethod of.'^aving money. D on't spend it.
I)

T h e mumber of nbnorrqaliy rich
men being created in thus country ia
a m atte r of grave conern

Popular opinion is popular qnly
far as it- Is satisfactory to the
dishonest hiethods. Certainly the
There is. at least, ono -noticeable practices resorted to by those, men
effect Of the war. America is quite in tljeir pcramblo for gold are not in
accordance with the precepts of the
safe for plutocracy.
golden rule.
Wholesale dishonesty In business
It’s comforting to know th a t ar­
bitration Is coming into style, and brings reproach upon the fair name
disquieting to know th a t style never of-Amorica, nnd supplies the ground
work /o r future discontent and pos­
sible revolution, i t means disaster
Some people: are alw ays endeavor­ in. y e a n t o come.
No country ran survive in these
ing to enlarge their circle of ac­
quaintances. T h e borrow ing is easier days when the m ajority of the
wealth ii in the hands of a few. This
you know. “
K e v d n thut—heroines * the—m a rt "fir
last
resort’. This great country Itself
Beauty, they say, is only skip
is
the
outgrowth of rebellion against
deep. But th at, we imagine, depends
upon whether or not it is of tho drug
store variety.
An^ exchange avers th ilt ninetenths of. the conceit in tho world is
monopolized by. men under 40. Howold an* you?
i

Gains for 1919 Must Be Figured
Under U. S. La w — Returns

the average American girl
TOD MUCH LUXURY
the number oh m icrobes m n
Am erican people are suffering from
-tfpgle kiss, she’d order a coffin, shut
a
peculiar^ disease an
insatiable
her eyes, and take one la s t delirious
craving
for
the
luxuries
of
life.
ptkpgz.
Tim e was when if we had a good
home,
plenty to eat. and to wear, nnd
If tin* former crown prince gets
and
means
of recreation and enjoy­
short of cash he might secure a
ment,
wr*
srrrd
contented and happy.
booking in ' the American movies,
But not now.
it takes all sorts of peolo to make up
The more we get the more wewant,
2 a reel. \ 1
and th e more we w ant the more
feverish our efforts to get it.
?. The good book tells us th a t it is
We never have en»ugh--*are never
n \t well for man to be alone.' But
satisfied.
*
it Would take u mouth f u ll,to con:
If
our
neighbor
has
a car, we long
vinVo spine of the henpecked gentry
for one ju st a little better.
If Jones has a house of beauty,
Smith wants one of grandeur und
e piople a rt vert table geniuses magni finance.
kin r life disagreeable
for
If Mrs. Smith is at the head of
an i they find the pastim e so the social whirl. Mrs. Jones is not
g t tey never think of taking saitxfied until she has supplanted her
n their sails.
If one m an-is term ed our leading
citizen, a .dozen others will aspire
to the honor.
i-hen steak was 15. cents u
An abundance of- th e necessities
and eggs 10 cents a dozen of life i*f n o t eriouifh. Wcwmust have
»rp limits to thb m em ory of. the luxuries, both for our own plea­
newspaper editor.
sure and to outshine other _people.
And the list of life’s luxuries is so
xehange sagely rem arks th n t long and so' varied th a t no mkn or
every diverse results in two woman has- ever Wen known to
•
e m arriages." Quite interpst- reach th e und.
lleed. Possibly one of the
Millions of people forego many
nnexes a couple of new on es of the necessities of life in order to
bask tn..,Ute Jimiight of luxury, They
came to town one day this are lavish in adorning, their persons
and their surroundings at the ex­
pense of thefr stomachs. They enjoy
the tinsel of. life' nfid endure the
privations necessary in order to
'satisfy their vanity,
•• •
The age of sanity is disappearing.
Thnt of frivolity is, here.
YOU WANT FOR
M odern day ’ luxury is considered
a blearing. In reality it is more of a
curse, because we do not realize
when economy ends nml extrava­
gance begins.

LAND SALE PROFITS TAXABLE

M arket

Phone 106
fo r

q u ic k

s e r v ic e

M O R E TROUBLE AHEAD
. M any estimable people are fondly
of the opinion that the troubles of
America are at an e n d —at least in
so far as our relations with foreign
goverhnfenvs are concerned.
,
TJidy believe th a t because we
raised nn army of 4,000,000 in ft
few m onths nnd sent 2,000,000 to
Trttnce w e . have dem onstrated our
superiority in-such n striking manner
that th e rest of the world will be
glad“ to Tot us alone.
They nre in error, as -was clearly
shown when England and Franco
cslmly ignored -the th reat of I’rcsldeqt .Wilson on the Jugo-Slav *question.
•
M '* * 1 ,
E ngland nml France ^ expreted
enorm ous additional credits* from
th e ’U nited States government. They
did not get them.
T hey -expected tho United State?
to assum e much of the burdon of
rehabilitating devastated ► Europe.
T h e y wore disappointed. ^1®*^
T hey charge that w e 'c o m m e r­
cialized th e war nnd annexed tho
w ealth ;o f the world, and th at now
we will not open our money bags

I

1 FORSTER. President

B. F. WIIITNKR, Cashier

Sanford. Florida
been Jumping during tile past few
years, iuid during 1010 ninny owners
sold out p art or nil of th e ir lands at big
profits. All such gains constitute In­
come and must he taken Into the act
Income for the -ear.
Any person who sol ' p a rt of a farm
or raneli, or part of a p irc e l of land,
must also show nay gains realized by

M.irr'.iye of FI rat Couclns.

F irst cousins niny marry* la
hnmn. f'nlifortiln. Colorado. Conn
n il. U clnw nrr.' Florida] Cicorglm
N ecessary Farm Expenses May Be Do
bo. Iowa. Kentucky. Louisiana, Mn
d u cted —Special Form for - Farm
M aryland, M assachusetts, Mfrlilj
Income—Cash or Accrual
M innesota, Mlssli;s|p|il. Montana
hnm bn.'New Mexico. Neff York,
* - Oasis for Computing.
C nndlnn, Ittmde Island,
the sale
fltin. Tennessee," Text
The method of figuring gains and tnont, Virginia, West Virginia nn&lt;
losses on such im naaethins Is p rescrib­ Wisconsin.
ed In* (be Income Tax regulations.,
copies of which may be secured from
Coed Way to Clear Land.
Internal Revenue Collectors.
!q ttic novel method of etriirhl
odiqitcd by a Minnesota fntync
Forms for Returns.
underground rents »nre Imrned
The
Internal
Revenue
B
ureau
has
’slector of internal revenue by Ma.ri.1i In.
Niied an improved Form tiiiOF for the
use of farmers. This form, together use ii? firewood. At one side of each
w ith Form UHOA or IIHII..will give the "tum p im exrnvntlun Is made In tho
farm er explicit Information ns to how ground, nnd from this n hnlc',l\ bfired
lo properly ligure fils net Income for through the roots to n stovepipe | set
upright in the ground on the other
unit.
T h ere are two methods iif figuring a side. When it lire Is kindled 111 tho ex*
fnriUFrir-income lax retu rn this year, cnvntlon, the draft set np liiruughjrtia
Farm Expenses.
Complete Line of
From fds gross Income u former Is lie may make his return on the busts roots nod tin* pipe cause* tlio root" to
allowed to charge off nit of Ids neces­ of the 'JIJTerc.net* between the money he Slowly consumed, until the stump
and goods recelveil for Ills products may he toppled over q u ite unlmcumL
sary expenses In the conduct of the
and the cash paid cut for actual allow­
form during the year. T hese Include able farm expenses within the year,
i-iists of planting, cultivating, harvest­ fir tie may make Ills return on (lie ac­
ing nnd marketing.
In addition to crual basis, which -means computing
these costs he may deduct money spent the receipts and expenses th at pertultl
5323022353530248534802235348484848232348234848485353232353482348534853534848
for o rdinary farm tools of short .life to the tnknhlc year, o '.eluding Income I __&gt;_ bought during the year, such ns shov­ earn ed nml expenses Incurred*in Pf®- F flE C K L E S Posit
— t « ox t,
, 7els, rnkes, etc. A lso,,the cold of feed vious or succeeding years.
purchased for Ids live stock limy he
I t is worth 'q u ite a
treated us an expense, In so fur ,.s
this cost represents actual outlay: hut
bit to be able to get
the value of Ills m m products (Vd (a
i w ii &gt; from o \ living* fhl*" I t i n t ’k i •! of I»
ntiltnnls Is not a deductible Item.
parts when you need
O ttier farm eX|K&gt;hm*s allowable are Ing so much.” «itys an u n d ertaker of
them, and not have* to
”1 looked tl Up
the cost of m inor repairs op buildings wide experience.
(but not the dwelling house), on fenced, once und It’s Just the survival of an
wait and pay addi­
wagons nml farm m ach in ery ; also hills old Ibdirow custom of dressing folks
tional expense ■for spe­
tmld for ho|Hcshnclng, stock powders, different lo warn their neighbor* of
rock suit, services of v eterinary, Insitr- tin* unclean presence of ilouth. DR
cial factory shipm ents.
ahee (except ,pn dwelling house), ga"o- ft'rein n ik u s were used, however, lo
lino for o|tcrutlug pow er and sundry different old timers.
t&gt;n the gold
Furniture nnd Complete
o th er expenses which were tmld for In coast, of Africa the relatives of the
House Furnishings
rn sli.
dead w ear rail exehislvely and on the
As to Idreil Ip-Ip, all the productive east const they wear w hite Instead
Inhot; Is a deductible expense ; lint thn of black. The gnoo util hoh'-tnll Ma­
Stoves and* Ranges
wages of household serv an ts, or help oris of New Zealand must have beery
O ur Stock is Complete
hired to Improve, the farm , s s hi tree tlin Inventors of (Ii Ih taboo stuff,
planting, ditching, etc., cannot he though, for any one of them that
claim ed agahisi earnings. A farm er Is touched a corpse couldn't touch any­
Prices and Terms
not allow ed to claim ti salary for him­ thing with Ills hands f o r ’a year nnd
Reasonable
self o r members of Ids ’ family* who hnd to eat off the ground, like the
work on tho farm.
hoys In a ple-vat Ing i-nlttest. It’s

lucky for ii" undertaker" thnt some
at
least-of the obl-thne taboo has ratl­
P u rch ases of. form m achinery, wag­
ons, work hid mu Is, etc.,’ nlA» Ihe i-osl in! from tlhi memdry of Hie while
of coiistntcihm or extension of. Imlhb nmn." *
Wear and Tear. 1

e v e r y t h in g

GOOD
MEAL

If this hank enjoys success nnd-a-high reputation
if it is a tru ly up-building force in the com m unity
if it is fulfilling its highest mission as a bank, i t
is all due to the C haracter th a t makes it the
institution it is.

Due March 15

CARS

\ If

Did it ever o c c u r to. you th a t precisely the sam e
is true of a hanking institution?

Spring is the tim e to begin

MOtOR

We insist, however, th a t there is
nu comparison between the prevail\ ing price inflations nml automobile
\ tirt-x. The latter sometim es lilow up.

The true worth of
uian or woman is the meat
ure of hi* or her character.,
1
*'

Cor. Oak and 2d St
PHONE 3

SANFORD

logs, silos, fencing,.etc.,. khoiihl he con­
sidered additional Inv estm en ts'In the
farm nml are hot* proper deductions
against Income.
A reasonable allowance may bp
claim ed for wear ami teiir on farm
building? (except the farm house),
fences, m achinery, work iiiilmuls. wag­
ons, tan k s, windmills ami o th er farm
equipm ent which! Is used in Hie coiduct o f Hie farm.
As to notos nnd Tractors, the cost of
these Is not an expense, .nlthough the
cost o f th eir upkeep Is an allowable
deduction, If-the m achines a re used u cliislvely for farm purposes nml not
for p leasure, Also, In such eases, u de­
duction for w ear und le n t k* allowed.
Farm Losses.

T he loss of a growing crop Is not n

proper deduction from Incot. s, lintsyiuch ns the.value of the crop had mu
been tnken Info gross. Income. The
loss of n building or of machinery
through ntonu, lightning, Hood, etc., Is
an allow able dedurtlnn, but cart* should
lie used to nsecrtnIn the correct Ins?
*UMnlned, ns restricted by Income tux
regulations.
’ •
No deduction Is fillnwet) In the rase
of loss of nnlmnlx raised on the farm,
tuit n loss Is deductible from g r a s s In­
come If the nnlmnU had been p u t
chased fo r d raft or breeding purposes.
S hrinkage In weight or value of fnrrn
praducLa held for favorable m arket
prices cannot be deducted us A loss, for

thq trenwm tltat when such products
are sold Ihe shrinkage will bo reflected
In tho selling price.
,8 sls of Firms snd Land.

The value of agricultural lands has

31 years service to San
- ford

It Has Happened to Others'
And May Happen to You
In Spite of Everything You May Happen to Do

B e P rep a red
v-r. When
It Does Happen

ty&amp;Q
PH _=
nj ^
x
SL e i te M W S g g n

with ample
*

Fire Insurance
So that you may not “be the
loser, financially
S E E US FO R
F IR E IN S U R A N C E

A L L , K IN D S W
IN S U R A N C E.
R E A L ESTATE,

'S A N F O R D , F L A .
LIABILITY,

COLLISION

P R O P E R T Y DAM A G F .

".'dir u r n

.i^s
.j
•M

_ -ri.

�' j ■►

'

.
. 1 » r * * T ^ r fi
-

PAGE i — ,

• ••• ,

IB -

*-

Bfe-

Little Happening*
Mention of
Matter* In B rief
Personal Item s,
of Interest

-‘
» . Mmgr
» f* '

; »
I -Vi lBI?*---

,

**

.

-=1RJ*

-&gt;* I

‘

________

In a n d A b o u t
The C ity •£

•

Summary of the •
Floating Small
. Talk* Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Reatjera

T he D au g h ters of Wesley of th e before th e First day of April of any

.
cooked food sale at the Union P h ar­ tise and sell."
m acy on Kutuzilny Match* Sth for " T his i*s to notify &amp;H concerned
itts--bene lie of tfaw -Pip* ttm a a . Lund.
rhw requitenrcnVs
-will
i)c compiled with and th e T ax Books
i 110-ltc.
Electrical Fixture*, House Wire- will postiyely I*1’ closed on April
Ing, In ‘ fact all kinds of electrical First ji» provided by law arid n11
work. Phone j442. W. II. Treadwell, lands oh which tax es.h av e no t been
Electricl*#.- ’
83-tf. |,aid w|jl be advertised an d execu­
tions issued - for unpaid por.tonal
Floor coverings. G6Td Seal Guaren*
*
toed Congoleura Art Squares. Hall property taxes.
JN O . iD. M IN K IN S
runners .and yard^ good*. Boston
Tax Collector, * Senfinolo . C ounty.
.Bargain ‘llouae. A’. Kanncr Prop.
MOtc. *
• *-'•
213*216 Sanford Avo.
68-tf

I

________ 2________

Si. .Agnes Guild
S t. Agnes G uild will resume its
""TPffUlffT- mcntlntr^- nn“ M onday—withM rs. Itobt. H erndon hostess- nl the
hoftlt of her m o th er, Mrs. Stum on.
Full attendance requested, .

FOUND

WAY TO
To

S ettle . Adriatic • C o olrorersy
B etw een Baly en d slavH
London M arch *1 flly Associated
Press) Prem ier NiUl of Ita ly , in ter­
viewed liy th e M anchester G uardian
s a y s n way .will lie found to settle
(he A driatic controversy and th a t
Italy and Jugo-Slaviu jrljj he feionds.
LABOR SCARCITY
i- Mexiia'n Northern S ta le r
^ coming S erious

Be*

Mexjc'o City March 4 iHy Associ­
ated Press) The, exodus of Aml’ficun
htbcrrr* • tn t he—h r ilH i. ■K tstw , i*
i ecorni iq so fthrmlm; th a t scrhwji
datr/'*' to numerous Industries wtn
the northern
will close^and
iaige areas of farm lands wHI be
uncultivated.* •

IN SOCIETY’S DOMAIN
FINDS ANCIENT ABODE

Mnj. R. A. Terheun, Editor
Phone 395
E ; ; •' ‘ *
Zgg^t;

* *

Societ y Personals

Mrs. Cora Lee Xkers arrl ved
yesterday from Pulaski. Vo., lo he
the gutsl of M r^. Mill Hand.
Mrs. (ico. Shipp nnd children accompanlcd hy Mrs. Holding left to*
day for n vi&gt;lt of several day** with
_
•
relative) in 'I'a m pa.

*

B1*
KH- - --- *
|ii'||pjbc
r

t

„

•
[J;.

.

M iss Ilukh M etlingcr was tlje
guejt 0( Iter sister, Mrs, \V. L.'
Morgan nt Hoi id Carnes on LVc-l IP5*
day. She will return (of a week end
vlilt, on Saturday.

CM r - .
m -

■-

f

'

. Mrs. L, N. Strauglrn and daugliters Mi««ri Irene and Elizabeth left
this week for Washington i), C. ert
route to their home in Cen.trrvitlc
Md. after a visit of several month
•in Sanford.
.. Tenny D eane was among the
college folks sp ending the week end
a t home.

Mrs. Geo. Watson and
little
DoWitt arrived from Floral City
Tuesday and are the guests of Mr
Zeb Ratliff and Mrs. \\ W Ahncrathy.
M r.* Charlie Banniegster is in
Jacksonville thifc*-weok on business.
Mrs. F. A. Ilissctt and. tltrre
cildren have gone to Waycros* (o
jo in Mr. Bisson whose promotion
w ith the A. C.' L, makes Waycros*
.

•

• ii|a headquarters.
Mrs. Leon and mother, Mrs.
Deamontl were among the rertdit
Sanford shoppbrs iu Orlando.

t

K .:.

Propertj O w ners Take Noliic
t •
T h e law provide* that " If taj^e
upon real estate shall not he paid
g — _____ __________ I------------------

HEADQUARTERS
-------- FOR----- —
EVERYTHING IN

G ro ceries

.v

MACKEREL
-A T -

Camera Locates Cliff Dwelling in
Zion Canyon.

COMFORT

AT

LITTLE

«.' .
'

'

Inventor Tall* of Ida* Which Enables
Him to #Hsv# Hot -Bath a t Prao11cm11y No Expert**,
I

,

&gt;
b

** '

i

“ Barbara F rletch le"
W om an's
roqrngc
Ims'
often
matched man's, un a day In |801l li
outm atched man's. • B arham Frlett'lile’s blood runs 'through the vein*
L«* Angeles. — Discovering from of Old G lor/. Site vil* « gray-bnlred
lo* Angeles n hitherto unknown ell IT woman with the light of a mld-Ahy
dwelling 400 feet up a 2.1)00-foot can
slim Inti llpn in her veins. On a Sep
yon side In -Utnb Is a new - expe­ tem per morning, when I-ee's forces
rience.
were pouring through Frederick, Md.
It was tho experience o t Eyre Pnw 4ed by Stonewall Jackson, every (In*
ell of 4-1 Wnveerest avenue, Vcnlec, of tjn- United States hnd been low
who In enlurgttjg n unique photograph ‘-red. Up rose old Bnrhonr Krtrfchtr
token wlrhACtelephnio lens, made what in the Cnee of (lie regim ent plowing
may prove to he one of the greatest the street. She seized n hauled-dowr
nrrhneologlcnl discoveries of recent Dug a ml set h In her attic window,
years In the United States.
herself 11a color guard,
Slonewnll
The photograph wns taken Jn Zion Jnckaon'a eye caught sight of It
canyon, U tah, reccutljr ' declared a " F ire !’* The rllles sh a tte re d •the slnff
nntlnnnt park, and shows what np- hut old Bnrhnrn hud catight the ban­
parently Is a cliff dwelling 400 feet ner. and waving It fa r out over th&lt;
lonjf and Go or 70 feet wide.
It Is street, she'crletl, “Shoot,"If you will,
probable, according to Mr. Powell, Hint this old gruy bend, but spare ybut
no human foot hits beCh In the dwell­ country’s ’ ling.”
And th e, gallant
ing for l.nnp years or longer.
In Jackson's eye swam, and Ids shout
Mils fact Jles Its rhlef archaeological blazed now. "Who touches a hair ol
Importance, ns other cl IIT dwellings, yon gray head dies like a dog. March
found nt the surface, have been ttie on I"—Chicago Journal.
homes of* animals and much disturbed
slnre being Inhabited by thfcB’ original
"
W in Russian!
builders.
••
W illiam F ..F o x ,-K n ig h ts of Colum­
Tlie plintogrnph was taketf~TH/ a b u s commissioner to Siberia, who I*
dlstnnce of about three-qtinrien of a speeding up entertainm ents for th*
mite from the cliff, Mr. Powell Yanks doing police work on the T rans
having no Idea Hint It would reveal Siberian railway, records an auiusluR
anything of particular In te re st
The Incident a t the iiiHlulIutlOn of steam
portion of the photograph which heat In to the Knights of Columbut
Inter was found to show the ancient club nt Vladivostok. The new- radiator
dwelling was less limn a 'quarter of commenced piping quavers und tlt-mln n 'Inch In site. Through'successive sem iquavers, and a Russian- soldlei
eidargemen
irnis this was Increased to who was standing near by thought tfic
abbot 12 liInches. ,
contrivance was one of the celebrated
The dwelling Is nbouf 400 feel American * talking machines lie had
above the top of the shale slide nl heard much about,- Ho even thought
the base of the cliff. Leading down ih a f th e tune—the first to he played
from the dwelling nro Irnces of liy hy the new Instrum ent—wlitr Ihe Amer­
ledge otnT used by the dwellers to go ican national anthem. But ho vvnt
tip mid down to their safe relrent. quickly undeceived when Yankee sol­
These ledges have beer almost rain- diers' look him to (he basement und
pletely eroded by the elem ents In Ihe. Inltluted ,1dm into the rites of stoking
lapse of yeitrs, and It Is nafe to say, a furnace.
.■
according to Mr., Powell, that Ihe
dwellings there have been undisturbed
Noval Strike.
fhr nisvuy centuries.
T here la u novel form of strike Id
The discovery of ihe rllff dwelling
progress In u portion of Victoria
In Ihe picture ’ came as n complete
-Australia. Angered hy the high price)
Hurprlse to Mr. Powell. He has decharged Tor children’* shoes und
tided, however, to make -on early Inhoots, parents have been sending
' 1‘stlgnthin of (lie place, and believes
tin t a skilled Alpine climber may he their hoys und girls barefooted U
aide to pick his way up the almost school. . This nnil-profltecrlng mens
tire has been u-nihuslastlcally up
d list roved ledges which the ancient In­
plauded
by' the chlldreh, who enjoy
habitant.* were wont to climb.
the novelty, and 4n many cases, w hen
parents have not joined In', hoots hav*
been discarded before th e home U
' Testified He Kissed 300 Girls. o u t of eight. An am using feature
Tht» champion “Jack the Hugger and
has been the aellon of u local httolHclIKisser'* of Indianapolis, Ind„ la Ez Maroney, n twenty-two-y ear-old attendant e r in sending his own children bare
fouted. As there is no school rule
nt a skating rink. Marnney. n witness
which prescribes lootwear, nnd ns the
In Ihe trlnl of u slxteen-year-old girl
days a re tong and warm, the MrJkt
on Ihe charge of delinquency, told
Judge I.nhr In juvenile court th at ha la running Its nuTry course.
had hugged and kissed 300 girl* In the
P eru Alarmed Oyer Chinese.
time he had been employed a t I ha
. T he continued Influx of Chinese In­
link. .
to P e n t h* being viewed with a la n r
and ngjiation is being carried on by
Town Peculiarly Named.
W hat’s In a name? becomes n m et­ •th e recently fortped ‘Antl-AslaUt
league, which has as Its purpose tilt
ier for Consideration la the i-n-ie of
securing of more stringent tmmlgru
the happy-go-lucky mauner of bestow­
tlou laws. The chief fault found with
ing one practiced hv the surveying
the Chinese Is, that they enter. Intc
party about which Captain Bejn.irdsmall businesses and sell at such low
son tells In hi* book on the Mesopo­
prices Mint local tTusIne-s men can
tamia!) campaign. ITils p trfy eam e^o
not cyimpcte. Feeling h as run hlgt
a village on the BuphnRqs not market)
hfl' sevenil occasions, with disastrous"
on the map. so the surveyors hailed
results to .the Chinese merchants.
n local Anth jtnd n«ked hint! ."What
la the name of this vllloge?" “M’udri.”
Picturesquely P u t
the Antli. replied, tn’udri meaning “I
D isgusted Cop (at cro ssln ;)—Romi
do-pot know." But the party unque*rhauffetir. you are! Say. If you wen
tlomngly acceple«&lt; It as th e name of
the vlltaxe, and Mpdrt (he v llla rt l« rrosslne the Snhsrn desert you’d run
Into a hydrant.—Boston T ran scrip t
to .th is tluy—on the survey man.

‘ •* •

:rrh iri

FOR

,*

Dr. Alexander G raham Bell, liv
Ventor of the telephone, speaking of
the Importance of little things, In Peo­
ple’s Magaxlne, (ells of one of his own
' home-made devices..
- “ 81leaking of com fort In ^ie home,"
by. Hiyaf--Vlt’a e iltooght sb q u t, Ihm.botw nter problem. I do m ost of my hard­
est work lute at night and In the Very
early tuorqlng; and I Ukb to have a
bath between 2 and 3 a. m. But, as a
rule, th e w ater heated by tho kitchen
stove tins cooled lu the bollq: by that
time. . *
*T got n xlnc tnnk rind put It Into a
wooden box much larger, *o that there
w a s 'a space of th ree o r four Inches
between the outsdc walls of the tank
and (he Inside of. tho box walls. Tbit
whale space I filled w ith wool. Hot
w ater, poured Into the ylnc tank, • 1
fonnd, kept Ita h eat fa r longer under
those circum stances than In a con-*
Inlner unprotected by the wool—along
the lines of the therm os bottle, you
see.
“B ut how to heat th e w ater? And
w ithout w aste?- Ah I I was wasting
heat every night, w asting It. dreadful­
ly I T hink of how It poured from the
chimney of my student’s lam p! I ran
two pipes from the stnc tank Into a
'hood' over the lamp’s (lame, thus es­
tablishing a circulated of water, I then
proceeded with my night's work.
“Next morning the w ater In the lank
was a little warm, but not w ane
enough. I found, however, th at In the
evening when I relit the student’*
lamp t h e r e 'wns strtt wnrtnlh In the
w ater from (he xfnc tank. Sol It Ik.^
came n cum ulative process, anil In s
few nights I had the- w ater In (h&lt;
ta n k 'to o hot for me lo hold my hnad
In It.
* ;*•
“T h at 'tan k Is now In the attic ol
my Novn Scotia house, niid Its wa­
ter, health! by my student's-lam p Idea
and protected by Its . wool covering
gives mo n Alee warm hath every thorn
lug. T he only difference" Is tbnt I get
the heat from a straight pipe run down
the Inside of the chimney to fuy open
lire In the study,"

Probable That No Human Foot Haa
Deem In Dwelling for at Least
1,500 Years. %

ir

^ PKUTr’*Of*
KvTv? -nt

'

Four men have so far announced themselves a candidate for this office, and we
all know that just one maii will be elected. The one man will be the mart best
vf l t t e f r if&amp;ff-;t f t d o f f l ^ fTfi?cdW ?*h^'e(f
v
^
r J ‘ &lt;v

AND—

IT —

S H O U L D ------ B E
4

the same way in regards to the Gent’s Clothing stores in any -Jiown. The people
should.trade at the store that they think or know to be the best. Trade with
' men they think best fitted to takeicare of theft wants. This we believe is being
done in Sanford, because there is ever so many that trade with us.
-

f

•

I

r

- •Hi *• •

AND WE WANT Y -O -U , if Y -O -U ARE NOT m
ALREADY ONE OF OUR CUSTOMERS, WHEN
^ O - U THINK" OF CLOTHES AGAIN THINK OF ; it

M

PERKINS AND BR\
The Store That Is Different

•B
'•
• 'T V
X-my picture, nnd th e fa rt font even
Elephants tifdlspensable,'
the most delicate stru ctu re of plants
ran he tints photographed bears wit-* * It is said itiiit Inin's lenk farest*
M atter of All-Absorbing Importance ness Hint even those bodies which are could riot ho v p AtJ. w lihhm the a*
* Among Member* of the Anierlapparently transparent lo X-rays do slsinnce of cletm D». ,ns hnullng uu* can Expedj^jonary Force.
.absorb them to n cectnfn degree, which chines could nhj heA tfcd In Mie inso
teak trees grow.
is governed hy llielr consistence nnd cwwlhle ptncesjyrt
“One who observed Ihe United i hick ness, then content of air and of One eh-phnnt '&lt;yi i handle from jlfty ta
Seventy logs -In
i fa^aaon.
Slates arm y during the lute fracas, *np. nnd ihelr client ten! constitution.
r I.
both In this country ami lu the A- HLike other objects." p lan ts appear
F„ frequently reuchetl the conrluslon upon the i photographic plate not qj|
P.ittenct, or Folly.
that rhow was king." writes Jam es mere shadow pictures, hut In so-called
W
ei
tlrlselillj
C;
Iscldii Ifllru
-|llre z-pllottie
eplimni- of !»•
K. Dpmt In the American Legion .•'plnstle" representations— I. «*., giving
lienee?
Ur.
tile
cllijmx
of absurd foe
Weekly. "A complete, history of the nn effect of three dimensions.
" 1
tin stern worn#*
war cnttld he Indited in (he term s of
Judge mid miKwei*. 'A peusuui girl, of
tin willy, subm arine turkey, slum,
Call of Nicotine
-'n g n ie
entity jof
the Tyro!,
err'i• ejiin.v
lor Age
l yro:. thing
iliiug la
pomnu-s de_ lerre Fnuicftls und pot.Two south sfde stree t curs were th e m I'ldhl‘ “ itKcs.'^jt^ nttrncted ihe *tage,’* Continues the -Weekly,
approaching each oilier not long ago.- fen Honn of ,-i nilfyltjlf t»f S;ilu*;i_as_h*_
.
!Wheu do wc eat?’
- nt least not so tunny months ago. Idde p;i&gt;r loTF cUtViige dimr tiuij sa»
"Remem ber' tbat cry as Ihe horn- tills rnmouflngp being necessary In or­ lier sphiulng In. llm* mitillglit. Ilc'rnxe
mesHD-chevuux-S boxcar stood pa­ der t bnl it vigilant s[K&gt;tter may not Heel her. ItNiitglit Jitif to Ids castle with *
tiently for hours on n siding while he nbfe to find out the culprit, for pom p; detiuimleq,!When her first h*b*
hungry men longed, to gpt to the bil­ It was worth the delay to Intl^li nl wns Imrn. HuiijSljp resign it lo him:
leting area and hot coffee? Remem­ ulmt happenednFain ileinilIMjiil tl at She It-itve him,
ber that query In the trenches when
.Suddenly one motornmn signaled tills, hln complying meekly ; di-inmiiltd
Jerry had shcl|eiLUu; cuuuuuuluUlon the - ot Herr 'T i r e ' noprte-hmtnd e n r •trr two yenrs* thin- t|m t *sto- n tu n rietrench nnd held up the chow detail;' came to n grinding slop and tin* car arnty Ills nee hrldc for the nltnr—
or In the fox hole uren when tbe south-hound on the o th er truck did whleli sle- did ; anil its the dear wom­
kitchens hadn’t been nhle to keep up? likewise. An&lt;| then follow this:
an % su| iremlillng: before him. tbs
“ Even way hack In tho wooden gun
“Gimme n chew off the old plug." m arquis ri le d : "Tlnm old) art aij
•lny* of the w ar chow was a main (Business of reaching for ihe .said b rid e! Thee only do I love!" ilrl'cld*
objective In the day’s plun.’ I believe plug nnd passing II over. Business liniJ proved to him /h er Immcasurabl*
It I*- safe to say th at every inane In of taking a chew and passing It hack), ’affect Ion
(he army or navy commented nl Borne ■‘Thanks. " S ’long!"
And Ihe cars
lime In his letters home on the fowl. were on llielr way.—Indlannpolls
Name of. Japan.
It was either, T h e grub Is fierce,' or News.By Murco Polo, thg enipire of Jn|ml
T h ey sure give a guy plenty to ent.’
Is nniiiisl Zlpiingu; ‘nnd hr- the I’M“Those were the days early In the
Banks Make Record.
lies,-,
(ilpiiiitiqtle; ifi-j “Ttie empire profall of 1P17, when mess sCrgealits
There has been only one national
were
new
to
their
a rt—and
hank failure In twenty-two months, reeding from the' Suit.'' (upon or J*mess officers, too. for that m atter. with none nt nil during llm last pan. .tp|H-urs to he n Corrupt fern).of
The ’bird’ who managed to hold his calendar year—a new rio'nrd la Atin-r- the I'ldnese term. Ijiifrodurnl uruh*strategic position In Ihe front ywni '\lr m i finance, 30 times better than the Idv liy the Portuguese or llilllniis. It;
of the line tvtwi sflre to get a npftTu- average for any sim ilar period In tho the Inliuhlinnisi tliuf umpire, after lb#
tnental helping; whereas tbe ttlfiuclty forty years’ life of th e present na­ principal Ishiiuf, Is Itles'gnnlrd MpoA
Individuals iK (he other end were tional hanking kystem. Two hun­ or qiiphonlntisly Nlfjm, 'vrhlrh hn* tb*
apt to he told, '2s'o more prune*; tnqge dred nnd ninety-eight national hanks "nine signification m# Ihe Chinese irna
o n !’ or ’Coffee all o u t; quit shoving!’ have liicrenseir ihelr ra p lln l' ’stock Tetikn Is another phtne hy wldrh'tld
"Thnl was the fiercest bnltlc for during the last ten month*.
em pire Is rrrogulztid, which &gt;*lgn!ilc*..
existence. You were on time or went
Ji l»A siTTi-nrlesiJnl - rvnlDi." Fpim thl*
■hungry. Dear Clarence, who .must
deslgtintloil ttie tqiverelbn orlelatHf
S^d Filter tor Sewage.
always he cal Im l-three times for sup­
derlvtw) one of Ills iltji'* : that oiTrfltX
Frete
li experiment* have found or- S iiii-:i , t. e "TIi* | ..oil of Tenk: tf &lt;f
per ai home, learned to he right there
ff'im'v - «! ■ ethi-teni titter for &lt;iewwhen the chow line fell In.
tin* Sllh-t'eh‘stlBl-iv)nplre.— .Vote lath*
"Some of the canny even learned Rm*
Hakluyt S-.Hetyj BUhlleathtn.
to pack their mess kits with them lo
play It safe; on much Ihe same theory
th at some men .carry their tooth­
brushes wttli them, dot knowing jvhere
they will spend the night. .
of Rosoland Dairj’ Milk, and you
„"A tu.le is Jold o f a company In
the depol brigade nt- a certain camp
will mitlorstnnd ,w)&gt;y it is prefer*
th a t wns caught -standing retreat
red by mother who demand th«
holding th eir mess kits, 'Which hold
purest nnd b e t; for their children.
the prize until n rooky In another
The high-eost-of-food need never J
•■oiupany 'o f tbe same battalion' was
aflecL
the chi dren -so long a*
observed standing rMreat, wearing a
Rosoland
Milk provides tho nour*
dip hat npjl suiqljlng a stogie."

A LL THOUGHTS

ON “ CHOW"

Nate The Richness

Cannabis a New Mena'ce.
In Brazil cannabis smoking Is herenting a national menace, according
to Dr. T. S. B lair of Harrisburg, l’a..
who adds the warniilg that the vice
can readlljr he Imported to .this coun­
try unless we guard carefully against
It. He says ihe cannabis smoker n ear­
ly always becomes nn Imhccllolu time.
In an article oti the ’‘Relation of
Drug Addiction lo Industry" In' (lie
Journal of Industrial Hygiene, Dr.
B lair says m at business. Industry nnd
Industrial physicians m ust make It
It elr enre to see Hint Ihe ’’Jokers" lire
token out of Ihe narcotic Intvs and
thnl then those lawn are effectively
enforced. The few debased physicians
“who Infe-u rilhiost every community
and who deliberately keep up* addic­
tion through Ignorance oc cupidity," he
- nys. m ust be tnken lu hand.
In many ways heroin Is the worst
litildi■forming drug known.liedcclnre j
and mid) th at Its legitimate upptlca
Hon In medicine can be filled hy other
drugs.

ishment it docs fo i the. small
amount it costs. We make two
deliveries daily. &lt;

'

P h o n e 2011

Cotton Seed Meal
NITRATE

.

-

•

;- '

mm l-v*g

&gt;

■

f

Potash Nitrate
ASH ES

Riant, Secret*.
The ' use of X-ray photographs for
revealing the Inner secrets nf the
.structure of the 'bodies, of men nnd
anim als has long been fam iliar but,
th eir application to the-plant world Is
more m v n l.
The nupierotis mineral' constituents
of lim its all appear clearly In -the

f

.•

MARCH 4, 1920

s

COST

.

,

.

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

•(

M . E. S unday School will fmld a year, th e Tax Collector shall adever-

For Klim Powdered Milk. Phone. 2412
W. W. Drcasor.
- 108-Gtp
Mr*. Wllmfatt will be at The
French Shop] T hursday March 4th
* and tyill bo gla^ to meet her friends
and customers.
109-0tc. *
Itcsturant For Sale
On account of illn ess'in family
necessitating
rem oval to Georgia
tho Park Avenue Cnfe and nil fur­
niture and equlpem nt is offered for
sale. Good business jn good location.
, .For. particulars see Miss Carrie
■ Gray, Park AVenuo "Cafe.
108-tf.

, rjt.

r

.

.

* ■m m m

■

B B tS . i •

r

• •— ^*- ■'■

�'

J

rr.

MARCH

A 1320
L___

f*

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

the •Wn« of. i.twls and that, they also
understood the a rt of tanning fir cur*
Ing skins- ofvanimals. /
Ono thhwt seem* certain. Tho com­
munity was overtaken by some snd&lt;denty devoloplry*-catastrophe.
Included among the" bodies found In
a perfect state of preservation *tVcro
mm, women and children nf all ages.
Tito clothing, furs.nnd skins w ere In
perfect condition. Exposure to the
air, however, quickly caused much of
It to disintegrate. As n result but
few specimens of the clothing nre In*
■MctoAjnk Mr the vtaHwoftsy Isbogbt
by Mr. Van VnUn.

TdNlGHT L A S T TIM E—TWlb . S H O W S TONIGHT

(IN PERSON)

\

IN CONNECTION WITH

THE LAUGHABLE SCREEN COMEDY OF THE YEAR
FEATURING
BOTHWELL BROWNE, FORD STERLING, MARIE PROVOST, BEN TURPIN AND AN ALLSTAR CAST—ALSO WHY BATHING BEACHES ARE POPULAR

Admission: Adults 50 Cents; Children 25 Cents

Collector of Internal Revouue, Jnckitmvllle.

“ _____ - 1 - '-

How to Figure Income.
;T7Ttf best-tray m find rmt irtie th n -o n r
must tile n return Is to get n Forln
fftfOA nnd follow th e lust m et ions
printed on It. Tlmt form will serve ns
u rem inder «of every Item of Income,
—I------r*
nml1If n return Is due It tells how to
Business Mon, Farmers and Wage prepare nml tile It.

RETURNS DUE

Workers Must File Schedules

iung-sougnr link

ANCIENT RACE
DUG FROM ICE

between

Asm a n a

America.
Northcrdmoat Tip.

Tiio. dUebvrj-y • was.

made

near

Point narrow, the- northernmost, tip
of. ATnska.. Mr. Van Valin, head of
tYie expedition, wnV sent out two nnd

—I---• ,
*
* n .hrjlf years ago by tbe University
of Pennsylvania to make nn exhaus­
Hidden ‘for Centuries Under the tive study of tlm Eskimos.
lie was Investigating a shallow
If In doupi on any point ns to Income
ice Fields North of .

■

Southbound
Arrives
Dcpurlf.‘4|
3:06 a. m. 3:16 n.'m.
8:40 a. m.
12:28p. m. 12:48 p.nt.
3:05 p. m. 3:25 p. ro,
7:30 p.m.
7:45 p.m.
Northbound
1:48. a. m.
inis in,

Train No
No. 83
N o .-37
N o, 91 ^
No.-89
No. 85
No. 82

&lt;-iBiaap*rn

No. 80
41:35 iv m. , .2:55 p.m .
N o ’M eans of Preserving.
No': 92
3:45 -p.m.
3:60
m.
Unfortunately the fate which befell
No. 28
1,0:00 p.m.
tho skins nnd furs and hlrdskln suit t
Lccpburg Hranch .
nwnltod the. wearers a* Well. Al­
158 ;
7:30
though when discovered many of the
bodies still retained their flesh there
7:35
was no means a t the command of
3:10 p.m.
"Mr. Van Valin for preserving them.
. 1 4 :5 5
a .m .
Rut a few houiV exposure to wnrmor
Trilby’ Branch
air was required to cause the fleshy
PW
■ * 8 :0 0
m.
portions to sluff .nway. Forlunnlely,
however,-the skeletons remain Intact,
|
’ 3:25 P-m.
perfectly nrtlcutntcd. nnd within a
6:30 p.m .
. very short time will ho In the Uni­
2 5P0 i m n -----versity.museum.
O viedo' Branch
•- Many Interesting nnd vnlunhlc
a.m.
relics were discovered in the ruins of B B P - m
the six Igloos.
Some Idea of the No. 127
anomalous relationship betw een, the
Trains Nos. 158 and 157, Leesburg
Inhabitants and tho Eskimo Is sug­ Branch daily except iSumTi
gested try pieces of&gt; pottery found
Trains Nos. TjjO, 24. 101 and 25,
amid the ruins. The Eskimo of t&lt;»- Tri(by Branch, daily except Sunday.
dny uses soapsttmo utensils.
No
Trains Nos. 136 and 127, Oviedo
truce of such utensils could he fuqpd
Branch,*
daily except Sunday.
ln (tho Igloos.
Among the Implements used hy the
nnclent raco some nre of- similar conL ints to Qt Remembered.
“ sififcllofi: nha shnpe ns thnso nfaal by ~AdV!C* la like ’m iow r tho' sorter It
the Eskimos. Of pa'rtlmitar Interest fnlls. ]tho lim gef.lt dwells upon and
Is the fact that Jade was used by Jha tho deeper It Hnks Into the mind,—
to a rra ep. " IF must hnve been secured Coleridge.
•
from points ns far ns 300 miles away.
, Inquiries by Mr. Van Valin imiong
R)e Esklnjqs proved flint * 1lur latter
rnce lin'd no traditions connerted with
the Inhabitants whose remains tie had
.discovered, ^"hls Is take! to l»\'l
rate that the races must hnve dis­
V-*.
appeared centuries ago! for tho Eski­
mo’s '•ancient story" goes far hack.

swnll In search of- Eskimo relics When
nt deductions, n person may secure
Alaska.
(its nttentlrm tvns ottrncted by the
fiee ndvlre and nld froln thu nearest
.peculiar elinrncter of some debris.
Internal Revenue office.
,
Tills led to n still further examina­
t Jtu^swork,: f st Imales anil other lift tion. lturled heuenth fopr feet oFIce.
MARCH 15 LAST FILING DATE. or-mtss utethods-lire barred when n
Fpx Hunter-Gets Wolf.
_
snow nml tundra were uncovered
person Is inaUlug out Ills Income Tux
whnt tins rccogttlxed nt oneo nV Hie
Lafayette. Ind.x-A." line specimen ot
return."
•
Accomey—nml—
&lt;*nmpUden«*»
Net Incomes of $1,000 or Over, If Sin­
must he Insisted upon. .The return Is Village of Sts Igloos Discovered* at w reckage- of n collection of ancient gray timber wolf was shown here re^
huts, or Igloos. They h ad'boon, con­ rcntly hy William .O'JIerren, n West
gle; or $2,000 . Over If Married,
a sworn* statement. As such It must
Northern Tip of Alaska by Van
structed of drift woods of various
Lnfnyetie grocer.
O'Hcrrcn was 1
In- thorough .nml accurate.
Must Be Reported.
Valin Expedition—Not Like
kinds, covered
with dome-shaped
member of. a f*&gt;x drive nml while sep
.Salaried persons nml wage cnme.rs
the Eskimos.
roofs cut* from the tundra. Tho roofs nruled from others In ttie party »&lt;iw
must ascertain t h e actual com pensa­
Tin' In&amp;imc Tnx Imposed byhad Jong since fallen In, while little tho wolf skulking In the-woods nearby
tion received.
Overtime, bonuses,
Philadelphia.—Hidden for centuries remains, even-of the sides of the huts. The enrenss weighed forty pounds. Tin
of f’nngress on earnings of the year shares ln'°ttte profits of a* htlsfness,
under
the Ice fields north of Aloskn, n
Tin* grant dlscoycry. however, was wolf Is the first nnlnutl of the Jfiutl
1010 is now Imlng collected.
xalW of. quarters .qnd board furnished
scientific
expedition, headed by Wil­ made when .the explorers came upon to he shot here tn many years.
Ilet urns under onth must tie made lif tip* employer nml o th er Items which
liam Van Valin of the University of
In
* nn nr tirfnre Starch 13 try every cltt- are comtH'iisttitons—for services must- Pennsylvania tins discovered ilio re. tin- first of the frozen, bodies,
many Instances. (Tib positions of tbe Present Automobile Shortage
be
Included.
ren nnd resident who had n net In­
bddtos, all In perfect state of preser­
it m ust tie ticmt* In mind (tint code Inn Ins of a prehistoric arctic race.
Is Placed at 1,000,000 Cars
come for 1010 amounting to : , .
This remarkable find Includes the vation. frozen In solid blocks of Ice,
pensatlon may he paid In other forms
$1,000 or over, tf single; or If.mnr- than In.cash, A tinuns paid In U tterly fully clothed remains of no fewer suggested -Hint death had overtaken
New York.—A shortage of mi tonne
rliil and living apart from wife (or Ronds Is tnxahlo nt tlio m arket vnlur thnn 100 Individuals who apparently them unexpectedly. Some had died lilies tlds year was predicted-by memhusband); nr If widowed or divorced. Of the Itnntls. A note received In pay­ met sudden death In n village df six tn ho act of drinking, nt jrast Hint , |*(&gt;rs
| | lt. S’ntlotuil chnmtier of com
. $201*1 nc over, UL married nnd living m ent Cyr sexvlccs Is taxable. lnruiuu a} Igloos, nfterwnrd covered by Ire amt j Is the supposition from tlie presence mcrce, although Uh1)- estim ated that
Its face value, nnd tho Interest upon snow, where they romntned scaled un­ In their hands of what nppenfed to Ilie pnsHi-nger cur output for ttie year
with wife (or hustiand).
/
til the present time.
he long tnhes, &lt;qu*"end of which was would Vxo-ed 2,000.000., The slmrtnge
The status of- the person on the last U Is also taxnhle.
The life, habits mid physical ap­ held between tho lips.
at present was placed at 1,600,000 cars.
day of die year fixes the status for
Other Return# Due.
pearance of this remnrknblc people
Of the hundred or more bodies, One of the most prominent ‘munufacEvery' partnership doing business In tmre little resem blance to the E«UI- nearly nil wL-rt* fully attired.
the year with, respect to the above
Many
the 1)'tilted Stntes must *(ll» a retu rn .nin. They were seemingly more near­ were lying on beds of musk, often tnrers, It was said. Is preparing to
-ttypitfemonts.
Under tiny of these circumstances a on Form 1005; nml every personal ly related to the natives of Siberia, under polar hear skins. The npintrel dflnltlo the factory capacity this year
return must
made, even though Atrvlcc corporation m ust tile a. sim ilar nnd (tie scientists ore proceeding rn worn hy srtme showed that (tie race ticca uhl* o t the ateudlly lucreusing deretumT * ‘ *
• •
no tax Is dun.
the theory Mint they miis»l, ii*« the had Tenm rd to fabricate rloihtng from mum
C orporations' m ust file animal re­
ITusbund and..w ife must consider
the Income of linth, plus Ihnf of de­ turns on Form 1120.
T rustees, executors, m lm lulstrntors
53480153484801234823485348233053532301532353014848534853534823535323485353
pendent minor childrens In meeting
tin- requirem ent: nml, If sii(llclent,*to and others acting In a fldtiriury-cnpar­
iri|idtv n r e torn, nil twins jjiuxt, tit* tly are required to tile returns, 'h i
fcliou-n Ip n Joint return or In separate so m e . rases, Form l(Hl Is used; In
others, Form 1010; suit still others,
returns of liustmml -find wife.
A single person w.tth minor depend­ returns-m i both forma a re required. .
Inform ation returns, on Forms KKK*
ents nm t-lnclutto-Uw-Income o f sncli

• of Income for 1919.

ARR^AL AND DEPARTU15K OF
.TRAINS’

WIPED OUT BY CATASTROPHE

^_

of|M*ndenis.

A minor who Hns-o net Income of
$1,000 or more Is not considered o
dependent, nml must tile a separate
ret uni.
»
Personal returns should lie made on
Form 1010 A, unless the net Income
exceeded $3,000, In which case Form
loin should be-used. •
Itesldentn of Florida should file tlielr
returns with, nnd pinko payments of
lariiino Tax to, James 31. Cal lien rt,

sin) IflOd, must he filed by' t-very organlzntfon, firm or tterson who^pajd,
during HUIt, nn am ount
salary, wages, Interest
■ other
Hxed or dbternilnahfi* In com tn nn*
oilier jwfadn, pnrtnershl|e, |&gt;ersonnl|
service corporation or fiduciary. T h e n
Inform ation return* should Ik* for­
warded directly .to tlH* Commissioner
nf Internal llevonne (sorting division),
W ashington,-D, C.
&gt;

...

FOR S P R I N G

BEANS
LIMA BEANS
BEETS
EGG P L A N T
SQUASH .
TOMATOES
CUCUMBERS
SWEET CORN
PEPPERS
We Have The SEED—FRESH

C H A S E&amp;
SANFORD, FLA.

LEST YOU FORGET

Milvis Marble Co
P. L. MILLER. Owner

omimenls,

•

'

-'------- --- ----

I
|

* r ..

.

m

•*

*a

*

•

B. C. DODDS, M.D.
Residence: 905 Magnolia Avc.
I
Phone 461

Office:

• Our Corset Department was never more
for every figure. American Lady Corset

_v

A model

C o m p le te .

$2.00 to $6.50

,
•

15 New Models in Gossard’s Corsets, white. pink and flesh;
You ctfn select an^;style at any price from our stock of Gossards,
white and flesh,tome
•
j
:

the all elastic Corsets, white and pink

TREO GIRDLES

MEMO CORSETS, stff reducing, the Corsets for stout figures, No. 320, at

Baltimore. Md.—Tnklng chances of
SoInK dashed tq dentil. n pair of dncIbfU atel robbers used a . harrow-lodge
.-vlft.-tcTo the noh-l Emerson to enter
the fourteenth floor rooms of Mr. nnd
Mrs, Wllllnm V. Slut* of Wanhlng-

No’ 327 is a Model for. Medium Stouts. Comes in white arid pink. Price
We have every good line of Brassiers, Gossards, H. &amp; W. Devoise
/
and Nemo, with all the new styles front and back fastening - OOC L
Ask to see these new styles in Corsets and Brassiers. -

t0?rh fr niTret « snltense with tint
•Tresses ami lingerie owned by Mrs.
S’u u nml 'vRluesf nt *000 nod escaped,
carrying the plunder by the same dnnWfoun route,'a single slip upon which
would .h are been certain death.

W atch fo r Our D erry vale L inen D ay on the. 17th o f M arch

Groom's Father Dropped Dead.

New York.-A marriage ceremony
w** }ioatpoiied when Michael MonteHam. sixty yaara old. g y ^ p * * * ?
the presence of hla son. his sons
hrbfe-t" he nnd «*&gt; guests who had
nls.wnlilP(l nt witness tho wedding. .

/i
V
, - S.-..-Vi ’i.yvE'L' \ IL•\A*»i “*♦*.
; ; ; V-t-.r •i&gt;
itt.

■V ■ . I-

itv

V

V

■

-

V

‘

'

•
—

...

f

*3

i

■ •mmmmm •

—

»

i

.

’ v.

1

■

—■ — »- - « . *

,

First National Bank Building
Phono 462

,

■

tc

RICHER BROS., Sanford.Heights

niiiiininiiiiuiniiiniiniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniig

.

Thieves Took Rio Chances.

W ouldn't you .litre to have it on
y o u r'o ld car7" (Wouldn't y o u l i v a t o
have it talked nbout as a new model
spick nnd. ‘span? "Of cou.sol Our
nulo painting and finishing being of
the expert kind, will give your enr
that factory finish so much desired.-

Three Big Lines—Am erican L.^dy, Gossards and
Nemo for Stout .Figures

IN NUTSHELL
WHO—Slnglr persons who had
tint Income df 61,000 or mure
for tho year 11*10.
Married couples who Jtnil net
Inroine of ?2,0U() nr more. •
WHEN—March 13, 1020, Is llmiI dote for ; filing 1 returns and
hiARIng first payments.
WHERE—Collector of Internal
Itevemhjjfor District In which
the iwrsotL resides.
. ,
HOW—Full directions on -Form
1040A and fo rm 1040; also
tin* tan* and regulations.
WHAT—Four twr cent normal
' tn? on taxable Income up to $V
000 In excess of exemption.
Eight per cent normal tax on
hnlnuee of taxable IficonU*. fine*
ink, from one jmr cent to sixty.i five per cent on net lucernes •
I over $5,000.

That New Factory Finish

J The Corsets for “ Spring” A re

IN C O M E T A X

SUGGESTIONS

.

■ *a

■■■

■

-'j l i ; . • ‘»
J K IK m .

i i i

--------

*•
»

■'

' ' * &gt;'

» ■■ ■ ■ ’ * ■—

- .........

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="13">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10754">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1920</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11926">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 04, 1920</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11927">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11928">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 04, 1920.  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="11929">
                <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="11930">
                <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;, March 04, 1920; &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="11931">
                <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="11932">
                <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="11933">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11934">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1209" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1081">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/2cb0b3305fdd25432d3f0d78f862c093.pdf</src>
        <authentication>377c2ac9e25cd923498aca5d42581be4</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11945">
                    <text>•V

.

" i-

r

•«.

•. ■ - •
‘

-

Pf-Tf'V/V

-r&gt;

* ••&lt;»*/.

JVV‘r„ :
'•

.

?

•

•

*T v." - 14*1* .■

" ■■4

•

.. ' a' t;

• «.
ih»*v ' -.

1NTHE HEART OP THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
*

. . L

VOLUME’ I

SANPORD. FLORIDA. FRIDAY. MARCH 5, 1920 *•
jL

NUMBER 111

FLORIDA IS FROM MIAMI BY AIR
APPEARS UNDER FIRE FROM COLD ■ fur state
TOURIST WILL RETURN
IN NEWEST METHOD
NEW JERSEY STARTS IT OVER TOLD AT PRES’NT
■u

.

Suit Declaring Amendm
STATES RIG H TS
_______

attorney
and

general

•

palm er

c o m m i s s i o n e r

uate work despite .the distance from
tho campus. C lau d e’ S. Ogilvie,
principal oT the Sanford school..keeps
the class records.—Gainesville Sun.
Sanford is the only graduate Class
in th e United States being a re­
cord of which we can be all proud.
There are eight m em bers enrolled
T he class meets e v e ry two weeks
and Prof. E. C^Beck comes here from
th e University of FI orida at Gaines­
ville to teach the class. .
.

STATE DII) NOT# SUFFER AS H IG H PRICE OF frCRS MAKES
TH E
GAME
INTERESTING *
FIRST REPORTED BUT BAD
E V K N 'jN FLORIDA
.
ENOUGH
.
%
It would not occur to many peo­
Tampa. M af. 5.
ple th at a highly profitablo industry
While there is no doubt th a t the in Florida just now is trapping. T ra p ­
damage to .y o u n g and tender crops, ping has nearly alw ays beep associa­
done by the severe frost Monday ted with the Fold climates where
night, was considerable in the vicinity anumals with heavy furs are to he
ping hiis nearly alw ays been a s s o c i­
of Miami, later Inspection shows that
ated with tho rojd climates wTuro
the first ostim atc of ffi.QOO.OOO is an nnimals with .heavy furs abound
overestimate.
.
but some of the m ost vnlqabiu furs
The rest of the sta te suffered in are to be found in Florida.
The industry, however, has not
spots only, th e cold wave apparently
always
been profitable in Florida for
acting in a freakish m anner, landing
the
very
good reason th at the d e ­
hard on Aorae localities and dealing
mand
for
furs baa not nlwAys been
lightly with others. Tem peratures
generally w orem urh higher 'yesterday, as great qs It ia now for every kind
and still on the rise, with a prol.a of fur. A brown m uskrat pelt th a t
bility of rain rn the northern part of was worth a dollar two years ago is
woth* fifty-one dollars now.. The pelt
the state.
*
* - .
of one skunk, a ntuMi despiced ani­
U. Cv^ZclufT of the F’edoral- Plan
mal is worth several days hunting in
Board ;safd th a t white he hird made
F'iorida woods.
•
no comprehensive survey of the situ­
•A
few
woodsmen
along
the
St.
ation he believes th a t the damage to
Johns
river
have
found
th
a
t
there
i3
citrus in this section is confined to
money
in
trapping
fox,
coons,
skunks
setting.back the new growth from six
to eight inches. Cnbbege in some sec-* ami beavdr.'T hey find a ready m ar­
lions of the* Central part of the state ket: and enger ■"‘ifenratld fur all tho
was ruined, w hilr others it w as un­ pelts, they can secure.
A recent article frim the B u t i n
harmed. The next season's crop, of
, !tniH is pan tira'.ly uninjured by News- Bureau axya that all signs
reason of the fact th at February was pbi.it to th i\ country becoming the
so unusually cold t h a t 'the new bloom mo*l I’pfurred nntion, with lie p»&gt;*-silile cxi-cption of the Eskimos.
was not fully developed.
While London •'Still disputes the
In the Fort Myers fruit and veget­
able district tho damage .according to. fuel American fur deilers soy .th is
a statem ent of John M. Boring, de­ country has become, the tenter of
monstration agent for Lee eounty- the fur Industry. It is interesting to
ennsistfd of dnmage to cucumbe. note the 12,000 Aiaskn realskins
and wutermelon crops of 40 per cenr offered for sulo on- account ot the
tom ato and eggplants 20 per centt United States Governm ent wefe
hut the beans, potatoes and peppers dresl dyed, and machined in this
escaped serious injury. According.to euuntay instead of at London as
the latest reports from the weather formerly.
The fur catch last year was en­
bureu there is no more cold weather
tirely inadequate compared with the
in sight at present.
By a peculiar freak of the cold demand and if present consumption
snap it was, colder at Miami and keeps Up in spile of mounting prlies
Fort Myers than at Tam pa, a hun­ the nexffew years will seo a terious
. .
dred miles further north, and the shortage in furs for m urket.
T h a t Australian Canada and Pile
Tipmage was greater further south
than in this section. The Manatee United StatPi are com b’ering more
«ictidr( was not n great
sufferer. stringent gom e-ccnrervnthn laws,
There was not considerable damage some of which will probable be in
to lender truck cr^ps in Polk a n d j force tills « car, only aggravates' the
Pasco counties, while in the tier of F ix atio n . Already Canada has many
counties further north first plantings im portant fox farms, where tin1 hmst
were wiped out, but the crops were costly variety, like th e silver fox, are
not as far advanced
as in the lower being bred solely for fur-selling pur­
poses.
_ ,
tie r.’
■ 9 ,
America apparently la s not taken
Miam£-Murch 3.— Reports reach­
ing this city today were tq the effect to the monkey-skin stylo so preva­
that the.'loss to the winter vegetables lent in France and Ki gland a t pre­
bgfriwers of southern Florida .from se n t. but dealers heleive they wilt
Monday night’s freeze is not $o have to supply such a demand next
great as. was first reported. F'irst y ear-n n d are preparing fordl.
teporls was that frOsts
had- visited
the extreme southern portion of the
stah? had done considerable more
damage.
,
T h e.loss, however, will am ount to
several 'million dollars, ‘hundreds of
farmers having all th eir,cro p s liter­
ally wiped out.

ROPER
ARE
DEPENDANTS
•
•
,i
.
Commissioners Meet ' Washington, M arch 5.— T he state
of New* Jcm y rA b ro u g h lt»-attorney — T h o Tegular m eeting of the City
’ general, T h o m a s'F . M cCrarr,-today Commission of Sanford wIR be ad­
filed In the United S U tce supreme journed from next M onday evpning
court a suit seeking to have the pro­ M arch 8th to W ednesday everriiig
hibition am endm ent declared Un­ M arch i0tTi.~8 P. M7 *7— :----constitutional and to prevent en­
L. U. P H IL IP S ,
Clerk of th e Comtnu-Uui.
forcement of th e Yolstead Act. The
suit is -difccted against .Attorney
General Palmer and Daniel C. Roper
commissiqner of Internal revenue.
The biil sets forth th a t th e amend­
ment was properly draw n, th a t in 21
states the legislatures have not ra ti­
fied it as, provided by Their sta te con­
stitutions, and th a t there Is no power
in congrcss to propose A ednstltutipnaf amendm ent’ regulating th e htfbifs
ind morals of thoW °pl«?- I t recites
further that the upiendcm cnt is a
legislative and not a constitutional
matter and th at os such it was imFROM
BRO­
.properly--passed. Ja says th a t the W ERE STOLEN
KERAGE h o u s e s in
Ne w
amendment centralizes
authority
without the consent of th e people of __Y.OKK AND O TH ER CITIES
New Jersey and th a t it is a violation
New York March 5 (By Associa-*
of their sovereign rights. T he Vol­
ted
Press) ..Twelve million dollars
. stead act, having been enacted under
se
curitics
were.atoien from brokerage
authority of th e am endm ent, the
petition sayji, is null and void.
. houses in New Yrok and other titles
last 'year according to District aAtft js claim ed.that tli«. Volstead art^
to rn c y ’s ' ficues announced “Toitay.
is illegal because, by “ depredating
and in u lurge m easure destroying
the taxable value of real and person­
al property* within th e sta te ," it Is
‘destructive of th e s ta te ’s free and in­
dependent governm ent; because it
deprives the sta te revenues from li­
censes, which in . 19 18 am ounted to’
12,442,899 and because it interferes
'*Tl‘ith the Internal- governm ent of the
• *r*~* •
• people and oprrates ti^lnunish them
M BS. FRANK GOUI.I) HANGS
by heavy fines, im prisonm ent and
U P - GREAT CONTRACT
IN
forfeitures, thus preventing upplieaMOVIES
-»i•.r\ for licenses for sale or nnn-intoxicanting beverages,
authorized
London March 5 (By Assoiiated
under the laws of the state.Press) Mrs. Frank J a y Gould re­
Complaint ia m ade th a t th e act*re- cently divorced' h is signed a corr stricta the practise of physicians of, tr a c t to heeon *1. u moving pirturo
• tha state A nd-the .o p e ra tio n 'o f Its
s ta r In n Britl h corporation at a
panel, correctional and charitable in­■I phenomenal rnl-iry. • •
stitution; th at th e s ta te has not con
curred in the am endm ent; th a t if the
act is enforced it will nullify* the
right *){ the sta te to direct ita inter­
nal allairs.
’t is claimed th a t t h r act U.not
», a
•
appropriate to -the.prA hibition c o n ­
•
*
tained In the am endm ent which is
expressly confined t o . intoxicating ARE NOT AFRAID „ OF T H E
liquors.
ALLIES AND NOT AFRAID
- • In'fconcluslon, th e com plaint de­
OF WAR ; **
• ’
clares if the emend m ent is valid the
Conftantinople M nrrh 5 (By A*v h right of congress to legislate under It
is restricted to m atters relating to iated Pre s) . Turkish N a t i o n a l s
“ the external copcernc of th e United are e*|iectcd to he prominent in the
States and within thq peculiar do­ new cabinet of the N ationalists or­
main of the federal governm ent to ganised forces of which are e timatnd
regulate commerce among th e state* ’ at a half milliorvto a million and it
and th a t the state, alone has the is becoming char will not pearefully
power to enforce the net within its accept partitioning of Aplastic T ur­
key. Nationalists eiip’p orfera predict
own -borders,
a war in the sfiring if t h e ’Greeks
left Smyrna and French Sillcia.
They Itughed at the allisd threats
and naval displays and say the al­
lies cannot w a g e a succeW ul war in
Interior of Asia Minor.
• WILL REPLY TO NOTE AND
GIVE
ASSURANCE
OF
GUARDING* T H E
FORMER
* KAISER
1.
•

SECURITY

PROMINENT
DIVORCEE
IN PICTURES

TURKISH NATION­
ALISTS ORGANIZED

SANFORD’S . &lt;
HIGH SCHOOL&gt;
MAKESRECORD HENDRICKS AP­
POINTED CENSOR
THE
ON|&lt;Y
GRADUATE
TENSION
CLASS ’ IN
UNITED STATES

EXTHE

Sanford, because it has the only
graduate e x te ra lo r claVa in the Unit­
ed States, would be entitled to a
■tar instead of a dot if a dot were
made of the classes th a t have .been
'rganitetl recently by. th e General
Exteniion Division of the University
Flqrida. Every m em ber of the
«Nflfau which is studying - .Browning,
V s a B. A., while .one has an M. A.
dkgree.
Thla seminar clasa haa the advan­
tage of personal contact a t regular
intervals with the instructor, Prof.
E-.C. Beck of the U niversity of Flo­
rida,* and ia doing regular post-grad-'
.-‘

WILL
HAVE . CHARGE
. OF
WORK
OFj
CENSORING
PICTURES
SH O W N
TO
YOUNGSTERS.
Now York March 5 (By Assocleted Press) Rev. W alter A. Hendricks
of Portsmouth
Virginia has been
appointed to take charge of the
work of tho Persbyterian board of
tem perance -and moral welfare in a
reform movement of plcturos.’ .T ho
effort will be made to condemn pic­
tu re s characterised as a menace to
child welfare and the cause of
Juvenile delinquency.

