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DAILY HERALD

IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
VOLUME 1

SANFORD, FLORIDA, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 11. 1920

ARMISTICE DAY SUCCESS
DESPITE LOWERING CLOUDS
HUNDREDS OF VISITORS

NUMBER 188

FARMERS TO ORGANIZE 1
AND PROTECT INTERESTS
BY SELLING ORGANIZATION

WHEN PEACE CAME
By Miss Jefferson Bell, in Miami Herald

On that eventful night of Nov.-11, scourged by the lash of fear. Craven,
1018, Miss Jefferson Bell of the Mi­ abject, like yelping curs they went
ami Herald wrote an articlo which in that mad race through the night—
she entitled "When Peace Came." It Bhivexing, whining, waiting. . And be­
appeared in that newspaper on the side that steel-clad limousine raced
morning of the 12th and -fas ns fol­ pale figures from the realms of shade
that thrilled the assemblage of peo­ lows:
•
and after them on the thundering GIRL EMPLOYEE^
ple thronging the sidewalks along
SHOW
DISLOYALTY,
Darkness lay on land and sea and hoofr of n ghostly steed, sheeted nnd
the the line of march. The float, far across the sweep of gleaming gibbering, rode Death.
ONE TIIRASIIF.D
-.
Uncle Sam and Miss Columbia, came waters' great guns belched and sholl
In the great capitals sat grave and
(B t T)m ify ifftitH Pr*ia)
next with Robt. Herndon driving, R. and flame swept the racked and tor­ silent men while the hours went—
LONDON, Nov. 11.—Girl employees
A.'Terhcun representinf Uncle Sam tured land. The wind was foul with nnd they, too, waited.
of Sylvia Pankhurst’s communistic
with an original makeup and Miss the smell of mustard gas,'poison and
In
n
million
homes
women
waited
paper were thrashed by an ahgry
. i-,
.
Columbia represented by Mrs. Robt. smoke and the moist taint of fresh, and-of all these legions who wnited
mob claiming thnt during two min­
-------— »
••
•
#
and w ith good w e a t h e r t h is Herndon; the Red Cross nurse by warm, red blood that oozed and flow­ they only prayed through the great utes of solemn silence In *honor of
EAb OR SECURES GOOD WAGES
Mrs. Burdick and guarded by the ed from the dead fallen on sodden hours that passed slowly into eter­
tho fallen dend, the women sang,
a fter n o o n a n d n ig h t tiie
army and navy; the float being dec­ fields.
BUT TURNS ON FARMERS DE­
4
I
nity. .They did not weep, those wait­ danced and- banged tin cans In tho
BOYS WILL BE “JAKE"
orated in Florida moss, pine needlea
Through tho darkness, Swift and ing women, praying with yearning newspaper office.
MANDING CHEAPER FOOD
and .vinca. This float received the fearsome, crashed a heavy atccl-cljid hearts to tho GreaJ God of All the
The biff day started off early as applause of the crowd all along the
BOSTON, Nov. 11.—Tho establish­
machine, racing with fate Wnd death, Years for those in camp and field nUCANEERS STOP
many of the boys never went to bed way.
. driven in hopeless haste and bringing and for. those who sailed the treacher­
ment
of nation-wide selling organi­
'
CHANNEL
BOATS
last night bat atayed up to be on
Behind Uncle Sam was the Chap­ the. bitter terms of defeat, chosen In ous seas. And it was not for peace
zations
.which shall establish . tho
time the firat thing In the morning lain’s ear, driven by Chaplain Geo.
-f
(B r l i t A*m c U U 4 F r« n )
price
of
products if the farmer does
a
desperate
hour
Against
a
greater
they
prayed
as
they
waited
unless
it
and long before daylight they were Hyman, with little John Hyman in
LONDON, Nov. 11.—A steamer not receive tho same hourly pay that
and more desperate need. In the coun­ brought the things for which they
out sounding the bugle calls and driv­
uniform sitting on tho hood and Dr. cil chnmbcr waited the Clan of the hnd given their men, but it was a lit­ proceeding to Cork nnd Queenstown other workers receive, was predicted
ing trucks with the cut-out open and
Brower of the Congregational church, Black Engle. Shorn were Its tnlons any wrung fromanguished souls thnt wnR stopped by a shot fired from by Sherman J." Lowell, of Fredonta, /
backfiring the engine and by seven
and Dr. Walker of Jhe Methodist and its plumnge befouled with hide­ death would pass over their men— men in boats nnd armed men boarded N. Y., mnster of the National Grange,
o’clock it is probable that more peo­
church, and R. J. Holly, of tho Y. M. ous crimes. Sullenly, desperately and nnd angels listened to the prayers of nnd seized goods.
Patrons of Husbandry, In opening tho
ple were awake early in Sanford thnn
C. A., occupying the car which wns doggedly they waited while the heavy- the women while they waited.
annual
convention of the grange.
have been since Armistice Day two
WASHINGTON CELEBRATES
decorated in red, white and blue bunt- tick of time and eternity marked the
"We
are
willing to have a fair un­
In the camp where the Clan of the
years ago.
ing and. carried the insignia of the passing hours. ‘
derstanding
of values, the farmer*
Black Eagle wnited In the council
(B r Tk* A m c l i t i j F n u )
The boy, wer. bo.y . . boo, until. e2ni,
the A|, A \ r k . „ , .ml
a
WASHINGTON,
Nov.
11.—Arntisreceiving
the
same pny for tho same
In the streets t)f Berlin nri d through chnmbeff*thd*hour of midnight wns
parade , time gettln, the wheel, of ,h„ wh|(e cr0„ „
, J eb.pl.ln,
tico
dny
was
celebrated
in
the
Navy
hours
work
thnt
others
receive,
no
the empire savage hordes marched striking, nnd the fate of the world
fortune and other amusements ready, —.
.. _
:
and shouted nnd sang. It was not balanced to the weight of n hair, and Marlnb corps by awarding t\t-o more, no less, but we feel thnt this is
and mnking all secure for tho dinner T ,_...
. .... , , ,
, .
,
,
. , ..
. „ ..
.. -Legion, was beautiful, being driven the songs of the Fntherlt nd they Lung, while breathless billions waited. thousand medals and letters of com­ the Inst call," he said. "If no atten­
and the dance tonight and all the oth- ,
_
„
,
. , ,
..... , . ,, ,, .
.
,
by Wnltcr. .Connelly. and ...............
containingsang, but the Marseillaise, t ic maYchIn the hushed silence of thnt tre­ mendation for valorous services in tion is pnid to this now by bnnkera,
cr little details that go to make up ,
the wreath for the boys who diod in injr. , onR of n hutod nntion| and {hslr mendous hour only the scratch of a the world war.
merchants, railrond men and other*
the big time.
• tho servico of their country’ nnd held
and the government continues to im­
pen
was
heard
nnd
then—through
nil
shouts curdled the blood of those wh6
The parade started promptly at 10 j a guard of honor.
port great quantities of raw material
LATE
WIRES
the
breathless
waiting
world,
from
n
crouched in the darkness of tottering
o'clock on Oak avenue led by the
The navy had a fine float repre­ thrones, nnd they shivered nnd listen- billion thrnnts and figm n billion
to keep prices down, then the farm­
Kissimmee band and it wns nn in­
(Dj Th* AiimUU4 Friti)
senting a ship and filled with sailors ed—and wnited.
brazen bells enme thundering shout.v WILLIAMSON, W. Va., Nov. 11. ers will organize nntlonal selling or­
spiring sight to BCb the boys of the the cor being driven by Ed. Wnrd.
In a steel-clad limousine, speeding of victory. It wns a world gone mnd —The Norfolk and Western railroad ganizations to fix the selling price of
army and navy nil rcsplendnnt in
The D. A. R. car was driven by
their pYoducts.
their uniform^ that had been Inid Hawkins Connelly and contained Mrs. Across a neutral bonier, fearful of with joy and while white doves of trestle at Thacker nnd the Drumhoupe
“There is no threat in this; we will
Mnttn Coal Co., at Ajax were blown
----life, and scurrying like a rat from
away'in moth balls for tho past year ... „ » ----- ?
W. E. Watson, Miss Morrison, Mrs.,
k
.
. pence hovered and nestled near the up todny. State police are investi­ hnve been driven to it in self defense,
, R. Key,
.
...
or more.
A.
Miss Wilkey, Mrs. Forest 1death,
, , * went two . men. The
. engine
, ox earth, the women, who had prayed, gating with bloodhounds.
to protect agriculture. We do not de­
,11
t. nndi »»_
*
i»
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,
the
h
gh-powered
car
sped
on
and
The line up of the parade wns ns rLnkc
Mrs. Louckes nnd wns dec- . . . .
, ,
, on, wept.
sire class or Inbor division; we desire
, , driven with the energy of despair and
follows:
orated in Myrtle over a while back-j
CHICAGO, Nov. 11.—A iinvnl sen- to aid humnnity nnd to be able to
First Flection
ground with hybiscus entwined in tho
’
plane with three men aboard is be­ keep the enrth fertile, alwnys bring­
The Colors.
Myrtle and bearing the insignia of n Y f n i l l F Q P
**
lieved to hnve been lost on the lnkc, ing forth its hnrvest sufficient to
Second Section
feed the increasing millions of our
the D. A. R. on tha side. *
D U u IllL iU lJ
today.
American Legion.
it*
The B. S t. P. car of Perkins &amp; Britt
NEW YORK. Nov. 11—Another people. It is no smnll task, how­
Floats:—
wns among the beautiful cars being
break of one-quarter of n cent a ever, nnd it can only bo snfely done
(a) Legion Float.
driven by Lieut. Kenneth Murrell, ac­
pound in raw sugar was announced by a proper appreciation of thin task
(b) Liberty Float (Terhune)
by our urban population."
companied by I)ixio Brown nnd held
todny.
" (c) Chaplain's car.
little Braxton Perkins, Charles Britt,
Mr. Ix)well rejoiced that labor had , VJ1
(d) Wreath (Conncly).
Wnnita McMillan, Wnnltn Smith nnd
. WASHINGTON, Nov. II.—'The Ad- ’ &gt;’«’«,n able to secure a much higher
Third Section
Margaret Britt nnd was decorated in PEOPLE HOPEFUL THAT BET­ LONDON AND PARIS CELEBRAT­ rintic question is believed closed as rah* °f wages, but added: "We little
Band.
rgd, white nnd blue roses over white
far as the United States Is concerned elected thnt they- would turn and
ED SECOND ANNIVERSARY
TER TIMES ARE COMING
Floats:—
nnd the children held red, white nnd
CLOSING OF WORLD WAR
by the officinl announcement by the demnnd chenper food from us withWITH EASIER MONEY
(a) Army Float.
blue pnrnsols. The Chandler car of
Jtnllnn embassy thnt Italy nnd Jugo- &lt;-ut first ascertaining the coHt of pro(Br Tk* a&gt;i&lt;x1*1*4 Pr*M)
(b) Navy (ship).
the Wight Tire Co., wns hcnutiful in Hopes thnt reviving business will
discovering
Impressive ceremonies were held Slavin boundary line has been agreed duction and thereby
(c) Spanish War Veterans nnd pure white nnd decorated in white fedlow the elections find expression
Upon
The
line
is
cnM
of
what
wns
whether
or
not
we
were
taking too
G. A. R. nnd I). A. It. in enrs flowers the Indies being dressed in in somJ* quarters, but the results of nt Ixindon and Paris to celebrate the known qs the Wilson line
large
n
margin
of
profit.
second anniversary of the closing of
&lt;d) Spnd (Lee Bros.)
white and the car driven by Mrs. IInI the balloting are not likely to prompt
v"
-------The nntionnl master declared that
the world war nnd pny tribute to
F o u rth Section.
Wight and accompanied by Mrs. a sudden reversal of consumers* buyGREENVILLE,
S.
C.,
Nov.
II.—
,the
great chnngcs that have taken
the fallen soldiers. The body of nn
Red Cross Nurses.
Ilnlph Wight, Mrs. Fred Wight, Mrs. ing disposition, und there is no genAnnouncement
wns
made
that
one
place
since the beginning of the war
unidentified soldier wns buried in
Floats:—
r
Kirklcy nnd Mrs. Clnude Howard.
crnl expectation of nny immediate npthe
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollar
have
been
to the disadvantage of agWest Minster Abbey amid elaborate
(a) Red Cross Float.
Tho Rose of No Man’s Land wns a precinble recovery from the .existing
pool
raised
by
local
merchants
will
riculture
and
mnny Inws and rulings
ceremony with King* George the chief
(b) Pence Float (Holly).
green car, decorated in red and driv- economic depression. While confusbe
ready
to
lend
farmers
on
cotton
of
our
nntlonal
government have
(c) Uncle Sam and Liberty (Gulf en by Robert Holley , nnd containing ion over the fundamental causes of mourner.
proven
of
injury
to
the fnrmers.
beginning
Monday.
In Paris a soldier’s body was tak­
Refining Co.)
Misscs Mnrgnret Znchnry and Ermi- the commercial reaction has not been
Mr.
Lowell
said
tho
recent census
en from n nnmeless grave nt Verdun
Fifth Section.
nin Houser dressed as Red Cross lacking, political factors do not ex­
NEW
YORK,
Nov.’ll._The
prneshowed
n
net
decrease
of 100,000
nnd buried under Arc De Triomphe.
School Children.
plain the steadily yielding prices of
nurses.
tices
of
the
l
J
rated
States
Shipping
fnrms
in
'seven
states.
Floats:—.
The Spinsh Babies car driven by- commodities, the increasing curtail­ President Millernnd und three mar­ H oa rd which led to n congressional
Concerning tnxntlon, he said:
shals participating in the ceremony.
(a) Tillis
Maude Lake nnd nccompnnled by Mis­ ment of production, nnd the continCommittee
investigation
have
not
"There is hut one equitable,form of
No nntionnl ceremony wns held in
(b) Perkins A Britt.
ses Kittie Dubose, Mnry Eliznbeth uel| (spread of unemployment, nnd can the United States but in most cities been "corrupt,” Commander A. B. I taxation nnd thnt is when cveYy form
(c) Fleetwood.
Puleston, Mildred Holly, I^oClntrJ hardly be singled out ns giving prom- the day was observed by parades und Clement, executive assistant to Ad- of wrnlth pays Its equitnblc propor(d) B. S t 0. Garage.
Jones nnd Olite Newman was in 15c of nny abrupt change from this
mirnl Benson, testified todny. He tion. There is no tax more equitable
memorial services.
(e) B. &amp; O. Garage.
white trimmed with blue nnd was dec- situation. At bottom, the business
said grounds for criticism is there thnn nn income tax for It Is not n &lt;
(f) B. &amp; O. Garage.
orated with -Kewpies.
. .
readjustment has been frequently “
'
'
'
'
hns not been perfect "co-ordinntion thnrge against anyone who has n o t’
Sixth Section
Among^the best decorated cam in reiterated, is the inevitable out- (trihutinpr influence in the forcing of between the different departments.” , the means to pay."
j
City Officials, Police and Fire De­ the parade were the two Peace cars,1growth of the great inflation and ov- 1merchandise liquidation,
----- r
»•
| He spoke against (he single tax and
partments.
one of them being driven by. Edward er extension of the war period and 1 Th»t restriction of building activ- _ NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—The Word the Idea of placing a govemmerit Und
Floats:—
.
Lane and one by Mr*. R. S. Holly.1afterward nnd tho movement tow ard, “ '0H **now practlcnllycountry-wide,
today prints an article saying the tax of 1 per cent on the Und In place
(a)
’ Wight Tire Co.
The lJ»no car wns said to be one of a sounder and more wholesome basis following nn earliertendency toward Wall Street bomb explosion wns caus- of taxing largo incomes which would
(b) Higgins.
the moiyt beautiful enr* of th* kind hi not one which can be swiftly com­ expansion, is evidenced by n special ed by unemployed workmen seeking be disastrous to agriculture he said,
(c) Lee Bros.
In the parade and wns done entirely pleted, or effected without somo survey pf the situation, just made revenge against Robert F. Brlndell, “Another equally erroneous idea,"
(d) Overland.
. In pink and white effects, the ladies measure of disturbance. The nccom- through tho branch offices of R. G. president of the Building Trades he said, “Is the one of having a tax
• (e) Std. Auto Top Co.
sitting under a white umbrella ra ls-1ptn y unsettlemerrt has been more se­ Dun S t Co. The causes of the reac­ Council, whose practices are now be- on all unimproved land holdings tor
(f) Thrasher.
ed In the center of the car, . Mr. 'yvrt In some trades and industries tion, which has occurred in the face Ing investigated.
j If this wns done and they were forced
- Seventh 8ectlon
J
Lane in white being In front and ac- than In others, but In all lines there is of a growing need for additional
*
.
-------*
on the market by reason of such a
Tournament Riders.
companicd by Miss Virginia Brady,'clear evidence of a transition to n housing accommodation, arc similar LONDON, Nov. 11.—An armistice tax (which is the Intcpt) it would
Floats:
Mrs. Lane, Mrs. . Charles Britt and ne* order' of conditions, and of a to those which have brought about was signed today between the Armen- cause the depreciation of farm lands
(a) McCuller.
.
Mrs. John Smith nnd the lines were'return of buyera’ marketa. After 26 readjustments in other lines* and high fans and tha Turkish nationalists, an 60 per cent from the fact that there
(b) Bryan.
held by a Cupid In front of the car. Jconsecutive weeks during which a costs of both materials, and Inbor Armenian communique announced.
is more Improved land than men to
(c) Hill Lumber Co.
•
"Peace” In large Ictfcrs was on the 1representative list of wholesale quo-j)1* '0 probably been more responsible
work It now."
.
.
a
! . . * * . • •
_____I __
I n i n n n u nfKni* l i n n l n / n n f / i r /rase l ir a
(d) Chore-Cola Co.
front of the car.
.
■
Itatlons has disclosed a preponder- than nny other single factor for tho
NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—Three bod­
(e) Lane.
The other Peace car was,driven by ance 0f recession*, the general aver- restraint or construction operations. ies were discovered on a burned sec­
AEROPLANES WERE HERB
(f) Walthal &amp; Estrldge.
Mrs. R. S. Holly accompanied by M rs.' age 0f prices 1* now considerably Tho tightness of the money market tion of the steamship El Mundo on
Eighth Section
S. Mi Lloyd, Mrs. Donald Smith, Mrs. !|ower than ha^d previously seemed moreover, has rendered dtfflcult the which nine men were seriously in­ The aeroplanes were here on time
Boy Scouta.
Eugene Roumillat nnd Mrs. R- J r probable ^ind thb declines at the re­ financing of new undertakings, and jured yesterday jwhen an oil tank ex­ this morning and one of them under
■rcv
Floats:— *
Holly nnd little Evelyn Smith sat in ' tail counters, If developing more many contemplated projects are be­ ploded.
; command of Lieut Bivcna and with
(a). Miscellaneous Floats and au- the back dressed in white and w ith ' slowly, are becoming more numerous ing held in abeyance until conditions
Scrgt. Smith they did all kinds of
•
tomobUea.
.
wing* spread played the part of the t nd widespread. The developments become more favorable. A recent de­
WASHINGTON, , Nov. 11^—The stunts over the city while the parade
cided
lowering
of
lumber
prices
in
The parade was probably one at fairy. The
car was Inpure white of recent months have demonstrated
National Association of Railway and was in progress and afterward. Their
the largest and best arranged that throughout with canopy effect the that maintenance of price* a t ab- many sections has encouraged hopes Utilities Commissioners selected At- loops and tail spins and other stunta. A M
of
a
subsequent
revival
of
building
has ever been pulled off In Sanford top holding a basket of white flowers ' normally ijlgh levels Is dependent uplanta today for the next convention, scared the people watching the pa­
and this was due to the military pre-^ and the white dove of peace perched 0n a sustained purchasing power, and activity, but the price declines have
-------rade and many of them expected the
cision with which it was carried out. on the tip. Each aide of the car con- the former extravagant demands not yet extended to every class of
COLUMBIA, S. C., Nov. 11.—An plane to come tumbling down on their
material,
and
the
Immediate
future
of
Under the command of Colonel Geo, tained gold letters with the word from consumers hnve been replaced
express messenger safe on the South- heads, but the boys'in'the plnne were
W. Knight, and his efficient staff, the "Poaccb"
Among thedecorated jn many Instance* by a policy of pro­ tho industry is regarded as being cm train Number .16, containing $16,- old heads nt the business nnd they
parade started on Oak , •avenue floats that deserve special mention vidlng for absolute requirements on- more or less uncertain. It is the con­
000 was thrown off by robbers nt inndcd safely on Sanlord Field after
promptly nt ten and to the Inspiring arc the following:
*ly, .In 'th e belief that further price census of opinion, however, that any Sharpe but recovered by a freight
their hair raising stuff and were the
strains of "Over There" the Kissim­ The Reo car driven by Leslie, D ry-, yielding will ultimately follow. Ro­ general and substantial deflation of crew before the robber* returned!
guests of tho Seminole Hotel for Ihe*
mee Band under the leadership of an,-all done in yellow and containing giiUmce to high prices, /moreover;
prices,
accompanied
by
an
easing
of
day. It wns good of the Carlstrom
Capt. Gallagher, led tip boys out
bunch of yellow daisies being a has been strengthened by the extra
LONDON, Nov. 11.—Three thous- Field commander to allow tho plane
with chests out and eyes front and bevy of children dressed In yellow nnd ordinarily mild fall weather, which t"® financial stringency, would be folthe colors first with the color guard carrying out the idea of the gold seal has caused heavier accumulations of. lowe&lt;) by the starting of construction and unemployed men io Berlin storm- i to come here and we are quite sure
of the army and navy followed by a car. The little girls were Virgle goods than would otherwise have been work on a broad scale after the pass­ ed the Lion Metal Works and estab- that the lieutenant was glad to be
lished political Soviet, the dispatches assigned to this pleasant duty of vis"long line of soldier boys and tailors
(Continued on page four )
witnessed, and which has been n con­ ing of winter.—Dun’s Review.
say.
; iting his old Hanford friends.
I '

Rain Failed to Dampen Ardor
Of the Boys

Wages Must Be in Propor­
tion to Price on Crops

EVERYTHING READY

WILL NOTEQUAL PAY

IMPRESSIVE
CEREMONIES
CONDITIONS
. IN EUROPE
READJUSTED

".

Bvmvi
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THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD,
alia are Included in this price.
At 2 p. m. C. M. Hand’s Galaxy of
galloping rough-riders will furnish a
number of thrills.
With $100 in prizes being offered
it Is certain that all events will be
hotly contested.
The toitmanicnt will be staged on
the bulkhead—no admission fee be­
ing charged.
Promptly following the tournament
the Navy vs. the Army baseball game
will be played at Holden Pairk.
Look over the following .line-up

At The Star Theatre
.

WEDNESDAY, NOty

TONIGHT

DON’T FORGET A SPECIAL ARMISTICE DAY PROGRAM

A L IC E BR AD Y in

The New York Idea
SHE WANTED A DIVORCE—QUICK!
' “What grounds?” of course wns a natural question for the
Judge to nsk. Cynthia Karslirfcc was stumped for a minute. And
then she remembered that "John" had a habit of strewing.his shav­
ing things about her boudoir in a very untidy manner.
. And so a divorce was easy—so easy that it wasn’t any fun at
all.
Is divorce a failure? That question will arise in your mind
when you sco beautiful ALICE RRADY in "THE NEW YORK
IDEA”—a pungent satire on modem married life.
Friday and Saturday, Louise Glaum in “SAHARA"

‘|

++*+4-+ &gt;+•&gt;*+•&gt;*++++++++*+4-+*****+-*+**++++++++++++*++++*
end of protecting ’the public safety.
REORGANIZATION PLANS
•
Since the conference here with, the
FLORIDA NATIONAL GUARD
army officers last week, General Lov­
CHARLESTON, S. C., Nov. 8.— ell has been nt Columbia with Mrs.
That the government and war depart­ Lovell, visiting the relatives of the
ment in particular t^eans td do ev­ latter.
erything. it can to make life in the
Nntlonal Guard attractive,'interesting
and instructive In the future, was the
opinion expressed here this afternoon
by Gen. C. P. Lovell, adjutant gener­
al-elect of Florida, just before he
boarded the Clyde steamer Comanche
for Jacksonville.
.
General Lovell wns here Inst week
to attend the conference of udjutant
general of the Southeast with offic­
ers of the nrmy fourth corps nrea,
where the reorganization plans for
the National Guard were generally
gone into.
General: Lovell stated that in the
case of Florida, for instance, there nt noOn.
•
•
wil\ be a motor truck company form -1 Preparations hnve been made for
ed, ns well as nn up-to-the-minute oniy 2000 so come early and avoid
motorcycle company. the rush.
At first the nrmy officers were
We defy you to beat the nccomdisposed to allow only eight compan- pnnying menu during these times of
ies in Florida but he secured their the H. C. of L:
promise to recommend a complete
j |0t naked Beans
regiment for that state.
!Iot Frankfurters
He bblieves the Floridn National Pickles.
,
Bread and Butter
Guard can be organized in such a
Coffee
mnnner ns to provide n routine, which
And nil for the modest, sum of twowill be attractive to the men and re- bits!
suit in great efficiency toward the
Plates, cups and necessary flten-

Burdick,* shortstop; Amoon, right
field; Rive, catcher; Chapman, left
field; Hartis, center field; Holly,
third bash; Lang, first base; Hoff­
man/ second base; Perryman, pitcher.
Subs: Baggett, Woodruff, Griggs.
Navy
- Chapman, first base; Coft, second
b’nsc; Griffin, third base; Robinson,
catcher; Spencer," pitcher;
Roper,
short stop; Dean, eenter field; Ogilvie, right field; Moye, left field. Subs,
Schultz, Ward.
The Hotels {ieminole and Valdez
promise to take care of our out-of­
town guests at the supper hour.
Special meals have been arranged
by the management of the two hostelries and the prices will be found td
be very reasonable.
Kissimmee’s famous 18-plecc baqd
will render selections at various hours
of the day, appearing In concert at
the court house! from 7:00 to 9:00 p.
Manager Herndon, of the Star
Theatre, hns secured n special feat-,
ure film for the day, showing nt
both the matinee nnd evening hours.
The famous Goldwyn staj, Barbnrn
Castlcton will appear in the picturization of Katherine Newlin Burt’s
novel, "The Branding Iron.”
A special presidential edition 1of
the Fox news will bIbo be shown In
nddltion to the customary comedy
\yhlch follows the feature; attrac­
tion.
Although this is n special picture,
and a longer program than usual, the
admission fee will be but 25c.
Mr. Herndon has kindly arranged
the program for the accommodation
of those who do not care to attend
the dance.
Last, but not lenst, don’t forget to
procure your tickets for the Legion
Ball..

Sportsmen’s Headquarters

Season O pens N o v . 20th
"!

ARE YOU READY?

G u n s R ifle s A m m u n itio n
H u n tin g C lo th in g , E tc .
•

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Quick Lunch
Coffce 5c Sandwiches 10c
Pies, home made 10c cut
Rest Coffee in Sanford

Princess Theatre Bldg

December 1st
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES.
Minimum Charge for any one
One Time, per word___ ___ lc
Three Times, per word____ _ 2c
Six Tim*»‘ per w o rd ...____ Sc
Over Six Times, l-2c per word
per issue.
WANTED
WANTED—For cash, an old build­
ing for its lumber. Address with
locution and price where it stands.
If you hnve one, write O. Goodellc,
Orlando, Fla.
18G-3tp
WANTED—An elderly Indy, single
preferred, to attend invalid lady.
Address, 112 Elm Ave.
185-fltp
Buy your post cards nt the Herald
office.
WANTED—Your old battyrles to re­
build. Let us make your starting
nnd lighting a pleasure. We nre au­
thorized “EXIDE" dealers nnd hnve
a Battery for nil mnkes automobiles.
"EXIDE, the Giant that lives In a
box.”—Ray pros. Phone 648, old
Ford Gnrngc.
179-tfc
—Get your Scratch-Pads from Tho
Herald—by tho pound—15c.
WANTED—Brick nnd cement work,
chimneys, flues, piers, cement
floors, sidewalks. — A. L. Kay, 200
Pnrlf Ave.
173-30tp
WANTED—By November 15, a 4 to 6
room house or apartments, unfur­
nished or partly furnished. Best of
references given. Will rent hy the
year. Address at once, “Cottage,” In
WANTED—Pupils, Violin and Piano.
—Ruby Roy, 200 Park Ave.
176-20t-p
Iluy your post enrds nt the Herald
office. Beautiful views, lc each.
WANTED TO RENT—HOUSE OR
APARTMENT OF 4 TO 6 ROOMS.
FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED.
WILL RENT HY YEAR. ADDRESS
“APARTMENT" CARE OF THE
HERALD.
tf
FOR SALE—H i H. P. and 2 Vi II. P.
Gasoline engines. Brand n&lt;jw and
in perfect condition.—Herald Print­
Ing Co._______________________ tf
WANTED—Two rooms for light
housekeeping with private family.
Address K. K. J., care Herald.
187-3tp
FOR RKNT
FOR RENT—One nicely furnished
room, 320 Oak Ave. Phone 308-J.
187-tfc
TO RENT or for sale, large ware­
house with railroad siding.—Chns.
Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co.
16G-tfc
FURNISHED ROOMS—Two furnish­
ed bed rooms. Inquire 311 PaA
Avenue.___________________ 157-tfc
FOR ifENT—Apartment of three
rooms and bath, furnished or un­
furnished at Elder Springs with Eid­
er Springs water free. Phone 3505.
.
184-tfc
FOK RENT—Furnished front room,
218 Elm.
184-Stc
FOR RENT—Two or three furnished
honsekeeplng rooms. P. O. Box
117, Owner.
*
184-Gtp
FO RRENT—Six unfurnished rooms,
bath and hall, over Red Front
Store on Ninth street, fourth block
east of depot Box 81.
18G-3tp

Sporting Goods

LOST
LOST—Western Union branch de­
posit book. Finder please return
to Western.Union office.—J. P. Hall,
M gr." .
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180-tfc

Cash must accompany order. Ten
cents extra if charged.
Advertising in thla column in which
the address of the "advertiser -is not
given but which refers you to Post­
office Box Number or Care of the
Herald MUST be anBwerqd accord­
ingly. Please do not ask ns for the
names of advertisers advertising in
this way. Usually we do not know
who they are, and If we do we are not
expected to tell you.
MISCELLANEOUS
ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week,
109 East First street, over Union
Pharmacy.
____
lA.'l-tfc
CARPETS and rugs washed right on
the floor, with Hamilton Bench
Electric Carpet Washer. Kills nil
moth nnd disease germs. Make your
floor coverings absolutely sanitary.
—Electric Carpet Washer, Sanford.
.
186-Ctp
DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture,
bedstends, chnirs, etc. What have
you ?
174-30tc
BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run
your battery until she is entirely
dead. The battery is the costliest ac­
cessory to your car. We re-charge
and' re-build all mnkes of batteries.
—Rny Bros. Phone 548, old Ford
Gnrnge.
179-tfc

On the first of each month
. your rent is due;
Why give
other people your money. Boy
you a home and each month
instead of paying out rent
money, pay on a home that is
yours.
' Beautiful homes on Park,
Oalr, Magnolia, Palmetto and
Myrtle
avenues,
Hanford
Heights. Building lots in any

E. F. LA N E
The Real Esiate Man’

Daily Service

Phono 66

Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props

Y V e la k a B u i l d i n g
FOR SALE—Shasto daisies, fl per
dozen. English Shamrock Oxalys
30c per dozen. Ring 207-W. 183-12tc
Special reduction in men's nnd In
dies’ W.' L. Dougins shoes.—A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.
__________________________ 106-tfc
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished large
light housekeeping rooms.—Mrs.
Riddling, 205 Oak ave. Eagle Hall.
186-Gte
WOOD AND POSTS sold and deliv­
ered on hard road, within one mile
t&gt;f town. See me.—W. V. Dunn.
186-Gtp
FOR SALE—H', II. P. nnd 2V, II. P.
Gasoline engines. Rrand new and
in perfect condition.—Herald PrintWc have just received n line of
silverware and casseroles.—A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.
Phone
660.________ ’ .
’
106-tfc
PLANTS FOR SALE—Cabbage, On
Ions, beets, lettuce nnd cauliflow­
er.
Yellow self-bleaching celery,
guaranteed French imported seed,
bought from Chase &amp; Co., write for
prices. State quantity wanted.—W.
C. Post.
.
173-GOtc
FOR SALE—Very cheap, one 7-pas­
senger automobile in good shape.
Apply B. A O. Motor Co.'
185-6tc
FOR 8ALE—Five room cottage,
large yard for vegetable garden,
various fruit trees, also two separate
fives acre farm land; 6 gallon hot
water heater, P. O. Box 117, Owner.
,
184-Gtp
See our line of electrical lamps.—
A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Avenue.
Phone 650.________ ________ 166-tfc
New line of Congoleums and Art
Squares.—A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford
Ave. Phone 550._____
lM-tfe
FOR SALE—IK H. P. and 2V» H. P.
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
in perfeet condition.—Herald Print­
ing Co.
________
tf
Special reduction on Georgette Silk
and cotton shirt waists.—A. Kanner,
213^215 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.
FOR SALE—7-room, 2-story house,
largo yard for garden spot, also
chicken yard. Various fruit trees..
Phone 487.
18G-6tc
Office supplies at the Herald.

Specials For Today
Choice
Western and Florida
Meats
Vealj Porir, Mutton,
Sausage

F r o m the Foundation

Quality-Servicd-Price
Try a Herald Want Ad.—It P»I**

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THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER II, 1920

SANFORD DAILY HERALD
“DOUBLE YOUR EARNING POWER. THINK
WHAT IT MEANS TO YOU TO DOUBLE YOUR
EARNING POWER. THOUSANDS ^LV.VE DONE
_
IT AND THOUSANDS ARE DOING IT AND YOU
THE HERALD PRINTING CO., Inc. CAN
I)(T
IT
TOO
WITHOUT
IT INTERFERING WltTH YOUR WORK,
PUBLISHERS
BY INVESTING 1N-THE 8 PER.CENT CUMULATIVE PRIOR PRE­
R. J. HOLLY................- .........Editor FERRED STOCK OF THE SOUTHERN UTILITIES COMPANY.
SET
N. J. LM-LAItp..Secretary-Treasurer ASIDE A LITTLE SURPLUS EACH MONTH AND LET IT MAKE MON­
n . A. N E E L _____General Manager EY FOR YOU. THERE’S NONE BETTER.
F. P. IUNES__ Circulation Manager
Phono 181

Six Kinds of

rak|U k*4 t r t r j tft.rn o o a .x c tp t 8*n4»r a t Tba
B araU B uildlnf. 107
A t. bu.
B u fo rd , Florida

Balaa Xada Known an A p ,H o llo a
Bakacrlptoa Prloo A A drasca
O il

f a i r ......................................V.................... f(U00
Uoolh* ...................... . . I . . ' . . . . . 13.00
DallTtrad la City k r Carrlor

Oo- W rak

.................. .................,.,'.7 7 .1 5

Oanta

$|ember of the AssociatedT’reas

Hello, buddies.
The city Is youra today,
- o -

get that pot of "chow” ready
navy will play ball
tho war."
We can fight the battle of •Paris'
find the siege of Bordeaux all over
i. L
What a joy it muBt be today to be
out of the trenches and living in the
beautiful sunshine of Floridn. Some
difference, bud, some difference.
-------- —O-- ;------The e&lt;litor of the Hcrnlrf is in
«?oubt us to whether he hulongs to
the army •or the navy, having sorved
the army on boai^J the transports nnd
nerved th navy at the same place.
----- o
We feel like we would get o haver­
sack of chewing gum nnd cigarettes
and give them out today nmong the
boys. They were “our boys” for so
wo were a father to so many
thousands in fact.
. — -■ o---------Don1 expect a good paper today,
While we cannot close the plant for
we expect to let the force off
and then there is so much going
on thAt it will be impossible for the
editor t o stay on the job and wo will
not stay on it anyhow. We are just
going A. W. O. L. today and we defy
\ military nnd civil authority to
, us serve nnd you will probably
us among the K. P.'s down on
lake front if there is anything
...1 for the welfare of the
j. This is the big day and we
J to celebrate until the last
blows "taps” tonight.
---------- o---------ARMISTICE DAY

Francs nnd then grumbled to get
home—but their grumbling is just the
natural American chafin nt the bit for
things to move faster. They are the
boys who will make the future Am­
erican citizens and they nry&gt; of the
right sort. They have been through
the mill and if any of them had any
cooties of discontent on them they
were shed witli the trench uniform
nnd did not come back home with
the boys who were' willing to sacri­
fice their all in this world because
the government: called them. They
went- Into the'i mouth of hell because
they were, needed In the timo o f their
country's ntress and having answered
ore entitled to all thnt-The country
can give' them in the years to come.
No,one can Imagine what they suffer­
ed unless you were in tho midst of
the ruck and the muck with them.
No one can imagine their feelings,
their opinions and their, inspirations
unless you were with them.nnd talked
with them while the mood was on
them. T h ese boys only homo for tho
past two years and some less thnn
that h»V&lt;? been made over again into
peace loving, loyal, law-abiding citi­
zens. They were made over from
citizens into soldiers in n short space
of time nnd were again made into cit­
izens in'just as short a space and the
transformation is marvelous nnd most
remarkable and shows the versatility
of our modern American boys. That
they are here with us today in such
large numbers is another cause not
only for wonderment but for congrat­
ulations nnd we have them with us
today celebrating that victory that
means so much .to the world today
and will mean so much more to the
world in the ygars to come.
. Enjoy yourselves, boys, to the full­
est extent. We arc with you soul
nnd heart and body and will endenvr r to keep up with you until our legs
give out and then we will call for an
embulnnce and ride in the procession
until the finish.
And to those boys sleeping in
Flanders field nnd these who nre
sleeping under the stars nnd stripes
in this country todpy we drop a tear
to your memories. You cannot be

Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank
X where you deposit your money?.
•
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The first consideration is the capital, which should be
X ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank
£ is to serve.
here to celebrate but you will be re­
membered none the less. You paid X
The next question to consider is the officers in charge.
the supreme sacrifice ami yoyi have
They...................................
should be men
of experience, high character and successi.ot died In vain. As the yenra go by ^
.......................................... .................................... ......
nnd the cycle enlarges and merges,
ful. Without men of ability po institutioncan succeed.
into the yesterdays and the shadows |
lengthen a t thto dose of the day and
Then there is the question of confidence. The public f
the end of this life we will alwayrf’
remember and always praiso Him
should have confidence m the officers and in the bank.
that saw so mnny safely through and
These three principles determine the success of a bank.
safely over and ask that He. “stand
by" the boys who have passed Into
We adopted these principles in the outset of our career X
the beyond and those who nre here
"carrying on."7
„
and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase v
VALDEZ GRILL OPEN AT NIGHT
our usefulness to the community as the years go by.
%
The many patrons of the Valdez
We Offer You:
Hotel grill will be pleased to learn

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that the management hat decided to
keep the grill open nt night until 1
o'clock.
1 87-fltc

1ST: LARGE CAPITAL AND WORKING RESERVE.
2ND: TRAINED MEN IN CHARGE-MEN OF SEVERAL YEARS EX­
PERIENCE.
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CHRISTMAS^

Pendants ___ ?-____

5 to

500

Cuff Links .7 ______

5 to

100

Wrist WatcX’s ____15 to
Electric Lamps -- --- 10 to

6TII:
.

150

SHOW YOU

P o d tfp p /o s

S rapos
STORE CLOSED THURSDAY
'W ' t, 7 iff;

&lt; Dfet a

T u—
rn er
n e Z
-------iPAtmt 49T WrtmAm SBwiMftf

1

A
A
X
X
A
A
X
$
X
A

A
A

WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS

V
A

T h e jJ ew eler.
M. D. GATCHEL
* GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES

H eaters ;;

jt m

Phone 110
Corner Sanford and Cclgry Avenues
2-lb CANS STANDARD,
PACKED TOMATOES,
PER CAN ................. ......

HAND-

EXTRA FANCY GRADE
CORN, PER
CAN ...................................

MAINE

20c

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE. 1-lb. can___. . .

40c

Vulcanite
Shingles
Just Lay Them Down and Nall—That’s All
There Is To It
The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot .or cpld air—rain, sleet,
etc., from forcing its way thro ugh the” roof.
Tho Shoulder of Proteetio n is also the Self-Spacing Device.
Makes laying easy nnd rapid—thus saving time and money.
These Asphalt Shingles nre surfaced with natural colored Rod
or Green Crushed Slate. Eac h rain washes away the accumulated
dust—reviving perpetually the original rich colors.
Where these shingles are used the insurance rate la lowered—
because they nre fire-resistin g.
,
t.
Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the
cost free of charge. Samples nnd priejs furnished free.

Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co
•4-S"t++4+4+++*+++++++4+*4-;-4+444++4+4.|.4+.H-4+4++++-fr+++

A 25c Want
Ad. •in The
Herald
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.
.
will Rent Your House For You

SWIFTS* PREMIUM
HAMS. Per lb...........
Try a Herald Want Ad.—It pays.

Full Line

Prices from $50 to $300

Terms to Suit
Yourself
•hfi1'

To make room during the construction of our new garage we will close out
our stock of celebrated Willard Threaded Rubber Batteries AT COST. _
Overland*, regular price— r ------ $58.40; sale price------- - ------ $46.60
Cadillac, regular price------ ---------- 83.33; sale price-------,-------- 67.69
Dodge, Marmon, Franklin, reg. price, 71.90; sale price----- 58.63
Olds, Overland, Oakland,
Buick Fours, regular price.— . 53.35; sale price-------------- 43-52
Hudson, Reo. Iluick 6’s. regular price. 61.60; 'sale price-----------------50.27
Packard, regular p ric e ___________ 83.33; aale price-----------------67.69
Maxwell, regular p ric e ____ . . . — . 66-55; sale price— . . r --------54.29
These are all bran new batteries and will last for years if properly
cared for. If your old battery la becoming doubtful now Is the opportunity
to aave m bunch of money and at the same time insure a winter of care­
free pleasure or buslneaa.
, V ~
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The most complete line of Records
in the city.
Line ofj^iolirw, Guitars a n d M a n d o l f f i s

rices

Daytona Storage Battery Co.

INOLIA AVB15 MAGNOLIA

FLORIDA
DAYTONA, FI

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EXPORT SOAP.
PER C A K E -----

TO THE MOTORISTS

O ran ge?

X

INSURANCE OF ALL DEPOSITS EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR,
THIS IS A PROTECTION NOT COMMONLY FOUND IN BANKS
AND IS AN ABSOLUTE PROTECTION FOR YOUR FUNDS, IN
ADDITION TO ALL TIIE OTHER USUAL SAFEGUARDS.

M cL A U L IN

Reduced J ? # ? J 7
Q
Prices on Mi E L iE L iM -J\D
at West Side Grocery

P a r s n ip s

A

PEOPLES BANK OFSANFORD f

H ILL HARDW ARE COMPANY i!

C a r r o ts

V
♦&gt;
♦&gt;

THESE ARE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD DO
BUSINESS WITH
US. AND WE BELIEVE THAT NO BANK CAN OFFER BETTER INlDUCEMENTS.\..

Toilet Sets _______ .-lO lo
75
f
rr WILL HE A PLEASURE TO

Every Kind it

jC o ttu c o

J

100

Two years ngo tho whistles and the
FOR T H E FIR S T
bells and other noise makers soundC O M P L E T E H O U S E BILL
the glad tidings that war was over
C A R T E R L U M B E R CO.
peace had been declared and our
i over yonder and our boys in the
■camps here could come borne again.
All those weary months of wafting -H-+++++++++++++++++++++4-++++++++++++++++++++-M-+++4-++4
Over, here and those weary months of
fighting nml then waiting over there
over nml how we did celebrate
a dny nnd a night over the good
OF
People went wild with joy nil
• the world at the glad tidings
"■
g£j
M S lto r g
__ , peace would again brood over
the .world-and fighting come to an
OUR PRICES ARK RIGHT
id. While peace has not quite cn! the world since that time and
many countries nre torn asunder with
revolution, peace has to a large ex__ j come to most of the countries
vt the earth nnd America can at least
celebrate Armistice Day today with
the feeling that most of our troubles
ate over. Wo will bo beset frdm time
to time with troubles and agitations
before things right themselves but
America will always be America, the
land of the free and the home of the
brave nnd nil those boys who spent
any time in the countries of Europe
and who arc home today celebrating
If you don't believe .we handle Feed, just look]at
will feel like t^ey nre home and that
these prices: That Go6d Omelene Feed, sack3$3.95.
home means the grandest home in the
* grandest country In the world. Come
Shorts, sack, $3.50. Scratch Feed, sack, $3,95. Coin,
■what will in the next ten years we % Oats, Laro, Etc., received dayly. jr^PERUNAj [FEEDS.
count on the boys of the AmeriYour Phone and My Delivery Makes Me
'
our true and loyal cit- £
They mny grumble with the J
Your Nearest Grocer
of us nt times and think things
nre not ns they should bo—they j
Phone 166.
L. F . ROPER, Prop.
1 in the camps nml in the
trenches and grumbled to- get to .*+.{. A.&gt;.C.+.M^*.yA.t+++++«++.t'M.++4&lt;.«.+':*4+++»+44’+++*-l-+4++*+++

A vocados

V

A
A

5TII: THE ADVICE OF A COMPETENT BOARD OF DIRECTORS,
WHO MEET WITH TOE OFFICERS
REGULARLY
EACH
MONTI! AND ADVISE THEM AS TO TOE OPERATION OF
THE RANK. • •

Diamond Brooches __ 25 to 1000
100

Y

4TH: PROTECTION BY TWO EXAMINATIONS EACH YEAR BY THE
STATE HANKING DEPARTMENT, TWO AUDITS EACn YEAR
BY AN INDEPENDENT RECOGNIZED PUBLIC AUDIT COM* ‘
PANY AND TWO SWORN STATEMENTS SUBMITTED TO TOE .
STATE COMPTROLLER BY TOE CASHIER, GIVING THE
HANK’S CONDITION IN DETAIL, ALL OF WHICH INSURES
REGULAR, SYSTEMATIC AND THOROUGH OPERATION OF
THE BANK.

Diamond R in g s __ ..-$23 to $1500
Scarf Pina ............— 2 to

■

3RD: THE CONFIDENCE OF TOE PUBLIC. WHICH IS PROVEN BY
THE DAILY ADDITION TO OUR LINE OF DEPOSITORS.

ONLY SIX WEEKS OFF
BUY EARLY

S P E C IA L BAR GAIN S

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�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1|, 1920

LMl« Hsppentngs
Mention of
Msllers In Brier
Personal Items
of Interest

In and About

Summary of the
Floating Small
Talks Succinctly*
Arranged for
Herald Readers

*£ The City

lion, rorcst UaKe returned Inst}
evening from Tallbhossec.

Hon. Kph Brown, of the Ft. Christsection, wa« in the city today.
Mr. and Mrs. Chnrles Brumley of
Chuluota, were in Sanford Wednes­
day.

A Trial Solicited

THEATRE

Miss Norma Herndon is at home
for Armistice day from Stetson.

TONI GHT

K. A. Niemyer and Rodney Syndcr,
prominent business men of Kissimmee
wrro here today.
x

An array of Herman Sourcnirs and War Material will be on exhibition
all day Armistice Day. Lieut. Birins, will also be here bringing with
him a flying machine from Carlatrom Field to thrill the crowds with
some darc-doril stunts. There are so many features connected with this
day that it just can’t help being the biggest day in Saitford yet.

P u re Food M ark et
J. H. Tillis, Prop.
Phone 105
402 SanfonJAve.

at our place all the time is onq of the nicest arrays of Men’s Clothing and
Furnishings, so many nice things in fact, that it would take a whole
page to tell you about a part of them. And we are selling them all at
pricea you'HTike.

Mr. and Mgs. II. Clay Stanford, of
Kissimmee, nrc among the prominent
visitors to the city today.
Lieut. Bivens and friend are the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Hern­
don at the Seminole.

------m » ...

.

i t ^. - a

04? r w w u n D u n

Boxta&amp;S&amp;ctiflq

Judge and Mrs. E. F. Housholder,
Master Carlyle Housholder and Mrs.
Julius Schltx, were in DcLand Wed­
nesday.

25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts.
20 to 75 Walts in 32 Volts

Mrs. Terhune, the sister of Mrs. F.
F. Dutton, came last, evening to be
with Mrs- Dutton for some time.

Everything Electrical
Expert Installation and
Repair Work

Master Billy Thigpen, who has
been ill at the home of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Morton .Thigpen, is
much better.

G ILLO N &amp; FR Y
Phone 412

Mrs. Pearle, Mrs. Frank Jones, Miss
Jeannette Ijiwson and Messrs. Davis
and Gregory, of Kissimmee, were in
the city today.

Seed, Our Business.
Honesty, Our Motto.
Purity, Our Watch

Mr. uml Mrs. Cal McCaughn, of
Orinndo, ara in the city today visit­
ing friends. Mr. McCaughn is the
proprietor of it cafeteria in Orlando
and Mrs. McCaughn was formerly
Miss Maude Alice Wagner of this
city and both of them have many
friends in Sanford.
The Ball Hardware Company,
known among sportsmen as the
"Winchester Store,” is mnking great
preparations for the opening of the
hunting season, which opens Novem­
ber 20th. A complete line of ev­
erything for the sportsman and
hunter is carried and you are invited
to call when -in need of hunting sup­
plies or fishing tackle. They handle
only the best recognlzod brands, and
can fill your wants in these lines.

COME IN AND SEE US. „
(Southern Seed Specialists)
iwa Iildg.
Sanford, Fla.
STREAK OF LEAN
STREAK OF FAT

The Logical Treatment

J-. E. SPURLING

Sanford’s Most Popular Hotel

A la Carle Service all day

B a tte ry R ep airs

We hold this to be n Trtuh:—viz:—
That Circulation is the BASIC factor Every UaUcry repair we make is
guaranteed for sir months. We ate
of Human Health.
•
aide to do this because In repairing
The ".Energizer” process will DO any make of battery we are licensed
MORE Benefit to Any Adult's gen­ to use patented features which hare
eral condition thnn any other method made Vesta batteries famous.
known.

Sanford Balteiy Service Co.
A. RENAUD, Prop.

record of RESPONSIBILITY
tronage is invited

Seminole County Bank
1? owned, controlled* and 'managed by home
people, who are interesfed in the development
and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County
With our large resources and strong financial
connections we are in position to assist our cus­
tomers at all times in the handling of their finan­
cial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.

4 Per Cen t Interest Paid

Seminole County Bank

Phone 160

Next Door to Mobley's Drug Store.
L. C. CAMERON
Rox 399 Sanford, Fla. Phone 164

t is prepared clean, cooked and seasoned just right,
ird to find. But we have it—and once you try it you
say, otie kind, “The Best.’*
flip

United States, Kokomo ai
Miller Tires and Tubes

Combination Dinner 75c
_

Homo Cooking

Up - To -^Date Repair Shop
COMPLETE LINE OF ACCESSORIES
DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE
_

That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the
constant and gratifying growth in business.

Under Management of

WALTER B. OLSON
Our Spednlly*— Seminole's
famous $1 Sunday Dinner
de luxe.

ENERGIZER W e G u aran tee A ll
For Many Human Ills.

COME IN nnd talk it over.
108 Park Are.,

RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under
which this institution has been managed since
the first day the doors were opened.

It is the desire of the officers of this Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals
desiring most efficient and responsible hanking

SANTA ANNA, Cniif., Nov. 11.—
A bride weighing 725 pounds was
brought home by John 11. Hamilton,
who weighs 155.

GREENLEAF HOLDS
TITLE BILLIARD CHAMP
BRIDGE
CHICAGO, Nov. 11.—Ralph Greenleaf, of Monmouth, III., retained the
Mrs. G. D. Bishop was hostess of title of world pocket billiard chamthe initial meeting of a new bridge pion in a contest here today.
club Wednesday afternoon, but owing
to the illness of two of the members
no definite plans were made.
The home bn Park avenue was
AT THE STAR THEATRE
tastefully decorated in yellow daisies
TODAY
and bridge was played at two tables.
SPECIAL ARMISTICE DAY
Mrs. McCullcr won *khe priie for
PROGRAM
high score which was a lovely collar
and cuff set. At the concluslpn of
An All-Star Cast in
the game a salad course was served.
■THE BRANDING IRON”
And “TOPICS OF THE DAY*’
WEDNESDAY’S ARRIVALS
AT THE SEMINOLE IIOTEI
I) A. Read, Tampa; S. D. Blazer,
Nocatee, Fin.; E. J. Bombcy, Tampa;
C A. Llndbled, Chetek, Wis.; StnffScrgt. Jack Smith, Carlatrom Field,
Lt. 1). O. Bivins, Cnrlstrom Field;
E. H. Rnife, Jacksonville; G. C. Mil­
ler, Kcnanville, Fla.; Geo. W. Lang,
Chuliota, Fla.; C. W. Gi/ldend and
wife, Tampa; M. Gillen, Jacksonville;
Jas. A. Strunk, Jacksonville^ E. S.
Kauai, Atlanta; E. W. Ellis, Ocala;
Geo. H, Kraus nnd wife, Cleveland;
F. M. Chaffee, DcLand; J. S. Ncsblt,
Jacksonville; G. C. Keller, Frankfort;
H. C. Gessor, Jacksonville; Geo.
Crews, U. N. Avsrn, Jacksonville;
J- S. Daniel, Mt. Dora; Miss Nell
Lane, Sleepy Hollow, O.; Miss EHssheth Adncy, Knoxville, Tenn.; Arthur
J. Seidle, Rochester, N. Y.j J. P.
Hamilton, Charleston, S. C.; J. PChazal, Ocaln; P. L. Cunningham,
Cincinnati; W. R. Jackson, Palatka.

115 Magnolia Are.

____

Distributors for
«EMINOLE, LAKE, VOLUSIA, ORANGE AND OSCEOLA COUNTIES

12 to 2
v.

Homo Cooking

SMITH BROTHERS
Expert Repair Work

Boy yoar post cards at the Herald
office. Beautiful views, le each.

TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS-lc A WORD

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              <text>SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION&#13;
Volume 1&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Sanford, Florida, Thursday, November 11, 1920&#13;
Number 188&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------&#13;
ARMISTICE DAY SUCCESS DESPITE LOWERING CLOUDS HUNDREDS OF VISITORS.&#13;
&#13;
Rain Failing To Dampen Ardor Of the Boys.&#13;
EVERYTHING READY&#13;
AND WITH GOOD WEATHER THIS AFTERNOON AND NIGHT THE BOYS WILL BE “JAKE”&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The big day started off early as many of the boys never went to bed last night but stayed up to be on time the first thing in the morning and long before daylight they were out sounding the bugle calls and driving trucks with the cut-out open and backfiring the engine and by seven o clock it is probable that more people were awake early in Sanford than have been since Armistice Day two years ago.&#13;
 The boys were busy as bees until parade time getting the wheels of fortune and other amusements ready and making all secure for the dinner and the dance tonight and all the other little details that go make up the big time.&#13;
 The parade started promptly at 10 o’clock on Oak avenue led by the Kissimmee band and it was an inspiring sight to see the boys of the army and navy all resplendant in their uniforms that had been laid away in moth balls for the past year or more.&#13;
 The line up of the parade was as follows:&#13;
&#13;
-First Section&#13;
 The Colors&#13;
&#13;
-Second Section&#13;
 American Legion.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Legion Float.&#13;
(b)	Liberty Float (Terhune)&#13;
(c)	Chaplain’s car.&#13;
(d)	Wreath (Connely).&#13;
&#13;
-Third Section&#13;
 Band.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Army Float&#13;
(b)	Navy (ship)&#13;
(c)	Spanish War Veterans and G. A. R. and D. A. R. in cars&#13;
(d)	Spad (Lee Bros)&#13;
&#13;
-Fourth Section&#13;
Red Cross Nurses.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Red Cross Float&#13;
(b)	Peace Float (Holly)&#13;
(c)	Uncle Sam and Liberty (Gulf Refining Co.)&#13;
&#13;
-Fifth Section&#13;
School Children.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Tillis&#13;
(b)	Perkins &amp; Britt&#13;
(c)	Fleetwood&#13;
(d)	B &amp; O Garage&#13;
(e)	B &amp; O Garage&#13;
(f)	B &amp; O Garage&#13;
&#13;
-Sixth Section&#13;
City Officials, Police and Fire Departments.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Wight Tire Co&#13;
(b)	Higgins&#13;
(c)	Lee Bros&#13;
(d)	Overland&#13;
(e)	Std. Auto Top Co.&#13;
(f)	Thrasher&#13;
&#13;
-Seventh Section&#13;
Tournament Riders&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	McCuller&#13;
(b)	Bryan&#13;
(c)	Hill Lumber Co.&#13;
(d)	Chero-Cola Co.&#13;
(e)	Lane&#13;
(f)	Walthal &amp; Estridge&#13;
&#13;
-Eighth Section&#13;
Boy Scouts.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Miscellaneous Floats and automobiles.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The parade was probably one of the largest and best arranged that has ever been pulled off in Sanford and this was due to the military precision with which it was carried out. Under the command of Colonel Geo. W. knight, and his efficient staff, the parade started on Oak avenue promptly at ten and to the inspiring strains of “Over There” the Kissimmee Band under the leadership of Capt. Gallagher, led the boys out with chests out and eyes front and the colors first with the color guard of the army and navy followed by a long line of soldier boys and sailors that thrilled the assemblage of people thronging the sidewalks along the line of march. The float, Uncle Sam and Miss Columbia, came next with Robt. Herndon driving, R. A. Terheun representing Uncle Sam with an original makeup and Miss Columbia represented by Mrs. Robt. Herndon. The Red Cross nurse by Mrs. Burdick and guarded by the army and navy; the float being decorated in Florida moss, pine needles and vines. This float received the applause of the crowd all along the way.&#13;
 Behind Uncle Sam was the Chaplain’s car, driven by Chaplain Geo. Hyman, with little John Hyman in uniform sitting on the hood and Cr. Brower of the congregational church, and Dr. Walker of the Methodist church, and R. J. Holly, of the Y. M. C. A., occupying the car which was decorated in red, white and blue bunting and carried the insignia of the 82nd Division, the All Americans and the white crosses of the chaplain.&#13;
 The Wreath car of the American Legion, was beautiful, being driven by Walter Connelly and containing the wreath for the boys who died in the service of their country and held a guard of honor.&#13;
 The navy had a fine float representing a ship and filled with sailors the car being driven by Ed. Ward.&#13;
 The D. A. R. car was driven by Hawkins Connelly and contained Mrs. W. E. Watson, Miss Morrison, Mrs. A. R. Key, Miss Wilkey, Mrs. Forrest Lake and Mrs. Louckes and was decorated in myrtle over a while background and hybiscus entwined in the Myrtle and bearing the insignia of the D. A. R. on the side.&#13;
 The B &amp; P car of Perkins &amp; Britt was among the beautiful cars being driven by Lieut. Kenneth Murrell, accompanied by Dixie Brown and held by little Braxton Perkins, Charles Britt, Wanita McMillan, Wanita Smith and Margaret Britt and was decorated in red, white and blue roses over white and the children held red, white and blue parasols. The Chandler car of the Wight Tire Co., was beautiful in pure white flowers the ladies being dressed in white and the car driven by Mrs. Hal Wight and accompanied by Mrs. Ralph Wight, Mrs. Fred Wight, Mrs. Kirkly and Mrs Claude Howard.&#13;
 The Rose of No Man’s Land was a green car, decorated in red and driven by Robert Holley and containing Misses Margaret Zachary and Erminia Houser dressed as Red Cross nurses.&#13;
 The Splash Babies car driven by Maude Lake and accompanied by Misses Kittie Dubose, Mary Elizabeth Puleston. Mildred Holly, LeClair Jones and Olive Newman was in white trimmed with blue and was decorated with Kewpies.&#13;
 Among the best decorated cars in the parade were the two Peace cars, one of them being driven by Edward Lane and one by Mrs R. S. Holly. The Lane car was said to be one of the most beautiful cars of the kind in the parade and was done entirely in pink and white effects, the ladies sitting under a white umbrella raised in the center of the car, Mr. Lane in white being in front and accompanied by Miss Virginia Brady, Mrs. Lane, Mrs. Charles Britt and Mrs. John Smith and the lines were held by a Cupid in front of the car. “Peace” in large letters was on the front of the car.&#13;
 The other Peace car was driven by Mrs. R. S. Holly accompanied By Mrs. S. M. Lloyd, Mrs. Donald Smith, Mrs. Eugene Roumillat and Mrs. R. J. Holly and little Evelyn Smith sat in the back dressed in white and with wings spread played the part of the fairy. The car was in pure white throughout with canopy effect the top holding a basket of white flowers and the white dove of peace perched on the tip. Each side of the car contained gold letters with the word “Peace.” Among the decorated floats that deserve special mention are the following:&#13;
 The Reo car driven by Leslie Bryan, all done in yellow and containing a bunch of yellow daisies being a bevy of children dressed in yellow and carrying out the idea of the gold seal car. The little girls were Virgie&#13;
(Continued on page four)&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WHEN PEACE CAME&#13;
By Miss Jefferson bell, in Miami Herald&#13;
&#13;
 On that eventful night of Nov. 11, 1918, Miss Jefferson Bell of the Miami Herald wrote an article which she entitled “When Peace Came.” It appeared in that newspaper on the morning of the 12th and was as follows:&#13;
 Darkness lay on land and sea and far across the sweep of gleaming waters great guns belched and shell and flame swept the racked and tortured land. The wind was foul with the smell of mustard gas, poison and smoke and the moist taint of fresh, warm, red blood that oozed and flowed from the dead fallen on sodden fields.&#13;
 Through the darkness, swift and fearsome, crashed a heavy steel-clad machine, racing with fate and death, driven in hopeless haste and bringing the bitter terms of defeat, chosen in a desperate hour against a greater and more desperate need. In the council chamber waiting the Clan of the Black Eagle. Shorn were its talons and its plumage befouled with hideous crimes. Sullenly, desperately and doggedly they waited while the heavy tick of time and eternity marked the passing hours.&#13;
 In the streets of Berlin and through the empire savage hordes marched and shouted and sang. It was not the songs of the Fatherland they sang, but the Marseillaise, the marching song of a hated nation, and their shouts curdled the blood of those who crouched in the darkness of tottering thrones, and they shivered and listened – and waited.&#13;
 In a steel-clad limousine, speeding across a neutral border, fearful of life, and scurrying like a rat from death, went two men. The engine of the high-powered car sped on and on, driven with the energy of despair and scourged by the lash of fear. Craven, abject, like yelping curs they went in that mad race though the night – shivering, whining, waiting. And beside that steel-clad limousine raced pale figures from the realms of shade and after them on the thundering hoofs of a ghostly steed and gibbering, rode Death.&#13;
 In the great capitals sat grave and silent men while the hours went – and they, too, waited.&#13;
 In a million homes women waited and of all these legions who waited they only prayed through the great hours that passed slowly into eternity. They did not weep, those waiting women, praying with yearning hearts to the Great God of All the Years for those in camp and field and for who sailed the treacherous seas. And it was not for peace they prayed as they waited unless it brought the things for which they had given their men, but it was a litany wrung from anguished souls that death would pass over their men – and angels listened to the prayers of the women while they waited.&#13;
 In the camp where the Clan of the Black Eagle waited in the council chamber, the hour of midnight was striking and the fate of the world balanced to the weight of a hair, hung, while breathless billions waiting.&#13;
 In the hushed silence of that tremendous hour only the scratch of a pen was heard and then - through all the breathless waiting world, from a billion throats and from a billion brazen bells came thundering shouts of victory. It was a world gone mad with joy and while white doves of peace hovered and nestled near the earth, the women, who had prayed, wept.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
BUSINESS CONDITIONS READJUSTED&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLE HOPEFUL THAT BETTER TIMES ARE COMING WITH EASIER MONEY&#13;
&#13;
 Hopes that reviving business will follow the elections find expression in some quarters, but the results of the balloting are not likely to prompt a sudden reversal of consumers’ buying disposition, and there is no general expectation of any immediate appreciable recovery from the existing economic depression. While confusion over the fundamental causes of the commercial reaction has not been lacking, political factors do not explain the steadily yielding prices of commodities, the increasing curtailment of production, and the continued spread of unemployment, and can hardly be singled out as giving promise of any abrupt change from this situation.&#13;
 At bottom, the business readjustment has been frequently reiterated, is the inevitable outgrowth of the great inflation and over extension of the war period and afterward and the movement toward a sounder and more wholesome basis is not one which can be swiftly completed or effected without some measure of disturbance. The accompany unsettlement has been more severe in some trades and industries than in others, but in all lines there is clear evidence of a transition to a new order of conditions, and of a return of a buyers’ markets. &#13;
 After 25 consecutive weeks during which a representative list of wholesale quotations has disclosed a preponderance of recessions, the general average of prices is now considerably lower than had previously seemed probable and the declines at the retail counters, if developing more slowly, are becoming more numerous and widespread. The developments of recent months have demonstrated that maintenance of prices at abnormally high levels is dependent upon a sustained purchasing power, and the former extravagant demands from consumers have been replaced in many instances by a policy of providing for absolute requirements only, in the belief that further price yielding will ultimately follow.&#13;
 Resistance to high prices, moreover, has been strengthened by the extraordinarily mild fall weather, which has caused heavier accumulations of goods than would otherwise have been witnessed, and which has been a contributing influence in the forcing of merchandise liquidation.&#13;
 That restriction of building activities is now practically country-wide, following an earlier tendency toward expansion, is evidenced by a special survey of the situation, just made through the branch offices of R. G. Dun &amp; Co. The causes of the reaction, which has occurred in the face of a growing need for additional housing accommodation, are similar to those which have brought about readjustments in the lines, and high costs of both materials, and labor have probably been more responsible than any other single factor for the restraint or construction operations. The tightness of the money market moreover, has rendered difficult the financing of new undertakings, and many contemplated projects are being held in abeyance until conditions become more favorable.&#13;
 A recent decided lowering of lumber prices in many sections has encouraged hopes of a subsequent revival of building activity, but the price declines have not yet extended to every class of material, and the immediate future of the industry is regarded as being more or less uncertain. It is the consensus of opinion, however, that any general and substantial deflation of prices, accompanied by an easing of the financial stringency, would be followed by the starting of construction work on a broad scale after the passing of winter. – Dun’s Review.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
IMPRESSIVE CEREMONIES IN EUROPE&#13;
&#13;
LONDON AND PARIS CELEBRATED SECOND ANNIVERSARY CLOSING OF WORLD WAR.&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Impressive ceremonies were held at London and Paris to celebrate the second anniversary of the closing of the world war and pay tribute to the fallen soldiers. The body of an unidentified soldier was buried in West Minister Abbey amid elaborate ceremony with King George the chief mourner.&#13;
 In Paris a soldier’s body was taken from a nameless grave at Verdun and buried under Arc De Truimphe. President Millerand and three marshals participating in the ceremony. No national ceremony was held in the United States but in most cities the day was observed by parades and memorial services.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
GIRL EMPLOYEES SHOW DISLOYALTY, ONE THRASHED.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
LONDON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
 Girl employees of Sylvia Pankhurst’s communistic paper were thrashed by an angry mob claiming that during two minutes of solemn silence in honor of the fallen dead, the women sang, danced and banged tin cans in the newspaper office.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
BUCCANEERS STOP CHANNEL BOATS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
LONDON, Nov. 11.-&#13;
A steamer proceeding to Cork and Queenstown was stopped by a shot fired from men in boats and armed men boarded and seized goods.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WASHINGTON CELEBRATES&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
&#13;
Armistice day was celebrated in the Navy and Marine corps by awarding two thousand medals and letters of commendation for valorous services in the world war.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
LATE WIRES&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Williamson, W. Va., Nov. 11.&#13;
&#13;
 The Norfolk and Western railroad trestle at Thacker and the Drumhouse Matta Coal Co., at Ajax were blown up today. State police are investigating with bloodhounds.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 11 -&#13;
 A naval seaplane with three men aboard is believed to have been lost on the lake, today.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 11 -&#13;
 Another break of one-quarter of a cent a pound in raw announced today.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 -&#13;
The Adriatic question is believed closed as far as the United States is concerned by the official announcement by the Italian embassy that Italy and Jugo-Slavin boundary line has been agreed upon. The line is east of what was known as the Wilson line.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
GREENVILLE, S. C., Nov. 11 -&#13;
 Announcement was made that one the hundred and fifty thousand dollar pool raised by local merchants will be ready to lend farmers on cotton beginning Monday.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 11 –&#13;
 The practices of the United States Shipping Board which led to a congressional committee investigation have not been “corrupt,” Commander A. D. Clement, executive assistant to Admiral Benson, testified today. He said grounds for criticism is there has not been perfect “co-ordination between the different departments.”&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 11 –&#13;
 The Word today prints saying the Wall Street bomb explosion was causing by unemployed workmen seeking revenge against Robert P. Brindell, president of the Building Trades Council, whose practices are now being investigated.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
LONDON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
An armistice was signed today between the Armenians and the Turkish nationalists, an Armenian communique announced.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 11 –&#13;
Three bodies were discovered on a burned section of the steamship El Mundo on which nine men were seriously injured yesterday when an oil tank exploded.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
The National Association of Railway and Utilities Commissioners selected Atlanta today for the next convention.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
COLUMBIA, S. C., Nov. 11 –&#13;
An express messenger safe on the Southern train Number 36, containing $16,000 was thrown off by robbers at Sharpe but recovered by a freight crew before the robbers returned.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
LONDON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
Three thousand and unemployed men in Berlin stormed the Lion Metal Works and established political Soviet, the dispatches say.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
FARMERS TO ORGANIZE AND PROTECT INTERESTS BY SELLING ORGANIZATION&#13;
&#13;
Wages Must Be in Proportion to Price on Crops&#13;
WILL NOT EQUAL PAY&#13;
LABOR SECURES GOOD WAGES BUT TURNS ON FARMERS DEMANDING CHEAPER FOOD&#13;
&#13;
BOSTON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
The establishment of nation-wide selling organizations which shall establish the price of products if the farmer does not receive the same hourly pay that other workers receive, was predicted by Sherman j. Lowell, of Fredonia, N. Y. master of the National Grange, Patrons of Husbandry, in opening the annual convention of the grange.&#13;
 “We are willing to have a fair understanding of values, the farmers receiving the same pay for the same pay for the same hours work that other receive, no more, no less, but we feel that this is last call,” he said. “If no attention is paid to this now by bankers, merchants, railroad men and others and the government continues to import great quantities of raw material to keep prices down, then the farmers will organize national selling organizations to fix the selling price of their products.&#13;
 “There is no threat in this; we will have been driven to it in self defense, to protect agriculture. We do not desire class or labor division; we desire to aid humanity and to be able to keep the earth fertile, always bringing forth its harvest sufficient to feed the increasing millions of our people. It is no small task, however, and it can only be safely done by a proper appreciation of this task by our urban population.”&#13;
 Mr. Lowell rejoiced that labor had been able to secure a much higher rate of wages, but added: “we little exected that they would turn and demand cheaper food from us without first ascertaining the cost of production and thereby discovering whether or not we were taking too large a margin of profit.”&#13;
 The national master declared that the great changes that have been taken place since the beginning of the war have been to the disadvantage of agriculture and many laws and rulings of our national government have proven of injury to the farmers.&#13;
 Mr. Lowell said the recent census showed a net decrease of 100,000 farms in seven states.&#13;
 Concerning taxation, he said:&#13;
 “There is but one equitable form of taxation and that is when every form of wealth pays its equitable proportion. There is no tax more equitable than an income tax for it is not a charge against anyone who has not the means to pay.”&#13;
 He spoke against the single tax and the idea of placing a government land tax of 1 per cent on the land in place of taxing large incomes which would be disastrous to agriculture he said.&#13;
 “Another equally erroneous idea,” he said, “is the one of having a tax on all unimproved land holdings for if this was done and they were forced on the market by reason of such a tax (which is the intent) it would cause the depreciation of farm land 50 per cent from the fact that there is more improved land than men to work it now.”&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
AEROPLANES WERE HERE&#13;
&#13;
 The aeroplanes were here on time this morning and one of them under command of Lieut. Bivens and with Sergt. Smith they did all kinds of stunts over the city while the parade was in progress and afterward. Their loops and tall spins and other stunts scared the people watching the parade and many of them expected the plane to come tumbling down on their heads, but the boys in the plane were old heads at the business and they landed safely on Sanford f=Field after their hair raising stuff and were the guests of the Seminole hotel for the day.&#13;
 It was good of the Carlstrom Field commander to allow the plane to come here and we are quite sure that the lieutenant was glad to be assigned to this pleasant duty of visiting his old Sanford friends.&#13;
&#13;
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 &#13;
PAGE 2.  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 10, 1920&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
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--&#13;
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At The Star Theatre.&#13;
TONIGHT&#13;
DON’T FORGET A SPECIAL ARMISTICE DAY PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
ALICE BRADY in ‘A New York Idea”&#13;
&#13;
SHE WANTED A DIVORCE QUICK!&#13;
&#13;
What grounds?” of course was a natural question for the Judge to as. Cynthia Karslake was stumped for a minute. And then she remembered that “John” had a habit of strewing his shaving things about her boudoir in a very untidy manner.&#13;
 And so a divorce was easy – so easy that it wasn’t any fun at all.&#13;
 Is divorce a failure? That question will arise in your mind when you see beautiful ALICE BRADY in “THE NEW YORK IDEA” – a pungent satire on modern married life.&#13;
&#13;
Friday and Saturday, Louise Glaum in “SAHARA”.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
REORGANIZATION PLANS FLORIDA NATIONAL GUARD&#13;
&#13;
CHARLESTON, S. C., Nov. 8 –&#13;
 That the government and war department in particular means to do everything. It can to make life in the National Guard attractive, interesting and instructive in the future, was the opinion expressed here this afternoon by Gen C. P. Lovell, adjutant general-elect of Florida, just before he boarded the Clyde steamer Comanche for Jacksonville.&#13;
 General Lowell was here last week to attend the conference of adjutant general of the Southeast with officers of the army fourth corps area, where the reorganization plans for the National Guard were generally gone into.&#13;
 General Lovell stated that in the case of Florida, for instance, there will be a motor truck company formed, as well an up-to-the-minute motorcycle company.&#13;
 At first the army officers were disposed to allow only eight companies in Florida but he secured their promise to recommend a complete regiment for that state.&#13;
 He believes the Florida National Guard can be organized in such a manner as to provide a routine, which will be attractive to the men and result in great efficiency toward the end of protecting the public safety.&#13;
 Since the conference here with the army officers last week, General Lovell has been at Columbia with Mrs. Lovell visiting the relatives of the latter.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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PROGRAM ARMISTICE DAY GUARANTEE BIG TIME AMUSEMENT ALL DAY&#13;
&#13;
(Continued from page one)&#13;
&#13;
Shop whistles, everyone is requested to assume the position of attention, gentlemen uncovering their heads, until the cessation of the whistle blasts.&#13;
 Under the direction of Mess Sergeant Hodson Ball and his able staff of assistants, a dinner will be served on the bulkhead between Park avenue and Palmetto ave., promptly at noon.&#13;
 Preparations have been made for only 2000 so come early and avoid the rush.&#13;
 We defy you to beat the accompanying menu during these times of the H. C. of L.:&#13;
 Hot Baked Beans. Hot Frankfurters. Pickles. Bread and Butter. Coffee.&#13;
And all for the modest sum of two-bits!&#13;
Plates, cups and necessary utensils are included in this price.&#13;
 At 2 p. m. C. M. Hand’s Galaxy of galloping rough-riders will furnish a number of thrills.&#13;
 With $100 in prizes being offered it is certain that all events will be hotly contested.&#13;
 The tournament will be staged on the bulkhead – no admission fee being charge.&#13;
 Promptly following the tournament the Navy vs. the Army baseball game will be played at Holden Park.&#13;
 Look over the following line-up and we feel sure that you will get double value from your 25c admission ticket.&#13;
&#13;
Army&#13;
 Burdick, shortstop; Amoon, right field; Rive, catcher; Chapman, left field; Harris, center field; Holly, third base; Lang, first base; Hoffman, second base; Perryman, pitcher. Subs: Baggeett, Woodruff, Griggs.&#13;
&#13;
Navy&#13;
Chapman, first base; Coft, second base; Griffin, third base; Robinson, catcher; Spencer, pitcher; Roper, short stop; Dean, center field; Ogilvie, right field; Moye, left field. Subs: Schultz, Ward.&#13;
 The Hotels Seminole and Valdez promise to take care of our out-of-town guests at the supper hour.&#13;
 Special meals have been arranged by the management of the two hostelries and the prices will be found to be very reasonable.&#13;
 Kissimmee’s famous 18-piece band will render selections at various hours of the day, appearing in concert at the court house from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. &#13;
 Manager Herndon, of the Star Theatre, has secured a special feature film for the day, showing at both the matinee and evening hours. The famous Goldwyn star, Barbara Castleton will appear in the picturization of Katherine Newlin Burt’s novel, “The Branding Iron.”&#13;
 A special presidential edition of the Fox news will also be shown in addition to the customary comedy which follows the feature attraction.&#13;
 Although this is a special picture, and a longer program than usual, the admission fee will be but 25c.&#13;
 Mr. Herndon has kindly arranged the program for the accommodation of those who do not care to attend the dance.&#13;
 Last but not least, don’t forget to procure your tickets for the Legion Ball.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
 Advertisement – 2 column/6 inch deep – illustration of a woman leaning forward out of a black line of a box. She is wearing a checkered wrap around her shoulders and a sleeve-less white top. With bulging eyes, she looks over her bare left shoulder and her hair is in a page-boy style.&#13;
&#13;
Caption: THE BRANDING IRON. A Reginald Barker Production. Goldwyn.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
THE WINCHESTER STORE Sportsmen’s Headquarters&#13;
Season Opens Nov. 20th – Are You Ready?&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING FOR THE HUNTER&#13;
&#13;
Guns – Rifles – Ammunition – Hunting Clothing, Etc.&#13;
&#13;
BALL HARDWARE COMPANY Sporting Goods.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES.&#13;
&#13;
Minimum Charge for any one ad		25c&#13;
One Time, per word				 1c&#13;
Three Times, per word				 2c&#13;
Six Times, per word 				 3c&#13;
&#13;
Over Six Times, 1-2c per word per issue.&#13;
&#13;
Cash must accompany order. Ten cents extra if charged.&#13;
Advertising in this column in which the address of the advertiser is not given but which refers you to Post office Box Number or Care of the Herald MUST be answered accordingly. Please do not ask us for the names of advertisers advertising in this way. Usually we do not know who they are and if we do we are not expected to tell you.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
WANTED&#13;
&#13;
WANTED – For cash, an old building for its lumber. Address with location and price where it stands. If you have one, write O. Goodelle, Orlando, Fla.    186-3tp&#13;
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WANTED – An elderly lady, single preferred, to attend invalid lady. Address, 112 Elm Ave.    185-9tp.&#13;
--&#13;
Buy your post card at the Herald office.&#13;
--&#13;
WANTED – Your old batteries to rebuild. Let us make your starting and lighting a pleasure. We are authorized “EXIDE” dealers and have a Battery for all makes automobiles. “EXIDE”, the Giant that lives in a box.” – Ray Bros. Phone 548, old For Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
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Get Your Scratch Pads From The Herald – by the pound. – 15c&#13;
--&#13;
WANTED – Brick and cement work, chimneys, flues, piers, cement floors, sidewalks. – A. L. Ray, 206 Park Ave.    173-30tp&#13;
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WANTED – BY November 15, a 4 to 6 room house or apartments, unfurnished or partly furnished. Best of references given. Will rent by the year. Address at once, “Cottage,” in.&#13;
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WANTED – Pupils, Violin and Piano. – Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.  175-20t-p.&#13;
--&#13;
Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
--&#13;
WANTED TO RENT – HOUSE OR APARTMENT OF 4 TO 6 ROOMS. FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED. WILL RENT BY YEAR. ADDRESS “APARTMENT” CARE OF THE HERALD.    Tf.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf&#13;
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WANTED – Two rooms for light housekeeping with private family. Address K. K. J., care Herald.    187-3tp&#13;
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FOR RENT&#13;
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FOR RENT – One nicely furnished room, 320 Oak Ave. Phone 308-J.   187-tfc.&#13;
--&#13;
TO RENT or for sale, large warehouse with railroad siding. – Chas. Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co.   156-tfc.&#13;
--&#13;
FURNISHED ROOMS - Two furnished bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park Avenue.   157-tfc.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR RENT – Apartment of three rooms and bath, furnished or unfurnished at Elder Springs with Elder Springs water free.  Phone 3505. 184-tfc.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR RENT – Furnished front room, 218 Elm.   184-3tc&#13;
--&#13;
FOR RENT – Two or three furnished housekeeping rooms. P. O. Box 117, owner.   184-6tp.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR RENT – Six unfurnished rooms, bath and hall, over Red Front Store on Ninth street, fourth block east of depot. Box 81. &#13;
186-3tp.&#13;
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--&#13;
LOST&#13;
--&#13;
LOST – Western Union branch deposit book. Finder please return to Western Union office. – J. P. Hall, Mgr.   180-tfc.&#13;
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MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
--&#13;
 ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, 109 East First street, over Union Pharmacy.   163-tfc.&#13;
--&#13;
CARPETS and rugs washed right on the floor, with Hamilton Beach Electric Carpet washer. Kills all moth and disease germs. Make your floor coverings absolutely sanitary. – Electric Carpet Washer, Sanford.   186-6tp.&#13;
--&#13;
DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture, bedstands, chairs, etc.  What have you?   174-30tc.&#13;
--&#13;
BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run your battery until she is entirely dead. The battery is the costliest accessory to your car. We re-charge and re-build all makes of batteries. – Ray Bros. Phone 548, old Ford Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
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--&#13;
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FOR SALE&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
FOR SALE – Shasto daisies, $1 per dozen. English Shamrock Oxalys 30c per dozen. Ring 207-W.  183-12tc.&#13;
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Special reduction in men’s and ladies’ W. L. Douglas shoes. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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&#13;
FOR RENT – Nicely furnished large light housekeeping rooms. – Mrs. Riddling, 205 Oak ave.  Eagle Hall.   186-6tc.&#13;
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WOOD AND POSTS sold and delivered on hard road, within one mile of town. See me. – W. V. Dunn.   186-6tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf&#13;
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We have just received a line of silverware and casseroles. – A Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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PLANTS FOR SALE – Cabbage, Onions, beets, lettuce and cauliflower. Yellow self-bleaching celery, guaranteed French imported seed, bought from Chase &amp; Co., write for prices. State quality wanted. – W. C. Post.    173-60tc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – Very cheap, one 7-passenger automobile in good shape. Apply B. &amp; O. Motor Co.  185-6tc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – Five room cottage, large yard for vegetable garden, various fruit trees, also two separate fives acre farm land; 5 gallon hot water heater.  P. O. Box 117, Owner.  184-6tp.&#13;
--&#13;
See our line of electrical lamps. -  A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford avenue.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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New line of Congoleums and Art Squares. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf&#13;
--&#13;
Special reduction on Georgette Silk and cotton shirt waists. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford ave.  Phone 550.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR SALE – 7-room, 2-story house, large yard for garden spot, also chicken yard. Various fruit trees.  Phone 487.  186-6tc.&#13;
--&#13;
Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
REO.  SALES – SERVICE – PARTS – ACCESSORIES.&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO.  PHONE 66.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Cozy Café – Quick Lunch.&#13;
Coffee - 5c. – Sandwiches - 10c. - Pies, homemade 10c. cut – Best Coffee in Sanford.  Princess Theatre Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
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December 1st.&#13;
 On the first of each month your rent is due. Why give other people your money. Buy you a home and each month instead of paying out rent money, pay on a home that is yours.&#13;
 Beautiful homes on Park, Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and Myrtle avenues. Sanford Heights. Building lots in any location.&#13;
&#13;
E. F. Lane – “The Real Estate Man”.  Phone 95. 204 First Street.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Lord’s Purity Water. As Good as the Best. Daily service. Phone 66.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
CITY MARKET – Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props. Welaka Building.&#13;
&#13;
Specials For Today.&#13;
Choice Western and Florida Meats. Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage.&#13;
CITY MARKET.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
EVERYTHING for THE BUILDER. &#13;
From the Foundation to the Roof. &#13;
HILL LUMBER CO.   Quality-Serviced-Price.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Try a Herald Want Ad. – It pays.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
PAGE 3 – THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOV. 11, 1920.&#13;
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&#13;
SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
&#13;
Published every afternoon except Sunday at the Herald Building, 107 Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, Florida.&#13;
-&#13;
THE HERALD PRINTING CO., Inc. PUBLISHERS.&#13;
-&#13;
R. J. HOLLY		Editor&#13;
N. J. LILLARD		Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
H. A. NEEL			General Manager&#13;
F. P. RINES		Circulation Manager.  Phone 481.&#13;
-&#13;
Advertising Rates Made Known on Application.&#13;
-&#13;
Subscription Price a Advance&#13;
One year			$6.00&#13;
Six months			$3.00&#13;
Delivered in city by carrier&#13;
One week			15 cents.&#13;
-&#13;
Member of the Associated Press.&#13;
&#13;
Art - Union Label seal&#13;
-----&#13;
Hello, buddies.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
The city is yours today.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
And get that put of “chow” ready at noon.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
The army and navy will play ball to see “who won the war.”&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
We can fight the battle of Paris and the siege of Bordeaux all over again.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
What a joy it must be today to be out of the trenches and living in the beautiful sunshine of Florida. Some difference, bud, some difference.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
The editor of the herald is in doubt as whether he belongs in the army or the navy, having served the army on board the transports and served the navy at the same place.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
We feel like we would get a haversack of chewing gum and cigarettes and give them out today among the boys. They were “our boys” for so long and we were a father to so many of them, thousands in fact.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Don’t expect a good paper today. While we cannot close the plaut for a day we expect to let the force off some and then there is so much going on that it will be impossible for the editor to stay on the job and we will not stay on it anyhow. We are just going A. W. O. L. today and we defy all military and civil authority to make us serve and you will probably find us among the K. P.’s down on the lake front if there is anything important for the welfare of the country. This is the big day and we intend to celebrate until the last bugle blows “taps” tonight.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
J P says:&#13;
&#13;
“Double your earning power. Think what it means to you to double your earning power. Thousands have done it and thousands have done it and thousands are doing it and you can do it too without it interfering with your work. By investing in the 8 per cent cumulative prior preferred stock of the Southern Utilities Company. Set aside a little surplus each month and let it make money for you there’s none better. &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
ARMISTICE DAY&#13;
&#13;
Two years ago the whistles and the bells and other noise makers sounded the  glad tidings that war was over and peace had been declared and our boys over yonder and our boys in the camps here could come home again. &#13;
 All those weary months of waiting over here and those weary months of fighting and then waiting over there were over and how we did celebrate for a day and a night over the good news. People went wild with joy all over the world at the glad tidings that peace would again brood over the world and fighting come to an end. While peace has not quite encircled the world since that time and many countries are torn asunder with revolution, peace has to a large extent come to most of the countries of the earth and America can at least celebrate Armistice Day today with the feeling that most of our troubles are over.&#13;
 We will be beset from time to time with troubles and agitations before things right themselves but America will always America, the land of the free and the home of the brave and all those boys who spent any time in the countries of Europe and who are home today celebrating will feel like they are home and that home means the grandest home in the grandest country in the world. Come what will in the next ten years we can count on the boys of the American Legion for our true and loyal citizens. They may grumble with the rest of us at times and think things are not as they should be – they grumbled in the camps and in the trenches and grumbled to get to France and then grumbled to get home – but their grumbling is just the natural American chafin at the bit for things to move faster. &#13;
They are the boys who will make the future American citizens and they are of the right sort. They have been through the mill and if any of them had any cooties of discontent on them they were shed with the trench uniform and did not come back home with the boys who willing to sacrifice their all in this world because the government called them. They went into the mouth of hell because they were needed in the time of their country’s stress and having answered are entitled to all that the country can give them in the years to come. No one can imagine what they suffered unless you were in the midst of the ruck and the muck of with them.&#13;
 No one can imagine their feelings, their opinions and their inspirations unless you were with them and talked with them while the mood was on them. These boys only home for the past two years and some less than that have been made over again into peace loving, loyal, law-abiding citizens. They were made over from citizens into soldiers in a short space of time and were again made into citizens in just a short space and the transformation is marvelous and most remarkable and shows the versatility of our modern American boys.&#13;
 That they are here with us today in such large numbers is another cause not only for wonderment but for congratulations and we have them with us today celebrating that victory that means so much to the world today and will mean so much more to the world in the years to come.&#13;
 Enjoy yourselves, boys, to the fullest extent. We are with you soul and heart and body and will endeavor to keep up with you until our legs give out and then we will call for an ambulance and ride in the procession until the finish. And to those boys sleeping in Flanders field and those who are sleeping under the stars and stripes in this country today we drop a tear to your memories. You cannot be here to celebrate but you will be remembered none the less.&#13;
 You paid the supreme sacrifice and you have not died in vain. As the years go by and the cycle enlarges and merges into the yesterdays and the shadows lengthen at the close pf the day and the end of this life we will always remember and always praise Him that saw so many safely through and safely over and ask that He “stand by” the boys who have passed into the beyond and those who are here “carrying on.”&#13;
&#13;
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VALDEZ GRILL OPEN AT NIGHT&#13;
&#13;
The many patrons of the Valdez Hotel grill will be pleased to learn that the management has decided to keep the grill open at night until 1 o’clock.   1-87-6tc.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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Avocados – Lettuce – Carrots – Parsnips – Oranges – Red Apples - Grapes.  &#13;
STORE CLOSED THURSDAY.&#13;
&#13;
Deane Turner.  Phone 497.  Welaka building&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
CHRISTMAS ONLY SIX WEEKS OFF. BUY EARLY.&#13;
&#13;
Diamond Rings			$25 to $1500&#13;
Diamond Brooches			 25 to  1000&#13;
Scarf Pins				  2 to   100&#13;
Pendants				  5 to   500&#13;
Cuff Links				  5 to   100&#13;
Wrist Watches			 15 to   150&#13;
Electric Lamps			 10 to   100&#13;
Toilet Sets			 10 to    75&#13;
&#13;
IT WILL BE A PLEASURE TO SHOW YOU.&#13;
MCLAULIN The Jeweler.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR THE FIRST COMPLETE HOUSE BILL.&#13;
CARTER LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Red Star Detroit Vapor Oil Store.&#13;
Heaters of every kind. Our prices are right.&#13;
&#13;
HILL HARDWARE COMPANY.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Reduced Prices On FEEDS At West Side Grocery.&#13;
&#13;
If you don’t believe we handled Feed, just look at these prices:&#13;
&#13;
That good Omelene Feed, sack $3.95.&#13;
Shorts, sack, #3.50.&#13;
Scratch Feed, sack, $3.95.&#13;
Corn, Oats, Laro, Etc., received dayly. &#13;
PERUNA FEEDS.&#13;
&#13;
Your Phone and My Delivery Make Me Your Nearest Grocer.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 166. &#13;
L. F. Roper, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
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TO THE MOTORISTS&#13;
To make room during the construction of our new garage we will close out our stock of celebrated Willard Threaded Rubber Batteries AT COST.&#13;
&#13;
Overlands, regular price			$58.40. sale price  $46.60&#13;
Cadillac, regular price			 83.33; sale price   67.69&#13;
Dodge, Marmon, Franklin, reg. price	 71.90; sale price   58.63&#13;
Olds, Overland, Oakland, Buick&#13;
  Fours, regular price			 53.35; sale price   43.52&#13;
Hudson, Reo, Buick 6’s, regular price	 61.60; sale price   59.27&#13;
Packard, regular price			 83.33; sale price   67.69&#13;
Maxwell, regular price			 66.55; sale price   54.29&#13;
&#13;
 These are all bran new batteries and will last for years if properly cared for. If your old battery is becoming doubtful now is the opportunity to save a bunch of money and at the same time insure a winter of carefree pleasure or business.&#13;
&#13;
DAYTONA STORAGE BATTERY CO.&#13;
15 MAGNOLIA AVE.  DAYTONA, FLORIDA.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SIX KINDS OF SAFETY&#13;
&#13;
 Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank where you deposit your money?&#13;
 The first consideration is the capital, which should be ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank is to serve.&#13;
 The next question to consider is the officers in charge. They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.&#13;
 Then there is the question of confidence. The public should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. &#13;
 These three principles determine the success of a bank.&#13;
 We adopted these principles in the outset of our career and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase our usefulness to the community as the years go by.&#13;
&#13;
 We Offer You:&#13;
  &#13;
  1st: Large capital and working reserve.&#13;
  2nd: Trained men in charge – men of several years experience.&#13;
  3rd: The confidence of the public, which is proven by the daily addition to our line of depositors.&#13;
  4th: Protection by two examinations each year by the state banking department. Two audits each year by an independent recognized public audit company and two sworn statements submitted to the state comptroller by the cashier, giving the bank’s condition in detail. All of which insures regular, systematic and thorough operation of the bank.&#13;
  5th: The advice of a competent board of directors, who meet with the officers regularly each month and advise them as to the operation of the bank.&#13;
6th: Insurance of all deposits every day of the year. This is a protection not commonly found in banks and is an absolute protection for your funds, in addition to all the other usual safeguards.&#13;
&#13;
  These are reasons why you should do business with us, and we believe that no bank can offer better inducements.&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD. We want your business.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
M. D. GATCHEL GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES.&#13;
Phone 110. Corner Sanford and Celery Avenues.&#13;
&#13;
2-lb Cans Standard, Hand-Packed Tomatoes, Per Can 	– 9c&#13;
Extra Fancy Grade, Maine Corn, Per can 	– 20c&#13;
Maxwell House Coffee, 1-lb. can 	– 40c&#13;
Export Soap, Per Cake 	– 5c&#13;
Swifts’ Premium Hams, Per lb. 	– 48c.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Try a Herald want ad. – It pays.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Vulcanite shingles&#13;
&#13;
Just Lay Them Down and Nail – That’s All There is To It.&#13;
&#13;
 The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air – rain, sleet, etc. from forcing its way through the roof.&#13;
 The Shoulder of Protection is also the Self-Spacing Device. Makes laying easy and rapid – thus saving time and money.&#13;
 These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red or Green Crushed Slate. Each rain washes away the accumulated dust – reviving perpetually the original rich colors.&#13;
 Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered – because they are fire-resisting.&#13;
 Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the cost free of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.&#13;
&#13;
Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
A 25c Want Ad in The Herald will Rent Your House For You.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Full line Columbia Phonographs.&#13;
&#13;
Prices from $50 to $300.  Terms To Suit Yourself.&#13;
The most complete line of Records in the city.&#13;
Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins. &#13;
&#13;
Prices right&#13;
H. L. Gibson.&#13;
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 &#13;
PAGE 4.  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1920.&#13;
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IN AND ABOUT THE CITY - Little Happenings. Mention of Matters in Brief. Personal Items of Interest.&#13;
&#13;
Summary of the Floating Small Talks Succinctly Arranged for Herald Headers.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Hon. Forrest Lake returned last evening from Tallahassee&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Hon. Eph Brown, of the Ft. Christmas section, was in the city today.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brumley of Chulota, were in Sanford Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Miss Norma Herndon is at home for Armistice day from Stetson.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
E. A. Niemyer and Rodney Synder, prominent business men of Kissimmee were here today.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H. Clay Stanford of Kissimmee, are among the prominent visitors to the city today.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Lieut. Bivens and a friend are the guests of Mr., and Mrs. B. W. Herndon at the Seminole.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Judge and Mrs. E. F. Housholder, Master Carlyle Housholder and Mrs. Julius Schlitz were in DeLand Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Mrs. Terhune, the sister of Mrs. F. F Dutton came last evening to be with Mrs. Dutton for some time.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Master Billy Thigpen, who has been ill at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Morton Thigpen, is much better.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Mrs. Pearle, Mrs. Frank Jones, Miss Jeanette Lawson and Messrs. Davis and Gregory, of Kissimmee, were in the city today.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Cal McCaughn, of Orlando, are in the city today visiting friends. Mr. McCaughn is the proprietor of a cafeteria in Orlando and Mrs. McCaughn was formerly Miss Maude Alice Wagner of this city and both of them have many friends in Sanford.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
The Ball Hardware Company, known among sportsmen as the “Winchester Store” is making great preparations for the opening of the hunting season, which opens November 20th. A complete line of everything for the sportsman and hunter is carried and you are invited to call when in need of hunting supplies or fishing tackle. They handle only the best recognized brands and can fill your wants in these lines.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
BRIDGE&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. G. D. Bishop was hostess of the initial meeting of a new bridge club Wednesday afternoon, but owning to the illness of two of the members no definite plans were made. &#13;
The home on Park avenue was tastefully decorated in yellow daisies and bridge was played at two tables.&#13;
 Mrs. McCuller won the prize for the high score which was a lovely collar and cuff. At the conclusion of the game a salad course was served.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WEDNESDAY’S ARRIVALS AT THE VALDEZ.&#13;
&#13;
D. A. Read, Tampa; S. D.  Blazer, Nocatee, Fla.; E. J. Bombey, Tampa; C. A. Lindbled, Chetek, Wis.; Staff Sergt. Jack Smith, Carlstrom Field, Lt. D. O. Bivins, Carlstrom Field; E. H. Raife,, Jacksonville; G. C. Miller, Kenanville, Fla; Geo. W. Lang, Chulota, Fla.; C. W. Giddend and Wife, Tampa; M. Gillen, Jacksonville; Jas. A. Shrunk, Jacksonville; E. S. Kassai, Atlanta; E. W. Ellis, Ocala; Geo. H. Kraus and Wife, Cleveland; F. M. Chaffee, DeLand; J. S. Nesbit, Jacksonville; G. C. Keller, Frankfort; H. C. Gessor, Jacksonville; Geo. Crews, U. N. Avera, Jacksonville; J. S. Daniel, Mt Dora; Miss Nell Lane, Sleepy Hollow, O.; Miss Elizabeth Adney, Knoxville, Tenn.; Arthur J. Seidle, Rochester, N. Y.; J. P. Hamilton, Charleston, S. C.; J. P. Chazal, Ocala; P. L. Cunningham, Cincinnati; W. R. Jackson, Palatka.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Ad Illustration: a tree on the left side. A man in cowboy gear and woman (sitting side saddle) riding on one horse which is standing on a road. The environment is a forest.&#13;
&#13;
STAR THEATRE TONIGHT – Samuel Goldwyn Presents&#13;
THE BRANDING IRON&#13;
Katherine Newlin Burt. A Reginald Barker Production.&#13;
&#13;
A-5/1 Col.&#13;
--&#13;
STREAK OF LEAN, STREAK OF FAT&#13;
&#13;
SANTA ANNA, Calif., Nov. 11 –&#13;
A bride weighing 725 pounds was brought home by John H. Hamilton, who weighs 155.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
--&#13;
GREENLEAF HOLDS TITLE BILLIARD CHAMP&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 11&#13;
Ralph Greenleaf, of Monmouth, Ill., retained the title of world pocket billiard champion in a contest here today.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
AT THE STAR THEATRE TODAY.&#13;
Special Armistice Day Program&#13;
An All-Star Cast in “THE BRANDING IRON” And “TOPICS OF THE DAY”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
The Logical Treatment “ENERGIZER” For Many Human Ills.&#13;
We hold this to be a truth: - viz: - That Circulation is the BASIC factor of Human Health.&#13;
&#13;
The “Energizer” process will DO MORE benefit to Any Adult’s general condition than any other method known.&#13;
&#13;
COME IN and talk it over.  108 park Ave., Next door to Mobley’s Drug Store.&#13;
&#13;
L. C. Cameron.  Box 399.  Sanford, Fla.  Phone 184.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
LEXINGTON MINUTE MAN SIX.&#13;
United States, Kokomo and Miller Tires and Tubes.&#13;
Up-To-Date Repair Shop.&#13;
COMPLETE LINE OF ACCESSORIES. DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE.&#13;
&#13;
B. &amp; O. Motor Co. &#13;
Distributors for SEMINOLE, LAKE, VOLUSIA, ORANGE AND OSCEOLA COUNTIES.&#13;
&#13;
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Buy Meat You Can Eat.&#13;
We carry a choice line at all times.  A Trial Solicited.&#13;
Pure Food Market.&#13;
J. H. Tillis, Prop.   Phone 105    402 Sanford Ave.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SEE URK  FOR EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING.&#13;
Cor. First and Sanford Ave.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
National Madza Lamps.&#13;
25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts.&#13;
20 to 75 Watts in 32 Volts.&#13;
&#13;
Everything Electrical. Expert Installation and Repair Work.&#13;
GILLON &amp; FRY.  Phone 442.  115 Magnolia Ave.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Seed, Our Business.  Honesty, Our Motto.  Purity, Our Watchword.&#13;
The L. Allen Seed Co.&#13;
COME IN AND SEE US (Southern Seed Specialists).&#13;
Welaka bldg.  Sanford, Fla.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Real Estate. I Sell It.&#13;
J. E. Spurling. The Man Who Sells Dirt Cheap.&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Sanford’s Most Popular Hotel – SEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL.&#13;
Under the management of WALTER B. OLSON.&#13;
&#13;
Our specialty – Seminole’s famous $1 Sunday dinner de luxe.&#13;
A la carte service all day.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
We Guarantee All Battery Repairs.&#13;
Every battery repair we make is guaranteed for six months. We are able to do this because in repairing any make of battery we are licensed to use patented features which have made Vesta batteries famous.&#13;
Sanford Battery Service Co.  L. A. Renaud, Prop.  Phone 189.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Ad art – A polar bear and a rubber tire.&#13;
Title - Gillette Tire and Tubes.&#13;
Chilled Rubber Process make them A Bear for Wear.&#13;
&#13;
SMITH BROTHERS.  Expert Repair work.&#13;
--&#13;
Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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ARMY EXHIBIT&#13;
&#13;
An array of German Souvenirs and War Material will be on exhibition all day Armistice Day. Lieut. Bivins, will also be here bringing with him a flying machine from Carlstrom Field to thrill the crowds with some dare-devil stunts. There are so many features connected with this day that it just can’t help being the biggest day in Sanford yet.&#13;
&#13;
ON EXHIBITION.&#13;
&#13;
At our place all the time is one of the nicest arrays of Men’s Clothing and Furnishings, so many nice things in fact, that it would take a whole page to tell you about a part of them. And we are selling all at prices you’ll like.&#13;
&#13;
COME SEE FOR YOUR SELF.&#13;
&#13;
Perkins &amp; Britt.  “The Store That Is Different”&#13;
&#13;
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RESPONSIBILITY.&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under which this institution has been managed since the first day the doors were opened.&#13;
&#13;
 That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the constant and gratifying growth in business.&#13;
&#13;
 It is the desire of the officers of the Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals desiring most efficient and responsible banking.&#13;
&#13;
 On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your patronage is invited.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
Is owned, controlled and managed by home people, who are interested in the development and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County.&#13;
&#13;
 With our large resources and strong financial connections, we are in position to assist our customers at all times in the handling of their financial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.&#13;
&#13;
 4 Per Cent Interest Paid.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank.&#13;
&#13;
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FOOD –&#13;
&#13;
 That is prepared clean, cooked and seasoned just right, is hard to find. But we have it – and once you try it you will say, one kind, “The Best.”&#13;
&#13;
Combination Dinner 75c – 12 to 2 – Home Cooking.&#13;
&#13;
Fleetwood &amp; Company.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS – 1c A WORD.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
------END OF THE DOCUMENT--- 11/11/1920&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="256515">
              <text>SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION&#13;
Volume 1&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Sanford, Florida, Thursday, November 11, 1920&#13;
Number 188&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------&#13;
ARMISTICE DAY SUCCESS DESPITE LOWERING CLOUDS HUNDREDS OF VISITORS.&#13;
&#13;
Rain Failing To Dampen Ardor Of the Boys.&#13;
EVERYTHING READY&#13;
AND WITH GOOD WEATHER THIS AFTERNOON AND NIGHT THE BOYS WILL BE “JAKE”&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The big day started off early as many of the boys never went to bed last night but stayed up to be on time the first thing in the morning and long before daylight they were out sounding the bugle calls and driving trucks with the cut-out open and backfiring the engine and by seven o clock it is probable that more people were awake early in Sanford than have been since Armistice Day two years ago.&#13;
 The boys were busy as bees until parade time getting the wheels of fortune and other amusements ready and making all secure for the dinner and the dance tonight and all the other little details that go make up the big time.&#13;
 The parade started promptly at 10 o’clock on Oak avenue led by the Kissimmee band and it was an inspiring sight to see the boys of the army and navy all resplendant in their uniforms that had been laid away in moth balls for the past year or more.&#13;
 The line up of the parade was as follows:&#13;
&#13;
-First Section&#13;
 The Colors&#13;
&#13;
-Second Section&#13;
 American Legion.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Legion Float.&#13;
(b)	Liberty Float (Terhune)&#13;
(c)	Chaplain’s car.&#13;
(d)	Wreath (Connely).&#13;
&#13;
-Third Section&#13;
 Band.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Army Float&#13;
(b)	Navy (ship)&#13;
(c)	Spanish War Veterans and G. A. R. and D. A. R. in cars&#13;
(d)	Spad (Lee Bros)&#13;
&#13;
-Fourth Section&#13;
Red Cross Nurses.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Red Cross Float&#13;
(b)	Peace Float (Holly)&#13;
(c)	Uncle Sam and Liberty (Gulf Refining Co.)&#13;
&#13;
-Fifth Section&#13;
School Children.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Tillis&#13;
(b)	Perkins &amp; Britt&#13;
(c)	Fleetwood&#13;
(d)	B &amp; O Garage&#13;
(e)	B &amp; O Garage&#13;
(f)	B &amp; O Garage&#13;
&#13;
-Sixth Section&#13;
City Officials, Police and Fire Departments.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Wight Tire Co&#13;
(b)	Higgins&#13;
(c)	Lee Bros&#13;
(d)	Overland&#13;
(e)	Std. Auto Top Co.&#13;
(f)	Thrasher&#13;
&#13;
-Seventh Section&#13;
Tournament Riders&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	McCuller&#13;
(b)	Bryan&#13;
(c)	Hill Lumber Co.&#13;
(d)	Chero-Cola Co.&#13;
(e)	Lane&#13;
(f)	Walthal &amp; Estridge&#13;
&#13;
-Eighth Section&#13;
Boy Scouts.&#13;
Floats:-&#13;
(a)	Miscellaneous Floats and automobiles.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The parade was probably one of the largest and best arranged that has ever been pulled off in Sanford and this was due to the military precision with which it was carried out. Under the command of Colonel Geo. W. knight, and his efficient staff, the parade started on Oak avenue promptly at ten and to the inspiring strains of “Over There” the Kissimmee Band under the leadership of Capt. Gallagher, led the boys out with chests out and eyes front and the colors first with the color guard of the army and navy followed by a long line of soldier boys and sailors that thrilled the assemblage of people thronging the sidewalks along the line of march. The float, Uncle Sam and Miss Columbia, came next with Robt. Herndon driving, R. A. Terheun representing Uncle Sam with an original makeup and Miss Columbia represented by Mrs. Robt. Herndon. The Red Cross nurse by Mrs. Burdick and guarded by the army and navy; the float being decorated in Florida moss, pine needles and vines. This float received the applause of the crowd all along the way.&#13;
 Behind Uncle Sam was the Chaplain’s car, driven by Chaplain Geo. Hyman, with little John Hyman in uniform sitting on the hood and Cr. Brower of the congregational church, and Dr. Walker of the Methodist church, and R. J. Holly, of the Y. M. C. A., occupying the car which was decorated in red, white and blue bunting and carried the insignia of the 82nd Division, the All Americans and the white crosses of the chaplain.&#13;
 The Wreath car of the American Legion, was beautiful, being driven by Walter Connelly and containing the wreath for the boys who died in the service of their country and held a guard of honor.&#13;
 The navy had a fine float representing a ship and filled with sailors the car being driven by Ed. Ward.&#13;
 The D. A. R. car was driven by Hawkins Connelly and contained Mrs. W. E. Watson, Miss Morrison, Mrs. A. R. Key, Miss Wilkey, Mrs. Forrest Lake and Mrs. Louckes and was decorated in myrtle over a while background and hybiscus entwined in the Myrtle and bearing the insignia of the D. A. R. on the side.&#13;
 The B &amp; P car of Perkins &amp; Britt was among the beautiful cars being driven by Lieut. Kenneth Murrell, accompanied by Dixie Brown and held by little Braxton Perkins, Charles Britt, Wanita McMillan, Wanita Smith and Margaret Britt and was decorated in red, white and blue roses over white and the children held red, white and blue parasols. The Chandler car of the Wight Tire Co., was beautiful in pure white flowers the ladies being dressed in white and the car driven by Mrs. Hal Wight and accompanied by Mrs. Ralph Wight, Mrs. Fred Wight, Mrs. Kirkly and Mrs Claude Howard.&#13;
 The Rose of No Man’s Land was a green car, decorated in red and driven by Robert Holley and containing Misses Margaret Zachary and Erminia Houser dressed as Red Cross nurses.&#13;
 The Splash Babies car driven by Maude Lake and accompanied by Misses Kittie Dubose, Mary Elizabeth Puleston. Mildred Holly, LeClair Jones and Olive Newman was in white trimmed with blue and was decorated with Kewpies.&#13;
 Among the best decorated cars in the parade were the two Peace cars, one of them being driven by Edward Lane and one by Mrs R. S. Holly. The Lane car was said to be one of the most beautiful cars of the kind in the parade and was done entirely in pink and white effects, the ladies sitting under a white umbrella raised in the center of the car, Mr. Lane in white being in front and accompanied by Miss Virginia Brady, Mrs. Lane, Mrs. Charles Britt and Mrs. John Smith and the lines were held by a Cupid in front of the car. “Peace” in large letters was on the front of the car.&#13;
 The other Peace car was driven by Mrs. R. S. Holly accompanied By Mrs. S. M. Lloyd, Mrs. Donald Smith, Mrs. Eugene Roumillat and Mrs. R. J. Holly and little Evelyn Smith sat in the back dressed in white and with wings spread played the part of the fairy. The car was in pure white throughout with canopy effect the top holding a basket of white flowers and the white dove of peace perched on the tip. Each side of the car contained gold letters with the word “Peace.” Among the decorated floats that deserve special mention are the following:&#13;
 The Reo car driven by Leslie Bryan, all done in yellow and containing a bunch of yellow daisies being a bevy of children dressed in yellow and carrying out the idea of the gold seal car. The little girls were Virgie&#13;
(Continued on page four)&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WHEN PEACE CAME&#13;
By Miss Jefferson bell, in Miami Herald&#13;
&#13;
 On that eventful night of Nov. 11, 1918, Miss Jefferson Bell of the Miami Herald wrote an article which she entitled “When Peace Came.” It appeared in that newspaper on the morning of the 12th and was as follows:&#13;
 Darkness lay on land and sea and far across the sweep of gleaming waters great guns belched and shell and flame swept the racked and tortured land. The wind was foul with the smell of mustard gas, poison and smoke and the moist taint of fresh, warm, red blood that oozed and flowed from the dead fallen on sodden fields.&#13;
 Through the darkness, swift and fearsome, crashed a heavy steel-clad machine, racing with fate and death, driven in hopeless haste and bringing the bitter terms of defeat, chosen in a desperate hour against a greater and more desperate need. In the council chamber waiting the Clan of the Black Eagle. Shorn were its talons and its plumage befouled with hideous crimes. Sullenly, desperately and doggedly they waited while the heavy tick of time and eternity marked the passing hours.&#13;
 In the streets of Berlin and through the empire savage hordes marched and shouted and sang. It was not the songs of the Fatherland they sang, but the Marseillaise, the marching song of a hated nation, and their shouts curdled the blood of those who crouched in the darkness of tottering thrones, and they shivered and listened – and waited.&#13;
 In a steel-clad limousine, speeding across a neutral border, fearful of life, and scurrying like a rat from death, went two men. The engine of the high-powered car sped on and on, driven with the energy of despair and scourged by the lash of fear. Craven, abject, like yelping curs they went in that mad race though the night – shivering, whining, waiting. And beside that steel-clad limousine raced pale figures from the realms of shade and after them on the thundering hoofs of a ghostly steed and gibbering, rode Death.&#13;
 In the great capitals sat grave and silent men while the hours went – and they, too, waited.&#13;
 In a million homes women waited and of all these legions who waited they only prayed through the great hours that passed slowly into eternity. They did not weep, those waiting women, praying with yearning hearts to the Great God of All the Years for those in camp and field and for who sailed the treacherous seas. And it was not for peace they prayed as they waited unless it brought the things for which they had given their men, but it was a litany wrung from anguished souls that death would pass over their men – and angels listened to the prayers of the women while they waited.&#13;
 In the camp where the Clan of the Black Eagle waited in the council chamber, the hour of midnight was striking and the fate of the world balanced to the weight of a hair, hung, while breathless billions waiting.&#13;
 In the hushed silence of that tremendous hour only the scratch of a pen was heard and then - through all the breathless waiting world, from a billion throats and from a billion brazen bells came thundering shouts of victory. It was a world gone mad with joy and while white doves of peace hovered and nestled near the earth, the women, who had prayed, wept.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
BUSINESS CONDITIONS READJUSTED&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLE HOPEFUL THAT BETTER TIMES ARE COMING WITH EASIER MONEY&#13;
&#13;
 Hopes that reviving business will follow the elections find expression in some quarters, but the results of the balloting are not likely to prompt a sudden reversal of consumers’ buying disposition, and there is no general expectation of any immediate appreciable recovery from the existing economic depression. While confusion over the fundamental causes of the commercial reaction has not been lacking, political factors do not explain the steadily yielding prices of commodities, the increasing curtailment of production, and the continued spread of unemployment, and can hardly be singled out as giving promise of any abrupt change from this situation.&#13;
 At bottom, the business readjustment has been frequently reiterated, is the inevitable outgrowth of the great inflation and over extension of the war period and afterward and the movement toward a sounder and more wholesome basis is not one which can be swiftly completed or effected without some measure of disturbance. The accompany unsettlement has been more severe in some trades and industries than in others, but in all lines there is clear evidence of a transition to a new order of conditions, and of a return of a buyers’ markets. &#13;
 After 25 consecutive weeks during which a representative list of wholesale quotations has disclosed a preponderance of recessions, the general average of prices is now considerably lower than had previously seemed probable and the declines at the retail counters, if developing more slowly, are becoming more numerous and widespread. The developments of recent months have demonstrated that maintenance of prices at abnormally high levels is dependent upon a sustained purchasing power, and the former extravagant demands from consumers have been replaced in many instances by a policy of providing for absolute requirements only, in the belief that further price yielding will ultimately follow.&#13;
 Resistance to high prices, moreover, has been strengthened by the extraordinarily mild fall weather, which has caused heavier accumulations of goods than would otherwise have been witnessed, and which has been a contributing influence in the forcing of merchandise liquidation.&#13;
 That restriction of building activities is now practically country-wide, following an earlier tendency toward expansion, is evidenced by a special survey of the situation, just made through the branch offices of R. G. Dun &amp; Co. The causes of the reaction, which has occurred in the face of a growing need for additional housing accommodation, are similar to those which have brought about readjustments in the lines, and high costs of both materials, and labor have probably been more responsible than any other single factor for the restraint or construction operations. The tightness of the money market moreover, has rendered difficult the financing of new undertakings, and many contemplated projects are being held in abeyance until conditions become more favorable.&#13;
 A recent decided lowering of lumber prices in many sections has encouraged hopes of a subsequent revival of building activity, but the price declines have not yet extended to every class of material, and the immediate future of the industry is regarded as being more or less uncertain. It is the consensus of opinion, however, that any general and substantial deflation of prices, accompanied by an easing of the financial stringency, would be followed by the starting of construction work on a broad scale after the passing of winter. – Dun’s Review.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
IMPRESSIVE CEREMONIES IN EUROPE&#13;
&#13;
LONDON AND PARIS CELEBRATED SECOND ANNIVERSARY CLOSING OF WORLD WAR.&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Impressive ceremonies were held at London and Paris to celebrate the second anniversary of the closing of the world war and pay tribute to the fallen soldiers. The body of an unidentified soldier was buried in West Minister Abbey amid elaborate ceremony with King George the chief mourner.&#13;
 In Paris a soldier’s body was taken from a nameless grave at Verdun and buried under Arc De Truimphe. President Millerand and three marshals participating in the ceremony. No national ceremony was held in the United States but in most cities the day was observed by parades and memorial services.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
GIRL EMPLOYEES SHOW DISLOYALTY, ONE THRASHED.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
LONDON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
 Girl employees of Sylvia Pankhurst’s communistic paper were thrashed by an angry mob claiming that during two minutes of solemn silence in honor of the fallen dead, the women sang, danced and banged tin cans in the newspaper office.&#13;
&#13;
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--&#13;
BUCCANEERS STOP CHANNEL BOATS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
LONDON, Nov. 11.-&#13;
A steamer proceeding to Cork and Queenstown was stopped by a shot fired from men in boats and armed men boarded and seized goods.&#13;
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WASHINGTON CELEBRATES&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
&#13;
Armistice day was celebrated in the Navy and Marine corps by awarding two thousand medals and letters of commendation for valorous services in the world war.&#13;
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LATE WIRES&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Williamson, W. Va., Nov. 11.&#13;
&#13;
 The Norfolk and Western railroad trestle at Thacker and the Drumhouse Matta Coal Co., at Ajax were blown up today. State police are investigating with bloodhounds.&#13;
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CHICAGO, Nov. 11 -&#13;
 A naval seaplane with three men aboard is believed to have been lost on the lake, today.&#13;
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NEW YORK, Nov. 11 -&#13;
 Another break of one-quarter of a cent a pound in raw announced today.&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 -&#13;
The Adriatic question is believed closed as far as the United States is concerned by the official announcement by the Italian embassy that Italy and Jugo-Slavin boundary line has been agreed upon. The line is east of what was known as the Wilson line.&#13;
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GREENVILLE, S. C., Nov. 11 -&#13;
 Announcement was made that one the hundred and fifty thousand dollar pool raised by local merchants will be ready to lend farmers on cotton beginning Monday.&#13;
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NEW YORK, Nov. 11 –&#13;
 The practices of the United States Shipping Board which led to a congressional committee investigation have not been “corrupt,” Commander A. D. Clement, executive assistant to Admiral Benson, testified today. He said grounds for criticism is there has not been perfect “co-ordination between the different departments.”&#13;
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NEW YORK, Nov. 11 –&#13;
 The Word today prints saying the Wall Street bomb explosion was causing by unemployed workmen seeking revenge against Robert P. Brindell, president of the Building Trades Council, whose practices are now being investigated.&#13;
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LONDON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
An armistice was signed today between the Armenians and the Turkish nationalists, an Armenian communique announced.&#13;
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NEW YORK, Nov. 11 –&#13;
Three bodies were discovered on a burned section of the steamship El Mundo on which nine men were seriously injured yesterday when an oil tank exploded.&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
The National Association of Railway and Utilities Commissioners selected Atlanta today for the next convention.&#13;
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COLUMBIA, S. C., Nov. 11 –&#13;
An express messenger safe on the Southern train Number 36, containing $16,000 was thrown off by robbers at Sharpe but recovered by a freight crew before the robbers returned.&#13;
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LONDON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
Three thousand and unemployed men in Berlin stormed the Lion Metal Works and established political Soviet, the dispatches say.&#13;
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FARMERS TO ORGANIZE AND PROTECT INTERESTS BY SELLING ORGANIZATION&#13;
&#13;
Wages Must Be in Proportion to Price on Crops&#13;
WILL NOT EQUAL PAY&#13;
LABOR SECURES GOOD WAGES BUT TURNS ON FARMERS DEMANDING CHEAPER FOOD&#13;
&#13;
BOSTON, Nov. 11 –&#13;
The establishment of nation-wide selling organizations which shall establish the price of products if the farmer does not receive the same hourly pay that other workers receive, was predicted by Sherman j. Lowell, of Fredonia, N. Y. master of the National Grange, Patrons of Husbandry, in opening the annual convention of the grange.&#13;
 “We are willing to have a fair understanding of values, the farmers receiving the same pay for the same pay for the same hours work that other receive, no more, no less, but we feel that this is last call,” he said. “If no attention is paid to this now by bankers, merchants, railroad men and others and the government continues to import great quantities of raw material to keep prices down, then the farmers will organize national selling organizations to fix the selling price of their products.&#13;
 “There is no threat in this; we will have been driven to it in self defense, to protect agriculture. We do not desire class or labor division; we desire to aid humanity and to be able to keep the earth fertile, always bringing forth its harvest sufficient to feed the increasing millions of our people. It is no small task, however, and it can only be safely done by a proper appreciation of this task by our urban population.”&#13;
 Mr. Lowell rejoiced that labor had been able to secure a much higher rate of wages, but added: “we little exected that they would turn and demand cheaper food from us without first ascertaining the cost of production and thereby discovering whether or not we were taking too large a margin of profit.”&#13;
 The national master declared that the great changes that have been taken place since the beginning of the war have been to the disadvantage of agriculture and many laws and rulings of our national government have proven of injury to the farmers.&#13;
 Mr. Lowell said the recent census showed a net decrease of 100,000 farms in seven states.&#13;
 Concerning taxation, he said:&#13;
 “There is but one equitable form of taxation and that is when every form of wealth pays its equitable proportion. There is no tax more equitable than an income tax for it is not a charge against anyone who has not the means to pay.”&#13;
 He spoke against the single tax and the idea of placing a government land tax of 1 per cent on the land in place of taxing large incomes which would be disastrous to agriculture he said.&#13;
 “Another equally erroneous idea,” he said, “is the one of having a tax on all unimproved land holdings for if this was done and they were forced on the market by reason of such a tax (which is the intent) it would cause the depreciation of farm land 50 per cent from the fact that there is more improved land than men to work it now.”&#13;
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AEROPLANES WERE HERE&#13;
&#13;
 The aeroplanes were here on time this morning and one of them under command of Lieut. Bivens and with Sergt. Smith they did all kinds of stunts over the city while the parade was in progress and afterward. Their loops and tall spins and other stunts scared the people watching the parade and many of them expected the plane to come tumbling down on their heads, but the boys in the plane were old heads at the business and they landed safely on Sanford f=Field after their hair raising stuff and were the guests of the Seminole hotel for the day.&#13;
 It was good of the Carlstrom Field commander to allow the plane to come here and we are quite sure that the lieutenant was glad to be assigned to this pleasant duty of visiting his old Sanford friends.&#13;
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PAGE 2.  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 10, 1920&#13;
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At The Star Theatre.&#13;
TONIGHT&#13;
DON’T FORGET A SPECIAL ARMISTICE DAY PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
ALICE BRADY in ‘A New York Idea”&#13;
&#13;
SHE WANTED A DIVORCE QUICK!&#13;
&#13;
What grounds?” of course was a natural question for the Judge to as. Cynthia Karslake was stumped for a minute. And then she remembered that “John” had a habit of strewing his shaving things about her boudoir in a very untidy manner.&#13;
 And so a divorce was easy – so easy that it wasn’t any fun at all.&#13;
 Is divorce a failure? That question will arise in your mind when you see beautiful ALICE BRADY in “THE NEW YORK IDEA” – a pungent satire on modern married life.&#13;
&#13;
Friday and Saturday, Louise Glaum in “SAHARA”.&#13;
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REORGANIZATION PLANS FLORIDA NATIONAL GUARD&#13;
&#13;
CHARLESTON, S. C., Nov. 8 –&#13;
 That the government and war department in particular means to do everything. It can to make life in the National Guard attractive, interesting and instructive in the future, was the opinion expressed here this afternoon by Gen C. P. Lovell, adjutant general-elect of Florida, just before he boarded the Clyde steamer Comanche for Jacksonville.&#13;
 General Lowell was here last week to attend the conference of adjutant general of the Southeast with officers of the army fourth corps area, where the reorganization plans for the National Guard were generally gone into.&#13;
 General Lovell stated that in the case of Florida, for instance, there will be a motor truck company formed, as well an up-to-the-minute motorcycle company.&#13;
 At first the army officers were disposed to allow only eight companies in Florida but he secured their promise to recommend a complete regiment for that state.&#13;
 He believes the Florida National Guard can be organized in such a manner as to provide a routine, which will be attractive to the men and result in great efficiency toward the end of protecting the public safety.&#13;
 Since the conference here with the army officers last week, General Lovell has been at Columbia with Mrs. Lovell visiting the relatives of the latter.&#13;
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PROGRAM ARMISTICE DAY GUARANTEE BIG TIME AMUSEMENT ALL DAY&#13;
&#13;
(Continued from page one)&#13;
&#13;
Shop whistles, everyone is requested to assume the position of attention, gentlemen uncovering their heads, until the cessation of the whistle blasts.&#13;
 Under the direction of Mess Sergeant Hodson Ball and his able staff of assistants, a dinner will be served on the bulkhead between Park avenue and Palmetto ave., promptly at noon.&#13;
 Preparations have been made for only 2000 so come early and avoid the rush.&#13;
 We defy you to beat the accompanying menu during these times of the H. C. of L.:&#13;
 Hot Baked Beans. Hot Frankfurters. Pickles. Bread and Butter. Coffee.&#13;
And all for the modest sum of two-bits!&#13;
Plates, cups and necessary utensils are included in this price.&#13;
 At 2 p. m. C. M. Hand’s Galaxy of galloping rough-riders will furnish a number of thrills.&#13;
 With $100 in prizes being offered it is certain that all events will be hotly contested.&#13;
 The tournament will be staged on the bulkhead – no admission fee being charge.&#13;
 Promptly following the tournament the Navy vs. the Army baseball game will be played at Holden Park.&#13;
 Look over the following line-up and we feel sure that you will get double value from your 25c admission ticket.&#13;
&#13;
Army&#13;
 Burdick, shortstop; Amoon, right field; Rive, catcher; Chapman, left field; Harris, center field; Holly, third base; Lang, first base; Hoffman, second base; Perryman, pitcher. Subs: Baggeett, Woodruff, Griggs.&#13;
&#13;
Navy&#13;
Chapman, first base; Coft, second base; Griffin, third base; Robinson, catcher; Spencer, pitcher; Roper, short stop; Dean, center field; Ogilvie, right field; Moye, left field. Subs: Schultz, Ward.&#13;
 The Hotels Seminole and Valdez promise to take care of our out-of-town guests at the supper hour.&#13;
 Special meals have been arranged by the management of the two hostelries and the prices will be found to be very reasonable.&#13;
 Kissimmee’s famous 18-piece band will render selections at various hours of the day, appearing in concert at the court house from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. &#13;
 Manager Herndon, of the Star Theatre, has secured a special feature film for the day, showing at both the matinee and evening hours. The famous Goldwyn star, Barbara Castleton will appear in the picturization of Katherine Newlin Burt’s novel, “The Branding Iron.”&#13;
 A special presidential edition of the Fox news will also be shown in addition to the customary comedy which follows the feature attraction.&#13;
 Although this is a special picture, and a longer program than usual, the admission fee will be but 25c.&#13;
 Mr. Herndon has kindly arranged the program for the accommodation of those who do not care to attend the dance.&#13;
 Last but not least, don’t forget to procure your tickets for the Legion Ball.&#13;
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 Advertisement – 2 column/6 inch deep – illustration of a woman leaning forward out of a black line of a box. She is wearing a checkered wrap around her shoulders and a sleeve-less white top. With bulging eyes, she looks over her bare left shoulder and her hair is in a page-boy style.&#13;
&#13;
Caption: THE BRANDING IRON. A Reginald Barker Production. Goldwyn.&#13;
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THE WINCHESTER STORE Sportsmen’s Headquarters&#13;
Season Opens Nov. 20th – Are You Ready?&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING FOR THE HUNTER&#13;
&#13;
Guns – Rifles – Ammunition – Hunting Clothing, Etc.&#13;
&#13;
BALL HARDWARE COMPANY Sporting Goods.&#13;
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CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES.&#13;
&#13;
Minimum Charge for any one ad		25c&#13;
One Time, per word				 1c&#13;
Three Times, per word				 2c&#13;
Six Times, per word 				 3c&#13;
&#13;
Over Six Times, 1-2c per word per issue.&#13;
&#13;
Cash must accompany order. Ten cents extra if charged.&#13;
Advertising in this column in which the address of the advertiser is not given but which refers you to Post office Box Number or Care of the Herald MUST be answered accordingly. Please do not ask us for the names of advertisers advertising in this way. Usually we do not know who they are and if we do we are not expected to tell you.&#13;
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WANTED&#13;
&#13;
WANTED – For cash, an old building for its lumber. Address with location and price where it stands. If you have one, write O. Goodelle, Orlando, Fla.    186-3tp&#13;
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WANTED – An elderly lady, single preferred, to attend invalid lady. Address, 112 Elm Ave.    185-9tp.&#13;
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Buy your post card at the Herald office.&#13;
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WANTED – Your old batteries to rebuild. Let us make your starting and lighting a pleasure. We are authorized “EXIDE” dealers and have a Battery for all makes automobiles. “EXIDE”, the Giant that lives in a box.” – Ray Bros. Phone 548, old For Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
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Get Your Scratch Pads From The Herald – by the pound. – 15c&#13;
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WANTED – Brick and cement work, chimneys, flues, piers, cement floors, sidewalks. – A. L. Ray, 206 Park Ave.    173-30tp&#13;
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WANTED – BY November 15, a 4 to 6 room house or apartments, unfurnished or partly furnished. Best of references given. Will rent by the year. Address at once, “Cottage,” in.&#13;
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WANTED – Pupils, Violin and Piano. – Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.  175-20t-p.&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
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WANTED TO RENT – HOUSE OR APARTMENT OF 4 TO 6 ROOMS. FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED. WILL RENT BY YEAR. ADDRESS “APARTMENT” CARE OF THE HERALD.    Tf.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf&#13;
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WANTED – Two rooms for light housekeeping with private family. Address K. K. J., care Herald.    187-3tp&#13;
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FOR RENT&#13;
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FOR RENT – One nicely furnished room, 320 Oak Ave. Phone 308-J.   187-tfc.&#13;
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TO RENT or for sale, large warehouse with railroad siding. – Chas. Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co.   156-tfc.&#13;
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FURNISHED ROOMS - Two furnished bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park Avenue.   157-tfc.&#13;
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FOR RENT – Apartment of three rooms and bath, furnished or unfurnished at Elder Springs with Elder Springs water free.  Phone 3505. 184-tfc.&#13;
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FOR RENT – Furnished front room, 218 Elm.   184-3tc&#13;
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FOR RENT – Two or three furnished housekeeping rooms. P. O. Box 117, owner.   184-6tp.&#13;
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FOR RENT – Six unfurnished rooms, bath and hall, over Red Front Store on Ninth street, fourth block east of depot. Box 81. &#13;
186-3tp.&#13;
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LOST&#13;
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LOST – Western Union branch deposit book. Finder please return to Western Union office. – J. P. Hall, Mgr.   180-tfc.&#13;
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MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
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 ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, 109 East First street, over Union Pharmacy.   163-tfc.&#13;
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CARPETS and rugs washed right on the floor, with Hamilton Beach Electric Carpet washer. Kills all moth and disease germs. Make your floor coverings absolutely sanitary. – Electric Carpet Washer, Sanford.   186-6tp.&#13;
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DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture, bedstands, chairs, etc.  What have you?   174-30tc.&#13;
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BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run your battery until she is entirely dead. The battery is the costliest accessory to your car. We re-charge and re-build all makes of batteries. – Ray Bros. Phone 548, old Ford Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE&#13;
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FOR SALE – Shasto daisies, $1 per dozen. English Shamrock Oxalys 30c per dozen. Ring 207-W.  183-12tc.&#13;
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Special reduction in men’s and ladies’ W. L. Douglas shoes. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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FOR RENT – Nicely furnished large light housekeeping rooms. – Mrs. Riddling, 205 Oak ave.  Eagle Hall.   186-6tc.&#13;
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WOOD AND POSTS sold and delivered on hard road, within one mile of town. See me. – W. V. Dunn.   186-6tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf&#13;
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We have just received a line of silverware and casseroles. – A Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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PLANTS FOR SALE – Cabbage, Onions, beets, lettuce and cauliflower. Yellow self-bleaching celery, guaranteed French imported seed, bought from Chase &amp; Co., write for prices. State quality wanted. – W. C. Post.    173-60tc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – Very cheap, one 7-passenger automobile in good shape. Apply B. &amp; O. Motor Co.  185-6tc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – Five room cottage, large yard for vegetable garden, various fruit trees, also two separate fives acre farm land; 5 gallon hot water heater.  P. O. Box 117, Owner.  184-6tp.&#13;
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See our line of electrical lamps. -  A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford avenue.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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New line of Congoleums and Art Squares. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf&#13;
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Special reduction on Georgette Silk and cotton shirt waists. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford ave.  Phone 550.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 7-room, 2-story house, large yard for garden spot, also chicken yard. Various fruit trees.  Phone 487.  186-6tc.&#13;
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Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
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REO.  SALES – SERVICE – PARTS – ACCESSORIES.&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO.  PHONE 66.&#13;
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Cozy Café – Quick Lunch.&#13;
Coffee - 5c. – Sandwiches - 10c. - Pies, homemade 10c. cut – Best Coffee in Sanford.  Princess Theatre Bldg.&#13;
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December 1st.&#13;
 On the first of each month your rent is due. Why give other people your money. Buy you a home and each month instead of paying out rent money, pay on a home that is yours.&#13;
 Beautiful homes on Park, Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and Myrtle avenues. Sanford Heights. Building lots in any location.&#13;
&#13;
E. F. Lane – “The Real Estate Man”.  Phone 95. 204 First Street.&#13;
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Lord’s Purity Water. As Good as the Best. Daily service. Phone 66.&#13;
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CITY MARKET – Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props. Welaka Building.&#13;
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Specials For Today.&#13;
Choice Western and Florida Meats. Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage.&#13;
CITY MARKET.&#13;
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EVERYTHING for THE BUILDER. &#13;
From the Foundation to the Roof. &#13;
HILL LUMBER CO.   Quality-Serviced-Price.&#13;
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Try a Herald Want Ad. – It pays.&#13;
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PAGE 3 – THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOV. 11, 1920.&#13;
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SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
&#13;
Published every afternoon except Sunday at the Herald Building, 107 Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, Florida.&#13;
-&#13;
THE HERALD PRINTING CO., Inc. PUBLISHERS.&#13;
-&#13;
R. J. HOLLY		Editor&#13;
N. J. LILLARD		Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
H. A. NEEL			General Manager&#13;
F. P. RINES		Circulation Manager.  Phone 481.&#13;
-&#13;
Advertising Rates Made Known on Application.&#13;
-&#13;
Subscription Price a Advance&#13;
One year			$6.00&#13;
Six months			$3.00&#13;
Delivered in city by carrier&#13;
One week			15 cents.&#13;
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Member of the Associated Press.&#13;
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Art - Union Label seal&#13;
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Hello, buddies.&#13;
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The city is yours today.&#13;
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And get that put of “chow” ready at noon.&#13;
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The army and navy will play ball to see “who won the war.”&#13;
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We can fight the battle of Paris and the siege of Bordeaux all over again.&#13;
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What a joy it must be today to be out of the trenches and living in the beautiful sunshine of Florida. Some difference, bud, some difference.&#13;
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The editor of the herald is in doubt as whether he belongs in the army or the navy, having served the army on board the transports and served the navy at the same place.&#13;
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We feel like we would get a haversack of chewing gum and cigarettes and give them out today among the boys. They were “our boys” for so long and we were a father to so many of them, thousands in fact.&#13;
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Don’t expect a good paper today. While we cannot close the plaut for a day we expect to let the force off some and then there is so much going on that it will be impossible for the editor to stay on the job and we will not stay on it anyhow. We are just going A. W. O. L. today and we defy all military and civil authority to make us serve and you will probably find us among the K. P.’s down on the lake front if there is anything important for the welfare of the country. This is the big day and we intend to celebrate until the last bugle blows “taps” tonight.&#13;
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J P says:&#13;
&#13;
“Double your earning power. Think what it means to you to double your earning power. Thousands have done it and thousands have done it and thousands are doing it and you can do it too without it interfering with your work. By investing in the 8 per cent cumulative prior preferred stock of the Southern Utilities Company. Set aside a little surplus each month and let it make money for you there’s none better. &#13;
&#13;
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ARMISTICE DAY&#13;
&#13;
Two years ago the whistles and the bells and other noise makers sounded the  glad tidings that war was over and peace had been declared and our boys over yonder and our boys in the camps here could come home again. &#13;
 All those weary months of waiting over here and those weary months of fighting and then waiting over there were over and how we did celebrate for a day and a night over the good news. People went wild with joy all over the world at the glad tidings that peace would again brood over the world and fighting come to an end. While peace has not quite encircled the world since that time and many countries are torn asunder with revolution, peace has to a large extent come to most of the countries of the earth and America can at least celebrate Armistice Day today with the feeling that most of our troubles are over.&#13;
 We will be beset from time to time with troubles and agitations before things right themselves but America will always America, the land of the free and the home of the brave and all those boys who spent any time in the countries of Europe and who are home today celebrating will feel like they are home and that home means the grandest home in the grandest country in the world. Come what will in the next ten years we can count on the boys of the American Legion for our true and loyal citizens. They may grumble with the rest of us at times and think things are not as they should be – they grumbled in the camps and in the trenches and grumbled to get to France and then grumbled to get home – but their grumbling is just the natural American chafin at the bit for things to move faster. &#13;
They are the boys who will make the future American citizens and they are of the right sort. They have been through the mill and if any of them had any cooties of discontent on them they were shed with the trench uniform and did not come back home with the boys who willing to sacrifice their all in this world because the government called them. They went into the mouth of hell because they were needed in the time of their country’s stress and having answered are entitled to all that the country can give them in the years to come. No one can imagine what they suffered unless you were in the midst of the ruck and the muck of with them.&#13;
 No one can imagine their feelings, their opinions and their inspirations unless you were with them and talked with them while the mood was on them. These boys only home for the past two years and some less than that have been made over again into peace loving, loyal, law-abiding citizens. They were made over from citizens into soldiers in a short space of time and were again made into citizens in just a short space and the transformation is marvelous and most remarkable and shows the versatility of our modern American boys.&#13;
 That they are here with us today in such large numbers is another cause not only for wonderment but for congratulations and we have them with us today celebrating that victory that means so much to the world today and will mean so much more to the world in the years to come.&#13;
 Enjoy yourselves, boys, to the fullest extent. We are with you soul and heart and body and will endeavor to keep up with you until our legs give out and then we will call for an ambulance and ride in the procession until the finish. And to those boys sleeping in Flanders field and those who are sleeping under the stars and stripes in this country today we drop a tear to your memories. You cannot be here to celebrate but you will be remembered none the less.&#13;
 You paid the supreme sacrifice and you have not died in vain. As the years go by and the cycle enlarges and merges into the yesterdays and the shadows lengthen at the close pf the day and the end of this life we will always remember and always praise Him that saw so many safely through and safely over and ask that He “stand by” the boys who have passed into the beyond and those who are here “carrying on.”&#13;
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VALDEZ GRILL OPEN AT NIGHT&#13;
&#13;
The many patrons of the Valdez Hotel grill will be pleased to learn that the management has decided to keep the grill open at night until 1 o’clock.   1-87-6tc.&#13;
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Avocados – Lettuce – Carrots – Parsnips – Oranges – Red Apples - Grapes.  &#13;
STORE CLOSED THURSDAY.&#13;
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Deane Turner.  Phone 497.  Welaka building&#13;
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&#13;
--&#13;
CHRISTMAS ONLY SIX WEEKS OFF. BUY EARLY.&#13;
&#13;
Diamond Rings			$25 to $1500&#13;
Diamond Brooches			 25 to  1000&#13;
Scarf Pins				  2 to   100&#13;
Pendants				  5 to   500&#13;
Cuff Links				  5 to   100&#13;
Wrist Watches			 15 to   150&#13;
Electric Lamps			 10 to   100&#13;
Toilet Sets			 10 to    75&#13;
&#13;
IT WILL BE A PLEASURE TO SHOW YOU.&#13;
MCLAULIN The Jeweler.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR THE FIRST COMPLETE HOUSE BILL.&#13;
CARTER LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Red Star Detroit Vapor Oil Store.&#13;
Heaters of every kind. Our prices are right.&#13;
&#13;
HILL HARDWARE COMPANY.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Reduced Prices On FEEDS At West Side Grocery.&#13;
&#13;
If you don’t believe we handled Feed, just look at these prices:&#13;
&#13;
That good Omelene Feed, sack $3.95.&#13;
Shorts, sack, #3.50.&#13;
Scratch Feed, sack, $3.95.&#13;
Corn, Oats, Laro, Etc., received dayly. &#13;
PERUNA FEEDS.&#13;
&#13;
Your Phone and My Delivery Make Me Your Nearest Grocer.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 166. &#13;
L. F. Roper, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
TO THE MOTORISTS&#13;
To make room during the construction of our new garage we will close out our stock of celebrated Willard Threaded Rubber Batteries AT COST.&#13;
&#13;
Overlands, regular price			$58.40. sale price  $46.60&#13;
Cadillac, regular price			 83.33; sale price   67.69&#13;
Dodge, Marmon, Franklin, reg. price	 71.90; sale price   58.63&#13;
Olds, Overland, Oakland, Buick&#13;
  Fours, regular price			 53.35; sale price   43.52&#13;
Hudson, Reo, Buick 6’s, regular price	 61.60; sale price   59.27&#13;
Packard, regular price			 83.33; sale price   67.69&#13;
Maxwell, regular price			 66.55; sale price   54.29&#13;
&#13;
 These are all bran new batteries and will last for years if properly cared for. If your old battery is becoming doubtful now is the opportunity to save a bunch of money and at the same time insure a winter of carefree pleasure or business.&#13;
&#13;
DAYTONA STORAGE BATTERY CO.&#13;
15 MAGNOLIA AVE.  DAYTONA, FLORIDA.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SIX KINDS OF SAFETY&#13;
&#13;
 Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank where you deposit your money?&#13;
 The first consideration is the capital, which should be ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank is to serve.&#13;
 The next question to consider is the officers in charge. They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.&#13;
 Then there is the question of confidence. The public should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. &#13;
 These three principles determine the success of a bank.&#13;
 We adopted these principles in the outset of our career and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase our usefulness to the community as the years go by.&#13;
&#13;
 We Offer You:&#13;
  &#13;
  1st: Large capital and working reserve.&#13;
  2nd: Trained men in charge – men of several years experience.&#13;
  3rd: The confidence of the public, which is proven by the daily addition to our line of depositors.&#13;
  4th: Protection by two examinations each year by the state banking department. Two audits each year by an independent recognized public audit company and two sworn statements submitted to the state comptroller by the cashier, giving the bank’s condition in detail. All of which insures regular, systematic and thorough operation of the bank.&#13;
  5th: The advice of a competent board of directors, who meet with the officers regularly each month and advise them as to the operation of the bank.&#13;
6th: Insurance of all deposits every day of the year. This is a protection not commonly found in banks and is an absolute protection for your funds, in addition to all the other usual safeguards.&#13;
&#13;
  These are reasons why you should do business with us, and we believe that no bank can offer better inducements.&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD. We want your business.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
M. D. GATCHEL GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES.&#13;
Phone 110. Corner Sanford and Celery Avenues.&#13;
&#13;
2-lb Cans Standard, Hand-Packed Tomatoes, Per Can 	– 9c&#13;
Extra Fancy Grade, Maine Corn, Per can 	– 20c&#13;
Maxwell House Coffee, 1-lb. can 	– 40c&#13;
Export Soap, Per Cake 	– 5c&#13;
Swifts’ Premium Hams, Per lb. 	– 48c.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Try a Herald want ad. – It pays.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Vulcanite shingles&#13;
&#13;
Just Lay Them Down and Nail – That’s All There is To It.&#13;
&#13;
 The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air – rain, sleet, etc. from forcing its way through the roof.&#13;
 The Shoulder of Protection is also the Self-Spacing Device. Makes laying easy and rapid – thus saving time and money.&#13;
 These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red or Green Crushed Slate. Each rain washes away the accumulated dust – reviving perpetually the original rich colors.&#13;
 Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered – because they are fire-resisting.&#13;
 Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the cost free of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.&#13;
&#13;
Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
A 25c Want Ad in The Herald will Rent Your House For You.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Full line Columbia Phonographs.&#13;
&#13;
Prices from $50 to $300.  Terms To Suit Yourself.&#13;
The most complete line of Records in the city.&#13;
Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins. &#13;
&#13;
Prices right&#13;
H. L. Gibson.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
PAGE 4.  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1920.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
IN AND ABOUT THE CITY - Little Happenings. Mention of Matters in Brief. Personal Items of Interest.&#13;
&#13;
Summary of the Floating Small Talks Succinctly Arranged for Herald Headers.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Hon. Forrest Lake returned last evening from Tallahassee&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Hon. Eph Brown, of the Ft. Christmas section, was in the city today.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brumley of Chulota, were in Sanford Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Miss Norma Herndon is at home for Armistice day from Stetson.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
E. A. Niemyer and Rodney Synder, prominent business men of Kissimmee were here today.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H. Clay Stanford of Kissimmee, are among the prominent visitors to the city today.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Lieut. Bivens and a friend are the guests of Mr., and Mrs. B. W. Herndon at the Seminole.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Judge and Mrs. E. F. Housholder, Master Carlyle Housholder and Mrs. Julius Schlitz were in DeLand Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Mrs. Terhune, the sister of Mrs. F. F Dutton came last evening to be with Mrs. Dutton for some time.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Master Billy Thigpen, who has been ill at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Morton Thigpen, is much better.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Mrs. Pearle, Mrs. Frank Jones, Miss Jeanette Lawson and Messrs. Davis and Gregory, of Kissimmee, were in the city today.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Cal McCaughn, of Orlando, are in the city today visiting friends. Mr. McCaughn is the proprietor of a cafeteria in Orlando and Mrs. McCaughn was formerly Miss Maude Alice Wagner of this city and both of them have many friends in Sanford.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
The Ball Hardware Company, known among sportsmen as the “Winchester Store” is making great preparations for the opening of the hunting season, which opens November 20th. A complete line of everything for the sportsman and hunter is carried and you are invited to call when in need of hunting supplies or fishing tackle. They handle only the best recognized brands and can fill your wants in these lines.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
BRIDGE&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. G. D. Bishop was hostess of the initial meeting of a new bridge club Wednesday afternoon, but owning to the illness of two of the members no definite plans were made. &#13;
The home on Park avenue was tastefully decorated in yellow daisies and bridge was played at two tables.&#13;
 Mrs. McCuller won the prize for the high score which was a lovely collar and cuff. At the conclusion of the game a salad course was served.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WEDNESDAY’S ARRIVALS AT THE VALDEZ.&#13;
&#13;
D. A. Read, Tampa; S. D.  Blazer, Nocatee, Fla.; E. J. Bombey, Tampa; C. A. Lindbled, Chetek, Wis.; Staff Sergt. Jack Smith, Carlstrom Field, Lt. D. O. Bivins, Carlstrom Field; E. H. Raife,, Jacksonville; G. C. Miller, Kenanville, Fla; Geo. W. Lang, Chulota, Fla.; C. W. Giddend and Wife, Tampa; M. Gillen, Jacksonville; Jas. A. Shrunk, Jacksonville; E. S. Kassai, Atlanta; E. W. Ellis, Ocala; Geo. H. Kraus and Wife, Cleveland; F. M. Chaffee, DeLand; J. S. Nesbit, Jacksonville; G. C. Keller, Frankfort; H. C. Gessor, Jacksonville; Geo. Crews, U. N. Avera, Jacksonville; J. S. Daniel, Mt Dora; Miss Nell Lane, Sleepy Hollow, O.; Miss Elizabeth Adney, Knoxville, Tenn.; Arthur J. Seidle, Rochester, N. Y.; J. P. Hamilton, Charleston, S. C.; J. P. Chazal, Ocala; P. L. Cunningham, Cincinnati; W. R. Jackson, Palatka.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Ad Illustration: a tree on the left side. A man in cowboy gear and woman (sitting side saddle) riding on one horse which is standing on a road. The environment is a forest.&#13;
&#13;
STAR THEATRE TONIGHT – Samuel Goldwyn Presents&#13;
THE BRANDING IRON&#13;
Katherine Newlin Burt. A Reginald Barker Production.&#13;
&#13;
A-5/1 Col.&#13;
--&#13;
STREAK OF LEAN, STREAK OF FAT&#13;
&#13;
SANTA ANNA, Calif., Nov. 11 –&#13;
A bride weighing 725 pounds was brought home by John H. Hamilton, who weighs 155.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
--&#13;
GREENLEAF HOLDS TITLE BILLIARD CHAMP&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 11&#13;
Ralph Greenleaf, of Monmouth, Ill., retained the title of world pocket billiard champion in a contest here today.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
AT THE STAR THEATRE TODAY.&#13;
Special Armistice Day Program&#13;
An All-Star Cast in “THE BRANDING IRON” And “TOPICS OF THE DAY”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
The Logical Treatment “ENERGIZER” For Many Human Ills.&#13;
We hold this to be a truth: - viz: - That Circulation is the BASIC factor of Human Health.&#13;
&#13;
The “Energizer” process will DO MORE benefit to Any Adult’s general condition than any other method known.&#13;
&#13;
COME IN and talk it over.  108 park Ave., Next door to Mobley’s Drug Store.&#13;
&#13;
L. C. Cameron.  Box 399.  Sanford, Fla.  Phone 184.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
LEXINGTON MINUTE MAN SIX.&#13;
United States, Kokomo and Miller Tires and Tubes.&#13;
Up-To-Date Repair Shop.&#13;
COMPLETE LINE OF ACCESSORIES. DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE.&#13;
&#13;
B. &amp; O. Motor Co. &#13;
Distributors for SEMINOLE, LAKE, VOLUSIA, ORANGE AND OSCEOLA COUNTIES.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Buy Meat You Can Eat.&#13;
We carry a choice line at all times.  A Trial Solicited.&#13;
Pure Food Market.&#13;
J. H. Tillis, Prop.   Phone 105    402 Sanford Ave.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SEE URK  FOR EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING.&#13;
Cor. First and Sanford Ave.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
National Madza Lamps.&#13;
25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts.&#13;
20 to 75 Watts in 32 Volts.&#13;
&#13;
Everything Electrical. Expert Installation and Repair Work.&#13;
GILLON &amp; FRY.  Phone 442.  115 Magnolia Ave.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Seed, Our Business.  Honesty, Our Motto.  Purity, Our Watchword.&#13;
The L. Allen Seed Co.&#13;
COME IN AND SEE US (Southern Seed Specialists).&#13;
Welaka bldg.  Sanford, Fla.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Real Estate. I Sell It.&#13;
J. E. Spurling. The Man Who Sells Dirt Cheap.&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Sanford’s Most Popular Hotel – SEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL.&#13;
Under the management of WALTER B. OLSON.&#13;
&#13;
Our specialty – Seminole’s famous $1 Sunday dinner de luxe.&#13;
A la carte service all day.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
We Guarantee All Battery Repairs.&#13;
Every battery repair we make is guaranteed for six months. We are able to do this because in repairing any make of battery we are licensed to use patented features which have made Vesta batteries famous.&#13;
Sanford Battery Service Co.  L. A. Renaud, Prop.  Phone 189.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Ad art – A polar bear and a rubber tire.&#13;
Title - Gillette Tire and Tubes.&#13;
Chilled Rubber Process make them A Bear for Wear.&#13;
&#13;
SMITH BROTHERS.  Expert Repair work.&#13;
--&#13;
Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
ARMY EXHIBIT&#13;
&#13;
An array of German Souvenirs and War Material will be on exhibition all day Armistice Day. Lieut. Bivins, will also be here bringing with him a flying machine from Carlstrom Field to thrill the crowds with some dare-devil stunts. There are so many features connected with this day that it just can’t help being the biggest day in Sanford yet.&#13;
&#13;
ON EXHIBITION.&#13;
&#13;
At our place all the time is one of the nicest arrays of Men’s Clothing and Furnishings, so many nice things in fact, that it would take a whole page to tell you about a part of them. And we are selling all at prices you’ll like.&#13;
&#13;
COME SEE FOR YOUR SELF.&#13;
&#13;
Perkins &amp; Britt.  “The Store That Is Different”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY.&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under which this institution has been managed since the first day the doors were opened.&#13;
&#13;
 That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the constant and gratifying growth in business.&#13;
&#13;
 It is the desire of the officers of the Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals desiring most efficient and responsible banking.&#13;
&#13;
 On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your patronage is invited.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
Is owned, controlled and managed by home people, who are interested in the development and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County.&#13;
&#13;
 With our large resources and strong financial connections, we are in position to assist our customers at all times in the handling of their financial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.&#13;
&#13;
 4 Per Cent Interest Paid.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
FOOD –&#13;
&#13;
 That is prepared clean, cooked and seasoned just right, is hard to find. But we have it – and once you try it you will say, one kind, “The Best.”&#13;
&#13;
Combination Dinner 75c – 12 to 2 – Home Cooking.&#13;
&#13;
Fleetwood &amp; Company.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS – 1c A WORD.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
------END OF THE DOCUMENT--- 11/11/1920&#13;
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on November 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>
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                    <text>PACK * NAVAL MEN _
CROP REPORT BULGE
LEGION
DANCE
WINDS
UP
FOR ORANGES
GIVEN AWARDS
SHOWS SLIGHT GAINS
TO CONTINUE
FOR SERVICE JOYOUS DAY CELEBRATION
OVER LAST YEAR’S CROP
RAIN HINDERED BUT LITTLE
FLORIDA GROWERS WILL CON­ CONGRESSIONAL
INVESTIGA­
TINUE USING THE SAME
TION HELD UP AWARDS
ORANGE HACK
LAST YEARR