*

1i-*

prevent Wilhelm from endangering
tho world peace.
Knston Aid. March* 5, Tha RlgjH
Rev. William FVdcs Allam*, bis­
hop of tho Kpisrnpla church died to­
day.
•
Washington March 5, Still hoping
to save tho peace treaty from r a
deadlock, the Democratic senators
moved today to lay directly hefo're
President Wilson the latest propo­
sals discussed as a compromise basis
to article ten. The move is skid to
have grown .p u t of negotiations in
progress for several duys under th'o
charge of Senator Simnu^is, Demo­
crat, N orth Carolina and Watson,
republican of Indiana.
Rnllrgh. March 5 ,'Joe a n d 'G a rd ­
ner Catn tw o • surry- county Spoon-*
shiners, brothers were electrocuted
ill tlm ..Slate prison for the murder
of Riley Master. TJiis being the first
double execution of white men in'
the history of the stuto.

*

PORTUGAL
I TROUBLE
ROM BS W ERE T H R O W N
SHOTS
WERE
FIRED
MANY. C IT IE S
.

A ND
IN
*

Madrid, March 5 (By Associated
Press! Travellers from Portugal re­
port firing on Lisbon, Oporto and
Vizeu the ministry of the interior
here announces. Frontier reports ssy'
that bombs were thrown and shuts
were 1lred into a ’military train nl
Caatelltv narth of. Oporto.

BUZZARD
REACHES
THESOUTH

.

Tourists Willing To Pay
For Fast Travel
COST IS
OBJECT
TOURISTS
T H IS YE,
ROUT

GO
HOM E
TH E AERO

Aerial parsin «r transportation
a regular, busier ^ between gltios-hl
became a factlir TMuridn, Eaat Coast
tourists clatnoH ig for passage on the
big airship) fr&lt; m Miami to New
YorK nnd I’^ I p ^Boach to New York.
Simietime agb t ic Aero Limitedwhich
hks been m i fg service
between
I'alm -Benclfj ,'iiam i, H avana, Nassau‘ nnd Bijrhi fi announced that it
v ould[ carr; i . ‘Certain num ber of
York from I’alrrf
p aasungera
a th and min mi.w Immediately
ca&lt;h
i6n was it j'wlf(| srrum blc for reser7i33
big se.A)&gt;laAes.
1° y
Yasser gers have been booked
Tpa*
at 1750 e:/oli spd still there is dc- •_
|int|d. A/eor ling to u statem ent
jiaqe by th^ m anager of the Aero
Limited corporation several
^rips
fnay l)h tnurle to nccomodnte ull of
|heiie who wish ro avoid the'crow ded , 'i.'Asi
grains by takipie to the air.
. From[ Miarpi to New York is approxim dttly l.HOp miles air line. Uaing h&gt;jdro-plan(s w ith an uvernge
speid if between sixty and severity
miles;' »er hour not considering the
dfiett if winds, n contiguous flying
trip of about twenty hours would be
required. .This will lie broken up by *
rom point tp point up the Atcoast,' ns neither passengers
ots could stand i» continuous
L
’vcn If planes w ithstood the
I t - Is figured by those Jiacking
the plan that about four days with a
Hying tinu) of about five hours per
day will be used.
*
This is the greatest booking of
pax^eugers for travel-by nir yet an­
nounced in Americu‘(nnd is believed,
to . lie » world's record for number
)rmi distance. Many prom inent pco- ,
pie nro among those booked for tho
triP. .
.
: ’
.
•

SEABOARD
O N ' • ATLANTIC
AND KNOW AS FAB SOUTH
ALA MB AM A
A8
W ashington, Marrh 5 (By Associ­
ated Press) T h r M arch’blizx*fd will
reach the A tlantic coast tonight with
its s tre n g th . disseminated in part
Snow fell as far -south its Alabama
and unusually low tem peratures' for
the .entire southern states is the
forecast with another frost for Flo­
rida.
. ‘
•

PROPOSAL SALE
OF WEST INDIES

-r

WB8T
IN D IE S . TO
BRITISH
UNITED STATES TO HELP
PAY WAR DEBT
‘ '
*
London March 6 (By Associated
Press) The proposal-to sell tho B ri-,
iish West In'dies to the United States*
| to help halnnro the war d e b t ^ l l l
I |io discussed s in tjie House of. Com­
T akarh Jfome Burned
' . m o n s 'next LTcnday b;. I !io Premier.
The home of Mr. and Mrs. Julius
Takach on Celery avenue was burn­
ed last night. It is unknown ju st how
the fire s lirte d and ns thu home if
about three 'miles from th e city the.
» • M
CHARGED W.ITH M URDER DF fire had great headway and could
the
M ILLER FAMILY AT ABKR- not he controlled ' although
Sanford F'ire D ejnrtnie.it took the
/PF.EN
M IS SIS SIPPI
chemical truck .out th ere.as coon as IN SIBERIA AND PROBABLY
Aberdeen, Miss. Mwrrh 5 (By possible w ith the thought th a t maybe
MAKE PEACE
WITH
BOL­
•A'a*drla(ied Press) Churies M i'shnlt,!4 ^»m e assistances could be given. The
SHEVIK
GOVERNM ENT
•
has been brought here under miiitariY
miJIt.n- house ix beyond the iity limits,
Honolulu Mnrch 6 (By Associated
gua/d for tri il for the* murder «r( •ev en l miles nnd had no protection
Robert Miller dn&lt;l three members of. A i&gt;nTnll Insurance, was carried nnd Press 1 The Japanese government
tho Miller fondly near Ainory on th e sym pathy, of their many friends hits decided to abandon the Siberian
Jan u ary 1Gib. Only persons directly, is extended to them In their loss. expedition ip line with the American
policy, according to a cable
to
interested are allowed in the court
Shinpo n Japanese newspaper. The
room and jail and the court hourc Is
soviet peace offer t o 'Jap an according
The Hague, March 5, (By Associ­ guarded to prevent violencp.
to th e cable asks recognition o f the
ated Presa) Intim ations are given
L enine government and a reiuptioh
Late W ires
th a t the Holland, reply to the Allies,
of the full diplom atic relations and
second noto relative tb th e extradi­
London March 6 (By Associated
promises the end of terro rism and
tion of the in tern m en t of the former Press) pred d au t W ilson's note in
recognizes Japan's special rights In
. . .r»""
emperor William will be handled reply to the latest communication
Slberij.
. '
. ;;
'
P
R
E
S
ID
E
N
T
OF
SOLDIERS
by Lloyd George this week a n d ex­ pf Alliod Prem iers on the Adria’.le
AND
SAILORS
LEAGUE
press the wUlingnees to guard the* question, reached the
^frerican
WANTS
FIVE
HUNDRED
erstwhile m onarch apd prevent any­ embassy. Vfill be delivJred by Earl
w
FOR BACH MAN
thing th at might threaten the Eu Curzon foreign secretary this after­
ropean peace.
noon. In stru ctio n s. sent wilh tho . W ashington M atch 6 (By Associa­
note contained no mention of ar-. ted Press) The lump sura- q / ' flvi
rangelnent for. its publication.
Ex-Governor Hanley of Indiana
hundred .dollars to each person who
To-night.
’ T h e Hague, M arch 5, The Dutch served In m ilitary and naval forces
For Florida fair colder (0 night.
Ex-Governor J. F. Hanley of governm ent for the gecond time has during the war was asked before the ^Freezing tem perature in n o rth per- *
.Indiana is&gt; to ' reach Sanford this refused to deliver the former German W ay arid Means C om m ittee by tiop, heavy* frost cen tral p o iijcri.
afternoon and apeijt tonight at* the Em peror to the-A llies for trial. Tjip M arvin G ahti Sperry the national F tobably light frost on southern,
Baptist Temple.: Admission Free. note*, addressed to Lloyd George president of the P rivate Soldiers m ainlands Saturday fair e’p n tir v td
Collection will be tak e n .
. promise t o take all precautions to and 8ailors League.
cold fresh northwest winds.
'
1
•
\
/
" ' • . • •. ’-I
-• •
-

HOLLAND
WILL HELP
THE ALLIES

I . .
r _ --‘A

MARSHALL
ONTRIAL
FOR CRIME

JAPANESE WILL
STOP OPERATION

LUMP SUM TOR
MEN WHO SERVED

Weather Report

'*
• ••

• ••

.!»

1 r_

• » * f.-v

" • *
-- . -

; - •* •-.. J
r—r ^ r . . - ,

'

�•
"

• . *•
,
^
.
*
' ’■

* ■* *•
•
• •

.

•

0
• .•

-

V
•
•

•

*

•

‘

j've

• ••

•

*

w 1" ;
*
•
.
.

•

• *

r
• •

.
* *

; 1.

%

*

M ARCH 4, 1920

8A N FO B D
been prominent ItTthe buidneaa affairs
in Florid* over forty yeara. In 0880
h«:-jtfned hie father In-eetabllshlng
the Bank of Jacksonville and finaWW
the Bank of Jacksonville which a ft­
erward became the National Bank of
Jackaonville and Anally changed to
the present Bafnett National Bank
of Jackaonville. Mr. B arnett was
alio interested in amy other lines.

ALL ’ROUND
NEW S OF T H E G REA T STA TE OF FLORIDA
Compiled In Tabloid Form F or Busy Uerald Readers
‘ The. DuvaJ HigK -school quintet
known as the Tigers, will play a re,
tu rn game with the Lake City high
school team on the courts of the Y.
•:M.
Ja/tk«o!».giU« .tpmotmwhight. The Lflke City boys wero defe a te i early’ fn the basketball season
by the Jacksonville high school lad s
and "art* going to Jacksonville Satur­
day determined to even up tho score

t h a t" m any will come when the
weather moderates. As usual Ohio
leads, vylth more than three thousand
visitora. New York is second, with
2,066,. a n d Michigan i** th in ly with
0,8(3.—St.Petersburg Times.

TAKES
Negro -• Catight Stealing Baton Has
An" Explanation for tho

^

Beautiful Woman Who Beguiled
Unwary Into Giving Secrfets
to Germans.
Near Punta Gorda lust Sunday,

-•

.

...

Kan«ns City. Mo.—As hfcad nf a
thriving household. Charles Webb, a
negro, employed by the Fred Harvey
Corapnny, was a .faithful provider.
There was no question about It.
Charles always "brought home «!»•*
hncon." 0. if. Edralnakl, specfal nflV
cer for the Harvey company, oaufchr
Webb taking some Ofteen pounds of
first-class bacon that be had stolen
frdfti ffitr'ffrmhr cnmurfsaiirr' &lt;wr*mr
Ing to tho officer, Wtfbb hod cut the
hncon Into strips, which were con
rcnlcd InVarlous pockets of his clothw
.In tho South Municipal court Webb
(itMftptqd to cxplnln to Judgo Edward
J. Fleming why ho h n d r taken «b«bacofc
*■
"Ah was Jes tnkln' homo n little
meat foh mnh cat, Jedge," explained

while F. R. Blount was out driving
he'cam e upon a crow d’of strangers,
whp»vp (« lb lv i i w l p z
iRV
‘•ffee range in Klorfda, took ft to}
granted th a t orango groves are in­
truded in free range and were help­ At Her Headquarters In Antwerp She
Motion county’s board of com­ ing themselves to- the fruit on trees
Collected •Information Which' Was
Forwarded to Qerman Headquar­
missioners has called a bond election in Dr. McQueen grove. Mr. Blount
ters—Had. Two. Accomplices.
to-dcrido whtthcr or not j»n issne happened to have his camera along
amounting to more than three-quar­ and made potraits of.'the crowd, so
1-: . ..At the State Retail Qialhler’a As- ters of a million should be approved if the doctor wonts to know" where • /London.—-Jinny details about t"he
aoclation convention, which closed a for the development of-the roads of his fruit is going and w ho'is taking •Ife of tho "blond-haired Indy,1' wl/o
««*nred ns a Gnnunn chief of spies In
three day scstion in Jacksonville on th at county.
is our confident be­ it he should consult Mr. Blount. lie war, hnve been given by n colonel
Must hove been a tlgdr." said the
W ednesday, fre d Wolf, of Tam pa, lief that Marlon county will not be
ii (be French counter espionage servge. “$100. 'Biipposo the- poor cat
was chosen president, and Tam pa was unlike other Florida eouties wlfichF
The Tam pa Tribune says the Tani- •re who know, her vvcll, .uccordlng to
wav selected as the meeting place for.* h*vo in recent years been called up­ pa Board of Trade is having printed n London Times l*Tirla correspondupt.the next convention. A vote of
Tlils coloqel, who w:os then a cap-'
on to decide for or against the ia- a new booklet of th e city describing
DAVID F . HOUSTON
thanks was extended EipH Borrfatein, suance-of'honds for permanent roads. Its many advantages. The books Is •nlu. spent some niouths during the
retiring president, for his successful Money sp en t in road building is
profusely Illustrated and has an in­ war at Antwerp and laiv most of the
'"effo rts in th c'p aat year.
money well spent, ar\d .especially teresting and instructive tect. The people who visited the lady, for It-was
so for permanent roads. AIL Florida front and back cover Illustrations are tils duly to supply tlieso visitors with
false Information nr true Information
T h f -Ladies’ Ftiday Musicale of counties have come to realise this especially worthy of notice, as the when too Inte to use. Thb chatenu.
Jacksonville will give n complimen­ and . we are certain th at Marion form er'(how s the court house, plaza which the witnesses nt Lille believed
cou
no less appreciative of this during a hand concert, with the d ty to he outside Antwerp.-wns In reality
tary recital to the music-loving peo­
fact than yny othvr county. Therefore hall ain the background, and the lat­ In the center of the city. It was a hople of tho( metropolis on the evening j fore there is but little question but
a innter shows a night.scene of the Tam pa el in the boulevard do la
of March 4th, at which time they th at the hons issue will pass and Bay hotel. Thecolor work of both is h'xtlc building which those who were
will present Miss Marion Kous, head th at another Idg link in Florida's excellent, especially the back cover. brought blindfolded In n motor cor
of tho piano departm ent at Hollins now rapidly developing system of
with drawn blind* ' might well Imre
Taken Tor o chateau In the countryiColiogcr W inter ;P « rif,InhcrU -euiT e good 'road® t i l l Tie assured.—Jack
The Punta Gorda Herald,, says:
recital. The Timea-Union says: Miss sonville Metropolis
‘‘The
mnrfs meeting held in the Ma­
Belated to General von Heinrich.
Rous gave this recital before the
sonic
hall
insl Friday night for the ' Tim titiwiMiutrod lady \W* certainly
McDowell Memorial Association at
Palm etto showed 1G3 varieties of
Pt'terboro, N. 11., last summer, he- fruit at the Manatee county fair purpose of re-brganizhy: the Punta • relative of Oorirrnl von Heinrich,
Gorda Board of Trade was one of the hough the exnCt relationship sillj refore a large audience, of delegates
most
enthusiastic and largely a tte n d ­ 'iiaIna ipiccrlutu. She was u fine wornfrom all parts of the United States.
Progreis is being nude looking to ed meetings held In Punta Gorda in &gt;n. being slim unit unlike the majorT he 'recital was enthusiastically re­ tho ndjustdiont of the cliim s of thp
iy of tier fellow countrywomen, The
ceived. Miss, Itous Is in great demand castor bean "ii'i-rontract »»a Monitor m any months, and resulted in the '.'mu I ink tor, os she wus addressed
organization
of
what
will
be
known
having recently returned from an Park Tratiihiell who has hten work­
■y her colleagues. spoke French withengagement in Philadelphia and is in g for weeks in beh-tll of the claims as the Punta Govia Commercial • •ut n truce of a foreign accent ni:il
booked to appear shortly in Atlantu&gt;' of the Florida grownn has been ad ­ Club. Fifty* men had signified their* bowed f»y her iiTiinuer and dress that
Chattanooga, Louisville, Cleveland j vised By .the \V r Departm ent that dbsire to organize and become mem­ •lie bail lived for n long time In
bers of a trade body and p'ructirally France. utx) prolmldy In Purls. She
and many other cities.
" snore
.
than t ’ice- hundred of the p •II .of these were present, in addition i-ed iq address tier ngeutq - with a
claim i have hccn-aplravod- for pay­ tii prehaps flfrenn or tw en ty other*:” 'Tiqirtr cigarette between Tier' lips,
g e i&gt;n diitivB
S t.’ Petersliufg is now sheltering ment and th at checks will die i.iiinznnlng luirk seductively. In a large
more .winter visitors than wu sever diitely &gt;e it t » t ie claim ants. He way
■rinclialr. She never hpo^e harslily,
known before. Tlib registration book* also assure I by the Departm ent thA W ILL BECOM E AIR NEW SBOY
hi . on .the c ontrary, In sweet, even
New portrait of David F,
yesterday showed that more tlian 18­ settlem ent of the remaining rltints
ones, no doubt gaining much which iccrctary of agriculture.
West Virginia Club Plana to Dellyer »-r inii-riillnc cojifederiitev of Jlid Grr200 had registered. which would would l»o expediteh.
Paper* and Merchandise by
••an geoernl stnlt lost through their
mean that more than 3O.OO0 are in
Airplane..
•ir of brutality.
the city now. At this time last year
William J). Harnett ode of the
Accomplices of the German Spy,
the registration nook* showed 16,­ leading financiers in the state, died
Chnrleslon. W. Vn.—Tho Illuefield — Two m m lived In tint “chateau”
1168 registrants. Owing to the bliz­ "Ut his home In Zoltwoful, Lake coun­ Aero club of niuefield. W. Vn., which
zards, in the north, only few people ty. Saturday afternoon. Mr. Harnett will operate nerlnl tnil. lines In south­ ' lilt her. ii man who posed as an Engish fop with n monocle pretending to
arrived last week, hut it is expected was sixty-ought • years old and has ern and eastern West Virginia, has
e n Journalist on a l/nidmi paper,
been Incorporated. The club 'will p u r and an otllcer of the Germnn O. II. Q.
chnsc alrplnnes nnd tn nddltlon to the ■file fop. the French colohcl stales,
tnxl business, will engage In transport­ was the proprietor of a hotel In the
ing missionary workers, carrying pris­ 'iiliie luiutevsttl.de In Lot. und lire
oners, ambulance serrtcT einil delivery • ierninn otllcer, Kt-ITor by name, had
CIIULIIOTA, FLORIDA
.
of merchandise, newspapers nnd other us Ifis Inst duty the control of (he Inarticles.
OpenlDecember 7th for (ho Season.
forinntlon upon the ntlles' submarine

*.BEIATIV£ M U

HEINRICH.

Building Material
Rooting of A U Descriptions
\s

#•*

Lime, Cement, Plastor
Brick, Drain TUe and
Sewer Pipe.- »

Hill Lumber

ician

-L enses Ground
GLASSES ADJUSTED
and REPAIRED

L. A. BRAND
OptomctrlHt-Optlrlan'
•ii
-

221 E. Find Street
Opposite Postofllce

Thrift in Peace Time

g h u l u o t a in n
MRS. CHAS. I). BRUMLEY, Mgr.

$50 Put in Bank in 1847;
. Value Grows lo $1,332
Wlnstodl, Conn.—Fifty dollars
placed In the savings hank In Ansonln In 1847 gradually grew un:
til President William A'. Nelson
of Hint Institution recently paid
the sum nf $ 1.Bfl1.00 for the hank
book, which It «ns .worth after
Its 73 years’ (tervlce. Twice
wlthln'n period of twenty yenr*
the sum of $2 wns placed on the
account, but nothing more.

SEND US THAT ORDER
WIIKN TOt: NKE1» ANYTHING IN

OITice.Furniture nnd Supplies
Commercial and Fancy Stationery
Printing, Lithographing, Engraving
Books—All Kinds
.

A rtis ts ’ M a te r ia l
A th le tic G o o d s

Kodaks

.

•,

.
..

' ^ ^ N)

‘

* ’

**

The H. &amp; W. B. Drew Company
(S*49 West llay Street

—
'♦

•

JACKSONyU.I K

— ---------

A

-

s,

Smatl G u itla n

Boy Mascot.

Liverpool. — Trudging dowrf tbr
gntigplnnk of the' steamship Onlnr
fruin Archangel, close nt the heels of
n Itrltlsh otllcer was a little white
fncwl. under-nourished, thlrtoen-yinrold Ilusslnii hoy, his eyes wide with ns
Tonlshtnent. He w iis Ihe mascot’d^ the
Inst detachment nf nrltlsh troops nt
the Oxfords nml Hacks light Infntitr.v
to leave Archangel, having heen adopt­
ed by tho oltlcer. fils father was kilted
In t’h'e Russian nrtny fighting tho «b&lt;r
mnns. and his mother now Is a prls
oner of the bolshevik!.
-

buses n! Calais and Dunkirk, nml the
numbers nml changes lb the.north of
France. The blond-hnlrcd Indy, be­
sides using part, of her time In be­
guiling poor unfortunates Into betray

ng their countrymen, collated her In
formation before forwarding It to Ger-

FR EN C H “ V ET S ” ADMIT YANKS
Ambulance Volunteers, Foreign Le
glon and
E tc a d rille
Member*
Eligible to Society.

New . Vork.—Atnerlcnn
who «erved In the umhulInnre corps,
’he Foreign* legion or tiee Ijifavettc
•'indrlllr lire to tie neeepi“d as n-solute itleiiil ier» of Ihe Pcdi-riithui nf
French Veterhns nf the Great War. Ii
wns eminuncod here at the \e&gt;» V.irk
benilqtinriers 1»y- ('buries Umiriiez. the
general secretary.
The ftrgiiiilziiifnn. formed in. "eiiltl
vale u vplrli .nf loyalty in ibe United
Stales nnd altnrliment to Franco." will
extend Its in-tlvlijr, It.Is said, to Cnnndn and Mexleiv
Ellul Norton of the Norton.Ilnjcs,
ambulance and It. Howard Gamble of
the .American field service, have he«»n
designated by the f«Mlorat(on executive
eomnilttee to pass upon application*
for associate nnd honorary niemhur-

PEOPLES BANK OF
=
SANFORD =

HENRY F. HOLLIS

C H ILD R EN ’ S CHIM ES P LA N N ED

Every Cloud Has a Silver
Lining

Every Chlfd la United States to Be
Asked to Give Cent for VlcNew YArk.—Every child (n America
will btf usked to give nt least one cent
tnwunl
erection Ip New York of c
set of “victory chimes.’' which will rln~
out In dally reminder of the sacrifice*
inado by Americans In the war, It wns
announced by the newly organized Vic­
tory Chimes and Carillon association,
Tho plans call for n series of 4H
hells—one for each stale In the Union
—on which will he played dally n vic­
tory nnthcni composed for children.
“The btnr-Spnnglcd. Hnnncr” and
"America." A forty-ninth hell, to be
the largest bell In the uorld. would
be sounded only upon the Inaugura­
tion or denth or a president of tho
United States. '
’

W e w ill lin e y o u r d a rk est
c lo u d s w ith S IL V E R , if y o u
m a in ta in a c h e c k a c c o u n t w ith

A - little

ta lk

w it h

us

m ay

m ea n D O L L A R S and . s u n n y
s k ie s to Y O U in d a y s to c o m e .
}

•

".

..

B e fo re m a k in g in v e s tm e n ts
c o n s u lt th e
o ffic e r s o f th is

HOME IN

Former Senator H enry.F. Hollla of
New Hampshire, who haa been given
by the French government the rank ot
chevalier In. the Legion of Honor In
reeognltion of hie qervteea during the
war, After retiring from the senate
Mr. HoJIla waa a member of the liqui­
dation board, upon which he served
until November la st

■Meets Sleter A ftsr Years.
Chico, Cal.—After being parted from
hts lister for a period of thirty years,
William Simpson of Vlrdcn, Manitoba.
Canada, arrived here yesterday to be
the guest of his alster, Mrs, L. F. Eggers In Chico Vedno. Simpson ta ac»
com pan led by hla wife nnd son Qordon. who waa wounded in action In
Franre while serving with a Canadian
contingent of the British army In (he
world war.
•V i»f.*i&gt;. Hffftit:

TRY A SURE CROP
.

SOLD BEFORE YOU TLANT

*.

The American .Coffee Bean Company will contract
100 acres only a t Sanford and will pay four dollars
($4.00) per bu. of €4 pounds delivered a t shipping
point in two bu. sacks.
The seed will cost 98 per acre cash. The teana begin to mature in
three m onths after planting and should vidd not less thon ton hnlhnl«
per acre following ctdery without addit^nal f e r tiilS 'K e b L t d t S
gen gathering crop that &lt;*an i^ plantid Only such f a r m e r s ^ are bi
P^ address
t
P'tn t tn&lt;i htrveal the cr°P Properly need apply. ^ I l l on
or

A. HOW ARD.

C H U LU O TA I N N
On the Okeechbb&amp; Branch of the Florida East Coai
.
-Railroad
..
, Special Attention Given to Autom obile P arties
• .
•
MR8. &lt;?. D. BRUMLEY, Manager,

LhaV.ifjf?

CHULUOTA, FLORIDA

�M ARCH 5. 1920

HANFORD DAILY HERAtD

PAGE 2

net
n a tln g jn the bbaeyvaned of Acknowl
Pomsrene, “ th a t with 'ah. Increase oV
edgment Day on Palm Sunday, which
haasengcrTEtes approxim ately 50 per
this Year falls on March 28th* Every
cent, and In tncrejue of freight rates
church taking part Id the movement
•* * «
s ir* *
«I
T k» H e r . 1.1 D aH Jln |, 1S7 M » * W U A * « aM . H»n- in exceu of 25 per cent. In two year*
la expected to bold special cvailgMla
rart, Side14*.
of govefnmenf operation, there is
lie services durlftg -tho month. Dur
’■
■
* T ‘'
"
*- net loss conceded of over $700,000,00
Rif M arch'also there arc to be held
PUnUHHEU-S
and unilipiad*tfd claims held by th e
a Series of ajato paatora’, conferences
In the principal cRIes of tho South
T H E H E R A LD PR IN TIN G C O M PA N Y railroads for depreciation nggrega
INC.
to bring tho paatora more closely In
ting $376,000,000. And, if the am ount
R. J. HOLLY, Editor
touch with tho. purposes and scope of
ultim ately found To tie .due In ’this
tho Interchurch ty°rid Movement In
W. M. HAW ES, Business Manager behalf should he only 3D 1-3 per
Its relation to the Individual; church
cent, of the total, it would add an
**
community
and “depomlnatlon.
•w tiataf Raja* Mad* Ka«*a »■ AfalkM laa other $126,000,000 to the $700,000,
Join the Church Day arnT Commit
000 of loss alreay adm itted, making
ment Day. when thouaanda of new
r v i m s c R t r n o N p r ic k in a d v a n c e
members are expeclad to b« received
j u t Lha tuU l lo u of $825,000,000,
POR ONE TEAK• AFTER a im PAINTING
m are than. $1,000,000, urer day d u r­
Into the churches In tho South, will
POM
MONTHSa3 HIX
-----------DELIVERED IN CITT l i t CARRIER ,
ing life period. of government con your nuto will look spick jukI span bo observed on Easter Sunday, April
ONE WEEK.—,------------- —---------------- &lt;s 9*“ u
trol.1
just like new. We give your ear 4tb. Thla .day will be'm arked by
of Christians In tho
New
equipment
m
ust
be
provide*
b l w s d aa a e o a d cUaa » a ll » Oetaba* 17.
that tlname], factory finish so great-Ingathering
churches Inspired with the thought
l i l t , at Iks ao«iofOr» atH aafard. Florid* a a d n a t once, and good authorities esti
much desired by motorists. It is
a ct of Marak S. IIT I
m ate that lOO.OOjrefrigerator,' coll, easier to wash and clean when it and determination of doing a greater
service for Christianity.
box and m iscellaneous cars are need has been paintod and finished by
. MEMliER O r THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The next fortnight In April will be
ed before the railroads can care dor us. Ask us for an estimate on spent In active preparation for the
the nation’s business with anything
great financial campaign to be con­
Evangelist in Tam pa nays th a t tike satisfactory efficiency. Not less your car. /
ducted April 2!at to May 2d, Inclu­
man did not .come from mOnkuyst than 4,000 now passenger-, cars are
sive. Local teams and committees
Glad to hear th at. We ran again re. needed and 2,000 new locomotives.
will be organized and thoroughly drill
'O IJ R P R O C E S S
aume re|ations with the doubtful The aggregate cost of this new equped In tho duties to be expected ‘of
them In the making of this canvass
ones.
' .
'
ment, Imperatively needed, will -bo
or
for
funds to carry out the constructive
a
t
present
*
prices,
approximately.
®
‘
.
-Tirana, dp Change. Several northern $723,000,000, From -half a billion, to Washing and Polishing Automobiles program of the cblirches.
Throughout May and the early part
' status nre.Dow clamoring for atntcs one billion dollars will be needed per
Make* Them Look Like New
of
Juno tho Movement will bo directed
rights. Some’ time since we fought annum for several years to come,
toward
tho organization and perfec­
xperiencptl workmen, high grade*
for th o u 'rig h t* and were told to This gives some idea qf the magni­
tion of consecration and extension
go way-bark and ait down.
tude of the problems confronting 5olish. Prices very reasonable plans. Later In June summer confer­
See us for quick action.
the owners of the roads.
\ 1:- -— 0 — ence* of missionary education will beWo , afe n o t' getting our share of
tla
The senator furnishes some Illumi­
Florida jtunshine but we are better native Ideas, also, regarding the own­
Women 8elllng Their Jewels.
ofT thaii those poor folks who are ership of the roads. He declares the
HANFORD HEIGHTS
R
seems io he the faalilon Just now
living in the northern states buried popular Impression th a t they are
for women-wltli plenty of money pnd
Auto
Painting
and
Trimming
under the snow drifts and freezing owned by men of great wealth is
heavily stocked wl]h Jewel coses to
only partly correct. Some great sys­
to death.
sell any rldh mwl rare stones that they
tems* a 'e owned- and controlled by
may ponses*, not becoustj they qeed
T h a t j - rich Philadelphia draft i\:oinp»raterly few men, such us the
the money but simply because tliey
ttEe the rxclf*¥ient- of getting n trig
•do(lgrr-"Bhon1d- t)r^seiil up for lifer} Phllndplphia"* Reading, and' the
figure "for articles tlial they probably
• T heydung man with plenty of rron-* Chlcrygo, Burlington &amp; Quincy, but
seldom wear mid certainly do not
ey and no dependant* should be on the other band, the great Penn
actually ml*.*.
t
msde tu go.to waf or lake the.counts sylvartia * company, .has rao*ro than
R Is rc|K&gt;rled Hint the woman who
v
.
*
for life, He is one man who had no 100,00 stockholder;}, and til ! 20. larIs
now Mrs, Jack Gllllntt and was pre­
* reasonable r ext use for Haying ' at Best stockholders own less than 9
viously the .widow of t{fo- eccentric
nterchurch
World
Movement
per
cent,
of
the
stock.
Over
40
nrif* homo when his country needed him
marquis of Anglesey, recently went
iion shares of the greatest roads of
OutiineH Activities In South
through her Jewel chests and collected
For Months Ahead
\ Remember thut the Board of the country, nearly one-half of all
quantities' of old-fashioned, quaintly
set gem* which she sent off to he sold
‘ "'.Trade . will • hold a meeting next. their shares are owned by 019,62!^
Tuesday night and some real busi- men, women and children.
Beginning with n campaign of e'du by auction.
whiele. niton or me cjiurcn im -mir- H o TiTiT
nA«« u-ill rnllin Imfufi- Itiil lmilp.-T.Li*. __I t .*Li—a—gigantic—
- active members will take a most confront* the owners of the roads, financial obligation to. tbn church, a sum of money that ran well Into Ilea
".
arU yf part in all 'th a t pertains to and the pulic, wliii'h undoubtedly comprehensive and continuous .pro figures, with which she' purchased a
beautiful little esmie. where site is lo
Herpjnolc County this year and some prefers private m anagem ent to that
grant of activities from the present bulging in her pet fail of chicken fa n n ­
of
government,
will
be
required
to
of those who' have been standing on
ing.
the 'outside looking in will find out. exercise due patience with the efforts time through the month *of June hus
of the owners to extricate the roads been decided upon by the Interchurch
.. that they are really ut
And He Deserved. It. ■
from the chaos into w h ich ‘two years World Movement In the South. This
for. life.
After a ruthless ppu-es* of rejection
of government control,hav&amp; plunged campaign.of education In the duly of
----- O----- '
here were five oppliniiil* for the post
h------ Every tourist that has rrnnr to them. We must nut oxpccl them La giving to the support of rellgimta nc* or errand hoy ft-ft for Ilie head n thu
Sanford this season and had real operate smoothly and successfully tlvltlea I* commonly known In tho firm himself* to Interview.
It w-rfs one of hi* tllppani mornings,
--/- accomodations is carried away with from the sta rt, faced as they/ are by movement a* the Stewardship cant
the city and tliey all say they will a disorganized forco clamoring for an palgn., It will culm inate on Washjng- and he sought to nmum&gt;. himself h\
, return next season for a much longer increase of jitvy. and a paucity of tou’s Birthday In the observance of ii-Udig Ilie eager hoys puzzling nod
stay. This is what real hotels will do equipment, greater than was" ever National Stewardship Enrollment Bay l*flte Ineleviutl qo(%tlo|ts lo lest thelf
p-lienil ’ Xmovietlge.
for your city. With- rnpri'*hotels and known.
In all churches participating In tho
T in s tar away from the earth Is
----- O - apartment houses next season San­
movement, February 22 this year the North Star?" was the question
ford will soon take her place at. one
RUTH PROVES THEORY
to- tlrVil at the -third shiny-faced
chancing to fall on Sunday. ,
' of the tourist centers of the state
The Stewardship enrollment observ­ youngster.
'
"
O—
Rut h • Roland In "A dventure! Qf ance will be followed by the observ­
.f in -Huri-v I cannot give you the ex
Ruth" At The Princess .Today ance of Sunday, February 29th. lift act figure uflflinnd, *lr," was the reply
GREAT PROBLEMS FACE T H E
RAILROAD OWNERS
Just because she had aume very U fc Enlistment Day of Prayer for “lutl on a rough eKtlmnte I should
S tudents. .February till* year, for the say ihut li Is far enough away noSome interesting facts concerning cleai and definite ideas us to picture
llrat time In forty years, will have (lvo in Interfere with me running er
the railroad,situation were contribute making, Ruth Roland, sta r of the 3unday*. This fifth Sunday observ­ rinds."
by Sen. Alice Pomerejio in an ad­ new5 Pat he serial, "T h e Adventures ance in fo "bo mnde n day o f ' signifi­ ^ He got the post.
dress before the Tralllc Club in New of Ruth” which will be seen at the cance throughout
the Inlt^rchurch
York city, a few nights ago. lie gave Princess to-day, every ± Friday, World Movement's organization.
Japan’s Ships.
‘a resume of the results of govern­ earned Gilson Willcts. Pat he Scrne
The month of March Is to be given
On August I. JJqmn had ii total ol
ment management, and some indica­ ario Editor to pack up and move ver to ihi- promotion of tli«- campaign 721 vi-ssel* uf more than t.INat grmu
tion of what the owners will have (.» bag and, baggage, from hi* New or life work and evangelism, .culml
i oos it ....(-I a till ocean trade.
contepd with in their Handling of the York hmpq to Los Angeles during
roads, which have been relumed to the filming of the serial.
W ILLIAM M. WOOD
them . Among other things, he said,
, t
r ■
On a visit to New York several
govornmetit ownership ns a solution months ago, ut the ‘conclusion of
of the-rational railroad problems, in work on her former serial, “ The
‘being advocated in this.country, by tTiger's frail.” Miss Roland brought
a clnss of men "whose heads are al­ the manuscript of a story she wrote
ways above thti clouds, and W hose herself. She called it "Till* Adventures
feet are never on the earth." He said of Ruth" and hail derided to make
/uethcr that n8 man 3-nuld he trusted it the first production of her own
F. L. M ILLER, Owner
with the mflnageme nt M the-roads company.' Mr. Willetts, w ho. wrote
"L et us I'etnember," said Sen many of Miss Roland's past serial
suece»“e«, took tfiy manuscript and
began work on the scenario. When
Roland had hf-r company or­
ganized, she requested him (d'coim*
at once to Los Angeles and assist in
,
#*
th e. production.
.
"Ylio
scenario
writer
is.
nearly
n*
• Y O U W A N T I'O H
important to tin* actual making of a
, picture as he Is to tho preparation
j of, the cqtyinuity," Mis* Rntnmi tleF R E C K L IS P o s itiv e ly Itcm oved
| ejared: "H e |s the uu*i who vj&amp;utliies
b y D r. IleiT)'*fl F r e c k le O jitn ie n t
' the 'to rv uind ' tin* fatting* and the
Your Druseltt or by Mall 6Sc
hustpeis, and he should be -'right on
Srml lor I'rco Ouukjct
thu ground while the picture is being Dr. C I I . Berry Co.,
made."
•
%
•
Agreeing perfectly with the Injirul
YOU MAY FIN D
reasoning, Mr. Willetts went to L*rj
Angeles, and the finished picture
proves, tho wisdom of Mi** Roland’
AT T H E
gr*.v
.contention.
•
A live reel feature a Iso given.

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

"L*i

'i- * - / i ' * » *
" T£Clinic worth oT u man ttr.. woman U the mcaiure of his or her character,

■ -

•

Did" It ever occur to y p u 'th a t precisely Che sam e
is true of a hanking institution? . ^
If this hank pnjoys"success and a high rep u tatio n
if If is a truly up-building force in the com m unity
If I f Is fulfilling
its highest mission
as a bank, I t »
*
*■
is all d u e tto the C haracter, that makes R tho
institution it is.
.

REHER BROS.

1 . I . FORSTER, President

Sanford,. Florida

CHURCHES PUN
BUSY PROGRAM

_
• jj . .

B. F. W HITHER) Cashier

*i

CHULUQTA INN
CIIULUOTA, FLORIDA
Opcn|Dcccmbcr 7th Tor the Season.
MRS. CHAS. D. BRUM LEY,‘ Mgr.

cf Kr.srilnnri Duirj'Mi'k, and you
will undorstnnd’why it is prefer­
red by mother&amp;who demand the
“purest and hurt for theirfhi!riijsrtgj|
The hiRh-ccst-of-food need net^pr
alTeet the children so long ;ls
Rcseland Milk provide^.Uie nour­
ishment it does for Ihe' small
amounl it costs. AVe make two deliveries daily.
•
1

* Phone 2011

Cotton Seed Meal
NITRATE
SODA
Potash Nitrate
ASHES

LEST YOU FORGET

Milvis Marble Co.

.

h a s e -s

r&lt;mMmeni

Every Cloud Has a Silver
Lining

1

W e w ill lin e y o u r d a r k e st
c lo u d s w ith S IL V E R , if y o u

ician

City Market

Famous Dixie Cakes
Fresh Dates

Figs and Nuts

*

Phone 106
FOR QUICK SERVICE

.c e .

Monumenls, Copings
. In Marble or Granite

EVERYTHING
'A
GOOD
MEAL

C

m a in ta in a c h e c k a c c o u n t w i t h
t h is b a. n k%.
- “■
•. -.
* i*!
\

Hawks Not All Enemlet.

Tho department Atf agriculture says
that of the Ml principal varieties of
hawks 47, urn of benefit to the farmer
since.they catch great number* of ns
Uenta th a t Injure crops. ,U I* even
■aid that 'n hawk on th e fa tot Is ak
jrabmhle .as n ctnr.. Thtm- .nrp jUtree
Varieties of hawk3 tlmj are deadly to
chicken* and should he shot on *tchk
Musical In itrum cnts of Insects.

Buzzing Or humming Is .mainly dun
to rapid vlbfntlon* of the wing*, whlcft
often strike Hie air "more than h hun-&gt;
dri*l limes In n second; tint there Is
sometimes n special quivering Instru­
ment near the' base o t the wings.

Chirping or trilling Is due to some sort
of .-strldulatlng" orgnn, one b»rd part
being scraped against another, as the
bow on th« fiddle—It may bo leg
■gainst wing,

A j little

Lenses Ground

L .A . BRAND

&gt;:

.

us

and

m ay
su n n y -

s k ie s t o YO U* in d a y s t o .c o m e .
, \

%

B e fo r e m a k in g in v e s t m e n t s
c o n s u lt th e o f f ic e r s o f t h is
bank.

H« Olamed to Rats.

Reside* damage in food, nits hrlng
iho dreaded bubonic plague, trichi­
nosis. send it fever, typhoid, diphtheria
and- many other Infectious diseases.
Mr. Wortiilngtoo says that "of the
Oplometrlat-Optician
*«
. . thousands of Area of, *unknown‘ origin
havftiK thelf origin In Uio wnllj. attics
221 E. First Street
•
i or ceilings, probably 00 pfer cent are
\ Opposite Fostoflice
jto k to tbs material sccumnlktiKl by
_________ . * *
| rata—mainly by spontaneous IgulUoa." !•

‘ •J

w it h

m e a n *D O L L A R S

William M. Wood, president of the
American Wooten company, who has
threatened to start' a ten,story department store for the 20,000 employees
of Ihe mills of the company In Law.
rence, Has knocked commercial clrclee
Into ? stupor.

, GLASSES AD J LASTED
and REPAIREEj

ta lk

mb' ♦
■- #

\
• ■j)

r

.’ - ~

•’

WE PAY]

41

S eminole C ounty

::

"HOME L f iS T lT U T I O f t"

SERVICE

ON

SAVlflGS

.S A N F O R D . F L A . ‘

�DAILY H ERA LD
jn -----------------------Uttlc.Happe,1I,,*■
Melton ef
Matters In Brief
Persons] Items
o f Imerest

In and About
d i r he dd ig

PAGE 3

.
’ “\
Summary of the &gt;1
Floating Small
1
• Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
|
Herald Readers

------------------- J
h'c Daughter* o r Wctloy of th e
E. Sunday School will hold a
P,i food, sale at the Unipn Ehary on Saturday M arch 6th for
iK-nofil of the Pipe Organ furtd.

, The two lota on -First street and
French uvenue have been purchased
by Mrs.* G ertrude Dykes who con­
tem plates the rection of two lovely
bungalows, thus improving
thia
splendid auction. Thfs,sale was hja.de

p,.
. . Stafford-..has. purPtF the -splendid . rrsU ianro- on
avenue from ’ Mrs. J. B. Lawwhcrc abe expects to- make h e r
&gt;ancnt home. This transaction
rande by J. E. Spurling.
ectrical Fixtures, House Wfrojn fact *U kinds' of *electrical
phone 442.-W . H . Treadw ell,
trlclin.
83-tf.
r H. L. Gibba becomes tho
,r of the neat little cottage~ on
Ave and and Htreet where he
i,e’ convenient to his m achine
i. Mr. Gibbs purchased thru

lift .4. -EL-Spurling; -v. . ..

.

All you good Base Ball men th a t came across with $50.00 last year for the sup­
port of the team remember th a t it takes ju st twice as much to get the same re.sultsthis y ear hecaus^eyetythiug th a t goea into- the- makirig *ef a* ftrftHftess baH
club/TUce everything else,- has advanced ifl price. This year; when ydii* are called
upon, kick w ith a hundred. You’ll ^ et your money’s worth before the season
is over.
.

.Monday.
J Mrs. A rthur Johnsonftias recently
purchased one of thu Ferguson hoqses on Laurel avenue and expects
to take possession abdfot March 15th
W. P. Pcrrul, of Suvaanah, Gn.,
Division Inspector for -th^-Southern*
Boll Telephone Com pany was In
Sanford yesterday inspecting th e
local plant. Ho left last night for
Gainesville.
Mr. and Mrs. D. L. T hrasher ami
daughter \ Miss May m otored to
Miami on Wednesday to visit Dr.
an&lt;} Mrs. Pulcston. They .are expect­
ed home within a few days.
Mrs. Woodward IlarriweJI of New

Properly Owners Take Notice
TIuj law provides th a t "If tafbs
upon teal c ita te shall not b e l a i d
before.the First day of April of any
year,-the Tax Collector shall adovorttse and soil."
This is to notify all 'concerned
th a t .th e .requirem ents of law will
b e ‘compiled with and the Tax Books
remember th a t you will always get your full money/s w orth a t ojur place. You
will postively be closed on April
get a full dollar’s worth for every dollar you-spend with us. We nave customers
First as providod by law and all
and customers and more customers th a t will testify to this and jive w ant you, if
lands on which taxes have not been
you
are not already one, to become one of our customers. We ju s t M U ST have
paid will be advertised and execu­
you
and to hold your patronage we will make it worth your whiloF
tions issued for unpaid personal
•
Flpor coverings. Gold Seal Guarcn property1 taxes.
JN
O
."
D. JIN K IN S
Congoleurn
A
rt
Squares.
Hall
teed
Tax Collector, Seminole County Mrs. Wm. Leffler, at tho Gobles
runners nnu y ‘d gooda. Boston
this week end. leaving y e s te rd a y 'to
Bargain Houae, A. K anner Prop.
join
her father.
213-215 Sanford, Ave.
58-tf
Misses K athrrine nnd Dorothy
For Klim powdered Milk. Phono. 2412
\V. W. Dreswr.
\
108-6tp
Bender who have been the guests of
Mrs. John Melsch for several weeks
Mrs. W ilm ott will be a t The
loft
-yesterday for, tllelg h o m o - In
French Shop T hursday M arch 4th
Mrs. R. A.,Terheun, Editor
Sen
Caucus. N. J.
•nd will he glnd to meet her friends
• Phone 395
*
Mrs.
It. It. M osclty-of New port
and customers.
109-Otc.*
News, Va., is vbdtipg h er sister,
Itcpturaal For Sale
* ' .**
Personals
On account of. illness in fam ily
rem oval to Gebrgia djrughter, Rebecca are-m otoring to
bating
guxuu-rti—C uujji ula— Pnr~?&lt;nlr^-Pnir-nf-ptrnln ■weighing
T'liflirnlsTeTI roohi in
t lie Park Avenue Cafe" and all ftifltoggs having ln-en transferred to
The .ilo of advance tickets to the .sol) and 000 pounds, five joar« o il.
A ‘ P. Connelly.
t h a t ' city * iiy ‘ the* Southern Bell Kd'-v.n Hrigh im, E ntfft ji imenl by A. K. Appleby. Sanford Heights.
110 -310!
Telephone Co.
.
.*
engagypeut only bfijicak a lar;,e
&gt;udlcnn&gt; The Pipe Organ Club ii
rno m bouse, poisesWanted L aly waitress Kx|&gt;crionecd s b n
3rd.
A P. Conpeliy,
promoting
the
entertainm
ent.
Third Lyceum Num ber .At Woman’s
Bell
Cufo
79-tf
110-3tC,
"Tin I*

And No Matter Whether You Give or Not

The Store That Is DiffereSf

Erpeat Ilrotherson ha# _purchased
nire lot on Sanford Heights from
E, Spurling.

FOUND
uMP.mm Kprinir Imll milt' west, of Ci^n be ket
W. T e n th ,S t.
Monroe foaH. 351j acres of ideal 1 . - i
! 10-3tp
homer .sit1*and irrigable farm land. * ---------Worth $200 per acre offered for j Kor, Sale1—Stable M anure in clt
lessly lurniqg a corner. The eur »n&lt;
$75 per acre cosh Direct from bitk' Buffkl n &amp; Girvin, Ilisbco Bldg.
o v e r t u n ed and the “ boys" were
nwnes. Enquire at Phone 352 re- Jiuiksonville\ Fla.
MO-SOte.
pulled rr ., m underneath tin- car by a
luting abalract and deed. 94-tf.
1

■t at about fili.'tt) when a
r driven by* th r e e S a n fo rd
young men came to grief when r e c k ­
la±t '
F|ir*l

The llatv-iiinn come to Sar
with a suceg fill career of fine
tertainm ent to their rredit and *d
draw a crowded bonne. This it
other opponftnity
afforded
pntple -of Sanford to enjoy' a
edasn imTyTctiT production and u 1
artistic ‘entertainm ent.

1 It) S a n fo rd A vpnrn

EVERYTHING IN

PHONE G1

G r o c e r ie s

Cutters and Makers

passerby.

One was taken to the
General Hospital, severely
bartered up. The others were just
able t" navigate, the "shine'’ k e rn ­
ing to act as a pretty good anesthetic
- Orlando Sentinel.

For SalD—Typewrtioj1, standard
m ake. Gall or addroxx 505 E, -3rd
S t.
110-3tc.

Orange

For B ent—One large well fur­
Lreit-—A bunch of keys’ finder
nished room. 7-17 Park Ave. 109-Gt return to Herald Office.
109-3tc.

' W oman's t'lub
Tire re was a splendid artehdnnce
at the annual meeting '■ t h e Wo­
man’s Club, Wednesday afternoon
with .Mrs. W. L. Morgan presiding
The president's annual address
was excellent in which several points
were emphasized, criticism .of- th e
club and its members, being one of
&gt;lrs. Morgan stated th at d u b
women should bo above criticism or
criticising; better 'attendance a t de­
partm ent m eetings-nnd co-operation
was stressed. The address included
a report of the president's work d u r­
ing the d u b .y e a r. Kepurta of the
officers -and- departm ents were won­
derfully good. The report subm itted
by the first vice president, Mrs. W.
E. Watson who is also'chuirm an of
finance, among other good things
showed the club debt entirely can­
celled.
1
The second vice-president Mrs. E.
M. Gull nway and cidarmnn of mem­
bership reported fifty-three new. re­
instated and associate members fiur-

FIN E CLOTHES

NICE FAT
MACKEREL

M en’s Suits$45.00 to $65.00
Boys’ Knickerbocker Suits
$28.00 to $35.00
All work bench tniloretl at
our shop,
A fit guaranteed.
We relint* coats nnd over­
coats for Indies or gentlemen.
We re-pocket trqusers for
Gleaning and pressing neatly
done by hand.
Club rates
furnished
on
application.
*

JAS. M . TRAMMELL, Jh&lt; N
,

*

manaokh

s

Not E a s y to Practice T 1....1
Thrift begins with irttb-M (in,I i.'nds
toward contentment. “Tho difficulty )■
to begin saving Just u little when you
have plenty, ir Is so much easier to
spend the whole surplus from week to
week ami from month to month while
things nre coming easy.

&lt;k&gt;
—-----------;--- u
♦ CLASSIFIED ; ♦
ADVERTISING
'- ±
s1 ^
____
—

_________

.-s.

For B ent—Furnished rooms for
housekeeping. P erm anent1 tchunts
perferred. Also I bedroom suitable
for gentlcpian. 102 Oak avenue
. ”
11J -3tp.
W anted One cow pony for city
pound. Will exrhiinfte for other
■'lock. G. A. Abbott, City Mimntyer,
lll-titc .
I,o:;t -Strayed or stolen. Monday
Mar. I t . Small l»r(,wn
Rocker
Liberal reward. Address or . edl- nt
Herald • office.*
7 B P 3 tp .
For Sale—Extra Fine . 'W hite
W yandotte* egg*. .Two .dollars per
15. W. B. Ballard, A ltam onte
Springs; Fla.
U 0-tf.
For Sate—At Sdnford, by Western
Union Co., tw enty five * or thirty
undersixe heart cypress telegraph
poles *20 nnd 25 feet long. Suitable
for fence posts five or six fence post*
can be made of each pole.
H0-fite'

Our Spring H ats nnd Caps for the WHOLE FAMILY
beginning to arrive. See this line of Outing and
Picnic H ats.
If you need anything in P ry Goods and Notions, call
in and inspect O ur Stock before buying
M en’s Palm • Beach
Suits. Boys’ Wash Suits

Anything in Notions;
^Complete stock of Val
Laces, Flouncing and
Embroideries.
\ *

"See our line of Ladies’
W aists from v $ 1 .7 5 to
$8.25.
Ladies’ Skirts from
$3.00 to $10.50

Cor. 4th St. and Sanford Ave

Sanford, Florida

W anted—3 or I rooms for house­
keeping Unfurnished preferably Gut
will consider 'urnUhecftMrs. B. A.
Terheun.
.
.10H*tf.
At The Valdez
H i^P, Miller, Jacksonville, Fin.;
D. E. Anderson, Jacksonville, Fin.;
George Leone. Pittsburg, Pa.; J . A.,'
Bram, Coronado, Fla.; F. ^1. Cook.
Jacksonville, Fla.; II. C. Berry, St,
Paul, Mint)',; R. A. - Haute, Birming­
ham, Ala j-B u d Lewine, ’New York,
N. Y .r&lt;1. Reitx and fartiily
Indianapolis, Ind.; Gog* J. Frank
Hanley, Indianapolis, I ni . ; Mrs. H.
'B. Abbott, Louisville, Ky.

For Snliv—K iddiyK oop, • In fair
condition.- ^10.00 cash. Can be seen
a t 214 Elm ave.
For Sale—Two ntory 8 room houVe
and garage. Sanford Heights. Apply
No. 402; Sanford Ave.
90-tfc
For Sale—Post Card Collection,
world-wide,.- also refrigerator and
odds nnd ends in furniture* 206
Elm Ave.
108-tf.
For Sale —House and • L6t on
Magnolia avenue. ’ Good bargain
P. O. Box 329.
107-6tl

Service* At jT h *r ItaptM
Temple, S'ind.jy M arch 5th.
9:30 Sunday School.
For Salo—Orie 18 Horae Powpr
11:00 Address "CriUc&amp;KUl of the Kerosene Oil Engine. Chaae &amp; Co.,
In ter Chjireh M ovement.”
' r-' ' Sanford,' Fla.
lOS-Af.
6:30 Young People
. 7:30 Mertloriais Before Cod.
Fqr- pale—Fresh Milk Cow. See
Welcome.
E. J. Taylor, 407 Magnolia Avenue.
Gonrge H ym an, Pastor,
. ’’k . ' ‘A ; - . '

S a n f o r d H e ig h ts

It U#as Happened to Others
. And

Happen to You

In Spite of Everything You M ay Happen to Do

'Be Prepared

'

It Does Happen

1

Fire Insurance
So that you. tnuy not be the
loser, financially

a ry j

SEE US FOR
FIRE INSURANCE

ALL KINDS OF
IN S U R A N C E .
r e a l Es t a t e .
[SANFORD, FLA.
LIABILITY.
COLLISION,
P R O P E R T Y D A M A G F ..

^

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="13">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10754">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1920</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11936">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 05, 1920</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11937">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11938">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 05, 1920.  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="11939">
                <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="11940">
                <text>Original 4-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;, March 05, 1920; &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="11941">
                <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="11942">
                <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="11943">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11944">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1210" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1082">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/219d00830de63fd6db6ac83eb9358539.pdf</src>
        <authentication>b7c91df62e6ab4ffc36621322385f423</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11955">
                    <text>’

t

*
V, • • • '

IN THE HEART OP THE WORLD’®1GREATEST VEGBTABLB SECTION
volume

SANFORD, FLORIDA. SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1020

I

CETTING A NEW RESIDENCE
BUILT FOR HIM TO OCCUPY
The Hague, M arch 6.—Tho
Dutch government t o d a y for the
Mcond time refused to deliver tho
former kaiser to the allies for trial
In a note addressed" to " David
Lloyd George, tho Holland govern­
ment promised to take all means
necessary to minimize th e ’ liberty of
Herr Wilhelm and to prevent him
^from flacturing the world’s peace.
The second communication from the
Dutch government, which was de­
livered in London this morning,
states that these precautions will lie
•taken "on the ‘spot". While Doom
j, „„t mentioned in the text it is
. understood from conversation#' WtlR
(hr nl’ied diplomats' here that tho
• Dutch authorities have assured them
that rjose guarding and censorship
will Ik1 instituted when Wilhelm accupic« hie r«tnto at that, place.
Night and day shifts ure working
nn the kai-er’#' new rasidonee ut
Doom and it. U ‘ reported J i e will
move there from Amorongen May 12.
A hud' fence about t1te house ut
Doom to which objection was miide
at f-r-t IteCnuveit .obstructed a puiilic
road, ii now near. cuiUplctttlutW. the.
author: tie* having Vaived opptirition
• to the work. A train load of furtii• • turr arrived a t Doom a few' weeks
ago and st-teral truckloads have been
delivered in thp house. The building
hs« him completely remodeled.
Count llnhenzollern' will he p’rbtretrd tiv n high fence and u moat.
The hou*&lt;l at Doom is really “ an
arrf^c-age" and the Dutch govern­
ment jf it desired could hold • Wil­
liam a -prisoner for the revt of his
iiay«

who is an expert on thin kind of work
The new organ la whut is known as
a two manuel organ and is one of the
heat of the kind. T h e Prmbytorian
church is fortunate indeed to lie nljlo
to get this.organ also to have an
accomplished player in the person
of Dr. Herbert McCaslin who hns
heen the faithful organist of the
Presbyterian church sinco he has
made this city his home.
T h i s ! organ will make the third
pipe organ for Sanford, the Congre­
gational church being the first church
to have one fallowed by t o Episcopal
church and now the Presbyteriap
church and tho HaptLiLs have, made
arrangements to have’ their pipe
organ installed as soon as the new
auditorium is finished.

Philadelphia March 6 &lt;By Assoclatcd Press) Frcitinfe • temperutlirea
on the heels .of h raging snow,,wind
and rain storm is expected today to
check the llood* which yrodorday
evening broke over’ the eastern part
of Pennsylvania and Delaware cauring heavy damage nod driving many
persons from their home*. T h e sriow
wifi one of tin* severest of the winter
and virtually o\Vry stream in this
section bus overflowed.'

CITY 1IA1) NOT RECOVERED
FROM
SNOW S
OF
LAST
• M ONTH
IS
PROSTRATED
AGAIN
. .
•

000 loans to.finance the sales, Julius
.Barnes, head of the corporation, told
tho house rul«^ committee. He said
he now had authority to m ake tho
sales ori .credit hut hoped the loans
would he a u th o riz e d ./
The flour nowr held at American
ports and (orW hich the corporation
asks 110.75 a barrcll is " th e cheapest
in the world" Mr. nam es tpld the
committee. . He added that "every
effort had been exhausted to sell it!
for rash" hut th a t American house­
wives would pay higher prices for
the hnrti wheat flour.
"Why ure ptic«si of Hour going u p !"
asked Representative Fess, Republi­
can Ohio.
' "The last year crop ycild eas a
peculiar one," nnswered Mr. Barnes
"There w a s - a amnll yield of the
strong wheat and u big yffcldof the
Boft w lieat.’Flour made of th e soft
wheat could he obtained for domestic
use at all times at the exact-reflection
e United , States In of the government-gifurantecd price
'■
the mend i r»l ip in of wheat."