Corn, Sweet Potatoes, Peanuts
and Peas Good Crops

ANOTHER REVOLUTION
IN PERU IS STAGED

WASHINGTON, Nov. 12— With
ORLANDO,
Nov.
12— Florida
growers and shippers won a signal the dawn of another Armistice day,
{*7 TU Auk Ii M Pr***.)
Victory over the railroad^ in the hear­ it was announced here yesterday that
LIMA, Nov. 12.—The arrest of ing here Wednesday ajl the issue of thousands of medals and crosses, ac­
companied by letters of commenda­
thirty persons discolsed n Peruvian the bulge pack for cifrus fruits. _
Citrus men were out in large num- tion, hnd been presented to naval ofrevolutionary plot! to nttack Presi­
dent Laquai at a formal dinner, it bers, filling the court house where i fivers with appropriate ceremonies
the hearing was held. They won tRe . the world over,
was disclosed today.
ESTIMATE FOR ORANGES IN
first point by Taking charge of the
This was accomplished by the dlsSEPTEMBER SEEMS
meeting and placing one of their patch of medals and crosses to com­
REINDEER
MEAT
JUSTIFIED
number, L. B. Skinner, of Duqcdin, manding officers on board ship and
WILL BE SHIPPED
ashore with instructions to present
HERE FROM ALASKA in the chair.
GAINESVILLE* Fla., Nov. 1 2 From
that
time
oh
it
was
easy
thefn
yesterday upon telegraphic of
Harvesting qf the state’s field crops
(*7 Tk# AyiocUUd fnu)
sailing.
Jns.
Mcnzius,
freight
traf­
wireless
notification, which wns sent
has .been practically completed with
SEATTLE, Nov. { 12.—Alaskan fic manager of the A. C. L. railway, out in the morning.
*.
the.exception of sweet potatoes and packers are arranging to ship rein­
testified
first.
He
stnted
thnt
the
The
presentation
marked
the cul­
sugar cane. •
‘
i
deer meat to American markets, it bulge pack was responsible for much mination of an exhaustive investiga­
Continued dry weather over most was announced todayT
damaga to shipping in transit, hut he tion by a congressional body into the
of th&lt;* state has enabled farmers to
could give no statistics or exact data. merits of the work of naval commake great headwny in harvesting
The agent of the Pennsylvania rail­ mnndnnts during the wnr, brought
but the same conditions have pre­
road testified as to the damaged con­ about by the refusal of Admiral Sims
vented the normnl growth of such
dition of fruit on the pier At New to accept a medal because, according
late crops as sweet potatoes and cane
York, but could not testify thnt tho y&gt; his statement, the distribution was
and nrc holding back fall farming op­
injury did not result from labor trou­ not made upon the merit of the cases.
erations, turning lnnd, sowing oats
bles, 6r the use of cotton hooks in He alleged that the services of men
and rye, planting truck crops, etc.
UNLESS FORCES ARE THROWN unloading fruit.
who lost their ships during the wnr,
Corn
INTO ARMENIA BOLS WILL
Inspector
Enright
of
the
Illinois
were awarded while those who went
The state’s production of corn, for
SHOOT UP EUROPE.
Central
said
much
fruit
came
in
Chithrough tho fray with unblemished
1920 is the lowest for several years, I
cago in n damaged condition, but ad- records were ignored,
fBr
ThAitacUUd
Frm)
The planted
. . .acreage wns, seven
. . per
. . &gt; GENEVA, Nov. 12.—The immodi- niitted some o fit was due to over- j Roar Admiral Sims’ name ngain
cent under last year and a higher ^ UR• of „„ forc„
th,. Nonr Eaat
loading tho enrs. He also admitted appeared upon the list ns hnving been
percentage than usual of the land In (o prevcnt ^ un|on of tho Bo,she.
that bulge pneked fruit kept better awnrded n D. S. M., but It wns said
com was also growing other crops at ik, wjth tho Turki„h NationflIistfl owjng to better ventilation.
at the navy department thnt tho medthe same time, *peanuts,* velvet beans,' forces
..... ..........
, ,__ . „necessary to prewas declared
Mnny
other
witnesses
testified
nl hnd not been actually forwarded
ptc
l
*
.
. . .
, • vent the annihilation of the Armen- along similar lines, but without ad- to Admiral Sims, ns was done in alHeavy rains ear y In the season inanothcr
, w„
ducing nnything against the conten- most every other ense, due to tho ofterfered with cultivation and pro-1
tion of tho shippers. It wns there- firer’s previous refusal to accept the
vented perfect pollenizalipn, and the J
Lbs.)
(Lbs.)
fort* not a matter of surprise to the’ honor.
•
crop as a whole wns further set bnck 1919 . . 4.200 950
8.990.000 spectators when Air. Mcnzius, speak­
The
navy
crosses
awarded
Rear
by dry weather in the late summer.
1920 . . 4.200 1,100
4.020.000 ing on behalf of the Amcricnn rail­ Admiral Benton O. Docker and Capt.
Yield per acre is estimated nt 13.5
way association, gracefully withdrew RRnymond llashronck, who 'look acUnited States
bushels, compared with 15 bush­
Admiral
Acreage
Yield
Production from the position previously taken by ' tton similar to thnt of
els Inst fenr and a four-year average
the roads and announced he would hns been deposited in the bureau of
(Lbs.)
Lbs.)
of approximately 15 bushels.
780.8 1,889,458,000 recommend to the general committee navigation for such future nction re­
Quality of the crop is 8.1 per cent
o
„
in New York that the bulge pnek be gnrdlng acceptance of the medals ns
j ---- 793.9
1,4(0,444,000;
of normal compared with 87 per ccent
e n t,1,1”®
”
00
retained. As that wns a complete the officers concerned might wish to
last year and n four-year average o f :
Peanuts
»
withdrawal from the positions taken take, it wns explained nt the dopnrt87.5H.
*
| The Floridn situation on peanuts j by the representatives of the road, ment.
. .. • *
It is estimated thnt about 227,000 harvested for grain cannot bo stated and appeared to bo acquiesced in by | The list of nwnrds, ns findlly apbushels from the 1919 crop wns still ( with certainty before the December' ropresenta(ives present, the meeting proved, showed n considerable inon the farms on Nov* 1, something report date.
ended with good feeling all around. crease over the list published before
less than two per cent, of thnt year’s
The late runner peanut will fur­
the congressional investigation.
nish a bigger percontngo of the total MBS. McSWINEY
production.
It wns shown thnt nftcr the matApproximately R,000 acres of corn than usual and the disposition of this
WILL _COME
TO AMERICA
„
ter
wns referred hack to the bonnl
wns cut for silage this yenr, with an.corp is uncertain yet.
.
TO TESTIFY AT, COURT beaded by Rtar Admiral Austin M.
average yield, of four tons to the
Early ncrenge estimates itrr nppar- i
Knight,
for reconsideration many
.
......*i.i, ....
(Br th*
r
acre.
[ ently good, hut intcrplnnted acreage
WASHINGTON
Nov.
12._The
meritorious
rises were discovered
1,
Production estimate of corn for was larger thnn usual and the per-!
committee
of
one
hundred
investigat*hut
hnd
not
been discovered in the
grain for Floridn and the United rentage for grain and yields will
ing
the
Irish
question
announced
the
original
list.
For
this renson, it was
need somti revision.
States arc as follows:
acceptance
of
the
offer
of
Mrs.
Mur"ai‘L
1,951
medals
and 662 letters of
Florida
The quality of nuts harvested is
lei
MacSwiney,
wife
of
the
late.
Lord
commendation
were
awarded yesterAcreage Yield Production 92 per cent of normal with 90 per
Mayor
of
Cork,
to
come
to
the
United
,Iny»
instead
of
l
’
fd
mednln nnd 301
(But.) I cent last yenr and n four-year aver­
(Bus.)
States
to
testify
at
hearings.
letters,
ns
was
originally
announred.
12.500.000 age of 91 per cent.
1919 ___ 840,000
15.0
16.544.000
1920 ___ 781,000
13.5
Production estimates, based or\ nil
United States
dqta obtainable nt this time, nre as
Acrenge Yield Production follows for Florida and the United
(Bus.)
States:
(Bus.)
1919 ..102,075,000 28.0 2,917,450.000
Florida
1920 . . 103,048)000 30.9 3,199,120,000
Acreage Yield Production
Sweet Potatoes
(Bus.)
(Bus.)
TO INCREASED
PRODUCTION NATIONAL COAL ASSOCIATION
Sweet potato harvesting is pro­ 1919 . . . 126,000 27.0
3.402.000
BUT WELCOME IMPROVED /
NOT IN FAVOR OF GOV­
gressing rapidly. Yields from early 1920 . . . 123,000 28.0
3.444.000
METHODS.
ERNMENT CONTROL
plantings were good, but the late
Uaited States
acrenge, which is large, is showing
(Br Tk* AumIi M Pm*.)
IB* Th* Aiwclitid IV... I
Acreage Yield Production
ATLANTIC
CITY, Nov. 11.—“No
the effects of too much dry weather.
WASHINGTON,
Nov.
12.—Samuel
i
(Bus.)
(Bus.)
The crop as n whole will show 1919 — 1*251,400 26.6 33.263.000 Gompcrs, president of the American emergency exists in the bituminous
light yields with an unusually high 1920 ...1,221,400 29.6 37.483.000 Federation of Labor, declared before c,°aI industry colling for federal conthc industrial research conference^
mines," Vice-President Morpercentage of medium sized market­
Sorghum for Syrup
that organized labor welcomes whnt- .'*ow of National Cool Association,
able stock.
.
The acreage In Florida is small nnd
• Quality Is slightly above last year
ever assistance research and science declared in an address. He said con­
has
changed
very
little
•
from
last
.90 per cent of normal.can offer to modern industry. He ditions causing consumers trouble in
year.
It is estimated that 45 per cent of
said labor waa not opposed to in­ obtaining coal and speculative prices
•
The
crop
was
grown
under
gener­
this year’s crop was grown for mar­
creased production or Improved meth­ only passing phase of the war read­
ally favorable conditions and shown
ket, about 1,700,000 bushels.
ods but Is rightly auspicious of tho justment nnd the remedy lies in an
Last year 44 per cent, 1,800,000 an average yield of 142 gallons of changes introduced without explana­ improved transportation facilities and
syrup per acre.
*
•
bushels, was grown for market.
tion and whose effect upon their wel­ not regulation.
Florida,
for
the
past
two
years
has
Production for Florida and the
fare was not considered.
ANNUAL RED CROSS MEETING
United States is estimated ns follows: msde the highest yield per acre of
sorghum of any state in the Union.
Florida
The annual Red Cross meeting and
Production ia estimated as follows SPUDS THAT SOLD IN
Acreage Yield
Production
election
of officers will be held at
1918
FOR
15.50
NOW
for Florida and the United States:
„
(Bus.)
(Bus.)
BRING BUT 50 CENTS the Woman’s Club Monday night, at
Florida
»
1900'___ 41,00100 p 4,100,000
7:36. Members arc earnestly request­
Acreage Yield Production . MACON, Ga., Nov. 12.—Sweet po­ ed to attend this meeting. The Home
1020 ___ 40.00
05
3,800,000
(Gala.)
(Gals.)
•
United States
tatoes sold today on the atrefjs of Service Section under the supervis­
Acreage Yield
Production ioif -...:r eoo iso
78.000 Macon a t 50c per bushel, having drop­ ion of Miss Virginia Smith is doing
85.000 ped far below any price quoted since a splendid work In Seminote county
(Bus.)
(Bus.)
1920 .......... 600 142 |
1910 ...1,029,000 100.7 103.879.000
United 8tatcs
1914 and to a mark below which the and as long as funds arc obtainable
Acreage Yield Production price has seldom ever gone.
1020 ...1,022,000 103.4 105.670.000
will continue to render valuable ser­
Tobacco
1
(Gals.)
(Gals.)
An unusually large crop, together vice. It co-operates with the Wom­
With approximately the same- acre­ 1919 ........... 386,200 86.3 33.312.000 with the general decline In prices of an’s Club nnd the churches. Gives
age aa for last year, Florida tobacco 1920 ........... 401,600 03.1 37.402.000 farm products, is given as the reason. aid to the needy, in sickness nnd in
growers have produced about 10 per
Field Peas
Iri 1918 the same grade of potatoes poverty and nssists ex-service jnen
cent more tobacco.
• It in estimated that 80 per cent of retailed here for as high as $5.50 per in securing emnloyment.
Adjust­
Some excellent yields have been the unuAl acreage for grain has been bushel.
ment of delayed allottments nnd in­
made with an average for the state of harvested. Yields arc generally low
surance is also an important feature
L100 pounds, compared with 050 averaging 72 per cent of normal.
Remember that the Herald Print­ of the Home Service Section of the
pounds last year and) a four-y(*ar .
,
• Citrus
:
ing Co., has a stationery and ofMce Red Cros*. The fourth Red Cross
average of about 1,000 pounds.
Present* conditions do not Justify supply department that is ready to roll call, under the direction of Dr.
The quality of the crop is 96 per any change from September pre­ supply oil your needs in the station­
S. W. .Walker, chairman, is under
cent of normal compared with 91 per liminary estimates of production. ery nnd supply line. Postcards of all
way. A re-newai of membership
cent
•nt last year, and a four-year aver- Condition of oranges a n £ grk’pefruit kinds shewing Florida and local
means the continuation of helpful ser­
*ke of 04
9- per cent.
is off one point, being 90 per cent hnd scenes and everything thnt you may vice to our community. Remember
Florida
• •
78 per cent compared with 91 per cent want in the picture postcard line, the annual meeting on Monday night,
Acreage Yield
Production and 79 per cent a month ago.
wholesale nnd retail.
November 15th at 7:201

SILAGE CROP HEAVY

I

I

Bolsheviks Threaten
Another General War

Organized Labor
No Cause Federal
Is Not Opposed
Control of Coal

•J

.-.V. V

*» ' . i

.

•

Vv-i

PROHIBITION
OFFICERS TO
TIGHTEN UP

Tournament and Dance Were
Successfully Carried Ont

■m

J

(Br Tk* Ai.xut.d
V.l
. WASHINGTON, Nov. 12.-Prohihition enforcement officers throughout
sm
the country wero instructed today to
?! i
prevent the sale of malt and hops in
tho hope of tightening the ban on BALL GAME HAD TO BE POST­
home brewing, but details of the or­
PONED ON ACCOUNT
der arc lacking.
OF THE RAIN
SAVING MONEY
After the parade yesterday the
PART OF SCHOOL
rain
came down with a steady down­
EDUCATION
pour and put the kibosh on those
who wanted to eat on the lake front
. (B r Th* A u m U M P r»», )
WASHINGTON, D. C-, Nov. 12.— nt a later hour nlthough nfany hun­
The treasury department officials j'dreds v,ere served before the rain
conferring with educators today o n ; c^a*od them off. The boys would
plans to establish the principle of sav- havc ,na,i0 n nicc "um on the cat*
ing and investment of money as a despite the fact that they were only
compulsory pnrt of the American charging twenty-five cents for a real
good dinner. After the feed the tourpublic school curriculum.
I nament was the first on the program
nnd not ctcn the rain kept the boys
from riding nnd they pulled off *
first class riding tournnmont in tho
rain nnd mnny watched to see them
ride without the downpour interfer­
ing in any way with either tho parti­
ADMISSION INTO THE LEAGUE cipants or the spectators.
OF NATIONS AND WILL FIGHT
The Yollowlng prizes were awarded
'gas
AGAINST IT.
to the tournament riders:
First prize to, Eddlo Pell, of Os­
1
(Br Tk* AnocUUd Pr**&lt;)
teen.
PARIS, Nov. 12.—The French gov­
Second prize to David Self of Chtiernment unalterably opposes the ad­
luota.
mission of Germany to the League of
Third prize to Sam Brooks of Os­
Nations, it was stated nt the foreign
teen.
office. Some “drastic action” would
Fourth prize to Barney Beck, of
be the consequence if the league vot­
Sanford.
______
ed
to admit Germany, it intimated to­
Sims,
In
the
hurdle
races
Henry
Camer. L
day.
on, of Sanford, won the first prizo
- i:i
and William Kilbee, of Geneva, won
FOREIGN DEMANDS
the second prize nnd George Lewis, of
MADE COAL SCARCE
Sanford,
won the third prize.
IN UNITED STATES
The rnlnlhnd fallen to such'a do­
(B r Tk* A m m U M F n u .)
gree that th
the hall parks were thought
WASHINGTON, Nov. 12. — The too WPt | 0 |,|ny nn(j there wns nothing
foreign demand for coal was an im­ doing between the army and navy
portant factor for the high domestic and it J^ still a mooted question as to
coal prices along the Atlantic Sen- ■who won the wnr. However, It ‘ Is
honrd but only minor factor In the hoped at some future date to stago1
-f.tf
creation of the high prices for the this grent spectacular game between
whole country, the Interstate Com­ (hr army anil navy at Holden Park.
merce Commission declared in a re­
Last night nt the court house tho
port to the icnate today.
Legion put on one of tho finest danc­
es thnt hns ever been staged in Sail.ya
1IAITA PRESIDENT
ford nnd this is given in full in tho
DISPROVES CHARGES
'society columns of this issue.
Mi
AGAINST MARINES
And when “taps" came last night
liv the clock nn d the orchest rn had
'Ey Th* Aitofiat»4 Troti)
PORTAU PRINCE. Haiti, Nov. 12. put up their instruments n tired nnd
—The president of Haiti testifying sleepy nrtd well satisfied crowd of
before the Naval Board of inquiry clc- I-cgion boys and their friends said,
•
cliired he had no official know ledge "benucoup* 'nnd “finis.”
of the charge of indiscriminate killing
»
of natives by the United States ma­ WILL PROBE
SOLUTION OF •
rines, ndding “they have been accus­
BOMB THROWING
ed by public clamor."
sjE
COFFEE TO COST
I
Tk. A*f*ci*u4 p « m)
MORE NEXT YFAR
NEW YORK, Nov. 42.—The dis, •
■trict attorney plans to investigate th*
ST. LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 12.—An ad- New York World’s account of the "sovnnee in tho price of coffee next yenr lutlon” of (he Wall Street bomb eswns indicated by present conditions,1plosion, the newspaper claiming it
according to T. Laggaard Menezes, of . wus done by workmen seeking th*
Sao Paulo, Brazil, who addressed the revenge on the nllcgel building trust.
opening session of the 10th nnnual |
------------------------’(invention of the National Coffee ALBERT DORNER I1IGGE8T
Roasters’ Association vJethrPsUny.
j BEGGAR IN SEMINOLE COUNTY
Labor, high living conditions and
-------frosts combined to materially curtail1 Albert Dorner is the biggest and
production this year, he said, and. the best beggar in Seminole county,
next year’s crop was expected to Yesterday he made up as a wooden
■ m
show a further shrinkage. . '
* j legged beggar and with nn iron pot
More than half of the coffee con- over whicJ&amp;A-wtrf* screen had been
•*!
sumed In the United States comes Jsoldered he implo
he public to
from Brazil, according to delegates at drop their money in th&lt;
t for the
the convention.
benefit of the county home. Albert
has a big heart in his manly bosom
THINKS FLORIDA IS JUST RIGHTi*n&lt;* *ntcn&lt;J* to’get up several other
stunts to raise money for a
big
E. M. Jackson was In the city yes- Christmas tree at the county home,
1
tenlny advancing the Sparks Big j On December 4th he will have •
Shows that will show here on Tues-, wrestling match and glove contest
day, November 23rd. Mr. Jnckson is j and several other stunts at Holden
carried away with Florida and having j Park fo» the- siyne purpq^o. Yestertravelled in every state in the union day ho entertained the crowd
c
’ on
he is a Judge of country. He stated First street with his wooden legged ■ufj|V ,
in the Herald office yesterdny that he antics' and drove his Ford car oh
would spme day in the near future the street with one leg, standing on
1
(quit trooping nnd come to Florida to the back of the seat and doing all
B r
\
live for the rest of his life. He said kinds of hair raising stunts.
He
.
;V
Florida had it .al) over California In ‘ wore out one of his legs and bllstarevery way and that no country hi the ed his hnndj hut he says it wns worth
world could touch this state for all it nnd he managed to collect $24.99
*•3M* o r
year round climate nnd “everything.” for the county home and the fund ia
now in the bank waiting for more to
The Daily Herald subscription list follow.
.
Is growing so rapidly thnt new car­
rier bpyiLare necessary
t \
r each’Week.
______If I Buy your post cards a t tho Herald
|
!
you do not get your paper promptly«office. Beautiful vi«w«. i&lt;* each.
phone 481.
•
! _
--------------------------Try a Herald Want Ad__Tt

THE PRIZE WINNERS

\

France Refuses
Germany to League

*

i

m

1
§

.

�O’- *.• •’

•*rt in '-="1 ,

■ifr.TAK
r-v\i*^1lV^

r

r^*-**^*
THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD,

-Y Friendly - Assistance

•

and worth while advice—this is part
of the constructive serice which this
bank renders.

7rM\

m

Sr-v
„ K i- C■*•„

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

Hap-.
THE NEW-PAINT SMILE
v
|
,
• M
You'll wear one too If we
repaint your auto. Why go
around with a dim. dull, oldlooking car when for a few
dollars wo will paint and
finish it like new? It's good
sense nlsp to keep a fresh
coat of paint on your car—
adds to its value if you want
to sell it or trade it in.

tfUtf*

-VC®
'

REHER
BROS.
Anlo Painting

Phone 1 1 2

Sanford Heights

R f-

Wu . • ■
W F *' •

1

The Whole World Wants U
B u tter-N u t, the perfect bread, crisp, dainty,
delicious, w holesom e.
•
N o bread so good was ever baked. N o better
bread can be baked.

The NEW

B

utter

-N u t B r e a d

has nil the quality of the old Rbtlrr-Nut; wr could
1 not improve that.
Itut in nddition we’ve perfected a new mixing
process which enables us to turn out a lighter,
daintier loaf than ever.
Get n lcvnf today, for Butter-Nut is its own best
advocate. At all good gr ocers. The genuine bears
the Butter-Nut label.
MILLER'S jBAKERY

r - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sanford Milk Depot
at City Market

|

r-ii-

(Continued from pago one)
Hyman, Mary Gnrbley, Thelma GnrbCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
Cash must accompany order. Ten
ley, Rebecca Stevens, Capneta Bnrcents extra if charged.
RATES
ber, Irene McGagnon nnd Ruby Riv­
Advertising In this column in which
ers. ’
’ *
the address of the advertiser is not
Minimum Charge for any one
The Golf Refining enr driven by
given but which refers you to Post­
A d .----- . . . . _____
,.25&lt;
John Smith, accompanied by Donald
office Box Number or Care of the
One Time, per word___ ____lc
Smith, dressed as sailors and the car
Herald MUST be answered accord­
Three Times,, per word_____ 2c
ingly. PleaBe do not ask us for the
being beautiful in white and yellow
Six Times- per w o r d - ....__ 3c
names of advertisers advertising in
nnd upon a pedestal wns a largo can­
this way. Usually we do not know
non and the guard of honor wns lit­
Over Six Times, l*2c per word * who they are, nnd If we do we are not
per iuue.
expected to tell you.
tle Wilson Smith nnd Martha Fltta
all dressed in white.
' ,
The B. &amp; 0. Garage had a patriotic
WANTED
WOOD AND POSTS sold and deliv­
car all done In red, white nnd blue i\VA&gt;JTE]
ered on hard road, within one mile
ANTED—For cash, an old build­
showing the Lexington Una.
ing for ita lumber. Address with of town. See me.—W. V. Dunn.
There were a number of other enrs location and price where it stands.
186-6tp
and Goats in the parade that should If you hnve one, write 0. Goodeile,
FOR
SALE-1
ft
H.
P.
and
2ft
H. P.
have special mention but they were Orlando, Fla.
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
186-3tp
so numerous and the parade was
in perfect condition.—Herald Print­
•
tf
spread over so much territory and WANTED-^-A'n elderly lady, single ing Co.
preferred, to attend invalid lady.
We have jusc received a line of
broke up after the memorial address
p h o n e e e
185-Gtp silverware and caaseroles:—A. Kanthat It was difficult to get them all. Address, 112 Elm Ave.
213-15 Sanford Ave.
Phone
Buy your post cards at the Herald ner,
The' parade stopped nt Central
560.
'
166-tfc
Park after goihg over the principal office.
PLANTS FOR SALE—Cabbage, On­
streets of the city and centered around WANTED—Your old batteries to re­ ions, beets, lettuce and cauliflow­
the park where Capt George G. Her­
build. Let us make your starting er.
Yellow aclf-blcachlng celery,
ring in n few words paid n beautiful and lighting a pleasure. We arc au­ guaranteed French imported seed,
tribute to the boys who had given thorized "EXIDE” dealers and have bought from Chase &amp; Co., write for
Quick Lunch
their lives for their country, at the
Battery for all makes automobiles. prices. State quantity wanted.—W.
conclusion of which n special guard j “EXIDE, the Giant that lives in a C. P o st
*173-60tc
Coffee 5c SandwichcH 10c
of honor composed of Virgil Smith box.'*—Ray Bros. Phone 648, old
FOR SALE—Very cheap, one 7-pas­
Pies, home made 10c cut
of the army, and Morris Spencer of Ford Garage.
179-tfc
senger automobile in good shape.
Best Coffee in Sanford
the nnvy, took the wrenth and, laid it
—Get your Scratch Pads fronTThe Apply B. &amp; 0. Motor Co.
185-Ctc
over the monument that was erected Herald—by the pound—16c.
for the soldier dead at the close of WANTED—Brick and cement work, FOR SALE—Five roota. , cottage,
Princess Theatre Bldg.
the war. As the band played the
chimneys, Hues, piers, cement . large yard for vegetable garden,
Star Spangled Banner tho soldiers floors, sidewalks. — Aj L. Ray, 206 various fruii trees, also two separate
nnd sailors stood at nttentlon- nnd Park Ave.
173-30tp fives acre farm lnnd; 5 gallon hot
the color gunrd composed of Robert WANTED—By November 15, a 4 to 6 water heater. P. O. Box 117, Owner.
184-Gtp
Deahe of the nnvy nnd R. 0. Weeks
room house o r ' apartments, unfur­
Sec our line of electrical lamps.—
of the army nnd Roy Chittendon of nished or partly furnished. Best of
On the first of each month
references given. Will rent hy the A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Avenue.
the mnrinos lowered the colors mak­ year.
Address at once, “Cottage,” in Phone 550.
your rent is due.
Why gWe
166-tfc
ing a beautiful ceremony in honor of WANTED—PtipiU, Violin and Piano.
other people your money. Buy
New line of Congoleums and Art
the dead arid a most fitting close of
Squares.—A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford
—Ruby Roy, -206 Park Ave.
you a home and each month
the pnradc.
' 166-tfc
________________________ 175-20t-p Ave. Phone 550.
instead of paying out rent
Chns. Henry nnd C. M. Hnnd neted
SALE—lf t H. P. and 2ft H. P.
money, pay on a home that Is
Buy your post cards at tho Herald FOR
ns marshals of the day, being mount­ office.
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
yours.
Beautiful views, lc each.
ed on fiery steeds and they kept the WANTED TO BENT—HOUSE OR in perfect condition.—Herald Print­
Beautiful homes on Park,
ing Co. .
.____________ tf
line of march open and looked after
APARTMENT OF 4 TO 6 ROOMS,
Oak,
Magnolia, Palmetto and
Special reduction on Georgette Silk
the various floats and also acted as FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED.
Myrtle
avenues,
Sanford
and cotton shirt waists.—A. Kanner,
the ndvnnce gunrd for the toumn- WILL RENT BY YEAH. ADDRESS 213-215
Sanford
Ave.
Phone
550.
Heights.
Building
lots,
in any
CARE OF THE
nient riders who were nil ready for “APARTMENT”
HERALD.______________________ U
location.
/
the big tournnment rnces of this af­ FOR SALE—l f t II. P. and 2ft H. P.
ternoon and were mounted on their
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
fleet ponies nnd enrried their lances. in perfect condition.—Herald Print­
tf
As we go to press tho thousands ing Co.
“The Beal Estate Man”
of visitors arc eating that famous 25c WANT ED—Two rooms ?or light
«
lot n,M s u m 1
housekeeping with private family.
“chow” on Che lake front nnd the Le­
gion boys nre looking after their com­ Address K. K. J., enre Herald.
fort and while it is raining it looks __________________________187-3tp
ns though they will be nble to pull
F o r Re NT
the mnny stunts that are on the pro­ FOR RENT—One nicely furnished
gram for the afternoon.
r»om, 320 Oak Ave. Phone 308-J.
As Good os the Best
The big dance will lie held in the
187-tfc
Daily Service
Phone 66
court house tonight being n costume
RENT or for snlo, Inrgc ware­
dance nnd every one is invited. J azz TOhouse
with railroad siding.—Chaa.
orchestra will furnish the music nnd Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co.
the floor is one of the best in the ______________:____________l$6-tfc
FURNISHED BOOMS—Two furnish
• tnte.
ed bed rooms, inquire 311 Park
The army flont was good, showing
Avenue.
157'tfc
a pup tent nnd nil the equipment of
FOR RENT—Furnished front room,
the soldier in the field nnd Ned Chit184-3tc
•218 Elm.
tendon in heavy marching order stood
FOR RENT—Two or three furnished
W althall &amp; E slridge, Props.
guard on the float.
.
housekeeping
rooms.
P.
O.
Box
The school children, with the tench184-Otp
ers lending the various grades of the 117, Owner.
V V e la k a B u ild in g
primary nnd grammar schools whs n FO RRENT- Six unfurnished rooms,
bath and hall, over Red Front
fine display of the cducntinnnl insti­
tutions of the city nnd if the sight Store on Ninth street, fourth hlock
lRG-3tp
wns old to the Sanford people it wns enst of depot. Box 81.
certainly novel to the visitors nnd
LOST
they were loud in their praises of the
LOST—Western Union branch de­
fine looking body of children.
posit book. Finder please return
Wo nre fdrtunnto to hnve a real
colonel here in the person of Col. to Western Union office.—J. P. Hall,
180-tfc
George W. Knight nnd he wns in Mgr.
chnrge of the pnrade with Major
MISCELLANEOUS
Sanford,
Florida
Rnlph Stevens and Post Commnnder ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week,
Donnld Whitcomb of tho Cafnpboll109 Enst First street, over Union
l^ossing Post ns his staff. And we Phnrmncy.
_____
163-tfc
would remark that Donnld Whitcomb CARPETS nnd rugs washed right on
hnB had some job on his shoulflcrs to
the floor, with Hamilton Beach
&gt;
engineer this great day.
Electric Carpet Washer. Kills all
One of the features of the pnradc moth and disease germs. Make your
and one that few here had ever seen floor coverings absolutely sanitary.
4 •
, ,
___ „
wns the Germnn prisoner stunt pull­ J-Electrlc Carpet Washer, Sanford.
ed by the boys. Tom Meredith was
. „
186-Gtp
dressed up in true German army d ix ie F u r n it u r e co ., 321 san ­ GENERAL MACHINE ANI) BOIL­
style and marked with the W. P. sign
ford avenue, pay cash for furniturg, ER WORK RRA88 CASTINGS
and wan in the parade under guard of bedsteads, chairs, etc. What have
GAS ENGINE. REPAIRS
the M. P. in the person of Jim Iluff. you T
.
174-30tc
ACTBYLENE CUTTING AND
We don’t know whether Jim liked his BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run
WELDING
job of M. P. or Tom liked Tils one of
your battery until she is entirely
W. P. but at any rate they were dead. The battery Is the costliest ac­ Special machine for turning Auto
both there with tho goods.
cessory to your car. We re-charge Crank Shafts and Crank Pins to
within .0005 accuracy.
• .
For some time the Masonic fra­ and re-build all makes of batteries.
.
IRRIGATION
SUPPLIES
ternity of Wnuchula has been con­ -•-Ray Bros. Phone 648, old Ford
PULLEYS and SHAFTINGS
179-tfc
templating building a new home, and Garage.
QOUND
AND SQUARE IRON
at the last communication of the ___________FOR 8ALE
.
lodge commKtces were appointed to
FOR SALE—Shasto daisies, $1 per ~ The- Euhtis Board of Trade is plan­
secure plans and to get the abstract
dozen. English Shamrock Oxaiys ning the construction of a bungalow
for the oroperty owned by thq^«h^e'
0c per do*en. Ring 207-W. 183-12tc colony as its solution of the housing
up tc-date.
Special reduction in men's and la­ problem. It is proposed to construct
dies*
W. L, Douglas shoes.—A. Kan­ a number of three-room bungalows.
Office supplies a t the Flerald.
ner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 650. Organization of a corporation to fi-|
From, the Foundation
__________________________ 166-tfc nance 'the project is planned.
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished large
light housekeeping rooms.—Mrs.
t&lt;? the Roof
Will Open Season 1920-21 on
Riddling, 205 Oak ave. Eagle Hall.
•
186-6tc

]| First N ational Bank j|

■*I 1*, " wmi-

,

SALES

On November 1 we secured the output of the IMNEIIUItST DAIRY
and now have the entire output of both the KOSEI.ANR and R. L. GAR­
RISON DAIRIES. This gives us an opportunity to render first class ser­
vice and, by eliminating all unnecessary overhead expense by combining
under one distributor, will enable us to give real service at a minimum
cost. There will be no advance in the price of any dairy product. The
regular morning and rrrning delivery will he continued as before the
merger, and in addition we will make auto deliveries at all houhi of the
day from the store, where the milk and cream I* kept in our cold storage
plant.
Patrons will please co-operate-with deliverymen by putting out botflea and tickets, so as not to cause a delay. Where there are no bottles or
tickets there will be no milk delivered—this being the only way we cab
serve you promptly and efficiently.
Tickets can be secured at the store or from the delivery man.
The patronage accorded us during the past week has far exceeded
our most sanguine expectations and we earnestly ask a continuance.

CITY M ARK ET
Walthall &amp; Estridge
WHERE YOU GET GOO D THINGS TO EAT

.

co.

Cozy Cafe

December 1st

Salt Mullet
Mullet Ree
Fat Mackerel
Nice
Fryers
and
Hens

All Good
and
/
Churn Gold Olio
Clover Hill Butter

Sanford
Machine &amp; Foundry
Company

FRANKLIN CARS |

‘•WE GIVE YOU SERVICE
—ASK ANYBODY”

Kelly-Springfield Tires.

CITY MARKET
Specials For Today
Choice
Western and Florida
M eats

Veal, P ork , M utton,
. Sausage

EVERYTHING

\

for

THE BUILDER

Thanksgiving Day
Turkey Dinner

»

W IG H T T IR E CO.
•

Lord's Purity Water

CITY MARKET

CHULUOTA INN

CHANDLER CARS

E. F. LANE

ii

Diamond Tires.

1

■■nH i

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Re

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11. 1120

BRYAN

i/ •

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i

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PARTS ACCESSORIES

*i
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ARMISTICE DAY 8UCCES8
DESPITE LOWERING CLOUDS
HUNDREDS OF VISITORS

i: Co-Operation Accommodation
P i:, •

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"5 / / K | . *

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THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD,

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1920

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J
4,

! Miss Marion Cary-Elwes pouring cof­
fee and n number of her near friends
assisting in the sendng. Exquisite
roses and asparagus fern were used
ez*\
'f t
with beautiful effect in the large
m i
rooms at the home, nnd all attending
enjoyed this happy, informal gather­
ing.
No formal invitations w e re issued,
-MISS KATHRYN WILKEY, Editor.
Phope J28
only
the personal message given /to V
/
Ynnin-Ynma;
Mr.
Hnwkins
Connelly,
friends
who could be rooched in this
SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR THE
Indian;
Mr.
Hines,
Gypsy.
way.
- WEEK.
Much merriment attended the cut­
Among the number who were not in
l^ridiy—
costume were:
ting of the wedding cake by the bride,
T. N. T. with Mrs. Reginald Holly.
Misses Helen Peck, Norrnn Hern, Miss Grace Warlow receiving the
Saturday—
don, Bryan, Fox, Eddie, Ethel Henry, Coveted ring, Miss Lucy Gage the
Cedllan Muale Club at the Studio Smyth, Flasher, Morrison, Bond and dime, while the thimble, unfortunate­
of Mrs: Frances S. Munson at 3 Wyma.
ly exposed to view in slicing, was
tiic l.
'O’clock.
Roy Chittenden, Ned Chittenden, disavowed by all the gjrls. An eager
a
Mr. Muro, Mr. "Schulz, Me. McGlau- group waited the throwing of the
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Chamberlain chin, Walter Connelly, Mr. Fox, Mr. bride's bouquet from high on the
bare as their house guesta, Mr. and Yowcll, Dr. Stevens, Dick Brown, Mr. Btair-casc, Miss Ella Siemens cap­
[i£f
Mrs. Schulte, of Daytona Beach.
Mahoney, Mr. Ogilvle, Mr. Whitner, turing this prize.
Mr. Chase, Tracey McCullcr, Sir.
Early ti) the nftemoon Mr. nnd
Mrs. George H. Bice returned from Whitcome, Mr. Eddie, Mr. Pearmsn, Mrs. Phillips slipped away by auto,
W orcester, Mass., last evening to jMr J|m 1!lg(t|niIi Mr. French, Mr. i their destination and length of ab­
a
mptnd the winter with her daughter, Rrandon# Mr. ThrcBhcr| Dr. Howard, sence unknown.
S n . A. R. Key. Coming with her j j re Mobley, Mrs. Keclor, Judge and
Especially becoming was the bride’s
m Mr »"&lt;* Mrs- Fred Chamberlain M„ Hous,holder, Col and Mrs. dainty gown of white lace and net,
l&amp; f m a n n .
* ,
, ’ - Knight, Dr. nnd Mrs. Puleston, Mr. bead trimmed, over white satin, with
and Mrs. Henry, Mr. Ball, Mr. nnd white lace hat and exquisite shower
v Miss Helen Peck and Miss ^ th c l Mrs.llake, Mr. nnd Mrs. Watson, Mr. bouquet Of whiti roses. Her travel­
Henry came home for the Armistice Schulte, Mr. and Mrs. Key, Mr. and ing suit was an Imported costume of
1ST: LARGE CAPITAL AND WORKING RESERVE.
day holiday , from the Florida - State Mrs. Holly, Mr. and Mrs. Loucks, dark blue with leather trimming and
i
CbUege: '
Mr. nnd Mrs. Chamberlain, Mr. and n becoming blue hat to match.
2ND: TRAINED MEN IN CHARGE—MEN OF SEVERAL YEARS EX­
j
Mrs. McCuller, Mrs. Peck, Mr. and Mrs
The matron of honor and bride's
PERIENCE.
Miss Nell Lane and Miss Elizabeth Ijconardl, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Betts, Mr. maid both woro white lace gowns and
3RD: THE CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBLIC, WHICH IS PROVEN BY
Audney, of DeLahd, are the guests nnd Mrs. Archie Betts, Mr. nnd Mrs. carried pink roses.
THE DAILY ADDITION TO OUR LINE OF DEPOSITORS.
vifMiss Norma Herndon.
Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Dace, Mr. TilBoth tho bride and groom are well
lis, Mr. nnd Mrs. Roumilntt, Mr. nnd known, and most popular here, and
ITII: PROTECTION IIY TWO EXAMINATIONS EACH YEAR BY THE
Miss Sarah Wight has ns her house Mrs. Walsmn, Mr. nnd Mrs. Fodder, their friends rejoice that Orlando will
STATE BANKING DEPARTMENT, TWO AUDITS EACH YEAR
xuests, .MiHS Davies nnd Miss Watts MtS. Bennett, Mr. and Mrs, Lane, continue to be their home.
BY AN INDEPENDENT RECOGNIZED PUBLIC AUDIT COM­
irom Rollins College.
Mrs. Ijirintore, Mr. nnd Mrs. V. Speer,
Mrs. Phillips Is the youngest
PANY AND TWO SWORN STATEMENTS SUBMITTED TO TIIEMrs. Biggers, Mr .and Mrs. Overland, daughter of Mr. Frederic H. Rand.
STATE COMPTROLLER BY THE CASHIER, GIVING THE
r. Miss Eddie nnd Mr. Eddie wor?i.Mr. and Mrs. Wnthnm, Mr. nnd Mrs. Her sisters, Misses Elizabeth, Anna
BANK’S CONDITION IN DETAIL, ALL OF WHICH INSURES
■the guests of Mrs. Henry Wight Inst Osbum Herndon.
REGULAR, SYSTEMATIC AND THOROUGH OPERATION OF
nnd Mnry Rand, Mrs. Percy Morton
-evening.
nnd Mrs. Evelyn Maurey, were all
THE hANK.
. .
PHILLIPS-RANI)
here for this event, ns was her broth­
5TH: THE ADVICE OF A COMPETENT BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
A party from Orlando that came
er, Frederic II. Rand, Jr., of Miami.
WHO MEET WITn THE OFFICERS
REGULARLY
EACH
up for the dnnee were: Miss Kath­
St. Luke's Cathedral was filled thin
The groom Is a son of Mr. nnd Mrs,
MONTH
AND
ADVISE
THEM
AS
TO
THE
OPERATION
OF
erine Bond, Mr. French, Mr. Jack morning at 11:30 o’clock by many I. W. Phillips nnd is one of Orlan­
THE*
BANK.
Brandon, Miss Wymn nnd Mr. Thresh- friends whose deep interest centered do’s energetic nnd efficient young
in the wedding of Miss Edith Ralston business men.
6TH: INSURANCE OP ALL DEPOSITS EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR,
Rand and Welbom (C. Phillips, the
A host of friends unite in tender­
THIS IS A PROTECTION NOT COMMONLY FOUND IN BANKS
Mr. Roberts, vice-president of the mnrringe sendee held by Dean Glass ing earnest i&gt;est wishes to this young
AND IS AN ABSOLUTE PROTECTION FOR YOUR FUNDS, IN
Peoples Bank of Jacksonville, was in juid the benediction pronounced by couple.
,
ADDITION TO ALL THE OTHER USUAL SAFEGUARDS.
Sanford Thursday.
the) Rt. Rev. Edwin G. Weed, D. D.
Bishop Weed has been a close
THESE ARE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD DO HUSINESS WITH
Miss Helen Way played a beautiful friend of the Rand family for many
US, AND WE BELIEVE THAT NO BANK CAN OFFER BETTER IN­
Judge II. L. Crane, of Tampa, was organ post-hide, and immediately bo- years nnd his presence at this time,
ntsitd1
DUCEMENTS.
the guest of his neice, Mrs. J. G. , fore the sendee Miss Louise Holt to attend the Veterans’ reunion, was
■&gt; Ball Thursday.
i sang "At Dawning," by Cadninn, her especially welcomed.—Orlando Re­
; clear, sweet tones rendering this se­ porter-Star.
H r. and Mm. Endor Curlett, of lection most effectively.
Geneva, were in Snnford Thursday.
The ushers, Messrs. Julian Harris, VALDEZ GRILL OPEN AT NIGHT
Gerald Hurlburt, Jack Branham,
Leigh Newell and Dou^as Phillips,
The many patrons of the Valdez
THE ARMISTICE DANCE
WE WANT XOUR BUSINESS
V
led the bridal pnrty, entering the Cn- Hotel grill will be pleased to learn V
Though the rain dampened things i pdra| fn)m the west door.
Mrs. that the management has decided to
generally the climax of n more than Miller Phillips, matron of honor, was keep the grill open nt night until 1
successful day was reached “In lift* followed by the bride's maid. Mis# o'clock.
, 1 87-fltc
4. +&lt;t++++4+++t+t++*+++'{,+ * t+ f + t * + t + t t t - t + + + &lt; - t W H * &lt; ,^ ,H I
/lance last evening nt the
Court Helen Hurlburt, the latier immediate­
f _ _ _
____ ___
_
X
U oubp, The halls and itairway were ly procpdmg the bride who entered
+
'Beautifully decorated in patma nnd on the arm of her father, Mr. Freder­
*
GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES
❖
the hall room was indeed n gay nnd ic H. Rand.
festive scene tastefully decorated in
The groom, attended by his'broth­
Just
Lay
Them
Down
and
Nall—
That’s
All
Phone 110
a profusion of palms, moss nnd er, Miller Phillips, entered from the
There Is To It
t
streamers of blue and gold. The per­ vestryroom, meeting the bridal par­
Corner Sanford and Celery Avenues
Quick
Lunch
The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air—rain, sleet, $
gola was nlso attractive in hanging ty nt the choir steps where Dean
etc.,
from forcing ita way thro ugh the roof.
',rv
rones, golden rod and shaded lights. Glass had the first part of the brief,
Co
flee
5c
SnmlwirhcN
10c
The
Shoulder
of
Protectio
n
is
also
the
Self-Spacing
Device.
I
lbtrtzvll’s orchestra of Lakeland, beautiful service, the final part held
2-tb CANS STANDARD. IIANDMakes
laying
easy
nnd
rapid—thus
saving
time
nnd
money.
Pics,
home
m
ade
10c
cut
furnished the !&gt;est music Sanford has nt thg) chancel rail where at its con­
PACKKI) TOMATOES,
These Asphalt Shingles a re surfaced with natural colored Red
Best Coffee in Snnford
£uiiI the opportunity of dancing by clusion thoi young couple knelt to
PER CAN ........................
or
Green
Crushed Slate. Eac h rain washes away tho accumulated
_
fo r quite a long time.
receive the benediction from Bishop
dust—reviving perpetually the originnl rich colors.
The D. A. R.’s assisted the I-cgion Weed.
Princess Theatre B ld g .
Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered—
in receiving nnd caring for the guests.
EXTRA FANCY GRADE* MAINE
With the beautiful strains of the
because
they are ,firc-resistin g,
H
Delicious ‘punch was served by them wedding march, the bridal party left
CORN, PER
*
Give
us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the
throughout the evening nnd sand- the church, going direct to the Rand
CAN ............................
• cost free of chnrgc. Samples and prices furnished free.
# wiches and coffee were served nt n home on Osceola street, where friends
late hour.
crowded to offer heartfelt good wish­
MAXWELL HOUSE
There were one hundred and seven- es nnd congratulations.
COFFEE,
1-lb. can...........
On the firat of each month
tty-five couples present nt the dnnee
The. churrh wns decorated with
your rent i# due.
Why give
amd the riot of color of the gay cos- quantities of henutiful wild flowers,
other people your money. Iluy
tames nnd large number of men in white jessamine nnd asparagus fern.
EXPORT SOAP.
you a home and each month
Xtmform mnde a wonderfully nttrac- High aimve the altar wove masses of
PER
4C A K E ........ ....................
instead of paying out rent
= tive picture.
white nnd golden blossoms amid soft
money, pay on n home that i*
Eei'
There were two prizes given, one of green, with the same simple yet ef­
yours.
-—.
E15 for the couple with the most at­ fective decorations in the choir nnd
SWIFTS’ PREMIUM
Beautiful
homes
on Park,
tractive costumes, which wns won by on the pews down the center aisle.
HAMS, Per lb.....................
Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and
Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Holly, in
Miss Anna Rnnd greeted the
Myrtle
avenues,
Sanford
rgyp*y .costume* nnd a prize of $10 guesta at the door of the Rand home,
Try n Herald Want Ad.—It pays.
Heights.
Building
lots
in any
Tor the couple dancing !&gt;cst which and Mrs. Whitman within introduced
location.
wrss won by Miss Wight dancing with them to the receiving line, compris­
M r. Muro.
ing Mr. Rand, Miss Elizabeth Rand,
The dance wns a delightful one and Bishop Weed, Mr .and Mrs. I. W.
saccesri in every way. Those pres­ Phillips nnd the bride nnd groom. A
"The Real Estate Man"
ent were:
delicious two-course buffet luncheon
rkon. M
IQ* » « NUm I
Mrs. Hines, Gypsy; Mrs. Morgan, was served. Mrs. Jas. G. Glass and.
Chanticlcar; Mrs. Bishop, a YamaTfnmn; Mrt. CoJcmnn, Turkish; Miss
Ball, Turkish; Mrs. Ralph Wight, Co­
lonial; Miss Wight, Spanish; Miss
Bowler, Bohemlnq; Mrs. Reglnnld
Holly, Gypsy; Miss Florence Henry,
T urkish; Mrs. Hal Wight, YamnYamn; Mrs. Spencer, Queen of
H earts; Mrs, DeCottc, Yama-Yotna;
Mrs. Lloyd, French peasant; Mrs.
John Smith, Yama-Yama;
Mrs.
Itunineas has not gone Ids! right? The little things have been
Morse, Gypsy; Mrs. Donald Smith,
trying and the routine has gotten on your nerves?
WHAT YOU
- . Turkish; Miss Tigue, America; Miss
NEED IS SPIRITUAL POISE Afil) POWER. Jesus said: "Come
Helen Hand, little girl; Miss Costello,
unto Me. all ye that labor, and are heavy laden, and I will gire you
old-fashioned girl; Miss Davies, Chi­
nese; Miss Watts, Yama-Yamo; Mrs.
'Schulte, day; Miss Gollen, night; Miss
Ham as, Colonial; Miss Bryan, Colon­
ia l; Miss Loc, Gypsy; Mrs. Sturmsn,
Indian; Mss. Langley, night; Mrs.
Line of Violins, Guitars arid Mandolins
UopeT, Japanese; Mrs. Babcock, Co■Ion mV, Miss Wilson, Colonial; Miss
Roberts, Colonial; Miss Nell Lane,
folly; Raymond Philips, colonial;
Col. Knight, Cavalry dress uniform;
H . Ball, Jlggs; Douglas Griffin,
Yama-Yama; Mr. Coleman, Spanish;
M r. Fields, Cadet; Mr. Reginold Hol­
ly , Gypsy; Max 8t«wart, folly; Mr.
T yler, Chantlclear; Mr. J. Smith,

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S ix K in d s o f S a f e t y

Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bahk
where you deposit your money?
The first consideration is the capital, which should be
ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank
is to serve.
The next question to consider is the officers in charge.
They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed. y
Then there is the question of confidence. The public
should have confidence in the officers and. in the bank.
These three principles determine the success of a bank.
We adopted th^se principles in the outset of our career
and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase
our usefulness to the community as the years go by.
We Offer You:

f
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T
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X

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y
X
y
y

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♦
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PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD

M. D. GATCHEL

Cozy Cafe

! V u lc a n it e S h in g le s

9c

20c t

December 1st

40c
5c

48c

E. F. L A N E

|

Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co

A 25c Want Ad. in The Herald
will Rent Your House For You

Full Line

I HAVE YOU HAD A HARD 1
.. WEEK?

Prices from $50 to $300

Terms to Suit Yourself

Come to the

| Presbyterian Church i|

*

The most complete line of Records
in the city.

Prices Right

�.»' - 1

THE SANFORD DAILY nERALD,

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1920

PAGE THREE

THE WILMINGTON (N. C.) STAR. SEPT. 218T, BAYS: ‘TH E
LAKE MONROE
CLEANEST AND BEST CIRCUS SEEN HERE IN MANY A DAY WAS
Horrah for November! Two full
SPARKS' THREE-RING CIRCUS WHICH EXHIBITED HERE YESTER­ grown holidays this month, Armis­
DAY, THE CROWDS TAXING THE CAPACITY OF THE HUGE TENT, tice day nnd Thanksgiving.
•CLEAN AND CLEVElfc SUMS U P THE SHOW AND THE CROWDS
Rev. E. Lee Smith, ,pf Orlando,
held an examination for the B. Y. P.
WERE ORDERLY."
U. training class Monday night.
There were ten who took the exami­
nation. The class started with four-j
teen, but two were sick and two ha&lt;^
moved away nfter the study course
was almost completed. There will be
another examination held later for
those who were unable to be present
at this time.
MAMMOTH INSTITUTION °S
Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Mann entertain-1
MERIT ANDJMIGINALITYcd Misses Winnie Brown and Sadia
f l COMPREHENSIVE E N SE M B LE W
Blackburn, two popular teachers of
O f THE WORLD'S BEST PERFORMERS ^
the Ssnford school during the week
AND THE FINEST TRAINE0 ANIMALS
end.
Miss Ruby Walker was called to
r f l MULTITtDE V STRANGE AN 0
‘ CU RIO US FEATURES FROM ALL ^
Chattanooga, Tenn., on business this
ENDS V THE E A R T H *
week. Her guardian,. Mr. llartline,

EAST SANFORD

CHRISTMAS

Rev. Walker, from Sanford, gave
an Interesting talk on the different
kinds of blindness, at Moore's Station
ONLY SIX WEEKS OFF
church on Sunday and a' pleasing
feature of the service was a duet
BUY EARLY
sung by Miss Annette Walker nnd
Ruby Long that was much appreci­
Calendar
ated.
Wednesday, Nov. 17—
Mrs. Thomas Wood, of Atlanta, is
Welfare Department, Mrs. B. W.
Diamond Rings
$1*. to $1500
a
guest
at the J. W. Corley home this
Jltmdon, Chairman.
Home Economics Day, Demonstra­ week. Mrs. Wood leaves Saturday
Diamond Brooches . . 25 to 1000
tion: “Florida Fruits and Their for her winter home at Jupiter,
Philip R. Andrews and son Eugene
Uses," Mrs. P. T. Wakefield.
arc at their winter home on Celery
Pendants
Leaving on Monday to attend the avenue halng just recently arrived
tnnual meeting of the Florida Fed­ from Klnnebunk, Me. Mrs. Crsine
eration of Woman’s Clubs will be nnd daughters, Misses Dorothy and
Wrist Watches
jjrs. E* M. Galloway, chairman of the Otis arc Quests there for the winter.
Good Roads Committee of the State Mrs. Crnine Is the mother of tho late
Electric Lamps
Federation; Mrs. W. L- Morgan, presi­ Mrs, Andrews.
Mrs. G. C. McDongal, Miss Annie
dent of the Woman’s Club of San­
ford; Mrs. A. M. Phillips and Mrs. Weeks, Herbert Squire and George
IT WILL BE. A PLEASURE TO
A n e x h ib it io n t h a t .
Harry B. Lewis, delegates from the McDongal, Jr., made n jolly party
driving to'TVaycross, Ga., and re­
snow YOU *
locsl club.
turning last week.
Social Department
Mr. nnd Mrs. Ira ^Summerville of
Preceding the bridge game on DeLnnd and Cambridge, Ohio, were
C O M IN G T O
Tuesday afternoon, a called meeting guests of Mrs. G. C. McDongal Inst
of the Social Department was held Sunday.
for the purpose of transacting special
Mrs. Ben Monroe has been in the
business. Mrs. A. P. Connelly, con­ Orlando hospital for some time under
ducted the meeting.. Following the Dr. McEwan's care.
B a ll P a rk G ro u n d s
Jjusinesa period, Mrs. Hal Wight
Mr. and Mrs. Brown and two little
gracefully presided over the destin­ daughters have arrived from Char­
ies of the bridge pUyert,_there being lotte, N. C., and have taken possession
an unusually Inrgc number of mem­ of th e ir‘ijew-home The Cliff Bell
bers nnd guests present. Hifch score place on Celery avenue.
was made by Mrs. Ben. Coleman, to
Mr. and Mrs. Brentloy and^family
whom was presented the prlie.
A are now people here living inVj the
Send in your locals to the Herald
fruit salad course wns served at the Johnson house at, Moore’s Station.
office.
Phone the news to 148. We
conclusion of tho game, Mrs. Wight They drove through from near Mont­
want
every
bit of it. Tell us the
being assisted in the discharge of her gomery, Ala., their former home in
news each day.
social duties by Mra. Howard nnd their Chevorlet car nnd have been
AT THE LINCOLN
unloading a car load of household
Miss Mabel Bowler.
goods at Moore’s station, nnd expect
(By Wilbur 1). Nesbit)
The following have registered at
Literature-Music Departments
Your flag nnd m y'fln^
to go into farming.
the Lincoln House:,
Presided over-by, Mrs. A. D. Kelly,
And how it flics today
Joe and A. B. Cameron drove over
J. A. Prewitt nnd wife, Anderson,
chairman of the Literature Depart­ to Ocoee during the late excitement.
In your land and my land
S. C.; Mrs. T. M. Welborne, Ander­
ment, the meeting on Wednesday af­
And half a world away!
Mrs. J. F. Hickson was out from
son, S. C-; S. C. Smith, Jacksonville;
ternoon suatnined the reputation of Sanford calling Tuesday onf East
Rose-red and blood*red
Eddie Clark, John Filer. Mr. Gruel), Every Battery repair we make is
A Trial Solicited
the two departments for the excel­ Side friends.
The stripes forever gleam;
Mr. t’elton, West Palm Beach; J. H. guaranteed for six months. We are
lency of their programs. Two splen­
Snow-white and soul-white—
Mr. and Mrs. Dock Hasty have
Brantly and wife, Chattanooga, Tenn. able tA do this because in repairing
did papers were contributed by Mrs. moved to town to be with her grand­
The good forefathers’ dream,
J. Durke and wife, Atlanta; C. G. any make of battery we are licensed
Geo. Chamberlain and Mrs. C. Boyce mother, Mrs. Davis since the death
.Sky-blue and true blue, with stars Adams, Lakeland; F.j G. , Fletcher, ’to use patented features which have
Bell, the first “The Oldest City and of Mr. Davis.
to gleam aright—
Boston; Edwin Brown, Chicago; C. made Vesta batteries famous.
J. H. Tillis, Prop.
Fortrcsss of the United State" and
The gloried guerdon of the day n M. Milbum, A. C. L.,; J. A. Judd,
W. L. Henley has sold what wns
the latter on the “Early History of the Long place and crop to Mr.
Davenport, Ga.; John N’yship nnd
Phone 105
402 Sanford Avr.
New Smyrna." The study of Flori­ Fergeson, of Charlotte, N. C., who
| l . a . RENAUD, Prop.
Phbne 189
family,
Canndn;
W.
M.
Truman,
Sa­
Your flag and my flag!
da is proving n most interesting sub­ will trike possession at once. It will
vannah, Gn.; W. T. Spcigler, Enter­
And, oh how much it holds—
ject, the papers presented showing a bo remembered Mr, nenley bought
prise, Ala.
Your'lnnd and my land—
THE NEW-PAINT SMfLE
careful consideration of each topic. the Long 5 acres nnd Stonoff 10
Secure
within
its
folds!
Miss Helen Terwilliger furnished the acres all improved land some months
You’ll wear one too If we
Your heart and my heart
music department number, giving n ngo in Richmond, Ave.
repaint
your auto. Why go
Deat
quicker
at
the
sight!
most charming rendition of the “Ev­
Jf O. Mitchell and family have
around
with
a dim, dull, oldSun-kissed
and
wind-tossed—
ening Star," from Tnnhauaer (Wag­ moved back from near Stark after
looking
car
when
for a few
Red
and
blue
and
white.
ner).
being away a couple of years.
dollars wc will pnint and
The one flng—the grent flag—the W althall &amp; Estridge, Props
Mr. nnd Mrs. J. W. Corley are re­
finish it like new? It's good
• flag for me and you—
Notice of Application for Tax Deed modeling their house on the interior
sense also to keep a fresh
Glorified all else beside—the red
Welaka Building
Under Section 575 of the
nnd have added two rooms and a
coat of paint on your car—
and
white
and
blue!
General Statutes.
fireplace which adds greatly to Its
ndds to its value if you want
Notice is hereby given that George comfort
to sell it or trade it in.
We were interested to read, of Mr.
Murphy, purchaser of Tax Certifi­
cate No. 1808, dated the 3rd day of nnd Mrs. Bnllnngers silver wedding
June, A. D. 1901, has filed said cer­ nnd that they were'from St. Johns,
FOR EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING
R E H E R B R O S
tificate in my office, nnd has made Mich., the Hast Sanford correspond­
application for tax deed to issue in ent is a native of Fenton, Mich., only
Phone GG
Sanford Heights
Cor. First and Sanford Ave.
accordance with lnw. Said certificate a short distance from St. Johns.
Some
very
interesting
postcards
embraces the following described
property situated in Seminole Coun­ have been received here from Marda
Maycdo, who is In' Japan.
ty, Floridn, to-wit:
Seed, Our Business.
Beg. 340 ft. N. nnd 424 ft. W. of
Get your office nunpllev and school
SE. cor. of NW U of SWV4 of Sec.
Honesty, Our Motto. 25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts.
31, Tp. 20 S., R. 30 E., run N 734 ft., supplies nt the Herald Printing C»
20 to 75 Watts in 32 Volta
where you can get what yen went nt
Purity, Our Watch
W 170 ft., S 734 f t, E 170 ft.
very reasonable rates.
The said land being assessed at the
word.
Everything Electrical
date of the issuance of suer certifi­
cate in the name of Unknown. Unless
Expert Installation and
said certificate shall be redeemed ac­
Repair Work
cording to law lax deed will issue
thereon on the 22nd day of Decem­
COME IN AND SEE US.
ber, A. D. 1920.
(Southern 'Seed Specialists)
Witness my official signature nnd
115 Magnolia Ave.
Wckiwa Bldg.
Sanford, Fla Phone 442
seal this the 12th day ,of November,
“ Ma says, look for the B u tter-N u t
A. D. 1020.
label, because if it isn’t the t genuine
(SEAL)
E. A. fcOUBLASS,
TO
THE
MOTORISTS
Clerk Circuit Court
Butter-Nut she doesn’t want it.
Seminole County, Fla.
To make room during the construction of our new garage we will close out
««Dad and I like Butter-Nut, too- It ta$$et
ll-12-0tc By V. E. DOUGLASS, D. C.
our stock of celebrated Willard Threaded Rubber Batteries A*T COST.
like more.*'
Overlandn, regular price_. . _____ . . $58.40; sole price_________..$46.60
The NEW
**
Cadillac, regular price___________ 83.33; sale prlee____ _______ 67.69
Dodge, Marmon, Franklin, reg. price, 71.90; sale price________ _ 58.63
Olds, Overlsnd, Oakland,
Sanford’a Most Fopulsf Hotel
. Raick Fours, regular price___ _ 53.35; sale price..________ 43.52
Hudson, Reo, Huick 6’s, regular price, 61.60; sale price__________ 50.27
has all the quality of the old Butter-Nut; we could
Packard, regular p rice__________
83.33;
sate
price___67.69
Under Management of
not improve |hr.;.
Maxwell, regular p ric e __________
66.55;
sale
price.__ 54.29
But in addition wVvc perfected a new mixing
WALTER B. OLSON
•
■
process which enable;) us to turn out a lighter,
These are all bran new batteries and will last for years if properly
daintier loaf than ever.
Our Spccialljr——Seminole'H
cared for. If your old battery la bee timing doubtful now la the opportunity
Get a loaf today, for Butter-Nut la its own beat
famous $1 Sunday Dinner
to save « bunch of money and kt the same time insure a winter of care­
advocate. At nil good gr cccra, The genuine bears
the llutter-Nut label.
free'pleasure or business.
de lux?.
MILLER’S BAKERY
A l a Carle Service a ll day
15 MAGNOLIA AVB.
1DAYTONA,
------------- FLORIDA
'

McLAULIN
The |Jeweler

TUESDAY

We Guarantee All
Battery Repairs

Pure Food Market

Sanford Battery Service Co.

National Madza Lamps

G 1LLO N &amp; FR Y

I Sell It

J. E. SPURLING

Salt Mullet
Mullet Roe
Fat Mackerel

Daytona Storage Battery Co

R aisin g th e F a m ll
46 HOWOMC

kooom atr,

Churn Gold Olio
Clover Hill Butter

I RAFF to
I
IMXM AT rwe,r
.
&lt;xp pucn.*'ove&lt;isu£.ap
1W«W I wh V M itsco |
t e r n s ' upat 6 •=&lt;*IveaBS-WeS FnoH j
I txei (vunrax;

a tu n s O H ts
fcjjr

imto a. wooli
o f fcAOLN R i&amp; EUS

leCFcAtr we

G U E tv r HORN S P O O K * - 7

ITS u AM W 4 OlOMVNfc
H E U P1. C O S M .tX N
WOHT BE NUCH L E F T j *

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TlfcMTl VT

£
11*4

Sanford,

Florida

�TIIB SANFORD DAILY HERALD, FfolDAt. NOVEMBER 12. 1920

PAGE FOUR

while the common voters are legion.
/
Why should the few override the
.&gt;
*
s
“WHY
GAMBLE
IN
UNCERTAIN
ALLURING
wishes
of the many In this^ presum­
B*blU S*d *nr]r .fU r n o o . . i e . p t 8 o * i» r &gt;1 TV*
** %( 7 C ^ A n t/A
STOCKS YOU KNOWNOTHJNQ ABOUT? YOU ably free country?
H erald Bull dim , 1ST X ir a .lL i Arana*
VT
MUST REALIZE THAT THE LAW OF ACTION
- B *afs,d. n » rld »
Why be tnaa ridden iyhcn we can
AND REACTION COVERS ALL SUCH INVEST- Just as well be self governed?
ME.VTg*ALD in 99 CASES OUT OF EVERY 100. IT IS THE LAW
Why riot let the people be the peo­
OF REACTION IN WHICH YOU LOSE. IF YOU HAVE MONEY, IN­ ple, Instead of being pawnr-of men
R. J. HOLLY...........................Editor VEST IT IN A' STRONG AND RELIABLE COMPANY WHICH IS who think of themselves first* of
N. J. LILLARD..Secretary-Treasurer GROWING AND PRODUCING AND A NECESSITY TO THE GENER­ \otes next, and of their country last
General Manager AL WELFARE OF THE COMMUNITY', CITY AND STATE. THERE of all? *
H. A* NEEL
IS NONE SAFER, OR BETTER. THE SOUTHERN UTILITIES COM­
and worth while advice—this is part
F. P. RINESI__Circntation Manager PANY WITH GENERAL OFFICES AT PALATKA. FLORIDA, IS A
SOBER JUDGMENT SHOULD
Phono 481
of the constructive scrice which this
COMPANY OF THIS CLASS AND I STRONGLY RECOMMEND THE 8
PREVAIL
bank renders.
A ir a r t U li* K a tit K id * Knnwa on Application PER CENT CUMULATIVE PRIOR PREFERRED STOCK AS A SAFE
AND CONSERVATIVE INVESTMENT. THERE'S NONE BETTER.
In our endeavors to restore normal
•aV*«rtpt*B PrU* a A drtic*
conditions In this land of chaos sane
Om l * * r
M i I f oath*
end sober Judgment should prevail.
XHlIrartd la City by C irH *r
We have agitators In our midst
PEOPLE OR BOSSES.
19 Casta
whose sole apparent aim is to de­
stroy our established system of gov­
Member of the Associated Press
follows:
Why continue the old method of ernment.
"Assoc is ted Press dlspstchcs from P*rty conventions for the selection of
We have others who arc consumed
Northern markets for some time pnat candidates for the presidency?
with unrest, are out of harmony with
have been carrying notices of deWhy not let the voters of a party prevailing methods, and yet1are true
’hit” rained all right.
clinea in the prices of various com- record their own choice of a candi- and loyal at heart.
F. P. Forster, President. B. F. Whitner, Cashier,
moditica In all lines, with the result '^to at the party primary and have
We
must
learn
to
differentiate
be­
But then what is rain to the Amer­ that merchants report an attitude on the result certified by the county
tween the two.
ican Legion?
the part of the public of expecting a clerk to.,the national committee of
The one must be curbed or destroy­
corresponding decrease in price on that party, instead of seeding dele- ed, while the other should be con­
We had the parade all right and it commodities which the .merchants gates atr great personal expense to a
served and nurtured back to a heal­
was some parade.
now havo In stock.
_
convention to say what their conati­ thy state of mind.
CHANDLER CARS
FRANKLIN CARS
o n fairness to the merchants it is Went* have already said?
There
is
much
to
perplex
and
exas­
There was one of the largest well for the public to remember that
W some such law could be enacted
crowds here that Sanford has seen stock which merchants now have on w’c would be riifof the iniquitous con- perate us all, but nothing to cause a
WE GIVE YOU SERVICE
palsy of alarm.
for some time.
land was purchased frpm eight vention rule entirely, and unsenipuIt has taken years of work and
--A SK ANYBODY”
months to a year ago when the mar- l°ua delegates would no longer be wisdom to create the greatest nation
And this demonstrates that San­ cet was almost at Its height.
"
fcb!e to dicker and trade and effect on earth. It will not be wrecked In
ford should pull these stunts about
Tampa merchants In All lines are eecret combinations for their owri n day.
once every two months. Get the taking losses right now on tholr goods j personal gain, as we strongly suspect
Energy, perseverance and sober
crowds coming.
In order to meet, insofar as they arc ; &gt;a frequently the case,
judgment will in time restore condi­
able, the price declines that have j • The framers of the constitution in­ tions to some more satisfactory bas­
i Kelly-Sprin^field Tires.
Diamond Tires.
We did not have any Armistice come in the m ark e t aince their goods tended that every voter should enjoy
is, but only time and patience can
Day celebration last year but it is were purchased.
1 ^rec #nd inalienable right to an ex- 'bring about this result.
-b+++44&gt; 44^+44++4++4++44++4+4+4++++++4+++++++++++++4
aure and certain that Cnmpbcll-Loss"To sell the goods that were pur- presalon of his choice In the selection
Ing Post will pull one each year from chased a y e a r ago on the rising m ar- c? public officials. It was not intend*ELLIS ISLAND CHEFS
this time on.
TO SERVE A 25-CENT
SPECIAL BARGAINS
MEAL TO HOTEL
The editor knows he missed home
FOR THE FIR8T
of the floats yesterday and if so
NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—Hotel men
COMPLETE HOUSE BILL
please tell us about it for we want to
of this city will partake today of a
give everyone credit far what was one
C A R TE R LUM BER CO.
25 cent meal on, Ellis Island. This
of the best parades that hr.a ever been
resulted from expressed skepticism
pulloi off here. We were simply too
over the statement that the chefs on
busy to get ll all and be in the pa­
the inland could get up n 25 cent
rade also.
meal and still make a profit.
It was recommended today that
YVc just had a bit of Brest weather
hostelries cut the price of bridal
yesterday to let the boys remember
suites, both as an aid to matrimony
the "duck boards” nnd other things
and to help reduce the high" prices.
that made them feel homesick while
they were over there. It was not
The east side of the St. Johns riv­
much like Florida weather but we
er, as well as Palntka Heights, is be­
OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT
need the rain and the cooler weather
coming one of the finest residential
and maybe” we should have pulled
sections of Florida, nnd the west
Armistice Day or some similar cele­
side of the river is rapidly developing
bration scvcrcla weeks ago and
into one of the greatest business nnd
brought the rain sooner.
industrial centers of the state.
•

Co-Operation Accommodation
Friendly Assistance

WIGHT TIRE CO

Heaters

oa_s*m

"IdWW

HILL HARDWARE COMPANY

Sanford should have one of the
most successful seasons of her career
this year. There is everything to
make it successful nnd despite the
high cost of growing crops the farm­
ers should realize good prices for all
of their stuff. And again the Herald
would urge the growers to put up
nothing but good stuff, ship nothing
but n guaranteed pack and sec that
your stuff goes out right at least
Then It is up to the railroads nnd the
refrigerator people to do the rest.
The American Legion will keep us
all more patriotic for being in our
midst and this reminds us that' no
many people kept their lints on at the
park yesterday while the band played
the Star Spangled Banner. Have we
toat our patriotism since the war or
did the soldibrs nnd snilorn keeping
on their hats confuse the people? The
military do not remove their hats nnd
merely stand at attention but the peo­
ple present nt nny public gathering
should uncover whenevr the national
anthem is being rendered and this
should always lie your motto ns long
as you' live.
IN FAIRNESS TO MERCHANTS
• The present drop In prices of mer­
chandise is confunfng in n way as
most people reading, them expect the
Sanford merchants to drop their*
goods the same hour the articles nppear In the papers. This, of course,
is not to bo expected and any fairminded person will easily understand
thst It would mean the ruin of^the
merchants who have bought goods on
the high market in order to keep n
goo4 stock on hands. The decline Jn
prices will have to be met gradually
in order that the merchants can get
' the present stock of goods moving, at
a price that while it may mean no

SpoTtsmen’s Headquarters

Season Opens Nov. 20th
Specials For Today

ARE YOU READY?

Choice
Western and Florida
M eats
Veal, Pork, Mutton,
Sausage

Guns Rifles Ammunition
Hunting Clothing, Etc.

EVERYTHING

S ra p es*
S te e l J t p p h

From the Foundation

O ra n yo o
. A vocados
jC o N uco

C a r r o ts
P a r s n ip s

'e a n e
U u r n e r
*• 497
•UStt'iAm SSm iM ,

Sporting Goods
Quality--Servicd*-Price

X

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER IS, 1920

PAGE FIVE

RED CROSS WAS THERE.
Utile Happenings
Mention of
Mstters In Brief
personal Items
of Interest

In and
About
*

l i',gj ! j Mr~ »

'■ V r r ^ i _

■ -

~ T

Sumrjiarjr of the
Floating Small
Talks Succinctly*
Arranaed for
Herald Readers

- , tT'T.

The City

Ron. Forest Lake Is home for a
days from his labors in the state
pad department in various pnrts of
the stnte.
jlr* and Mrs, Sam Younts have
reived into their new bungalow rc«ntJy purchased frtfm the George W.
Knight Co., on Magnolia avenue.
Miss Clifford Sasser and Miss Hanmb, of Eustis, were among the outof-town visitors to the city last night
attending the Armistice dance.
The sidewalks have been finished
on Magnolia avenue beyond Tenth
street as far as Thirteenth-street and
the streets are now being graded.
All of the hotels were filled with
visitors yesterday, many coming here
frem a distance to see the Armistice
Ray ^festivities and the dance last
nighbN-^
Misses Nell Lane and Elizabeth
Abney, of DcLand, spent the week entf
vitH Miss Norma Herndon, coming
over for the Armistice Day celebra­
tion and ball.
The Hnrtzclls and their bunch of
real musicians were in the city yes­
terday calling on their Snnfonl
friends. They furnished the music
for the Armistice ball Inst night.
The city street force is busy draw­
ing lines for the automobiles to park
on the streets. This is a step In the
right direction and on busy dnys and
rights will give all the cars ample
parking space nnd allow less waste
space by careless parking.