American Farm Bureau

FIRST LAST AND * AI.L THE
TIM E
AND
CONDEM N
STRIK ES O F
ALL
KINDS

Chicago, March 6.-r-Tho American
Farm Bureau federation, at the clos­
ing cession of its annual meeting y « terday,'adopted a rrxolutlun denounc­
ing the uttom pt to ally the agricul­
turalists of America with radicals.
The federation is composed ofT.GOO,Matrimony Restricted lly Hank
oo members -of farm bureaus in 27
Rules; Small Salary is Considered
states.
',
•Chjrnsio, March 5. A hook ef
The resolution adopted by tho
rules for* employes of the fedora
oration declared 1*
reserve hank of Chicago, circulat­
"W e wish the A
ed today, -ays: "N o male employe
definitely
to understand th u t the or­
orceiving le-s than $12'* a month
Had j-Fire-at Da) Iona
-hU
rueumuuim
ganization
styled "The FnrmrrV N a--salary t r i l l lie permit ted to marry
tinnul
C
o
u
m il'.h a s no authority to
t
Daytona.
March
fi
Mre
whfifli
vvjiile in t ie service oT this liank.
speak
itt
.
IjeJtalf
of the fa it*rA of
,
started
i
i
Kenner
Wil’i-aiH
garage
wit 'out fir j / t t ing •'(•• matter up
this
country,
and
any and nl i-florts
Ins
t
night
s-read
Hi
four
ad)
(Aiming
with tlie chief clerk.'’
• •
on
the
part
of
'the
farmers
Extend
Time
For
building* and d u l , damage estimated
"The sum cot fortli in t ht&lt;* hook
council' to all); agriculturalists
Tax
Return*
at
a
quarter
of
a
mi'lion
dollar*.
For
is the minimum upon w iich n man
Wi/shington March fi Extension ,i inn.- t 1 oatenril tin- entire luisiness America with the radicals in the in
Hl'ould set (firth on the m.ttrinuinof time for the filing of final income section. Fire apparlus from Daytona dustrial world is hereby denounced.'
iul sea," said T. O. McGovern, of
UNLESS
AMERICA
COMES tax return by corporations to May 15 Hearh was eallrrl ins—ttse a m i ‘the
Resolution* TMUtjfig' nf legislation
the bank. "This hank believes thnt
INTO
LEAGUE
LARGER.
(lames
were
under
controlat
mid­
was
announced
tonight
by
the
bur­
ahd
other desire* of the f
is the least amount upon which
NAVY WOULD HE ‘NECESSA­ eau of Internal revenue. A tenatative night.
were
adopted, the salient features be­
two can live these days."
RY.
return or an estimate of the tax due.
ing the creation of bureaus
dir.^cY supervision of t
Washington March fi By \*sor- together with one-fourth payment
the federating. These resolutions
ialed Pro"isi Secretary DaneW told must
. be made by March 15. however
provide for «slirldishment of
th&lt;- Ifo.r- Nava! Commit tve toot he ! A ^aJLenumt explaining why return
on trade" relations with
would reiomnu i tpe riHV:-5 bud I- cannot lie completed- within the pr»»countrirs, djstrlhution of farm
tcer
than
that
pro'
serllii-d
-time
amt
a
formal
reipiest
ing program la
ducts, legislation, transportation
hosetl by the General BmTHf if th e made for t h i extension must be tll.sl
a bureau on business
n„t
rnitlTed
at
thiv
»'V
corporations
taking
advantage
pence treaty is
IIO M B titl)
FINLAND
AND with authority to &gt;et up without
\
\
ii
hi.ohm
g
&lt;'f
the
extension,
when
formal
post­
i-»iinn of f octresn.
ACT AC K IN
NEW
PI At E lay a business organization under
final lecomntendalion the serretarj ponement will lie gratitisi.
new
E ngland
states
i-n
,
Lcn Inn M arch -fi i By A*!&lt;n luted dirrrtinn of trained experts.
the
GRIP , OF
REGULAR
Other resolutions .endorzed
I're - I'm* It dslievi-t lav e begun
BLIZZARD
..
a new- a i l a e i on Finland..ac'nn ing American Legion,
to a lle h tngfow despn'eh. -After n ■b-alth nmi indurtry,
Washington M nr^y 5 ( lly A*»neihraYv itrI d|i--V 1 on b.r-dment Wer’- 1-triles and oj&gt;po’-ed legislation t
ated PtewO -While* the storm., which
ne-ol.i
they a tta kril t&gt;e I ii.ish ing to levy a tax of t per cent on
swept out of the northwest Thursday
landholdings in e r e e f ef &lt;10.COO.
(loxiti hi ut Sul f e n I
w .is pacing -hiw y out I &gt; v y » ’ •
INSTALLING PIPE ORGAN
wi -Is c o r i 1m u - ’ I i f -oJnils I' i n'l Hold Ho/ Dlckcrsin
I’orlujsueKo Cabinet IH signs
J day I/ O
tb e
A tl.in tl*
I*.-)'’
and
sev irt-ly
Los Ail/rlr-, l rl. March fi. Huy
London
March fi, -.By Associated
I’rr-li)it-rian Church Has Purchased cold weather pr. ailed over Ufa eu-.
Dickers
in,
charyi*l
witli
aiding
in
Press)
The
Portuguese cabinet has
line instrument For Krw^Huildlng tire country ea t of tlie Rockies
the rfthhery of a hank at Phenlx, resigned uftcr tlie defeat of the gov­
The Presby tcrian Qhuch recently and will probahl eo/Uinue for se­
Ala., made is hut In aid to h ive been ernment o.n the* ynti^ o f confidence.
purchased a fine Austin pipe organ veral duys.« Tl •*-fu’l *-force of tho
f
it Mith enrapo fputd isil here fodny
ONES WHO
and it lias been ahlpped to this city sto'Yn is leing ‘fell in the New HAD
( A 8 JID
SUSPENSION THOUT.IIT TO BE
v.
),en in* it-ed a rruue le y on his • ’
Revival Meeting
AMERICAN
UP
.
and is now being installed tinder thg. England M..t-s .
••
OF HANK AND FACED DIS­ • U I K y
.«'l fii. « in the ( itv prison, ( ’imbed
_
_
_
„
.
_
.A
Begins
at
the* McthodDl Church
direction of lohn Kicster of Nfrginia
CONSULATE
# up a \o u tii.it&lt;&gt;r xhaft iiti'I lied.
GRACE
Ma/ch
"21st.
Dr
Walker will do
For f be H-Mpllal Find .
I ir)I'r'iin'i wife who
in Jail
Berne, .March fi (By A-&lt;m 'a te d
preaching
nnd
have
special help
New
port
News
March
0
&lt;
By
A*‘or
&lt; ungress Cutting Off Free
Tne public spi it ’d 1 i Jins, of SinI'ttM i Four suspects have been ar­ Lite *uid l e r hu«hand formerly wax •i *&lt;nn singer. If is hoped this meeting
i,»ted
Press)
It.
D.
Ilolloway,
pre
ifor*l u.ilor t v a ill loulershlp of
h vaudeville performer making
a
/ T d to
* he on• time • Mrs. A E II 11 who -old t i.’kctx for dt'nt of the Va«xnr Abbott Co.. who«i rested at the frontier station ut specialty *nf freeing him-elf from will reach and help the whole city,
It « •alWays/well
- i Bachs us a rv-solt of the bombing of
ns it will not simply he h Mi thodiat
a. .ni of t,m hound*. For-ecing thi* the Prine-ss Tlii*Mr9 for t ’ e perfor- excessive Ioann recsintly caused the the American con ulate at Zurich. hnndctilTs and other rintraints. She
meeting.
danger we farmers-- or rather agri­ mame last night are to be din *ralu- suspension of the Colonial Bunk and They are attem pting t i ero
into told tin- police l e had e*cuped H80
The pastor will preach to-morrow
who
was
arrvated
here
ye&gt;terda.v
lateTl
upon
their
good
work"
as
they
times amt" t h a t . 1« never had I een
culturists—were liable tp sutler fjom
Austria.
Federal
rommUxioners
have
morning
on "W hat is to to he wise?"
charged wjth having stolen
.
..
lmpriorred &gt;xte«ailully longer than
our congress we got our allotment of garnered chough to make, some 3l»2 e/cning
fifteen thousand dollars from .the
appointed to *nve, lta |e tlK.
Sunday
night
oii^ 'E xcubb Me.
•
free seeds long ngo, and now comes for the hotpltal and the check was bank, shot nnd killed hlmsejf tH- Mtempt. to wr.Vk t ^ . ’c o m u la te . tow .nWxt'xs.
this
DickersonS cuHniiite was found
thV heartless.'Senate anti says to us turned over to the hoapitul
Mrs. Comer Dies
• - . a*|ee|» after the e«rnpo. Mo told the
tirklpM of the soil th a t no longer morning. Every little bit heips and morning.
J
Will Hulld lUlel
•
Newport
News
March
6
(By
Asso­
Birmingham, Ala., March G (By
guard he had not heard Dickerson's
would they hand out to us free seeds •there. should ho something o/^thD
J. A. Branp formerly .of this city movement.-.
,.
.
Associated rr&gt;
*-•
We must pay as we’ go, or quit going kind kept g fp‘2 to keep the hospital ciated Press) Holloway wa« found
by hi * wife who heard a* muffled but for t l ^ past .two years a resident
The hank at Phonelx was robbed Comer wife of the newly appointed
•In th e e n d we farmer* may he he going and by the way the Fi’rn tld- report of a revolver. A dopy of the of Cnionado Ilrach was in-tlie c ity
Alabama
the giiuon as the s e ed s'th e Govern- Laughton Hospital is going good so mornin2_ paper telling of Holloway s today calling on his m an y friends of fn.OGO. Fix men have been ur- United S tates. Senator of
far
nnd
the
report
of
their
financial
rottod
i
n
conoet
lion
with
the
robbery
died
here
t
i
:no’
i
I’
• merit -sends out as a perquisite to
arre-t b y spread on tho
table. and he hnd ‘plans and sjHHsficattons
congressmen are but the refuse and condition will he giv.on in Monday * Holloway had J79.0P0 life in orftn'’e ■fo, a w w hotel at Coronado which
. Political Row
Rummage and
Worthies* stuff that reputable seed Herald. Let everybody help .thia which was a t igned to the Oolonuil | looks like a winner. Mr. B rann’ lin*
houses will not send out to their most worthy institution.
Wa»hingtm», March 6.—A hot
T*te Junior I). Y. P. Uf (gill
Bank.
•"
•
|th n pavilion nnd resturimr irt thp
trade. If congre'3 will go ahead and
bench now and ha* -worked wonders polltirxl row broke out in th e House u R um m age and Candy Sale
STO RM GOES INTO. OCEAN
lop off some hundreds of other
Donation To llot-pltal ,
with It but he nee* t i e many ad­ today when .the Republicans forced Corner of Sanford avenue
foolish and worthless expense* the
.
Washington March G.—The storm
The officers-of the Fernuld-Lanph- vantages to be derived from u real through a resolution authorizing an Street March 13th.
invedrgatlon.
by
tye
judiciary
com­
tavpayers of the country will say. of almost blizzard proportions which ton Hospital association wish to hotel and am u&gt;e merit place
at
Amen.
•
m its* xil th e acts of Attorney Gen­
has swept over the country'from tho express their thanks for the^denntion Coronado and he wmirts to interest eral Ihilmer in connection with prices
the
people
of
Id*
ownwtfclion
at
New
northwest, apparently had plunged of Twenty-five Dollars froai the
Smyrna nnd also the /people of the charged Icrd.oui iid’a surnr.
out into the Atlantic tonight, leav­ Ladies T Aid Society of the First
The llem n rrats bitterly opposed
interior, who. have nlwnya had n
Baptist £ h u rc h . .
ing a trail ol stranded shipping in
the
project, char)ing r e p u te d ly it
The hospital is daily proving its warm spot in their lasrrti for Cor­
its wake. Reports to the weather
was
d
H n t r d a* on indlre-t impeach­
onado Beach. There is.-no -doubt hut
bureau shoWed that a forty*cight worth’ to th e city nnd county, and
ment
r
l Palmer and only intehded a*
what some of the*o fine days Coronad
mile wind, accompanied in many the many contributions to ita sup­
a
means
of checking the "growing
Beach
or
Now
SmYrna.
Beach
as
it
sections by snow aijd sleet, marked port evidence the interest that is
will soon be called will be one of the. populirity” of a D enoctatic presi­
being
taken
by
the
best,
people
.of
tho passage of the disturbance to the
,
most popular beaches on the coast. dent! d aspirant.
.
.
•ea over the whole eastern half of the the county.
In
reply
the
Republican*
charged
T, W. L A W T O N , President I t has ail the possibilities-and needs
United States. At sea Its comings
that
P
ro
ld
e
’nt*
Wilson
and
Palmer
only the right kind of development
had been foretold by storm warnings
w'ere
directly
responsible
for
the
pre­
to get the people.of central Florida
but reports of steamers friven ashore
KEN UCKY
SCENE
OF
ANaa patron*. Mr. Brann will have no vailing high Irlce of sugaf.’
came quickly from the Virginia coast
O f UK It TRAGEDY DUE , TO
trouble Interesting capital Ih lilt new
Ev e l y n
parker
o b t a in s
on the hceis of the weather. *
DRUNKEN QUARREL!.
hotel at the bedch
Florida beaches Milk Drops To M‘ Cents A ()uarl
DIVORCE • FROM
PROF.
Weather bureau officials said to­
In Chlrsgo. .
are the finest in the world and are
Ashland Ky. March 6 (By Associ­
, HER8 CHEL
PARKER
TH E night th at tho wind would diminish
getting
morepopular
every
year.
Chicago.
March
5.—Milk is sell­ ated Press) Milford Hubbard and
explorer.
.
•
in force ashore during the night, the
ing Chicago lor I t cents a quart brother in law, Jerry’ H ubbard were
, /
• For Florida fair and continued
New York March .6 iBy Associa- center of the disturbance passing cold tonight and Sunday. Freezing
Flour On Credit
It^lowing tho drop of 46 cents a killed, Wittard Hubbard a brother of
t*d Praia) Evelyn Parker obtained in out to sea. Tomorrow, they said, tem peraure .tonight north" porth)
Washington March fl.—Five mil­ a decrease of one cent a uuart Milford was teriously injured in a
twelve minutes aeparatiop from pro- would show.'Eeneraily lower temper­ Heavy frost central portion. Probably lion barrels of the United Statepi hundted pounds fixed .by cirtylhu gunflght between themselves yesterfewor Herschel -C. Parker the ex­ atures east of the Mississippi riveo nlight
soft whept ------.
(Tour- ------------------------------to rs and producers --•
for
March. day a t Ponca Virginia. The men were
| Ut nfrost
n , in southern.. mainland. grain-Corporation’s*
— r ----------- ,, -----------plorer who climbed Mount Mc­ possibly with*' winter cold records Gentle to m oderate' porth west to will Tie sold on credit in Europe s o o n lT h is is 10 cpnta a hundred pounds said to have been IntozIcatotTand
Kinley. Mrs. Parker charged aban­ ftsj'u&amp;llftd in the northern helf of t e north winds..
unlctt congress authorised $60,000, ' “ - * • ...................... . . .
.
A,Untie ,e«bo,fd.
•
v ' •■
donment and non-aupport.

SECRETARY DANIELS
SEES FUTURE W IT H ­
OUT LEAGUE NATIONS

/

Would Demand larger
“ Navy At Once __“

' ., .

&amp;

FOR THREE YEARS
*

HIGH WINDS
— CONTINUE
.
ON ATLANTIC

&lt;

BOLSHEVIK BEGIN .
• A NEW ATTACK

PRESIDENT BOMBERS
OF BANK ARRESTED
SUICIDES ATBORDER

MOONSHIN

o f :.

2 DEATHS

Weather Report

,u

*

.♦ *

./* .

lof

,—r~

' *

�PAGE 4

Aditu 20 Ceais

Thritt in Peace Time

After Retirement

YOUNG
MRS.WINTHROP
R U TH R O W L A N D i. a * * .. -

DON'T MISS THE FIRST EPISODE
REMEMBER TOD.AT IS BENEFIT DAY FOR THE FERN
-La u g h t o n m e m o r ia l h o s p it a l

TOMORROW
The Greatest Story of Ambi
tion Ever Rimed
A

Phenomenal • Woman's
Phenomenal Car^T

-fine time.—
Is there f$NE
YOUR life ?

The.Most Sensational PhotoP!av of the Year

■far* P.xchxnan. who n t m d It at
•litj-ilx mad retired •at »rr«ty.
Abjom wfc« n uu oxer th* history
of the prwMewey wilt b* struck by the
rbc t t d (an a t zht agv at ajikh pn&gt;
bVnrx.kax* tattr r i mod retired fraaa
odtf*. and the xarytng length of time
by abirS they bare outlived retire
rent, rrtm rtj the . Philadelphia Rrr-mi. Of the Brag debt president*. all
hot two of wheat w n r d two term*
each, six retired when (a it sixty Ore.
cae of them. JatfciU. */itbto tl day*
of bla K tk tieth birthday. The Brat
Adana retired at sixty-two. Tan Bar­
ra at fiftyalo*. Of these eight, feor

Adana oatttxed retirement by twentyAre year* and J t&amp; tr m .
died on

New Insulating Material.
A new product suitable for one In
retired electrics! insulation Is being obtained
at sixty-sesew. died July &lt; 1S3I.
Brunt the treatment of kelp* la Aas­
Since J a c U u . no prewMent except . tral la. The moist precipitate Is sub­
Wllsuo. Buchanan. Taylor and the ■ jected to pressure and formed undej
Brat Harrison has sat la the White 1 pressure.- after which It. is .hardened
llo y e when s-x:j uso years otdt-;O f, by" treatment with formalin. The fin­
all who bare **ned la that tine, teo ■ ished article Is nude by turning oa
retired or died la office before reucb- 1 the lathe, a process which Is said to
leg afty-seren. and only two outltred be perfectly satisfactory, and n. high
retlrrgBdnt twenty years. Not ooe jo iu h u applied. The raw material
tired to
eighty, and only fit. ; la to be found In large quantities
po«»ed serenty. Polk octlUed retire- 1 around the coast of Australia and par­
ment tens than six month*, and died! ticularly on the Tasmanian shores—
at fifty-four, younger than any. other ; Scientific American.
• .•
.eh president. Few presidents in the j
ia*« fifty tear* bare Itred to see three j
S ta te le s s P ru n e *. •
.
their sb i r w o o . and several bar* j The jjppelf-w prune,.,* new prod
!»uf »een two. though I v r t s saw-four I
,i .cronliiar la Overeat a pep- i
TT»y r r ? n t t -t&amp;i ’ tw
t- a n lif e la ?£*e U o tie ) S ta te s I*
r r v u t - r th a n H « v* « t&gt;-o th e rep u b ­
lic w a s f -r in z .
p u b lic
.-wen h a t e h a rd ly s h a re d in th e favoo
“ ( le c g lb c t.rr i.'la y * . T h e p re sld e c e y .
tndre-1
&lt;• b ite a e * e r e x a c tly wfcat
e t e r u l a * M l r a ti * weft sn ap . • »

COMEDY?

iiu a .il l» fc*lay The Xip&lt;le&gt;a-

i•s c ^4i i r
m*i.-

rt

head­
Some
rolled
rings.

~*f

Heroic Ambrose

GENEVA
Mr. ar.d* Mrs. U B
tes R x e Lev) left *L

a matter of balance daring the
ing forward and rolling down.
fragmeQtx had broken away and
on their aides wtthoot forming

Miami Last Saturday to take her
mHirer. Mrs. S. W iliam s-back with
her. Mrs. W ffiiira has spent the
past yexr here with another daugh­
ter.
C. F. Hxrri'orL
The Geneta «ehcoi* opened on
Masdav ef tb:i week, there
*ing
no more ta-jes of scarlet fever.
Mr*. Harry. River* and children
left Syr,day fi? thetr home ;r M i.*ots
G*.. alter having *ye«t the .p a *
two months with Mrs. J. N Prevatt
Word ha» j»*t been received th s t
Ed RauIerMQ of Palm Beach has

„le w a r ga*e W aahiqgrocj. th e first
A dam *. J c ‘^’er***o au&gt;l iia«l:*OQ a
,!
m any try in g bosjrr*. N c ?D-y » ;l t«t-1
ih e lr perioil* o f r e s p ite . W a sh in g to n ,
w b e re se e he h a p p e n e d to b e a s ch ief
x ra g ts rra te . g-.ar.aged to esr-spe bow
s o d a g a in to th e
a n d i f' t-

nlfted quiet of Vlrsttat V#rTi-Xl

John

A dam s, th e first p r v '- &gt;»r! to
py tb e W h ite H e s s * a t W ash in g to n ,
th e d o m e stic a r r a n g e m e n ts o f w hich
a p p e a r e d “taspogsltyle" to ' h is th r if ty
a ad o rd e rly N ew E n g la n d w-.fe. o fte n
r e tu r n e d t * th e q u ie t o f h is hocne a t

W a r Dug Decorated.

* Ur* Walter Ctoxerd, dog fanrier of
VI!II Valley. Oa!_ has welcomed hack
bo=:e
th kln-l treatment her famon*
a i r &lt;b»g Marne, .which, t.ad been dec-

PEOPLES BANK OF
=
SANFORD =

TRY A SURE CROP
SOLD BEFORE YOU PLANT
T he American Coffee Bean Company will coni

100 acres only at Sanford and* will - pay four dollars ,
Y$4.00) per bu. of f4 peunds ’delivered at shipp n g ;
point in two bu. sacks.
* : •••
m i

\

HI i oc ?«d t»l!l etui
jel icrt&gt; raHT I 7 . p LcanaTf-glfi 10 takluri in
three m onth*alfrfp'jr.tirg ard ehr&gt;t.!(i }i*-M not Ins than 100 bCshels
per detr following celery WJthoct additional fertilizer. Th« best nltto- 1
gen gathering crop that can he planted Only such farmers as an? in
position to plant and harvest the crop projcrly need apply.. Call qn |

yf

Inz «

SA N FO R D

t he strain of hfx experience
!n (!&gt;• rrencties where he performed
rali'snMi a* a cs»
carrier fgr the
F rc tlc h a rra y .
‘

-c t c f the T ru est A rtis ts .

■« -»-» s—w-rr-mf r*e rtre object ot
the t to g1*e permanence
to images *ach a* we should ‘always
deefre to behold, tod might bphold
without agitation: while tbe Inferior
branches of destfcn are concerned wtfb
the at-ater pas*loos which depend oa
the turn cf » narrative, or the gugrau
of an emotion —Raskin.
If

Reilly an Art.
}
Growth of Crerdatlon
Idea. 1
•t
To be boreu and not abdw Iti la oa#
Aemilable statistic* compiled less of the secrets of soda) succesj.—Bow
than a.dccailo. aga ahaw. ihau.tn. Uia Ion Boat.
• United Staffs the total number of cre­
mations bad risen to ever 00 000 dis­
tributed among 3S cretnatorle* The
growth, of cremation has' been Tery
rapid on the Paclflc coast. In 1013*
Residence: 905 Magnolia Ave.
a contract was lei by the government
Phone 461 i
for the erection of a crematory In the
Office: First National Bank Building
Canal xone.
* *’
**
Phone 462

B. G. D O D D S, M.D

Mr. and Mr*. Reed cf P i c - t
to-v. lil.. arrived !a«t Wedseada.
ocehpy thei* c-&gt;1.tagv it Lake H;

father M

i hereby announce a» a (.ancidate
foe she. «ta t? Seevabr 'rum the I?th

District, eornprinag Oicfola. Orange
and Seminole 'Comtiee. and I earrf®Ky solicit th e rapp-aet of all
Democrat* in the Dea»&gt;*i*attee pts
ary to t* held Ju re s h I ha re ser­
ved Osceila County i j the State

Furniture and Complete
H ouse Furnishings
Stoves .and Rafigcs

Full of repletion hs it is to-day, with even’ necessity of the New Season—
with every fad and fancy for peisooal adornment. Little wonder that every
counter has its fascination for visitors and that everybody is eager to inspect the
complete and mtehsting stock of material and highly desirable merchandise. We
are all glad th at the stormy -winter and bad record is behind us aryl that the
bright days of spring a a j ,^ ! around the corher. Everybody is keen to put off
the winter clothing and pijt-on bright,‘fresh apparel of spring.

Our Stock is Comolete
Prices and Terms
Reasonable

LADY HOWE

34 years service to San

ARE BEAUTIFUL THIS SEASON
Sport Dresses are very good for Spring, Sill c Pangea, Crepe Dechine
Pussy Willow, Taffeta. The newest combination on display in window

Building Material
Roocag of Ali Descriptions

Doie, Cement, PUstor

The next big day will be the SEVENTEENTH OF MARCH, ST. PATRICK DAY
display of IRISH LINEN, DRESS LINEN, TABLE LINEN AND ART LINEN.

Hill Lumber

Th« farmer Florence OavU cf New
Y*rk. who** wcond marriage. Vila
time to Earl Hewe. i* win minced. She
waa marr ed kn IM3 t . Terrence Ternpie-Blackwood. Me mccaeded U the
me retaliate of DwfTerIn la 1*02. the
aame year - that Earl Howe *--- —,
Lard Chamberlain to Queen Alexandra

�MARCH 6. 1920

SANFQRD DAILY -HERALD

PAGE 2
climate is not one of them
time during the winter or
and if there is any better
anvwhero in the world let

REPORT OP CITY MANAGER
For The Month Of Feb. 1922.
Fire Call# —number, 8, estimate dam­
age &lt;1190.00.
Number of arrests 75.
Complaints, informal, 69.
Permits—building 6; Dog licensht, 12;
Amusement licenses, 3; Lccupational
licenses, &gt; 61; Auto licenses, 7; Other li
censes none; Street licenses 10.

at a n y
summer
climate
Us heat

about it

3~ PUDLIHIIERN
' R E T H E R E TUESDAY .NIGHT
There w ilF b e a’ most important
•NC. • • , .
mceliiYg of the Hoard j&gt;f Trade next
# % R. J. HOLLY, Editor
W. M. HAYNES, Business'Manager Tuesday night at which time officers
for the ensuing year will ho elected
and
a, new sta rt will he made with
— Udfti Il*l« Mad. *«*•■■ »■ Ap»tlc«U.«
the idea of taking up, all th e many
)iceds of the city .and c o u n ty .a n d
uwscttirnoN t’ KicE in a d v a n FI:
TO R UNK TEAR------------------— -------/I
putting Seminole on the map esTuu tux m o n t h s --------- :-------------- *
.pecially during th e coming season.
I 1ELIVEREU IN CITY RT CAItllffclt
ONE WKEK.1----------------------------- &lt; *C
Re there Tuesday night,

&amp;

• c» of March J, !S7»

&amp;

City Attorney
Administration
City Manager
Secretary
Auditing
Asst. in*Auditing
Special Services
Total
tabor Claims
StrecU
Sanitation
New Sewer
Parks

MOTOR

CARS

Complete Line of

when

L. A. BRAND
OpIontelriKl-OplIrlan
221 E. First S i r e d
Opposite Postofllce

EVERYTHING

Phone 1 0 6
FOR QUICK SERVICE

Delinquent Taxes (Personal
' Tax
.
Delinquent Taxes (Real Esstaici
....
Interest on all delinquent
•
tuxes
Amount liens collected
Cleaning Vacant* lots, removrublush etc
Sale of. Fertiliser
Sale of Burlap
*»
Use of Garbage can

CHULUOTA

Pr*aa ( ’JVniment
City folks will know a thing, or
two nbOut "rising prices of food when
the farmer quits the habit of rising
at 4 a. m. Florida Metritpolis.
When attending concerts or public
speakings K would help some if peo­
ple Who always talk shbuld leave
their voices Jif home. Whisperers and
conversationalists' 'in public gather­
ings are nuisances to*those within
hearing distance’, of them.’— Mintnl
Metropolis.
When a Marion county farmer
comes t » Ocala and sells hi* eggs for
50 or 60 cents a dozen, then goes into
a resturanl and pay* 35 cents for
two of the snnlc, or two, just like
them, with two or three slices #f
stale bread ami about enough blitter
to grease the hill of a humming bird
there ia riot much use to talk to him
about Swift, Armour amLUte other
packers being'profiteers.—OcahisStar

INN

CIIULUOTA, FLORIDA
'OpenJDccember 7th for the Season.
MRS. CIIAS. D. BRUMLEY, Mgr.

23110

Note The Richness n

267.40

of Rrsflar.d.Dairy Milk, and you
wiM untfeistand.why i( is proferrt*d by motlwra’who demand the
purest and best for their children.
The hik'h-ccst-of-food nred never
affect the children so long ns
Roscland Milk provides the nourLshmont it does foi the small
amount it coats. ;\Ve make two
deliveries daily

1X0.85
31.79
32.50
3.50
3.50
1.50

One Mule
100.00
Fees
.
,
25.25
Labor I’ay Roll for The &lt; ity Of Sanford
For Week Lading February 7 1920
Sewers:'
Will Akers
*.00
Ed Smithy.
15.00
Will Akers
1.150
Total
34.50
Streets:
*■ James Stewart
3.00
Arthur Dea*
’
9.00
Arthur Deas
4.50
Berry Gardner
G. W. Jackson* ..
12.37
Wm. King
12.00
Wm, King
12.00
Wm. Bristow
12.25
Total
65,12
Sa nltnry:
Wm. Cooper
1,1.2
C .T . Taylor
12.00
Total
’ ....
23.25
F«r Week Ending February 14 1920
Sewers:
D.G. McLaulin
‘
IH.Oo
D/H. Edwards
18.00
Ed Smith
18.00
Ed Forum on
6.60
Will Akers
13.60
R.G. Williams
12.00
W. R. Williams *
7Y.no
Total
157.50

Phone 2011

C o tto n S e e d M e a l

NITRATE
SODA
P o ta s h N itr a te
ASHES

Cor. Oak and 2d St
PHONE 3

SANFORD

i ; 1

Berry Gardner
Janies Stewart
Total.
Sanitary;
Wm. Cooppr
G .\ V .Jackson
C. C. Taylor
Totnl
For Week Ending February
Sewers:
D.G. McLaulin
I&gt;. II. Edward*
Ed Smith
Ed Fnroqjon .........
Archie Hudson
Muse Richardson
W* R. Williams

1
V
V
:

'

Every Cloud H as a Silver *
Lining
W e will line your darkest
clouds with SILVER, if you
maintain a check account with
this bank.
' - ..
mue taiK with us may
mean DOLLARS and sunny
skies to YOU in days to come.

John Hall
Berry Gardner
Wm. King .1
Sanitary Dept.;
Wm. Cooper
.
10.12
G. W. Jackson
' 12.37
Geo. Thompson
10.00
C. Tpylor
"
16.00
Total
!
.
48.49
For The Week Ending Febfunry 28lh
Sewers:
V

(Continued on page 4)

•\s _fr , ,;ii f J ' r j y | f A j g f c L . g r i | rt

*

Labor on Streets
Wm. Brinson

D. II. E l wards
D. G. McLaughlin

.

- V

t

YOU MAY FIND

Famous Dixie Cakes

Itercipls
Dog IJcenses (amount col
leeted •
Oeupalional Licenses Col­
lected
Amount of Amusement Li
census
Current Taxor (personal &amp;

Geo. Thompson
Morman Thompson

GOOD
M EAL

C ity M arket

SANFORD, FLA

,

I t is worth quite a
bit to be able to get
parts
you need
them, and not have to
wait and pay addi­
tional expense for spe­
cial factory shipments.

GLASSES ADJUSTED
, and REPAIRED

FIRST NATIONAL BANK

Pound Cnllcrilons

ician

Lenses Ground

Income tax blanks for computing returns for the
year 191-9 are now being distributed, and boforcr
March 15th, every unmarried person with" an hpcome of $1,000.00, of if married, $2,000.00, must
make a return even though deduction^ allowed may
reduce taxable income to the point where theres
no liability for payment.
* 1
The officers of the First National Bank have
taken some time and trouble tp inform- themselves
as fully as possible regarding the law and rulings
bearing on the matter, and will be glad to render
assistance to nil who may desire it in making out
their returns.
Come in and bring all information and figures for
the year's business and let us help you.

1st Aaat. chief
2nd Asst. Chief . ____ ___—
Police Deparlmcnl
Chic/ Sanitary Inspector
Patrolman
Patrolman
Motorcycle officer
Street Department
Superintendent
Health Department
City Physician Health
Officer
Sanitary Collector

H i i M ^ u 'M n a S r im ~ eaWw OfSsM * IT,
i t i s . at tb« ,o«ionk» * ! 84i&gt;r&lt;xd r w u u »»■!«

C H A R L IE WALTON R E T IR E S
C. H. WaRon has disposed of his
interests if\ the Indian RiviV Advo­
MBMUKK n r THE ASSOCIATED PUKMM
I
cate at Titusville after twenty eight
years of service as the editor and
And yet. without liqupr ft) these general manager of the "pink sheet”
past two months, tKe codntry m ana­ as it is familiarly known all over tho
ges to stagger along.-1- Leesburg state and in many other states of tho
Commercial.
—i union. Tw enty eight years is a long
" Stagger a(opgj If right and we note time tp serve the people without
several “staggering Along” -on the money and without glory hut Char­
streets of Sanfordwlricfi give rise to lie Walton Bcrved them right royally
wonderment uhout where they oh and well 'In all that time and only
tained thla "stagger stuff” and why his failing health makes it necessary
they are allowed to stagger along for him to give up the reins to a n ­
o u t's tr e e ts in prohibition tim e any other after auch a long and illustrous
more than In wet times.
career. M r . ’ Walton slat A th a t he
will .still have an Interest in th e Ad­
Sanford seems to he having a vocate which is good news to his
worse time with its privately owned many frlem}a in the "press gang" for
light and water paint than we are the Florida Pres* Association could
with our nilnicipnl plant. Five daya not hold a r’e&amp;l rpecting without Mr.
in succession without any juice is the aryl Mrs. Charles Walton. Success
record so far.—Leesburg Commcr- and long life to them and may they
retire to their beautiful home cm the
Yes, we have searched the records Indian River to enjoy the sunset of
in this country and all foreign coun­ llfc.Rurroundeti by their friends anil
tries and this has the world beat. with the knowledge that their work
Another .record established for San­ has been well donc.v*
ford is the fact of being the only
The Advocate has been purchased
city in Ljie world where they lire .ex­ by W. R. Dobson of the Cocoa S t a r 1
pected to pay for Service which they who will combine the two papers and |
have not received. However we will cull them the Star' Advocate and
hnvc a.municipal plant in another thus give Brevard county one big
twelve months and pay our money to paper and one. that should prove*
ourselvcs.
very popular. Success to the new]
owners apd th e old.
That awful freeze did not materia­
lize yesterday. T h e re has never been
a freeze.in Florida after.February as
far back as the present memory of
I’m firmly of the belief that the
Ilian goeth and there probably never
t eacher s of this s t a t e are underpaid.
wlli be oiiu. So this bright and sunny
day we are giving out sympathy to I heard twer young men talking on
the folks north who are digging the street several nights ago, and,
themselves out of the snow banks ju srn s ! panted 1 heard nnp trH .the
and with poor prospects of coal for other' "Well. w*ith your regUlur pay
the fire and furnace. Wo may have and what you can pick up on the
a few drawbacks in Florida but the aide it’s dead easy to round-up sixty
dollars a week ’* Gee. think of that,
oh. you newspaper men! Think of it,
too. oh you teachers! I’m betting
that neither out; of the f^lows talk­
ing had even a high school education
and there was sixty dollars lying
around ready to he horns waggled!
And a teacher has to pay for educa­
tion—Unless dad paid it all; and even
then she has to keen trotting round

To Our Customers and Friends

Before making investments
consult
officers of this

HOME
16.50

VVE P A Y

IN S T IT U T IO N

4 V.

ON S A V T M n t

�MARCH: 6, 1980
Little Happening*
Mention of
Mattera In Brief
Personal Items
of I nil-re st

,

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

In a n d A b o u t
•£ The C ity ■&lt;£

"flu" a n d /v i U 't r y and improvo her
health b y 'n change of scene*.
Mr. H. L. Gibbs becomes the
owner of th e neat little cottage on
Elm Ave a n d and street where he
will he convenient to hU machino
shops. Mr. Gibbs purchased thru
J. E. Sprling.
See notice of the services a t ..the
Congregational Church In another
column
night at " T h e Altamonte Hotel ,
Altamonte Springs. Dancing from
8:30 to 11:30. Tickets 75 cents each
person. Geo. E. B ntes &amp; Son.
Fri. and *Sat.»tf.

EVERYTHING IN

G r o c e r ie s

Summary of th«
' Floating Small
Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Readers

KOil SALE FOR LESS T H A N ITS
VALUE ACCOUNT O W N ER LEAV
INC APPLY A. P. CONNELLY-.
81-Frl-Mon-We-I. 12 tc.
D. C, Wagner of Kissimmee was
in the city yesterday shaking hands
with his many Sanford friends. Mr.
Wagner has tho state ugency for one
of the largo insurance companies and
together with his real estate business
he is kept busy. His friends here are
glad to know th a t he is propspering
and that he and his family are well.
For Klim Powdered Milk. Phone. 2412
W. W. Drrasor.
108-Gtp
Remember the Board of Trade
meeting at the Court House next
Tuesday night at 7:30 at which time
new ofllccra will be elected and the
members will get ready for .a big
season in Sanford. There nre many
matters of improtnnee that should
be taken u p for this city and county
and the Boayd of Trad,e is the place
to bring it.
On account, of illness in family,
necessitating
removal to Georgia
the Park Avenue Cufe and all fur­
niture and oquipemnt is offered for
sale. Good business in good location.
For particulars *ee M bs ! Carrie

Christian Science services
will be held at the Woman’s
Club, Oak avenue, between
Third and Fourth streets,
on Sunday naming at 10:45
o’clock. Subject: "Man'-',
ll-ltc .

Dr. and Mrs. Langley are now
living in their *m\w home recently
purchased of H. B. Crowder. The
lu m e is at .611 Park avenue, Ph6no

NICE FAT
MACKEREL

Electrical Fixtures, House Wireingi in fact a ll'k in d s of electrical
work. Phone 442.' W. H. Treadwell,
Electrician,
83-tL
Floor coverings. Gold Seal Guarcntced Congoleum Art Squares. Hall
runners . nnd yard goods. Boston
Bargain House, A. Kanner Prtfp.
213-215 Sanford Ave.
68-tf
Property Owricrs Take Notice
The lawj provides thnt "If taxes
upon leal eitr^tu shall not .he paid
before' the First day of April of any
year, the Tax Collector shall adevertise and sell."
all concerned
th at t'he requirements of law will
he compiled with and the Tax Books
will postively he closed on April
First as . provided by law and all
lands on which taxes have not been
paid will be advertised nnd execu­
tions issued for unpaid personal
property taxes.
1
r j m o *D. JTNKINS
Trtx Collector, Seminole County.
110- tc. ‘ '

LEST YOU FORGEP-

their efforts td raise furidi and fife
fruition o f jth e ir plans cause* much
rejoicing among the members.
C. E, Notice
The Presbyterian Christian En­
deavor Society will hold its regular
meeting Sunday night a t 0:30/
All thembers are urged to
bo
present..

F. L. MILLER, Owner

All you good Base Ball men that came across with $50.00 last year for the sup­
port of the team remember that it takes just twice-as mucli to get the same.resulta this year because everythiug that goes, into the making of a first-class ball
* club, like everything else, has advanced in price. This ybar, when you are called
upon, kick with a hundred. You'll get your money’s worth before the season
is over.
1
.
.

Social Socrc tnrjahls As A Social
Ladder. "T h e Lure of Ambition"
At T h f Princess ^To-day• T he social secretary la a personxfjfe "’of "rapidly increasing imporance. Not only does she assume the
social burdens of her employes? but
frequently aho" bears the burden of
important execu tive duties.
This was especially true of Olga
Dolan, th o heroine of "Lure- of Am­
bition
the new super-production in
which William Fox will/present Jfhod.
Bara at the Princess tomorrows
Olga Dolan, formerly a child of
the alums, became social secretary
to Lady Constance Bromley, and
then, secretary to th e Duke of Rqtledge. As secretary to the Duke
she won from a foreign diplomat an
im portant internatiqpal concession
which the Duke had been unahle to
secure. This achievement won her
ont only tho Duke’s ndmhation, but
led to her becoming the Duchess of
Rutledge, the highest social position
In the land. **
As evidence that this remarkable
rise of an ambitions girl is not
without parallel In real life, mu&gt;' he
cited in the case of. the Soman who
was- secretary to David.
Lloyd
George, Brltlih" prim e—m in is tr r^ S o
etlicient was her work that she vecame practically an cx-olflcb) mem­
ber of tho British cabinet—which
position she ntkv holds

And No Matter Whether You Give or Not
remember that you will always get your full money's worth a t our place. You
get a full dollar’s worth for every dollar you sperid with us. We have customers
and customers and more customers that will testify to this and we want you, if

The Store That Is Different

( or

I£

Robert1

ADVERTISING

For Rent' Unfurnished room in
Bill hop Block. A I*. Connelly.
110-3tc.

For Sale—o room house, posses­
sion March 23rd. A I*. Connelly,
Wanted—Lady waitress Experienced
l tO-.'tte,
Bell Cafe 79-tf

SUGGESTIONS'
FOK S P R I N G

BEANS
LIM A B E A N S
BEETS
EGG P L A N T
SQ U A SH
TOM ATOES
CUCUM BERS
SW E E T CORN
PEPPERS

Charles Electric
. Company
Electrical Fixtures and «
Supplies of All Kinds

£

by an expert

- *^

Motor, Generator a n d
ncto Repairing a

Lum ber
mpany
■

the Pipe Organ.
At the meet:
Club ef the JlaptRt Temple on Mon
day aft rjm*i P .m on ? OltHJF DUWnPfS
tran&lt;ui'.*d v.ax the important urr*
a n i m v * ti- to buy the Pipe Organ
for which t c club h:« been working
for-several you
Ap-nU of various
Pipe Or^jjn concerns hiivo been
r,.,til|edAh t 't k - Club desires to buy
and ho rn «iitt '■
to icU'c. tHe orgnn that it may bo
in’n a
it,e.opening- of ,tfje
Temple auditorium 'Sept. 15th. T he
club has
hem indefatigable v In

r

Tractor plowing and all kinds of
Tractor work. Call Phone 184.

FOUND OtHirFL St. .west or
Sanford $4437.50 Fronting north
on brick highway just cast of the
artesian Spring half mile west of
Monroe road. 35*’j acres of ideal
home site and irrigable farm land.
Worth $200 per acre offered for
$75 per acre cash Direct from
ownes. Enquire; nt "Phone 352 re­
lating abstract and deed.' 94-tf.

&gt;. For Kent—One large, will fur­
nished* room. 717 Park A’vo. 109-6t

Specialty

f

S an fo rd H eights

It II as Happened to Others
And May Happen to You
For Sale—At Stanford, by Western
Union, Co., twenty five* or thirty
undersize heart cypres* telegraph
poles 20 nnd 25 feet long. Suitable
for fence post * flvo or si* fence posts
can be made of each.pole. !IO-6tc‘
For Sale—Two atory 8 room house
and garage. Sanford Heights. Apply
No. 402, Sanford Ave.
90-tfc
For Sale— House and
Magnolia avenue. Good
P. O. Box 329.

Mag
i

W e are ready to serve you at

Si

For Sale—Frc^li Milk Cow. See
E. J.'T a y lo ri 407 Magnolia nvrrttfo.

”

all tim es .

Charles Electric
Company
107 West First St. *Phone 311

Lot on
bargain
107-fitp

For Sale—'One 18-H orso Power
Kerosene Oil Engine. Chase
Co..
Sanford. T1«.
*
I05-tf. J*

'g icS

hn

FRECKLES Positively Itiinoved

by D r. Iic iry ’o Freckle Ointment
,

In Sp ile of Everything You M ay Happen lo Do

He Prepare^
When '
It Does Happen

I” ~
W ^

Fire Insurance
So that you may not be the
loser, financially

u s FOR
FIR E INSURAN CE
see

ton-tf

1

E A L ESTATE. J
SANFORD-,
F L A .3
pro perty

D r.C IL Berry CA- n o

--- - -

ALL KINDS OF
IN S U R A N C E . _

LIA B IL-ITY .

Your DruccUt or by Msjl 65c
Srntl ior I'fre floakUt

’■
* i ;■

CHULUDTA. FLORIDA

For S^Ie—Typewriter, standard
make. Call or address 606 E. 3rd
St.
'
•
110-nth.

Tost - Strayed or stolen, Monday
hfar. I «t., .Small., brown
Bttckcr
Liberal reward. Address or call nt
Herald nfllec.
"*
lll-ltp .

Electrical Engineer

Lime, Cement, Plastor
Brick, Drain Ti*e and
Sewer Pipe.
::
::

MRS. C. Da DRUM LEY, Manager,

We Have The SEED— FRESH

«

Pipe Organ Club ..Votes

Special Attention Given to Autom obile Parties

&amp;.

Wiring and Estimates

of. A ll Descriptions

unHh of Ur* Florida E;
Roflroad

■ For Sale—Stable Manure in *car
lots. Budkin
Girvin, Bisbee Bldg.
Jacksonville, Fla.
I10-50te.

Mrs. 11. A. Terlu'un, Editor
Phone 395

Building Material

or Sale--Kiddie-Kotrp,
dltlonT $ 10.00 cash Clai
214 Elm ave.

CHUL&amp;OTA IN

CLASSIFIED

P e r s o n a ls

Monuments, Copings
to Marble or Granite

rioms for
tenants
m suitable
U avtnuo
m -3 tp .

SS B

C H A S E &amp; CO.

Mrs, C. L. Goodhue is upending n
few days in. Jacksonville.
• Mr. Julian Roper of Columbia. S.
C. is the tui” i &lt;T I Lj aunt and rousin, Mrs, C. M. Tolar und Mrs.
Loretta Broliler.on.
M r s . ‘J. B. McLeod returned this
week from Trilby.
Mr. and Mrs. Shellds of Pittsburg

•ty , l o ' &gt; ? t —Furntike
i r r I,: &lt; •! e« j , ;
PermaVi
* r, ! ) e
. e 1. . A im ' I bo lr
It&lt;. j for 'gentleman, t 2 It

W anted—White lady for, house­
keeper ami cook for 'in!!! ‘hands at

SANFORD, FLA

Plilvis Marble Co

PACK 3

- -

C O LLIS IO N

DAMAGE.

"V

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="13">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10754">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1920</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11946">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 06, 1920</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11947">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11948">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 06, 1920.  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="11949">
                <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="11950">
                <text>Original 4-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;, March 06, 1920; &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="11951">
                <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="11952">
                <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="11953">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11954">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1211" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1083">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/b2a7bbe561130b8485f448a198a16d03.pdf</src>
        <authentication>571e89140d91312231b8f45311455a0b</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11965">
                    <text>IN THE HEART OF THE"WORLD’S CREATE8T VEGETABLE 8ECTION

VOLUME 1

8 ANFORD, FLORIDA, MONDAY, MARCH 8, 1920

OF CANDIDATES * FO R
CHARTER
.BOARD
w e t t in g

TH E
AT
'

If expressions from numerous of
Tsmps’s most prom inenLjind repre­
sentative business men have any.
significance whatever, T am pa will
doubtless have ii commission form of
government ere another year rolls by.
More than a hundred such men ga­
thered in the council, cham ber at
eight -o'clock Friday night where a
meeting of the Commission C harter
League was held. The meeting was
thrown open for. general discussion
following the perfecting of a perma-nent organization and- tho—election
of officers to serve the league. No­
ticeable throughout the entire m eet­
ing was the undouhtablc and over­
whelming sentim ent and public
"Opinion in favor of a change from a
councilman'll’ form to a commission
form of government.
Tltv meeting' wna opened by Dr.
S. L. Lowry, as-tem porary president
of the organization, who in a few
w»]| i l.u-en words told of the purpose
of the league and of the meeting
last night. He explained th a t' the
public generally had been called
upon (o appear at the council cham­
ber last night to express ati opinion
on the proposed change and to peroert a • prem anenl organization to
ffurther the interests of a commission
form. John R. Sharpe read the min­
ute* of the precious and first, meet­
ing of the league, which ' werg ap*
proved.
Dr. ■»I.wry entertained a motion
made by Councilman J . R. Fielding
to the effect th a t the jirganixntion be
made a perm anent one. The motion
was carried unanim ously. T he name
of Albert Thornton was then placed
is nomination .for perm anent presi­
dent of the league and was named
without opposition. He im m ediately
took the chnir and callfed for nom ina­
tions for .a prem anent secretary.
John G. Sharpe, the Incum bent, w u
named Charles II. Brown was made
«permanent treasurer for th e league
President Thornton . declared M a t
th e league's undertaking was an im
portant one for T am pa and'reijuests
that he be-nuthorized to appoint a
committee of ten men to serve as an
ai'' isney beard in coniunetion .with
th e president! (Tin ■suggestion was
placed in the form of a m oticn and
carried. President T hornton stated

lanapping
Association
HAS BEEN FOUND IN MEXICO
WITH
MEXICAN
AND

AMERICANS
W ashington M arch 8 (By Assocla— ted* Press) T he discovery of a co­
operative kidnaping association for
the purpose of holding for ransom
foreigners pcrferably Americana U
announced by the Mexican Foreign

effica/ According to
'

Mexico City

advices. The announcem ent says a NEW E N G L A N D \T O W N 8 ARE OFFICERS REFUSE TO STAND
com pany made up of Americans and
MAROONED
AND
TRAINS
WHEN. GERMAN NATIONAL
M exicans on th e border are trying
AIR IS PLAYED
to create trouble with the U ftitjd
. II ohton M arch 8 (By Associated
Berlin, M arch 8 (By Associated
S tates.
Press) Railroads and various Indus- Press) G ustav Noskc m inister of
tries o( th e com m unity today com- Defense ordered the provisions for
O rder In Portugal
biped their efforts to restore then the arrest of Prince Joachim Albrecht
W ashington M arch 8 (By Associa­ passenger and fre ig h t faeilities th a t cousin of th e former Em peror and
ted Press) O rder has been resotred wero. cut off northern N&lt;;w England Daron Von Platen*for engaging in a n
in Porttfgnl following the strikes by the storm . The situation In M a in e ,1assault on a French officer a t the
tho Portugues delegation was in­ New Ham pshire and Vermont w a s ! Hotel Aldon S aturday night when th e
formed to d a y .'
the most serious in years. H undreds ; the latter and party refused to stand
of passengers were marooned In t h e ! while the orchestra was playing
small cities and towns where tho j Deustchlaml Uber Allies. Tho in­
trains has stalled and were being |c id e n t is expected to lead to unpleafed. as best they could the feeding ! santness for th e German governm ent.

------------- —j j - --------- -—-—

_

is v i s m n g

nom o

ioiks

lo u ay .

l i e is

hange o
ales.
n Interesting Florida people in the
Dr. Geo'rge Hym an, has received growing of coffee and says it will
a message calling him for an engage- i,„ th e com ing crop if people everyment to Fort- W ortli and Houston, where will p lan t a few acres.. .
Texas on* April 7th. T he engagement
f
.
. .
was m ade soriifc tim e ago. but th e
.
The dates for
II. C. DuBtjse at t|t Pensacola
ON
TH E
LODGE
RESERV A ­ dates were not set.
the
special
meetings
at
the
B
aptist
for
nfew d n y s'im business connected
T IO N * TN * * ARTICLE*" TEN
church will therefore be changed to with tho Presbyterian church forTODAY.
April 18th to 25th.
/
wurd m ovem ent In the South.

Siege

Of W nrfarc

Against 'P ro h l

W ashington, March 6.—A slego
of warfare against the prohibition
enforcement a c t was inaugurated to­
day by wet members of the House.
Although Repulsed 264 to 86 in the
initial attack, which was m ade in the
form of a stra ig h t out repeal provi­
sion offered by Eagan, Democrat, of
New Jersey, anti-prohibitioniata an­ THAT. WON HIM , FAME IN
nounced th a t they plsenr ed to* raise
TH E
TRANS-CONTINENTAL
the issue again during the consider­
TR IPS RECENTLY
MADE
ation of every bill appropriating
Sanford was hon o w l yesterday by
funds for en(prccment of the prohi­
bition am endm ent.
. a visit -from Lieut. Belvin M aynard
popularly known as the "F lying
Parson" ~~whtr stopjictP ^ff for th e
day to visit his uncle, N. H. G arner
of this city. Lieut. Maynurd and his
mechanician Sergeant Saxe alightod
on the aviation Field of th o Dixie
Aero Service south of •the- c ity and
his plane wna vir^wed by many* poeple yesterday.- It is the same plane
lb wtilrh he~w&lt;nr~f»Yn7r'by milking
the coast ,tp 'c o a st flight several
months ngo in d on the front of the
machine is. visible the slogan "H ello
Frisco" and the tail bears the writ­
ten nntnes of poople in many* s ta te s
' W ashington March 8 (By Associa­
ted P r e s s ) Very cold weather con­ wheie the “ flying Parson” lias stoptinues throughout the country with
freezing tem peratures into northern
Florida a n d ’tw enty minutes snow in
New Orleans th e First time ever re­
corded in M arch. The lowest tem per­
atures ever recorded in.some sections
of the north have been made in the
“past two weeks.

At The Lincoln House
VICTIMS
OF
MELEE
ARE
PR O M IN EN T AND TROUBLE
WILL- FOLLOW
Mexico City Murch 8 (By Associ­
ated Press) M embers of the H ondu­
ran cungrwk engaged in a pitvhed
battle the third week of February
in which tw enty wero killed and
aloundbd according to th e newspaper
El Universal. D r. Romulo E. Duron
t b e • president of tho congress.* was
killed and n new revolution led by
General Tubercio Garcia followed.

ju
j.*r
jj.
na

Since tho organization of Campbell
Leasing Post of the American Legion
innumerable .questions have been
asked of the various members of thi
executive staff, in I e( exrnce to
eligibility, dura, ctx. in view of the
fact th a t but a Comparative few of
the rx-aerclve men of-the Co wero
enabled to a tte n d the First m inting
might be, the following answers in
regard to questions of membership
will be of valuo to future member*
as well as the civilian public who
may join The American Legion?
&gt;,Q. Who m ay join the American
Legion.
&gt;•
• *•
A. The C onstitution of the Ameri­
can Legion provides for'active mem­
bership .only. The „ following aie
eligible.
*
DEH IST O R IC 8T R U C T IO N
A.
All
men
and
women
who
ser­
SOMF.
, .s t h o y k d
and
DEAD ved honorably and completely un­
' U E S T S ,- MAY
BE
G
der m ilitary oath in any branch of
bfd PdlrTt^Comfort Vs. M arch 8, sendee, com batant or otherwise, of
illy Associate!! Press) Firemen*, civi­ the arm y, navy or marine corps, for
lians * n d t H U Jers continued
to any period of service between April
search the ruins of the Cham berlain 6, 1917 and Nov. 11, 1918.
H otel to d ay for possible victim s of
B. Men and women who served
th e fire w hich destroyed th a t historic In the nation associated with the
stru c tu re Sunday night. Rum ors United States in the war, provided
t h a t tw o dr1 th ree were lost were th a t at the tim e of their entry into
discounted though the hotel register this service they were American citi­
is lost.
zens and *that they have resumed
their • American citizenship by th e
time they apply for membership in
Ahe Legion.
Under these provisions, members
of th e. Red Cross, V. M.C, A. and
sim ilar welfare organizations and
•members
of examption boards are
Fair tonight, .F arm er north ant
not
eligible
to m embership. \ • .
♦ portion, fu a a d a y fair and warm
The
Conatitution
specifically, b a n
M oderate northern winds. •
Kj.

Weather Report

The fight followed a speech by Veneco Cailejas against the governm ent
Callcjas was immediately shot by a
government adherent and. a general
battle ensues!. The victims of th.e
tneiee were prominent and the feel­
ing is intense suys El Universal giv­
ing as a source o f' Information the
Honduran jo u rn a lis t-in ’close touch
with the H onduran conditions.

Hanford is to lie congratulated
upon securing Edward Brigham of
Steinway H all, New* York, for an
engagem ent.. Ho will be here on
Thursday n ig h t und sing ut Thp
B aptist T em ple. Seats will be re­
served a t Bowers Tuesday. Only
400' seats m ay bo had.

from mem bership all who word dis­
charged from service on other thun
than an honorable status and those
who are conscientious or other
grounds refured to give uift)ualificd
service o r subtr.lt themselves to
military discipline.
Q. . W hat women are eligible to
membership.
A, Women who seryed under
military o ath are eligible. Typical
groups in whiqb such service was
possible arc tho Army Nlitre Corps,
the telephone. *ec(ions of the Signal
Corps and f the " Yeomancttcs" of
th e navy.
Q. Are "W om en’s Auxiliaries" au­
thorized'
A. Article X I I I of the C onstitu­
tion provides for the formation of a
"W om an's Auxiliary of the Ameri­
can Legion", and the limits the
eligibility to mothers, aives, doughtors and l is te r s of Legion members,
and to th e sam e relatives of those
who were In the United S tates ser­
vice' during th e war and died "in
line of d u ty " .nr after honorable
discharge and prior to N ovem ber
Q. How. dan ono join?
A. M em bership in the Legion is
obtained by' joining some post.
There are no ''m em bers a t large"
and there is no "honorary m em ber­
ship" In order to join s post any
eligible person need only, .present
discharge paper* or. other evidence
ol eligibility to the Post A d jutants
together w ith thf required dues.
Watch th is column "each week for
some live dope on the Legion.

Lieut. M aynard First leaped into
fame l&gt;&gt;* winning the great interna­
tional race. New York to Toronto
and fetiirn. T h a t was last fall prior
to the great trans-continental endur­
ance anil speed test which landed
him on the very top of this greatest
tlyera of the world.
In the Now York-Toronto race
livers of fhreo countries competed,
and planes from nt least six nations
were used -in the flights. Englishmen,
,('ariudia»H and United States flyers
were entered in this race, and m ade
in the United States, England,
France Italy, Germany and C anada.
In the grpat rnce which started a t
Mlneola," Long Island,- October 8.
last in which Lieut M aynard flew to
Snn Francisco and return in ten dnya
covering a distance of 6,120 miles,
London M arch S (By Associated belter than 600 miles per diiy, he
Press) The soviet forces have lau n c h ­ competed against a great number of
ed attneks against tho Poles anil the best nviators in the American
Finns, on tho northern and western army.
..
fro n ts and advices ssy they have
Lieut. M aynard comes to Florida
been repulsed in both instances. Tho
in th e ' Interest of arm y recruiting.'
Finns counter-nttacked and pirceed
Ho is co-operating with the local
the red lines. The Poles last .week
urmy recruiting office, and will inako
rejected th e a rm istic e , overtures.
p num ber of stops in the state a t
substations.
dropping
literature
while flying o v e r.th e various cities
lie visits*
*
Lieut. M aynard is a resident of
North Carolina .where he was preach­
ing when the wnr was declared and"
he prom ptly volunteered for the a ir
sefvice and became one of the best
in the business,
.‘He experts to leave this afternoon
MADE BY M RS. 8TARLIN O, AT
north via Ocala and
RECENT
ANNUAL
CONFERGainesville und Madison and thence^
ENCK
.

Salih* Harrison Chapter I&gt;. A. R.
. S ta le R eport. ,
As Am ericanization, Patriotic Ed­
ucation and Conservation .are to
closely allied and are the key notes
of our D .'A .'U . work. I will begin
by telling you what* we have done
along them |iq e i. We have n C hair­
man and Com m ittee appointed in
our Cli ipter whose special duties are
th e advancem ent of th i^ w o rk , We
have p!a&gt;ed the American ConrtUution in all the Public School* 'w hite
mill colored)
In all public places a
in the Post Office In our C ity. We
also sent copies of the Constitution
to U pula, a Sweedi’h. settlem ent
near Sanford, which U the only
foreign cottlerr.ont anywhere, near us.
Sc^you can rce th at our chance for
work nmonfg the foreign Born is
very poor-*t.he Flag Code' as advo­
cated by our N ational D. A. R. has
been placed in.' ail . the schools of
Sanford
I'Htea have been offered
by our. C hapter to the white and
colored grnmm er schools for the best
paper '■written by s student .on*
“ American C itienahlp."'
We h n i given magazine* t &lt;&gt; the
County Home, and books and read­
ing material to the City. Jail. t)u r
D. A. R. M a g a tie e l*e« been given
to the public library. By H e request
(Continued on back page)
•
■
*v

At The Vajdez
N. E. Schofield, Phila. Pa.; P. M,
Hidden, Summerville. S. C.; Misi
T. T urney, New Yofk N. Y.; C. R
Willinms, Culumituj, Ga,; M rs. C,
R. Williams, Columbus, Ga.; A. W.
Roldnson and wife, Laurel, Due.;
Gov. J. F. Hanley. Indianoplois Ind.;
Miss Halite McNeill, Indianapolis,
Ind.; Ike Dougherty, Tam pa, Fla.;
Dr. H. J. Wheeler, Boston, Mass.;
W. F, Nehling, ’ Orlando, Fla.; D
W. Robinson, Jacksonville, Fla.
W. J. Byones, St. Louis, Mo.; W. t
Clary, New Orllna*. La.; J. D
Mathews, D aytons, Fla.;

President
Is Better
Goes Out
W ILSON
TAKES
TH E
J N OPEN AUTOMOBILE

AIR

W aahlngton M arch 8 (By Asao'cla*
tbd Press) President Wilson w ent
riding today In an open autom obile
accom panied by Mr*. Wilson. D r.
G rayson and. William Bolling,f M rs.
Wllaon'a* brothref.; -,
.

�PAGE 4

SANFORD DAILY HR BALD

Afternoon 2 to 5 "
, • Night 7 to 11
A dults 20 Centa
&lt; Children 10 Centa

TO DAY
T he G reatest Story of Ambi
.
tion E ver Filmed

their soufs tot
luxuries and a
fine time.

A

Is there ONE in
YOUR life P

Phcnomtnr.17 W omen
Phenom enal C ateer

KXX fWMWTl

FhedaBara

The M ost Sensational Photo
Play of thc;Y ear

(COMEDY)

LO N E w ith the temj - X
ter on (he sum m it of X
a m ighty Alpine peak she
listened to his pleadings.
"Y o u r htbband d ors not
luvMyou . why should y u i
lovo him ?”
i
W hat did this lonely,
unhappy, n e g ln |-d wife
do? P d sh ’1 rehukn lti*u
for his "daring—or &lt;TI&lt;I she
acknowledge t h a t . i t w rs
true. O r did She' find a
way to win hack her hu band's lovr. M ost of a I,
what d id til'' Inobnnd &lt; o
when he ahd the. &lt;*th- r
man were at lost alon *?

•
*■ •

u th e site for th e first Presbyterian
church, and thV late II. M. Flagler,
who built the orginal church edifice,
had the lot cleared and filled up to
grade- However, Just before letting
th e contract for the church building
he changed his plans and chose the
present site in the Royal Palm park.

Hauling: of all
kinds to any
part o f the
COUNTY

*

------A L S O ------

GOOD GRACIOUS BOBBY (Comedy)
Na Raise In Price, Adults, 20c; Children 10c

Furniture and Complete
H ouse Furnishings
Stoves nnd Ranges
Our Stock is Com plete
Prices nnd Term s
Reasonable

.

34 years service to Snn
ford

1]

1
f«f«*!' I

LU

.

Miami, M arch 6.—Sale of the
Mills San .Carlos hotel by Mils cor­
poration to Frederirk I! Bund, Jr.
fur 4529,000 was reported today.
Possession i* to lie given tfte first nf
.May the Mill* ro tp n ration coin!lift­
ing the big tourist hosterly until the
close of tbe present season.
Mr. Hand,
the
purchaser, lias
made
announcem ent
ns to ’ his
plans for .the building, but it is pos­
sible thnt it may he greatly enlarged
next summer. The foundation, Mr.
Mills suid, is of suffireint strength
to carry ten ’sto rie s."
The transfer of the Mill»-Ka/i Car­
los hotel is the ljtgest deal in Miami
eve/ recorded and it also records a
trem endous increase ih property Val­
in's.
The orginal site of thv hotel -150
feet on Avenue B 'and 50 feet on
Eleventh street was bought by G. A.
Millss from tin* Fort Dallas Land
com pany, a subsidiary of th e Flotidu Fust Coast Itailway company,
in 189!) for only $810. Four years la­
te r another lot with a frontage-of

utely in the rear, was bought of the
com pany for $810. The next year
th e front 100 gfeet of the ncxg lot
V '
M
cast was bought by Mr. Mills from’
D r.* J. M. Jackson for $1,000 nnd
three years itgo th e 5 0 -feel ut the
rear of thut .ot was bought from Dr.
Jackson for $2,000. The total cost
AFTER
OUR
PAINTING
IrJJ*
*;*v; . •
.
of the realty, 150 feet square, on
vour auto will look spick and span * h l:h th e hotel stands was $4,660.
just&gt;Jike new. Wy Rive your ear
The. hotel site was first designed
|

A

*~

The first requsitc for you to do is to th ink—this
will bring forth ideas'of two kinds; via: Impcrfccted
nnd Perfcrted Ideas. The Impcrfccted Idea- is one
where you .think you will some day s ta rt to save
but ju st seem never to do it. The Perfected is
where you ACT. AT ON CE and save for th rift's
sake. Which course will you take? You __ know
which ij.b e s t and We Know where we can help
you. Will you Come* H E R E ?

PH O N E

story was
Ml** Bara
hi which
nnd plays,

PEOPLES BANK OF
SANFORD

selected as a vehicle for
in a sc.e/iario competition
many well known books
were offered.

Edmund

Lawrence directed
the
w htrtj-hr )3 r n-.TUthor
with Julia Burnham
One more reel.

TRY A SURE CROP
SOLD BEFORE YOU PLANT

REPORT OF CITY MANAGER

• .The American Coffee Benn Company will contract
(Continued from Page 2)
100.
acres, only a t Sanford and* will pay four dollars
Ed Smith
($4.00) per bu. of P4 pounds [delivered a t shipping
Archie Gatjsen
point
in two in i. sacks
Ed Formon
W. B. Wijjjam*
Total
195.00
Theda Bara Here In Play Of Amh|.
Street
l.abor:
lion nl The Prince*-* T anight.
Jam*** Stewart
"Litn*-tif Am hirinrr'"'a *u|i*-r-produrtiiin in wruch William |-yx p re­ &gt; Berry Ganlner
sent* Theda Barn, i* coming to the
Wm. King
X SAN FO RD
AND
OKEECHOBEE £
i’rin *••»* tonight. This i* nht only
Win Brinson
Mtc* B ata's Lit***! phot op) i ‘lull it
John Hull
•huiiI lo In* one &lt;J the mint intense­
Issah Harris
ly interesting*nf tv* many n icsses
Total.
in which *h» h UR IllMMI HIM*f1.1/
'53.35
Muncipal Court Case
Cases dismissed, 1
’ Disorderly Conduct, 11
The driving power of r.-nt !••■&gt;* am- 1 Sanitary Dept. , f
94.()0
Total
. ....
I it loti is tin- motive of to. *-torv. ^ , /jpu. .TllUiUpauU
13 75' Gambling
162^00 112-lt.M
Mis* Burn is i-i-n ;T* 1&gt;lp-* Jloiun, th e
Win. Cooper
13-75 Sanitafy Violations 1
50.00
heroine, who graduate* from t h e 1 Win. Cooper
11.25 Selling Intoxicants,J .
150.00
slum* to t he ili-s1* of ,i hotil steqip j C. Taylor
12.00 ( Viplnting Truffle Laws, 31
174.00
grnpher, ami from in it t&gt;«*iitonl Frank Grant
13.50 Carrying Concealed Weapons, I
10.00
Residence: 905 Magnolia Avc
finally become the D *. '.i- ..
B u t.' G. W. Jink son
11 25 Disturbing.the Peace
25.00
Phone 461
ledge after many dramatic'vli&gt;h.*l(ldus I
Total
61.75 Lther Lffenses, 6
80.00 Office: First National Bonk Building
The central role i* no strd n / that th e '
Grand Total
777.50 Cases Appeal*!, 2
.
Phone 462

m

A Six R ed Universal Special Production
'
T hat You Will N o t Soon Forget.

MARCH 6, 2d20

Thrift' in Peace Time

•Card of Thanka
To all our kind neighbors anil
friends who £o prom ptly, and willing­
ly helped us a t the burning of our
home on Thursday evening and to
all who ofTcred us tha. hospitality
of their homes later, we wish .to ex
tend our most heartfelt and grateful
thanks.
•
Mr. and 'M rs. Julius Takach.
At The . Valdes
A. W. A bbott, Philadelphia, Pai;
E. S. Hobbs, Chicago, III.; Miss Mae
Fox, Los Angeles, Cal.; Miss Jessie
Sm ith, Los Angeles, .Cal.; Miss
Loretta Goodwin, Los Angeles, Cal.;
Miss Jennie ^icLaine, Los Angejes,
Cal.; Misa Annie " Anderson, Los
Angeles, €n!.; Miss Ilruce Anderson,
Los Angeles, Cal.; Carl F uestd,M ar­
tin, Los Angles, Cal.; H. Ethridge,
Los Angeles, Cal.; B. J. Shea, Los
Angeles, Cal.; M artin McCIICland,
Jacksonville, Fla.; J. Llpman, New
York City, N. Y.; A. E. Trucsdell,
Chicago, ' III.; William E. Skogga,
Decatur, Ala.; J. S. Keane, Jackson­
ville, Fla.; Thos. M. Keane. Jackson­
ville, Fla.; E. R. O’Dca, Jacksonville,
Fla.; Capt, W: A. Doyle, Lynchburg,
Va., H. A. Regi&amp;, T am pa, Fla. A.
A. Regan, Tdmp.V Fin.; I). G. Wag­
ner, Kissimmee, Fla.: AI Sejiwnrtburg. New York. N. Y.; A. GluchkHowell
Philadelphia, Pa.; B. Beck. Phila
delphiu. Pa.; (). Burlier, Boston
Mass.; H. A. Drown, Baltimore, Md.;
Phil .Collins, New. York, N. Y.; D.
C. T ow nsend,. Pnlutka, F lu .i'J , S.
Waite, Palatka, Fla.; IV M. Hnlet,
Palntka, Fla.; K. A. Davis, Palatka,
( . S u m mul l r
an ftp
Gu.; O. (). Timm erm an, Atlanta, Ga.;
F . D. Share- Jacksonville, Fla.; W.
Frickerck. Palatka, Flu

-1 - *

m

m

x x x x m

x m

m

x x x

B. C. D O D D S , M .D

Full of repletion as it is* to-day, with every necessity of the N ew Season
with eyery fad and fancy for personal adornm ent. Little* wonder that every
counter Ills its fascination for visitors and that everybody is eager to inspect the
complete and interesting stock of material and highly desirable merchandise. We
are all glad th a t the storm y winter and bad record is behind us and that the
bright days of spring are just around the corner. E verybody is keen to put off
the winter clothing and put on bright, fresh apparel, of spring.

HP

I

that* enam el, factory finish so
^
much df sired by m otorists. It is
£ easier to wash and clean when it
has been paint.xi and finished by
I
Ufs A sk us foi an tsUfnato on
• y o lirc a r.

ARE BEAUTIFUL THIS SEASON
And

Sport Dresses are very goad for Spring. Sill
Pussy Willow, Taffeta. The newest combination.

Crepe D echine
in window •

GO TO CHURCH
SUNDAY”
( And Every Sunday )

OUR

PROCESS
Congregational

Wishing and Polishing Automobiles

Church

Make* Them Look Elite New

Sunday Sohool at 9:45,
Morning worship ut eleven* The
Fastor will sp*ak on

Experienced workmen, high grade
Polish. Prices very reasonable.
See u« for quick nctidn.

‘•‘The Unknown Christ”

SANFORD HteibWrti

Auto Painting and Trimming

Christian Endeavor at 6.80
Evenih* worship a t 7:80.

. SERMON:

'The Vietbr ahd His Rewards’

display of IRISH LINEN, DRESS LINEN, TABLE LINEN

st.

P a t r ic k d a y .
AND ART LINEN.

a

�M A R C li'8. 1920

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

ALWAYS A G O O D

FOLLOW TH E C R Q W D Stothe

SH O W

Every Afternoon 2 to I

W hat’s fair for the
m an is fair for the
vvpim uvand .to her,
j marriage w as a m atj ter of fifty-fifty.

OP!” she flamed, “ You must not enter this room
re ir»y husband—” “But he does not love you/
the tempter’s reply—and she knew itwas true. Set
e lJ ^ -V o m m a n d r a e n t
Q a m m &lt; m \t^ rlcra jl(p ic tu re

M arried or single you
j should s e c /th is picture

SUPPORTED BY

T h e 8-reel S T R O H E IM Photoplay F e a tu iin g S T R O H E IM himself
The m osU ippcaling love sto ry ever written,

MONTE BLUE.
ANNA A. MLLSON
IRVING CUMMINGS AND OTHERS -

Also GOOD GRACIOUS BOBBY (Com edy)

Ad.Its 20c; Children 10c

9—IlEFI-S—V- Adults 20c; Children 10c

The Picture Play You H ave Been W aiting for

FROM THE
NOVEL OF

HAROLD BELL WRIGHT

T h oescapo o f the con vict nnd-his-wandering in the San Bernardino M ountains
T he kidnapping of Sibil Andres.
T he flight of the girl into the hills and the sensational pursuit.

Massive Parts

\ The Flight of the Lovers on the Mountain Cliff
We don 't, like to talk about our features h u t we gjun?.inl:e
this production to please th e moat skeptical

AL M IS S IO N

noiiri&lt;l nnd well. A f S tiiy iln v w h tr nltrllmtc* her cure in the l.nril. will il,Toll** i Iih remainder of her Ufa In the
■prcndlng of the got pel of fnlili, and
mlaxldiihry work.

:-D ry* Leader-in West Virginia
Mountain Districts Has
fe;;
His Hands Full.

N EW WORLD

PROGRAM DEVISED
BY CHURCHES.

L o o p e d . T i m e s In Five Minutes.

Looping (he loop ‘.Ti time* In five
minutes, Edmond Plllnn. a French
avintlnn “nee." estnhllslied a new rec­
ord for lids ling/mlngs sport.
A
small new -idrphme, Indll for spurt,
was being tested hv Plllnn when he
established the record.

By 3. EARL TAYLOR

M atinee, Adults 25c; Children 15c
N ight.’
Adults 35c; Children 20c

An epic iniiy Ih* put Into, n im*i fIf?
| wnn t tiniin^ Itntne from n diuirp,
whleh lm« h month Iinieli manlier than ntnl I &lt;1!•11,'t want iuy ewnrt. whom I
the egg. »iiy.i I’ojnihif Mechanic* Mur- in,.I Just met Hun evening. to know
•rlne. First soak IIn* egg In vinegar where I renhied. We were walking
un til-lln* nhHMfwetmtnt-«TTf|-nml *pll-—nmvn~llie «tre«d p n d l'tin w o preliy
able. Ii will (hen he en*y to fore* house. *1 tdApped In front of thl*
the egg Into (ho l.nille, I'otir cold house and told in.v escort that I lived
water Into the bottle Hnd allow u to there and wn» obliged, for his alienrpmoln until the shell heroine* hnrtl Hon :md kindness In taking me home,
again. The hptlle can then be shown .A- look of hmvitrtermer.t hrnke mil on

Bored Congressman Decides to Retire

CRIPPLE 28 YEARS,
'
. IS£URED BY FAITH

Uenitlse .^Oligruia nil her "Imre*"
him.’ Itepre'o'iit ii live *J. IV. Umihor.jif
the; Third Indluna district, him.deold
rd not to b-J a nimlldute for re-elec

. "Pop !" \

Too True.
•‘ .

“Yea. my son.**

•

‘.

" I s 'fifty dollars very much money?*'
"It -nil depends whether you menu
when*,Pin earning fi or when your
inoiher Is spending It. my hoy."

This will be of interest to every house
wife in the City of Sanford
There will be a t

,

Upraised Arm and Open Palm
Mednt Soldier Had No Dagger
The military salute so familiar in

every soldier’ nild scout dates hack lo
very early days, notes Hoys' Life. At
llrst It was not Intended In the lunst
io show liespeci to superiors. The U)&gt;ralsed arm with lh$' open palm extended wits meant merely to slio\v that
Hie soldier did not carry u dagger In
Ids hand and could pyt attack If he
wonted to. A" «vvn more remarkable
change Ims dime In the meaning of
the eiistmu of retiring backward from
tin* presence «lf royalty.’ In very early
times .'men hacked away from u king
m protect themselves fnmi belli,;
kicked.
•

Milvis Marbfe
F..L. MILLER, Owt

Cakewalk Really Irish.

B. C. D O D D S , M .D

PROF. f.l. PLANCK

Residence*. 905 Magnolia Avc.
* • * Phone
* 461
re: First National Rank Building
Phono 102
-

Furniture and- Complete
H ouse Furnishings
' Stoves and Ranges
Our^3took is Com plete
• Prices and Term s
Reasonable

A Cooking.and P um Food D em onstration

ON THE W ONDERFUL
DR. &amp;. EARL TAYLOR,
General Secretary Intfcrchurch V/ofld
M ovemnet- '

If Christ, on Urn day lie was horn,
had started on a tour to preach In
every vlllngo In India. He would still1
huvo 30,000 more to visit.
Wo now bellevo wo have foyrd a
way by which the lendem of the P ro b :
entant churches can sit around a conimon tabic and have the Christian pro!
g ran of the entire woyld laid before
them, By means of the Interchurch
World Movement wo can sco where
the Methodists a rc ,, and where the'
Baptists are. Wc can see the general
outline of their forces, their present
status In this great world struggle,
and may also have rome Idea of the
unoccupied places.. and w)int may be
dono by all of _us to enter those unoc­
cupied parts of the world field which
Christ sent u* to occupy.

t wm-m stwpapy

After heltfg a helpless cripple for
tweuty-sjlght years, Jib s Ida Bell*
Hmylhe, n Brooklyn woman, whose,
photo Is ubov* shown. Is today aide
to ,walk ab o u t'us she pleases, having
discarded her braces, Without which
little hope bad been held ’Jtuil she
would by ever able to move about.
MU* Stay the?* laipjiy smile Is .due to
lu-r "faith ctire” which slit* attributes'
to the “work of the Lord." Injured
when a llllle girl, her left foot* was’
reiidvieil lH telF5^ while her spine also
later hecnuie affected and hue was
HUbJct to fainting spasms. On Oct.
‘- J. during a prayer meeting at tier

home attended 1by members of the
church, tlu* full chapter Kl-lgth verso
o f St .lames was read from w j Bible,
Ml** Smythft again went Into w coma.

Wild Section In Southern Franco.

An nlinost forgotten region lately
pointed out by-Samuel Wells to the
Liverpool fleogvnphltnl * society In
southern nml mldlwni Kroner, with
the desert lumls ou the. Metlllcrrnnrati.
Here the wild hetrue uml n breed o f
buffaloes are still extent, and grcnl
rooks, gorges and caverns are feature*
of the eotintry. The Immense rnves
abound In rettfhlns, of. the stone and
hronxe ages, w)ille wonderful MaineHiss hang from the roofs. The buildlogs show architecture centuries old,
esltvclull) that of the Jtoinun period$12,512 in Petit. .
lltime. Ore.- *\Y, Bum an, uhn has,
acvcrnl hundred coyote trap*, has Jam
mle It'* '■enibannual trip to P arnc
and su'd Via imTire'iftnrU of (150 *k'rm

ltleb hrtntvhl* $18.25 each. ImAldei

34 years service to San
*-f or4

nu-.v* j-i.hm

D e t r o i t V i s o r Si
- ally invited*
X
An'd wc promise X
y o u will not
X
be disappointed *j

W ith this S to v e
• it relieves
the worry o f the
gas situation
as this stove
. burns eith er

l a Kerosene oi
. 4 Gasolene
us a ca: on the above dates
eiiT a wonderful cook
many blue ribbons in
&lt;1 be able to «rive but

�JA

i d ’, Ai s

i

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

r**r» *n«/&gt;*on tlttf l Hudtr .1
T*. ||rr»M
II.rsM ItaUdln*.
UuUdln*. 107 Mu m IIi A*«n»». H.n_____
fard. fUHd».
P U D L U M IF . IU i

INC.
R. J. HOLLY, Editor
W. M. HAYNES, Iluslncss Manager
M*-t* Km » i on AppIU.U.i

-rildnX

illUiCHUTION CHICK IN ADVANCE
" ’,5 SIX MONTHS---------------------- «
d k ij v k r c d

in

c it y

b y

c

A It K I K It

ONB WEBK------- ---------------------------1» c
, . MM| U MOM) ( U u millrr Otlobcr 27.
_A
lftftUfta nnAft,
•i l l at lhft« p o
c lo.fSftft
ftk * nl
al U
S a*anfftftvl
fo rJ . V
Florid
node*
*rt If M«th I. I»7S

me.mmat

ST

o r tiib associated press

PETERSBURG AFTER
’ YEAR S IS S A T I S F I E D .

S IX

In 1913 St. Petersburg adopted*the
commission form of governm ent and
in fact the niah
is not sorry
who would go there a n d advocate go­
ing buck to tho old, political form of
government would, perhaps, lie in

treasury. St. P etersburg is living well
within its Income, som ething which
Arcadia would tio well to em ulate.
At the close of business nt the end
of the fiscal year in 1913 St. P eters­
burg had no money In the treasury
and owned, ip current hills. $14,553.
This condition had ex M e d a t the end
.of the fiscal year for. m a n y 'years and
under the councilmanic plan the ex­
penses were nlways more th a n th e in­
come (as it is in A rcadia .)

in current bill*, $14,553 T h a t con­
dition had c u l s t e d at the end of each
fisacl year for m any years. There was
always u deficit. Under tffe councilmanic plnn th e expenses always were
more than th e income.
•
At the close of the fiscal year 1^19
there was in the city, treasury, in.
casrt in the hank. $29,705 2S: ami
every outstanding iiill hud
been
paid. There *wa« no Ih iatisg debt.
There has not been any
lloating
debt at the end of the fiscal, year
since the commission plan of gnvernm ent h** been used. T he budget
system prevents it.
In 1913, the Inst year th a t the old
councilmanic plan was in effect, the
city ’s revenue am ounted to $53,182.93. This town had then just started
on its upgrade movejnent. T h e re­
venue. for a town of its size, was
good. T he tax ra te was 19 mills.
Rut the expenses wore greater than
the income, for in th a t year, 1913.
th e city paid o u t a total of $61,127.96. leaving a deficit of $7,655.03
while from th e previous year there
remained a ls o -u n p a id bills a m o u n t­
ing to $6,898.G6 so th at the actual
deficit was $14,553.69. •
In 1919 th e city s ta rte d o u t with
$14,513.22 cash left over from th e
previous year, after all lloating debt
had been Jiaid? T ax e syand uUjur-r’evenue brought in $152,790.70. This
made a total available for current
expenses of $167,303.92, It was a
trig sum for a city the size of St.
Petersburg, b u t the expanses were
only- $137. .598.64, so there was u
balance l e f t afte r-p a y in g olM»ills-o1
$29,795.28. %
Comparing "St; Petersburg under ibo
the commis-ion plan v. till it u n d er
th e old m u m ilmatiic torin. is very
difliruH, for th e city ha- been grow­
ing so fast it i- hard to get a Inc.is.
For istanee. th e u * v incut in
KM3

Moro (JYiierTain Lived to
Be Eighty-TDrce Years Old;
Remarkable Age for Tropics
The tombs of ■ome of tho Moro
clitics of the Philippines are n curious j
combinntIon of nptlve Ingenuity and (
civilized finery. An ancient and d l*
tliigulshed Moro chleftiilu Is said to
have lived*to be 83 years old—a reuinrknble nge for the tropics where
men and women mature early and die
young, according to American ' s ta n d -!
■an!*: Tills chieftain. Hengtrtfo.'way rr n r
only a distinguished warrior of a pow- ’
erful trlhe. hut nlso n w|so diplomat.
He held his tribe under firm control
during ninny turbulent periods, n o
wns usually nt pence with the Span­
iards when they had control of the
Islands, hut when he occasionally
Spanlsh govcrnor-getiernl, ho struck
hsrxl, und with sdfli snvngo ferocity
nnd ftgood generalship, followed by a
lunstcrly dlsnppenrnncc of the entire
tribe Into the Jungle fastnesses, thnt
the Spaniards, a fte r some show of pur­
suit, were glad* to make a pence treaty
anti leave Ilengulto to the management
nnd administration of his own tribal
affairs. When the Americans took |&gt;o»session of the Philippines, Ilengulto
with unusual discrimination for n nntlvo refused to be led Into the Agulnnldo revolution, maintaining u digni­
fied but nrmed nnd. wntcbful neutralJty. and when he saw clearly, ■long
ahead of the other native chiefs, the
rising s ta r of the-Americans, he grace­
fully suggested a conlltlon or trenty
with the United States which nenrly
took the lirentli nim y from the Ameri­
can authorities, some of whom bad
about concluded thnt the only way to
mnke pence WinrtUB Mnro'Wns wtth
n Krug rllle.
Ilengulto'* body lay In stale for 33
days Wlfliln hls.ioinli. constructed of
baiiilmo framework, tmt decorated
wit li white cloth after the Moslem
fashion, for he and Ids tribe wore de­
vout Mohfimineilnns. The body of tho
old chief wns placed In a sitting pos­
ture.
«

n t every- iy*ar under- l-ie old lorin-;
p -:i- m o n t nr bit irjlv
a. ,t i
l-V't th a t enough? la it any wonder
j, ,
il • t ‘-e people of SI I'ete- burg
.
j .| ,
, . . . . It .i- | ,
,|.i no*, want to g" bur'. t ' the old , ^ | m
m i I 1 .i g e
i n d
Why He Raved
politieal form of governm ent?
|„*. a .
q iie
w.iMrs. Myles: "I licur Mrs. Styles luis
St Petersburg expects to end the
I smil l e m. ■
it i'1 two
a new hal which cost $40, Have you
I ven*. line 3fi nitli mnnev I *i J'l.,. • *. ' ,
• ■&lt;.
'' m. ’
It
Jieard her rave about It?"
tin- bank. This cilj. has p rin ti-rd climbed
high a- 22 mills, which
5trs. Wyles: "No. I haven't; hut mjr
thrift ami has tup yielded to the would be the Mint* as 11 mills on liusband heard her huxhnud doing conmania for spending; It is b r i n g welt *Tbff prn-i’nt Yu’uimnn. tiefon' th e slderyhle raving afioiit IT."
m il in its income, being one of tin presi-jit comini-si'jners a-sume I oilier
A Convincing Alibi
very few cities in this country in
^
Petersburg has grown I remit n“ You ought to
which the" income exceeds .the ex- , ,p,UN| y
the I »-1 seven uj&lt;ars, and
tie ns rich as
penditure*.
the property value* Iciyl Increased
Ilrnivn."
Si Petersburg has the commission "if, the seme ra^io and the revenue
"I know It. my
form »f government It lias n plain 1; ns 'Inc-eased.
friend, but you
and simple provi-ton in its charter
l?ndor the commission form of
see I'm more lib­
that requires a budget system . Crider government accounts have b e e n ’neeral with my wife
than lie Is with
this system , made m an d ato ry b y 't h e llr.lt,.|v
g,.pt and the citizens are
bis."
•hnrter. it is hardly possible for t h e l |ltlJt|jy a |,i(. |'(l t,.|| pow t h e rngn’r y
city to spend more th an it takes in. p,ls t„.,.n M|„.nt «• d al-n how much
Drilling Them In.
for tln*re is made, each year, by each
been used from
current taxes
W right: "I aw* by iho paper Hint
departm ent of the city governm ent. jor perm anent Improvements. The
an estim ate of the a m o u n t needed to Waler works plant uses its earnings electrically-driven drills liuvo been In­
run’tn at d epa rtm ent for a year, and , 0 ,,ay interest and sinking fund vented for surgical operations on the
human skull.**
the am ount appropriated / u r ^ j h a t charges on t h e watereorks bunds
I’ontiinn: "P o not despair, old m an;
dejiart infint by Ibe
whole city com- | nc-1&lt;-a't of this tnonev being put as they'll succeed In making people see
mission must not
exceeded, under p&lt;&gt;fa,r&lt;., in the general expense fund. your Jokes yet."
Iienaltv "f removal l*rom oll're of the j,
t p,. r ,|-tuni in I tie days of
depart merit head.
,.jty routti'il', for the n i e n u e front
He Got Whaled.
Jim m ie— I put a tack on teuelier's
M Petersburg trie&lt;l out the old waterworks i s go (or p aying, the
• ounrilmnnir form of government It eurrenAexpenst s of other clepartments. choir yesterday.
Wllllo—Did, you? I’ll I)c( ho won't
grew weary of this and in 1913 voted Now the revenue from th e watersit
down In a burry agnln.
for a new city chnrter and a new works is used to pay interest and
Jltnhtle—N o; and neither will L
form, of government^ T here is little sinking funds charges. !n the fiscal
likelihood of the rity ever going b ark .-y e ar 1919 alj th e interest and sinkSatisfactory Evidence.
to th e old plan. How much money ing fund *httVw*v of the waterworks
Mrs. J u n e —Did'
h a i been saved to th e city by the , bonds were* paid by the not revenue you
water
the
commission plnn no o n e can sav ac- from the w ale; *• ''&lt;•« I lie -.ime is ferns In the drawcuralely. but those futniliar with the true of the gas p ml ll* earnings Ing room?
Maid — Yes'm.
way t lu* city lias been conducted!, now are most limn s U .i lent* to pay all
Pon't you hear //T E 7 x
that a biz saving has I —• ii effected
the charges no ti e ,-.i» bonds
At the rlo/e of lic-i* S. al l ie end
r thi r r -il
iti p lln . I*'t
ping on
of the fiscal ye tr KH'I. th e « •t ” ha I p,.&lt;e• h
j i . 11,,| owns its
no nioney in tho treasury and owed gas plant. w l i i ‘i t- \ vpry large
source of revenue: it Iim* reduced tho
operating eost "f the iva'erwork . amf
hn - culler ted nil t e lrili« due: it hns
paid off out of n . ei;t r* i nil?, $2.7,-

JUST TO LAUGH I

EVERYTHING
GOOD

M EAL
YOU MAY F IN I)

hi m*

and

p id o '

other

eld d f t t x nmo ■
* to «J,800. All
rtf which s h o w t ' tt th'erc was ,fn . ■f)09 f . r o 't tr* tho city th a t went to
th e pVvTtlert 1 f «&gt;ld 'delds. I n - tr s d
of a defiili.-lrt «pite&gt; &lt;•( tlmm unuMial

FO R Q U IC K S E R V IC E

Law.
Nobody Is exempt from Income Tjix.
An obllgitilnn Is laid directly on tho
shoulders of each citizen and resident
to consider his ow n-nine nnd to get his
return In on time If one In due.
With cncli return showing n lax due
n payment m u s t‘accompany the reti|rti
in the full nmmint of tho tux or nt
IviiNt one-&lt;|tiarter of iho tax.
All returns for HMD must he filed on
or before Miirch 13.
Mult Show Truo Figures. . .
In figuring .up .Ids earnings for In­
come tux purposes n person must take
Into consideration all Items of taxable
Income, and each llem Itself nigst be
accurate In nmmuit. RucsScs and estlnintes must be avoided, for ilm re­
turn Is mnde under on Hi.
'E verybody who.bud nn 111chine dur­
ing HMD must now determine whether
Ids or h e r net Income xvus sulllclcni In
amount to require nn Income Tax reTurn. The fif-sl way ’to"lin’d out Is'fb
got n Form IlMOA noil follow iho In
MruclIons iiriiitod on it. Tlmt form
oil! ijcrvo ns it reminder of every Item
of Income; and if a return Is due, it
tells Itmv to prepare and tile It.
Otto of the Important points to keep
la mind Is (but a person’s net Incotne
Is found by ii' computation .prescribed
l i i l l i e h t w , ami I lint oneb Item of Inrome front every voiitve mint lie con-sldeled, unless spet-llien IIV"exempt i'll
Another thing to repietoher I- that

• *•*

*

A hank should be regarded as th e inti­
m ate helper, advisor, and friend of th e custom ­
er, ever read y to eo'-djuVatC in every proper
way, to extend necessary accom m odation os re­
qu ired ,'an d to protect his interest in every way
th a t lies w ithin it's power.

This Ls th e kind of. service th a t • we en­
deavor to render; and we invite yctu to make
your connection with u.s with such service in
view,

F. P. FORSTER, President

B. F. WHITNER. Cashier

Sanford, Florida
CHULUOTA

INN

, CHULUOTA, FLORIDA
. •
O pcnlD cccm licr 7th for the Season.
M RS. CD AS. I). BRUM LEY, M gr.

•

Note The Richness

l lie persoiint exempt loll nllowed faxpul its In In IV tills on I el.lt I,*ti lll n ll e le r
io ilie requirement in file return This

tif lits tla n tl D airy Milk, und you
will understand why it is ju-pferred l»y m others who dem and ih e
pure si and host for then children.
The* high-cotil-of-food nctul never
affect the children so Ion# as
Koscluud .Milk provides thu n o u r­
ishm ent it dot-A foi the sm all
am ount it cast.s. We m ake two
deliveries daily.

• \ellipl lull Is not to In' considered until
n person tins figured out Ills net III
• '•me mol determined it briber ll was
■lift, lent to reqilil ■ Inm to file II le
‘turn. Then, If u return muni lie typt,
lie should rend enreftillv the Instrue-

Phone 2011

Cotton Seed IVIe
N ITR A TE
SODA
Potash Nitrate

Cutters and Makers

rn ule, yet ’the

rjilafic* *f »
have I ren rai

U th" city offii

and

firemen

cmi:)oyr.*« r-ff -* t ♦In«I mure
wor'.’. 8tiM t h e r e ' l l

For M en and Bajrs

M en ’s Suits$45.00 to $05.00
Hoys* Knickerbocker Suits
$28.0Q to $35.00
All w ork bench tiilorotl a t
A fit g u aranteed.

s 'rs

C leaning and pressing, neatly
clone by band.
Club rate's
furnished on application. » *

I morD'y P1

goinjr to be a su/ptu* at t h e ’vnd of

this fiM'd year, as

there has been
under
the
commission
every year t----Arcadia New*
form of government

YOU G A N T MAKE
HAY WiTHOI iv

F IN E CLO THES

h

no »i i ■&lt;' •
proverci n! b*

rials, ou!
Phono** 106

Sul&lt;;st Way li to Follow Form 1040A.
. .. F r e e Advice In Doubtful Cases.
Severe Penalties In

for■collect7^g'drnft.s,•&lt;*tc.*,,

RHONE 51

Fresh Dates
F ig s an d N u ts

MARCH 15 LAST FILING D A TE

A bank Ls much m oio than m erely a safe
place for-keeping funds, for handling checks,

s la* ! to liierff lie*

fiiits undt-r Ike Cour. i|m.tnie form.
Tal e t!’r y ear *,f t)io |i*;*tL*nt comml- inn * form i f - « i.e'it-TtenL l ' 0
fbrnl J car i n i * ’ ' .June 39,. 191 *: At
(le
ot* r f bp in*for th a t ve-r
i k i i i ' , l i ‘d- " i t * c u r
. tiff *
(4 For •.••■I* I i e
t -re bud l»er*n
a deficit of &lt;'*3 ffJfi. Hut this dnc&lt;
not
' nt th e v htJp difference.
| n 191* th e til * paid *2C.0fif» on lnli-re t and fin* &gt;nz fund ehurges ■
ju t $_’6,0(ti&gt; ,*mnre t'inn was paid
th ree ve r- In * “e. T h e eity paid
Vjq.Of'0 o n . e a .r-l*1%‘!r' I c b n trtitn d
by M e f i vi u -.
t'
Yhe
vmi- out *t the c’irfpnt reve,, p , r f
p *(d t' e • *•1 Rahbnro
r'eVt i f ‘ , w '•

Famous Dixie Cakes

Every Person Who Had Income
in 1919 Must Determine
Own Liability

fifi'* thrl was i k e . r " eld nvemflinfld&gt; t iit

YOU W ANT FOR

PAGE 3

JA S. M . TRAMM ELL, Jr

N o r c a n y o u n u r; c m u c h m o n e y
w i t h o u t is o n io ( i i o r t t o

Penalties for Delay and Failure
to Make Returns— Early v
Compliance Urged.
v
'All liiropte^tijX returns -*«*&gt;iTliig the.
year HMD rtiust be tiled by IJlondny,
March 13. Hitch tuxabR* return must
be accompanied by check or money or­
der for the full.amount nr m least oneq uarter of the nmohnt of tax due.'
Cash payments ar'..rcceplcd only at
Hie collector's main oflfi’e; If kent by
intill, tlifv are at the sender's ylsk.
Residents ..f Florida stiodld file flielr
returns with, and maky .paymcnlo. of
Income Tax lo. J a m e s -M. (’ntlinirt.
Collector of IW.eranl Revenue,* Jnck:
Tionvllle.
•riiosu who must file return* tmt
Imve not done’ so are warned thikt the
raven uo law Imposes heavy ’penalties
for failure to get returns In on tliuo.or
to make! payments on time.
Fairly filing and early payments arc
UrgM.dn order to relieve tho Internal
roxenue offices as much *is possible of
an overload on the final day, March lfli

C O N S E R V E Y O U R . J tE S O U ItC E S
by

e s ta b lis h in g

re lia b le b a n k .

* 9 ,

c re d it w ith
.

-

a

'

* £*

“Why r^t make some real

stalling a check uccount with
ns. Build up ji mr credit, that
you may b.o ; hio to .^paster
diificult problems.

HOME INSTITUTION

,

�M ARCH

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

TAGS 4

8 . 1920

ETH EL CLA¥TON* IN IH t*M A ?IC

UtUfiiUwenipis
Mention of

In and About

PICTURE OF MARRIED LIFE

Summary o fjb e
Floating Small
Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Readers

rhe
Thirteenth ('om m am lem nf'
l n d lils ' I'amperod Wife Who
Demands All

Mrs. J. L. Pickard of Tifton Ga.
The m any old tim e friends of
H arry Papw orth nre glad to see returned from Winter Park Sunday
him in Sanford again. He is here on where she has been visiting her
a short visit with M rs. Papw orth, and sister Mrs. Robert L. Betts. She will
they are the guests of Mrs Papworths visit her brother, Mr. W. S. T h o rn ­
m other snd fotifer, Mr. and Mrs. ton'.and sister Mrs. C. A. Betts in
M. F. Robinson. Uarxy ..Fapw orlh' Sanford before returning ’to -her
is an old Snjiford l&gt;oy having live&lt;l home in Ga.
here In the early days and at one
Property Owners Take Notice
tim e was In the hardw are business.
The law provides th a t "If taxes
He is now with th e Hoot C o -,. in upon real cUafe shall not be paid
New 'York large m anufacturers of before the First day of April of any
engines nnd' blowers, etc.
year, the Tax Collector shall adeye'rFor Klim Powdered Milk. Phone. 2412 tisc and sell.”
1.
W. W. Dressor.
108-Gtp
This is to noti/y all concerned
Lieut. M aynard, the
"Flying th a t the ixquirements of law will
Parson" spent yesterday with his he compile* with nnd the Tax Books
uncle, N. H. Garner. He is and ex­ will poxtively be closed &lt;tTi April
ceptionally fine man and made a First as provided by law and all
great record in the flying corps in lands on which taxes have not been
France and inter In America. He paid will be advertised and execu­
made many friends during his short tions issued for unpaid personal
s ta y here who hope to sec him again property taxos.
after he is mustered out of service.
JNO . D. J IN KINS
Electrical Fixtures, House Wire- V T ax Collector,* Seminole County.
Ing. in fact all kinds of eltctriyal
work. Phone 442. W. H. TteidVeU,
Electrician. *
83-tf.
Mrs. W. W. A bernathy, Mrs.
Plenty of Plain View Bcan.PIlfh' Geo. WaUon and little Son, Mr.
tera for Immediate -delivery.
Zcb; Ratliff and baby daughter nro
Im plem ent and SupflTy Co. 113-6tc. leaving today for Miami. Mr. •
Cooked Foo&lt;f Sale
Saturday RatlifT wilj return after a short va­
M arch 13th by Girls of
Junior cation. *,
Dept .M ethod 1st S. S. nt MoCullcrs.

Store
B esturanl For Sale
O f gfcotfgji 'o f 'tl ln r s y - i n —fam ily
Mm. TtTArTcrheUn, Editor
necessitating
removal -fo Georgia
.. v
Phono^S
\
the Park Avenue Cafe and iill^ fur­
niture and equipenint is'olTered for
,
Personals
aaie. Good bi/idne/* in good jo c a tb n .
For particulars see Miss Carrie
M r, E. T. Woodruff is here for
Gray, Park Avenue Cafo.
tho week-end looking after property
interests.
•
• .
P. E..Goid who has, bren here for
Mrs. N. II. Kennedy returned
sevral months with
the
Dixie Saturday from a visit to*her mother
Aerial ^S erv ice left Saturday for nt Tam pa.
O rland o where he will take up his
('ap t. Cecil Gnhbett left Sunday
d u tie s with the Florida Automobile
to return to
his station in Ne
Association as editor of the mngaxinc
published m onthly in the interest of
the association ami good roads.
Woman’s Club Spring Carnival
Thfc . Princess . T heatre has just
At
a rocenl meeting of the exe­
closed a'hooking for the big musicnl
cutive
Com m ittee of the Woman's
a Lucille" which is
show called
Club
it
was decided to hAld the&lt;
said to b a -a good one. It will he
Spring
Carnival,
under the auspices
here March 19th. W atch for further
rf the Welfare departm ent, April
announcemo.nts.
I &amp;-16- 17th. The place will be an­
nounced Ipjer. Last year a very
successful carnival was held by .the
club that afforded pleasure and en-

HEADQUARTERS
EVERYTHING IN

Groceries

Sir,ties about ymfng married life
• always inlrriMtlnir. Rupert Hu"Tbirta.nclb Com m andm ent"

udwPtcl trt the fcri-on an I will lit*
shown with Ethel Clayton in tho
h!eTWn;r mle-nt the lYvue*” to m m rw r
Tho heroine it thivypanfporod
daughter of a ntiddlo &lt;n$rfesn '/nor­
th-ant. She hai nlwayy find nil Bhc
wanted and, when shn becomei en­
laced to a young New Yorker, ruppo'o&gt; him to- be rich boi nine 'i:hc
spends lots of ’money, on I r.r! But. 'a
trip to the metropolis ihow: her th a t
lie
really poor an I Li making tre*
m endotn aaefifices in order to sati fy
her.w ii nv. (Hhi*c_ dram atic ifovclopmentH convince b"r of the- injuatirc
nf tho altiiiulo of lh&lt;* p retty woman
whp demands u heavy linn m i. 11 tri­
bute from her husband fp{ s-imply
boing idle a rid 'extravagant
She pursue* on Independent career
and, when her liaoee it ready to wed

is the thbmc of the utory.

Strpheim . is rt»niciphprcc|. even
hated, by thousands of persons, -for
his nm tray al of a Hun officer in
the big Universal war-pb ture, "The
.Hear* of Hum anity."
Supporting him in, "Blind Huibnnds” ns Maragret Armstrong tinwife, is Frnncelia Hillingron and_ the
following cast nf popular Universal
players: Sam DeGrstsse, II. GilnonGowlaml. Valerie ( irrmonprt*

fiuilding Material

And No Matter Whether You Give or Not
remember that you will alw ays get your full m oney’s worth a t our place. You
get a fuH dollar’s worth for every dollar you spend with us. We have custom ers
and custom ers and more custom ers th at will testify to this and we w ant you, if
you are not already one, to become one of our customers. We just M U S T have
you and to hold.your patronage we will make it worth your while.

-MUj Clayton 1*- supported J»y
a lino e,»d, which include . Anna Q.
Nlj^ein, M anic Bhip. Ch?r|r* Mere­
dith,- und frying Cuinmli’iffi. It is n
I’nram ounl-A r'eraft picture directed
|rj- flohert G. Vignola.
,
.One more reel.
.

ONER

The Store That Is Different
w

Excess of Food Blamed.
Dr. Prttrhnrd. nn English prortulnn*
rr, bcllevhs that most of the dlg-.-stlvo
troubles of Infunts nnd young children
. New York.—Owing to the high cost sfc due to excess of food. And. be­
of living, John llulliert, the stiito exe­ tides tho direct derangement* of the
cutioner, .who nuuiliiiilntes the sVvttch Stomach nnd Intestines. these have nn
conneated with the Slug Sing eledrlO rffoct upon the whole syslen, null may
choir, Inis boosted the cost of killing, It In (lie ping run ninku It more susceptIblo to catching ether dls-M-os.
was learned, lie tins Increased’ the
nmoiinl of the fee lie deimmds from &gt;51.VI
to Sl’Vl. lie charged the prison depart­
ment S‘_’^4l for llle execution of Vlllcetira K s | m i s | | o of Schenectady, on the
night of Jan. 8 last. The Mil lias not
vet been paid.
The state hired him In 1914 for $Vl
per murderer. II having dispensed
with Executioner Edward Dnvls, who
was receiving S2VI. and got n chen|&gt;er
ni'an. Warden Moyer Infer Increased
Halbert's pay to *180. llulliert ,hn»
had only one execution In nine months.
However, since taking the Job lie has
oltleluted at forty eight killings.

CLASSIFIED

ADVERTISING

SMALL WAISTS THE. FASHION

Ii

W anted—One cow pony for city
fmufrrl:— Will—rxrhrrrgp—for— other
stock. G. A. Abbott, City Minagrer,

. •’ 11F*6tc.
For Sale—Pair of ponies weighing
800 a n d *900 pounds, live yearn old.
For Sale—Kiddio-Koop, in
A. K. Appleby, ..Sanford H eights. condition. $10.00 cash. -Can he
at 211 Elm n v e..

C H U LU O T A IN N
On th e Okeechobee- Branch of tho
Railroad

Spccial Attention Given to Automobile Parties
AIRS. C. D. BRUM LEY, Manager,

CHULUOTA, FLORIDA

twtwtwtfotkmB

Wanted , -Lafy waitress Experience !
Bell Cafe 79-tf

Dressn^aJ&lt;ers, However,
That Tight Lacing Is to
Return.

Lost A small gold octagon shape
watch, monogram G. E. A., gold
faced, gold how-knot pin. Reward
if
returned to T he Herald Office or
Purl*.—Whispers nre henrd In cir­
Phone
295J.
112-:itc.
cles of fashion Hint sinnll waists nre
to “come' In" uguln next season.
For Sale —W hite Leghorn Hahy
Strictest secrecy Is being mainmined |n professlonnl quarters In nc- Chicks, 20 cents, 18.00 per 100.
cordnnce with u decision by great Eggs for hatching $1.25 for 15.
dressmaking' hsiiibllshineuls hero not $10.00 per 100 delivered. H. Roberts,
to make premature revelations, hut. Route A Box 20G.
112-Otp.
It Is sitlil giiwns ilrslgmsl nfler the
Wanted- W hite lady for house­
•new mode Itnve been, seen nnd ndkeeper und rook for mill hands at
mired
Authorities In • the dressmaking Forrest City. W rite Mrs. F. H.
trade however, deny tight lacing Is to Pounds, ‘M aitland, It. F. D. or
return, one of them saying: •’The telephone 130, city.
112-6tc.
wasp wnlst Is ns obsolete ns the stuffs
Fm Sale— Wood. Chrh|i.
See
conch or the sedan chair.”
B. F. W hitncr. J r. or Phone 212.

German Textbooks Bar
Kaiser’s Whole Family \
Itel'llli.
Herman textbook-.
Iierenflor will he minus Hie lor
inrrly Inevitable plcturt** of the
kaiser mill tils predeeioouirH on
the l'ru-*?lnn throne, uj« u result
of an order by the minister of
education, who nl*» rulca oul all
nneciloles of the IbdieuxoHorns
"which might 'seevo only to gltirlfy the dynasty mid foster I In-

Tractor plowing and all kinds xif
T ractor work. Call Phontf 184.

FO U N D .On first St. w i^t Uf
Sanford $4437.50 FVontinR north
on brick highw ay jtwl oiusl of tho
artesian S pring h a lf mile west of
M onrob road. 3 5 ' u acres*of ideal X O C3CX&gt;C?O CX
ahd irriK‘*I&gt;lL» farm land
W orth $200 )&gt;cr acr.’ ofTercil for
$75 p er acre Vhah.4 Direct from
It H a s H a p p e n e d
owncs. E nquire a t Phone 352 re­
latin g a b strac t an d deed. 04-tf.

to O th e rs

And May Happen to You

For Sale—O n e 'lot. Good location.
Apply 40(5 M yrtle Ave
107 -SHtp
For R ent—One large
it furni^hrd mom. 717 Park AVo. 109-Gt
----(.____ _
Lost -S tray ed or stolen Monday
Mar. l#t. Small brown
Rocker
Liberal reward. Address o r-call at
Herald office.
II !-3tp.
W yundottc .1 eggs
15. W, .B. -!1a
Springs. F|a.

Hooting of All Descriptions

J

BOOSTS- FEE

Sing TSlng Electric Chair Operator
Demands $250 for Each
Murderer. •

Paris

The Six Reel Universal Special
‘‘Blind Husbands" Al The PrinCess Today
The bestial nature of a-libertine
officer, formerly of the Austrian
army, is relentlessly exposed In
"Blind Husbands" thv Universal
photodrainu of the Tyrolean Alps,
which comes t o ' the Princess Today
The -principle role is played by
Eric Stroheim, former lieutenant of
the 'Austrian army, and in ' "Blfnd
Husbands*" Eric Stroheim portrays
the nrrogance nnd supreme cohceit
that., made the Teuton unfit for the
rommunion of humans.
As a lieutenant of the Austrian
army the starring vjlhnn goes to a
fashionable re-tart in the Alps to
prey on womankind There he meets
Maxagret Armstrong, wife of the
famous Dr. Arm stnm g,'who i; loved
^but badly neglected wife.
IJr. Armstrong inakps it discovery
BiuuccUi
cts something
sutpethinc worse, anil his
soul'U seared and tortured when the
li»ut«nunt lies to him. The fate of a

All you good Base Ball men that cam e across with $50.00 last year for the sup­
port o f the team rerttember th at it takes just twice as much to g e t the sam e re*suits this year because everythiug th a t goes into the m aking of a first-class ball
club, like
advanced
This
year,i when
called
l a i ; leverything
y u
r t i i u i i i else,
c i o u . has
u u o u
u » u i i v . v . u in
i n price.
»/• i w .
*
jr
* - - - - - jyou^are
----kick w ifflfa Tiundrecf. Vou^fl
your m o n e y s worffi b d ftn n f1^ ,' f?^ b n
is over,

In Spite o f Everything You M ay Happen to I)o

fie Prepared
When " • • . p \ .
It Does Happen
B fe
re Insurance

F I R U IN

Lime, Cement, ria»tor

RANCE

enh I'e made of oar1
•'Paradise *.«g.nned’’ on Cabbage.

Hill Lumber

It Is said Him Jidiu Milton often
used to have nothing but a few olives
for dinner, -umj we do not wonder so
much since learning this that he so
wldom ,wrote anything vh-'-rful. VVp
do not think wp cdtilil write Anything
chaerfuf ourselveit ‘ufler dining on
n ffjw olives, ihougli wo have done l|
not lnfn-qurntl&gt; mi Ixillerl cahbtigc und
prune UMp.—Ohio Hlnte Juunml.

For Sale*-One IS HorJc Pov.e
Boa* Long, fortnef chief of the Keroaene Oil Engine. C lw o &amp; Co
Latih-American division of the depart 5ar.ford., FI*. •
.
105-tf.
ment of state, and more recently min­
For .Sale I reffi Mil!;' Cow. For
ister to Salvador, has beeivl^ippointed
envoy from the United 6tates to Cuba,
J. Taylor, 197 Mugnolia. avenue;
and has left for his new post.

. ALL KINDS OF
&amp; ’in s u r a n c e .
^ iR E A L

ESTATE.

SANFORD. FLA
L

ia b il it y

�MARCH 8.1920

8ANFORD DAILY* HERALD
CEM ETERY

Smithy, immortalized by Long
fellow, 'Still Stands.
Shop of the Village Blacksmith, at
Cambridge, M m . Looks Today Almost as It DHL When the

*

-‘■ft -

Poet Wrote of It,'

j.-.

.. i , .

In his diary of October 6. 18.T0,
Longfellow made this noto: "Wrote a

new psalm "t i l t ^ l t ’l* T ho Village
Blacksmith.’ "

Anil tho house of the vlllago black«niih, built tu 1811, still stands In
Cambridge, covered with vines uhd
ntight after by tourlsts-and lovers of
the old, although the "spreudlng chest­
nut treo" has been cut down to make
room for the widening of Brattle
It was ti)e home of Dexter ITntt,
dm vlllago blacksmith, and the friend
of, J^ngfellow, who hmnortnllXed him
MiThis smithy In verse. Tho Bnch,elder family, who bought the place
from the heirs of Mary Walker In
1PUJ, have • restored tho. place to Its
former simple beauty. It still bears
the "Sign of the Cockhorse."
Inside, the rooms are restored with
all the qualntness of their orlglnnt
form. As one goes In tho door they
open from both sides of the small hall
gnd each room linn n largo open fireplace. The mantels nro wldo and
plain, ns was the fashion In the early,
days.
Upstairs, nt the Brattle street end
of the house, one goes down three
steps Into tho end rftom. You pnss
through a narrow back passage nnd'
Itnrt 'twfj ftumtF hodronnts nnd back'
stairs which are.sharp nnd steep,,
Dexter I'rntt, J^ongfol low's blncksiulth friend, succeeded Torrey Han­
cock In the owncraldp of the property.,
who In turn bought It from tho heirs
of Thomas Brattle, who' built the
hou«e.* Pratt had lived Oiere n long
time when Longfellow came to Cntntjybtge Jp 4880. After the death of
Dexter I’rntt, in 18-17, tho property
po-«ci| through various hands until,
In ISTO. friends bought It for Mary
Walker, on e-caped ■quadroon slnVo. n
woman of rennement-nml beauty, who
had been n servant In several Cam­
bridge families, and afterw ard’ taught
school in the South,
After her return to tho North two
of her Hirer 'children were found mill
feiuriiiMl to tier through the efforts of
(lenernl O. 0." Howard. They were then
n grown man and woman, although
»hm 1110 1081 saw. them they were
children.
/ ,
While she occupied tltu house tunny
llnrrnrd students lived there. Now.
purchased frqm the heirs of the es­
caped slave. It has become oug of the
shop places of Cambridge.

OF* T H E

PAGE 5
FUTURE

Government Scientist D rain Pleating
Picture of Resting Places of
Loved Ones Gone Before. .
Innce of 17ft miles. An nil It min of !(IM
feet was maintained during moat of
Cemeteries nre ;nct-€lieerful. places.
the time, and a genefnt north and south
Iturlnl
lots uro cared fol during twd
course wus flown,
»r
three
generations and then, too
The messages were received Without
n break, nlthough ft.e operator stated commonly nre nesjected. Weeds cover
that at times’ they became faint and the graves and fallen tombstones are
the distinctions varied, due likely to allowed to l)e. The long dead are for­
got Ion.
the direction of the lllght.
Dr. -David Fairchild, a distinguish'd
government scientist, urges u new de­
thnt the caste system Is hreakliig down.
Now you will find men. and women of RUSSIAN SP U R N S RAW M EAT parture. He thinks* that cemeteries
should be made a ttra c tiv e and that
many castes doing work which for­
merly was done by one caste alone. Prince Troubetaky, Strong Mao, Bends the principal-feature of n great city
Coin With His Teeth on
burying ground ought to be a beautiful
Fllgh-caste Hindus nre coming to sec
* .
Vegetable DleL
building somewhat resembling a li­
^
----WjjrhLQutlnok
brary. with alcove* ami quiet nooks.
„ -'•Nev^York.-M'rince Until Troubetaky.
InHcnd of book-stacks It Would have
Russian sculptor, whom studio l» ur fireproof vaults containing personal
Plywood Given Severs TeiL
Hollywood, CnL, and who ‘enme "here records of members of the families
The plywood tested nt the Wisconsin
1 fairly radtntlng strength, declared that whose lost ones nre burled under fiat
forest products tnhorntory Is built up
g a tin g vegetables Instead of ilient had stones amid the charming surround­
In thin layers laid crosswise to .one'
! tronsfornietl him from n sickly youth ing* of n vust garden. These records
another, and- glued with, wntcr-reslst'one of Anier|ci
would iudude nil kinds of data re!at*
lug gfuer Various protective finishes
Ing to tho dead—accounts of their
tire applied to the wood. All materials
arc subjected jto every variety of cli­ bent n quarter fwo ways with ht?. most noteworthy doings.'photographs.
matic temperature and moisture, teeth, smashed some walnuts with a
and In glue tests, piles must not sep­ blow of Uls list, nnd raised above his
•“Cannot you Imagine," says Hr.
arate after boiling In water eight head some weights which. tin ordinary Fairchild, "strolling Into the linll of
hours, or soaking at room temperature man could not budge.
the dead, to find there, In their proper
ten days. The prqjlucts developed find
tnimy Important uses besides thnt of
making nlrplnne propellers.
The
woven plywood, designed ns a substi­
tute fo r linen In wing covering. Is
basket woven ,fmrn strips of spruce
veneer about one and one-foarlh to one
snd seven-eighths Inches wide and .01
Inch thick, the finished sheet being
about one-flftli Inch thick.
Difficult to Learn.
'flte Chinese jmcket dictionary contnlns no less tli^n 10,000 characters.
which one must leant In order to
claim1 any real familiarity with the
language. However, nn acquaintance
with 8,000 or 4,000'symbols ts nil thnt
ihe avenige native has, nnd It Is said
to he possible to get along with u vorabulory of.'l^XKfc-

place. nil of the personnI records o f
ymjr fntnujr for generations buck?
There nre ifie-.phnlnginid,. 3*
grandparents; of departed ilncles umJ
a u ii(a, or little oho* who did not llvp
to (*row up. nil with* nto Men of their
llvi a attached n ( ^ letters’ nnd nnec-

dolose

Shallowness.
Shallow waters show n ven - ' " i r
bottom and liui little Intensity • ... ht
Is needed In order to dlsplny the 7-ebbles and clear Nand Thai must lie a
“purest ray s e r e n e '—a pencil of
strongest tight—which - dl*tdw*e* tho
({lack. rich, wreckedrewn depths. For
the r hair ness of itepih Is very different
front tjie rlenfiHis* of slm lip wile.*.'The
former Is n )a ml m e qnullty The, tatter
Is negative.—&lt;.*! s r h - Wnrrert Stod-

dsnl

Chesterfield

Did you ever see n locomotlvn rim
IJ0 miles nn hour nnd yet not gel any­
w here!. -Such Is the performance of
locomotives which come regularly to
the locomotive laboratory of the Uni­
versity of Illinois f«*r scientific tests
on sured. fuel, power, etc.

BARO NESS ROMANO AVEZZANO

The Crumbling of Caste.
Isdbi l* ,|n tbc midst of one of tier
rr.-n»'--it famines. Grain Is twice nr

SUGGESTIONS
FO R S P R IN G

W e H av e T!*e S E E D — F R E S H

Lenses Ground *
g l a sse s

tho

{ Newlyweds Lost in
1
Dfciue' Maine VJoods
Lenox. Mass,—A storj' «*r thAf
and Mrs. Atli'lbi'ri 1. New ton
I were lost In the northern waste
j of the Maine wood* andwonder/ csl nhout for four, days without*r fimd* wn&amp;f revealed In
* n letter received here from Mr.
Newton

J

ician

A viixu n o,

wife of tho new Tlullnn nttibawMidor
who recently nrrlvcd In this country,
was formerly. Miss Marie .lurquollii
TnHor, dnuRhter,of the Into slorthuog
Taylor of SI. l.ouls, and Mrs. Fred*
irsrntwi hdnmi

$

S A N F O R D , FLA

ituitniiio

M r.

i

J
#

J

#

J
•

* tatloitUnnble to loente their Cltmp or t
cabin they pa-seil three nights J
# out of doors, suliHlhllng on dried
* Iterries. Finally tlidy anno out on
&lt; u, stream nnd followatl It to a
J hunting loilgc. *

a d ju st e d

and H E PA raED

AIRPLANE “SENDS^’ 175 M IL E S
Record Broken In Wlrelew Transmis­
sion of Mestago From fthlp
In Cloud*.'

Optomctris|.t&gt;pl Irish
i . ^ * y.f*

r*- *-

221 E. F irst Street
opposite Post office

Wnshlngtoq- Whut Is. belle,
l.ave In-oil -ii record hi tlto tn»h!
of wireless itiessuges from oh nlrplnho
ln flight t‘» « hunl JtaUod Was rtpiMJ*

In o r d e r to help film determine wheth­
er bis patient tins delusions, is insnu^
or is carried nwny by certain emotion*
nr any abnormality. And there la a
renson for this. It has tieen proved X
many (lines that there ta o dlstluct rela­
tion between the nerves of the brain*
and those of the hand, so thnt a man's
writing reflects hts menial temperamenu
Signifies Intents Imagination.
,
In numerous types of handwriting
the manner of throwing the looped
Is. Is nn*l other loan letters fn excess
above the tine become the tm*sl strik­
ing feature, one wlilrli catches the eys
ImiiHsllntely.
Whenever this forma­
tion appears ,jt armhorties the exist­
ence of a 'startling, vivid. Intense lmAgination. which gives, tho writer a
memnt trend which will overbnlanca
other qualifies amt produce iho ef­
fect of high nervous tension and a lack

m ylEow C hesterfields
"Satisfy!” '
A delightful selection, of fine
Turkish and D om estic tobaccos,
harmoniously, blended in an en­
tirely new and exclusive way.
T he blend is based on o u t
private formula—the outcom e of
many years of experiment. Andthe final result has justified the
time dnd money spent. For cer­
tainly, Chesterfields do “satisfy
But don't take our word for
it. Smoke Chesterfields today
and find out for yourself.
The speciaj m oisture** p r o o f p a c k a g e k e e p s
. C hesterfields firm and
• f r e s h, w h a t e v e r t h e

. Nowhere at Sixty Mllea an Hour.

llnroiifs»

Aliequts* T«*t-

t f . t r -a caution* th*t*a for nn nllrnlst^
to demand n speeppen «»T handwrlilng

new note

l/mcfellow. In the Kptckerhocker
Magazine, In 1810. first Immortalized
the place. He trintle n .w o rd picture
of the village smithy, nnd ^Jie black­
smith, and also made a |r&gt;n and Ink
’'rich of the chestnut tree nrttl the
smithy. The treo up to 187(1 sprend
Its brandios In front nf«(ho house.

BEANS .
LIM A B E A N S
BEETS
~
EGG P L A N T
SQ UA SH
TOM ATOES
CUCUMBERS
SW EET CORN
. PEPPERS

- -

••With* Hlest might be preserved
phonographic records of tho voices of
the dead, so that they could he heard
to tu lk ; nod rooms might he tilted tip
for prlvnti'ly viewing moving pictures
pf the departed, who would tliusly bn
made to 'cyme nllve ngnln.'"
The dend. could thus he ntnde, In a
ppnsp, to live on Indetlnltcly. Between
the living generation mid tho past
would be established a definite and
permanent tic.

An “Ejevated” Railroad.
The Uintah railroad, from Stack.
Polo., to Watson. Utah, n distance of
slxty-t wo* miles, rmm over the Atchee
mountains, which are over 0.000 feet
high, with 7ft per cent curve*.

j' ■
1[■ I T

-

, J1

i n

j; S •

i|

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="13">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10754">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1920</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11956">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 08, 1920</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11957">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11958">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 08, 1920.  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="11959">
                <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="11960">
                <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;, March 08, 1920; &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="11961">
                <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="11962">
                <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="11963">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11964">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1212" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1084">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/2da82784ed234e090127ee695be8e2c7.pdf</src>
        <authentication>ff2f252c9ac4f4d01cb27414689d4845</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11975">
                    <text>&gt;

iiV . f i t

IN THE BEAST OP THE' WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION

MARCH 15TH IS T IM E L IM IT
FOR M AKING OUT INCOME
TAX RETURN
.
Now is thp time to make your In­
come tax returns for .the time is up

,fla th£-151h.jL&amp;lfl-mgJilh. I n .nrdei.
that all ‘those who do not know how
to make up their j-oturns may have
expert help Harry Brown, is here
thU week representing the govern­
ment and being from the office of
Collector J. M. Cathcart in Jack­
sonville.’ *
'
Mr. Brown will be at the court
house this week from 9 to 6 in the
dsy time and will also be there -at
Dight from 7 to 9 in or’der that those
who are obliged to work all day and
cannot get there in the daytime can
art him at night/ This in very ac­
comodating on Mr. Brown’s part
and will give every one in this coun­
ty the chance to consult him on
their returns. »
Finer no man can ferret out the
secret of how to make out these re­
turn* properly and the man
who
made up the blanks In Washington
it puttied over them it behooves
every one to see Mr. Brown and get
the right slant on how much to apy
the government in your income and
there are very few who are exempt
from paying an income tax. If you
are exempt Mr. Brown will tell you
and you can go on your way rejojc
ing |and then if you arc due a
tax and you have failed to make out
your returns you will be. fined-by
the government and may have to
spend some time in jail.
It come* hard .this tax business
but Uncle Sam says pny me and we
must pay all that is due.
*

profits arc taken on the lower priced
COURT
SAYS
NO M INATED
FOR .HALL OP SUPREME
UNCLE * 8AM
MUST
GIVE portions.
„
FAME
AMONG
TH EM
"The housewife holds in her own
BACK THE M ONEY
BEING ONE FROM FLORIDA
hand the remedy for high meat
Washington, March 8.—Stock di­ prices," said the nnnouncenu-nt."I)y
Washington, Mar. 9.— "T h e Great
Tree on Boston Common" and ."T h e vidends may not be taxed as income, turned from expensive to inexpensive
Green Tree Hotel" at Lo Claire, the supreme court held today in de­ cuts she riot only will drive down the
Iowa, the most famous tree 'bn the claring unconstitutional the provi-1 price of choice cuts, and make ‘it
Mississippi River were today nomi­ uiona of the 1916 income tax act. d i­ possible for meat to be merchandised
nated .for a place in the "H all of stant of the 1916 income tax (axing more economically."
Fame for Trees" being, compiled by as Income such dividends decla’rcd
the American Forestry Association. by corporations out of earnings and
('a d d I Mayor' of Kissimmee
The Great Tree on Boston Common profits accruing after March 1, 1913.
Kissimmee. March 8.— At the city ABOUT TW O HUNDRED CAR8
is nominated by J. Collins Warren, The court’ divided 5 to 4, Justice ejection Saturday John 8. Cadell was
W ILL
GO FORWARD TH I8
of Boston, who sends a complete Pitney rendering the majorityoplnlon elected mayor over T. C. Bryan by a
WEEK
Day join­
.
hlst9ry of the tree which was blown Justices Holmes and
majority of 66 votes. A. S. GIlbi&gt;rt •
ing
in
one
dissenting
from
the op­
The
recent
cold
snap did no injury
down In a storm February 16, 19J8,
and J. W. Thompson were elected to
the centennial of the year In ^hlch inion, Justices Clark apd Brandeis the council; the former re-elpcted. to the'great celery crop of Sanford
Hn eelenlata gathered around*1tfar combining-on-anot her.---------------- The latter will succeed W\ H. Arnold and beyond making the tops a' tri­
The court upheld federal-court de­
fle ypllow one would hover know that
tree and started for Lexington to
From the result It appears the vo*
crees
denying
the
authority
of
con­
the
cold had visited the celery fields.
give battle to tho British.
tors did not tnko into consideration
gress
to
tax
stock
dividends
and
Just
now the growers are getting
"T h e Green Tree Hotql’’ at Lc
the commission form of government
awarding
to
Myrtle
.1
1
.
McCombcr
into
the
very height of tho shipping
Claire, Iowa, is'nominated by .J. W.
proposition. Cadell favors such action
$3,167 which she paid had under
season
and
the r6ads are filled with
Barnes, who as a hoy, played leap
and so docs Thompson but Gilbort
frog beneath tho branches of this protest on 1,100 shares of now stock had not expressed himself one way or tourists every day watching tho cut­
tree with one Willie Cody afterward 'reveivrd in January, 191T5, as u stock the othex. Arnold, who was defeated ting and packing of thia great money
known to fame as "Buffalo Bill." dividend from the Standard Oil Co- for re-election, was a commission crop. Many of tho largest growers
of California. The case was one of a
are cutting celery this week and it is
The hlstcyic elm Is well knowrf on
form of government candidate. J. R.
series in which J. P. Morgan, Her­
the Mississippi River because to .the
Gilbert wps elected city clerk, lead­ almoit certain that this and next
bert J,. Pratt and others had ques­
river men, report* Mr. Barnes, "it
ing the ticket. He has hold this office week' will be large weeks in the ship­
tioned the vnlldify of the act. Cour(
was the waiting place of men out of
for years and had no opposition. J. ping of celery. Lr.st week about 125
officials suid -the case was one of the
the Sanford
a job and looking for a trip. There­
Z. Roberson was elected city trea­ cary were rollezfrom
most important nt this term and that
section
and
thia
week
it
is estimated
fore they give it the name of "T h e
surer and-W. C. Bass, 7s. Bass C. A.
determination of tho question effects
that
about
200
will
he
shipped
which
Green Tree Hotel." It is considered
Carson Alan J. McDonough and J.
thousands of investors.
is
a
good
record
for
this
year
and
W. Persons were selected members
to he 1*20 years old.
much hutter than was done last year
Justice Pitney, in rendering the of the city executive committe.
Other nominations for tho Hall of
although the price is not as good.
court’s opinion, said stock dividends
Fame include the DcSoto 'Oak at
Prices were falling last week on ac­
are 'no more thnn a “ hook adjust­
Tampa. Fla, from which DeSoto
count of the heavy snows In th*
ment", and do hftt change the nnture
started for the Mississippi and the
northern cities and the intense cold
character, mutual Relations Qr inter­
West; the 'Octopus Tree in Chnrles
that stopped much of the Niiyinr
ests of a corporation. The court di­
City Co., Virginia, nominated by
and this helped materially In reduc­
vided 5 to 4, Justices Holmes and
Mcndc Ferguson as the largest and
ing prices hut yesterday the .grower
Day joining in ' one dissenting op­
oldest tree in the state; the two oaks
were getting $2.60 per’ crate in the
inion and Justices Brandeis and'
at Mnrlintown, W. Va., marked in
field which is ntit considered bad
Clark
in
another.
L761 by General Andrew Lewis nom­
when conditions are taken into, con­
Millions
of
dollars
ip
taxes
collect­
inated by Andre Price; the tallest,
sideration.
ed on stock dividends must he re­
tree in the Balkans at Podgoritxu
The high price of labor and mat’erfund
ed
by
the
government
under
the
OF THE
ALLIED
COUNCIL'S nominatod by the Red Cross which
inls
this year make it iifcumbent for
court’s decision, hut internal revenue
DECISION
REGARDING
tht grower to get a much better •
had headquarters near it during the bureau officials, have not yet made
OCCUPATION OF CONSTAN-*
BALTIMQRC' HAS BLAZE THAT price this year than ever before in ’
an estimate of the total.
war.
T IN O P LE
(O S T
MANY
THOUSANDS order to come out with any profit and
and it is hoped that the price will go
Paris, March 69 (By Associated
Baltimore March 9 (By Associated much higher before the big shipments
Press) Premier Millerand instructed
Press) Five firemen were overcome
got ready to roll.
the Flench uinI; as: ad or at Wtshlngwhile fighting n $300,000 fire at the • As usual there are*many buyers
ton to ask President Wilson’s op­
Crook Grocery -warehouse in the h’ere to tuke euro of tho trade and
inion of the Allied Council's decisions
downtown section last night.
the fact that the rash buyers com
regarding Turkey, says the Echo dc
here to lake the celery in the fleid
Paris. The paper says Lloyd George
Is
u big thing for the Sanford and
proposal the occupation of Constan­
.Seminole County growers for it
tinople and the War Ministry to or­
mokes on f. o. h. maikct which is
der tho arrest, of the Anti-Allied
FORE IGN
OFFICE
T H E . LEGION .
BONUS M EXICAN
the biggest inducement in the world
Turkish statemenn but Millerand ON
WHEN ’ HUGE
BOILER
IN
S^AYS
BOLSHEVIKS • ARE
QUESTION
W HICH
SEEMS
gained a ffw minutes grace by
GERMAN PLANT LETS... GO for. Those who arc sinking a real
.
stipulating no notion until tho reply ’ HONK
i. OF
CONTENTION
DOING
IT
•
Berlin Mrch 9 (By Associated growing section of Florida.
of' the ullied commissioners ur Con­
The Celery is looking exceptionally
Prces)
Fifty
persqns
were
estimated
Washington March 9 (By Assooisi * Wa r ljiju r * Mit&lt;h 9 (Py Am riastantinople could he received.
killed and ninety burned when the fine this year and will probably bo
ted Press) Charges that members of tnd Press) Ti e Mexiivsn fore iyti cfl &lt;•*
boiler in a huge Rhenish Westpha­ one of the finest crops that Sanford,
the House Ways and Means Com- has w irned t he M iuinn Guarif lian plant electrical plant bur*
has ever -shipped.
• .
sgeinst coot erf n't money made in the
mimittee were. endeavoring to .kil
,cattrring
dl-atii
and
destruction
nil
United States and rays it was nusdc
the
.... bonus legislation by
- delay
- .were
•
|,y the Bobhevi** n* a reprisal for over the works according to a des­
made by Chabrman, Fnrdney when* the |er. ecutinn of tie Radical' in patch' here; *

made to pay these exorbitant bills.
They also think they should be pro­
tected In this ipatter by tho City
Commissioners and the City Mana­
ger and the City Attorney since all
of these gentlemen are servants of
the people. Up to date no action has
been taken by the commissioned or
tho City Attorney but action will
certainly be uked at the meeting of
the commiasiSn on Wednesday night.
It they arc averse to taking this step
we can site them to another instance
of this kind taken from the press
df-flpatches yesterday as follows:
Durham, N. C. March 7.— Prior to
hia departure tonight for New York
in company with City Attorney S. C.
€hambcTs;'MXyor M. E. Newsome
issued a statement in .which he called
upon patrons of tho Carolina Power
and Light Company in this city to
postpone payment of gas bills until
further notice. Th,e action of the
mayor came as a result of a gas
shortage through which tho city has
passed covering a period of several
months. The mayor and city attorne
aro going to New Yrok for tho pur­
pose of holding conferences with di
Irectors of tho company. They will
demand rebates for the gas consumers
n this city.
•

WANTED"

FRENCH A P
BADLY HANDLED
WHEN
MAN

MIX UP OVER GER­
SONG TAKES *LAC E

FIREMAN
OVERCOME
AT FIRE

OPINION

COUNTERFEIT
MEMBERS
OF HOUSE
- M ONEY IS , STALLING
BEING MADE FIFTY PEOPLE KILLED

FREIGHTERS
ARE SOLD
: TO BELGIUM

Ib'flin March 9 '(B y Associated
i'rtfs Tho. French officer roughly
h;itu(|i',| while a t -the Bremen barru. kr while the Germun* sand Deust, hlaud Ubor Allea tho Vosriche Zeltirg ulus report that the crowd as­
saulted the allied offlrer* in the
Jbetnen streets when tip*'” latter
Hopped a German soldier who failed
SH IPPIN ;
to rlule.
" *
’ .
$200 PER

PEOPLE
&gt;
fo r

s e r v ic e s

I.-

th at

have

RENDERED BY
U TILITIE S
CO.

Several weeks ago the Herald called
upon the City Commissioners and
the City Manager and the City A t­
torney to enjoin the Southern Utili­
ties Co., from collecting bill* for
service that had not been rendered
In other words the people of this
«t y received bills all during the
months of December, January and
Pcvruary that were higher than they
'e re when’ the company was fur­
nishing real service. What thepeople
*-ant to know Is how in tKf summer
hreexea can a consumer use the gas,
dtetric lights and water when there
Is no such animal for many day* at a
time. It would be impoeaible to use
the current, to use the power, to use
tha gas and to uso the water if it
»a# ihut off half of the time and thn
people do not think they should be

Tr

.

.

mi i

at. . t

the United StsU*. The Mexican
consul in New York ha&lt; reported two
million dollars in spurrlous money in
circulation.

members suggested to postpone t h*
hearing until the-American Legion
legislative rommlttre irt-eting Murch
22. The Committee called Secretary
GETS of the Treasury Houston' and GovHOARD
• rt.or Harding of th e , Federal ReTON FOR S H IP S
&gt;cr\«* Board for the meeting on
Washington March'9 (By Associ­ ■Thursday•
ated Press' The sale of
seven
freighter to foreign cor|W»raticn« Is
announced b y ’ the Shipping Board
The French and Belgium companies
Q r COAL COMMISSION UN­
bought at two hundred dollnra' per
IJESS WAGES ARK RAISED
ton. the -v e-eels of three thousand
Indianapolis March 9 (By Associa­
tons each.
~
t
ted Pr*M) The ynited Mine Worlers
W ITH
-TFE wiU refuse to accept the findings of
IN
DEALING
Maynard Plhrs Sanford To Tnl1aOF
TURKISH lh«' liilumunouB coal commission
QUESTION
hasser. 300 Miles In T w » Hours • CONTROL ;
unless a suh tanlial wage ..increase
Forty Mlante*
and
improved working conditions
Rome March $ J By Associated
Talahasiee. March 6.—Lieut. Bclate provlfed. This is inferred in i
vin W. Maynard, the "Flyjng Parson* Press)* Italy will aasocalte Itself with i tatrment. 1st» rfi today at headquar­
accompanied by Sergt. Joseph W. the allies only la diplomatic ateps ters The official* rre alcent and those
Saxe, photographer and mechanician regarding Constantinople says the -irf! charge' refuted to rommert on
arrived here this afternoon In the Popio D’ ltalca declaring*’fhaV ’ tY»e
the rtatenent. . .
plane used by the former Jn wlnhing nation’s objects In Asia Minor are
the 'transcontinental ajr race. They purely economic.
American M«st Bill May Be Reduced
loft Sanford at 3:30 this afternoon
.
‘
«
By Baying Cheeper Cule ,
Prince** Theatre Donates
to
and reached hero at 6:10. thus mak­
Washington March 8.— Plane for
•
Hospital
’
ing the trip of 800 mile* In two hour
reducing
the American family’s meat
Tho officeia of the Fcrnald-Laughto
and forty minute*. Lieut. Maynard
hill
have
been announced by the de­
Memorial
Hospital
Awocintlon
with
who ia touring the country in the
partment
of justice which will urge
to'express
their
sincere
appreciaii
n
aid of army enlistments’. . will leave
housewives
td turn from the high
of
the
contribution
of
Fifty-Th
eo
in the morning for Atlanta.
Dollars by the Prin^e^ Theat e priced cuts to less costly portions of
the steer.
' .
A T T E N T IO N
»
Fair price commissions in every
Mr. Bryan *aya the liquor force*
The Royal Neighbors will meet
state will be aaked to direct an edu­
are
not
licked
yet
and
are
making
Thuraday evening at 7:30 every mem­
cational campaign, with the co-oper
ber ia urged to be present, as buai- a desperate fight for their exslatence,
ration, of • retailer*, wholsaler* and
neea of especial Importance is to be despite.the enactment of prohibition
laws. H e ia fight. If the country is packing companies, and the depart­
attended to.
aetvially’
to be dry it (s necessary that ment ywill undertake to pee to It, that
Please make an’ effort to be there.
the prohibition forces continue tha the consumer receives good meat at
Refreshment!.
•
^
j
battle.—St. Petersburg Independent. low prken and that no abnormat
Recorder.
■

■&gt;»

•

ITALIANS WILL
USE DIPLOMACY

- ■! y ■

NOT BEEN
SOUTHERN
.