SAHARA” SQL'L STIRRING
THRILLING THROUGHOUT
The Star Theatre presents tonight
ami Saturday what.the management,
believes to be the , most dramatic,
soul-st.rtlng drama set ip
most
lavish, colorful and artistic Bettings
the screen has ever seen.' This pic­
ture is “Sahara," starring Louise
TJIaum, C. Gardner* Sullivan, the
most famous of all photoplay auth­
ors, wrote “Sahara," which is n big
Hodkinson picture presented by J.
Parker Read, Jr., and supervised by
Allan Dwon.
Louise Glaum plays the. role of
Mignon, the darling of 'Paris, on
whom her American husband, por­
trayed by Matt Moore, has wasted hin
fortune. He takes over an engineer­
ing Job on the Sahara desert and
Mignon, against her wishes but lured
by the promise o fa visit to Cairo,
accompanies him and dwells in a lux­
urious tent on the burning sands. But
six months of the sand and the pray­
ing Arabs drive her to such an utter­
ly depraved state of discontent that
she leaves her husband and goes to
Cairo with Baron Alexis (Edwin
Stevens).
Years Inter she finds her husband;
demented and a victim of drugs, nnd
and her child, begging in Cairo. He
has sworn to kill the woman who
wrecked his life. She, with every de­
sire fulfilled except that of happi­
ness, is moved to her first deed of
real, loving sacrifice—the return of
her husband’s mind though it means
1e r death! She docs' nil in her pow­
er to cure him, nnd the dny comes
’ hen she is recognized—What then
i f the butterfly whb found her soul?
'"If thi* mnn who suffered a living
iVnth for the love of an unfaithful
v.ife? Of the child who missed a
i Hither^ guiding hnnd when it was
most needed? The climax will grip,
surprint and please you.

In the articles aVout the parade in
yesterday's Herald the Red* Cross
car and (he Red C ross'girls in the
parade was. left out. The Red Cross
car was one of the finest in the pro­
cession being ail in white nnd trimmed
in red crosses. The car was driven
by May Thrasher nnd she was ac­
companied by Miss Helen Peck nnd
Mrs. Ernest Betts, who ns the nurse
relieving suffering humanity hnd Dick
Maxwell dressed as a grandfather,
Billy Morse and Miss Thelma Eaton
ns crippled children and the float wan
very realistic.
'
The senior and junior classes of the
Sanford High school went ns Red
Cross nurses and marched bravely
over the entire line of march on foot
with “Bill Marlowe" as the Red Cross
dog marching in the tend and the
girls and the dog attracted much at­
tention.
On the Bryan Reo truck amorig
the little girls the names o f ' Ruth
Henry and Louise Wells were left off
the article.
There were a number of cars in
the parade not decorated for the 6ccaslon but did not come under the
head of decorated cars nnd It would
take a newspaper with 100 pages togive the list of names of all those
who took part in the parade as It was
a mile long at least and was pro­
nounced one of tho best parades of
the kind that has ever been promoted
in Sanford.,
PHIZES AWARDED
FOR-DECORATED CARS
The prizes for the best decorated
floats In tho Armistice dny parade
were warded today ns follows:
First prixo, Edward Lane.
Second prize, R. S. Holly.
Third prize, John Smith, Gulf Re­
fining Co.
MADE CLOTHES FOR LINCOLN

* Mr. nnd Mrs. N. F. Nash nnd moth­
er, Mrs. E. IL lloyt, of Haverhill,
Mass., are in the city the guests of
the Valdez and are looking for a
home expecting to spend the winter
here. Mr. Nash was here about one
year ago and is delighted with the ARRIVALS FOR THURSDAY
prospects around Sanford.
AT THE SEMINOLE

AYR, Scotland, Nov. 12.—George
Silkcr, who hns just died here at tho
nge of 102, claimed thnt ns a tailor
in America he made clothes for Ab­
raham Lincoln. Sllker also fought in
the American Civil War on the side
of the north and Inter saw service In
the Frnnco-Prussinn war.

The many friends of J. L. Gallngher
were glad to see him here yesterday.
Re is the lender of the Kissimmee
hand and expects to spend the win­
ter there. The lack of n band here
jre.itenlny demonstrated thnt Sanford
seeds a band and should have one for
just such occasions and for weekly
concerts.

Notice of Application for Tax Deed
Under Section 575 of the
General Statutes

J. G. Lege, Ocala; Cecil McDaniel,
Senath, Mo.; Chas. Mnywnld, Tam­
pa; E. M. Jackson, Agent Spark’s
d ra ft; A. F. Kroger, Jacksonville;
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Smith, Brndentown; Mrs. C. N. Frazier, Ij»ke Side,
Ohio; Mrs. W. T. Bobo, Battle Creek,
Mich.; Mr. nnd Mrs. D. J. W. Baird,
Bnttle Creek, Mich.; W. T. Giillcdgc,
Hamlet, N.NL; H. L. I-ong, Troy, N.
Y.; J. E. Johnson, Crescent View, N.
Y.; Ray Esposito, New York City;
Earl Brady, Hoboken, N. J.; A. E.
Rouse nnd family, Arlington, Mnss.

.Seth Woodruff has arrived homo
from Pennsylvania where he hns been
for the pnst two years and will spend
the winter in Florida, preferably near
Sanford. Mrs. Woodruff nnd the
baby preceded him here several
• • • • • • • • • • •
months ago nnd they will mnko their •
home with grandpa nnd grandma, Mr. • SATURDAY AT PRINCESS
■nd' Mrs. C. C. Woodruff, for some
time.
•
Special Production ‘
,
•
TH E MARRIAGE PIT"
GREAT FOR GARAGES
•
_____
%
• Also tho "Vanishing Dngger"
For that new garage no roofing •
can begin to compare with Artcrnft,
slate surface, weather-proof nnd firesafe. Handsome nnturnl slntc'colors,
Office supplies at the Herald.
red and green shingle design.
Use Artcrnft for sidings ns well
The Logical Treatment
as for the roof.
The Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co.
l89-3tc

•
*
*
•

•
•

“ENERGIZER”

F.verything is humming in Sanford
now and everybody feels good over
the wonderful prospects for the win­
ter.

,

Far Many Human Ills.

*
*

AT THE STAR THEATRE
TODAY

*

W, W. Hodkinson presents
LOUISE GLAUM In
“SAHARA"

*

Also “HOLD ME TIGHT"
A Sunshine Comedy

Notice is hereby given that W. N.
Neeley, purchaser of Tax Certificate
No. 1806, dated the 3rd day of June,
A. D. 1901, has filed said certificate
in my office, and hns made application
for tax deed to issue in accordance
with law. Snid certificate embraces
the following described property sit­
uated in Seminole county, Florida, towit:
Beg. SW cor. of NW14 of SWVi of
Sec. 31, Tp. 20 S., R. 30 E.J Run N 8
rh*., E 5 chs.. S 8 chs., W 5 chs.
The said land being assessed at
tho dale of the issuance of such cer­
tificate in the name of Unknown. Un­
less said certificate shall be redeem­
ed according to law tax deed will is­
sue thereon on tho 22nd day of De­
cember, A. D. 1920.
Witness my official signature and
seal this the 12th day of November,
A. I). 1920.
(SEAL)
F,. A. DOUGLASS,
Clerk Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Fin.
11-12-fitc By V. E. DOUGLASS, D. C.

jCHULUOTA INN

W . hold th l. to bo n Trtuh:—vis:—

™t“

“ Tib© Stoir© T lhal Us M K em m ft80

RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under
which this institution has heen managed since
the first day the doors were opened.
That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the
constant and gratifying growth in business.
It is the desire of the officers of this Bank to con­
tinue adding new accounts of those individuals
desiring most efficient and responsible hanking
-0n our record of RESPONSIBILITY your pa­
tronage is invited.

S e m in o le

C o u n ty B a n k

Is owned, controlled and managed by home
people, who are interested in the development
and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County
With our large resources and strong financial
connections we are in position to assist our cus­
tomers at all times in the handling of their finan­
cial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.

v 111 ° P cn S c ,so n 192°-21 " "

,"h*,hcnA?,c ,“,0, Thanksgiving Day

The "Energizer" process will DO
* MORE Benefit to Any Adult's gen­
* eral condition than any other method
known.

.

4 Per Cen t Interest Paid.

Turkey Dinner
NOW MAKING

Nut Roll

CQME IN nnd talk It over,
108 Park Atc„

*

S e m in o le C o u n ty

Fresh Daily
$1.00 POUND

Next Door to Mobley's Drug Stoh*.

Water's Kandy Kitchen

L. C. CAMERON
Box -399 Sanford, Fla. Fhone 184

t is prepared clean, cooked and seasoned , just right,
trd to find, But we have it—and once you try it you
say, one kind, "The Best.”

States,, Kokomo and
Miller Tires and Tubes

Combination D inner 7 5 c

Up - To - Date Repair Shop

Homo Cooking

12 to 2

Home Cooking

COMPLETE LINE OF ACCESSORIES
DAY‘AND NIGnT SERVICE
V

B. &amp; O . M o t o r C o .
?.T. ==fv

V
/
Distributor* for
SEMINOLE, LAKE. VOLUSIA, ORANGE AND OSCEOLA COUNTIES

.

j

SMITH BROTHERS
Expert Repair Work

♦»♦ f + » + »»W +»» »♦ » f t

_

&gt;

•••*

TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS-lc A WORD

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              <text>SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION&#13;
&#13;
Volume I.  Number 189.&#13;
&#13;
Sanford, Florida.  Friday, November 12, 1920&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
FLORIDA’S CROP REPORT SHOWS SLIGHT GAINS OVER LAST YEAR’S CROP&#13;
&#13;
Corn, Sweet Potatoes, Peanuts and Peas Good Crops.&#13;
&#13;
SILAGE CROP HEAVY.&#13;
ESTIMATE FOR ORANGES IN SEPTEMBER SEEMS JUSTIFIED.&#13;
&#13;
GAINESVILLE, Fla., Nov. 12 –&#13;
Harvesting of the state’s field crops has been practically completed with the exception of sweet potatoes and sugar cane.&#13;
 Continued dry weather over most of the state has enabled farmers to make great headway in harvesting but the same conditions have prevented the normal growth of such crops as sweet potatoes and cane and are holding back fall farming operations, turning land,  sowing oats and rye, planting truck crops, etc.&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Corn&#13;
The state’s production of corn for 1920 is the lowest for several years. The planted acreage was seven per cent under last year and a higher percentage than usual of the land in corn was also growing other at the same time, peanuts, velvet beans, etc.&#13;
 Heavy rains early in the season interfered with cultivation and prevented perfect pollenization, and the crop as a whole was further set back by dry weather in the late summer.&#13;
 Yield per acre is estimated at 13.5 bushels, compared with 15 bushels last year and a four-year average of approximately 15 bushels.&#13;
 Quality of the crop is 83 per cent of normal compared with 87 per cent last year and a four-year average of 87.5 ½.&#13;
 It is estimated that about 227,000 bushels from the 1919 crop was still on the farms on Nov. 1, something less than two per cent of that year’s production.&#13;
 Approximately 8,000 acres of corn was cut for silage this year, with an average yield of four tons to the acre.&#13;
 Production estimate of corn for grain for Florida and the United states are as follows:&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Florida&#13;
	Acreage 	Yield (Bus.) 	Production (Bus.)&#13;
&#13;
1919 	840,000 	15.0 	12,600,000&#13;
1920 	781,000 	13.5 	10,544,000&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
United States&#13;
	Acreage 	Yield (Bus.)	Production (Bus.)&#13;
&#13;
1919 	102,075,000 	28.6 	2,917,450,000&#13;
1920 	103,648,000 	30.9 	3,199,126,000&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Sweet Potatoes&#13;
Sweet potato harvesting is progressing rapidly. Yields from early plantings were good, but the late acreage, which is large, is showing the effects of too much dry weather.&#13;
 The crop as a whole will show light yields with an unusually high percentage of medium sized marketable stock.&#13;
 Quality is slightly above last year 90 per cent of normal.&#13;
 It is estimated that 45 per cent of this year’s crop was grown for market, about 1,700,000 bushels.&#13;
 Last year 44 per cent, 1,800,000 bushels, was grown for market.&#13;
 Production for Florida and the United states is estimated as follows:&#13;
&#13;
Florida&#13;
	Acreage 	Yield (Bus.) 	Production (Bus.)&#13;
&#13;
1900 	41,00 	100 	4,100,000&#13;
1920 	40,00 	 95 	3,800,000&#13;
&#13;
United States&#13;
	Acreage 	Yield (Bus.) 	Production (Bus.)&#13;
&#13;
1919 	1,029,000 	100.7 	103,579,000&#13;
1920 	1,022,000 	103.4 	105,676,000&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Tobacco&#13;
With approximately the same acreage as for last year, Florida tobacco growers have produced about 16 per cent more tobacco.&#13;
 Some excellent yields have been made with an average for the state of 1,100 pounds, compared with 950 pounds last year and a four-year average of about 1,000 pounds.&#13;
 The quality of the crop is 96 per cent of normal compared with 91 per cent last year, and a four-year average of 94 per cent.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Florida&#13;
	Acreage 	Yield (Lbs.) 	Production (Lbs.)&#13;
&#13;
1919 	4,200 	  950 	3,990,000&#13;
1920 	4,200 	1,100 	4,620,000&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
United States&#13;
	Acreage 	Yield (Lbs.) 	Production (Lbs.)&#13;
&#13;
1900 	1,901,200 	730.8 	1,389,458,000&#13;
1920 	1,859,700 	793.9 	1,476,444,000&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Peanuts&#13;
The Florida situation on peanuts harvested for grain cannot be stated with certainty before the December report date.&#13;
 The late runner peanut will furnish a bigger percentage of the total than usual and the disposition of this crop is uncertain yet.&#13;
 Early acreage estimates are apparently good, nut interplanted acreage was larger than usual and the percentage for grain and yields will need some revision.&#13;
 The quality of nuts harvested is 92 per cent of normal with 90 per cent last year and a four-year average of 91 per cent.&#13;
 Production estimates, based on all data obtainable at this time, are as follows for Florida and the United States:&#13;
&#13;
Florida&#13;
	Acreage 	Yield (Bus.) 	Production (Bus.)&#13;
&#13;
1919 	126,000 	27.0 	3,402,000&#13;
1920 	123,000 	28.0 	3,444,000&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
United States&#13;
	Acreage 	Yield (Bus.) 	Production (Bus.)&#13;
&#13;
1919 	1,251,000 	26.6 	33,263,000&#13;
1920 	1,221,400 	29.6 	37,483,000&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Sorghum for Syrup&#13;
 The acreage in Florida is small and has changed very little from last year.&#13;
 The crop was grown under generally favorable conditions and shows an average yield of 142 gallons of syrup per acre.&#13;
 Florida, for the past two years has made the highest yield per acre of sorghum of any state in the Union.&#13;
 Production is estimated as follows for Florida and the United States:&#13;
&#13;
Florida&#13;
	Acreage 	Yield (Gals.) 	Production (Gals.)&#13;
1919 	600 	130 	78,000&#13;
1920 	600 	142 	85,000&#13;
&#13;
United States&#13;
	Acreage 	Yield (Gals.) 	Production (Gals.)&#13;
1919 	386,200 	86.3 	33,312,200&#13;
1920 	401,600 	93.1 	37,402,000&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Field Peas&#13;
 It is estimated that 80 per cent of the usual acreage for grain has been harvested. Yields are generally low averaging 72 per cent of normal.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Citrus&#13;
 Presents conditions do not justify any change from September preliminary estimates of production. Condition of oranges and grapefruit is off one point, being 90 per cent and 78 per cent compared with 91 per cent and 79 per cent month ago.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
ANOTHER REVOLUTION IN PERU IS STAGED&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
LIMA, Nov. 12 –&#13;
The arrest of thirty persons disclosed a Peruvian revolutionary plot to attack President Laqual at a formal dinner, it was disclosed today.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
REINDEER MEAT WILL BE SHIPPED HERE FROM ALASKA&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
SEATTLE, Nov. 12 –&#13;
&#13;
Alaskan packers are arranging to ship reindeer meat to American markets, it was announced today.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
BOLSHEVIKS THREATEN ANOTHER GENERAL WAR.&#13;
UNLESS FORCES ARE THROWN INTO ARMENIA BOLS WILL SHOOT UP EUROPE.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
GENEVA, Nov. 12 – &#13;
The immediate use of all forces in the Near East to prevent the union of the Bolsheviki with the Turkish Nationalists forces was declared necessary to prevent the annihilation of the Armenians and another general war.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
BULGE PACK FOR ORANGES TO CONTINUE.&#13;
FLORIDA GROWERS WILL CONTINUE USING THE SAME ORANGE PACK.&#13;
&#13;
ORLANDO, Nov. 12 –&#13;
Florida growers and shippers won a signal victory over the railroads in the hearing here Wednesday on the issue of the bulge pack for citrus fruits.&#13;
 Citrus men were out in large numbers, filling the court house where the hearing was held. They won the first point by taking charge of the meeting and placing one of their number, L. B. Skinner, of Dunedin in the chair.&#13;
 From that time on it was easy sailing. Jas. Menzius, freight traffic manager of the A. C. L. railway, testified first. He stated that the bulge pack was responsible for much damage to shipping in transit, but he could give no statistics or exact data.&#13;
 The agent of the Pennsylvania railroad testified as to the damaged condition of fruit on the pier at New York, but could not testify that the injury did not result from labor troubles, or the use of cotton hooks in unloading fruit.&#13;
 Inspector Enright of the Illinois Central said much fruit came in Chicago in a damaged condition, but admitted some o fit was due to overloading the cars. He also admitted that bulge packed fruit kept better owing to better ventilation.&#13;
 Many other witnesses testified along similar lines, but without adducing anything against the contention of the shippers. It was therefore not a matter of surprise to the spectators when Mr. Menzius, speaking on behalf of the American railway association, gracefully withdrew from the position previously taken by the roads and announced he would recommend to the general committee in New York that the bulge pack be retained. As that was a complete withdrawal from the positions taken by the representatives of the road, and appeared to be acquiesced in by representatives present, the meeting ended with good feeling all around.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
MRS. McSWINEY WILL COME TO AMERICA TO TESTIFY AT COURT&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 –&#13;
The committee of one hundred investigating the Irish question announced the acceptance of the offer of Mrs. Mariel MacSwiney, wife of the late, Lord Mayor of Cork, to come to the United States to testify at hearings.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Organized Labor Is Not Opposed.&#13;
TO INCREASED PRODUCTION BUT WELCOME IMPROVED METHODS.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Washington, Nov. 12 –&#13;
 Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, declared before the industrial research conference that organized labor welcomes whatever assistance research and science can offer to modern industry. He said labor was not opposed to increased production or improved methods but is rightly suspicious of the changes introduced without explanation and whose effect upon their welfare was not considered.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SPUDS THAT SOLD IN 1918 FOR $5.50 NOW BRING BUT 50 CENTS.&#13;
&#13;
MACON, Ga. –&#13;
Sweet potatoes sold today on the streets of Macon at 50c per bushel, having dropped far below any price quoted since 1914 and to a mark below which the price has seldom ever gone.&#13;
 An unusually large crop, together with the general decline in prices of farm products, is given as the reason.&#13;
 In 1918 the same grade of potatoes retailed here far as high as $5.50 per bushel.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Remember that the Herald Printing Co., has a stationary and office supply department that is ready to supply all your needs in the stationery and supply line. Postcards of all kinds showing Florida and local scenes and everything that you may want in the picture postcard line, wholesale and retail.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
NAVAL MEN GIVEN AWARDS FOR SERVICE.&#13;
CONGRESSIONAL INVESTIGATION HELD UP AWARDS LAST YEAR&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 –&#13;
With the dawn of another Armistice day, it was announced here yesterday that thousands of medals and crosses, accompanied by letters of commendation had been presented to naval officers with appropriate ceremonies the world over.&#13;
 This was accomplished by the dispatch of medals and crosses to commanding officers on board ship and ashore with instructions to present them yesterday upon telegraphic or wireless notification, which was sent out in the morning.&#13;
 The presentation marked the culmination of an exhaustive investigation by a congressional body into the merits of the work of naval commandants during the war, brought about by the refusal of Admiral Sims to accept a medal because, according to his statement, the distribution was not made upon the merit of the cases. He alleged that the services of men who lost their ships during the war, were awarded while those who went through the fray with unblemished records were ignored.&#13;
 Rear Admiral Sims’ name again appeared upon the list as having been awarded a D. S. M., but it was said at the navy department that the medal had not been actually forwarded to Admiral Sims, as was done in almost every other case, due to the officer’s previous refusal to accept the honor.&#13;
 The navy crosses awarded Rear Admiral Benton O. Docker and Capt. Raymond Hasbrouck, who took action similar to that of Admiral Sims, has been deposited in the bureau of navigation for such future action regarding acceptance of the medals as the officers concerned might wish to take, it was explained at the department.&#13;
 The list of awards, as finally approved, showed a considerable increased over the list published before the congressional investigation.&#13;
 It was shown that after the matter was referred back to the board headed by Rear Admiral Austin N. Knight, for reconsideration many meritorious cases were discovered that had not been discovered in the original list. For this reason, it was said, 1,951 medals and 662 letters of commendation were awarded yesterday, instead of 1,261 medals and 361 letters, as was original announced.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
No Cause Federal Control of Coal.&#13;
NATIONAL COAL ASSOCIATION NOT IN FAVOR OF GOVERNMENT CONTROL.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
ATLANTIC CITY, Nov. 11 –&#13;
“No emergency exists in the bituminous coal industry calling for federal control of mines,” Vice-President Morrow of National Coal Association, declared in an address. He said conditions causing consumers trouble in obtaining coal and speculative prices only passing phase of the war readjustment and the remedy lies in an improved transportation facilities and not regulation.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Annual Red Cross Meeting.&#13;
&#13;
The annual Red Cross meeting and election of officers will be held at the Women’s Club Monday night, at 7:30. Members are earnestly requested to attend this meeting. The Home Service Section under the supervision of Miss Virginia Smith is doing a splendid work in Seminole county and as long as funds are obtainable will continue to render valuable service.&#13;
 It co-operates with the Woman’s Club and the churches. Gives aid to the needy, in sickness and in poverty and assists ex-service men in securing employment. Adjustment of delayed allottments and insurance is also an important feature of the Home Service Section of the Red Cross. The fourth Red Cross roll call, under the direction of Dr. S. W. Walker, chairman, is under way. A renewal of membership means the continuation of helpful service to our community. Remember the annual meeting on Monday night, November 15th at 7:30.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
PROHIBITION OFFICERS TO TIGHTEN UP.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 –&#13;
Prohibition enforcement officers throughout the country were instructed today to prevent the sale of malt and hops in the hope of tightening the ban on home brewing, but details of the order are lacking.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SAVING MONEY PART OF SCHOOL EDUCATION.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 12 –&#13;
The treasury department officials conferring with educators today on plans to establish the principle of saving and investment of money as a compulsory part of the American public school curriculum.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
France Refuses Germany to League.&#13;
ADMISSION INTO THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS AND WILL FIGHT AGAINST IT.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
PARIS. Nov. 12 –&#13;
The French government unalterably opposes the admission of Germany to the League of Nations, it was stated at the foreign office. Some “drastic action” would be the consequence if the league voted to admit Germany, it intimated today.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
FOREIGN DEMANDS MADE COAL SCARCE IN UNITED STATES.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 12. –&#13;
The foreign demand for coal was an important factor for the high domestic coal prices along the Atlantic Seaboard but only minor factor in the creation of the high prices for the whole country, the Interstate Commerce Commission declared in a report to the senate today.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
HAITA PRESIDENT DISPROVES CHARGES AGAINST MARINES.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti, Nov. 12 –&#13;
The president of Haiti testifying before the Naval Board of inquiry declared he had no official knowledge of the charge of indiscriminate killing of natives by the United States marines, adding “they have been accused by public clamor.”&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
COFFEE TO COST MORE NEXT YEAR.&#13;
&#13;
ST. LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 12 –&#13;
An advance in the price of coffee next year was indicated by present conditions, according to T. Laggaard Menezes, of Sao Paulo, Brazil, who addressed the opening session of the 10th annual convention of the National Coffee Roasters Association Wednesday.&#13;
 Labor, high living conditions and frosts combined to materially curtail production this year, he said, and next year’s crop was expected to show a further shrinkage.&#13;
 More than half of the coffee consumed in the United States comes from Brazil, according to delegates at the convention.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
THINKS FLORIDA IS JUST RIGHT.&#13;
&#13;
E. M. Jackson was in the city yesterday advancing the Sparks Big Shows that will show here on Tuesday, November 23rd. Mr. Jackson is carried away with Florida and having travelled in every state in the union he is a judge of country. He stated in the Herald office yesterday that he would some day in the near future quit trooping and come to Florida to live for the rest of his life. He said Florida had it all over California in every way and that no country in the world could touch this state for all year round climate and “everything.”&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
The Daily Herald subscription list is growing so rapidly that new carrier boys are necessary each week. If you do not get your paper promptly phone 481.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
LEGION DANCE WINDS UP JOYOUS DAY CELEBRATION RAIN HINDERED BUT LITTLE.&#13;
Tournament and Dance Were Successfully Carried Out.&#13;
THE PRIZE WINNERS.&#13;
BALL GAME HAD TO BE POSTPONED ON ACCOUNT OF THE RAIN.&#13;
&#13;
 After the parade yesterday the rain came down with a steady downpour and put the kibosh on those who wanted to eat on the lake front at a later hour although many hundreds were served before the rain chased them off. The boys would have made a nice sum on the eats despite the fact that they were only charging twenty-five cents for a real good dinner. After the feed the tournament was the first on the program and not even the rain kept the boys from riding and they pulled off a first class riding tournament in the rain and many watched to see them ride without the downpour interfering in any way with either the participants or the spectators.&#13;
&#13;
 The following prizes were awarded to the tournament riders:&#13;
 First prize to Eddie Pell, of Osteen.&#13;
 Second prize to David Self of Chuluota.&#13;
 Third prize to Sam Brooks of Osteen. &#13;
 Fourth prize to Barney Beck, of Sanford.&#13;
 In the hurdle races Henry Cameron, of Sanford, won the first prize and William Kilbee, of Geneva, won the second prize and George Lewis, of Sanford, won the third prize.&#13;
&#13;
 The rain had fallen to such a degree that the ball parks were thought too wet to play and there was nothing doing between the army and navy and it is still a mooted question as to who won the war. However, it is hoped at some future date to stage this great spectacular game between the army and navy at Holden Park.&#13;
 Last night at the court house the Legion put on one of the finest dances that has ever been staged in Sanford and this is given in full in the society columns of this issue.&#13;
 And when “taps” came last night by the clock and the orchestra had put up their instruments a tired and sleepy and well satisfied crowd of Legion boys and their friends said, “beaucoup” and “finis.”&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WILL PRONE SOLUTION OF BOMB THROWING.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 12. –&#13;
The district attorney plans to investigate the New York World’s account of the ”solution” of the Wall Street bomb explosion, the newspaper claiming it was done by workmen seeking the revenge on the allegel building trust.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
ALBERT DORNER BIGGEST BEGGAR IN SEMINOLE COUNTY&#13;
&#13;
Albert Dorner is the biggest and the best beggar in Seminole county. Yesterday he made up as a wooden legged beggar and with an iron pot over which wire screen and had been soldered he implored the public to drop their money in the pot for the benefit of the county home. Albert has a big heart in his bosom and he intends to get up several other stunts to raise money for a big Christmas tree at the county home.&#13;
 On December 4th he will have a wrestling match and glove contest and several other stunts at Holden Park for the same purpose. Yesterday he entertained the crowd on First street with his wooden legged antics and drove his Ford car on the street with one leg, standing on the back of the seat and doing all kinds of hair raising stunts. He wore out one of his legs and blistering his hands but he says it was worth it and he managed to collect $24.99 for the county home and the fund is now in the bank waiting for more to follow.&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views. 1c each.&#13;
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Try a Herald want ad. – It pays.&#13;
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THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1920 (Classified page)&#13;
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Co-Operation Accommodation Friendly Assistance.&#13;
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And worth while – this is part of the constructive serice which this bank renders.&#13;
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First National Bank&#13;
F. P. Forster, President.  B. F. Whitner, Cashier.&#13;
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AUTO PAINTING – THE NEW-PAINT SMILE&#13;
You’ll wear one too if we repaint your auto. Why go around with a dim, dull, old looking car when for a few dollars we will paint and finish it like new? It’s good sense also to keep a fresh coat of paint on your car – adds to its value if you want to sell it of trade it in.&#13;
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REHER BROS. Auto Painting.&#13;
Phone 112. Sanford Heights.&#13;
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The Whole World Wants It&#13;
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Butter-Nut, the perfect bread, crisp, dainty, delicious, wholesome.&#13;
No bread so good was ever baked. No better bread can be baked.&#13;
&#13;
The New Butter-Nut Bread&#13;
Has all of the quality of the old Butter-Nut; we could not improve on that.&#13;
But in addition we’ve perfected a new mixing process which enables us to turn out a lighter, daintier loaf than ever.&#13;
Get a loaf today, for Butter-nut is its own best advocate. At all good grocers. The genuine bears the Butter-Nut label.&#13;
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MILLER’S BAKERY.&#13;
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Sanford Milk Depot at City Market&#13;
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On November 1 we secured the output of the PINEHURST DAIRY and now have the entire output of both the ROSELAND and R. L. GARRISON DAIRIES. This gives us an opportunity to render first class service and by eliminating all necessary overhead expense by combining under one distributor, will enable us to give real service at a minimum cost. There will be no advance in the price of any dairy product. The regular morning and evening delivery will be continued as before the merger, and in addition we will make auto deliveries at all hours of the day from the store, where the milk and cream is kept in our cold storage plant.&#13;
 Patrons will please co-operate with deliverymen by putting out bottles and tickets, so as not to cause a delay. Where there are no bottles or tickets there will be no milk delivered – this being the only way we can serve you promptly and efficiently.&#13;
 Tickets can be secured at the store or from the delivery man.&#13;
 The patronage accorded us during the past week has far exceeded our more sanguine expectations and we earnestly ask a continuance.&#13;
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CITY MARKET – Walthall &amp; Estridge.&#13;
WHERE YOU GET GOOD THINGS TO EAT.&#13;
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CHANDLER CARS – FRANKLIN CARS.&#13;
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“WE GIVE YOU SERVICE – ASK ANYBODY”&#13;
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WIGHT TIRE CO. Kelly-Springfield Tires.  Diamond Tires.&#13;
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ARMISTICE DAY SUCCESS DESPITE LOWERING CLOUDS HUNDREDS OF VISITORS.&#13;
(continued from page one)&#13;
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Hyman, Mary Garbley, Thelma Garbley, Rebecca Stevens, Carmeta Barber, Irene McGagnon and Ruby Rivers.&#13;
 The Gulf Refining car driven by John Smith, accompanied by Donald Smith, dressed as sailors and the car being beautiful in white and yellow and upon a pedestal was a large cannon and the guard of honor was little Wilson Smith and Martha Fitts all dressed in white.&#13;
 The B. &amp; O. Garage had a patriotic car all done in red, white and blue showing the Lexington line.&#13;
 There were a number of other cars and floats in the parade that should have special mention but they were so numerous and the parade was spread over so much territory and broke up after the memorial address that it was difficult to get them all.&#13;
 The parade stopped at Central Park after going over the principal streets of the city and centered around the park where Capt. George G. Herring in a few words paid a beautiful tribute to the boys who had given their lives for their country, at the conclusion of which a special guard of honor composed of Virgil Smith of the army, and Morris Spencer of the navy, took the wreath and laid it over the monument that was erected for the soldier dead at the close of the war. As the band played the Star Spangled Banner the soldiers and sailors stood at attention and the color guard composed of Robert Deane of the navy and R. O. Weeks of the army and Roy Chittendon of the marines lowered the colors making a beautiful ceremony in honor of the dead and a most fitting close of the parade.&#13;
 Chas. Henry and C. M. Hand acted as marshals of the day, being mounted on fiery steeds and they kept the line of march open and looked after the various floats and also acted as the advance guard for the tournament riders who were all ready for the big tournament races of this afternoon and were mounted on their fleet ponies and carried their lances.&#13;
 As we go to press the thousands of visitors are eating that famous 25c “chow” on one lake front and the Legion boys are looking after their comfort and while it is raining it looks as though they will be able to pull the many stunts that are on the program for the afternoon.&#13;
 The big dance will be held in the court house tonight being a costume dance and every one is invited. Jazz orchestra will furnish the music and the floor is one of the best in the state.&#13;
 The army float was good, showing a pup tent and all the equipment pf the soldier in the field and Ned Chittendon in heavy marching order stood guard on the float.&#13;
 The school children, with the teachers leading the various grades of the primary and grammar schools was a fine display of the educational institutions of the city and if the sight was old to the Sanford people it was certainly novel to the visitors and they were loud in their praises of the fine looking body of children&#13;
 We are fortunate to have a real colonel here in the person of Col. George W. Knight and he was in charge of the parade with Major Ralph Stevens and Post Commander Donald Whitcomb of the Campbell-Lossing post as his staff. And we would remark that Donald Whitcomb has had some job on his shoulders to engineer this great day.&#13;
 One of the features of the parade and one that few here had ever seen was the German prisoner stunt pulled by the boys. Tom Meredith was dressed up in true German army style and marked with the W. P. sign and was in the parade under guard of the M. P. in the person of Jim Huff. We don’t know whether Jim liked his job of M. P. or Tom liked his one of W. P. but at any rate they were both there with the goods.&#13;
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 For some time the Masonic fraternity of Wauchula has been contemplating building a new home, and at the last communication of the lodge committees were appointed to secure plans and to get the abstract for the property owner by the lodge up to-date.&#13;
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Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
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CHULUOTA INN.&#13;
Will Open Season 1920-21.  Thanksgiving Day. Turkey Dinner.&#13;
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 NOW MAKING Pecan Nut Roll. Fresh daily.  $1.00 POUND.&#13;
Water’s Kandy Kitchen.&#13;
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CLASSIIFED ADS.&#13;
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CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES&#13;
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Minimum Charge for any one ad		25c&#13;
One time, per word				 1c&#13;
Three times, per word				 2c&#13;
Six Times, per word				 3c&#13;
Over six times, 1-2c per word per issue.&#13;
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Cash must accompany order. Ten cents extra if charged.&#13;
Advertising in this column in which the address of the advertiser is not given but which refers you to Post office Box Number or Care of the Herald MUST be answered accordingly. Please do not ask us for the names of advertisers advertising in this way. Usually we do not know who they are, and if we do we are not expected to tell you.&#13;
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WANTED –&#13;
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WANTED – For cash, an old building for its lumber. Address with location and price where it stands. If you have one, write O. Goodelle, Orlando, Fla.   186-3tp.&#13;
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WANTED – An elderly lady, single preferred, to attend invalid lady. Address, 112 Elm Ave.    185-9tp.&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office.&#13;
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WANTED – Your old batteries to rebuild. Let us make your starting and lighting a pleasure. We are authorized “EXIDE” dealers and have a Battery for all make automobiles. “EXIDE”, the Giant that lives in a box. – Ray Bros.  Phone 548, old Ford Garage.  179-tfc.&#13;
-Get your scratch pads from The Herald – by the pound – 15c.&#13;
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WANTED – Brick and cement work, chimneys, flues, piers, cement floors, sidewalks. – A. L. Ray, 206 Park Ave.  173-30tp.&#13;
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WANTED – By November 15, a 4 to 6 room house or apartments, unfurnished or partly furnished. Best of references given. Will rent by the year. Address at once. “Cottage,” in.&#13;
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WANTED – Pupils, Violin and Piano. – Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave. 175-20t-p&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
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WANTED TO RENT – House or apartment of 4 to 6 rooms, furnished or unfurnished. Will rent by year. Address “apartment” care of the herald.   Tf.&#13;
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For sale – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf.&#13;
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WANTED – Two rooms for light housekeeping with private family. Address K. K. J., care Herald.   187-3tp.&#13;
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FOR RENT&#13;
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FOR RENT – One nicely furnished room, 320 Oak Ave. Phone 308-J. 187-tfc.&#13;
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TO RENT –or for sale, large warehouse with railroad siding. Chas. Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co.   156-tfc.&#13;
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FURNISHED ROOMS – Two furnished bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park Avenue.  157-tfc.&#13;
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FOR RENT – Furnished front rooms. 218 Elm.   184-3tc.&#13;
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FOR RENT – Two or three furnished housekeeping rooms. P. O. Box 117, Owner.   184-6tp.&#13;
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FOR RENT – Six unfurnished rooms, bath and hall, over Red Front Store on Ninth street, fourth block east of depot. Box 81.  186-3tp.&#13;
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LOST &#13;
LOST – Western Union branch deposit book. Finder please return to Western Union office. – J. P. Hall, Mgr.   180-tfc.&#13;
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MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
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ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, 109 East First street, over Union Pharmacy.  163-tfc.&#13;
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CARPETS and rugs washed right on the floor, with Hamilton Beach Electric Carpet Washer. Kills all moth and disease germs. Make your floor coverings absolutely sanitary. – Electric Carpet Washer, Sanford.  186-6tp.&#13;
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DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture, bedsteads, chairs, etc. what have you?    174-30tc.&#13;
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BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run your battery until she is entirely dead. The battery is the costliest accessory to your car. We re-charge and re-build all makes of batteries. – Ray Bros.  Phone 548, old Ford Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE&#13;
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FOR SALE – Shasto daisies, $1 per dozen. English Shamrock Oxalis 20c per dozen. Ring 207-w.  183-12tc.&#13;
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Special reduction in men’s and ladies’ W. L. Douglas shoes. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  165-tfc.&#13;
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FOR RENT – Nicely furnished large light housekeeping rooms. Mrs. Riddling, 205 Oak ave.  Eagle Hall.   186-6tc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 7-room, 2-story house, large yard for garden spot, also chicken yard. Various fruit trees. Phone 487.   186-6tc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – on and a half truck, used only two months. Bargain if taken at once. Can be handled on a $1,000 cash, balance easy payments. – H. B. Lewis, Agent.  187-3tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – One counter, 17 feet long, $25. At Ford Garage.  187tfc.&#13;
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WOOD AND POSTS sold and delivered on hard road, within one mile of town. See me. – W. V. DUNN.   186-6tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf.&#13;
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We have just received a line of silverware and casseroles. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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PLANTS FOR SALE – Cabbage, Onions, beets, lettuce and cauliflower. Yellow self-bleaching celery, guaranteed French imported seed, bought from Chase &amp; Co., write for prices. State quantity wanted. – w. c. Post.  173-60tc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – Very cheap, one 7-passenger automobile in good shape. Apply B &amp; O Motor Co.  185-6tc.&#13;
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FOR sALE – Five room cottage, large yard for vegetable garden, various fruit trees, also two separate five acre farm land; 5 gallon hot water heater. P.O. Box 117, Owner.  184-6tp.&#13;
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See our line of electrical lamps. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550. 166-tfc.&#13;
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New line of Congoleums and Art Squares. – A Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect conditions. – Herald Printing Co.  tf.&#13;
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Special reduction on Georgette Silk and cotton shirt waists. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.&#13;
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Salt Mullet – Mullet Roe – Fat Mackerel – Nice Fryers and Hens.&#13;
All Good and Churn Gold Olio. Clover Hill Butter.&#13;
L. P. McCuller.   Sanford, Florida.&#13;
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Sanford Machine &amp; Foundry Company.&#13;
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GENERAL MACHINE AND BOILER WORK. BRASS CASTINGS. GAS ENGINE REPAIRS. ACETYLENE CUTTING AND WELDING.&#13;
Special machine for turning Auto Crank Shafts and Crank Pins to within .0005 accuracy.&#13;
IRRIGATION SUPPLIES. PULLEYS AND SHAFTINGS. ROUND AND SQUARE IRON.&#13;
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The Eustis board of trade is planning the construction of a bungalow colony as its solution of the housing problem. It is proposed to construct a number of three-room bungalows. Organization of a corporation to finance the project is planned.&#13;
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Beauty in every Jar.&#13;
Freckles Positively Removed by Dr. Berry’s freckle ointment giving beautiful complexion. Your druggist or by small 65c. Send for Free Booklet.&#13;
Dr. C. H. Berry Co., 2975 Michigan Ave,. Chicago.&#13;
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SALES – SERVICE – PARTS – ACCESSORIES – REO&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO.    PHONE 66.&#13;
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Cozy Café – Quick Lunch.&#13;
Coffee 5c.  Sandwiches 10c.  Pies, home made 10c, Cut – Best Coffee In Sanford.&#13;
Princess Theatre Bldg.&#13;
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December 1st.&#13;
On the first of each month your rent is due. Why give other people your money. Buy you a home and each month instead of paying out rent money, pay on a home that is yours.&#13;
 Beautiful homes on Park, Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and Myrtle avenues, Sanford Heights. Building lots in any location. E. F. LANE. “The Real Estate Man”.  Phone 93. 204 First street.&#13;
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Lord’s Purity Water – As Good as the Best.&#13;
Daily Service. Phone 66.&#13;
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CITY MARKET&#13;
Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props.  Welaka Building.&#13;
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Special For Today.&#13;
Choice Western and Florida Meats.  Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage.&#13;
CITY MARKET.&#13;
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EVERYTHING for THE BUILDER.&#13;
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From the Foundation to the Roof.&#13;
HILL LUMBER CO.   Quality – Servicd –Price.&#13;
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Try a Herald Want Ad. – It pays.&#13;
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PAGE 2.  The SANFORD DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1920.&#13;
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Society. &#13;
MISS KATHRYN WILKEY, Editor.  Phone 428.&#13;
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SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK.&#13;
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Friday-&#13;
T.N.T. with Mrs. Reginald Holly.&#13;
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Saturday –&#13;
Cecillian Music Club at the Studio of Mrs. Francis S. Munson at 3 o’clock.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Chamberlain have as their house guests. Mr. and Mrs. Schulte, of Daytona Beach.&#13;
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Mrs. George H. Rice returned from Worchester, Mass., last evening to spend the winter with her daughter, Mrs. A. R. Key. Coming with her were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Chamberlain of Orlando.&#13;
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Miss Helen Peck and Miss Ethel Henry came home for the Armistice day holiday from the Florida State College.&#13;
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Miss Nell Lane and Miss Elizabeth Audney, of DeLand, are the guests of Miss Norma Herndon.&#13;
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Miss Sarah Wight has as her house guests, Miss Davies and Miss Watts from Rollins College.&#13;
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Miss Eddie and Mr. Eddie were the guests of Mrs. Henry Wight last evening.&#13;
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A party from Orlando that came up for the dance were: Miss Katherine Bond, Mr. French, Mr. Jack Brandon, Miss Wyma and Mr. Thresher.&#13;
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Mr. Roberts, vice-president of the Peoples Bank of Jacksonville, was in Sanford Thursday.&#13;
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Judge H. L. Crane, of Tampa, was the guest of his neice, Mrs. J. g. Ball Thursday.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. Endor Curlett, of Geneva, were in Sanford Thursday.&#13;
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THE ARMISTICE DANCE&#13;
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Though the rain dampened things generally the climax of a more than successful day was reached in the dance last evening at the Court House. The halls and stairway were beautifully decorated in palms and the ball room was indeed a gay and festive scene tastefully decorated in a profusion of palms, moss and streamers of blue and gold. The pergola was also attractive in hanging moss, golden rod and shaded lights.&#13;
 Hartzell’s orchestra of Lakeland, furnished the best music Sanford has had the opportunity of dancing by for quite a long time.&#13;
 The D. A. R.’s assisted the Legion in receiving and caring for the guests. Delirious punch was served by them throughout the evening and sandwiches and coffee were served at a late hour.&#13;
 There were one hundred and seventy-five couples present at the dance and the riot of color of the gay costumes and large number of men in uniform made a wonderfully attractive picture.&#13;
 There were two prizes given, one of $15 for the couple with the most attractive costumes, which was won by Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Holly, in gypsy costume, and a prize of $10 for the couple dancing best which was won by Miss Wight dancing with Mr. Muro.&#13;
 The dance was a delightful one and a success in every way. Those present were:&#13;
 Mrs. Hines, Gypsy; Mrs. Morgan, Chanticleer; Mrs. Bishop, a Yama Yama; Mrs. Coleman, Turkish; Miss Ball, Turkish; Mrs. Ralph Wight, Colonial; Miss Wight, Spanish; Miss Bowler, Bohemian; Mrs. Reginald Holly, Gypsy; Miss Florence Henry, Turkish; Mrs. Hal Wight, Yama Yama; Mrs. Spencer, Queen Of Hearts; Mrs. DeCotte, Yama-Yama; Mrs. Lloyd, French peasant; Mrs. John Smith, Yama-Yama; Mrs. Morse, Gypsy; Mrs. Donald Smith, Turkish; Miss Tegue, America; Miss Helen Hand, little girl; Miss Costello, old-fashioned girl; Miss Davies, Chinese; Miss Watts, Yama-Yama; Miss Schulte, day; Miss Gollen, night; Miss Thomas, Colonial; Miss Bryan, Colonial; Miss Lee, Gypsy; Mrs. Sturman, Indian; Mrs. Langley, night; Mrs. Roper, Japanese; Mrs. Babcock, Colonial; Miss Wilson, Colonial; Miss Roberts, Colonial; Miss Nell Lane, Tolly; Raymond Phillips, colonial; Col. Knight, Calvalry dress uniform; H. Ball, Jiggs; Douglas Griffin, Yama-Yama; Mr. Coleman, Spanish; Mr. Fields, Cadet; Mr. Reginold Holly, Gypsy; Max Stewart, folly; Mr. Tyler, Canticlear; Mr. J. Smith, Yama-Yama; Mr. Hawkins Connelly, Indian; Mr. Hines, Gypsy.&#13;
 Among the number who were not in costume were:&#13;
 Misses Helen Peck, Norma Herndon, Bryan Fox, Eddie, Ethel Henry, Smyth, Flasher, Morrison, Bond And Wyma.&#13;
 Roy Chittenden, Ned Chittenden, Mr. Muro, Mr. Shultz, Mc. McGlauchin, Walter Connelly, Mr. Fox, Mr. Yowell, Dr. Stevens. Dick Brown, Mr. Mahoney, Mr. Ogilvie, Mr. Whitner, Mr. Chase, Tracey McCuller, Mr. Whitcome, Mr. Eddie, Mr. Pearman, Mr. Jim Higgins, Mr. French, Mr. Brandon, Mr. Thresher, Dr. Howard, Mrs. Mobley, Mrs. Keelor, Judge And Mrs. Householder, Col. and Mrs. Knight, Dr. And Mrs. Puleston, Mr. And Mrs. Henry, Mr. Ball, Mr. And Mrs. Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Watson, Mr. Schulte, Mr. and Mrs. Key, Mr. and Mrs. Holly, Mr. and Mrs. Loucks, Mr. and Mrs. Chamberlain, Mr. and Mrs. McCuller, Mrs. Peck, and Mr. and Mrs. Leonardi, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Betts, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Betts, Mr. and Mrs. Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Daes, Mr. Tillis, Mr. and Mrs. Roumilatt, Mr. and Mrs. Walsma, Mr. and Mrs. Fedder, Mrs. Bennett, Mr. and Mrs. Lane, Mrs. Larimore, Mr. and Mrs. V. Speer, Mrs. Biggers, Mr. and Mrs. Overland, Mr. and Mrs. Waltham, Mr. And Mrs. Osburn Herndon.&#13;
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PHILLIPS-RAND.&#13;
St. Luke’s Cathedral was filled this morning at 11:30 o’clock by many friends whose deep interest centered in the wedding of Miss Edith Ralston Rand and Wellborn C. Phillips, the marriage service held by Dean Glass and the benediction pronounced by the Rt. Rev. Edwin G. Weed, D. D. &#13;
 Miss Helen Way played a beautiful organ post-lude, and immediately before the service Miss Louise Holt sang “At Dawning,” by Cadman, her clear, sweet tones rendering this selection most effectively.&#13;
 The ushers, Messrs. Julian Harris, Gerald Hurlburt, Jack Branham, Leigh Newell and Douglas Phillips, led the bridal party, entering the Cathedral from the west door. Mrs. Miller Philips, matron of honor, was followed by the bride’s maid, Miss Helen Hurlburt, the later immediately preceding the bride who entered on the arm of her father, Mr. Frederic H. Rand.&#13;
 The groom, attended by his brother, Miller Phillips, entered from the vestryroom meeting the bridal party at the choir steps where Dean Glass had the first part of the brief, beautiful service, the final part of the brief, beautiful service, the final part held at the chancel rail where at its conclusion the young couple knelt to the receive the benediction from Bishop Weed.&#13;
 With the beautiful strains of the wedding march, the bridal party left the church, going direct to the Rand home on Osceola street, where friends crowded to offer heartfelt good wishes and congratulations.&#13;
 The church was decorated with quantities pf beautiful wild flowers, white jessamine and asparagus fern. High above the altar were masses of white and golden blossoms amid soft green, with the same simple yet effective decorations in the choir and on the pews down the center aisle.&#13;
 Miss Anna Rand greeted the guests at the door of the Rand home, and Mrs. Whitman within introduced them to the received line, comprising Mr. Rand, Miss Elizabeth Rand, Bishop Weed, Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Phillips and the bride and groom. A delicious two-course buffet luncheon was served. Mrs. Jas. G. Glass and Miss Marion Cary-¬Elwes pouring coffee and a number of her near friends assisting in the serving. Exquisite roses and asparagus fern were used with beautiful effect in the large rooms at the home, and all attending enjoyed this happy, informal gathering.&#13;
 No formal invitations were issued, only the personal message given to friends who could be reached in this way.&#13;
 Much merriment attended the cutting of the wedding cake by the bride, Miss Grace Warlow receiving the coveted ring, Miss Lucy Gage the dime, while the thimble, unfortunately exposed to view in slicing, disavowing by all the girls. An eager group waiting the throwing of the bride’s bouquet from high on the stair-case, Miss Ella Siemons captured this prize.&#13;
 Early in the afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Phillips slipped away by auto, their destination and length of absence unknown.&#13;
 Especially becoming was the bride’s dainty gown of white lace and net, bead trimmed, over white satin, with white lace hat and exquisite shower bouquet of white roses. Her traveling suit was an imported costume of dark blue with leather trimming and a becoming blue hat to match.&#13;
 The matron of honor and bride’s maid both wore white lace gowns and carried pink roses.&#13;
 Both the bride and groom are well known, and most popular here, and their friends rejoice that Orlando will continue to be their home.&#13;
 Mrs. Phillips is the youngest daughter of Mr. Frederic H. Rand. Her sisters, Misses Elizabeth, Anna and Mary Rand, Mrs. Percy Morton and Mrs. Evelyn Maurey, were all here for this event, as her brother, Frederic H. Rand, Jr., of Miami.&#13;
 The groom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Phillips and is one of Orlando’s energetic and efficient young business men.&#13;
 A host of friends unite in tendering earnest best wishes to this young couple.&#13;
 Bishop Weed has been a close friend of the Rand family for many years and his presence at this time, to attend the Veterans’ reunion, was especially welcomed. – Orlando Reporter Star.  1-87-6yc&#13;
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VALDEZ GRILL OPEN AT NIGHT&#13;
The many patrons of the Valdez Hotel grill will be pleased to learn that the management has decided to keep the grill open at night until 1 o’clock.   1 87-6tc.&#13;
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Cozy Café – Quick Lunch.&#13;
Coffee 5c.  Sandwiches 10c.  Pies, home made 10c, cut – &#13;
Best coffee in Sanford.&#13;
Princess Theatre Bldg.&#13;
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December 1st.&#13;
On the first of each month your rent is due. Why give other people your money. Buy you a home and each month instead of paying out rent money, pay on a home that is yours.&#13;
 Beautiful homes on Park, Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and Myrtle avenues, Sanford Heights. Building lots in any location.&#13;
E. F. LANE. “The Real Estate Man”.  Phone 93. 204 First Street.&#13;
&#13;
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HAVE YOU HAD A HARD WEEK?&#13;
&#13;
Business has not gone just right? The little things have been trying and the routine has gotten on your nerves? WHAT YOU NEED IS A SPIRITUAL POISE AND POWER. Jesus said: “Come unto Me all ye that labor and are heavy laden and I will give you.&#13;
&#13;
Come to the Presbyterian Church.&#13;
Sunday 11 a.m.; 7:30 p.m.  We have a helpful message for you.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SIX KINDS OF SAFETY&#13;
&#13;
 Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank where you deposit your money?&#13;
 The first consideration is the capital, which should be ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank is to serve.&#13;
 The next question to consider is the officers in charge. They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.&#13;
 Then there is the question of confidence. The public should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. &#13;
 These three principles determine the success of a bank.&#13;
 We adopted these principles in the outset of our career and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase our usefulness to the community as the years go by.&#13;
&#13;
 We Offer You:&#13;
&#13;
1st: Large Capital and Working Reserve.&#13;
2nd: Trained Men in Charge – Men of Several Years Experience.&#13;
3rd: The confidence of the public, which is proven by the daily addition to our line of depositors.&#13;
4th: Protection by two examinations each year by the state banking department. Two audits each year by an independent recognized public audit company and two sworn statements submitted to the state comptroller by the cashier, giving the bank’s condition in detail. All of which insures regular, systematic and thorough operation of the bank.&#13;
5th: The advice of a competent board of directors, who meet with the officers regularly each month and advise them as to the operation of the bank.&#13;
6th: Insurance of all deposits every day of the year. This is a protection not commonly found in banks and is an absolute protection for your funds, in addition to all the other usual safeguards.&#13;
&#13;
These are reasons why you should do business with us, and we believe that no bank can offer better inducements.&#13;
PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD. We want your business.&#13;
&#13;
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M. D. GATCHEL GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES.&#13;
Phone 110. Corner Sanford and Celery Avenues.&#13;
&#13;
2-lb Cans Standard, Hand-Packed Tomatoes, Per Can – 9c&#13;
Extra Fancy Grade, Maine Corn, Per can – 20c&#13;
Maxwell House Coffee, 1-lb. can – 40c&#13;
Export Soap, Per Cake – 5c&#13;
Swifts’ Premium Hams, Per lb. – 48c.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Try a Herald want ad. – It pays.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Vulcanite shingles&#13;
Just Lay Them Down and Nail – That’s All There is To It.&#13;
&#13;
 The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air – rain, sleet, etc. from forcing its way through the roof.&#13;
 The Shoulder of Protection is also the Self-Spacing Device. Makes laying easy and rapid – thus saving time and money.&#13;
 These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red or Green Crushed Slate. Each rain washes away the accumulated dust – reviving perpetually the original rich colors.&#13;
 Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered – because they are fire-resisting.&#13;
 Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the cost free of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.&#13;
&#13;
Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
A 25c Want Ad in The Herald will Rent Your House For You.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Full line Columbia Phonographs.&#13;
&#13;
Prices from $50 to $300.  Terms to Suit Yourself.&#13;
The most complete line of Records in the city.&#13;
Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins. &#13;
Prices right&#13;
&#13;
H. L. GIBSON.&#13;
 &#13;
PAGE 3.    THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1920.&#13;
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Woman’s Club Week’s Activities Club Calendar.&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 17 –&#13;
Welfare Department, Mrs. B. W. Herndon, Chairman.&#13;
 Home Economics Day, Demonstration: “Florida Fruits and Their Uses,” Mrs. P. T. Wakefield.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Leaving on Monday to attend the annual meeting of the Florida Federation of Women’s Clubs will be Mrs. E. M. Galloway, chairman of the Good Roads Committee of the State Federation; Mrs. W. L. Morgan, president of the Women’s Club of Sanford; Mrs. A. M. Phillips and Mrs. Harry B. Lewis, delegates from the local club.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
Social Department&#13;
Preceding the bridge game on Tuesday afternoon, a called meeting of the Social Department was held for the purpose of transacting special business. Mrs. A. P. Connelly, conducted the meeting. Following the business period, Mrs. Hal Wight gracefully presided over the destinies of the bridge players, there being an unusually large number of members and guests present. High score was made by Mrs. Ben Coleman, to whom was presented the prize. A fruit salad course was served at the conclusion of the game, Mrs. Wight being assisted in the discharge of her social duties by Mrs. Howard and Miss Mabel Bowler.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Literature-Music Departments&#13;
&#13;
Presided over by Mrs. A. D. Kelly, chairman of the Literature Department, the meeting on Wednesday afternoon sustained the reputation of the two departments for the excellency of their programs. Two splendid papers were contributed by Mrs. Geo. Chamberlain and Mrs. C. Boyce Bell, the first “The Oldest City and Fortresses of the United State” and the latter on the “Early History of New Smyrna.” The study of Florida is proving a most interesting subject, the papers presented showing a careful consideration of each topic. Miss Helen Terwilliger furnished the music department number, giving a most charming rendition of the “Evening Star,” from Tanhauser (Wagner).&#13;
&#13;
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Notice of Application for Tax Deed Under Section 575 of the General Statutes.&#13;
&#13;
Notice is hereby given that George Murphy, purchaser of Tax Certificate No. 1808, dated the 3rd day of June, A. D. 1901, has filed said certificate in my office, and has made application for tax deed to issue in accordance with law. Said certificate embraces the following described property situated in Seminole County, Florida, to-wit:&#13;
 Beg. 346 ft. N. and 424 ft. W. of SE. cor. of NW ¼ of SW ¼ of sec. 31, Tp. 20 S., R. 30 E., run N 734 ft., W 170 ft., S 734 ft., F 170ft.&#13;
 The said land being assessed at the date of the issuance of said certificate in the name of Unknown. Unless said certificate shall be redeemed according to law tax deed will issue theron on the 22nd day of December, A. D. 1920.&#13;
 Witness my official signature and seal this the 12th day of November, a. d. 1920.&#13;
(SEAL)&#13;
E. A. Douglass&#13;
Circuit Circuit Court&#13;
Seminole County, Fla.&#13;
By V. E. DOUGLASS D. C. &#13;
11-12-6te.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Salt Mullet – Mullet Roe – Fat Mackerel – Nice Fryers and Hens.&#13;
All Good and Churn Gold Olio. Clover Hill Butter.&#13;
 L. P. McCuller. Sanford, Florida.&#13;
&#13;
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EAST SANFORD&#13;
&#13;
Rev. Walker, from Sanford, gave an interesting talk on the different kinds of blindness, at Moore’s Station church on Sunday and a pleasing feature of the service was a duet sung by Miss Annette Walker and Ruby Long that was much appreciated.&#13;
 Mrs. Thomas Wood, of Atlanta, is a guest at the J. W. Corley home this week. Mrs. Wood leaves Saturday for her winter home at Jupiter.&#13;
 Phillip R. Andrews and son Eugene are at their winter home on Celery avenue haing just recently arrived from Kennebunk, Me. Mrs. Craine and daughter, Misses Dorothy and Otis are guests there for the winter. Mrs. Craine is the mother of the late Mrs. Andrews.&#13;
 Mrs. G. C. McDongal, Miss Annie Weeks, Herbert Squire and George McDongal, Jr., made a jolly party driving to Waycross, Ga., and returning last week.&#13;
 Mr. and Mrs. Ira Summerville of DeLand and Cambridge, Ohio, were guests of Mrs. G. C. McDongal last Sunday.&#13;
 Mrs. Ben Monroe has been in the Orlando hospital for some time under Dr. McEwan’s care.&#13;
 Mr. and Mrs. Brown and two little daughters have arrived from Charlotte, N. C. and have taken possession of their new home The Cliff Bell place on Celery avenue.&#13;
 Mr. and Mrs. Brentley and family are now people here living in the Johnson house at Moore’s Station. They drove through from near Montgomery, Ala., their former home in their Chevrolet car and have been unloading a car load of household goods at Moore’s station, and expect to go into farming.&#13;
 Joe and A. B. Cameron drove over to Ocoee during the late excitement. &#13;
 Mrs. J. F. Hickson was out from Sanford calling Tuesday on East Side friends.&#13;
 Mr. and Mrs. Dock Hasty have moved to town to be with her grandmother, Mrs. Davis since the death of Mr. Davis.&#13;
 W. L. Henley has sold what was the Long place and crop to Mr. Fergeson, of Charlotte, N. C., who will take possession at once. It will be remembered Mr. Henry bought the Long 5 acres and Stonoff 10 acres all improved land some months ago in Richmond, Ave.&#13;
J. O. Mitchell and family have moved back from near Stark after being away a couple of years.&#13;
 Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Corley are remodeling their house on the interior and have added two rooms and a fireplace which adds greatly to its comfort.&#13;
 We were interested to read of Mr. and Mrs. Ballangers silver wedding and that they were from St. Johns, Mich., the East Sanford correspondent is a native of Fenton, Mich., only a short distance from St. Johns.&#13;
 Some very interesting postcards have been received here from Marda Mayeda, who is in japan.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Get your office supplies and school supplies at the Herald Printing Co. where you can get what you want at very reasonable rates.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Real Estate. I Sell It.&#13;
J. E. SPURLING.  The Man Who Sells Dirt Cheap.&#13;
&#13;
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Sanford’s Most Popular Hotel&#13;
SEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL&#13;
Under management of WALTER B. OLSON.&#13;
Our specialty – Seminole’s famous $1 Sunday Dinner de luxe.&#13;
&#13;
A la carte service all day.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
THE WILMINGTON (N. C.) STAR, SEPT. 21ST. SAYS: “THE CLEANEST AND BEST CIRCUS SEEN HERE IN MANY A DAY WAS SPARKS’ THREE-RING CIRCUS WHICH EXHIBITED HERE YESTERDAY, THE CROWDS TAXING THE CAPACITY OF THE HUGE TENT. “CLEAN AND CLEVER: SUMS UP THE SHOW AND THE CROWDS WERE ORDERLY.”&#13;
&#13;
[artwork]&#13;
COMING: SPARKS CIRCUS.&#13;
A mammoth institution of merit and originality – &#13;
A comprehensive ensemble of the world’s best performers and the finest trained animals-&#13;
A multitude of strange and curious features from all ends of the earth-&#13;
An exhibition that is worth while-&#13;
GORGEOUS STREET PARADE AT 10:30 A. M. &#13;
&#13;
Coming to Sanford Ball Park Grounds Tuesday Nov. 23.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
YOUR FLAG AND MY FLAG&#13;
(By Wilbur D. Nesbit)&#13;
&#13;
Your flag and my flag,&#13;
And how it flies today&#13;
In your land and my land&#13;
And half a world away!&#13;
Rose-red and blood-red&#13;
The stripes forever gleam;&#13;
Snow-white and soul-white –&#13;
The good forefathers’ dream,&#13;
Sky-blue and true blue, with stars&#13;
To gleam aright –&#13;
The gloried guerdon of the day a&#13;
Shelter through the night.&#13;
&#13;
Your flag and my flag!&#13;
And, oh how much it holds -&#13;
Your land and my land-&#13;
Secure within its folds!&#13;
Your heart and my heart&#13;
Beat quicker at the sight!&#13;
Sun-kissed and wind-tossed-&#13;
Red and blue and white.&#13;
The one flag – the great flag – the&#13;
Flag for me and you –&#13;
Glorified all else beside – the red&#13;
And white and blue!&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Lord’s Purity Water&#13;
As Good As The Best. Daily Service.  Phone 66.&#13;
--&#13;
Seed, Our Business. Honesty, Our Motto. Purity, Our Watchword.&#13;
The L. Allen Seed Co. Come In And See Us. (Southern Seed Specialists)  Wekiwa Bldg. Sanford, Fla.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
TO THE MOTORISTS.&#13;
To make room during the construction of our new garage we will close out our stock of celebrated Willard Threaded Rubber Batteries AT COST.&#13;
&#13;
Overlands, regular price  	$58.40;  	sale price  	$46.60&#13;
Cadillac, regular price  	 83.33;  	sale price  	 67.69&#13;
Dodge, Marmon, franklin, &#13;
reg. price, 		 71.90;  	sale price  	 58.63&#13;
Olds, Overland, Oakland,&#13;
Buick Fours, regular price  53.35;  	sale price  	 43.52&#13;
Hudson, Reo, Buick 6’s,&#13;
regular price, 		 61.60; 	sale price  	 50.27&#13;
Packard, regular price  	 83.33;  	sale price  	 67.69&#13;
Maxwell, regular price  	 66.55;  	sale price  	 54.29&#13;
&#13;
These are all bran new batteries and will last for years if properly cared for. If your old battery is becoming doubtful now is the opportunity to save a bunch of money and at the same time insure a winter of carefree pleasure or business.&#13;
&#13;
Daytona Storage Battery Co.&#13;
15 MAGNOLIA AVE.  DAYTONA, FLORIDA.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
AT THE LINCOLN&#13;
&#13;
The following have registered at the Lincoln House:&#13;
 J. A. Prewitt and wife, Anderson, S. C. S.; Mrs. T. M. Welborne, Anderson, S. C.; S. C. Smith, Jacksonville; Eddie Clark, John Filer, Mr. Gruell, Mr. Pelton, West Palm Beach; J. H. Brantly and wife, Chattanooga, Tenn. J. Durke and wife, Atlanta; S. C. G. Adams, Lakeland; F. G. Fletcher, Boston; Edwin Brown, Chicago; C. M. Milburn, A. C. L.; J. A. Judd. Davenport, Ga.; John Nyship and family, Canada; W. M. Truman, Savannah, Ga.; W. T. Speigler, Enterprise, Ala.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
CITY MARKET&#13;
Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props.  Welaka building.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SEE URK FOR EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING. Cor. First and Sanford Ave.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
National Madza Lamps&#13;
25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts.&#13;
20 to 75 Watt in 32 Volts.&#13;
Everything Electrical. Expert Installation and Repair Work.&#13;
Gillon &amp; Fry.   Phone 442.   115 Magnolia Ave.&#13;
&#13;
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LAKE MUNROE&#13;
&#13;
Hurrah for November! Two full grown holidays this month, Armistice day and Thanksgiving.&#13;
 Rev. E. Lee Smith, of Orlando, held an examination for the B. Y. P. U. training class Monday night. There were ten who took the examination. The class started with fourteen, but two were sick and two had moved away after the study course was almost completed. There will be another examination held later for those who were unable to be present at this time.&#13;
 Mr. and Mrs, L. B. Mann entertained Misses Willie Brown and Sadia Blackburn, two popular teachers of the Sanford school during the weekend.&#13;
 Miss Rudy Walker was called to Chattanooga, Tenn., on business this week. Her guardian, Mr. Hartline, accompanied her on her trip.&#13;
 T. E. Wainwright has purchased land and timber at Chuluota this week and will move his sawmill from Astor to that place at an early date.&#13;
 J. T. Jacobs and family and Bartow Mann and family visited Mr. and Mrs. Theodore and Mrs. M. E. Jacobs at Oviedo Sunday.&#13;
 The public school gave an interesting Armistice program Wednesday afternoon. The program consisted of songs, dramatization, essays and readings. It was very interesting to the number of visitors present as well as to the school.&#13;
&#13;
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Send in your locals to the Herald Office. Phone the news to I48. We want every bit of it. Tell us the news each day.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
We Guarantee All Battery Repairs.&#13;
Every battery repair we make is guaranteed for six months. We are able to do this because in repairing any make of battery we are licensed to use patented features which have made Vesta batteries famous.&#13;
&#13;
Sanford Battery Service Co.  L. A. Renaud, Prop.  Phone 189.&#13;
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CHRISTMAS ONLY SIX WEEKS OFF. BUY EARLY.&#13;
&#13;
Diamond Rings 	$25 to $1500.&#13;
Diamond Brooches	 25 to  1000&#13;
Scarf Pins  	  2 to   100&#13;
Pendants  		  5 to   500&#13;
Cuff Links  	  5 to   100&#13;
Wrist Watches  	 15 to   150&#13;
Electric lamps 	 10 to   100&#13;
Toilet sets  	10 to    75&#13;
IT WILL BE A PLEASURE TO SHOW YOU.&#13;
McLaulin the Jeweler.&#13;
--&#13;
Buy Meat You Can Eat&#13;
We carry a choice line at all times. A trial solicited.&#13;
Pure Food Market. J. H. Tillis, Prop. &#13;
Phone 105. 402 Sanford Ave.&#13;
--&#13;
THE NEW-PAINT SMILE.&#13;
 You’ll wear one too if we repaint your auto. Why go around with a dim, dull, old-looking car when for a few dollars we will paint and finish it like new? It’s good sense also to keep a fresh coat of paint on your car – adds to its value if you want to sell it or tarde it in.&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PAINTING (art).  REHER BROS. Auto Painting. Phone 112.  Sanford Heights.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
(Art) “Ma says, look for the Butter-Nut label, because if it isn’t the genuine Butter-Nut she doesn’t want it.&#13;
“Dad and I like Butter-Nut, too. It tastes like more.”&#13;
&#13;
The New Butter-Nut Bread&#13;
Has the quality of the old Butter-Nut; we could not improve that.&#13;
 But in addition we’ve perfected a new mixing process which enables us to turn out a lighter, daintier loaf than ever.&#13;
 Get a loaf today, for Butter-Nut is its own best advocate. At all good grocers. The genuine bears the Butter-Nut label.&#13;
MILLER’S BAKERY.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
(a cartoon by Fisher. International cartoon co. N. Y. 543) &#13;
Raising the Family. We don’t see why Uncle Pete goes to bed.&#13;
&#13;
(Panel 1)&#13;
Uncle Pete – “Don’t let me oversleep in the morning Gid!”&#13;
Gid – “well, Good night, Uncle Pete – sleep tight!”&#13;
&#13;
(Panel 2)&#13;
Gid – “I haff to laugh at that old duck ‘oversleep’. Why I ain’t missed gettin’ up at 6 for years – he is from the country!&#13;
Gid’s wife – “He’ll find he’s got into a house of early risers before he completes his visit!”&#13;
&#13;
(Panel 3)&#13;
Knock! Knock! Knock! Knock!&#13;
&#13;
(Panel 4)&#13;
Uncle Pete – “Great Horn Spoons – it’s 4 am. Why didn’t ya wake me up! Gosh. They won’t be much left of the day!”&#13;
Gid and wife awaken in confusion.&#13;
 &#13;
Page 4.  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD.  FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1920.&#13;
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SANFORD DAILY HERALD – &#13;
Published every afternoon except Sunday at The Herald Building, 107 Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, Florida&#13;
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THE HERALD PRINTING CO., INC. PUBLISHERS&#13;
-----&#13;
R. J. Holly		Editor&#13;
N. J. Lillard		Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
H. A. Neel			General Manager&#13;
F. P. Rines		Circulation Manager  &#13;
Phone 481&#13;
-----&#13;
Advertising Rates Made Known on Application&#13;
-----&#13;
Subscription Price in advance&#13;
One year			$6.00&#13;
Six months			$3.00&#13;
&#13;
Delivered in City by Carrier&#13;
One week			15 cents&#13;
-------&#13;
Member of the Associated Press&#13;
----&#13;
----&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Well, “hit” rained all right.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
But then what is rain to the American Legion?&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
We had the parade all right and it was some parade.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
There was one of the largest crowds here that Sanford has seen for some time.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
And this demonstrates that Sanford should pull these stunts about once every two months. Get the crowds coming.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
We did not have any Armistice Day celebration last year but it is sure and certain that Campbell-Lossing post will pull one each year from this time on.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
The editor knows he missed some of the floats yesterday and if so please tell us about it for we want to give everyone credit for what was one of the best parades that has ever been pulled off here. We were simply too busy to get it all and be in the parade also.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
We just had a bit of Brest weather yesterday to let the boys remember the “duck boards” and other things that made them feel homesick while they were over there. It was not much like Florida weather but we need the rain and the cooler weather and maybe we should have pulled Armistice Day or some similar celebration several weeks ago and brought the rain sooner.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Sanford should have one of the most successful seasons of her career this year. There is everything to make it successful and despite the high cost of growing crops the farmers should realize good prices for all of their stuff. And again the Herald would urge the growers to put up nothing but good stuff, ship nothing but a guaranteed pack and see that your stuff goes out right at least. Then it is up to the railroads and the refrigerator people to do the rest.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
The American Legion will keep us all more patriotic for being in our midst and this reminds us that so many people kept their hats on at the park yesterday while the band played the Star Spangled Banner. Have we lost our patriotism since the war or did the soldiers and sailors keeping on their hats confuse the people? The military do not remove their hats and merely stand at attention but the people present at any public gathering should uncover wherever the national anthem being rendered and this should always be your motto as long as you live.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
IN FAIRNESS TO MERCHANTS.&#13;
 The present drop in prices of merchandise is confusing in a way as most people reading them expect the Sanford merchants to drop their goods the same hour the articles appear in the papers. This, of course, is not to be expected and any fair-minded person will easily understand that it would mean the ruin of the merchants who have bought goods on the high market in order to keep a good stock on hands. The decline in prices will have to be met gradually in order that the merchants can get the present stock of goods moving at a price that while it may mean no profit will not mean a heavy loss. The Tampa Tribune sums it up as follows:&#13;
 “Associated Press dispatches from Northern markets for some time past have been carrying notices of declines in the prices of various commodities in all lines, with the result that merchants report an attitude on the part of the public of expecting a corresponding decrease in price on commodities which the merchants now have in stock.&#13;
 “In fairness to the merchants it is well for the public to remember that stock which merchants now have on hand was purchased from eight months to a year ago when the market was almost at its height.&#13;
 Tampa merchants in all lines are taking losses right now on their goods in order to meet, insofar as they are able, the price declines that have come in the market since their goods were purchased.&#13;
 “To sell the goods that were purchased a year ago on the rising market at prices quoted in recent market reports would result in ruin of many merchants, and the fair-minded public must take this fact into consideration.&#13;
 The fair-minded citizen will purchase what he needs now at the reductions which are being offered by practically every merchant in Tampa.&#13;
 A thorough investigation on the part of this paper leads us to believe that in many instances local merchants are selling their goods at actual cost in order to meet the recent price declines – and no one could ask for a greater sacrifice.&#13;
 “To buy now – not recklessly, but sufficiently to supply one’s immediate needs – is the only means of maintaining business conditions in Tampa that will be of direct personal benefit to every citizen of this city, regardless of his vocation or holdings in the community.”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
EDUCATING THE PUBLIC&#13;
&#13;
Certain members of congress have been stirring up a mess in Washington over what they term a waste of public funds in the publication of bulletins by the various departments and bureaus.&#13;
 Not having seen any of the said bulletins, we are unable to pass judgement upon their value as educational mediums. And we presume the education of the public is the primary object of their publication.&#13;
 But if the government or congress is desirous of disseminating useful information relative to agriculture, health, science, or other subjects, there is one way, and one only, of reaching the people who pay the bill. &#13;
 That way is to use the columns of the public press and pay the publishers a fair price for the space consumed.&#13;
 Practically every citizen of normal diligence reads the newspapers. This is a newspaper age and the people are lost without them.&#13;
 Government information disseminated in this manner would reach the great mass of the people, those for whom it is compiled at great expense, and would be put to practical purpose in the extension of knowledge and the greater development of the country.&#13;
 To educate the public you must first reach the public, and there is no arm so long or voice so loud as that of the press.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Grapes - Red Apples – Oranges – Avocados – Lettuce – Carrots – Parsnips. Deane Turner.  Phone 497.  Welaka Building.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
REO. SALES – SERVICE – PARTS – ACCESSORIES.&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO.   PHONE 66.&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
J. P. says:&#13;
“Why gamble in uncertain alluring stocks you know nothing about? You must realize that the law of action and reaction covers all such investments and in 99 cases out of every 100, it is the law of reaction in which you lose. If you have money, invest it in a strong and reliable company which is growing and producing and a necessity to the general welfare of the community, city and state. There is none safer, or better. The southern utilities company with general offices at Palatka, Florida, is a company of this class and I strongly recommend the 8 per cent cumulative prior preferred stock as a safe and conservative investment. There’s none better.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
PEOPLE OR BOSSES.&#13;
&#13;
Why continue the old method of party conventions for the selection of candidates for the presidency?&#13;
 Why not let the voters of a party record their own choice of a candidate at the party primary and have the result certified by the county clerk to the national committee of that party, instead of sending delegates a great personal expenses to a convention to say what their constituents have already said?&#13;
 If some such law could be enacted we would be rid of the iniquitous convention rule entirely, and unscrupulous delegates would no longer be able to dicker and trade and effect secret combinations for their own personal gain, as we strongly suspect is frequently the case.&#13;
 The framers of the constitution intended that every voter should enjoy a free and inalienable right to an expression of his choice in the selection of public officials. It was not intended that his choice should be warped and twisted by party chiefs behind closed doors, as if too often the case under the convention system.&#13;
  Here is an example:&#13;
 A dozen or so men may be running for the nomination within a certain party. One of these men may receive a greater number of all of the votes cast at the various primaries than any other candidate. It would seem that in all fairness he should be entitled to the nomination. If not, why ask the people to express a choice at all?&#13;
 Yet in the convention, because of the large number of candidates and the numerous scattering votes, he may be one or two votes short of the necessary MAJORITY of all votes cast by the delegates. If he is unable to entice the delegates of some other candidate away from their allegiance, he loses the nomination.&#13;
 And right there is the weak plank in the whole convention structure. It lets the bars down for all kinds of dickering and bartering and selling of delegate votes, possibly resulting in the nomination of some unknown quantity whom the people do not want at all, but whom the bosses think they can control if he is fortunate enough to win the election.&#13;
 Of course, to abolish the convention system would deprive the party chiefs and bosses of their control of the nomination, and possibly of their control of patronage after election. But the chiefs and bosses are few, while the common voters are legion.&#13;
 Why should the few override the wishes of the many in this presumably free country?&#13;
 Why be boss ridden when we can just as well be self-governed?&#13;
 Why not let the people be the people, instead of being pawns of men who think of themselves first, of votes next, and of their country last of all?&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Specials For Today&#13;
Choice Western and Florida Meats. Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage. CITY MARKET.&#13;
--&#13;
Everything for The Builder. From the Foundation to the Roof.&#13;
HILL LUMBER CO.  Quality – Service – Price.&#13;
--&#13;
SOBER JUDGEMENT SHOULD PREVAIL&#13;
&#13;
In our endeavors to restore normal conditions in this land of chaos sane and sober judgement should prevail.&#13;
 We have agitators in our midst whose sole apparent aim is to destroy our established system of government.&#13;
 We have others who are consumed with unrest, are out of harmony with prevailing methods, and yet are true and loyal at heart.&#13;
 We must learn to differentiate between the two.&#13;
 The one must be curbed or destroyed, while the other should be conserved and nurtured back to a healthy state of mind.&#13;
 There is much to perplex and exasperate us all, but nothing to cause a palsy of alarm.&#13;
 It has taken years of work and wisdom to create the greatest nation on earth. It will not be wreaked in a day.&#13;
 Energy, perseverance and sober judgement will in time restore conditions to some more satisfactory basis, but only time and patience can bring about this result.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
 ELLIS ISLAND CHEFS TO SERVE A 25-CENT MEAL TO HOTEL MEN.&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 10. – &#13;
Hotel men of this city will partake today of a 25 cent meal on Ellis Island. This resulted from expressed skepticism over the statement that the chefs on the island could get up to a 25 cent meal and still make a profit.&#13;
 It was recommended today that hostelries cut the price of bridal suites, both as an aid to matrimony and to help reduce the high prices.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
The east side of the St. Johns river, as well as Palatka Heights, is becoming one of the finest residential sections of Florida, and the west side of the river is rapidly developing into one of the greatest business and industrial centers of the state.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Co-Operation. Accommodation. Friendly. Assistance.&#13;
&#13;
And worth while – this is part of the constructive serice which this bank tenders.&#13;
&#13;
First National Bank.&#13;
F. P. Forester, President. B. F. Whitner, Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
CHANDLER CARS. FRANKLIN CARS.&#13;
“WE GIVE YOU SERVICE – ASK ANYBODY”&#13;
WIGHT TIRE CO.&#13;
Kelly-Springfield tires. Diamond Tires.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR THE FIRST COMPLETE HOUSE BILL. CARTER LUMBER CO.&#13;
--&#13;
Red Star Detroit Vapor Oil Store.&#13;
 Heaters Of Every Kind. OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT.&#13;
 HILL HARDWARE COMPANY.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
THE WINCHESTER STORE – Sportsmen’s Headquarters.&#13;
Season Opens Nov. 20th. ARE YOU READY?&#13;
Everything For The Hunter. &#13;
Guns, Rifles, Ammunition, Hunting Clothing, Etc.&#13;
BALL HARDWARE COMPANY Sporting Goods.&#13;
 &#13;
THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1920.   PAGE 5&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
In and About The City&#13;
Little Happenings Mention of Matters in Brief-Personal Items of Interest.&#13;
Summary of the Floating Small Talks Succinctly Arranged for Herald Readers.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Hon. Forest Lake is home for a few days from his labors in the state road department in various parts of the state.&#13;
--&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Younta have moved into their new bungalow recently purchased from the George W. Knight Co., on Magnolia avenue.&#13;
--&#13;
Miss Clifford Sasser and Miss Hannah, of Eustis, were among the out-of town visitors to the city last night attending the Armistice dance.&#13;
--&#13;
The sidewalks have been finished on Magnolia avenue beyond Tenth street as far as Thirteenth street and the streets are now being graded.&#13;
--&#13;
All of the hotels were filled with visitors yesterday, many coming here from a distance to see the Armistice Day festivities and the dance last night.&#13;
--&#13;
Misses Nell Lane and Elizabeth Abney, of DeLand, spent the week end and Miss Norma Herndon, coming over for the Armistice Day celebration and ball.&#13;
--&#13;
The Hartzells and their bunch of real musicians were in the city yesterday calling on their Sanford friends. They furnished the music for the Armistice ball last night.&#13;
--&#13;
The city street force is busy drawing lines for automobiles to park on the streets. This is a step in the right direction and on busy days and rights will give all the cars ample parking space and allow less waste space by careless parking.&#13;
--&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. N. F. Nash and mother, Mrs. E. H. Hoyt, of Haverhill, Mass., are in the city the guests of the Valdez and are looking for a home expecting to spend the winter here. Mr. Nash was here about one year ago and is delighted with the prospects around Sanford.&#13;
--&#13;
The many friends of J. L. Gallagher were glad to see him here yesterday. He is the leader of the Kissimmee band and expects to spend the winter there. The lack of a band here yesterday demonstrated that Sanford needs a band and should have one for just such occasions and for weekly concerts.&#13;
--&#13;
Seth Woodruff has arrived home from Pennsylvania where he has been for the past two years and will spend the winter in Florida, preferably near Sanford. Mrs. Woodruff and the baby preceded him here several months ago and they will make their home with grandpa and grandma, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Woodruff, for some time.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
GREAT FOR GARAGES.&#13;
&#13;
For that new garages no roofing can begin to compare with Artcraft, slate surface, weather-proof and fire safe. Handsome natural slate-colors, red and green shingle design.&#13;
 Use Artcraft for sidings as well as for the roof.&#13;
 The Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co.  189-3tc.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Everything is humming in Sanford now and everybody feels good over the wonderful prospects for the winter.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
AT THE STAR THEATRE TODAY&#13;
&#13;
W. W. Hodkinson presents – LOUISE GLAM in “SAHARA”.&#13;
Also “HOLD ME TIGHT” – A Sunshine Comedy.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
“SAHARA” SOUL-STIRRING THRILLING THROUGHOUT&#13;
&#13;
The Star Theatre presents tonight and Saturday what the management believes to be the most dramatic, soul-stirring drama set in the most lavish, colorful and artistic settings the screen has ever seen. This picture is “Sahara,” starring Louise Glam. C Gardner Sullivan, the most famous of all photoplay authors, wrote “Sahara,” which is a big Hodkinson picture presented by J. Parker Read, Jr., and supervised by Allen Dwan.&#13;
 Louise Glam plays the role of Mignon, the darling of Paris, on whom her American husband, portrayed by Matt Moore, has wasted his fortune. He takes over an engineering job on the Sahara desert and Mignon, against her wishes but lured by the promise of a visit to Cairo, accompanies him and dwells in a luxurious tent on the burning sand. But six months of sand and the praying Arabs drive her to such an utterly depraved state of discontent that she leaves her husband and goes to Cairo with Baron Alexis (Edwin Stevens).&#13;
 Years later she finds her husband; demented and a victim of drugs, and her child, begging in Cairo. He has sworn to kill the woman who wrecked his life. She, with every desire fulfilled except that of happiness, is moved to her first deed of real, loving sacrificed – the return of her husband’s mind though it means her death! She does all in her power to cure him, and the day comes when she is recognized. What then of the butterfly who found her soul? Of the man who suffered a living death for the love of an unfaithful wife? Of the child who missed a mother’s guiding hand when it was most needed? The climax will grip, surprise and please you.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
ARRIVALS FOR THURSDAY AT THE SEMINOLE&#13;
&#13;
J. G. Lege, Ocala; Cecil McDaniel, Senath, Mo.’ Chas. Maywald, Tampa; E. M. Jackson, Agent Spark’s circus; A. F. Kroger, Jacksonville; Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Smith, Bradentown; Mrs. C. N. Frazier, Lake Side, Ohio; Mrs. W. T. Bobo, Battle Creek, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. D. J. W. Baird, Battle Creek, Mich.,; W. T. Gulledge, Hamlet, N. C.; H. I. Long, Troy, N. Y.; J. E. Johnson, Crescent View, N. Y.; Ray Esposite, New York City; Earl Brady, Hoboken, N. J.; A. E. Rouse and family, Arlington, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SATURDAY AT PRINCESS&#13;
&#13;
Special production “THE MARRIAGE PIT” – Also the “Vanishing Dagger”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
The Logical treatment “ENERGIZER” for many human ills.&#13;
We hold this to be a Truth: - viz: - The Circulation is the BASIC factor of Human Health.&#13;
The “Energizer” process will DO MORE Benefit to Any Adult’s general condition than any other method known.&#13;
&#13;
COME IN and talk it over.  108 Park Ave., Next door to Mobley’s Drug Store.&#13;
L. C. Cameron. Box 399 – Sanford, Fla. – Phone 184.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
LEXINGTON MINUTE MAN SIX&#13;
United States, Kokomo and Miller Tires and Tubes. Up-To-Date Repair Shop.&#13;
COMPLETE LINE OF ACCESSORIES. DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE.&#13;
B. &amp; O. Motor Co.  Distributors for Seminole, Lake, Volusia, Orange and Osceola Counties.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
RED CROSS WAS THERE.&#13;
&#13;
 In the articles about the parade in yesterday’s Herald the Red Cross car and the Red Cross girls in the parade was left out. The Red Cross car was one of the finest in the procession being all in white and trimmed in red crosses. The car was driven by May Thrasher and she was accompanied by Miss Helen Peck and Mrs. Ernest Betts, who as the nurse relieving suffering humanity and Dick Maxwell dressed as a grandfather, Billy Morse and Miss Thelma Eaton as crippled Children and the float was very realistic.&#13;
 The senior and junior classes of the Sanford High school went as Red Cross nurses and marched bravely over the entire line of march on foot with “Bill Marlowe” as the Red Cross dog marching in the lead and the girls and the dog attracted much attention.&#13;
 On the Bryan Reo truck among the little girls the names of Ruth Henry and Louise Wells were left off the article.&#13;
 There were a number of cars in the parade not decorated for the occasion but did not come under the head of decorated cars and it would take a newspaper with 100 pages to give the list of names of all those who took part in the parade as it was pronounced one of the best parades of the kind that has ever been promoted in Sanford.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
PRIZES AWARDED FOR DECORATED CARS.&#13;
&#13;
The prizes for the best decorated floats in the Armistice day parade were ward today as follows:&#13;
First prize, Edward Lane.&#13;
Second prize, R. S. Holly.&#13;
Third prizes, John Smith, Gulf Refining Co.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
MADE CLOTHES FOR LINCOLN.&#13;
&#13;
AYR, Scotland, Nov. 12. – &#13;
George Silker, who has just died here at the age of 102, claimed that as a tailor in America he made clothes for Abraham Lincoln. Silker also fought in the American Civil War on the side of the north and later saw service in the Franco-Prussian war.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Notice of Application for Tax Deed Under Section 575 Of The General Statutes.&#13;
&#13;
Notice is hereby given that W. N. Neely, purchaser of Tax Certificate No. 1806, dated the 3rd day of June, A. D. 1901., has filed said certificate in my office, and has made application for tax deed to issue in accordance with law. Said certificate embraces the following described property situated in Seminole county, Florida, towit:&#13;
Beg. SW cor. Of NW ¼ of SW ¼ of Sec. 31, Tp. 20 S., R. 30 E.,J Run N 8 chs., E 5 chs, S 8 chs., W 5 chs.&#13;
 The said land being assessed at the date of the issuance of such certificate in the name of Unknown. Unless said certificate shall be redeemed according to law tax deed will issue thereon on the 22nd day of December, A. D. 1920.&#13;
 Witness my official signature and seal this the 12th day of November, A. D. 1920.&#13;
  (SEAL)&#13;
E. A. DOUGLASS, Clerk Circuit Court, Seminole County, Fla.&#13;
By V. E. DOUGLASS, D. C.   11-12-the&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
CHULOTA INN  &#13;
Will Open season 1920-21 on Thanksgiving Day. Turkey Dinner.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
NOW MAKING Pecan Nut Roll - Fresh Daily - $1.00 POUND.&#13;
Water’s Kandy Kitchen.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Gillette Tires and Tubes.&#13;
 Chilled Rubber Process makes them A Bear for Wear.&#13;
SMITH BROTHERS. Expert Repair work.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Just Received.&#13;
&#13;
Large shipment of shoes. Bought on Lowest Market. Come see ‘em.&#13;
&#13;
Perkins &amp; Britt.   “The store That Is Different”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY.&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under which this institution has been managed since the first day the doors were opened.&#13;
 That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the constant and gratifying growth in business.&#13;
 It is the desire of the officers of the Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals desiring most efficient and responsible banking.&#13;
 On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your patronage is invited.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
Is owned, controlled and managed by home people, who are interested in the development and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County.&#13;
&#13;
 With our large resources and strong financial connections, we are in position to assist our customers at all times in the handling of their financial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.&#13;
 4 Per Cent Interest Paid.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
FOOD&#13;
&#13;
That is prepared clean, cooked and seasoned, just right, is hard to find. But we have it -- and once you try it you will we say, one kind, “The Best.”&#13;
Combination Dinner 75c – 12 to 2 &#13;
– Home Cooking.&#13;
&#13;
Fleetwood &amp; Company.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS – 1c A WORD.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-------------------------&#13;
&#13;
-----END OF DOCUMENT ----&#13;
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IN THE HEART OF THE W O R LD S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
NU M BER 190

SANFORD, FLO R ID A, SATU R D AY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920

VOLUME 1

CONVENTION HELD T O D A Y TO C. P. BRANNON S IU P &amp; T W O CARS
•
GET N A T IO N A L AID FOR
F IN E LETTUCE THROUGH
H IG H W AY
DUTTON COM PANY

Er

ChairmanWalker Well Satisfied
With the Work

FOR A GOOD CAUSE
«

_________

MEANS MUCH TO PEO PLE EV­
E R YW H E R E A N D OUR OWN
IN P A R T IC U L A R

(Br Th* A iM ciittd rtf,,.-)
CRU E LTY TO F A M IL Y
Sanford lcttuce*‘ is going forward
INCREASES IN CHICAGO
DEN\ ER, Nov. 13. The
initial ^ jbe nor^ ern markets every day
SINCE PRO H IB ITIO N convention o f the National Park-to-' now fln(J the Bcagon wi„ B00n ^ at
Park Highway
Association, with
ita height. The weather is ideal and
CHICAGO^* Nov.UU4 l3!^Statistics ncarl&gt;’ J 00 ^
ait” in attendance,
juVt“ cool Vnough” to'head“ 'up "the
showing complaints of cruelty
to , op5 " cd * cre Thursday with a program , ,cttucc ond keep. it prime. C. F. Branwives and children’ increased 238 per
lnR ,,r conRres9,5ona
or J * . non Bcnt jn several heads of Big Boscent since prohibition was given in L T
Z
* y .
, ” ta," g ton to the Herald office today that is
the annual report o f the superintend° il° *
'excellent stuff and is shipping two
cars of this today through the F. F.
ent o f Ibo Juvenile .-rotecflvo As.o- E’W 0 m" " * * * ' «
*•»
elntlon . h o
men who formerly “
" " k*
,ho N * t- Dutton Co. Ten cars o f lettuco hnve
lonal Park-to-Park Highway.
Tho
gone forward this week which is a
drank heavily have undergone a re­
convention will last three days.
good showing for early lettuce and
action expressing itself in surliness
Stephen T. Mather, director o f the
while no cash sales have been made
and abuso o f their family. Non-sup­
Nationnl. Park Service, officials of
here the lettuce is being shipped to
port charges have decreased.
the American Automobile Association
find out what the market will take
the Ron,nans Optimists and other j ‘J * * t^e V ’icc nt^which itVan bi- sold,
western organizations arc pnrticlpathp fjnjt ,ettucc B hippe(1 by the Dut.

w
STEAMERS COLLIDE
.

A T STATEN ISLAN D
PASSENGERS DROWN

New Smyrna Board of Trade
Will Take Up Matter

(B 7 Th« A«uod«t«4 Broti)

NEW YO R K , Nov. 13.—The Span­
ish mail steamer Monsterrnt,

from

SHOULD bY e RECTED

Cadiz with 379 passengers and the
steamer San Marcos, from Galveston W OULD M EAN MUCH TO T R A D E
A N D T R A V E L OF TH IS SEC­
collided o ff Staten Island today. Some }
TION OF FLORIDA.
o f tho Montserrat’s passengers leap­
ed overboard nnd one known-to have
The counties o f Volusia and Semi­
been rescued. The San Mnrcos con­
nole have long discussed the proposi­
tinued to the pier.
tion o f n free bridge at Osteen fe r r y
nnd while Seminole county haa been
• ready to do her part for several years
|Volusia hns been hanging back f o r
m
|&gt;
n
| 1 j various reasons nnd these reasons

The Red Cross membership drive
started o ff here in fine shape on
Armiaticd Day but on' account of
the big doings that day the work of
the' Red Cross was ovcrshndowed al­
though the girls were
everywhere
during the day getting subscriptions
^ aTk t 0 ' r ark I ton Co. wan of « new variety propaP01* 00"! rensons and not
and advertising the fact that the
S lK J J ir P r i r p
M o r l p ^ i&gt;'*nvn^ Association will be put
I
by Sheridan Jewett aind it has
altogether
for
the beat interests o f
J
U
g
d
l
I
l
f
l
d
u
e
"
organita
ion
basis,
and
^
name&lt;,
.
,hc
e&lt;ntor
of
drive was on.
by the editor of tho H er­
the-county
nnd
the cities in tho south- yj
______
state
and
local
branches
formed
in
Dr. Walker is in charge of the
ald, tho "Jewett Special,” being a very GOVERNM ENTS W IL Ij GET TO*
cast
end
o
f
Volusia,
havo long under­
NEW
YORK,
Nov.
13.—
There
was
12
H
tat°
9
nnd
100
c
itir
9
of
the
WC9tdrive and has his headquarters at the
early lettuce thnt comes uhend o f the
GETHER ON PLAN FOR
stood
the
reasons
and
wanted some­
another
break
of
one-quarter
cent
a
i
Congress
will
be
m
em
orialed
to
Union Pharmacy \vherc subscriptions
Big Boston. Tho two cars today arc
AGREEM ENT
thing
doneby
the
Volusia
comraUpound
in
raw
sugar
today.
Cuba’s
“
federal
highway,
roughwill be taken at any time during the
the first of the Big Boston to bo
sioners in the way of a free bridge gj
' By T l « A u ttltlW PrtM.1
day. Tho canvassing committees are sowing a# 6 cents and freight, a new (
circling nine western states, Col- shipped from here this senson of
TOKIO,
Nov. 13.— Newspapers at Osteen. The other road across ths
on ana, Idaho,
( a o,
any ....____
mention______
has been
made.
,v out taking in the various residence low record for the season. The do- °™do, Wyoming, Montana,
______
streets and from all indications tho dine came under contiued pressure |Washington, Oregon, California, A r i- ( j Ji|t wcck
Domer brought here todny report thnt the Japanese St. Johns river nt Monroe hns n paid
ferry nnd it is fifty cents all day and
zona,
and
Now
Mexico
and
connect-,
Membership Drive will not fine re- from producing countries and the
I in several heads of good lettuce to and American governments havo
all
night nnd this works a hardship
ing
11
Nationnl
parks.
turns. The monoy is not for the war pocr demnnd for refined sugar. '
the Herald office but it was not as­ reached nn agreement in principle
on
the
travel to Seminole nnd V olos!*
Representatives
o
f
the
governors
work* this timo ns it woa several.
*
--------certained whether this was Big Bos- relative to the exclusion o f Jnpnnese
nml
keeps
ninny people Yrom comiiqg
of
these
states,
ns
well
ns
Utnh,
Ne.
.
,
...
...
.u:,.
years ago and for- this we are all
Halrcuta Back to Two-Bits .
,
,
ton or not nnd this will not ho snip­ laborers from tho United States. It
to
this
city
nnd many from going t o
-------vndn
and
Texns,
nre
attending
the
.
.
.
wns asserted, however, there is a
sincerely thankful but the member­
This to ll
MACON, Nov. 13.— Return to pro- conference, which marks the close of
° rL. Pv X#„_ ji,.,
rrnn in disagreement regarding the methods DeLand nnd Daytonn.
ship dollars will be spent here on the
bridge- hns heeti built long enough to
war prices in shnves nnd hair cuts the offlclnl tour dedicating this A m -'
' ° U 00
°
to
be
employed.
It
is
understood
the
Home Work thnt means so much to
the Sanford section this year is very
pay the owners big money and tho
hns been made In this city through crirnn motor way, with the start.nnd
all of us. The Home Work Bureau
bright nnd ns it is n much easier Japanese provisions fur exclusion, if
two counties Bhould exercise
th eir
the announcement of several bnrher fjninh in Denver. The trip required
embodied
in
n
treaty
will
bo
humiliat­
here has been doing excellent work
shops of reductions from 25 cents to 70
7
fi days,
noon nnd night meetings be- ^r0 *1 l° rn' M
,
C
.1
nllnin„ /or *ho ing nnd form nn undesirable preced­ prerogative nnd buy it, making I f .
c
as the report published in this paper
either n pay proposition until paid
ing held in towns on the route « o |,et(uc&lt;| J OVfC„ and ah|ppcra hoping ent.
several days ago set forth nnd your 15 cents in the price of shnves nnd inR
for or make it n free bridge. The
in hair cuts from 50 cents to 25 cents, arouse the west to n greater nppredollars put forth for this purpose will
thnt the weather man will keep it
day has pnssmfTfor toll bridges and
cintion of its scenic, industrial and
be dnllnrs well spent.
cool until after Thanksgiving nt
Volusia 'counfiri* beset with them «*»
agricultural possibilities.
which time the big shipments T^fll be
I all sides. It is refreshing then to
This wonder highway in the form
going forward and there should he
8II1PPING BOARD
'•
.
o fn Inrint loop embraces nn area
APPO IN TM E N TS
,
good money made for the growers
111 J A v I V u U l i » I L L l i i New Smyrna nt lenst will make an
grenter thnn
continental
Europe,
’
GIVEN OUT TO D AY
despite the high cost of production
______
j effort to hnve the bridge at Ostean
touching
in
the
course
of
its
scenic
(Br Th* Aitixlilid Pr«»*.).
this senson.
running
noose,
Mesa
Verde,
Rocky
13
Ship
1
*
STATE F A IR ASSOCIATION W ILL ferry built ns jioon ns possible nnd
W ASHINGTON, Nov.
President
SIX
NORTHEAST
COUNTIES
W
IL
L
(
j
j
ountajnf
Yellowstone,
Glacier,
Mt.
the New Smyrna Hoard o f Trndo haa
M AKE ARRANGEM ENTS
ping board appointed by
WOULD APPROVE SETTLEM ENT
RET UP TH E IR OWN
taken it up ns the following would
Rniner,
Crater
1-nkc,
Ijissen,
YoseFOR PERM ANENCY
Wilson todny wns Rear Admiral Ben­
GOVERNM ENT
i St Tk» A»»ocUl-d Pr*»»&gt;
mite,
Scquoln,
General
Grant
nnd
indicate:
*
son, Georgin, Democrat, chairman;
ROME, Nov. 12 .— Foreign Minister
"Thnt
a
bridge ncross tho
St.
Grand
Canyon
Nationnl
Parks.
A
Frederick L. Thompson, AInbafna,
Bi»**&gt;
JAC KSO NVILLE, Nov. 13.— Pro­
branch rond will some day connect received from the Itnllnn embassy at vided sufficient counties nnd commun­ Johns river at the Osteen ferry can
Democrat; Joseph N. Teal, Oregon,DUBLIN,
Nov.
13.— The
Irish
Washington n statement that the
l&gt;e secured nnd .built, with the nssistDemocrat; John A.
Donnld, New parliament nt Belfnst
for tho
six Zion Nntionnl Park in Utnh. ' CheyAmerican government has declared ities respond— nnd the indications are
thnt thev w ill- t h e Florida State Fair nnce o f Seminole county nnd the aUU»
York, Democrat; Chester H. Rowell, northeast counties is expected to be enne, Great Fnlls, Spoknnc, Seattle,
formally it would approve nny settleCalifornia, Republican; Guy D. G off , 1 set up immediately, onco the Home Tacoma, Portland, San Francisco,
&amp; Exposition will establish a permnn- rond department, if the people
Los
Anegelfl
nnd
Denver
nre
on
the
»uent of the Adriatic question renchi d ent agri'-ulturul museum this year
this county will get io^m iUhe
Wisconsin, Republirnn; rhnrlcs Sut-' Rule bill is passed by the Imperial
■between Italy nnd Jugo-SInvin.
The fair association has invite.! nil ment and help it along is the
ter, Missouri, Republicnn.
\government It wns pointed out that
counties, boards of trade, and eham- motion thnt hns come to the new N ew
this Would serve ns nn example for
IMMIGRATION
nil tiie rest o f Ireland, nnd have n
l,t.r of commerce, ns well ns nil com- Smyfnn-Coronn.lo Hoard o f Trade,
WILL BE RESTRICTED
munitirs to send along witK their ex-, nnd the new organization haa Utken
steadying effect by showing the Sinn
TO BI.OOD R E I.ATI1E S joiners thnt Dublin nnd the other 25
hibits to the state fair, November 18 the matter tip with the idea o f caiv
*-------1 counties could hnve precisely tho
to 27, sufficient surplus products of rylng It through if possible.
(By Tho AmocUUiI TTtm.)
same machinery o f self-government
______
] the soil to 1&gt;ogin the museum, which
"The agitation for a ,r»
bridge
^ lo n “
B ^ fa -t win have for ita six conn- 1
FROST
A
N
D
FREEZING
TEM
PERwill
inmaintained
in
one
o
f
the
big
ncross
the
St.
Johns
river
a
°
9"
II he Ttw&gt; A o o c U t F f j j t l
'
fair
buildings
for
the
benefit
of
the
teen
ferry
has
l,oen
on
for
a
number
ties.
W
ASH
ING
TO
N.
Nov.
13—CurATU R E S FOR SOUTH
urged by tho House committee on
! many visitors and tourists who pour of yonrs and hns been discussed m any
Therc is some ngitntion fo r mnend- tnj|nipnt nf cotton manufacturing wns
AND GULF.
immigration to restrict ndmisslon of
ments to the finnncinl terms of the reflecte«l in October cotton consump­
through Jacksonville during the win- tlmfiB in Volusia nnd Seminoio eotraaliens to close, blood relntives o f nr.tn» Tk. AeociiM Fr»e*i
1
ties, but without definite results. I t
Rule bill. Ulstermen nre op- tion, statistics announced todny show­
urnlized
citizens,
Representative Hnm&lt;’
. . .
.
. . ,
W ASHINGTON, Nov. 13.— Frost
This phut is in connection with the is intimated thnt if the matter is put
Johnson, the chnlrm.n, .»!,!.
I r " ’' 1 &lt;"
?,e r
“ ny rl"h ing the nmount o f rnw cotton used nnd freezing temperatures in the
ihody tho control o f customs nnd ex- for manufacturing Inst mont’^
association’s
project to establish a. before the stag mad department in
ns
1 cisc. They do not wnnt this privilege 309,837 hales, the smallest in nny South Atlantic and gulf states except preat community center nt the Ilrrnt- the proper light state aid fo r
•
OPP.N OLD CASE
Southern Florida wns predicted by woo dgrounds.
structure can be obtained. Seminole
for themselves nnd nre determined month in six years.
the weather bureau in its forecast for
&lt;By tv* AMocuud fm i)
' that it shall not he made available
_____
General Manager B. K. Hanafourde county\haa stood ready for a
tonight nnd Sundny.
Temperatures o f the fair association states thnt he of venrs to pay her half o f tho « LANGDON, N. !L , Nov. 1 2 — An for tbe rpR( 0f Ireland, fonring that it SEBASTOPOL
continue below normnl for the.eastern hns already received many favorable pens® o f building the bridge, b a t
abandoned well on the farm of WII- m|Kht be used to the detriment o f inBEING EVACU ATED
linm B. Whitney waa reopened todny dustry In the northern section o f the
replies from prospective exhibitors Volusia county has never got to til#
DY TH E BRITISH hnlf of the country.
in search o f the body o f Whitney’s country.
Florida, nrd ho is confident thnt this point where she will meet -ninole.
•
Tk» At*o«Ut*d fm i)
• ,
PRESIDENT-ELECT
second wife, who the son said his
Belfast men want more thnn the
season
will see launched what is de- in the proposition.
.
,
, , / . „
LONDON, Nov. 13.— Sebastopol is
K E P T INSIDE DY
fathered murdered eight years ngo.
ntlncd to become nn invaluable adjuct
"The matter will be taken up thru
fl.mw.000 lo w jrrantejj fo r »clh n B
owucunloUnn,l Ilrill.h .ulhorl:
BAD W EATHER
to the state fair, ns well ns to Florl- the new board o f trade nt once and
op it, prop™ , now l» r lU m . n t T M j,
„w
Con.tan.l.
A U S TR IA W A N T S IN
da
communities, in showing nil year some interesting developments may
(Bf. 1h» AuMl&gt;t*d rrtn.)
h*
T . l f . 18’™ ’?
«o p l« t .k . refuneM from th .t city,
(B r Th# AuocUttd Tt f t t . )
which Irrlnnd I. lo contribolo .nnool„ d,
ch from Co„ „ „ nt|n„p|,
. i ,• n n y n *i uia^pu-i. Hum uvij0w.wh«iv|*.wi POINT ISABEL, TCX., NOV. 13.--- the great' range nnd variety o f pro- be expected.
G E NEVA; N ov. 1 2 ^-Thc
formal j j bo tho support o f thsem piro h. too ^ ^
ExchnnK(, TolpRraph. G eneral, Kept o ff the fishing grounds by n ductrf raised from Florida soil.
j
'
.r
Staple agricultural products, of FA R M E R ’ S BANK W ITH ■
&gt;
pplication from Austria for admis- , 'J1*-’ "V* " 0U '
&gt;y , fT,
Wrangel’s situation In Northern Cri- cold northern?r.nnd virtually maroonS ' u “ » L ‘ u V « ' Noilon.
' t1.000.000 . yrar by lh « .o o u ltir, men is said to be desperate.
$6 ,000,000 C A P IT A L
ed on Inndside by impassable roads, course, will keep nlmost nn indefinite
. . . .
now payable to the imporinl treasury
period without replacement, but per- (
ORGANIZED A T J A X
President-elect
Harding
remained
at
received todny.
.
by jrfsh farmers who have purchased
ishubles will be displayed In glass
— .—
n seashore cottage todny.
C E R TIFIC A TE
their holdings with government ad­
Jars nnd preserved In alcohol.
1 JAC KSO N V ILLE . Nov. 13.— A t a
C A N N O T SELL HOPS
FROM DOCTOR
vances. This sum is in the future to
Mr. Hanafourde states tho plan is met&gt;tjng here today o f tho JadhsonTO O BTAIN C O AL GERM ANY DID
be divided between tho two Irish par(B * Tk» A-»»«l«t*d Br»M)
* NOT M AK E REQUEST
to
enlist the aid o f the rnilronda in vmc clearing House Association, the
COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 1 2 .— Suit to |iamcnta.
(By Tk« Ah m Ii I mI frr*»l
.
FOR AD M ITTAN C E advertising tho agricultural museum, org Bn|M tion plan for tho Southern
test the recent ruling prohibiting tho j Qno BUggeitlon has been made that
__________
B U FFALO_, Nov. 13.— A doctor’s
nnd in this connectiob-nn attractive pPdrrnl Farm Banking Corporation,
sale of mnlt extract and hops except ^Ireland's contribution to the Imperial certificate wns .required to obtain a
GENEVA,T
1
N
ov
.'°
18.—
Gcnmany
dldJ
8
,Kn will b&lt;r erected in the Jackson- authorizod by the Edge act, wan npto confectioners and bakers will be funds shall be limited to the Irish In- ton o f coal here today and with the
A , isoy. i».-u cn m a n y .l y
" " " ' T , Btation caU,
attcn. ^ n o r .z v u uy u.c
filed in tht federal court here by a com. t . , ond super-toe which . t .hcormomcter
nhn.o_ not mnko fn n .n l nppllcntlon fnr ml; I ^
p
c
o
v
c
d
.
Thc c o ^ r o t lo n ^ m Imvo
in , iiiv „ i ___ _.round
_ _ ttwenty
W 0 Q » * ___
cnpital stock of $0 ,0 00 ,000 .
distributing company.
*
present amounts to £10,000.000 or X9T0 thousands with empty bins clam- mission to the I.eagu eof Nations but
J. 8 . Reese, Pensacola; A. F. P erry,
£11,000,000 n year.
ored fo r fuel. A marked shortage o f W0U,(I not
th^ ln1X,t" t,,fon t0 b&lt;‘‘
WAGES
BEING
CUT.
Jacksonville;
J. A. Griffin, Tam pa;
tb e daug hters
Outside 6 f Ulster, however, none o f natural gas intensified the demand. 1 come * mcniber said Dr. Herrmann
W A N T RECOGNITION
-------.
G.
C.‘
Ware,
Leesbv/rg,
nnd E.
C.
J
Mueller,
vice-president}
o
f,
the
for­
these point* is being discussed at * 11.
’
AS H E V ILLE , N. C., Nov. 13— De­
D
A
N
V
ILLE
,
Va.,
Nov.
12.—
Wage
Romph,
Miami,
were
named
a
corneign
affairs
committee
o
f
the
Ger­
Complete separation and an indspend^
W RANGEL DRIVEN BACK.
nouncing the act whereby the names
man' reichstag, in a statement to reductions o f 25 per cent effective mittre to invite stock subscriptions
ent republic is the Sinn Fein policy,'
of Southern military and JMVal heroes
No. 21, were announced todny by Dan |n Florida.
(Br
Tk«
AuoeUU*
Br***.)
the
Journal cle Geneva today.
while even the moderates demand a ;
of tho Civil W ar were omitted from
River nnd Riverside Cotton Mill Cor.
— ^------------— :---- &gt;
PAR
IS
,
Nov.
12—
General
Wranggovernment for all Ireland on domln- -----. —
_
n n m rB T n u v . . p
the list inscribed in the Hall of Hon­ Ion lines ns completely free in finance el’a nntl-Bolshcvik forces were driv- , , I NC
poration, one o f the largest orgnnl- CONSCIENCE STRICKEN T H IE F
, '
*
or and Fame in the Arlington Mem­
! zations of its kind in thq South.
FO O TBALL GAM K
ns Canada.’ The government’a bill en back to the second line In Crimea j
Or Th* SM-.-iUud Br***.)
orial Amphitheatre,
the
UnitedU) does nothing to meet this view and today before the fierce Bolshevik atBRINGS BIG CROWD j T h eannourfeement said two. groups­
AM E RIC U S, Gn., Nov. 12.— A cot^
Daughters o f the Confederacy, in con
" its creation of two separate parlia- tack.
.
* .
j . H n jvr r r r 7 " \Vv 13— Van l ° 5 ,tB emP,oy e9 ^presented in #the
vention yesterday appointed a com­
plant management had voted almost science stricken thief returned $3,000
ments in Ireland with equal powers,
----------------------' , . Ruards of ™
f if Iv thouwnd ’ °W
nmnaucmcnt hnd votfd a,mo!lt
h MOTOR CA R DERAILED '
more than fifty thousand Mnanimotisly to.accept th ereductlon. In Liberty bonds and $200 in war sav­
mittee with permanent powers
to .______ ________________ I
is resrnted by c^erj’ eection o f politic-1
spectators
ovei*
ran
Princeton
today
serve untij such time as the names
The reduction, it was said, affects ings stamps stolen from tho residence
ions in the south nnd west.
■for the nnnual Prlnccton-Yale foot- only the bare rate o f pay, the econ­ of A. C. Croclfett It was received
of th^[r heroes nre placed on the roll.
19r Tb* AitocUtwd Br***)
W INCH ESTER, Va., Nov. 12— , hall classic. The llnc-up shows that omy dividend ot bonus in force un­ in an anonymous letter from Kansas
Judge Charles B. Howry, o f Missis­ HUNGER STR IK E t A L I.E D
Three
killed and three were injured Captain Callahan will play ri^ht der the plant government system not City,
sippi, now a resident o f Washington,
will be requested to act as an advisor
CORK, Nov. 12.— The hunger strike in the derailment o f an electric motor guard for Yale and thus not face his being affected.
,to this committee. He it a member o f the nine Irish prisoners was Called car near thrf old chapel bridge here brother who will play center for tho
Buy your post cards at tho Herald
of the amphitheatre committee.
Princeton team.
today.
o
ff
today.
T
ry
a
Herald
W
ant
Ad—
It
pays.
\
office.
Beautiful views, lc each.
i.