NUMBER 114

SANFORD, FLORIDA, TUESDAY, MARCH 9. 19J0

fOLUME 1

.

#

'

SLEEPING
SICKNESS
MINERS WILL RE- IN N. Y.
TUSE FINDINGS

-■
=-

-ti

;■ : V* * £v -

v

■

*

SEVENTY
MILLION
FRANCS
GO
UP
IN
ALCOHOLIC
BLAZE %

Oran, Algeria March 9 (By Associ­
ated Press) Seventy million franc#
MIYSIGJANS • SAY \ AFTER damage was .dope when a carelessly
OF
INFLUENZA dropped match. &gt; »»•»«! the dertruc:
EFFECTS
tion to thousands of barrels of
New Yrok March 9 (By Associated nirohol and other property here.
* —
'•
” "
r
Press) One hundred and seventy
coses of sleeping sickness are roporttd
here since the flrat of January and
arc apparentyl an aftermath of
influenzu the health commissioner

rport*.

.

Another Hotel For Orlando.
Out of the varied rumors and div&lt; ii«n t ideas tjiat have filled the at­
mosphere during the past few years
concerning an up to date tourist ho­
tel in Orlando, th’e Reporter-Stur is
in a position to state that the’ moat
poqcreto and tangible plan* for a 432
room establLhmeiit highly worthy of
the name are now hoeing.assembled
into workable form by Stout, Miller
St Hughe*, of this city,.and that this
hotel will he locate! on the entire
block facing Eola Lake (and
Eol*
Park *on the norlh ride of the lake
separated therefrofo only by Fobinson avenue. It U iltuated- between
Cathcart street on the east and' H ill­
man qn the west, covering a apace
of .approximately 80 /eet square.—
Reportet Star, v- .
•

"~Vir|sl

1

MATCH CARELESS
. BIG DAMAGE

:Ai' J

MICHIGAN TIED
UP BY STORM
'

» ,y •-

* . * • — •*

MANUFACTURERS AND OFFICE
' BUILDINGS OUT OF FUEL
Grand Raplda March 9 (By Aaapclated Press) Virtually all the rail­
roads in western and northern Michi­
gan are tied up by Thursday’s' bill­
iard and many towns are isolated
and suffering a fuel famine. Office
buildings and industrikl plants in.
Cadillac must close down. within
forty .eight hours.

Weather Report
■■

t

- ’•

Fal r tonight, warmer extreme
north portion, Wednesday (air and
warmer north and central portion.
Gentle to moderate northeast winds.

-

ini
.* «■

-‘

�PAGE 6

Savage Fight Put Up Between
Two Caged Brutes. V \ •

THE AL. G. FIELDS MINSTRELS

Marvelous Strength Exhibited by M ad­
dened Brown Bear Almoet Beyond
Belief, According to Wltneea
*
•
of.the Struggle.

America’s Oldest and Best Minstrel1Organization
• An Attraction That Has Become an Institution
BIGGER AND BETTER TH AN EVER
v
/

.

A Magnificent FItat Part

THE GARDEN OF MIRTH
•--------------------------— :------------

Derby Day at Churchill Downs

r

■
m

A Dazzling Dancing Divrrtlsemrnl
.
■ '
* — • *r.
•

w
§
j
1
jg

'

T h e F r o g s W e d d in g

i

f]

Short Order Open While You
*
W ilt
.
t h e iu g b u r l e s q u e

*

Oae Touch of Nature

,

s jr
Od

Mcmornblo Minstrel. £ ( "
Merrymakers
DO

PRICES: 75c $1.00 $1.59 Plus Tax
•

*

___

_ _

•a

^

a

A

4

Seats on Sale Tuesday, ESTES PHARM ACY
3■}

39
i *i

1

J

V
-. 1

1

%
cm

STATE REPORT D. A- R
(Continued from Page 1)

f t
1
J

of Mrs. Clark, the- Custodian,' we
sent a copy of the Flag Code .to
General Grant's Memorial -Home nt
&amp;U. regory, N. Y , O n e Revo­
lutionary relic presented to us by
Mrs. .Mabel Fernald lias hern sent
i n _to__ Memorial—Conte netiul Hall.
We have given one tree to Victory
Park, Ti\U park is a 'Memorial to
our Seminole CotinJy Soldien nnd
Sailors, und- it tho work of our * Wo­
man’s Club.\ Wo liuve adopted as a
permanent memorial and tribute tothe boys*'of'huf.Uiiunrj—ar*»n- m.vlethe supreme sncfitlce, that every
one, eight in number, *r,i.*, I ■•••*
placed on t*t- rnonumet t
1 -'i
to tiicir memory in our ‘ -ty I’ .irs
a wreath (\J eye*g.i-«*n o'n t'hr s-.in.i
morning. (Thi* monument was give i
liy the fomer l*r«- iucnl i f the City
Counrd Frank
Milh-t and • w»
the first monument erected. In the
Stale to the memory of the brave

We have had one Rummage sale
which -netted a neat sum —w^ gave
to the County Home, canned goods:
nnd material aid to a dr*er|r I wife
of soldier. AI*o one Jfi.dfl. pair i|f
aline* to nn old colored Mammy
We have organized to raise a
fund for u .Memorial to the United
States Service men of our County
A committee of our Coopty's most
promint nt business men - has-been
appointed to work with tin- Chapter
for. this cause.
'
- •
The Chapter hxx‘ three new mem­
bers and fine associate member
there are ten Hpp'iruni- now working
Ob’ their member, ihe.'infnnt daughter
of our eharti-r Sn-ntary
We presented "M iss"
Thigpen
with a D: A. It. spun. Ahnt'icr gift
that the Chpaler thoroughly enjoyed
giving was a box rent to one of our
home hoys who wns in the Pqly-

^ v m tm e n t

FRECKLES Positively Removed
Ly Dr. Berry's Freckle Ointment
Y o u r D ru irg U f o r by M a ll &lt;SJc
S * n . l lu f l-rcc f l-m k lfl
D r . C I I. B c r n r C o ..
U h U.m« .... U f a .

w
~m
m

0

MARCH 8, 1920 - s

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

i•

j

i

a

Clinic Hospital pt New York.
Four M iliary Tmcom - •!.*.%o been
i u,t to WashInfton and the State
llhtoMun— we h ’ \e .h i I ner Chap­
ter Chi-trr framed, and l ave selcet &lt;d .white and green for our colort.
have h.*d j.e.o.-al p.e--cnt —and
the one that.we a ! 1&gt;•» he not.
i.i a
'».!
merie.nr Flat that

c

t h*

Fiini

ll -*-l

( rr&gt;s

i

CinptrT «&gt;• &lt; signed up
ci r,t for work: one dnu-i te*
ijiarP* County f'hairma-) on
v anil iitu- bn-I the ilbticn-

parties nnd other entert iinmi-nts to
ruin- money for. our - tretsury. This
is Die work we wi'l begin
right
after the ii-ntal se«snn.
Respectf tliy submitted to
tIn'
|stIt Xnnuai Florida State Confer'
enre by Mr-. It I Stnr'lmf, Regent
of Sallie Harrison Chapter. D. A. R
nf Sanford. Fla
F I McDaniel of Owasso, Michi­
gan who owns a home south of the
city on the Sanford Orlando road
and who is one of the
greatest
Sanford boosters ‘ we have with us
in the winter is hero for a short
visit. His runny friends are'giving
hibi a w-nrm welcome.
•Hr ing that old furniture to the
Dixie * Furniture or drpp us a card
und we will call. We pay cash. 321
Sunford Avc.*
'
l!3-6tp.
The T. N. T. Wowing Club will
resume its meetings Thursday ufternuon with Mrs. Geo. Fox hostess.
Mrs. ThomaR Criggle is here from
Gulfport, Miss to conclude her busi­
ness afTuirs before sxjjjng for Knglnn
where she plans to reside.
Mr. nnd Mrs. D. L. Thrasher und
Miss May Thrasher have returned
from Miami accompanied liy Mrs.
Frank*- Miller.
Miss Ruth Mettinger wns the
week-end guest of-her sistpr,. Mrs.
W. L. Morgan at Hotel Carnes.

some sight. It came aooui iujvu»*t n
mtxup-of cagcmnfea. I ennnot recall
why a change was mndc, but at all
events the female cagcinnteof Admiral
—another big Alaskan brown bear
abiding In the adjoining cage—wn*
temporarily shifted from ,hlm Into
Ivan's den..
•‘Admiral felt that that-was not a
square deal and It made film furious.
At once he set to work to tear his
way through tho ateel partition and
get Into lyfln'a cage. I reached the
scene whllo tie was In the very a&lt;ft of
finishing the Job.
was made of fiat

Ten million round* of ammunition
bjr
were fired
I
T United S U tii maiinea
on rlflo ranges. In the-last 11 month*,
according -to the report of tho Inspco
tor of rifle practice, given out at marine
corps headquarters In Washington. '
This la the answer to the que»*
tlon: Why are marines always crack
.shots! yvhlch has been asked over and
over again by their opponents at re­
cent military rlflo matches, when they
saw the •'sea*soldiers" walk away with
most*of the trophic*.
Nineteen thousand of the 21*000 men
who fired qunllflcd ns mnrksmen or bet­
ter. In 1010 marines fired on ranges
In ten foreign countries -and posses­
sions, ns follows: Ireland. Slberln.
China, France, Germany, Cuba, Santo
Domingo, Haiti, the Axoncs and Nlrnrngus. nnd In 10 states, territories and
possessions of our own-country,

Thrift in Peace

Army Physique.
A careful study rovcnled n gain dur­
ing three and one-half months at the
camps, among natJbnnl army recruits
of 0.4 pounds uplefce—almost entirely
In muscular tissue; and 23 per cent
Increaso In chest expansion. A similar
Investigation In the navy showed al­
most the same average Increase, Indi­
vidual gains running up to 33.
pounds ‘ Individual beneficial losses
reaching 23 pounds — and the aver­
age very
Inadequately recording
“ the enormous benefit
life* . , . . hns done these men phys­
ically.” In fact, the driven chief of
the medical department, hampered by
the lack of statistical clerks (who cost
f 1,000 to $l,80O a year!) rcmnrked
forcefully that the Improvement In
physique wns so evident that details
are a,* needless “as to demonstrate
mathematically that peas grow In

place. Tho end* of the flat bar* were
fastened by bending them over while
hot; and everybody was quite sure
that those panels were strong enough
to hold elephants.
’ . .
“Admiral- wont to work with Ills
great strength and his cporuiou^ claws
to pull oua of those woven bar panels
out of Its frame, and thus make a hole
In the partition that would let him
through. It seems Impossible, hut he
aid Itl B6‘ flia wliat-g steam-rotter
could not have done. I saw him finish
tearing that steel hnsket out of jts
Time's Great Changes.
frame, smash.lt down nud rush over It
When Queen Elizabeth wn* present
through the Aliening nnd Into the next In the hall nt Mlddlo temple. In Lon­
don, on the occasion of the first per­
formance of Hhnkespeare’* "Twelfth
Night," It would hove been n rash
ninn who would have dnred to predict
what would he thc'nfXt occnslorf on
ly matched. Tlu-y tought s.trlctly head which women would be permitted In
to bead nnd month to mouth. .Not the hnll In an official cnpnclty. Such
once did either of the fighter* .swerve a one would. In fact, have had to look
by a foot und expose his body to at­ forward more than 300. years, .for If
tack. Round and round they raged historical-records are k&gt; he depended
und the female grizzly shrank off In a upon, the latter occasion wns when
corner, terrified. Presently the two iln- four women, who have rccontly
fighters reared on their hlnll leys, each been ndultted as students to the
holding the other by n cheek, and In temple, formally “dined In the hall"
silence they waltzed nnd chewed.
with tie- beindu-ra.
"And then the keepers - find - thrtr
chance. Carrying their arms full of
Concernlng the Sabbath.
hickory plch handles, ea'cli one weigh­
According
tn the Itlble tlie Lord ereing nbnut five pounds, they slipped tn
at the front gnte and took positions. nlotl tho world In six days anil rested
They yelled nt those bear* ns Iftthey on the seventlr. As Saturday 1* tlio
meant to tenr them to pieces, nnd tlu-y seventh day of the week, ttie Jews ob­
slammed those pick linndlt** Into them serve It ns Ilie Sabbath a* tin rertnln
until they.won. The l/lckory hurri­ ntlier denmnlnatlons following the old
Mosaic law. When Christ said: “The
cane wns too much' to enjlare anil,tho
nltl
things have passed nwny; behold,
bears let.go nnd fell apart.* Tln-h nil
they are become new." his followers
attention—nnd |d«k handles—'was con­
regarded tills ns a command to change
centrated qti Admiral, who soon rbthe
old order, nnd they made the dny
tlrcd through (he hole,he hail mndo
j f his-resurrection the Sabbath.
•

PEOPLES BANK OF

TRY A SURE CROP
S
V
v
v
v
5'
jfl
X
V
ft

X

SOLD BEFORE YOU PLANT
ft
The American Coffee Bean Company will contract 0
100 acres ortly at Sanford and will pay four dollars JJ
($4.00) per bu. of C4 pounds [delivered at shipping v
point in two bu. sacks.
. * *
V
F9 The tr«d will cost $8 for acre cn»h. The leansdxvin to mature in
threo months after planting and rhnuld yield not less than 100 bushels
■per acre following Celery without additional fertilizer. The best nitn*gen gathering crop thnt ran be planted Only such farmers ns are in
position to plant nnd harvest the crop properly need apply. Call on
or address
"

$

B. A. HOWARD,

55 S A N F O R D
x

x

x

m

x

AND
m

x

x

ft

O KEECHO BEE
x

m

x

m

m

. your auto will look spick and span
just like new. Wc* give your car
that enamel, factory finish so
much desired by motorists. It is
easier to wash and clean when it
has been pnintod and finished by
us. Ask us for an estimate on
your cor.
.

OUR

PROCESS

Wishing and Poliihing.Aatomobllei
Make* Them Look Like New

Happiness In 8erenlty.

The thing for us nlF to do Is to be
xrrene nnd happy, no matter whether
wc are four and twenty or three
score nnd ten. To tnke disappoint­
ment philosophically, as something
thnt ean’t be cured and therefore to
be endured. To be kind and gentle
and generous, nnd forgiving—If wt
shall resolvo upon all that, something
better than youth will bo ours.—Ex­
change. - ’

.W.Mera the Trouble Llts
If people really took cuch other for
better or worse. It would be dlffcreht.
Hut tltt'y .don't. They alwnys tnke
ench other for butter—for far better
than the circumstances warrant—Ex­
change.
.

Full of repletion as it is to-dav, with every necessity of the N ew Season—
^■ith every fad and fancy for ■personal adornment. L ittle wonder that every
counter has its fascination for visitors and that everybody is eager to inspect the
complete and interesting stock of material and highly’ desirable merchandise. W e
nre all glad th at the stormy winter and bad record is -behind us and that the
bright days of spring are just around the corner. E verybody is k&lt;s?n to put off
the winter clothing and put on bright, fresh apparel of spring.

ARE BEAUTIFUL THIS SEASON

For Sale— Player piano In perfect
condition, house hold goods and
furniture. Also Smith typewriter
and bicycle. 609 Palmetto Ave.
For Sale—8 aertte- celery (and all
tiled with 4 flowing wells. Good
house,
sheds 100,000 feet birching
lumber. Reasonable price—terma.
113-6tp.

Wanted— Young -girl to answer
Experienced workmep, high grade
Polish. Prices very reasonable. telephone calls. 8:30 to 3:30P. M.
Call 806 E l m a v e n u e .
113-4tc.
See us for quick action,
e fo r f t &gt;i.‘ a, f t&lt;•;. ‘

ANFORO A n

Lost— Feb. 29th near depot, '
transfering from one train t o ‘another
oval shaped Jet and guld pin. Finder
will be rewarded frr return to N. A.
Campbell/ Fulford, Fla.
118,ltp
'am|ilii-tl Fulford, u.\. * ' ‘ . t. ; : '

m

Odd Facts.

Wanted—To buy that old furni­
ture. Turn it into cash. Dixie Furnituro Co., 321 Sanford ave. 113-Ctp

For Sale—Two story 8 room house
d garage. Clear title. Sanford
rights. Apply No. 402, Sanford
enue.
.
110-tfc.

J

,Llfe. stfonge to sn'y. Is never a dw
eert drear to him who tins plenty- pf
Band.—Boston Transcript.

TOO LATE CLASSIFY

AFTER OUR PA IN TIN G

V
52
X
M
ft
A

The next big day wifi be the SEVENTEENTH OF MARCH, ST. P A TR IC K D AY
display o f IRISH LINEN, DRESS LINEN, T A B L E L IN E N AND A R T LINEN.

�MARCH 9. 1920

SANFORD. DAILY’ HERALD

PRINCESS TH EA TR E

TOMORROW AND THURSDAY
N IG H T 7 TO 11 P. M .

AFTERNOON 2 TO 5 P. M,

•4

‘

T h e Picture Play You H ave Bedn W aiting for

S T HAROLD B ELL W R IG H T
Th e escape o f the cpnviot and his wandering in/the San Bernardino M ountains
LJ Th e kidnapping o f Sibil Andres. *
Th e flight o f the girl into the hills and. thfcfj&amp;isational pursuit.

Massive Parts

Massive Parts

The Flight of the Lovers on the Mountain Cliff
AND OTHER THRILLING SCENES

We don't like to talk about our features but we guarant
this production to please the most skeptical

Scientists’ Search Leads to Dis
covery of Many Strange *
Monsters of Deep.

There Are Still Sharks to Be Found
However, Forty Feet Long— Dan­
gerous Marine Creatures
*
‘ Not the Largest.

.

-

ETHEL CLAYTON «&lt;/ CHARLES MEREDITH
i^THE THIRTEENTH COMMANDMENT*

A PARAMOUNT ARICRAFT PICTURE.

Scene from Ethel Clayton in “ The Thirteenth Command
.
ju en t,” which conies to the Princess, Today
fire days would, tw required. Against
this, the nlr ministry points out, the
Air Service Now Heady, Cut* Ten
total flying distance of itm aerial
Week Trip Between Cltlea
route should hot tbfrAal ’ 5,200 miles.
to One.
Taking MSI miles mi hour as n fair
average flying speed -muter filyornble
i. muon.—i niro ami t ape Town, rep­
Condttliuis and'When the route bus been
resenting llie extremes of the African,
firmly established, only fifty-two hours’
continent, have at last been linked up
netiml living time would lie required
hy an nlr service. The Itrltldj nlr iiiIii•o cover I he distaiire, or about u week,
I ’ try tins mm......... that the nlr route Hying eight" h f u r s u day.

•over which engineers have s p e n t long
luonilis of labor uinldsl great dlllleutties Is llmilly ready for traffic. This
Means that the time heretofore re­
quired (o traverse the continent—from1
ten to twelve 'weeks—has now been
cut down (A about &lt;*»• wet-k and Hint
therefore secluded seetlous of Africa
Will he opened to the world.
*1Im total distance by tip- obi meth­
ods of eumiiiiiidcnthui Is d,22fi miles,
fur which trian lift)-nine to seventy-

lug to local portH entertain their
friends and unsophisticated strangers
with highly colored narratives of great
sea serpents and other unfamiliar
monsters of the deep that they have
encountered on their voyages. That
monsters of the deep exist today as
In olden times Is well known lo sci­
ence, hut they lire ipilte different from
those described by the old sails.
"The sea serpent.'' said Dr. John T.
Nichols, head of iho department of

ADMISSION
i tin water, mi Hi inn n finnt** anchor
hidnyden Ita Imrtis by chance, Ilfrinc
l lie pAcIfor and towing tho astonished
honlnion out to aea. At certain urn
wins tht? devil flail In common' along
tho Gulf const of Florlila, when* It fur­
nishes exciting sport for hlg-gume fish­
ermen. *
\\. , ']
-c
,
The dnngerous mnrlne creatures nre
In general not tho'lnrgest. The killer
wlmle, which l« 1*0 feet or so in
length. will -nttnrk nail devour almost
iit(vIlilntr Hint swims In the, aen. Some­
times they Jnlii hi schools, nml hunt
the Mg whalebone whales like'a pack
nf, hungry* wolves. The inmi-enler
shark, seldom iuo»r ihan 20 feet loon;
It one of (he fiercest of sen creatures,
lie Is ns rare ns he Is dangerous. The
Mg *|xtrm whale seems to feed lame­
ly on large specimens of octiiptis, for
which It dives In deep water. Some
observers ns«ert that they have seen
spectacular contests between such n
sperm whale tun! mi octopus which It
hnd bnnight to the surface.
The octopus also goes hy the tinme
of devil llsh. though II Is nil entirely
different nli Imat from the rnantn.

Matined, Adults 25c; Children 15c
Njght,
.Adults 35c; Children 20c

Adults 20c
Children 10c

TONIGHT
JEPEE I* L/.6KY

i

eIvominandment'
j t lC j k im m o u iit r lr lm ilt Q id u r ?

SUITOIITKD UV
MONTE n U 'E .
ANNA A. NILLSON
HIVING CUMMINGS AND OTHERS -

W hat’s fair for the man. is fair for the woman
! to h e rf m arria ge w as a m atter o f fifty -fifty .
M arried or Single You Should See T h is Picture.

Goes Into Navy.

Vincennes, Iml.—George Dewey Hod­
man, after spending four years In the
army, arrived home recently. While
here he heard of a-navy recruiting
officer tiring In the city on i\, recruit­
ing mission, and. nlthniigh he hud
Wily.-been out of .the army a few dpya,
enlisted In the navy. He Is one of font
brothers In his family who were In
the army during the world war. Hear
.Admiral. Hodman of the United Stoles
Uiivy Is u cousin of the youth.

MISS CARITA SPENCER

This will be of interest to every house
wife in the City of Sanford
There will be at

’

AND HE LO O K S HAPPY

A Cooking aiid Pure Food Demonstration

ON THE WONDERFUL

You are cordi­
ally invite ci
And w e promise
you will not
be disappointed

W ith this Stove
-it relieves
the w orry o f the
gas situation

B. C . D O D D S , M .D
Hcaidonct:: 005 Magnolia Avo.
Phone -101
:e: First National Bank Building
Phone 102

Furniture and Complete
House Furnishings
Stoves and Ranges
Our Stock is Com plete

Prices and Terms
Reasonable
34 years service to San

•

ii&gt;

i n l g i . n l s ' l i i i S i l i ' - ui

iln b ll

tills

un I d e a that bv making himself uncom­
fortable lii this world lie will have
tilings soft tn tin* next. Ills seat Is a
hoard dal led with spikes upon Which
lA* has wait enroll Itlm M f to siuj
a whit (i, "partly n* a peiiHiico’ pnVily to
rojfvlhct* the believers that a lady,man
Is In'cns,b!i: bi llie things that are
extremely painful to the average per­
son. lie must have convinced himself
a-, well, for even u sto(c would.balk
at smiling In micTi im uncomfortable

published In 1551,
■ "Afraid of ting*
i» King James ver'»v ctOflif M *
Jap* Uniform In fill*.

The striking uniformity of kixe
aiming llie Japanese Is Illustrated hy
llie fact Unit measurement* taken of
an Infantry regiment stmweij nu~ tb*
rintlcm* exceeding two Inche* la
height or twenty pounds In weight

•&lt; - &gt;lfi.a lipcnc.r, Niw v&amp;rk .acicty woman mfd chairman i f the Foad
for France fund, who la reclaim.rrn n
ibandrnnl CCQyerrJoM .f;rrt, at W H■t-^r lake, near Franklin, N. H.. and
'tseo In licughbty garb, •---— ------Hint vicinity.
Plenty ol Sea Monster*.
Tlnve are plenty of iimu^ters In tho
sen. Hie ghrtit devil fish, or maiitn,
which prohably grows to be over 20
find between the tips of Its greatwings. The model of an Individual 0f
18 feet or so Is on exhibition at Die
American museum. .The mnnla hns
hojdiHke processes dlnFcted forwnrd.one nf either &lt;lde of Its hrom) head,
and there nre well-nulhentlented Ipstnmn-s nf n devil fish "Hying" through

INTEREST
trusting friends at vnrinnee; some bocause they nre suspicious nml wish to
see sport nml watch from k '^ fe dl*- j
tanc* those Whom they have set Dy
the ear*.—Lucius Amineus Seneca.

to y o u

COME ONE AND ALL

�MARCH 9, 1920

raUUk*4 ntO kHwamm tyvpt
T | i l i « » M B«U4U «, 107 M u » U » A re n *.

SANFORD DAILY HERALD
to make one ancient and any kind
of show is apt to startle the old fel­
lows who are sunning themselves in
ttjc after glow of life's-sunset and
start them to ‘ ‘gumming over" ’tho
days wheirthey were young and giddy
(Wo are writing this Herb, so you
can use if for an alibi at home)

legal rights of mykclf-and other tax
paydra of the Cit,1 of Sanford, ‘with
rfferenctL-to tlia unlawful expendi­
ture of public funds In the payment
of any compensation to a de facto
officer.
' .
Awaiting your immediate reply,
la m ,
Yours very truly,
GK&lt;1 A. DECOTTES.
March 6, 1920.
Hon. G. A. Abbott, City .Manager,
Sanford, Fla.

It. J. HOLLY. Editor
W. M. HAYNES, tyjsIncM Manager
IIaim M a d * Known an Application

OUR C O M M U N IT Y S P IR IT
Occasionally, but not often, we

i.UMCUIPTlON PRICK IN ADVANCE
roK o n e t e a r
— -----------------r — i

Paragraph (a) of Section 33' of
Chapter 8361, Laws of Florida of
1909, provides that the City Mana­
ger shall he responsible for tho pro­
per administration of all alTairs of
the City, and to that end it shall be
his duty "to see that the laws and
ordinances of the City are enforced.
Therefore, I feel it incumbent upon
me as a citizen of the City of Sanford
(o call to your ollicial attention the
flagrant vjolatiorf’ of certain provi­
sions of the present City charter. As
the violations- of tho Charter provi­
sions, hereinafter set ‘forth, vitully
effect the legality
of
ity
of
the administrative officers of the
City of Sanford, I deem the matter
under discussion to he of suffii-ii-nt
importance to warrant me in npenlv
addressing this letter to you through
the columns of the !-'anford Herald.
The violations of 'the provisions
of the City Charter to which 1 refej
have heretofore been fully discussed
in notifies written by Mr. J, .1.
..i 1 ion ir-r ii\r-.". ftoth nf these
rhcles were published in the Hanford
Herald. As possibly you failed to

o n e w eek .

Katn-edu "wowd
Oil. it (fc* pMtwTBo
,ti,o/ Mmb 1. I « *

snarp practices. and bunco games.
There is much of that precious
M KSIIIF.lt o r TUB AIMOCIATftD Pit ESN
spirit in this town, but there is room
for more.
We have fully our share of good
will and tolerance, but we could cultW
vato more with honor to-ourselves
and profit to the community.
Life ,to each of us consists, mainly
of what we mako of it. We can cast
ter. Keep It up
the soft rays of sunshine and happi­
Orlandq Sentinel,
ness over our existence, or-we can
fill our lives with the shadows or
Tonight the Sanford Board of igroed and avarice (And insatiable
Trade will have the annual election longing for those things which we
of officer* and will geT toady for a may not possess.
.big campaign of advertising for the
This Is our home—the place where
season of 1920 and 21. Let all the most of our lives will he spent—
real boosters of Seminole County be where memory is always dear to us.
there and put new life into the or­
Shall we seek to cast out what
ganization. Sanford and Seminole there is of the .spirit of greed, and
county will never be anything with­ suspicion, and ungenerous rivalry
out a live Board of Trade.
umong men?
Shall we supplant it with one of
The people of this city who have kindness, of tolerance, and of gpod
the interest of the city at heart and will toward each o t h e r ? __]______
want to see the city prosper should .^.Shall wo .make honorable thrift
not let this idea of municipal owner­ the Watehwon) of our community?
ship get away from thcm.-Reganllnes
It js the. ideal cxsistence, and 'is
of what the Southern Utilities Co., possible to any community where
expects to do in the futuro Sanford the people have the will and the
should own her utilities. All of the courage to follow the pnth of honor
progri^slve cities of the stute own and gentleness whcrcever it may
their utility plants and Sanford lead.
should fall .into line. THE B A T H IN G ’ GILRK
The Mack Sennctt Bathing Beau­
lieu are scheduled for Sanford today
■Thursday, Mnrch 4th. We do not ex­
pect to receive the Sanford Herald of
date of Friday, March 5th, an nunc
will be published. The editor of that
paper is bald-headed and past fifty—
just the kind of man that a fioek of
femininity can -run cn\£y.— St; Au­
gustine Record.
Herb, old dear, those Hebes of
which you rave about were hefe and
wp did not ever^ sec them.. It wt*
ever go crazy about any of them we
will not need to leave Florida ‘ beach­
es or take Jazz Tonic over Mack’s
girls although from all accounts we
believe they are very, very nice girls
in every way. After seeing thousands
of the dear things in England, France
New York and other seaports we are
“ rnwther blase” don’ t you know,
dear fellow, ngd a few bathing girls
hprp and there mnke but little di­
fference in the pink Und green setting
of our senility that you talk uboutfn
describing our appeurance. And then
we are only forty tTiree and not past
fifty admitting tho "bald" charges to
be true. Of course it makes a differ­
ence in one’s life and habits accord­
ing to the town in which you live.
Living in the ‘.‘Ancient C ity" la apt

EVERYTHING

MOTOR

reA R S

PEOPLE’S FORUM
Mr. Robt. J. Holly,
Ediotr Sanford Herald,
City.
,
Dear Sirs:
I enclose you herewith copies of
open letters this day written by me
lo M r. G. C. Abbott City Manager,
and to the City Commissioners. As
the matters and things therein complained of are of u public nature, I
kindly request the publication of
these letters in your paper.
- Thanking you for fuvor requested
1 beg to remain,
Very truly yours,
GEO. A. DECOTTES.
. ’
March’ -6, 1920.
Hon. 11. R. Stevens,
Horn 8.‘ O. Chase,
Hon. C. E. Henry,
City Commissioners,
Sanford, , Fin.
Dear Sirs:
As an advocate of the law and a
believer in the orderly administration
of municipal affairs in strict accord­
ance with the provisions of exsisting
legislature enactment, providing for
the government, jurisdiction and
powers of the present municipality
of the City of Sanford, Florida; I am
addressing you- this- communication
and. as the matter I herewith present
for your consideration is of a public
nature, nnd covers a subject that

Complete Line of

I t is worth quite a
hit to be able to get
parts when you need
them, and not have to
w ait and pay addi­
tional expense fo r spe­
cial factory shipments.

GOOD
M EAL

M arket

Phone
for

quick *service

mimen

FRECKLES Positively, lit-moved
®7 Dr. Berry’a Freckle C jitment
Ynur Drunliie or by Msll «Se .
Send u t frej IlnoUet
*"-C.n. Berrr Cou.;~r»

mako this

com

therefore, I merely call to your offici­
al attention the article heretofore
published by me, a copy of which Is
enclosed, and refer you to my letter
of even date jo your City Manager.
Please be kind^ enough to officially
advisj* if it is'you r atttentjon to
provisions of tht* present City
charter regarding the eligibility of
officers and employees of the City
of Sanford.
Yoor City Attorney and ono of
your Commissioners, Mr. II. R.
Stevens, are both disqualified to
bold office under the present charter,
and as .iTTnatter of law are dcfacto
*i Hieera.
I also desire to atkvlse that you
can not^legnlly .pay any funds or
moneys of tht- City of Snnfgjrd.to
your dcfacto City. Attorney, as he
h not duly fiqialified and legally ac­
ting officer-cf tie'C ity. I also de ire
to further adVl.e you ugd put you'

on notice that ■** a tatp. ycr nnd
(iiixtm of Sanford* I intend to hold
you,’ end tacit of you. persons!!*’
and inrilvi’au.iy rt-poieible
fur
any ivr’d all* sums of money which
you heretofore or ut;-y hcreifter pay
to the pH rent &lt;Mfc&lt;-to City Attorney
of Sanford.
A prompt reply, to thin latter is
rotuestef so that 1 may be advised
ho v to proceed to fully protect the

A bank Is much mote than merely a Baft
place for keeping funds, for handling checks
^ o r i c o U e c t i ^ . t l f t u U s » . i i f c c , --

.

A bank should be regardejDas the inti
mate helper, advisor, and friend of the custom
er, ever ready to co-operate in every propel
way, to extend necessary accommodation as re­
quired, and to protect his interest in every way
that lies within it s power,

This Ls the kind of service that we en­
deavor to render; and we invite you to make
your connection with us with such service in
view,

F. I'. FORSTER, President

B. F. WHITNER, Cashier

S a n fo rd , F lo rid a

CM ULUOTA INN
XH U LU O TA, FLORIDA
OpenlDccember 7ih for (he Season.
MRS. CHAS. I). BRUM LEY, Mgr.

Note. The Richness r

of Ucselnnd Dairy Milk, and you
will understand why it is prefer­
red by mothers who demand tho
purest and be.&lt;t for their children.
53485353484853484848534823485353484853232301535353485323900053235302235301004853534823534823532348235348530253The Jtigh-cost-of-food need never
affect the children so long as
Roseland' Milk provides the riour2348530123485323532323535323482353232353482348015348232323534823482348482323232353485353485348234823232353535302534823232323485348
Second, that Mr. Gary D. I.undi*
ishrmmi ~fr~3des for
"Of the Taw firm of 'Landis,, Tm*1i Aamount it costs. We t
Hull of DeLnnd, Florida, the City
deliveries daily.
Attorney of Sanford, Fin, and of

YOU W A N T FOR

desire to

dale of the 28th of February, 1 an
biri-with enduring for yef.r 'V irm a(ion amt um.-.i^LTutiJ.i a vopy of the
article written by-mp.
It is needleui for me in this com­
munication to reiterate what I have
already find to say on this subject.
The facts are these:
First, Chat Ifoti. II. ft Stevens.

PAGE 3

Cor. Oak and 2d St
PHONE 3

SANFORD

Counsel for the Atlantic Coast Line
Railroad, lif* not a resident of the
City of Sanford, and a!ao at the lime
of hi* appointment u» City Attorney
had and now ha* in hi* possession
an annual pass over the.ilines t*f the
Atlantic Coast Line ilailraod.
No doubt you , are thoroughly
familiar with tire provisions of the
present 00y Charter, therefore it is
needless fo^me to point out to you
that no commissioner or other offi­
cer or employee of the City who is
the holder of a pass over any railmad line is eligible to hold office,
and thnt any officer or employee
hnving in his possession a pass or
enjoying any special privilege'more
favorable than gtnntcd the public
generally shall forthwith forfeit his.
office.
You are also aware of_thn fact
that Mr. Landis at the present
time of his appointment as City
Attorney was a resident of DeLnnd,
Florida, anil that he is not now and
never has been a resident of the
City of Sanford, and not being n
resident of the City of Sanford is
ineligible to hold office under the
p.rosent charter.
Further than this Mr. Landis is
the holder of a pass over the lines,
of the Atlantic Count Line Railroad
which fact creates, a forfeiture of
his office ns City Attorney, even
eligible beoause of his non-residence.
The persistent and continued viol
lotion of -the charter
‘provisidns
hereinbefore referred to has been a
matter of public discussion generally
since the new form of government
went into effect, and nothing what­
ever has been done by you as City
Manager to remedy the situation.
Therefore, it has become neces­
sary for «ne to handle this'mattqp
with you in this manner, with the
view of obtaining direct and postivo
official expression and information
as to whether you usihe City Man­
ager Intend to rt^ytedt and abide-be
tile legal provision* of the Charteunder which you are opere*-’ ’
j ..
performing your do*'.

'Phone 2011

Cotton Seed Meal
N IT R A T E
SODA
Potash Nitrate
m A S H ES

^ YOU CAN’T MAKE! &gt;
HAY WITHOUT SUNSHINE
Norcah you make muck money
without some effort to
rm ^lix Til YOUIt RESOURCES

u

sliiug credit with a

s t a r t in g ;

us. Bull
you

*. i mis end,
prompt reply, I am
Yqurs Truly,
GEO. A. DECOTTES.
What's the IdsaT
The eel baa two hearts—one la the
proper place and the other In.Its talk

may

make some real
Mie SUNSHINE by
reck account with
your credit that
able to master.

cult problems.

STRENGTH

H O M E IN S T IT U T IO N

�Little Happenings
Mention nf
Matters in Brief
PersonU Items
of Interest

MARCH 9. 1920

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

PAGE 4

in and A bou t

Mrs. E. B. Brown of Jacksonville
is in the city a few days the guest of
♦,er sister Mr* K. J. Holly and m o'
tiier Mrs. E. G. Tyner. She is cnroute to her homo.from Tumpa where
the removal t-f her tonsils and is
l sufficiently-recovered to make the
trip home. Mrs, Brown i* a former
resident of tha city where Mr.
. i Brown was at one time local manager
o( the V. .V. Co., and is flow the
P o t a t o manager of the sales- depart­
ment *of the same company.
For Klim Powdered Milk. Phone. 2412
W. W. Dressor.
108-6tp
Fred M. Basil of Kissimmee was
here yesterday talking about base
bull and also mentioning the fact
that he was a candidate for
position of State Senator for the
Nineteenth District. Fred says he
is the winning candidate in all
three counties.
Electrical Fixture*, House tfirclng, in fact alt klnda of electrical
work. Phbne 442. W. H» Treadwell,
Electrician.
83-tf.
Harry Brown deputy collector of
internal revenue is in the city this
week to help the people inukedp their
income taxes returns. lie will be qt
the court house day and night.

S u m m a r y nf the

Floating Small
Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Readers

The Democratic Executive Commiti • fop Seminole County will meetin the court house next Saturday
morning at ten o’clock to arrange
for the Democratic ’primary to ho
W sjlW ftafiM ?!
urt! ! £ '
queried to he present. The meeting

is called by Chairman C. IlfDIngise.

The E/ea O f The t fo r T T P r o m
The Novel of Harold Bell Wright
At. The Princeas Wednesday and
Thursday

Car of Bananas and Appier on'
track by express olllce. Muit. be
sold In two days. Price 75*renti u|»,
When Harold Boll .Wright began
per bunch. Come and get your work on "T h e Eyes of The World"
he was a resident of Itcdlands, Cal.,
bargains. *
114- tp.
Property Owncra Take Notice
The law provides that " I f taxes
ypon i eat estate shall not tie paid
before the First day of April of arfy
year, the Tax Collector shall adevertise and sell.”
This Is to notify, all concerned
that the requirements of law will
be compiled with and the Tax Books
will postlyely ,be closed on- April
First as provided by law and All
lands on which taxes have not been
paid will he advertised and execu­
tions issued for unpaid porsonal
property taxes
JNO. D. J IN K IN S
Tax Collector, Seminole County

The Sanford Board of Trade will
-meet-*opigbt-itt—tbw-cmirt~bmT-«—nt7.*30 to elect officers for the ensuing
year and to Inly* up many important
Mrs. It. A. Terheun, Editor
matters relating to the city tf San­
,
Phone 395
ford and the eourrty of Seminole.
Every boor ter in the county should
Personals
be present.
Mrs. S. Puleaton returned Jrom
Plenty of Plain View Bean Plan­
ter* for immediate delivery. Hill Miami with Mr. D. L. Thrasher’s
Implement and Supply Co. 113-Gtc. party on Sunday. She b» the guest
of Mrs. Thrasher.

* —
i_

On
of
necessitating
removal to Georgia
the Park Avenue Cafe and all fur­
niture and equipemnt is' offered for
sale. Good business in good location.
For particulars . see . Miss Carrie
Gray, Pari: Avenue U n ­

York, a charming and lovely girl
whose pleasing praonaKly hi? en­
deared her to a large circle of friends
in her home town and in Jacksonville
where she has spont the last year.
Mr. and
Walker will reside
in Sanford and will boat home after
March Ifilh with Mr. and Mrs.
Vance Douglass on Golden Lake.

Mrs. J , W. Btfrnes is in Sanford
again, to the delight of her many
friends. Mrs. llarnca usually spends
the winter here but this year has
been in Pensacola with Iter mother.

This story, which has had a sale of
nearly 2,000,000 copies (which meads
according to the publisher’s accepted
ratio of five readers to each sale,
about 10,000,000 readers), has been
put into elaborate^cinema form .by
the Clune Company and is to boserin lor'the first time'in Sanford at
the Princess theatre on Wednesday
and Thursday.
An interesting incident in connec­
tion with this fact was related re­
cently by Mr. Wright when tho work
of translating the book Into motion
pictures was under way. Much of
this work was done in Redlands, for
It is the common belief that tho
author put into tho story people
whose prototypes he obserwi-d while
pastor of a. church there.
Tho nulTTbr’s indictment of "so­
ciety" did not refer speifically to
Redlands, but applied equally well to
any other community where wrong­
ful tendencies’are in evidence every
— and that means prncticnlly every
good-sized American community now
ndnys.
So it seems Fnirlnnds, the scene of
many of the incidents of the story,.Is'
not n thinly dixguiesd pseudonym for
Redlands, but only happens to be the
name that sprang into the mind- of
Mr. Wright for the purpose of his
tale of liction.

JOHN H. S M A L L

Mrs. Austin Williams and daugh­
ter Miss Mnifrte Kate are here from
Tampa visiting Mrs. Voile William*
Just received n complete line of and Mrs Arthur Johnson
Children's Ready to Wear Hats, in
Milan ( ctr, Mrs. . Grarc Williams.
114-Gtr..

W ill meet tonight. I t is so easy for a man or men to
stand on the street comers and say how a thing should
be done, but w hat counts most is the man or men that
come out and help to do it. W e are members of the
Board o f Trade and we are going to help make Sanford
a better. Sanford all the time. .. A re you? A t the same
time, don’ t you w ant to be a

o f that large body o f men that have found the real
place to purchase their clothes? Y ou do, don’ t you?
I f we tell you that we buy only the best, and therefore
have only the best to S E L L , you will give us an oppor­
tunity to'p rove it won’ t you? N o t one dollar o f any
man’s money do we want that is not a dollar honestly
earned.

During these days of high prices patronize th e men that deserce your confidence,
• earn that confidence of yours. Call around and lets
talk it orer.

THE STORE THAT IS DIFFERENT

Dwarf* In History.

Dwarf*.' until very receiil days, have
been liTfrtily regarded and much sought
after. In far nwny days kings have
fought over dwnrfs. and ii court thnt
possessed one was considered very for;
lunate and altogether stylish. Wenllhy
folk, even, competed with inonarcbs In
the purclinse of dwarfs us n sort of
hall-mark of aristocracy. A fiice of
tiny people In Equatorial Africa, (he
Akkas. were much prized by the early
Pharaohs. The Romans tried to sup­
ply the demand by artificial dwnrffng.
and had sopumte words (o distinguish
the natural from the unnatural dwnrf.
Why the Ed. Fled.
'Colonel Blister celebrates hla all
rer wedding tomorrow, having been
harried since October 1, 18JR
nionton HulURln.

Wanted—T o buy that old furni­
For Sale— House* and four lots. A
bargain. Box. 239.
113-Gtp ture. Turn it Into cash. Dixie Fur­
niture Co., 321 Sanford ave. 113-6tp
.waitrejs Experienced
Wanted
Bell Cafe 79-tf
For Sale— Player piano in perfect
condition, house hold- gcods and
For Site—Whito Leghorn Baby furniture. Also Smith typewriter
Chicks, 20 cent*. 18.00 per 100. and bicycle. GOD Palmetto Ave.
l’ ,;gs for hatching $1,25 for 15.
113-tM
SI0.00 per 100 delivered. II. Robert*',
Route A Box 206.
*112-3tp.
wanted— White lady . for house­
keeper and cook for mill hands at
Forrest City. Write Mrs. F. R.
Pounds, Maitland, R. F. D. or
telephone 130, city.
112-Gte.

For Sale—Two otory 8 room hou«
For Sale— Wood. Cheap.
See and garage. Clear title. Sanford
,F. Whitncr Jr. or Phone 242. Heights. Apply No. 402, Sanford
avenue--------------- ------- —-UH-t/e—.

For Sal^—Stable Manure I
ioti/ Buffkin &amp; Girvin. Bishop
Jacksonville, Fla.
110-

Wanted — Young girl to *onsw&lt;r
telephone-calls. 8:30' to 3:30P. M.
Call 30G Elm nvenup,

CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING

------F O R -----EVERYTHING IN

Groceries

NICE FAT
MACKEREL

Pipe Organ Club
The decrease .in the number of
"flu" cases lias been the signal for
resuming activities in iiu&gt; various
church organizations and meetings
at, the \VOman’s Club, the Pipe
Organ Club having been among tho
first to call Its members together
again.,
Monday afternoon, the meeting
of this busy bee hive was held with
Mrs. Schelle Mnines, hostess and a
large attendance. Mucli beautiful
fa’ncy work was brought in, the first
installment for the apnuul Christmas
bazar for these energetic young peo­
ple are fancying and begin catly in
(be year to gather an assortment of
hand work for thc^jinnuai event, in­
cidentally however, they will fill
orders at any time. Tickets for the
Edward Brigham concert for Thurs­
day night were distributed tho ad­
vance sale already indicating a full

Wanted — Night Clerk, man middle
nge. references. Loc
Seminole Hotel, S
Mg'r.

Representative John H. Sm all of
North Carolina, who hae been elected
president of the National Rivera and
Harbors congress, succeeding Senator
). E. Ranadell, resigned.

One Reason for Gojfr
considerable mununl of golf is
played principally for the reason thnt
some women think their hushntxls
look well In knlekerhnrkrm.
A

house.

At the conclusion of bukint**, the
hostess served naiad and sandwiches
with hot coffee.
Several new Nmembers were en­
rolled and there were also a few guest
Thtwc aresent were Mesdaim*: MacAlti“i F o r r e s t Gntchel, Toiforti, J.
G. Hurley,. Paul Booth, Kenneth
Robbins, Geo. Ilynian. E.T. Taylor.
. Leslie Bryan, A. M. Phillip#, Porter
Pitta, Thoa. Citdten, Will Bray and
AFTER OUR PAIN TIN G
'.
Misses Jeanette Laing, Netty*
Maine* and May. Field. your auln will look spick and span

Building .Material

Rooting of Mi Descriptions
Llntc, Cement, Plastor
Uriel;, Ilrnln Tile ami
Sewer Pipe.
::
::

Hill Lumber

For Sklo -One Ford Touring Car,
practically .new; One Baby Grand
Chevrolet 1U20 .model in perfect
mechanical order also
complete
camping outfit im hiding lent rots
&lt;o&lt; b rig utensils etc. Cun be seen at
Hotel Lincoln. Sanford after * G
p. mJ
114-fit p.
Tractor plowing and all kinds of
Tractor work. Call Phono 184.,

FO U ND On first St. west‘ of
Sunford $-1*137.50 Fronting north
on brick highway just oust of the
artesian Spring half mile west of
Monro? road. 35Jd acres of Ideal
heme site arid irrigable farm land.
Worth $200 pt r acre offered for
$75 per acre cash Direct from
ownes. Enquire at PhotfB 352 re­
lating abstract.and deed. 94-tf.
For Rent—One large well fur­
nished room. 7J7 Park Ave. lf)9-Gt

here

having- lived from ealrieSt childiiood
to young ’ manhood in thl.i city, lie
U a young man &lt;f sterling character
nnd business ability and is a Valued
employee of the J, U, Lawson (Motor
Company. As First Sargeunt hi the
U. S. Motor Corp*. he •served. two
yean in the recent war, Eighteen
months of the time, serving in France
- Mr. Walker h the son of Mrs
C. L. Goodhue of this city and num-

OUR

PROCESS

Washing and Polishing Automobiles
Makes Them Look Like New

Experienc'd workman, high grade
Polish. Prices very reasonable.
See us for quick action.

SANFORI) HEIGHTS,

Auto Feinting and Trimming

*

S a n fo r d H e ig h t s

It Has Happened to Others
Aqd May Happen to You
Ip Spite o f Everything You M a y Happen to Do

For Sale— Extra Fine White
Wyandotte* eggs. Two dollars per
IjL.. W* II. Ballard. . Altamonte

Be Prepared

•

When

For Kale—At Sanford, b y Western
Union Co., twenty live n&gt; thirty
just like new. Wo give your ear undersize heart cypreaa telegraph
Wedding Announcement
thut enamel.\ factory finish fo poles 20 nnd 23 feet long. Suitable
‘ •Mr;-J. Hnrhlk announces the much dfsiifd b y i motorists. I t is for fence posts five or six fence posts
110-Gtc'
marriage if Ida daughter, Edna easier to wash-and rl«*an when it can he made of each pole.
Carolina ty&gt; Stanley C. Walker, has-been p&amp;intotf and finished by
Monday, March the eighth, nineteen, us.' Ask us for an estimate on . For Sale—Kiddie-Koop, ,Jn fair
condition-_j.10.00 cash. Can ho aeon
hundred and twenty, ut tho Snyder your car,
at 214 Eltn ave.
Memorial Methodist parsopago, Rev.
Keene officiating.
The announcement of Mr. Walker’s
marriage will lie received with much
among
Cord

G E T OUR E S T I M A T E S

Wanted—One cow pony. for.city
'yrid. -Will exchange (or other
stock. G. A. Abbott, City Mnn&amp;grer,

It DQes Happen

■ -

■0 .

,

with ample

Fire Insurance
So that-you may not b. :!.j
loser, financial}'

S E E US FOR
F IR E IN S U R A N C E

•

^

�MARCH 9. 1920

SANFORD: DAILY' HERALD

WHERE OUR BRAVE BOYS SLEEP IN BELLEAU WOOD

PAGE 5

where shells o f various calibers are
piled In cords like firewood, but tinfenced. and exposed to the weather.
.The French military authorities are
clearing up these places ns rapidly an
possible, hut on account of the lack
of men the work goes slowly.
The shells ' hurled In the soil are
n source «f» danger ns soon us culti­
vation begins.
It fa seriously proposed tit abandon
ninny of iho villages In the devas­
tated aone uf..Frame, compensate the
uwnrn o f the land, and turn tnrgu*
arena Into forest, "tn seventy-live or
n hundred years tlielnveatment would
have reimbursed the state for Its out­
lay, and by Unit time. In ruse It should
bo deemed best t o 1use the renewed
soli for agriculture, the explosives
hidden underneath would become
harmless.

THE AL. G. FIELDS MINSTRELS
Am erica’s O ldest and Best M instrel Organization
An Attraction That Has Become an Institution
BIGGER AND BETTER TH A N EVER
A Magnificent First Part

THE GARDEN OF MIRTH
Short Order Opera While Yon
; W alt

Derby Day at Churchill Downs

MISS JU LIA DAVIS

A Hauling Dancing Divcrtisemcnt

THE BIG BURLESQUE

T h e F&gt;ogs W edding

Memorable Minstrel
Merrymakers

One Touch o f Nature

Quickly Covers Un Relics ,of
Man’ s Destructiveness.

Roman*' Victory nt Gcrry-au One
Mere Squabble Compared With Ter.
rible Conflict Waged .There'^Durlng
Late War—Wrecks of Tanks on
Slope Where Roman Army Fought—
French Clearing Up BattlSfielda.
Berry-nti-Bne Is an the north bnnk
of the Alsne, where the ancient road
from Reims to I.non crosses. Ilefare
the war It'was a prosperous vllfage.
On the other lido of the AI sue was a
large sugar factory, now 'a mass of
tol-ii-d uiijl rusting Iron, stones and
mortar, lu the town, except where
the highway lias been cleared foF
travel, the streets are obliterated,
and onlj- projections (if corner walls
here and there suggest tluiT~rtTtt&gt;~wii?r
once st place of habitatIqji, writes
Frauds \V. KelSey, director o f Uni­
versity' of Michigan scientific expeillilon, In New York Times.
It I* strange how InpercoptUdy, yet
how rapidly. In this climate the heal­
ing powers of nature seek to cover
up frnni sight the relics of man’s
destructiveness., lu Helms, luxurious
Ivy musks the crumbling wulls of
courts heliyfij^ig to wrecked und tensinless Imnww^nnd here-at Herry-lmHac weeds und grass have already
thrown a mantle over the ruins.

PRICES: 75c $1.00 $1.50 Plus Tax
Doors Open 7:15
Curtain 8:15

these regions. Even then them w« b
(i bridge across the Alsne, apparently
at nr near the place wliere thu bridge
la today.
Belgian hosts opposing
tliiM Invasion uNsemhled and went ap­
proaching from the north.
It was Caesar's practice to fortify
a camp In a position -favorable for
htm.-elf, und try then to Induce tho
enemy to attack him on Ills own
ground. Not fur below Iterry-ntl-Rnc
tin* Atmie receives from the northeast
n small .tributary, the Mlplte brook.

Seats on Sale Tuesday* ESTES PH ARM ACY

French tanks, one o f earlier, tlm oth­
er of later pattern. Tho letter had
not reached the tlrst Herman tree h
when-It was hit by u shell wit Ml blew,
the motor entirely out of the natchlife.
..tuf-^^oiton.t dry tit sttttttriers 41—tgands Just. as .It_u iu -when -alum
dotted.
/
Vt In-11 we i-nmu hack the s-cmd day
a group of (Sermau prisoners was
searching the halllcfichbi 'fo r scat­
tered graves, that Die bod uni might
be gathered In a cemetery. - Such
ipteels lire not Idle; for lit casually
crossing the field to examine the near­
er tank one could see, umoitg’ lbe
\vi wJs on the edge ef a shell hole,
part of a human spine and thigh hone;
possibly tin* victim had been liurLel
im tie plunged, fol'ward and .the earth,
nashlug 'down the-Ride of the shell
hole had exposed a pari of the skcli*^
ton. We ditl not have the heart even
to report the find.
All day long, when In this region,
■front different directions, we could
hear explosions, as skilled men. clear­
ing the r.oneJtf comlmi. hle\v_up con­
cealed mines that hud not been
touched off. and exploded shells la
pits. Kuril, at any rate, was the proc­
ess described to us; wtr did not
venture to pass near enough to ob­
tain exact luformuiUui.
Plies of Shells. ■
The amount of utiexplodcd shells in
tlid region is alinnsf Incredible, Small
collections of shells are not iilteom
nion; ami not far from 1.11011. hetoc.-.
thy highway and th" railway runuliig
parallel a few hundred feet away
there Is a large ammunition dunu

CHULUOTA INN
On (he Okeechobee Branch of the Florida Ernst Coast
Railroad

Special Attention Given to Automobile Parties
MRS. C. n. BROMLEY, Manager.

CHUI.UOTA, FLORIDA

fitw

OW«#**rn Ntw»tx»&amp;»r Union

Miss Julik'Davis, the pretty and tab
errted daughter of tha American am­
bassador to Great Britain,‘ In a pop­
ular member of London's younger so

clal set.

.

'll., :!CI||| Uiiillnil f .10 with r -cell
tel i- ■•■'_!* i!j!e. in lni»l*
U-- '
goe-i #1r•.’ ll 1*1 tup'll ug Ills
-! i i-i t, i-'u'w-. to rl-.li! .tiiif left uiiconutmidy
lie dues nut iti*e*l in In- easy
in in*
mi'iir«sL lie can he firm
In lilt* convict Inns mid Immovable
froln tils principles, anti yet be eon as­
sert himself lu tluit nulei, sincere way
which wins the respect even of his op­
ponents."— Frqm The Northwestern
Itux.xer, piihllslied by Northwestorn
Electric Equipment company, Bl Paul.
Minn.

C auro Fires.

Itut- ate foml of entlng tho Immlattng material t-i electric wires, and are
fe poti“lid(* far utnny of the fires 11arrlltotl m "defective Insulation." They
Itsn gnaw holes lu lentl water pipes.

Get. the Dally Walk Habit
**A dully walk Is 111Unholy superior
In Its'henlth-glvlng effects to the dally
aperient and Is also more beneficial
than working for some time nt high
tension or than even taking 0 long
rest Working In spurts and playing
or resting In spurts, as the American
usually does, ts not glxxl prpctlce.
Business men nod women should ra­
tion their outdoor exercise,- mid the
exercise could take tho form of walk*
tng."— Exchange.

Use of Plant roods.
When the pots In which are homo
plants heroines full o f roots and tho
soil worn put, or exhausted, u litil«y
fertIMr.cr can he.given them. —The soil
should he midst, not dry or very wet,
when fertiliser I*.applied. There- ar«
good plant foods wild at large seed
stores, of which sutllclcnt can bo -fond
for a small price to do for a gtfod
Hired collection of plants for tho
whole winter. Or a fertiliser can be
Hindu by dissolving half an ounce of
nitrate-itf soda In a gallon of water.
About half a ten cupful of this ferll*.
fixer every two .weeks for n plant In a
six-inch 1w»t will be sulllcR-ht. lli-gonibs' and colons must not be given too
much fertiliser. Geraniums will bear
« larger quantity,
. .

Caesar There In 57 D. C,
From ancient times this Junction of
river and highroad has been strategi­
cally Important., Such Julias Oaesur
found it when In 57 II. C. be Ted a
Roman uruiy for the Arab-time Into

A G oodSuit isNot Expensive

SUGGESTIONS
-FO Tt S P R I N G

Our “ Silverman &amp; H offm an’s” line is here. T h ey are one of the best' suit
hiakers in N ew York. Th e best quality o f French Serge and Tricotine with
Pussywillow Fancy Linings, fpney and plain tailored styles. * Th e styled we have
in stock retail in other cities for $100.00 and- $125.00, Our prices are

BEANS
L IM A B E A N S
BEETS
EGG P L A N T
SQ U A SH
. TOM ATOES
CUCUMBERS
SW E ET CORN
PEPPERS
W o' Hr vo The .SEED— FRES11

C H A S E &amp; CO.
SANFORI). FLA

cian

great ImportnUfi* to Caeonr.
Yet
vi 11 it a mild uffulr It ocelli* when rolltnislcd with tin* hn-stfis and method*
employed In the war ' which lately
cldved
For reu'ons nttnlognn* to thn*c
wlilrit made this part of the AI mw
a scone of battle In ('iiesarVthtie, In
(bo nutUimi of llll-i, otul lu life last
tVVU years of the war, Hu- Struggle*
tool, place at Iterrynii-Bne. In Ha
angle formed by the Mo-tie und Hhe
Alone, ami oa N lfitii^ so frequently
’•.•oiijtonctt &gt;p 'H«* d'stc-t--'-e*.

These dresses are made o f Belding’s T a ffe ta — some plain and
ruffles, short arid long sleeves.
Y ou will find these numbers
very stylish and dresses that will wear. Tan, naVy, gray and
b la c k K - a t ts iz e s .

*

,

{rtlTl Hkj f* uTreclly‘t**(\t # I #&gt;*

lu-litti*, cm tint other 1 ■ of Um
Alsne. and l*,nf a'.whitish chalk formiitiou.-easily luirked.' It wRs mined
oiid count ennlued ufitll the whole *urime Uli’HlilU a complex of yawning
mine ernters. One of those, near the

Ground
GLASSES ADJUSTED
and REPAIRED

L. A. BRAND
*

Optometrist .Optician
•

v"

2?I E. First Street..
Opposite I’oxtolUcc

.

Itclow Befrjr-nu-Ihio, near the begin­
ning of October. In 10H, French and
British troops constructed pontoon
bridges In the file* of artillery fire
accurately directed from tho high
ground on the north side of tho A lane,
and qga|n, ns was reported by dis­
patches .at the time, the Alsne was
AiipkevUyrith- corpses. Near (M AIkiio
In Octotter.* 1011*. 12 months after the
Herman* withdraw from this' region,
tn m u t
f e w temiKirary ‘ w o o d e n

The March
Victrola Records

AfiKNTH fa n TIIK

White Sewing
Machine

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="13">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10754">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1920</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11966">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 09, 1920</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11967">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11968">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 09, 1920.  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="11969">
                <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="11970">
                <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;, March 09, 1920; &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="11971">
                <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="11972">
                <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="11973">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11974">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1213" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1085">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/80123db09579477bd39c7509a4fe661a.pdf</src>
        <authentication>8c3f6fc880ef3819b88d039b2748a0fb</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11985">
                    <text>IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
VOLUME 1

SANFORD, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, MAUCH 10, 1020

Cardinal Telia Men 'Flemlnla m'
^ PlgjtcrJMcnacc
Doaton, March 9.— Growing weak;
ncaa on the part of the men of the
country is developing a sinister fem­
inism, Cardinal O'Connell told a gath­
ering of men at tho Cathedral of the
Holy Cross last night. Man is the
head of the house, he said, nnd should
assert his proper authority in tho
ATTORNEY G E N ER AL QUOTES home. T o do this, the cardinal asserts
STATES
R IG H TS
FOR prevents a false feminlnism, which,
•RHODE ISLAND
unless curbed, will have distraous re­
Washington March 9.— Rhode sults for humanity'.
“ The women are becoming mascu­
Island's legal attack on the*prohibi' Uon amendment to the Federal con1 line, if you please, and the men arc
dilution was argu etLin -, Buprcmc becoming effeminate. This is disor­
court today, assailed by the com ­ ganization.
plainant as revolutionary and an f a t h e r O'Connell said a father
invasion^ states’ rights and defend­ could look on and see his children, es­
ed by the government ns legitimate pecially the girls, running rampant
addition to the nation's basic law without any regard for propriety.
over which the courtHield no juris­ Headship of the family, he said,
meant that the father should look af-.
diction.
‘
*
. ' .
ter
the morals of whole family. The
Throngs attended 'the. session of
-the. court to hear the arguments on evil of extravagant expenditure,
one &lt;&gt;f the burning questions of the whicji he said would result in a fi­
day.••Many persons wniteif outside nancial reaction in America to some
the floors throughout the morning degree similar to that which hns caus­
ed Europe’s virtunl bankruptcy, was
to obtain admittance.
criticised. The cardianl ulso argued
Herbert A. Rice, nttorney-genrcal
against what was called the contin­
of Rhode Island, opened for the op­
ual clamor for more pay by working­
position, arid William L. Frierson,
men, nnd advised that they be on
juiutant attorney-general &lt;-f the
guard* against a spirit working under­
the United States,'replied for
she handed for perpetual strikes with the
government. Other arguments will he purpose of destrouing organize tion
heard Iomury^ ns well as appeals snd industry.
.
.
from Kentucky and Massachusetts
involving the same question.
Mr Rice charged there was in
progress a ''constitutional revolution
through amendments.”
.»
"I '«•«• no more danger in the doc­
trine urged by the government than
any doctrine urged by the demagogue
during the world war,*’ he said. The
rights assured the people under the
tenth commandment were never in­
tended to be taken-away."

British Business Houses Have
•
Their Own Museums.
Interesting Relics and 8amples That
'Have In Soipe Cases Been Pre­
served for More Than
r
a Century
.

Mr. Rice urged that the prohibi­
tion amendment resulted front n mis­
conception- of the law by congress and
curiosities preserved by various
and that the Federal government had .
business bouses In Brllalu und else­
where would make a museum of great
size ami unparalleled Interest, observes
Loudon Au*wersv
A *
The Worcester china works, for In­
stance, possess samples of all the va°f the prohibition amendment are i Iouh kinds of cblim wldcli tlu-y have
dearly outside the purview of the .manufactured for nearly 150 years
past. Including examples of dinner
conritution
services made for .many celebrities,
such ns I-ord Nelson nnd George IV.
' Another Worcester firm preserves
with tender cure u little fnded slip of
yellowish paper. On It Is written the
recipe, now' some two centuries old,
wldcli was purchased by a former
lu-ad of flic firm from a butler, and
has-been tlie means of creating a large
business and several large fortunes.
More than one Unit, cherishes sAme
similar recipe. The Sprulerf, "who sup­
ply Invender water to half the royal
families In the world: the Nanis, who
hold the original recipe for niArasohlno. Both these carefully preserve the
writings which founded their fortunes.
The famous firm of Klirffield cutlers.
Joseph Rodgers A Sons, show visitors
a knife with 1,000 blade*. - Ten fresh
hl/idcs nro added to' It every tenth
year.' A second cnrloslty of which the
Arm Is proud consists of three pairs
of scissors so minute that nil three can
Ite covered by An ordlhnry lady's thim­
ble. Another Sheffield tlnil possesses
u knife which, though only nit Inch In
length when closed, hns seventy
blades, nil of different shapes.
A London Arm o f potted moqt tnnnufocturCrf possesses an Interesting
collection of the covers o f the lurge
china pots In which potted meat used
to bo sold some forty years ngo. These
are daintily printed In color frolu dc-'
signs by some o f the host known Dutch
and English nrtlsts of the time. Each
Is framed, and probably no other house
can show a prettier or quainter collec-

A Concept of Duty.
There are’ at the presont day but
oo many who Imagine they have per
rectly .done their duty. be&lt;»ose they
V * kind toward their friends, affeej'onate to tholr fhmllle*... Inoffensive
«°*ard the rest of the world.— M a»

j

The Herald comes out today with all Wire
Service and all 'News Service Cut Out because
the Southern Utilities Co., has failed to furnish
any current all day. The lights were also off
the-greater part of the night. They claim they
are out of fuel at the plant which is one of the
excuses they have given all winter. There is no
other plant in the state that has been tied* up
this winter because they could not get fqel but
the Southern Utilities Co., is allowed to put it
over on the people of Sanford because the City
Commissioners have not made them toe the
mark. The consumers will receive the bills at
the end of the month that will be larger than if
the current had been furnished every day in the
month. The people of Sanford expect the* City
Commissioners to give them relief by enjoining
the Southern Utilities Co., from collecting for
something that they have not furnished. The
Commissioners meet tonight and the citizens
shoqid demand that they get a square deal and
the City Attorney should see that they do.

Photo of German Train That
Runs on Air

"Tiiyrt'-l
.An invention inspired by the reported shortage of coal in Oermany la
that of Otto 8telnitx, a Berlin engineer, who hae designed a railroad locomo­
tive with an air propeller driven by two aerial 260-horse power engines. It
is said to be able to travel 139 kilometers an hour and to consume but 500
grams of benzine per kilometer. The Inventor Is shown with one hand on
the propeller.
•
V

Harold Bell Wright's Great Novel
* “ Krcs O f The W orld" Shown At
The Prlnret-s Today And
Thursday

ed with the active personal nHsfitunce of the author, who not only
amplified the story for the screen
and prepered t ie working teennrio,
hut also took part in the day-hy-day
work of interpreting hia characters
for the production. A motion pic­
ture view. o&lt;l Harold Bell Wright at
his literary workshop on his great1
ranch at Oracle, Aritona, are shown
preceding the filmed story.
, •

To the thousands of bool; readers
who know the tense dramatir inter­
est and deep emotional thrill'
Harold Beil Wright’s famous story of
love and/adventure, "T h e Eyes of
the. World
It will be welcome news
that a. magnificent motion picture
Holds Picture Nall Solid. '
estlug relics. One Liverpool firm pos­ production of the romance in nine
When n wall Is so soft that It will
sesses a huge bone taken from n whale reels will be seen at the Princess
which a good many years ago deliber­ theatre on to-morrow ancJ Thursday not hold n picture nail, mix a little
plaster of purls in a fi-ucup; enlarge
ately charged a ship of theirs In the
The fight on the cliff in "T h e Eyes
north Atlantic. The steamer was bad­ of the W orld" between King nnd the hole to a fair size und Insen tho
piaster—and. n minute after, the nnfl
ly (Jamaged hut the whale was killed.
Rutlidge, which is the major, climax —nnd let It dry. The nnjl will be per­
A good many firms preserve historic of the story, is raid to be one of the
fectly secure nf »e- •» bus dried
machinery of one kind or another. most thrilling things ever shown in
Richard Arkwright's own spinning
Th# Motive.
a theatre. A musical score had been
All who have meant good work-with
prepared for "T h e Eyes of the
their whole hearts have done good
World" which ia cued to tho second
work. , . . Every heart that baa boat
with evety mood of the -unfolding
strong and cheerful has left a hope­
tele, and is aaid«to be a symphonic ful Impulse behind It In the world,
drama in itself. .
end bettered the tradition o f mankind.
‘ 'The Eyes of the W orld" was fl’ m­ —Robert. Louie Kievcn-on.

Lumber lacks to Tramp
Over John Brown’s Grave,
. Troy, N. Y.—The grate o f
John Brown, the abolitionist, at
North Elba, lo the Adlrosdacks,
Is Included In the sale o f 1,200
acres of Umber land In Essex
county near Lake Placid, which
has jpst been bought by James
Hurley, Lake Placid, for WO,000. Lumbering operations will
he carried on. When Brown was
executed In 1850 hts body was
taken to North Elba, where he
tind founded a refuge for fugltire slave*.
Severn! years ago
a monument was placed aver
the grove.

COAL M IN ED BEYOND NORMAL
Bituminous
Pits In Pennsylvania
Reach High Mark In Month
f f January.
riillndt'lphin, I’n.—Production of an­
thracite coal In Pemiaylvimln ‘ li\ 1910
wns the lowest In seven years. There
wore mined 8fl,200,(X&gt;0 tons, com­
pared with UH.82fl.000 tons In 1018.
Bituminous coni production reached
die lowest level since 1015, with 458.otn.flflo inns, nearly 21,000,000 tons
less than Ipst year.
&gt;.
The soft coal mines hi the first week
of January, reached. nortnnl for the
ttrsi time since the miners returned Ir
work after the strike agreement. Pro­
duel loo wns 10? per cent of normal.

$2,465 HAS B E E N ' R A IS E D AS
A
STA R TE R
AND
M UCH
M O R E TO PO I.LO W
N ever before in the history of
Sanford has there beqn displayed so
much enthusiasm over Base Ball pro­
spects as have been displayed during
the last few weeks. Men who want
to ree Sanford represented in every
thing that is of nny improtapee to
the Stnte urc all anxious to see that
Sanford is ngain represented' this
year with a Imll team thnt will be a

n\ore for advertising Sanford than
anything that hus ♦been done in
years gone by. Every njan who know;
base bull through out the entire
State talked of and knew of Sanford
The (Money that was spent was spent,
well, because the advertising alone
was worth twice the money.
We start this season off with every
orfe in the Statu watching SanfordThey have now learned what a ball
tn yn Sanford Is and they are ex­
pecting big things from. us. We wil
not disappoint them either, for we
shall use all our elTorts in placing
a hall team in The Florida Stale
l-eogue ngniri tlint is bound to be a
winner.
Other

towns in

the

league

nre

Hant’’ Makes Announcement, watching Sanford and they exp&lt;-t to
use their efforts to head off Sanford
but Can’t 3e Located.

'they too, know that Sanford goes
int&lt; things lo win nnd the prepara­
Providence (Rhode Island) Citizens tions nejng made now by these
other clulis show* thnt they are all
Have a Real Sensation In "Mani­
out
with fire In their eyes. St. Peters
festations" Which Have Bafburg
and Daytonn are both hall
.
fled Elucidation.
towns from uwny hack and Sanford
cannot expert to come out on top
unless the Snnfnrd men push. This
to realized bv our.men here and they
are pu-birg.

line wns waiting out through tho
rd Into the street, tho police took
hi. Tenants- said they would move
they could only find a place lo move
, nnd both Up’nnd down the street
fellers said If someone did not do
nnuicIhlng pretty soon they would
think of-moving.
It nil came about through a
^olce" which, the neighbors
nunten from the cellnr. A w
quntlng one o f the Kind Stti
tenant went Into tho cellar i
startled by the voice saying
me something' to eat. I'm starving."
The tenant upset his coal scuttle,
hut was not nervous about it. He did
not want to worry the other tenants;
so lie said nothing until someono else,
entering the cellar, heard distinctly:
"Take- mo* out _o* here." .
There was a consultation; tenants
laughed when they looked at each oth­
er, hut they listened when they passed
the cellnr stale*. A neighboring marketmatr was called Into consultation.
He went downstairs "to bo shown”
and with amazing promptness an eerie
voice from behind the confines of the
cellar announced; " I know yon; you’re
the butcher."
Comparison of notes, led lo the oilservntlons that the volco wns heard
most frequently nt 12 noon and at 0
a. m. Nolacs In tho night and the re­
port that a gas range Jaxxed across
tho kitchen floor and hack have nil
been orally chronicled to prove that
there Is something the nia({f*r.
Patrolman McLnughKn, the mitn on
the heat, was called In,
lie heard

It takes money to put anything
over arid this year it will take more
money than last year. And when you
are tailed on tei rome up with a lit­
tle change go clear to the bottom oj
your pockets before llerlding upon the
amount. Keep in mind the fact that
this is not money thrown awry be­
cause asideyfrom the ndygr(ising it
gives Sanford^ what is a town where
it is all work and no play. And it is
bound to keep people at home this
summer nnd give them something to
do while they nre here. There will
lie many dollars spent* in Sunford
this slimmer thnt would not be spent
without the Base Ball tenm being
here.
.
i
The ton rriltcc that ir soliciting
funds have not ns yet hod the op­
portunity to canvass much but up to
the time of jgoing to j&lt;tcM tl/c- cilowing have come across veluntar
Peoples Bank . . .
.
j
Seminole Ctfunty Bank -- G. W . Spencer
. . . .
Geo. A. DcCOttca - - - Forrest L a k e ...................
Perkins and Britt
. . .
L. P. McCuUer . . . .
Bower and Roumillat - May and Walthall . . .
Hill Hardware Co.
. . .
0. P. H e r n d o n ....................
J. D. Davison . . . . .
Chat. E. Henry - - - .
Sanford Shoe and CIo. Co.
Roy F. Symes - - - - . . .
Sanford Truck Growers Frtink M e U c h ....................
F. F. Dutton - - - - ,
A, P.' Connelly - - - . .*
Rail Hardware Co. . . .
Subscriptions amounting to
less than flOO each
TOTAL
About the Swlngknlfa.
A swlngknlfe la a wooden sword, 18
to 24 Inches long and 8 lo 10 Inches
broad, used to scrape the woody por­
tion from flax, a handful of which
hangs over u groove in the standing
board known a *-Jtlie s'wlngstock. r.
Bwlngknlves are still used In the man­
ufacture of fiax In imrta o f the Old
World Imf modern iniichlnery has
preiu_ c-:Vj-jjiI1&gt; di«|&gt;lut-ed -them.------ —

�s a n Fo r d d u l y : h e r a l d

PROGRAM
Brigham, Bapiist Temple
.. Thursday NteM
.... ....
SONGS
M oor - - - Old
Grove - - - M ia
mi to the Sun God

Highland Melody
Welsh Folk Song
Tyranean Melody
- Indian Melody

RECITATIONS
John G. Whittier
-* Alfred Noyes

Abraham .Davenport
The Highwayman

r e c it a t io n s w it h m u s ic
Laugh and the World Laughs
'
With Y ou ........................ Wilcox-1
Poem by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Music by D ’Auveigne Barnard
The Canoe
1 Poems Anonymous
The Usual W a y )
■ - - - Phyllis
Christ’s Smile
- - Edward I
The House by the Side of the
..Road . - Sam W all
Makin’ Believe - - Joseph C.
The E lf and the Dormouse - Oliver
Her W ay
- - - - Samuel Mintui
B ill M a s o n ’s B r id u - — —

The following warranta were or­
dered paid at the lait meeting p i the J26.00; W C. Williamson. $66.00;
Goard of County Commissioners: A. Vaughn, $100.00; Jno. D. Jinkir&gt;s,
$.WU4;. E~ A.. Duuglaaa. (34.07; S o v*‘
Road Bond- Pund
Bell Tel. &amp; Tel. Co.,. $83.60; E. E.
Peoplea Bank of Sanford, $60.00;
Brpdy, I4.0Q; W. C. Williamson,
Fred T. William*, $66.00; Industrial
$102.76; Jno. D. Jjnkins, 1404.07;
Index, .$18.00; Geo. A DeCottei,
C. M. Berry, $100.00; E. F. Hous$600.00; J. J. Dickinson, $877.60.
holder, $13.30; E. A. Douglass,
Itoad St Bridge Fund
. $13.80; Woodruff &amp; Watson, $74.40;
W. C. Williamson, $52.50; W. C W. J. Thigpen St Co., $18.00; Dr.
Williamson. $47.50; W. C. William­ T . G. Simmons, $10.00; Dr. lJ. T .
son, $40.00; W. C. Williamson, $45.00 Denton, $45.00; Herald Printing Co.,
Allen Allman, $26.00 Wrm Wood, $82.15; L. P.
McCuller, 125.62;
1377.00; J. B.
Americah Agri. Chem. Co., $108.50;
Lawson M otor Co., $1621,13; Fred T . J. Appleyard, $08.00; G. A. Speer
T. Williams, $134.60; Wight Grocery k Son, $21.36; Southern Utilities Co.,
Co., $322.67; J. F .'M itch ell, $7.34; $32.64; Bower St Roumillat,.$18.20;
q . II. C. Rabun, $72.00; Hill Lum­
T . J. Miller Sc Son, 134.30; HIU
ber Co., $39.62; M . D. Gatcbell, Hardware Co., $3.30; M. D. Gstchel
$63.47; W. C. Williamson,-.$63.92;
$246.61; Geo. T . Johnson Co., $60.46
W. C. Williamson, $12.68:
V. A. C. Smith, $62.60; Geo. D. Bar­
Schmeltz St Son, $116.00; P. B. Bost- nard Stat. Co., $108.85; H. St W. B.
ton, $100.00; O. P. Swope, 12.76; Drew Co., $3123; Igou St Igou,
The Texas Company, $65.60; G. A.
$11.20:. Ball Hardware. Co., $6.40:
Bryant, $40.00; Chuluota Mfg. Co.
$69.74; Jlall Hdw. Co.&lt; $22.86; A. J.
McCullcy, $1.35; Hill Hdw. Co.;
$46.30:
A. J. MeCulley, $12.00.

Curtain At 8:15. No one Se tied During The Prologue
An Epoch-making e.rent In the tnnaU of Am trl. can amusements ia t i e preaentatjon by Richard
WaYion TufTr o f tlTc tWIe-eompjrillnr-areojnplWie*American actor, Guy Batea Poet, In the lrrld e«en t
bubble of modern -humanity, "T h e Maaquerader
This dramatic masterpiece by John Hunter Booth,
taken from the wldily read novel of Katherine
Cecil Thuraton, Intimately l l l u . t r i t e i t h ^ U v e « o f
two men who met In the fog and traded identitiee
and living quartern.
• /
The dual characterlaatlon offers Mr. Poet a
wonderful opportunity and the con trast'd cbaractera are iroperaonated by him with all the art of
a genlua mind. Ilia drug fiend la a pitful wretch;
hia Loder. the "man " the mental and moral an-*
tithesis of the other
More Intenaely and artistically Interesting than
Jeckyl and H y d e -m o re massive ^n presentation
than any modern play, and yet. so deftly done. Its
ponderous scenes move with the smooth rapidity or
■n uninterrupted panorama, and thmt I* w n »t tnls
wonderful play Is— A L IV IN G M O V IN G , T A L K ­
IN G P A N O R A M IC R E P L E X OF T H E W A R P
A N D WOOF O F H U M A N IT Y .
♦
The most Ponderous of all Modern Play*
pulsating with the element that comprises ' Life
presented in

— Bw

RECITATION WITH MUSIC
T h e H a p p y P*ince

.

- - - Wilde-La?h
Story by Oscar Wilde
*• - Music by Madame Liza Lehman

SO N G S
Vesper Hymn

IN C O M E TAX A G A IN
Corporations May File
Tenatlvc
Returns Under Certain Conditions

Old English
Bellini

not be completed within the [)T6^
scribed time., and a formal request
for the extension. Any deficiency
in the first installment will hear in­
terest at'the rate of aix per cent per
annum.
"An extension of time is hereby
granted to corporations in auch
casc-s to file completed returns on or
before May 15th, 1920. The tenta­
tive teturn submitted in accordance
with the foregoing ' should he on
Form 1120 on which should he w rit­
ten plainly across tho face, ‘ T en ta­
tive Return’ . Only the estimated
amount of tax due need be stated

Jacksonville. Mar.
— (Special)
"Just this morning I receives! the f«l
lowing information from Commis­
sioner of Internal Revenue Daniel
C. Roper, and I am giving it to the
prers imTnediately," said Collector
of Internal Revenue James M. Cathcart, "us it is of great interest to the
corporations of Florida.”
•'I am authorised to accept tenta­
tive corporation ' returns for the cal­
endar year 1919 on or before March
16th, 1920. Each return must he
Interest Unchanged In 200 Years.
accompanied by' at least one-fourth
Tho highest Intorest* that can be
of the estimated amount of tax due, charged for a lonn In the Isle of Man
together with a 'statement setting Is fl per cent, and thut has been tho
forth the reason why the return can- Inw-ftil rate for more than 200 yeura.

Th rift in Peace Time

Denton, $30.00; Geo. A. DeCottes,
$60.00; Frank Harris; $50.00; H. -C
on wherfcvor a county or community
EDITOR
W t &lt;fi. HARRIS O F '
VALLEY-G A ZE TTE LOSES HIS will as?iit the board of health with
Its program. The program calls for
. R IG H T EYE
draining, oiling, the tiso of stirfarv
Was Assaulted on Street Ily Fred M . minnows, screening and ttyr use of
Hass Whose Flfiger Nall Cut Into quinine prophylaxis.
The Eye
*
*
II. liarKis«immee&gt;
ris, editor and one of the owners of
the Kissimmee Valley (Jarettc, had
his right eye gouged out Saturday,
when ho was unexpectedly attacked
on the. street by Fred M„Hans, can­
didate fgr the state sennte from the
Nineteenth senatorial district, compricing the counties of- Osceola,
Orange ami Seminole.
*Bass became tnien ed with Mr.
Harris hecauso he did not receive u
reading nptico in the Kissimmee Val­
ley Gazette when he advertised his
announcement in the paper Friday,
March 6.
.
Words passed between the two
men in the office of the Garotte
■jbltjiiy and Buss became insulting
and was ordered out of the office.
Saturdays* Editor Hnrris was cross­
ing th e 'parkway on Broadway, Rpss
approached him, asked him if he in­
tended to apologize or. would he
Bass, have to give,him a whipping.
Mr. Harris replied he had nothing
t&lt;h-~apologise for. Thereupon llass
grasped the editor by tho'Collar and*
a aculTle ensued, liars Is a young
mun about six feel three inches tall
and weigldng over 200 pounds. II ar­
ris is a nan of small stajure and
wright and hud no rhanre in the
encounter.. He fell and Ilass on top
of him 'struck him with I is fist and
then gouged llariis’ right eye with
one of his fingers, the nuii penetrat­
ing deep into the optic.
. *

Business;

May

He Dally

Later.

Fort Pierce, March 8.—The News
Printing Co., publishers of the Fort
Pierce News, of which R. II. Glenn is
president and editor, has purchased,
the St. Lucie County Tribune, semi­
weekly, the Stuart Messenger and
tho Fellsmero Tribune, weeklies;
from A. K. Wilson*, and will continue
the publication of foup newspapers.
The plants are valued at $40,000.
It Is* understood that the News
Printing Co., will begin the publica­
tion of a daily on December or Janu­
a r y ! , to run luring the tourist sea­
son each yenr until conditions war­
rant nn all year daily.
R. H. Glenn, whh hns been editor
and manager of the Ft. J’ ierre News
for four years and L. F. Chapmun
of Warrtrace, Tenn. will edit and
rgnnago the newspapers. Mr. Glenn
came to Florida ovet six years ago
from Oklahoma, where for several
years he-was editor and manager of
the DiVant Daily * and Weekly
Democrat. Mr. Chapman retired
from the Methodist ministry cf
Florida over two years ago. It "is
understood that Mr. Wilson is re­
tiring from the newspaper fame.

The first requsito for you to do Is to-think— this
will bring forth ideas of two kinds; v ii: Iroperfectcd
and Perfected .Ideas. The Imperfcctcd ’Idea Is orte
whore you think yop will dome day start j o save
but just seem never to do it. The Perfected is
where you A C T A T O NCE and fa v e for thrift s
sake. Which course will you take? You
know
which is heat and We Know where we can help
you. Will you Come HERE?.
•

PEOPLES BANK OF
—
SANFORD =

Just Three W eeks Old and G row ing to
Beat the Band ,

Sheriff Ingram and others pulled
Bass off the prostrate form of the
editor. ‘
•

Extension Telephone Service
NoW A vailable
Extension telepjiohe service is now avail­
able for those who. alfeady have telephone
service
There is no greater convenience in the
home than an extension telephone on the
other floor or beside the bed.
No more running up and down.stairs to
answer the telephone, it is always conven­
ient and addy-to^he pleasure of housekeepThe cost is small, but the convenience
is great.
.
Call the Managers office today and ar­
range for sfn extension telephone in your
home.
1
• /
•

SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY

•
picture, "T h e Thirteenth Command­
Mr. Harris, ‘ Saturday,. went to
ment" 4s "a ll-star".it Includes some
Tampa and placed -himself In the
of $he most prominent players on
the .screen.* Besides the beautiful
and talented Mias .Clayton, there .Is
Anna Q. Nilsson, one of the best
cyf, entering t ie lens, cutting It
known leading women In pictures.
loose, it floating about and the
She recently appeared opposite Bry­
the science of an optician cannot an­
ant Washburn in "Venaus in the
chor it. Mr. Harris will he blind in
East" and In tho production of
this eye for life. *
•*
’."Soldiers of Vortune" Monte Blus,
Bass gave bond for his appearance who' played one of 'th e featuring
fn city court Monday morning. Ed* roles In "E veryw om an " and Is a
itor Harris returned last night from favorite among the young film actors,
Tamps in a weakened ropdition from gives a fine performance a:the hero­
his experience.— Florida Tirr.oa-Un- ine’s brother. Th e leading man la
lon, March 8.
Charles Meredith, whose latest «p pcarancc was with. Marguerite Clark
e Carried On in "Lu ck in P aw n " The cast also in­
Model Campaign Ti
cludes Irving Cummings. W inter
To Eliminate Xtalsris
Jacksonville. .March 8.—T h f anti- Hall, and Arthur Jaude.
Robert G. Vignola directed tho
malatial program of the State Board
picture
and it is a Paramount-Artof Health has reeelved the full en­
cra/t.
The
Princess Theatre will
dorsement of J. A. LaPrfnce, chief
■how
today
-o
n ly with two other
sshitary engineer of the United

States Public. Health Service, and
the federal organization has prntnbed
its full cooperation in carrying out
the work.
,
The campaign will be started In
Taylor county, Perry, the county
real, having provided a fund of

Good old Florida sunshine is here a t last
and come to stay. Th e same applies to
our D ry Goods Department. I t ’ s a per­
manent fixture— one that meets the de­
mand o f our people. Here you find any­
thing you w ant in D ry Goods, N otions,
Ladies’ and Gents’ Furnishings, Fancy
and Fam ily Groceries, a long felt w ant
fully supplied in our: General Line. ALL
we ask is a TRIAL ORDER that we m ay

fully convince you.

Cor. 4th St. and Sanford Ave.

-

Sanford

�SANFORD DAILY HERALD &gt;

FAG-R 2

M A T IN E E
AND

NIGHT
t H E P IC T U R E Y O U H A V E B E E N W A I T I N G F O R

were nbnuf to tie rarrled Into exccul!on. In thcao days' of the alrplaon
ami wireless telegraphy^lj. seems lmpossible to deliver n surprise nmmuIL
ffevertbeless* no pain* afe spared to
the exact
deceive the enemy as
point of attack. As a means o f cover­
ing the true point of attack, the chief
of tank corps presented a scheme
which received the approval of the
JN VENTED BY J. ill.-S W A IN
tdch command.
Cut Up Like an Army of Tanks!
“ Accordingly, nfler tho withdrawal j
of the tanks from the'St. Mlhtcl sec­
tor. I.leut. Higgins with his platoon of
(he Three Hundred and Thirty-fourth
A Vegetable Comblnatiin for Softening Water, Whitening
battalion lank corps, was dlroeted to
proceed from this point In a northClothes, Scrubbing and Scouring, . Removing SnoUj from your
wester!j" dlrerttotr along the Hues via
Clothes, Carpets and Rugs. -ADialufeciant, Kilts and Deatraytv
narrow gnu go railway, He was to stop
Chinches, Bed Bugs and their eggs, ail Insects, Bugs and
each night and make a reconnaissance
Worms, Ants, Fleas, lic e on Stock, Blight on Vegetables and
In front of onr positions with his
also acts as Vegetable Fertilizer to all Plants, Rose Bushes,
tanks and Immediately load up and
House Plants and Tender Vines.
repent the operation the following
Has endorsement of some of the leading Physicians of
night further down the line. Florida.
A One Disinfectant. Great saving to the House­
“On Sept. ID, the five tanka and
keeper being one tenth of the cost of Ammonia. Selling the
their crews were loaded and the ex­
formula only and a quart of the H A N D Y F L U ID goes free
pedition started. ■ That cvehlng they
with.e{ich formula.
stopped In the rear o f a little wood,
many kilometers west of St. Ulhlcl.
Off the little narrow guage flat cars
tumbled the the tanks and nosed Into
the woods for concealment. About 11
o'clock all was ready and tho minia­
Representing David Cook ^o,
ture nrmy started forward on Its mis­
85 Leading magazines
sion. Everything went ofT as sched­
uled. The tanka rolled through our
W IL L SEE Y O U P E R S O N A L L Y
positions and Into No Man's Land.
"They were operated hack and forth
for half an hour. After this they
were quietly withdrawn, crawled back
Tribute to Great American. •
rlc* a much heavier nrinnmcnC
on their little narrow gauges and
Carlyle nnd a friend were walklnf
The great difficulty with the large
started merrily on their way. They
British tanka was that they were nn- t Btrect In London many years «g&lt;J[
timed their work perfectly, and as
derpowereft nnd. on account of the ar­ and suddenly Cnrlylo gripped bis
they pulled out n- terrific barrago hit
rangement of tho machinery within, friend's arm nnd Bald: "Who Is that
the wood they had left.
And the friend
did not nfford the proper room for the tnnn that pn**ed?"
"The following evening the proced­
replied:
'.That
Is
Daniel
Webster of
crews. A commission o f British nnd
ure was repented. Agnln the bar­
American experts has corrected faults Massachusetts.'* ^ And Carlyle said;
rage descended too Into to hurt the
Jnrgely through the adoption of th» "He looks like a walking cathedral."
Jaunty— baud.— -For —sis , sueeesslve
Atnerlcnn Liberty motor.
•nights the troupe staged their one
night stands, nnd the reports all along
the' sector showed that the Hun was BRITAIN HAS BIG NEW S H E L L
up In the air. All day long the sky
was full of planes searching for the Projectile L* Said to. Pierce the
nrmy of tanks which Ifoo enemy tvns
Heaviest Armor Without
FOR SPRING
sure jvns concentrating on this front.
Shattering.
All suspicious looking places-were
bombarded wllh the usunl Hun thor­
London.— The British, navy may soon
oughness nnd Intensity.
All night be given n new nnd “unsurpassed"

FULLY GUARANTEED--18 IN 1

•M ASSIVE REELS

FROM THE
NOVEL OF

H A R O LD B E LL W R IG H T

J. H. S W A IN

Sibil Anores— 1
T he Flight of the Girl Into the Hills apd the Sensational
Horses and Men Together Plunging Down the Mountain Side

THE FIGH T OF THE LOVERS ON THE M O U N T A IN CLIFF
O TH ER S E N S A T IO N A L SCENES

A D M IS S IO N
J P n . ADULTS I C C : CHILDREN

25 CPINTS
15 CENTS

A ll
111

ADULTS CHILDREN

35 CENTS
20 CENTS

A P IC T U R E YO U S H O U L D N O T M I S S

No Hope of Better Foq^d Situa
tion Seen by Food Con­
troller at Rome.

Strike* and Blot* Are Bred by Stead
By Increasing Cost of Everything
— Causing Deep Anxiety to
.
Government,
Home,

Hon hundredweight f the till harvest
ia an punt the.public lu«s -lew-limn
atic-tlilrd the quantity doled mu last
year. There Is less (linn half the
quantity of cheese, lard, butter and
milk of Inst year; there Is a serious
sugar short age too.
No Prospect of Relief.
And the food controller hns no
remedy to suggest. T h e’ public htatmy
him nnd Ids food ministry. He
blames tho food ministry too, say­
ing that micti chipis reigned when he
look I* river Insf summer Ibat be lias
be-n tttfnMe fit straighten things out
itml \&gt;'ll resign as soon as pti--llile
lie told an risbtitished ehitinlter Mud
be found Ids ministry buying cheese
at r.o cents n pound, to resell to
wholesale dealers who doled u mu
1. *he pultih- at 51.511 a [mum!
lie
added that'one great trouble Is the
hie!: of food experts to advise •the
government In haying ‘ foods. &lt;&gt;»pet-tally perishable kinds
And he
s;dd be sinv no hope for a better .....I

yielded
2U»uou,tsKi . bum Ired weight
less than Insf year; the government
must
Import
250.000.000 hundred■wight for bread,-jplilch u* sold lit 20
rents for n two-pound lottf, and tqc&amp;rtT
f WX).0t)O.ooo on bnril grain alone; on
soft grain thtf" toss equals another
♦400,000,000: on olive ell the slate
■uses several hundred million dollars
Italy Is tlin only allied country
whose liihabltanls must stm mt war
bread Its price, the government says,
'oust shortly lie raised 5 or 10 cents
Tor a two-pound loaf, because the
midget cannot stand the loss of $800,*
000.000 n year on grain alone. The
public must Itear part of the bunion
In dearer bread.
Bice Is scare*;, too; (bis year's har­
vest shows a shortage of half n inII-

1LliSl YOU FORGET

B.C. D O D D S , M .D
•Residence: 'J(I5 Magnolia Ave.
Rhone 401
Office: First National Bank Building
I’liunt* 482

Furniture and Complete
. House Furnishings
Stoves and Ranges
*Our S tock is C o m p le te
T*
Prices nnd Terms
Reasonable
34 years service to San
ford

situation, in the near future unless
people eat less anil pull their belts
lighter over empty stnmiiclts,
Th perpetual upward flight of food
priors &gt;rj Italy ratinea deep tinrU-O lu
'hobo responsible for the country's
good order.
Recent strikes and civil
strifi were almost wholly due to
discontent cnu«ed by Mie still In
creasing cost of life's prime' ueecs
s;to-s nnd mure trouble Is yet to come
LinSeRs ttie upward trend Js curbed.
Sample

SU G G E STIO N S

Ruse That Kept Germans Guess
ing on Eve of Argonne
Disclosed.

long the darkness was dispelled by
hundreds of dares nnd rockets, and
all Indications showed that ifelnlo was
not going to bi&lt; caught napping.
D ive rte d

Their Blufl Attacks Divert Two Ger­
man Divisions— U S. Army Gets
First Two of Unproved Type
of Battlo -Tank.
H’ltstiliigton.—The story of five little
American tanks and the part they
plnyeil In the great Argonne offensive
in told as follows in a statement is­
sued by the war department:
"Gen, 1’ershlng with the first Ameri­
can army bud just llulshed awakening
the Herman high command to a healthy
fear of the American soldier by re­
ducing the St. Mlbli'l salient, ami the
plans for the Meuse-Argonne offensive

Two

D ivisio n s.

"Host of all. Just ah the little band
wn* preparing to entrain to pet Into
the Me show til flip Argonne there
. nine a noo-Mige from the Ititclllgcnec

section stating 'two GfEjniin dlv|s|ofis
withdrawn from Argonne
Kn
i ifront.
*
I raining for ytqir sector."'
Tin- lank corps Iiiin Just received
at t'nntp Meade. Md., from the Hock
Island arsenal two Mack VIU . tanks.
This type, the largest yet placed In
quantity production, was especially de­
signed for use against the I lindenburg line nnd similar defenses. Not
bo fust nor so easily handled hs the
lighter types. It possesses tho ability
tq cross much larger ditches, crush
more formidable obstacles, and car-

BEANS
LIMA BEANS
BEETS
EGG P L A N T
SQUASH
TOMATOES
CUCUMBERS
SWEET CORN
PEPPERS

weapon In a largo caliber shell which
will pierce the heaviest armor without
shattering, said Sir Hubert llutlltcld.
•-Iiitirmiiii om! muuuglng director of
Hadflelds. Ltd., steel imtnnfncfnrcrs.
recently, lie Indicated that possession
of sueli a sin-11 during the great war
would tin''* Imeti of inestimable value
to Mo Itritl-li fleet.
Lumberjack’s Appetite.
W e lu-anl some tiim ago that Mir
nanagi-r-

of

flu* liiiui et

cm n p '

Ii -d

lei-bli'd to refuse fret feeds lo (Innigrum lundu-rJaeJci*. drifting friun
•amp fit rjimp. bni md nil we «aw a
timberjnek out did we nntliT-Onnd the
flue Impulse that led to (lie d-*iston.
Afler eating Ills nil. If one of the fel­
lows should Irj to push Ids way down
a logging road.'lie wohld get stuck be­
tween the trees and probably stay
there until he starved. Detroit New*.

We Hove The S E E D — FIIESII

C H A S E &amp; CO.
SANFO RD , FLA

Increases.

Colton goods cost 300 per rent
yore tIni ii Jjiey did In 1010. woolen
goods 230 per cent, lints find shoes
!■“•*) tier rent, shoddy clot lies 250 fier
cent, glass goods :uitl jter cent. Home
grov it proilat e hns Inert-used more
than foods Imported from America
For Instance, eggs pre now- 55 per
cent dearer than three years ago, pot»hicn 150 jter cent dearer, beans -I2d
(nr cent, fresh pork 370 per cent,
Italian Inril 28TI per cent, hoef 311
per cent, butter 270 per cent, rhccM*
250 [M.r cent,' milk 300 per cent, wine
825 per cent. The fond conlrtd olfiee
report* Mutt w ipe growers made such
big pi'ellts Mils last veyr that thev
P tld for the land their wines are
g -n on from the one year's gain
alone.
T ’. t evergrowing ctml of living In
Imly unee the rbeniiest enuniry yi
Ktimi", the paradise of llie poor mall
m i ms to lie In ii vicious circle
Dent food and discontent go hand-Inhard, breeding strike#, riots, blond
stieil. They again react on local pro
d»e|lnp&lt; and cause p’rlCca lo" rlr-c
higher Minn before. Then follow
fir-n mrikcs ami disorder*: ttu* screw
I* iufii*-d yet again nnd the vicious
circle must be rounded once more.

■Serpentine Crepe has advanced, but we boi
at the low price. You r choice for V
SEE

W IN D O W

50 pieces some time ago

60c yard

D IS P L A Y

Our New Shipment has just arrived. T h e - newest an
that could be bought. 36 to 40 inches wide

prettiest patterns

New York Dealer Bought Shakespeare
Volume In Europe for a
Client.

New York.’—A copy of Shakes­
peare's “ Venus nml Adonis." printed
In Ifijitl ami classed as one of the
most valuable books In the world, ar­
rived here In the possession of GcurgO
D&gt; Smith, a dealer In rare books, a
passenger mi the (Jiimird Ilnur CarMr. Smith vnltl be paid $75,000 for
the tiny vnltjtnc, two by three Inches
In six*! anil weighing only two ounce*.
The volume wot purchased for llentV
K, Huntinglmi of New York.

Spain to Have Skyscraper*.
Bilbao. Spain.—At n conference ol
properly-*wuers and architect* It was
decided Thnt owing to the grent In­
crease la Hind values here twenty and
ihim siorlt-s hiilbbiigH will lie bulb

*aoB|d Xuu jo B)0jnqc3 jo uaj
•uoi|J oj i»3 i.uv.Ktp aq )uqi Muq« oj wu
jmjjo'd Xpiunjittn on ■[ juumnua « ih
•«i3imfltni| qsijaujj aqj Bonn jaqjny Xuja
aqi OJ A|Buojjt* upofqo u|ja.f,l XBUBjv
■Xb m v U iu i 0|juso piQ aqj. «»A |0

~

These new numbers in Underwear are the
latest and are made o f extra good Nainsook and -i
? 'trim m ed.

Teddies, Gowns, Corset Covers and Skirts

�_

r»m
&lt;rfc7---.
gjFl-,;*■■■i■»:-W
r .f/

MARCH JO, 1920
possible to* amputate the stump of
the Iving child and graft on the hand
p.MUhpd « » V t . «n «r »o «B e t f f f l Hand*; *&lt; of a child that has just died. The
rfc, |!rr.Jd UbIWIbJ. **7 Maxnolla At . m m , 8 « o- time will undoubtedly come when
1* 4, r t w H * - ___________________ ;_______________
surgical science will he able to ac­
.•
PUOLtSHKBS
complish even this wonder.
•

theheraldprintingcompany
INC.’

B. J. HOLLY, Editor
W. M. HAYNES, Business Manager'
Krntm

Midi K—wi. — A.plU.tl.n

uwiCBtrTiON PB1CB IN ADVANCB
..... MAO
-* ' *
a
M.00
roR ONR
TKA*__
13.00
. a ll MONTH*
MONTH* —---- ---------------- H
rOB.RU

crrr o r

dk livered i n

c a r r ie s

•

« » r ________________________ I I O n [a
ONE w
WEEK
(U m m altar O tlab w 17,
at S .n f.rd . Florida, aadtr

• b lm d M w w m

MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ly served, when the taxation to* lie
required for this purpose would be
levied upon. Mm as .well as upon
others?
&gt;
Just what Is simple justice?

During the civil war many thou­
A CASE OF E V E R Y B O D Y
sands of artps nnd legs were sawed
Everybody walks, the streets of
off without the aid of an anaesthetic
this town.
Today ‘such a thing is never even
Everybody see bits of paper and
considered.
. .
refuse on tho ^streets— possibly
A few years ago tho pulling of a everybody helps to put them there.
tooth was a fearful ordeal to the .■ Everybody -thinks they are un­
victim. Today wholeiets nro extract sigh tly and should he removed, but
etT without- pain.
everybody waits for everybody else
The modern surgeon cuts a man to do it.
Now if everybody would make a
open, turns him inside out, cleans
his organs, sews him up again, and in point of picking up this refuse we
a few weeks the fellow is up and try­ Would have a more sightly town, and
ing to put one over on his competitor everybody would take pride in liv ­
ing (n a place which everybody helps
in business.
Tho wonders of surgery are so to keep clcati.
Let’s everybody get busy for the
great as to be almost unbelievcahle
benefit
of everybody else.
to the lay mind, and yet It is ’only

Rhode Inland la talking about
ntates rights. Shades of Abraham
Lincoln.
in ita Infancy.

.Another great war will result in a*
great achievements in the develop­
ment of tho science as the one just
closed, and it will not be at all sur­
prising to see the hands of the deaP
grafted onto the shattered stumps of
tho living.
Few things are Impossible to the
man of science who is determined to
succeed. /
•

Our achool teachera are not get­
ting enough money. I f • *he women
could only vote there woulld beaomething doing.
^

Snaka Expert Qot Out of Rather Tight
Fix In a Somewhat Clever
Manner.

=

~-_7_ .e w

.*. -7

ai 7

A. K. Wilaon baa aold hia interests
There is a certain professor o f nat?
In the Ft. Pierce Tribune and several
ural history who delights In propound­
ing catch qucaUons to his class, and
other East Coast papers to a new
one young fellow, who had been caught
company that will publish a daily
by one, determined to got even. At
paper in the near future. The Florida
tho
next clnBs, therefore, he said
press will miss A. k . Wilson and his
grnvqjy:
TOO-M
UCH
M
O
N
E
Y
—
FO’R
SOME
charming wife.
"Professor, you have made n special
----- O — —
A condition is being brought about study of snakes, have you not?"
.W e are glad*to get the Orlando In this country which Is anything
"Yes, I think I nm fairly well In:
Sentinel and the -Prlando Reportcr- but desirable to one who values the formed ns to that branch," the profes­
Star ngnim-Whila the paper_ahtlffiUItl Juturc welfare of the United States. sor responded.
wat Ao acute we could not get these
From tho number of millionaires — “Then.—professor,—you Oatv undoubt­
valuable papers and no news was that have sprung up in the past (ew edly Inform me on a point which,
filtering through the lines from the years it is apparent to any thinking while doubtless simple, puzzles mo.
hoys of Orange county’*! capital. person, that the wealth of the country , May 1 ask you a question?"
Tho professor begun to feel uneasy,
is not being equitably distributed. but there was nothing to reply but
*9
If you did not join the Board of Entirely too great a proportion of it "yes."
Trade last night you should join it is finding Its way into the coffers of »•
“Then, sir, what I desire to know Is,
today. If you are alreidy a member favored class at tho expense of tho where does n snake's tall begin?" the
ymmg*ri'llmv asked gravelly.
and mU paid up you should pay up. great mas.i of the people.
Tito professor was silent for n nto-.
If you expect to do something^in
Milllonaises nre fikenmahruum* Sanford that is worth while you will they are 5hoot trig , up almost over meiit, urn! n titter tiegnn to run over
the roonf, which Increased to a roar ns
have to get &lt;10 the ohariot of progress night and they nre being created
the professor replied calmly:
and the chariot of progress is the because our system of government
"That Is qillte simple; It begins at
ItnariJ of Trade!
makes it possible for lho many to he the end of the snake which Is not the
----- O ----plundered by the few. Or. prehap* it head."
We knew that as-soon as our new would he better to suy that our fail
hotel was all t ready that Orlando ure to enforce the laws against cul­
W ILL TUNNEL UNDER STRAIT
would have to build another one. prits-in high places makes this conAll Tight. Orlando. Build another ditipn possible.
Japanese Authorltlea Bald to Have
one down there and we will build
Everyone has more money than
Decided Upon Engineering Feat
another one up here and keep the they had a few years ,ago because,
of Magnitude.
ball rolling every year and if both the wejflth of the country has in­
towns build a dozen fine hotels they creased by ly'aps had bounds,
Reverat months ago announcement
but
will not he able t o ‘ take care of all tho men- who produced this wealth was mmle that tb^ Imperial govern*
the tourists that are corning into by the labor n! their hands have not .meat railways nf Japan Intended to
hulld 11 tunnel under the Sldnmnosekl
tins part of Florida next season.
received their just proportion. Jug­
jitrult. .This ^|rati separates the main
— U ----gling and sharp practices- have d i­
Maud of the Japanese group,
“ Are beautiful women stupid?" verted the lion’s share to thnt odori­ from the smaller Island of Kltishu nt
That is the query propounded by ferous minority of gentry popularly the south. It In now .crossed fiy n
some ii. f. over in London, and now known as high financiers men who car ferry, which Is rapidly becoming
it has floated across the Atlantic receive a hundred dollars for every
Insufficient to meet the demands that
are made upon It. Two years are to
to stir up the d. f ’s over here. Of ten that they honestly eat
course the answer of every sane
Government olllcials and public |&gt;e spent In studying the geological
married man would depend upon nton wonder why there is so much formation o f the sen bed In the strait
nml lit drafting of tho general plan
the personal appearance of his wife unrest in this country.
of work In preparation for the actual
and of every lover upon Quit of 1tis
It they woul i leave .their gilded undertaking of tunneling, so that the
best girl. Beautiful women stupid? hulls for a few weeks ami get out
real work will not commence until
Ask the ntlicd^llow. ..
among the people, eat what they etTV, HKM. Engineers nnd workmen will he
----- O ----sleep where they slee p, and do
as sent to America and Europe to make
W ANTED—A
NEW
HAND
they do, they would soom imbibe it study of what has hcetr achieved In
The science of surgery has been not only the solution, but Ji little these'Countries In the way of tunnel
engineering. Thu lino Is to he seven
developed to sqch a wtmderful degree common sense ns well.
tulles’, long. 01IO mllo of which will ho
in the world war that a mother has
A matt can only lo o m ? a multi­ entirely under .the sen. The approxi­
appealed to the medical department millionaire by taking
the
money
mate cost of the undertaking &gt;rill be
at Fort* Sheridan to graft a nety hand from
other . people
who
arc about $10,000,000 nnd the work rVexon a five months old child that was justly entitled to much of it. And
peeled to he
In 1W2H.— sPt*“
no completed
cotnph
born without that member.
for every plutocrat so rroited a entitle American.
The chief surgeon reluctantly ad­ thousand bolsheviks will raise their
What'o In a Number7
mits that science has not reached heads to plague the government.
An'
turn
squadron, preparatory to
that point. A new hand can not lie
The remedy is obvious. Place ‘ a
furnished the little child. IVut who limit upon the amount of money the slurt for the front, . wii S hetng
knows what the future may bring to any one mm may bv permitted to Initiated again'Inin the mysteries of
clnaa-order drill.
While most of the
it?
• .
accumulate, and then enfor -c the men knew every nut. holt ntul
In five or ton yeirs it may he law agahist all people alike.
square Inch of canvas on the ^planes,

E V E R Y T H IN G
Y O U W A N T F O It

GOi
MEAL
I •
~~=717

- i V- . ‘

„

,£

Y O U M A Y F IN D
*-

■

'

AT TH E

\

*

C ity M a rk e t
♦
-

-

■■

—

Fam ous-D ixie Cakes

Fresh Dates
Fi&amp;s and Nuts
ff? &gt;
•

&lt;

.TvT ■r'' -$■**’# ■

i

■V- f \

Phono 106
FOR Q U IC K SE R V IC E *

S IM P L E JU S TIC E

*

*

Sooner or later congress must do.•cide whether or not the Country is to
pay n bonua to our young men who
defended their native land on the
bloody fields of France.
There is some opposition to the
suggestion, because the ttotnl runs
into millions.
•But- here are two picture#, fairly
stated— take your choice. ’
.First. One young man remained
at homo, 1ns it was necessary that
some should do. He worked in
munition factories, or in the ship
yards, or in any of the thousands of
places where work wbb required. He
* received high wages*-probtni!y higll; er than ever before—a good home
:in which to live, enjoyed his hours
i of leisure and recreation, and was in
no pcrsottul danger ut any time. He
, made money.
Second. Another young man went
! to the war, as it was also necessary
**thal some should do .. He gave up
bis position at good wages, f orsook
his means cf enjoyment, exchanged
; a comfortable home for the'rigors of
camp life, endured the horrors of the
bloodiest war in history, faced the
dangers of sickness and disease und
returned to find another map in his
old job. awl-in most cases had to be
’content with what he could got. Ho
gave from one to
y car8 °I .the
beat part of his life to his country
and financially lost money.
. Should he, or should he not, re­
ceive some addftlortal* recompense
from the people whom ho lii valiant-

PAGE a

cr misconception as fo this rolrTthan
nny other ever struck by the United
Btntea mints.
This arises from the
fact that there are two kinds o f hnlfdollnrs of-4853, Thtf rnro variety has
no arrows nt the dates nnd there Is no
sunburst on Its reverse.
Only two specimens of this coin arc
known to he In existence. Unlf dol­
lars of lfkvi with arrows at dntc ami
sunbursts on. the reverse#-nre very nu­
merous, however, and they hnvexfrequently dashed tho hopes of boldines
who were unfamiliar with the dis­
tinction between the two varieties of
the coin.

• ^r*■
■ '

for collecting drafts, etc.

A bank should be regarded as the inti­
mate helper, advisor, and friend of the custom-

•
Small Girl'* Criticism.
Little five-year-oili Lots had been
told not to be In such a hurry when
. she put nwnjr her plnythlng*. to take
a III Be more cure and puck them
straight. One evening her grandma
waft tnklng her home after dark.* A*
they 'were walking along the street
lights were turned on. She looked up
and itsknl: "Grandma, who turned all
nt tho*e lights on nt onee?” On heln r
told a man nt the electric Ujdu plan
turned them on. she said: “ Well, then
who- tum« Oft all 'he light* In the
sky?" Grandma told her God did that.
Noticing thnt the new ninqp was tilled
nt n different tingle from wtmt she hnd
noticed before, she"-aid rather disgust
eilly: "Well. I wish God would take
Just n little .uore' time when he-turns
on the lights nnd turn that •moon -oh
straight while he Is nbyut It.”

.

er, ever ready to.co-operate in’ every proper
way, to extend necessary accommodation as re­
quired, and to protect his interest in every way
that lies within it’s power.

»

This is the kind of service that we en­
deavor to render; and we invite you to make *.

Cat* la Settlad Out of Court by Pay.
mant of $10.
There will he no lawsuit about tho
cow-thnt ate two silk dresses at Calverton, L. I., for tho claim has been
compromised nt $10, .according to a
statement made by Lawyer James T.
YVnlsh, which sum was paid by the
owner o f the cow to tho father o f the
owner o f tlte dresses.
, Thin story started when It was said
Qua Brooks of Cnlverton demanded u
warrant fur tho arrest of John Juba*
hmsky’S cd\V, which"*ho ^wanted Id
charge with eating two little RUk
dresses belonging to bis child. The
cow. It wns claimed, deliberately wandcred over to tin* Brooks clothesline
and was caught with"the gwuls— that
Is, she was seen to he calmly pulling
tho dresses from the Hue nnd eat|ug
them up. After the last of the gar­
ments disappeared-.Mrs. Brooks was
tooted to the spot with surprise for'
the time being—n detpaud for repara­
tion was nuuje. John couldn't believe
that bis cow would do so unladylike an
act, hut.when he was convinced she
had In- settled the ease by paying $10.

your connection with us with such service in
view.

'
10

Bank

F. P. FORSTER, President

B. F. W H ITN E R , Cashier

v Sanford, Florida

C H U L U O J A IN N
CHULUOTA, FLO RID A
Open|I)eccmbcr'7th for Ihc Season.
MRS. CIIAS. I). B R U M LE Y, Mgr.

\

Note The Richness
of Roseland Dairy Milk, and you
will understand why it is prefer­
red by mothers who demand the
purest and best for their children.
The high-cost-of-food need ’neveraffect the children so long as
Roseland M ilk provyles the nour­
ishment it does for the small
amount it costs. -We make two
deliveries daily.

JOEL GRAYSON

Phone 2011
r—

Cotton Seed Meal
NITRATE
SODA
Potash Nitrate
ASHES
$

* In a little alcove In the capital at
Washington alts Joel Grayson.
All
tho surplus documents &gt;t the house
are In this alcove, and tho member*
keep "hard after” Mr. Grayson, v*ho
know* exactly where to find e*ch and
""
every paper required. Having served
**
e government for 45 years, it can
1
be understood that Mr. Grayson knows
his business.
Ring Strangely Recovered,

^

'

Chase &amp; Co
V
V

•J

O p tic ia n
r-

Eyes Tested

YOU CAN T MAKE
H AY W ITH O UT SUN SH IN E

Nor canyoumake mnenmoney
■witliout some effort to
CONSEP T3 YOUR RESOURCES

Lenses Ground
G L A S S E S A D JU S T E D
. * and R E P A IR E D

L. A. B R A N D
Optomelrisl-Optldnn^

221 E. Firsl Street

by establ sliing credit with a
reliable lx nk.
Tvliy no' make some real
-“ HAY” in Mie SUNSHINE bv
starting a c \eck account witu
ns. Build 1your credit that
you may^To able to mastei’
difficult problems.

Opposite Poaloffice.

ik

)in

FRECKLES Positively Removed
Thl* Half-Dollar Raro.
Ever since the ttewa that -a silver ft/ Df. Berry’s Frecklo C InIntent
,
Your Druailit or by Wall 65c
half-dollar or 18-Vt brought
wnk
Send for Free Uookl*l
published throughout the country a
.few years a^o, there has hrnn A great- Dr. G I L Berry Qo., m i
x .r - -

—

place J o r keeping funds, for handling checks,

laln.
"More, you. where do you belong?
Whnt’s your number?" .
The buck snapped out of Ids trnnee.
"No, 2£4f*2d. air," ho announced,—
The Home Sector.

A bank is much more, than merely a safe

COW EATS SILK GOWNS

A wedding ripg-was found In the
stomach o f it coil rancht on the Grand
hanks. The ring belonged to Mrs. Paul
Ills Burnham, an English woman, who
had Insi It, when the styaaishtp AngloSaxon went down In 1801. The fisher­
man graced the ownership of tho ring
they were more than ,hazy about the
nnd sent It hack to lho son of Mrs.
forgotten details of iliolr apprentice­
Burnham, who Is Mild to hnvo reward­
ship days’In the army.
ed him with a present of

"Squads right!" bellowed the com*
mantlli^f officer.The majority of lho squadron man­
aged to get there somehow or other,
lutt No. ft, re:tr rank, fourth squad,
wns totally lost, . l i e muueuTcn’d
aimlessly about tho field for 11 time,
trying to find Ills place, npd Ann By
walked. Inlo the arms of tho enp-

„

A Pessimist's Observation.
"Wo have ho unity of tho unem­
ployed'."
"I don’t know," rejoined Mr, jQpow;
rher. "A fter watching a few o f tffii
helpers who have come along In connectlon-wlih. various kinds of work, 1
have concluded thnt we hnvo n large
number in a state of unemployment
The difference Is.that they get paid
for i t "

DIDN’T FEAZE THE PROFESSOR :

..
.
_ _ _

_

SA N FO R D D A IL Y 3 IIE R A L D

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

'

--.i •

_

H O M E IfiS T J T U T IO r t

S A N F O R D , FLA

4

~
•Wv-vS-H'-T

--

X ~r __*

.

*

,

.' A t - f c a a , ■

�f

‘ j. '
T'?li

* --

-*

•

ii ,

■ .• f

■-■

iv \ - ••

.

f.

gta s vV J J w M

ga
■ ■ ■ ■

: ' v:
• '
J--T-*—gLI *•»

.-• *
f La*;-** f i . :?j

UTT' **■ »!

1

FREIGHT
Utile Happenings
Mention bf
Matters In Brief
Personal Hems
o f Interest

In and A b o u t
&lt;£ The C itg

‘ Summary o f the
Floating Small
Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Readers

For Klim Powdered Milk. Phone. 2412
W. W. Drvasor. .
10S-6tp

THEY TOOK HER LITER A LLY

Electrical Fixtures, llouao WireIng, in fact all kind* of electrical
work. Phone 442. W. H. Treadwell,
. Electrician.
,
83-tf.

But Probably Musical Comedy Star
&lt; Did Not Msan Just What She
Threatened.

» • Car of Hanarrar- arid- 'Apples on
track by express office. Must be
* add In two days. Price 75 cents up,
per bunch. Come and get youc
bargains.
l i t - t|\.
Plenty, of Plain View Bean Plan' tera for immediate deliveri". Hill
’ Implement and Supply Co. 113-6tc.
,
v

i

Wk

MARCH 10, 1920

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

rA U E l «

•

HEADQUARTERS
- - - - - - - - F O lt - - - - - - EVERYTHING IN

G ro c e rie s
Y

lng*Line.

How much does It cost imvy to feed
an elephant for a year? Two thousand
dollars, say the officials of the London
j:jui
And n ginifTV costs half ns much
So that, with the hicreuM-d prices of
food, have come new problems for' ^lu-

keepers of tnenagertVs. The meat funds
Include beef, horse Mesh, guinea pig*.
rats, rnts, inlet*, rabbits frogs, snakes.
Msh. pigeons, ducks, sparrows, gentles,
snails, nnts and cmI liver oil. The gn
relies, hnfTalnes and antelopes must be

provided with ris k suit They are fed
tin nnts, hrnn. liny, green clover to
gether with carrots and potato,-*. Tinbirds arc the most •difficult to .... 1 sat
Jsfnrlorlly. ITninlngm-s, for Instance,
require soaked wheal. ladled shrimps
ami ftn|i nil stnfill
Some birds are
fed largely on bullock's Uv*-r. 'yds Is
cut Into slices, ladled, then ,pul through
n mincing machine, The mince Is
dried In a slow oven rind preserved.
The dry mince Is usually mixed with
bran or pollard. Quantities of Insects
have to he kept In stork for the Insect
eating birds. These are principally
meal worms and gentles, which Is the
polite name for myat maggot*
Itut
for some bird* tile* and grasshopper*
are required. The monkey- require
fruit. Mich ns tialiuuus ami apples,
while the snakes must be fed on small
animats, such ns ralddls. mice and
ruts.
New Idea In Storing Coal.

FRUITED OATS
Something New

-A T-

L. P. MeCuller’s

The Ingenious plan of storing coal
In carbonic n**ld gn*. a* undertaken at
Dortmund, Oorniitnv give* the safety
from spontaneous Ignition of under
water storage, while the container of
for* the convenience of the' overhead
bunker Knob of the three cylindrical
hunkers eimstnjeted with a enpnrllv
of 'J.oOtt ton*, lias semi spherical top
nnd bottom, anti three tilling opening*
hi the top. Willi three discharging out
lets at Ihe bottom. The lower outlets
are gn* light when closed, but a* the
carbonic itn rr-1* much heavier than
air the upper openings do not require
being absolutely leak proof, a grab
on n at rue |uni) steel tower unbinds the
coal from a barge. The coal I* dropped
Into n small hopper, nnd then fed to n
push-plate conveyor, which Is *o placed
that It may serve In tilling or empty­
ing the three blinkers. The small
amount of carbonic arid gas Mini b-ak*
out in removing con I can la* readily
replaced.
Fun for the Girl.

Lumber
Building Material
.^

Rooting of All Descriptions

-V

U n ic , (\'HU*nt, Plaslnr
Uriel:. Drain Tile and
S ew er Pipe.

\
\

H ill L u m b e r

S

BROKE

AWAY

Peculiar Happening Hailed aa Somol‘ thing Particularly New In His­
tory of Railroading.
The Rrlem'irrond hns demnnstrnted
the practicability of a theory that n
freight train may lose a car from its
midst and keep to Its acbedulo with
Its crew In Ignorance of their loss, and
Ed Mott, of .Goshen, the local histo­
rian, Is happy.
For a generation Mott hns been tell­
ing fotksuf an Erie train that left Sus­
quehanna,In the winter of 1853 with 13
cars o f cnttle. At Port Jervis one car
was missing. It had disappeared from
the middle of the train without leav­
ing broken couplings or other traces
of the manner of Its ejectment. Two
days later the missing car waa found
In a field near the track at Shohola.
It was empty. The cattle It had held
were recovered In Sullivan county,
New York. They hnd freed themselves
from the car and crossed tho Delaware
river on the ice.
• *
Engineer Albert 0. Roberts was
driving a' train-to New York last Sun­
day morning. At West Tuxedo atr
brake trouble led to the discovery that
the fpurternth car wns missing. The
thirteenth and fifteenth ear* hnd recoupil'd themselves. Search led to the
discovery of the mlsslpg car alongside
the track n mile to the oortlv
The accident of Sunday was exactly
the same as the one Wh! eh Mott de­
scribes ns of slxly-odd years ago, ex­
cept that the modern form of lirnke
mused the loss of n car to be discov­
ered mure quickly than was tho case
In the old dnys. when the couplings
were of simple design and the brakes
were operated by hand.—New Haven
Union.

A popular musical comedy star was
taking her summer vneatlou In a New
England village this year, and good
naturedly agreed to participate In an
"entertainment" to be given at the
town hall for ths benefit of local char-.
Itles. 8he procured from New York
one of the costumes from her last win­
ter's show, and a fetching poster show­
ing herself In that same costume. Boon
after the poster was on dUpiny a dele­
gation of village ladles waited upon
the committee o f gentlemen who were
engineering the entertainment and pro­
tested against the chic costume o f the
poster, which was. In fact, that of the
conventional "prince" of musical com­
edy, with a frank If pleasing display
of silk-encased limbs.
"Let's send for MUs da Lanry and
see. if we can't fix It up," a commit­
teeman suggested, and this was done.
Now, besides being good natured.
Miss de Lancy Is high-spirited, and
rather thought that the costume which
had been good enough for her to ap­
pear In for some hundreds of times In
Now York would do for one appear*
nhee In Hlcksvtlle.
"There Is no use talking," she nnnounced wllh decision, 'T il appear In
that costume or nothing I"
There was a moment of horrlfie&lt;! atlonce, then quick whispering among
tho Indy delegation, and n moment Int­ GOOD EXERCISE IS MOTORING
er jlietr protest ngnfimt the proposed
costume wns withdrawn.—Hillndelphtn Physician Seems to Have Made Out a
Good Cate for Hie Side of
ledger.

Rcaturanl For Sale
On account of illness in family
necessitating
removal to Georgia
the Park Avenue Ca/e and all fur­
niture and cquipemnt is offered for
•ale. Good business in good location.
For particulars., see Mias Carrio
Gray, Park Avenue Cafe..
108-tf.
‘ Just received a complete line of
Children's Ready to Wear HaU. in
Milan etc. Mrs. Grace Williams.
114-6tc.
Properly Owners Take Notice
The law provide* that " I f taxes
upon teal estate shall not be paid
before the First day of April of any
year, the Tax Collector shall adever'tisc and sell.*'
This is to notify all concerned
that the requirements of law will
be compiled with und the Tax HookT
will postively be closed on April
First aa provided by law uqil alt
lands on which taxes have notlhecn
paid will be advertised and execu­
tions* issued for unpaid personal
COSTS MONEY TO RUN ZOO
property taxes.
JNO
D .(IN KIN’ S
Tax Collector, Seminole CourttV P#ts 7jT Londofi1lr» Are Really Expen.
aive Proposition* In the Feed110- 12tc.
Wasn't Going to Touch Any.'
It wns ten time and Itlllyieame to
the table, with Milled I t : i «ttln-r
Immediately told him to leave tie*
table. "Why," said site, “you must he
washed. I wouldn't think of letting
.Yw touch a piece of bread with Mich
hnnds." The child made no attempt
to leave. He .evidently .concluded he
could remain Ju&gt;^ its 'he h
ho
said: "O, tbnt'H*oll right, mamma;
that’s nil right. I dldfi'l want bread
anyway,

CAR

•One evening, coming home from the
theater on the street ear with my Indy
friend, 1 stepped from the ear and
noticed nil automobile coming tip be­
hind tile ear. I kept my eye on the
automobile and look the elbow of the
next person nllghllng lifter rmv -ex­
pecting It to be my friend. Still Walehlug the motor, I led the elbow safely
to the walk, und Mien turned my at­
tention to her. Ititl, to my omhacrasstm rti, who should 1 llml myself escort­
ing,'hut a great, tall man, who snht In
Ihe Sweetest voiref "Thank you, I
was never e*eorte*L by ii young man
aero*:* ttie xrreer In rorr*"; you lira in,t led.
fell.
1
r met " .M i h,d\
,11.
!
I
d
M, I
t
t»
Wanted Smelt to Materialize.
John hnd been taken by.Ills umthci

Argument.

Dr. llt-nry Williams, In nn article
In Mutur*, rumba!* the theory that
motoring l* reducing our-opportunities
for exerelse. He says It* benefits are
(hr,-, fold phi deal, mental nnd vo
llrinonl The butt el pig of wind* and
li,*; Inhalation of large quantities of
oxygen .stimulate digestion, asslmlln
tbm and excretion Thl* I* true of
It,, poison who merely sit* a* well
a* vf him who drives. The latter, however, benefit* directly.
Doctor *WH&gt;
Ham* *nv*
"When you drive a car
to or 3&lt;&gt; mile* over overage Anlerlrnn
road*.' ot n fraction of that distance
In any city, you give your arms nnd
torso tt cour*e of purpioicfiil calistlien!*■* that redound* directly to the bene­
fit &lt;tf \oitr mu*ele* and arteries nod
losirt anil Indirectly, bill no !•■** slg
niltcnntlv. la lliti bom-fit of your diges­
tive organ* of elhtilhnllan a* well as
th* nervous sy*tein."
Another Statue.

V E R Y— Q OO D----- CAUSE
that we are behind is seeing that the men of the Am er­
ican Legion, as well as all men, are not “ Gouged for
^ all you can get out o f ’ em ,” but g iv e them all you can
W e are patronizad b y the men who appreciate a real
H A B E R D A S H E R Y , and in extending you this in vita­
tion to call on us it is with the hope that we can •

I

R E N D E R Y O U A S E R V IC , N O W W H E N A
L IT T L E E X T R A S E R V IC E C O U N T S M O S T

•‘THE STORE THAT IS DIFFERENT

Flr*t Woman Joumallvt.
Mr*. Anne Roytill, Itorn In Maryland

in lTOfi, wus npi only the first woman
Journalist, Imi the fir*! of Iter sex to
nvyn nnd edit n newspaper. Site way
Me w|dow of n Virginia revolutionary
war miner, nnd nptmnrrd in Washing
ton In IS'JI ^or the purpose of trying
to* secure a government pension, ra il­
ing In lid*, -lie Marled u hiiiiiII weekly
sheet which vvti* Hist called the "Wash; ingioti I'nql I'n ’ and later the "Ifunl
. res*.'* she had diet personally nnd
talketr with every president from
j
Washington to Lincoln; nnd vvus the
terror of notinemn*

m m m m m x x x i o t m xxx

&lt;#t

#

W i

CLASSIFIED
A D V E R T ISIN G r

uii-'i nmone

Ml 4u alt he vva* a sail

Ctrnr.fci ,&lt;r
g u x r u j... a n d a grant
•l1 n p|udnt inent
to tin* gtn-sis,
K\
cluing**
-

-'Wealthy I’utlcnt Oh, doctor, 1 have
Mii'h a hud cold. I can’t go to tin* office.
Mil* morning. Can’t you do something

V

5

m j

Ul

The Artistic Temperament
The landlady anothinred that a wellknown humorist and cartoonist was to
Join u* nl our hoarding' house nnd we
all had expectation* of meeting a Jolly
good fellow who would drive dull care
away. When lie arrived In* Insisted
oii having n smttk (aide by Idmvelf,
and Instead o f . drawing his chair tip
to the table "always drew tin* table to
Idlti. eiiting, fncliig the wall, with 111*
hack tn the guest*, and declined |u

W anted— 'To buy that old furni­
For Sale—House and four lots. A
ture.
Turn it into cash. Dixie Fur­
bargain,. Box. 239.
113-6tp
niture Co., 321 Sanford ave. U3'6tp
Lost—Gold Locket. Initials, S. F.
D. Kinder return to Herald Office
For Sale-*-Player piano in perfect
and receive reward.
lll-fitp . condition, house hold goods and
furniture. Also £m ith typewriter
For Sale— Extra Fine White
and bicycle. 609 Palmetto Ave.
Wyandotte* eggs. Two dollars per
11 t-tf.'
15., W. II. Ballard, Altamonte
Springs, Fla.
. 110-t f
For Sale h acres celery land al'
tiled
w j kh 4 flowing wells. Good
Wanted- White huly for house­
house,
sheds 100,000 feel hteehing
keeper and cook ior m ill'hands at
Forrest City. Write Mrs. F
It lumber. Reasonable price term*
11l-*&gt;ipi
Pounds, Maitland, It.. F. I).- or i E. F. lame

telephone 130, city.
M2-6tc
How Herons Take Fish.
For Sale T wo story H room house
Die .heron tribe has the most typi­
For Sale Wood. Cheap.
See and garage. Clear title SunfoqJ
cal nnd accompil-liot} -|*enrmen. al­
though llo* klngll-hcr* ami some oili­ B F. Whitrier Jr or Phone 242. Heights. Apply -No. 102, Sanford
112-6tp. avenue.
*
.
113-tfr.
er* have ability qf Mint sort. Persons
who have h**eu milch near sdreum*
For Sab- Stable Manure in car
amt lufcr* often have seen ih-ron*. and
Wanted • Young girl t o hnhwf*r
It 1* not difficult to watch them !l*h. lot* Budkin A: ( i i r v n. Bis bee Bldg. telephone" culls. 8:30 to 3 i.'lup M
With Modr long leg* they easily can Jacksonville, Fla'
I 10-50te.
Call 306 Kim avenue.
I Id Be.
wade Into fairly deep water I laving
reached n suitable spot, they nifty
Hum) for h.iur* a* motionless us n
reed or post, with sharp-pointed spear
—tile long, -leiider honk—poised for n
strike. If the fl*h Is small the heron
probably opens the beak slightly as
he strikes, and simp* It up ns K with
forceps. It I* • knnwn they some­
times drive thr benk through large
fish and It may hi* they often kill their
prey In that way.