Another Tumble In

Japanese Question

10 Be Settled b*vo ^ccn

rite

PERMANENT DISPLAY

IRISH RULE AT
BELFAST EXPECTED

IM I AriTQANVII IE M
’c by tfil‘ K‘‘w Snwrnn NcWB th*t

Stopped Buyjng Cotton Colder Weather
Goods Cuts Output.
Is Predicted

7

‘thL

'm m

�PAGE SIX

TUB BANTORD DAILY BTBft'ALt). *RIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1120

counter,
lontf, &gt;2g. A t Ford G .r »—
FOK S A L E Very
w ngcr automobile in ?0o&lt;,
Apply B. &amp; O. Motor Co

. * * • our line o f e le c tP ic T T lT ^ ?
A. banner, 213-15 Sanford T ? p* ~
Phone 550.
ra ^ n oe.

T O N IG H T AND S A tU R D A Y

J. Parker Read's Presentation

" New
o f C o 5 5 5 S 5 S T l2 n Squares. A. Banner, * 1 % g * , * *
Ave. -Phone 55o!
____

_

W AN TE D

W A N TE D — An elderly lady, single
preferred, to attend invalid lady.
Address, 112 Elm Ave.
185-Ctp
A drama of a woman who who whipped the devil in herself.

Fascinating Paris, Mysterious Cairo,
crafty temper— Gowns to challenge any woman who ever lived.

HOLD Mis T IG H T
Sunshine Comedy
FO X NEW S
M O ND AY— “ JUST A W IF E ". COMING, LOUISE GLAUM IN
SEX,” ALSO “ SHEPHERD OF TH E H ILLS "

T A K IN G

UP

TOURISTS.

*

Buy your post cards at the Herald
office,
W A N TE D — Team work.
M. Hanson Shoe Shop.

FOR S A L E — lY i n . P
Gasoline engines, f
in perfect condition.-*Special reduction on (
nd cotton shirt waists
213-215 Snnford Ave
FOR

H A L E — Five

Inquire o f
large yard fo r ■vegetable
189-60tp D IX IE F U R N ITU R E CO., 321 San­
various
fru it trees, also two
ford avenue, pay cash for furniture,
W A N TE D — Your old batteries to reWhat have
• build. Let us mako your starting bedsteads, chairs, etc.
you?.
. J74-30tc
and lighting a pleasure. We are au­
thorised "E X ID E ” dealers and have
a Battery fo r all makes automobiles.
1EXIDE, the Giant that lives in a
box.”— Ray Bros. Phone 648, old
Ford Garage.
179-tfc
„ “ Get your Scratch Pads from- Tho
Herald—by the pound — 15c. .......
W A N T E D — Brick and cement work,
chimneys, flues, piers,
cement
floors, sidewalks. — A. L *R a y , 206
Ave.
$jft3-30tp
W AN TE D — By November 15, a 4 to 6
room house 6r apartments, unfur­
nished or partly famlahed. Beat of
references given. W ill rent by the
year. Address at once, “ Cottage.” In
W A N T E D — Pupils, Violin and Piano.
— Ruby Roy, 208 Park Ave.
175-20t-p
Buy your post cards at tho Herald
office. Beautiful view*, lc each.
W AN TE D TO REN'T— HOUSE OR

TEL]

CARPETS and rugs washed right on
the Boor, with Hamilton
Beach
Electric. Carpet Washer. Kills ' all
moth and disease germs. Make your
floor coverings absolutely sanitary.
— Electric Carpet Washer, Sanford.
186-Gtp

B A TT E R Y TROUBLES? Do not run
just received
. j
.
8,10 18 enl,re,y silverware and casseroles V lni *
dead. The battery is the costliest ac- ner, 213-15 Sanford Ave
cessory to your car. We re-charge r&gt;p0.
‘
and re-build all makes o f batteries. P L A N T S ~ F O R S A L E -C a b h a / ~ ^
- R a y Bros. Phone 648, old Ford
1000, fl.5 0 ; Cauliflower i J L C
Gttragg^ . t f c Rnow Ball, per M, |2.50:
T 5 5 T --------------------- ? • P «r K fl-50; Ice Berg,

1road Commission on the part o f the ORGAN R E C ITA L A T T H E
Chamber o f Commerce.
_ P H O N E RATES AND C LYD E
LO S T-W estcrn Union branch de- L* * L j * * ! ? * t Croaby’B Egyptian,
PR E S B YTE R IA N CHURCH
The new schedule o f the Clyde
“ LIN E CHANGE OF SCHEDULE
posit book. Finder please return
0n,,on’ yelL,ow ^ ™ u d s, j*r
Line's Sanford Route, which went in­
to Western Union office.—J. P. Hall, «
w M c Bermuda, per
The tourist season, which this year to effect November 1st, cannot be
Mgr.
.
*
180-tfc ? * U ™ 5 CeJ C! h , ye1l0W golden&gt; P «
officially opens November 15th, flnda changed at this time, according to a
L 5 S T - I N o , nc&gt;r S u t I V . t r c ~
|W N
an unprecedented number o f tourists letter received from Captain Tup- be given Tuesday night, Nov. 16, at
per by the Chamber o f Commerce.
already in the statr.
■lSTnll l&gt;r° W" '“ T
r
r u i n i n g ‘ " ‘I. ’c - . r . n t «
8 o'clock. Sanford is fortunate in
M5 and some small change. Finder r iav Countv
A
„ ~
Captain Tupper’a attention ha'cl
The problem o f housing them, par*
having an opportunity* to hear a
&gt;
l
e
«
.
return
to
Mm.
B.
A.
Dunon,
c
„7
.
SorinL."
n
.
^
'
-Cr™
ticulnrly In communities which were been called to the inconveniences this musician o f such ability. Miss Fos­
m«
c k c.
. — j ___ ...
covc a Pr,n8». rla.
ll.is
_ &gt;n the mer­
congested under normal circumstanc­ new schedule entailed ujio
ter ip founder and director o f the
es, will bopomc more difficulty to chants o f Sanford, particularly the
school o f Musical A rt o f Jacksonville.
L u o i — An Alpha umicron Pi sor*
arrival o f a boat here on Saturday. _
solve as the new arrivals increase.
The Jacksonville Times-Union says:
ority pin with the name Kathryn
In explaining his poaition in the
The Chamber o f Commerce is re­
“ Miss Foster is not only the lead­
Wilkey
on back. Finder return to
matter
he
stated
that
it
was
to
the
ceiving requests in every mail for
ing orgnnlst o f the city, but* has
owner
nnd
receive reward.
188-tfp
best
benefits
of
all
concerned
in
mnklight housekeeping rooms from peo­
probably few equals in the state and
as
close
connection
ns
possible
ple who are desirous of spending the *ng,
FOR S A LE
the South and her playing is always a
their
ocean steamers, for
winter in Sanford. In order to de­
delight, a thorough musician with
FOR SALE— Shasto daisies fl per
termine the number o f rooms o f this the accommodation o f those passeng­ nigh faultless technique.”
dozen. English Shamrock Gxalys
nature available, Secretory Pearman ers who were routed through the-rivThis evening o f music is planned
30c
per dozen. Ring 207-W. 183-12tc
urgently requests that this informa­ er line to Sanford, and also 4o pre­ to give the people o f Sanford an op­
Special reduction in men's *and la­
tion be listed with him at the earl­ vent running boats on Sunday, both portunity to hear the Presbyterian or­ W a . N T E D - T w o
rooms fo r light dies’ W. L. Douglas shoes.— A. Ban­
from
crew
nnd
shippers
standpoint.
Post Cards nt the Herald office, le.
iest possible moment, as well ns any
housekeeping with private family. ner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.
gan and no admission will be charged.
Hereafter,
it
is
the
intention
of
the
other furnished room that may be
________________________________ lQg-tfc
Address K. K. J., care Herald.
rented to relieve this condition. Phone Clyde Line to put the steamer Osce­
FOR RENT— Nicely furnished large
___ ______________________ 187-3tp
229 or write the Secretary at the ola on this run nnd Captain Tuppcr B E A U T IF U L POST CARDS
light housekeeping rooms.— Mrs.
W A N T E D —Saleslady in general dry’
anticipates that better time will be
Riddling,
205 Onk ave. Eagle Hall.
good* store.
Stei
A T THE HERALD. E A C H ...
made on this schedule.
_______________________________ 186-6tc
Surprise Shoe Store
Sanford
A special meeting of the Bonrd of
Avenue.
189-21C bOR S A LE — 7-room, 2-story house,
Governors of the Snnford Chamber
large ynrd for garden Bpot, also
T 'O R ltE N T
o f Commerce was held Inst evening in
chicken yard.
Various fruit trees.
FOR RENT—One nicely furnished Phone 487.
the Valdez Hotel to determine what
186-Ctc
W lJ L \i ■
room, 320 Oak Ave. Phone 308-J.
attitude the organization would take
G E N E R A L M A C H IN E AND BOIL­
i * ,s A &lt; r ir
187-tfc
in the proposed telephone rate in­
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
•j
ER WORK
m tA S S CASTINGS
in perfect condition.— Herald Print­
crease, the hearing of which will be
GAS E N G IN E REPAIRS
) R E N T or fo r sale, large ware­ ing Co.
tf
held before the State Railroad Com­
house with railroad siding.— Chas.
A C T E Y L E N E CUTTING AND
.•ler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co. FOR S ALE — One horse, wagon nnd
mission in Tallahassee on tho 15th of
Li' ~
.'V
W ELD ING
.
156-tfc
*7 ^
hnrness.
Apply M. Hanson Shoe
this month.
■ •1
FURNISHED ROOMS—Two furniah Shop.
189-12tp Special machine for turning Auto
The company’s district and locnl
ed bed rooms.
Inquire 311 Park
managers were present at this meet­
FOR S A LE — Ton and a half truck, Crank Shafts and Crank I’ ias to
ing to explain their company's posi­
FOR R E N T -T w o or three furnished
used only two months. Bargain if within .0005 accuracy.
tion in tho matter and give nny addi­
housekeeping rooms.
p. O. Box taken nt once. Can be handled on a
IR R IG A TIO N NIPPLES
tional information that might be re- I
117, Owner.
184-6tp $14000 cash, balance easy payments.
P U L L E Y S and SHAFTINGS
quired.by the Board.
187-3tp ' ROUND AN D SQUARE IRON
bOR R EN T— Furnished front room, — H. B. Lewis, Agent.
Further action was deferred until I
218 Elm.
184-3U’ WOOD AN D POSTS sold nnd deliv­
Friday evening, nt which time it will
ered on hard road, within one mile
iR E A T ” M O RI)ETTE” . “ UPSIDE M AN.” CO
_________ M ISCELLANEOUS
be definitely determined what recom -'
o
f
town. See me.— W. V. Dunn.
B E A U T IF U L POST CARDS
ON TUESD AY. NOVEMBER 23RD, W ITH
ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week,
mcodations will be made to the Rail-1
109
Enst
First
street,
over
Union
A T T H E H E RALD , E A C H ...
THREE RING CIRCUS
Pharmacy.
183-tfc
T ry n Herald Want Ad.— It pays

i

.

Sanford

Machine &amp; Foundry
Company

4

Ladies’ Coat Suits

S P E C IA L FO R T H E L A S T
D A Y OF THE SALE

O n e lot of Tailored Tricotincs, Dovet yncs and Zalam a Cloth Suits,
some with handsome Fur Collars

your choice Saturday for

3ver, all wool, light and dark shades
made of best quality Zephyr Yarns

E V E R Y T H IN G N E W

2se

are drummer’s samples— no two al
Wholesale prices were $48 to $60 dozen

T H A T ’S G O O D

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD,

PAGE TWO

SATURDAT, NOVEMBER 13. ! » »

Six Kinds of Safety
« . J. H O L L Y ......... ........... ,_Editor
H . J. U L I,A R D ..S *a *U rj-T rt»M rw
H . A. N E E L ,______(Venera! M auser

W e are not kicking on the
itxihe regularity of it.

work

Ami the Daily Herald is the Little
non that is doing, quite -a bit of
e stirring.
fla re you a little Daily Herald in
y o o r home ? It b the greatest little
exhilarate r that you ever saw-.

The announcement of the prixe j The people are realiring more and
'rinners of the Armistice Day parade more that the Fernald-Laaghton bas­
in Ust night’s Herald eras placed in pital means more to the city than
the paper at the Last minute and ’any other institution and many of
many did not know the result and ( them who have been inmate* there
hare asked that we re Wish it again, j wonder how Sanford erer existed
The lodges of the can are still in -. without a good bospitaL Every citicognito and will never be knows a s , sen in the county is standing by the
they have probably left for parts un- ^hospital and. when they find out the
known as judge* o f any kind of » eon- j hospital needs something thejf dig
test usually are obliged to do but in ' down and get it- The following do­
th!* case their decision seems to nations were made this week:
meet with general approvalL L Fraxier, of Celery avenue, do~
The firjt prise o f 125 went to Mr. rated fifty feet o f ho«e to,water the
and Mrs. E. F. Lane, who had the
“ Peace" ear decorated in white and
trimmed in pink wisteria nu king
what was pronounced one of the pret­
tiest cars that has ever been shown
GREAT FOR GARAGES
here in a parade:- In the car were
Mr and Mrs. Edward F- l a y , Mrs.
John Smith, Mrs. Charies'-tMth and
Miss Virginia Brady.
—
—
The Lane car had a white doTe of
peace on the front o f the car and I
. mall Cupid drove the car by silken
reins running to the mouth of the
dove and the entire effect was very

Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank
v
where you deposit your money?“
v
v
The first consideration is the capital, which should
should, be
ample to meet the retirem ents of the community the bank
is to serve.
The next question to consider is the officers in charge.
They should be men of experience, high character and success­
ful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.
Then there is &lt;the question of confidence. The public
should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. ,
These three principles determine the success of a bank.
our career
W e adopted these principles in the outs
id increase
and we expect to live up to this high standi
our usefulness to the community as the years
W e O ffer You:
1ST:

LARGE C APITAL AND WORKING RESERVE.

2ND:

TRAINED MEN IN CHARGE—MEN OF SEVERAL YEARS EX

3RD:

THE CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBLIC; WHICH IS PROVEN BY
fH E D AILY ADDITION TO'OUR O N E OF DEPOSITORS.

4TH:

PROTECTION BY TWO EXAMINATIONS EACTI YEAR BY THE
STATE BANKING DEPARTMENT. TWO AUDITS EACH YEAR
DY AN INDEPENDENT RECOGNIZED PUBLIC A U DIT COM• P A N T AND TWO SWORN STATEMENTS SUBMITTED TO TH E
STATE COMPTROLLER BY TH £
CASHIER,
GIVING
T IIE
BANK’S CONDITION IN D E T A IL A L L OF WHICH INSURES
REGULAR, SYSTEMATIC AND THOROUGH OPFJ1ATION OF

5TH:
T h e American Legion boy* deserve
a vote of thanks for putting some pep
into the game. They put over a big
ewe even if old Jupe Ptuvins did
throw a spit balL

INSURANCE OF A L L DEPOSITS EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR.
THIS IS A PROTECTION NOT COMMONLY FOUND IN BANKS
AND IS AN ABSOLUTE PROTECTION FOR YOUR FUNDS, IN
ADDITION TO A L L THE OTHER USUAL SAFEGUARDS.

Quick Lunch
feoffee Sc

The Herald has often said that
Sanf ord should have a band and we
way it again. It b one of the best
assets of any town and should be fost n i d and encouraged in every way.
Y en seem to get more out cf life if
yea can hear a good band now and
then and no town is a real town un­
set* i t has a good band.

Lloyd and Mrs. Eugene Rocmiilat
and little Evelyn Smith dressed in
fairy costume posed in the rear of
the ear.
The third prize was awarded to
the John Smith car entered as the
Gulf Refining Co. ear and the decora­
tions were white and yellow, beauti­
ful in design and carried oat the spir­
it of the day with a huge cannon
mounted on the Cost guarded by lit­
tle Wilton Smith and MU* Martha
Fitts, tbe car being driven, by John
Smith- The third priie was 110 and
while the judge* had a difficult time
"in judging the various car* as there
were so many beautiful design* iu
the parade it b the general o p ia s i
that they gave the prixe* where they
were due and the cars were donated

THE ADYICB OF A COMPETENT BOARD OF DIRECTORS,
WHO MEET W T in THE OFFICERS
REGULARLY
EACH
MONTH AND ADVISE THEM AS TO THE OPERATION OF
TH E BANK.

THESE ARE REASONS W HY YOU SHOULD DO BUSINESS W ITH
US. AND WE BELIEVE TH AT NO BANK CAN OFFER nETTER IN ­
DUCEMENTS.

S ifid w ich es 10c

Pie?, hocte made IOr cat
Bc&gt;t Coffee in Sanford

WE WANT YODR BUSINESS

December 1st
On the first of each month
year rent is due.
Why gbe
other people j oer money. Bay
yon a home and each mouth
instead of paying cat rest
money, pa; on a home that b
yoars.
Beautiful home* on Park.
Myrtle
Heights.
location.

1 M. D. GATCHEL
GROCERIES AND

SUPPLIES

Phone 119
! Corner Sanford and Celery Arcane* j

Vulcanite Shingles
Just Lay Them Down and Nall—That’s All
There is To It

u n its .
Sanford
Betiding lots in aay
2-lb CANS STANDARD. HANDPACKED TOMATOES.
TER CAN ........................... V V
EXTRA FANCY

GRADE

MAINE

sr.p“ __.... 20c
Specials For Today

Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co

BRIDGE ACROSS ST. JOHNS

Choice
Western and Florida
Meats

,

^v

EXPORT SOAP,
PER CAKE . . .
SWIFTS' PREMIUM
HAMS. Per th. 1----

. S P E C IA L BAR G AIN S
. FOR T H E F IR S T

C O M P L E TE H O U S E B IL L
CARTER LUMBER CO.

Veal Pork, Mutton^
Sausage
Phone 6$

Seed, Our Business.
Honesty, Our Motto.
Purity, Our Watch
word.

Prices from $50 to $300

Terms to Suit Yours
The most complete line of Rec
Line o f Violins, Guitars and Mandolins

Prices Right

__ _________

THE HERALD PRINTING CO., be.

�—
■-»

THE SANFORD D A ILY HERALD,

u - -1
i - _' ’ : ‘ 'i”i :i

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13. 1920

-V

fjg - : t'
r\--. -i.*-'-;.

Ir \

^

--- •

-

,1
c• - &gt;r
.T jVrrrr3"fj -

PAGE TORE!?
' ‘

T O U R IS T CAMPS.

MISS K A T H R Y N W IL K E Y , Editor.
fj T

SOCIAL C A L E N D A R FOR THE
W EEK

Rhone 128

W E A TH E R REPORT

For Florida: Generally fair to­
Saturday—
night and Sunday. Colde^ in East
. Cccilian Music Club at the Studio and South portion tonight. Frost in
of Mra. Frances S. Munson nt 3 interior of Northern portion tonight.
o'clock.
DORNER H A S NEW LETTUCH
Albert D om er brought in a new
kind of lettuce today that looks like
n cross between lettuce and romalne
or Chinese cabbage or something of
the sort. A lbert says he crossed jt
with Iceberg lettuce and Big Boston
and
Romalne and It looks like this
T Mr. and Mrs. Raymond W. Butler,
was the hybrid from all three. He
of Brunswick, Ga., announce the birth
says he has two acres and has been
of a son, October 17th, who is to 1ms ,
tilled Raymond W. Butler, Jr. Mrs. j offered big money fo r it but expects
to wait until he can get tho price
■Butler is very pleasantly remembered
that he thinks he should have.
In Sanford by many friends as Miss
Edna Williams. .
VALDEZ G R IL L OPEN A T NIG H T

Mrs. B. J. Starling has returned a f­
ter a pleasant trip to Savannah, Ga.
'
•
Mrs. A. R- King motored her guest*
*nd Mr. and Mrs. Chamberlin to Orrr Undo Friday.

Tho many patrons o f the Valdez
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Marlow have
Hotel grill w ill bo pleased to Ipnrn
purchased the house on-tho comer o f
that the management has decided to
Seventh and Park avenue from* Dr.
keep the grill open at night until 1
Philips. ‘
o'clock.
1 87*6tc
_____

T. N. T.
The T. N. T. was charmingly enter­
tained Friday afternoon
by Mrs.
Reginald Holly at the home of Mrs.
R. J. Holly on Park avenue.
The regular members
and
two
guests enjoyed a most pleasant after­
noon. .
A delicious Bnlnd course was serv­
ed.
•

T A X P A Y E R S , T A K E NOTICE!
.■ i •
Tax books are now open for the
payment of State and County taxes
fo r 1020. &gt;A discount o ' two* per cent
is allowed for payipppt in November
and one per cent in December.
JNO. D. JIN K IN S,
11-13-dlw,
Tax Collector,
w-2t
Seminole Couijty.

Tourist campers would do well to
study the rules o f tho state board o f
health, which they will probably find
posted somewhere about the enmp
site, and try to obey, them to the let­
ter
,
These rules ane designed solely to
protect the health o f the campers and
o fthe people living in the vicinity of
the camps. \Ye do not want our visi­
tors to come down here and get sick
through failure, to obser/e the simple
riles o f sanitation which our peculiar
climate requites, and then go back
and declare Florida an unhealthy
state; neither do we want them to
spread any
contagious
diseases
amo’ig our people.
\
Cleanliness is next J o godliness ev­
erywhere, but In b Fwrida camp it Is
co-equal, because the one can not
exist long without the othjr.
Fortunately, local sanitation Is not
a difficult problem here. There Is
no mud. The sandy soil will not hold
surface water. There is little rain in
winter. But there ia na freezing
weather. Garbage and waste food o f
all kinds decay rapidly, and with un­
pleasant results, ’ The surface water
— that is the water in small ponds
shallow wells is easily contaminated
and should never be used for drink­
ing until it is certified by the proper
health authorities.
Fire is the best purifier and Into It
should j go all rubbish, .wnste paper,
and, most Important of all, every tin
enn, unless the yare removed prompt­
ly and In some systematic way. An
empty tin can is a nuisance on half a
dozen, counts. It will afford nn idinl
breeding place fo r mosquitoes even
in winter. It Is a Boclal center for
all kinds o f insects. And, no matter
what came in it, It soon developcs an
aroma nil its own.
u
All the rules can be summed up in
the general injunction:
Keep
the
premises clean.— Lakelnml Telegram.

I

John Graham, member o f tho KlsGIVING A W A Y RED TUBES
slmhice band, was tho guest of C. E.
The B. &amp; O. Gnrage hava nn ad­
Secrest and wife on Armistice day nt vertisement in this issue calling at­
their home on French nvenuc.
tention to the fact that they are giv­
ing away red tubes with every purIt cost $9,416,060 to elect Harding
Mrs. Lillian Deyores, o f Kissim­
i base of ft Kokomo tire. See the nd. nnd the Republicans who elected him
mee, was the guest o f Mrs. C. E. Se­
in this issue.
'
can now guess where this money is
crest for Armistice Dny.
coming from. Not from the people nt
Cooked Food Snle, Welfare depart­
Mr. and Mrs. IL- II. Withorlngton ment. Women’s Club, Wednesday nf- large ns the Democratic funds were
raised bul'from the big corporations
of Apopka, were in the city today for temoon.
il00-3tc
and trusts o f the country nnd when
a short time enroute to Daytona.
they put up rqoney for anything they
MILK IN J E C T O R HERE
Hon. Eph Brown and son, of Ft.
D. It. Osborne, representing the expect to get it l&gt;ack. You can draw
Christmas, wero In the city today on State Board o f Henlth, was in the your own conclusions nnd wc wish
business. •
city today making an inspection of you sweet dreams— we did not vote
the dairies. His report will be pub­ for Mr .Harding.
J. H. McClollnnd, o f Geneva, was lished in another Issue.
Jacksonville reports that ’tourist
calling on friends nnd transacting
travel from the north has gained by
business here today.
•
THE CO N G R E G A TIO N AL
* leaps nnd bounds within the past few
days. x
- *
FRIDAY’S GUESTS A T
Morning at 11 o’clock
*
TH E SEM IN O LE HOTEL •
The five (^fferent districts o f Dui
•
“ T A K IN G T H E CHURCH w •
vol county are now equipped with ma­
SE R IO U SLY” .
'*
Cecil McDaniel, Sanford; Mrs. J. F. •
chinery suitable fo r the maintenance
Evening at 7:30 o’CIock
*
Stonebraker, Jr., Arcadia; Mr. and •
o f roads, $16,360 having Just been
“ T n E BODY AND BLOOD
*
Mrs. E. E. White, Daytona; It. J. •
spent by the county commissioner*.
OF C H R IS T ’ *
*
Galloway, New York City;
E. J. •
•
• • • • • * • * • • &lt;
Brady, Atlanta; John Mondiili, Jack­ • f •** • • • • •
•
•
sonville; Mr. and* Mrs. N| A. Reason#
Demonstration o f Florida
Fruit
er,»with Royal Palm Nurseries; II.
•
A T TH E STA R TH E A TR E
*
W. Glass, Edgmoorc, S. C.; S. I&gt;. juices nt the 'Woman’s Club Wednes­ •
TODAY
Wakefield products •
______
•
Rndmnn, Rodman, S. C.; S, C. Robin­ day afternoon.
on
sale.
190-3tc
son, Edgmoorc, S. C.; W . M. Melton,
•
W. W. liodkinson presents
*
Richburg, S. C.; Victor W. Hallis, •a • • » • « • • • • • •
•
LOUISE GLAUM in
*
Richburg, S. C.; F. M. Everett, Titus­
“ SAHARA”
•
•
S A T U R D A Y A T PRINCESS
• •
ville; Ernest Stephan, Tavares; L. M.
Burch, Indianapolis; I. S. Roberts,
Also “ HOLD ME T IG H T ’
Special Production
• •
Atlanta; Jeff Withers, Tluntington,
•
A Sunshine Comedy
*
•THE M A R R IA G E P IT ”
•
W. Vn.; J, F. Kettcrs, Wilmington,
______________________ t
N. C.
Also the “ Vanishing Dagger”
*
Office supplies nt tho Herald.
Mr. nnd Mrs. C. L. Smith, formerly
of Brndentown, have engaged rooms
The Logical Treatment
» l the Seminole nnd will spend the

•

winter in Sanford.

enunen

•

»

“ E N E R G IZ E R ”

Lieut. Bivins and S ta ff Sgt. Smith
will remain In Sanford until Sunday.
For Many Human Ills.
They are well pleased with Sanford,
and have mndo many friends on their
Wo hold thla to bo a Truth:— viz:—
visits here. They will return .to Ar­
That Circulation is tho BASIC factor
cadia Sunday in their airplanes.
o f Humnn Health.
v
Dr. Brownlee and II. C. Dubose
The "Energizer” process will DO
have returned from.DeFuniak Springs M ORE Benefit to Any Adult's gen­
where they attended the meeting of eral condition thnn any other method
the Presbytery.
.
'»
known.
COME IN and talk it over,
Secretary Pearmnn, o f the Sanford
108 Park Are.,
Board o f Trade, nnd Geo. G. Herring
will represent the Sanford Bonnl of
N ext Door to Mtobley’s Drug Store.
Trad# nt tho hearing o f the Southern
Bell Telephone before the Railroad
L. C. CAM ERON
Commissioners nt Tnllnhnssces next
nox
399
Sanford. Fla.
Phone 184
MonBay.

SAVE 3 0

PER CENT.

ON YOUR TlltySS

From the Foundation

—

.......................... _

............................ .............._

&amp;

R E S P O N S IB L E

X !

which this institution has been managed since

banking is the policy

under

the first day the doors were opened.

That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the
constant and gratifying growth in business.

It is the desire of the officers of this Bank to con­
tinue adding new accounts of those individuals
,

desiring most efficient and responsible hanking
h

a

*

O n our record of R E S P O N S IB IL IT Y your pa­
tronage is invited.

Seminole County Bank
Is owned,

controlled and

managed

by home

people, w h o are interested in the development
and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County
e resources and strong financial
connections w e are in position to assist our cus­
tomers at all times in the handling of their finan­
cial heeds.

LET US SERVE YO U.

4 P er Cent Interest Paid

Seminole County Bank

V

HILL LUMBER CO.

W EEK -EN D SPECIALS

fill

Open Season 1920-21 on;

Thanksgiving Day

[Z f\

a Specials
aluefor

Gonzalez &amp; Sanchez
$7.50 value’for

/

A{

Gonzalez &amp; Sanchez &lt;h
Z A
$6*75 value for
4&gt;0*0U

CHULUOTA INN

Reduction on all Cigars by the Box. Also! on all Cigarettes
by the Carton. Stationery, Ink, Writers* Supplies, Novelties

LMERS SUPERB CANDIES

Turkey Dinner
NOW MAKING

Pecan Nut Roll
m m m

.

to the R oof

Fabrics Guaranteed for 6,000 Miles and Cords 10,000

Distributors for
SEMINOLE, LAKH, VOLUSIA, ORANGE AND OSCEOLA C0UNTIE3

iT

EVERYTHING
* for
THE BUILDER

u a lity - S e r v ic d - P r ic e

With Every KOKOMO TIRE Purchased
of US. Take Advantage of this and

. . . . . .

Fresh Daily
,
$1.00 POUND
Water’s Kandy Kltohen
i-

F L E E TW O O D ’S, 107 East First St
TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS-lc A WORD

■

s .

■

. ■

:«3

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              <text>SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION&#13;
Volume 1&#13;
Number 190&#13;
&#13;
Sanford, Florida, Saturday, November 13, 1920&#13;
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RED CROSS MEMBERSHIP DRIVE GOING STRONG. COMMITTEES ARE OUT.&#13;
Chairman Walker Well Satisfied With the Work&#13;
FOR A GOOD CAUSE.&#13;
Means Much To People Everywhere And Our Own In Particular.&#13;
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The Red Cross membership drive started off here in fine shape on Armistice Day but on account of the big doings that day the work of the Red Cross was overshadowed although the  girls were everywhere during the day getting subscriptions and advertising the fact that the drive was on.&#13;
 Dr. Walker is in charge of the drive and has his headquarters at the Union Pharmacy where subscriptions at the will be taken at any time during the day. The canvassing committees are out taking in the various residence streets and from all indications the Membership Drive will net fine returns. The money is not for the war work this time as it was several years ago and for this we are all sincerely thankful but the membership dollars will be spent here on the Home Work that means so much to all of us. The Home Work Bureau here has been doing excellent work as the report published in this paper several days ago set forth and your dollars put forth for this purpose will be dollars well spent.&#13;
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SHIPPING BOARD APPOINTMENTS GIVEN OUT TODAY&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 – Shipping board appointed by President Wilson today was Rear Admiral Benson, Georgia, Democrat, chairman Frederick L. Thompson, Alabama, Democrat; Joseph N. Teal, Oregon, Democrat; John A Donald, New York, Democrat; Chester H. Rowell, California, Republican; Guy D. Goff, Wisconsin, Republican; Charles, Missouri, Republican.&#13;
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IMMIGRATION WILL BE RESTRICTED TO BLOOD RELATIVES&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 – &#13;
Congress at the coming session will be urged by the House committee on immigration to restrict admission of aliens to close, blood relatives of naturalized citizens, Representative Johnson, the chairman, said.&#13;
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OPEN OLD CASE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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LANGDON, N. H., Nov. 12 -&#13;
 An abandoned well on the farm of William b. Whitney was reopened today in search of the body of Whitney’s second wife, who the son said his fathered murdered eight years ago.&#13;
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AUSTRIA WANTS IN&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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GENEVA, Nov. 12 – &#13;
The formal application from Austria for admission to the League of Nations was received today.&#13;
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CANNOT SELL HOPS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 12 –&#13;
Suit to test the recent ruling prohibiting the sale of malt extract and hops except to confectioners and bakers will be filed in the federal court here by a distributing company.&#13;
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THE DAUGHTERS WANT RECOGNITION&#13;
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ASHEVILLE, N. C., Nov. 13 –&#13;
Denouncing the act where by the names of Southern Military and naval heroes of the civil war were omitted from the list inscribed in the Hall of Honor and Fame In The Arlington Memorial Amphitheatre, the United Daughters of the Confederacy, in convention yesterday appointed a committee with permanent powers to serve until such time as the names of the heroes are placed on the roll.&#13;
 Judge Charles B. Howry, of Mississippi, now a resident of Washington, will be requested to act as an advisor to this committee. He is a member of the amphitheatre committee.&#13;
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CRUELTY TO FAMILY INCREASES IN CHICAGO SINCE PROHIBITION&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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CHICAGO, Nov. 13 –&#13;
Statistics showing complaints of cruelty to wives and children increased 238 per cent since prohibition was given in the annual report of the superintendent of the Juvenile Protective Association who says men who formerly drank heavily have undergone a reaction expressing itself in surliness and abuse of their family. Non-support charges have decreased.&#13;
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ANOTHER TUMBLE IN SUGAR PRICE MADE&#13;
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NEW YORK, Nov. 13 –&#13;
There was another break of one-quarter cent a pound in raw sugar today. Cuba’s selling at 6 cents and freight, a new low record for the season. The decline came under continued pressure from producing countries and the poor demand for refined sugar.&#13;
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Haircuts Back to two-bits&#13;
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MACON, Nov. 13 –&#13;
Return to pre-war prices in shaves and hair cuts has been made in this city through the announcement of several barber shops of reductions from 25 cents to 15 cents in the price of shaves and in hair cuts from 50 cents to 25 cents.&#13;
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IRISH RULE AT BELFAST EXPECTED&#13;
SIX NORTHEAST COUNTIES WILL SET UP THEIR OWN GOVERNMENT&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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DUBLIN, Nov. 13 –&#13;
The Irish parliament at Belfast for the six northeast counties is expected to be set up immediately, once the Home Rule bill is passed by the Imperial government. It was pointed out that this would serve as an example for all the rest of Ireland, and have a steadying effect by showing the Sinn Feiners that Dublin and the other 26 counties could have precisely the same machinery of self-government as Belfast will have for its six counties.&#13;
 There is some agitation for amendments to the financial terms of the Home Rule bill. Ulstermen are opposed to handling over to any Irish body the control of customs and excise. They do not want this privilege for themselves and are determined that it shall not be made available for the rest of Ireland, fearing that it might be used to the detriment of industry in the northern section of the country.&#13;
 Belfast men want more than the £1,000,000 to be granted for setting up its parliament. They also say that the sum of £18,000,000 which Ireland is to contribute annually to the support of the empire is too high. This would be reduced by about £3,000,000 a year by the annuities now payable to the imperial treasury by Irish farmers who have purchased their holdings with government advances. This sum is in the future to be divided between the two Irish parliaments.&#13;
 One suggestion has been made that Ireland’s contribution to the Imperial funds shall be limited to the Irish income tax and super tax which at present amounts to £10,000,0 or £11,000,000 a year.&#13;
 Outside of ulster, however, none of these points is being discussed at all. Complete separation and an independent republic is the Sinn Fein policy, while even the moderates demand a government for all Ireland on dominion lines as completely free in finance as Canada. The government’s bill does nothing to meet this view and its creation of two separate parliaments in Ireland with equal powers is resented by every section of politician in the south and west.&#13;
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HUNGER STRIKE CALLED OFF&#13;
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CORK, Nov. 12 –&#13;
The hunger strike of the nine Irish prisoners was called off today.&#13;
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PARK–TO-PARK NATIONAL ROAD TO BE BUILT SOON&#13;
CONVENTION HELD TODAY TO GET NATIONAL AID FOR HIGHWAY&#13;
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(By The Associated Press)&#13;
DENVER, Nov. 13.-&#13;
The initial convention of the National Part-to-Park Highway Association, with nearly 100 delegates in attendance, opened here Thursday with a program calling for congressional aid for the 12 most westerly states in raising $100,000,000 for hard-surfacing the 5,600 miles of dirt roads that serve as connecting links to form the National Part-to-Park Highway. The convention will last three days.&#13;
 Stephen T. Mather, director of the National Park Service, officials of the American Automobile Association the Rotarians, Optimists and other western organizations, are participating. The National Park-To-Park highway association will be put on a permanent organization basis, and state and local branches formed in 12 states and 100 cities of the west.&#13;
 Congress will be memorialized to make this a federal highway, roughly circling nine western states, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, California, Arizona, and New Mexico and connecting 11 national parks.&#13;
 Representatives of the governors of these states, as well as Utah, Nevada and Texas, are attending the conference, which marks the close of the official tour dedicating this American motor way, with the start and finish in Denver. The trip required 76 days, noon and night meetings being held in towns on the route to arouse the west to a greater appreciation of its scenic, industrial and agricultural possibilities.&#13;
 This wonder highway in the form of a lariat loop embraces an area greater than continental Europe, touching in the course of its scenic running noose, Mesa Verde, Rocky Mountain, Yellowstone, Glacier, Mt. Rainer, Crater Lake, Lassen, Yosemite, Sequoia, General Grant And Grand Canyon National Parks.&#13;
 A branch road will some day connect Zion National Park in Utah, Cheyenne, Great Falls, Spokane, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Denver are on the route.&#13;
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Stopped Buying Cotton Goods Cuts Output&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 –&#13;
Curtailment of cotton manufacturing was reflected in October cotton consumption, statistics announced today showing the amount of raw cotton used for manufacturing last month as 399,837 bales, the smallest in any month in six years.&#13;
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SEBASTOL BEING EVACUATED BY THE BRITISH&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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LONDON, Nov. 13 – &#13;
 Sebastopol is being evacuated and British authorities requisitioning ships in Constantinople take refugees from that city, says a dispatch from Constantinople to the Exchange Telegraph. General Wrangel’s situation in Northern Crimea is said to be desperate.&#13;
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CERTIFICATE FROM DOCTOR TO OBTAIN COAL&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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BUFFALO, Nov. 13 –&#13;
 A doctor’s certificate was required to obtain a ton of coal here today and with the thermometer around twenty above zero thousands with empty bins clamored for fuel. A marked shortage of natural gas intensified the demand.&#13;
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WRANGEL DRIVEN BACK&#13;
(By The Associatd Press)&#13;
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PARIS, Nov. 12. –&#13;
General Wrangel’s anti-Bolshevik forces were driven back to the second line in Crimea today before the fierce Bolshevik attack.&#13;
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MOTOR CAR DERAILED&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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WINCHESTER, Va., Nov. 12 –&#13;
Three killed and three were injured in the derailment of an electric motor car near the old chapel bridge here today.&#13;
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FIRST CARS BIG BOSTON LETTUCE SHIPPED TODAY&#13;
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C.F. BRANNON SHIPS TWO CARS FINE LETTUCE THROUGH DUTTON COMPANY&#13;
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Sanford lettuce is going forward to the northern markets every day now and the season will soon be at its height. The weather is ideal and is just cool enough to head up the lettuce and keep it prime. C. F. Brannon sent in several heads of Big Boston to the Herald office today that is excellent stuff and is shipping two cars of this today through the F. F. Dutton Co. Ten cars of lettuce have gone forward this week which is a good showing for early lettuce and while no cash sales have been made here the lettuce is being shipped to find out what the market will take and the price at which it can be sold. The first lettuce shipped by the Dutton Co. was of a new variety propagated by Sheridan Jewett and it has been named by the editor of the Herald, the “Jewett Special”, being very early lettuce that comes ahead of the Big Boston. Two cars today are the first of the Big Boston to be shipped from here this season of which any mention has been made.&#13;
 Last week Albert Dorner brought in several heads of good lettuce to the Herald office but it was not ascertained whether this was Big Boston or not and this will not be shipped before next week.&#13;
 The outlook for the lettuce crop in the Sanford section this year is very bright and as it is a much easier crop to raise than celery and costs less money we are all pulling for the lettuce growers and shippers hoping that the weather man will keep it cool until after Thanksgiving at which time the big shipments will be going forward and there should be good money made for the growers despite the high cost of production this season.&#13;
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WOULD APPROVE SETTLEMENT&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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ROME, Nov. 12.&#13;
Foreign Minister received from the Italian embassy at Washington a statement that the American government has declared formally it would approved any settlement of the Adriatic question reached between Italy and Jugo-Slavia.&#13;
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COLD WEATHER IS PREDICTED&#13;
FROST AND FREEZING TEMPERATURES FOR SOUTH AND GULF.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 –&#13;
Frost and freezing temperatures in the South Atlantic and gulf states except Southern Florida was predicted by the weather bureau in its forecast for tonight and Sunday. Temperatures continue below normal for the eastern half of the country.&#13;
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PRESIDENT–ELECT KEPT INSIDE BY BAD WEATHER&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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POINT ISRAEL, Tex., Nov. 13 –&#13;
Kept off the fishing grounds by a cold northerner and virtually marooned on landslide by impassable roads, President-elect Harding remained at a seashore cottage today.&#13;
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GERMANY DID NOT MAKE REQUEST FOR ADMITTANCE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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GENEVA, Nov. 18. – &#13;
Germany did not make formal application for admission to the League of Nations but would not ignore the invitation to become a member and Dr. Herrmann Mueller, vice-president of the foreign affairs committee of the German reichtag, in a statement to the Journal de Geneva today.&#13;
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PRINCETON-YALE FOOTBALL GAME BRINGS BIG CROWD&#13;
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PRINCETON, N.J., Nov. 13 –&#13;
Vanguard of more than fifty thousand spectators over ran Princeton today for the annual Princeton-Yale football classic. The line-up shows that Captain Callahan will play right guard for Yale and thus not face his brother who will play center for the Princeton team.&#13;
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STEAMER COLLIDE AT STATEN ISLAND. PASSENGERS DROWN&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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New York, Nov. 13 –&#13;
The Spanish mail steamer Monsteerrat, from Cadiz with 370 passengers and the steamer San Marcos, from Galveston collided off Staten Island today. Some of the Montserrat’s passengers leaped overboard and one known to have been rescued. The San Marcos continued to the pier.&#13;
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Japanese Question To Be Settled.&#13;
GOVERNMENTS WILL GET TOGETHER ON PLAN FOR AGREEMENT&#13;
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(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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TOKIO, Nov. 13 –&#13;
Newspapers here today report that the Japanese and American governments have reached an agreement on principle relative to the exclusion of Japanese laborers from the United States. It was asserted, however, there is a disagreement regarding the methods to be employed. It is understood the Japanese provisions for exclusion, if embodied in a treaty will be humiliating and form an undesirable precedent.&#13;
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PERMANENT DISPLAY IN JACKSONVILLE&#13;
STATE FAIR ASSOCIATION WILL MAKE ARRANGEMENTS FOR PERMANENCY&#13;
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JACKSONVILLE, Nov., Nov. 13 –&#13;
Provided sufficient counties and communities respond – and the indications are that they will – the Florida State Fair &amp; Exposition will establish a permanent agricultural museum this year.&#13;
 The fair association has invited all counties, boards of trade, and chamber of commerce, as well as, communities to send along with their exhibits to the state fair, November 18 to 27, sufficient surplus products of the soil to begin the museum, which will be maintained in one of the big fair buildings for the benefit of the many visitors and tourists who pour through Jacksonville during the winter months.&#13;
 This plan is in connection with the association’s project to establish a great community center at the Brentwood grounds.&#13;
 General Manager B. K. Hanafourde of the fair association states that he has already received many favorable replies from prospective exhibitors Florida, and he is confident that this season will see launched what is destined to become an invaluable adjuct to the state fair, as well as to Florida communities in showing all year the great range and variety of products raised from Florida soil.&#13;
 Stable agricultural products, of course, will keep almost an indefinite period without replacement, but perishables will be displayed in glass jars and preserved in alcohol.&#13;
 Mr. Hanafourde states the plan is to enlist the aid of the railroads in advertising the agricultural museum, and in this connection at attractive sign will be erected in the Jacksonville terminal station calling attention to the exhibit.&#13;
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WAGES BEING CUT.&#13;
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DANVILLE, Va., Nov. 12 –&#13;
Wage reductions of 25 per cent effective No. 21, were announced today by Dan River and Riverside Cotton Mill Corporation, one of the largest organizations of its kind in the South.&#13;
 The announcement said two groups of its employes represented in the plant management had voted almost unanimously to accept the reduction.&#13;
 The reduction, it was said, affects only the base rate of pay, the economy dividend or bonus in force under the plant government system not being affected.&#13;
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Try a Herald Want Ad. – It pays.&#13;
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BRIDGE ACROSS ST. JOHNS AT OSTEEN FERRY WILL BE BUILT IF VOLUSIA HELPS.&#13;
New Smyrna Board of Trade Will Take Up Matter&#13;
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SHOULD BE ERECTED&#13;
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WOULD MEAN MUCH TO TRADE AND TRAVEL OF THIS SECTION OF FLORIDA.&#13;
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The counties of Volusia and Seminole have long discussed the proposition of a free bridge at Osteen ferry and while Seminole county has been ready to do her part for several years, Volusia has been hanging back for various reasons and these reasons have been personal reasons and not altogether for the best interests of the county and the cities in the south east end of Volusia have long understood the reasons and wanted something done by the Volusia commissioners in the way of a free bridge of Osteen.&#13;
 The other road across the St. Johns river at Monroe has a paid ferry and it is fifty cents all day and all night and this works a hardship on the travel to Seminole and Volusia and keeps many people from coming to this city and many from going to DeLand and Daytona. This toll bridge has been built long enough to pay the owners big money and the two counties should exercise their prerogative and buy it, making it either a pay proposition until paid for or make it a free bridge. The day has passed for toll bridges and Volusia counties beset with them on all sides. It is refreshing then to see by the New Smyrna News that New Smyrna at least will make an effort to have the bridge at Osteen ferry built as soon as possible and the New Smyrna Board of Trade has taken it up as the following would indicate:&#13;
 “That a bridge across the St. Johns river at the Osteen ferry can be secured and built with the assistance of Seminole county and the state road department, if the people of this county will get behind the movement and help it along is the information that has come to the new New Smyrna-Coronado Board of Trade, and the new organization has taken the matter up with the idea of carrying it through if possible.&#13;
 “The agitation for a free bridge across the St. Johns river at the Osteen ferry has been on for a number of years and has been discussed many times in Volusia and Seminole counties, but without definite results. It is inimated that if the matter is put before the state road department in the proper light state aid for the structure can be obtained. Seminole county has stood ready for a number of years to pay her half of the expense of building the bridge, but Volusia county has never got to the point where she will meet Seminole in the proposition.&#13;
 “The matter will be taken up thru the new board of trade at once and some interesting developments may be expected.”&#13;
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FARMER’S BANK WITH $6,000,000 CAPITAL ORGANIZED AT JAX&#13;
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JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 13 –&#13;
At meeting here today of the Jacksonville Clearing House Association, the organization plan for the Southern Federal Farm Banking Corporation, authorized by the Edge act, was approved. The corporation will have a capital stock of $6,000,000.&#13;
 J. S. Reese, Pensacola; A. F. Peery. Jacksonville; J. A. Griffin, Tampa; G. C. Ware, Leesburg, and E. C. Romph, Miami, were named a committee to invite stock subscriptions in Florida.&#13;
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 CONSCIENCE STRICKEN THIEF&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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AMERICUS, Ga. Nov. 12 –&#13;
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 A conscience stricken thief returned $3,000 in Liberty bonds and $200 in war savings stamps stolen from the residence of A. C. Crockett. It was received in an anonymous letter from Kansas City.&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
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PAGE SIX.  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1920.&#13;
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STAR THEATRE – TONIGHT AND SATURDAY&#13;
J. Parker Read’s presentation of Louise Glam in SAHARA&#13;
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A drama of a woman who whipped the devil in herself. Fascinating Paris. Mysterious Cairo. A craft temper – Gowns to challenge any woman who ever lived.&#13;
“HOLD ME TIGHT” – Sunshine Comedy FOX NEWS&#13;
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Monday – “JUST A WIFE.&#13;
Coming. Louise Glaum in “SEX.” Also “SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS”&#13;
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TAKING UP TOURISTS, TELEPHONE RATES AND CLYDE LINE CHANGE OF SCHEDULE&#13;
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 The tourist season, which this year officially opens November 15th, finds an unprecedented number of tourists already in the state.&#13;
 The problem of housing of housing them, particularly in communities which were congested under normal circumstances, will become more difficult to solve as the new arrivals increase.&#13;
  The Chamber of Commerce is receiving requests in every mail for light housekeeping rooms from people who are desirous of spending the winter in Sanford. In order to determine the number of rooms of this nature available, Secretary Pearman urgently requests that this information be listed with him at the earliest possible moment, as well as any other furnished room that may be rented to relieve this condition. Phone 229 or write the Secretary at the Valdez Hotel.&#13;
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 A special meeting of the Board of Governors of the Sanford Chamber of Commerce was held last evening in the Valdez Hotel to determine what attitude the organization would take in the proposed telephone rate increase, the hearing of which will be held before the state railroad commission in Tallahassee on the 15th of this month.&#13;
 The company’s district and local managers were present at this meeting to explain their company’s position in the matter and give any additional information that might be required by the Board.&#13;
 Further action was deferred until Friday evening, at which time it will be definitely determined what recommendations will be made to the Railroad Commission on the part of the Chamber of Commerce.&#13;
 The new schedule of the Clyde Line’s Sanford Route, which went into effect November 1st, cannot be changed at this time, according to a letter received from Captain Tupper by the Chamber of Commerce.&#13;
 Captain Tupper’s attention had been called to the inconveniences this new schedule entailed upon the merchants of Sanford, particularly the arrival of a boat here on Saturday.&#13;
 In explaining his position in the matter he stated that it was to the best benefits of all concerned in making as close connection as possible with their ocean steamers, for the accommodation of those passengers who were routed through the river line to Sanford, and also to prevent running boats on Sunday, both from crew and shippers standpoint.&#13;
 Hereafter, it is the intention of the Clyde Line to put the steamer Osceola on this run and Captain Tupper anticipates that better time will be made on this schedule.&#13;
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ORGAN RECITAL AT THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH&#13;
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 The music lovers of Sanford will be glad to know that the pipe organ recital by Miss Bertha M. Foster will be given Tuesday night, Nov. 16, at 8 o’ clock. Sanford is fortunate in having an opportunity to hear a musician of such ability. Miss Foster is founder and director of the school of Musical Art of Jacksonville. The Jacksonville Times-Union says:&#13;
 “Miss Foster is not only the leading organist of the city, but has probably few equals in the state and the South and her playing is always a delight, a through musician with nigh faultless technique.”&#13;
 This evening of music is planned to give the people of Sanford an opportunity to hear the Presbyterian organ and no admission will be charged.&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, each … 1c.&#13;
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[picture of four men upside down head first on a set of ascending and descending stairs which are on either side of a stage.]&#13;
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THE GREAT “MOUDETTE”. “UPSIDE MAN,” COMING TO SANFORD TO TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23RD, WITH SPARKS THREE RING CIRCUS.&#13;
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CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
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 Classified advertisements, 5 cents a line. No ad taken for less than 25 cents, and positively no classified charged to anyone. Cash must accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit accordingly.&#13;
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WANTED&#13;
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WANTED – An elderly lady, single preferred, to attend invalid lady. Address, 112 Elm Ave.    185-9tp.&#13;
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Buy your post card at the Herald office.&#13;
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WANTED – Team work. Inquire of M. Hanson Shoe shop.  189-60tp &#13;
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WANTED – Your old batteries to rebuild. Let us make your starting and lighting a pleasure. We are authorized “EXIDE” dealers and have a Battery for all makes automobiles. “EXIDE”, the Giant that lives in a box.” – Ray Bros. Phone 548, old For Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
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Get Your Scratch Pads From The Herald – by the pound. – 15c&#13;
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WANTED – Brick and cement work, chimneys, flues, piers, cement floors, sidewalks. – A. L. Ray, 206 Park Ave.    173-30tp&#13;
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WANTED – By November 15, a 4 to 6 room house or apartments, unfurnished or partly furnished. Best of references given. Will rent by the year. Address at once, “Cottage,” in.&#13;
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WANTED – Pupils, Violin and Piano. – Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.  175-20t-p.&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
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WANTED TO RENT – HOUSE OR APARTMENT OF 4 TO 6 ROOMS. FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED. WILL RENT BY YEAR. ADDRESS “APARTMENT” CARE OF THE HERALD.    tf.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf&#13;
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WANTED – Two rooms for light housekeeping with private family. Address K. K. J., care Herald.    187-3tp&#13;
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WANTED – Saleslady in general dry goods store. Steady position. – Surprise Shoe Store, 310 Sanford Avenue.    189-2tc.&#13;
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FOR RENT&#13;
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FOR RENT –One nicely furnished room, Oak Ave. Phone 308-J.&#13;
157-tfc.&#13;
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TO RENT or for sale, large warehouse with railroad siding. – Chas. Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co.   156-tfc.&#13;
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FURNISHED ROOMS - Two furnished bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park Avenue.   157-tfc.&#13;
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FOR RENT – Two or three furnished housekeeping rooms. P. O. Box 117, owner.   184-6tp.&#13;
FOR RENT – Furnished front room, 2018 Elm.    184-tc&#13;
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MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
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ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, 109 East First street, over Union Pharmacy.   163-tfc.&#13;
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CARPETS and rugs washed right on the floor, with Hamilton Beach Electric Carpet washer. Kills all moth and disease germs. Make your floor coverings absolutely sanitary. –Electric Carpet Washer, Sanford.   186-6tp.&#13;
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DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture, bedstands, chairs, etc. What have you?   174-30tc.&#13;
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BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run your battery until she is entirely dead. The battery is the costliest accessory to your car. We re-charge and re-build all makes of batteries. – Ray Bros. Phone 548, old Ford Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
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LOST&#13;
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LOST – Western Union branch deposit book. Finder please return to Western Union office. – J. P. Hall, Mgr.   180-tfc.&#13;
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LOST – In or near Star Theatre a small brown pocketbook containing $15 and some small change. Finder please return Mrs. B. A. Duncan, 308 east 5th street and receive reward.   180-tfc.&#13;
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LOST – an Alpha Omicron Pi sorority pin with the name Kathryn Wilkey on back. Finder return to owner and receive reward. 188-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE&#13;
&#13;
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FOR SALE – Shasto daisies, $1 per dozen. English Shamrock Oxalys 30c per dozen. Ring 207-W.  183-12tc.&#13;
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Special reduction in men’s and ladies’ W. L. Douglas shoes. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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&#13;
FOR RENT – Nicely furnished large light housekeeping rooms. – Mrs. Riddling, 205 Oak ave.  Eagle Hall.   186-6tc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 7-room, 2-story house, large yard for garden spot, also chicken yard. Various fruit trees.  Phone 487.  186-6tc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf&#13;
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FOR SALE – One horse, wagon and harness. Apply M. Hanson shoe shop.            189-12tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – Ton and a half truck, used only two months. Bargain if taken at once. Can be handled on a $1,000 cash, balance easy payments. – H. B. Lewis, Agent.    187-3tp&#13;
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WOOD AND POSTS sold and delivered on hard road, within one mile of town. See me. – W. V. Dunn.   186-6tp.&#13;
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Try a Herald want ad. – It pays. &#13;
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FOR SALE – One counter, 17 feet long, $25. At Ford Garage. 187tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – Very cheap, one 7-passenger automobile in good shape. Apply B. &amp; O. Motor Co.  185-6tc.&#13;
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&#13;
See our line of electrical lamps. -  A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford avenue.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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New line of Congoleums and Art Squares. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf&#13;
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Special reduction on Georgette Silk and cotton shirt waists. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford ave.  Phone 550.&#13;
&#13;
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FOR SALE – Five room cottage, large yard for vegetable garden, various fruit trees, also two separate fives acre farm land; 5 gallon hot water heater.  P. O. Box 117, Owner.  184-6tp.&#13;
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We have just received a line of silverware and casseroles. – A Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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PLANTS FOR SALE – Cabbage per 1000, $1.50; Cauliflower, Handers Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B, B., per M, $1.50; Ice Berg, per M, $1.50; beets, Crosby’s Egyptian, per M, $1.50; Onion, yellow Bermuda, per M, $1.50; onions, white Bermuda, per M, $1.50; Celery, yellow golden, per M, $2.00; self-bleaching imported celery, per M, $2.00; French celery seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.00. – Clay County, Gardening Co., Green Cove Springs. Fla.       11-12.&#13;
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LARGEST TOURING CAR IN THE WORLD&#13;
&#13;
PARIS, Nov. 12. – &#13;
Complete with “cocktail bar,” the largest touring motor car in the world is now in Paris, says the Daily Mail.&#13;
 The car seats 15 persons and at night 9 can sleep on spring beds with every comfort.&#13;
&#13;
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Post cards at the Herald office, 1c.&#13;
&#13;
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Sanford Machine &amp; Foundry Company.&#13;
&#13;
GENERAL MACHINE AND BOILER WORK – BRASS CASTINGS – GAS ENGINE REPAIRS.  ACTEYLENE CUTTING AND WELDING.&#13;
&#13;
Special machine for turning Auto Crank Shafts and Crank Pins to within .0005 accuracy.&#13;
IRRIGATION SUPPLIES – PULLEYS AND SHAFTINGS – ROUND AND SQUARE IRON.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD. EACH 1c&#13;
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[advertisement with 3 line drawings of ladies in 1920’s dresses]&#13;
&#13;
1,000 Yards Silk, per yard, $1.49.&#13;
X’Mas Line on Display Nov. 20&#13;
&#13;
Ladies’ Coat Suits – SPECIAL FOR THE LAST DAY OF THE SALE.&#13;
&#13;
One lot of tailored Tricotines, Dovetynes and Zalama Cloth Suits, some with handsome Fur Collars.&#13;
$78.50, $87.00 to $100.00 suits, your choice Saturday for&#13;
&#13;
$59.50 only one day&#13;
&#13;
Sweater Specials –&#13;
 50 Slip-Over, all wool, light and dark shade and made of best quality Zephyr Yarns. &#13;
Saturday for $3.98 Each.&#13;
&#13;
For Saturday Only –&#13;
 These are drummer’s samples --- no two alike.&#13;
Wholesale prices were $48 to $60 dozen.&#13;
Saturday for $3.98 Each.&#13;
&#13;
YOWELL COMPANY. EVERYTHING NEW THAT’S GOOD.&#13;
&#13;
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 &#13;
PAGE TWO    THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOV. 13, 1920.&#13;
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&#13;
SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
&#13;
Published every afternoon except Sunday at The Herald Building, 107 Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, Florida.&#13;
-&#13;
THE HERALD PRINTING CO., Inc. PUBLISHERS.&#13;
-&#13;
R. J. HOLLY		Editor&#13;
N. J. LILLARD		Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
H. A. NEEL			General Manager&#13;
F. P. RINES		Circulation Manager.  Phone 481.&#13;
-&#13;
Advertising Rates Made Known On Application.&#13;
-&#13;
Subscription Price In Advance&#13;
One year			$4.00&#13;
Six year			$3.00&#13;
Delivered is city by carrier&#13;
One week			13 cents.&#13;
-&#13;
Member of the Associated Press.&#13;
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Some strenuous week.&#13;
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And some more of them ahead of us.&#13;
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However, we rest tomorrow for one day.&#13;
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We are not kicking on the work but the regularity of it.&#13;
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This old town is getting in the big city class with something stirring every minute.&#13;
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And the Daily Herald is the little spoon that is doing quite a bit of the stirring.&#13;
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Have you a little Daily Herald in your home? It is the greatest little exhilarator that you ever saw.&#13;
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The American Legion boys deserve a vote of thanks for putting some pep into the game. They put over a big one even if old Jupe Pluvius did throw a spit ball.&#13;
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If there was ever a greater bunch of boys in the world than the soldiers and sailors of the American army we would like to see them in their uniforms once each year at least and more if possible.&#13;
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The Herald has often said that Sanford should have a band and we may it again. It is one of the best assets of any town and should be fostered and encouraged in every way. You seem to get more out of life if you can bear a good band now and then and no town is a real town unless it has a good band.&#13;
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The State Road Department under the leadership of Forest Lake, of Sanford, is doing things, and as a result it is receiving the compliments and respect of the people of the state. Even those who would rather the state road department would do things other than those it is doing are pleased to see the pep and spine that Mr. Lake has injected into the body which unquestioningly is one of the most important departments of the entire state government, and should never be hampered in its work by efforts of the legislature to abolish it. – St. Augustine Record.&#13;
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Bridge Across St. Johns&#13;
&#13;
What Sanford and New Smyrna needs more than any one thing is a bridge across the St. Johns river at Osteen ferry. There is an article in this issue from the New Smyrna News that brings up this matter again and states Seminole county has been ready to pay her share of the bridge for many years but a certain cities in Volusia county has stood in the way of a free bridge across the St. Johns river probably because the bridge across the St Johns river at Monroe is a pay proposition and the free bridge would cut off some revenue from the pay bridge owned by private parties. The state road department might aid some in this much needed enterprise and it is hoped the two counties will get together, lay all personal objections aside and get a bridge built here at once and make it a free bridge.&#13;
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&#13;
Today – Lettuce - Cùkes – Fla. Cabbage – Yellow Squash – Egg Plants – Apples – Oranges – Bananas – Avocados.&#13;
&#13;
Deane Turner. Phone 491. Welaka Building.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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J  P says:&#13;
 I used to borrow money and pay big commissions and interest to get it. It was like a heavy yoke around my neck under which I was constantly struggling. It simply kept me grinding every day for others, so one day I resolved to save and invest. It was a might hard thing to do because I had the interest, principal, life insurance, household expenses and goodness knows what not to meet when pay day came. But I resolved with that determination and after years of struggling I succeeded in getting out of this rut and on top. Today I am retired, loaning money and making an investment in the 8 per cent cumulative prior preferred stock of the southern utilities company. What I did, you can to. Start now.” There none better.&#13;
&#13;
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THE PRIZE WINNERS&#13;
&#13;
The announcement of the prize winners of the Armistice Day parade in last night’s Herald was placed in the paper at the last minute and many did not know the result and have asked that we publish it again. The judges of the cars are still incognito and will never be known as they have probably left for parts unknown as judges of any kind of a contest usually are obligated to do but on this case their decision seems to meet with general approval.&#13;
 The first prize of $25 went to Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Lane, who had the “Peace” car decorated in white and trimmed in pink wisteria making what was pronounced one of the prettiest cars that has ever been shown here in a parade. In the car were Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Lane, Mrs. John Smith, Mrs. Charles Britt and miss Virginia Brady.&#13;
 The lane car had a white dove of peace on the front of the car and a small Cupid drove the car by silken reins running to the mouth of the dove and the entire effect was very pretty.&#13;
 The second prize went to Mr. And Mrs. Reginald S. Holly who also had a “Peace” car all in the white without a touch of any color carrying out the effect throughout the car with the white dove of peace perched on the tip of the canopy that was draped over the car and was also perfect in all it appointments. Driving the car was Mrs. Reginald holly and accompanying her were Mrs. R. J. Holly, Mrs. Donald Smith, Mrs. S. M. Lloyd and Mrs. Eugene Roumillat and Little Evelyn Smith dressed in fairy costume posed in the rear if the car.&#13;
 The third prize was awarded to the John Smith car entered as the Gulf Refining Co. car and the decorations were white and yellow, beautiful in design and carried out the spirit of the day with a huge cannon mounted on the float guarded by little Wilson Smith and Miss Martha Fitts, the car being driven by John Smith. The third prize was $10 and while the judges had a difficult time in judging the various cars as there were so many beautiful designs in the parade it is the general opinion that they gave the prizes where they were due and the cars were donated like everything else – to make Armistice Day the greatest day in history – and no one went into the parade for any other purpose.&#13;
 The beautiful cars and floats demonstrated that Sanford can arrange such an affair on short retire and make a display that would be a credible to a city many times as large and the Sanford spirit can always be counted upon to come across at the proper time.&#13;
&#13;
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 Will Rogers, the cartoonist, says McSwinney has nothing on the Republican postmasters – they have been starving for eight years.&#13;
&#13;
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Lord’s Purity Water. As Good as the Best.&#13;
Daily service.  Phone 66.&#13;
&#13;
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Seed, Our Business.  Honesty, Our Motto.  Purity, Our Watchword.&#13;
&#13;
The L. Allen Seed Co.&#13;
Come in and see us (Southern Seed Specialists).&#13;
Welaka Bldg.  Sanford, Fla.&#13;
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Kremora &#13;
Beauty in every box. The Finest Face Bleach ever produced. Does wonders for a bad complexion. All dealers or by mail, $1.25. Free booklet.&#13;
Dr. C. H. Barry Co. 0000 Michigan Avenue, CHICAGO.&#13;
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DONATIONS TO HOSPITAL&#13;
&#13;
The people are realizing more and more that the Fernald-Laughton hospital means more to the city than any other institution and many of them who have been inmate there wonder how Sanford ever existed without a good hospital. Every citizen in the country is standing by the hospital and when they find out the hospital needs something they dig down and get it. The following donations were made this week:&#13;
 L. I. Frazier, of Celery avenue, donated fifty feet of hose to water the lawn and keep it looking good.&#13;
 F. W. Mahoney sent a pew stove to keep the nurse’s cottage comfortable this winter.&#13;
&#13;
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GREAT FOR GARAGES&#13;
&#13;
For that new garage no roofing can begin to compare with Artcraft, slate surface, weather-proof and fire safe. Handsome natural slate colors, red and green shingle design.&#13;
 Use Artcraft for sidings as well as for the roof.&#13;
&#13;
The Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co.      189-3tc.&#13;
&#13;
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 Cozy Café – Quick Lunch.&#13;
Coffee  5c.   Sandwiches  10c.   Pies, homemade  10c cut.&#13;
Best Coffee in Sanford.&#13;
&#13;
Princess Theatre Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
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December 1st.&#13;
&#13;
On the first of each month your rent is due. Why give other people your money. Buy you a home and each month instead of paying out rent money, pay on a house that is yours.&#13;
 Beautiful homes on Park, Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and Myrtle avenues, Sanford Heights. Building lots in any location.&#13;
&#13;
E. F. LANE.  “The Real Estate Man”.  &#13;
Phone 54. 206 First Street.&#13;
&#13;
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Special for today&#13;
Choice Western and Florida Meats. Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage&#13;
&#13;
CITY MARKET.&#13;
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SALES – SERVICE – PARTS – ACCESSORIES.&#13;
REO – the gold standard of value.&#13;
&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO.   Phone 66. &#13;
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SIX KINDS OF SAFETY&#13;
&#13;
 Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank where you deposit your money?&#13;
 The first consideration is the capital, which should be ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank is to serve.&#13;
 The next question to consider is the officers in charge. They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.&#13;
 Then there is the question of confidence. The public should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. &#13;
 These three principles determine the success of a bank.&#13;
 We adopted these principles in the outset of our career and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase our usefulness to the community as the years go by.&#13;
&#13;
 We offer you:&#13;
  &#13;
  1st: Large capital and working reserve&#13;
  2nd: Trained men in charge – men of several years experience.&#13;
  3rd: The confidence of the public, which is proven by the daily addition to our line of depositors.&#13;
  4th: Protection by two examinations each year by the state banking department. Two audits each year by an independent recognized public audit company and two sworn statements submitted to the state comptroller by the cashier, giving the bank’s condition in detail. All of which insures regular, systematic and thorough operation of the bank.&#13;
  5th: The advice of a competent board of directors, who meet who meet with the officers regularly each month and advise them as to the operation of the bank.&#13;
6th: Insurance of all deposits every day of the year. This is a protection not commonly found in banks and is an absolute protection for your funds, in addition to all the other usual safeguards.&#13;
&#13;
  These are reasons why you should do business with us, and we believe that no bank can offer better inducements.&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD. We want your business.&#13;
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M. D. GATCHEL GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES.&#13;
Phone 110. Corner Sanford and Celery Avenues.&#13;
&#13;
2-lb Cans Standard, Hand-Packed Tomatoes, Per Can – 9c&#13;
Extra Fancy Grade, Maine Corn, Per can – 20c&#13;
Maxwell House Coffee, 1-lb. can – 40c&#13;
Export Soap, Per Cake – 5c&#13;
Swifts’ Premium Hams, Per lb. – 48c.&#13;
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Try a Herald Want Ad. – It pays.&#13;
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&#13;
Vulcanite Shingles&#13;
&#13;
Just Lay Them Down and Nail – That’s All There is To It.&#13;
&#13;
The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air – rain, sleet, etc. from forcing its way through the roof.&#13;
The Shoulder of Protection is also the Self-Spacing Device. Makes laying easy and rapid – thus saving time and money.&#13;
These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red or Green Crushed slate. Each rain washes away the accumulated dust – reviving perpetually the original rich colors.&#13;
Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered – because they are fire-resisting.&#13;
Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the cost free of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.&#13;
&#13;
Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co&#13;
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SPECIAL BARGAINS for the FIRST COMPLETE HOUSE BILL.&#13;
CARTER LUMBER CO. &#13;
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Full line Columbia Phonographs.&#13;
&#13;
Prices from $50 to $300.  &#13;
Terms to suit yourself.&#13;
The most complete line of Records in the city.&#13;
Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins. &#13;
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Prices right&#13;
&#13;
H. L. Gibson.&#13;
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 &#13;
(PAGE 3). THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920.&#13;
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Society.  MISS KATHRYN WILKEY, Editor.  Phone 428.&#13;
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SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK&#13;
&#13;
Saturday –&#13;
Cecilian Music Club at the Studio of Mrs. Fannie S. Munson at 3 o’clock.&#13;
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Mrs. B. J. Starling has returned after a pleasant trip to Savannah, Ga.&#13;
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Mrs. A. R. King motored her guests and Mr. and Mrs. Chamberlin to Orlando Friday.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. Raymond W. Butler, of Brunswick, Ga., announce the birth of a son, October 17th, who is to be called Raymond W. Butler, Jr. Mrs. Butler is very pleasantly remembered in Sanford by many friends as Miss Edna Williams.&#13;
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T. N. T.&#13;
&#13;
The T. N. T. was charmingly entertained Friday afternoon by Mrs. Reginald Holly at the home of Mrs. R. J. Holly on Park avenue.&#13;
 The regular members and two guests enjoyed a most pleasant afternoon.&#13;
 A delicious salad course was served.&#13;
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John Graham, member of the Kissimmee band, was the guest of C. E. Secrest and wife on Armistice day at their home on French avenue.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs H. H. Witherspoon of Apopka, were in the city today for a short time enroute to Daytona.&#13;
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Hon. Eph Brown and son, of Ft. Christmas, were in the city today on business.&#13;
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J. H. McClelland, of Geneva, was calling on friends and transacting business here today. &#13;
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FRIDAY’S GUESTS AT THE SEMINOLE HOTEL&#13;
&#13;
Cecil McDaniel, Sanford; Mrs. J. F. Stonebraker, Jr., Acadia; Mr. and Mrs. E. E. White, Daytona; B. J. Galloway, New York City; E. J. Brady, Atlanta; John Mondilli, Jacksonville; Mr. And Mrs. N. A. Reasoner with Royal Palm Nurseries; H. W. Glass, Edgmoore, S. C.; S. L. Rodman, Rodman, S. C. ; S. C. Robinson, Edgmoore, S. C.; W. M. Melton, Richburg, S. C.; F. M. Everett, Titusville; Ernest Stephan, Tavares; L. M. Burch, Indianapolis; I. S. Roberts, Atlanta; Jeff Withers, Huntington, W. Va.; J. F. Ketters, Wilmington, N. C.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Smith, formerly of Bradenton, have engaged rooms at the Seminole and will spend the winter in Sanford.&#13;
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Lieut. Bivins and Staff Sgt. Smith will remain in Sanford until Sunday. They are well pleased with Sanford, and have made many friends on their visits here. They will return to Arcadia Sunday in their airplanes.&#13;
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Dr. Brownlee and H. C. Dubose have returned from DeFuniak Springs where they attended the meeting of the Presbytery.&#13;
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Secretary Pearman, of the Sanford Board of Trade, and Geo. G. Herring will represent the Sanford Board of Trade at the hearing of the Southern Bell Telephone before the Railroad Commissioners at Tallahassee next Monday.&#13;
&#13;
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RED TUBE FREE&#13;
 With every KOKOMO TIRE purchased of US.&#13;
Take advantage of this and save 30 per cent on your tires.&#13;
&#13;
Fabrics guaranteed for 6,000 Miles and Cords 10,000.&#13;
&#13;
B. &amp; O. Motor Co.&#13;
SEMINOLE, LAKE, VOLUSIA, ORANGE AND OSCEOLA COUNTIES.&#13;
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WEATHER REPORT&#13;
&#13;
For Florida: Generally fair tonight and Sunday. Colder in East and South portion tonight. Frost in interior of Northern portion tonight.&#13;
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DORNER HAS NEW LETTUCE&#13;
&#13;
Albert Dorner brought in a new kind of lettuce today that looks like a cross between lettuce and romaine or Chinese cabbage or something of the sort. Albert says he crossed it with Iceberg lettuce and Big Boston and Romaine and it looks like this was the hybrid from all three. He says he has two acres and has been offered big money for it but expects to wait until he can get the price that he thinks he should have.&#13;
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VALDEZ GRILL OPEN AT NIGHT&#13;
&#13;
The many patrons of the Valdez Hotel grill will be pleased to learn that the management has decided to keep the grill open at night until 1 o’clock.  1-87-6tc.&#13;
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TAXPAYERS, TAKE NOTICE!&#13;
&#13;
Tax books are now open for the payment of State and County taxes for 1920. A discount of two per cent is allowed for payment in November and one per cent in December.&#13;
&#13;
JNO. D. JINKINS.&#13;
Tax Collector, Seminole County.&#13;
11-13-dlw, w-2t.&#13;
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GIVE AWAY RED TUBES&#13;
&#13;
The B. &amp; O. Garage have an advertisement in this issue calling attention on the fact that they are giving away red tubes with every purchase of a Kokomo tire. See the ad in this issue.&#13;
&#13;
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Cooked Food Sale, Welfare Department, Women’s Club, Wednesday Afternoon.&#13;
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MILK INSPECTOR HERE&#13;
&#13;
D. H. Osborne, representing the State Board of Health, was in the city today making an inspection of the dairies. His report will be published in another issue.&#13;
&#13;
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THE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH&#13;
Morning at 11 o’clock&#13;
&#13;
“TAKING THE CHURCH SERIOUSLY”&#13;
Evening at 7:30 o’clock&#13;
“THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST”&#13;
&#13;
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Demonstration of Florida’s Fruit juices at the Women’s Club Wednesday afternoon. Wakefield products on sale.   190-3tc.&#13;
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SATURDAY AT PRINCESS&#13;
Special production “THE MARRIAGE PIT”&#13;
&#13;
Also the “Vanishing Dagger” &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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The logical treatment “ENERGIZER” for many human ills.&#13;
&#13;
We hold this to be a truth: - viz: - That Circulation is the BASIC Factor Of Human Health.&#13;
&#13;
The “Energizer” process will DO More benefit to Any Adult’s general condition than any other method known.&#13;
&#13;
COME IN and talk it over.  108 Park Ave. Next Door to Mobley’s drug store.&#13;
L. C. Cameron.  Box 399.  Sanford, Fla.  Phone 184.&#13;
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TOURIST CAMPS&#13;
&#13;
Tourist campers would do well to study the study rules of the state board of health, which they will probably find posted somewhere about the camp site, and try to obey them to the letter.&#13;
 These rules are designed soley to protect the health of the campers and of the people living in the vicinity of the camps. We do not want our visitors to come down here and get sick through failure, to observe the simple rules of sanitation which our peculiar climate requires, and then go back and declare Florida an unhealthy state; neither do we want them to spread any contagious diseases among our people.&#13;
 Cleanliness is next to godliness everywhere, but in a Florida camp it is co-equal, because the one can not exist long without the other.&#13;
 Fortunately, local sanitation is not a difficult problem here. There is no mud. The sandy soil will not hold surface water. There is little rain in winter. But there no freezing weather. Garbage and waste food of all kinds decay rapidly and with unpleasant results. The surface water – that is the water in small ponds shallow wells is easily contaminated and should never be used for drinking until it is certified by the proper health authorities.&#13;
 Fire is the best purifier and into it should go all rubbish, waste paper, and most important of all, every tin can, unless the yare removed promptly and in some systematic way. An empty tin can is a nuisance on half a dozen counts. It will afford an ideal breeding place for mosquitoes even in winter. It is a social center for all kinds of insects. And no matter what came in it, it soon developes an aroma all its own.&#13;
 All the rules can be summed up in the general injunction; Keep the premises clean. – Lakeland Telegram.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
It cost $3,416,060 to elect Harding and the Republicans who elected him can now guess where this money is coming from. Not from the people at large as the Democratic funds were raised but from the big corporations and trusts of the country and when they put up money for anything they expect to get it back. You can draw your own conclusions and we wish you sweet dreams – we did not vote for Mr. Harding.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
 Jacksonville reports that tourist travel from the north has gained by leaps and bounds within the past few days.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
 The five different districts of Duval county are now equipped with machinery suitable for the maintenance of roads, $16,360 having just been spent by the county commissioners.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
 AT THE STAR THEATRE TODAY&#13;
W. W. Hodkinson presents LOUISE GLAUM in “SAHARA”&#13;
Also “HOLD ME TIGHT”  A Sunshine Comedy.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
EVERYTHING for THE BUILDER&#13;
&#13;
From the foundation to the roof&#13;
HILL LUMBER CO.   Quality – Serviced – Price&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
CHULOTA INN&#13;
Will open season 1920-21 on Thanksgiving Day Turkey Dinner.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
NOW MAKING PECAN NUT ROLL. Fresh daily.  $1.00 POUND&#13;
Water’s Kandy Kitchen.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Just Received&#13;
Large shipment of shoes. Bought on lowest market.&#13;
COME SEE ’EM.&#13;
&#13;
Perkins &amp; Britt.  “The Store That Is Different”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY.&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under which this institution has been managed since the first day the doors were opened.&#13;
&#13;
 That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the constant and gratifying growth in business.&#13;
&#13;
 It is the desire of the officers of the Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals desiring most efficient and responsible banking.&#13;
&#13;
 On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your patronage is invited.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
Is owned, controlled and managed by home people, who are interested in the development and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County.&#13;
&#13;
 With our large resources and strong financial connections, we are in position to assist our customers at all times in the handling of their financial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.&#13;
&#13;
 4 Per Cent Interest Paid.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WEEK-END SPECIALS&#13;
Portina specials - $6.75 value for $5.50&#13;
Gonzalez &amp; Sanchez - $7.50 value for $6.40&#13;
Gonzalez &amp; Sanchez - $6.75 value for $5.60&#13;
&#13;
Reduction on all Cigars by the Box. Also, on all Cigarettes by the Carton. Stationery, Ink, Writer’s Supplies, Novelties.&#13;
&#13;
ELMERS SUPERB CANDIES&#13;
ALL WE ASK IS A TRIAL. ONE KIND – THE BEST!&#13;
&#13;
FLEETWOOD’S, 107 East First St.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS – 1c a word.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
END OF DOCUMENT&#13;
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                    <text>■■i I

IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
SANFORD. FLORIDA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1920

VOLUME 1

RIVERS AND HARBORS
CONGRESS WILL MEET
AT NATION’S CAPITAL
Hatters of Importance To
State of Florida

THAT WANT RIVERS AND HAIt
BORSAND BETTER WATER
TRANPSORTAION

Little John Carver Goes Abroad

DAIRY INSPECTION
IN AND AROUND CITY
HAVANA DOCK
CONGESTION DECREASES

GREECE 18 QUIET
AFTER ELECTION RIOTS
(B r TVa Ai m «UU 4

NUMBER 191

O r Tk« A u m U U 4 r n n . 1

P n *% )

WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.—Conges­
tion of the Havana docks ia rapidly
increasing because of importers in­
ability to pay duties, the department
of commerce was informed today.

ATHENS, Nov. , 16.—Greece ia
quiet except foi» a few minor clashes
as the result of the election In which
Premier Vcnizelos claimed victory-!
Small disorders were quieted by fire
hose streams. All meetings are for*
bidden. *

ASSOCIATED DAILIES
OF FLORIDA HOLD
IMPORTANT MEET

THE NATIONAL
FOREST PROGRAM
. CARRIED OUT

■A

•I

State Boatd of Health Is
On the Job

WILL BE PUBLISHED
IN THE HERALD WITH.THE PEF
CENTAGE ATTAINED BY
EACH DAIRY

.The dairies in and around Sanford
Following the preliminary an*
will be inspected every month from
nounccment sent out a month ago,
this time forward and thc percent
the official call for &gt;the Sixteenth
age of each one will be given in the
Convention of the National Rivera.&amp;
Sanford Herald if the plans .of the
Harbors Congress has now been is­
State Board of Health ore carried
MET AT DAYTONA YESTERDAY
sued. Like fill tho recent convent
out. Thia much was made plain b y ’
. AT THE HOME OF EDITOR
tions of the Congress this will. be
D. II. Osborne, of the State Board of
•
FITZGERALD
WHEN
CONGRESS
MEETS
IN
DE­
Health after his visit here last Sat­
held in- thei New Willard Hotel,
CEMBER RILL WILL RE
urday.
\Vashington, D. C., the dates being
The Associated Dailies of Florid*
INTRODUCED
Wednesday, Thursday nnd Friday,
One of the most prominent passengers on the first 10&lt;&gt; per cent Amerlcnn met nt Dnytonn yesterday with* ‘ He visited every one of the place*
liner, the Panhandle State, was little John Carver, eight years old. n direct about twenty papers present repre- "here cows are kept by people who
the 8th, Oth and 10th of December.
(By Tb« Ax«cUU4 fn n )
descendant of the first governor of Massachusetts. John Is going ubrund to
While the entire program has not
Sanford or as many
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—When intend the Pilgrim's tercentenary at Leyden, Holland. He Is shown In this sented by some thirty-five men and 8e^
them as he could learn about. Ho
been announced, it is evident that Congress meets in December n bill
women
of
the
Florida
press
gnng.
photograph with hts mother.
•
there will be no lack of Interesting wln ^ introduced for a national forThc meeting was called nt 2 o'clock found some of them all right and he
addresses nnd that an unusual num- CBt proKratn Including better fire
at thc hospitable home of Mr. and found some of them that were not all
ber of Important questions will be protection for the forests. “This step,
Mrs. Edward Fitzgerald (we nlwnys right and he warned those not all
presented for discussion.
Decided following an agreement by all the
include Mrs. Ed. for she is ubiquitous right to gpt right by thc time he
differences of opinion exist on ccr- |ndUBtries interested, marks the first
also) and after n delicious buffet made his next round or they would
In
tain subjects and some live, snappy , unitc(j mQyc Jn this direction in this
luncheon of the kind that could not be stopped from selling milk.
debates may be expected.
; country/' Aays Charles I-athrop Pack,
be served anywhere else* except the other words he gives all of them fa ir
‘ Everybody knows that waterwnys prel!idcnt of the American Forestry
Fitz’s home, the meeting wns called warning before ho comes down on
are very much less used in the Unit- Association, which announces the outto order by President Fitzgerald nnd them nnd gives them 20 daya in
ed States than they are in Europe. nnc of fu tu res to be embodied in
for two hours or more matters of which to clenn up their places and
MaJ. Gen. Lapsing II. Beach, Chief «be proposed legislation. The plan
the greatest importance to the press keep them clean nnd they will then
of Engineers, U. 3. Army, has som c|cnji9 for national appropriations of
of Florida were taken up. W. A. be graded kccording to their sanitary
very positlse view as to the reasons nt lcaat ? 1j, 000,000 a year,
Probcrt, the head of thc Associated measures adopted in order to have
why waterways are sp little used in. Thc provisions of the proposed
Press for the Southeast, was present clean nnd pure milk for sale. The
WOMAN REPRESENTATIVE
this country and the things that must meaBUrc are two-fold—for a consldnnd gave some very important in­ city commissioners will issue permits
SPENT SOME MONEY BUT
be done before the situation can bo crat,ie extension of direct federal acformation for the establishment of a to sell milk only to those who have
MADE
NO
PROMISES
headquarters
at Jacksonville. Other » mnrk °ver 00 per cent which is the
changcd.
(
tivity in forest ownership and producrepresentatives
were present for nd- vcr&gt;' l°wcst Hiey enn score and get
The National Rivert and Harbors tlonf and f or thc development with
(B
r
T)&gt;*
A
i
w
i
i
l
o
l
T n tn .)
vertislng agencies nnd supply houses ^ wi,h- w h™ lhp&gt;'
*hey
Congress look tho lend in securing federal aid and encouragement o f 1
_____
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.—Miss nnd gave information about stock w,,» bc Pub,,' hwl in th‘‘ J”*Pcr *nd
the important provisions for the gyntematic policies in the Severn! for- i | / \ i | p m A M T l ir * IT C*
Alice Robertson's campaign for elec­ nnd supplies nnd advertising nnd thc lbc consumers enn see the score of
benefit of waterwnys and
water Csted states to bring about adequate N M N k H K n M I H h
II \
various dairies and how they
transportation which are included in forest production and reproduction, j
* * tion from the second Oklahoma dis­ meeting wss conducive of results
thnt
will
mnkc
Florida
dailies
big.‘
"“’nd.
Each dairy wss given the
trict
cost
f2,940,
her
campaign
man­
the Transportation Act. Under one ( Thc program provides specifically, add aC ^ m Trisitr
MAnn
ager reported.
Miss Robertson's ger nnd better papers in the future.
nn'1 ^Rulntions governing tho
of these provisions there has been throuRh co. 0pCrntlon between the11UT
» p p £ k«
TIVFS OF
Statement declared "No pledges or While everything thnt enters into dairies of the state and thc laws oi»
created the Division of Inlnnd nnd ROVOrnment, the states and owners of
i
Coastwise Waterways Service, of timberlanda, for adequate protection
UNANCE AND ECONOMIES
promises were made."
the dailt and weekly newspaper is at ‘hp
wi» be r,gidly
enforced.
which Brig. Gen. W. D. Connor is nRn(nBt forest fires, for reforestation
the
peak
of
high
prices
just
at
pres­
(B r Tho A u k I i I , ! P r* u .)
* ent it seems that there may be a
The Herald will not say anything
Chief. Among other things this D i-,
(Continued on page four )
GENEVA, Nov. 15.—Delegates of SINGLE TAX PARTY
.
nAI)
SOME
MONEY
about
the dairies or how thoy would
vision has charge of thc Government
■
■■ ■
—— forty-one countries are attending the
drop in the’price of newspaper some
be
scored
today but will state th at
Barge Lines on the Mississippi and
n 1TP P n n
time/next spring which Is the first
first session of the assembly of the
Dr 7fc»
Fr*»»)
Mr.
Osborne
wns not satisfied with
Warrior rivers and the New York
r ( J |V
of hope the newspaper men hnve
ly oi
League of Nations here today. Def­
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16. — The ray.
sonic
of
them
nnd ns he has nindeState canals.
!
inite system of disarmament nnd a Single Tax pnrty expended two thou­ hull in ninny months.
nn
honest
endeavor
nil over his te r­
It is no secret thnt most old-time
The daily miners of Jacksonville,
plnn for using the economic block­ sand five hundred nnd forty-eight
ritory
to
get
better
regulations la
stenmbont men think that the tow­
ade against nations transgressing , ^ ||nr8 in th,, presidential campaign Pensacola, Jjikclnnd, (Orlando, St.
keeping
clenn
dairies
it
is not his inboats which have l&gt;een built for use
league's orders nrc a fong the sub- weconjjnjr to
forma! report. l)o- Augustine, Pnlutkn, DcLnnd, Dnyon these barge lines, all of which TOTAL HEATHS AMOUNT TO
,H,cu,«d. Tho United State. ~
“ "fl£ T i , ™ . "
!*»""•
S"nfonl *nd -everal tenth,e tc , work . hordohlp 00 .n r are of the “tunnel" type, will prove
TWELVE AND NINE-TENTHS
« ...
repre,ented b , d e l e f t ., but
„„noll„rcd today.
j" th" title, were repre.eated at the «■&gt;« ^ t Z ^ r ^ e . L
Jew U H ™
to be disastrous failures- Some of i
arrangements were made for t h
c
__________ ._____
! meeting and the next session will be «•« nciopi rno ruics anu reguiaunn*
PER THOUSAND
the new tow-boats are now’, in use
hold on December 12th nt Jackson- ln,(I ‘'own ^ tho "tntc h0*1™
-v.
rr.o .1
• United States to hnve* representation CREW RESCUED FROM
henlth in order to safeguard the
nnd n'report on their performance is
W iR H iN rnN Knv in The 1010 on the Hnancial, economics nnd man•
WRECKED SHIP ville.
i
henlth of the community nnd in thi*
awaited with much interest. Gen.) WASHINGON, Nov. 15-T h e
^ conjmiMion( ir de, irrd.
_____
|
Connor’s address will bo illustrated death rate of the Continental Unite i
________________
;
,Br -p,.
rr».o
, work he should hnve the co-opera­
tion of nil the dnirieicnnd tho com­
with moving pictures.
(States wns the lowest recorded for, WASHINGTON, \ 0v. 15.—Plans
SUPERIOR, WIs., Nov. 15.—The
missioners and the public generally.
All active workers for the im- •’W cr&lt;* y,,nr' t',‘’ Cenms Ilnrci.ti nn- ,^or legislation restricting ininiigrn- crew was rescurij from th^ steel
provement of watenvnys nre fnmilinr nounced. The totel deaths were 1- ^jon nnij naturalization of nlieni were^freighter, Francis J. Wldlnw, which
BYRINGTON APPOINTED
with the methods followed for thirty OOrt.IMfi; or twelve and • nine-tenths •discussed in executive session of the^waa wrecked on thc shoals in I^iko
years or more in the formulntion of P***" thousand.
House immigration committee to&lt;lay.f,Superior today.
*•
Br
A tio cliU d
Rivers nnd Harbors Bills, but mighty
•1
/
MISS BERTHA M. FOSTER WILL, WASHINGTON, Nov.- 13.—Frank
few of then, havdany idea how it is FREEZING TEMPERATURES
GIVE FREE ORGAN RECITAL *n. Byington, Maryland, was appolntREPORTED SOUTH TO TEXAS*♦
.
Z
to he done in the future. Just be- .
---“
----f
TOMOIIROW NIGHT •
, ed commissioner of pensions today.
♦
fore the close of the last session the ’
t*.
rr...i
House jutfsed n resolution, which ; WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.—FreezOne of the events In the musical
._ tn n
*___
puts all power to frame npprdprln- jnR temperature was reported ns fnr +.}. 4. &lt;•. y . j .
•&gt;+&lt;••&gt;♦+4-++41*+♦♦+♦$&lt;•&lt;••&gt;❖ *•!■-S"* ■&gt;++*•!•-y -S -ir-y ♦+ circles of the city is the pipe organ
tion bills’ Into the hands of a single South bh Central Texas.
recital that) will be held at the Pres - 1* 'J L I v l l j l J O U I W U l O
committee, which is to be composed
----------------------WASHINGTON, Nov. 15,—President Wilson issued his Thanks­
byterian church tomorrow night nt 8
giving Day Proclamation Friday night, saying that “in plenty, secure k o'clock. Miss Bertha M.‘ Foster.*of
of thirty-five members.
’P L
i
1 l? II
ity and peace, our virtuous and neT-relinnt people fare the future,”
It seems there Is still to be a Rlv- j 0 [ ) 3 S l O p O l I tillS
the Jacksonville School of Musical
•
—■■ ■i —# ,"
ers and Harbors Committee, nitho
and aetting aside Thursday, November 25, for the usual observances.
- (Br •' &gt;
rrtu -1
Art will give thc recital and It prom­
It will not frame Rivers nnd liar- !
The text follows:
WASHINGTON,
Nov.
15— Insur­
ises to be one of .the best thnt tho t
hors bills. Hon. S. Wallace Demp-(
“The keason approaches when it behooves us to turn from the
ance
policies
on
n
person’s
life who
people of Sanford hnve ever enjoyed.
soy, M. C., whose home is nt tockdistractions and preoccupations of our daily life, thnt we may contem­
The recital is free to everyone, no commits suicide is payable, If all
port, N. Y., hns been n member of REPORTED TO BE IN CHARGE
plate the merries which have been vouchsafed to us, nnd render heart­
admission to be charged and the pub- conditions of thc policy nrc compiled
OF WHOLE CRIMEAN
the Committee for. several years nnd
felt nnd unfeigned thanks unto God for His manifold goodness.
lie is* cordially Invited to nttend.'‘ Wjth, the Supreme Court ruled here
PENINSULA
*
it is understood that he will be its
‘This ia an old observance of the American people, deeply im­
Come early nnd be assured of n good today.
chairman in the-next Congress. His
bedded in our thought and habit- The burdrns and thc stresses of
( B f T &gt; . A m m Ii I U 7 r * » )
address on “Future River nnd Hare
pr&lt;" 'r‘ m
b* |
WAn T sT azTn o 8 TOP.-K.)
life hnve their own Inalstence.
PARIS, Nov. 15.—Sebastopol has
hors Bills” will no doubt clenr up a fallen.
“We
have
abundant
cause
for
thanksgiving.
The
lesions
of
{he
Russian bolshevik! troops
1.—America Triumphant, from !
_ _ “ ~ , _ .
number of points which arc now ob­ arc occupying thc city according to
war are rapidly healing. The great army of freedom which America
the Pilgrim Suite
.Dunn, WASHINGTON, Nov. 13— Secre-*
scure.
.
sent to the defense of liberty, returning to the grateful embrace of
unofficial French information to2 - The S w an ........ ..Sain -^aens ,ary D, nIell Mld the Na
depart.
the nation! has resumed the useful pursuits of peace, as simply and as
From various quarters demands day# -pho Boisheviki forces are re3 - Morning Serenade..........U m .re mcnt wl„ „co thp Umlr ln Bta l
promptly ’ns it rushed to arnut in obedience to the country’s call. The
are being made for still more radical ported as masters of tho whole Cri4 In Capulct s G arden..-.S te e re out hazInR
Naval Ul0 academ anJ
equal justice of onr laws has received steady vindication, in tho aupchanges in thc methods of handling n/oan peninsula nnd General Wrnngel
6-G o u n n d . “O Divine Redeem- • midBhipment wl„ ^ dlBm,BBcd If nec.
the improvement of waterways. Some aiuj
aro aboard a French ware • port of a law-abiding people againat varioui and sinister attacks,
r * , , byn "(dedicated
r;
-top the practice.
which have reflected only the .baaer agitations of war, now happily * «6.
urge the creation of a new Depart- Bhip bound for Constantinople.
—Gavette
to Miss j W___________
nient of Public .Works and others , .. ........... —■■■—■■;
—
—
paaslng.
‘
Foster) ________ 1. Campbell
“In plenty, security and peace, our virtuous and yir-rellant peothe appointment of a Waterways mad0 by tho administration that will
7.—E vensong___u ____ Johnston
Commission. Some of the advocates COme Into power on thc Fourth of . pie face the future. Its duties and ita opportunities. May we have vis­
8.
—Nuptial March . ......G u iim n n tSH O P
©
ion to discern our duties; the strength, both of hand and resolve to
of these two plans wanl to take away f March, will be a change in the meth0.—Spring Song__________ Hollins
discharge them; and the soundness of heart to realize that the truest
from Congress the power to decide qJ 0f dealing with the improvement
10.—Teccata __________ Crawford
opportunities are those oLservlee.
what should be dono and from the Gf rivers and harbors. If press re­
“In spirit, then, of devotion and stewardship we should give
Army, Engineers tho execution of., ports of addresses made by PreslTHREE DAY WEEK
thanks in our hearts, and dedicate ourselves to the service of God’s
the works that arc ordered. Others dent-elect Harding nre correct, he
WORKING SCHEDULE
*&gt;
merciful and loving purposes to Ills children.
believe that Congress should outline believes a change is desirable and ia
(B
r
TV?
A
im
t
I
i
M
F
m
i)
“Wherefore, I, Woodrow Wilt »n, president of the United States
a general plan and then turn over a inclined to favor the appointment of
BIDDLEFORD, Maine, Nov. 15—
of America, do hereby designate Thursday, the twenty-fifth day of
lump sum each year to the Army n commission. Further study n»y
Peppcrcl and York Cotton mills, em -'
November, next, as a day of thanksgiving- and prayer, and I call upon
Engineers to be expended according change his opinion, however, and a
my- countrymen to cease from their ordinary tasks and avocations up­
ploying six thousand persons, inau- [
to their judgment.
| discussion of thc various plans pro-1
gurated
a three day week working’,
on
that
day,
giving
it
up
to
the
remembrance
of
God
and
Hla
bless­
•There is n general impression that, posed should be aiv interesting and
schedule
it was reported today.
'
ingga,
and
their
dutiful
and
grateful
acknowledgement’’
among other changes that will be valuable feature of the convention. |

FIRST SESSION ASSEMBLY
THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS
MEETS AT GENEVA TODAY
Forty-one Countries Repre­
sented at Meeting

i

AMERICA LOWEST

Pipe Organ Recital
' Presbyterian Church

President’s Thanksgiving Proclamation

P H ! | f |F S ^ H lf I I I F S

MUST BE PAID

in .Bols Hands

.

40 '

^
-A

�PAGE FOUR

THE SANFORD DAILY
— ■■......... ....... .. ’ .

T O N IG H T AND S A TU R D A Y

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920

Salt Mullet
:: Co-Operation Accommod
Muillet Roe
Friendly Assistance
Fat Mackerel
Nice
and. worth while advice—this is part
Fryers
of the constructive serice which this
bank renders.
and
i
*

J. Parker Reads Presentation

A drama of a woman who who whipped the dcfll in herself. Fascinating Paris, Mysterious Cairo,
crafty temper—Gowns to challange any woman who ever lived.

HOLD ME T IG H T
Sunshine Comedy
FOX NEW S
MONDAY—“JU 8 T A WIFE". COMING, LOUISE GLAUM IN
SEX," ALSO "SHEPHERD OF JH E HILLS"

Churn Gold Olio
Clover Hill Butter

F. P. Forster, President B. F. Whltner, Cashier.
♦♦&lt;M&gt;+*+&lt;t**+******++*+*&lt;»-**++++++

CHANDLER CARS
HOLY CROSS CHURCH
Church services for Sunday, No­
vember 14th (24th after Trinity) will

Sanford

Florida

7:30 n. m., Low Celebration.
9:45 a. m., Church School.
1:00 a. m., Church service.
7:30 p. m., Vespers.

•

FRANKLIN CARS

"WE GIVE YOU SERVICE
—ASK ANYBODY”

WIGHT TIRE CO

Kelly-Springfield Tires
Diamond Tires. ♦
WANTED
MEN'S CLUR OF HOLY CROSS | ___
FOR SALE—One horse, wagon nnd
A good, enthusiastic meeting of WANTED—An elderly lady, single
harness. Apply M. finnson Shoe
preferred, to nttend invalid .lady. ^&gt;Pthe Men’s Parish Club was held in
•
.»
189-12tp
the Pariah House Inst Wednesday Address, 112 Elm Avc,
185-Gtp WOOD AND POSTS sold and deliv­
night, which marked the successful •Buy your post cards at the Herald
ered on hard road, within one mile
progress on the "White Way" to be office.
of town. Sec m e .- W. V. Dunn.
established about the church proper­ WANTED—Team work
.___________
.
180-dtp
ty on the two avenues and street.
M. Hanson Shoe Shop.
FOR SALE—One counter, 17 feet
Tho committee in charge are Mr. G.
long, |25. At Ford Garage. 197tfc
WANTED—Your
old
batteries
to
re'
A Trial Solicited
F. Smith, Mr. Lincoln nnd Mrs. A. F.
build.
Let
us
make
your
starting
FOR
SALE—Very cheap, one 7-pasO U S to v*
McAllister. After other business
senger nutomobllc in good shape.
providing for some Inrgc successful nnd lighting' n pleasure. We are au­
OUR PRICES ARK RIGHT
185-Ctc
matters to be nnnounccd Inter, the thorized “EXIDE” dealers nnd hnve Apply B. &amp; O. Motor Co.
n
Battery
for
all
makes
automobiles.
Sec our line of electrical lamps.—
members ndjotirned by “n sing” un­
Ksnncr, 213-15 Sanford Avenue.
der the leadership of Mr. A. If. Stone “EXIDE, the Giant that lives in a A.
J. H. Tillis, Prop.
Phone 550.________________ lGff-tfc
box.”—Ray
Bros.
Phone
548,
old
and followed by refreshments of
New line of Con go leu ms nnd Art
'
179-tfc
• 402 Sapford Ave.
which committee Mr. Deane Turner Ford Garage.
Squnres.—A. Knnner, 213-15 Sanford Phone 105
—Get your ^Scratch Pads from Tha Avc. Phone 550.
is chnirmnn. After the meeting, the
men went to the bowling alleys. Herald—by thk pound—15c.
Three teams nre nlready organized i WANTED—B k nnd cement work
chimneys, flues, piers, cemont
under captaincies of Archie lletts,
flours,
sidewalks. — A. L. Ray, 20C
Frank Giles nnd R. R. Dens.
A
Park
Avc.
173-30tu
Specinl reduction on Georgette Silk
bowling challenge is mil against tho
nnd
cotton shirt waists*—A. Knnner, Every Battery repair we make la
WANTED—Pupils,
Violin
nnd
Pinno.
Senior Chapter Brotherhood of S. An­
213-215
Sanford Ave. Phone 550.
—Ruby Roy, 200 Park Ave.
guaranteed for six months. We nre
drew Chapter 425 (Tuesday night
able io do this because in repairing
175-20t-p
Chapter) which will* mark some fnst _______
nny make of luiltery we are licensed,
Buy your post enrds nt'thc Herald
bowling this winter in Sanford.
to use patented features which have
B. F. Whltner^ president of the' office. Beautiful views, lc each.
made Vesta batteries famous.
Men’s Club, will be pleased to hnve FOR SALE— 11, II. I*, and 2 ') |T“ P.
engines. Brand new and
other men join in the work which this in Gasoline
perfect condition.—Herald Print­
large successful club is doing.
ing Co.
a
ve nave just received n
L. A- KENAU.D, Prop.
Phone 189
erwnre and cnsscroles._
, 213-15 Sanford Ave.
The Brotherhood of Snint Andrew,
Senior nnd Junior Chapters of Holy
‘' Why don’t you get some bread that I can eat ?”
PLAN I S FOR SALE—Cabbage per
Cross Parish are forging ahead in nil
lOftO,
S
1
.n
0
;
Cauliflower,
Handers
That’s
never heard id the family that uses the new
ways. Sternly work is bringing the TO RENT or for sale, large ware­
Butter-Nut Bread.
•
»
Snow
Ball,
per
M,
$2.50;
Lettuce,
I).
Brotl orhood House nearer to full
house with railroad siding.—Chns. R., per M, $1.50; Ice Berg, per M,
For
its
appetizing
taste
tickles
the
palates
of youne and
completion. Much of the new ntlilet- Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co.
old
alike.
Walthall
&amp;
Estridge,
Props
$1.50;
beet!.,
Crosby’s
Egyptian,
per
150.tfc
ic equipment hn* come —two new bas­ ______________________
The NEW
ket balls; two sets of boxing gloves; I 1 RN1SI1EH ROOMS—Two furnish M. $1.50; Onion, yellow Bermuda, per
ed bed rooms. Inquire 311 Pnrk M, $1.50; .minus, white Bermuda, per
W e la k a B u ild in g
volley bnlls nnd net; medicine ball;
'I,
$1
50.
l
•
ler&gt;
,
yellow
golden,
per
two punching lings (one donated by
M. $2 .00 ; Self-blenehing imported
Robert Holly); these things to be
celery,
.per M, $2.00; French celery
hns nil the quality of the old Butter-Nut; wc could
followed now by some gymnasium ROOM AND BOARD, $
not improve that.
101
)
East
First
street
seed,
guaranteed,
jkt
M,
$2.00._
outfit—mnts, Indder, rings, etc. In Pharmacy.-_____\
But in nddition we’ve perfected a new mixing
this constant growth nnd expansion CARPETS nnd rugs washed right on Clay County Gardening Co., Green
process which enables us to turn out a lighter,
Cove Springs, Fla.
11-12 FOR EXPERT ALTO REPAIRING
daintier loaf than ever.
•
of the B. S. A. the lads nnd young
the floor, with Hamilton Beach
Get
n
loaf
today,
for
Butter-Nut
is
its
own best
men of tho city nre getting the same Electric Carpet Washer. Kills nil
advocate. At nil good gr ocers. The genuine bear*
and added benefits of one of the fin­ moth nnd disease germs. Make your
the Butter-Nut label.
est equipped "Y” or Club houses.
MILLER’S BAKERY
floor coverings absolutely sanitary.
This work is not nil for “self,'' for &lt;- Electric Carpet Washer, Sanford.
during the month contributions have
been added to some locnl charities,
to tho “Advent Box” in tho way of DIXIE FURNITURE CO , 321 San­
25 to 300 Watt in I I (J Volts.
ford avenue, pay cash for furniture,
new toys for tho mountain children of
THE NEW-PAINT S.MILK
20 to 75 Watts in 32 Volts
tho West Virginia Mission, nnd con­ bedsteads, chairs, etc. What have
174-30te GENERAL MACHINE AND BOIL­
You’ll wear one too if we
tribution of our part in money to the you?
Everything Electrical
new tower being ndded to Holy Cross BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run ER WORK BRASS CASTINGS
repaint your auto. Why go
nround with n dim, dull, oldMonastery on the Hudson river, New
your battery until she is entirely
GAS ENGINE REPAIRS
Expert Installation and
York, of which Fnthcr Huntington dead. The. buttery is tha costliest ac­
looking .car when for a few
ACTEYLKNE CUTTING AND
Repair Work
dollars we will paint and
(who will he remembered here) is cessory to y o u rcar. We re-charge
WELDING
the Superior nnd founder.
finish it Ukc newT It's good
ami re-build nil makes of batteries.
Chapter meetings itre every Tues­ —Rny Bros. Phbne 548, old Ford Special machine for turning Auto
sense also to keep a fresh
day nnd Thursday afternoons nnd Garage.
c;ont of paint on your c a r .
179-tfc Crank Shafts nnd Crank Pins to Phone 442
115 Magnolia Ave
within .0003 accuracy.
nights.
adds to its value if you want
to sell it or trade it in.
IRRIGATION NIPPLES
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
LOST—Western Union branch de­
PULLEYS nnd SHAFTINGS
The pastor has returned from the
posit book. Finder please return
Synod nnd will preach nt 11 a. m. to Western Union office__J. P. Hall,
ROUND AND SQUARE IRON
nnd 7:30 p. m.
•
Mgr.
•
180-tfc
Auto Painting
Sunday school nt 9:45 a. m.
LOST—An Alphn Omicrun Pi sor­
Phone 112
Intermediate C..'E., 2:30 p. m.
Sanford Heights
ority pin with the. nnrne Kathryn
Senior C. E., 0:45 p. m.
Wilkcy on back. Finder return to
owner nnd receive retvnrd.
188-tfp
TO THE MOTORISTS
.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
To make room during the construction of our now garage we will close oat
j
FOR SALE
CHURCH
our stock of celebrated Willard Threaded Rubber Batteries AT COST.
SUNDAY NOVEMBER 14
FOR SALE—Shnsto daisies,. $1 per
Orcrlands, regular price.....................rT3.H; sale price_____ _____ f 16-49
Subject:
doxen. English Shamrock Oxnlys
MORTAL AND IMMORTAL'
Cadillac,
regular price........................ S:.? 2 ; gale price___ . . . . . . . . 67.69 ..
30e per dozen. Ring 207-W. 183-12tc
podge, Matmon, Franklin, rcg. price, 71.90; sale price___________ 5M*
Special reduction In men’s nnd la'
Olds. Overland, Oakland,
its* W.
VU L.
V T
Y/m1#■1fi shoes.—A.
■[
dies*
Doughuf
Ban­
Bulck Fours, regular price........ 33.35; sale price___ 1............... 43J* J
THE CHURCH AT WORK
ner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phono 650.
______________________ •
106-tfc
Hudson. Reo, Bulck 6&gt;, regular price, 61.60; sals price................
50-17 i
1.—SANCTIFYING
Sanford’s Most Topnlsr.Hotel
Packard, regular |frice ...................
83.33;sale price........
67.69 j
by Sacraments snd Blessing*
FOR. RENT—Nicely furnished large
Maxwell,
regular
p
ric
e
......................
66
.
55
;
Ba),
p
ric
e
.....................
5429
light housekeeping rooms.—Mrs.
2.—TEACHING
SEMINOLE
HOTEL
and
GRILL
by Preaching and Reading.
Riddling, 206 Oak avc. Eagle Hall.
These are all hran n^w batteries and will last for years if pro perif
Under Management of
HOLY CROSS CHURCH
180-Gtc
carrd for. If your old battery Is bee cming doubtful now is the opportunity
W ALTER B. OLSQN
Park Ave. at Fourth Street
to save n bunch of money nnd at the same time insure a winter of csrc*
r OR SALE—7-room, 2-story house,
Sunday Services; (24th after
free
pleasure or business.
•
Our
Spcclnlly---«l?eniitolt‘’8
large yard for garden spot, also
. Trinity)
famous $1 Sunday Dinner
chicken yard. Various fruit trees.
7:30 o. m.t Low Celebration.
Phone 487. .
186-Otc
de luxe.
5
9:45 a. m.. Church School.
SMITH BROTHERS
15 MAGNOLIA AVE.
•
'
* DAYTONA. FLORIDA
FOR SALE—1U, II. P. and 2ft II. P.
11:00 a. m.. Church Service.
Gasoline
engines.
Brand
new
and
Expert
Repair
Work
A la Carle Service all day,
7:30 p. m., Vespers.
in perfect condition.—Herald Print­
ing Co.
•
*
tf

Pure Food Market

HILL HARDWARE C O M P A N Y

We Guarantee All
Battery Repairs

Sanford Balltiy Service Co.

B u t t e r -N u t B

read

Cor. First and Sanford Ave.

Sanford
Machine &amp; Foundry National Madza Lamps
Company

G ILLO N &amp; FR Y .

I Sell It

J. E. SPURLING

Daytona Storage Battery Co.

A HERALD W A N T

j

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1920
~ FLORIDA--NOT- BENEFITTED

{Ju 4 *

£» * ^ i * ▲ w

Not One of RUIn A ff«ltd by Re'
duction of Ond Cent Per Gal.lon at Wagoq
NEW YORK,NoV. I d'.—Tank yrAg­
on prices of gasoline will be reduced
one cent n gallon today in states
MISS KATHRYN W1LKEY, Editor.
Phone 428
which the Standard Oil Company of
New Jersey and the Standard Oil
LATE WIRES
ppCIETY
&gt; ‘ it
Company of Louisiana operate, it was
Monday— 1
1
(O r Th, i M K i t U d P rill)
announced here last night by Wnltcr
Monday Afternoon Bridge Club ■ NORFOLK, Nov. 15.—Secretary
. C. Tcagle, president of the New Jerwith Mrs. Drummond.
I Daniels, addressing Rotarians here sey company.
Tuesday—
.today declared America’s program is ' States in which the reduction wjlj
Evening—Organ recital at ( the !to make her navy the greatest that, be effective include New Jersey,
v \Presbyterian ChurcH:
Jias ever been floated by any nation Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina,
Wednesday—
in history^South Carolina and the District of
Welfare Department at Women’a
Columbia in which the Standard Oil
WASHINGTON,. Nov. 15.—Presi­
Club.
Company of New Jersey operates,
dent Wilson has taken personal di­ and In Louisiana, Tennessee and A r­
Thursday—
Every Week Bridge Club with Mrs. rection of msjor American policies kansas, in which the Loulslsna com­
coming before the International Com­ pany operates.
Margaret Barnes.
-*•
munications Conference in session
Friday—
The reduction in price Is not thc^
here today.'
D; A. R, with Mrs. A. R. Key.
result of lower costs, cither of crude*
Spendthrift Club with Mrs. S. M.
oil or labor, Mr. Teagle said, but is a
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15— The ’movement on the part of the com­
Lloyd.
government requested the Supreme
t
-------Mrs. George Fox is opening her Court to set January 3rd for the pany to aid in lowering of prices as
home, op Park avenue, after h sum­ hearing of arguments in the nppeal part of the general commercial ad­
justment.
• 1
mer in the north.
’for Senator Newberry and sixteen
, Prices of tank wagon gasoline un­
others from conviction on charges of
Mias Dorothy Rumph is spending conspiracy to violate the election der the reduction will vary In the dif­
ferent states, it was explained, ow­
her Armistice holiday with a school Iowa.
ing to differences In freight costs.
friend,in Norfolk, Fla.
The effect upon the retail price gen­
DENVER, Nov, 15.—Senator CaldMias Ethel Henry Miss Helen Peck
erally was not predicted by company
er,
chalAnan of tho Senate commit­
and Miss Mae Thrasher return to
officials. In New Orleans the price
tee on reconstruction and production, will be reduced to twenty-eight and a
Taltahassea today. %
said he doubted If any big price de­ half cents today. •, The present New
clines
in bujlding material will come Origans price is from thirty-one to
Miss Sarah Wight and Miss Esther
soon
and
that prices ever will’ reach thlity-tRhgo cents.
Miller returned tq Rollins College nt
pre-war
levels.
‘ j
i_
Winter Park this morning.
Reduction in New Orleans
.Miss Norma Herndon returned to MAY RECRUIT
—«■
NEW ORLEANS, Noy. 15.—Reduc­
Stetson University today.
UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS tion in lank wagon prices of one
——1 "
cent per gallon for gnsollne, effective
Lieut. Bivens nnd friend left for
(At T h , A m » 1»L4 P i * « t
NEW YORK, Nov. 15— Tho ques­ Mondny throughout the stated of
Arcadia Sunday afternoon.
tion of recruiting college professors Louisiana, Tennessee and Arkansas
.
,.
■ -■
Mayor W. J. Steed of Kissimmee, to offset the shortage was discussed was announced last night by the
visited his family In Sanford during before the convention of the Associ­ Standard Oil Company of Louisiana,
tlie week-end.
ation of American universities here "as an aid to the restoration of what
today.
was properly considered normnl pric­
MRS. MAMS DIES IN
es."
&lt;
'PHILADELPHIA TWO ACTRESSES KILLED
IN CHICAGO PARK
No Limitations Set
■ There are many hearts in Sanford
CHARLOTTE,
N. C-, Nov. 15— Of­
and In Seminole county that will be
ficial
announcement
by the Standard
saddened by tho news of the passing
Oil Company of New Jersey of one
of Mrs. George L. Maris at the home 0f two prctty aertsses whose bodies
of her daughter in Philadelphia on weri&gt; found in Grant Pnrk remains a cent n gallon reduction in tank wag­
on prices of gasoline, effective today
Friday, Novcm!&gt;er 12th, after n pro- mystery. They were identified an
were received here today from New
traded illness,
Marie Alma Ramey, whose real name
Prof, and Mrs. Maris came to Flor- i8 Mary rtho«Jes, born at Altoonn, York, makes no specification of ter­
ritorial limitations.
Ida some thirteen years ngo, made pn&gt;i wifp 0f j | m McCauley,, actor,
and beautified a comfortable home on fbc other was Lilliam Thompson, OASIS IN CVBA
Lake Ohoro, nnd from the first they wjfc 0f Joseph MaCaree, electrician
DRAWS iiOBO ARMY
took an honored plncc in the higher nt wheeling, W. Va.
FROM UNITED STATES
SOLID CARLOAD OF
OF VEGETABLES LEAVES
WAUCHULA SECTION

Six Kinds of
Have you every psused to consider the sofety of the bonk
where you deposit your money?
which should be
the first consideration is Ithe capital,
„
ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank
*,
’
*
is to serve. •
The next question to consider is the officers in charge,
They should be men of
i experience, high character and successful. Without men of abil y no institution can succeed,
Then there is the &lt; estldh of confidence. The pul
_____
should_________________
have confidence in ie officers and in the bank.
i
These three principled determine the success of a bank
We adopted these principles iin the outset}of odr car
and we expect to live tip to this high standard and incre
our usefulness-to the coiiiitiuiilty as the yfedrs g i By.
We Offer You:
1ST: LARGE CAPITAL AND WORKING RESERVE.
2ND: TRAINED MEN IN CHARGE—MEN OF SEVERAL YEARS EXPERIENCE.
3RD: THE CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBUC, WHICH IS PROVEN BY
TH E DAILY ADDITION TO OUR LINE OF DEPOSITORS.
,

'

1

4TH: PROTECTION BY TWO EXAMINATIONS EACH YEAR BY THE
STATE BANKING DEPARTMENT, TWO AUDITS EACH YEAR
BY AN INDEPENDENT RECOGNIZED PUBLIC AUDIT COM­
PANY AND TWO SWORN STATEMENTS SUBMITTED TO THE
STATE COMPTROLLER BY THE CASHIER, GIVING . THE
BANK’S CONDITION IN DETAIL, ALL OF WHICH INSURES
REGULAR, SYSTEMATIC AND THOROUGH OPERATION OF
THE BANK.
5TH: THE ADVICE OF A COMPETENT BOARD,OF DIRECTORS.
WIIO MEET WITH THE OFFICERS
REGULARLY
EACH
* MONTH AND ADVISE THEM AS TO THE OPERATION OF
THE BANK.
GTH: INSURANCE OF ALL DEPOSITS EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR,
THIS IS A PROTECTION NOT COMMONLY FOUND IN BANKS
AND IS AN ABSOLUTE PROTECTION FOR YOUR FUNDS, IN
ADDITION TO ALL THE OTHER USUAL SAFEGUARDS.
THESE ARE REASONS WYIY YOU SHOULD DO. BUSINESS WITH
US, AND WE BELIEVE THAT NO BANK CAN OFFER BETTER IN­
DUCEMENTS.

M. D. (iA T C H E L
GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES

Just Lay Them Down and Mall—1That’s All
There Is To it

Phone 110
li

h

CorneT Sanford and Celery Avenues

2 -Ib CANS STANDARD,
PACKED TOMATOES,
PER C.\N ..................... —

HAND

EXTRA FANCY
CORN, PER

MAINE

GRADE

The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air—rain, sleet,
etc., from forcing its way thro -ugh the roof.
The Shoulder of Protectio n is also the Self-Spacing Device.
Mnkcs laying easy and rapid— thus saving time and money.
These Asphalt Shingles a re surfaced with natural colored Red
o r Green Crushed Slate.
Eac h rain washes away the accumulated
dust—reviving perpetually the original rich colors.
Where these shingles arc used the insurance rate ia lowered—
because they are fire-reslstin g. ” ‘ l~ ~ **
Give us the dimensions of your roof. Wo will estimate the
cost free of charge. Samples nnd prices furnished free.

20C

H ill

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE. 1-lb. can.
GREAT FOR GARAGES

\
EXPORT SOAP.
PER C A K E .......... ..................t f W
1 ■

*

■“

-*■— '

“

„i

~~~

S P E C IA L BARGAINS

|

FOR THE FIRST**

SWIFTS’ PREMIUM
. /lO g *
HAMS, Per lb. ................. a O v
Try a Herald W ant Ad.—It pays.

Implement &amp; Supply Co

C O M P L E T E H O U S E .B IL L
CARTER LUMBER CO.

•

■

Full Line

AXPAYKRS, TAKE NOTICE!

WHY SOME RALES
MANAGERS GO MAD
FIRST SNOW LIKELY
Answer to the query why some
IN MIDDLE ATLANTIC
snles managers go mad mieht find
SECTION FOR TODAY some solution in the following ques­
tionnaire filled out by an applicant
WASHINGTON, Nov.
15—The applying to the United States Em­
weather bureau Inst night predicted ployment Service for employment:
the first snow of the winter tonight
Q. Bom? A. Yes; once. Q. Na­
or Tuesday In the middle ^Mantle tivity? A. Baptist,_ Q. Married or
states as the result of a disturbance single? A. Have been both.
Q.
In the east central Gulf of Mexico. Parents alive yet? A. Not yet. Q.
'The disturbance, the bureau announc­ Hair?
A. Thin, Q. Voice? A.
ed, probably will move northeastward weak. Q. Healthy? A. Sometimes.
nrith increasing intensity and be at­ Q. Previous experience? A. No. Q.
tended by rains tolny in the South W'hcre? A. Different places.
Q.
Atlantic and East Gulf states, Ten­ Business? A. Rotten. Q. Salnry ex­
nessee and Kentucky nnd rains nnd pected? A. More. Q. Drink? A.
•anows tonight or Tuesday in the mid­ Not In dry Rtatcs. Q. Why do you
dle Atlantic nnd New England states. want job? A. Wife won’t work any
Local snows also are probable in the more.
central Mississippi valley.
• Lower temperatures Monday in the
Central {dtsslsslppl valley and Tues­
day In the Eastern and Southeastern
states are indicated.
■ ;

£ ---.. .

.y*.-

TO ALL PEOPIJ? SELLING
MILK IN SANFORD
Notice is hereby given that, after
December 3rd you will be required to
have permit to Bell milk to anyone In
the City of Sanford. These permits
will be issued each month by the
City Clerk but will not b? issued to
anyone whose dairy* la not In first
class sanitary condition $s required
by the State Board of Health. City
health authorities are co-operating
with the State Board of Health In ev­
ery way nnd ask your support.
J. M. TOLAR.
Health Officer.
Get some of those late postcards at
Herald office, The Valdex Ho­
tel, the Welaka Block, the Seminole
Hotel and other polnta of Interest,
Only one cent each. Send a Sanford
card fo your friends. ’

—i—

t
i

Prices from $50 to $300

Terms to Suit Yourself
'

The most complete line of Records
in the city.
Line of Violins, Guitars and M andolins

Prices Right

�PAGE THREE

FORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER IS. 1920

THE MING TOMBS
N A N K IN G
A M ER IC A N
•S A I L O R S
SEE
H IS T O R IC A L.C H IN A

crdick, having a good tjjnej^helping
her get n quilt off.
A number of the ladies, Mrs. Bareli,
Mr*. Mggnuson, Mm. Ericson, Mrs.
Ballinger lent a hand to help clean
the church Thursday. Mrs. Ebba
Lee and baby nlao came in to encour­
age us.
Mrs. Tyner and children with Miss
Eunice and Elmer, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Krell, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Leo.and Mr.
and Mm. Roy Lee, Mrs. Borell nnd
Mm. Mngnuson, Mm. E. W, Lundquist with Raymond, Clarence Busqutst, Archie Swanson were among
those attending the Armistice dny
program besides a number of the
school children. All say it was fine.

a “temperance poem, having been
herself a strong temperance worker.
Rev. Edwards followed, speaking
earnestly on "Follow Me.’,’ Mrs, Jack
Vaughn and Mr* Swan, Mf.; arfd~Aim.
Vernon -Cofler. Mrs. Glensd^ arnl^jn
Clyde, were among those present.
Rev. Edwards was entertained at
the homo of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Bertleson while nmong us.
WILL CONVERT SOUTH

A NATIONAL
INSTITUTION

SANFORD
Ball Park Grounds

THE MING TOMBS OF NANKING, ly to forty feet in thickness. These
UPSALA AND GRAPEV1LLE
-------}nils are said to have been built in
______
If you were to visit the Orient on the fifth nnd sixth centuries, B. C.
an American man-o'-war nnd, make* Nanking is thq home of the cclethe trip from Manila to Shnnghni (l,rated mausoleum of Emperor Hung
through the China Sea and enter th e . W u-died in .1399—with other great
Yang Tso Kiang River, the largest ( monuments known as the Ming
in the world, nnd your ship should Tombs. There nre many mtereststopV at Nanking, yom would see jnjr niins in and near the city, insome very interesting sights.
(eluding those of Hung Wu’s Pnlnce.
It has been the pleasure of mnny, The Ming Tombs are the most
‘Mr' nna
’vni K°«'n8on were
American bluejackets to make the interesting in China, an 1 have
cruise. It has been their duty to probably been photographed more by visitors at the home of Mrs. J. A.
navigate the Great Yang Tsc ns far | American naval men thnn any other Vaughn on election day. Mrs. Vaughn
as Hankau (600 miles) nnd many of statues or temples in the Empire, j tells us she was one thnt was proud
the smaller ships have braved the The famous porcelain tower of nine j to go in and cast her vote for Cox
rapids ns fnr ns Chung King (1200 stories, nnd over two hundred feet nnd Charley Hand—and I gather the
miles). The river lends nn imposing high, is also very interesting.
last came first with her.
sight to the visitor, nnd there are
Dr.'Denton has been called out
In Nanking one con 'either ride in
mnny interesting land marks to he enrringes, jinrickshas, or automobiles, twice to attend Clnire, the
little
seen. Chinkiang, n beautiful little and the latter may be secured as daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
city is passed on the left yet there well ns the former for sightseeing Bertleson.
A number from this section were
are many villages of striking plc- in nnd nround the city. Sailormen
making the trip up the river are visiting Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
prone to tnke ndvnntage of these Edwin Peterson at Holly Ilill.
Word came that her sister, Mrs.
wonderful sights, nnd there is prob­
Sjoblom,
of Knoxville, Teim., was op­
ably no body of tourists who become
erated
upon
Sunday.
more familiar with China’s history
We
learn
thnt
Mr. nnd Mrs. Borell
than the American men-o’-wars-men.
are making some improvements on
their home, enclosing in a room and
reroofing parts of their house.
Mrs. Beck and Mrs. Ilodkins were
spending Wednesday with Mrs. Weat-

Mile Long Open Cage

Street Parade
1 0 :3 0 A . M .
We had a flno time as wc expect­
ed Sunday, besides most of the Eupsnln folks, Rev. Albertson nnd wife of
IJoLand, Dr. Conway and wife and
Miss Ruth Whittncker, of Orango
City. Dr. Conway brought out the
contrasts, showing how Jesus the
Christ could In? the little child, the
son given and yet the everlasting
father. Miss Whittncker played for
us. At the basket dinner Mr^ nnd
Mrs. Dunn and children, of Lake!
Mary with Dr. Edwards, of Jackson­
ville, came prepared to join us and
we all broke bread together under
the trees. Elmer Tyner got a snap
shot of us. Mrs. Albertson gave us

THE NEW-PAINT SMILE
You’ll wear one too If wo
repaint your auto. Why go
around with a dim, dull, oldlooking car when for a few
dollars wc will paint and
finish it like new? It’s good
sense also to keep a fresh
coat of paint on your e a r adds to its value If you want
to sell it or trade it in.

Phone 112

Sanford Heights

Passed the Sanitary Inspection Saturday
Sanitary Inspector
Walthall, and Estridge have the entire output of the Pinehurst and Roseland Dairies and
will only deliver Milk, from these two Dairies—insuring pure Milk. - See

■Hajj-

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m

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A V NOVEMBER
V A W M D P D 15.
IK 1J2«
t« H ‘
THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY,

PAGB FOUR

M 1 U M **m t itU n M n « i « t l l u i i r i t
I m l t BntUlur. KH M&lt;**.tU Ar*o««

Tkt

• THE MBASV RB OF SUCCESS IN LIFE IS NOT
BASED ON A MAN*8 ABILITY TO EARN, BUT
UPON HIS ABILITY TO SAVE, INVEST AND AC­
CUMULATE. BUILD UP A CONSERVATIVE IN-,
VESTMENT WITH SOUTHERN UTILITIES COMPANY 8 PER CENT
CUMULATIVE PRIOR PREFERRED STOCK. THERE’S NONE BET­
TER.

■

■
"

&lt;

SYNOD OF FLORIDA
* MEETS IN DeFUNlAK

'

Co-Operation Accommodation

DeFUNlAK SPRINGS, Nov. 10.—
The Synod of Florida Is in session in
DeFunink.
Rev. W. -S. Patterson, D. D., of
ruBLisitraa
Madison, preached a searching ser­
R. J. HOLLY...........................Editor
mon on "Personal Responsibility for
N. J- LILLARD.. Secretary-Treasurer
4 4 » + + 4 + » 4 » » + 4 4 » » » » * 4 + 4 + 4 * * * 4 4 * 4 » 4 W » » » » » » » 4 » 4 » 4 4 4 » 4 + 4 Souls.” Using Matthew 4:lx for a
H. A. N E E L ___ General Manager
text Dr. Patterson took the place of
Dr. Daffin, retiring moderator, and
F. P. RlNES-.-ClreuUtion Manager
and worth while advice—this is part
down on the job of bridge, building the new cars somewhat reminds the Impressed the members of Ihe synod
Phono 481
of
the constructive serice which this
at the St. Johns river crossings nnd spectator of witnessing a person’s
Mr*rU*lar litu Hid* Known on A&gt;plte*Uaa other places in the county. In fact first attempt to master a tin lizzie. with a large number of DcFunifek
bank renders.
people with a splendid message.
Volusia
is
beset
with
toll
bridges
and
There
are
fifteen
cars
upon
a
plat­
■ jH rfV
BnW ertpU .
» A 4n«u»
The synod then opened with pray­
Om T h i ........................................................ |4.00 they are a serious drawback to de­ form 40 by 150 feet. The cars are er by the moderator and Rev. E. t&gt;.
operated and steered individually by Brownlee ,of Sanford was elected to
a t Month* .................................................... ..*1.00 velopment
DnlirtrnA U C ttr h r C .trU r
the rider. No'skill is required, you the .highest office in the synod. E.
o----------•r- ' H
• '
i
CNns W"mmk * •
t
15 OtQts
simply grasp the familiar steering W. Way* D. D. was chosen as read­
TAKE A MEMBERSHIP
wheel, step on the pedal and away ing clerk and T. H. McConnell, Dy D.,
Member of the Associated Press
IF
- rj- _. £r
^ It will be heartening to the glor­ you go. With a little practice you as press agent of the synod.
_fvr_~ _r
ious cause of the American Red Cross are enabled to Dodgem (maybe). It
*
Rev. E. E- Lam, synod of Florida;
i 1 ; i* •• Is a question which drives the most L. T. Chafer, 'b . D* of Atlanta PresIf
people
everywhere
will
sign
up
m t K. ----------early this week In the fourth annual fun, the skilled or the unskilled op­ byWryi Prof. Milton Clarke, D. D.,
Nice rains today.
roll'call. This occasion brings back erator. The cars, like a mule’s dis of Columbia Theological Seminary,
-----------o----------F. P. Forster, President. B- F. Whltner, Cashier
vividly the days of the World War position, steers just the opposite to and Ira Miller, D. D., U. S. A., were
Makes nice lettuce tomorrow.
♦444»4 »*44444444»
&gt;&gt; H | | 4
II
when enthusiasm ran high and peo- nil set rules.—Atlanta American.
among the prominent visiting digni­
And fat bank accounts a few weeks' Ple wcrc c*Ker to contribute to one
taries. C. Blytatae, of the Southern
LARGE
BABOON
.ADOPTS
cause
or
another
in
connection
with
Baptist
church, was Invited to sit as serration and growing of timber. Al­
from nay.
so ■of methods of insuring against
the mighty struggle. In those days
FAMILY OF PUPPIES a visiting brother.
forest
losses by fire.
the
call
was
terribly
urgent
btit
even
The
report
of
the
committee!
on
ar­
Oat of which maybe the Herald
'
Provision
for more rapid replant­
yet
the
need
for
Red
Cross
ministra­
It
Is
a
well
known
fact
that
the
rangements
was
read
hy
Dr,
Curry,
will get a few dollars and dimes.
ing
of
the
vast
areas of denuded land
tions
has
not
ceased.
The
end
of
tho
ordinary
house
cat
has
been
known
and
was
adopted.
Rev.
Shell
will
. -----------o----------Walthall &amp; Estridge,
within
the
national
forests.
war
has
not
brought
an
end
to
fam­
to
adopt
an
entire
family
of
puppies,
lead
the
morning
devotion
on
Wed­
And every merchant In Sanford
Appropriation of $10,000,000 a year
will realize something on his invest-' ine and suffering and want and the and on rare occasions a mother dog nesday at 8:45 and Dr. E. E. Lane
Welaka Building
for five year? for tho purchase of
ravages of disease nor has made it has reared beasts of the jungle va preached at 11 a. m.
ment for holiday timer Is here.
unnecessary to continue to care for rtety, hut never In the annals, of zoo­
President Kemper, of Palmer Col­ lands, which should be added to the
And the merchant that falls to ad­ the health of communities. Wc still logy has a member of tho monkey lege, extended an invitation to the national forest' system, whether or
synod to attend a reception a t Palm­ not on the headwaters of navigable
vertise now is overlooking tho best owe n tremendous debt of gratitude family been known to “mother”
bet In his young life. People read to the Red Cross. Let us demon­ family of puppies until Fifi, one of er college to meet t the faculty and streams s's such purchases are now l
strate this sense of obligation by the star actresses in Minnie Thomp­ student body at 8:30 p. m., which was limited:
the Dally Herald.
promptly inscribing our names on son's troupe of statue canines with heartily accepted.
Authorizing ^hc-^fiddltlon 'to nst.1
-----------o------:---the
roll
of
honor.
*
ional
forests of lands now in other
the Sparks circus recently gave birth
The synod met at 8:45 a. m. Wed
Everyone that comes to Sanford
nesday, when Rev, EL E. Snell, of j forms of government ownership but
now speaks in highest terms of this
Madison, spoke of the Reality of found chiefly suitable for permanent
city and states that they heard noth­
forest production.
ing but praise for this city every­
God's Presence.
"Tha very great importance of this
Rev. Wm. Fred Galbreath, of the
where. Our excellent hotels nrc re­
program
and the suggestion outlined
Synod of Tdxas, was introduced as a
sponsible for this good reputation.
cannot
be
overestimated," said Mr.
-----------o----------correspondin gmember.
Bob Holly doesn't know whether
The moderator then appointed the Pack.
"They effect every state In the Un­
he belongs to the army or the navy,
permanent committees with revision
,
ion and the business interests of ev­
having served in both. Bob's "A
of the standing committees.
Jolly, a regular Jolly; soldier nnd
Communications were heard from ery state which means that every
sailor too," according to Kipling.—
the Y. M. C. A. nnd Dr. Joseph Ven­ man who wants to build n home who
Excuses for postponing your fall shopping are no longer in order.
Tampa Tribune.
able, of Jacksonville, was given the wants to get along, will be affected
second order of the afternoon to by this Important legislation.
m :
It should be done now—at once—before the holiday rush sets in.
1
And wd should guard the good
“It so happens this united move
spenk on the inter-race problem, now
for a national* forest policy," con­
V
nam e’of our hotels and sec that they
so acute in the Southland.
You can shop thoughtfully, leisurely and economically if you
[f are kept right up to the standard.
The Lord’s ndy missionary nllianco tinues Mr. Pack, "comes at an op­
shop* now. But if you wait until tho Christmas rush sets in,
■
There is nothing that gives the town !
nnd Columbia seminary nnd Thom- portune time and its importance to
yoii must buy hastily and inefficiently, and therefore extrnvag
a black eye as quickly as poor hotel |
well orphannge were heard from and j the welfare of every citizen canhot
antly.
^
accommodations. Our past experiDr. Melton Clark was given the first be overestimated. The plan tics up
NOW MAKING
m
cnees will tell us that. Keep up the
with water power development and
hour of the afternoon.
Shop now. Make a list of all that the family will need—heavier
j
good work of feeding the multitude.
President W. J. Martin, D. D., of j the coal situation. When we put the
-----------o----------Davidson
college, was presented to millions of waste power to work, the
clothes
for
the
cooler
weatther,
new
shoes,
new
hats,
that
new
-«
Fresh Daily
the
synod
being one of the lesding coal situation will begin to right It­
Every time wc meet with the news­
furniture you have been discussing, linen and silverware for
$1.00 POUND
educators of the South, the synod self. Water power development jind
paper men of Florida it gives us
bed and tabte.
will await his message with pleas­ reforestation should go hand in hand. W a te r’s Kandy Kitchpn
the-feeling that wc have the best
We are at the door of great commer­
ure.
bunch of scribes In the United States.
These you will find now in pleasihg selections on the shelves nnd
The message of Dr. Joseph G, Ven­ cial development. Let us open that BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
|f r
They have the goods and they are
counters of the local stores-^-fresh fall stock at the new lower
able on the inter-racial question was door."
getting out fine papers despite the
AT THE HERALD, E A C H -....
prices
that
please
us
ail.
one of the most powerful heard by
Ugh cost of everything that enters
the synod.
Into the publishing business.
We
The following resolution was adopt­
want to entertain them in Sanford
Make up your list now—and be sure to look for suggestions and
ed
by the synod:
CHANDLER
CARS
FRANKLIN
CARS
J
Borne time soon nnd get some celery
prices in the advertisements in the Daily Herald. It is always
*■
.
,1
___
A
That the moderator appoint an
in their systems (maybe celery, tonic
well to read the nds before shopping, and they will be found
ad interim’ committee to which the
if some can be found):
particularly helpful now.
m &amp;'
IlFl
"WE GIVE YOU SERVICE
address of Mr. Venarable be refer­
-----------o---------- red,
said
committee
also
to
serve
ns
It ia well that Sanford is to have
—ASK ANYBODY”
|
The season of heavy fall buying really begins tomorrow.
Make
co-operating ngeney of the synod
milk inspection and to follow that it
in dealing with the great question of
your selections early.
''fty j *. •
would be well to have meat inspec- I
thp
relations between the white nnd
tion. Too long have we waited for ,
toolrcd
races."
both and only the fact that the city
A
p
ro
g ressiv e po licy on hom e mis­
ELK.rUANT
LIKES
MONEY.
to
four
healthy
English
setter
pup­
of Sanford is the healthiest city in
sions
w
as
ad o pted by the Bynod.
pies.
the United States has kept off a n '
------Kelly-Springfield Tires.
Diamond Tires. I
A superintendent of Home Mis­
epidemic of disease that could haVe
An elephant with a craving for
As it happens Fifi enacts very im­
«ime from either the milk or other PnPcr money has to be watched, portant roles in the canine dramas sions for the stato ns a whole was de­
food supplies. More care should be Such nn elephant is “Baby Sue" one and statue numbers presented under cided upon. This man will also have
exercised by the people who raise ! °f U*e Johnny J. Jones animals at the "big top" nnd during the per­ charge,, of the Presbyterian Progres­
these products nnd by the people who the Southeastern Fair at Lakewood, formance cannot devote much of her sive program until such a man can
handle them. The law governs these ' 1° Wftr times, when the Red Cross time to the babies; therefore it fell he secured, Mr. II. C. DuBose ,of San­
cases.
was putting on its drive ami the to Miss Thompson to provide nn ef­ ford, was elected manager of the
-----------o_______
other war organizations were, cam- ficient nurse during Fifi's trcsplan Presbyterian Progressive Program.
OF
Articles of county with other de­
New Smyrna is still agitating the pnigning for funds, "Baby Sue" , duties. Ever since the birth of the
matter of a free bridge over the St. helped to collect funds. She went youngsters, Joe, a Inrge, good nntur- nominations were adopted nnd the
Johns at Osteen ferry. This question 11P and down the streets of towns cd baboon of the dog-fnee variety, following committee of county ap­
will never be settled until it is set- "'here the show appeared, carrying a j who occupies nn adjoining enge in pointed: E- D. Brownlee, chairman,
OUR PRICKS ARE RIGHT
' tied rig h t The Stntc Road Depart- bucket in her snout. She would hold the Menagerie seems to show such an Ilr. L. E. McNair, Jacksonville, nnd
1
ment is building nbout a dozen free out the bucket and make nn appeal , untiring interest in the babies, that Dr. T. II. McConnell, Orlando. The
bridges over West Florida rivers, and f°r funds that was usually nnswered finally Miss Thompson carefully ap­ location of every new church must
is even talking of n bridge three by liberal contributions. But she had Jpronchrd his cake with one of the be passed upon by this committee
miles long over Escambia Bay. The to be watched, ns she would eat the j fuzzy mites, when to her surprise, he before organization.
state, so far ns The News knows,' PnPpr money that was put Into her! held out both arms nnd upon rcceiv^has built no bridges in South nnd bucket. She would deliberately oct (ing it, immediately began to "coo” THE NATIONAL FOREST
PROGRAM CARRIED OUT
East Florida, where most of the tax-1down the basket, extract the bills and in true monkey innguage and fondle
•es are paid. The counties nnd com-|l‘«l them with as much relish ns it as only a mother’s instinct knows
(Continued from pago ond)
munltics and private particsi havo ; though they were peanuts. . After —in fact he proved to be such nn of denuded lands, for-.obtaining es­
built all the bridges in this section of she hadconsumcd many dollars, the adept in the role of nurse, that the sential information in rcgnrd to tim­
tho state.—Dclnind News.
j attendant who was with her on tour, babies quicVly adopted him nnd dur­ ber nnd timber lands, for extension
Wo believe the new state road de- kept nn eye on the bucket, nnd when ing Fifi's absence in the ring, it is of the National forests and foY oth­
partment will consider some of tho n bill was put into it would get the one of the dnliy nights of the Sparks er steps essential to continuous for­
needs of this part of Floridn as well bill out before "Sue" had n chance Menagerie to see this siminn nurse est production on lands chiefly suit­
as other parts. However, we still to consume it. Many persons, see­ fondling his little charge. Undoubt­ able for this purpose. -The follow­
contend that Volusia county laid ing the trainer take tho paper money edly Joe’s cage’ will be the center of ing legislation is proposed:
from the bucket nnd being ignorant attraction for all the kiddies when
Authorizing the Secretary of Ag­
of “Sne’s" craving for bills, would the circuq comes to Sanford on Tues­ riculture, after consulting appropri­
wonder if the bills were being kept day, November 23rd.
ate local agencies, to approve an ade­
u
by
the trainer. "Sue” collected a
(|W e have Bm useb carpet**
quate policy for each state, covering
7 Jo d a y
total
of
nbout
$14,000
for
war
work
„ W e have lace curtains,"
fire protection, reforestation, cut­
(H E
PURE FRESH
organizations.
tl W e have Fwench mirrors.'*
ting and removing of timber crops.
JU
Edward R. Salter, publicity man
W e have Butter-Nut Bread evtiy d a y !"
■R H u t■ j C o tIt u* c o C u k e s
Not less than $1,000,000 annually
of the Johnny J, Jones' Exposition is
And that settled it, for of course there’s nothing better than
*•
avtiiable for such co-operation with
Jty a , C a b b a g e
always emphatic in his declarations
#u k ' ! ■
states.
that the Johnny J. Jones Expositions TllE REAL HOME-MADE KIND
A survey of forest resources, forest
/
e
l
l
o
w
S
q
u
a
s
h
SEASONED JUST AS IT
is the greatest outdoor amusement of
production and forest requirements
I
SHOULD BE.
its class in the world and bases his
of the nation.
* £ g g fP ia n ts
statement largely upon the fact ev­ Come and get it—It's as cheap as the
Provision for studies and experi­
has an the quality of the old Butter-Nut; we could
ery new form of amusement or rid­
not improve that.
ments in forest reproduction meth­
other kind.
j f p p t e j O r a n y *s
ing device that is brought out, first
But In addition we've perfected a new _ mixing
ods, wood utilization, timber tests,
process which enables us to turn out a lighter,
make sits appearance with this or­
ZBananaa jfo o c a d o s
wood preservation, development of
daintier loaf than ever.
ganization. The latest Innovation is
by-products and other step# to bring
Get a loaf today, for Butter-Nut ia Ita own best
PnONB 122.
a riding device called "The Dodgem."
advocate. At all good Rr ocers. The genuine bear*
about the mopt. effective use of the
the Butter-Nut label.
.
and it is the first nnd only one in
nation’s forest resources.
SR®: f
ji
operation. The "trying out" test was
Provision for a study of forest tax­
MILLER’S BAKERY
¥97
SOmtJidf
put up to tho patrons of the South­ BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
ation, to assist states in devising tax
— ---------- i----------------------------eastern Fair. The modus operand! ofAT T H E H E R A L D , EACH—...
laws which will encourage the conBinforJ, Tier) 4 .

THE HERALD PRINTING CO., he.

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•

#

Friendly Assistance

• &lt; • • ■ « . . . *

Props.

J

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Specials For Today
Choice
Western and Florida
Meat 8

Y o u r F a ll S h o e in g

Veal, Pork Muttonf
Sausage

B e f o r e th e H o l i d a y R u s h

CITY MARKET
Pecan Nut Roll

i

WIGHT TIRE CO.

Ms,

Heaters

Every Kind

H ILL H A R D W A R E COMPANY

i:

HVfcaf Settled the Argument

Pork Sausage

3

m

Brown’s Market

IDeanc Z u rn er

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Mention of
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About

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TOE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY', NOVEMBER 15, 1920

Summary of the
Fleeting Small
Talks Succinctly*
Arranged for
Herald Readers

P e rso n a l I te m s

. of Interest

PACE FIVE

d&amp;AaTa

RESOLUTION ADOPTED
BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF
THE CHAMBER COMMERCES

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In Ke-application of the Southern
Hell Telephone Company for
Increased Rates.

November 12th, 1920.
WOMAN SERGEANT
WHEREAS,
It having been brought
BURIED WITH HONORS,
WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 13.—
to
the
attention
of the Sanford Chihn^j4^
FOUGHT FOR POLAND
Forecast for the period November 15
ber of Commerce that the Southern
to 20, inclusive. South Atlantic and
WARSAW, Oct. 21.—(By Mail).— Bell Telephone Company have peti­
CLulf stttes: Generally unsettled and All Warsaw turned out for Che funer­ tioned the Railroad Commissioners of
occasional rains; temperature below al the othVr'day of Sergeant Sophie the State of Florida for increased tolj
normal.
Poukopwicz, a member of Poland’s nnd exchange rates, which petition
Woman's Battalion, who was called w 11 be hear ! before that body on
WEATHER REPORT
here "the heroine of Plock.” She died November 15th, 1920, and,
For Florida: Rain tonight, cotder from wouqds inflicted with a Russian . WHEREAS, tho Board of Goveron North portion. Tuesday, fair and sword and the "Nahajha'1 or Cos­ nota of the Sanford Chamber of
much cooler.
sack’s whip whish ahe received at Commerce having acquainted them­
Plock during the drive against War­ selves with the facta as presented by
All ladies of Seminole county are saw. As a final tribute the Ameri­ the Southern Bell Telephono Company
cordially Invited to on open meeting can nurses who attended her nt the through paid advertisements in the
at the Woman’s Club on Oak avenue, hospital and the entire personnel of press and verbal presentation of
Wednesday, Nov. 17, at 3 o'clock.
the American Red Cross in Warsaw the same by its representatives, and,
went to her funeral.
WHEREAS, It appear* from data
B. H. Coney visited his fsmily here
All Warsaw knew her story and presented by the Southern Bell Tele­
for the week end coming up from there'were many moiit eyes that phone Company, thnt the said Com­
near Tampa where he is putting in gaxed at the plain white painted pine pany is making but a small margin
construction work but still has head­ board coffin containing the girl-sol­ of profit on its Investment in Flori
quarters at Fort Meade.
§fi
dier a s 'it was borne through the da, therefore,
streets
on
the
shoulders
of
her
fight'
BE
IT
RESOLVED.
Thnt
the
Brown’s Market at 417 Sanford
w
‘Board
of
Governors
of
the
Sanford
arenue, started today making abaccomrades, .11 girls from the WornChamber of Commerce go on record
lutely pure pork sausage—the r e a l! '" "
*t
before the State Railroad Commis­
veteran
of
home made kind, seasoned Just right I
SoPhic WM * .
sioners
as favoring the granting of a
the
and priced just right. If you w ant' Po,nnd fl
war* which ln
rate
increase
to the Southern Bell
minds
of
most
Poles
began
when
the
something really good, try 1L
world war ended In November, 1918, Telephone Company, only after tho
under careful
Hunting season opens next Satur- ^he was 22 years of age nnd was one matter hns been taken
■
diy nnd already there are tales o f , of
original members of the Worn- advisement by the Commission, fur­
the pot hunters going out nnd shoot-1 *n’B Battalion which was formed late thermore,
BE IT RESOLVED, that the per­
ing ducks and turkeys and other In 1918 for the purpose of defending
Lemberg
against
the,
Ukrainians.
She
centage
of increase be left to the,
game before the season opens. They
was
wounded
three
times,
first
nt
wise
discretion
of the State Rnilrond
should he watched nnd arrested.
Lemberg, ngnin nt Vilna and last Commissioners, with the recommen­ V
Sir. and Mrs. R. J. Holly
and while leading her company against dation that it be understood that any
increased rnte granted be for tho
Mr. nnd Mrs. R. S. Holly atended the the Russians nt Plock.
meeting of the Associated Dailies nt' She typified the spirit of Polnnd to­ purpose of enabling the Southern Bell
Daytona yesterday afternoon having day. There are fiOO like her in the Company to nrrango the financing of
a fine time nt tho home of Mr. and Women's Battalion. Officers in the their contemplated plant extensions,
Mrs. Kdwanl Fitzgerald, who were army from I'ilsudski down ndmit thnt 'and the attaining of a higher stand­
the host nnd hostess of the occas­ tho mere existence of this battalion ard of telephone service in Sanford
exercized a wonderful effect upon and Seminole county, furthermore,
ion.
the popular imagination, upon recruit­
BF. IT RESOLVED, That this rec­
Mr. anti Mrs. Brossier nnd Mr. and ing and even upon the soldiers in ommendation is based upon certain
Mrs. Wnttis, of tho Reporter-Star, (he recent heavy fighting.
provisions for plant extensions in
Orlando, and Mr. nnd Mrs. W. C. EsTho age limits for privates In tho the city of Sanford nnd Seminole
slngton, of the Sontipel, of Orlando, battalion nrc 17 and 33. Most of county, nnd thnt the Railroad Com­
and L. M. Bloom, of the Lakeland the women who have joined nre of mission require a definite period for
Star, were among the newspaper peo­ humble origin, nnd come from semi- ’the beginning and completion of
ple here yesterday on their wny to stagnant industrial centers such as these improvements, therefore,
BE IT RESOLVED, That a copy of
Daytona to attend the meeting of Ahe Ix&gt;dz. The economic problem has had
something to do with their continued these resolutions be ‘presented to
Associated Dailies.
existence ns soldiers hut they hnve the Railroad Commissioners at the
lion. Forest Lake, of thc| State shown great enthusiasm nnd bravery. hearing to be held in Tnlluhnssee,
Road Department, spent Sundny here They have had many casualties.
Monday, November 15th, 1920.
with his family nnd expects to leave
SANFORD CHAMBER
today for Tallahaisee where his du­ VALDEZ GRILL OPEN AT NIGHT
OF COMMERCE,
ties keep him most of the time. Mr.
The many patrons of the Valdez
DEATH OF TITOS. J. CHECK.
Lake is doing n lot of constructive Hotel grill will be pleased to learn
work in the state road department thnt the management has decided to
Thomas J. Check died at Phoenix,
and is a busy man in trying to cover keep the grill open at night until 1
Ariz.,
'last Saturday night nt eight
the state of Florida. - o’clock.
1 87-Gtc
o’clock after a ahort illnesa of tuber­
culosis. Mr. Check had been in San­
Prof. Bache, W. A. Adams, Wal- MRS. ROYAL C. DUNN
ford a few months ago and his friends
DIES
SUDDENLY
AT
l»ee Bell, Arthur Moore, Otis Cobb,
THE CAPITAL CITY here hnd not noticed any change in
Robert Holly nnd llnmden Dubose
his condition but he told some of
have returned from the Hy-Y meet­
TALLAHASSEE, Nov. 14.—After them that he wns suffering from this
ing at Ocala Friday nnd Saturday.
They were entertained by the people a short illnesH, Mrs. Royal Canfield disease ami that he would be (breed
of Ocala in great style nnd had an Dunn died at her home in this city 'o go to Arizona by his doctor’s or­
excursion to Silver Springs and many this morning at 10 o’clock. Mrs. Dunn ders.
T. J. Check waa n resident of EasTf
other side trips besides .hearing some was the wife of R. C. Dunn, railroad
Orange,
N. J., and had been coming
fine lectures from the f*Y" secretar­ commissioner* nnd was beloved by
to
Sanford
for many years having
ies present. They made the trip in all Tallahassccans. She was a prom­
at
one
time
considerable city prop­
Wallace Bcil’a car and had a good inent club woman, nnd her denth will
erty
but
in
the
last year disposing of
cast n ‘shadow over the deliberations
trip going and coming.
much
of
it
nnd
before his death he
o fthc annual stnte federation which
willed
all
of
the
remainder of tho
convenes in this city this week.
RF.n CROSS CAMPAIGN
Sanford
property
to
his son Victor
Funeral
services
were
conducted
nt
OPENS TODAY
the Presbytorinn church this after­ Check and wife.
He leaves n son, Victory and n
The real Reel Cross campaign op­ noon nt G o’clock by the Rev. R. G.
en* today when the canvassing par­ Newsome, pastor. Interment will be daughter to mourn his loss, Mrs.
ties will be out covering their re- made In Madison tomorrow nftcr- Check having died several years agfl.
The remains will be taken to the
fpectivo territories and getting in noon, and the body will be accompan­
old
home In New Jersey for inter­
the memberships. The girl^ covered ied there by the husband nnd four
ment..
the down town districts last week on Bisters of the deceased. Mrs. Dunn is
Armistice Day with the idea of get­ also survived by two brothers.
Cooked Food Sale, Welfare depart­
ting all the stragglers who were in
Tho Presbyterian church
was
ment,
Women’s Club, Wednesday af­
town for the day. This week the crowded to tho doors this afternoon
ternoon.'
190-3tc
systematic campaign of enrolling ov- during the .funeral services, attesting
«ry man, woman nnd child in San­ the love In which Mrs. Dunn was held
ford will be taken up by the commit­ and the general sorrow of the com­
tees under the leadership of Dr. munity in her untimely death.
AT THE STAR THEATRE—fc-*
Walker. If you have not been ap­
TODAY
•
proached send in your dollar (o head­
A raid cohducted by prohibition en­
❖
quarters or telephone Dr. Walker nnd forcement officers on Garcia's res­
An All-Star Cast In
he will get your money.
■
taurant in Tampa, Friday morning,
“JUST A WIFE"
brought 250 quarts of contraband
Demonstration of Florida Fruit stuff valued at nbout |3,000 nnd the •
Hallr(Him Hoy* In
juicei at the Woman’s Club Wednes­ arrest of the proprietor of the res­
•
"WILD. WILD WOMEN"
day nftemoon. Wakefield products taurant, M. F. Lopez. He Is charged
un sale.
190-3tc with violation of the Volstead act.
* * ’
WEATHER FOR WEEK

Laun|&lt;£

@11
©no L(S)W©sl Maurifestt

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'forte Tkmi Us Kffferamft80

X*

RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under
which this institution has been managed since
the first day the doors were opened.
.

That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the
constant and gratifying growth in business.

i n

It is the desire of the officers of this Bank to con­
tinue adding new accounts of those individuals
desiring most efficient and responsible banking
On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your pa­
tronage is invited.
u

**

f

,

Seminole County Bank
. Is owned, controlled and managed by home
people, who are interested in the development
and\jpbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County
*

. With our large resources and strong financial
connections we are in position to assist our cus­
tomers at all times in the handling of their finan­
cial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.

4 Per Cent Interest Paid.

I

I

Seminole County Bank
.

!3

::

The Logical Tree

u
With Every KOKOMO TIRE Purchased
of US. Take Advantage of this and

O N YOUR TIRES
Fabrics Guaranteed for 6,000 .M iles and Cords 10,000
• .*

f —J - L

eSH

Wo hold this to be a Truth:—viz:—
That Circulation Is the BASIC factor
of Human Health.

;:T H E H E R A L D ’S Office Supply Department has ju£t re- ::
ceived a large and complete line of this beautiful stationery ::
Tho "Energizer" process will DO
MORE Benefit td. Any Adult’s gen­
'M
eral condition than any other method :: —no two boxes alike—and w e will print any monogram on ;; f
known.
i: paper (or cards) and envelopes—in one* two* or three colors
™
COME IN and talk it over.
108 Park Are.,

. . .

B. &amp; O.

ENERGIZER”
For Many Human Ilia.

SAVE 30 PER CENT.

■i!_

;

WUJt- ' ' ' ! • pi*-

. &amp;&amp;
. Distributor* for
SEMINOLE, LAKE, VOLjUSIA, ORANGE AND OSCEOLA COUNTIES
-±t *
^J
.

Next Door to Mobley’s Drug Store.
-|||j
■
J"?1L
L . C. CAMERON
Box 399 Sanford, Fla. Phone 184

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TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS-lc A WORD
'• Y.'.

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�</text>
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              <text>SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION&#13;
Volume 1&#13;
Sanford, Florida, Monday, November 15, 1920&#13;
Number 191&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
RIVERS AND HARBORS CONGRESS WILL MEET AT NATION’S CAPITAL.&#13;
Matter of Importance To State of Florida&#13;
OTHER STATES ALSO&#13;
THAT WANT RIVERS AND HARBORS AND BETTER WATER TRANSPORTATION&#13;
&#13;
Following the preliminary announcement sent out a month ago, the official call for the Sixteenth Convention of the National Rivers Harbors Congress has now been issued. Like all the recent conventions of the Congress this will be held in the New Willard Hotel, Washington, d. c. the dates being Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, the 8th, 9th and 10th of December.&#13;
While the entire program has not been announced, it is evident that there will be no lack of interesting addresses and that an unusual number of important questions will be presented for discussion. Decided differences of opinion exist on certain subjects and some live, snappy debates may be expected.&#13;
Everybody knows that waterways are very much less in the United States than they are in Europe. Maj. Gen. Lansing H. Beach, Chief of Engineers, U. S. Army, has some very positive view as to the reasons why waterways are so little that must be done before the situation can be changed.&#13;
 The National Rivers and Harbors Congress took the lead in securing the important provisions for the benefit of waterways and water transportation which are included in the Transportation Act. Under one of these provisions there has been created the Division of Inland and Coastwise Waterways Service, of which Brig. Gen. W. D. Conner is chief. Among other things this Division has charge of the Government Barge Lines on the Mississippi and warrior rivers and the New York State canals.&#13;
 It is no secret that most old-time steamboat men think that the towboats which have built for use on these barge lines, all of which are of the “tunnel” type, will prove to be disastrous failures. Some of the new tow-boats are now in use and a report on their performance is awaited with much interest. Gen Conner’s address will be illustrated with moving pictures.&#13;
All active workers for the improvement of waterways are familiar with the methods followed for thirty years or more in the formulation of Rivers and Harbors Bills, but mighty few of them have any idea how it is to be done in the future. Just before the close of the last session the House passed a resolution which puts all power in frame appropriation bills into the hands of a single committee, which is to be composed of thirty-five members.&#13;
 It seems there is still to be a Rivers and Harbors Committee, altho it will not frame Rivers and Harbor Bills. Hon. S. Wallace Dempsey, M. C., whose home is at Lockport, N. Y., has been a member of the Committee for several years and it is understood that he will be its chairman in the next Congress. His address on “Future River and Harbor Bills” will no doubt clear up a number of points which are now obscure.&#13;
From various quarters demands are being made for still more radical changes in the methods of handling the improvements of waterways. Some urge the creation of a new Department of Public Works and others the appointment of a Waterways Commission. Some of the advocates of these two plans want to take away from Congress the power to decide what should be done and from the Army Engineers the execution of the works that are ordered. Others believe that Congress should outline a general plan and then turn over a lump sum each year to the Army ngineers to be expended according to their judgement.&#13;
 There is a general impression that, among other changes that will be made by the administration that will come into power in the Fourth of March, will be a charge in the method of dealing with the improvement of rivers and harbors. If press reports of addresses made by President-elect Harding are correct, he believes a change is desirable and is inclined to favor the appointment of a commission. Further study may change his opinion, however, and a discussion of the various plans proposed should be an interesting and valuable feature of the convention.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
GREECE IS QUIET AFTER ELECTION RIOTS&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
ATHENS, Nov. 15 –&#13;
Greece is quiet except for a few minor clashes as the result of the election in which Premier Venizelos claimed victory. Small disorders were quietly by fire hose streams. All meetings are forbidden.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
THE NATIONAL FOREST PROGRAM CARRIED OUT&#13;
WHEN CONGRESS MEETS IN DECEMBER BILL WILL BE INTRODUCED&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.&#13;
When Congress meets in December a bill will be introduced for a national forest program including a better fire protection for the forest. “This step, following an agreement by all the industries interested, marks the first united move in this direction in this country,” says Charles Lathrop Pack, president of the American Forestry Association, which announces the outline of features to be embodied in the proposed legislation. The plan calls for national appropriations of at least $11,000,000 a year.&#13;
The provisions of the measure are two-fold – for a considerable extension of direct federal activity in forest ownership and production, and for the development with federal aid and encouragement of systematic policies in the several forested states to bring about adequate forest protection and reproduction.&#13;
The program provides specifically, through co-operation between the government, the states and owners of timberlands, for adequate protection against forest fires, for reforestation (Continued on page four)&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
DEATH RATE FOR AMERICA LOWEST&#13;
TOTAL DEATHS AMOUNT TO TWELVE AND NINE-TENTHS PER THOUSAND&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 –&#13;
The 1919 death rate of the Continental United states was the lowest recorded for any one year, the Census Bureau announced. The total deaths were 1,096,436 or twelve and none-tenths per thousand.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
FREEZING TEMPERATURES REPORTED SOUTH TO TEXAS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.-&#13;
Freezing temperature was reported as far South as Central Texas.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Sebastopol Falls in Bols Hands&#13;
REPORTED TO BE IN CHARGE OF WHOLE CRIMEAN PENINSULA&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
PARIS, Nov. 15 –&#13;
Sebastopol has fallen. Russian bolsheviki troops are occupying the city according to unofficial French information today. The Bolsheviki forces are reported as masters of the whole Crimean peninsula and General Wrangel and staff are aboard a French warship bound for Constantinople. &#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Little John Carver Goes Abroad&#13;
&#13;
One of the most prominent passengers on the first 100 per cent American liner, the Panhandle State, was little John Carver, eight years old, a direct descendent of the first governor of Massachusetts. John is going abroad to attend the Pilgrim’s tercentenary at Leyden, Holland. He is shown in this photograph with his mother.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
FIRST SESSION ASSEMBLY THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS MEETS AT GENEVA TODAY.&#13;
Forty-one Countries Represented at Meeting.&#13;
NONE FROM THE U.S.&#13;
BUT ARRANGEMENTS MADE FOR REPRESENTATIVES OF FINANCE AND ECONOMIES.&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
GENEVA, Nov. 15 –&#13;
&#13;
Delegates of forty-one countries are attending the first session of the assembly of the League of Nations here today. Definite system of disarmament and a plan for using the economic blockade against nations transgressing league’s orders are among the subjects discussed. The United States was not represented by delegates but arrangements were made for the United States to have representation on the financial, economics and mandates commission, if desired.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15. –&#13;
&#13;
Plans for legislation restricting immigration and naturalization of aliens were discussed in executive session of House immigration committee today.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WOMAN REPRESENTATIVE SPENT SOME MONEY BUT MADE NO PROMISES.&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.-&#13;
&#13;
Miss Alice Robertson’s campaign for election from the second Oklahoma district cost $2,940, her campaign manager reported. Miss Robertson’s statement declared “No pledges or promises were made.”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SINGLE TAX PARTY HAD SOME MONEY&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 –&#13;
&#13;
The Single Tax party expended two thousand five hundred and forty-eight dollars in the presidential campaign according to a formal report. Donations came from persons living abroad, it was announced today.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
CREW RESCUED FROM WREAKED SHIP&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
SUPERIOR, Wis., Nov. 15. – &#13;
The crew was rescued from the steel freighter, Francis J. Widlaw, which was wrecked on the shoals in Lake Superior today.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
President’s Thanksgiving Proclamation&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 –&#13;
&#13;
President Wilson issued his Thanksgiving Day Proclamation Friday night, saying that “in plenty, security and peace, our virtuous and self-reliant people face the future,” and setting aside Thursday, November 25, for the usual observances.&#13;
The text follows:&#13;
&#13;
The season approaches when it behooves us to turn from the distractions and preoccupations of our daily life, that we may contemplate the mercies which have been vouchsafe to us, and render heartfelt and unfeigned thanks to God for His manifold goodness.&#13;
“This is an old observance of the American people, deeply imbedded in out thought and habit. The burdens and the stresses of life have their own insistence.&#13;
“We have abundant cause for thanksgiving. The lesions of the war are rapidly healing. The great army of freedom which America sent to the defense of liberty, returning to the grateful embrace of the nation, has resumed the useful pursuits of peace, as simply and as promptly as it rushed to arms in obedience to the country’s call. The equal justice of our laws has received steady vindication in the support of a law-abiding people against various and sinister attacks, which have reflected only the baser agitations of war, now happily passing.&#13;
“In plenty, security and peace our virtuous and self-reliant people face the future, its duties and its opportunities. May we have vision to discern our duties; the strength, both of hand and resolve to discharge them; and the soundness of heart to realize that the truest opportunities are those of service.&#13;
“In spirit, then, of devotion and stewardship we should give thanks in our hearts, and dedicate ourselves to the service of God’s merciful and loving purposes to His children.&#13;
“wherefore, I, Woodrow Wilson, president of the united states of America, do hereby designate Thursday, the twenty-fifth day of November, next, as a day of thanksgiving and prayer, and I call upon my countrymen to cease from their ordinary tasks and avocations upon that day, giving it up to the remembrance of God and His blessings, and their dutiful and grateful acknowledgement.”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
HAVANA DOCK CONGESTION DECREASES&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 –&#13;
&#13;
Congestion of the Havana docks is rapidly increasing because of importers inability to pay duties, the department of commerce was informed today.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
ASSOCIATED DAILIES OF FLORIDA HOLD IMPORTANT MEET.&#13;
&#13;
MET AT DAYTONA YESTERDAY AT THE HOME OF EDITOR FITZGERALD&#13;
&#13;
The Associated Dallies of Florida met at Daytona yesterday with about twenty papers present represented by some thirty-five men and women of the Florida press gang. The meeting was called at 2 o’clock at the hospitable home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fitzgerald (we always include Mrs. Ed for she is ubiquitous also) and after a delicious buffet lunch of the kind that could not be served anywhere else except the Fitz’s home, the meeting was called to order by President Fitzgerald and for two hours or more matters of the greatest importance to the press of Florida were taken up. &#13;
 W. A. Probert, the head of the Associated Press for the Southeast, was present and gave some very important information for the establishment of a headquarters at Jacksonville. Other representatives were present for advertising agencies and supply houses and gave information about stock and supplies and advertising and the meeting was conducive of results that will make Florida daillies bigger and better papers in the future.&#13;
 While everything that enters into the daily and weekly newspaper is at the peak of high prices just at present it seems that there may be a drop in the price of newspaper some time next spring which is the first ray of hope the newspaper men have had in months.&#13;
 The daily papers of Jacksonville, Pensacola, Lakeland, Orlando, St. Augustine, Palatka, DeLand, Daytona, Miami, Sanford and several other cities were represented ae the meeting and the next session will be held on December 12th at Jacksonville.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Pipe Organ Recital Presbyterian Church&#13;
MISS BERTHA M. FOSTER WILL GIVE A FREE ORGAN RECITAL TOMORROW NIGHT.&#13;
&#13;
One of the events in the musical circles of the city is the pipe organ recital that will be held at the Presbyterian church tomorrow night at 8 o’clock. Miss Bertha M. Foster, of the Jacksonville School of Musical Art will give the recital and it promises to be one of the best that the people of Sanford have ever enjoyed. The recital is free to everyone, no admission to be charged and the public is cordially invited to attend. Come early and be assured of a good seat. The following program will be rendered: &#13;
&#13;
1– America Triumphant, from the ‘Pilgrim Suite” 	Dunn&#13;
2– The Swan 							Saint-Saens&#13;
3- Morning Serenade						Lemare&#13;
4- In Capulet’s Garden					Steere&#13;
5- Ground’s “O Divine Redeemer” sung by		Miss Bowler&#13;
6- Gavotte (dedicated to Miss Foster)			Campbell&#13;
7- Evensong							Johnson&#13;
8- Nuptial March							Guilmant&#13;
9- Spring Song							Hollins&#13;
10- Teccaia							Crawford&#13;
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THREE DAY-WEEK WORKING SCHEDULE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
BIDDLEFORD, Maine, Nov. 15 – &#13;
Pepperel and York Cotton mills, employing six thousand persons, inaugurated a three day week working schedule it was reported today.&#13;
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DAIRY INSPECTION IN AND AROUND CITY WILL BE MADE MONTHLY&#13;
State Board of Health Is On the Job&#13;
&#13;
WILL BE PUBLISHED&#13;
IN THE HERALD WITH THE PERCENTAGE ATTAINED BY EACH DAIRY.&#13;
&#13;
The dairies in and around Sanford will be inspected every month from this time forward and the percentage of each one will be given in the Sanford Herald if the plans of The State Board of Health are carried out. This much was plain by D. H. Osborne, of the State Board of Health after his visit here last Saturday.&#13;
 He visited every one of the places where cows are kept by people who sell milk in Sanford or as many of them as he could learn about. He found some of them all right and he found some of them that were not all right and he warned those not all right to get right by the time he made his next round or they would be stopped from selling milk.&#13;
 In other words he gives all of them fair warning before he comes down on them and gives then 20 days in which to clean up their places and keep them clean and they will then be graded according to their sanitary measures adopted in order to have clean and pure milk for sale. The city commissioners will issue permits to sell milk only to those who have a mark over 60 per cent which is the very lowest they can score and get by with.&#13;
 When they are scored they will. When they are scored they will be published in the paper and the consumers can see the score of the various dairies and how the stand. Each dairy was given the rules and regulations governing the dairies of the state and the laws on the same and these will be rigidly enforced.&#13;
The Herald will not say anything about the dairies or how they would be secured today but will state that Mr. Osborne was not satisfied with some of them and as he has made an honest endeavor all over his territory to get better regulations in keeping clean dairies it is not his territory to get better regulations in keeping clean dairies it is not his intention to work a hardship on anyone but simply to have all the dairies adopt the rules and regulations laid down by the state board of health in order to safeguard the health of the community and in this work he should have the co-operation of all the dairies and the commissioners and the public generally.&#13;
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BYRINGTON APPOINTED&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 13. –&#13;
Frank D. Byington, Maryland, was appointed commissioner of pensions today.&#13;
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--&#13;
POLICIES SUICIDES MUST BE PAID&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 –&#13;
Insurance policies on a person’s life who commits suicide is payable, if all conditions of the policy are complied with, the Supreme Court ruled here today.&#13;
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--&#13;
WANTS HAZING STOPPED.&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 13. -&#13;
&#13;
Secretary Daniels said the Navy department will “go the limit” in stamping out hazing in Naval the academy and midshipment will be dismissed if necessary to stop practice.&#13;
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Shop early …&#13;
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 --&#13;
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PAGE FOUR  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
STAR THEATER – TONIGHT AND SATURDAY&#13;
J. Parker Read’s presentation of Louise Glam in SAHARA.&#13;
A drama of a woman who whipped the devil in herself.  Fascinating Paris. Mysterious Cairo. A crafty temper – Gowns to challenge any woman who ever lived.&#13;
-&#13;
“HOLD ME TIGHT” - Sunshine Comedy  -- FOX NEWS.&#13;
&#13;
MONDAY – “JUST A WIFE”. &#13;
COMING LOUISE GLAUM IN “SEX,” ALSO “SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS”&#13;
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--&#13;
SUNDAY AT THE CHURCHES&#13;
-&#13;
Church services for Sunday, November 14th (24th after Trinity) will be:&#13;
7:30 a.m., Low Celebration.&#13;
9:45 a.m., Church School.&#13;
1:00 a. m., Church services.&#13;
7:30 p.m., Vespers.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
MEN’S CLUB OF HOLY CROSS&#13;
 A good, enthusiastic meeting of the Men’s Parish Club was held in the Parish House last Wednesday night, which marked the successful progress on the “White Way” to be established about the church property on the two avenues and street. The committee in charge are Mr. G. F. Smith, Mr. Lincoln and Mrs. A. F. McAllister. &#13;
 After other business providing for some large successful matters to be announced later, the members adjourned by “a sing” under the leadership of Mr. A. H. Stone and followed by refreshments of which committee Mr. Deane Turner is chairman.&#13;
 After the meeting, the men went to the bowling alleys. Three teams are already organized under the captaincies of Archie Betts, Frank Giles and R. R. Deas. A bowling challenge is out against the the Senior Chapter Brotherhood of S. Andrew Chapter 425 (Tuesday night Chapter) which will mark some fast bowling this winter in Sanford.&#13;
 B. F. Whitner, president of the Men’s Club, will be pleased to have other men join the work which this large successful club is doing.&#13;
&#13;
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B. S. A.&#13;
 The Brotherhood of St. Andrew, Senior and Junior Chapters of Holy Cross Parish are forging ahead in all ways. Steady work is bringing the Brotherhood House nearer to full completion. Much of the new athletic equipment has come – two new basketballs; two new sets of boxing gloves; volley balls and net; medicine ball; two punching bags (one donated by Robert Holly); these things to be followed now by some gymnasium outfit- mats, ladder, rings, etc. In this constant growth and expansion of the B.S.A. the lads and young men of the city are getting the same and added benefits of one of the finest equipped “Y” or Club houses. &#13;
 This work is not all for “self,” for during the month contributions have been added to some local charities, to the “Advent Box” in the way of new toys for the mountain of children of the West Virginia Mission, and contribution of our part in money to the new tower being added to Holy Cross Monastery on the Hudson river, new York, of which Father Huntington (who will be remembered here) is the Superior and founder.&#13;
Chapter meetings are every Tuesday and Thursday afternoons and nights.&#13;
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PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH&#13;
The pastor has returned from the Synod and will preach at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Sunday school at 9:45 a.m.&#13;
Intermediate C. E., 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Senior C. E., 6:45 p. m.&#13;
&#13;
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CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH – SUNDAY NOVEMBER 14&#13;
Subject: “MORTAL AND IMMORTAL”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
THE CHURCH AT WORK&#13;
1.	SANCTIFYING by sacraments and blessings&#13;
2.	TEACHING by preaching and reading&#13;
&#13;
HOLY CROSS CHURCH&#13;
Park Ave. at Fourth Street. Sunday Services: (24th after Trinity)&#13;
&#13;
7:30 a. m., Low Celebration &#13;
9:45 a. m., Church School.&#13;
11:00 a. m., Church Service.&#13;
7:30 p. m., Vespers.&#13;
&#13;
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CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
&#13;
Classified advertisements, 5 cents a line. No ad taken for less than 25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cash must accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit, accordingly.&#13;
-&#13;
WANTED&#13;
&#13;
WANTED – an elderly lady, single preferred, to attend invalid lady. Address, 112 Elm Ave.   185-6tp.&#13;
&#13;
Buy your post cards at the Herald office. &#13;
&#13;
WANTED – team work. Inquire of M. Hanson Shoe Shop.  189-60tp.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED – Your old batteries to rebuild. Let us make your starting and lighting a pleasure. We are authorized “EXIDE” dealer and have a Battery for all makes automobiles. “EXIDE, the Giant that lives in a box.” Ray Bros.  Phone 548, old Ford Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
-Get your Scratch Pads from the Herald – by the pound –15c.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED – Brick and cement work, chimneys, flues, piers, cement floors, sidewalk. – A. L. Ray, 206 Park Ave.   173-20tp.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED – Pupils, Violin and Piano. – Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.  175-20t-p.&#13;
&#13;
Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE - 1½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.&#13;
&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
&#13;
FOR RENT – One nearby furnished room, 320 Oak Ave. Phone 308-J.  187-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
TO RENT or for sale, large warehouse with railroad siding. – Chas. Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven Co.  156-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
FURNISHED ROOMS – Two furnished bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park Avenue.   157-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
&#13;
ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, 109 East First street, over Union Pharmacy.  163-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
CARPETS and rugs washed right on the floor, with Hamilton Beach Electric Carpet Washer. Kills all moth and disease germs. Make your floor coverings absolutely sanitary. Electric carpet washer, Sanford.  186-6tp.&#13;
&#13;
DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture, bedsteads, chairs, etc. What have you?   174-30tc.&#13;
&#13;
BATTERY TROUBLES?&#13;
Do not run your battery until she is entirely dead. The battery is the costliest accessory to your car. We re-charge and re-build all makes of batteries. – Ray Bros.  Phone 548, old Ford Garage.  179-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
LOST&#13;
&#13;
LOST – Western Union branch deposit book. Finder please return to Western Union office. – J. P. Hall, Mgr.  180-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
LOST – An Alpha Omicron Pi sorority pin with the name Kathryn Wilkey on back. Finder return to owner and receive reward.  188-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE – Shasto daisies, $1 per dozen. English Shamrock Oxalis. 30c per dozen. Ring 207-W. 183-12tc.&#13;
&#13;
Special reduction in men’s and ladies’ W. L. Douglas shoes. – A Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave., Phone 550. 166-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
FOR RENT – Nicely furnished large light housekeeping rooms. – Mrs. Riddling, 205 Oak ave.  Eagle Hall.  186-6tc.&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE – 7-room, 2-story house, large yard for garden spot, also chicken yard. Various fruit trees. Phone 487.  186-6tc.&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE - 1½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing co.  tf.&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE – One horse, wagon and harness. Apply M. Hanson Shoe Shop.   189-12tp.&#13;
&#13;
WOOD AND POSTS sold and delivered on hard road, within one mile of town. See me. – W. V. Dunn.    186-6tp.&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE – One counter, 17 feet long, $25. At Ford Garage.  187tfc.&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE – Very cheap, one 7-passenger automobile in good shape. Apply B &amp; O. Motor Co.   185-6tc.&#13;
&#13;
See our line of electrical lamps. – A. Kanner, 216-15 Sanford Avenue. Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
New line of Congoleums and Art squares. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.   166-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE - 1½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf.&#13;
&#13;
Special reduction on Georgette Silk and cotton shirt waist. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE – Five room cottage, large yard for vegetable garden, various fruit trees, also two separate fives acre farm land; 5 gallon hot water heater.  P. O. Box 117, Owner.  184-6tp.&#13;
&#13;
We have just received a line of silverware and casseroles. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
PLANTS FOR SALE – Cabbage per 1000, $1.50; Cauliflower, Handers Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B. B., per M, $1.50; Ice Berg, per M, $1.50; beets, Crosby’s Egyptian, Per M, $1.50; onion, yellow Bermuda, per M, $1.50; onion, white Bermuda, per M., $1.50; Celery, yellow golden, per M, $2.00; Self-Bleaching imported celery, per M, $2.00; French celery seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.00. – Clay County Gardening co., Green Cove springs, Fla.&#13;
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Sanford Machine &amp; Foundry Company.&#13;
&#13;
GENERAL MACHINE AND BOILER WORK, BRASS CASTINGS, GAS ENGINE REPAIRS.&#13;
ACETYLENE CUTTING AND WELDING.&#13;
&#13;
Special machine for turning Auto Cranks Shafts and Crank pins to within .005 accuracy.&#13;
IRRIGATION NIPPLES – PULLEYS and SHAFTINGS – ROUND AND SQUARE IRON.&#13;
&#13;
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Gillette Tires and Tubes&#13;
Chilled Rubber Process makes them A Bear for Wear.&#13;
SMITH BROTHERS – Expert Repair Work.&#13;
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Salt Mullet – Mullet Roe – Fat Mackerel – Nice Fryers And Hens.&#13;
All Good and Churn Gold Olio. &#13;
Clover Hill Butter.&#13;
&#13;
L.P. McCuller. Sanford, Florida.&#13;
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Buy Meat You Can Eat.&#13;
We carry a choice line at all times. A Trial Solicited. &#13;
&#13;
Pure Food Market. J.H. Tillis, Prop.  Phone 105. 402 Sanford Ave.&#13;
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We Guarantee All Battery Repairs.&#13;
Every battery repairs we make is guaranteed for six months. We are able to do this because in repairing any make of battery we licensed to use patented features which have made Vesta batteries famous.&#13;
Sanford Battery Service Co.  L. A. RENAUD, Prop. Phone 189.&#13;
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CITY MARKET. Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props. Welaka building.&#13;
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SEE URK FOR EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING.&#13;
Cor. First and Sanford ave.&#13;
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National Madza Lamps&#13;
25 to 300 watt in 110 volts.&#13;
20 to 75 watts in 32 volts.&#13;
&#13;
Everything Electrical. Expert Installation And Repair Work.&#13;
Gillon &amp; Fry.  Phone 442.  115 Magnolia Ave.&#13;
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Real Estate. I sell it. &#13;
J. E. Spurling.  The Man Who Sells Dirt Cheap.&#13;
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Sanford’s Most Popular Hotel&#13;
SEMINOLE HOTEL AND GRILL.&#13;
Under the management of Walter B. Olson&#13;
Our Specialty -- Seminole’s famous $1 Sunday dinner de luxe.  &#13;
A la carte all day.&#13;
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Co-Operation Accommodation Friendly Assistance&#13;
&#13;
And worth while advice – this is part of the constructive service which this bank renders.&#13;
&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
F.P. Forster, President.  B.F. Whitner, Cashier.&#13;
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CHANDLER CARS.  FRANKLIN CARS.&#13;
“WE GIVE YOU SERVICE – ASK ANYBODY”&#13;
WIGHT TIRE CO.  Kelly-Springfield tires. Diamond tires.&#13;
&#13;
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Red Star Detroit Vapor Oil Store. Heaters of every kind.&#13;
OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT. HILL HARDWARE COMPANY.&#13;
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The Call of the Wild.&#13;
“Why don’t you get some bread that I can eat?”&#13;
That’s never heard in the family that uses the new Butter-Nut Bread. For its appetizing taste tickles the palates of young and old alike.&#13;
The New Butter-Nut-Bread&#13;
Has all the quality of the old Butter-Nut; we could not improve that. But in addition we’ve perfected a new mixing process which enables us to turn out a lighter, daintier loaf than ever. Get a loaf today, for Butter-Nut is not own best advocate. At all good grocers. The genuine bears the Butter-Nut label.&#13;
Miller Bakery.&#13;
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AUTO PAINTING.  THE NEW PAINT SMILE.&#13;
&#13;
You’ll wear one too if we repaint your auto. Why go around with a dim, dull, old looking car when for a few dollars we will paint and finish it like new? It’s good sense also to keep a fresh coat of paint on your car. – adds to its value if you want to sell it or trade it in.&#13;
&#13;
REHER BROS. Auto Painting.  Phone 112.  Sanford Heights.&#13;
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TO THE MOTORISTS&#13;
&#13;
To make room during the construction of our new garage we will close out our stock of celebrated Willard Threaded Rubber Batteries AT COST.&#13;
&#13;
Overlands, regular price - $58.40; sale price - $46.60&#13;
Cadillac, regular price - $83.00:  Sale price - 67.69&#13;
Dodge, Marmon, Franklin, reg. price, - 71.90; sale price - 58.63&#13;
Olds, Overland, Oakland, Buick Fours, regular price - 53.35&#13;
   Sale price - 43.52.&#13;
Hudson, Reo, Buick 6’s, regular price - 61.60&#13;
  Sale price - 50.27&#13;
Packard, regular price - 83.33;  sale price - 67.69&#13;
Maxwell, regular price - 66.55;  sale price - 54.29&#13;
&#13;
These are all bran new batteries and will last for years if properly to save for. If your old batteries is becoming doubtful now is the opportunity to save a bunch of money and at the same time insure a winter of carefree pleasure or business.&#13;
&#13;
Daytona Storage Battery Co.  15 MAGNOLIA AVE. DAYTONA, FLORIDA.&#13;
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TRY A HERALD WANT AD.&#13;
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PAGE TWO   THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1920.&#13;
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Society.  MISS KATHRYN WILKEY, Editor.  Phone 428.&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY&#13;
Monday –&#13;
Monday Afternoon Bridge Club with Mrs. Drummond.&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday – &#13;
Evening – Organ recital at the Presbyterian Church.&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday – &#13;
Welfare department at Women’s Club.&#13;
&#13;
Thursday – &#13;
Every Week Bridge Club with Mrs. Margaret Barnes.&#13;
&#13;
Friday –&#13;
D. A. R. with Mrs. A. R. Key.&#13;
Spendthrift Club with Mrs. S. M. Lloyd.&#13;
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Mrs. George Fox is opening her home on Park Avenue, after a summer in the north.&#13;
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Miss Dorothy Rumph is spending her Armistice holiday with a school friend in Norfolk, Fla.&#13;
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Miss Ethel Henry, Miss Helen Peck and Miss Mae Thrasher return to Tallahassee today.&#13;
-&#13;
Miss Sarah Wight and Miss Esther Miller returned to Rollins College at Winter Park this morning.&#13;
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Miss Norma Herndon returned to Stetson University today.&#13;
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Lieut. Bivens and friend left for Arcadia Sunday afternoon.&#13;
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Mayor W. J. Steed of Kissimmee, visited his family in Sanford during the weekend.&#13;
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MRS. MARIS DIES IN PHILADELPHIA&#13;
&#13;
There are many hearts in Sanford and in Seminole county that will be saddened by the news of the passing of Mrs. George l. Maris at the home of her daughter in Philadelphia on Friday, November 12th, after a protracted illness.&#13;
 Prof. and Mrs. Maris came to Florida some thirteen years ago, made and beautified a comfortable home on Lake Onoro, and from the first they took an honored place in the higher intellectual life in this community. Mrs. Maris was the beloved president of the Wednesday club for some time before it became a part of the Woman’s Club of Sanford and could always be depended upon for thorough and painstaking work, and for progressive thought.&#13;
 As a neighbor, she surely deserved the beautiful title of Friend which she and Professor Maris bore so happily from their Quarker ancestry. Her quiet sympathy, her loyal love and her cheerful spirit, will linger long with those who came close enough to realize how devoted and unselfish was her life, and all hearts go out to her husband and their two children in their sorrow.&#13;
Professor Maris is making his home with his daughter, Helen, at 2039 north 29th street, Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
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GREAT FOR GARAGES&#13;
&#13;
For that new garages no roofing can begin to compare with Artcraft, slate surface, weather-proof and fire-safe. Handsome natural slate colors, red and green shingle design.&#13;
Use Artcraft for sidings as well as for the roof.&#13;
The Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co.   189-3tc.&#13;
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TAXPAYERS, TAKE NOTICE!&#13;
&#13;
Tax books are now open for the payment of State and County taxes for 1920. A discount of two per cent is allowed for payment in November and one per cent in December.&#13;
&#13;
JNO. D. JINKINs, Tax Collector, Seminole County.&#13;
11-13-dlw, w-2t.&#13;
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FIRST SNOW LIKELY IN MIDDLE ATLANTIC SECTION FOR TODAY&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 –&#13;
The weather bureau last night predicted the first snow of the winter tonight or Tuesday in the middle of the Atlantic states as the result of a disturbance in the east of the Gulf of Mexico. The disturbances, the bureau announced, probably will move northeastward with increasing intensity and be attended by rains today in the South Atlantic and East Gulf states, Tennessee and Kentucky and rains and snows tonight or Tuesday in the middle Atlantic and New England states. Local snows also are probable in the central Mississippi valley.&#13;
 Lower temperatures Monday in the Central Mississippi valley and Tuesday in the Eastern and Southeastern states are indicated.&#13;
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LATE WIRES.&#13;
-&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
NORFOLK, Nov. 15 –&#13;
Secretary Daniels, addressing Rotarians here today declared America’s program is to make her navy the greatest that has ever been floated by any nation in history.&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 15-&#13;
President Wilson has taken personal direction of major American policies coming before the International Communications Conference in session her today.&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 – &#13;
The government requested the Supreme Court to set January 3rd for the hearing of arguments in the appeal for Senator Newberry and sixteen others from conviction on charges of conspiracy to violate the election laws.&#13;
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DENVER, Nov. 15 –&#13;
Senator Calder, chairman of the Senate committee on reconstruction and production, said he doubted if any big price declines in building material will come soon and that prices ever will reach pre-war levels.&#13;
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MAY RECRUIT UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 15 –&#13;
The question of recruiting college professors to offset the shortage was discussed before the convention of the Association of American universities, here today.&#13;
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TWO ACTRESSES KILLED IN CHICAGO PARK&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
CHICAGO, nov. 15 –&#13;
&#13;
The murder of two pretty acrtsses whose bodies were found in Grant Park remains a mystery. They were identified as Marie Alma Ramey, whose real name is Mary Rhodes, born at Altoona, Pa., wife of Jim McCauley, actor. The other was Lillian Thompson, wife of Joseph Macaree, electrician at Wheeling, W. Va.&#13;
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SOLID CARLOAD OF VEGETABLE LEAVES WAUCHULA SECTION&#13;
&#13;
WAUCHULA, Nov. 15-&#13;
Although vegetables have been going out by express the few weeks, the first solid car load of the fall season left here last week. It consisted mostly of peppers and was loaded by J. T. Bush.&#13;
 About 200 crates of mixed vegetables are going out by express daily consisting of peppers, egg plants, beans and cukes. Peppers and egg plants are selling at the station at $2.50 per crate; beans are bringing $3 per hamper at the station and cukes $3.50 per crate.&#13;
Owing to the unfavorable season last fall and the high cost of fertilization and labor, the fall crop in this section is not as large as usual, but with a few weeks of favorable weather those who ventured a fall crop will receive good returns, judging by present indications.&#13;
While the Alexander &amp; Baird Co., packing house has been running the past two weeks packing early fruit, the other three packing houses, the Wauchula Sub-Exchange Packing house, A. G. Smith’s packing house and Chase &amp; Company’s packing house opened this week and are now putting up fruit. Up to yesterday thirty-eight car loads of citrus fruit, mostly oranges, had been shipped from Wauchula. The prices f. o. b. have averaged between $3 and $3.50 per box.&#13;
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WHY SOME SALES-MANAGERS GO MAD.&#13;
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Answer to the query why some sales managers go mad might find some solution in the following questionnaire filled out by an applicant applying to the United States Employment Service for employment:   Q. Born? A. Yes; once.  Q. Nativity? A. Baptist.  Q. Married or single? A. Have been both.  Q. Parents alive yet? A. Not yet.  Q. Hair? A. Thin.  Q. Voice? A. weak.  Q. Healthy? A. Sometimes.  Q. Previous experience? A. No.  Q. where? A. Different places.  Q. Business? A. Rotten.  Q. salary expected? A. More.  Q. Drink? A. Not in dry states.  Q. why do you want job? A. wife won’t work any more.&#13;
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The twenty-sixth annual convention of the State Federation of Woman’s Clubs will be held in the city of Tallahassee, November 15th to 20th.&#13;
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FLORIDA NOT BENEFITTED&#13;
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Not One of States Affected by Reduction of One Cent Per Gallon At Wagon.&#13;
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NEW YORK, Nov. 15 –&#13;
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Tank wagon prices of gasoline will be reduced one cent a gallon today in states which the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey and the Standard Oil Company Of Louisiana operate, it was announced here last night by Walter C. Teagle, president of the New Jersey company.&#13;
States in which the reduction will be effective include New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and the District of Columbia in which the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey operates, and in Louisiana, Tennessee and Arkansas, in which the Louisiana company operates.&#13;
 The reduction in price is not the result of lower costs, either of crude oil or labor, Mr. Teagle said, but is a movement on the part of the company to aid in lowering of prices as part of the general commercial adjustment.&#13;
Prices of tank wagon gasoline under the reduction will vary in the different states, it was explained, owing to differences in freight costs. The effect upon the retail price generally was not predicted by company officials. In New Orleans the price will be reduced to twenty-eight and half cents today. The present New Orleans price is from thirty-one to thirty-three cents.&#13;
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Reduction in New Orleans&#13;
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 15 –&#13;
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Reduction in tank wagon prices of one cent per gallon for gasoline, effective Monday throughout the states of Louisiana, Tennessee and Arkansas was announced last night by the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana. “as an aid to the restoration of what was properly considered normal prices.”&#13;
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No Limitations set.&#13;
CHARLOTTE, N. C., Nov. 15 –&#13;
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Official announcement by the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey of one cent a gallon reduction in tank wagon prices of gasoline, effective today were received here today from New York, makes no specification of territorial limitations.&#13;
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OASIS IN CUBA DRAWS HOBO ARMY FROM UNITED STATES.&#13;
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(By The Associated Press)&#13;
HAVANA, Nov. 13. –&#13;
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About the only persons seen on the streets of Havana who show symptoms of overindulgence in intoxicants are Americans. This does not mean, however, that all the Americans who come here to drink to excess.&#13;
Beer and light wines are so much a part of the Latin life that it has no intoxicating effect. They drink moderately. But some visitors from the dry land seem to drink constantly, once they find a bar.&#13;
To Americans, however, the most disagreeable and sickening picture is the hobo from home, a hopeless, wretched figure that infests hotel lobbies. His panhandling is brazen. They pick out people speaking their own language, and without shame boldly announce that they want money for drinks. They long ago discarded the appeal for help to get the other shirt from the laundry.&#13;
Most of these unfortunates did not follow the flag; they followed the whiskey trail, generally as stowaways or in shep crews they deserted, once within swimming distance on the docks. But for passport regulations, Havana police authorities say, there would be hundreds here from the states with a trist and no visible means of support.&#13;
Cuba happens to be the nearest ‘foreign country’ to the states, and government officials here declare that much of the growing travel is due to the fact that the islands isn’t dry. It is a big item of revenue, and has helped to put up prices for everything.&#13;
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TO ALL PEOPLE SELLING MILK IN SANFORD.&#13;
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Notice is hereby given that after December 3rd you will be required to have permit to sell milk to anyone in the City of Sanford. These permits will be issued each month by the City Clerk but will not be issued to anyone whose dairy is not in the first class sanitary condition as required by the State Board of Health. City health authorities are co-operating with the State Board of Health in every way and ask your support.&#13;
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J. M. Tolar, Health Officer.&#13;
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Get some of those late postcards at the Herald office. The Valdez hotel, the Welaka Block, the Seminole Hotel and other points of interest. Only one cent each. Send a Sanford card to your friends.&#13;
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SIX KINDS OF SAFETY&#13;
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 Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank where you deposit your money?&#13;
 The first consideration is the capital, which should be ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank is to serve.&#13;
 The next question to consider is the officers in charge. They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.&#13;
 Then there is the question of confidence. The public should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. &#13;
 These three principles determine the success of a bank.&#13;
 We adopted these principles in the outset of our career and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase our usefulness to the community as the years go by.&#13;
 We offer you:&#13;
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  1st: Large capital and working reserve&#13;
  2nd: Trained men in charge – men of several years experience.&#13;
  3rd: The confidence of the public, which is proven by the daily addition to our line of depositors.&#13;
  4th: Protection by two examinations each year by the state banking department. Two audits each year by an independent recognized public audit company and two sworn statements submitted to the state comptroller by the cashier, giving the bank’s condition in detail. All of which insures regular, systematic and thorough operation of the bank.&#13;
  5th: The advice of a competent board of directors, who meet who meet with the officers regularly each month and advise them as to the operation of the bank.&#13;
6th: Insurance of all deposits every day of the yea. This is a protection not commonly found in banks and is an absolute protection for your funds, in addition to all the other usual safeguards.&#13;
  These are reasons why you should do business with us, and we believe that no bank can offer better inducements.&#13;
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PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD. We want your business.&#13;
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M. D. GATCHEL GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES.&#13;
Phone 110. Corner Sanford and Celery Avenues.&#13;
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2-lb Cans Standard, Hand-Packed Tomatoes, Per Can – 9c&#13;
Extra Fancy Grade, Maine Corn, Per can – 20c&#13;
Maxwell House Coffee, 1-lb. can – 40c&#13;
Export Soap, Per Cake – 5c&#13;
Swifts’ Premium Hams, Per lb. – 48c.&#13;
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Vulcanite shingles&#13;
Just Lay Them Down and Nail – That’s All There is To It.&#13;
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The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air – rain, sleet, etc. from forcing its way through the roof.&#13;
The Shoulder of Protection is also the Self-Spacing Device. Makes laying easy and rapid – thus saving time and money.&#13;
These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red or Green crushed slate. Each rain washes away the accumulated dust – reviving perpetually the original rich colors.&#13;
Wherehe co these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered – because they are fire-resisting.&#13;
Give us the dimensions of your rood. We will estimate the cost free of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.&#13;
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Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co&#13;
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SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR THE FIRST COMPLETE HOUSE BILL. &#13;
CARTER LUMBER CO.&#13;
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Full line Columbia Phonograph.&#13;
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Prices from $50 to $300.  Terms to suit yourself.&#13;
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The most complete line of Records in the city.&#13;
Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins. &#13;
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Prices right.&#13;
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H. L. Gibson.&#13;
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PAGE THREE. THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1920.&#13;
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THE MING TOMBS OF NANKING. AMERICAN SAILORS SEE HISTORICAL CHINA.&#13;
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THE MING TOMBS OF NANKING.&#13;
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If you were to visit the Orient on an American man-o’-war and make the trip from Manila to Shanghai through China Sea and enter the Yang Tse Kiang River, the largest in the world, and your ship should stop at Nanking, you would see some very interesting sights.&#13;
 It has been the pleasure of many American bluejackets to make the cruise. It has been their duty to navigate the Great Yang Tse as far as Hankau (600 miles) and many of the smaller ships have braved the rapids as far as Chung King (1200 miles). The river lends an imposing sight to the visitor, and there are many interesting land marks to be seen. Chinkiang, a beautiful little city is passed on the left yet there are many villages of striking picturesqueness along the banks of this widely-heralded stream.&#13;
Nanking, meanong Southern Capitol, is 205 miles from Shanghai. The city owes its name to having been the capitol of the Empire, the last occasion being in the Ming dynasty at the beginning of the 15th century. The city is surrounded by great walls varying from forty to ninety feet in height and from twenty to forty feet in thickness. These alls are said to have been built in the fifth and sixth centuries, B. C.&#13;
Nanking is the home of the celebrated mausoleum of Emperor Hung Wu – died in 1398 – with other great monuments known as the Ming Tombs. There are many interesting ruins in and near the city, including those of Hung Wu’s palace. The Ming Tombs are the most interesting in China, and have probably been photographed more by American naval men than any other statues or temples in the Empire. The famous porcelain tower of nine stories, and over two hundred feet high, is also very interesting.&#13;
In Nanking one can either ride in carriages, jinrickshas, or automobiles, and the latter may be secured as well as the former for sightseeing in and around the city. Sailormen making the trip up the river are prone to take advantage of these wonderful sights, and there is probably no body of tourists who become more familiar with China’s history than the American men-o’-wars-men.&#13;
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Send in your locals to the Herald office. Phone the news to 148. We want every bit of it. Tell us the news each day.&#13;
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USALA AND GRAPEVILLE&#13;
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Little Dorothy Krell was ill the first of the week and her parents took her in to see Dr. Langley a few times and she is much better.&#13;
 Raymond Boyd, of Sanford, spent a part of Sunday at the home of his cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cruse.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Will Robinson were visitors at the home of Mrs. J. A. Vaughn on election day. Mrs. Vaughn tells us she was one that was proud to go in and cast her vote for Cox and Charley Hand – and I gather the last came first with her.&#13;
 Dr. Denton has been called out twice to attend Claire, the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Bertleson.&#13;
 A number from this section were visiting Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Peterson at Holly Hill.&#13;
 Word came that her sister, Mrs. Sjoblom, of Knoxville, Tenn., was operated upon Sunday.&#13;
We learn that Mr. and Mrs. Borell are making some improvements on their home, enclosing in a room and reroofing parts of their house.&#13;
 Mrs. Beck and Mrs. Hodkins were spending Wednesday with Mrs. Westerdick, having a good time, helping her get a quilt off.&#13;
 A number of ladies, Mrs. Borell, Mrs. Magnuson, Mrs. Ericson, Mrs. Ballinger lent a hand to help clean the church Thursday. Mrs. Ebba Lee and baby also came in to encourage us.&#13;
Mrs. Tyner and children with Miss Eunice and Elmer, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Krell, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Lee, Mrs. Borell and Mrs. Magnuson, Mrs. E. W. Lundquist with Raymond, Clarence Busquist, Archie Swanson were among those attending the Armistice day program besides a number of the school children, all say it was fine.&#13;
 Rev. Brower, of Sanford, has offered to preach for us once again, next Sunday afternoon. Sunday school at 3:00.&#13;
 We always count it a great treat to have Dr. Brower and this may be our last time.&#13;
Upsala seems to have more than its share of anake scares this year but fortunately no one has been killed. Last Saturday we were all so worried about little Adrian, the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Lundquist, as he was bitten on the second finger of his left hand by a small diamond back. He was hoeing some grass for his chicks and stooped to pull a bunch close to the fence when the snake struck him and brought blood.&#13;
 His mother banded his finger at once, calling for Mrs. John Lindquist. They killed the snake and got Mrs. Campbell to take the boy to the hospital and in three-fourths of an hour Dr. Puleston was attending him there. He was allowed to return home that night, going down a few times since to have the wound dressed, so we trust he is out of danger. The second day the arm swelled to the elbow.&#13;
 We had a fine time as we expected Sunday, besides most of the Eupsala folks. Rev. Albertson and wife of DeLand, Dr. Conway and wife and Miss Ruth Whittaker, of Orange City. Dr. Conway brought out the contrasts, showing how Jesus the Christ could be the little child, the son given and yet the everlasting father. Miss whittacker played for us.&#13;
At the basket dinner Mr. and Mrs. Dunn and children, of Lake Mary with Dr. Edwards, of Jacksonville, came prepared to join us and we all broke bread together under the trees. Elmer Tyler got a snap shot us. Mrs. Albertson gave us a temperance poem, having been herself a strong temperance worker. Rev. Edwards followed, speaking earnestly on “Follow Me”. Mrs. Jack Vaughn and Mr. Swan, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Coller, Mrs. Gleason and son Clyde, were among those present.&#13;
Rev. Edwards was entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Bertleson while among us.&#13;
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WILL CONVERT SOUTH&#13;
POINT ISABEL, Tex., Nov 15 – &#13;
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President-elect Harding, whose outing at Point Isabel ends next Wednesday, has agreed to deliver an address in New Orleans on the following day just before he sails for his voyage to Panama. He will speak at a luncheon of the New Orleans Association of Commerce and is expected to discuss in particular the economic possibilities and requirements of the South and the need for a national industrial policy uninfluenced by sectional interests.&#13;
 Leaving Brownville at 10 o’ clock Wednesday morning in a special train, he will try to avoid rear platform speeches on the way northward along the Gulf coast and by a fast run will reach New Orleans Thursday morning. His steamer sails that afternoon.&#13;
 Senator Harding’s decision to accept the New Orleans speaking invitation means that in consonance with his oft-repeated ambition to obliterate sectionalism, his first three formal addresses as president-elect are to be delivered within the territory of the old Confederacy and in states that long have been pillars of the Democratic solid South. The first of these addresses was delivered in Brownville, Tex., and the third has been scheduled for December 5th at Bedford, Va.&#13;
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SPARKS 3 RING SHOWS. A NATIONAL INSTITUTION.&#13;
COMING TO SANFORD ball park grounds. Tues., Nov. 23 Mile Long Open Cage Street Parade  10:30 a.m.&#13;
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THE NEW PAINT SMILE&#13;
You’ll wear one too if we repaint your auto. Why go around with a dim, dull, old looking car when for a few dollars we will paint and finish it like new? It’s good sense also to keep a fresh coat of paint on your car – adds to its value if you want to sell it or trade it in.&#13;
 REHER BROS. Auto Painting.  Phone 112.  Sanford Heights.&#13;
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The Pinehurst Dairy and The Roseland Dairy&#13;
Passed the Sanitary Inspection Saturday Morning by the Sanitary Inspector.&#13;
Walthall and Estridge have the entire output of the Pinehurst and Roseland Dairies and will only deliver milk from these two dairies – insuring pure Milk. &#13;
See Walthall and Estridge about your supply of milk, cream and buttermilk.&#13;
The city market.  Phones 113 and 114.&#13;
PAGE FOUR. THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1920.&#13;
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SANFORD DAILY HERALD – Published every afternoon except SUNDAY at The Herald Building, 107 Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, Florida&#13;
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THE HERALD PRINTING CO., INC. PUBLISHERS&#13;
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R. J. Holly		Editor&#13;
N. J. Lillard		Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
H. A. Neel			General Manager&#13;
F. P. Rines		Circulation Manager.  Phone 481&#13;
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Advertising Rates Made Known on Application&#13;
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Subscription Price in advance&#13;
One year			$6.00&#13;
Six months			$3.00&#13;
Delivered in City by Carrier&#13;
One week			15 cents&#13;
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Member of the Associated Press&#13;
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Nice rains today.&#13;
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Makes nice lettuce tomorrow.&#13;
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And fat bank accounts a few weeks from now.&#13;
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Out of which maybe the herald will get a few dollars and dimes.&#13;
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And every merchant in Sanford will realize something in his investment for holiday time is here.&#13;
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And the merchant that fails to advertise now is overlooking the best bet in his young life. People read the Daily herald.&#13;
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Everyone that comes to Sanford now speaks in highest terms of this city and states that they heard nothing but praise for this city everywhere. Our excellent hotels are responsible for this reputation.&#13;
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Bob Holly doesn’t know whether he belongs to the army or the navy, having served in both. Bob’s “A Jolly, a regular Jolly; soldier and sailor too,” according to Kipling. – Tampa tribune.&#13;
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And we should guard the good name of our hotels and see that they are kept right up to the standard. There is nothing that gives the town a black eye as quickly as poor hotel accommodations. Our past experiences will tell us that. Keep up the good work of feeding the multitude.&#13;
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Every time we meet with the newspaper men of Florida it gives us the feeling that we have the best bunch of scribes in the United States. They have the goods and they are getting out fine papers despite the high cost of everything that enters into the publishing business. We want to entertain them in Sanford some time soon and get some celery in their systems (maybe celery tonic if some can be found).&#13;
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It is well that Sanford is to have milk inspection and to follow that it would be well to have meat inspection. Too long have we waited for both and only the fact that the city of Sanford is the healthiest city in the United States has kept off an epidemic of disease that could have come from either the milk or other food supplies. More care should be exercised by the people who raise these products and by the people who handle them. The law governs these cases.&#13;
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New Smyrna is still agitating the matter of a free bridge over the St. Johns at Osteen ferry. This question will never be settled until it is settled right. The State Road Department is building about a dozen free bridges over West Florida rivers, and is even talking of a bridge three miles long over Escambia bay. The state, so far as The News knows, has built no bridges in South and East Florida, where most of the taxes are paid. The counties and communities and private parties have built all the bridges in this section of the state. – DeLand News.&#13;
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We believe the new state road department will consider some of the needs of this part of Florida as well as other parts. However, we still content that Volusia county laid down on the job of bridge building at the St. Johns river crossings and other places in the county. In fact Volusia is beset with toll bridges and they are a serious drawback to development.&#13;
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TAKE A MEMBERSHIP&#13;
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It will be heartening to the glorious cause of the American Red Cross if people everywhere will sign up early this week in the fourth annual roll call. This occasion brings back vividly the days of the World War when enthusiasm ran high and people were eager to contribute to one cause or another in connection with the mighty struggle. In those days the call was terribly urgent but even yet the need for Red Cross ministrations has not ceased. The end of the war has not brought an end to famine and suffering and want and the ravages of disease nor has made it unnecessary to continue to care for the health of communities. We still owe a tremendous debt of gratitude to the Red Cross. Let us demonstrate this sense of obligation by promptly inscribing our names in the roll of honor.&#13;
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Today – Lettuce – Cukes – Fla. Cabbage – Yellow Squash – Egg Plants – Apples – Oranges – Bananas – Avocados.&#13;
Deane Turner. Phone 497. Welaka building.&#13;
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ELEPHANT LIKES MONEY.&#13;
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An elephant with a craving for paper money has to be watched. Such an elephant is “Baby Sue” one of the Johhny J. Jones animals at the Southeastern Fair at Lakewood. In war times, when the Red Cross was putting on its drive and the other war organizations were campaigning for funds, “Baby Sue” helped to collect funds. She went up and down the streets of towns where the show appeared, carrying a bucket in her snout. She would hold out the bucket and make an appeal for funds that was usually answered by liberal contributions. But she had to be watched, as she would eat the paper money that was put into her bucket. She would deliberately set down the basket, extract the bill and eat them with as much relish as though they were peanuts. After she had consumed many dollars, the attendant who was with her on tour, kept an eye on the bucket and when a bill was put into it would get the bill out before “Sue” had a chance to consume it. Many persons, seeing the trainer take the paper money from the bucker and being ignorant of “Sne’s” craving for bills, would wonder if the bills were being kept by the trainer. “Sue” collected a total of about $14,000 for war work organizations.&#13;
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Edward R. salter, publicity man of the Johnny J. Jones’ Exposition is always emphatic in his declarations that the Johnny J. Jones Expositions is the greatest outdoor amusement of its class in the world and bases his statement largely upon the fact every new form of amusement or riding device that is brought out, first make sits appearance with this organization. The latest innovation is a riding device called “The Dodgem” and it is the first and only one in operation. The “trying out’ test was put up to the patrons of the Southeastern Fair. &#13;
The modus operandi of the new cars somewhat reminds the spectator of witnessing a person’s first attempt to master a tin lizzie. There are fifteen cars upon a platform 40 by 150 feet. The cars are operated and steered individually by the rider. No skill is required, you simply grasp the familiar steering wheel, step on the pedal and away you go. With a little practice you are enabled to Dodgem (maybe). It is a question which drives the most fun, the skilled or the unskilled operator. The cars, like a mule’s disposition, steers just the opposite to all set rules. – Atlanta American.&#13;
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J P says: The measure of success in life is not based on man’s ability to earn, but upon his ability to save, invest and accumulate. Build up a conservative investment with southern utilities company 8 per cent cumulative prior preferred stock. There’s none better.&#13;
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Do Your Fall Shopping Before the Holiday Rush&#13;
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Excuse for postponing your fall shopping are no longer in order.&#13;
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It should be done now – at once – before the holiday rush sets in. You can shop thoughtfully, leisurely and economically if you shop now. But if you wait until the Christmas rush sets in, you must buy hastily and inefficiently, and therefore extravagantly.&#13;
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Shop now. Make a list of all that the family will need – heavier clothes for the cooler weather, new shoes, new hats, that new furniture you have been discussing, linen and silverware for bed and table.&#13;
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These you will find now in pleasing selections on the shelves and counters of the local stores – fresh fall stock at the new lower prices that please us all.&#13;
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Make up your list now – and be sure to look for suggestions and prices in the advertisements in the Daily Herald. It is always well to read the ads before shopping, and they will be found particularly helpful now.&#13;
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The season heavy fall buying really begins tomorrow. You’re your selections early.&#13;
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LARGE BABOON ADOPTS FAMILY OF PUPPIES&#13;
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It is well known fact that the ordinary house cat has been known to adopt an entire family of puppies, and on rare occasions a mother dog has reared beasts of the jungle variety, but never in the annals of zoology has a member of the monkey family been known to “mother’ a family of puppies until Fifi, one of the star actresses in Minnie Thompson’s troupe of statue canines with the Sparks circus recently gave birth to four healthy English setters puppies.&#13;
As it happens Fifi enacts very importatnt roles in the canine dramas and statue numbers presented under the “big top” and during the performance cannot devote much of her time to the babies; therefore it fell to Miss Thompson to provide an efficient nurse during FiFi’s trenspan duties. &#13;
Ever since the birth of the youngsters, Joe, a large, good natured baboon of the dog-face variety, who occupies an adjoining cage in the Menagerie seems to show such an untiring interest in the babies, that finally Miss Thompson carefully approached his cake with one of the fuzzy mites, when to her surprise, he held out both arms and upon receiving it, immediately began to “coo” in true monkey language and fondle it as only a mother’s instinct knows – in fact he proved to be such an adept in the role of nurse, that the babies quickly adopted him and during Fifi’s absence in the ring, it is one of the daily sights of the Sparks Menagerie to see this simian nurse fondling his little charge. Undoubtedly Joe’s cage will be the center of attraction for all the kiddies when the circus comes to Sanford on Tuesday, November 23rd.&#13;
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PURE FRESH Pork Sausage.&#13;
THE REAL HOME MADE KIND, SEASONED JUST AS IT SHOULD BE.&#13;
Come and get it – it’s as cheap as the other kind.&#13;
Brown’s market.  Phone 122.&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARD AT THE HERALD, EACH … 1c&#13;
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SYNOD OF FLORIDA MEETS IN DeFUNIAK&#13;
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DeFUNIAK SPRINGS, Nov. 10. –&#13;
The Synod of Florida is in session in DeFuniak.&#13;
The Rev. W. S. Patterson, D. D., of Madison, preached a searching sermon on “Personal Responsibility for Souls.” Using Matthew 4:1x for a text Dr. Patterson took the place of Dr. Daffin, retiring moderator, and impressed the members of the synod with a large number of DeFuniak people with a splendid message.&#13;
 The synod then opened with prayer by the moderator and Rev. E. D. Brownlee of Sanford was elected to the highest office in the synod. E. W. Way, D. D. was chosen as reading clerk and the T. H. McConnell, D. D. as press agent of the synod.&#13;
 Rev. E. E. Lam, synod of Florida; L. T. Chafer, D. D. of Atlanta Presbytery; Prof. Milton Clarke, D. D., of Columbia Theological Seminary, and Ira Miller, D. D. U. S. A., were among the prominent visiting dignitaries. C. Blylaise, of the Southern Baptist church, was invited to sit as a visiting brother.&#13;
The report of the committee on arrangements was rad by Dr. Curry, and was adopted. Rev. Shell will lead the morning devotion on Wednesday at 8:45 and Dr. E. E. Lane preached at 11 a. m. &#13;
President Kemper, of Palmer College, extended an invitation to the synod to attend a reception at Palmer College to meet the faculty and student body at 8:30 p. m., which was heartily accepted.&#13;
The synod met at 8:45 a. m. Wednesday, when Rev. E. E. Snell, of Madison, spoke of the Reality of God’s Presence.&#13;
Rev. Wm. Fred Galbreath, of the synod of Texas, was introduced as a corresponding member.&#13;
The moderator then appointed the permanent committee with revision of the standing committees.&#13;
Communications were heard from the Y. M. C. A. and Dr. Joseph Venable, of Jacksonville, was given the second order of the afternoon to speak on the inter-race problem, now so acute in the Southland.&#13;
The Lord’s ady missionary alliance and Columbia seminary and Thornwell orphanage were heard from and Dr. Melton Clark was given the first hour of the afternoon.&#13;
President W. J. Martin, D. D., of Davidson college, wss presented to the synod being one of the leading educators of the South, the synod will await his message with pleasure.&#13;
 The message of Dr. Joseph G. Venable on the inter-racial question was one of the most powerful heard by the synod.&#13;
The following resolution was adopted by the synod:&#13;
“That the moderator appoint an ‘ad interim’ committee to which the address of Mr. Venerable be refered, said committee also to serve as a co-operating agency of the synod in dealing with the great question of the relations between the white and coolred races.”&#13;
A progressive policy on home missions was adopted by the synod.&#13;
A superintendent of Home Missions for the state as a whole was decided upon. This man will also have charge of the Presbyterian Progressive program until such a man can be secured, Mr. H. C. DuBose of Sanford, was elected manager of the Presbyterian Progressive Program.&#13;
Articles of county with other denominations were adopted and the following committee of county appointed: E. D. Brownlee, chairman, Dr. L. E. McNair, Jacksonville, and Dr. T. H. McConnell, Orlando. The location of every new church must be passed upon by this committee before organization.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
THE NATIONAL FOREST CARRIED OUT&#13;
&#13;
(Continued from page one)&#13;
&#13;
Of denuded lands, for obtaining essential information in regard to timber and timber lands, for extension of the National forests and for other steps essential to continuous forest production on lands chiefly suitable for this purpose. The following legislation is proposed:&#13;
Authorizing the Secretary of Agriculture, after consulting appropriate local agencies, to approve an adequate policy for each state, covering fire protection, reforestation, cutting and removing of timber crops. Not less than $1,000,000 annually avtilable for such co-operation with states.&#13;
A survey of forest resources, forest production and forest requirements of the nation.&#13;
 Provision for studies and experiment in forest reproduction methods, wood utilization, timber tests, wood preservation, development of by-products and other steps to bring about the most effective use of the nation’s forest resources. &#13;
Provision for a study of forest taxation, to assist states in devising tax laws which will encourage the conservation and growing of timber. Also of methods of insuring against forest losses by fire.&#13;
Provision for more rapid replanting of the vast areas of denuded land within the national forests.&#13;
Appropriation of $10,000,000 a year for five years for the purchase of lands, which should be added to the national forest system, whether or not on the headwaters of navigable streams as such purchases are now limited.&#13;
Authorizing the addition to national forests of lands now in other forms of government ownership but found chiefly suitable for permanent forest production.&#13;
 “The very great importance of this program and the suggestion outlined cannot be overestimated,” said Mr. Pack.&#13;
“They effect every state in the Union and the business interest of every state which means that every man who wants to build a home who wants to get along, will be affected by this important legislation.&#13;
“It so happens this united move for a national forest policy,” continues Mr. Pack, “comes at an opportune time ant its importance to the welfare of every citizen cannot be overestimated. The plan ties up with water power development and the coal situation. When we put the millions of waste power to work, the coal situation will begin to right itself. Water power development and reforestation should go hand in hand. We are at the door of great commercial development. Let us open that door.”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Co-Operation Accommodation Friendly Assistance&#13;
&#13;
And worth while advice – this is part of the constructive service which this bank renders.&#13;
&#13;
First National bank. &#13;
F. P. Forster, President.  B. F. Whitner, Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
CITY MARKET&#13;
&#13;
Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props&#13;
Welaka Building&#13;
&#13;
Specials for today.&#13;
Choice Western and Florida Meats.&#13;
Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage.&#13;
&#13;
City Market.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
NOW MAKING Pecan Nut Roll.&#13;
&#13;
 Fresh daily.  $1.00 POUND.&#13;
Water’s Kandy Kitchen.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, Each … 1c.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
CHANDLER CARS – FRANKLIN CARS.&#13;
“WE GIVE YOU SERVICE – ASK ANYBODY”&#13;
&#13;
WIGHT TIRE CO.  &#13;
Kelly-Springfield Tires.  Diamond Tires.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Red Star Detroit Vapor Oil Store.&#13;
Heater of every kind – OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT.&#13;
&#13;
Hill Hardware Company.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
What Settled the Argument&#13;
&#13;
“We have Bwussels carpet.”&#13;
“We have lace curtains.”&#13;
“We have Fwench mirrors.”&#13;
“We have Butter-Nut Bread every day!”&#13;
And that settled it, for of course there’s nothing better then&#13;
&#13;
THE NEW Butter-Nut Bread&#13;
&#13;
Has all the quality of the old Butter-Nut; we could not improve that.&#13;
But in addition we’ve perfected a new mixing process which enables us to turn out a lighter, daintier loaf than ever.&#13;
Get a loaf today, for Butter-Nut is its own best advocate. At all good grocers. The genuine bears the Butter-Nut label.&#13;
&#13;
Miller’s Bakery.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
PAGE FIVE.   THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY NOVEMBER 15, 1920.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-- Little Happenings. Mention of Matters in Brief. Personal Items of Interest. In and About the City.&#13;
Summary of the Floating Small Talks Succinctly Arranged for Herald Readers.&#13;
&#13;
------&#13;
WEATHER FOR WEEK&#13;
--&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 13 – &#13;
Forecast for the period November 15 to 20, inclusive. South Atlantic and Gulf states; Generally unsettled and occasional rains; temperature below normal.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WEATHER REPORT&#13;
For Florida: Rain tonight, colder on North portion. Tuesday, fair and much cooler.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
All ladies of Seminole county are cordially invited to an open meeting at the Woman’s Club on Oak avenue, Wednesday, Nov. 17, at 3 o’clock.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
B.H. Coney visiting his family here for the week end coming up from near Tampa where he is putting in construction work but still has headquarters at Ford Meade.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Brown’s Market at 417 Sanford avenue, started today making absolutely pure pork sausage – the real home made kind, seasoned just right and priced just right. If you want something really good, try it.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Hunting season opens next Saturday and already there are tales of the pot hunters going out and shooting ducks and turkeys and other game before the season opens. They should be watching and arrested.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Holly and Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Holly attended the meeting of the Associated Dailies at Daytona yesterday afternoon having a fine time at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fitzgerald, who were the host and hostess of the occasion.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Brossier and Mr. and Mrs. Wattis, of the Reporter-Star, Orlando, and Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Essington, of the Sentinel, of Orlando, and L. M. Bloom, of the Lakeland Star, were among the newspaper people here yesterday on their way to Daytona to attend the meeting of the Associated Dailies.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Hon. Forest Lake, of the State Road Department, spent Sunday here with his family and expects to leave today for Tallahassee where his duties keep him most of the time. Mr. Lake is doing a lot of constructive work in the state road department and is a busy man in trying to cover the state of Florida.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Prof. Bache, W. A. Adams, Wallace Bell, Arthur Moore, Otis Cobb, Robert Holly and Hamden Dubose have returned from the Hy-Y meeting at Ocala Friday and Saturday. They were entertained by the people of Ocala in great style and had an excursion to Silver Springs and many other side trips besides hearing some fine lectures from the “Y” secretaries present. They made the trip in Wallace Bell’s car and had a good trip going and coming.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
RED CROSS CAMPAIGN OPENS TODAY&#13;
&#13;
The real Red Cross campaign opens today when the canvassing parties will be out covering their respective territories and getting in the memberships. The girls covered the down town districts last week on Armistice Day with the idea of getting all the stragglers who were in town for the day. This week the systematic campaign of enrolling every man, woman and child in Sanford will be taken up by the committees under the leadership of Dr. Walker. If you have not been approached send in your dollar to headquarters or telephone Dr. Walker and he will get your money.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Demonstration of Florida Fruit juices at the Woman’s Club Wednesday afternoon. Wakefield products on sale.    190-3tc.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WOMAN SERGEANT BURIED WITH HONORS, FOUGHT FOR POLAND.&#13;
&#13;
WARSAW, Oct. 21. – (By Mail). – &#13;
&#13;
All Warsaw turned out for the funeral the other day of Sergeant Sophie Poukopwicz, a member of Poland’s Woman’s Battalion, who was called here “the heroine of Plock.” She died from wounds inflicted with a Russian sword and the “Nahajka” of Cossack’s whip whish she received at Plock during the drive against Warsaw. As a final tribute the American nurses who attended her at the hospital and the entire personnel of the American Red Cross in Warsaw went to her funeral.&#13;
All Warsaw knew her story and there were many moist eyes that gazed at the plain white painted pine board coffin containing the girl-soldier as it was borne through the streets on the shoulders of her fighting comrades, all girls from the Women’s Battalion.&#13;
 Sergeant Sophie was a veteran of Poland’s great war, which in the minds of most Poles began when the world war ended in November, 1918. She was 22 years of age and was one of the original members of the Woman’s Battalion which was formed late in 1918 for the purpose of defending Lemberg against the Ukrainians. She was wounded three times, first at Lemberg again at Vilna and last while leading her company against the Russians at Plock.&#13;
She typified the spirit of Poland today. There are 600 like her in the Woman’s Battalion. Officers in the army from Pilsudski down admit that the mere existence of this battalion exercised a wonderful effect upon the popular imagination, upon recruiting and even upon the soldiers in the recent heavy fighting.&#13;
The age limits for privates in the battalion are 17 and 33. Most of the women who have joined are of humble origin, and come from semi-stagnant industrial centers such as Lodz. The economic problem has had something to do with their continued existence as soldiers but they have shown great enthusiasm and bravery. They have had many casualties.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
VALDEZ GRILL OPEN AT NIGHT&#13;
&#13;
The many patrons of the Valdez Hotel grill will be pleased to learn that the management has decided to keep the grill open at night until 1 o’clock.       1 87-6tc.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
MR. ROYAL C. DUNN DIES SUDDENLY AT THE CAPITAL CITY&#13;
&#13;
Tallahassee, Nov. 14. –&#13;
&#13;
After a short illness, Mrs. Royal Canfield Dunn died at her home in this morning at 10 o’clock. Mrs. Dunn was the wife of R. C. Dunn, railroad commissioner and was beloved by all Tallahasseeans.&#13;
 She was a prominent club woman, and her death will cast a shadow over the deliberations of the annual state federation which convenes in this city this week.&#13;
Funeral services were conducted at the Presbyterian church this afternoon at 5 o’clock by the Rev. R. G. Newsome, pastor. Interment will be made in Madison tomorrow afternoon, and the body will be accompanied there by the husband and four sisters of the deceased. Mrs. Dunn is also survived by two brothers.&#13;
The Presbyterian church was crowded to the doors this afternoon during the funeral services, attesting the love in which Mrs. Dunn was held and the general sorrow of the community in her untimely death.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
A raid conducted by prohibition enforcement officers on Garcia’s restaurant in Tampa, Friday morning, brought 250 quarts of contraband stuff valued at about $3,000 and the arrest of the proprietor of the restaurant, M. F. Lopez. His is charged with violation of the Volstead act.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