4

No More Pup*.
A , little friend of mine who live*
next door-has been teasing Id* mother
for a puppy. Knowing the destructive
hnbll* of such nnlmuK she bus firmly
rcfuMsI to let hint have one. At last
he persuaded lu*r_Jn li*t Iflur borrow,
one for half a tfriy to show To-r that
o puppy knew enough to properly be­
have hltii'-i-lf. Being warned that he
niu*i wnlcli the puppy every dtiltiuie
It was In the house, the little chap
for a lime was careful to keep III* eye
on i t ; but. finally tiring of Mich vigi­
lance, In1 relaxed hi* lit tent loti only to
give the puppy the chit nee ll had been
waiting for It Improved It in the full
by do*vv lug to pieces one of Ills most
clierNtied Christmas toys. Till* wns
too much for the young host. "Good
night," he exclaimed, "no more pup*
for me; I'll get me a 10 your old dog."
— Exchange.

For Sale One Kurd Touring Cur.
practically new. One Baby Grand
Chevrolet 1920 model in perfect
mechanical order also
complete
ramping outfit including tent cot*
cooking utensils etc. Gan ho seen at
Ilotol Lincoln, Sanford after
6
p." tn. '
.
'
' I ll- f it |&gt;.
Tractor plowing und all kinds of
Tractor work. Cut! Phone 184.
112-tfc.

F O U N D On first St. west of
Sanford $1137,50 Frontinyr north
on ftrirk highway just o;ist of the.
artesian Spring half mile west of
Monroe road. 35) -j acres of ideal
home site and irrigable farm land.
Worth $200 per acre offered for
$75 per acre cash Direct from
ownes. Enquire at Phone 352 re­
lating abstract and deed. D-t-tf.
For Salt* At Sanford, by Western
Union Co., -twenty five or thirty
undersize heart cypress telegraph
poles 20- arid 25 feet long. Suitable
for ftytee post* five or six fence posts
can be made of each fiote.
110-fite'
For Sale Kiddie-Kottp, in fair
condition. $10.00 cash. Cnn he seen
at' 214 F.Im ave.
Wantc 1 One cow pony for city
pound
Will exchange for other
•lock G A Abbott. City Managrer,
11l-fitr.
Wantoti—Latiy waitress Ex)&gt;ertcnccd
Bell Cafe 79-tf

For Sale—One 18 Horse Power
Kerosene Oil Engine. C h a s e , C o . ,
'
105-tft
Ex-Army Medico (Just out)—Get eat Sanford, Fla,
of here! I'hm'rynit m u Fm busy? Tliurt
For Sate Fresh Milk Cow. See
l-ii't afiyth'ttg the matter with v -u
n-. J. Taylor, 107 Magnolia avenue.
ytu add ' ek. Thu lloluu Si-vt&gt;..
lOG-tf

RE
H IG H

GRADE
ft

Auto Painting and Trimming«
GET OUR

ESTIM ATES

S a n f o r d Heights

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

It Has Happened to Others •
And May Happen to You
In Spite o f Everything You

May

Happen to

with ample

Fire Insurance
So thnj you may not be the
loser, financially

SE E US
F IR E IN S U R A N C E

A .P . CONNELLY
ALL KINDS OF
in s u r a n c e .

,REALC ESTATE.

~&gt;ANF0 RD. FL A.Z3

LIA B ILIT Y .
C O LLISIO N
PROPERTY DAMAGF.
•—=

'

I.LSJL-

'&amp;SB&amp;S
fr •

■-

•

i

Do!

Be Prepared
When
It Does Happen

fur It 7

■ i:

'

]
\

Wlth the unveiling of. the figure of
Gen. William Shepherd In the commu­
nity of West fluid, Mu*!., n worthy fig
tire Is added to tho American popula­
tion of revolutionary heroes whose
memory Is perpetuated by ii pithily,
statue. General Shepherd, before the
•Revolution, had taken pnrj In the "Old
•
French war." which jtfMiflod Macau*
lav to -avhig* that because I n lerlek
Mo Grant tin*1 derided to roll a neigh­
bor. "ryd men sculped each other by
tin* great lake* of North America." lie
1
began as n private soldier and rose,
to the rank of lleulennnt colonel under
Washington, and Inter commanded a
hrlgade under I.nfnyette, Individuals
have sometimes questioned Ihe Utility
of public statues; yet In this ruse ns
In many another, the statue defeats
Wanted Night Clerk, tnijn middle
the common forget thine** of past age, reference* Local man preferred.
deeds that lias found expression In the Seminole Motel. S U Etnmerick,
old saving "out "f sight out of mind*' M g r
114-31r ; '

"fdark Him Duty."

for it lung ride to see an old aunt
wlm was slow In getting the dlnnei
d u 'th e lable. John wuh hungry amt
cmtlil niiicII tin* dinner. Finally. In or
der to hurry tiling* a little he edge*
up to the aunt ami said
*•('!! he !•
ylnil when f can laMc Mini smell
won't you?"

Vi.-.,

: -

of the American Legion will meet at; Post headquarters
(Courthouse) Thursday night, 8 o’ clock. A ll members
should be there as well as the men that are eligible,
and who are not members. Iu attending these meet­
ings and pushing the thing along y o u are ( furthering a
good" cause.

i, -•
V&amp;k

,*. 4

j 1f ArsSS/a-r*
Cc-VJii* .•

�' /

.

-

•

-

,

-

,

*■
■ M i

—

*•

1920

• M ARCH to

_____

.

- --

.

-

i
----- -------..........................................

----- “ .-T2~^r— -7— r r

mmm

pxr.r s

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

I

STB

No disappointment awaits you
here. Brerjr artlrte Quoted rings
with true economy.
This great sale will last for 10
days, nn'd offers many unusual op
portunilles to Hare money.

Sanford's, Greatest Sale
Certain Satisfaction
10 BIG DAYS
Hundreds of values Just received for
this big sale nre not advertised here
•

.4

I Tmj

Ten Big Days of Bargains
and at 8:30 a. m.

v M jm

This Big Sacrifice
Sale Begins
“■“ T T T T ^ T T -

N e v e r in the history o f merchandising and especially at this critical moment when goods o f every class are advancing daily has a merchant so sacrificed his
stock. But regardless o f the prevailing high prices, we are offering you the Opportunity to supply your im m ediate needs in all lines, and at ju s t' the tim e you hr©
needing the goods. A t this sale you will be able to buy goods at less than to-day's market price. .
4
40-in. Unbleached Sheeting, Best Quality'
Sea Island, 40c grade

Indies’ ’ Shirt Waists, white and fancy,
Voile, Organdie and Lawn Waists, Big
Assortment
I
|

rrr'.'W
-a- —=e _

'

One Big Assortment of Ladies Silk Geor­

36-in. Fine Weave,' Standard Quality
Cambric.............
.......................... ...2 9

gette, Crepe do Chine and Taffeta

364n. Bleaching, y d . ............................. 26
Big Assortment of Fancy Dress Ging­
hams, plain colors and plaids, 45c values

"$1.69 and up

36-in. Percale

32-in. Fast Color French Ginghams, very
is sale, yd.
Fine Quality, Special for this

36-in. Best Quality Percales.............., ., .44
Heavy Quality, fast color, Cheviots----- 34
Best Quality Amoskeng Outing
-30
Curtain Scrims
....
.22
Mpttress Tick in g
•
.30
Standard Quality Blue Denim, yd.
.48
8 Oz. Ducking . . : ..........
.39
Feather Ticking
. '
.44
Part Linen Crash Toweling
-20
$3.00 Quality ,72-in.Table Damask,yd$2.10
Heavy Quality Cot ton Flannel
.38
Serpentine KimonaCrcpe, yd
-30
Part Wool Flannel
-39
All Wool Flannel..................
-78

36-in Best Quality Taffeta Silk, in Brown,
N avy and Black

$1.98
30-in. Silk Georgette Crepe, line
thread

even

$1.98

$4.95

...____ *........................... .34

Quality Silk Crepe do Chine,
Assorted Colors, yard

O n elo to f Silk Poplin Skirts goin g at $2.95

Jj

One lot o f Serge Skirts, assorted
c o l o r s ....................................$4.69
All-w ool Poplin, Serges, Plaids and
Velours Skirts
- $6.95 up to $11.95

$2.68

Good Quality Peppcrel Sheeting, 81-in.
wide, Bleached, yd.

Going at Less Than Actual Cost

40-in. All Wool French Serge, Special At

90c yard

$2.00 yard
36-in. Farley Silk Pongee, going at, yd.

$1.39
.1.98

Sheets 72x90
Sheets, 81x90

Blouses

.34

Closing Out Positively at Less Than Cost, all Coats, Suits
Dresses and Wool Skirts

64c

Heavy

Silk

Everything w ill be Sold, Marked in Plain Figures

N o Goods Held in Reserve.

|

Best Quality 3G-in. Bleaching, yd.

A ll Coat Suits and Coats $16.00 to $29.00

78c

Bed Spreads for Double Beds, full size

Values Up to $60.00

Fancy Voiles
.44
40-in. Fine White Organdies, Best Quality

$1.98, $2.48, $3.10
and $3.69

78c and 98c yd.
B ig.Ixit pf Ribbons at Special Price for
This Sale.
All Widths and Colors.

Cotton Blankets, with
tn pink
pi
border. H eavy
weight,
size
L full
fu

Plain White Middies, with Pink or Blue
Collars and Cuffs

$1.95

$5.95 pair’

One lot o f Silk, Taffetas, Satins and
Serge Dresses
$12.45 to $19.00
One lot o f Children’s Coats, good
values, goin g at less than cost

$5.95

W e are offering some of the greatest values money can buy. W e have cut the price within the limits of Everybody’s pocket
book. Come to be surprised; you will not be disappointed
.— •

Special in Hoys’ and G irls’ Fine
Ribbed Stockings

*

Ladies’ Silk Hose
Black, White and

Ladies’ Lisle Hose

Brown

Extra Quality Silk Lisle Stockings
* ,
Ribbed 70c Value

“fee VUlue.............................................. .59
• 30cValue

.... *.. .................. .......

$ 2 .4 5
Ladies’ White Kid

59c

85c Value, Lisle Hose in All Colors ... .65

$3.50Value
............... .
&gt;V ..‘..»2.85
3.00 Value
...............
2.10
2.50 Value ................................. L95
1.75 Value......... ....*7...... .
......... :... *1.38
I.

1Julies* Black Kill Gloves, ‘ $3.50 Value

Fine

Good

.19

ljidies Pure Silk Gloves, white and black,
$1.50 value

95 c

35c, 3 pair for $1.00

•

Gloves, $3.00 Value

$2.10

Quality Fine Ribbed Stockings,
Size 6 to 9Lj, 50 cent Value ■

Take advantage of this Big Sacrifice Sale and do your Shopping EARLY
...

--

»

B A R Y .G O O D S
Knit Sucks, 75c Value........ ......$ .44
$3.00 Value Wool Sweaters....... 1.78
$1.25 Value Fine Baby Capes........ 88
Wool Mittens ................................. 20
Bootees, pink and blue . ................ 20
Knit Stocking Caps....... .................48
Lawn and Organdie Caps, 35 to.. .69
Infant's W hite Coats, made of
Albatross, $6.00 Value........... 4.45
Fine Serge W hite C o a t s V..
2.20
Velvet Corduroy Coats...... .
2.95

LAD IES' U M B R E LLA S
One Lot of Umbrellas, good q
$2.00 Value, Special for this Sale

W . B. and J. C. C. C O R S E T S going in Th is Sale at
'

*

.

Reduced Prices

$2.00 value
3.50 ” • 5,00 ”
. . .
75c Quality W. B. Brassiers

117 E. First St.

$1.38

$1.65
1.95

2.50

H. B.

COUCH COVERS, P IA N O , TAB LE

Other Qualities

V IC T K O LA COVERS. C E N ­

TE R

PIECES.

AI.L

G R E A T LY

REDUCED FOR T H IS SALE.
. .
••
. - • ,i

$2.24 and up

2.85
4.10
- 48c

AN D

Ladies’ Summer Weight, knee length
Union Suits. Good Values

60c Quality Suezine Silks, All Colors

65c and 85c

Special

Childrens’ K n it and Cambric Waists^ * &gt;

. 42c

38c

Sanford, Fla.
■-

4 »*(

flH- !ti

l

lO H M I

* r * im * m

M W *?
■ r,

t ■- ••

___ - o
m

m

i c

.

.■&gt; '.site,

^

~ -

Ti . •

!. •

•

i

'

•

•

•-.
■

wm

I -mm

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="13">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10754">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1920</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11976">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 10, 1920</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11977">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11978">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 10, 1920.  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="11979">
                <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="11980">
                <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;, March 10, 1920; &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="11981">
                <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="11982">
                <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="11983">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11984">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1214" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1086">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/5af4bf2edaf19b27393db67ad0f3a38d.pdf</src>
        <authentication>7ec1a5e62bde57fc045c0cafc78636c8</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="11995">
                    <text>T r.

IN THE HEART OP THE W ORLD’S CREATES^ VEGETABLE SECTION
VOLUME 1

SANFORD. FLORIDA, THURSDAY, MARCH I I . 1920

especially while D. C. Marlowe wae
the nptive secretary anti If possibls
in the early fall a secretary will be
engaged to put tho ,Sanford Hoard
of Trade and the county on the map
in large letters. It now .behooves
evpry live citizen of the county to
join the Board of Trade and becomo
Q n e:sjm in _iivery settle of the._word
CHEAT S P IR IT OP B O O S T IS
SHOWN - BY N E W ^O FFIC E R S

Joe Meltirh Gives MOO
In the list of people giving .'100
each to the Baseball Association in
AND M EM BERS
yesterday’s Ilernld the name of Joe
One of the most enthusiastic nnd Mclsch was left out and hence this
representative crowds of
busine" correction. Joe is one of the boys and
men, farmers and. manufacturers
thst have ever met at a Board o f
Trade meeting in Sanford met at the
Court House Tuesday night when the
annual election of ofilcors was held
resulting in the following officer^
being chosen for the ensuing year.
President, Frank L. Miller, first
vice president, Chas. L. Britt, second
vice president, T . W . Lawton,
tressurer. W. M. J I types. '
The following board of directors
• were' elected:
H. L. Haight of Altamonte, W. C.
Hill, S. O. Shinholsrr nnd Dr.
George Hyman of Sanford, O. P.
Swope of Oviedo, Endor Curlett of
Geneva. E L. Hoban of Osreohs, C.
Boyce Bell of East Sanford and
John Meisch of West Sanford.
Several of the members made in­
teresting talks on the benefits of the
Board of Trade and the got together
spirit and tho many things needed
in Fanforil some of which has been
brought here'dry the Board of Trade
and many to bo pul in force by the
efforts of the board" in tho days t’er
come and out of the discussion was
brought forth the subject of the
Osceola Cypress Co., at the new1town

W A N T 8 AM E R IC AN S T O T E LL
H IM ALL TH E NEW S
AND
THEN
RELEASES
TH EM

Fa il u r e
to
g iv e
pro m pt
T O * OPE R A T IO N CO ST ALLIES
LIVES AND M O N E Y

Washington March 11 (B y Associ­
ated Press) The Wsr Department
Intelligence officers received word
unofficially from Villa that his pur­
pose in kidnapping Americans was
to talk to them nnd get the news of
the outside world and give his views
on Mexican affairs. He said ns*WHnsom was wanted and he would re­
lease them promptly when business
was finished. He has kidnfipped five
and released them all in two months.

Washington, March ' l l . — Failure
of the navy department to give
prompt and full co-operation in the
war department during the first six
months after the United States cn-ti-rert the~*truggHrt)f*Vehled_V vTc'
tory over Germany by July, 1918,
Rear Admi.nl Wm. S. Sims told tho
senate investigating committee to­
day in supporting his charges of
delay against the department.
*
" i t is no light matter that rost the
cause with which we were allied half
a 'million Hvrs,_* l 9tO0n,t)OO;Ot)O and
2,6.00,0.00 tons cd shipping," he said.
The officer first read to t ie rommittrp the statement he had made
upon Ids arrival in London in 1917’
The statement was long and full of
technicalities, but sharply brought
out his conclusion that victory or
defeat was to ho determined by the
Gerfhan submarine .campaign, which
was concentrated in the eastern A t­
lantic where shipping routes to
England and Franco were most
numerous nnd converged.

Hood Sells Farms
brothers John and Frank is public
J/
D.
Hooil hn* disposed of hi*
spirited in every-sense of the word an
forms
on
the wed hide Roy Syrac?
nnd you carf. always' baftk on the
buying
the
22 ucres on First rtreet
Meisch boys being there with thegootf
opposite
the
ice plant and Lloyd
when th e' community needs them.
Brown buyjng tho ten acres farm
south of the 22- a&lt;;rc farm. Theae
form s'are among the in**t on , the
west side and have excellent crops
of celery on them. Mr. Hood will
take the crops and has already con­
tracted for most* of the celery at an
excellent price. It is not known what
he sold these farm* for but it is
understood that he received a hand­
Failure of the naval department to
some sum for them. The celery on throw the full force ofthe navy into
these farm* i* among the best I:T the the Fruggle ho said resulted in n
celery section and shows the quality lr&gt;«« of -t.t OO.nrO tons of shipping in
of the land. Mr. Hood will not give 1917 nnd 1.00O„0P0 tons in 1918.
ECHO I)E PAR IS SAYS FRANCE up farming altogether as he likes the Americu he said could have had a
GUARDS
R H IN E . BORDER game too well but he expeois~ld" de^- million men in Franco in 1919, in­
vote part o f his time to other pur­ stead'bf 10(1.COO. if suclt action had
FOR
SAFETY SAKE.
suits that are not quite so strenous. been taken.
.
Paris March’ 11 (B y Associated
Press} Pertinax the political editor
of the Echq.de Paris says president
Wilson’s charges of imperialism were
aimed at France by name but Mar­
shall Foch by implication. T h e .socalled imperialism Of Franco he says
is that she must hold tho Rhine
bridgeheads as n guarantee against
of Osceola or Bridge End as i t has
.&lt;*,
any and all attacks.
been called in the eastern part of the
TO ACT AS M OTOlt.M KN AND
TO*
CO R RO B O R ATE
THE
county whore a city of a thousand
C O ND U CTO R S
IN
S TR IK E .
CHARGE
T H A T ;.
A L L IE S
people has already been budt and
W ERE S LO W IN V IC T O R Y .
on account of a stretch of had road
Atlnntn March 11 f By-Associated
between Geneva and Osceola the
Press)
One hundred nnd fifty citi­
Washington March II (B y Associ­
people are prevented from coming to
zen*
signed
t ie petition to terve a*
ated Press) Ilorhert Hoover will he
Sanford. A committee w’as appointed
tnotormen
und
conductors if the
called to testify in the Senate in­
to confer with the county com m is­
vestigation of the navy conduct of company would accept their offer
sioners at their next meeting about
the war. It was Sims request- that |when t|i(r yir*e* car strike continued
this road nnd in the event that the
Hoover be allowed to corroborate to eomfUetaly paralyze the traffic
commissioners cannot at thi3 time
.
’ .
M URD ERER
W H O the charges that the allien barely Lntlny.
build tho road the committeo is N E G R O
CAUSED R IO T AT L E X IN G ­ escaped pence without a victory.
empowered t o make a loan and allow
Old Ball Player Hero
T O N ' IS
ELECTROCUTED? Sim’s testimony toddy contained in­
the county commissioners to repsjj
dications that' the. navy doped ment
J. II. Swain U in the city selling
them as soon as the county ii able
Eddysville, K y. March 11 (B y had withheld' all. available craft in
his
formula for making the Florida
as the road fund is almost used up Associated Press) I’ etrie Kimbrough,
European waters early in tho war Handy Mixture and ulso taking sub­
at prerent. The followingTom m ittce
alias W ill Lockett, the central figure
because they desired to keep the scriptions for magazines. In the
» « appointed by the president: A.
n the Lexington riots died in the
main body of the sea strength in­ heydey of bis youth he was known as
P Connelly, j . G. Bail, B. F. Whitnrr electric chair this morning for the
tact if possible for evcntiullties. lie " C y " Swain umFSvas tho pitcher of
R. J. Holly nnd F. W. Mahoney.
slaying.of Geneva Hnrdmnn school criticised w'hnl lie termed the policy
the Washington team in 1897 When
' Several other matters of grent fin girl. The execution was witnessed conditioned future of the United
he helped to pitch them to victory
pittance were discussed and demon by the brothers of the girl victim and States when engaged in war l* ccr- pitching tho deciding game in the
atrntod" what the Board of Trade a delegation of Lexington citizens. tr.ln to cxhnust^ll participants por- pennant raco Washington against
can accomplish ntone meeting if'tljo
sible except out selves.
Baltimore winning a bonus of $500
members will co e out and make the
nnd a trip to Florida. He never used
county's buiines* their besinois. At
• • .
Dyess-Gsrwood
. . the return trip an he fell In love with
the close of th e ' meeting Proddent
Mia* Pearl Leona Garwood and a Florida girl at Bristol who was a
Miller made an earnest address*
I. ’ M. Dyess o f Paola were united niece of Judgo Sheppard and did
thanking tho members for their con­
in marriage by Schelle Mairfes-iji n ot'go back to Washington. Howovo
fidence placed in him by the election
his office yjfttcrday. Tho wedding the lurp of the diamond was to
And pledging them his time and sup­ $100.00
Damage
Result*
From took -place in the presence of tho strong to keep him down on the farm
port for the year.' Mr M iller stressed
parents of the contracting parties and . in j 901 ho won on tho Ft. Wayne
\Varehouse Fire.
the fact that Sanford cobid arcomand a few friends. Both young peo­ team and helped them to win threo
High Point N. C. March 11 (B y
pllsh wonders here if the • people
ple arc well and favorably known in pennants. While In training at Colo­
would.only get together and stay to­ Associated Press) $100,000 damage the Paola section. Mr. Dyess has rado Springs he hurt his shoulder
gether on the main idep of support­ jrMulted here when a fire destroyed- lately returned from France where and had to uit the game. M r. Swain
ing the Board of .Trade and meeting the warehouse of the Williamson he wo* a sergeant In the A. E. F. will reside for a time and is looking
regr'-rly nn&gt;?'* etch month laylttC Veneer Co , r f Baltimore.
Their many friends extend con­ for furnished rooms for himself and
aside nil factional differences nnd
gratulations and best wishes.
family.
pulling f c n greater ‘lanforcf. H r im Three Killed In Alrplano Smash
pressed all j.a io u . t.’ lh i.'.j i .\r..i t?
Miami,' Fla. Mar. 11.— Maxwell
ne*s and showed that he Is tho right Blanchard of CLI cl So, .pilot, and
man in the right placo and in Presi­ Charles (T o d ) Sims of New York,
dent Miller the members will hnve and Kenneth Earle, of Montclalre,
an artive rhairnyan nnd one who will N. Y., mechanicians, were killed a f
•*pect every member t &gt; work with G o’ clock ast evening when a throe
him.
seated air-marine mnehine crashed
: , I. .
KHKSH STO R E
AND
OTHER
In Frank Miller. Char. Eritt. T . to earth near tho Hillsborough light, ’ BUSINESS HOUSES D A M A G - ESPERENZA ASH O RE IN M EXICO
W IT H PASSENGE RS IN Nj&gt;
W. Lav.tin and W. M. Haynes Hie .16 miles north of Miami. The acci­
ED.
hoard hn* a working force that will dent was witnessed by farmers who,
DANGER.
Winston Salem N . C. March 11,"
w°rk and the board of governors hurrying to the muchine, found.it a
Tampa March 11 (B y Associated
from every part of Seminole-county wreck and the oceupanta dead. T h e (By Associated ' Press) $160,000
Press)
Wireless reports say tho’ Ward
cause
of
the
sccident
is
Unknown.
damage by fire in the business dis­
* &gt;l) make 'the Board of Trade hum
Lino
steamer
Esperenza with pass­
trict
today
included
the
Kress
D&lt;*m this time-forward.
engers
struck
tl reef off Progresso
Store
and
other
stores
damkged
by
Will Talk on Comission G overn ­
No appointment a* secretary ha* ■"
Mexico and two steamers had gone
smoke
and
water.
ment.
,
been made and until a campaign for
to her aid.-She is not believed to be
G: A. Abbott the city manager of
membership* ha* been put over it I*
in any dan^pr.
Sixteen Carried in a Seaplane likely (hat sqmo'volunteer will hold Sanford- will address the - charter
Miami,
Fal. Mar. 11%
— Carrying
thi* office with the azrirtcnre of a commissions for tho new form of
M ill -Will R rtlgr
. ,
14 passengers in addition to tho pilot
stenographer to answer the corres­ government In.Tampa Friday night.
Rome March 11 16y Associated
pondence and take care of adowntown Mr. Abbott has been Invited to ad­ and mechanician from Bimini in the
office that will be opened If possible dress the meeting by the chalrmnn Bahama yesterday; the U-16 is be­ Press' The Italian cabinet .members
*hile the tourist reason is-on. •
. of- the compnission and will avail lieved to have established a new re­ will handle the resignation of Pre­
.The Sanford ^Board of Trade in him selfol-the opportunity (o discuss cord for seaplance transportation. mier t N itti today to facilitate his
the p u t has accomplished much for this invVvrtsnt question with the Rodman" Wannamaker was in the work of forming a new ministry ac­
party.
cording to the Tribune. the county and made a fine record voters o f Tampa.

WILSON’S
CHARGE
REFUTED

Hoover.
Citizens
•
Testifies In - Of Atlanta
• Navy Mess
Volunteer

LOCKETT PAYS
PENALTY FOR
H IS CRIMES

HIGH POINT N.
.
' CAROLINA FIRE

WINSTON SALEM
WARD LINER
HAS BIG FIRE *
IS ON REEF

NUMBER 116

Soil Expert Here
On Tuesday A. E. Grantham, Di­
rector of the Agricultural Service
Bureau of tho
Virginia*Carolina
Chemical Company, spent some time
with Mr. H. G. Dieterich, the Co­
pony's local representative, in vislting the farms of a few of the most
'successful truckers around Banford.
Mr. Grantham has recently come
with thb~Yirgihla-Carolina Chemical
Company In tho capacity of Soils
and Crops Expert. He is giving es­
pecial attention to the soil problom
and fertilizer practice in tho citrus
und truck sections of the State. This
Bureau of the Company will bo at
the service' of farmers and 'growers
in answering questions pertaining to
soil management and especially the
use of fertilizers.
*

FOR BOTH SID ES . OP C O N ­
T R O V E R S Y AND S O M E T H IN G
W IL L D RO P SOON.

Washington, March 11.— Here la
article 10. on which the fate of the
peace treaty again is suspended—jus
two compact .sentences act in the
midst of an 80,000 wold document:
“ The members of the league
undertake to respect nnd preserve
as against external nggreasion" the
territorial ihtorgtity and exsisting
political independence of all members
of the league. In case of such aggres­
sion or in case of any threat or dan­
ger of such aggression, tho council
shall ndvisc upon the means by which
this obligation shall be fulfiillcd.’ *
The peace treaty ratification fight
in the senate entered its final nnd
most bitterly contested phase today
with article in nnd the reservations
thereto the unfinished business to be
dispose^ of. Debate of the much dis­
IN
SU S Q U E H AN N A
RIVER puted section of the lengue of nations
covenant is in progress while negoti­
AND R E LIE V E TRAFFIC
ations looking to a compromise on
Port. Depos'd, Md. March 11 (By
the republican reservations will Ire
Associated Press) Airplanes contin- I
continued. Both sides frankly with­
ued to rain bombs on the ice jam in j
out much hope that an agreement
the Suaqufhanna river today in an j
will he effected. Several republican
effort to Open traffic which is com­
officers were ready to Institute a
pletely blocked. Yesterday's bomb­
reservation yesterday tb which they
ardment was unavailing. •
cailnl they hail obtained the support
of 48 democrats, but that number la*
Vole A geinst Strike-■
from 2 to 6 nhorl'oTTfie" W 1** neceg"
London March 11 'B y Associated
•ary to pass the treaty carrying'
.I’ rcss) T l e special trade* union emi­
qualification* which President W il­
gres voted overwhelmingly against
son ha* declared will cut the very
t'ie stride force end nationalisation
heart from tho pnet.
. .
~
of mires today.
The reservation on voting power.
In the league,'hy which United*States
declines to he -bound by decisions to
which congiess hn* not absented un­
til voting power Is made legal was
re-adoj ted yesterday, 47 to 20.
Some dernorrnt* favoring reserva­
tions arranged for n conference today
in the ykJfire of Hen. Owen, of Okla­
homa, in an efiort to expedite ratift
. —ration.
.
«
REPO RTS
IN D IC A T E
fliA T
CO LUM BIA
IS
OUT
OF*
W IL L M E E T T O N IG H T
COAL.
.

BOMBING
BREAK ICE

COAL FAMINE
*
SO. CAROLINA
THREATENED

Columbia, S. C. Match i l &lt;By
Associated Press) A general coal
famine Is threatened in South Cnrolir.a and the reports indicate that
(he Columbia is exhausted and one
largo industry has already closed
down.
*
*
•
*-

PEACE BETWEEN
RUMANIA - REDS
N E G O T IA T IO N S
W ILL
PLACE TH U R SD A Y .

TAKE
...

Bucharest March Jl. (By Associa­
ted Press) The peace negotiations
between y Russia bolshcvikc and
Rumania will begin Thursday..
E D W ARD It HIGH AM
Celebrated

City Commlnsionern Failed To.M is et
Last Night On Account'd" Illnes s.
The meeting of the City C o m ­
missioners was not held Inst nigh t.cn
account of the illness of II. It. SteVens und tho meeting was postponed
until tonight at which time the m any
matters of importance will ho ta k en
up by tho commissioners.

*

•' ‘
’
’

To Make Auto Tops; ’
Earle Field U hflro Inching for a
location for q fnctory In which to *
build auto top* and furnishings for*
-intfltrcbllf*. FJ--J* •- - - r * 1
boy having resided hero with his^
parent* Mr. and Mr*. W. P. Field
for many te ira buPof lr*e has lieW *
in Adgusta. Gn. where he va* dszncU *
ated with his fat*ie» in the njito to p 1*
busine**: This f* n np«- Hpp'J of en­
deavor in the mantifneturing field
nnd would be a good thing for San­
ford and If there i\ a * o- hr .? who
ha&gt; n vacant store or fni,.»ry jpaco
that could ho rented or leased to M r
Field It would mean anothor fac­
tory for Sanford,
' \

New York Entertainer
H ere Tonight
Mr. Edward Brigham of Steinwuy
Hail, J4cw York will give his .enter­
tainment tonight at tue Baptist
Temple-. He comes at the invitutinn
of the Pipe Organ Club. The hour is
8 o'clock. The price it only 60 cents
Heats, nr? rc-crved .at* Rcwers 4:
Roiimillatt. Aftor the entertainment
rofro»hment« will be »ervod in the
Temple cafeterii.
-» Mr. A. W. I.ho of Lee Bros, says,
’ ’ ! have heard Edward Brigham on
several ’decasloq*. _ He U _Y ecy_H ot.
R E P O R T S E N T T O P R E S ID E N T
in d will certainly, make good .”
T O D A Y * FOR
rO N F IR M A - T IO N . ”
Meeting D. A. It.
The regular business meeting of
•Washington Match 11 (B v Associ­
Sallie Harrison Chapter- D. A. It.' ated Press) The report of tho c oa l
will moot at the homo o
Mrs. •trike settlement commission was
Forest Lake Friday afternoon at rent to the president for. approval
3:3d. At this meeting plans for the today. The content* 'ware not pbumemorial to the service men of San­ llshed and .official* would not conford Seminole County will be sub­ flrjn the reports that It rnnthlned In
mitted. Many beuntlful
designs the recommendation fer a tw enty
h tve been sent in by the various five per cent increase for the h itarchitects..
ominous miners.

COAL STRIKE &gt;
SETTLEMENT
COMMISSION

•S :
m .

�MARCH 10, 1J20.

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

PAGE 6

enui’uuiuxly -muT we- Voir**- mm— rtr*»1 g rf trrfn -mrrr^-lrnnrrdtnrcljr'ivith' tfii
aervlce* o f pm? uf the most pracHatL}’ nrnie*{ Innd agent of the xcrvlfu. .wife
export* In thl* country, who I* con-, will fake over III* mnlla at once nm!
rentrating hi* attention exclusively on aend them on their wny In n fnnt thothe question na to hmv directional torryele,
'
•
' &gt;
wireless nml the wireless telciiltonap The polnt'la now demonstrated vers-

W ireless Telephone Will Do Much
to Insure Speedy Mail
Deliveries.

Information for Plane Pilot.
When we have this ayatem working
properly It will mean that during our
hours of flying. *:iy fr*nrn 12 o’clock to
4 p. m..- every land operator will he
listening for messages from the air
and a pilot having set out say from
Hounslow, and wishing to know ex­
actly what the breather Is like In tlio
channel, will *!mply take up hls re­
ceiver and call “ Hello. Lympue." All
the othfr stations on the nlrway will
henr, but only Lympne will reply, and

Hurtllng\Through the Fq^,

A pilot In nn\Alrplane, flying on
through n thick mist. Is as unhappy
ns a pedestrian In a dense fog—only
more so. Not only Is there the ques­
tion o f finding hls way. but he Is
faced also by the embarrassing fact
that, through not being able to torn
London.—W ill the aerial mail serv­
Ida eye upon any horizon line, he ennice. when Its organization lias been
nol Judge the altitude or Inclination
Improved, still continue to be Inter­
of hls mnchlne In relation to the
rupted by such adverse weather as
ground below, with the result that lie
may get Into a side slip or spla and
find suddenly that hls machine has
passed out of Ills control—n condition
rusetnge without Inking up nny room nf affairs which may spell -extreme
j Hut should n pilot have to innki* n peril.
_____
compulsory- descent-hc-irttlnn nHgtirThen tve expect very soon to have
I Ing |nke out hi* must. Joint It together Improved considerably the Instru­
nml place the ’’aerial" of hi* ivlre- ment* In . n mnchlne which tell Its
&lt; lc*s telephone on the tup of it. Then. pilot Its altitude and Inclination when
; when he tins raised this mast and he Is deprived hy fog or cloud nf n
stuck the end of It In the ground— horizon line. Then, ns yet another
I It will lie about 30 feet high wlien point, we nre working on the question
fully extended—lie will he able to call of lighting aerodomc* . and landing
' up |he nearest aerodrome on Mg w-irj». grounds so that a pilot can make a
less telephone nml tell them Ju*| wlinf. safe contact with the ground eren
field he Is. down In nml whm hi* when the air Is heavily obscured.
trouble I*. • In «tich n ruse. If n uinn This Is. of course, n point of rnpltnt
cannot n*crml ngnln quickly, we shall Importance.
It Ik not enough to
sem^ another machine lo him from the guide n man accurately while he Istirnre«t relief point, which will take1 flying In misty weather. You must,
on hl« innII* We -hull «oen time a I lie able to Insure him also a safe
system, both on the English mid
French sections of the route, whereby
n pilot who ha* u forced land'it'* i nn
Wireless teL
When New 8yetem Is Wogklng Prop*rly'Pilots Will Be In Conetant
Touch With around by Meane
of Wireless.

HELD

FAST TO THOSE FISH

Indianapolis Man Was Taking No
Chances of Losing the Prizes
He Had Secured.

frtjr TTjrnn a w n r ii•n **-rin!n Tirtrnber
nf lanterri-Wtye view*. usually 10, hut
ino or ‘Jflo or motto by special ndnptnlion. The npjmVntu* include* n 1,000
rnndlc power nitrogen-tungsten lamp,
condensing nnd_ objective lense*. nml
n small motor to lip connected to n
Intup socket on either ft direct or alter­
nating current circuit. \f*ho' mnfhlne
shifts tin* slide* automatically, allow­
ing cnrh picture to rcuuHn on the
screen 12 second* before bolnit replnred hy tit® next. The nulflt with
screen. Klldes. etc., pack* Into n aultcniie, nml In especially flttnl tp enable
the traveling MlIonian to ahow good*
by picture, though nlso ndupted for
educational display*. home eatertnlninent nml n great variety of other purposes.

An Epoch-making event in the annals of Am eri­
can amusements is the presentation by Richard
Walton Tully of the virilo-compellfng-feccoinpHshed
American actor, Guy Hales Post, in the irridescent
bubble of modern humanity, “ The Masquerader.*'
This dramatic masterpiece by John Hunter Booth,
taken from the widely read novel of Katherine
Cecil Thurston, intimately illustrates the lives of
two' men who met in the fog and traded identities
and living quarters

The dual characterisation offers Mr. Poat a
wonderful opportunity and the constrasted char­
acters are impersonated by him with all tho art of
a genius mind. Ilia drug fiend ia a pitful wretch;
his Loder, the. "m m ,“ the mental and moral an­
tithesis of the.other.
More intensely and artistically interesting than
Jcckyl and H yde— more massive in presentation
than any modern play, and yet, so deftly done, its
ponderous scenes move with the smooth rapidity of
an uninterrupted panorama, and that is what this
wonderful play i s - A L IV IN G M O V IN G , T A L K ­
IN G P A N O R A M IC R E F L E X OF T H E W A IU *
A N D W OOF OF H U M A N IT Y .

Special Attention Given to Automobile Parties
MRS. C. D. DRUM LEY, Manager,

Filming Holy W rit

NOTICE

men In Amerlcn who jire about to he
gtn this stupendous work claim that
tfielr Bible picture* will help lo quiet
the unres! o f the world, nnd that, ns
tin nld to religion, education nnd social
welfare, their value wlll he almost In
rulriAablc.
•

An Attraction That lla.s Become an Inalitulion
RIGGER AND BETTER THAN EVER
A Magnificent First Pari

THE GARDEN OF MIRTH
Derby Day at Churchill Downs
A Hauling Dancing Divcrlisemcnl

Memorable Mlnslrrl
Merrymakers

PRICES: 75c $1.00 $1.50 Plus Tax
Doors Open 7:1
Curtain 8:15
Seats on Sale Tuesday, ESTES PHARMACY .

CALL FOR’ A NATIONAL CRY
Great Need In This Country, 'TIs Said
for an Explosive, Expres­
sive Yell.*

Christmas Eve Calamity.
lie had been spending Christmas
eve m KIi bis brother In I^&gt;ndo/i, and
when, lute dint same night, lie re­
turned to Id* wife—Mrs. Brown—hit
face «a * siruiigdy-jialc and haggard
“ What la It, dear?" exclnlmcd thl
wife..
. *
•
“ I will tell yog. It linpticncd whlll
we were nt dinner. We were nil eat*
log Id -quite ordinary fashion whei
suddenly little Donqhy uttered a er.l
of distress and dosed tier eye*. . A'*
most af the Mime'instant my sister in­
law pressed her hand to h
and tears streamed down
As I gored at hf-r In alarm my brother
John threw up Id* arm* with an excla­
mation of luteiiM- pain nml then hurled
Ills face, over which n sharp xpaxn
appeared to lie passing. In hls napkin/
“ Poisoned!” gnsped Mr*. Brown,
with hysterical symptoms. • •
,
"No. my dear.", replied-Mr. Brown
»ilh ghastly nil inties*. “ Horseradish.'
— London Tit-Hits.
. _
•

This will be of interest to every house
wife in the City of Sanford
There will be at

PEO PLES BANK OF
=
SANFORD =

l&lt;\ particularly In patriotic outdoor
detminslratliin*.. American* nre not
Incapable of making loud, loyal noises,
nnd not averse thereto. But rarely Is
n parade staged In tills city Hint Aloe*
not move throughout n largo part of
Its course between syfnl lines of spec­
tator*.
The result I* sometimes so
depressing as largely to neutralize the
desired effect of the parade.
Tile will to cheer doubtless arises
nil along l|ic line, hut there I* no short
nml easily exploded yell known to us.
•'Hurrah," Is the traditional Amcrlrnn
word fur cheer, hut no mini will ven­
ture Its use In puhlle. unless In the
wake of n cheer leader who prefaces
It with a “ hip, hip, hip!” Even then
the usual response testlfle* that this
method of cheering Is getting rusty.
There la no lack of cheering on an
American fupthnll field, nor nt nny
kind of n demonstration on n college*
campus. The reason for thl* I* Hint
good, expressive, explosive yells have
heen devised' for outdoor use. AmJ
because they do explode, nnd because
•hey aland for something, the Ameri­
can public likes to use them. They
also like to follow u good yell lender.

Improved Stareeptlcen.
A recent development of tho aterenptlcon. operates automatically, throw-

-

A Cooking and Puro Food Demonstration

S

'

ON THE WONDERFUL

| D etro it V a p o r S to v e
jg

; Wednesday and Thursday, Mar. 10*11
You are cordi­
ally invited
And we promise
you will not
be disappointed

BISH O P HAYES

The first requtite for you to do is to think— this
*111 bring forth ideas of two kinds; via: Imperfcctrd
and Perfected Ideas. The I rnper fee ted Idea is one
where you t* ink you will some day.start to suve
iiut just- seem never to dd' it. The Perfected is
where you ACT* A T O NCE and save for thrift’s
sake. Which rourre will you take? You
know
which is best and Up Know where we run help
you. Will you Come HERE?

CHULOOTA, FLORIDA

*

Tlie Bible Is to Tie (limed, and the

America’s Oldest nnd Best Minstrel Organization

Thritt

Curtain At 8;15. No one Seated During The Prologue

On the Okeechobee Brunch of the Florida Erist Coa«t
,
’Railroad
?

lie Was shotting jiff 111*.alleged
before tbe family ntld the
maid mistook li for Kusslnn.—

v* One Touch of Nature

marrfrrf

C H U L U 0T A IN N

l; so glum?

The Frogs Wedding

ORLANDO

The most Ponderous o f all Modern Plays
pulsating with the element that comprises " L i f e "
presented in

Charles had* been going to kinder
garten about two week*.'During this
time the children hnd been taught the
song' “ When the Hun Wnkes Up at
Itrenk of Day." The little fellmv liked
It very much and trlnl to sing It at
home. T li» children hnd been told
about Mr* Itlnker living nboro the
l.liiih-rgnrieiiMiml dial she could hear
them Kinging.
Thl* fact. With the word* o f the
*ong made a deep Impression on
t'liarle- Wlien he reproduced the xgng
at home, this is what tie Insisted was
miTPCtT “ When the Still Wnkes Up on
Itlnker- Day."

m e S n 'iu r .

THEATRE

G UY
B A TES

'Valuable Tree.
A giant knurl tree has been logged
hy the Queensland forest service and
the limber sold for 91.000. It was
known as noil's tree and yielded 17,­
000 sii|H*rflclal feet of timber In five
huge logs, and the logging costs
amounted to $500. The net stumpnge
came to twelve feet fl Inches per 100
sutler feet. Had the tree been smaller
n higher prize would have been real­
lied, an few saw-millers cared lo handie It. This giant of the forest was
offered In n timber-getter for &gt;30 on
the slump, being at (he rate of less
lhnn 20 cents per super feet, twelve
year* ago.

Cause for Gloom.
Why d o e s William Wlndjnm-

THE AL. G. FIELDS MINSTRELS

PHILLIPS

With this Stove
it relieves
tbe worry of the
gas situation
as this stove
burns either

Kerosene or
Gasolene
T?oa ®’lvA
e 118 a CflHl-°n the above dates,
® 7 ® mon.8trat°r being a wonderful cook
f
.e ;wu!ner of.many blue ribbons in
many recipes that will

give out

* BE OF INTEREST TO YOU
Bishop Hayes, who lo soon to go %•
Franco aa head of tho Am orlcan army
chaplain*. H o will go ao a civilian
having dscllnod a Commission

�MARCH l i . 1920

SANFORD. DAILY HERALD

PAGE 2

THE HERALD PRINTING
COMPANY
nm
U. J. HOLLY. Editor
W . M. nAYNES. Business Mansger
AOcertUmS Ktum Mad* « » • « • •« Arell***’®*

Maryland In, Hlitery.
The city of Baltimore wan fniinded
In 172S, Frnb-rlrWti 1743 utwl George
(own In I7M. Slrtrytarti! playoff an hnn
ora file part In the Revolutionary war
and In 1783 cun grins met nt Annnpoiis,
where, on December 23. after the conelusion o f peace, Washington resigned
Ids commission as commander In
chief. In the war of 18(2 the state
suffered severejy. fort McHenry was

This city has lost a hunch of
business through the neglect of the
Southern Utilities Co., and much of
this business will never come hack
and yet t&gt;4* bunch deliberately
takes money for service that has
never been rendefed. O, you munci
pa! ownership.

A bank is much more than merely a safe
place for keeping funds, for handling checks,

occasion for thc.writing.of “ Tim StarSpangled Bonner" by Francis Scott
Key.
•
_____________
&gt;

fo r collecting* drafter etc.

• •

A bank should be regarded as the inti­
There are aorne big things in atore
for Sanford thla summer and they
are things which th e Herald knows
about but cannot divulge at this
time. Among them are another hotel,
two apartment h'ousee and a project
that ia new and will be the making
of Sanford as a tourist resort.

Another ia£ off ywterday. *

Feel like making a gallon or two of
Fue 1 oil is scarce in thia part of
booxe
for your own use? Don’ t do It.
the country.
Under the provisions of the prohibi­
Only a few more days in which to tion Isw the government, if you are
&lt;io your Income Tax shopping. The detected, can aeize the real estate oh
which it was made and throw you
T im e U up on MaVc_h 16th.
Into the street. The antis appear to
have put sharp teeth into th e law,
We would like to ask the City
Commissioners again, "W h a t are
you going to do about it?” and when.
Are the morals of this nation In a
state of rapid decline? One is in­
clined to think so, from^thc mass of
disgusting details served up daily
by the city newspapers. Th e eily
circulation of today depends to a
considerable extent upon the amount
of sensationalism the editor can
Star says '^FohRdnoh woiTId' tittVP a crowd into his pages. * Ltgim ate
wonderful effect on London,” W ell nows nrtides arc the last to he read.
say it would, buddy.
- — o ----, We are compiling facts and figures
Watch the Sanford Board of on the question of muncipal owner­
Trade. It is going to do things this ship that will open the eyes of the
summer. If you have not joined you people to the amount of money we
had better get in the game.
have been losing .through the South­
ern' Utilities Cm And when thr*e
It may he true that money is the facts and figures are published there
root
hire's■ win
will uu
ho iiu
no qquestion
about the people
i v y t of all evil. But “ if so, t ,.......
u r ^ i i u i i auuui
consolation in knowing that wc are|(J[ Sanford having their own plants*:
all tarred with the same brush.
whether
will tie by bunding or
-- 0 - — •
privati subscriptions,
----- O ---- ~
No man can make a success in
life unless lie begin* by believing
Placing nn-'s ear carefully
the
in himself The world's estimate of groon-l faint rumblings ryn
fie
your ability is never higher than heard of an early drive of the antIyo u r own.
^
tohaceo foFcei And. to meet f 'rce
----- O ----- J
1i: h t. i.eriur force, we suggest an
Soon now the census figures will or.i’ ajglit &lt;M tin- army *&gt;f anti-corset s
be made public. For the sake of our anti-rougue, anti-fave creams, antsreputation as a growing- community Ifg *iisplaying f-1 irtk. anti-hari- back*
an
here's hoping each one of us was and bri-anuu anti-chewing gum,
te*- creams, ant i-ronfeet ions, and
counted twice-.
a n t:-g o *M |*‘
M e r e i an i&lt; o n ! &gt; m e r e
— O ---t- .
.
, .
feran. tin* when backed up against
Fortunes are not made by loafing
.
,
,
.
.
the wall nod tn. desperation he will
oa street corner* and making sug­
let out a few whoops of wholesome
gestive remark* ahout women who
pass by But reputations are of a truths. On with the scrap!

mate helper, advisor, and friend of the custom­

SHOWS

"PROFS’'

Milvis Marble

k

1

■

MOTOR
CARS

ARCH

YOU M A Y FIND

City M arket
■B2v v

Famous Dixie Cakes
Fresh Dates
Figs and Nuts

m i *
m r ••

Phone 106
4

100-YEAR

Complete Line of

niulne. Wash.— Erection of n huge
memorial nrcti otr the JnternatlunAt
boundary here to commemorate tin?
century of pence between Canada ami
the United States Is being urged by
good roads men of Washington and
British Columbia.
•Tentative plans calf for the ereetloif
of the urch in a big park to bo -estab­
lished on the Pacific highway on both
sides o f. the boundary. The eltjL of
Blaine Is willing to purchase the
American share of the park If the
British Columbia parliament will buy
the Canadian side.
Samuel tllll of Seattle, president of
the Paclflc Highway association, Is
leading the movement Premier John
Oliver o f British Columbia has prom­
ised to consider the matter.
‘ •

,

FOR QUICK SERVICE

(Jbod Company.
1
One good talker and one good list­
ener make the moat satisfactory chat
—Buffalo Enquirer.

F. P. FORSTER, President

C H U L U O T A IN N
CHULUOTA, FLORIDA
Open|Dccembcr 7th for (he Season.
MRS. CIIAS. D. BRUMLEY, Mgr.

Note The Richness of Rcseland Dairy M ilk, and you
will understand why it is prefer­
red bym others who demand the
purest and best for their children.
The-high-cost-of-food need never
affect the children so long asItoseland Milk provides the nour­
ishment it does for the small
amount it costs. W e make two
deliveries daily.

F O U N D On first St. west of
Sanford $4437.50 Fronting north
on brick highway just cast of the
artesian Sprinp half mile west uf
Monroe road. 35' ^ acres of idetfl
home site and irrigable fttrm land.
Worth $20B per acre offered for
$7f&gt; p er'acre c;ls!i Direct from
mvnes. Enquire at Phono 352 re­
lating abstract and deed. 94-tf.

It
b it

is w orth
to

(ftffte a

Phone 2011
5^

be a b le to g e t

when

a d d i­

Wanted One row pony for city
pound
Will exchange for other
stock (i. A Abbott, City Mnnagrer.
!ll*6 tr.

tional expense for spe­
cial factory shipments

Wanted— Lady waitress Experienced
Bell Cafe 79-tf

p arts

yo u

need

them , and not h a v e to
w a it

and

pay

Cotton Seed M eal
T IT R A T E
SODA
Potash Nitrate
ASHES

For Sale— Kiddle-Koop, * in fnlr
condition. $10.00 cash. Can be seen
at 214 Elm ave.

■ For Sale—One 18 Horse Power
Kerosene Oil Engine. Chase &amp; Co.,
Sanford, Flo.
105-tf.
fo r Sale— Fresh Milk Cow, Sec
E.-J. Taylor, 407 Magnolia avenue.
106-tf

H A S E &amp; C O

For Sale— House and four lots. A
bargain. Box. 239.
]]3&gt;6tp
Loat—Gold Locket. Initials, S. F.
D. Finder return to Herald OtTce
and receive reward.
lll-3 tp .
For Salt*.— Extra Fine White
WyiyidoUea eggs. Two dollars ^&gt;er
IK. W. It. Ballard, Altamonte
Springs, Fla
110-tf.
* W anted— White indy for house­
keeper and cook fur mill hands nt
Forrest City. W rite' Mrs. F. R.
pounds, Maitland, R. F. 1). or
telephone 130, city.
112-Gte.

Cor. Oak

and 2d St

PH O N E 3

Sa n f o r d

^ YOU CAN’T MAKE ^
HAY WITHOUT SUNSHINE
Nor cait you make much money
without some effort to
f—-

Sale— Wood. Cheap.
Set
Whltner 'Jr. or Phnfte 242.
- 112-Gtp
For Salo—SUhle Manure in car
lota. BtifTMn &amp; Glrvin, IHshpe Bldg.
Jacksonville, Fla.
!10-50te.

C O N S E E T2 Y O U R R E S O U R C E S

l&gt;y estabL siring credit with a
reliable hi uk,
no : make some real
in Mte SUNSHINE by
starting a c \eek account wit!
ns. Build u i your credit that
yon may Lo able to master
difficult problems.

W anted— T o buy that old furni
ture. Turn it Into cash. Dixie Fur
niture Co., 321 Sanford ave. 113-Gti
For Sale— Player piano in perfect
condition, house - hold goods and
furniture. Also Smith . typawriter
and- bicycle. 609 Palmetto . Ave.
*
.
113-tf.l
tiled With 4 flowing wells. Good
house,
sheila 100,000 feet bitching
lumber. Reasonably price— terms.
E. F. Lane
'
*
113-Gtp.
For Salo— Two story 8 room house
and garage. Clear title. Sanford
Heights. Apply No. 402, Sanford
avenue.
. .
113-tfc.

HOME W E

W anted— Young girl to ar
telephone calls. 8:30 to 3:30P.
Call 306 Elm avenue.
113

-

IN S T IT U T IO N

P A V : 4 %

ON

.' « -- -

-

'
,

-

B. F. W H IT N E R , Cashier

S a n fo r d , F lo rid a

For Sale— At Sa'iford, by Western
Union Co., twenty fiv e - o r thirty
undersize heart cypress telegraph
poles 20 and 25 feet long. Suitable
for fence post* five or six fence posts
can be tnude of each pole.
110-Ctc'

PEACE

Memorial Urged for Friendly Rela­
tions Between Canada and
United States.

AT THE

ME

FOR

.view.

Tractor plowing and all kinds of
Tractor work. Cnll’ Phone 184.
112-lfr*

At Northwestern the full profi*ssor,

GOOD
MEAL ’

your connection with us with such service in

For Sale— One Ford Touring Car,
practically new^ One Baby Grand
Chevrolet . 1920 model in perfect
mechanical order also
complete
ramping outfit including tent cots
cooking utensils etc. Can Im* Seen at
Hotel Lincoln. Sanford after
C
p, m
II 4-Gtp

so called, receives .fn'tn $3,000 to
$4,000 yearly..'*
TlinquesUdminirc also el Idled oilier
Itiformnilou which the Northwestern
“ U" teacher clulms entitles him tb
sometlilng more Hum the 23 per cent
Increase of salary recently announced
b’j t\mpalgn Chairman Dyche.

A

deavor to render; and we invite you to make

— F o f \ P ; l] r .’A
gr^cn
celery fdant« for immediate Netting
Mrs. G. C. MrDougai. j^Celery
Avenue.
*
II

EVERYTHING

0

This is the kind o f service that we en

W anted— One o; two furnished
rooms for light housekeeping. Rea*
nonsble price. No objections to dis­
tance from city. Man pnd wife and
seven yeai old hoy. Can give re­
ferences. Address J. H. S. care of
Herald. Must know by 10 O'clorl^
Friday momipg.
1
JlS-’ tp.

Monumenls, Copings
I Marble or Granilc

ir*1-■
* -

quired, and to protect .his interest in evety w ay

For Sale—2 Hogs, clean , fed
weigh ahout 200 lbs. each in fine
rhipe to buchcr. W. H. Hynes,
919 French Ave.
.
116-3te.

Co.

TOU W ANT FOR

ADVERTISING

way, to extend necessary accommodation as re­

W anted— Night Clerk, man middle
age, references. Local man preferred.
Seminole Hotel, S. R. Emmorick,
Mg’r.
114-3tc.

UNDERPAID

We need nnother celebration here
t o gtt some life into the city after Wives of Instructors at Northwestern
the many llghtless night? and power­
University Are Forced to Do
less days and waterless mornings
Their Own Work.
and gasless afternoons.
Chicago.—A questionnaire among,
the faculty members of the college of
liberal nrla at Northwestern uulv«r*lty was responded to by fifty-two and
showed, among many Interesting!
things, that among professors and in­
structors whose salaries ore less than
$1,64.4) the modem "hired girl" Is un­
known.
" I f the Instructor marries, his wife
must do nil the housework for some
F. L. MILLER, Owner
time." the facility report, recently sub­
mitted to the trustees of the universi­
ty. siiy*.
But worst of all, even when the In­
structor hits worked Ids way up the
d
ladder to the position of associate
or assistant professor “ we find him,"
the reiHjrt continues, “still unable to
spend much of anything for domestic
service. N o t even In the group oT men
receiving the talaries of full profes*ors.do we fiud an average expendi­
ture sufficient to |iny n maid's wages
fo'r otp- year.”
,

er, ever ready to co-operate in every proper

that lies within it ’s power.

bind.
- — O -----

CLASSIFIED

-----

S A V IN O «
-

1 :

.. • '

�*»• \

MARCH 11, 1920

Uttle Uappooing*
Mention of

Matters

SANFORD DAILY HERALD
Sanford people for flight* over tho
lake. M r.%Gridin Is accompanied by
A. M. Andrews and they made the
flight from the hangar at Long I j»
land to Florida, by following the
Inland Waterways jtp. Jacksonville
From here they took the St. John*
river trip here and were U eligh fed :
Mr*. Rob ret Holly, wife of Editor
with this part of theif Joorney.
Hotly, of tho Sanfocd Herald was in
Fort Fierce this morning, railing on
Mr. and Mr*. A. K. -Wilson. Mr*.
Holly i* 'spending a month with her
sister, Mr*. Vincept, on the Indian
River Farms, near Vero, and accom­
Mrs. R. A. Terheun, Editor
panied them today on a trip to West
Phone 895
Palm Beach to.attend the Seminole
Sufj Dance.— Ft. Pierce Tribune.
Society Peraonala
’ Electrlqmi Fixtures, House WireMiss Kate Shorter haa returned to
log, in fact all kin da of electrical
her
home In St. Augustine after a
work. Phone 442. W . H. Treadwell,
week
end visit with M r*. Raymond
Electrician.
/
83-tf.

In and About

personal Items
of Interest '
The cjfikor of tho Herald wishes
to t h a n k Capt StafTord for n fine
"had that he *ont in the.othfr day
jt was n beauty nnd when baked
with all .the .trimmings was aorno
owell dish. The gennll captain guards
the bridge across the Harden ferry
&gt;nd also has time to net many of
the finny tribe for tho trade and w'e
hope he realizes his dream of a new
ice plant that will take care of his
fishing trade and not force him to
K nd to DeLand for ice as he.does
n0w when the Southern Utilities Co.,
b taking ^ »««t.

Summary o f the
Floating Small
Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
Uerald Headers

Card of Thank*
Car of Dsnnnu and Apple* on
To the kind Iriends who came t o
tr«ck by express office. M uit be
gold in two d*y*. Price 75 cent* Up, our assistance- 'em Monday night
when out home caught on flte, we
oer bunch Come and get your
wUh to extend heartfelt thnaks.
bargsins.
I H t Ip*
"
Misses Muller.
Mr. and Mn». Frank M ciich are
Anyone ha* work in Building
receiving congratulations on the ar­ Trade, Decorations, Anthony Scherival of a little daughter. The little man and Minnhan, one of tho old'
lady will be called Constance Cecelia- pioneers of Sanford Fla., his time
Plenty of Plain V iew Bean Plan­ while staying here awhile, like to he
ters for Immodigte delivery. H ill employed.
Anthony W'. Sehleman
Implement and Supply Co. I13-6tc. 116-3tp.
Cooked ' Food Sale, benefit of
Mrs. J. A. Brower who was operate
Methodist Conlenery, Saturday,
on last week for gall stone is rap idly March 13 at Betts Bros. Epworth
recovering.
League,
11G-Otc.
For Klim Powdered Milk. Phono. 2412
W. W. Dressor.
108-6tp •
Properly Owners Take Notice •
Rcslurant For Sale
The law provides that " I f taxes
On account of illness in fam ily
upon
teal citato shall not be paid
removal
to
Georgia
necessitating
the Park Avenue Cafe and nil fur before fhe First day of April of any
niturc and cqulpemnt fa olTdred for year, the Tax Collector shall n(lever
sate. Good business in good location. Use and sell."
This is to notify oil concerned
For particulars see
Miss Carrie
that
the requirements of Inw will
Gray, Park A vom,c Cafe.
be
compiled
with und tho Tax Books
108-tf.
will poatively ' he closed on April
Just received a* complete line of
First as provided by law und all
Children’ s Ready to Wear Jlats. in
lands on which taxes have not been
Milan etc. Mrs. Grace Williams.
paid will be advertised and execu­
tions Issued* for unpaid personal
property taxes.
J N l). D. JIN.K1NS
Tax Collector, Seminole County.
110- 12tc.

EVERYTHING IN

G roceries

Building M aterial
Rooting of All Descriptions

Lime, Cement, Plastor
Brick, Drain. TUc and
Sewer Pip«.
::
::

Hill Lumber
Company

PHILLIPS
GUY

THEATRE
ORLANDO

No Phone nrH(T»
N o u t U laid

Curtain At 8:15. No one Seated During The Prologue
An Epoch-making event In tho annals.of Am eri­
can amusement* is the presentation by Richard
Walton T ally of the virile-oonipelling-ajxompHshod
American actor, Guy Bates Post, in the irridescent
bubble of modern humanity, "T h e Masquerader."
•Thia dramatic masterpiece by John Hunter Bootlr?
taken from the widely read novel of Katherine
Cecil Thurston, Intimately illuitrates tho lives o f
two men who met In the fog and traded identities
anil living quarter*.
The dual charnctcrlxailan offer* Mr. Post a
wonderful opportunity and the conatroatcd char­
acters are impersonated by him with all the art of
a genius mind. His drug fiend is a pitfui wretch;
hi* Loder, the "m an," the montal and moral an­
tithesis of the other.
M ore Intensely and artistically Interesting than
Jeckyl and Hyde— more massive in presentation
than any modern play, and yet, *6 deftly done,. Its
ponderous scene* mova with the smooth rapidity of
an uninterrupted panorama, nnd that is what this
wonderful play is—A L I V I N G M O V IN G , T A L K -

said as he gave his Hundred Dollars to the Base Ball Club that in giving it as
well as the right to use the Ball Park this Summer he felt that the money was Be­
ing given to help the town, as a good ball team is" a help to the. town. L et’s all
of us help the proposition along, it deserves it.

And It Is Up To You To Decide
whether or not Our Store should be helped along. : Whether or not we deserve
your patronage depends upon you. W e have used every effort to place a Cloth­
ing store in Sanford that will be the equal of a city store, carrying the very best
that' can be purchased, W IT H O U T T H E C IT Y PRICES. Its here for you and
we want you to come get it. After trying us out once you can then be the judge
Us to whether or not we deserve your further consideration. Other men have

A congenial party of friends mo­
toring to New Smyran Tuesday the
gueata of Rev. G. B. Waldron were
Rev, and Mrs. Chas. D. Brower, M r
and Mrs. Palmer and Mrs. Kelt of
Chicago.
Mrs. R. E. Tolar will ffo up to
Jacksonville on Friday to hear the
Creators Opera Company on Tues­
day evening.
Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Stevens and
Rebecca have returned from Miami
accompanied by Dr. Ralph Stevens
and Dr. S. Pulcston.
Mr. and Mrs. Mabry Sumner and
little daughter stopped over In San­
ford while cn route from Tampa to
their home in Jacksonville. They
were guests of the Valdes, meeting a
number of friends whiles here.
('harming Dinner Parly
in honor of Mr. and Mrs. A. F.
Porter of Lunghorne, Pa., Mr. and
Mrs. I. D. Martin entertained with
u charming dinner-party orf Sunday
evening at their home on Golden
Lake.
Covers were • placed for fourteen
utid a delicious turkey dinner was
served in courses. The table with its
centerpiece of roses and attractive
appointments was very lovely, with
dainty hand painted place cards in
rose design making the places.
Other guests of the delightful
occasion, were Mr. and Mrs. J. C.
Ellsworth, Mr. and Mrs. C. II.
Campbell, ‘ Mr. and Mrs. \V. W.
Dr (-hror, Miss Lucy Byrd Smyths.
Miss Helen Dressor, .Mr. Samuel
Schwartz and Mr. Albert Smytho.

f

Something New

PAGE 3

■ Social Department Bridge

’

t

Mrs. Fred Walsmnn was the
gracious hostess of the bridge party
given by the social department at
tho Woman’s Club Tuesday after­
noon. There were six tables of players
enjoying the fascinating game and
a number of other guests engaged
in handwork.
Tho bridge prize was won by Mrs,
E. M. Galloway to whom was pre­
sented a bottle of toilet water. There
was a suggestion of
St. Pat ricks
Day in the cunning little tally cards
and the favors with their piggies
and. shumrocks. Cut flowers adorned
the rooms. At the refreshment hour
•a pineapple salad course was served
by the hostess assisted by Mrs.
Fedder and Mr*. W. L. Morgan.
St. Agnes Guild
St. Agnes Guild resumed its re­
gular .meetings on Monday after­
noon nrneeting with Mrs. Robt.
Herndon at the home of her mother,
Mm. Stumon. There was an unusually
large attendance, sixteen
members
being present.
Routine business was transacted
and a donation of tea towels made
to the Cathedral (EpUcopla) schooj
in Orlando. St. Agnes Guild will be­
gin this week to fiurnish sandwiches
to the High School committee for
sale for* the Far East Relief Fund.
A t the conclusion of business re­
freshment* were served. Those pres*nt» were Mesdames Swarthout,
Marvin, Lee, Bidding, Minarik, Key,
Belt*, Matthews, Lloyd, Takach,
Burdick, Lconrdi, Dniger,
Mrs.
E. F. DcLn Haye was a guest of
the Guild:

These days of high prices, Clothes that last longest is what you
umnt:- Thais the kind you get at Our Place. '

THE STORE THAT IS DIFFERENT

Mrs. C. b . Goodhue, mother of the
groom entertained. with IT fumlly"
dinner party last evening. The cele­
bration was also it* Imnor of her son's
birthday. A beautiful wedding cake
graced the center of the table, which
was most attractive with its pretty
appointments nnd vases of pink
Killarncy buds with ferns. The cake
was adorned with the ornaments that
beautified the-, wedding cuke of Ids
aisler, Mrs. Vance Douglass. The
family party consisted of Mr. and
M ts. Goodhue. Mr. and Mrs. Walker
Mr. and Mrs. Vance Douglass and
Helen and Herbert Douglass.