RED TUBE FREE&#13;
With every KOKOMO TIRE Purchased of US. &#13;
Take advantage of this and SAVE 30 PER CENT. ON YOUR TIRES.&#13;
&#13;
Fabrics Guaranteed for 6,000 Miles and Cords 10,000&#13;
&#13;
B. &amp; O. Motor Co.&#13;
Distributors for SEMINOLE, LAKE, VOLUSIA, ORANGE AND OSCEOLA COUNTIES.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
RESOLUTION ADOPTED BY BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE CHAMBER COMMERCE.&#13;
&#13;
In Re-application of the Southern Bell Telephone Company for Increased Rates.&#13;
&#13;
November 12th, 1920.&#13;
&#13;
WHEREAS, it having been brought to the attention of the Sanford Chamber of Commerce that the Southern Bell Telephone Company have petitioned the Railroad Commissioners of the State of Florida for increased toll and exchange rates, which petition will be heard before that body on November 15th, 1920, and,&#13;
WHEREAS, the Board of Governor of The Sanford Chamber of Commerce having acquainted themselves with the facts as presented by the Southern Bell Telephone Company through paid advertisements in the press and verbal presentation of the same by its representatives, and,&#13;
WHEREAS, it appears from data presented by the Southern Bell Telephone Company, that the said company, that the said Company is making but a small margin of profit on its investment in Florida, therefore,&#13;
BE IT RESOLVED, that the Board of Governors of The Sanford Chamber of Commerce go on record before the State Railroad Commissioners as favoring the granting of a rate increase to the Southern Bell Telephone Company, only after the matter has been taken under careful advisement by the Commission, furthermore,&#13;
BE IT RESOLVED, that the percentage of increase be left to the wise discretion of the State Railroad Commissioners, with the recommendation that it be understood that any increased rate granted be for the purpose of enabling the the Southern Bell Company to arrange the financing of their contemplated plant extensions, and the attaining of a higher standard of telephone service in Sanford and Seminole county, furthermore,&#13;
BE IT RESOLVED, that this recommendation is based upon certain provisions for plant extensions in the city of Sanford and Seminole country, and that the Railroad Commission require a definite period for the beginning and completion of these improvements, therefore,&#13;
BE IT RESOLVED, that a copy of these resolutions be presented to the Railroad Commissioners at the hearing to be held in Tallahassee, Monday, November 15th, 1920.&#13;
&#13;
SANFORD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
DEATH OF THOS. J. CHECK&#13;
&#13;
Thomas j. Check died at Phoenix, Ariz., last Saturday night at eight o’clock after a short illness of tuberculosis. Mr. Check had been in Sanford a few months ago and his friends here had not noticed any change in his condition but he told some of them that he was suffering from this disease and that he would be forced to go to Arizona by his doctor’s orders.&#13;
T. J. Check was a resident of East Orange, N. J., and had been coming to Sanford for many years having at one time considerable considerable city property but in the last year disposing of much of it and before his death he willed all of the remainder of the Sanford property to his son Victor Check and wife. &#13;
He leaves a son, Victor and a daughter to mourn his loss, Mrs. Check having died several years ago. &#13;
The remains will be taken to the old home in New Jersey for interment.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Cooked Food Sale, Welfare department, Women’s Club, Wednesday afternoon.   190-3tc.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
AT THE STAR THEATRE – TODAY&#13;
&#13;
An All-Star Cast in “JUST A WIFE’&#13;
Ballroom boys in “WILD, WILD WOMEN”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
The Logical Treatment “ENERGIZER” for many ills.&#13;
&#13;
We hold this to be a Truth: -viz: - That Circulation is the BASIC factor Human Health.&#13;
The “Energizer” process will DO MORE Benefit to Any Adult’s general condition than any method known.&#13;
&#13;
COME IN and talk it over. &#13;
108 Park Ave., Next door to Mobley’s Drug store.&#13;
&#13;
L.C. Cameron.  Box 399.  Sanford, Fla.  Phone 184.&#13;
--&#13;
--&#13;
White &amp; Wyckoff’s Superb Stationery&#13;
THE HERALD’S office supple department has just received a large and complete line of this beautiful stationery – no two boxes alike – and we will print any monogram on paper (or cards) and envelopes – in one, two or three colors.&#13;
&#13;
An Ideal and Inexpensive Christmas Gift.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS --- 1c a word&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY.&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under which this institution has been managed since the first day the doors were opened.&#13;
&#13;
 That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the constant and gratifying growth in business.&#13;
&#13;
 It is the desire of the officers of the Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals desiring most efficient and responsible banking.&#13;
&#13;
 On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your patronage is invited.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
Is owned, controlled and managed by home people, who are interested in the development and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County.&#13;
&#13;
 With our large resources and strong financial connections, we are in position to assist our customers at all times in the handling of their financial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.&#13;
&#13;
 4 Per Cent Interest Paid.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank.&#13;
&#13;
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&gt;

IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
NUMBER 19T

SANFORD. FLORIDA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1920

FARMERS TO
ELIMINATE ALL
MIDDLEMEN

Unionists and Sinn Feiners Fighting in Belfast

Big Convention - at Kansas
City Take Up Subject •

FORBID
To Prevent Ginning and Also NATIONS
KING CONSTANTINE’S
RETURN TO THRONE
Marketing of Crops
(By Th* A UM B *«*)
mm

t

PARIS, Nov. 16.—Newspaper* here
agree that England and probably
France will forbid the return of for­
_____
:j
mer King Conatantlne to Greece.
WOULD ESTABLISH AND K L LOOKS LIKE GROSS IGNORANCE Venizelos's defeat, political writers
TEND THE CO-OPBRATIVR
aay, would further complicate the dif­
ON PART OF PEOPLE TAK­
PLAN FOR MARKETING
ficulty in the Near East situation.
ING THIS ROLE
(B y H u I mcUM h u ll
KANSAS CITY, Nov. 16— TEw
ATHEN8,
Nov.
16.—Premier
Ven(By TV* Am n UU4 T n u .)
establishment and extension of thezelos’ cabinet resigned today and the
Street bottle between Unionist uml Finn Fein factions In York street. .Belfast, Ireland, during the recent rioting co-operative sales agencies to e f t s LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Nov. 16^-* Greek regent is expected to ask for­
Responsible sentiment in this state Is mer Premier1 George Rhallis, aged In that city. The Unionist* shown In the foreground, ore driving the Sinn Feiners back with stone*
inate the middleman in marketing «C
Jbnnlng strongly against night rid- eighty, to form a new ministry. The
fang products was the principal wabto* which has been undertaken -in victory of the opposition seemed cer
ject before the National Farmer^"
Union convention here today. Detomis mm
- ■»
tain. • Vcnitelos decided not lo
to resign
gates from twenty eight states w rre
to prevent the ginning and market ng ' ' ndln tha announcement of the
of cotton at the preaent low price. £
yote
.
.
present,
.
ReprcsenUtive _planters, bankers an l
*
-____________
Representative
FARMERS’ ASSOCIATION
business men feel strongly that this PROHIBITION SOLID
PURCHASE A BIG STORK'
lawlessness is giving the south a
FOR TWO YEARS
“black eye.”
SAYS CHAIRMAN
OCALA, Nov. 16.—^A deal has b e a r
At a recent meeting of the A r-,
-------PRESIDING OVER DESTINIES OF closed whereby the Farmers* C o-opoSHORT LINE ROADS AT
ative Association of Marion
!“ T ‘T u ™
' C m C A O O ? N tr^ J L 5 S c « lb .t
A .,station h m ,
h|b|t|on
in operal,„n
* PRESENT RATES
became the owners of the C arrcondemned aa an act of gross ignor- v
.
Thomaa grocery business,
Gov. Brough h .i taken o vlg- * r lhe n" ‘ ,
*
, „ .
(By TV* A*»»cUt*d P r* » 0
COAI. MINED
poet to continue
.tand Against night riding .nd «*• ^
Z
CHICAGO,
Nov. 16.—The trials of
STATE OWNED
along the same basis,
k h » hod further .upport,
. m m of » ,b° " '
PROVES VALUABLE railroad presidents who preside over few changes. The officers
'
s
r&gt;
i
..
i.
♦
kfl
years
hence,
is
given
by
Virgil
C.
others* from Clmiuc FitzpntinciCi ln€
, .
» .* d- aVUiIji m
the destinies of the country’s short
new firm are: H. L.
i Dr
A t* o cliU 4 P r « u )
L i d nt of tho A rk.ns.s Bonkrr. n l ",h " '
°!
1
lines are coming to*llght in the hear­
dent; A. S. Pickett, .
LEMMON,
S.
D.,
Nov.
16.—The
Auorlotion. All th . forges of .ho « • • * » '
h" " *l "*tl‘"u l
ings being given here to more than
C. M. Carr, secretary and
Claremont
coal
mine,
owned
by
the
■tote nnd Ior.I government, In AJ- (
.]U.r ero.
100 short lines whose employes have of directors are J. E. Johnson,
1 “We have n mission 81111,” Mr.
state of South Dakota, is now ship­
kansss are now co-operating to p rr-1
petitioned the United States Railway Bailey, G. A. Waters and
ITInuhr* said. “If any one of the
ping two hundred tons daily. The
vent further lawlessness in the cotton
The Carr-Thomaa was
product is of the quality known as Board for increased pay.
One Texas road, built primarily to oldest established grocery
ginning
nning centers.
rontaro.
' r i L L n T r t L u l T ^ i T Z n r T " ST. JOHNS SCENIC HIGHWAY IS
blud lignite.
This countermovement is believed
p
,
jb,
ANOTHER ONE THAT INTER­
The Claremont mine was purchas­ open a route to some mineral deposit the city and has
beds, has to date the champion hard past number of years
*° W d.lng much ,» .tap .hr * r t £
" d wtar . ^ n d ^ ta
. SSTS TIMS SECT,ON
ed last summer to insure state insti­
tutions against coal shortages. Fuel luck tale, according to G. W. W. Han Carr, Mr. Thoinaa having died
The state press seems to have
I, furnished to the .tale norm.1' f " . m' m^ r »'
r " ’; her of years ago.
come.to tho conclusion that the new
the co-operation of the citizens has p ROv|8IONAI. PRESIDENT
Khool u. Speorfl.h, the penllenllur,
&gt;l&gt;' J " “ jJ?
h,c ,&gt;''™
been proffered
maintaining
State Road Department will get re­
v-------**—
A officers ,nin mnlntainln-r
HUERTA WILL HEAD GEN.
OHIO TAKES OVER
, t Sioux Fulls, the school for Mind « ”’&gt;&gt;«• »&lt; •"&gt; *
,wo
sults
and already many of the papers M Guru, U.. school tan deuf ut Sioux , “ *»••
ord-r
.
OBREGON’S NEW CABINET
TOMB OF HARRISON, '
»•
0 --------are talking about the department
Acts of violence for which night
train
covered
the
distance
in
two
r
FIRST PRESIDENT
home at Hot
, - r xf
finlihing up many state roads that Falls, the soldiers’
riders have been given credit in Ar­
(Bt Th- AhocIi M Pr»ti)
houra.
Springs,
and
other
state
institutions.
Provis'• * Tk* A liixliU 4 I T m n
MEXICO CITY, Nov. 16.have been left unfinished for some
kansas have taken various forms. In
But between the two cities la a
Individuals may purchase coal at the
CINCINNATI, Nov. 16— The
addition to the burning of gins, ware- ional President Do la Huerta will time. There
mere i»
■» about
is also immui
much “&lt;
talk
hnrd surfaced highway, and enterpris­
mine.
•
houses and other property, farmers head the cabinet of General Obregon ^ugBlJfu,e auto licensetax, ifpossible,
ing nuto owners have opened a bus of Gcne;ul William Henry Har
The
mine
is
located
at
Haynes,
N.
who attempted to market their cotton when ho^ assumes the presidency I)e- j &gt;g tbe
away from the counThe hlrhway.
route,
firat of OfcfcAw
highway, on _a direct
..... ........
...... “Old Tippecanoe,
. . .
-_ . . of. this tax .hm» _worked
. . a_ v„_i
lust over the line.____
from. Lemmon. line.
have been threatened with death or comber 1st, says the newspaper Ex- ties
ia little more than twenty miles long, presidents—has become tho property*
hard- D
"*•. JU“‘
vi on them. xFormerly
?
*u„„
owners ___
began
the graocompared to the railroad’s 41. The of the state. It Is sltunted on a knoXT
ship
they milu
could The
* original
_ ______
A tmtmi
jevere punishment, and in some cases celslor today.
railroad
from tKthe
ing
for
a
spur
auto bus covers the distance in 40 at* North Bend, n suburb to the aoutx
have been badly maltreated. Negro
__
. ,, use this tax in their own counties but
families have been Intimidated and BREAD REDUCED TO 10c LOAF. I now it seems to be tied up in the mine to Lemmon. The state of South minut(r, one b'&lt;ur and twenty minutes of Cincinnati, commanding a maf?
, .
i :
,
,
, Dakota a now building* this railroad, faster than the train, nnd chnrges nificent view ojT the Ohio river,
funds and is useless to counA.
,v n„_ ..
driven from (heir homes ;becaurfe , C0LUMBUS&gt; Ga ( Nov. 10— Bak- state
,
.
.
.
i
__i.
It
n
estimated
that when
i Poaesslon by the stato became
, ,the line
. is
.
. the «»me fsrv.
thry sought employment or worked ^
^
reduccd the pricc of n t cs and state unless something ls ,,v ■■ *. .
.
-*fc u epv
Wau..
finished the mine’s output can be
\l as cotton pickers. Hundreds of cot- &gt;loaf
Thv
freight
outlook
he
described
ns
fectivc when State Rcprescntai_._
t _ _ J • of i__-.I
bread from IK
15 In
to 10
10 rnntn
cents nn
on done with i t The New Smyrna
!
eiiunlly
bad.
A
company
operating
Horace Ronser, of Clncinnativ -* d .l
Board
of
Trade
wants
the
bridge
'"
P
1
™'
____________
ton gins in various
nf the ncc0unt of the lower price of flour
i motor trucks with two trallcra to the with the county recorder- 15 qarC,
built nt Osteen by the two counties
Htato have bc&lt;?n ported with warn- f
truck.hauls freight over the highway, claim deeds representing the io te rnnd Chairman Lake, of the State H J | |
P K K V rll
Road Department, thinks there may " • v * * i i t i f U U
faster th&gt;n the road can by train, de- eats of the Harrison heirs, ficnftcrera
tar not heeding the » .n .ln B Inelud- O C n i U V H l i m i U l H U
liver* the gocnis at the merchant’s from New York to'California,
■be a chance to get national aid for 1
store door, and chnrges the same tar- [six acre* of Fund Involved in » » *
I f AC D I I C V H A V thljj project nnd Editor Codrington, |
ing destruction of the plants and for­
I l / l U . D U j I I / f t l of the DeLand News things the nuto \
_____
iff as the railroad. And on top of his transfer,
*feature of the lives of the owners.
_____
■
tax could be used. At any fate the j
,a, -ni, A***&lt;ut*a Br***&gt;
other troubles it is now eatimated
In one county eight men now are
(By Tk* A***cut*a Fmiii
new bonrtl seems to have Inspired &gt; WASHINGTON, Nov.
16.—The M
awaiting action of the grayd-j Jury
- *remaining
r
BROWNSVILLE, Tex., Nov. 16.— confldence |n the sUte nnd there is long drswn out controversy between nish the= mnin
source of i
on n charge of setting fire jo ^ g in ­
is ••—
nojv workactlvitT- in road matters ev- the State Department and the West- revenue will be exhausted within
nvniutm-oita.* Harding —
----- mucB activity
nery, and In another section of the President-elect
(Hr Tk* A&gt;t»el*l*d rt#«.T
state
nave been
ow* ing on accumulated corres^mdence pry^hcre. Many of the roads ir\ the ,«rn Unloa Telegraph Compnny today three year*.
state three
three white
white inrtncrs
farmers hnve
DAYTON,
Nov. 16—Capt. Schroe*reached the stage of nn open break,
sentenced to n year's Imprisonment and his New Orleans speech, aftk-r gtal&lt;5tBnt bnvc hecn impassable for
The president of an Alabama short er, holder of the world’# airplona a l­
and assessed heavy fines for Intiml- abandoning storm swept Point Isa- nitny month , are being fixed up and thc tejegraph company refusing to line whose principal source of revetitude record, was today lionoraMF
dptlon of ncjrre cotton pickers.
bel. Gorernor Hobby today extended
paBBahie at least until more handle *ay more cable messages for nue is hnullng ore to Birmingham
____________
, Texas’ fo/mnl appreciation over *lr. money can ^ 0bUlned to make them the State Department unlesa the tolls furnaev* appeared to defend his com­ discharged from the army and
were prepaid. It is understood that pany against tlx employes, nil sta­ enter business in Chicago.
M W lnoOT1 W Ita n v
.Harding’s visit and Senator Fall dis- ^
Tomd, aJra|n.
.
Schroeder flew tb a height' of s i x
PRESIDENT
WILSON
.
lCU
BBed
border
conditions.
.The
preal■
rnxiT.iJiTijq Tn iM Onnvp
. cubbcu i~ . ux. ------------ ------ - r - — | The St. Johns Scenic Highway that this order is intended to apply to ait tion agents, who hud requested more miles and when his oxygen becara «a»—
V
J \ w r^rinv dent-elect nnd party willleave tomor- wynd() JtB WBy down the S t Johns government departments, but others money. Their present Income is $95
haunted, fell fivo mile* before he » DESPITE THE ELECTION ^ foT New Orleans where they will rlvpr from j^vaonvllic to Sanford have been excepted informally from a month.
.
gained consciousness and succeiutfolfe?
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16— Presl- ^
the steamer for Panama.
, nnd then on to Tampa ,B one of the tho ruling. Western Union officials
The railread president exhibited a ,ftndcd hl, plano,
best roads in the state as faT aa lo­ said the company basod its action on personal knowledge of th ^ affairs of
dent Wilson continues to improve In
BOI.8 GETTING IN HAD.
cation ia concerned but has nevqr delayed payment* for previous cables, bach of his employees. One of the WRANGEL FLEES
"'
health. The statement of Ambassa­
been finished and the DeLand News but the Department'officials hold to station agents, hif said, owned a
TO UNKNOWN PORT
dor
on hi«
arrival in London
-w. Davis, v..
.... ------------------- , CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. 16— .baa the following editorial mention the opinion that fhis step is in rctal coumry mUre a xrw ri
country store t few rods from
ON RUSSIAN CRUISER *
that the president .was a much sicker g0jBhevIki leaders were today warn- « . ..
latlon
for
thc
failure
of
eht5iiD*pftr^
1
railroad
station
nnd
had
run
his
H:
man than the piddle knew is not con- ed
the French admiral In command •
VorpBt i - r. 0f thc
(Sr Tk* A***rUU4 Fr**&gt;.P
ment to allow the Western Union *° i gcfph' wire into-tho store so he could
sldered here to be in conflict with th . of
Blirck Sea foreeB th. t if the l
J * 1™ " j Z ^ m c n t il going land a cable nt Miami, Florida, con- j,and]e
j^jb (|uties as___
dispatcher
and
_____ ____________
r _____ _
_
LONDON, Nov. 16—G$n. WranguiL.'.
optimistic assurances Kiv'" by Sec- town of Sebastopol was lootedlor the »
^
^
letlon, ^ tlje nec'ting Barbados with the B ritish;____ »___m . __i.t__ __
operator while waiting on customers, vhose army was virtually ann&amp;flsi*-’'
reUry Colby after seeing the pw d- j ^ l U n U molested he would make * ^
?^
j BfkBOnv,„e&gt; cable from South America.
•A second was described as the w lfe&gt;d by the Bolshevik! In C rfw w U it*
dent a week ago.
reprisals.
!„la "Plant Citv. Kissimmee. Orlando,
, of a prosperous farmer. She had her Sebastopol on a Russian cruiser w Eh
Mr. Davis is believed to have been
STORMS COMING.
, telegrtph line In the farm kitchen, soldiers bound for an unknown pae*,
referring to an earlier period in Mr CALDER DOUBTS THAT
(Br
Tk»
A**s«ut*4
B
tbm
)
the president said, i Of the six opers- a ConsUntinoplc dispatch r e p o r t s
PRICES WILL RETURN
Wilaon'a illness and not to recent
TO
A
PRE-WAR
BASIS
of
this
250
mile
road
is
al.....................
---WASHINGTON, Nov. 16— Signals tors'only. one was located in a town, today.
weeks.
L
H
cYcrvoouv about
*H«u* the
w.v Whit*
..... ........------------------------------n t d y completed and In,splendid con- ^ d, . yed here-wsrnlng shipping and th at was a village of 600 popula
Housa
Everybody
HYMANS PRESIDENT
seems to hive become more hopeful! i DENVER, Coh&gt;., Nov. 16 — Doubt dltlon. There Is only a short stretch
at9Tm„that will sweep tion. Thepresidentsaid hisroad paid
LEAGUE OF NATIONS:
now about the president's ultimata that any big price reduction wm in Putnam county and the twenty
Atlantic and East Gulf no dividends and operated at a lota
of $100,000 last year.
recovery0* His Improvement has been com#aoon and that price, ever wm mile. In -Volusia county, part of Urn ^
GENEVA, Nov. 16— Paul Hy
SO much more than was expected and rearj. pre-war levels, was expressed money for which ‘f ^ n f id’e j n the
““
£ ? ! ° ° ^ ° rt cl Belgium, . . . eleelej .
s&lt;j much better than U ordinarily.by Senator W. M. Calder, of New bank, here and vralting for the SUte
' - j ° ME JAf ■ ,
" n*
f ‘ ch « m?'ch '* ,
‘president of th« U .g u e of H
(Mr A* A*««*wt*4 n r n ) '
taken up separately, is expected to
..
true of cases of the kind that Mr. Yotf, chairman of the senate com- Road -“Department and the national
__________
_
■
vvr
WASHINGTON
J
Nov.
16.—^The
C
{
/ntinue
for
several
weeks.
Decla-1
Wilson's
extraordinary
vitality
Is
mlttee
on
reconstruction
and
producgovernment
to
meet
Volusia
a
$200r
rs extraordinary vitality Is
tlon, which met here #-------yesterday
- to in- 000
--- W
on the 60-60 basis. The -----News afsapeaiivw
Japanesev pywaww**
population —
of ----------Hawaiian'Is--- lO
(ons
HH IH
in Sift
all C
cases
EMC will be handed down
», V
,
now expected to win the long struggle &gt;nrtl|
- '
- ...-----------------"be* ~
lsl for lands 1.
announced by the Census .im{lu«namiliv.
*.
yute* t° f t w 1
vestigate
housing
conditions
in
Colobelieves
that
it
would
wise
Is
B
jm{iltaneously.
for life which he has been waging
for President Motta Of Swit
rado and nearby states.
the vrfjegt legislature to provide for Bureau today as 42.7 per cent of the
— _
for more than aj year.
and one each for ex-Preaiddnt A4
LABOR LEADERS IN SESSION
Senator Calder based his opinion turning over this $200,000 to the total population of the Islands which
Instead of proving a shock to him,
;
of ' Switzerland and Leon
•
•
the election passed by without un­ bn information gathered by the com- State Road Department and to di- |B 255.512.
IM
j
Tk*
A
***cU
t*4
T
r»**
l
of France.
reel the department to complete the
■toward effect upon Mr. Wilson’s mlttee.
M. Hymans had called'the delegates. '
“As long as the government’s great road In
(n Volusia county. TO
This. wou.a
would «w
the oiai*
State nu-«
Road Department, five *^ WASHINGTON, Nov. 16—
health
“A.
"eslth. Those
Those who
who know
know the
the pres!-1
preal
to
order and introduced’ P r e r i . ^ t ■
den Lvst ^ r t h l . due to a sublime' loans are out, labor U opposed to re- relieve the Board of County Commls- member, of the VolusU Board _ of tion. of Industrial P«ce and re sted
Motta
of Switzerland, who in hla act- « m s£ S L : M the righteousnere of duction In wage, and the employer U .loner, ^n d the local board of trus- County Commiaa oners and three problem, were dUcuss.d today a t the
dress
welcoming
the delegates, e x ­
the cause* he fought for and that hU oppoeed to reductions o&gt; his prices. I tees for the fund of all responsibility mbmbbra of th«rlocal board of bond conference of Ubor leader, and Herpressed
the
hope
that the U nite*/
halR of mtod " n o t to tltok of lncl-1don’t see much hope for heavy de- andM feld place the responsibility In
States
would
not
delay
much
d*nta
two o r’th™
• « ”£«” r0\?f the ‘erllnoA
U n i TImnD-Hlflt/'K’
m m c d h te lyflTld
^ d ‘it
doubt- T
H
ants of *----»»**
t k a a a - ay•
aM
i t “is
l l dOUbt*
t hhe“
e hand! ^f" one" b o aH -to e' SUte of this $200,000-an unlucky thirteen, tor, w^o ia attending the conference .
political movemenU and tides of an ful If prices ever will atUln their Road Department. Under present which may account for the delay in at the request of President Gonpers in taking it| legKhnaU place nx
era of epoch
‘,
pre-war basis," he said.
conditions there are five members of beginning operations."
.
•
of the American Federation bf Labor. |.cogue,
*
.

DELEGATES28 STATES

injures the south

OF RAILROAD
STATE ROAD DEPARTMENT TRIALS
PRESIDENTS COMING
WILL TAKE UP MATTER TO UGHT IN HEARING
OF ROADS AND BRIDGES
In Seminole, Volusia Counties
Soon as Possible

THE OSTEEN PROJECT

e r r , stzzz

senator harding

AT GOVERNMENT

=

' • - t f

i

•

1

....

_

..............w
•&gt; . '

—,

— - •, v

!

.« - u w .B jr

•

...

�.

$

/

* «
4

DAILY QBRALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1920

PAGE SIX

The

Star Theatre
TONIGHT

AN ALL-STAR CAST IN

HALLROOM BOYS IN

Wild, Wild Women
Tomorrow—Billy Burke in
Prudence.1'
BIG CIRCUS* SOON TO
BE IN SANFORD

PISA t AN OLD CURIOSITY
SHOP OF HISTORY

resented In this tmly remarkable op­
en den street pageant which leaves
the circus grounds a t 10:30 a. m.
Since the last visit of the. circus to
this city, it has nearly doubled In
also and this season finds it among
the largest of tented exhibitions.
The Sparks Circus has always been
noted for its fine display of horses
and this season tango and shimmy
dancing horses are tg be seen in the
equine numbers which include Caes­
ar, champion high jumping horse of
the world, ns well as three groups of
ninrblesquc posing horses and collie
dogs in lifelike portrayals of the
works of noted sculptors.
Other
prominent features this year are the
Cornnllnr family of European acro­
bats who nre making their intinl tour
of America with Sparks Cirrus and
presenting nn act that for skill and
dnring has never been equalled. In­
cluded in the family is Miss Florence.
She enjoys the distinction of bc'ng
the only member of her sex in the
•world Lccomplishing a double somer­
sault.
Then there nre the two herds of
elephnnts including "Big Zulu,” the
skyscraper elephnnt nnd cnch herd
worked entirely by Indy trniners. In­
cidentally there will be mnny big
nrenir features interspersed with the
nnimnl acts , nnd clowns—well forty
of them will be on hand to extract
the Inughs from you.
Two performances will be given
daily—at 2 nnd 8 p. m. Before the
regular performance takes nlnro an
hour’s time will be given in which
patrons of the Sparks Cirrus may
visit the menagerie nnd also the hrose
fair.

A city of 10,000 skyscrapers before
Peter Ulnult bought Manhattan Island
for the present price of a supper at
a Broadway cabaret
A city that warred and traded with
empires, yet plunged Into a disastrous
struggle with a rlvol city over the
rights to a lapdog. •
A city which wna seized after a
Florentine Hobson "bottled up" Its
.harbor entrance with sunken boats
six centuries before the battle off San­
tiago bay.
8ucb is IMsa, whose leaning tower
W'as endangered by recent enrthquake
tremors in Itnly.
Pisa’s record abounds In Incidents as
freakish ns Its famous tower; yet It
possesses a history necessarily more
sifulllcnnt than uny British or Amer­
ican city.
Indicative of lisa's Importance In
the thirteenth century was her send­
ing an utnbassador to Home. There­
by bangs the story of the latxlog. Dur­
ing the coronntlon ceremonies of
Frederick II the Florentine emissary
admired the lapdog of a certain car­
dinal, so that dignitary promised lo
give the tiny animal to Its admirer.
Next day the Pisan ambassador said n
few kind words about the sume dog.
and the cardinal Just us readily prom­
ised || to him. The Florentine sent
for Ills gift, nnd got it; the Plsnn sent,
and received an apology. Florentines
began Joking the l'lmns about this In­
cident, nnd tights ensued on the ItoUiun streets. When the I'lnuu home
folks heard this .It gave them nn ex­
cellent chnnce to pick u quarrel that
had long been simmering. A sort of
medlevnl Boston tea party wus staged
by the l'lsaus, who selred all the en­
emy merchandise within their reach,
WOULD SELL HIMSELF
aud thus precipitated the first of a
■erics of wars with Florence which
Culminated In the subjection of I’fsu
by her long-time rival.
* The lapdog story seems trlvlnl, yet
characteristic of u cortnln childish
quality noticeable among the juvenile
civic nationalities that preceded nn'tionnl Italy.
As further proof one
might recall the occasion when the
victorious unny of Lucca hung u|»oii
n IMsou tower u mirror with the in­
scription “Oh women of ,1*1so. use
these to look nt yourselves.” No oth­
er challenge was needed for the Pisans
to march to the gate of Lnccn, mill
there to plant poles, topped with mir­
rors, hearing retaliatory comment. ,
Were a sui&gt;er Hip Van Winkle of
medieval I’lsa to come with tils latterday compatriots to Kills Island In 1020,
not only the national Idrd of his
adopted land, but till* skyscraper line
of New York might make hltu feel at
home.
Towers they were called, these Pisa
skyscrapers, huddled together for all
tho world like groupH of tall apartment
housoa Two reasons nre assigned for
this method of building, common to
Italian towns of the twelfth century.
One was that the wall iiermlttcd only
vertical expansion when population
pressure Increased. Another, believ­
able In view of the constant fuctlonol
fights and family feuds, attributed
them to the necessity for protection.
Bridges that could be thrown from
tower to tower further suggested the
skyscraper likenesa On these precur­
sors of the modern fire escape, many
Jack Hardy, former sailor, now liv­
m community battle haa raged. *
ing
In a hall bedroom In New York,
The Lcaulng Tower of Pisa served
humanity well, aside from becoming bus offered to sell the remainder of
the most effective bit of city adver­ his natural life for not less than $3.&lt;100
tising' yet devised, for It permitted cash. He is only twenty-two years
Galileo, a native of Pisa, (o carry on old. Ho sa y s he wants to turn over
his experiments with the laws govern­ the ?3,000 to the woman "who has
•wen nil th a t u m o th e r h a s e v e r b ee n
ing the pendulum.
:o an y o n e. I nm In no w ay le g ally
o b lig a te d to tier, nnd nf this m o m e n t
d ie Is In no g re a t need of the money,

The Daily Herald subscription list
is growing so rapidly thnt new car­
rie r boys are necessary each week. If
you do not get your paper promptly
Buy your post cards at the Herald
phone 4S1.
.
• office. Beautiful views, lc each.

Classified advertisements, 8 cents s line. No sd taken for less than
25 cents, and ponitlvely no classified ads charted to anyone. Cash
mast accompany all orders. Count fire words to a line and remit ac­
cordingly.
•
••
WANTED
“WANTED—House or apartment of 3
or 4 rooms, unfurnished, for man
and wife with two school children.
Beat of references. Seg or write, G.
B. 8., Job depL, Herald office, dh-tf
WANTED—An elderly lady, single
preferred, to attend invalid Indy.
Address, 112 Elm Ave.
185-Gtp
Buy your post cards at the Herald
office,

build. Let us make your starting
and lighting a pleasure. We are au­
thorised "EXIDE” dealers and haVe
a Battery fAr all makes automobiles.
"EXIDE, the Giant that Jives in a
box.”—Ray Bros. Phone’ 648, old
Ford Garage.
"
179-tfc
—Get your Scratch Pads from The
Herald—by t he pound—15c.________
WANTED—Brick and cement work,
chimneys, flues, piers, cement
floors, sidewalks. — A. L. Ray, 206
Park Ave.
173-30tp
WANTED—Pupils, Violin and Pinno.
* —Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.
175-20t-p
Buy your post cards at the Herald
office. Beautiful views, lc each.
FOR SALE—iVj II. P. and 2\\ H. ! \
Gasoline engines, Brand n*w and
in perfect condition. -Herald Printing Co.
tf
FOR RENT
FOR RENT—One nicely furnished
room, 320 Oak Ave. Phone 308-J.
187-tfc
TO RENT or for sale, large ware­
house with railroad siding.—Chas
Tyler, care Zachary Tyler ' Vcn. Co.
156-tfc
FURNISHED ROOMS—Two furnish
ed bed rooms
Inquire 311 Park
Avenue.
157 tfc

FOR SALE—7-rofcm, 2-atory house,
large yard for garden spot, also
chicken yard. Various fruit trees.
Phone 487.
18G-6tc
WOOD AND POSTS sold and deliv^
cred on hard road, within one mile
of town. See me.—W. V. Dunn.
______________________
186-6tp
FOR SALE—One horse, wagon and
harness. Apply M. Hanson Shoe
Shop.
189-12tp
See our line of electrical ln m p s—
A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Avenue.
Phone 550._________________ 166-tfc
New line of Congoleums and Art
Squares.—A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford
Ave. Phone 550. ,
166-tfc
PLANTS FOR SALE—Cabbage per
1000, |1.60; Cauliflower, Handers
Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B.
B., per M, $1.60; Ice Berg, per M,
$1.50; beets, Crosby’s Egyptian, per
M, $1.50; Onion, yellow Bermuda, per
M, $1.50; onions, white Bermuda, per
M, $1.60; Celery, yellow golden, per
M, $2.00; Self-bleaching' Imported
celery, per M, $2.00; French celery
seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.00.—
Clay County Gardening Co., Green
Cove Springs, Fla.
11-12

Coffee 5c Sandwiches 10
Pies, home made 10c cut
Best Coffee in Sanford

Princess Theatre Bldg.

MICKIE SAYS

Lord’s Purity Water
W W , \X1UASGA \OCXJ,
wukxauf vw *m\^ vjuuhu-w

f

oe A

uoxf
WAWVWED c

“(WW35 MJBCyS A O O I M lfcO au,

\ &amp;C1CMA. \V» eovAfc OP MOO
'
\ fatvtoa MAJZ. fVlRFiVQUVUQ
V *b *
H fcc LRTB \xm u rf \ ____

MISCELLANEOUS
ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week,
109 East First street, over Union
Phnrmncy.
163-tfc
CARPETS nnd rugs wnshed right on
the floor, with Hamilton Bench
Electric Carpet Washer. Kills all
moth nnd disease germs. Make your
floor coverings absolutely sanitary.
—Electric Carpet Washer, Sanford.
.
180-6tp
DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Snnford avenue, pay cash for furniture,
bedsteads, chairs, etc. What have
you?
174-30tc
BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run
your battery until she is entirely
dend. The battery is the costliest ac­
cessory to your car. Wo re-charge POLICE ENFORCE
MOVING PICTURE LAW
and re-build all makes of batteries.
ABOUT LITTLE CHILDREN
—Ray Bros. Phone 548, old Ford
Gnrnge.
179-tfc
NEW YORK. Nor. 15— The police
arc enforcing rigidly the ordinance
LOST—Western Union branch de­ forbidding motion picture thentres to
posit book. Finder please return sell tickets to children unless accom­
to Western Union office— J. I'. Hull, panied by u guardian ns the result
Mgr.
180-tfc of the denth of six children in n false
firm alarm panic hero todny. *
LOST OR STRAYED—One red pig,
4 months old. If found notify E.
HRAIH.EV MATTRESS FACTORY
B. Randall, Jr., 825 First Street.
Orlando, Fla.
,
*
'
191-tfc Makes old Majtrrsses new nt oneLOST—An Alpha Omicron Pi sorthird the cost of n new one.
ority pin with the nnmc Kathryn PHONE 801
'l &lt;&gt; BRYANT ST.
Wilkcy on back* Finder return to
1 l-lSllm o-p
owner nnd receive reward.
188-tfp

As Good as the Best

Dally Service

Phone 66

Seed, Our Business.
Honesty, Our Motto.
Purity, Our Watch
word.

iu y Meat
Y ou Can
E at
A Trial Solicited

Pure Food Market
J . H . T illis, P rop.
Phone 105
402 Sanford Art.

CO.ME IN AND SEE US.
(Southern Seed Specialists)
Wekiwa Bldg.
' Sanford, Fla

We Guarantee All
Battery Repairs

December 1st

Every Battery repair we make is
guaranteed for six months. We ire
able to do this because in repairisg
any make of battery we are licensed
to use patented features which hit*
made Vesta batteries famous.

On the first of each month
your rent is due.
Why give
other people your money. Buy
you a home nnd each month
instead of paying out rent
money, pay on a home that is
yours.
Beautiful homes on Park,
Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and
Myrtle
avenues,
Sanford
Heights. Building lots in any
location.

E.

F. L A N E

Sanford Battery Service Co.
L. A. RENAUD, Prop.

Phone US

CHULUOTA INN
Will Open Season 1920-21 on

Thanksgiving Day
Turkey Dinner

The Real Estate Man”
X i n.MKdrsI

EVERYTHING
National Madza Lamps
25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts.
20 to 75 Walts in 32 Volts

FOR SALE—Shnsto daisies, ?1 per
dozen. English Shnmrock Oxalys
20c per dozen. Ring 207-W. 183-12tc
Special reduction in men's nnd la­
dies' W. L. Dougins shoes.—A. Knnner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 650.
__________________
lfiO-tfc
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished lnrgo
light housekeeping rooms.—Mrs.
Riddling, 205 Onk nve. Engle Hall.
186-Ctc

FOR SA LE-1 Vi H. I*, and 2'/, H. P.
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
in perfect condition.—Herald Print­
Ing Co.
'
tf
FOR SALE—l l i II. I’, nnd 2ft H. p!
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
In perfect condition.—Herald Print*
Ing Co.______ ____________ __tf
Special reduction on Georgette Silk
nnd cotton shirt walats.—A. Kanner,
213-215 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.
of
Wo have just received a line
I
silverware and casseroles,—A.. Knnner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.
Phone
166-tfc
550.

Quick Lunch

From the Foundation

Everything Electrical
Expert Installation and
Repair Work
G IL L O N &amp; F R Y
Phone 442

Quality-Servicd-Price
$ * • tSMITH nit OTHERS
E \fvrt Repair Work

Sanford

Is Your AUTO Insurance Heavy?
CUT OFF 50 PER CENT. OF YOUR HEAVY LOAD
Huy ygur Fire, Theft, Collision, Liability or Property Damage In­
surance at Actual Coat with

The Belt Auto Indemnity Association
At-k J. B. Lawson, Chas. Kanner, I)r. I-ngley about how The Belt
pays its Claims. Then call phone 4G or white Box 15G (ot\ rates. "It
will pay you” to see .

G. C. Fellows, Manager lor Sanford

GENERAL MACHINE AND BOIL­
ER WORK BRASS CASTINGS
GAS ENGINE REPAIRS
ACTEYLENE CUTTING AND
WELDING
Special machine for turning Auto
Crank Shafts and Crank Pins to
within .0005 accuracy.
IRRIGATION NIPPLES
PULLEYS and SHAFTINGS
ROUND AND SQUARE IRON .

115 Magnolia Ave.

.1 Sell it

'

J . E . SPURLING

Sanford's Most Popular Hotel

SEMINOLE HOTEL aid GRILL
Under Management of *

- WALTER B. OLSON
Our Specially——Seminole *
famous $1 Sunday Dinner
dc luxe.
A la Carte Service all day.

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, l « t
NATIONAL G R A lItt NOW
HAS 750,000 MEMBERS

SUSS KATHRYN WILKEY, Editor.
SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR THE
WEEK

Phone 4 «
LATE WIRES

(Wr t u IwcbUl rr—i).
CHICAGO, Nov. 16.—Membership
in the National Grange stands at ap­
proximately 750,000, S. J. Lowell of
Fredonia, N. Y., master of the grange
reports.
In this period of active organization of farmers, Mr. Lowell thus
briefly sketches the activities of his
society, one of the oldest and best
known of the farm en organizations:
"The first grange was organised on
April 15, 1868, In Fredonia, N. Y. It
is a' secret order, similar to all secret
orders in many respects, with a ritual
surpassed by none.
"It is non-sectarian and non-politi­
cal and Is devoted wholly to agricul­
ture and agricultural pursuits.
"It has one distinction, that in all
its meetings It has what is known as
the ‘lecturer's hour.’ This hour is
deTOted to the going over of matters
pertaining to farm life, interspereed
with music, recitations, etc., by the
younger people. It has done more
than any other one thing to build up
and strengthen agricultural life.
"The grange la now organised in
S3 states, which are chiefly in the
north, aa many of the southern states
have.no Granges. The largest grange
state is New York, which has a mem­
bership of 128,000.
"A great deal of co-operative work
is done. Insurance of fanners’ build­
ings is probably the greatest finan­
cial enterprise. The amount carried
in the insurance department, runs in­
to the hundreds of millions.” .

(tr TW AumUM fn«)
&gt;t
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 16.—Ama­
Tae«day E veningteur athletic union in session here to­
Pipe Organ Recital at the Presby­ day awarded the next convention to
terian Church.
, . . Chicago.
“Wednesday—
Welfare Department of Women's
TOKIO, Nov. 16.—Students socie­
Club.
ties of three privit* universities orThursday—
ganzed meetings tonight to discuss,
Every-week Bridge Club with Mrs. “shall Japan fight America."
Margaret Barnes.
WASHINGTON, Nor. 16.—Com­
Friday—
Spendthrift Club with Mrs. S. M. missioner General Caminettl leaves
tonight for a trip around the world
investigating immigration questions.
_
T
3 lr. and Mrs. Glenn B. Smith, late
ANNAPOLIS, Nov. 16 .—The strike
o f Atlanta, Ga.. a n the gueata of of stndents of SL John’s college is
R tx Smith's father, Hr. W. R. expected to be settled tonight
and family, 308 Park avenue.
W r. Smith la the Florida represen­ C. HI BROWN ELECTED
tative of the Stewart-Wamer ProMAYOR OF TAHPA
dhacta, Service Station of Atlanta, and
will make Sanford hla future headTAMPA, Nov. 16.—Charles H.
Brown was nominated for mayor
commissioner and Henry E- Snow, W.
■ONDAY AFTERNOON BRIDGE J. Barxitt, W. A. Adams and Victor
CLUE
V. Sharpe, were nominated for comH n D. P. Drummond waa the misaioners in the white primaries held
d a rm in g hostess of the Monday Af­ her* yesterday.
Nomination
Is
ternoon Bridge Club at her home on equivalent to election.
Magnolia avenue.
They will take office January 4 to
The attractive home was artistical­ institute the commission form of gov­
ly decorated in pink roses. Bridge ernment which Tampa adopted at an
HIGH PRICES DID IT,
-eras played at two tables by the reg- election October 19th.
(Br Til AokuIW rr*M)
~n$ar members and one substitute,
CHICAGO, Nov. 16.—Something
Miss Wllkey.
STATE CONVENTION
has reduced the per capita consump­
A box of stationery, the prize for
OF WOMEN S CLUBS tion of meat in this country In the
U g h score eras won by Mrs. Perkins.
past year, W. J. Carmichael, secre­
A t the conclusion of the game a
TALLAHASSEE, Nor. 16.—This
n e a t delicious salad course was afternoon the Florida Federation of tary of the National Swine Growers
Association said here, discussing the
Women's Clubs will hold its first “Eat More Meat” movement he is en­
Miss Edna Pa gen hart has been meeting of the annual convention. deavoring to set underway. He has
quite ill at her home on Oak avenue. The board of directors convenes at 3 called a meeting of livestock produc­
o’clock in the First Baptist church, ers, livestock exchanges and packers
and the registration and credentials for Chicago December 2.
REGISTRATIONS AT THE
committees will be in session there
At this conference he proposes to
VALDEZ MONDAY
enlist all interested in establishing a
YL W. Clifton, DeUnd; B. E. Bab] all the afiemoon.
This evening at 8 o'clock the for­ national organization to act as a
lard, Tampa;.J. L Crayden and wife,
mal
opening of the twenty-sixth an­ clearing house for meat men’s diffi­
Macon, Ga.; C- W. Parker, Pensacola;
nual
meeting will be held in the audi­ culties of this nature. Among these
W . E- Jewett, New York; W. G- Wiltorium
of the Florida State College is what Mr. Carmichael terms unfair
■stm, Jacksonville; Mr and Mrs. W. 41.
for
Women.
Mrs. J. W. McCollum, propaganda against meat.
Hedgdon, Betbany, Maine; Stuart
of
Gainesville,
state president, will
“Vegetarianism is making some
Hedgdon, Norma Hedgdon and May !
preside,
and
Mrs.
J. G. Kellum, presi­ headway in certain sections," Mr,
Hedgdon, Bethany, Maine; J. R.
■Waters, Miami; C- A. Matthews, Day­ dent of the Tallahassee club, will ad­ Carmichael said, “but a large part of
tona; R. R. Kinard, Crescent City; W. dress the club. Rev. Banyan Steph­
H. Cowler and wife, Jacksonville; ens, pastor of the First Baptist
W. H. Green and wife, Jacksonville; church, will give the invocation, af­
‘C- E. Taylor, Jacksonville; Mrs M. I ter which “America” will be sung.
Futztam, Asheville, N. C.; B. J. i The following addresses will be giv­
Maya, Tampa; G. J. Bloomberg. Tam- t en:
For the city, Mayor Guytc P. Mc­
pa; M R Cohen, Jacksonville; D. E.
Montgomery, New Britain, Conn.; A. Cord.
For the state, Hon. Sidney J. Calls,
~H. Fairchild, Jacksonville; T. W.
Turks, New B r ’ain, Conn.; W. G. governor.
For the hostess club, Mrs. Charles
Miller. Rochester, N. Y.; R- W. Coul­
A
Cay, first vice-president of Taite r, Atlanta: A. J. Pound, Crescent
lahasee
Women's Club.
w . S. Parker, Baltim-re; Nellie
For
the
College for Women, Dr.
Knowles, New York; Mack Kensley.
Edward
Conradi,
president Florida
A tlanta; Alexander Hooper, Jr., At­
Stale
College
for
Women.
lanta; Dr. and Mrs. J 1) Chunn, &gt;
Take Wells, Fla.; Mr and Mrs. C. S. ' Response for the feleration. Miss
Hollingsworth, Ft
Meade; Harry Elizabeth Skinner of Dunedin, vice- STORM HEADED SOUTH
FOLLOWED BY. A COLD
H u n t, FA. Meade; A. G. Campbell, president-at-large, F. S. W.'C.
At
this
meeting
the
college
glee
HAVE; BE COOLER HERE
Jacksonville; R F.. Vickery, Palatka.
club will give several numbers and
WASHINGTON. Nov. 16
{here will also befour-minute reports
TllE BOSS
of department work at the Golden
When things go easy, he just saun­ Prairie Biennial Convention. General
Federation of Women’s Clubs, held at
ters found.
A t ten o'clock or so; then reads his Des Moines, la , in June. Following
rjjoorr.men' a ireeption will te R *
mail.
Dictates some half a dozen letters to en in Bryan Hall eomplimeiltar.- to
the to the delegate* and visitors
the girl.
The morning and afternoon ses­
Toioes us each a word, or maybe two,
looks at the papers, lights a good sions Wednesday will be held in the
First Baptist church. At 5 o’clock
cigar,
Thones to a friend, and then goes out Wednesday afternoon a twilight or­
gan and violin recital will be given
to lunch,
at
the Methodist church by Miss El­
Ytnd l go home and say to maw—
la
Scoblc Opperman and Mrs. Clara
“ Gee whiz!
Farington
Edmonson.
I hate to work. I wish I was the
■bossr
H o t my, when things go wrong! May’ be a strike,
Our prices rise, or some bank goes
and busts,
T ien ain't he Johnny-on-the-spot at
eight! Then he don’t take no time to read
the news.
N or eat no lunch, but keeps us all
a-jump.
Then he shoots letters at the girl till
she
Getz flustery red spats on her cheeks,
and makes •.
"Even his chief clerk hustle; yon know
XTTY MANAGERS MEET,
him
H a t grey one, with -nervous sort of
spin.
And me—why I’m greased lightning
when he calls.
. An6 -when night comes, then he looks
kinder pale
’And -anxlous-Hke. ami yet so full of
fight,
T get a sort of aching in my throat,
Tike somethir.™ choked me, when I
look at him,
’ And I go home and say to* maw—
"Gee whiz!
Get your of/tce vinplie* nod *eb)ol
Hizness is tough. I'm glad ! ain’t the Tuppli-* at the Herald Prir.tlng’Ci
Boas!"
where you can get what yen wrr.t at BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
—Reliance Bulletin.
AT THE HERALD, EACH..
very teas'-naWe rates.

!

Have you every paused to considtt the safety of the bank
where you deposit your money?
The first consideration is the capital, which should be
ample to m eet-the requirements of the community the bank
The next question to consider is the officers in charge.
They should be men of experience, high character and success­
ful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.
Then there is the question of confidence. The public
should have confidence in the officers and in the bank.
These three principles determine the success of a bank.
We adopted these principles in the outset of our career
and w e expect to live np to this high standard and increase
our usefulness to the community as the years go by.^
We Offer Yon:
1ST: LARGE CAPITAL AND WORKING RESERVE.
2ND: TRAINED MEN IN CHARGE—MEN OF SEVERAL TEARS EX­
PERIENCE_
3RD: THE CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBLIC, WHIOI IS .PROVEN BT
THE QAILY ADDITION TO OUR LINE OF DEPOSITORS.
«TH: PROTECTION BY TWO EXAMINATIONS EACH YEAR BY THB
STATE BANKING DEPARTMENT. TWO AUDITS BACH YEAR
BY AN INDEPENDENT RECOGNIZED PUBLIC AUDIT COM­
PANY AND TWO SWORN STATEMENTS SUBMITTED TO THB
STATE COMPTROLLER BY THE CASHIER. GIVING THE
BANK’S CONDITION IN DETAIL, ALL OF W n ittl INSURES
REGULAR, SYSTEMATIC AND THOROUGH OPERATION OF
THE BANK.
1
v .* wa ■w h '
w -*v-.w •- m
t,
5TH: THE ADVICE OF A COMPETENT BOARD OF DIRECTORS,
WHO MEET WITH THE OFFICERS
REGULARLY
BACH
MONTH AND ADVISE THEM AS TO THE OPERATION OF
THE BANK.
, . ,
.... .
6TII: INSURANCE OF ALL DEPOSITS EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR,
THIS IS A PROTECTION NOT COMMONLY FOUND IN BANKS
AND IS AN ABSOLUTE PROTECTION FOR YOUR FUNDS, IN
ADDITION TO ALL THB OTHER USUAL SAFEGUARDS. THESE ARE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD DO BUSINESS WITH
US. AND WE BELIEVE THAT NO BANK CAN OFFER BETTER IN­
DUCEMENTS,

WE WART YODR BUSINESS

M. D. GATCHEL
GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES

I Vulcanite Shingles
|
$

3-Ib CANS STANDARD
PACKED TOMATOES.
PER CAN .........................
EXTRA FANCY. GRADE

Just Lay Them Down and Nail—That’s All
There Is To- It

♦
The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air—rain, sleet,
+ etc., from forcing its way thro ugh the roof,
The Shoulder of Protectio n is also the Self-Spacing Device.
HAND- j
♦ Makes laying easy and rapid—thus saving time and money.
These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red
J or Green Crushed Slate. Eac h rain washes away the accumulated
J dust—reviving perpetually the original rich colors.
Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered—
MAINE
+ because they are fire-res Latin g.
X
Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the
♦ cost fre^ of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.

IT™....... 20c

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE. 1-lb. can.
EXPORT SOAl1
PER CAKE ...
SWIFTS' PREMIUM
HAMS. Per l b . -----

%

Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co
SPECIAL BARGAINS
FOR THE FIRST

COMPLETE HOUSE BILL
CARTER LUMBER CO.

Try » Herald Want Ad.—It naya.

P r ic e s fro m $50 t o $300

Terms to Suit Yoursett
The most complete line of Records
in the city.
Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins

Prices Right

�‘J

.

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY,. NOVEMBER 16, 1920

PAGE t h r e e :

Th« American Red Cross, by lt»
Congressional charter, la officially
designated:
.* To furnish volunteer aid to the
tick and wounded of armies In
time of war, In accordance with
the conventions of Geneva.

iWWlTS*SStBJiSmtfci.—

To act In matters of voluntary
relief and as a medium of com­
munication between the AmeLcart
people and their Army and Navy.

im

To continue and carry on a sys­
tem of national and International
relief In time of peace and to ap­
ply the Arne In mitigating the suf­
ferings caused by pestilence, famine,
Are, flood* and other great calam­
ities.
To devlie and carry on measure*
for preventing these cause* o f
suffering.
FOURTH RED CROSS ROLL CALL

shiver midst the snow and ice of the
GREA^ FLEETS TO ASSEM­
north
to zee the combined power of
BLE IN THE PACIFIC
ion of Which they are a
January will witnesss one of the
greatest armadas ever assembled un­
der the American flag, when . the
great Pacific nnd Atlantic fleets as­
combined gun power of
semble in the Pacific for winter man­ tions with
112
14-inch
guns,
80 12-inch guns,
euvers.
;l
220 '5-inch, and 28 3-inch. In addi­
When .the time comes for the fleets
tion to the great, vessels of tho
to assemble in Southern waters this
fleets there will he submarines, de­
winter, tho Pacific fleet under com­
stroyers, nnd nuxiiinry vessels in
mand of Admiral Rodtnnn will steam
abundance, while the N'avnl Air Ser­
to the southward towards the Gulf
vice will have their winged ships
of Panama where it will nwtemhle for
dotting the skies.
winter operations. , The Atlantic
It wilt be an impressive sight even
fleet under commnnd of Admiral. Wil­
to the men-o'-war’s-men who are
son, steaming southward, will, piyts
accustomed to the unusual and who
Guantanamo Bay where it has win­
believe that there is “nothing new
tered yenrly in the past and will pro­
under the sun."
,
ceed to the Panama Canal, pnssing
In the large picture above v
through' which it will join the Pacific
the Atlantic fleet steaming in forma­
Fleet, creating the most magnificent
tion flanked by subchasers, while the
naval spectacle in years.
air scouts guard them overhead. In
Upon the meeting of the great the top nnd immediate foreground
fleets Admiral Wilson will become are the muzzles of
two of Uncle
Commandcr-in-Chief of the grent Sam’s mighty peace makers On the
armada, and the winter maneuvers, vessel from which the picture was
spliced in with athletic meets be­ taken. At the top and reading from
tween the various champions of the left to right are: Admiral Wilson,
fleets will begin.
who will be commander-in-chief of
This re-union of the fleets will the combined fleets; Admirnl Coontz,
give the personnel a chance to renew Chief of Operations; and right, Ad­
old acquaintances, to see the Bights miral Rodman who commands the
of Pnnnma, nnd while their friends Pncafic fleet.

ARRIVALS AT T11E SEMINOLE

F a ir

*,S 1.00

Contributing ........................
Life . . . . v
•

5.00
10.00

Sustaining

10.00

........a .......

BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
AT THE HERALD. EACH...
THE NEW-PA1NT SMILK

Patron
100.00
Send dues to your nearest local
chapter.
•

You’ll wear one too If w e
•repaint your nuto,, Why g o
around with n dim, dull, oldlooklng car when for a few
dollars ivc will paint and
finish it like new? It’s good1
sense also to keep a fresh
coat of p o in t on y o u r car—
adds to its value if you w a n t
to sell it or trade it in.

Savannah

Sanford Heijlhljy

double

In w hich

FLORIDA POOPING AHF.AD
IN PURE BRED LIVESTOCK
Large Prizes at Stale
_

Freckles Positively Removed

November 11-25, 1920.
MEMBERSHIP FEES!

Annual

PROMINENT FT. MEYERS
EX-KAISER'S SON
CITIZEN DIES SUDDENLY
NAMES DAUGHTER
“HEART SUFFERIN G *
FORT MYERS, Nov, 16—Walter
G. Langford, president of the First
BERLIN, Nov. 16.—Prince O scar,
National bank here, a prominent the cx-kniser’s fifth son, taking in to
stockman anti one of tho best known account the altered state of the H obmen in South Florida, dropped dead enzollern family nffnirs, is having hi*
a t his home here last midnight
youngest daughter baptized HerxTho death was due to npoplexv. Icido (Heart suffering).
Mr. Langford had not been ill until
he was stricken. He .was *17 years
The Daily .Hcrnld subscription li s t
old and is survived by his wife and
is growing so rapidly that new c a r­
two children.
rier boys arc necessary each weelc. IT
Mr. Langford will ho buried rfn
you
do not get your paper prom ptly
Thursday morning. His . daughter,
phone
481.
who is attending school in New* York
city, has been wired to come home
hut docs not know of his death.
Mr. Langford w ns• one of the
wealthiest men in this section of
the state. He came of an old family
th a t had been prominent in Florida
affairs for more than three genera­
tions. His home was the most beau­
tiful one in this city nnd he had
large interests outside of the First
National Bank, of which he was pres­
lUxwrr
XL"
ident.
in Every Jar

TALK ADOUT dlmo novel*.
■* • . *
THEY BENT Jim down.
TO TEXAS to Investigate,

Attract
Many Entries, and Fine
i
Is Assured.

SOME OIL wells there.
WHICH THEY m is

AND HE waa to report.
BY WI RE In s e c re t &gt;&lt;xl«.

NOW—ENTER tho villain.
A BLIPPERY crook.

AND TRAILED Jim down.
• • •
COPIED OFF bln code.
AND BRIDED a boob.
IN THE telegraph branch.
• • •
SO THE crook could {tL
• • •
THE EARLIEST ward.
AND CORNER stock.
Defender of Tlorra Alta No. 220019, Grand Champion Aberdeen Angus Bull
of South and West, 1918. At hsad of herd of J. J. Logan,
Jacksonville, Florida.

AND WORK a "hold up. •

Jacksonville.—A pretty good check
on the rapidly growing livestock Industry may be made by looking over
the animals exhibited at the Florida
State FaJr, Jacksonville, Nov. 18-27.
The premium* offered are larger than
those of many bigger and older fairs,
offering aniplo encouragement to exhlbltora, Breeders from other atatea.
taking advantage of the handsome
Prizes offered, have been showing
their bards and walking off with most
the prlae money. This year, how­
ever. they will bavo a little stlffcr
competition from Florida grown ani­
mals. the number of early entries by

BUT JIM got wlac.
• • •
,
AND THREW away hla tod#,
• • •
AND WHEN hq ae*.«
• • •

• • •
IT LOOKED liko easy coin.

Florida breeders being much larger
than heretofore.
One of tho moat Important pieces of
work accomplished by the Stato Fait
has been to encourage the production
of more pure bred livestock, and al
ready It baa gone a long wajr toward
helping put Florida on the map as a
stock growing state.

THE FINAL dopo.
HE FOILED tho villain.
* * *
THE MESSAGE ju st oaldL.
CHESTERFIELD.
AND HIS directors knew.
• • •
THAT ALL waa well.

and what baa already been accomplish­
ed.
'
1J
■

-

-

Jn p a c k a g e * o f 30 p r o t e c t e d by
epecUl m o istu re • proof wrapper.
AJaoln round A IR -T IQ H T Mn* or 50,

WITH THOSE oil wells.
FOR OIL mon know.

SCRUB YS. THOROUGHBRED

THAT “CHESTERFIELD" meenau

Jacksonville—No more significant
statement has been mnde In connec­
tion with the livestock Industry than
that of a man wht^knowia well whereof he speaks:

"THEY SATISFY."

•

"It costa no more to
imurnl steer than . 600 pound scrub.-

Thu truth of this s t a t e m e n t will lie
.
r
demonstrated In the live DO YOU KNOW * county exhibit *t
-ectfon of the Florida .atnto Fair
,u " * ourc"
L t. - U hl ber«*. Sot. ‘18-27. Com pa r;
m iv be odious but they often I oo YOU know ths State Fair win
this yoer pay approximately $9,000 In
r
n anor in Itn-mrcrttcnl.
i [trite* for cattle alone I

g r a p h ic a lly

Send in your locals to the Herald
Will Rogers, the ‘cartoonist, says
office. Thone the news to 148. We McSwlnney has nothing on the Re­
want every bit of it. Tell us the publican . postmaster^—tht*Jr
have
*
•
new* each day.
been starving for eight years.

Boat Cards at the Herald office, lc,
•-

.I L v " ;

at the Herald.
r

=*1;

=i* ‘

•

OU'LL.know you’ve "struck it rich" when
you discover Chesterfield*. You’ll aay "they
afy.” A wonderful blend—the pick of Torkiab and Domestic tobacco* —put; together In
the Chesterfield way —that’* why _ .
fr." And -the Chesterfield blend can not ft*

eopM I

*

�%

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD. TUB8DAT, NOVEMBER 18, 19C0

PAGE FOUR

r&amp; M liW J «T«r7 ifU r» * * » « «c»p( B n a d ij 11 T in

Jt»r»ld Bttildln*, lcrr Stimuli* Annul
\

S*r.fcrd.

r.erld*

R . J. H O L L Y .............................Editor
N. J. LILL A llD .-Sccrctary-T resaW r
H. A* N E E L _____ General Manager

F. P. RINES__Circulation Manager
Phono 481

'

A TRULY DEMOCRATIC NATION IS A NATION
* * ( 7 C ^ d r , '( A OF CAPITALISTS. A NATION .O F STRONG,
/C r
/7
COURAGEOUS MEN AND WOMEN WHO HAVE
Q, y
**
SET APART SOME CAPITAL OF THEIR DAILY
EARNINGS T o'A SSU R E FUTURE INDEPENDENCE. YOU CAN DO
THIS VERY THING BY INVESTING IN 8 PER CENT CUMULATIVE
PRIOR PREFERRED STOCK O f THE SOUTHERN UTILITIES COM­
PANY. THERE’S NONE BETTER.

that France has raised enough wheat
for her own needs, and both wheat
and cotton are dropping in price, and
There is evidently a general and the high prices on which the farm ­
growing belief that prices of nil com­ ers* built their hopes, seem farther
modities have reached and passed the off than ever. Germany wants cot­
IS OoU peak, and are now on the down grade. ton, in large quantities—estimated at
How far they will go cannot be fore­ 2,000,000 bales—but she has not the
Member of the Associated Press
The aame
told with any certainty.
Judging wherewith to pay for
is
the
caso
with
the
starving
peoples
from past experience they may go
of
the
near
and
far
e
a
s
t
They
want
tower than actual conditions will jus­
bread,
but
they
have
no
means
of
paytify, in which case a reaction to a
Kainy neason again.
certain extent may be looked fdr. But j ing for it, and it must be given them

Aimrtlitac *»U» Midi Known on AypllcvlUa

C o-O peration A ccom m odation

Friendly Assistance

Figuring

and worth while advice—this is part
of the constructive series which this
bank renders.

PRICES ARE ON THE DOWN
GRADE AT LAST

HAITI i MAGIC ISLE OF
THE INDIES

.

Picture an island more wonderful,
more beautiful and more richly en­
dowed by nature even than the fabled
tales that medieval mariners loved to
dream about; a country of pleasant
peaks, charming vales and fertile
plains; an Idyllic land set In a summer

Picture then a land where the ararice of conquerors, ruthlessly exploit­
But at that w /h a v c more bright
oW P,ca, lhV “&gt;,ou
bu* now l if their UvCJ are MVe&lt;L
ing, has blasted promises of progress;
days than any other place.
*or evvr&gt;’ihing will be higher n e x t. j n their desperation the fanners
where the passions of men have run
______-o -----------spring,” has lost its force, and no have appealed to the government for riot; where tyrant after tyrant, some
However, if Returns cojd tonight *on*fer
any
relief in the shape of loans to enable great, some petty, have waded to
ibe growers will be wearing broad
Getting down from the high plane them to hold their products off the power through pools of blood; a land
smiles tomorrow.
which we have occupied during the market, and force higher prices, but from which the gods of peace and In­
_______ olast few years
is naturally a painful the government says very properly, dustry seem to have turned away.
Both are pictures of Haiti, the rela­
Gen. Wrangel has been wrangling °nd unpleasant process, but it had to in the minds of many, that it cannot
with the Bolsheviki and has been de- ‘come, and the only thidg we can do use its funds to promote speculation, tions between which country and the
United States are now under discus­
feated Itlte all the rest of them. Good
to
the best of it, and use our and the farmers must pull through as sion.
'
time to get out
of Russia,all of the
beat efforts to make the transition as best they can.There willbe much
To avoid confusion It must be ex­
civilised nations and let them fight it Quick and easy as possible. It Is dis- dissatisfaction and grumbling, and plained at the outset that the name
out among themselves.
. pleasing to any retailer who may have possibly some suffering, but there Haiti Is used sometimes to denote the
----------- o-----------his shelves full of high priced .goods, does not seem to be any other way. entire island, which Is the second larg­
The Rotary Club of Jacksonville uP°n which ho must cut prices to the The prime needs of all the people est land mass In the West Indies,
invites the editors of Florida to be bone, eliminating any chance of prof- are cheap foods and clothing, and the sometimes to denote merely the R e­
their guests next Tuesday an denjoy it? sod deeming himself in great luck needs of all must take precedence of public of Haiti, which occupies the
everything that Jacksonville has to jhf the process does not involve an the interests of any one class.—Tam- western third of Us area. The possi­
bilities of ro n fuslou ore Increased by
*
offer. We do not know ju st how far ac*ual nnd serious loss But most re- pa Times.
thi&gt; f a it th a t th e island Is also known
th a t invitation goes but we will bet
»» S an to Domingo and San Domingo,
they show the newspaper turn th e !
nam es applied likewise to the D om ini­
time of their young lives. We would
can Republic, which occupies the east­
ern two-thirds of the land unit.
like to be th e ir but a man with a
T h e n am e H aiti ts m uch used be­
daily paper never knows where he
cause It whs th e d e scrip tiv e term ,
■will be in the following twelve -hours
m ean in g "h ig h land.” given to th e
and we cannot make any plans that
Island by Its aborigines. T h is w as the
f a r ahead.

our

The 1-akeland Daily Telegram has
Just passed the twelve year mark and
is entitled to a big birthday party.
Editor Ilctherington hns certainly la­
bored early ami late in giving the peo­
ple of [.akrtand a good paper.and he
deserves all the prosperity that may
come his way. He w-ent ahead and
built one of the finest buildings in
Lakeland to house his plant 'and only
those who have gone into the build­
ing line kr.ojr how much this strugr i r costs one'in sleepless nights and
he has given the Ixhd there was in
him fqr many years to make the
Telegram a real daily paper. May he
live to see many more birthday* fnr
the Telegram.
The League of Nations is meeting
a t Geneva today and America is not
present. Mr. Harding is down in
Texas fishing and golfing and while
be is storm hound he will have plen­
ty of time to prepare a substitute for
th e League of Nations for the people
of the United State* are determined
to hive r.o more war and the Repnb.
Dean party wi'l be forced to arrange
for a per;v-!vn! pea. r tr e a ty wi t h the
stro n g . r n atio n * of the w o rld They
can call il anything they please but
th-: League of Nations will be the
final outcome of their deliberations
for. the world wants a League of Na­
tions regardless of the name under
which this work will be accomplished
Meantime the world meet* at Genera
and the greatest country in the world
is absent.
W . L, T h o m d y k e , known all over

the c iv iliird w o rld and also at Palm
Beach aF*‘01d T h o rn ” i* now a t Kis­
simmee and ha* been given ‘entire
charge of the editorial columns of the
Kissimmee Garette. VThom" is not
an old man by any fitear.* as only
about fifty summers have passed ov­
e r his head and no winters but he has
all the buoyant spirit of pre-prohibi­
tion days and manages to get up a
few hundred column* of good stuff
every day if necessary a r d every
■week !f possible a s he is now doing.
We will make one last bet on Thorn.
He will ccrtalr.iy wake up Kissim­
mee as she has never been wakehei
before and If the business men will
back him up he will make Kissimmee
blossom and grow into a big city in
a few years .

tl7e heavens and to settle fri peace and
benediction oxer the surrounding country.
From the even rows of red-topped
roofs and the trees of the surrounding
level spaces In Mallnes the Immense
lint-topped Gothic spire of Si. Romhauld once arose. The cathedral dated
from the thirteenth century nnd ha*
for hundreds of years been known the
world over for the remarkable silvery
quality of Its bells. So much attention
had been given to ranking It tin* best
of Its kind that Its bell makers gained

B. F. Whilner, Cashier,

Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props.

Welaka Building

Specials For Today

w id e re p u ta tio n s nnd th e to w n Itse lf

become the headquarters of-bell found­
ing. ’ •
T h e tow er, vast and m ysterious
ag a in st th e lum inous sky. seetm ft to
dom inate the city. While compelling
th e atte n tio n It stirred the Im agination
ns it kept w atch over Mnllties and
toiled the passing of th e hours with
Its hugest M L
W hen not attach ed
to th e w onderful m echanism th a t con
tro lled the ringing of the carillon, this
bell req u ired eight men to ring It. The
ran g e o f the bells of this carillon
g reat enough to adm it of m any dlftl
ru lt o p eratic selections. T oday tIt,
m ajestic tow er mingle* Its du«i with
I ha i o f the ruined city over which it
had for centuries guarded.
T h e carillon o f 'A n tw erp possessed
ibe cn-iit*-«t num ber of todls .if nny in
I la n d e rs—slxty-flve. It ha* heed anlrt
th at from the c ath ed ral tow er on a
i h 3! m o n th 's 12d cnrillons col:hi b*

fa v o rite Island of the W est Indie* to
Colum bus, who reserved fo r it th e m ost
com p lim en tary nam e bestow ed on th e
lan d s w hich he discovered— H isp a n ­
K iru se* ^for p o stp o n in g your fall shopping a re no longer in order.
iola. " little S pain." Som ething of the
Im pression w hich this b e a u tifu l am i
prom ising (si a ml m ade on the great
it should la? done now—at once—before the holiday rush seta in.
discoverer ra n b&gt;* gleaned from his
You can shop thoughtfully, M surely nnd economically if you
referen ce to it as a "G arden of E den.”
shop now. But if you wait until the Christmas rtish sets in,
and. from (he fa c t th at he nam ed the
point s t w hich he first set foot In
you must buy hastily and inefficiently, and therefore extravag
H aiti. D ecem ber &lt;5, 141*2, " th e Vnle of
antly.
P arad ise."
H isto ry lias been prodigal to the
hop now. Make'a list of all that the family wrtll need—heavier
Islam) of H aiti and hns crow ded one j
In terestin g and trag ic event a f te r an- I
clothes for the cooler weatther, new shoes, new hats, that new
o th e r Into the relatively sh o rt span of j
furniture you have been discussing, linen and silverware for
) ear-- since the eye* of w hite men first
l*-d and table.
beheld It* tow ering peaks.
On Its j
n o rth e rn ro ast, n e a r the p resen t Cope I
U aitlen. the S an ta -Maria, w hich Uirv j
These you will find now in plea ring selections on the shelves and
C olum bus to th e new w orld, wn* [
counters of the local store*—fresh fail stock at the new lower
w recked on C h ristm as eve, 1492, nnd ;
from *t* broken, historic tuoanls
prices that please us alt.
*
set up by th e crew- the first s tru c tu re ]
e re c te d by E uropean* In th e w estern ;
Make up your list now—and b- sure to look for suggestions and
hem isphere. T h is was th e fo rtre i* of
prices in the advertisements in the Dally Herald, it is always
N avidad. in w hich the. m en *of the
S a n ta M aria w ere killed w hile Colum- j
well to read the ad* l&gt;efore shopping, and they will be found
bus w as on bis re tu rn voyage to Spain
particularly helpful now.
to re p o rt h it epoch-m aking discovery
of -“th e Indies."
f a r t h e r to tb-‘ **n-t on the n o rth e rn
to m o rro w
•-&gt; i,*- of tile Isluml I'ntirtyibu* bull! &lt;*n
hi- re tu rn die tir-t iilu te settlem en t 111
the new world, uaniine the little tow n
"Isa b e lla " fo r the queen w ho had [
tailor* can hnve the satisfaction of- Sanford has started shipping let- m ade h is voyage o f discovery possible. |
looking buck on a series of good, tuce and romaine in solid car lots, On th is second trip C olum bus hrbught
years when constantly advancing ' The poor Republican ridden North w ith him to bis titanic Isle a great Heet
prices made losses practically impos- .win now cheer up.—Tampa Tribune. h e a rin g a larg e force of so ld iers and
a d v e n tu re rs. A fter d efe a tin g th e n a ­
siblc and almost anybody could bo a
----------- o— -------tive* th e conqueror* jou rn ey ed to the
successful merchant The wise ones Cooler weather and winter will south coa*t and th ere laid the foun ,
were those who rraliredfghat such soon lie upon us. Have you decided i:.ith&gt;ns of the city of S anto Itom ingo—
conditions could not last forever, and upon that winter suit and overcoat? f i^ t jH -rm am n! city estab lish ed by l'u- ?
prepared in time for the coming Look through the Herald columns to p ra n * In Am erica, for m any year* T
storm, by restricting their purchase* and pntroniie the up-to-date raerch-, the mo*! Im portant outpost of w estern $
to their immediate n,-*-d* But at] did ant* who are asking for your busi- civilization, and fo reru n n er of the ♦
counties* cities and villages th at a re t ♦
riot do th#t Some were over sangu- ness.
the s e a ts today of the Industry, com- J
me, and will be the sufferers now
------------- o ------------m e rc e .n n d c u ltu re of th ^ th re e A m er- X
that the frertiy for buying has come There 'is much talk ab&amp;it prices tens.
*
♦

Choice
Western and Florida
■ M eats

,

Veal, Pork, Mutton
Sausage

i CHANDLER CARS

FRANKLIN CARS }

WE C1VE YOU SERVICE
—ASK ANYBODY”

WIGHT TIRE CO

| Keliy-Springfield Tirei*.

to an end.
dropping on everything but the drop
With the farmers, tWe wheat rais- will be gradual and those „who exers and cotton growers the case is poet to see pre-war prices thus year
somewhat different. During the war will la? sadly mistaken. It took some
the government urgv*j them to pro- time to get them up to where they
dace to the utmost, assuring them are now and it will take some time to
that everything would be reeded for get them down again.
j
the support of the millions of soldiers
we and our allies had put in the field,
Office supplies at the Herald.
and which had been largely drawn
from the fa nr,* and factories, thus
TAXPAYERS. TAKE NOTICE
reducing the numbers of the produc­
ers and augmenting those of the conTax books are now open for the
straers and wasters,-The farmers re* payment of State ami County taxes
rponded to those urging*, in spite of for 1920. A discount of two per cent
all the difficulties they had to meet is allowed for payment in November
owing to the scarcity and inefficiency, nmi one per cent in December,
of labor, and the high price* of every­
thing they used on the farms. They
believed that even if the w ar ended
suddenly there will be several years
of re-adjustment, when the demand
PURE FRBSn
for raw materials from American
farms would be continuous and insis­
tent a t long prices. Visions of I $3
Wheat and 40 . cent cotton doomed
THE REAL HOME-MADE KIND
their eyes, and they rejoiced that na­
SEASONED JUST AS IT
ture assisted by their own strenuous
SHOULD BE.
efforts had given them big crops. But
thing* have r*t worked out as they
Lave anticipated. The four years of
war resulted in the storage of vast
quantities of wheat which the end of
PHONE 112the war released and it has been com­
ing on the market to reduce the price,
and now, but .two vears afte r the
T —
rigeir.g of the armisfk* we a r t told

Brow n’s Market

u rn er

F. P, Eorster, President

,«.AV

Diamond Tires. ♦

Heaters
D e tr o it V a p o r O U S to ta
OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT

H IL L H A R D W A R E COMPANY

the national lives of these l*eople.
which cannot even he heard in this
country.
*
A carillon Is made up or a act of
tower belt* attuned to the Intervals
of the chromatic scale, usually cover­
ing a range of four octaves. To attain
such a /range tbe belt producing the
lowest note must weigh *e*era! ton*,
while the smallest weighs scarcely
twenty pounds. The bell* are connect­
ed to a keyboard or to a clockwork
mechanism which causes their d a p ­
per* to strike.
,
Producing music from the bells re­
quires great skill a n d dexterity on the
part of the beitmaster. for he must use
h is feet for the larger bell#, and* the
muscles of both his w rist a n d elbow
are brought Into play In producing the
trem o lan d o effect usually gWf-n.
A
fine earitio o 1* not the resu lt of a
chance m olding of m etal but its m ak ­
ing t* as m uch so achlev emeu: w rought
by a w ise com bination of excellent m a­
te ria l a n d deep th o u g h t as a S tra d i­
vari u*. Lover* o f carillon m usic com­
p a re th e tone* to those of a p ian o fo rte
la 'delicacy a n d to an organ to majesty.
W hen tifO cU d Ly tb e band of a m a ste r
tike D m y n . th e w izard of UaUnea, the

taus-t mu« x m come veritably from

What Settled the Argun*
*'We have Bwussels carpet.'*
We hare lace curtain*.'*
1 We hare Fwcnch mirrorx."
We have Butter-Nut Bread every day!*'
And that settled it, for of course there’s nothing better than

i

h»* all the quality of the uld Butter-Nut; wc co
improve that.
,
But it. addition we’ve perfected a new
process which enables u* to turn out a . tight* •
daintier loaf than evwr.
,
Gtl a loaf today, for Butter-Nut is its own
advocate. At all good gr ©cere. The genuine be*
the Butter-Nut label.
MILLER’S BAKERY*

not

�TUB SANtORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY,' NOVEMBER It, 1»M
SHREVE ATTENDS
Ullle Heppeelnga

Mention of
Metiers In Brief
Personal Items
of Interest

In and A bou t
&lt;£ The City

Summary’of the
Floating Small
Talks Sacdncllyt
Arranged for
Herald Readers

II. C. Waters has installed a fine
Sparks Circus next Tuesday, the
pop com and peanut machine to his picture shows ind the famous Mel­
Candy Kitchen.
ville players all week will keep San­
ford pmuaement lovers busy next
Fipo organ recital at the Presby­ week. Watch the Herald for an­
terian church tonight. Everybody in­ nouncements.
vited. Admission free.
The "13" Club met at the Seminole
H. D. Hearn, representing the Fox Hotel today and transacted much
pictures Incorporation, it in the city business of Importance and also par­
in the interest of his company.
took of a most tempting .dinner at
this famous hostelry. The Seminole
T. 0. Brown, of Uriando, was in the is installing telephones in every room
city today. H i. is one of the travel­ thus adding much to the convenience
ing salesmen of the C. W. Zaring Co. of the guesta.
Severe! care of lettuce were shipped
Emmett Hunt has established a
yesterday despite the rein and should brokerage business in this city and
the weather clear today there will be will buy and sell and ship Florida,
quite a big movement) on this week. fruits and vegetables. Emmett is an
experienced vegetable broker and in
Mrs. P. T. Wakefield, of Geneva, coming back to Sanford is coming
was In the city today getting every­ back to his first love as he was lo­
thing arranged for the display of Jel­ cated here in the vegetable business
lies end preserves a t the Woman's when the war called him to tho eoiClub tomorrow afternoon.

Hunting season opens next Saturorday. Sanford stores arc all ready ELECTION RIOTS
GREEK TROOPS
for the hunters with large stocks of
FIRE ON MOB
ammunition and guns and hunting
togs of all kinds. Get ready for the
(By Th. Auoclit*] r m t )
ATHENS, Nov. 10.—Trops fired on
several groups of oftcr election trou­
ble makers today. Fear of further
trouble and there is danger that the
army may get out of hand.
POSTOFFICE CLERK
ARRESTED FOR ROBBERY
The Red Cross meeting that was to
have been held last night at the
Presbyterian church was postponed
until tonight on account of the rain
and will be hold tonight at the
church immediately after the organ
recital.
Miss Bertha M. Foster, of the
Jacksonville School of Musical Arts
has arrived in the city and will give
an organ recital at tho Presbyterian
church tonight to which everyone is
invited. No admission will be charged
for this recital and the music lovers
of Sanford arc promised a treat.
A, W. Hutson, gvneral manngcr of
the Southern Utilities Co., with head­
quarters in Palntkn, has been in the
city several days of this week and Is
well satisfied with the progress of
the reconstruction work going on at
the plant When finished the Ice,
water and electric plants here will be
among the best in' the state.
B. A, Jewett, representing the
Robert E. Ward Advertising Agency
of New York and Chicago, was in
the city today tho guest^of the Her­
ald. The Ward Agency has n select
lint of dnilics in Florida of which the
Herald is one and the agency Is get­
ting some important information re­
garding tho state nnd its resources
with the view df issuing a booklet
for the national advertisers and San­
ford will be put on the map in big
letters.
The Seminole notel is having n
number o(. largo signs pa inted to
place at the cross ronds calling at­
tention to the fact that the Seminole
Hotel is open and ready to take care
of the tourista and commercial men
this season. The Seminole is going
after the business with a generous
advertising budget and believes in
advertising of all kinds that Will not
only help the hotel but help tho town.
Their patriotic menu printed in red,
■white andlduc on Armistice Dsy wiCs
a work of art and was commended by
all who mw It,

nOtBL MEETING ; ' '■
IN JACKSONVILLE
E. C. Schreye, Jr, of the Valdes
Hotel just returned from Jackson*
villc where he attended the first con­
vention of Che Florida Greeters Char­
ter No, 47, Greeters of America, tho
largcsV hotelmcn’s organisation in
the world and the only one operating
nationally. Mr. Shreve has conduct­
ed. the organisation of the Florida
charter with the assistance of E. T.
Cruise, of the Aragon Hotel, of Jack­
sonville. ■
‘
Shreve feels hlghl yelated over the
fact that this being his first year in
Florida and then to have them elect
him as their, president,
Tho following personnel of officers
will control the affairs for one year:
E. C. Shreve, Jr., president, Hotel
Valdes, Sanford; C. E. Young, first
vice-president, prop.- Hotel Monson,
St. Augustine; II. S. Evclcth, second
vice-president, manager Hotel Mc­
Kinnon, Miami; E. T. Cruise, secre­
tary and treasurer, clerk,Hotel Ara­
gon, Jacksonville, Board of Gover­
nors: E. C. Rsheve, Jr., chairman;
W. A. Nelson, a sst manager Hotel
Windlc, Jacksonville; Thoo.
C.
Brooks, manager College Arms, DeLand; Chas. A. Pelot, clerk Hotel
Jackson, Jacksonville; R. L. Cobb,
clerk Hotel Windsor, Jacksonville; J.
B. Rector, Jacksonville, sergeant-atarms.
Tho convention was held in the
University rooms of the Aragon Hotel
and was attended by members from
all over tho state nB well as several
visiting members from nearby states,
The Greeters national convention will
be held in New Orleans in June next
and Florida will bq represented by
eight delegates and as the member­
ship grows will be entitled to more
representatives a t the big doings.

fDy Th» iiuclilid rr.»0
HENDERSON, N. C.. Nov. id.—L.
V. Graves, postoffice clerk, was ar­
rested today charged with robbing
tho malls of over $18,000, part of
which, authorities said, wns found In
I wish to state to the public that
nn extra tire on bis automobile.
I have personally investigated our
present miik supply in Sanford; I
ELECTION CONTESTS
have been present during tho milking
REPRESENTATIVES SEATS and bottling of the morning’s milk
which the firm of Wnithnll &amp; Est(Br Th. AiwxUUd Pm.,)
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—Notice ridge are delivering to the public and
of five contests for sents in the house that it meets with the requirements
of representatives have already been o t the rules and regulations of the
filed with the clerk of the housa who State Board of Health. They have
agreed to stamp each and every bot­
said he expects fifteen contests.
tle of milk delivered by them with
the name of the dairy and the time
WEATHER REPORT
of milking and bottling, so that the
For Florida: Rain this afternoon public may know the age and the
and tonight. Much cooler tonight and dairy of the milk they nro getting.
cold wave in North portion; tempera­ They have also agreed that at fivo
tu re near freexlng in tho interior of o'clock each morning, the night-before
Wednesday milk will be delivered to customers
North portion tonight
fair and colder.
who do not prefer morning's milk and
wish milk earlier than it is possible
REDUCED RATES
to deliver the morning milk, the de­
TO JACKSONVILLE
livery of the morning milk to be maeje
FOR STATE FAIR not inter than 7:30 a. m.
;
At the present price of milk, I do
JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 10.- As not believe, for the value received,
customary* all transportation lines that we can equal it in food vniue
entering Jacksonville—through G. Z. with any other class of food that wo
Phillips, director of Transportation can buy and I would urge the public
.—have announced reduced round trip in generni, to rally to the'support of
rates for the annunl Florida State our dairies who are complying with
Fair nnd Exposition, which will be the state rules and regulations, that
held here November 18 to 27.
it may be put on a paying ;basis, be­
Theso rates—a fare nnd one-third cause it is an essential food supply of
for tho round trip, nro sufficiently our city, as there are mnny babies,
low and attractive to please tho most
exacting prospective fair vlsitdr, and
are expected to be the incentive which
will bring thousands of people to the
big fall exposition, which, this yeaV, VALDEZ GRILL OPEN AT NIGHT
The many patrons of the Valdez
assumes an importance far surpass­
Hotel
grill will Ik* pleased to learn
ing anything of provioua years. The
that
the
management has decided to
general admission to the Fair
keep
the
grill open at night until 1
Grounds will be 60 cents.
o’clock.
1 87-0tc
In connection with the low rates,
it Is announced tickets will In? on sale
Cooked Food Sale, Welfare depart­
from all Florida polnta to Jackson­
ville on November 17, 10, 21, 23 and ment, Women's Club, Wednesday af­
ternoon.
190-3t&lt;
In addition, the same reduced rate*
will bo in effect—within a redlum of
100 miles of 'Jacksonville—on, No­
AT THE 8TAR THEATRE
vember 18, 20, 22, 24, and 26. These
TODAY
tickets will be good on trains arriv­
ing in Jacksonville before.noon on
BILLY BURKE In
November 27,
AWAY GOES PRUDENCE'

Oren Stcnstrom^a having the room
recently occupied by the City Mar­
ket cleaned upf and put in first class
ahape for the opening of a new cash
and carry store. Oran has many
Demonstration of Florida Fruit
friends here who will be gladt to' hear
Juices
a t the Woman’s Club Wednes­
the announcement that he Is going In
day
afternoon.
Wakefield products
for himself. Watch the Herald for
on
sale.
ld0-3tc
the opening announcements.

B &lt; b)gq$ M © i s

M a u r h e tt

RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under
which this institution has been managed since
the first day the doors were opened.
That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the
constant and gratifying growth in business.
It is the desire of the officers of this Bank to con­
tinue adding new accounts of those individuals
desiring most efficient and responsible banking
On our record of RESPONSIBILITY
tronage is invited.

Seminole County Bank
Is owned, controlled and managed by home
people, who are interested in the development
and.upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County
With our large resources and strong financial
connections we are in position to assist our cus­
tomers at all times in the handling of their finan­
cial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.

4 P er C e n t Interest P a id

Bank

and "PROFITEERINB BLUES
a Comedy

The Logical Treatment

With Every KOKOMO TIRE Purchased
of US. Take Advantage of this and

AVE 30 PER CENT
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T H E H E R A L D 'S O ffice S u p p ly D e p a r tm e n t h a s ju &amp; r e - ;
c e iv e d a la rg e a n d c o m p le te line o f th is b e a u tifu l statio n ery
— no tw o b o x e s a lik e —a n d w e w ill prin t a n y m o n o g ra m o n
env&lt;
in o n e, tw o or th ree c o lo r s !

COME IN and talk it over.
108 Park Ave..
Next Door to Mobley’s Drug Store.
Distributors for
SEMINOLE, LAKE, VOLUSIA, ORANGE AND OSCEOLA COUNTIES

L. C. CAMERON
Box 399

Sanford, F lu

Phone 184

TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD ‘FOR RESULTS-lc A WORD

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              <text>SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
&#13;
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION&#13;
VOLUME 1&#13;
&#13;
SANFORD, FLORIDA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1920&#13;
Number 197&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------&#13;
SENTIMENT RUNS STRONG AGAINST NIGHT RIDING COTTON GROWING STATES&#13;
To Prevent Ginning and Also Marketing of Crops&#13;
INJURES THE SOUTH&#13;
LOOKS LIKE GROSS IGNORANCE ON PART OF PEOPLE TAKING THIS ROLE&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
Responsible sentiment in this state is running strongly against night riding which has been undertaken in this and other cotton growing states to prevent the ginning and marketing of cotton at the present low price. Representative planters, bankers and business men feel strongly that this lawlessness is giving the south a “black eye.”&#13;
 At a recent meeting of the Arkansas division of the American Cotton Association here, nightriding was condemned as an act of gross ignorance. Gov. Brough has taken a vigorous stand against night riding and he has had further support, among others from Claude Fitzpatrick, the president of the Arkansas Bankers Association. All the forces of the state and local governments in Arkansas are now co-operating to prevent further lawlessness in the cotton ginning centers.&#13;
  This countermovement is believed to be doing much to stop the activities of night riders. Mass meetings have been held in many towns and the co-operation of the citizens has been proffered officers in maintaining order.&#13;
  Acts of violence for which night riders have been given credit in Arkansas have taken various forms. In addition to the burning of gins, warehouses and other property, farmers who attempted to market their cotton have been threatened with death or severe punishment, and in some cases have been badly maltreated. Negro families have been intimidated and driven from their homes because they sought employment or worked as cotton pickers. Hundreds of cotton gins in various sections of the state have been posted with warning against continuing to buy and gin cotton, the threatened penalties for not heeding the warning included destruction of the plants and forfeature of the lives of the owners.&#13;
  In one county eight men now are awaiting action of the grand jury on a charge of setting fire to a ginnery, and in another section of the state three white farmers have been sentenced to a year’s imprisonment and assessed heavy fines for intimidation of negro cotton pickers.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
----&#13;
PRESIDENT WILSON CONTINUES TO IMPROVE DESPITE THE ELECTION&#13;
&#13;
Washington, Nov. 16.&#13;
&#13;
President Wilson continues to improve in health. The statement of Ambassador Davis, on his arrival in London, that the president was a much sicker man than the public knew is not considered here to be in conflict with the optimistic assurances given by Secretary Colby after seeing the president a week ago.&#13;
 Mr. davis is believed to have been referring to an earlier period in Mr. Wilson’s illness and not to recent weeks.&#13;
 Everybody about the White House seems to have become more hopeful now about the president’s ultimate recovery. His improvement has been so much more than was expected and so much better than is ordinarily true of cases of the kind that Mr. Wilson’s extraordinary vitality is now expected to win the long struggle for life which he has been waging for more than a year.&#13;
 Instead of proving a shock to him, the election passed by without un toward effect upon Mr Wilson’s health. Those who know the president best say this due to a sublime confidence in the righteousness of the cause he fought for and that his habit of mind is not to think of incidents of two or three years but of the political movements and tides of an era of epoch.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
NATIONS FORBID KING CONSTANTINE’S RETURN TO THRONE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
PARIS, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
Newspapers here agree that England and probably France will forbid the return of former King Constantine to Greece. Venizelos’s defeat, political writers say, would further complicate the difficulty in the Near East situation.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
ATHENS, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
Premier Venzelos’ cabinet resigned today and the Greek regent is expected to ask former Premier George Rhallis, aged eighty to form a new ministry. The victory of the opposition seemed certain Venizelos decided not to resign pending the announcement of the army vote.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
PROHIBITION SOLD FOR TWO YEARS SAYS CHAIRMAN&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
Notice that prohibition will continue in operation for the next two years at least for the purpose of guaranteeing continuation of a bony dry congress two years hence, is given by Virgil C. Hinshaw, chairman of the Prohibition national committee here at national headquarters.&#13;
 “We have a mission still,” Mr Hinshaw said. If any one of the major temperance organizations were to stop now it would give a chance to the wets to come back and possibly pass a beer and wine amendment to the Volstead law.”&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
PROVISIONAL PRESIDENT HUERTA WILL HEAD GEN. OBREGON’S NEW CABINET&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
MEXICO CITY, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
Provisional President De La Huerta will head the cabinet of General Obregon when he assumes the presidency December 1st , says the newspaper Excelsior today.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
BREAD REDUCED TO 10c LOAF&#13;
COLUMBUS, Ga., Nov. 10&#13;
&#13;
Bakers yesterday reduced the price of a loaf of bread from 15 to 10 cents on account of the lower price of flour.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
SENATOR HARDING HAS A BUSY DAY&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
BROWNSVILLE,Tex., Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
President-elect Harding is now working on accumulated correspondence and his New Orleans speech, after abandoning storm swept Point Isabel. Governor Hobby today extended Texas’ formal appreoiation over Mr. Harding’s visit and Senator Fall discussed border conditions. The president and party will leave tomorrow for New Orleans where they will board the steamer for Panama.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
BOLS GETTING IN BAD&#13;
CONSTANTINOLE, Nov. 16&#13;
Bolsheviki leaders were today warmed by the French admiral in command of the Black Sea forces that if the town of Sebastopol was looted or the inhabitants molested he would make reprisals.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
CALDER DOUBTS THAT PRICES WILL RETURN TO A PRE-WAR BASIS&#13;
&#13;
DENVER, Colo., Nov. 16&#13;
Doubt that any big price reduction will come soon and that prices ever will reach pre-war levels was expressed by Senator W.M. Calder, of New York, chairman of the senate committee on reconstruction and prediction which met here yesterday to investigate housing conditions in Colorado and nearby states.&#13;
 Senator Calder based his opinion on information gathered by the committee. &#13;
 “As long as the government’s great loans are out, labor is opposed to reduction in wages and the employer is opposed to reduction in his prices. I don’t see mich hope for heavy declines immediately and it is doubtful if prices ever will attain their pre-war basis, he said.&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
STATE ROAD DEPARTMENT WILL TAKE UP MATTER OF ROADS AND BRIDGES&#13;
In Seminole, Volusia Counties Soon As Possible&#13;
&#13;
THE OSTEEN PROJECT&#13;
ST JOHNS SCENIC HIGHWAY IS ANOTHER ONE THAT INTERESTS THIS SECTION.&#13;
&#13;
The state press seems to have come to the conclusion that the new State Road Department will get results and already many of the papers are talking about the department finishing up many state roads that have been left unfinished for some time. There is also much talk about using the auto license tax, if possible, as the taking away from the counties of this tax has worked a hardship on them.&#13;
 Formerly they could use this tax in their own counties but now it seems to be tied up in the state funds and is useless to counties and state unless something is done with it. The New Smyrna Board of Trade wants the bridge built at Osteen by the two counties and Chairman Lake of the State Road Department thinks there may be a chance to get national aid for this project and Editor Codrington-of the DeLand News things the auto tax could be used. At any rate the new board seems to have inspired confidence in the state and there is much activity in road matters everywhere. Many of the roads in the state that have been impassable for many months are being fixed up and made passable at least until more money can be obtained to make them real roads again.&#13;
 The St. Johns Scenic Highway that winds its way down the St. Johns river from Jacksonville to Sanford and then on to Tampa is one of the best roads in the state as far as location is concerned but has never been finished and the DeLand News has the following editorial mention of it:&#13;
 Chairman Forest Lake of the State Road Department is going right after the completion of the road from Tampa to Jacksonville via Plant City, Kissimmee, Orlando, Sanford, Deland, Seville, Palatka and Green Cove. Nearly seven-eights of this 250 mile road is already completed and in splendjd condition. There is only a short stretch in Putnam county and the twenty miles in Volusia county, part of the money for which is lying idle in the banks here and waiting for the State Road Department and the national government to meet Volusia’s $200,000 on the 50-50 basis.&#13;
 The News believes that it would be wise for the rest of the legislature to provide for turning over this $200,000 to the State Road Department and to direct the department complete the road in Volusia county. This would relieve the Board of County Commissioners and the local board of trustees for the fund of all responsibility and would place the responsibility in the hands of one board--the State Road Department. Under present conditions there are five members of the State Road Department, five members of the Volusia Board of County Commissioners and three members of the local board of bond trustees in charge of the expenditure of this $200,000--an unlucky thirteen, which may account for the delay in beginning operations.”&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
COAL MINED STATE OWNED PROVES VALUABLE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
LEMMON, S. D., Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
The Claremont coal mine, owned by the state of South Dakota is now shipping two hundred tons daily. The product is of the quality known as blue lignite.&#13;
 The Claremont mine was purchased last summer to insure state institutions against coal shortages. Fuel is furnished to the state normal school at Spearfish, the penitentiary at Sioux Falls, the school for blind at Gary, the school for deaf at Sioux Falls, the soldiers’ home at Hot Springs, and other state institutions. Individuals may purchase coal at the mine.&#13;
 The mine is located at Haynes, N. D., just over the line from Lemmon. The original owners began the grading for a spur railroad from the mine to Lemmon. The state of South Dakota is now building this railroad. It is estimated that when the line is finished the mine’s output can be tripled.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
W. U. PEEVED AT GOVERNMENT&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
The long drawn out controversy between the State Department and the Western Union Telegraph Company today reached the stage of an open break, the telegraph company refusing to handle any more cable messages for the State Department unless the tolls were prepaid. It is understood that this order is intended to apply to all government departments, but others have been excepted informally from the ruling.&#13;
  Western Union officials said the company based its action on delayed payments for previous cables but the Department officials hold to the opinion that this step is in retaliation for the failure of the Department to allow the Western Union to land a cable at Miami, Florida, connecting Barbados with the British cable from South America.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
STORMS COMING&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
Signals are displayed here warning shipping against severe storms that will sweep the entire Atlantic and East Gulf coasts.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
SOME JAPS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
The Japanese population of Hawaiian Islands is announced by the Census Bureau today as 42.7 per cent of the total population of the islands which is 255,512.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
photograph of city street with men fighting each other.&#13;
Caption: street battle between Unionist and Sinn Fein factions in York street, Belfast, Ireland, during the recent rioting in the city. The Unionists, shown in the foreground are driving the Sinn Feiners back with stones.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
TRIALS OF RAILROAD PRESIDENTS COMING TO LIGHT IN HEARING&#13;
PRESIDING OVER DESTINIES OF SHORT LINE ROADS AT PRESENT RATES&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 16 -&#13;
The trials of railroad presidents who preside over the destinies of the country’s short lines are coming to light in the hearing being given here to more than 100 short lines whose employes have petitioned the united states railway board for increased pay.&#13;
 One Texas road built primarily to open a route to some mineral deposit beds, has to date the champion hard luck tale, according To G. W. W. Hanger, member of the board. The president of the line explained he owned 41 miles of track between two terminal cities. His fast passenger train covered the distance in two hours.&#13;
 But between the two cities is a hard surfaced highway and enterprising auto owners have opened a bus line. The highway on a direct route, is little more than twenty miles long, compared to the railroad’s 41. The auto bus covers the distance in 40 minutes, one hour and twenty minutes faster than the train, and charges the same fare.&#13;
  The freight outlook he described as equally bad. A company operating motor trucks with two trailers to the truck hauls freight over the highway faster than the road can by train, delivers the goods at the merchant’s store door, and charges the same tariff as the railroad. And on top of his other troubles it is now estimated that the mineral deposits which furnish the main remaining source of revenue will be exhausted within three years.&#13;
  The president of an Alabama short line whose principal source of revenue is hauling ore to Birmingham furnaces appeared to defend his company against six employes all station agents, who had requested more money. Their present income is $95 a month.&#13;
  The railroad president exhibited a personal knowledge of the affairs of each of his employees. One of the station agents, he said, owned a country store a few rods from the railroad station and had run his telegraph wire into the store so he could handle his duties as dispatcher and operator while waiting on customers. A second was described as the wife of a prosperous farmer. She had her telegraph line in the farm kitchen, the president said. Of the six operators only one was located in a town, and that was a village of 500 population. The president said his road paid no dividends and operated at a loss of $100,000 last year.&#13;
  Hearing of the more than 100 short line cases, each of which is being taken up separately is expected to continue for several weeks. Decisions in all cases will be handed down simultaneously.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
LABOR LEADERS IN SESSION&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 18&#13;
&#13;
Questions of industrial peace and related problems were discussed today at the conference of labor leaders and Herbert Hoover, former food administrator, who is attending the conference at the request of President Gompers of the American Federation of Labor.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
FARMERS TO ELIMINATE ALL MIDDLEMEN&#13;
Big Convention at Kansas City Take Up Subject&#13;
DELEGATES 28 STATES&#13;
WOULD ESTABLISH AND EXTEND THE CO-OPERATIVE PLAN FOR MARKETING&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
KANSAS CITY, Nov. 16&#13;
The establishment and extension of the co-operative sales agencies to elusinate the middleman in marketing of farm products was the principal subject before the National Farmers Union convention here today. Delegates from twenty eight states were present.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
FARMERS’ ASSOCIATION PURCHASE A BIG STORE&#13;
OCALA, Nov. 15&#13;
&#13;
A deal has been closed whereby the Farmer’s Co-operative Association of Marion county became the owners of the Carr-Thomas grocery business. They expect to continue to run the store along the same basis, with just a few changes. The officers of this new firm are: H. J. Shearer, President; A. S. Pickett, Vice President; C. M. Carr, Secretary and the board of directors are J. E. Johnson, R. C. Bailey, G. A. Waters and J. C. Folks.&#13;
  The Carr-Thomas was one of the oldest established grocery firms in the city and has been run for the past number of years by Mr Baxter Carr, Mr Thomas having died a number of years ago.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
OHIO TAKES OVER TOMB OF HARRISON, FIRST PRESIDENT&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
CINCINNATI, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
The tomb of General William Henry Harrison--“Old Tippecanoe,&#13;
first of Ohio’s presidents has become the property of the state. It is situated on a knoll at North Bend, a suburb to the south of Cincinnati, commanding a magnificent view of the Ohio river.&#13;
 Possession by the state became effective when State Representative Horace Bonser, of Cincinnati, filled with the county recorder 15 claim deeds representing the interests of the Harrison heirs, scattered from New York to California, for the six acres of land involved in the transfer.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
CAPTAIN SCHRAEDER IS HONORABLY DISCHARGED&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
DAYTON, Nov. 16&#13;
Capt. Schroder, holder of the world’s airplane altitude record, was today honorably discharged from the army and will enter business in Chicago. Captain Schroeder flew to a height of six miles and when his oxygen became exhausted fell five miles before he regained consciousness and successfully landed his plane.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
WRANGEL FLEES TO UNKNOWN PORT ON RUSSIAN CRUISE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
LONDON, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
Gen. Wrangel, whose army was virtually annihilated by the Bolsheviki in Crimea, left Sebastopol on a Russian cruiser with soldiers bound for an unknown port a Constantinople reported today.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
HYMENS PRESIDENT LEAGUE OF NATIONS&#13;
GENEVA, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
Paul Hymans of Belgium, was elected permanent president of the League of Nations at the opening session of the league’s assembly here yesterday. He received thirty-five votes to four votes for President Motta of Switzerland and one each for ex-President. And of Switzerland and Leon Bourgeois of France.&#13;
  M. Hymens had called the delegates to order and introduced President Motta of Switzerland, who in his address welcoming the delegates, expressed the hope that the United States would not delay much longer in taking its legitimate place in the league.&#13;
Page six.  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1920&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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(Advertisement)&#13;
At The Star Theatre TONIGHT&#13;
&#13;
AN ALL STAR CAST IN ‘JUST A WIFE’&#13;
----------------&#13;
HALL ROOM BOYS IN “WILD, WILD WOMEN”&#13;
&#13;
TOMORROW: Billy Burke in “Away Goes Prudence.”&#13;
&#13;
------&#13;
Art of world map as a globe made of lines.&#13;
Caption: Today’s Geography&#13;
Little Journeys To Places Figuring In World Events&#13;
&#13;
Prepared by the National Geographic Society Washington D.C. for Department of Interior Bureau of Education.&#13;
&#13;
PISA: AN OLD CURIOSITY SHOP OF HISTORY&#13;
&#13;
  A city of 10,000 skyscrapers before Peter Minuit bought Manhattan island for the present price of a supper at a Broadway cabaret.&#13;
  A city that warred and traded with empires, yet plunged into a disastrous struggle with a rival city over the rights to a lapdog.&#13;
  A city which was seized after a Florentine Hobson “bottled up” its harbor entrance with sunken boats six centuries before the battle off Santiago bay.&#13;
  Such is Pisa, whose leaning tower was endangered by recent earthquake tremors in Italy.&#13;
  Pisa’s record abounds in incidents as freakish as its famous tower; yet it possesses a history necessarily more significant than any British or American city.&#13;
 Indicative of Pisa’s importance in the thirteenth century was her sending an ambassador to Rome. Thereby hangs the story of the lapdog. During the coronation ceremonies of Frederick II the Florentine emissary admired the lapdog of a certain cardinal, so that dignitary promised to give the tiny animal to its admirer. Next day the Pisan ambassador said a few kind words about the same dog and the cardinal just as readily promised it to him. The Florentine sent and got it; The Pisan sent, and received an apology. &#13;
 Florentines began joking the Pisans about this incident, and fights ensued on the Roman streets. When the Pisan home folks heard this it gave them an excellent chance to pick a quarrel that had long been simmering. A sort of medieval Boston tea party was staged by the Pisans who seized all the enemy merchandise within their reach, and thus precipitated the first of a series of wars with Florence which culminated in the subjection of Pisa by her long-time rival.&#13;
  The lap dog story seems trivial, yet characteristic of a certain childish quality noticeable among the juvenile civic nationalities that preceded national Italy. As further proof one might recall the occasion when the victorious army of Lucca hung upon a Pisan tower a mirror with the inscription “Oh women of Pisa use these to look at yourselves.” No other challenge was needed for the Pisans to march to the gate of Lucca, and there to plant poles, topped with mirrors, bearing retaliatory comment.&#13;
  Were a super Rip Van Winkle of medieval Pisa to come with his latterday compatriots to Ellis island in 1920, not only the national bird of his adopted land, but the skyscraper line of New York might make him feel at home.&#13;
  Towers they were called, these Pisa skyscrapers huddled together for all the world like groups of tall apartment houses. Two reasons are assigned for this method of building, common to Italian towns of the twelfth century. One was that the wall permitted only vertical expansion when population pressure increased. Another, believable in view of the constant factional fights and family feuds attributed them to the necessity for protection.&#13;
  Bridges that could be thrown from tower further suggested the skyscraper likeness. On these precursors of the modern fire escape many a community battle has raged.&#13;
  The Leaning Tower of Pisa served humanity well, aside from becoming the most effective bit of city advertising yet devised, for it permitted Galileo, a native of Pisa, to carry on his experiments with the laws governing the pendulum.&#13;
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  The Daily Herald subscription list is growing so rapidly that new carrier boys are necessary each week. If you do not get your paper promptly phone 481.&#13;
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BIG CIRCUS’ SOON TO BE IN SANFORD&#13;
Sparks’ Word Famous Shows Due on Tuesday, November 23rd&#13;
&#13;
  The Sparks big three-ring circus will exhibit in Sanford on Tuesday, November 23rd, giving two performances and inaugurating its appearance with a splendid parade nearly two miles in length. Every feature of the great exhibition will be represented in this truly remarkable open den street pageant which leaves the circus grounds at 10:30 a. m. Since the last visit of the circus to this city, it has nearly doubled in size and this season finds it among the largest of tented exhibitions.&#13;
  The Sparks Circus has always been noted for its fine display of horses and this season tango and shimmy dancing horses are to be seen in the equine numbers which include Caesar, champion high jumping horse of the world, as well as three groups of marblesque posing horses and collie dogs in lifelike portrayals of the works of noted sculptors. Other prominent features this year are the Cornallas family of European acrobats who are making their initial tour of America with Sparks Circus and presenting an act that for skill and daring has never been equalled. Included in the family is Miss Florence. She enjoys the distinction of being the only member of her sex in the world accomplishing a double somersault.&#13;
  Then there are the two herds of elephants including “Big Zulu,” the skyscraper elephant and each herd worked entirely by lady trainers. Incidentally there will be many big arenic features interspersed with the animal acts, and clowns--well forty of them will be on hand to extract the laughs from you.&#13;
  Two performances will be given daily--at 2 and 8 p.m. Before the regular performance takes place an hour’s time will be given in which patrons of the Sparks Circus may visit the menagerie and also the brose fair.&#13;
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WOULD SELL HIMSELF&#13;
(An image of a man in a business suit with hat in hand)&#13;
&#13;
Caption: Jack Hardy, former sailor, now living in a ball bedroom in New York, has offered to sell the remainder of his natural life not less than $3000 cash. He is only twenty-two years old. He says he wants to turn over the $3000 to the woman “who has been all that a mother has ever been to anyone. I am in no way legally obligated to her and at this moment she is in no great need of the money, but my conscious points a duty.”&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
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CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
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Classified advertisements, 5 cents a line. No ad taken for less than 25 cents, and positively no classifies ads charged to anyone. Cash must accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit accordingly.&#13;
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WANTED&#13;
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WANTED--House or apartment of 3 or 4 rooms, unfurnished, for man and wife with two school children. Best of references. See or write, G. B. S., job dept., Herald office.    Dh-tf.&#13;
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WANTED--An elderly lady, single preferred, to attend invalid lady. Address, 112 Elm Ave.  185-6tp.&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office.&#13;
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WANTED--Team work. Inquire of M. Hanson Shoe Shop.   189-60tp.&#13;
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WANTED--Your old batteries to rebuild. Let us make your starting and lighting a pleasure. We are authorized “EXIDE” dealers and have a Battery for all makes automobiles. “EXIDE, the Giant that lives in a box.”--Ray Bros. Phone 548, old Ford Garage.    179-tfc.&#13;
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Get your scratch pads from The Herald—by the pound.—15c.&#13;
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WANTED—Brick and cement work, chimney, flues, piers, cement floors, sidewalks. - A. L. Ray, 206 Park Ave.  173-30tp.&#13;
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WANTED--Pupils, violin and piano. --Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.175-20t-p.&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
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FOR SALE--1½ H. P. and 2½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition.--Herald Printing Co.   tf.&#13;
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FOR RENT&#13;
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FOR RENT--One nicely furnished room, 320 oak Ave. Phone 308-J. 187-tfc.&#13;
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TO RENT or for sale, large warehouse with railroad siding.--Chas Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co.   156-tfc.&#13;
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FURNISHED ROOMS--Two furnished bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park Avenue.     157-tfc.&#13;
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MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
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ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, 109 East First street, over Union Pharmacy.     163-tfc.&#13;
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CARPETS and rugs washed right on the floor, with Hamilton Beach Electric Carpet Washer. Kills all moth and disease germs. Make your floor coverings absolutely sanitary. --Electric Carpet Washer, Sanford.  186-6tp.&#13;
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DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture, bedsteads, chairs, etc.  What have you?   174-30tc.&#13;
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BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run your battery until she is entirely dead. The battery is the costliest accessory to your car. We re-charge and re-build all makes of batteries. --Ray Bros. Phone 548, old Ford Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
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LOST&#13;
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LOST--Western Union branch deposit book. Finder please return to Western Union office. --J. P. Hall, Mgr.   180-tfc.&#13;
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LOST OR STRAYED--One red pig, 4 months old. If found notify E. B. Randall Jr., 825 first street.     191-tfc.&#13;
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LOST-- An Alpha Omicron Pi sorority pin with the name Kathryn Wilkey on back. Finder return to owner and receive reward.  188-tfp.&#13;
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FOR SALE&#13;
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FOR SALE--Shasto daisies, $1 per dozen. English Shamrock Oxalys 30c per dozen. Ring 207-W.  183-12tc.&#13;
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Special reduction in men’s and ladies W. L. Douglas shoes.--A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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FOR RENT--Nicely furnished large light housekeeping rooms. – Mrs. Ridding, 205 Oak Ave. Eagle Hall.   186-6tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE--1½ H. P. and 2½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition.--Herald Printing Co.   tf.&#13;
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FOR SALE--1½ H. P. and 2½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition.--Herald Printing Co.   tf.&#13;
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Special reduction on Georgette Silk and cotton shirt waists. --A. Kanner, 213-215 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.&#13;
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We have just received a line of silverware and casseroles. --A. Kanner, 213-215 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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Is Your AUTO Insurance Heavy? CUT OFF 50 PER CENT OF YOUR HEAVY LOAD. Buy Your Fire, Theft, Collision, Liability Or Property Damage Insurance At Actual Cost with-&#13;
&#13;
The Belt Auto Indemnity Association&#13;
Ask J. B. Lawson, Chas Kanner, Dr. Lagley about how The Belt pays its claims. Then call phone 46 or white Box 156 for rates. “It will pay you” to see&#13;
&#13;
G. C. Fellows, Manager For Sanford.&#13;
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Gillette Tires and Tubes&#13;
Chilled Rubber Process makes them A Bear for Wear.&#13;
SMITH BROTHERS. Expert repair work.&#13;
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FOR SALE--7 room, 2-story house, large yard for garden spot, also chicken yard. Various fruit trees. Phone 487.  186-6tc.&#13;
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WOOD AND POSTS sold and delivered on hard road, within one mile of town. See me. - w. v. Dunn.    186-6tp&#13;
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FOR SALE--One horse, wagon and harness. Apply M. Hanson Shoe Shop.   189-12tfc.&#13;
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See our line of electrical lamps. --A. Kanner, 215-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  155-tfc.&#13;
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New line of Congoleums and Art Squares. --A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.   166-tfc.&#13;
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PLANTS FOR SALE--Cabbage per 1000, $1.50; Cauliflower, Handers Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B. B., per M, $1.50; Ice Berg, per M, $1.50; beets, Crosby’s Egyptian, Per M, $1.50; Onion, yellow Bermuda, per M, $1.50; onion, white Bermuda, per M., $1.50; Celery, yellow golden, per M, $2.00; Self-Bleaching imported celery, per M, $2.00; French celery seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.00. – Clay County Gardening co., Green Cove Springs, Fla.&#13;
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cartoon of a boy shouting and papers flying around him.&#13;
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Mickie says:&#13;
Hey, whassa idea of bringin’ in this write-up now of a wedding ‘at happened three weeks ago. Mi@osh, I betcha if some of you birds wuz furnishing copy to a encyclopedia, you’d be late with it!&#13;
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POLICE ENFORCE MOVING PICTURE LAW ABOUT LITTLE CHILDREN&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 15&#13;
The police are enforcing rigidly the ordinance forbidding motion picture theatres to sell tickets to children unless accompanied by a guardian as the result of the death of six children in a false fire alarm panic here today.&#13;
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BRADLEY MATTRESS FACTORY, Orlando, Fla.&#13;
Makes old mattresses new at one-third the cost of a new one.&#13;
Phone 804.  16 bryant st.   11-1511mo-p&#13;
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SALES   SERVICE   REO   PARTS  ACCESSORIES&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO.&#13;
PHONE 66&#13;
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Cozy Cafe - quick lunch&#13;
Coffee 5c. Sandwiches 10c. Pies, homemade 10c cut. Best coffee in Sanford.&#13;
Princess Theatre Bldg. &#13;
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Lord’s Purity Water. As Good as the Best. Daily service. Phone 66.&#13;
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Seed, Our Business. Honesty, Our Motto. Purity, Our Watchword.&#13;
The L. Allen Seed Co. COME IN AND SEE US. (Southern Seed Specialists). Wekiwa Bldg. Sanford, Fla.&#13;
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December 1st&#13;
On the first of each month your rent is due. Why give other people your money. Buy you a home and each month instead of paying out rent money, pay on a home that is yours.&#13;
  Beautiful homes on Park, Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and Myrtle avenues, Sanford Heights. Building lots in any location.&#13;
&#13;
E. F. LANE&#13;
“The Real Estate Man”&#13;
Phone 95	206 First Street&#13;
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EVERYTHING FOR THE BUILDER&#13;
From the Foundation to the Roof.&#13;
HILL LUMBER CO.&#13;
Quality – Servicd – Price.&#13;
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Sanford Machine &amp; Foundry Company&#13;
GENERAL MACHINE AND BOILER WORK – BRASS CASTINGS – GAS ENGINE REPAIRS – ACTEYLENE CUTTING AND WELDING.&#13;
Special machine for turning Auto Crank Shafts and Crank Pins to within .0005 accuracy.&#13;
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IRRIGATION NIPPLES. PULLEY and SHAFTINGS – ROUND AND SQUARE IRON.&#13;
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NEW Florida Syrup&#13;
APPALACHICOLA OYSTERS&#13;
L. P. McCuller, Sanford, Fla.&#13;
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Buy Meat You Can Eat. We carry a choice line at all times. &#13;
A trial solicited. &#13;
Pure Food Market. J. H. Tillis, Prop. Phone 105. 402 Sanford Ave.&#13;
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We Guarantee All Battery Repairs&#13;
Every battery repair we make is guaranteed for six months. We are able to do this because in repairing any make of battery we are licensed to use patented features which have made Vesta batteries famous.&#13;
Sanford Battery Service Co. L. A. Renaud, Prep. Phone 189&#13;
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CHULOTA INN Will Open Season 1920-21 &#13;
on Thanksgiving Day Turkey Dinner.&#13;
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SEE URK FOR EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING. Cor. First and Sanford Ave.&#13;
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National Madza Lamps&#13;
25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts. 20 to 75 Watts in 32 Volts.&#13;
Everything Electrical. Expert Installation and Repair Work.&#13;
Gillon &amp; Fry. Phone 442. 115 Magnolia.&#13;
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Real Estate. I Sell It. J. E. Spurling. The Man Who Sells Dirt Cheap.&#13;
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Sanford’s Most Popular Hotel – SEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL&#13;
Under Management of WALTER B. OLSON&#13;
Our Specialty --- Seminole’s famous $1 Sunday dinner de luxe.&#13;
A la Carte Service all day.&#13;
PAGE 2.   THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1920.&#13;
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SOCIETY. Miss Kathryn Wilkey, Editor.	Phone 428&#13;
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SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday Evening –&#13;
Pipe Organ Recital at the Presbyterian Church.&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday – &#13;
Welfare Department of Women’s Club.&#13;
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Thursday – &#13;
Every Week Bridge Club with Mrs. Margaret Barnes&#13;
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Friday – &#13;
D.A.R. meeting with Mrs. A. R. Key.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. Glenn B. Smith, late of Atlanta, Ga., are the guests of Mrs Smith’s father, Mr. W. R. Bates, and family, 308 Park avenue. Mr. Smith is the Florida representative of the Steward-Warner Products, Service Station of Atlanta, and will make Sanford his future headquarters.&#13;
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MONDAY AFTERNOON BRIDGE CLUB &#13;
&#13;
Mrs. D. P. Drummond was the charming host of the Monday Afternoon Bridge Club at her home on Magnolia avenue.&#13;
  The attractive home was artistically decorated in pink roses. Bridge was played at two tables by the regular members and one substitute, Miss Wilkey.&#13;
  A box of stationery, the prize for high score was won by Mrs. Perkins.&#13;
  At the conclusion of the game a most delicious salad course was served.&#13;
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Miss Edna Pagenhart has been quite ill at her home on Oak avenue.&#13;
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REGISTRATIONS AT THE VALDEZ MONDAY&#13;
H. W. Clifton, Deland; B. E. Ballard, Tampa; J. L. Crayden and wife, Macon, Ga,; C. W. Parker, Pensacola; W. E. Jewett, New York; W. G. Wilson, Jacksonville; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hedgdon, Bethany, Maine; Stuart Hedgdon, Norma Hedgdon and May Hedgdon, Bethany, Maine; J. R. Waters, Miami; C. A. Matthews, Daytona; R. R. Kinard, Cresent City; W. H. Cowler and wife, Jacksonville; W. H. Green and wife, Jacksonville; C. E. Taylor, Jacksonville; Mrs. M. Putnam, Asheville, N. C.; B. J. Mays, Tampa; G. J. Bloomberg, Tampa; M. R. Cohen, Jacksonville; D. E. Montgomery, New Britain, Conn.; A. H. Fairchild, Jacksonville; T. W. Parks, New Britain, Conn.; W. G. Miller, Rochester, N. Y.; R. W. Coulter, Atlanta; A. J. Pound, Crescent City; W. S. Parker, Baltimore; Nellie Knowles, New York; Mack Kensley, Atlanta; Alexander Hooper, Jr., Atlanta; Dr. and Mrs. J. D. Chunn, Lake Wells, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Hollingsworth, Ft. Meade; Harry Hurst, Ft. Meade; A. G. Campbell, Jacksonville; E. E. Vickery, Palatka.&#13;
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THE BOSS&#13;
&#13;
When things go easy, he just saunters round,&#13;
At ten o’clock or so; then reads his mail,&#13;
Dictates some half a dozen letters to the girl,&#13;
Tosses us each word, or maybe two.&#13;
Looks at the papers, lights a good cigar,&#13;
Phones to a friend, and then goes out to lunch,&#13;
And I go home and say to maw—“Gee whiz!&#13;
I hate to work. I wish I was the boss!”&#13;
But my, when things go wrong! Maybe a strike,&#13;
Our prices rise, or some bank goes and busts,&#13;
then ain’t he Johnny-on-the-spot at eight!&#13;
Then he don’t take no time to read the news,&#13;
Nor eat no lunch, but keeps us all a-jump.&#13;
Then he shoots letters at the girl till she&#13;
Gets flustery red spots on her cheeks, and makes&#13;
Even his chief clerk hustle, yon know him&#13;
That grey one, with nervous sort of spin.&#13;
And me – why I’m greased lightening when he calls. &#13;
And when night comes, then he looks kinder pale&#13;
and anxious-like, and yet so full of fight,&#13;
I get a sort of aching in my throat,&#13;
Like something choked me, when I look at him,&#13;
And I go hand say to maw—“Gee whiz!&#13;
Bizness is tough. I’m glad I ain’t the boss!&#13;
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- Reliance bulletin.&#13;
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LATE WIRES&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 16&#13;
Amateur athletic union in session here today awarded the next convention to Chicago.&#13;
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TOKIO, Nov. 16&#13;
Students societies of three private universities organized meetings tonight to discuss, “shall Japan fight America.”&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 16&#13;
Commissioner General Caminetti leaves tonight for a trip around the world investigating immigration questions.&#13;
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ANNAPOLIS, Nov. 16&#13;
The strike of students of St. John’s college is expected to be settled tonight.&#13;
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C. H. BROWN ELECTED MAYOR OF TAMPA&#13;
TAMPA, Nov. 16&#13;
Charles H. Brown was nominated for mayor commissioner and Henry E. Snow, W. J. Barritt, W. A. Adams and Victor V. Sharpe, were nominated for commissioners in the white primaries held here yesterday. Nomination is equivalent to election.&#13;
 They will take office January 4 to institute the commission form of government which Tampa adopted at an election October 19th.&#13;
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STATE CONVENTION OF WOMEN’S CLUBS&#13;
TALLAHASSEE, Nov. 16&#13;
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This afternoon the Florida Federation of Women’s Clubs will hold its first meeting of the annual convention. The board of directors convenes at 3 o’clock in the First Baptist church, and the registration and credentials committees will be in session there all the afternoon.&#13;
  This evening at 8 o’clock the formal opening of the twenty-sixth annual meeting will be held in the auditorium of the Florida State College for Women. Mrs. J. W. McCollum, of Gainesville, state president, will preside, and Mrs. J. G. Kellum, president of the Tallahassee Club, will address the club. Rev. Bunyan Stephens, pastor of the First Baptist church, will give the invocation, after which “America” will be sung. &#13;
&#13;
The following addresses will be given:&#13;
For the city, Mayor Guyte P. Mccord&#13;
For the state, Hon. Sidney J. Catts, governor.&#13;
For the hostess club, Mrs. Charles A. Cay, first vice-president of Tallahassee Women’s Club.&#13;
For the College of Women, Dr. Edward Conradi, president Florida State College for Women.&#13;
Response for the federation, Miss Elizabeth Skinner of Dunedin, vice president-at-large, F. S. W. C.&#13;
  At this meeting the college glee club will give several numbers and there will also be four-minute reports of department work at the Golden Prairie Biennial Convention. General Federation of Women’s Clubs, held at Des Moines, Ia, in June. Following adjournment a reception will be given in Bryan Hall complimentary to the delegates and visitors.&#13;
  The morning and afternoon sessions Wednesday will be held in the First Baptist church. At 5 o’clock Wednesday afternoon a twilight organ and violin recital will be given at the Methodist church by Miss Ella Scobe Opperman and Mrs. Clara Farlington Edmonson.&#13;
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ST PETERSBURG FOOD INSPECTOR CONDEMNS QUESTIONABLE EGGS&#13;
ST PETERSBURG, Nov. 16&#13;
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  A large quantity of eggs said to have been shipped out from a Tampa produce concern were condemned yesterday by Dr. W. E. A. Wyman, food inspector, who found the eggs in a local grocery establishment. The egg cases were stamped June 5, representing the date the were put in cold storage with the date Sept. 23 as that of removal from storage. They were sold to the St. Petersburg grocer November 13.&#13;
 Dr. Wyman says the eggs were worse than bad; that they were rotten. He proposes to see to it that only good eggs are sold in this city and will sandle suspicious shipments.&#13;
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The Daily Herald subscription list is growing so rapidly that new carrier boys are necessary each week. If you do not get your paper promptly phone 481.&#13;
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Get your office supplies and school supplies at the Herald Printing Co., where you can get what you want at very reasonable rates.&#13;
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NATIONAL GRANGE NOW HAS 750,000 MEMBERS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
  Membership in the National Grange stands at approximately 750,000, S. J. Lowell of Fredonia, N. Y., master of the grange reports.&#13;
  In this period of active organization of farmers, Mr. Lowell thus briefly sketches the activities of his society, one of the oldest and best known of the farmers organizations:&#13;
 “The first grange was organized on April 16, 1868, in Freedonia, N. Y.   it is a secret order, similar to all secret orders in many respects, with a ritual surpassed by none.&#13;
  “It is non-sectarian and non-political and is devoted wholly to agriculture and agricultural pursuits.&#13;
  “It has one distinction, that in all its meetings it has what is known as the ‘lecturer’s hour’. This hour is devoted to the going over of matters pertaining to farm life, intersperced with music, recitations, etc., by the younger people. It has done more than any other one thing to build up and strengthen agricultural life.&#13;
  “The grange is now organized in 33 states, which are chiefly in the north, as many of the southern states have no Granges. The largest grange state is New York, which has a membership of 128,000.&#13;
  “A great deal of co-operative work is done. Insurance of farmers’ buildings is probably the greatest financial enterprise. The amount carried in the insurance department runs into the hundreds of millions.”&#13;
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HIGH PRICES DID IT.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 16.&#13;
&#13;
  Something has reduced the per capita consumption of meat in this country in the past year, W. J. Carmichael, secretary of the National Swine Growers Association said here, discussing the “Eat More Meat” movement he is endeavoring to set underway. He has called a meeting of livestock producers, livestock exchanges and packers for Chicago December 2.&#13;
  At this conference he proposes to enlist all interested in establishing a national organization to act as a clearing house for meat men’s difficulties of this nature. Among these is what Mr. Carmichael terms unfair propaganda against meat.&#13;
  “Vegetarianism is making some headway in certain sections, Mr. Carmichael said, “but a large part of the decrease in meat eating appears due to the use of meat substitutes. These have been encouraged by advertising. We don’t object to people using substitutes but we feel it very unfair for them to be led to do so, as in some cases, by misleading comparisons with meat values.”&#13;
  Reports of working men receiving high wages developing into large meat eaters, Mr. Carmichael said held true only in some districts, such as Gary, Ind. Meat consumption for the country as a whole fell off 8 pounds per individual in the last year, he said.&#13;
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STORM HEADED SOUTH FOLLOWED BY A COLD WAVE; BE COOLER HERE&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
   Storm warnings were displayed last night on the Gulf coast east of the mouth of the Mississippi river and on the Atlantic coast from the Florida straits northward to Delaware breakwater as the result of the disturbance now centered over the east central Gulf of Mexico. The influence of the storm is widespread, according to a weather bureau announcement, being attended by general rains in the South Atlantic, middle Atlantic and East Gulf coast states and local snows in the region of the Great Lakes and the Ohio and Upper Mississippi valleys.&#13;
  Temperatures remain below normal in virtually all parts of the country east of the Mississippi river and “decidedly” below normal in the Gulf states.&#13;
  Rains in the South Atlantic and rains and snows in the middle Atlantic states are indicated for Tuesday and probably Wednesday. The temperature will fall on the South Atlantic coast and will remain below normal, generally elsewhere east of the Mississippi river Tuesday and Wednesday.&#13;
--&#13;
CITY MANAGERS MEET.&#13;
CINCINATI, Nov. 16.&#13;
&#13;
The city managers of the 192 cities were present when the annual convention of the National City Managers Association opened here yesterday. Administration, housing, zoning and other civic problems will be discussed. Harrison G. Otis of New York, secretary of the national association, said 25 cities has adopted the city manager plan during the past year.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH...1c.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Six Kinds of Safety&#13;
Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank where you deposit your money?&#13;
  The first consideration is the capital, which should be ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank is to serve.&#13;
  The next question to consider is the officers in charge. They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.&#13;
  Then there is the question of confidence. The public should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. &#13;
  These three principles determine the success of a bank.&#13;
  We adopted these principles in the outset of our career and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase our usefulness to the community as the years go by.&#13;
  We offer you:&#13;
  &#13;
  1st: Large Capital and Working Reserve&#13;
  2nd: Trained Men in Charge – Men Of Several Years Experience.&#13;
  3rd: The confidence of the public, which is proven by the daily addition to our line of depositors.&#13;
  4th: Protection by two examinations each year by the state banking department, two audits each year by an independent recognized public audit company and two sworn statements submitted to the state comptroller by the cashier, giving the bank’s condition in detail. All of which insures regular, systematic and thorough operation of the bank.&#13;
  5th: The advice of a competent board of directors, who meet who meet with the officers regularly each month and advise them as to the operation of the bank.&#13;
6th: Insurance of all deposits every day of the year, this is a protection not commonly found in banks and is an absolute protection for your funds, in addition to all the other usual safeguards.&#13;
&#13;
These are reasons why you should do business with us, and we believe that no bank can offer better inducement.&#13;
&#13;
Peoples Bank of Sanford. We want your business.&#13;
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M. D. GATCHEL GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES.&#13;
Phone 110.  Corner Sanford and Celery Avenue&#13;
&#13;
2-Lb Cans Standard. Hand-packed Tomatoes. Per Can		 9¢&#13;
Extra Fancy Grade Maine Corn, Per Can 				20¢&#13;
Maxwell House Coffee, 1-Lb Can					40¢&#13;
Export Soap. Per Cake							 5¢&#13;
Swifts’ premium hams. Per lb.					48¢&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Vulcanite Shingles&#13;
Just Lay Them Down And Nail – That’s All There Is To It&#13;
&#13;
  The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air – rain, sleet, etc., from forcing its way through the roof.&#13;
  The Shoulder of Protection is also the Self-Spacing Device. Makes laying easy and rapid = thus saving time and money. &#13;
  These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red or Green Crushed Slate. Each rain washes away the accumulated dust reviving perpetually the original rich colors.&#13;
  Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered – because they are fire-resisting.&#13;
  Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the cost free of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.&#13;
&#13;
Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Special Bargains For The First Complete House Bill.&#13;
Carter Lumber Co.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Full line Columbia Phonographs.&#13;
 Prices from $50 to $300&#13;
&#13;
Terms to suit yourself. &#13;
&#13;
The most complete line of Records in the city. &#13;
Lines of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins. &#13;
&#13;
Prices Right.  H.L. Gibson&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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 &#13;
page three		THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1920&#13;
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&#13;
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GREAT FLEETS TO ASSEMBLE IN THE PACIFIC&#13;
&#13;
  January will witness one of the greatest armadas ever assembled under the American flag, when the great Pacific and Atlantic fleets assemble in the Pacific for winter maneuvers.&#13;
  When the time comes for the fleets to assemble in Southern waters this winter, the Pacific fleet under command of Admiral Rodman will steam to the southward towards the Gulf of Panama where it will assemble for winter operations. The Atlantic fleet under the command of Admiral Wilson, steaming southward, will pass Guantanamo Bay where it has wintered yearly in the past and will proceed to the Panama Canal, passing through which it will join the Pacific Fleet, creating the most magnificent naval spectacle in years.&#13;
  Upon the meeting of the great fleets Admiral Wilson will become Commander-in-Chief of the great armada, and the winter maneuvers, spliced in with athletic meets between the various champions of the fleets will begin.&#13;
  The re-union of the fleets will give the personnel a chance to renew old acquaintances, to see the sights of Panama, and while their friends shiver midst the snow and ice of the north to see the combined power of the organization of which they are a part.&#13;
 It is expected that Admiral Wilson will have several hundred vessels under his command during the operations with combined gun power of 112 14-inch guns, 80 12-inch guns, 226 5-inch, and 28 3-inch. In addition to the great vessels of the fleets there will be submarines, destroyers, and auxiliary vessels in abundance, while the Naval Air Service will have their winged ships dotting the skies.&#13;
 It will be an impressive sight even to the men-o’-war’s-men who are accustomed to the unusual and who believe that there is “nothing new under the sun.”&#13;
 In the large picture above we see the Atlantic fleer steaming in formation flanked by subchasers, while the air scouts guard them overhead. In the top and immediate foreground are the muzzles of two of Uncle Sam’s mighty peace makers on the vessel from which the picture was taken. At the top and reading from left to right are: Admiral Wilson, who will be commander-in-chief of the combined fleets; Admiral Coontz, Chief of Operations; and right, Admiral Rodman who commands the Pacific fleet.&#13;
&#13;
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FLORIDA FORGING AHEAD IN PURE BRED LIVESTOCK&#13;
&#13;
Large Prizes at State Fair Attract Many Entries, And Fine Show Is Assured.&#13;
Photo of a very large, black, male cow. Caption: Defender of Tierra Alta no. 220019, Grand Champion Aberdeen Angus Bull of South and West, 1918. at head of herd of J. J. Logan, Jacksonville, Florida.&#13;
Jacksonville - &#13;
A pretty good check on the rapidly growing livestock industry may be made by looking over the animals exhibited at the Florida State Fair, Jacksonville, Nov. 18-27. The premiums offered are larger than those of many bigger and older fairs, offering ample encouragement to exhibitors. Breeders from other states, taking advantage of the handsome prizes offered, have been showing their herds and walking off with most of the prize money. This year, however, they will have a little stiffer competition from Florida grown animals, the number of early entries by Florida breeders being much larger than heretofore.&#13;
  One of the most important pieces of work accomplished by the State Fair has been to encourage the production of more pure bred livestock, and already it has gone a long way toward helping put Florida on the map as a stock growing state.&#13;
  More livestock and better livestock should become the slogan of every community in the state which is to any measure adapted to stock raising.&#13;
  Go to the State Fair this year (Nov. 18-27) and see how it can be done and what has already been accomplished.&#13;
&#13;
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SCRUB VS. THOROUGHBRED&#13;
Jacksonville - No more significant statement has been made in connection with the livestock industry than that of a man who knows well whereof he speaks:&#13;
 “It costs no more to raise a 1200 pound steer than a 600 pound scrub.”&#13;
  The truth of this statement will be graphically demonstrated in the live stock section of the Florida State Fair being held here, Nov. 18-27. compared the ----- may be odious but they often --- a spur to improvement.&#13;
&#13;
Do you know the dates of the State Fair are Nov. 18-27?&#13;
DO you know the counties which advertise their resources at the State Fair are the most prosperous?&#13;
Do you know the State Fair is ready-made publicity agent for the       resources of all Florida?&#13;
Do you know an exhibit at the State Fair will bring investors to this county?&#13;
Do you know a county exhibit at the State Fair advertises its resources as no other medium?&#13;
Do you know the State Fair will this year pay approximately $9,000 in prizes for cattle alone?&#13;
&#13;
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Send in your locals to the Herald office. Phone the news to 148. We want every bit of it. Tell us the news each day.&#13;
&#13;
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Post Cards at the Herald office, 1c.&#13;
&#13;
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Will Rogers, the cartoonist, says McSweeney has nothing on the Republican postmasters – they have been starving for eight years.&#13;
&#13;
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Office supplies at the herald.&#13;
&#13;
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ARRIVALS AT THE SEMINOLE&#13;
Arrivals at the Seminole for Monday were:&#13;
&#13;
H. A. Nelson, Jacksonville; H. B. Hill and wife, Akron, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Sapp, Akron, Ohio; H. D. Hearn, Fox Pictures; Mrs. Carter, Mrs. Prescott, H. H. Sawyer, Boston, Mass.; T. O. Brown, Orlando; F. P. Marshall, Jacksonville; A. W. Houston, Palatka; Harvey B. Hatch, Marquette, Mich.; M. H. Keyes, Philadelphia, Pa.; D. T. Rungtrean, Atlanta; E. H. Richey, Jacksonville; Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Dodson, Jacksonville; Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Dreyfus, Kansas City, Mo.; J. P. Kumble, Bronson, Fla.; H. C. Gerror, Jacksonville; F. P. Marshall, Jacksonville; E. R. Caswell, Tampa; W. L. Gailing, Savannah, Ga.; Robert Ingram, Atlanta; Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Newcome, Miss S. K. Skinner, Palm Beach; J. W. Wilson, H. B. Marsh, Columbia, S. C.; H. J. Burkhalter, Jacksonville; Lieut. Geo. Dewitt, U. S. A.&#13;
&#13;
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Get your office supplies and school supplies at the Herald Printing Co. where you can get what you want at very reasonable rates.&#13;
&#13;
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Your Red Cross&#13;
&#13;
The American Red Cross, by its Congressional charter, is officially designated:&#13;
  To furnish volunteer aid to the sick and wounded of armies in time of war, in accordance with the conventions of Geneva.&#13;
  To act in matters of voluntary relief and as a medium of communication between the American people and their Army and Navy.&#13;
  To continue and carry on a system of national and international relief in time of peace and to apply the same in mitigating the sufferings caused by pestilence, famine, fire, floods and other great calamities.&#13;
  To devise and carry on measures for preventing these causes of suffering.&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH RED CROSS ROLL CALL&#13;
November 11-25, 1920. Membership fees:&#13;
&#13;
Annual		$1.00&#13;
Contributing	 5.00&#13;
Life			50.00&#13;
Sustaining		10.00&#13;
Patron	     100.00&#13;
Send dues to your nearest local chapter.&#13;
&#13;
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PROMINENT FT. MEYERS CITIZEN DIES SUDDENLY&#13;
&#13;
FORT MYERS, Nov. 16 -&#13;
Walter G. Langford, president of the First National Bank here, a prominent stockman and one of the best known men in South Florida, dropped dead at his home here last midnight.&#13;
  The death was due to apoplexy. Mr. Langford had not been ill until he was stricken. He was 47 years old and is survived by his wife and two children.&#13;
  Mr. Langford will be buried on Thursday morning. His daughter, who is attending school in New York city, has been wired to come home but does not know of his death.&#13;
  Mr. Langford was one of the wealthiest men in this section of the state. He came of an old family that had been prominent in Florida affairs for more than three generations. His home was the most beautiful one in this city and he has large interests outside of the First National Bank, of which he was president.&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH _1c.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
EX-KAISER’S SON NAMES DAUGHTER “HEART SUFFERING”&#13;
BERLIN, Nov. 16&#13;
&#13;
Prince Oscar, the ex-kaiser’s fifth son, taking into account the altered stats of the Hobzenzollern family affairs, is having his youngest daughter baptized Herzleide (Heart suffering).&#13;
----&#13;
The Daily Herald subscription list is growing so rapidly that new carrier boys are necessary each week. If you do not get your paper promptly phone 481.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Beauty in Every Jar. Freckles Positively Removed. By Dr. Berry’s Freckle Ointment, giving beautiful complexion. Your druggist or by mail. Send for free Booklet.&#13;
Dr. C. H. Berry Co., 2975 Michigan Avenue, CHICAGO.&#13;
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AUTO PAINTING. THE NEW PAINT SMILE. &#13;
You’ll wear one too if we repaint your auto. Why go around with dim, dull, old looking car when for a few dollars we will paint and finish it like new? It’s good sense also to keep a fresh coat of paint on your car – adds to its value of you want to sell it or trade it in.&#13;
Reher Bros Auto Painting. Phone 112. Sanford Heights.&#13;
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(advertisement)&#13;
In which we double cross a master mind&#13;
&#13;
Talk about dime novels.&#13;
They sent Jim down.&#13;
To Texas to investigate.&#13;
Some oil wells there.&#13;
Which they might buy.&#13;
If Jim said O.K.&#13;
And he was to report.&#13;
By wire in secret code.&#13;
Now – enter the villain.&#13;
A slippery crook.&#13;
Got wind of it.&#13;
And trailed Jim down.&#13;
Copied off his code.&#13;
And bribed a boob.&#13;
In the telegraph branch.&#13;
So the crook could get.&#13;
The earliest word.&#13;
And corner stock.&#13;
And work a hold-up.&#13;
It looked like easy coin.&#13;
But Jim got wise.&#13;
And threw away his code,&#13;
And when he saw&#13;
The final dope.&#13;
He foiled the villain&#13;
The message just said,&#13;
“Chesterfield.”&#13;
And his directors knew.&#13;
That all was well.&#13;
With those oil wells.&#13;
For oil men know.&#13;
That “Chesterfield” means.&#13;
“They satisfy.”&#13;
&#13;
You’ll know you’ve “struck it rich” when you discover Chesterfields. You’ll say “they satisfy.” A wonderful blend--the pick of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos – put together in the Chesterfield way – that’s why “they satisfy.” And the Chesterfield blend can not be copied!&#13;
&#13;
In packages of 20 protected by special moisture-proof wrapper. Also in round air-tight tins of 50.&#13;
They Satisfy Chesterfield Cigarettes.  Liggett &amp; illyers Tobacco Co. &#13;
Page Four – THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1920&#13;
&#13;
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SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
Published every afternoon except Sunday at The Herald Building, 107 Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, Florida&#13;
----&#13;
THE HERALD PRINTING CO., INC. PUBLISHERS&#13;
----&#13;
R. J Holly 	Editor&#13;
N. J. Lillard 	Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
H. A. Neel		General Manager&#13;
F. P. Rines	Circulation manager&#13;
Phone 481&#13;
-----&#13;
Advertising Rates Made Known on Application&#13;
Subscription Price in Advance&#13;
One year 		$6.00&#13;
Six months		$3.00&#13;
&#13;
Delivered in City by Carrier&#13;
One week		15 cents&#13;
&#13;
Member of The Associated Press&#13;
&#13;
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Rainy season again.&#13;
&#13;
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But at that we have more bright days than any other place.&#13;
&#13;
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However, if it turns cold tonight the growers will be wearing smiles tomorrow.&#13;
&#13;
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Gen. Wrangel has been wrangling with the Bolsheviki and has been defeated like all the rest of them. Good time to get out of Russia, all of the civilized nations and let them fight it out among themselves.&#13;
&#13;
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The Rotary Club of Jacksonville invites the editors of Florida to be their guests next Tuesday and enjoy everything that Jacksonville has to offer. We do not know just how far that invitation goes but we will bet they show the newspaper men the time of their young lives. We would like to be there but a man with a daily paper never knows where he will be in the following twelve hours and we cannot make any plans that far ahead.&#13;
&#13;
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The Lakeland Daily Telegram has just passed the twelve year mark and is entitled to a big birthday party. Editor Hetherington has certainly labored early and late in giving the people of Lakeland a good paper and he deserves all the prosperity that may come his way. He went ahead and built one of the finest buildings in Lakeland to house his plant and only those who have gone into the building line know how much this struggle costs one in sleepless nights and he has given the best there was in him for many years to make the Telegram a real daily paper. May he live to see many more birthdays for the Telegram.&#13;
&#13;
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The League of Nations is meeting at Geneva today and America is not present. Mr. Harding is down in Texas fishing and golfing and while he is storm bound he will have plenty of time to prepare a substitute for the League of Nations for the people of the United States are determined to have no more was and the Republican party will be forced to arrange for a perpetual peace treaty with the stronger nations of the world.&#13;
  They can call it anything they please but the League of Nations will be the final outcome of their deliberations for the world wants a League of Nations regardless of the name under which this work will be accomplished. Meantime the world meets at Geneva and the greatest country on the world is absent.&#13;
&#13;
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W. L. Thorndyke, known all over the civilized world and also at Palm Beach as “Old Thorn” is now at Kissimmee and has been given entire charge of the editorial columns of the Kissimmee Gazette. “Thorn” is not an old man by any means as only about fifty summers have passed over his head and no winters but he has all the buoyant spirit of pre-prohibition days and manages to get up a few hundred columns of good stuff every day if necessary and every week if possible as he is now doing. We will make one last bet on Thorn. He will certainly wake up Kissimmee as she has never been wakened before and if the business men will back him up he will make Kissimmee blossom and grow into a big city in a few years.&#13;
&#13;
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Welaka Coffee. Deane Turner. Phone 497. Welaka Building.&#13;
&#13;
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JP says – A truly democratic nation is a nation of capitalists, a nation of strong, courageous men and women who have set apart some capital of their daily earnings to assure future independence. You can do this very thing by investing in 8 per cent cumulative prior preferred stock of the southern utilities company. There’s none better.&#13;
&#13;
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PRICES ARE ON THE DOWN GRADE AT LAST&#13;
&#13;
There is evidently a general and growing belief that prices of all commodities have reached and passed the peak, and are now on the down grade. How far they will go cannot be foretold with any certainty. Judging from the past experience they may go lower than actual conditions will justify, in which case a reaction to a certain extent may be looked for. But the old plea that “you better buy now for everything will be higher next spring,” has lost its force, and no longer has any effect.&#13;
  Getting down from the high plane which we have occupied during the last few years is naturally a painful and unpleasant process, but it had to come, and the only thing we can do is to make the best of it, and use out best efforts to make the transition as quick and easy as possible. It is displeasing to any retailer who may have his shelves full of high priced goods, upon which he must cut prices to the bone, eliminating any chance of profit, and deeming himself in great luck if the process does not involve an actual and serious loss. &#13;
  But most retailers can have the satisfaction of looking back on a series of good years when constantly advancing prices made losses practically impossible and almost anybody could be a successful merchant. The wise ones were those who realized that such conditions could not last forever, and prepared in time for the coming storm, by restricting their purchases to their immediate needs. But all did not do that. Some were over sanguine, and will be the sufferers now that the frenzy for buying has come to an end.&#13;
  With the farmers, the wheat raisers and cotton growers the case is somewhat different. During the war the government urged them to produce to the utmost, assuring them that everything would be needed for the support of the millions of soldiers we and our allies had put in the field, and which had been largely drawn from the farms and factories, thus reducing the numbers of the producers and augmenting those of the consumers and wasters.&#13;
  The farmers responded to those urgings, in spite of all the difficulties they had to meet owing to the scarcity and inefficiency of labor, and the high prices of everything they used on the farms. They believed that even if the war ended suddenly there will be several years of re-adjustment, when the demand for raw materials from American farms would be continuous and insistent at long prices. Visions of $3 wheat and 40 cent cotton dazzled their eyes, and they rejoiced that nature assisted by their own strenuous efforts had given them big crops. But things have not worked out as they have anticipated. &#13;
  The four years of war resulted in the storage of vast quantities of wheat which the end of the war released and it has been coming on the market to reduce the price, and now, but two years after the signing of the armistice we are told that France has raised enough wheat for her own needs, and both wheat and cotton are dropping in price, and the high prices on which the farmers built their hopes, seem farther off than ever. Germany wants cotton, in large quantities-estimated at 2,000,000 bales--but she has not the wherewith to pay for it. The same is the case with the starving peoples of the near and far east. They want bread, but they have no means of paying for it, and it must be given them if their lives are saved.&#13;
  In their desperation the farmers have appealed to the government for relief in the shape of loans to enable them to hold their products off the market, and force higher prices, but the government says very properly, in the minds of many, that it cannot use its funds to promote speculation, and the farmers must pull through as best they can. There will be much dissatisfaction and grumbling, and possibly some suffering, but there does not seem to be any other way. The prime needs of all the people are cheap foods and clothing, and the needs of all must take precedence of the interests of any one class. – Tampa Times.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Do Your Fall Shopping Before the Holiday Rush&#13;
&#13;
Excuses for postponing your fall shopping are no longer in order.&#13;
&#13;
It should be done now—at once--before the holiday rush sets in.&#13;
	You can shop thoughtfully, leisurely and economically if you shop now. But if 	you wait until the Christmas rush sets in, you must buy hastily and 	inefficiently, and therefore extravagantly.&#13;
&#13;
Shop now. Make a list of all that the family will need--heavier clothes for the 	cooler weather, new shoes, new hats, that new furniture you have been 	discussing, linen and silverware for bed and table.&#13;
&#13;
These you will find now in pleasing selections on the shelves and counters of the local stores--fresh fall stock at the new lower prices that please us all.&#13;
&#13;
Make up your list now--and be sure to look for suggestions and prices in the 	advertisements in the Daily Herald. It is always well to read the ads before 	shopping, and they will be found particularly helpful now.&#13;
&#13;
The season of heavy fall buying really begins tomorrow. Make your selections early.&#13;
&#13;
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Sanford has started shipping lettuce and romaine in solid car lots. The poor Republican ridden North can now cheer up. – Tampa Tribune.&#13;
&#13;
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Cooler weather and winter will soon be upon us. Have you decided upon that winter suit and overcoat? Look through the Herald columns and patronize the up-to-date merchants who are asking for your business.&#13;
&#13;
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There is much talk about prices dropping on everything but the drop will be gradual and those who expect to see pre-war prices this year will be sadly mistaken. It took some time to get them up to where they are now and it will take some time to get them down again.&#13;
&#13;
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Offices supplies at the Herald.&#13;
&#13;
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Taxpayers, take notice!&#13;
&#13;
Tax books are now open for the payment of State and County taxes for 1920. A discount of two per cent is allowed for payment in November and one per cent in December.&#13;
&#13;
JNO. D. JINKINS, Tax Collector, Seminole County. 11-13-dlw,w-2t.&#13;
&#13;
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PURE FRESH Pork Sausage&#13;
THE REAL HOME-MADE KIND SEASON’ED JUST AS IT SHOULD BE.&#13;
Come and get it--it’s as cheap as the other kind.&#13;
Brown’s Market. Phone 122.&#13;
&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH…1c&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
(art of a line drawing of a globe)&#13;
TODAY’S GEOGRAPHY&#13;
HAITI: MAGIC ISLE OF THE INDIES&#13;
&#13;
  Picture an island more wonderful, more beautiful and more richly endowed by nature even than the fabled isles that medieval mariners loved to dream about; a country of pleasant peaks, charming vales and fertile plains; an idyllic land set in a summer sea.&#13;
&#13;
  Picture then a land where the avarice of conquerors, ruthlessly exploiting, has blasted promises of progress; where the passions of men have run riot; where tyrant after tyrant, some great, some petty, have waded to power through pools of blood; a land from which the gods of peace and industry seem to have turned away.&#13;
&#13;
  Both are pictures of Haiti, the relations between which country and the United States are now under discussion.&#13;
&#13;
  To avoid confusion it must be explained at the outset that the name Haiti is used sometimes to denote the entire island, which is the second largest land mass in the West Indies, sometimes to denote merely the Republic of Haiti, which occupies the western third of the area. The possibilities of confusion are increased by the fact that the island is also known as Santo Domingo and San Domingo, names applied likewise to the Dominican Republic, which occupies the eastern two-thirds of the land unit.&#13;
&#13;
  The name Haiti is much used because it was the descriptive term, meaning “high land,” given to the island by aborigines. This was the favorite island of the West Indies to Columbus, who reserved for it the most complimentary name bestowed on the lands which he discovered--Hispanola, “little Spain.” Something of the impression which this beautiful and promising island made on the great discoverer can be gleaned from his reference to it as a “Garden of Eden,” and from the fact that he named the point at which he first set foot in Haiti, December 6, 1492, “the Vale of Paradise.”&#13;
   History has been prodigal to the island of Haiti and has crowded one interesting and tragic event after another into the relatively short span of years since the eyes of white men first beheld its towering peaks. On its northern coast, near the present Cape Haitien the Santa Maria, which bore Columbus to the new world, was wrecked on Christmas eve, 1492, and from its broken, historic boards was set up by the crew the first structure erected by Europeans in the western hemisphere. This was the fortress of Navidad, in which the men of the Santa Maria were killed while Columbus was on his return voyage to Spain to report his epoch-making discovery of the “the Indies.”&#13;
   Farther to the east on the northern coast of the island Columbus built on his return the first white settlement in the new world, naming the little town “Isabella” for the queen who had made the voyage of discovery possible. On this second trip Columbus brought with him to this magic isle a great fleet bearing a large force of soldiers and adventurers. After defeating the natives the conquerors journeyed to the south coast and there laid the foundations of the city of Santo Domingo--first permanent city established by Europeans in America, for many years the most important outpost of western civilization and forerunner of the countless cities and villages that are the seats today of the industry, commerce and culture of the three Americas.&#13;
&#13;
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A MUSICAL ADVENTURE FOR AMERICA&#13;
&#13;
   Newspaper dispatches state that there is a plan afoot to have a national carillon at Washington, D. C., as a tribute to the soldier dead.&#13;
   Contact with the men and women of Flanders has directed American attention to one kind music, vital in the national lives of these people, which cannot eve be heard in this country.&#13;
   A carillon is made up of a set of tower bells attuned to the intervals of the chromatic scale, usually covering a range of four octaves. To attain such a range the bell producing the lowest note must weigh several tons, while the smallest weighs scarcely twenty pounds. The bells are connected to a keyboard or to a clockwork mechanism which causes their clappers to strike.&#13;
   Producing music from the bells requires great skill and dexterity on the part of the bellmaster for he must use his feet for the larger bells and the muscles of both his wrists and elbow are brought into play in producing the tremolando effect usually given. A fine carillon is not the result of a chance molding of metal but its making is as much as achievement wrought by a wise combination of excellent material and deep thought as a Stradivarius. Lovers of carillon music compare the tones to those of a pianoforte in delicacy and to an organ in majesty. When touched by the hand of a master like Denyn, the wizard of Malines, the music seems to come veritably from the heavens and to settle in peace and benediction over the surrounding country.&#13;
   From the even rows of red-topped roofs and the trees of the surrounding level spaces in Malines the immense flat-topped Gothic spire of St. Rombauld once arose. The cathedral dated from the thirteenth century and has for hundreds of years been known the world over for the remarkable silvery quality of its bells. So much attention had been given to making it the best of its kind that its bell makers gained wide reputations and the town itself became the headquarters of bell founding.&#13;
   The tower, vast and mysterious against the luminous sky, seemed to dominate the city. While compelling the attention is stirred the imagination as it kept watch over Malines and tolled the passing of the hours with its hugest bell. When not attached to the wonderful mechanism that controlled the ringing of the carillon, this bell required eight men to ring it. The range of the bells of this carillon was great enough to admit of many difficult operatic selections. Today the majestic tower mingles its dust with that of the ruined city over which it had for centuries guarded.&#13;
   The carillon of Antwerp possessed the greatest number of bells of any in Flanders--sixty five. It has been said that from the cathedral tower on a clear morning 126 carillons could be heard.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
A raid conducted by prohibition enforcement officers on Garcia’s restaurant in Tampa, Friday morning, brought 250 quarts of contraband stuff valued at about $3,000 and the arrest of the proprietor of the restaurant, M. F. Lopez. He is charged with violation of the Volstead act.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
CHANDLER CARS – FRANKLIN CARS. “WE GIVE YOU SERVICE—ASK ANYBODY”&#13;
WIGHT TIRE CO. Kelly-Springfield Tires. Diamond Tires.&#13;
----&#13;
Red Star Detroit Vaper Oil Store. Heaters of every kind.&#13;
Our prices are right. Hill Hardware company.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Cartoon for advertisement: Art of 2 ladies in dresses arguing. 1 has a baby carriage and the other a doll.&#13;
&#13;
What Settled the Argument&#13;
“We have Bwussels carpet.”&#13;
“We have lace curtains.”&#13;
“We have Fwench mirrors.”&#13;
“We have Butter-Nut Bread every day!”&#13;
And that settled it, for of course there’s nothing better than&#13;
&#13;
The New Butter-Nut Bread has all the quality of the old Butter-Nut; we could not improve that. But in addition we’ve perfected a new mixing process which enables us to turn out a lighter, daintier loaf than ever. Get a loaf today, for Butter-Nut is its own best advocate. At all good grocers. The genuine bears the Butter-Nut label.&#13;
Miller’s Bakery.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Co-operation, Accommodation, Friendly Assistance and worth while advice--this is part of the constructive service which this bank renders.&#13;
&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
F.P. Forster, President. B.F. Whiter, Cashier.&#13;
----&#13;
City Market&#13;
Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props. Welaka Building.&#13;
&#13;
Specials for Today – &#13;
Choice Western and Florida Meats. Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage.&#13;
City Market.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
NOW MAKING Pecan Nut Roll. Fresh Daily. $1.00 Pound.&#13;
Water’s Kandy Kitchen.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH 1c.    &#13;
Page Five		The Sanford Daily Herald, Tuesday, November 16, 1920.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
----&#13;
In and About the City&#13;
Little Happenings - Mention of Matters in Brief - Personal Items of Interest.&#13;
Summary of the Floating Small Talks Succinctly Arranged for Herald Readers.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
H. C. Waters has installed a fine pop corn and peanut machine to his Candy Kitchen.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Pipe organ recital at the Presbyterian church tonight. Everybody invited. Admission free.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
H. D. Hearn, representing the Fox Pictures Incorporation, is in the city in the interest of his company.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
T. O. Brown, of Orlando, was in the city today. He is one of the traveling salesmen of the C. W. Zaring Co.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Several cars of lettuce were shipped yesterday despite the rain and should the weather clear today there will be quite a big movement on this week.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Mrs. P. T. Wakefield, of Geneva, was in the city today getting everything arranged for the display of jellies and preserves at the Women’s Club tomorrow afternoon.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Hunting season opens next Saturday. Sanford stores are all ready for the hunters with large stocks of ammunition and guns and hunting togs of all kinds. Get ready for the big day.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
H. C. Gerror was in the city yesterday a guest of the Seminole and his many friends here were glad to see him again. He is now traveling engineer on the A. C. L. and has headquarters in Jacksonville.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
The Red Cross meeting that was to have been held last night at the Presbyterian church was postponed until tonight on account of the rain and will be held tonight at the church immediately after the organ recital.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Miss Bertha M. Foster, of the Jacksonville School of Musical Arts has arrived in the city and will give an organ recital at the Presbyterian church tonight to which everyone is invited. No admission will be charged for this recital and the music lovers of Sanford are promised a treat.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
A. W. Hutson, general manager of the Southern Utilities Co., with headquarters in Palatka, has been in the city several days of this week and is well satisfied with the progress of the reconstruction work going on at the plant. When finished the ice, water and electric plants here will be among the best in the state.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
E. A. Jewett, representing the Robert E. Ward Advertising Agency of New York and Chicago, was in the city today the guest of the Herald. The Ward Agency has a select list of dailies in Florida of which the Herald is one and the agency is getting some important information regarding the state and its resources with the view of issuing a booklet for the national advertisers and Sanford will be put on the map in big letters.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
The Seminole Hotel is having a number of large signs painted to place at the cross roads calling attention to the fact that the Seminole Hotel is open and ready to take care of the tourists and commercial men this season. The Seminole is going after the business with a generous advertising budget and believes in advertising of all kinds that will not only help the hotel but help the town. Their patriotic menu printed in red, white and blue on Armistice Day was a work of art and was commented by all who saw it.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Oren Stenstrom is having the room recently occupied by the City Market cleaned up and put in first class shape for the new opening of a new cash and carry store. Oran has many friends here who will be glad to hear the announcement that he is going in for himself. Watch the Herald for the opening announcements.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Sparks Circus next Tuesday, the picture shows and the famous Melville players all week will keep Sanford amusement lovers busy next week, Watch the Herald for announcements.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
The “13” Club met at the Seminole Hotel today and transacted much business of importance and also partook of a most tempting dinner at this famous hostelry. The Seminole is installing telephones in every room thus adding much to the convenience of the guests.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Emmett Hunt has established a brokerage business in this city and will buy and sell and ship Florida fruits and vegetables. Emmitt is an experienced vegetable broker and in coming back to Sanford is coming back to his first love as he was located here in the vegetable business when the war called him to the colors.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
ELECTION RIOTS GREEK TROOPS FIRE ON MOB&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
ATHENS, Nov. 16 –&#13;
Troops fired on several groups of after election trouble makers today. Fear of further trouble and there is danger that the army may get out of hand.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
POSTOFFICE CLERK ARRESTED FOR ROBBERY&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
HENDERSON, N. C., Nov. 16.&#13;
&#13;
L. V. Graves, postoffice clerk, was arrested today charged with robbing the malls of over $18,000, part of which, authorities said, was found in an extra tire on his automobile.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
ELECTION CONTESTS REPRESENTATIVES SEATS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.&#13;
Notice of five contests for seats in the house of representatives have already been filed with the clerk of the house who said he expects fifteen contests.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
WEATHER REPORT&#13;
&#13;
For Florida: Rain this afternoon and tonight. Much cooler tonight and cold wave in North portion; temperature near freezing in the interior of North portion tonight. Wednesday fair and colder.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
REDUCED RATES TO JACKSONVILLE FOR STATE FAIR&#13;
JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 15.&#13;
&#13;
As customary, all transportation lines entering Jacksonville—through G. Z. Phillips, director of Transportation—have announced reduced round trip rates for the annual Florida State Fair and Exposition, which will be held here November 18 to 27.&#13;
  These rates—a fare and one-third for the round trip, are sufficiently low and attractive to please the most exacting prospective fair visitor, and are expected to be the incentive which will bring thousands of people to the big fall exposition, which, this year, assumes an importance far surpassing anything of previous years. The general admission to the Fair Grounds will be 50 cents.&#13;
  In connection with the low rates, it is announced tickets will be on sale from all Florida points to Jacksonville on November 17, 19, 21, 23 and 25.&#13;
  In addition, the same reduced rates will be in effect—within a redium of 100 miles of Jacksonville—-on November 18, 20, 22, 24, and 26. These tickers will be good on trains arriving in Jacksonville before noon on November 27.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Demonstration of Florida Fruit juices at the Women’s Club Wednesday afternoon. Wakefield products on sale.   190-3tc.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
SHREVE ATTENDS HOTEL MEETING IN JACKSONVILLE&#13;
&#13;
E. C. Schreve, Jr., of the Valdez Hotel just returned from Jacksonville where he attended the first convention of the Florida Greeters Charter No, 47, Greeters of America, the largest hotelmen’s organization in the world and the only one operating nationally. Mr. Shreve has conducted the organization of the Florida charter with the assistance of E. T. Cruise, of the Aragon Hotel, of Jacksonville.&#13;
  Shreve feels highly elated over the fact that this being his first year in Florida and then to have them elect him as their president.&#13;
  The following personnel of officers will control the affairs for one year: E. C. Shreve, Jr., president, Hotel Valdez, Sanford; C. E. Young, first vice-president, prop. Hotel Monson, St. Augustine; H. S. Eveleth, second vice-president, manager Hotel McKinnon, Miami; E. T. Cruise, secretary and treasurer, clerk Hotel Aragon, Jacksonville. Board of Governors: E. C. Saheve, Jr., chairman; W. A. Nelson, asst. manager Hotel Windle, Jacksonville; Theo. C. Brooks, manager College Arms, DeLand; Chas. A. Pelot, clerk Hotel Jackson, Jacksonville; R. L. Cobb, clerk Hotel Windsor, Jacksonville; J. B. Rector, Jacksonville, sargeant-at-arms.&#13;
  The convention was held in the University rooms of the Aragon Hotel and was attended by members from all over the state as well as several visiting members from nearby states. The Greeter national convention will be held in New Orleans in June next and Florida will be represented by eight delegates and as the membership grows will be entitled to more representatives at the big doings.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
ON THE MILK SUPPLY&#13;
&#13;
  I wish to state to the public that I have personally investigated our present milk supply in Sanford; I have been present during the milking and bottling of the morning’s milk which the firm of Walthall &amp; Estridge are delivering to the public and that it meets with the requirements of the rules and regulations of the State Board of Health. They have agreed to stamp each and every bottle of milk delivered by them with the name of the dairy and the time of milking and bottling, so that the public may know the age and the dairy of the milk they are getting. They have also agreed that at five o’clock each morning, the night-before milk will be delivered to customers who do not prefer morning’s milk and wish milk earlier than it is possible to deliver the morning milk, the delivery of the morning milk to be made not later than 7:30 a.m.&#13;
  At the present price of milk, I do not believe, for the value received, that we can equal it in food value with any other class of food that we can buy and I would urge the public in general, to rally to the support of our dairies who are complying with the state rules and regulations, that it may be put on a paying basis because it is an essential food supply of our city, as there are many babies, children and invalids who cannot live upon any other class of food.&#13;
   DR. J. T. DENTON.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
VALDEZ GRILL OPEN AT NIGHT&#13;
The many patrons of the Valdez Hotel grill will be pleased to learn that the management has decided to keep the grill open at night until 1 o’clock.     87-6tc&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Cooked Food Sale, Welfare department, Women’s Club, Wednesday afternoon. 190-3tc.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
AT THE STAR THEATRE TODAY&#13;
BILLY BURKE in “AWAY GOES PRUDENCE”&#13;
and “PROFITEERING BLUES” a comedy.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Logical Treatment “ENERGIZER” For Many Human Ills.&#13;
&#13;
  We hold this to be a Truth:-viz:- That circulation is the BASIC factor of Human Health.&#13;
  The “Energizer” process will DO MORE Benefit to Any Adult’s general condition than any other method known.&#13;
COME IN and talk it over.&#13;
&#13;
108 Park Ave., Next Door to Mobley’s Drug Store.&#13;
L. C. Cameron. Box 399, Sanford, Fla. Phone 184.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
Just Received&#13;
&#13;
Large Shipment of Shoes Bought on Lowest Market &#13;
Come see ‘em&#13;
&#13;
Perkins &amp; Britt.   The Store That Is Different.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY.&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under which this institution has been managed since the first day the doors were opened.&#13;
&#13;
 That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the constant and gratifying growth in business.&#13;
&#13;
 It is the desire of the officers of the Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals desiring most efficient and responsible banking.&#13;
&#13;
On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your patronage is invited.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
Is owned, controlled and managed by home people, who are interested in the development and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County.&#13;
&#13;
 With our large resources and strong financial connections, we are in position to assist our customers at all times in the handling of their financial needs. &#13;
LET US SERVE YOU.&#13;
 4 Per Cent Interest Paid.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
White &amp; Wyckoff’s Superb Stationery&#13;
&#13;
THE HERALD’S office supply department has just received a large and complete line of this beautiful stationary--no two boxes alike--and we will print any monogram on paper (or cards) and envelopes--in one, two or three colors.&#13;
&#13;
An Ideal and Inexpensive Christmas Gift.&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS – 1C A WORD.&#13;
&#13;
-------------------   END OF DOCUMENT&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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DAILY HERALD

IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION

NUUMUER 193

8ANFORD, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17, 1920

VOLUME 1

Education for Disabled Ex-Soldiers

BIG TEXTILE MILLS ARE .
CLOSING DOWN FACTORIES
PRODUCTION IS LOWERED
New England. Catting More
Than Half

ORANGES NOW
MOVING FROM
SANFORD
CHASE &amp; COMPANY OPEN PACK­
ING HOUSES WITH RIG
CROP OF FRUIT.

CONSTANTINE KING
IN GREECE AND
EXPECT HIM RACK

(By Th, A***cl*t*4 Pra**)
ATHENS, Nov. 17.—“Constantine
is our rightful king,” former Premier
Gaunnris, leader of the successful
party In the elections told correspond­
many o f t h e
m il l s h a v e ents. “We expect him back as soon
CLOSED ENTIRELY—SOME
ns plebiscite shows people wapt him."
WORK nA L F TIME
ATHENS, Nov. 17.—Former Prem­
. •
(V r Tk» A iiO fU U d Fr»«i.)
ier
Rhnllis formed a now cabinet suc­
BOSTON, Nov. 17.—The total pro­
ceeding Venlzelos' government.
action la leas than half that of a
jut ago In the New England textile
bdustriea employing 300,000- opera­ TEN MINERS RESCUED
FROM. BURNING MINE
te s , according to an estimate from
a canvass of mill centers. Some mills
(By Tka AuscUUC Praia)
u t curtailed as high ns 80 per cent,
EARLINGTON, Ky., Nov. 17.—Ten
others are closed entirely, and the ma­ miners were rescued from the burn­
jority have adopted n shorter working ing Arnold coal mine near hete to­
schedule.
day. The bodies of five others have
been rescued, one other person is
VEILED THREAT
. missing. A tunnel was dug around
STATE DEPARTMENT
the lire which shut off the single en­
NOTE ON TELEGRAPH CO.
try. The men have been entrapped
twenty-four hours.
(By Tk* Am#cI*»*4 Bum.)
WASHINGTON, Noy. 17.—A veiled
threat Is contained In a formal state- BANDITS bOIl.ED
ment of the State Department that
IN A TIEMPTED ROBBERY
permits for the landing of the West- \
^ I ^ T , d r„ .. i
era Union cable, in the United States
n.-D u n d its atwill
be
revoked
unless
the
company
•
wui ue
v
tempU-d hold up and rob Union Pa. • p|| BM8nRcr .trnln
# %
__ Unlay,
continues to accord
accom tho
» » American e|fk
hcrc
government the same privileges as
»
trnjD but w# drlvcn off
other governments in handling cable ' ^ ^
^
^
# ^ ^
messages.
*
............................
and later derailed the following train.

Chase A Company, of this city, are
not only the largest growers, pack­
ers and shippers of fruita and vege­
tables in the other sections of Florid/
but they have threo largo packing
houses here all built of Lrick and
having the latest and moat improved
These discharged. dfsabliil soldiers ure tmdduloi: &lt;ch«wd learning with lawpltul treatment. During a short machinery in them. This enterprising
petlml each day they utteiid tin* classroom of the selnmt on the United Slates public health service n*servatlon at firm recently built one of the finest
I'erryvllle. Md.. They ure be'ng ‘aught to read and write English. Uncle Sam la n great believer In education In the
and most complete office building*
making of good citizens.
,
,
and warehouse adjunct in tho statu
at the comer of Second street ann
Oak.avenue and have recently moved
SPANISH STEAMER
into their new quarters.
•
MSVRES9 OFF
Mr. and Mrs. Sweet, who were with
JERSEY COAST
the mail order department last sea­
(By Tk* AraociiUJ Bt***)
son, have arrived in the city to take
NEW YORK, Nov 17—The Span­ charge ngnin nnd brought Mias Geor­
ish steamer Yute, bound for Dunkirk gia Poulson, of Montpelier, and Miss
from Baltimore, called for help off Gladys Doster, of Muncic, Indiana,
the New Jersey coast today,
with them and all of them will be
in the mall order department of the
BOLSHEVIKS SWEEP
Chnso Co. This part. of tho business
UKRAINIANS OFF MAP has grown to large proportions with
the irrepressible Toni Jones (late of
OLD MAN VILLA
IBy Tk* At*ocUt»4 Pra**.)
London) taking care of the outside
SETTLES DOWN ON FARM
WARSAW, Nov. 17—The Bolshe­
IN LOWER CALIFORNIA vik cavalry swept through the Uk- mail cyder packing nnd shipping and
rainian lines today nnd the Ukrainians "together with the picking, packing
( D j Th# AmsociatfJ P» b*»)
and shipping of ornnges and vege­
SAN DIEGO, Calif., Nov. 17.— fleeing evacuating Kiev nnd all other tables in enr lots all over Florldn
TUDEC Rif! NATIONS Villa «* "ported at the head of a big towns held.
keeps the office forces "of Chase &amp;
1H U L L
D l U l l i a l l V y l a t / colonizing scheme in Lower Califor­
Co., here nnd at other polntn busy.
nia with fifteen hundred men fnrmlng
Sanford is fortunate In being mado
WOULD BF. AMPLE PROTECTION with modem' machinery. It is believ­
the headquarters of this large fire*.
AGAINST THE
ed he was settled in Chihuahua on
Already the business of pncklng or­
WORLD.
land given him by the government.
anges has commenced hcrc nnd Will
Lcfflef, the ubiquitous head of tho
PRESIDENT WILSON
(By Tk* Ano&lt;i«ty1 P r a t t )
HARDING LEAVES
SENDS MESSAGE TO
office
force, reports that more or­
NORFOLK, Nov. 17— Bishop Her­
Bm
SECLUDED RETREAT
.
LEAGUE OF NATIONS
anges are being packed and shipped
bert D. Bur)', of North nnd-Central
MAY STOP IN MEXICO
nt this time of the year thnn ever beEurope, addressing the Episcopal Sy­
(By Tk* AuocUt*! Br*»il
I
DO
NOT
FAVOR
A
"FARMERS
fore nnd they are bringing good pric(By
Tk*
AtiacUUd
Pr*i*.)
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17— Presl-1
nod of the province of -Washington in
es.
In fact the Chase packing house*
STRIKE"
BUT
THINK
THEY
BROWNSVILLE,
Tex.,
Nov.
17—
dent Wilson sent a message to the ■
session here today, declared that the
here
hnvc already started up with a
SHOULD HAVE BETTER
president of tho League of Nations league of Nations will not be neces­ President-elect Harding is on his way ;
large
force of packers and the season
PRICE
assembly nnd expressing "hope and
sary when Russia is put on her feet todny to New Orleans where he will
has
commenced
with the brightest of
belief that their Inborn will be of im- !
nnd stands together with America nnd board n ship for Panama. He is ex­
prospects.
This
Is only one of the(B
y
T
b*
At»o&lt;l»Wil
Tr***)
sense value to the whole civilized WILL HE IN MINORITY AND England, beenuse three great nntions pected to decide today whether he
many
big
firms
here
that arc doing a
WILL HAVE ROYAL BAT­
CHICAGO, Nov. 17— While not
united would Ik * .strong enough to will nccept an invitation to visit Mex­
world."
big
business
in
Florida
fruits ami
TLE ON BILLS.
I &gt;rM
ico. His ship may be ordered stopped favoring n grain “strike" for nny set
keep tho peace of the world.
price,
sentiment
among
organized
farj
vegetables
and
that
have
the
faith or
NO CORPORATION
nt Vera Cruz.
___________
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17— Wuah- many Democrats getting tho axe. In
mers in the great agricultural states (their convictions in Sanford and FlorWILL DELIVER
RECOG
N1TION TO MEXICO ington N alive with interesting gos South Carolina, with changes in three WITNESSES DIRECT
of the middle wrst runs strongly to-jida so ktrong that they are building
, _____
yip concerning what the Democrats districts, where W. Turner will suc­
wan! holding back grain ns fur as for the future,
FROM IRELAND
(By Tk* A»*o«uud Br***-)
jn c onfrrt.gI, will do nt the beginning ceed R S- Whaley in the First, John
WILL TESTIFY practicable for better prices, nccord- j
WASHINGTON,
pfI II1C
|hp CXini
cxtrn Brnamn,
BeBsion&gt; which,
in nil
• v*’' Nov.
--- 17— No cor- O
"•
J. McSwain succeeding Sam J. Niching to ennvass made here. This sur- C*
fA n im n y m o I
bnb|,ity| will
wjh be called
caller for nbuut olls in the Fourth, nnd II. P. Fulmer
foration, no group of corporations and nrrl^nbj|j,v
' f i t Tb* A u ^ U D d r r * i » )
,f
m ntinn-nt was taken by the II- 'uOUtllGril ^ 011111161X 131
vi
y
u
1
»1 is going “to deliver Am- Mnrrb , r,
co individual
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17—Witnesa- linois Agricultural Association.
taking the plnce of Erl. C. Munn in
fritsn recognition
Mexico,- stated
........
............... to
— -There’ is always more than the \ the Seventh, the last named members
direct from In*lnnd will be the
Reports were received by secretar­
authoritatively nt the State depart- UBUn| nmount of cloak-room talk when j win
will for
time bo
lor ua noiu
u- known
miuhii as "baby"
uuuy first to be heard by the commission |Q
uue rarm
ourrau federations
icuciaouu*
iesB 0j
of B
state
farm bureau
ment today.
j the names of such men ns Represen-1members. There is every reason-to from the committee of one hundred |n Missouri, Minnesota, South- DaWILL HOLD NEXT SESSION.. IX
“ Carolina, think, however, that nt least one of investigating conditions inIreland, fcotn, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Wlstntive Byrnes of‘ ~
South
WASHINGTON BEFORE
' Frank Clark of Floridn, Charley Crisp them, Mr. McSwain, will soon elevate whVh proposed no public henrings conijn nnd Kentucky. In no rases
INAUGURATION '
Jand othera of Georgia arc mentioned, himself from his congressional crib until tomorrow.
did n state federation report it had
p • |
and lhnt 11 wiU ** decidedly up to and proclnim himself n full-grown
-----------------------advised n “strike."
(D r Tk* A»**«l»t*4 Pra**.&gt;
Iri T a v QC S t i r k C these Democratic war horse* to d.» ( man and member, entitled to all the
Need
of
credit
'ncillties
to
enable
WASHINGTON,
Nov. 17. — The
GREEKS
ARK
WEARY
H I I C A a O U IIL IIO mon} thnn the ordinary ammin'. of '
rights, privileges, benefits nnd other
OF POLITICS AND WAR farmers to-hold their wheat if they Southern Commercial Congress will
--------- .
_ work in the next Congress.
emoluments incident nnd appertaining
want to was pointed out from sev­ hold its next convention in Washing­
POINT ISABEL IS AN OUT-ObIt is a good thing that such men ns to his membership in the House. These
/Djr Tb* A*%otU*fJ
eral slat* s. One state secretary to n in March immediately precedingTHE WAY .PLACE ON THE
Clark, Byrnes, Crisp nnd Claude three members must go to the foot of
ATHENS, Nov. 17— Venlzelos in wrote he wns “using the present con­ .the inauguration of President-elect
GULF COAST.
Kitchin, of North Cnrolinn, are to bo j the ladder so far us committee plnces said to have attributed his defent to ditions ns nn argument in favor of Harding. The congresss will cficusa
tBy Tk* _____
A**«cl*t*A Bra**)
on hand In the House with the defeat, are concerned,
but that
will not r-pro- weariness
of -politics the farmers getting into the big mar- a legislative program of tho United
........ ...............—
..................
- ........ - of the -people
POINT ISABEL, Tex., Nov. 17.—An of Champ Clark of Missouri, the pro- vent them from talking out in meet- and his opponents chnrges he was feting game In such n wny that they State Congress for Southern intetnajout-of-thc-way* place is the gulf motion of Tom Heflin to the Senate ' Ing whenever they get ready to do It putting. Greece In the hanis of forel)f #b,e ^ flnnnfe jt nnd to store ional problems nnd related internat­
coast resort where President-elect „nd the practically demolition gencr- —P. H. McGownq in Tlmes-Union.
l e n e r * . ________ J _______ 1considerable
considerable oil
oil the
the grain
grain as
ns ItIt isis ofof ional reconstruction.
Hsnling la recuperating from the.ally of the Democratic organization
fered.”
strain of the national campaign. For |n the House.
•
“The nttitude I have taken In the executive secretary, wrote. “As in­
communication
The Georgin
delegation will return
k v m in u iiiv a tiu ii with
nsw « the -outside
— ------- world
w
mnttrr is this," wrote II. D. Lute, of dividuals," he added, “all member*--of "
it depends upon n narrow gauge rail- to Washington for tho extra session
Lincoln, Nebr., secretary of the Ne­ our executive committee take the atroad to Brownsville, nnd automobile wRh not even a dent In the House
braska Farm Bureau Federation, tltude that where farmers can affdzdi
road, n few telegraph and telephone side, but with a big cavernous hole
thnt It is wrong to set an arbitrary (to hold wheat they should be a ir
lints and the big government wireless made in the senate by the defeat of
price of $3 a bushel and that it Is means do so. This is on tho theoory
.US)
station through which came the firat Senator Hoke Smith. With Charley .
hardly advisable to ask the farmers j that present prices arc about as lowr
direct information on the Corpus crisp are Wise, Gordon Leo, Lanon,
to hold their wheat unless we arc In ns we can reasonably expect tbens to
Christl storm of September, 1919.
Wright and Overstreet and others
n position to help them on the finan­ go, Since we are not in a position to
Though onljl 20 miles from the busy who will be called upon to put on
cial nnd storage ends of the game. guarantee 13 wheat, we can hardly
Excuses for postponing your fall shopping are no longer In order.
border city of Brownsville, it Is like the battle armor from the very mo- ;
But I do tell the farmers that 1 be­ advise farmers to hold for $8-"
passing into a different country to ment the strife begins.
.
The Wisconsin Farm Bureau Fed­
lieve wheat will be higher and that It
It should be done now—a t once—before the holiday rush seta In.
make this 20-mlle trip. On the way
“Jimmie" Byrnes will load the
eration does not endorse “strikes” an
will
he
a
good
thing
to
hold
it
if
they
You can shop thoughtfully, leisurely and economically If you
lies a plantation act in palm trees, Democratic hosta on the painfully
a means of controlling the price of
are in a position to do so.”
shop now. But If you wait until the Christmas rush aeta in,
with thatched palm huU of Mexican evident “minority” side of the House
Writing that the South Dakota farm products, wrote Secretary C. Alaborers, which is more suggestive of chamber for the men from the Palyou must buy hastily and inefficiently, and therefore extravag
Farm Bureau Federation “does not Peters, of Rosendale, Wls. “Accord­
the Philippines than of anything else- metto state and Frank) Clark, old
believe
a ‘wheatatrike* necessary or ing to the present situation in regard
antly.
—
where in the United States. Beyond seasoned war horse that he It, will
desirable for the country',-” Secretary to wheat we believe that the low pric­
the planted area come great flat* and take care of Florida*! interests. In
P. J. Crandall,’ of Huron said, “oqr es are unjustlfiablo and that it would
Shop now. Make a list of all that the family will need—heavier
•ome low rolling hills, on which the .this connection it is also Interesting
method of handling the situation la to be good business policy for the farm­
clothes for the cooler weatthjr, new shoes, new hits, that new
sky reveals here and there the straight to note that when the amoke of battle
furnish farmers with accurate In­ ers to discontinue heavy marketing
furniture you have been d'.tcusalng, linen and silverware for
lentinel-llke Spanish dagger. Hurry has cleared away and It Is aacertalnformation regarding the wheat mar­ and allow the market to adjust it­
or worry is unthinkable In the lniy ed reliably who Is elected end who Is
bed and table.
ket to help them in determining what self”
•nd almost perpetual sunshino of this not, that all the members of the deleFrom Iowa, E. H. Cunningham, of
nctlon Is best for their needs. The
tHlon.
gatlons from the states have moved
These you will find now In plea ring selections on the shelves and
fanners will hold their wheat off the Ames, secretary of the Iowa Farm
On its outer edge lies' Point Isabel, up the ladder. There la poaalbly an
market without n doubt if they are Bureau Federation, wrote, “We realcounters of the local stores—fresh fall stock at the new lower
• fishing village, with the always pic- exception to be noted In the case of
able
to get credit which will allow ^ze that it is the n\o*t difficult thing
prices that please us all. ,
toresque complement of Mexican pop- Mr. Clark, Inasmuch as he was chairthem to carry their products. The ‘to hold grain and we do not recomulation to be found In this extreme man' of the House committee on
credit situation Is the key to the !mend that It be held to arbitrarily
Make up your list now—and b) sure to look for suggestions and
corner of the United States. Ailong buildings and grounds when the Demwhole matter. We aro advising that .force prices to unreasonable height.
*ooden pier run* out Into the water ocrata were in control of the House,
prices In (ha advertisement*
its In th
the? Dally Herald. It is always
■t ---------situation warrants
the world wheat
---------- -| Of
— course
------- we have no
, credit
----- system
.
like a finger and the town extends and U now “ranking Democrat" on all
Well to read the ads befors shopping, and they will be found
holding of the crop If credit allows! whereby we can hold all the grains of
along the shore at right angles to this important committees to which he
and using our best efforts to help the country, but wa are advising our
particularly helpful now.
finger. Pailre Island, a strip of sand wishes to belong,
farmers to slow down in marketing
bring financial irHe'.
danesft with trees here and there,
It will also be ascertained that the
Officially the Missouri Farm Bu­ for the present until this period of de­
The season of heavy fall buying really begins tomorrow.
lies in front of Point Isabel, forming other members of the delegation from
.
*
.
: .
•
*
reau Federation has made no recom­ moralization In price* has somewhat
your selections early.
the lagoon which the town faces. To Florad—Drane, Sears and Smithwlck
.
mendation, A. J. Meyer, at Columbia, recovered."
(Continued on page &amp;)
—have moved up as the result of so

CURTAIL BIG PER. CT.

LEAGUE OF NATIONS IS
UNNECESSARY IF RUSSIA
COULD STAND ON FEET
Says the Bishop of Episcopal
Synod at Norfolk

FARMERS MAY HOLD
THEIR WHEAT CROP
NO GRAIN ‘STRIKE’

DEMOCRATS IN
NEXT CONGRESS
MUST FIGHT

Congress to Meet

Harding Rusticating

D o Y o u r F a ll S h o e in g
H o U ay

ore

j

'

'

- - V

• '
* .5

m

I M
'

Mif-V

'I, --

-

�F FLORIDA I
BIG PRODUCERS

Please Phone
Your Orders

To Prove Tlieir Prowess at State Fair.

Jacksonville.—Over lf5,000 boys and dube, calf dubs, boys’ Judging contest
hver 76,000 girls are engaged In Boys’ and girls’ canning dubs.
and 0 Iris’ Club work In the South. It Is not so much to the present as
They produced more than six million to tbe coming generation that Florida
dollars’ . worth of products last year: must look for tbe reallsatluu of her
A pretty good record.
fond hopes for future development sud
One of the means of furthering this pr egress. It Is, thorefore, of tbe ut­
work Is the encouragement offered most Importance that boys and girls
boys and girls by the Vlorlda Slate be given advantages tbit wme denied
Fair, to be held this year at Jackson­ tbe past, and to s certain extent tho
ville. Nov. IS-17.
present generation.
A department has been eet aside for Tbs 8tate Fair Is encouraging them
the boys* and girls’ efub work and lib­ through material reward and honorary
eral premium! are offered. These con­
sist of cash and ribbons and are otter­ mention to greater effort In tbe pro­
ed for the beet displays by the boys duction of better crops, better liraand girls poultry clubs of* Florida, stock and better food. Help tbe n u r.
boys’ corn dubs, peanut dubs, pig | boost tbe boys and girls. •
•

CHINESE

KILL

Classified advertisements, 5 cents s line. No ad tqken for 1«
2S cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone.
moat accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit ac
rordingly.
'
• ,
*

----- For----•
THANKSGIVING (TURKEY
Everything for Your Fruit Cake

WANTED
H. P. and 2Yi H. P.
*. Brand new and
WANTED—House or apartmenTor 3
on.—Herald Printor f rooms, unfurnished, for man
and wife with two school children.
Special reduction on Georgette Silk
Best of references. See or write, G. and
cotton shirt wrflsts.—A. Kanncr,
B. &amp;, job dept.. Herald office, dh-tf
'Buy your post cards at the Hermit
We have jus* received a line of
office.
silverware and casseroles.—A. Ban­
ner, 215-15 Sanford Ave.
Phone
WANTED—Ti
168-tfe
M. Hanson Shoe Shop.
189-60tp FOR SALE—One horse, wagon and
WAITED—Your old batteries to re­
harness. Apply ,U . Hanson Shoe
build. Let us make your starting Shop.
189-12tp
and lighting a pleasure. We are au­
our line of electrical lampH.—
thorized "EXIDE" dealers and have A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Avenue.
166-tfc
a Battery for all makes automobiles. Phone 650.________ •»
“EXIDE, the Giant that lives in a PLANTS FOR SALE-Cabbage per
&gt;ox."—Ray Bros. Phone 548, old
1000, $1.50; Cauliflower, Handers
Ford Garage.
179-tfc Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B.
—Get your Scratch Pads from The B., per M, $1.50; Ice Berg, per M,
Icrnld—bythe^ pound—15c.
$1-00; beets, Crosby’s Egyptlsn, per
WANTED—Brick and cement work, M, $1.50; Onion, yellow Bermuds, per
chimneys, flues, piers, cement M, $1.50; onions, white Bermuds, per
loots, sidewalks. — A. L. Ray, 208 M, $1.50; Celery, yellow golden, per
’ark Ave.
_______ 173-30tp M, $2.00; Self-bleaching imported
1VANTED—Pupils, Violin and Piano. celery, per M, $2.00; French celery
—Ruby Roy, 208 Park Arts.
seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.00.—
175-20t-p Clay County Gardening Co., Green
.
11-12
Bay .your post cards at the Herald Cove Springs, Fla.
flee. Beautiful viewsf 1c each.
•Git 8 ALE—1\'j If. P. and 2^ H. K The twenty-sixth annual conven­
Gasoline engines. Brand new sad
n perfect condition-—Herald Print- tion of the State Federation of Wom­
an’s Clubs will be held in the city of
Tallahassee, November 16th to 20th.
YtfR RENT

LEMON PEEL

FOR RENT—One nicely furnished
room, 320 Onk Ave. Phone 308-J.
Captives Are Shot to Death With
’
‘ .
187-tfc
•
• Revolvers.
TO RENT or for sale, large ware­
house with railroad siding.—Chas.
United States Citizens Far Away
Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co.
Enthusiasts Members of the First Make Victims Dig Graves, Then ___ _____________________ 156-tic
FURNISHED ROOMS—Two furnish'
Execute Them for the
“ Fourteenth” Division.
cd bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park
Bolshevlkl.
t(: Among tbe moat enthusiastic and
eoergetJc members of tbe American
Red Croat are those rltlseci of the
Halted States who live outside tbe
eontlnrntal bonndartea of tbelr country
—eons and daughters of tbe Start and
Ittripea residing at tbe far corners of

Amsterdam.—The correspondent of
the Handelshlad. who recently re­
turned from n trip In soviet Rossis,
gives the following account of his In­
vestigations of the activities of the
Chinese employed there by the bol­
shevlkl ns executioner*.
**8urh horrible stories were being
told In Europe about these Chinese
that I thought It worth my while to
loam more about them. As a joke, I
asked everyone who asked my opinion
of tbe bolshevlkl to show me seme
’real man-killing Chinese,’ but I always
was told they couldn't produce any
Just now because they had all gone to
the Denlklne front
**l was told the Chinese. If com­
manded by their own officers were ex­
cellent soldiers, hut they ran like hares
If their officers were killed. Execu­
tions are now very rare In Moscow,
hut. In August, when thousands of
counter-revolutionaries were slough-

These people compose tbe Insular
and Foreign Division of the parent or­
ganisation, generally known aa the
"Fourteenth" Division, which has
Jurisdiction ef all territory outside
tbe country proper; that Is, Alaska.
Porto Rico, Hawaii.' VtrgliPlelanda, the
Philippines, Guam, and even the Is­
land of Yap, which came' under our
Rag as a result of tbe world war. For
tbe year 1020 this division reported
•0.806 paid op members.
Tbe main object af this division ta
8a give our citizen* everywhere tbe op­
portunity to participate la tbe work
•f tbe organisation which atanda for
tbe bast national Ideala American!
*■| fnr places Intensely loyal and pa­
triotic, tree sura their membership In
tbe Red Cross as the eutward ex­
pression of tbelr ritlseoahlp. It la so­
other tie to the homeland and to ,
qach other. There are chapters of
Ibis division In Argentine. Bolivia, are ordered to perform. They are
pratil, Qanal tooe. Chile, China, Coats blind, conscienceless tools In the hands
Rica. Cuba, Dominican Republic, of the men who feed them and pay
Ecuador, England. Franca, Ounce, them nnd who raised them from the
Qaalemala, Haiti, Hawaii, Honduran, position of coolies In which they came
Japan, Manchuria, Netbarlanda, Nica­ to Russia to the rani of soldier, of
ragua, Paraguay, Peru. Philippine s. the guards.
*
“If thg *hottsJak' (h'ls name for bol­
shevik) order* something, the Chinese
does If. nnd he does It In his typically
practical way. He first makea the vietlm dig Ida own grave and then shoots
him with his revolver. He la not cruel
about It. jn«t practical.
"When holtsjak says kill, then he
kills with nn unperturbed face. And
when holtsjak says, ‘Ton may atop
now.’ with the same cool face he lets
bis victim go."
The correspondent after some week*
In Russia left when he ,« u refused
permission to. make Investigations
Notice of Application for Tax Deed
Under Section 575 of the
General Statutes.
Notice is hereby given that George
Iz/ib? ^ r ^ r^ ° ,'n B' r ^ nr!Bf* IllMurphy’ Purch“ «r of Tax Certifi«L
C*te No* 1808'
tb' ™ *** of
June, A. D. 1901, has filed said cer, . . '
tificate in my office, and has made
tvrrtn nTA'V s*aMi***r*r?w*um ** ” application for tax deed to issue in
£-***•**'■
atiam
accordance with Uw. Said certificate
Tv—n a n«rr. *• *i.
embraces the following described
T* i w i a. timer 1*4 •«!£ ni«w a tun. property situated in Seminole Counr arwvtn*. Xe» t«*. u t Jumm Utouna ty. Florida to-wit*
•
w*:
_ _
.
I Beg. 346 ft. N. and 424 ft- W. of
wi
BE. «,r. of NW H Of SWU of S « .
3 ,» Tp. 20 S^, R. SO
ran N 734 ft-,
MV Tart; tut r~. Umm Mrran- S i a W170 f t , S 734 f t , E 170 ft.
• r t : te a t «Wv* It m m

a

la te a S u i t mi t

S a id

GVG

brownjbugar

DATES'
. FIGS
SPICES offaJI kinds
MEW FLORIDA SYRUP
APPLES, 75c per Peek

Quick Lunch
Coffee 5c Sandwiches 10c
Piee, home made 10c cut
- Best Coffee in Sanford

Florida

Phone 66

A Trial Solicited

Pure Food Market
J. H. Tillis, Prop.
Phoae 105

MOW

l«Tv»* TIM*
Tto
S\JAic*j»n
Co m e in a n d s e e u s .
(Southern Seed Specialists),

Wekiwa Bldg.

402 Sanford Ave.

We Guarantee All

Sanford, Fla.

December 1st
On tbe first of each month
your rent is due.
Why give
other people your money. Buy
you a home and each month
instead of paying out rent
money, pay on a home that is
yours.
Beautiful homes on Park,
Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and
Myrtle
avenues,
Sanford
Heights. Building lota in any
location.

’OR SALE—Shasto daisies, $1 per
dozen. Fnglish Shamrock Oxnlys
0c per dozen. Ring 207-W. 183-12tc
Special reduction in men’s and laFor the convenience of the public
liea’ W. L. Douglas shoes.—A/ Kan-.
*r, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phono 650.. applications for registrations ^pf mo­
: tor vehicles for the year 1921 MAY
FOR SAI E—H i If. p. and 2ft If. P.
Gasoline engines. Brand new and: BE FILED NOW, if accompanied by
in perfect condition.—Herald Print-' remittance. THE 1921 TAGS WILL
inr Co.________________________tf ’ BE SENT OUT ABOUT THE MID­
New line of Congbleums and Art DLE OF DECEMBER for all appliSquares —A. Kanncr, 213-15 Sanford1 cations filed up to that time; and
Ave. Phone 550.
166-tfc
. thereafter as fast ns applications in
correct form reach this office.
I Before mailing your application
please see that all questions are an­
I swe red and your name and address is
printed or written plainly to avoid
errors. The law requires ypu to exe­
cute the application before a Notary
Public or tome officer using a seal.
Tags cannot be issued until a duly
executed application is filed in this
office.
Blanks may be secured from banka,
Justices of the Peace,' Notaries Pub­
lic, and County Officers, or. the
Comptroller.
ERNEST AMOS,
State Comptroller,
.
Tallahassee, Florida
ll-19-2t
.
BRADLEY MATTRESS FACTORY
/ Orlando, Fla.
Makes old Mattresses new at onethird tho cost of a nsw one.
PHONE 804
1 C BRYANT ST.
ll-1511mo-p

Sanford

Princess Theatre Bldg,

Seed, Our Business.
« Honesty, Our Motto.
Purity, Our Watch
word.

TV? MO OV hr .

oxouva ad m *vu\* pccoxjcso
pvjttwioa Ov evouevot \ ,

LOST—Western Union branch de­
posit book. Finder please return
to Western Union office.—J. P. Hail,
Mgr.
180-tfc

Expert Repair Work

RAISES^

We carry a choice lioe i t i H timet.

BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run
your battery until sho is entirely
dead. The battery is the costliest ac­
cessory tq your‘car. We re-charge
and rc-build all makes of batteries.
—Ray Bros.^ Phone 548, old Ford
Garage.
179-tfc

s.M rrn b r o t h e r s

CURRANTS

Daily Service

W nk vt$v4 &lt;wTT W vtmvovrv
NX OUOKT tO
GO

ORANGB PEEL '

E. F. L A N E

Every Battery repair we make is
guaranteed for alt months. We are
able to do this because in repairing
any make of battery we are licensed
to use patented features which hare
taa^e Vests batteries famous.

Sanford Battery Service Co.
I . A. RENAUD, Prop.

Phone 18$

CHULUOTA INN
Will Open S eason 1920-21 on

Thanksgiving Day
Turkey Dinner

The Real Estate Man"
»
ri* nr«so„(

EVERYTHING
25 lo 300 Watt in 110 Vohs.
20 tp 75 Watts in 32 Volts

From the Foundation

. Everything Electrical
Expert Installation and
•
Repair Work

G IL L O N &amp; F R Y
Phone 442

*115 Magnolia Ave.

Real Estate
• r*- *'

Q uality-Servicd-Price

Sanford

1

I Sell It
J.E.SPURLING

U n a b e in ^ U S ttte d i t th e

S T mIm
01 lh«
« rtm w a* uv u n m n. o m tw . m ■&gt;* cate in the name of Unknown. Unless
” ’T n '
mtJflcmt, ,b,U b . n f a i M i f .
s w a v s s s u a r k w c
•»
* “ * -*n u » ,
m Mae a raw Say a* ikia tw t.
thereon on the 22nd day of DecernH la fa rtM arOrM (Sal Ikla M tto W I
. n ,
Aina 11 m tka Iw M lt«r«U a tra ifu n *&gt;«r. A. D. 1920.
-T, . t Witness my official signature and
wttawa s. a. !&gt;**!»«. O rt i rum i sea] this the 12th day of November,
wrt ti*
n, | itomt. m &lt;Ua sz u *•; , n 1M.
fYiilir 1 . p. list.
.
A- u. lra).
r A. iM euI (SEAL)
K. A. DOUBLASS,
- :
rvik «* rvrmsi Oart.
I
* Clerk Circuit Court
a x.
°marr'
»
Seminole County, Fla.
MVtw aa« ftaawl fw CMplataaaL^
H-12-«tC By V. E. DOUGLASS, D. C. ’
Poit Cards at tbe Herald office, lc.

MISCELLANEOUS
ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week,
109 East First street, over Union
Pharmncy. &lt;
•
163-tfc
DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 San­
ford avenue, pay cash for furniture,
bedsteads, chairs, etc. What have
you?
174-30tc

MfCKIE SAY?

.

Office supplies at the Herald.

Is Yonr AUTO Insurance Heavy?
CUT OFF 5 0 PE* CENT. OF YOU* HEAVY LOAD
Buy your Fire, Theft. Collision. Liability or Property Damage laasrance at Actual Coat with

The Belt Auto Indemnity Association
-A*k J. B. Lawson. Chas. Kanncr, Dr. Langley about how The Belt
pays its Claims. Then call phone 46 or write Box 156 for rates. “It
will pay yon" to see

G. C. Fellows, Manager tor Sanford

GENERAL MACHINE AND BOIL­
ER WORK BRASS CASTINGS
GAS ENGINE REPAIRS
ACTBYLENB CUTTING AND
WELDING
Special machine for taming Auto
Crank Shafts and Crank Pins to
within .0005 accuracy.
IRRIGATION NIPPLES
PULLEYS and SHAFTINGS
ROUND AND SQUARE IRON

Saaferd’a Most Pop alar Hetel

SEMINOLEHOm u 4 GRILL
Under Management ef

• WALTER B. OLSON
Our Spedaltjr——Seminole’*
fam ous $1 Sunday Dinner
de luxe.
.

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THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOV. IT, 1920

PAGE TWO

Pipe Organ Recital
Presbyterian Church
MISS KATHRYN WILKEY, Editor.

Six Kinds of
%
f

Phone 428

^\H ave you* e v e r y paused to consider the safety of the bank
where you deposit your money?
The first consideration is the capital, which should be
ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank
is to serve.
The next question to consider is the officers in charge,
They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.
. Then' there is the question of confidence. The public
should have confidence in the officers and in the bank.
These three principles determine the success of a bank.
We adopted these principles in the outset of our career
and we expect to live up to this high sta n d a rd and increase
our usefulness to the community as the years go by.
We Offer You:

LARGE CROWD PRESENT TO
ENJOY AN EVENING OF
miles wide. The fishing is on both
SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR THE
MUSIC.
sides of the island. Redfish running
WEEK.
The pipe organ recital a t tho Pres- X
up
to
20
pounds
and
salt
water
trout
------ ' tWednesday—
which average three to six pounds are byterian church last night was atT
Wclfare Department of the Worn- ordinarily sought but, tho varieties of tended by a large crowd, the church
en’s Club.
[big fish within fisherman's distance pr°J»r and the gallery being filled'
Thursday—
’
'are almost endless. Wild turkeys and i w^^1 *be music lovers of the city and
Evcry-weck Bridge Club with Mrs. quail abound in the adjacent territory surrounding country. This Is the first y
and deer and javelin, or wildhog arc concert given in the church since the
Margaret Barnes.
numerous. Then there are the Mexl-,°***n
installed and under the v
T. N. T. with Mrs. J. B. Lawson.
can Hons, which are about the aixe o f . “Wilful fingers of Miss Foster the
Friday—
Spendthrift Club with Mrs. S. M. a large Newfoundland dog and. which orir*n was given a real test and re*
have fully as much courage as a jack- sponded to the touch of a master de­
Lloyd.
rabbit There are also leopard cats H atin g the audience in every numD. A. R. with Mrs. A. R. Key.
and bob-cats, jackrabbits and cotton b®r' The vocal selections of Miss
Mr .and Mrs. F. S. Dalguer were In tail rabbits.
(Mabel Bowler were also well received
Eustis Sunday.
Years sgo Point Isabel was visited as * general favorite who is always in
by many large vessels which served ^ ne ^orm *nd tbc entire concert was
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Key, Mrs. A. lower Texas and part of the north- “ groat success. Miss Foster* is from
D. Key and Mrs. Rice were guests of esstem section of Mexico. That was * e Jacksonville School of Musical
friends in Orlando Sunday.
before railroads connected the two Art and graciously consented to come
countries at Largo and before the
Sanford to give the concert In the
NNA
POLL
LUyVN
was
Grande
Valley,
now
famous
for
interest
of musical art and her cfLittle Miss RTOccca Stevens
1ST: LARGE CAPITAL AND WORKING RESERVE,
nt
the
Pollv
Anna
Club
Tueslta
truclt
gardens,
was
connected
with
,orla
wcre
hostess of Ike Poll, Aona.CIob Too, ^
^
^ ^
by ^ ^ appreciated
C„ W(J lto , as evidenced
hcr
2ND: TRAINED MEN IN CHARGE-MEN OF SEVERAL YEARS EXday afternoon. A very Jolly afternoon
night. The following program
.
PERIENCEwas passed in sewing, and games. De­ When the . St. Louis, Brownsville &amp;
Mexico railroad was constructed from wnB carried out:
licious refreshments were served.
3RD: THE CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBLIC, WHICH IS PROVEN BY
Houston to Brownsville, water trans­ 1.*-Amcric» Triumphant, from
THE DAILY ADDITION TO OUR L IN ^ OF DEPOSITORS.
the
"Pilgrim
Suite"---------Dunn
portation was greatly curtailed until
ST, AGNES GUILD.
2.
—The
Swan___Salnt-Saens
St. Agnes Guild met with Mrs. Ed. ( today it is almost negligible.
4TII: PROTECTION BY TWO EXAMINATIONS EACH YEAR BY THE
Uonc Monday afternoon. Thera were , Because of the town’s position on •&gt;3.—Morning Serenade_____Lemare j r
STATE HANKING DEPARTMENT, TWO AUDITS BACH YEAR
eleven members present who enjoy- j the Laguna Madrc and tho beautiful 4.—In Capulet's Garden..'___S tee re V
BY AN INDEPENDENT RECOGNIZED PUBLIC AUDIT COM­
—Gounod’s “0 Divine Redeem- j
ed a most pleasant nftemoon plan- sand bench on Padlc Inland, it was 5.
PANY AND TWO SWORN STATEMENTS SUBMITTED TO THE
cr” sung b y _____Miss Bowler
ning a dance and Christmas b a ia a r.1thought nt one time that Point IsaSTATE COMPTROLLER BY THE CASHIER, GIVING THE
A salad course was served during the ,hel would become a great winter re­ (5.—Gavette (dedicated to Miss
BANK’S CONDITION IN DETAIL, ALL OF WniCII INSURES
Foster) ________ . . . Campbell
sort, ami n commodious brick hotel
REGULAR, SYSTEMATIC AND THOROUGH OPERATION OF
afternoon.
—Evensong______ Johnston t
and numerous neat cottages were con­ 7.
V
*T
--THE BANK.
, ,
—Nuptial March _Guilmant J
structed. Difficulting in standardiz­ 8.
WILL HAVE TENT
5TII: THE ADVICE OF A COMPETENT BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
—Spring S o n g _Rollins t V
FOR METHODIST BAZAAR ing the narrow gauge railroad to 9.
WHO MEET WITH THE OFFICERS
REGULARLY
EACH
_____ Crawford
j Brownsville, however, hindered dove!- M.—Toccata _
MQNTn
AND
ADVISE
THEM
AS
TO
THE
OPERATION
OF
---------!
The ladies of tho Truth Seekers opment along these lines.
Demonstration
of
Florida
Fruit
THE
BANK.
Class of the Methodist church are not
juices at the Woman's Club Wednes- f
to be daunted by the fact thatfcthcrc fKEEP THE ) EGETABLK
6TH: INSURANCE OF ALL DEPOSITS EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR,
GARDEN
BUSY
day afternoon. Wakefield products
are no empty store rooms in Sanford (
THIS IS A PROTECTION NOT COMMONLY FOUND IN BANKS
190-.7tr
and wishing to hold their bazaar will ( During October and the first weeks 1on sale.
AND IS AN ABSOLUTE PROTECTION FOR YOUR FUNDS, IN
have a tent on the vacant lot on First of this month the weather has been Jards, onions, Dwarf Essex rape, cau- ?
ADDITION TO ALL THE OTHER USUAL SAFEGUARDS.
V
slroct where the mwf nrendo and dry nnd some of the garden crops liflower. The seeds of Carrots should Y
THESE ARE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD DO BUSINESS W ITn
apartment building will soon be erect- have suffered for moisture, especially i*. soaked for 12 hours before plant­ i
ed. Here they will have many pretty where water has not been available ing. Growing onions should be bank­
US. .AND WE BELIEVE THAT NO BANK CAN OFFER BETTER IN­
things for sale and on Saturday will for sprinkling. I,ack of rain can be ed, especially when desired for table T
DUCEMENTS.
have lunches and hot coffee for the remedied largely by stirring the soil use. This gives a long succulent
hungry as well ns something, upon with a rake constantly.
stem which makes the product more
which to feast the eyes. See their
A small quantity of commercial desirable and which cannot be had
advertisement iri this issue.
fertilizer should bo used to give the if no bleocing is done.
?
growing crops n boost and to keep
If frost threatens, the more sucHARDING RUSTICATING
them growing. A bone compound tulent plants should lie covered durWE WANT YOUR BUSINESS
IN TEXAS STICKS fertilizer* is recommended, Vegetables jnK the night. The covering should Y
❖
are stunted and hardened by al­ always l&gt;e removed during the day.
(Continued from page one)
lowing their growth to become check­
Experience teaches that no, area of
the north this slender island extends ed. High quality vegetable depend soil is more productive than is the
virtually unbroken for nearly 100 largely, on the cultivation of the soil vegetable garden^. There should be
miles. Its southern extremity reach­ dluring the growin period, says C. K. one for every home in the country
es barely past Point Isabel's front McQuarrie, state agent for the Florida nnd the city, supplying the tables of
GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES
door. The gulf surf .comes in on the agricultural extension division.
every family with green, succulent
A few of the vegetable crops rec­ food .every day of the year.
outside shore of the island affording
J
Just L a y Them Down and Nall—That’s All
j
The
Phone 110
year round bathing while the lagoon ommended for winter planting are: healthiest people are those who eat
&lt;
%
There is To It
3
is a big lake, in some places several Beets, cniTota, lettuce, cabbage, col-, vegetables nnd fruits.
Corner Sanford und Celery Avenues
The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air—rain, sleet,
etc., from forcing its way thro ugh the roof.
The Shoulder of Protectio n is also the Self-Spacing Device.
2-lb CANS STANDARD, HANDMakes
laying easy and rapid—thus saving time nnd money.
PACKED TOMATOES,
These Asphalt Shingles a re surfaced with nnturnl colored lied
PER CAN ___
. ...
or Green Crushed Slate. Eac h rain washes away the accumulated
,O U R
dust—reviving perpetually the original rich colors.
Where these shingles nrc used tho insurance rale is lowered—
BLUEJACKETS
EXTRA FANCY GRADE MAINE
’because
they arc fire-rcsistin g.
HAVE
4 COR^, PER
Give
ua the dimensions of your roof. Wc will estimate the
CAN ..................
C L E A N LTP W E E K
cost free of charge. Samples nnd prices .furnished free.

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PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD

M. D. GATCHEL

! Vulcanite Shingles]

9c

m ■

20c

• EVERY
F R ID A Y

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE. 1-lb. ran.

H ill I m p le m e n t &amp; S u p p ly Co

40c

EXPORT SOAP,
PER CAKE ___
SWIFTS' PREMIUM
HAMS, Per lb.
........ .

W

SPECIAL BARGAINS

48c

FOR

THE FIRST

COMPLETE HOUSE BILL
CARTER LUMBER CO.

.

Try a Herald Want Ad.—It nays.

Full Line

^
*
You nil know what a field day
means in civil life; you have heard
many times of the significance of the
field day in uthletics, hut you will
learn from the lines which follow that
"field day” has an entirely different
meaning in tho Navy. Friday ii the
day for general house cleaning—it is
on this day that our bluejackets
"turn to" and place their vc/sel in
tip top shape for the morrow’s in­
spection by the commanding officer.
The day set aside for cleaning is
known ns n “field day."
In "ye olden tymos" it was cus­
tomary to have the field day on Sat' urduy. nnd the inspection by the Cap­
tain on Sunday. Put timej have
changed in the Nnvy ns they have in
civil life, and just as sure as the
United States Navy ranks among the
greatest nnd most efficient in tho
world and just ns certain as it U

the untiring aim of not only tho Navy
by the people of this great nation as
well to have a Navy second to none
on the face of the earth, no our blue­
jackets who have ever atood by their
guns in tho face of the moat trying
duty endeavor to have the cleanest
ships in the world.
But back to the field day. The
nh[p is scrubbed with sand, it is "cur­
ry-combed" with holystones, and n
brighter, cleaner apot on land or
water cannot surpass a vessel of the
American Nnvy nftor it has been
cleaned fore nnd aft by our bluejack­
ets. From truck to keelson and from
bow to stern, on this day the vessel
is titivated nnd every thing is put in
its place, for who can tell, tho folks,
the best girl or friends may call and
want to look over their "home" on
Sunday or right after the Captain fin­
ishes inspection.

,

*
S

A ship of the capital type is no
small matter to clean; it requires the
help of "all hands nnd the ship's
cook," as the saying’ goes. And it
will he clean; it will eh spotless
when the lads finish and the captain
inspects. In fact he usually knows
thnt he will find a veritable palace,
for "cleanliness is Godlinosa," in the
Navy. Because of this extreme clean­
liness on board many favorable com­
ments nrc vouched by the visitors. A
Indy recently remarked while Inspect­
ing one of our large ships in the
North River, New York: "One could
eat one's lunch from the decks pf this
ship without the least hesitation."
And so she could for our ships are.
cleaned thoroughly every day but on
Fridays or immediately after coaling
they are made almost into mirrors
and shine as brightly as the sun.

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Prices from $50 to $300

Terms to Suit .
T h e m ost com plete line of Records
in tne city.
Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins |

Prices Right

• ^ i,

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THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOV. iT .'lM *
A FINE COLLECTION OF II0R8B8
ARE,THOSE OF THE 8PARKS CIRCUS
Lovers of horses find unusual delicht in the hordes of the Sparks Elg
Three-Ring Circus which appears here
Tuesday, November 23rd. The gen­
eral collection is unusually fine, evert

horaewomah,' Minnie‘Thompson and
her( coterie o'f assistants, without a
bit of admiration, whether he be a
horse fancier or not. Horses th a t
dance the one-step, two-step and

M. C. A. OFFERS SPLENDID
OPPORTUNITIES TO EXSERVICE MEN.

»n ex-service men bjr the Y. M. C. A.
ilncc January," is the announcement
made by the State Office of that or­
ganization today. The Notional War
Work Council appropriated three mil­
lion dollars of the funds raised for
(ducational work overseas, but whtch
tould not be used because of dcmobiliration, for free Scholarships to the
men at home. 449 ex-soldiers, sail­
ors and marines of Florida'have al*
rtsdy been assisted by scholarships
'totaling $28,376.82. $7,211.00 was giv­
en for Collcgatc Scholarships, $13,174.82 for courses in High schools,
Academic.*, or Technical and Gram­
mar schools of less than collegiate
r»nk, and $7,990.00 for Correspond­
ence courses.
Scholarships were not limited to
'Florida schools but 'were given to
Florida men who are In school feat­
ured all over. the--South, North and
East. To those who cannot leave
home and derflre to Improve them­
selves educationally, 'exceptionally
strong correspondence courses are be­
ing given, covering such subjects as:
Agricultural and Rural Engineering;
Architecture, Civil Enlnecrlng, Com­
merce, Mechnniff, Mnthemntlcs, Elec­
tricity, Radio Teleraphy, Science, Eng­
lish, History, Literature, Health and
Hygiene, Bookkeeping, Accounting,
Salesmanship, Advertising. One hundred and sixty different courses In
these lines are listed in the Home
Study catalogue of the Y. A l. C. A.,
from which the ex-scrvicc man may
make a selection.
Any soldier, sailor or marine who
has an honoralje discharge is eligible
ta apply for n free scholarship. Cat­
alogues, application blanks and Infor­
mation arc obtainable from the Flor­
ida State Y. M., C. A., Jacksonville.
Only a small balance of Florida’s
fund is unnsslgncd, which indicates
the appreciation of the soldiers /o r
these opportunities.
The committee on Scholarships for
Seminole County iB ns follows:
Schollo Mnines, T. W. Lawton, Don­
ald Whitcomb, of Sanford.
Scholarships have been granted to
the following men in this county:
Harry Lucas, of Lake Monroe; Les­
ley S. Hill, Virgil L. Smith and Mur­
rell, Wm. O., of Sanford.
(Colored) A. D. Hawkins, Wm. O.
Hryant, Raymond M. Collins, Jere­
miah Bronson, of Sanfoyl.
POISON FOUND IN
SHEPPARD’S STOMACH
MACON, Gn., Nov. 17.—Solicitor
General Garrett announced yesterday
that Director General Funke, Atlan­
ta pathologist, had been employed to
determine whether or not n certain
poison found-in the viscera of Fred
D. Sheppard, wealthy pcarch grower
of Fort Valley, Ga., was administer­
ed through the mouth. Dr: Funke,
the solicitor stated, will exnminc the
throat in an effort to determine the
source of the poison.
Examination of Sheppard’s stom­
ach by Dr. Edgar Everhnrt, of Atlan­
ta, the solicitor said, warranted inves­
tigation of every phase of the man's
death. An inquest will be held at
Fort Valley Friday at which several
witnesses, including Sheppard's for­
mer wife, now Mrs. F. E. Elmer, will
he cnlied.
Get some of those late postcards at
the Herald office. The Valdez Ho­
tel, the Wglaka Block, the Seminole
Hotel .and other points of interest.
Only one cent each. Send a Sanford
card to your friends.

TRAIN SCHEDULE
Corrected on NnvemNr 15, 1920.
Southbound
Departs
2:46 p. m.
8:40 a. m.
1:38 p. m.
3:^0 p. m.
7:45 p. m.

Arrive
2:36 a. m.

------1:28 p. m.
____2:55 p. m.
----- 7:80 p.m.
North Bound
Arrive
____1:48 a. m.
----- 11:45 a.m. 12:05 p.m.
___ 2:85 p. m.
2:55 p. m.
___ 4:00 p. m.
4:05 p. m.
__ _ 10:00 p. m.
Leesburg Branch
Arrive
Departs
____
7:30 a. ra.
____
7:35 p. m.
____4:00 p. m.
____11:55 a. m.
Trilby Branch
Arrive
Departs
____
•
8:00 a.m.
____
3:25 p.m.
____6:30 p. m.
____2:00 p. m.
Oviedo Branch .
Arrive
Departs
------11:00 a. m.
____
3:40 p. m.

TELEPHONE COMPANY’S
BOOKS TO BE AUDITED
BEFFORE RAISING RATE
TALLAHASSEE, Nor. 17— Follow­
ing an all day hearing of an appli­
cation of the Southern Bell Tele­
phone Co. for an Increase in Its rates
at all points in Florida, the State
Railway Commisssion announced late
lat night that it would make an audit
of the telephone compny’s books at
the expense of the compsny sad hold
another hearing before coming to a
decision in the case.

MELVIN’S COMEDIANS
HERE ALL NEXT WEEK
Melvin’s Comedians will be here all
next week on the grounds near the
Court House on Commercial avenue,
under the auspices of the "13" Club.
Melvin’s Comedians have been unable
to play here before' on account of the
high license but are well and favor­
ably known all over the South and
can be recommended to Snnfnrd au­
diences ns being one of the best and
cleverest attractions on the road. Read
what the Gainesville Sun says be­
low:
The Melville's Comedians Tent
Theatre located on the Post Office
block opened their engagement in the
city of Gainesville on Monday night
to a capacity house.
Their
opening play, "Broken
Hearts" pleased- a lnrge and enthusi­
astic 'audience and was well received.
The company has n well- balanced
enst nnd each and every member of
the company portrayed their charac­
ters in creditable style and we can
say here the Melville's Comedians ia
a company deserving high commen­
dation.
The many numbers , between the
acts were a treat in itself filling up
the time between acts and leaving
no long waits. The vaudeville ren­
dered by Addison and Livingston, Mr.
Ralph Pogue, Miss Grace Carpenter
nnd Mr. Bert'Melville, Toby, received
considerable applause.
All the plays presented by this
splendid company are: "All Royalty
Plays' 'and nre mounted in grand
style—carrying special scenery for
every production and they have n
complete electrical equipment for
their light effects (riving the shade
and color ns seen by any Broadway
attraction.
Melville’s Comedians is a
high
class standard attraction and their
plays arc of a good moral nnd clean­
ly nature nnd there 1s no doubt that
their stay in Gainesville will fill their
tent theatre every night to capacity.
The yare certainly deserving of good
large crowds.—Gainesville Sun.
TAXPAYERS, TAKE NOTICE!
Tax books are now open for the
payment of State and County taxes
for J920. A discount of two per cent
Is allowed for payment In November
and one per cent In December.
JNO. D. JINKINS,*
11-13-dlw,
Tax Collector,
w-2t
Seminole County.

FALLS OFF
THIRTY PER CENT
Imports from Spain indicate a de­
crease in the orange crop of 30 per
cent. The Spanish crop is usually
marketed in England. Oranges are
shipped in enses which weigh 60 kils
each. A kilo is 2.20 pounds. Cases
contain 420, 714 or 1,064 oranges, ac­
cording to size, each wrapped in pa­
per. Prices in England range from
15 to 60 shillings ($3.00 to $14.60)
per case, the average being about $10,

Choice
Western and Florida ,
. Meats
. . M
Veal, Pork , M utton 9
Sausage

SANFORD. FLORIDA

I CHANDLER CARS

FRANKLIN CARS

WE GIVE YOU SERVICE
—ASK ANYBODY”

WIGHT TIRE CO

As Good as the Best
Dally S ervice

Specials For Today

MRS. B. E. TAKAC1I
Proprietor
Corner of Park Avenue and
Commercial Avenue

Daily, except Sunday.

thrcc-stcp—even the more modern
tango, tickle toe and shimmy have
been mastered by these Blue Ribbon
and Diploma winners of the h o rs e
show world. Then there is the beau­
tiful statuesque posing of the three
handsomest and most vnluable white
horses in the world—posing so per­
fect that you have to rub’your eyes
to be sure the pictures arc really lire
Aorses and not marble which they
imitate so perfectly.

^ Welaka Building

Officc supplies at the Herald.

Woodford’s posing horses and dogs will be one of the Trained Animals fea
ture» of Sparks Three-Ring Circus when it cornea to Sanford on
Tuesday, November 23rd.
for organizations that make a spec­
ialty of beautiful and well trained
equine wonders, but nowhere before
has ever been seen such horses as
those that are ridden by the eques­
triennes who do the nrtistic riding.
They actunlly dance to the music of
the band and keep perfect time and
when the music changes, they change
step in harmony.
No-one can witness the horseman­
ship of the Indies of the Sparks Cir­
cus headed by the World’s greatest

Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props

Phone 66

Kelly-Springfield Tires.

Sanford
Machine &amp; Foundry
(.ENERAL MACHINE AND BOIL­
ER WORK BRASS CASTINGS
GAS ENGINE REPAIRS
ACTEYLENE CUTTING ANI)
WELDING
Special machine for turning Auto
Crank Shafts and Crank I’ina to
within .0005 accuracy.
IRRIGATION NIPPLES
PULLEYS and SHAFTINGS
ROUND AND SQUARE IRON

Diamond Tires
THE NEW-PAINT SMILE
You’ll wear one too If we­
re paint your auto. Why g»
around with a dim, dull, oldlooking car when for a few
dollars we will paint and
finish it liko new? It’a good
sense also to keep a fresh
coat of paint on your car—
adds to its value if you want,
to sell it or trade it in.

Phone 112

S an fo rd H eights

Post Cards at the Herald office, 1c

December 1st
On the first of each month
your rent in due.
Why give
other people your money. Buy
you a hotnc and each month
Instend of paying nut rent
money, pay cm a home that is
yours.
Beautiful homes on Park,
Oak, Magnojia, Palmetto and
Myrtle
avenues,
Sanford
Heights. Building lota in sny
location.

Sportsmen’s Headc-uarters

Season Opens Nov. 20th
ARE YOU READY?

E. F. LANE

Guns Rifles Ammunition
Hunting Clothing, Etc. 4
-

-= »

SMITH BROTHERS
Exnert Repair Work

Is Your AUTO Insurance Heavy?
CUT OFF 50 PER CERT. OF YOUR HEAVY LOAD
Ruy your Fire, Theft,’ Collision, Liability or Property Damage In* surance at Actual Cost with

The Belt Auto Indemnitv Association
Ask J. B. Lawson, Chas. Banner, Dr. LauHcy about how The Belt
pays its Claims. Then call phone 46 or write Box 156 for 'rates. “It
will pay you" to see

1

G. C. Fellows, Manager tor Sanford

Sporting Goods

�TOE SANfORD DAILY FIERALD, WEDNESDAY. NOV. 17, 1920

-THE FUTURE STRENGTH. POWER AND GLORY
OF AMERICA DEPENDS IN A LARGE MEASURE UPON REGULAR SAVING AND INTELLI(^ /
G3NT INVESTMENT OF ALL CLASSES.
HE
ONE OF THESE AMERICANS V nO ADD STRENGTH TO THEM­
SELVES AND TO THEIR COUNTRY BY INVESTING IN SOUTHERN
Editor UTILITIES COMPANY 8 PER CENT CUMULATIVE PRIOR PREFER­
.B. i . HOLLY
r*L J. LILLARD..Secretary-Treasurer RED STOCK. THERE’S NONE BETTER.
General Manager
H. A. NEEL
F . P. RINES__ Circulation Manager
Phono 481 , ,
THE HERALD HAS ONE.
n C f Ztf i u x

AifartnUf a*U(

!*•»« •» AntUatioa

Member of the Associated Press

.The cool weather is here
And cverbody
happy.

is correspondingly

. Except those who are shor
(Mood and stoves and overcoats,

The cold snap will bring on more
aales among the merchants. This is
the time to dispose of seasonable
merchandise.
Next week will be a gala week on
a small scale. Good time for the mer­
chants to offer special bargains while
tho big crowds are in town. The cir­
cus will bring them in.
Sanford needs an assembly place
where the young folks can have n
dance now and then and the people
can gather for meetings of all kinds
and this plsce should be on the lakefro n t Who will come forward ahd
help the *’13’’ Club to get such a loca­
tion upon which they can erect a suit­
able structure for the Rod and Gun
Club and the tourists.

•‘If he is offering td sell stock or
The only place In Lakeland and
other financial securities tell him you this vicinity where you can find the
never invest without the advice of l»‘&lt;*t Improvement in newspaper mayour banjeer and invite him to call chlnery is at T he Star office, where
again when you have had time to in- an automatic Miller feeder has been
vestigate.
operating now for over a Week. A
“If he is trying to interest you in a man from the company spent three
new way to beat the stock market,
erecting and introducing the
or with inside information about horse f****5"
the force and it has been
races, you need no further evidence, working beautifully ever since, and
If you are caught blame nobody but we have been trying it out a week
yourself.
before apything was said about It.
"But why specify further? No- The Star is the only shop in Lakebody need be taken in by a faker if u nd clip p ed with this great im­
ho will use ordinary common sense, provefflent in the operation of pressThe reason the faker flourishes is be- ea *nd high-class printers and presscause so many of us like to cut loose m«n who have had experience with
from our common sense occasionally the machine state that they don’t
and go it blind."
r
know of anything better that an of___
o_______
fice can do than to install one of these
ARMY OF VISITORS FILL
machines.' Take today noon,,/or inHIGHWAYS IN FLORIDA stance and on other days, the ma*
-------chine only took five minutes off for
Reports from various points on the dinner tnd wcnt riKht on fecd|nK job
highways north of here Indicatp the work wh|!e the foree took theIr
greatest immigration of tourists ever ,nr t |mc off. If you folka want ^
witnessed in .this state. An average
something work like a human and'
of a h u n d red to u ris t automobiles a st|n remain „ mnehine, come into the
day is reported at Jacksonville. From SUr office aonie tlme and watch th|8
Gainesville comes the estimate that animal perform; Dr. Piner says the
100,000 tourists have passed that city. 'thing ia crazy. .It fcoda the job work
(nmping parties are in evidence |n(0 the press; pulls each sheet out

RED CROSS CAMPAIGN
WILL BE WAGED ALL WEEK
. Dr. Walker, chairman of the mem­
bership drive of the Red Cross is busy
today looking after his committees
and getting all the workers out on the
job. The committees have been hav­
ing a difficult time with the rain and
■weather generally and the drive has
been delayed somewhat in conse­
quence but Dr. Walkor expects to
finish up Saturday with a'whirlwind
drive that will get them all.
The membership drivq is for a dol­
lar from each man, woman and child
in the county and from the way in
which the people are responding it
lookq'like they will get Hjitom every
one of them. This money gpes for
the home service that la doing such a
wonderful work .here in the county
under the able management of Miss
Virginia Smith, who has permanent
headquarters in the court house. This
work embraces all phases pf relief
work now that the war work is over
and takes care not only of the ex-sol­
diers arid their dependents but every
one who needs help. In.'case the flu
or any other epldemio broke out here
there is only one source of assistance
end that is the home branch of the
Red Cross and everyone knows what
a wonderful work was accomplished
by the Red Cross In the years past.
All those who have not beert ap­
proached by the workers can leave
their subscriptions at the headquart­
ers in the Union Pharmacy.

OFFERS YOU A SAFE AND SANE
WAY OF REACHING YOUR GOAL
—WHATEVER IT MAY BE—IT AS­
SURES YOU YOUR BANKER’S IN­
TEREST IN YOU# FUTURE WEL­
FARE AND IS AT ONCE THE
ONLY SURE AND DEPENDABLE
WAY IN WHICn YOU MAY OB­
TAIN PERMANENT SUCCESS.

First N a tio n a l Bank
F. P. Forster, President B. F. Whitner, Cashier.

NOW MAKING

Good to tho Last Crumb

Pecan Nut Roll

After you've tried Butter-Nut once you’ll no
more think of having a meal without it than you’d
think of omitting sugar or salt.
For Butter-Nut is more than mere bread—it’s t
delicious, tasty, appetizing item in a meal.

Fresh Daily
v $1.00 POUND

Water’s Kandy Kitchen

Seed, Our Business.
Honesty, Our Motto.
Purity, Our Watch
word.

has all the quality of tho old Butter-Nut; vo xmldn’t
improve that.
But in addition we’ve perfected a new mixing pro­
cess which enables us to turn out a lighter, daintier
loaf than ever.
Get a loal today, for Butter-Nut is Its own best
advocate. It’s 5 cents at all good grocers—10 cents for
the larger site. The genuine bears the Batter-Nut label.
l»
MILLER’S BAKERY .

COME IN AND SEE US.
(Southern Seed Specialists)
Wekiwa Bldg.
Sanford, Fla.
BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
AT THE HERALD. EACH...

l c T R Y A HERALD W A N T AD

Hill Hardware Company

CROOKED VISITORS
YOU AND YOUR HOARD OF
TRADE.
Office supplies at the Herald.

Quick Lunch
Coffee 5c Sandw iches 10c
Pies, home m ad e 10c cut
Besl Coffee in Sanford

Princess Theatre Bldg,

GREAT

f

.

*

•

»_

Pork Sausage
THE

REAL HOME-MADE KIND
SEASONED JUST AS IT
SHOULD BE.

Come and get it—it’s as cheap as the
other kind.
ous, to create building and work for
every man and it is working for you.
These fourteen men on the director­
ate of the body are working without
pay or graft,*for you and every man
in this town, and not only this, these
same man have been, subscribing
large sums of money to carry on the
the advertising and amusements for
Miami and for you; to make busi­
ness or employment for you. If you
undermine the chamber of. commerce
an dlt drops into the rut, as 98 per
cent of all chambers of commerce do,
who will feel the pinch of the need of
funds quickest? You cannot hurt tho
chamber of commerce without hurt­
ing yourself if you are living in Mi­
ami."
No town is bigger or better than
its board of trade, has been well said
by men of municipal and civic asso­
ciation experience and knowledge.
Tampa and every other Florida city
needs to co-operate in more wnys
than merely to give a dollar now and
then, with its board of trade.—lampa Tribune.

rn e r

Send in your locals to the Herald
office. Phone the news to 148. We
want every bit of i t Tell us the
news each day.
x
t

%

*

W e have anticipated your every need
in the Hunting and Sporting Goods
Line and have a complete stock of

W inchester and Rem ing­
ton Repeating Guns and
\

PURE FRESH

i

____

Rifles, and the F o x and
Smith double-barrel Guns
Also a Line of Good Cheaper Guns

Brown’s Market
PHONE 122.

-

EVERYTHING
BUILDER
From the Foundation

N IT R O CLUB Water-Proof SHELLS, with
Steel Lining—without doubt the best shell on
the market—there is a shell for every purpose
W e have a complete stock of Turkey Calls,
Blowing Horns, Tents, Coats, Puttees and
Leggins—in fact, everything for Sportsmen

S U PPU E

H ardware Co
Quality-Servicd-Price

�SANFORD

HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17, 1920

PAGE FIVE

THE MARSHALL ISLANDS *
Little Happenings
Mention of
Matters In Brief
Personal Items
of Interest
w

In a n d A b o u t
T he C ity

WEATHER REPORT

Summary of the
Floating Small
Talka Succinctly'
Arranged for
Herald Reader*

COM) WEATHER HERE;
SNOW IN CAROLINAS

For Florida; Fair tonight and
Thursday; frost In north and interior
Colder weather today and continued
of Central portion tonight; rising tem­ cold tomorrow is the way the weath­
perature in North portion Thursday. er man locally outlines the cold snap
that has already brought snow to the
Mr*. E. M. Gallowny, Mrs. W. L. Carolines. Nothing lower than 50 Is
Morgan and Mrs. H. B. Lewis nrc in expected in this vicinity, it Is stated.
Tallahassee this week representing
With the storm sweeping north­
the Sanford Woman's Club nt the ward, storm warnings were continued
slate federation of Woman’s Clubs.
here through yesterday and with the
passing of the wind will come the
According to the weather sharks chill. Freezing temperatures may bo
who arose early this morning the tem­ expected in the extreme northwestern
perature only fell down to 42 here part of the state.—Tampa Tribune.
mnd no frost or if there was any it
was mighty light. Should the weath­
Storm Overtakes Tarheel State
er be clear tonight thbre will in all
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—The
likelihood be frost and frost means Southern storm which advanced north­
nothing serious at present unless it is eastward yesterday increased greatly
a very heavy one.
in intensity and last night was cen­
Mr- and Mrs. Victor Canares are tered over North Carolina, aecording
in the city for a few days. Mr. Ca­ to reports to the weather bureau.
ns res is the advance man for the Storm warnings are displayed on the
Melvin Comedians, who will play a entire Atlantic coast.
week’s engagement here next week I Considerably lower temperatures
under a mammoth tent to be located are indicated today for tho south At­
on Commercial avenue. Mr. Canares lantic coast and temperatures will
has many friends in Sanford as he Continue considerably below normal
has been coming to Florida for many today and Thursday generally east of
the Mississippi river.
years.
Mr. and Mrs. Sweet have arrived in
the city after spending the summer
north and nrc ngnin with the mail or­
der deparamont of Chase &amp; Co. They
brought with them Miss Georgia
Poulson, of Montpelier nnd Miss
Gladys Dostcr, of Muncie, who will be
with Chase &amp; Cb., also. _ The many
Sanford friends of Mr. nnd Mrs.
Sweet are glud to have them back
agnin for another season.

AUeghcncys Under Snow Blanket
CUMBERLAND, Md., Nov. 17.—
The Allegheney mountains section is
blanketed by snow and sleet.
At
Frostburg, the snow and sleet is
about five inches deep with the fall
unnbndnted. At Thomns, W. Va,, on
the Western Maryland Railway, it
stands twelve above zero with two
inches of sleet. On the Big Savage
mountain the sleet .is six inches deep.

The Pico Hotel, the oldest and one
of the beat known hotelstry in this
section, has an ad in this issue of the
Herald. Mrs. B, E. Taknsh, the
proprietor, has hnd many years ex­
perience and does nil In her power to
make her guests comfortable. The
table is supplied with the best the
market affords and The Herald rec­
ommends the Pico to anyone seeking
a quiet home-like place.

First Snow of Season at Asheville
ASHEVILI.fi, N. C., Nov. 17.—
Asheville and immediate vicinity was
visited lust night by the first snow
fall of the senson but because it has
been raining two days the snow melt­
ed immediately. A fresh wind from
the north turned the night into the
coldest of the season.

Albert Dorner faced Judge’Moines
this morning on the charge of reck­
less driving as Albert was trying to
make an- aeroplane out of his Ford
coming in from the aviation field the
other day. He wna standing in the
Ford nnd driving it backward by us­
ing hiB feet and doing other atijnts
and the motorcycle cop nnd Chief of
Police Speer having been told nbout
him on the rond arrested him and he
was told to appear Snturday but ns
hiR attorney, Geo. A. DeCottes was
cut of tdwn the case wps called this
morning. Albert admitted the stunt