CHULUOTA- INN
On the Okeechobee Branch of tho Florida East Coast
Railroad

Special Attention Given to Automobile Parties
MRS. C. I). IiltUMLEY, Manager,

CHM.UOTA. FLORIDA

Cecllllnn Music Club
At the -students , recital_of the
Cerillian Musie ('lull on Saturdu?
afternoon at the studio of Mrs.
Munson, the assisting talent will he
Miss Irene McCague of Huslls, in
addition to the pleasing program
that will be rendered le^'llie pupils.

ALL KINDS OF
IN S U R A N C E .
RE ALC ESTATE.
fSANFORD, FLA.

Society Personals
Miss Iuo Willard Lindsloy who is
spending the winter in Orlando was
the week end guest of Mrs. Joe
Harroid.

When the horse is stolen, the stable door is locked"

* Mr. und Mrs. Ed Roux of riant
City with their sister Mrs. Booker
from Virginia were tho week end
guests of Dr. and Mrs. L. It. Phillips
Miss Naotpi Harroid of DeLand
was the weeT end guest of her aunt,
Mrs. J. A. Harroid.
Mr. and Mrs. Ilobl. Stiff of Pitts­
burg Pa. who hnve spent the last
two weeks In Sanford hnve gone to
Miami nnd other points on tho *
East Coast.
Mr. Fred Hanna came over from
Rollins College to*ap*end Sunday with
Raymond Phillips.
Mrs. I). D. Caldwell has returned
from, a short slay in Jacksonville.

• HcariJ on a
*T thought my first husband snored
badly enough, hut. oh. dear! John was
a solo snorer,.while my present hus­
band tries to imitate the entire orches­
tra."—Boston Transcript.

The Same Mistake
^

... Your Fire Insurance!

iviake sure ot your
insurance at once, so
4j|
that in the. not improbable event of a disastrous
§pl
fire in your own home
^
you will be amply pro­
tected against financial loss. Lock the door at
once!
•
»

Thritt in Peace Time

B . C . D O D D S , M .D
Residence: 905 Mngnolia Ave.
Phone 46i
First National Bank Building
Office
'
Phono 462

Music and Literature Department
A joint meeting of tho Music nnd
Literature departments was -held at
the Woman’s Clu^Fadntsdty nftcrnoon with Mm. Schellc Maine*,
chariman of the Music Department
presiding.
There was a noticeable improve­
ment in the attendance and a most
interesting program was rendered.
The subject of tho program- was
Poland and on excellent paper, "T h e
was given by M r*.
Story of Poland1 ___
C. C. Chamberlain.
Mr*. iC.- J.
Marshall rendered a pleasing-violin
*olo " A Polish Dance". Mr*. L. R.
Phillips submitted an , interesting
paper on Puderswki and the delight­
ful program closed with twji.entranc­
ing -vocal aolos by Mrs. L. It.
Phillips. A . short business period
followed the conclusion of the program

SUGGESTIONS

In Honor o f Bride and Groom

CHASE&amp;CO.

In honor of M r. and Mrs. Stanley
C. Walker,,r wh6»o marriage took
place in Jacksonville on^Mdnday,

FOR S P R I N G

BEANS
LIMA BEANS
BEETS
EGG P L A N T
SQUASH
TOMATOES
CUCUMBERS
SWEET CORN
PEPPERS
W e

H u e T h e S E E D — F R E S II

SANFORD, FLA.

Tho first reqtmite for you to do f« *o think “ this
will bring forth ideas of two kinds; via: Iinporfected
and Perfected Idea*. Tho Imperfccted Idea is one
whore you think you wiiLsome day start to cave
but just seem never to do it. Tho Perfected in
where you A C T A T O N C E and *ave for thrift’*
rake. Which course will you take? You
know
which is best and We Know where wo run help
you/ Will you Come H E RE ?
;;

V

*
&gt;
-

_

v / i ,
(*

-

- T* *. 1

»LES BANK
SANFORD =

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="13">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10754">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1920</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11986">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 11, 1920</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11987">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11988">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 11, 1920.  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="11989">
                <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="11990">
                <text>Original 4-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;, March 11, 1920; &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="11991">
                <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="11992">
                <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="11993">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11994">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="1215" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="1087">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/5dbd83fc188f8cb5cf84305d77c0e112.pdf</src>
        <authentication>30a6b976f04eb437e9abaca5b86131aa</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="12005">
                    <text>1

IN THE HEART O P THE WORLD'S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
SANFORD, FLORIDA. FRIDAY, MARCH 1

GROWERS LOSE
ON CAR' SHORTAGE
RAMPAGE
HOOD SENDS WIRES IN 0ZARKS
****

-

•

Lack of &gt; Information
Prevents

New Orleans I(as A
Rig wFire
I
Now Orleans, Mar. ’ l l . — Fire,
which broke out a t 1:30 this morn­
ing in the p la n fb f th e American Cof­
fee Co. at 423 S outh Peter* St., prac­
tically destroyed th a t p lan t and the
warehouse'&lt;of August H. Plaspoller
Co., in tho rear of the American Coltee Co. plant, and badly damaged the
warehouses of J. C. Morris and Tho­
mas J. Kelly companies.
Early statistics estimated the loss
would amount to $100,000. The (Ire
sta rte d on the -second floor of the
American Coffee Co., and
gained
much headway before being discover­
e d , Fanned b y n strong wind the
flames' spread to adjoining buildings
and for a tim e threatened o d stroy
b io tic —
------------ — ------ —--------

NUMBER 117

d il l

. L d iju in

BIG TIME

ju u m L iir

UTILITIES COMPANY

MISSOURI * LOSES
MUCH
IN
LIFE AND PROPERTY DAMAGE
BY RAINS

HELD
IMPORTANT
MEETING first pulling off the glasses of klr.
AND . -SMOKER IN
COURT Harris and slapped him with h'
his
HOUSE LAST NIGHT
rig h t hand. Then he and Mr. Bara
Brunson Missouri. V ar:h. -12. (By
The Campbell-Lossing Post of the clinched, l.oth men falling, with MrAssociated * Preen) Flooded. ' streams American Legion promises great things Hass on top. M rTilass say s he slap­
added'menace to life and property in for the soldidr Und sailof boys and at ped Mr. Harris, using his open hand.
southwest Missouri where the tonado their meeting last night 17 new mem- H arrii all the time cursing him and
yesterday Filled a t least thirteen and bent were taken in making a total of continuing alter he
had
rfaen.
injured others and old unestimated 67 member* in all. The Post had a kicked ot M r, Bass, lost hi* balance
properly damage every stream in the fine time last night at the court house nnd fell ipto^Bhcriff Ingram , who wan
Lznrk mountains being bank full or holding an informal smoker and among separating the then, both going to T O -T H E PEOPLE WHO
HAVE
overflowing. It fa believed that the the invited gbesta were Forest Lake, the gt-ound. " I may h a io gouged
SUFFERED
WITH
POO'R
SERVICE
MOVEMENT OF REFRIGERATOR
death list will be increased by later F. I \ Foster, J. G. Ball, R. J. Holly, hln eye, hut I do not know,” contin­
ALL THIS WINTER
; CARS UNSATISFACTORY
AND
reports.
'
•
ued Mr* Bass, "there were n o ,e y e
L.
M.
Tyre
and
several
other*.
Forest
GROWERS WILL SUFFER LOSS
At tho meeting of the City Com­
Lake gave the. boy* a fine address on witnesses to the affair who will
missioners
last night a representative
E. A. Douglass For Cl&lt;;rk
"Americanism" and P. ip, Foster on corroborate what 1 have said ,” Mr.
The Sanford growers are having
crowd
of
citizens
were present and ex­
difficulty &lt;in obtaining sufficient roIn this issue E. A. Douglass announce* "American Ideals" nnd It. J. Holjy Bass wns arrested bul released on
pressed
themselvis
on the subject of
his
own
recognizance.
. frigerntor’ears to haul their stufjf and
hfa candidacy for Clerk of the Circuit gave a short sketch on the part the
the Southern U tilltlep Co.. coll«ctln_
while there i« a caf shortage everywhere
Court to succeed hirnsPtf. Mr. Doug­ hoys played in the war and stressed
for services that have not been rendered.
in&lt;l business men are suftcring frqm
lass has hehl_thiajaflicc.sinc«-Uje «»unty- .tliu_im|mr«»nrr ofjoinin £ Illl'- A'merican
F. L'. Miller urged the commissioners
the car shortage the growers think {bey
was \creatcd and he had considerable I-cgion. After the regular business of
to enjoin the the company until such
»houl&lt;l receive some information daily
to do with the creation of the county. the meeting had been concluded-•the
time as they could guarantee service
about what they can expect in the way
He hus administered the affairs of the boys nnd the guest* were treated to
and told them of the action of the city
office in n manner that give* entire excellent sandwiches and soft drinks
of refrigerator cars. .For instance a
council getting up nn injunction suit
power wants to cut celery’ or lettuce
satisfaction. not only to tjie people bu that were greatly-enjoyed. The silnd- Khight of the Road Confronted
to prevent them from raising th # rates
to the county commissioner*, the judge wiciies wtre built by L. F. Rojx*r who
today and he wants to know when ho
With Hated Work.
her several years ago. The com­
of the circuit court and the state officials Jios charge of tfu&gt; Legion commissary
«n get refrigerator cars and he Is in­
missioner* agreed to enjoin the South­
. formed t hst he will get a car but the
who* have commended this office uppn and who had several K. P.s to assist
.
High Cost of Living Hat Mads It Hard ern Utilities Co., from collecting the
car is not forthcoming. The grower
many occnssions ,as being one of the him.
money ‘hereafter tho same fb
take
for Itinerants to Pick Up an Easy
finds out too late that he will not be
Many important questions , wor*
effect from the time the injunction
Success Claimed for New Small- heat kept clerk’s offices in the state.
Existence—Not" Like Good
able to got his stuff into'cars after he
With all hi* many duties In the clerk's taken up by' the Legion in respect to
■granted by- the courts.
,.
.
.
Old .Tlmi
Power
Device.
has started cutting and one can imagine
office nnd as manager of the abstract a drive fur membership*, in the erection
This paper Ls not informed as to
his plight.
.
. .
office Mr. Douglass finds timd to start of a suitable building for their meetings
(Tort the hills pre­
whether
this will
No other a rt Inis suffered greater de­
The growers are entitled to have deand help build the new hotel, the re­ nnd (or a recreation plnce, a big cele­ terioration through price nuinl|Adntlou sented for the past throe months and
building of the Pb-o block and many bration at some future date ami other thnn (tint of kitchen panhandling, and tho consumers shouldcl find out uhout
finitf information from the railroads
other public enterprises and be is nlways inportant phases of the work of the a wall I* now going up from a thou­ this before refusing to pny their Fel*and fmm the Armour Car lines about
found ready nnd willing to give hi* I-egion. Post Commander Whitcomb sand “Jungles" nil over the quiet Innd. mnry bills but It will
what they can expect and they wnnt
definite information. Jn other words Conversation Carried on Between Chi­ time and money toward those things stressed tho importance of the boys Even the price of simp, which I* openocca- j| Southern Utilities Co., from collecting
cago and Ossining, N. Y„ With Use that swell progress and the development keeping uptheir government insurance nlnnnjly used. Ih o u fli not Viu;oiirni:&lt;-d. | any more bill* until they can guarantee
|. they want a plain "yes" or "no" about
of Small Aerial, Low Wave* Length,, of Sanford and Seminole county.
and read several important items about promises tu make the American linbo j service whirji is
thK car business SO they can govern
The Herald
and Power of Only One-Third of 0,ne
their field operations accordingly. J.
E. A. Douglass has resided in this insurance and the aims of the Legion look like n mini bi-drnggled soldier has fought for since the day the plant
Kilowatt—Points to Elimination bf
after a long vlglf In n cootie-ridden started to go to pieces.
I). Ho™I wired Senator Fletcher and the
f
part of Florida the greater pnrt of his In obtaining.a square deal for the boys
trench.
Expensive, High-Powered Gener­
in
Congress.
The
meeting
wns'
well
Interstate Commerce Commission to­
Another matter brought to .th e at­
lify time and needs no introduction
This yenV* convention, In n sj-iim*.
ators.
day a!fnit this condition and expects
to the people with whom he comes or ail-m ini an 1 if every soldier and sailor will lie nieiniirnblt- luuMiiudi us the tention of the Commission iTrs was
in Seminole County at the present lime
to gel miiiii- definite information about
ordinance relative to jtarking cars
The De Forest laboratories of High lias come in contact during the past will join the Campbeli-^oHsing Post war liqs revolutionized the cruft &lt;»f
it
hoboing nml ninny novel and sturtllnu the streets nt night, an ordinance
Bridge. N. Y., announced that durlug twenty-five years and he is asking Un­
I he one of the best in the state. suggestions ns to bow to live mid has given rise to much discussion since
The farmers arc not arbitrary about the Inst thirty days wireless telephone people for their support on his record
this rendition. They realize
that conversations Imve been carried on ns n faithfu public servant nnd ns otto
travel wltbqiit work will be presented it operates in the majority of caSM
bi scores of delegate*, hulling from a pa list strangers in our city who |sre
there i*,a serious car shortage and they between Ossining ttnd Chicago, n dls- who lias served them well.
every section of the Jbuntry. "Jungle" Ignorant of the ordinance und who art*
realize that they will have to take tunee of some .UOO miles, ns well n*
philosophy likewise hns undergone a liable to arrest for leaving their'ears in
chance* with other lines of business. with cities nml towns In Indlnnn, Ohio,
great change and the high cost of liv­ front of the hotels or other plaCei and
western
Nyw
York,
and
South
Caro­
Hut other . lines are not dependent
ing hns only served to rub u sore laid
lina.
with
the
use
of
a
small
aerial,
rase* they are forced to leave
solely upon the movement of cars like
o| h"ii when the Imnd of Industry durlnv tho ears on the streets if ho garage Is
Ihe growers are anti the growers want s’ low wave length, nml power of only
the wnr reached Into box car*, down convenient. Henry MoLaulin 'had a
definite information and thj»y must jne thliil of one kilowatt.
Into the truck* "imdemciitli." eiunbed
Robert F. (Soweu, - engineer In
have it or suffer-great losses in their
tlie "Mind tniggiige'' nml puwrd over petition asking the commissioners, to
charge of the De Forest Radio com­
crop*- They should know
whether pany Million ut Ossining, said that tlo* Imperial Expedition, to Leave In
tile roof* of (deeper* nnd day rnoelic* repeal the ordinance hut they -decided
re lenient
to n*k the official* to la? more
&lt;
ALLS
ON
PEOPLE
TO
STAND
, it will t.e iioxsiftle to get u car on the day success during the last month! In the
of ten tIioiiniiml trains.
,
4
June,
Will
Seek
Scien­
especially
in
discharge
«
&gt;
f
their
duty
and
BY
C
O
V
E
R
M
M
E
N
T
I
N
that th.-y expect to cut or not and the fll(v „f „|| sorts of wenther dlfllcoltlcs.
War’s tirulnl grdcr to work *enr*-d
in
the'case
of
strangera
to
the
city to
TIM
E
OF
NEED
and
liurned,
It
Is
true,
hut
It
did
not
railroads and the Armour Car Lines wns nscrlhahle to n new type of mod­
tific' Data.
rru*h the spirit of the hobo cult nor explain the ordinance to them and not
■youId lie able to tell- them.
ulating circuit am i the use of a new
Madrid, March 12. (By Arasorlated deprive the hobo of bfs wits. The attempt an arrest and fine as it gives
I' V
glass In the-Do Forest million—a de*
The sclent Ifle exploration nnd com­
Brens)
A Lisbon telegram rays the coming convention will be a parade of the city the name of being a bad placo
vice which earned for thnj particular mercial development of the region*
kind of apparatus the term of "boltled traversed will be the main tibject of Portuguese government has issued' a wits. In fact, largely devoted to the for stranger* to stop. This was satis­
wireless.”
the British Imperial nntnMlc.ex|»edl- proclamation to ihe new cabinet as­ question of "How to get by with prices factory, to all purties concerned and
*
Claims Saving of Expense.
lion, which will leave England In suming power in tf.r.o of distri** and so "high."
after visitors had all been heard tho
Mirny u sigh will go iqi from u thou­ regular order of business was held and
After asserting tlm l the experiments June for live year*' exploration In the the republic is shaken to its foundations
|&gt;olnleil to the elimination of expen­ nntnrctlc, during which nn attempt- by the confusion in the minds-of the sand liosom* when the old order of reports of the various departments
sive, high-powered generators nnd tell­ will be made 'to reach the South
people ami the spirit cJ opposition to thing* Is inentlom-d. Five years ago made which will lie given in a later
ing how he had worked entirely on Ihe pole by airplane. Dr. John*!- Cope, discipline is prevailing the country and every hamlet, town mid city In Amer­
375 meter n'hinlctlr wave length, Mr. llio surgeon nnd biologist In tho Boss asks for support .in “ this grave hour”. ica had it "Jungle." or eonventlonul ren­ issue of this puper.
Chairman Stevens gave the citizens'
dezvous (or holme*, where they could
seh party of the Slmcktetnn expedi­
Gow6n snljl:
.
cook their own "inulllgmix," “bon up" a most res|&gt;octful hearing in all the
TWENTY FEET HIGH
GORGE
•'The effect of the new elrcttll Is to tion, who will command the qew expe­
IRg Cnnd Deal
and shoot, dice to see whether they rules und tho commtaioners
were
IN ALLEGHENY RIVER PLAYS render the, voice transmission much dition, lias given the purposes of the
Florida
as a whale will be greatly would bop u iraTTKfor north, south. disposed to meet tho people niore than
clearer, while the use of a new type Journey, a* follows:
HAVOC
of glass permit* of much greater Input
1. To ascertain the position nnd ex­ intorentrd in the $600,000 • tim ber «i*t or. west nnd where they could half way and do all they could . .to
Pittsburg, March 12. (By Associated circuit In Ihe development of wire­ tent of the mineral nnd other deposits land deal which was negotiated yes­ evade the surveillance of tho "hulls."
straighten out these’ little tangles th a t
But today thing* are different. Five
of economic value already known to terday, 43,000 acros of virgin tjm her
Press) An ice gorge twenty feet high less power.
have Voxed' the pgopfa's minds for to
“It Is further Interesting to note exist In Aninrtlcn (through tho scien­ land in Osceola and -Polk counties yearn, ago It wn*s tolerably easy to'apstretching eight miles broke’ loose in
many
weeks\
the Allegheny river lost night a t Free­ that nil my experiment* are lielng con tific report* of Bruce. Mawson. Scott being ®dkl to AVilliam Candler of 'proach the kitchen door, If the dog was
tied
up
and
Ihe
huck.vnrt!
showed
no
ducted
on
n
comparatively
low
wave
nod Slincklctpn) nnd to obtain data A tlanta, treasurer of the Coca Cola
port and started a rush down the river
•mashing flat boats, barges, houseboats length—that la to ray, the . special for their practical development a* CA., wind thy real estate m an and trnre* of a wood pile, deliver n remi­
niscent tale of home mill mother, to the
*nd other crafts. ‘The crash was heard amateur wave lengths permitted by* la a further source of luqierlnl wenltp. banker. W ith Mr. Candler will he kindly hou*dwlfe ami come away with
the government regulation's. In nddl2. To obtain further evidence of
for miles and caused fright among the tloiy* the experiment* nhow thnt the
Clay beefsteak. |&gt;!e‘and cake. It wns easy
Ibe localities and migration of whale* associated R ., A. M cTyer,
people living in the vicinity of the gorge. distance between Ossining nnd Chicago of economic m ine, nnd to erente Hrlt- Binlon, IL C. Wdodberry and E. C. five years ago to "mootch" the ordi­
KIwel!. T he land purchased
was nary bucolic sojourner for the price of
Is covered by using one third of tlo? en­ ikh Industries In this trade.
known
a
s
th
e
Pfann-Slngleterry
tract.
pieat, potatoes nnd onions with which
[‘ .Madlsine Traverse In Strong .Photo- ergy of wldch the I»e Forest bscllllon
3. To Investigate the meteorological
to
"stew up" a “mulligan."
'
l*lie
d
eal.w
as
m
a
d
e
liy
J.
E.
Craw­
nnd
mngnellc
condition*
In
the
Ross
or
oscillating
nttdlon
1s
cnpnble
of
Plsy At The Princess Today
And five years ago It wns possible
developing.
In
other
words,
with
only
ford.
who
Is
associated
with
Elw
dl
&amp;
sen
nren
nnd
*t
Cape
Ann
(Bnderby
Corning to the Princess today is
one-third kllowntt of Inpnt energy In land) In connection with their Influ­ Co,1 M r. Crawford is a native of for certain of the hobo gentry to tulk
William Fox photoplay entitled "Lost
OP
LACK - OP
r single tube, we an* enabled to talk ence- In slmllnr conditions In Austral­ Orange county and son of Senator the average restaurant keeper nut of n ON ACCOUNT
Money"— *rbl?h, If rran a Iro n r 1- without wire* from New York to Chi­ asia nml South Afrlcn, ‘ respectively.
meal
und
sidestep
tlie
dish
pan.
Bui
TEACHERS
AND
FAILURE
O. II. Crawford. He has worked on
vance report, that which is found in cago*.
TO PROVIDE SALARIES . ’
•*
I That sueh results nre of great econom­ the proposition fpr months and of nowmlnys It uppenrs to the American
Pl*re of the money is quite worth the
ic value harf been proven by tho station course Is rejoicing as it fa one of the .hobo Hint there are but three word*
Profited by W ar Experiments.
Waayington, March 12. (By Associa­
**crifire made by the beautiful London
In'lhc lexicon of the uvernge citizen—
“The new apparatus 1* a develop­ 'established by the Argentine govern­
ted Press) The Bureau of education
b*l!e. Madlaine Traverse
In
the ment. ‘in large pnrt, of the splendid ment for similar purposes In the Ifegnit tim ber land deals ever made "work" ijiitl "bent It." ..
in the atato.—Orlando Sentinel.
Hoboes nre purchasing no nourish reports ssy that eighteen schools were
•tellar role in this intensely interesting Improvements made on radio appa­ South Orkneys.
ment
In Job lot* tliesfc da^s. “ Tlie n|*- closed up to February 18th by th e ’lack
“
4.
To
circumnavigate
the
antarctic
*tory certainly ha* the beauty and the ratus during the war. At thnt time
lisas’ Statem ent Of Fight With Harrl jirnved plan I* to Imml together, eqcli of teachers through the failure to pro­
dramatic ability to make the picture radio expert* were able to talk from continent.
Kissimmee, M*r. 9 ,- Fred M. Bats "Bo'-' tiiklng-n certain territory to ni». vide adequate salaries.
5. Generally to extend tho knowl­
|£
nlrplnne to the ghound nnd from ship
5Vl* up to all its promises.
edge
of
Antarctica,
especially
with
a
candidate
fo* state senstit'from the vnsji. turn the "collection*" Into a gem
-The scene of the story fa laid In the to ship for only n few miles.
“Wo iinve been able to talk over a view to obtaining further scientific N ineteenth senatorial district today ernl fund nml buy a calf or a pig on
The. P ulestons Return
South Aferican diamond
fields.
data of economic Importance.
gavo his ride of tho.story in regard the hoof, lead the
__ nnlmal. ’ to
,, the, • "Jun­
.
Epsode No 2 of .Adventures of ftuth distance of OOO-mllesT but we have to­
Dr.
and
Mr*. P uleston and daugh­
The cost of the expedition Is catl- to the encounter he had last S atu r­ fc'les” nnd there prepare the "mulligan."
day reached the commercial develop­
siven for the usual admission, ment or the wireless telephone under ninied nt £150,000. \
Down nt the South, ns Col, Wnttoi* ters M ary Elizabeth and Camilla*
day with W B, H arris, editor of th(!
alvi jiver, for the usual admfacion.
son would say, the hoboes this ypnlf have returned to Sanford after ipend­
- Ga|l|. C. II. Wilkins, chief of the
all conditions."
.
Kissimmee Valley G azette.‘M r. Bara
Mr. Gewen, who In one of the engi­ selrntlflc'stnff to the Stefnnsson cxjie- &gt;tatftd t h a i ha raw Mr. Harris cross­ iwllj find practically every hnnd turm&gt;d- ing the w inter in M iatpl. Dr. Pule- ’
ngnlnst .them , every kitchen dinir cton will tesvm e the practice of medi­
neer* of-the Do Fohesrhrimnitorlea nt dltlnn. wttt-/ar Company -Doctor- f*npo
Date of Christ's Birth.
n* chief of ine sclenllflc staff for the ing the street and he walked out in­ closed tight, for the high cost of living cine here and having been away from
New
York,
Is
*
mepibcr
of
the
InstlChristian era. liret used &gt;hy a
to the street and up to Mr. H arris. I* holding hllurtmis carnival In those
new vet] In re. .
.
*itc of Itndlo Engineers.
;
home lon$ enough to reMiie thnt old
“ml; 1)lnnyslu« Kxlguus. In the year
He’asked the latte r if he would apolo­ PQrts nnd tho demand for labor I*
rong
about "no placo like home’'
A- D*a ml,adopted by Christian nogize -fer what he said to him in the greater than ever before!—New York
•ays
he
will live and die in Sanford. •
u,l“ m a Inter period, wus lutemled
■ » - For Clerk of Conrt
Superintendent Public Instruction
G izetty oftce Friday or would he Evening Sun.
Itegio with the birth of C hrist
T
he
many
friend* /if tho puleston
I hereby announce my candidacy take r. licking. Mr. Harris replied he
I hereby announce my candidacy
onj-*|Ui j, bcjlevcdt. however, to
fam
ily
are
glad to know th a t they
.
A
Way
to
Fam*.
' c made go error In fixing that for re-election m superintendent of for re-election as Clerk of the Circuit would do neither and thereupon Mr.
have
returned
home and will again
Fan)*
la
very
easily
acquired.
All
. ‘I1* ,n •he year 0f Rome 1H Instead public -Instruction f o r / Semlndle Court J ot Seminole County, subject Bass states- the editor called him r grqu have to do l« to be In the right he indentifled with the business a n d .
to
the
Democratic
Primary
to
be
held
name no white man would ta k e and plaee at the right time and do the right
&lt;•*)- C hiisfs birth la *n’ow consld- C ounty, subject to the Democratic
•orial life of Sanford. TheyNvHl be
»re«I to hare taken place In or before prim ary to be held June 8th,i 1920. June 8th. 1920.
when he4did M*. Dasa took hold' of thing In the righi way—and Then ad*
th
a guests of th e Valdes until they .
,h* m r U
t
‘
j ^ E . A. Douglass.
’ Mr. Harris* roller with his left hapd, .
T. W. LAW TON.
Ise it widely.—Kansas city Star.
(an build a new home.
”
’
‘. VliJF»
.
- , t
V
r
vY*itv.
• •

WANT THE TRUTH

From . Collecting For
Service Not Given
MEANS SOMETHING

HOBO IS IN BAD”

WIRELESS PHONE
GAINS IN REACH

TALK MORE THAN 900 MILES

BRITISH TO DEVELOP
ANTARCTIC WEALTH

PORTUGUESE
GOVERNMENT • PROCLAMATION

ICECORGE
;
BREAKS UP
BIG DAMAGE

THOUSANDS .
OF SCHOOLS
ARE CLOSED

— t------- --------- '•
:-v .

•

. ■

V

�** .
_r j __ i,_
••
,

s
*

*

.

* 9%

4. '*

*

•

\

•

*

* * *

.
•

. J f

0

•

f* .

PAGE 4t

9

. . • *
# -

•
*y1

•

1

'm m m &lt;

IP "

v•
•
\

•

•.

..

•’• ■‘

“ *

-

A ..

•

NIGHT 7 TO 11

TONIGHT
YOUR
LAST CHANCE
TO SEE

THE MAMMOTH NINE (9) BREL PRODICTION
ADAPTED FROM
THE NOVEL OF

•

MARCH n

any and all of its com petitor!.
- shown In tho city. Its story Is big
M r. Field has accum ulated a (Hud vital, hut y et full (if the human
fortune front. Its earnings. It is
interest of every-dsy occurrences
known, not only as an 'attraction, among every-day people
but an' institution. Clean in every
detail, it has furr.irhrtf a~.iLrc.~rnt
SH ER IFF IIAKER DEAD
for generation after generation. The
public views It os their own, capacity
.audiences greet it everywhere.
.
This, thy* Qilrd of a century tour,
is to be made memorable, th e com­ , West I’nlm Reach, March 9.— Gco-j
pany augm ented. The Al. G. Field rge B. R aker sheriff of Palm Roach '
Ministrels will this year present county, died this morning a t 10 o’-j
clock after a short illness from acute t
indigestion. He ayffered^his first at-!
lock lost week •m rv ttb o b fh serious- '
ly ill had apparently reeoverd and a tttended
MMfI / &amp; his
fttla official
A411 a.. I duties
‘1.ill .. on.
a. ft, SaturOM111B I
day.
’

HAROLD BELL WRIGHT

Adults 35 Cents; Children 20 Cents
The Big Nine Reel Peal
Of The World” at Th&lt;
Today*
*

TOMORROW
BACK TO THE 10c AND 20c PRICES

." T h e Eyes of tho W orld" th&lt;
photoplay from Harold Bell W right’i
truly groat novel, shown a t thi
Princess . t o d a y
is
a
big and intensely interesting production

O B E H[
1a CfflEldJll

IN EPISODE No. 2 OF

- |0 BjgjwjSSr
I
1 |

The photoplay follows th e a u th o r’s
story with exactitude and the char­
acters on the screen are the char­
acters from the pages of th e ’ novel
to the life.
’ I t is unnecesary to say anything
about the p lo t—let it suffice th a t It
conctrnc a group of th e most intcresting characters ever
presented

If you like thrill*—If you like
romantic adventure—if you liko
suspense, then you*11j go wild
over this serial

NE TRAVERSE

In the Five Reel
Fox n a tu re

A dramatic story of a fight for million* in which a worn in finds tho one
voice that can awaken her heart A drama cf the dtamjr.d fields '

lcian

Thirty-three years is a long time
for any business to ’lie conducted "by
this man th at orginated it Hut more
particularly an amusement venture—
a business that is viewed as precarious
Thirty-three years ago Al. G.
Field entered the Minlstrel profes­
sion ns the manager of the company
hearing his nnme. He .has been ac­
tive in the management of this com­
pany every year since,
, Thero Ls not a city or hainlct in
thi* land wherein the company is
not well, nnd favorable known. It is
said the success of the company has
been greater than any company of
its kind.
It has outclassed and outrivaled

Lenses Ground
GLASSES ADJUSTED
. and REPAHtED -

L; A. BRAND
Optometrist-Optician

221 E- First Street
Opposite, fostomce

Mr. Raker had been sheriff of
Palm Reach county over since that
county has exsisted, n period of 11
years, n trib u te to the faithfu. and ,
fearless execution of his duties. He
was 6$ years of age and is survived 1
by a widow and a large family of
children. Funeral services will bo
announced life r.

America’fPOldest and Be.st Minstrel Organization
An.AUtACllua That Has Became an InatUuCan
BIGGER AND BETTER THAN EVER*
—•

•

Derby Day at Churchill Downs
A Dazzling Dancing Dircrllscmcnl
THE BIG BURLESQUE

The Frogs Wedding
One Touch of Naluro

Memorable Minstrel
Merry makers

Seats on Sale Tuesday; ESTES PHARMACY

AUTO

andT

PAINTING

When You Invite Her to Ride
it’fc your duty to provide fo.-her
comfort and to see that she suf­
f e r no loss or- damage to her
apparc’. If you let m put a firstclass top on your car both pro.
visions will have been attended
to. She will be protected from
both blazing sun and blinding

Stoves and Ranges
Our Stock is
* Complete
~
Prices and Terms
Reasonable

W e S p ecia lize in W a sh in g and
P o lish in g Cars
PHONE 112

•

,

TRY A HERALD WANT AD

BLOUSES
Boll Blouse won’t fade
colors.
Plain white ai
chambry
Dutchess Pants for Boy
the best for hardest wear.

P 1a i n W h i te,
Blue, Grey

a id

Brown ^ t r i p e s ,
Finish Materials.

The New Dry Goods Store
$1.00 Is Worth One H undred Cents
S IZ E S 6 T O 18 Y E A R S

New shipment of Bungalow Aprons, all new patterns, checks, stripes and plain
materials sizes 32 to 52 .

It is said now that a Dollar is worth about 50c in
purchasing value.
•

»' -

.

'

.

.

■ We discount Our Bills in order to assist You in
making Your Dollar worth One Hundred Cents in
purchasing value at OUR STORE.

New Draperies and Cretonnes for Spring

Will You Let Us Prove This?

Special For Saturday the 13th
One lot Silks, assorted Colors and Plaids worth
about $1.50 for $1.00 per yard. Saturday Only.

Cor. 4th St. and Sanford Ave

Sanford, Florida

*

50CCXXXXXW XXXXXXXXXXJCXX5.-XX
3-1 years service to San
ford

Galituerapd Linen

onomy is uie
the foundation -of Success.
Success, Practice
x^Lonuinj
Economy in each purchase you make and thereby en­
large the purchasing power of $1.00.

'

j.

THE GARDEN OF MIRTH

Furniture and Complete
House Furnishings

range groves u n d r o - r gardens aro
around Redlanth, the locale i
story have been exquisitely |
graphed into scenes nf ran- c
It took eight months to film
Eyes of the World” nrul the i
play shows it in the careful wc
out of the sumllcst detail. *
The picture is one of the best

A Magnificent First Part

PRICES: 75c $1.00 $1.50 Plus Tax
Doors Open 7:15
* ‘ • Curtain i

Fisherman's Lucky Oay.
A l l . ar4ii gold hand ring was found
by John Moore, one of the crew of
the fishing schooner Gertrude De
Costn. Inside n big halibut enught on
George bank recently. The ring Is a
man’s size and Is believed to hnvo
been dropped overboard from soma
trans-Atlantic liner. Judging from Us
condition when recovered from the
halibut's slomnrh by Moore, the ring
hnd been lost recently. Moore will
wear It. ns there Is no way of deter-

A prologue gives am ple explanation
of the ito ry proper, accounting for
the actions and the punishm ent of
the various chararteVs
__
Monroe .Salisbiyy. as the cynical FRECKLES Positively Removed
LoGrange, is easily the outstanding by Dr. Berry’* Freckle Ointment
Your Dfamist or by M.ll 65c
character in the photoplay.
Semi for Free
Jack Livingston as the struggling D r.CII.Berry Co., **n Mi,i»i,«».....
artist; Kathleen Kirkhnm, as the de­
signing Mm. Trnine: Jane N ovak, as
the pure-hearted Sybil: Kdcnrd Poll,
us the sensuous Hullidge; Lurllne
Lyon*, as the pitiful Myra Willard;
Arthur Tavares, as her persecuted
brother; Jack McDonald, as the dis-

•enbuch, W ashington, I&gt;. C.; II.
Mcirill and wife, Jork'onvilile
: F. A. Coir. Ringham ptonrN . V
H. linnhart,/Foli-do, Ohio; J. W.
nsnn, Palntkn, Fin.; 0 . F. W inter
Petersburg. Fin; F. W. Cook,

E. 11. Howland, and wife, Omaha
eh.; E. G. Brown and wifc.Rujamin
i J.; A. D. Parrish and wife, Tam1 , Fla.;
Miss Fannie’ Sanders,
Grecnrhoro
ridge and wife, Middlyhnrn, Mass
Canada
A. F. M anner, New York; W. II Monde II Montreal Canada; Mrs
J. A. R obert.Hurtful en Hart, Conn
Mr*. s. Dulas, M ontreal, Canada
Mrs. II. Gaines, Quebec, Canada
Mr*. I). C. Broadway.., Daytont
H a.; II._Lov etto nnd wife, Colum­
bus, Inc!.; Mrs. E. Berk, Sander.*v.lle Ga.: Cliff Perry,
Sandrrsv ll«
C,a. Jno. N. Church, Jacksonvi le,

•

■

SANFdkn DAILY HERALD

AFTEROON 2 TO 5

. •

* •

• . , ■» . ■
. . *• * »

’T FORGET THE LINEN

�of the highly educated? lan't that a
way to help drive them into the rankest
materialism?
The above article taken from the
March issue of The American Majfaxine
la a statement of the reasons for the
• v ' rtm L istiias •
existing conditions^ in practically cv^ry
state
of our-Union. The memorandum
INC.
below was adopted at ta meeting Jan.
R. J. HOLLY, Editor
W . M. HAYNES. Business Manager 7 by public school officials on a ntimber
of the eastern States and published in
ASmtUM Rum M*4« Sm ««
Afflkell** the,current Issue of School Life.
• In the States of the Atlantic seaboard
hundreds cf schools are dosed be cauke
UtutCRirnON FRICK IN ADVANCE
teachers are not available for them.
There are being employed as teacher*
large numbers of persons who do not
possess the qualifications that have
■ Ealrrrd u MO*ad &lt;Um «•&lt;*• (W*b»i XI,
hitherto
been required. A loss of
S*lt, *trS*SM**rtc*»l8»Ji/*»d. rUrU* “ dw
-•«« V Much J. UT*. '
.
t ’ students in the State normal schools'
amounting to 25,.30 and in some States
150 per cent Indicates that young per­
sona are .turning their attention to
other occupations than
teaching.
Gouging an editor’s eye out beCommercial
and
industrial
opportunities
r failed to give him
causa the la
. . tte
----m ma
com plim entary notice, accompanying are not only attracting teachere from
his announcem ent, la a new method the schools, but they are drawing away
of cam paigning Inaugurated by a from supervisory positions in education
Kissimmee candidate. Wo will watch those (ipon rwhom reliance for Icajlerth k t candidate’s vote and sec what ship should be placed

THE HERALD PRINTING COMPANY

th ^ people u p there think of that
kind of business. However, we are
glad th a t we adopted the rule of flvii\g every candidate a good send-off
w ith his announcem ent. We have no
eyes to. risk on candidates.—Laljeland Telegram.
c
THE SCHOOL TEACHER

MARCH 12. 1920

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

PAGE 2

PALATKA N E E D S
COMMIS' SION G O V E R N M E N T
By a. vote of about four to 'one
I'alatk a tax payers voted, long ago,
to ertublish a commission or city
manager, form of government for
the adm inistration, of municipal
affairs. The sentim ent among tax
payers has not changed,, hut the

MORE PEOPLE

Fresh Cranberries
Celery Hearts
Silver Skinned
and Spanish -

'

A FRESH SUPPLY OF

NUTS, FIGS, DATES

Best Beef and Pork
Brookfield Sausage

READ

BOOKS

According to English Authority, Thla
la One of the Results of
th a 'W a r, .

There are fire tl tries as many peo­
ple fn England reading books as there
were before the war,, according to Sir
Ernest Williams, one of the foremost,
publishers dt London. He sa js w nr,
has (might the people there the value
of hooks, nnd shown them the Joy o f .
reading. Wheo- air raids were numer­
ous and alt social activities stopped,
there still rem ained. the Inner room,
the light anil hooks. There was a
quick demand developed for light
reading, hut It has changed and grown
so' that now the best books are most
In derannd. When a ir raids were ended
and lights and social activities were
used again, the habit of reading was
continued and has grown rapidly the
post year.
JT There la an Insistent demand, this
publisher says, for books that deal
-with real life. It la-hta belief that
out of the experiences of war has
been horn a deeper appreciation .of life
and understanding of bow tremendous­
ly worth living It Is. On this new con­
sciousness he bases the demand for
books that deal alncrrely with prob-'
lems of life.—Ohio State Journal.

ISLAND

SAVED

BY

t
A bank is much more than merely a safe
place’ for. keeping funds, for handling checks,
for ttollecting drafts, etc.
• A bank should be regarded as .the inti­
mate helper, advisor, and friend of the custom­
er, ever ready to co-operate in every proper
way, tp extend necessary accommodation as re­
quired, arid to protect his interest in eveiy way
th at lies within it's power. &gt;
This Is the kind of service that we en­
deavor to render; and we invite you to make
your connection with us with such service in
view,

WOMEN

How the Female Population of Helgoland Upset Calculation* of
Danish Admiral.

Phono 106

Ilelgolnnd, the nnvnl wnll flower
during the World war, had Its fnte
• The school teacher is critlsixed for
decided, upon one memorable occaaloit,
being behind the times! He spends
hi . the .woman nf-the Inland, according
very llfllltrfo r recreation. He cannot
to n bulletin of the National Geograph­
afford to buy 'books or magazines.
ic society. About the time William
I t- is a mad scramble to keep a shirt on
Penn was settling Pennsylvifnln a
his hark and shoes on his feet.' He
Danish ndmlrnl rnptun-d fho Inland's
never goes to the theatre* The 15
fishermen one night while they were
Almost
Wiped
Out
by
Dance
and
cent movie la about his limit. More
pinning their nets. He threatened
of the details could he "aired"—but
Feast.
to hold them ns hostages, mull tlm
the facts are familiar to ever)1 body.
island surrendered
to Denmark.
Wives, mothers nnd sisters arose nnd
If a great satirist like Voltaire nr
Famine Follow* Fete Among A l a i k . n forced the Danish garrison to re­
Dean Swift were alive, what fun be
linquish any claim upon Helgoland.
Indian*—Forty-Two Are
could have with teachers! Here would
"In the fifteenth and sixteenth
•Dead.
\w some of the points for him: Teach­
centuries Helgoland was a center of
ers ululate themselves to appreciate
Cordova, Alaska.— A ploy, n dance the North «cn herring fisheries. TJjett
good books but they liuvn l the price
and a feast, winding ti|t ii «en*on of herring veered back to Scotland's
to see them. They study to get an
plenty tuts responsible for the near- const and the Islanders handed down
understanding of great plays. They
extinction of the Qiilgtlllngok trlhe of n tale of the Impiety by which tbny
would enjoy Shakes|M'rean production*
natives Inst winter and spring, ac­ forfeited the boon. Until u few years
more than m«si people but
they
cording to John II Kllhtick, sujterin- ago horse*, were unknown -to, the Is­
haven’t the price to see them. They i
temlent of schools fur the Kusknkwlm land. One story has It that \vhcn an
old woman saw mi Englishman ride
river district.
The famine following the feast. Mr; up the hills she dropped dead from
Kllhuck said In Ids animal report to the shock of what she believed was
the .bureau of education, mused the a supernatural creature.
deaths of at least
of Jhe natives,
Humidity.
i ml would have wiped out the entire
• Inn hail not missionaries come to the
Iltmddlly Is the moisture or aqueous
resetie with n suiqdy of V*,,o|.
vapor In the atmosphere. The vapor
'I’he tribe. Mr Klllmrk mild, stored Is really an Invisible gas. When this
up great i|unntliles of flsli, during tiie vapor hecotnes visible It Is called dew,
Mimtuer and fall seasons.
fog, mist, lime, clouds, rnln, mow, hall,
CO-OPERATION
In celebration of their good for­ etc., according to the size of the drops
Ten men working together ran tune they Invited other tribes to a t­ of water or the method by which the
create far more Ihuu ten tim es the tend n *‘kirvgagyngttgg." featured by n vapor condenses. A given space nt n
wealth th at any ont* of- them could play, n "white man’s dance” and the given temperature can contain only n
giving away of food. When It was definite nmmirjt of moisture. When n
create working by himself.
all over the guests were millionaires given space contains nil of the mois­
Tiie ratio going on, ever increases. In the currency of the section, whll# ture It Is capable of holding lt*l$ said
On thousand then in co-operation the hosts were paupers.
*
to he saturated. The percentage of
can do more than a.hundred groups
It will he yenrs. .Mr. Klthiiek de­ moisture In the air to what tt would
of ten men each, every group work­ clared. before the (Jiiigllllngoks recover hold If saturated Is Failed the relative
from lhe effects of their generosity.
humidity. When the n lr'ls saturated
ing alone.
with moisture the humidity would he
United nations progress faster
tun per cent, nnd If half saturated W1
than countries in which there is
per cent, three-quarter saturated 7.1
continual internal discord. Civiliza­
per cent. The Increased humidity has
tion is the result of united peoples.
much to do with the effect of the tem­
perature on the Individual, which Is
If we ever have a co-operating
the region the subject Is so commonly
world, with nil nations working to­
discussed during hot periods.
gether nnd enjoying free intercourse
anti free exchange of products, the
Responsibilities.
prosperity we have enjoyed up to the
Thinking of others does not excuse
present time will, in a later duy.
folks from respecting (heir n\vn re­
Residence: 1)05 Magnolia Ave.
appear to he negligible.
.
Phone till
sponsibilities. The world wouldn't get
These are self-evident facts, sup­
along very fust If nil our lime and
Office: Kir-rt National Hunk Building ported by the experience of ail
thoughts were given to Adhqrs. To get
Phone tC'J
along ami have the means to he help­
ful fn others we must do considerable
for ourselves. Our Job must bring
enough returns to the boss fn pay him
for the trouble of bothering with us.
a
Our home life tenches others nnd we
punished
GLASSES ADJUSTED
must p to It that our contact leaves
In helping others Jo grow, we our­
them happier for the touch. Life Ls
and
REPAIRED
selves grow. The farm er's problem
more than mere routine however much
is the m anufacturer's problem, bcIt tuny seem to he cast In* a one piece
enuse the m anufacturer like the m er­
mold. It's our thoughts for others
F. L. MILLER. Owner
that lift us out of the humdrum and
chant and the man *of profession,
mnjtp life xyortli living.. There’s no
relies cm kite-farm er for food. The
Optometrist-Optician
limit to the enthusiasms of life when
m anufacturer's problem is the far­
concern for another's welfare gels hold
mer's problem. Ip-cause tire latter
22 I E . First Street
of £oii.
relies on the former for his m anu­
Opposite Poslofllce
facture J products.
Envied the Tailor.
’ The Interests of all men are inter­
Wheii Douglas Fairbanks tens s
locked. The farm er cannot turn m an­
little hoy. five years old. he lived In
ufacturer and the manufacturer
Denver, nnd he was ulwny* sent, to Iijm!
much earlier than he wanted to go.
cannot turn farmer without a luss.
Op|x&gt;*lte his bedroom was n tailor
Thfr man who refuses to co-operate
shop where the lights burned brightly*
Is an enemy to society.
FOB S P R I N G
a long time after Douglas went to
A com m ercial/organization In a
sleep. He used to lie nnd watch Iho
town l*. a body whostS purpose is co­
Industrious tailor, and one day he sur­
prised Ids father by saying that he
operation of all business interests for
knew whnl ho wanted to do when ltd
the good of the entire community.
grew up; he would be n tailor.
Join the Board of Trade!
“Why?’’ said his father.
Co-operate!—St. Augustine Record
“ Because" wild Dougins, “t could
alt ifp then ns long ns I wanted tt&gt;—nil

ician

F. T, FORSTER. President

B. F. WHITNER, Cashier

Sanford, Florida
C H U L U O T A INN
. CHULUOTA, FLORIDA
OpenfDcccmbcr 7th for th e Season.
Mrs. C H /.S. D. BKUMI.EY, Mgr.

CHULUOTA, IN N
On the Okeechobee Branch of the Florida East Ctutst
Railroad

Special Attention Given to Automobile Parties
MRS. C. D. BRUM LEY, Manager,

CHULUOTA. FLORIDA

Cotton Seed Meal
N ITRATE
SODA
Potash Nitrate
ASHES

B. C. DODDS, M.D

Lenses Ground

Milvis Marble Co

L. A. BRAND

Monuments, Copings
In Marble or Granite

SUGGESTIONS
BEANS
LIMA BEANS
BEETS
EGG P L A N T
SQUASH
TOMATOES
CUCUMBERS
SWEET CORN
PEPPERS

W c Have T he SEED—FRESII

C H A*f S E
&amp; C O .r*
# r *J- —J-F-- * -

, - *■

SANFORD, FLA.

Building Material

^ YOU CAN’T MAKE
HAY WITHOUT SUNSHINE
Nor can yon make much money
without some effort to •
C 0N S E H 'E Y 0 U E R E S O U R C E S

by establishing credit'witli a

reliable to ilk.

Roonng of All Descriptions

cii.i.s a#

Ancient Ruling House.

The Rajput house yf Chniuha have
ruled their little Indian’ mountain
state for more than IJ5U0 yenr.v of
unbroken descent, lamp before the
dawn of modem English history, tiefore the Mussulman Invuslon. through
nil the changing scene* and tlynasiles
of northern ludln, this Rajput state
sumo Ilojput fnmlly. Th* Itnja Uhiiri
Singh hns Just died Whetr royalty was
thrust upon him 15 years ago hy Ida
brother’s abdication; he accepted hie
bonof* under protest with modesty
and dignity mid w llh jh e fullest sense
of m q io D sib lllty has ruled h is s t a t e
in the Interest of Ills people, i

Lime, Cement, PliBtor
Brick, Drain Ti'e and
Sewer Fipn.
::
;;

Hill Lumber

J

.*

•m

*

Artistic Veyi^imllUude.
Customer—These grand opera phon­
ograph records ure Imperfect. I can't
get anything out of them hnlf the
time.
.
Salesman—They nru our finest
achievement. You never enn tell'when
these, records will sing—they’re so
temperamental.—Boston Transcript.
Japanese In Bolivia.
" v
Jnpnni-se Interests have obtained n
great stretch or land In Bolivia. They
have Mao 20,000 sqnitre miles In fvrtt
Agriculture and mining Is their stunt,

HOME

INSTITUTION

W E PAY

4 % "O H 3 A Y I N G f

�SANFORD DAILY HERALD
■“ #;*»
LUtle Happening*
Mention or
Matters In Brief
Personal Items
of Inlereat,

Summary of the
Floating Small
Talks Saednetly
The class has arranged for three
Arranged for }
a pillow cake booth, an apron booth
Herald Readers
and a miscellaneous booth. On the
latter will bo found alt kinds of hand­
th a t tho requirem ents of law will made articles both useful and or
be complied with and the Tax Books Cooked foods, dainty, delicious and
will positively he closed on April appetizing, will appeal to • the most
First as provided by law and all fastidious.
.
*
lands on which taxes have not been
At the conclusion of business Mrs.
paid will bo advertised and execu­ Kelly served a dainty sandwich, course
tions issued for unpaid personal with coffee.
property taxes.
I
A . ..
JN O . D. JIN K IN S
Prominent
Visitor Here
iTax Collector, Seminole C ounty.
110- 12tc.
Ex-Congressman Charles D. Haines
of New York who has s winter home
at Altamonte was In the city today and
paid the Herald office an appreciated
visit. Mr. Haines Is prominent In New
York business and
manufacturing
Mrs. R. A. Terheun, Editor* circles and served his statg^jiapy yearn
in Congress having entered '..politics
.Phone 395
when he was In his twenties. He 1*
not an old man yet and la of the virile,
Mr. and Mrs. L, D. Staten of Flo­
progressive type of real
American
rence S. C., arc the guests of Mrs. M. manhood and one has only to talk
M. StcVart.
with him a few momenta to discover
Mrv..C. L. Ausley of Americiis, Ga. that he la a real American lo every
■pent several hours in the city on Tues­ sense bf the word.
He Is a great
day the guest of her cousins Mr. and booster for Florida and Altamonte
and Mrs. David Speer.
and Seminole county in particular and
Mrs. John Purdon was hostess to a says that Altamonte is destined to. be­
jolly party on Wednesday, motoring come oi)e of the greatest tourist resorts
to Orlando In Mm. Purdon’s nevf car. in the central part of the state in a few
Refreshments were served in Orlando. yearn and anyone that has ever seen
Mr. and Mm. T. W, Lawton wore Altamonte can well believe it. If the
among the Oviedo folks entering the county had a few more men of the
Edward Brigham entertainment nt the Charlie Haines type it would build up
twice as fast os it is now building.
Baptist Temple, Thursday evening.

In and. A b o u t
The d t p

t St —
*■
• Plenty of Plain View Bean Plan­
t e r s ’ for im m ediate delivery. Hill
implem ent and Supply Co. 113-6tc,
K estaranf-For
Sate~ m m
, - ~;
•
m
On account of illness In family
necessitating removal to Georgia

the Park Avenue Cafe and all fur­
niture and equlpem nt Is offered for
sale. Good business in good location.
f{,r particulars . soo Miss Carrie
Cray, Park Avenue Cafe.
108-tf.
,
Just received a complete line Of
Children’s Ready to Wear H ats, in
Milsn etc. Mrs. Grace Williams.
I14-6tc.
.
Electrical Fixtures, House Wire-,
-log, in fact all kinds of electrical

work. Phone 442. W. H. T/eadwell,
Electrician.
88-tf.
Anyonp has work In building
Trade, Decorations, A nthony Sche-*
man and M innhan, one of the old
pioneers of Sanford Fla., his tim e,
while staying Jiere awhile, like to be
employed,
J lG-3tpA nthony W. Schleman
. Cooked Food Snie, benefit of
Methodist Cenfonery, S aturday, .
March 13 a t B etts Bros. Eow orth
League.
116-3tc.

Groceries

Accepted Incident as Mandate.
A remorknhle case of ring tlmllng is
related of St. Aiilitn., blslnpj of Za­
mora. who 11veil In the tenta W nlury.
He wauled to surrender tils bishopric
tnd threw his episcopal ring Into the
Doilru. But a fish brought It back to
hltn, and he concluded that he sltuuld
:ontlnuo to hear Ids burden.
’
,
“Sycophant."

Sycophant- Is from n Greek word
which.* expressed In* English letter*. Is
written, sukxipliuntes. tnenung
flghtnhhers." lum a-lent day* donio.,rntlc
Athens passed n law forbidding the ex­
portation of Ilgs4n urdeF to keep down
the prices. The Inw„ of course, was
evaded, hut there were always found
tnchlTfellows, who for rownnl or to
win favor with the authorities. Inform
ed on exporters. They were'cnlled In
contempt fuikoplmntcs, ("ngblabbers,")
or ‘‘Informers,” ns we would say.
Hence sycophant enpie to signify n
government toady and llien n tondy
generally.

Unique Dinner
Mr. and Mm. J. II. Calder entertained
at dinner, on Thumdny evening with
co/ers placed for eight. A delicious
mpnue was served, baked Belgian hare
the piece do resistance.
Quantities
of fr4 rqscs adorned life living and
dining rooms and centered the table.
Red geraniums designated the places.
Enjoying the gracious hospitality of
SUNDAY, MARCH 14th
.their hosts were Mr. and Mm. S. L.
Shlnholser. Mr. and Mrs. Quesenberry. 11:00 A M. T he Diitin (tiidun t
Mr. and Mm. Forrest Gutchel.
Beliefs of the Baptists

m

'

1

Som ething New
t ’

-A T -

L. P. McCullers
x PHILLIPS
GUY

THEATRE

9

And It Is Up To You. To Di
whether or not Our Store should be helped along. Whether or not we deserve
your patronage depends upon you. We have used every effort to plate a Cloth­
ing store in Sanford that will i&gt;e-the equal of a fcity stQEe, carrying the very best
that can be purchased, W lTHQUT TH E CITY PRICES. Its here for you and
we want you to come get it. After trying us out once you can then be the judge
as to whether or not we deserve your further consideration. Other men have
said we did, let's hear what you have ,to say

‘

HEADQUARTERS

:

said as he gave his Hundred Dollars to the Base Ball Club that in giving: it as
well as ihe right to use. the Ball Park this Summer he felt that the money was be.• ing given to help the town, as a good ball team is a help to the town,
of us help the pi opposition along, it deserves it.

IN SOCIETY’S DOMAIN

Dancing p a rty every Saturday
night a t "T he A ltam onte H otel",
Miss Marie—Knapp ~of Lancaster;
Altamonto SptlRfs. ‘ JJanelfig from
8:30 to 11:30. Tickets 75 cents each Pa., and Lee' McLain of Geneva were
recent guests of Mrs. W. L. Seig. Miss
person. Geo. E. Bates &amp; Son.
Knapp is spending the winter in Florida.
Fri. and S at.-tf.
Rev. Wright and family of Oviedo
Property O w ners Take Notice
attended the aong and dramatic recital
The law provides th a t " If taxes at the Bnptist TbmpTo last evening.
upon real estate ahalK pot bo paid
Mm. Will Hand, Mm. Ledorer and
before the First day of April pf any
Mm. Cora Akers are spending the day
_year. the Tax Collector shall adver­
with relatives in Orlando..
tise and Sell.'4
^
$_r
Mm. Torn Cook and children who
This is to notify all concerned
have be&lt;yi visiting Mm. W. C. DeCoureey returned to
Jacksonville,
Thursday.
Mrs. Ftmvillc is* expected today
from Raleigh, N. C. to visit Mrs. W. A.
Zachary.
Mrs. LoRoy Kirtley left on Thursday
.F O R to return to her home In Chicago after
a visit of several weeks with her parents,
EVERYTHING IN
Mr, and Mrs. Henry Wight.
Mias Lucy Byrd Smythe left
op
Thursday for Topeka, Kansas to visit
friends for sometime.

FRUITED OATS

PA OF

5®?S|, , T . 1__
._
Easter bazaar and cooked food sale
which will be held March 20th gt the
Ball Hardware Store on. First street.

m

m

x m

Things You Should
Know Today

7:30

P M Wha are t ie B i p ’n t i ?
W hat Have They L&gt; me? *

These days of higk prices, Clothes that last longest is what you
want. Thais the kind you get at O u r Place.
*

THE STORE THAT IS DIFFERENT'

Mlll’nsr Named for Milan.
. W anted—To b u y th at old fundFor Sale—Stable Manure in
Before Paris ln-cnittc flip mistress of turc. Turn it into cash. Dixie F ur- lot*. Buffklir &amp; Girvln, Blsbee Bldg,
mod oh, Milan gave the fashion lo the
nituro Co., 321 Sanford nve. 113-6tp JaekBonville, Fla.
' tlO-SOte.
world: hence.the word inlUlner.
iFor S ale—Player piano in perfect
For Sale—8 acre* celery land all
condition, house hold goods and tiled with 4 flowing wells. Good
furniture. Also Sm ith typew riter hoUBC, Binds 100,000 fyet hleching
and bicycle. 1109 Palm etto A v e .1lumber. Reasonable price—term s,
E. F. Lane
113-6tp.

1

# ’

’ #

•I

CLASSIFIED
♦
ADVERTISING
“j— &lt;$&gt;
&lt;♦
1#
♦

Koi’honRordHi
Ni»
IMd*

Curtain At 8:15. No one Seated During The Prologue
- An Epoch-making event In the annals of Ameri­
can am usem ents Is the presentation- by Richard
W citon Tt:!ly rf the virilc-cEepelUEff'tecccrnplhhcd
American actor, Guy Rotes Post, in the irridescent
.bubble
. . . r?. ■rt'-'lorn
— i.-----"T h e M asquerader.^
hum anity,
_____
^
e U* * »o*»*i
'r’i B dram-Ln.-atc.-pieco
i.7
___ _Lj
taken ;from
the widely read novel of K atherine
T hurston, Intim ately illustrate* the live-* of
Cctii ’____
two men w ho m et In the fog and traded identities
and living’ q u arter’.
The dual chart rtrrFiallon offer* Mr. Post a
wonderful ojfportunity* and the conatrasted char­
acters uro impcrsonatc'J by U rn with all the art of
a genius mind. I’ is drug fiend' is a pitful wretch:
bis fcodcr. the "m a n ,’* th e m c n ta l’and moral an­
tithesis cf the other.
More Intensely and artistically Interesting than
Jcckyl and- H yde—more ransslvg In presentation
than any modern play, and yet, so deftly done. Its
ponderous Beenes move with th e sm ooth rapidity of

For Sale -Pigs, two
good stock. Also one
I H. G. Dielerich.

months old,
Jersey cow.
117-Otp.

wonderful pixy is—A LIV IN G M OVING, TA LK ­
IN G PA N O R A M IC R E FL E X OF T H E WARP
A N D W pO F_O F HUMANITY.
The'"moat Ponderous of sill Modern Plnys^
pulsating with the element that comprise! ’ Life
presented in

If You Have Not Been
Immersed
Have You Been Baptised?
G EO RG E HYMAN
TELL YOU

Cooked food sale and Easter Bazaar.
All kinds of fancy work at Ball lldw
Co., store March 20th.
lJ7-7tc.

For Sale — Two story 8 room house
and garage. Clear title. # Sanford
H eights. Apply No. -102, Sanford
Jt venue. . .
- 113-tfc.

For Sale. 2 Hogs, clean
fed
weigh aboil* 200 lbs. each in fine
shape to hut her W H. Myn**J.
919 French Ave.
Ilfi-^tc

For Sale—Kiddie-Koop, in fair
condition. $10.00 cash. Can he seen
a t 214 Elm nve.
* W anted—One cow pony for city
pound. Will exchange for other
stork. G, A. Abbott, City Managrer,
lll-O tc .
W anted—L aly waitress Experienced
Bell Cafe 79-tf

A L L K I N D S OF
IN S U R A N C E .

JU ftP E A L E S T A T E .
I® S A N F O R D . F
LA.
FLA

“ When (he horse is stolen, the stable door is locked'*1

D o n 't ’ M ake .
. The Sam e M istake

W anted —Night Clerk, man middle
age, references. Local man preferred.
Seminole Hotel, 8. R Emmerich*;
Mg’r.
I in-3tc.

Regarding

Y our F ire In s u ra n c e !
‘M

Make sure of your
insurance at once, so
that in the not improb­
able event of a disastrous
fire in your own home
you will be amply pro-,
tectcd against financ al loss. Lock the door at
i

/

once!

Thrift in Peace Time

The first requMto for &gt;ou to do is to th in k —this
will bring forth Ideas of two kinds; \’ix* Imperfectcd
.and Perfected Ideas. The. lm pcrfocted Idea is.one
where you think you will somo day s ta rt to save
b u t ju st seem never to do It. The Perfected Is
•w heie you ACT AT O N C E and save .for thrift’s
sake. Which courre will you take? You
know
which is best an d . We Know where we cun help
you. Will you Come H E R E ?

For Sale—One 18 Horse Power
Kerosene Oil Engine. Chase &amp; Co..
Sanford, Fla.
|05-tf.

For Spin—Fresh Milk Cow. Sea
E. J. Taylor, -407 Magnolia avenue.
The Subjects herein printed* ;
loc-tf.
will he discussed the day?
For Sale—House and four lots. A
and hours stated.
.rgain. Box. 239.
113-6tp
•
The New T estam ent and The
' People Cnlled Baptists by
W snted—W hite lady for house­
George McDaniel form th e
keeper and cook for mill handa a t
t basis for the lectures.
Forrest City. W rite Mrs. P. R,
Pounds, ‘M aitland, R.
The Baptist Temple telephone
130, city.
Park Avenue and Sixth Street.

A

For Sale A beautiful home and |i
good celery farm at Berk Hammock.
I’ O Box 329 or phone 152. 116-Gtp.
LOCALS -

Sanford $4437.60 Fronting north
on brick highway jusl east of the
Read These Scriptures
artesian Spring half mile west of
Monroe road. 35H acres of ideal
Muttiicw 3:1. 3:18-16, 23:8homo site and irrigable farm land.
Mark 1:4, 6; 1:9-11.
Worth $200 per acre offered for
John 3:3, 5,7.
12‘
$75 per acre cash Direct from
«
Acts 2:41-17; 6:1-6; 8:12 owncs. Enquire at Phone 352 re­
36-39; 10:43-18.
lating abstract and deed. Ity-tf.
Roman* 6:4,5.
Ephesians 4:6.
Coloss inns 2:12.
Gnllutiun* 3:27
2. Tim othy 3:15-17.
.Revelations 22:18,* 19.

For Sale— Extra Fine White
Wyandotte* eggs. Two doPar* per
15. . W. B. Ballard, Altam onte
Spring*, F*in,
,
110-tf,

For Rent One seven room hquse
corner Park Av’e. and 7th Street.
Apply L, R. Phillips
117-t

Truth Seekers Meeting
A called meeting of the Truth Seekers
I'or Sale—50,000 large 4 green
SUNDAY, MARCH 2I«t
was held at the homo of Mrs. I). A
celery plants for immediate sotting
Kelly, Thursday afternoon for the 11:00 A. M. The Initial Christian Mrs. G. C. McDougal. .^Celery
purpose of perfecting plans for the
Ordinances.
•i
Avenue.
117:30 P. M.' W hat Others Say
About B aptists.
For Sale—.One F'ord Touring Car,
practically new; One Baby Grand
SUNDAY, MARCH 28th
Chevrolet 1920 model in perfect
com plete'
11:00 A. M. The Baptist* Opinion mechanical order also
camping outfit including tent cots
Relation
State
and
Church
FRECKLES Positively Removed
7:30 P. M. The Baptists in the cooking utonsils etc. Can be seen at
by Dr. Henry’s F re c k le O.ntment
Motel. Lincoln, Sanford after
6
Twentieth Century.
Your DrupftUi or by Mill 65c
p. in.
lJ4-fitp.
‘~St*nd lofFrco Booklet
- -------» --------- .— —*
SUNDAY, APRIL 4lh
D r.G H . Berry Co..
T ractor plowing and all kinds of
11:00 A, M. The Recurrent Church T ractor work. #Call ^Phnno 184.
i. Ordinance -7
112-tfe.
7:30 P. M. Tho Lord of Life.
(Song and $tor y Service;)
FOUND On first- St. west of

ORLANDO,

-

F.

D. or
112-6tc.

For Sale—Wood. Cheap. - Sea
B.* F- W hltner Jr. or phone *42.
112-6tp.

1

PEOPLES BANK OF
=
SANFORD
■

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="13">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10754">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1920</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11996">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 12, 1920</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11997">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11998">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 12, 1920.  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="11999">
                <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="12000">
                <text>Original 4-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;, March 12, 1920; &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="12001">
                <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="12002">
                <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="12003">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="12004">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