driving nnd wna fined ten nnd costs
with the promise that he would drive
the Ford In the wny Henry intended
it to be driver^ hereafter.

QUEEN MOTHER
, WILL TAKE REGENCY
(B r T b i JU w c U M Fr»*»)

ATHENS, Nov. 17.—Queen Mother
Olga, of Greece, will probably as­
sume regency today, it was reported
here. Admiral Coundouriot is to
present regent.

PA8QUALE ON Till AI
(By The AuoeiiWd Fnu)
MORRISTOWN, Nov. 17.—Augui
Pasquale, confessed kldnnppcr an
slnyer
of ■, 13-months-old Blakcl
Coughlin was plnccd on trial today,

AT THE STAR .THEATRE
TODAY
An All-Star Cast in
PARLOR, BEDROOM AND
BATH"
FOX NEWS and
SNUB POLLARD Comedy

HERALD WILL TAKE
OVER SUBSCRIPTION LIST

The Marshall Islundit, along with the
Carolines, were seized by Japan spon
after the outburst of the war, and their
permanent disposition has been under
discussion.
Their proximity to the
Philippines has been referred to In
this connection.
. •
.
The two chnlns of curlonsly-shaped
atolls, or coral Islands consisting of
low-lying coral reefs encircling Ingoous, known as the Marshall group,
lie a llttlo south of tho center of an
Imaginary line between the Philippines
ami Hawaii.
Guam. Samoa and Honolulu form a
triangle of tmde routes, with Its sides
not penetrated by Important steamship
lines. Near the center of thl* Isolated
Pacific zone are tho Marshall Islands.
Before the war Sydney was reached
by steamer, a Yoyage of more than
3,000 miles. The only other egress Is
a steamer to Ponnpe which connects
with the French line to Singapore.
Like two loosely-strung chains of
Jewels, the Islands stretch from north­
west to southeast, each with Ha la­
goon setting encased by a strangely'
shaped circlet of coral, some like tri­
angles. harps and stirrups, and one
outlining a bull's head with Its boras.
Straight-haired, dark-brown natives,
still presetting the religious algnlflenure of tattoo and taboo, are to be
found.
......mi was given a higher position
than among most savages because suc­
cession was through the female line.
Hut the chiefs power was nbsolute, to
the point of life and death. One am­
bitious ruler learned an alphabet nnd
Is snUl to tiave beheaded all his sub­
jects who seemed likely _ to acquire
more knowledge thnipho had. In some
Islands the mother was allowed to
keep only the first three children. She
had to bury the fourth.
Skillful nnd fearless navigators, tho
natives used bread-tree wood to make
sailing canoes In which they would
voyage for months.
They devised
charts, made of sticks, showing the lo­
cations of Islands nnd the directions
of prevailing winds.
Ancestor worship was their predomi­
nant religious sentiment.
With pe­
titions nnd glfl« they worshiped the
departed whose spirits were supposed
to return to earth In certain palm trees
wlili h they set off In stone Inclosures,
IllnU nnd fishes sometimes embodied
these spirits, they believed, nnd thus
certain species became tnboo.
Homes nr the natives were not pretenttous.
Floors were rnlred above
the ground to escape the ruts, nnd
Ihntched roofs covered the combination
house and storage room.
The two Island groups are known
as the Hntak nud Itnllk chains. Their
entire area Is not more than 100 square
miles; their native population 15,000,
with fewer than 300 foreigners. The
*eat of German government was on
Jnlult nnd the most populous Island
Is Majeru. with hut 1,000 persons.

HOOVER TELLS LABOR
COUNCIL NOT ALL OF
III.AME IS ON CAPITAL
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—Herbert
Hoover, former Federal food admin­
istrator, was called into conference
yesterday by the executive council of
I the American Federation of Labor, an
it continued a face to face discussion
of economic and industrial conditions,
presumably for the purpose of fram­
ing n policy to be followed by tho
federation In legislation, which it will
urge on congress.
Mr. Hoover wns Invited to tho meet­
ing, it was explained, because of bis
, wide knowledge of economic nnd in, dustrial conditions in America. It was
indicated also that the council desired
and had obtained from liini data which
The Logical Treatment
eminent engineers have gathered on
questions pertaining to or affecting
labor.
'Members who were in the council
meeting
behind closed doors, were disFor Many Human Ills.
Tinclined to talk of the discussions.
We hold this to be n Truth;—viz;—
IThere was evidence, however, that
That Circulation is the BASIC factor I'Mr. Hoover's views did not place all
of Human Henlth.
,'blnmc for conditions now confronting
The "Energizer ’ process will DO . labor on employers.
MORE Benefit to Any Adult's gen­ I Much dnta has been gathered by
eral condition than any other method .•the federation with respect to cconknown.
■ '
.
j omic conditions throughout the coun­
COME IN and talk it over.
try . il is known also th at tluring
yesterday’s conference some mem­
108 Pork Ave.,
Next,Door to Mobley’s Drug Store. bers of the council, while holding em­
ployers lnrgely responsible for pres­
L. C. CAMERON
ent conditions, admittedi that individ­
Box 399 Sanford. Fla. Phone 181
uals and even groups of workers had
not "played fair” in some instances.
Mr. Hoover wns understood to have
BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
told the conference that labor must
AT THE HERALD, EACH—
do Ha share In thb,elimination of in­
dustrial faults nnd ills which make
for unemployment.
Council members said they had be&amp;n
’deeply Interested in Mr. Hoover’s dis­
cussion of existing conditions because
of ita bearing’ on
federation’s
search for methods, which will avoid
intermltcnt operation of industry and
conseqhent unemployment. It la unidentood Mr. Hoover was told that
labor leadera regarded the action of
some employers In closing plants or
operation on part time, as "little short
of a social crime."

ENERGIZER

I

RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under
which this institution has been managed since
the first day the doors were opened.
That this pqlicy is appreciated is indicated by the
constant and gratifying growth in business.
It is the desire of the officers of this Bank to con­
tinue adding new accounts of those individuals
desiring most efficient and responsible hanking
On our record of RESPONSIBILITY
tronage is invited.

Seminole County Bank
Is owned, controlled and managed by home
people, who are interested in the development
and,upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole Count&gt;
With our large resources and strong financial
connections we are in position to assist our cus­
tomers at all times in the handling of their finan­
cial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.

4 Per Cent Interest Paid

Seminole County Bank

With Every KOKOMO TIRE Purchased
of US. Take Advantage of this artel

SA VE

30 P E R C E N T
ON YOUR TIRES

Fabrics Guaranteed for 6,000 Miles and Cords 10,000

Distributors for
r
LAKE. VOLUSIA, ORANGE ,AND OSCEOLA COUNTIES
PEIi?'

r

FIFTY THOUSAND
FOR TROTTING HORSE
(By Tk* AmsoUI.I fn n .)
NEW YORK, Nov. 17.—Peter Volo,
the world’s champion trotting colt
was sold today tq Walnut Hall Farm
for about $50,000.

T H E H E R A L D ’S Office Supply Department has juSt re­
ceived a large and complete line of this beautiful stationery
—no two boxes alike—and we will print any monogram on
paper (or cards) and envelopes—in one, two or three colors

TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS-lc A WO

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              <text>SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION&#13;
Volume 1&#13;
Sanford, Florida, Wednesday, November 17, 1920&#13;
Number 193&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
BIG TEXTILE MILLS ARE CLOSING DOWN FACTORIES PRODUCTION IS LOWERED.&#13;
New England Cutting More Than Half.&#13;
CURTAIL BIG PER CT.&#13;
MANY OF THE MILLS HAVE CLOSED ENTIRELY – SOME WORK HALF TIME.&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
BOSTON, Nov. 17 –&#13;
&#13;
 The total production is less than half that of a year ago in the New England textile industries employing 300,000 operatives, according to an estimate from a canvass of mill centers. Some mills are curtailed as high as 80 per cent, others are closed entirely, and the majority have adopted a shorter working schedule.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
VEILED THREAT STATE DEPARTMENT NOTE ON TELEGRAPH CO. &#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 – &#13;
&#13;
 A veiling threat is contained in a formal statement of the State Department that permits for the landing of the Western Union cables in the United States will be revoked unless the company continues to accord the American government the same privileges as other governments in handling cable messages.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
PRESIDENT WILSON SENDS MESSAGE TO LEAGUE OF NATIONS.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 –&#13;
 President Wilson sent a message to the president of the League of Nations assembly and expressing “hope and belief that their labors will be of immerse value to the whole civilized world.”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
NO CORPORATION WILL DELIVER RECOGNITION TO MEXICO.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 –&#13;
No corporation, no group of corporations and no individual is going “to deliver American recognition to Mexico,” stated authoritatively at the State department today.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Harding Rusticating In Texas Sticks.&#13;
POINT ISRAEL IS AN OUT-OF-THE WAY PLACE ON THE GULF COAST.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
POINT ISABEL, Tex., Nov. 17 –&#13;
&#13;
An out-of-the way place is the gulf coast where President-elect Harding is recuperating from the strain of the national campaign. For communication with the outside world it depends upon the narrow gauge railroad to Brownsville, and automobile road, a few telegraph and telephone lines and the big government wireless station through which came the first direct information on the Corpus Christi storm of September, 1919.&#13;
  Though only 20 miles from the busy border city of Brownsville, it is like passing into a different country to passing into a different country to make this 20-mile trip. On the way lies a plantation set in palm trees, with thatched palm huts of Mexican laborers, which is more suggestive of the Philippines than of anything elsewhere in the United States. Beyond the planted area come great flats and some low rolling hills, on which the sky reveals here and there the straight sentinel-like Spanish dagger. Hurry or worry is unthinkable in the lazy and almost perpetual sunshine of this region.&#13;
 On its outer edge lies Point Isabel, a fishing village, with the always picturesque complement of Mexican population to be found in this extreme corner of the United States. A long wooden pier runs out into the water like a finger and the town extends along the shore at right angles to this finger. Padre Island, a strip of sand dunes with trees here and there, lies in front of point Isabel, forming the lagoon which the town faces. To -  &#13;
(Continued on page 5).&#13;
&#13;
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CONSTANTINE KING IN GREECE AND EXPECT HIM BACK.&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
ATHENS, Nov. 17. – &#13;
 “Constantine is our rightful king,” former Premier Gaunaris, leader of the successful party in the elections told correspondents. “We expect him back as soon as plebiscite shows people want him.”&#13;
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ATHENS, Nov. 17 –&#13;
Former Premier Rhallis formed a new cabinet succeeding Venizelos’ government.&#13;
&#13;
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TEN MINERS RESCUED FROM BURNING MINE.&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
EARLINGTON, Ky., Nov. 17. -&#13;
 &#13;
Ten miners were rescued from the burning Arnold coal mine near here today. The bodies of five others have been rescued, one other person is missing. A tunnel was dug around the fire which shut off the single entry. The men have been entrapped twenty-four hours.&#13;
&#13;
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BANDITS FOILED IN ATTEMPTED ROBBERY&#13;
&#13;
(By the Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
DENVER, Nov. 17. --&#13;
 Bandits attempted hold up and rob Union Pacific passenger train here today. They flagged train but wa driven off by the train crew after a gut battle and later derailed the following train.&#13;
&#13;
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DEMOCRATS IN NEXT CONGRESS MUST FIGHT.&#13;
WILL BE IN MINORITY AND WILL HAVE ROYAL BATTLE ON BILLS.&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17. –&#13;
 Washington is alive with interesting gossip concerning what the Democrats in Congress will do at the beginning of the extra session, which, in all probability, will be called for about March 15.&#13;
 There is always more than the usual amount of cloak-room talk when the names of such men as Representative Byrnes of South Carolina, Frank Clack of Florida, Charley Crisp and others of Georgia are mentioned, and that it will be decidedly up to these Democratic war horses to do more than the ordinary amount of work in the next Congress.&#13;
 It is a good thing that such men as  Clark, Byrnes, Crisp and Claudio Kitchin, of North Carolina, are to be on hand in the House with the defeat of Champ Clark of Missouri, the promotion of Tom Heflin to the Senate and the practically demolition generally of the Democratic organization in the house.&#13;
 The Georgia delegation will return to Washington for the extra session with not even a dent on the house side, but with a big cavernous hole made in the senate by the defeat of Senator Hoke Smith. With Charley Crisp are Wise, Gordon Lee, Larson, Wright and Overstreet and others who will be called upon to put on the battle armor from the very moment the strife begins.&#13;
 “Jimmie” Byrnes will lead the Democratic hosts on the painfully evident “minority’ side of the House chamber for the men from the Palmetto state and Frank Clark, old seasoned war horse that he is, will take care of Florida’s interests. In this connection it is also interesting to note that when the smoke of battle has cleared away and it is ascertained reliably who is elected and who is not, that all the members of the delegations from the states have moved up the ladder. There is possibility an exception to ne noted in the case of Mr. Clark, inasmuch as he was chairman of the House committee on buildings and grounds when the Democrats were in control of the House, and is now “ranking Democrat” on all important committees to which he wishes to belong.&#13;
 It will also be ascertained that the other members of the delegation form Florad – Drane, Sears and Smithwick – have moved up as the result of so many democrats getting the axe.&#13;
 In South Carolina, with changes in three districts, where W. Turner will succeed R. S. Whaley in the First, John J. McSwain succeeding Sam J. Nicholls in the Fourth, and H. P. Fulmer taking the place of Ed. C. Munn in the Seventh, the last named members will for a time be known as “baby” members. There is every reason to think, however, that at least one of them, Mr. McSwain, will soon elevate himself from his congressional crib and proclaim himself a full-grown man and member, entitled to all the rights, privileges, benefits and other emoluments incident and appertaining to his membership in the house. These three members must go to the foot of the ladder so far as committee places are concerned, but that will not prevent them from talking out in meeting whenever they get ready to do it.&#13;
-- P. H. McGowan in Times-Union.&#13;
&#13;
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Education for Disabled Ex-soldiers&#13;
&#13;
[photo of young men and women writing at desks and on a blackboard in a classroom.]&#13;
&#13;
 These discharged, disabled soldiers are combining school learning with hospital treatment. During a short period each day they attend the classroom of the school on the United States public health service reservation at Perryville, Md. They are being taught to read and write English. Uncle Sam is a great believer in education in the making of good citizens.&#13;
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LEAGUE OF NATIONS IS UNNECESSARY IF RUSSIA COULD STAND ON FEET.&#13;
Says the Bishop of Episcopal Synod at Norfolk.&#13;
&#13;
THREE BIG NATIONS&#13;
Would be ample protection against the world.&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
NORFOLK, Nov. 17. –&#13;
&#13;
 Bishop Herbert D. Bury, of North and Central Europe, addressing the Episcopal Synod of the province of Washington in session here today, declared that the League of Nations will not be necessary when Russia is put on her feet and stands together with America and England, because three great nations united would be strong enough to keep the peace of the world.&#13;
&#13;
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OLD MAN VILLA SETTLES DOWN ON FARM ON LOWER CALIFORNIA&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
SAN DIEGO, Calif., Nov. 17 –&#13;
 Villa is reported at the head of a big colonizing scheme in lower California with fifteen hundred men farming with modern machinery. It is believing he was settled in Chihuahua on land given him by the government.&#13;
&#13;
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HARDING LEAVES SECLUDED RETREAT MAY STOP IN MEXICO.&#13;
(By the Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
BROWNSVILLE, Tex., Nov. 17.&#13;
&#13;
President-elect Harding is on his way today to New Orleans where he will board a ship for Panama. He is expected to decide today whether he will accept an invitation to visit Mexico. His ship may be ordered stopped at Vera Cruz.&#13;
&#13;
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WITNESSES DIRECT FROM IRELAND WILL TESTIFY.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Washington, Nov. 17 -&#13;
 Witnesses direct from Ireland will be the first to be heard by the commission from the committee of one hundred investigating conditions in Ireland which proposed no public hearings until tomorrow.&#13;
&#13;
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GREEKS ARE WEARY OF POLITICS AND WAR.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
ATHENS, Nov. 17 – &#13;
 Venizelos is said to have attributed his defeat to weariness of the people of politics and his opponents charges he was putting. Greece in the hands of foreieners. [?]&#13;
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Do Your Fall Shopping Before the Holiday Rush.&#13;
&#13;
 Excuses for postponing your fall shopping are no longer in order.&#13;
&#13;
 It should be done now – at once – before the holiday rush sets in. You can shop thoughtfully, leisurely and economically if you shop now. But if you wait until the Christmas rush sets in, you must buy hastily and inefficiently and therefore extravagantly.&#13;
 Shop now. Make a list of all that the family will need – heavier clothes for the cooler weather, new shoes, new hats, that new furniture you have been discussing, linen and silverware for bed and table.&#13;
 These you will find now in pleasing selections on the shelves and counters of the local stores – fresh fall stock at the new lower prices that please us all.&#13;
 Make up your list now – and be sure to look for suggestions and prices in the advertisements in the Daily Herald. It is always well to read the ads before shopping, and they will be found particularly helpful now. &#13;
 The season of heavy fall buying really begins tomorrow. Make your selections early. &#13;
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SPANISH STEAMER IN DISTRESS OFF JERSEY COAST.&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associate Press)&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 17. –&#13;
 The Spanish steamer Yute, bound for Dunkirk from Baltimore, called for help off the New Jersey coast today.&#13;
&#13;
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BOLSHEVIK SWEEP UKRAINIANS OFF MAP&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WARSAW, Nov. 17 –&#13;
The Bolshevik cavalry swept through the Ukrainian lines today and the Ukrainian fleeing evacuating Kiev and all other towns held.&#13;
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FARMERS MAY HOLD THEIR WHEAT CROP NO GRAIN ‘STRIKE’&#13;
&#13;
DO NOT FAVOR A “FARMERS STRIKE” BUT THINK THEY SHOULD HAVE BETTER PRICE&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 17 –&#13;
&#13;
While not favoring a grain “strike” for any set price, sentiment among organized farmers in the great agricultural states of the middle west runs strongly toward holding back grain as far as practicable for better prices, according to canvass made here. This survey of sentiment was taken by the Illinois Agricultural Association.&#13;
 Reports were received by secretaries of state farm bureau federations in Missouri, Minnesota, South Dakota, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Wisconsin and Kentucky. In no cases did a state federation report it had advised a “strike.”&#13;
 Need of credit facilities to enable farmers to hold their wheat if they want to was pointed out from several states. One state secretary wrote he was “using the present conditions as an argument in favor of the farmers getting into the big marketing game in such a way that they will be able to finance it and to store considerable of the grain as it is offered.”&#13;
 “The attitude I have taken in the matter is this,” wrote H. D. Lute, of Lincoln, Nebr., secretary of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation, “that it is wrong to set an arbitrary price of $3 a bushel and that it is hardly advisable to ask the farmers to hold their wheat unless we are in a position to help them on the financial and storage ends of the game. But I do tell the farmers that I believe wheat will be higher and that it will be a good thing to hold it if they are in a position to do so.”&#13;
 Writing that the South Dakota Farm Bureau Federation “does not believe a ‘wheatstrike’ necessary or desirable for the country,” Secretary P. J. Crandall, of Huron said, “our method of handling the situation is to furnish farmers with accurate information regarding the wheat market to help them in determining what action is best for their needs.&#13;
 The farmers will hold their wheat off the market without a doubt if they are able to get credit which will allow them to carry their products. The credit situation is the key to the whole matter. We are advising that the world wheat situation warrants holding of the crop if credit allows and using our best efforts to help bring financial relief.”&#13;
 Officially the Missouri Farm Bureau Federation has made no recommendation, A. J. Meyer, at Columbia, executive secretary, wrote. “As individuals,” he added, “all members of our executive committee take the attitude that where farmers can afford to hold wheat they should be all means do so. This is on the theory that present prices are about as low as we can reasonably expect them to go. Since we are not in a position to guarantee $3 wheat, we can hardly advise farmers to hold for $3.”&#13;
 The Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation does not endorse “strikes” as a means of controlling the price of farm products, wrote Secretary C. A. Peters, of Rosendale, Wis. “According to the present situation in regard to wheat we believe that the low prices are unjustifiable and that it would be good business policy for the farmers to discontinue heavy marketing and allow the market to adjust itself.”&#13;
 From Iowa, E. H. Cunningham, of Ames, secretary of the Iowa Farm Bureau Federation, wrote, “we realize that it is the most difficult thing to hold grain and we do not recommend that it be held to arbitrarily force prices to unreasonable height.&#13;
 Of course we have no credit system whereby we can hold all the grains of the country, but we are advising our famers to slow down in marketing for the present until this period of demoralization in prices has somewhat recovered.”&#13;
&#13;
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ORANGES NOW MOVING FROM SANFORD&#13;
&#13;
CHASE &amp; COMPANY OPEN PACKING HOUSES WITH BIG CROP OF FRUIT.&#13;
&#13;
Chase &amp; Company, of this city, are not only the largest growers, packers and shippers of fruits and vegetables in the other sections of Florida but they have three large packing houses here all built of brick and having the latest and most improved machinery in them. This enterprising firm recently built one of the finest and most complete office buildings and warehouse adjunct in the state at the corner of Second street and Oak avenue and have recently moved into the new quarters.&#13;
 Mr. and Mrs. Sweet, who were with the mail order department last season, have arrived in the city to take charge again and brought Miss Georgia Poulson, of Montpelier, and Miss Gladys Doster, of Muncie, Indiana, with them and all of them will be in the mail order department of the Chase Co. This part of the business has grown to large proportions with the irrepressible Tom Jones (late of London) taking care of the outside mail order packing and shipping and together with the picking, packing and shipping of oranges and vegetables in the car lots all over Florida keeps the office forces of Chase &amp; Co., here and at other points busy.&#13;
 Sanford is fortunate in being made the headquarters of this large firm. Already the business of packing oranges has commenced here and will Leffler, the ubiquitous head of the office force, reports that more oranges are being packed and shipped at this time of the year than ever before and they are bringing good prices. In fact the Chase packing houses here have already started up with a large force of packers and the season has commenced with the brightest of prospects. This is only one of the many big firms here that are doing a big business in Florida fruits and vegetables and that have the faith of their convictions in Sanford and Florida so strong that they are building for the future.&#13;
&#13;
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SOUTHERN COMMERCIAL CONGRESS TO MEET.&#13;
WILL HOLD NEXT SESSION IN WASHINGTON BEFORE INAUGURATION&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17. –&#13;
&#13;
 The Southern Commercial Congress will hold its next convention in Washington in March immediately preceding in the inauguration of President-elect Harding. The congress will discuss a legislation program of the United State Congress for Southern International problems and related international reconstruction.&#13;
&#13;
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 &#13;
PAGE six   THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1920&#13;
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BOYS AND GIRLS OF FLORIDA ARE BIG PRODUCERS.&#13;
To Prove Their Prowess At State Fair.&#13;
&#13;
[photo of grocery fruit aisle with has a banner  of ‘Boys Agricultural Clubs’]&#13;
&#13;
Jacksonville –&#13;
Over 125,000 boys and over 75,000 girls are engaged in Boys’ and Girls’ Club work in the South. They produced more than six million dollars’ worth of products last year. A pretty good record.&#13;
 One of the means of furthering this work is the encouragement offered boys and girls by the Florida State Fair, to be held this year at Jacksonville, Nov. 18-27.&#13;
 A department has been set aside for the boys’ and girls’ club work and liberal premiums are offered. These consist of cash and ribbons and are offered for the best displays by the boys and girls poultry clubs of Florida, boys’ corn clubs, peanut clubs, pig clubs, calf clubs, boys’ judging contest and girls’ canning clubs.&#13;
 It is not so much to the present as to the coming generation that Florida must look for the realization of her fund hopes for future development and progress.&#13;
 It is, therefore, of the utmost importance that boys and girls be given advantages that were denied the past, and to a certain extent the present generation.&#13;
 The State Fair is encouraging them through material reward and honorary mention to greater effort in the production of better crops, better livestock and better food. Help the Fair boost the boys and girls.&#13;
&#13;
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AMERICANS ABROAD IN RED CROSS WORK&#13;
&#13;
United States Citizens Far Away Enthusiastic Members of the “Fourteenth” Division.&#13;
&#13;
Among the most enthusiastic and energetic members of the American Red Cross are those citizens of the United States who live outside the continental boundaries of their country – sons and daughters of the Stars and Stripes residing at the far corners of the earth.&#13;
 These people compose the Insular and Foreign Division of the parent organization, generally known as the “Fourteenth” Division, which has jurisdiction of all territory outside the country proper; that is Alaska, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Virgin Islands, the Philippines, Guam, and even the island of Yap, which came under our flag as a result of the world war. For the year 1920 this division reported 80,808 paid up members.&#13;
 The main object of this division is to give our citizens everywhere the opportunity to participate in the work of the organization which stands for the best national ideals. Americans in far places intensely loyal and patriotic, treasure their membership in the Red Cross as the outward expression of their citizenship. It is another tie to the homeland and to each other. There are chapters of this division in Argentine, Bolivia, Brazil, Canal zone, Chile, China, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, England, France, Guam, Guatemala, Haiti, Hawaii, Honduras, Japan, Manchuria, Netherlands, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Porto Rico, Siberia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Turkey, Uruguay, Venezuela and Virgin Islands.&#13;
 During the war, these scattered members of the Red Cross contributed millions in money and millions of dollars’ worth of necessary articles for the men in service, and sent many doctors and nurses to France. At the same time they carried on an excellent Home Service in their respective communities for the families of those who had gone to war, and in some regions gave large sums of money and immeasurable personal service to the relief of disaster and disease victims.&#13;
 The division is now establishing service clubs in foreign ports for the benefit of sailors in the American Merchant Marine, making plans to aid Americans in trouble in foreign lands and completing arrangements for giving immediate adequate relief in cases of disaster.&#13;
 It is the Fourteenth Division’s part in the great Peace Time program of the American Red Cross.&#13;
&#13;
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[Legal}&#13;
Seminole county.  In Chancery.  Citation&#13;
Peoples bank of Sanford a corporation, Complainant&#13;
Vs.&#13;
Thomas E. Huff, et al Defendants.&#13;
&#13;
To Thomas S. Huff and wife, Elizabeth Huff, of Bronxville, New York, and James McCarron of the city of New York and state of New York:&#13;
 It appearing by affidavit filed in this cause that you and each of you are non-residents of the State of Florida; that you Thomas S. Huff and Elizabeth Huff are residents of Bronxville, New York; that you, James McCarron are a resident of the city of New York, State of New York; that there is no person in the State of Florida the service of a subpoena upon whom would bind any of you, and that you are each over the age of 21 years, therefore, you and each of you are hereby ordered and required to appear to the bill of complaint exhibited against you in this court not later than Monday, the 6th day of December A. D. 1920, the same being a rule day of this court.&#13;
 It is further ordered that this notice be published in the Sanford Herald a newspaper published in Seminole county, Florida, once a week for four weeks.&#13;
 Witness E. A. Douglass&#13;
Clerk of Court. Seminole County, Florida.&#13;
&#13;
Geo. A. DeCottes&#13;
Solicitor and Counsel for Complainant.&#13;
10-29-5tc&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Post Cards at the Herald office, 1c.&#13;
&#13;
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CHINESE KILL RUSS&#13;
&#13;
Captives Are Shot to Death With Revolvers.&#13;
First make victims dig graves, then execute them for the Bolsheviki.&#13;
&#13;
Amsterdam – &#13;
The correspondent of the Handelsblad who recently returned from a trip in soviet Russia, gives the following account of his investigations of the activities of the Chinese employed there by the bolsheviki as executioners.&#13;
 “Such horrible stories were being told in Europe about the Chinese that I thought it worth my while to learn more about them. As a joke, I asked everyone who asked my opinion of the bolshviki to show me some me some ‘real man-killing Chinese,’ but I always was told they couldn’t produce any just now because they had all gone to the Denikine front.&#13;
 “I was told the Chinese. If commanded by their own officers were excellent soldiers, but they ran like hares if their officers were killed. Executions are now very rare in Moscow, but, in August, when thousands of counter-revolutionaries were slaughtered, it was slaughtered. It was carried out by the Chinese because the authorities feared the Russian soldiers would refuse to do the work.&#13;
 “The Chinese do this work indifferently – like they do all other work they are ordered to perform. They are blind, conscienceless tools in the hands of the men who feed then and pay them and who raised them from the position of coolies in which they came to Russia to the rank of soldier, of the guards.&#13;
 “if the ‘boltsjak’ (his name for Bolshevik) orders something, the Chinese does it, and he does it in his typically practical way. He first makes the victim dig his own grave and then shoots him with his revolver. He is not cruel about it, just practical.&#13;
 “When boltsjak says kill, then he kills with an unperturbed face. And when boltsjak says, ‘You may stop now,’ with the same cool face he lets his victim go.”&#13;
 The correspondent after some weeks in Russia left when he was refused permission to make investigations freely as he pleased.&#13;
 &#13;
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[Legal]&#13;
 Notice of Application for Tax Deed Under Section 575 of the General Statutes.&#13;
&#13;
Notice is hereby given that George Murphy, purchaser of Tax Certification No. 1808, dated the 3rd day of June, A. D. 1901, has filed said certificate in my office, and has made application for tax deed to issue in accordance with law. Said certificate embraces the following described property situated in Seminole County, Florida to-wit:&#13;
 Beg. 346 ft. N. and 424 ft. W. of SE. cor. of NW ¼ of SW ¼ of Sec. 31, Tp. 20 S., R. 30 E., run N 734 ft., W 170 ft., S 734 ft., E 170 ft.&#13;
 The said land being assessed at the date of the issuance of sucr certificate in the name of Unknown. Unless said certificate shall be redeemed according to law tax deed will issue thereon on the 22nd day of December, A. D. 1920.&#13;
 Witness my official signature and seal this the 12th day of November. A. D. 1920.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
E. A. DOUGLASS,&#13;
Clerk Circuit Court, Seminole County, Fla.&#13;
&#13;
By V. E. Douglass, D. C.         11-12-6tc.&#13;
&#13;
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Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
&#13;
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 &#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
&#13;
Classified advertisements, 5 cents a line. No ad take for less than 25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cash must accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit accordingly.&#13;
&#13;
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WANTED &#13;
WANTED – House or apartment of 3 or 4 rooms, unfurnished, for man and wife with two school children. Best of references.  See or write, G. B. S., job dept., Herald office.  Dh-tf.&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the herald office.&#13;
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WANTED – Team work. Inquire of M. Hanson Shoe Shop.  189-60tp.&#13;
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WANTED – Your old batteries to rebuild. Let us make your starting and lighting a pleasure. We are authorized “EXIDE” dealers and have a Battery for all makes and automobiles. “EXIDE”, the Giant that lives in a box.” – Ray Bros.  Phone 548, old Ford Garage.  179-tfc.&#13;
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Get your scratch pads from The Herald – by the pound – 15c.&#13;
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WANTED – Brick and cement work, chimneys, flues, piers, cement floors, sidewalks. – A. L. Ray, 206 Park Ave.   173-30tp.&#13;
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WANTED – Pupils, Violin and Piano. – Ruby Roy, 206 Ave.  175-20tf-p.&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ h. p. and 2 ½ h. p. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf.&#13;
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FOR RENT &#13;
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FOR RENT – One nicely furnished room, 320 Oak ave. Phone 208-J. 187-tfc.&#13;
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TO RENT or for sale, large warehouse with railroad siding.  – Chas. Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. co.    156-tfc.&#13;
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FURNISHED ROOMS – Two furnished bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park Avenue.   157-tfc.&#13;
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MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
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ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, 109 East First Street, over Union Pharmacy.   163-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
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DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture, bedsteads, chairs, etc.  What have you?   174-30tc.&#13;
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BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run your battery until she is entirely dead. The battery is the costliest accessory to your car. We recharge and re-build all makes of batteries. – Ray Bros. Phone 548, old Ford Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
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LOST&#13;
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LOST – Western Union branch deposit book. Finder please return to Western Union office.  – J. P. Hall. Mgr.   180-tfc.&#13;
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LOST OR STRAYED - One red pig, 4 months old. If found notify E. B. Randall, Jr., 825 First Street.  191-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE &#13;
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FOR SALE – Shasto daisies, $1 per dozen. English Shamrock Oxalis 30c per dozen.  Ring 207-w.  183-15tc.&#13;
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Special reduction I men’s and ladies’ W. L. Douglas Shoes. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ h. p. and 2 ½ h. p. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf.&#13;
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New line of Congoleums and Art Squares. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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Gillette Tires and Tubes.&#13;
Chilled rubber process makes them A Bear for Wear.  &#13;
SMITH BROTHERS – Expert Repair Work.&#13;
&#13;
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-is your AUTO insurance heavy?&#13;
 Cut off 50 per cent of your HEAVY LOAD.&#13;
Buy your Fire, Theft, Collision, Liability or Property Damage Insurance at Actual Cost with&#13;
The Belt Auto Indemnity Association&#13;
Ask J. B. Lawson, Chas. Kanner, Dr. Langley about how The Belt pays its claims. Then call phone 46 or write Box 156 for rates. “It will pay you” to see&#13;
G. C. Fellows, Manager for Sanford.&#13;
&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf.&#13;
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Special reduction in Georgette Silk and cotton shirt waists. – A. Kanner, 213-215 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.&#13;
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We have just received a line of silverware and casseroles. – A Kanner, 213-215 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tf.&#13;
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FOR SALE – One horse, wagon and harness. Apply M. Hanson Shoe Shop.  189-12tp.&#13;
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See our line of electrical lamps. – A. Kanner, 213-215 Sanford Avenue. Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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PLANTS FOR SALE – Cabbage per 1000, $1.50; Cauliflower, Handers Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B. B., per M, $1.50; Ice Berg, per M, $1.50; beets, Crosby’s Egyptian, per M, $1.50; Onion, yellow Bermuda, per M, $1.50; onions, white Bermuda, per M, $1.50; Celery, yellow golden, per M, $2.00; Self-bleaching importing celery, per M, $2.00; French celery seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.00. – Clay County Gardening Co., Green Cove springs, Fla.   11-12.&#13;
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 The twenty-sixth annual convention of the State Federation of Women’s Clubs will be held in the city of Tallahassee, November 16th to 20th.&#13;
&#13;
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[Cartoon of young boy holding a newspaper] -- MICKIE says –&#13;
“If ya kin GIT BY without advertising, ya ought to GO BIG with th’ aid of a reglar ad in this peerless purveyor of publicity!”&#13;
&#13;
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1921 Auto Tags Now Ready&#13;
&#13;
For the convenience of the public applications for registrations of motor vehicles for the year 1921 MAY BE FILED NOW, if accompanied by remittance. THE 1921 TAGS WILL BE SENT OUT ABOUT THE MIDDLE OF DECEMBER for all applications filed up to that time; and thereafter as fast as applications in correct form reach this office.&#13;
 Before mailing your application please see that all questions aRe answered you’re your name and address is printed or written plainly to avoid errors. The law requires you to execute the application before a Notary Public or some officer using a seal. Tags cannot be issued until a duly executed application is filed in this office.&#13;
 Blanks may be secured from banks, Justices of the Peace, Notaries Public, and County Officers, or the Comptroller.&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST AMOS.&#13;
State Comptroller, Tallahassee, Florida. 11-19-2t.&#13;
&#13;
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BRADLEY MATTRESS FACTORY / Orlando, Fla.&#13;
Makes old mattresses new at one-third the cost of a new one.&#13;
PHONE 894   16 BRYANT ST.    11-1511mo-p.&#13;
&#13;
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REO – the gold standard of value.&#13;
PARTS – ACCESSORIES – SALES – SERVICE.&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO.   PHONE 66.&#13;
&#13;
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Cozy Café. Quick Lunch.&#13;
 Coffee 5c. Sandwiches 10c. Pies, homemade 10c cut. Best Coffee in Sanford.&#13;
Princess Theatre Bldg.&#13;
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Lord’s Purity water.  As Good as the Best.&#13;
Daily service.  Phone 66.&#13;
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Seed, Our Business. Honesty, Our Motto. Purity, Our Watchword.&#13;
The L. Allen seed Co.&#13;
COME IN AND SEE US. (Southern Seed Specialists). &#13;
Wekiwa Bldg. Sanford, Fla.&#13;
&#13;
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December 1st&#13;
On the first of each month your rent is due. Why give other people your money. Buy you a home and each month instead of paying out rent money, pay on a home that is yours.&#13;
 Beautiful homes on Park, Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and Myrtle avenues, Sanford Heights.&#13;
E. F. Lane.  “The Real Estate Man”.  Phone 95. 204 First Street.&#13;
&#13;
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EVERYTHING for THE BUILDER. From the foundation to the roof.&#13;
HILL LUMBER CO.  Quality- Servicd-Price&#13;
&#13;
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Sanford Machine &amp; Foundry Company.&#13;
&#13;
GENERAL MACHINE AND BOILER WORK.  BRASS CASTINGS.  GAS ENGINE REPAIRS.  ACTEYLENE CUTTING AND WELDING.&#13;
&#13;
Special machine for turning auto Crank Shafts and Crank Pins to within .0005 accuracy.&#13;
&#13;
IRRIGATION NIPPLES. PULLEYS AND SHAFTINGS. ROUND AND SQUARE IRON.&#13;
&#13;
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Please Phone in Your Orders&#13;
For - THANKSGIVING TURKEY.  Everything for your fruit cake.&#13;
LEMON PEEL – ORANGE PEEL – CITRON – CURRANTS – RAISENS – BROWN SUGAR – DATES – FIGS – SPICES of all kinds. NEW FLORIDA SYRUP. APPLES, 75c per pack.&#13;
L. P. McCuller.  Sanford, Florida.&#13;
&#13;
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Buy Meat You Can Eat.  We carry a choice line at all times. &#13;
A trial solicited.&#13;
&#13;
Pure Food Market.  &#13;
J. H. Tillis, Prop.  Phone 105.  402 Sanford. Ave.&#13;
&#13;
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We Guarantee All Battery Repairs&#13;
Every battery repair we make is guaranteed for six months. We are able to do this because in repairing any make of battery we are licensed to use patented features which have made Vesta batteries famous.&#13;
&#13;
Sanford Battery Service Co.  L. A. Renaud, Prop.  Phone 189.&#13;
&#13;
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CHULUOTA INN&#13;
Will open season 1920-21 on Thanksgiving Day Turkey Dinner.&#13;
&#13;
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SEE URK FOR EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING.&#13;
 Cor. First and Sanford Ave.&#13;
&#13;
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National Madza Lamps.&#13;
&#13;
25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts.  20 to 75 Watts in 35 Volts.&#13;
Everything Electrical. Expert Installation and Repair Work.&#13;
&#13;
GILLON &amp; FRY.  Phone 442.  115 Magnolia Ave.&#13;
&#13;
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Real Estate.  I Sell It.&#13;
J. E. SPURLING.&#13;
 The Man Who Sells Dirt Cheap.&#13;
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Sanford’s most popular hotel&#13;
SEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL &#13;
Under management of WALTER B. OLSON.&#13;
&#13;
Our specialty – Seminole’s famous $1 Sunday dinner de luxe. &#13;
A la carte service all day.&#13;
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- &#13;
PAGE TWO.   THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17, 1920.&#13;
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Society.  MISS KATHRYN WILKEY, Editor.    Phone 428.&#13;
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SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday – &#13;
Welfare Department of the Women’s Club.&#13;
&#13;
Thursday – &#13;
Every-week Bridge Club with Mrs. Margaret Barnes.&#13;
T. N. T. with Mrs. J. B. Lawson.&#13;
&#13;
Friday –&#13;
Spendthrift Club with Mrs. S. M. Lloyd.&#13;
D. A. R. with Mrs. A. R. Key.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Daiguer were in Eustis Sunday.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Key, Mrs. A. D. Key and Mrs. Rice were guests of friends in Orlando Sunday.&#13;
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POLLYANNA&#13;
Little Miss Rebecca Stevens was hostess of the Polly Anna Club Tuesday afternoon. A very jolly afternoon was passed in sewing, and games. Delicious refreshments were served.&#13;
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ST AGNES GUILD&#13;
St. Agnes Guild met with Mrs. Ed Lane Monday afternoon. There were eleven members present who enjoyed a most pleasant afternoon planning a dance and Christmas bazaar. A salad course was served during the afternoon.&#13;
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WILL HAVE TENT FOR METHODIST BAZAAR.&#13;
 The ladies of the Truth Seekers Class of the Methodist church are not to be daunted by the fact that there are no empty store rooms in Sanford and wishing to hold their bazaar will have a tent on the vacant lot on First street where the new arcade and apartment building will soon be erected. Here they will have many pretty things for sale and on Saturday will have lunches and hot coffee for the hungry as well as something upon which to feast the eyes. See their advertisement in this issue.&#13;
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HARDING RUSTICATING IN TEXAS STICKS.&#13;
(Continued from page one)&#13;
&#13;
The north this slender island extends virtually unbroken for nearly 100 miles. Its southern extremity reaches barely past Point’s Isabel’s front door. The gulf surf comes in on the outside shore of the island affording year round bathing while the lagoon is a big lake, in some places several miles wide. The fishing is on both sides of the island. Redfish running up to 20 pounds and salt water trout which average three to six pounds are ordinarily sought but, the varieties of big fish within fisherman’s distance are almost endless. Wild turkeys and quail abound in the adjacent territory and deer and javelin or wild hog are numerous. Then there are the Mexican lions, which are about the size of a large Newfoundland dog and which have fully as much courage as a jack-rabbit. There are also leopard cats and bob-cats, jackrabbits and cotton tail rabbits.&#13;
 Years ago Point Isabel was visited by many large vessels which served lower Texas and part of the north-eastern section of Mexico. That was before railroads connected the two countries at Largo and before the Rio Grande Valley, now famous for its truck gardens, was connected with the more populous sections of Texas. When the St. Louis, Brownsville &amp; Mexico railroad was constructed from Houston to Brownsville, water transportation was greatly curtailed until today it is almost negligible.&#13;
 Because of the town’s position on the Laguna Madre and the beautiful sand beach on Padle Island, it was thought at one time that Point Isabel would become a great winter resort, and commodious brick hotel and numerous neat cottages were constructed. Difficulting in standardizing the narrow gauge railroad to Brownsville, however, hindered development along these lines.&#13;
&#13;
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KEEP THE VEGETABLE GARDEN BUSY.&#13;
&#13;
During October and the first weeks of this month the weather has been dry and some of the garden crops have suffered for moisture, especially where water has not been available for sprinkling. Lack of rain can be remedied largely by stirred the soil with a rake constantly.&#13;
 A small quantity of commercial fertilizer should be used to give the growing crops a boost and to keep them growing. A bone compound fertilizer is recommended. Vegetables are stunted and hardened by allowing their growth to become checked. High quality vegetable depend largely on the cultivation of the soil during the growin period, says C. K. McQuarrie, state agent for the Florida agricultural extension division.&#13;
 A few of the vegetable crops recommended for winter planting are: beets, carrots, lettuce, cabbage, collards, onions, Dwarf Essex rape, cauliflower. The seeds of carrots should be soaked for 12 hours before planting. Growing onions should be banked, especially when desired for table use. This gives a long succulent stem which makes the product more desirable and which cannot be had if no bleaching is done.&#13;
 If frost threatens, the more succulent plants should be covered during the night. The covering should always be removed during the day.&#13;
 Experience teaches that no area of soil is more productive than is the vegetable garden. There should be one for every home in the country and city, supplying the tables of every family with green, succulent food every day of the year. The healthiest people are those who eat vegetables and fruits.&#13;
&#13;
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Pipe Organ Recital Presbyterian Church Very Entertaining&#13;
LARGE CROWD PRESENT TO ENJOY AN EVENING OF MUSIC.&#13;
&#13;
The pipe organ recital at the Presbyterian church last night was attended by a large crowd, the church proper and the gallery being filled with the music lovers of the city and surrounding country. This is the first concert given in the church since the organ was installed and under the skillful fingers of Miss Foster the organ was given a real test and responded to the touch of a master delighting the audience in every number. The vocal selections of Miss Mabel Bowler were also well received as a general favorite who is always in fine form and the entire concert was a great success. Miss Foster is from the Jacksonville School of Musical Art and graciously consented to come to Sanford to give the concert in the interest of musical art and her efforts were appreciated as evidenced by the large crowd that greeted her last night. The following program was carried out:&#13;
&#13;
1-American Triumphant, from the “Pilgrim Suite”	Dunn&#13;
2-The Swan   							Saint-Saens&#13;
3-Morning Serenade  						Lemare&#13;
4-In Capulet’s Garden   					Steere&#13;
5-Gounod’s “O Divine Redeemer” sung by 		Miss Bowler.&#13;
6-Gavette (dedicated to Miss Foster)  			Campbell&#13;
7-Evensong     							Johnson&#13;
8-Nuptial March 							Guilmant&#13;
9-Spring Song       						Hollins&#13;
10-Teccata  							Crawford&#13;
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Demonstration of Florida Fruit juices at the Woman’s Club Wednesday afternoon.  Wakefield products on sale.     190-3tc.&#13;
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[2 photos of sailors mopping and cleaning a ship deck]&#13;
&#13;
OUR BLUEJACKETS HAVE CLEAN UP WEEK EVERY FRIDAY.&#13;
&#13;
You all know what a field day means in civil life; you have heard many times of the significance of the field day in athletics, but you will learn from the lines which follow that “field day” has an entirely different meaning in the Navy. Friday is the day for general house cleaning – it is on this day that our bluejackets “turn to” and place their vessel in tip top shape for the morrow’s inspection by the commanding officer. The day set aside for cleaning is known as a “field day.”&#13;
 In ‘ye olden tymes’ it was customary to have the field day on Saturday and the inspection by the Captain on Sunday. But times have changed in the Navy as they have in civil life, and just aas sure as the United States Navy ranks among the greatest and most efficient in the world and just as certain as it is the untiring aim of not only the Navy by the people of this great nation as well to have a Navy second to none on the face of the earth, so our bluejackets who have ever stood by their guns in the face of the most trying duty endeavor to have the cleanest ships in the world.&#13;
 But back to the field day. The ship is scrubbed with sand it is “curry-combed” with holystones, and a brighter, cleaner spot on land or water cannot surpass a vessel of the American Navy after it has been cleaned fore and aft by our bluejackets.&#13;
 From truck to keelson and from bow to stern, on this day the vessel is titivated and every thing is put in its place, for who can tell, the folks, the best girl or friends may call and want to look over their “home” on Sunday or right after the captain finishes inspection.&#13;
 A ship of the capital type is no small matter to clean; it requires the help of “all hands and the ship’s cook,” as the saying goes.&#13;
 And it will be clean; it will b spotless when the lads finish and the captain inspects. In fact he usually knows that he will find a veritable palace, for ‘cleanliness is Godliness,’ in the Navy. Because of this extreme cleanliness on board many favorable comments are vouched by the visitors. A lady recently remarked while inspected one of our large ships in the North River, New York: “One could eat one’s lunch from the decks of this ship without the least hesitation.”&#13;
 And so she could for our ships are cleaned thoroughly every day but on Fridays or immediately after coaling they are made almost into mirrors and shine as brightly as the sun. &#13;
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SIX KINDS OF SAFETY&#13;
&#13;
 Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank where you deposit your money?&#13;
 The first consideration is the capital, which should be ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank is to serve.&#13;
 The next question to consider is the officers in charge. They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.&#13;
 Then there is the question of confidence. The public should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. &#13;
 These three principles determine the success of a bank.&#13;
 We adopted these principles in the outset of our career and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase our usefulness to the community as the years go by.&#13;
&#13;
 We offer you:&#13;
 &#13;
 1st: Large capital and working reserve&#13;
 2nd: Trained men in charge – men of several years experience.&#13;
 3rd: The confidence of the public, which is proven by the daily addition to our line of depositors.&#13;
 4th: Protection by two examinations each year by the state banking department. Two audits each year by an independent recognized public audit company and two sworn statements submitted to the state comptroller by the cashier, giving the bank’s condition in detail. All of which insures regular, systematic and thorough operation of the bank.&#13;
 5th: The advice of a competent board of directors, who meet who meet with the officers regularly each month and advise them as to the operation of the bank.&#13;
 6th: Insurance of all deposits every day of the year. This is a protection not commonly found in banks and is an absolute protection for your funds, in addition to all the other usual safeguards.&#13;
&#13;
 These are reasons why you should do business with us. And we believe that no bank can offer better inducements.&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD. We want your business.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
M. D. GATCHEL GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES.&#13;
Phone 110. Corner Sanford and Celery Avenues.&#13;
&#13;
2-lb Cans Standard, Hand-Packed Tomatoes, Per Can – 9c&#13;
Extra Fancy Grade, Maine Corn, Per can – 20c&#13;
Maxwell House Coffee, 1-lb. can – 40c&#13;
Export Soap, Per Cake – 5c&#13;
Swifts’ Premium Hams, Per lb. – 48c.&#13;
&#13;
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Vulcanite shingles&#13;
Just Lay Them Down and Nail – That’s All There is To It.&#13;
&#13;
 The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air – rain, sleet, etc. from forcing its way through the roof.&#13;
 The Shoulder of Protection is also the Self-Spacing Device. Makes laying easy and rapid – thus saving time and money.&#13;
 These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red or Green Crushed Slate. Each rain washes away the accumulated dust – reviving perpetually the original rich colors.&#13;
 Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered – because they are fire-resisting.&#13;
 Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the cost free of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.&#13;
&#13;
Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co&#13;
&#13;
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SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR THE FIRST COMPLETE HOUSE BILL. &#13;
CARTER LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
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Full line Columbia Phonograph.&#13;
&#13;
Prices from $50 to $300.  Terms to suit yourself.&#13;
&#13;
The most complete line of Records in the city.&#13;
Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins. &#13;
&#13;
Prices Right.&#13;
&#13;
H. L. Gibson.&#13;
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Page three        THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17, 1920&#13;
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FREE TUITION IS GIVEN TO EX-SOLDIERS&#13;
Y. M. C. A. OFFERS SPLENDID OPPORTUNITIES TO EX-SERVICE MEN.&#13;
&#13;
 “Splendid opportunities for free educational advantages have been given ex-service men by the Y. M. C. A. since January,” is the announcement made by the State Office of that organization today. The National War Work Council appropriated three million dollars of the funds raised for educational work overseas, but which could not be used because of demobilization, for free scholarships to the men at home. 449 ex-soldiers, sailors and marines of Florida have ready been assisted by scholarships totaling $28,375.82. $7,211.00 was given for Collegate Scholarships, $13,174.82 for courses in High schools, Academies, or Technical and Grammar schools of less than collegiate rank, and $7,990.00 for Correspondence courses.&#13;
 Scholarships were not limited to Florida schools but were given to Florida men who are in school scattered all over the South, North and East. To those who cannot leave home and desire to improve themselves educationally, exceptionally strong correspondence courses are being given, covered such subjects as: Agricultural and Rural Engineering; Architecture, Civil Engineering, Commerce, Mechanics, Mathematics, Electricity, Radio Teleraphy, Science, English, History, Literature, Health And Hygiene, Bookkeeping, Accounting, Salesmanship, Advertising. One hundred and sixty different courses in these lines are listed in the Home Study catalogue of the Y. M. C. A., from which the ex-service man may make a selection.&#13;
 Any soldier, sailor or marine who has an honorable discharge is eligible to apply for a free scholarship. Catalogues, application blanks and information are obtainable from the Florida State Y. M. C. A., Jacksonville. Only a small balance of Florida’s fund is unassigned, which indicates the appreciation of the soldiers for these opportunities.&#13;
 The committee on Scholarships for Seminole County is as follows: Schelle Maines, T. W. Lawton, Donald Whitcomb, of Sanford.&#13;
 Scholarships have been granted to the following men in the county:&#13;
 Harry Lucas, of Monroe; Lesley S. Hill, Virgil L. Smith and Murrell, Wm. O., of Sanford.&#13;
 (Colored) A. D. Hawkins, Wm. O. Bryant, Raymond M. Collins, Jeremiah Bronson, of Sanford.&#13;
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POISON FOUND IN SHEPPARD’S STOMACH.&#13;
&#13;
MACON, Ga., Nov. 17 –&#13;
&#13;
Solicitor General Garrett announced yesterday that Director General Funke, Atlanta pathologist, had been employed to determine whether or not a certain poison found in the visera of Fred D. Sheppard, wealthy pearcg grower of Fort Valley, Ga., was administered through the mouth. Dr. Funke, the solicitor stated, will examine the throat in an effort to determine the source of the poison.&#13;
 Examination of Sheppard’s stomach by Dr. Edgar Everhart, of Atlanta, the solicitor said, warranted investigation of every phase of the man’s death. An inquest will be held at Fort Valley Friday at which witnesses including Sheppard’s former wife, now Mrs. E. F. Elmer, will be called.&#13;
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&#13;
Get some of those late postcards at the Herald office. The Valdez Hotel, the Welaka Block, the Seminole Hotel and other points of interest. Only one cent each. Send a Sanford card to your friend.&#13;
&#13;
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REO – The Gold Standard Of Value. &#13;
Sale. Service. Parts. Accessories.&#13;
&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO. PHONE 66.&#13;
&#13;
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[photo of 1 man on a horse and 1 man holding a shot gun. Plus 4 hound dogs] Caption: Woodford’s posing horses and dogs will be one of the Trained Animal features of Spark’s Three-Ring Circus when it comes to Sanford on Tuesday, November 23rd.&#13;
&#13;
A FINE COLLECTION OF HORSES ARE THOSE OF THE SPARKS CIRCUS.&#13;
&#13;
 Lovers of horses find unusual delight in the horses of the Sparks Big Three-Ring Circus which appears here Tuesday, November 23rd. the general collection is unusually fine, even for organizations that make a specialty of beautiful and well trained equine wonders, but nowhere before has ever been seen such horses as those that are ridden by the equestriennes who do the artistic riding. They actually dance to the music of the band and keep perfect time and when the music changes, they change step in harmony.&#13;
 No one can witness the horsemanship of the ladies of the Sparks Circus headed by the World’s greatest horsewoman, Minnie Thompson and her coterie of assistants without a bit of admiration, whether he be a horse fancier of not. Horses that dance the one-step, two-step and three-step – even the more modern tango, tickle toe and shimmy have been mastered by these Blue Ribbon and Diploma winners of the horse show world. Then there is the beautiful statuesque posting of the three handsomest and most valuable white horses in the world – posing so perfect that you have to rub your eyes to be sure the pictures are really live horses and not marble which they imitate so perfectly.&#13;
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MELVIN’S COMEDIANS HERE ALL NEXT WEEK&#13;
&#13;
Melvin’s Comedians will be here all next week on the grounds near the Court House on Commercial avenue, under the auspices of the “13” club. Melvin’s Comedians have been unable to play here before on account of the high license but are well and favorably known all over the South and can be recommended to Sanford audiences as being on the of best and cleverest attractions on the road. Read what the Gainesville Sun says below:&#13;
 The Melville’s Comedians Tent Theatre located in the Post Office block opened their engagement in the city of Gainesville on Monday night to a capacity house.&#13;
 Their opening play, “Broken Hearts” pleased a large and enthusiastic audience and was well received. The company has a well balanced and each and every member of the company portrayed their characters in credible style and we can say here the Melville’s Comedians is a company deserving high commendation.&#13;
 The many numbers between the acts were a treat in itself filling up the time between acts and leaving no long waits. The vaudeville rendered by Addison and Livingston, Mr. Ralph Pogue, Miss Grace Carpenter and Mr. Bert Melville, Toby, received considerable applause.&#13;
 All the plays presented by this splendid company are: “All Royalty Plays’ ‘and are mounted in grand style – carrying special scenery for every production and they have a complete electrical equipment for their light effects giving the shade and color as seen by any Broadway attraction.&#13;
 Melville’s Comedians is a high class standard attraction and their plays are of a good moral and cleanly nature and there is no doubt that their stay in Gainesville will fill their tent theatre every night to capacity. The yare certainly deserving of good large crowds. – Gainesville sun.&#13;
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TAXPAYERS, TAKE NOTICE!&#13;
 Tax books are now open for the payment of State and County taxes for 1920. A discount of two per cent is allowed for payment in November and one per cent in December.&#13;
&#13;
JNO. D. JINKINS, Tax Collector, Seminole County.  11-13-dlw, w-2t&#13;
&#13;
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Is your AUTO insurance heavy?&#13;
CUT OFF 50 PER CENT OF YOUR HEAVY LOAD&#13;
&#13;
Buy your Fire, Theft, Collision, Liability or Property Damage insurance at Actual Cost with&#13;
&#13;
The Belt Auto Indemnity Association&#13;
Ask J. H. Lawson, Chas. Kanner, Dr. Langley about The Belt pays its Claims. Then call phone 46 or write box 156 for rates. “It will pay you” to see&#13;
&#13;
G. C. Fellows, Manager for Sanford.&#13;
&#13;
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SPANISH ORANGE CROP FALLS OFF THIRTY PER CENT&#13;
&#13;
 Imports from Spain indicate a decrease in the orange crop of 30 per cent. The Spanish crop is usually marketed in England. Oranges are shipped in cases which weigh 60 kils each. A kilo is 2.20 pounds. Cases contain 420,714 or 1,0634 oranges, according to size, each wrapped in paper. Prices in England range from 15 to 60 shillings ($3.00 to $14.60) per case, the average being about $10.&#13;
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Post cards at the Herald office, 1c.&#13;
&#13;
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December 1st&#13;
&#13;
 On the first of each month your rent is due. Why give other people your money. Buy you a home and each month instead of paying out rent money, pay on a home that is yours.&#13;
 Beautiful homes on Park, Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and Myrtle avenue, Sanford Heights. Building lots in any location.&#13;
&#13;
E. F. Lane – The Real Estate Man”.  &#13;
Phone 94. 204 First street.&#13;
&#13;
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Gillette Tires and tubes.&#13;
&#13;
Chilled rubber process makes them &#13;
A Bear for Wear.&#13;
SMITH BROTHERS. Expert Repair work.&#13;
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TRAIN SCHEDULE&#13;
Corrected on November 15, 1920&#13;
Southbound&#13;
&#13;
		Arrive		Departs&#13;
No. 83	 2:36 a.m.		 2:46 p.m.&#13;
No. 27				 8:40 a.m.&#13;
No. 91	 1:28 p.m.		 1:38 p.m.&#13;
No. 89	 2:55 p.m.		 3:20 p.m.&#13;
No. 85	 7:30 p.m.		 7:45 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
North Bound&#13;
		Arrive		Departs&#13;
No. 82	 1:48 a.m.		 2:03 p.m.&#13;
No. 84	11:45 a.m.		12:05 p.m.&#13;
No. 80	 2:35 p.m.		 2:55 p.m.&#13;
No. 92	 4:00 p.m.		 4:05 p.m.&#13;
No. 28	10:00 p.m.&#13;
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Leesburg Branch&#13;
		Arrive		Departs&#13;
*No. 158	 			 7:30 a.m.&#13;
 No. 22				 7:35 p.m.&#13;
*No 157	 4:00 p.m.&#13;
 No. 21	11:55 a.m.&#13;
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Trilby Branch&#13;
		Arrive		Departs&#13;
*No. 100				 8:00 a.m.&#13;
*No. 24				 3:25 p.m.&#13;
*No. 101	 6:30 p.m.&#13;
*No. 25	 2:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
Oviedo Branch&#13;
		Arrive		Departs&#13;
*No. 126	11:00 a.m.&#13;
*No. 127				 3:40 p.m.&#13;
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*Daily, except Sunday.&#13;
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Lord’s Purity water.  As Good as the Best.&#13;
Daily service.   Phone 66&#13;
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Sanford Machine &amp; Foundry Company&#13;
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GENERAL MACHINE AND BOILER WORK. BRASS CASTINGS. GAS ENGINE REPAIRS. ACETYLENE CUTTING AND WELDING.&#13;
 Special machine for turning Auto Crank shafts and crack pins to within .0005 accuracy.&#13;
&#13;
IRRIGATION NIPPLES. PULLEY and SHAFTINGS. ROUND AND SQUARE IRON.&#13;
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TELEPHONE COMPANY’S BOOKS TO BE AUDITED BEFFORE RAISING RATE&#13;
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TALLAHASSEE, Nov. 17 -  &#13;
&#13;
 Following an all day hearing of an application of the Southern Bell Telephone Co. for an increase in its rates at all points in Florida, the State Railway Commission announced late lat night that it would make an audit of the telephone compny’s books at the expense of the company and hold another hearing before coming to a decision in the case.&#13;
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Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
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Pico Hotel&#13;
Mrs. B. E. TAKACH, Proprietor&#13;
Corner of Park Avenue and Commercial Avenue. SANFORD, FLORIDA&#13;
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CITY MARKET  &#13;
Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props. Welaka building.&#13;
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Specials For Today.&#13;
Choice Western and Florida Meats. Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage.&#13;
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City Market.&#13;
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CHANDLER CARS – FRANKLIN CARS.&#13;
“WE GIVE YOU SERVICE – ASK ANYBODY” – &#13;
WIGHT TIRE CO.   Kelly-Springfield tires.  Diamond tires.&#13;
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[clip art of man with hand on steering wheel of car.]&#13;
AUTO PAINTING.  THE NEW PAINT SMILE.&#13;
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You’ll wear one too if we repaint your auto. Why go around with a dim, dull, old looking car when for a few dollars we will paint and finish it like new? It’s good sense also to keep a fresh coat of paint on your car. – adds to its value if you want to sell it or trade it in.&#13;
&#13;
REHER BROS. Auto Painting.  Phone 112.  Sanford Heights.&#13;
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THE WINCHESTER STORE&#13;
Sportsman’s Headquarters&#13;
&#13;
Season opens Nov. 25th. Are you ready?&#13;
&#13;
[art of gun &amp; box of shells with type EVERYTHING FOR THE HUNTER]&#13;
&#13;
Guns – Rifles – Ammunition – Hunting Clothing, Etc.&#13;
&#13;
[artwork of various hunting store items]&#13;
&#13;
BALL HARDWARE COMPANY sporting Goods.&#13;
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 &#13;
PAGE FOUR  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1920&#13;
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SANFORD DAILY HERALD – &#13;
Published every afternoon except Sunday at The Herald Building, 107 Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, Florida&#13;
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THE HERALD PRINTING CO., INC. PUBLISHERS&#13;
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R. J. Holly		Editor&#13;
N. J. Lillard		Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
H. A. Neel			General Manager&#13;
F. P. Rines		Circulation Manager.  Phone 481&#13;
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Advertising Rates Made Known on Application&#13;
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Subscription Price in advance&#13;
One year			$6.00&#13;
Six months			$3.00&#13;
Delivered in City by Carrier&#13;
One week			15 cents&#13;
-------&#13;
Member of the Associated Press&#13;
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&#13;
The cool weather is here.&#13;
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And everybody is correspondingly happy.&#13;
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Except those who are short on wood and stoves and overcoats.&#13;
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The cold snap will bring on more sales among the merchants. This is the time to dispose of seasonable merchandise.&#13;
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Next week will be a gala week on a small scale. Good time for the merchants to offer special bargains while the big crowds are in town. The circus will bring them in.&#13;
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Sanford needs an assembly place where the young folks can have a dance now and then and the people can gather for meetings of all kinds and this place should be on the lakefront. Who will come forward and help the “13” Club to get such a location upon which they can erect a suitable structure for the Rod and Gun Club and the tourists.&#13;
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We are not paying enough attention to our auto camps. There should be at least two of these camping grounds in and around Sanford for the people are coming here by the hundreds. We counted twelve different parties going through here last Sunday looking for a suitable place to camp and spend several weeks. The auto camps are proving to be good investments in every city in the state. They should, however, be under the proper sanitary regulations and have everything needful not only for the comfort of the campers but for the safety and health of the residents of the camp and the residents of Sanford.&#13;
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CROOKED VISITORS&#13;
&#13;
The Lakeland Telegram brings out a point which is too apparent at this season of the year. It is a situation which must be faced by every city in the state, for which the coming of winter months, the bad as well as the good make their way to climes less rigid.  The good that they may enjoy rest and comfort, the bad that they may gain a livelihood by “easy picking.”&#13;
 The Telegram tells its story in the following words:&#13;
 That “we have crooks ‘in our midst’ at this time is only another way of saying that another season has rolled around. They always appear in the fall, ply their trade through the prosperous winter months, and then take their early spring flight, provided, of course, they escape the eager, if not always accurate, clutches of the law.&#13;
 “It is almost superfluous to warn the public against them. The average crook carries his sign on his face as plain as the three balls at a pawn shop. The wonder is that he finds victims. Most of his devices are utterly crude – a man who has sense enough to invent a new swindling device does not have to remain in the swindling device does not have to remain in the swindling game.&#13;
 The golden rule is to be careful not to entertaine strangers who offer something for sale. If it is anything more expensive than a patent match safe, or a set of wire puzzles, the seller should be willing to submit to certain tests. Ask him for a list of references, and tell him to call again after you have written to them. Nine times out of ten you will be rid of him forever.&#13;
 “If he is offering to sell stock or other financial securities tell him you never invest without the advice of your banker and invite him to call again when you have had time to investigate.&#13;
 “If he is trying to interest you in a new way to beat the stock market, or with inside information about horse races, you need no further evidence. If you are caught blame nobody nut yourself.&#13;
 But why specify further? Nobody need be taken in by a faker if he will use ordinary common sense. The reason the faker flourishes is because so many of us like loose from our common sense occasionally and go it blind.”&#13;
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Welaka Coffee.  &#13;
Deane Turner. Phone 497. Welaka Building.&#13;
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J P says:&#13;
 “The future strength, power and glory of America depends in a large measure upon regular saving and intelligent investment of all classes. Be one of these Americans who add strength to themselves and to their country by investing in Southern Utilities Company 8 per cent cumulative prior prefered stock, there’s non better.&#13;
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ARMY OF VISITORS FILL HIGHWAYS IN FLORIDA&#13;
&#13;
 Reports from various points on the highways north of here indicate the greatest immigration of tourists ever witnessed in this state. An average of a hundred tourist automobiles a day is reported at Jacksonville. From Gainesville comes the estimate that 100,000 tourists have passed that city. Camping parties are in evidence along the roads from one end of the state to the other.&#13;
 These visitors come from all the states from Maine to as far west as Colorado. They come in all kinds of vehicles. While the energetic little Ford predominates, many nondescript vehicles are seen. Some of them are huge vans, loaded with the household goods of the visitors and indicating that permanent additions to our population are being made. Many come with full camping outfits. Still others content themselves with strapping on blankets and other implements of light housekeeping.&#13;
 It is estimated that over half the visitors come in autos, due, perhaps, in a measure, to the increased cost of traveling by rail, but more largely to the increased roads, and the general feeling of independence which an automobile gives a touring party.&#13;
 The estimate of one million visitors for the entire season has been made and is not considered too high.&#13;
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YOU AND YOUR BOARD OF TRADE&#13;
&#13;
To those who that having contributed their dollars to the board of trade of their city or town, they have done all that is expected, or all that they should do, it may come as considerable of a shock to learn that there is still left the most important thing undone – giving of your influence, your personal attention and your loyalty at all times.&#13;
 The president of the Miami chamber of commerce has just published an open letter to the people of his city, some of whom appear to have deserted the chamber of commerce in the belief that they and not it are the more important to civic advancement.&#13;
 Among the other good things he says to them is the following which is so applicable to the people of every city and town that it is so applicable to the people of every city and town that it is reproduced for the benefit it will have on all:&#13;
 Gentlemen, and ladies, I wish to call your attention to the fact that it is the business of the Miami chamber of commerce to make Miami prosperous, to create building and work for every man and it is working for you. These fourteen men on the directorate of the body are working without pay or graft for you and every man in this town, and not only this, these same men have been subscribing large sums of money to carry on the advertising and amusements for Miami and for you; to make business or employment for you. If you undermine the chamber of commerce and it drops into the rut, a 96 per cent of all chambers of commerce do, who will feel the pinch of the need of funds quickest? You cannot hurt the chamber of commerce without hurting yourself if you are living in Miami.&#13;
 No town is bigger or better than its board of trade has been well said by men of municipal and civic association experience and knowledge. Tampa and every other Florida city needs to co-operate in more ways that merely to give a dollar now and then, with its board of trade. – Tampa Tribune.&#13;
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Send in your locals to the Herald office. Phone the news to 148. We want every bit of it. Tell us the news each day.&#13;
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THE HERALD HAS ONE.&#13;
&#13;
The only place in Lakeland and this vicinity where you can find the latest improvement in newspaper machinery is at The Star office, where an automatic Miller feeder has been operating now for over a week. A man from the company spent three days erecting and introducing the feeder to the force and it has been working beautifully ever since, and we have been trying it out for a week before anything was said about it.&#13;
 The Star is the only shop in Lakeland equipped with this great improvement in the operation of presses and high-class printers and pressmen who have had experience with the machine state that they don’t know of anything better that an office can do than to install one of these machines. Take today noon, for instance and on other days, the machine only took five minutes off for dinner and went right on feeding job work while the force took their regular time off.&#13;
 If you folks want to see something work like a human and still remain a machine, come into the Star office some time and watch this animal perform; Dr. Piner says the thing is crazy. &#13;
 It feeds the job work into the press; pulls each sheet out and if a single thing goes wrong with the beast, a bell rings until some one looks it over or gives it more material to feed and on two color work and fine jobs the machine can’t be beat.&#13;
 E. C. Fox, our expert pressman, says that no human pressman can come any ways near registering work and feeding it as accurately as this machine and for two color letterheads or folders, nothing can compete with the feeder in delivering the goods. We don’t know how it is going to be paid for, but from the way it is performing we expect it to pay for itself in a year’s time, by way of saving a press feeder, delivering high class work that will be an advertisement and by being the means to keep the presses going and turning out the work while the men about the shop can be doing something else.&#13;
 We are proud of the fact that the Star is the only office in Lakeland and this locality that has one of these machines and our friends are invited to call and see a big city improvement, which all well equipped job printing plants have wherever you go in the large cities. – Lakeland star.&#13;
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Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
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Cozy Café – Quick Lunch&#13;
Coffee 5c – sandwiches 10c – &#13;
Pies, home made 10c cut – Best Coffee in Sanford.&#13;
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Princess Theatre Bldg. &#13;
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PURE FRESH Pork Sausage.&#13;
THE REAL HOME MADE KIND, SEASONED JUST AS IT SHOULD BE.&#13;
Come and get it – it’s as cheap as the other kind.&#13;
Brown’s market.  Phone 122.&#13;
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EVERYTHING for THE BUILDER&#13;
From the foundation to the roof.&#13;
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HILL LUMBER CO.  &#13;
Quality-Servicd-Price.&#13;
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RED CROSS CAMPAIGN WILL BE WAGED ALL WELL&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Walker, chairman of the membership drive of the Red Cross is busy today looking after his committees and getting all the workers out on the job. The committees have been having a difficult time with the rain and weather generally and the drive has been delaying somewhat in consequence but Dr. Walker expects to finish up Saturday with a whirlwind drive that will get them all.&#13;
 The membership drive is for a dollar from each man, woman and child in the county and from the way in which the people are responding it looks like they will get it from one of them. This money goes for the home service that is doing such a wonderful work here in the county under the able management of Miss Virginia Smith, who has headquarters in the court house. This work embraces all phases of relief work now that the war work is over and takes care not only of the ex-soldier and their dependents but every one who needs help. In case the flu or any other epidemic broke out here there is the home branch of the Red Cross and everyone knows what a wonderful work was accomplished by the Red Cross in the years past. All those who have not been approached by the workers can leave their subscriptions at the headquarters I the Union Pharmacy.&#13;
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NOW MAKING Pecan Nut Roll.&#13;
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 Fresh daily.  $1.00 POUND.&#13;
Water’s Kandy Kitchen.&#13;
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Seed, Our Business. Honesty, Our Motto. Purity, Our Watchword.&#13;
The L. Allen Seed Co. come in and see us &#13;
(Southern Seed Specialists).  Wekiwa Bldg.  Sanford, Fla.&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, Each … 1c.&#13;
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A BANK ACCOUNT&#13;
&#13;
Offers you a safe and sane way of reaching your goal – whatever it may be – it assures you your banker’s interest in your future welfare and is at once the only sure and dependable way in which you may obtain permanent success.&#13;
&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
E. F. Forester, President.  B. F. Whitner, Cashier.&#13;
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(advertisement image – man in black suit at a dining room table. He is holding a plate).&#13;
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Good to the Last Crumb.&#13;
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After you’ve tried Butter-Nut once you’ll no more think of having a meal without it than you’d think of omitting sugar or salt.&#13;
 For Butter-Nut is more than mere bread – it’s a delicious, tasty, appetizing item in a meal.&#13;
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The new Butter-Nut Bread has all the quality of the old Butter-Nut; we couldn’t improve that.&#13;
 But in addition we’ve perfected a new mixing process which enables us to turn out a lighter, daintier loaf than ever.&#13;
 Get a loaf today, for Butter-Nut is its own best advocate. It’s 5 cents at all good grocers – 10 cents for the larger size. The genuine bears the Butter-Nut label.&#13;
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MILLER’S BAKERY&#13;
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Try A Herald want ad.&#13;
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(Advertisement – art – 2 pine trees on a rock and clouds in the background)&#13;
&#13;
Hill Hardware Company&#13;
&#13;
 We have anticipated your every need in the hunting and sporting goods Line and have a complete stock of Winchester and Remington Repeating Guns and Rifles, and the Fox and Smith double-barrel Guns.&#13;
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Also a Line of Good Cheaper Guns&#13;
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Nitro Club Water-Proof Shells, with Steel Lining – without doubt the best shell on the market – there is a shell for every purpose.&#13;
 We have a complete stock of Turkey Calls, Blowing Horns, Tents, Coats, Puttees and Leggings – in fact, everything for Sportsmen&#13;
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Hill Hardware Co.&#13;
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PAGE FIVE.   THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, Wednesday NOVEMBER 17, 1920.&#13;
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-- Little Happenings. Mention of Matters in Brief. Personal Items of Interest. In and About the City.&#13;
Summary of the Floating Small Talks Succinctly Arranged for Herald Readers.&#13;
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WEATHER report&#13;
&#13;
For Florida: fair tonight and Thursday; frost in north and interior of Central portion tonight; rising temperature in North portion Thursday.&#13;
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Mrs. E. M. Galloway, Mrs. W. L. Morgan and Mrs. H. B. Lewis are in Tallahassee this week representing the Sanford Woman’s Club at the state federation of Woman’s Clubs.&#13;
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According to the weather sharks who arose early this morning the temperature only fell down to 42 here and no frost or if there was any it was mighty light. Should the weather be clear tonight there will in all likelihood be frost and frost means nothing serious at present unless it is a very heavy one.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. Victor Canares are in the city for a few days. Mr. Canares is the advance man for the Melvin Comedians, who will play a week’s engagement here next week under a mammoth tent to be located on Commercial avenue. Mr. Canares has many friends in Sanford as he has been coming to Florida for many years.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. Sweet have arrived in the city after spending the summer north and are again with the mail order department of Chase &amp; Co. They brought with them Miss Georgia Poulson, of Montpelier and Miss Gladys Doster, of Muncie, who will be with Chase &amp; Co, also. The many Sanford friends of Mr. and Mrs. Sweet are glad to have them back again for another season.&#13;
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The Pico Hotel, the oldest and one of the best known hotelstry in this section, has an ad in this issue of the Herald. Mrs. B. E. Takash, the proprietor, has had many years experience and does all in her power to make her guests comfortable. The table is supplied with the best the market affords and the Herald recommends the Pico to anyone seeking a quiet home-like place.&#13;
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 Albert Dorner faced Judge Maines this morning in the charge of reckless driving as Albert was trying to make an aeroplane out of his Ford coming in from the aviation field the other day. He was standing in the Ford and driving it backward by using his feet and doing other stunts and the motorcycle cop and Chief of Police Speer having been told about him on the road arrested him and he was told to appear Saturday but as his attorney, Geo. A. DeCottes was out of town the case was called this morning. Albert admitted the stunt driving and was fined ten and costs with the promise that he would drive the Ford in the way Henry intended it to be driven hereafter.&#13;
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QUEEN MOTHER WILL TAKE REGENCY&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
Athens, Nov. 17 – Queen Mother Olga, of Greece, will probably assume regency today, it was reported here. Admiral Coundouriot is to present regent.&#13;
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PASQUALE ON TRIAL&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
Morristown, Nov. 17 &#13;
&#13;
 August Pasquale, confessed kidnapper and slayer of 13-month old Blakely Coughlin was placed on trial today.&#13;
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AT THE STAR THEATRE TODAY&#13;
&#13;
An All-Star Cast in “PARLOR, BEDROOM AND BATH”&#13;
&#13;
Fox News and snub Pollard comedy.&#13;
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RED TUBE FREE&#13;
With every KOKOMO TIRE Purchased of US. &#13;
Take advantage of this and SAVE 30 PER CENT. ON YOUR TIRES.&#13;
&#13;
Fabrics Guaranteed for 6,000 Miles and Cords 10,000&#13;
&#13;
B. &amp; O. Motor Co.&#13;
Distributors for SEMINOLE, LAKE, VOLUSIA, ORANGE AND OSCEOLA COUNTIES.&#13;
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COLD WEATHER HERE; SNOW IN CAROLINAS&#13;
&#13;
 Colder weather today and continued cold tomorrow is the way the weather man locally outlines the cold snap that has already brought snow to the Carolinas. Nothing lower than 50 is expected in this vicinity; it is stated.&#13;
 With the storm sweeping northward, storm warnings were continued here through yesterday and with the passing of the wind will come the chill. Freezing temperatures may be expected in the extreme northwestern part of the state. – Tampa Tribune.&#13;
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Storm Overtakes Tarheel State&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17. –&#13;
 The Southern storm which advanced north-eastern yesterday increased greatly in intensity and last night was centered over North Carolina, according to reports to the weather bureau. Storm warnings are displayed on the entire Atlantic coast.&#13;
 Considerably lower temperatures are indicated today for the south Atlantic coast and temperatures will continue considerably below normal today and Thursday generally east of the Mississippi river.&#13;
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Allegheneys Under Snow Blanket&#13;
&#13;
CUMBERLAND, Md., Nov. 17-&#13;
 The Allegheney mountains section is blanketed by snow and sleet. At Frostburg, the snow and sleet is about five inches deep with the fall unabadated. At Thomas, W. Va., on the Western Maryland Railway, it stands twelve above zero with two inches of sleet. On the Big Savage mountain the sleet is six inches deep.&#13;
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First Snow of Season at Asheville&#13;
&#13;
ASHEVILLE, N. C., Nov. 17 –&#13;
&#13;
 Asheville and immediate vicinity was visited last night by the first snow fall of the season but because it has been raining two days the snow melting immediately. A fresh wind from the north turned the night into the coldest of the season.&#13;
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HERALD WILL TAKE OVER SUBSCRIPTION LIST&#13;
&#13;
The Herald will take over the subscription list of the Daily Herald beginning Monday next on the Daily. The list has been in charge of F. P. Rines but press of other lines of business has made it necessary for him to give it up and Robert Holly ill have charge of the Daily list in the future.&#13;
 He will carry one of the routes himself and look after the other routes and also put on a campaign for new subscriptions and any complaints about the daily will hereafter be handled through the Herald office, Phone 148. The list is growing so rapidly that a more comprehensive plan of handling the list is made necessary and it is thought that by centralizing it in the office it can be made more satisfactory for all concerned. Starting next Monday Robert Holly will be in charge of the Daily circulation department and will see every subscriber during the week.&#13;
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The Logical Treatment “ENERGIZER” for many ills.&#13;
&#13;
We hold this to be a Truth: -viz: - That Circulation is the BASIC factor Human Health.&#13;
The “Energizer” process will DO MORE Benefit to Any Adult’s general condition than any method known.&#13;
&#13;
COME IN and talk it over. &#13;
108 Park Ave., Next door to Mobley’s Drug store.&#13;
&#13;
L.C. Cameron.  Box 399.  Sanford, Fla.  Phone 184.&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH… 1c&#13;
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The Marshall Islands&#13;
&#13;
 The Marshall Islands, along the Carolinas, were seized by Japan soon after the outburst of the war, and their permanent disposition has been under discussion. Their proximity to the Philippines has been referred to in this connection.&#13;
 The two chains of curiously-shaped atolls, or corals consisting of low-lying coral reefs encircling lagoons, known as the Marshall group, lie a little south of the center of an imaginary line between the Philippines and Hawaii.&#13;
 Guam, Samoa and Honolulu form a triangle of trade routes, with its sides not penetrated by important steamship lines. Near the center of this isolated pacific zone are the Marshall Islands.&#13;
 Before the war Sydney was reached by steamer, a voyage of more than 3,000 miles. The only other egress is a steamer to Ponape which connects with the French line to Singapore.&#13;
 Like two loosely-strung chains of jewels, the islands stretch from northwest to southeast, each with its lagoon setting encased by a strangely-shaped cirlet of coral, some like triangles, harps and stirrups, and one outlining a bull’s head with its bones.&#13;
 Straight-haired, dark-brown natives, still preserved the religious significance of tattoo and taboo, are to be found.&#13;
 Woman was given a higher position than among most savages because succession was through the female line. But the chief’s power was absolute, to the point of life and death. One ambitious ruler learned an alphabet and is said to have beheaded all his subjects who seemed likely to acquire more knowledge than he had. In some islands the mother was allowed three children. She had to bury the fourth.&#13;
 Skillful and fearless navigators, the natives used bread-tree wood to make sailing canoes in which they would voyage for months. They devised charts, made of sticks, showing the locations of islands and the directions of prevailing winds.&#13;
 Ancestor worship was their predominant religious sentiment. With petitions and gifts they worshipped the departed whose spirits were supposed to return to earth in certain palm trees which they set off in stone inclosures. Birds and fishes sometimes embodied these spirits, they believed, and thus certain species became taboo.&#13;
 Homes of the natives were not pretentious. Floors were raised above the ground to escape the rats, and thatched roofs covered the combination house and storage room.&#13;
 The two island groups are known as the Ratak and Ralik chains. Their entire area is not more than 100 square miles; their native population 15,000 with fewer than 300 foreigners. The seat of German government was on Jaluit and the most populous island is Majeru, with 1,000 persons.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
HOOVER TELLS LABOR COUNCIL NOT ALL OF BLAME IS ON CAPITAL&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 –&#13;
Herbert Hoover, former Federal food administrator, was called into conference yesterday by the executive council of the American Federation of Labor, as it continued a face to face discussion of economic and industrial conditions, presumably for the purpose of framing a policy to be followed by the federation in legislation, which it will urge on congress.&#13;
 Mr. Hoover was invited to the meeting, it was explained, because of his wide knowledge of economic and industrial conditions in America. It was indicated also that the council desired and had obtained from him data which eminent engineers have gathered on questions pertaining to or affecting labor.&#13;
 Members who were in the council meeting behind closed doors, were disinclined to talk of the discussions. There was evidence, however, that Mr. Hoover’s views did not place all blame for conditions now confronting labor on employers.&#13;
 Much data has been gathered by the federation with respect to economic conditions throughout the country. It is known also that during yesterday’s conference some members of the council, while holding employees largely responsible for present conditions, admitted that individual and even groups of workers had not “played fair” in some instances.&#13;
 Mr. Hoover was understood to have told the conference that labor must do its share in the elimination of industrial faults and ills which make for unemployment.&#13;
 Council members said they had been deeply interested in Mr. Hoover’s discussion of existing conditions because of its bearing on the federation’s search for methods, which will avoid intermittent operation of industry and consequent unemployment. It is understood Mr. Hoover was told that labor leaders regarded the action of some employers in closing plants or operation on part time, as “little short of a social crime.”&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
FIFTY THOUSAND FOR TROTTING HORSE&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 17 –&#13;
Peter Volo, the world’s champion trotting colt was sold today to Walnut Hall Farm for about $50,000.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Just Received&#13;
&#13;
Large Shipment of Shoes Bought on Lowest Market. Come see ‘em.&#13;
&#13;
Perkins &amp; Britt.  “The Store That is Different” &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY.&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under which this institution has been managed since the first day the doors were opened.&#13;
&#13;
 That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the constant and gratifying growth in business.&#13;
&#13;
 It is the desire of the officers of the Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals desiring most efficient and responsible banking.&#13;
&#13;
 On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your patronage is invited.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
Is owned, controlled and managed by home people, who are interested in the development and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County.&#13;
&#13;
 With our large resources and strong financial connections, we are in position to assist our customers at all times in the handling of their financial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.&#13;
&#13;
 4 Per Cent Interest Paid.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
White &amp; Wyckoff’s Superb Stationery&#13;
&#13;
THE HERALD’S office supple department has just received a large and complete line of this beautiful stationery – no two boxes alike – and we will print any monogram on paper (or cards) and envelopes – in one, two or three colors.&#13;
&#13;
An Ideal and Inexpensive Christmas Gift.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS --- 1c a word&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
---END OF DOCUMENT ----&#13;
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                    <text>IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
NUMBER 194

SANFORD. FLORIDA, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 18. 'lofo

VOLUME 1

Experim ents W ith Frozen Fruit

hunting season opens

SATURDAY OF THIS WEEK
REPORT GAME PLENTIFUL
w

■ ------

*

Banters and Huntresses Are
Making Up Many Parties ,

FOURTH ANNUAL MEETING
SEMINOLE COUNTY CHAPTER
AMERICAN RED CROSS
SOVIET GOVERNMENT
WILL BE RECOGNIZED
IS GENERAL VERDICT;

THREE NEGROES
ARE KILLED '
BY GEORGIA MOB

Reports of the Year’s Work
Show Good Progress

r-811

(Br Tin AiwIitiA rr»»i)
LONDON, Nov. 18.—A wireless
___ ___
DOUGLAS, Ga., Nov. 18.—Two ne­
dispatch from Moscow says General l I C f T W C U 7 f t P F I f F R S
gro men and one negro woman impli­
Wrongd's destruction will make great ■ I j u v 1 llL i I f V I I Iv L ilm V
cated in the killing of Pearly Harper,
impression on western countries." Ina young planter here today, were lined
formnti6n that England is carrying on HEALTH CENTERS WILL BE ES­
up nnd shrit by a mob of a hundred
an agitation in the United States fa­ TABLISHED AND HOME WORK
peter
carner
g iv e s
so m e
nnd fifty men who overpowered the
voring renewal of trade relations &gt;vith (
good a d v ic e o n h o w t o
CARRIED OUT.
sheriff and his two deputies whilo at­
CONDUCT YOUR TRIP.
Soviet Russia. There is no doubt thc
tempting to take the negroes to a
Thc fourth annual meeting of Semi­
western countries -will be forced to
The following from the S t Augus­ place of safety.
recognise tjie Soviet government, It nole county chapter A. R. C. was held
tine Record la so good fo r all counties
at the Presbyterian church on Tues- •
wns anpounced today.
WRANGEL'S ARMY
day, Nov. 16th, with a good attend­
that we reproduce it:
PLANS TO COME BACK
The hunting season in Florida op­
ance.
GERMANY REFUSES
ens on Saturday, November 20th, and
. . (Ujr Tkt A»kkUU4
TO ENTER LEAGUE
| Reports of thc yenr’s work were
Frozen fruit Is n comparatively new fact In the experiment* of the de­
a-goodly number of licenses to hunt
EXCEPT AS EQUAL gtven nnd the annual election of of­
CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. 18.-20,­
have been procured by sportsmen at 000 men of Wrangel’s anti-Bolshevik partment of agriculture. The photograph show* several baskets of small fruits
ficers was held.
(By* Th« *»wl»Ud
,
The meeting opened with prayer by
the office of the county Judge. How­ army were taken out of Sebastopol which have been In cold storage for three month* without Impairing their fin
A1X LA CIIAPPELLE, Nov. 18.—
v.tr or quality. The ex|wrltnenters believe the freezing process to he more
Dr. Brownlee followed by nn interest­
ever, in view of the nearness to the after the Bolshevik victory and arc
Dr. Simons, the German foreign min­
ctvnitmlrnl nt- well as more satisfactory than running. ■
ing address by Mrs. Endor Curlett,
opening of-the Reason, th e number of panning to reorganize nnd go at it
ister, said Germany did not desire to
who is the efficient chnrlmnn of
licenses is not ns large an it should again.
•
enter the League of Nations unless
Seminole county chapter, Mrs. Curbe, indicating that scores of persons,
they were allowed to enter as equal.
lett is bending every effort to cstahas usual, will attem pt to hunt with­ NATION-WIDE STRIKE
Hrh Henlth Centers in Seminole Coun­
out license, the proceeds of which go
OF FARMERS' UNION
POLICEMEN SURRENDER
COMBAT LOW PRICKS
to lhe school fund.
THEIR CHARTER ty, and nlso hopes that nfter the roll
call the chapter will have sufficient
The county gnnlc warden has the
worst thing to do ns it is this crowd­
(Uy
TL*
A
m*cUI*4 rmO
A
m
««
ui
»4
NEW
YORK
CATASTROPHE
CALLS
funds to put on n public henlth nurse.
co-operation of the sheriff’s office in
ing of the people In tho back thnt
KANSAS CITY, Nov. 18.—A na­
BOSTON, Nov. 18— The policemen’s
UP
FACT
THAT
OUR
THE­
The report of the treasurer, Mr. FL
the enforcement « f tho hunting stat­ tionwide producers strike to combat
tramples the youngsters under foot. Union here voted today to surrender
ATRES
ARE
W
E
L
L
•
W.
Deane, wns ns follows:
utes, ns well us
os the backing oi
of every ^
^ on farm product8 ls
Should the audience in any of thc the­ their chnrter.
CONSTRUCTED
Rnl.
in Rnnk, Dec. I, 1910..$
law-abiding sportsman who has paid ^
Ront out by thc Not­
atres in Sanford ever become panic
Membership
dues .
hin license fee and does not approve ^
F am pn(. Union to Iocal unions
FOOD PRICES FALL
stricken for any enuse let all those on
There
should
never
he
a
entnstro-^
Donations
nnd
sales .
of shooting more game in a season or ^
hout thc country.
' phe in tho moving picture thentres in | the left side of the house go out thc
Home Service Fund .
IBy Th» (Uwtliltd fa n )
diy than tho law allows. Shooting
_____ ___________
WASHINGTON, Nov. 18— Retail (
i this city such ns occurred in New (left side entrance, thc s&lt;jme on the
out of season will not be tolerated,
right
nnd
let
the
Indies
nnd
children
food
prices decreased three per cent
| York one night Inst week. In one of ,
Total, inrlud. Rnl.------and unmerciful slaughter of bird. -mi*1
go first nnd every renl mnn in the throughout the United States in Oc- j
,
the
crowded
theatres
on
thc
East
Side
Disbursements.
other game will be punished, office
house will see to it that the children tober, the I.nl&gt;or Department an­ Remittance to Div. Head­
'
thc
cry
of
fire
was
raised
and
many
(
declare,
‘children were trampled to death In get out first of all, Indies next nnd nounced today.
quarters, mem. dues -----$ 594.GCK
An individual hunter may take
then it will be time for the men to
the
rush
to
get
out
of
the
door
nnd
Revolving fund _________ _ 50.00
only one deer, two turkeys, twenty
the proprietors of the theatre have ! go ns they enn always move faster
Town nnd County Nursing
quail or twenty-five other birds in a
SAYS. SANITY. CLEAR lorn arrested nnd will he held respon- j thnn women nnd children. We hope
• Service _________. . . . . . .
day, and killings for the season shall
this time will never hnppcn but if If
THINKING,
COMMON
SENSE,
'
oiblc
for
thc
deaths
of
the
little
ones
(
Supplies
to poor _________
not exceed three denr, ten turkeyn,
should, bear this advice in mind. Man­
HONESTY AND CO-OPERA­
'
ns
they
did
not
hnvc
thc
proper
means
Ml
seel,
expenses....................
end three hundred other birds. PhonsTION SHOULD RULE
of egress from thc thentre. The the­ ager Herndon has mnde every provis­
Telegrams and tele. . . . . . . . ‘
snts nnd grouse nre so scarce in
ion in the world for the safety of the
THE WORLD.
ntres
of
Snnford
all
being
on
tho
Sec. salary .............. .............
Flnridn that the open season is only
_____
people here nnd while these exits
ground
floor
with
many
doors
on
thc
‘
Stove nnd o i l _____________
otic month—from November* 20 to De(Dy Tli* AftiocUttd Pruii
sides nre especially adapted for clear­ hav never been used foH fire esenpes
Postage, stnt. &amp; ptg. -------ccmber 20.
' NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 18.—Presithey are used now for people who
ing
thc
houses
in
ense
of
fire
nnd
this
With the npproach of the hunting dent-elect Harding in a speech here
wish to g e t out &lt;tf the buildings when RETURNS AS CANVASSED TO 1IE
Total Disbursements .
RETURNED TO THE STATE
reason it is only appropriate that that (0day declared plain living nnd square is especially true of the Star Theatre the shows nre over nnd they should
that hns two doors on cnch side of
Ilnlnnec
In hank Nov. 1, 1020 $
HOARD AT TALLAHASSEE
branch of sport be given mention, dealing nre the nation’s strongest re­
always !&gt;c used in case anything hap­
the
building
nnd
many
windows
and
The
Secretary’s
report shows that.
Locally thc season promises to he the |jnnco during the coming period of
pens thnt calls for n quick exit
the
front
doors
np*
made
to
open
eith­
TALLAHASSEE,
Nov.
17—
The
’the
chapter
is
still
very much alive,
greatest ever witnessed. Hunters uft4,r wnr readjustment.
"Sanity,
of thc thentres in Snnford. It Is not following are the figures which will having held meetings each month ex-;
er
way
in
case
there
wns
a
rush
to
throughout the vicinity nre busily pre- cjenr thinking, contnjon sense, hones­
I n mntter o f.fire but anything thnt he presented to the state cnnvnssing cept through the summer month*,
paring for it find indications point to
nnj co-operation" nre prime neces- the front.
This was called to the minds of should happen to startle nn audience hoard when it meets to officially enn- Funds in memberships nnd donations*
a plentiful year of .game.
Much sitien in m eeting thd dem ands o f new
ninny people Inst night when little into starting for the front doors in vac* the election returns this morn- raised by the branches in 1920 an**trcss has l&gt;ecn laid, nnd rightly so, world order.
Osborn Herndon put a piece of film a mnd scramble to get out nnd usual­ ing. These figures have been com- i»* follows:
upon violations of the game laws.
" If we seek understanding which
ly i( is a small matter hut always
..........................$ 32.00
While on the subject, which brings reveals m utuality of in tere sts no d if­ on the stove near the cntrnnro, mak­ enough to stampede a crowd. If it piled by the secretary of s ta te ’s of- A ltam onte . .
ing
n
blaze
nnd
caused
a
momentary
fice from thc official returns of thc Chuluota .............. ....... ........... forth n lot of kick cnch season from ficulty can long abide. Such solution
ever occurs in Snnford remember the
people who do not understand or love cannot comu from greedy thoughts of rush nt the front door by several sido exits nnd use them but remem­ several counties and their correctness East Snnford ......................... .. 97-0O&gt;
thc sport, it is appropriate nlso to profiteer or revolutionary ngitation of who saw it. Thc others, were kept ber thnt if you ar«\ a man your1 safe­ \erified by n careful check. The of- Genova&lt;C&gt;-------- -------------- back by
mention a fevt cautions,
which if ob- ^o se who would
destroy. There
hns the presence of mind of a ty is only n secondary consideration, ficlnl canvass therefore, will show the Longwood ............................... - 00.0(9
few
who
told them to sit down ns
following vote:
Oviedo .................................... ..
served, will do away \yith thc howl bw,n wjj(j contemplation of earnings
and crowd the aisles which is the
there
wns
no
danger.
It
could
be
seen
Democratic—Cnrrnhcllo,
89,840;
Colored nuxlllnry — ............... „ -0&lt;&gt;
of the opponents of tho sport. Peter whether
• •
•in wages or dividends, terms
though thnt It wns the impulse of ev­
Core,
87,307;.
Jones,
88,984;
Knott,
Funds
raised in S n n fo rd ----- 742.00­
Carner, editor Nntionnl Sports Syndi­ of dollars rnther than purchasing
Office supplies nt the Herald.
eryone
to
start
for
the
front
doors
90,615;
Sharon,
87,122;
Wells,
87,812.
,
The
Home Service Secretary’* r e ­
cate, hns ndmirnbly covered the ques­ power. Wc must be more concerned
Lily
White
Republican—Allen,
10,port
shows
that part of the wurfc »»
tion. Ills "don’ts" follow:
in the substance of the reward for ac­
118;
Clough,
7,122;
Drummond,
0,557;
indeed
nctlvc.
Cases on file, 102; vis—(
Every year the hunting season tivity thnn in thc coin measurement.
l,ocke, 0,199; Moffett, 0.192.
’ Itors to office,,257; county and c ity
brings with it its spoils in the form We wnnt fortune nnd common pro­
Republican—Archibald 44,853; Brels cases, 17.
'
of human sacrifices. For the bene­ gression with thc cotton farmers of
ford 37,408; Chubb, 37,409; Smith, | At thc request of the government
fit of gunners who nre going nfter the south hnving their reward with
35,357; Pope, 30,542; Wentworth, 28,- .Red Cross goes forward for the mars
game this fall the followin list of the woo! grow-er nnd wheat grower of
Thc Honorable Board of County future desire to be hound by a prece­
’ '
tin uniform nnd in all enmps a n d tra fn the north. Wo want Southern fac­ Commissioners for Seminole County, dent established permitting thc use g jj.
don't is given:
ProhiMtion—Coffin, 2,041; McAul-(ing stations,
Don't take any chances. Tho func­ tories turned to music of thc mills of Florida, met In regular session Nov. of the Court room for social purpos­
cy, 4,720; Nanncy, 1,757; Smith, 4,- j Home service is still in demnndMV"
tion of a shotun is to scatter shot, tbe nortb. Thera la no sectionalism 3rd, 1020/at 10 o’c\pck a. m. Pres­ es, and,
280; Bryant, 5,124; Rechnrd, 3,773.
'thousands who wore the khaki; Irt.
but he very careful where you scatter jn r|ghteous American ambitions.*’
ent: Chairmnn L. A. Bromley, nnd &lt; WhcreaB, wc feel disposed to grant
Socialist—Cole, 5,189; Hayes, 3,­ own Home Service office there ««=■
it.
'
|
------------------------- „
Commissioners: L. P. l/rignn, C. W. the request of tho American Legion,
Don't blaze away In haste and don t ARGUMENTS TODAY
* Entzmlnger, and E. 11. Kilbre, with and permit the use of tho Court room 040; Henri, 3,447; Jnckson, 0,310; mn-y cares on file whirhi shmzv. th a t -.
settlements for allotments arc yeKtllr*' ‘
O’Kellcy, 8/223; Pillsbury, 3,047.
get excited. Many a shooter has filled .
SHORT LINE ROADS
V. E. Douglass, Deputy Clerk, nnd E. as desired by them for the purpose of
For
Governor—Hardee,
103,407;
ibe
mnde.
his favorite, dog full o f lead, just be- j
FOR. WAGE INCREASE E. Brady, Sheriff, In attendance. Ab­ holding a dance on Armistice night.
Gay,
23,788;
Van
Dutcr,
2,054;
W
hit-1
The
ex-service mnn depends upon
cause he was over anxious.
I
-------| Therefore, Be It Resolved that
sent: Com. O. P. Swope.
•
v
Don’t point'a gun a t any person in j
(»r
a. ~ lw4 i w &gt;
nker,
2,823.
|
thc
Home
Service secretary to help
Minutes of thc Inst regular meeting Campbell-Losslng Post of the Ameri­
test. It. is alw ays- the gun "he didn’t
CHICAGP, Nov. 18— Arguments
For Secretary of State—Crawford, him make out allotment affidavit*^
and- also special meetings of October can legion la hereby (fronted permis­
know was loaded" that goes off and over tho wage increases demanded by
90,700;
Dyson, 24,179. '*
’
,'which must be sent to Washington b e12th, 27th and Nov. 1st and 2nd were sion to use said court room on Arm­
Comptroller—Amos,
90,584;
North1 fore their unpaid allotments are sg tdoes the damage. Tho only time to employees of a hundred "short line”
istice night for thc purposes desired,
read, approved and ordered filed.
point a gun is when you intend to railroads opens today before the Unitrup,
19,406;
McCarthy,
4,545.
[tied
for.
provided, however that this notion on
bill.
cd StAtcs Railroad labor hoard mect- | Mr. F. P. Forster addressed thc ,the part o f this board shnll not be con­
Treasurer—Luning, 88,200; Hunt,
The Home service secretary e r Board In reference to the use of the
|pressed her appreciation of the loya?
Don't take every rustle of a bush ing here.
Court Room for the dance to bo held strued In the future ns a precedent 21,271; Ewing, 7,050.
Attorney
General—Buford,
01,780;
support given her by the executiveor a bough; to be a. sure indication of
es’abVsh'”’*
~*4*
r-'ferepre
to
grant*
game. Remember sometimes an in- of powder behind one and one-eighth by the American Legion, on the night In" us» of tin C turt room for social Gober, 22,672.
| board and the home service comraltof November 11th, 1020.
quisitive person has a penchant for ounces of shot I. inviting
Supcrlntcndent of Public Instroc- Mee.
i Hon. Forest Lake, Mr. Donald Whit­ prr'*'*',s.
being in strange places.
I D°" 1 load your gun until you are
tion—Sheets,
92,760; Junkins,‘20,090. j The report of thc nominating eom'
'
’-nfrd
this
.'rd
day
of
Nov.
A..D;
Don't -carry a loaded gun through actually r e ^ y for business. At .U comb and Mr. S. M. Lloyd addressed 19"0.
Commlssioncr
of Agriculture—Me- mlttee of five, composed of D r.
*
the street or in cars, trains, automo- .other times It should be empty. Keep the Board In reference to the use of • p t». Trim’d r addressed thc Bonn! Rac, 86,589; Hull, 18,411; Porter, 2,- Brownlee, Mm. Puleston, Mrs. W hitbile, or any other kind of vehicle, or your finger off the trigger until &gt;ou the Court room for the dance to be In •—?rrc**r* to the new vault, and '835.
, r.er, Mr. Woodruff nnd Mr. Whitcomb
leave It around farmhouses to have are looking along the barrel a t your given by the American Legion on the s t i ’cd ‘h”» same was completed and
United
States
Senate—Fletcher,
as follows: For chairmsn Seminole
night of November 11th, 1920.
some chiVd playfully blow a head off. game
98/157;
Klock,
2/147;
Martin,
3,526;
county
chapter, Mrs. Endor t u r l e t t o f
The following resolution ^ras offer­ In •’nod shape.
Don’t use a cheap gun, as It Is apt
Don’t get excited and shoot. with­
Cheney,
37,065.
\
Geneva;
vice-chairman, Miss AIHe
Mira Virginia Smith, reported to
ed by Comr. C. W. Entxmlhger, who
out making sure your object Is game. to explode when a heavy charge Is moved Ita adoption, thc same being tb« Board her finding In reference to
Congress, First District—Drone, Grnfford; secretary, Miss Virginia
Don’t shoot until you see the rabbit, used.
20/185; Jefferies. 4 729; Haines, J,- Smith; treasurer, Col. G. W. Knightr
Don’t borrow a dog or gun or loan duly seconded by Comr. L. P. Hagan, Mrs. 8hiriey nnd on motion of Comr.
or whatever It may be, and then be
. "
members of thc executive committee
(and adopted.
*
.. ;L. P. Hacrnn, seconded by Comr. C. 608; Smith, 1/174.
.
sure that he Is clear of both man and cither.
Congress,
Second
District—
(flark,
from Seminole county- chapter as folWhereas thc Campbcll-Lossing Post W. Fntzmingcr, nnd carried, clerk Is
Don’t rest on the muzzle of your
dog.
.
15,143;
Cuhberley
"
"81;
Case,
392.
lows: Mrs. E. M. Galloway, Mrs. S .
of the Americari Legion, have re­ Inrtroct-d to draw warrant cnch
Don’t drag a gun under n fence gun.
Conirress,
Third
D"*trict—SwithO. Chnse, Dr. S. W. Walker, J. C .
Don’t violate the gnme laws. It Is quested the use of tho Court room on n onth to Miss Virginia Smith fop the
with the muzzle pointed toward you
wick,
10,301;
Owens.
2.073.
Hutchinson,
nnd H. C. DuBose.
' spm o '
far thc use and beneDon’t climb over fences with your not only criminal, but sometimes very Armistice night for thc purpose of
,
Congre*s,
Fourth
District—Sears,
'
The
meeting
was closed with a n
•
holding a dance .under the auspices of fi*. of Mrs. Shirlov.
Run or lean it against tree until you costly.
18,355;
Bowen.
11,150;
Hunt,
2,010.
earnest
plea
by
Dr. Walker for every
' Hbn. Forest Lake, chairman of the
get over. Put it through the fence
Don’t "hog" all the game. Leave the .American Legion, and,
Justice
Supreme
Court—Ellis,
77,one
to
enroll
in
the
Red Cross.
Whereas, this Board has adopted "fetate.Road Department apoonred bcand on the ground, business end be- some for the next fellow.
148;
West,
81,192;
Marsh,
19,119;
-------------------------fore
Don’t rest thc mnzzla of your gun the policy, heretofore of not granting for the Board in reference to work to
I G ti your o fflc ^ u o n U « and school
be done by the State Roucj Dcjtart- Axtell. 6.711; Pcttlngill, 18,610.
Don’t hunt with any one that you on the ground. A gun muzzle clog- the use of the Court Room fof social
.&lt;, 8.,Ri whfrc
n ipp M?* nt the Herald Printing C*
Rnilroad
Commissioner
W
e
you cnn Ret
yca
ipcnt
and
stated
that
he
intended
to
know to be carelesas.
Carelessness ged with dirt or mud ia a dangerous purposes, and,
(Continued
on
page
2)
.
.
.
1
(Cnth'.ccd
on
page
3)
very reasonable rate*.
Whereas, this Board does not In the
with three and a quarter drams of propqsltlon.
in ? n&gt;«

a &gt;*o«uw &lt;i

Pm o

DEER TURKEY QUAIL

Sanford Theaters Are All Right

WARDING SPEAKS
AT NEW ORLEANS

AN OFFICIAL
CANVASS OF
LATE ELECTION

• ••V

«v

IW

---- —

—

| lUlllVVI

Ul

|

J

— -

County Commissiorters In Regular Session

J

�;

PA G E SIX

—V

TH E SANFORD DAILY

A t The

HELEN’S DRESSES
EYEBROW-RAISERS

S tar T h e a tre

Bill the Director of “Parlor, Bed-Room
and Bath” to To
*
Dlame.”

TONIGHT
Is your husband g ay enough? Is he the gay rascal
h e made you believe? If not, do you think he could
be? These are som e of the questions Angelica asks
herself in
*

Parlor, Bedroom
and Bath
11 From the famous Broadway Stage Comedy Success
by C. W. Bell and Mark Swan
;; A s for the answer Angelica gets. . . No, somebody
! I m ight overhear, better let her show you on the screen j

Methodist Bazaar
Sanford is on s boom—not a vacant store-room to be found on First
street, but undaunted "The T ruth Seekers'' of the Methodist Church
will erect a tent on the old Sanford House site and hold their Annual
Bazaar FRIDAY and SATURDAY. COOKED FOOD AND OYSTER
SUPPER SATURDAY NIGHT.

Your Patronage Solicited
PETERSBURG BASE­
!.Tarpon Springs, and failing in this
had the dull leaders arrested.
BALL MANAGERS PLEAD
Whether an attempt will be made
GUILTY AND PAY FINE
to play here again next Sunday is not
ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 17.—On known. There is some talk of having
pleas of guilty, Dr. J. L. Mooreficld another game, but the general opinion
and "Babbles" Hargrave, owner and I* that there will be no game. Those
manager of the St. Petersburg base- opposed to Sunday ball are prepared

local club mvner nnd his manager
went before Magistrate R. R. Carter,
who isshed the warrants and entered
plena.jtl guilty. The nominal fine
was imposed.
W arrants were sworn out yester­
day by John P. Lynch, who liven close
to the ball park nnd who is a leader
in church work. He had tried to pre­
vent the game being played here Sun­
day afternoon when the locals met

Please Phone
Your Orders

“I want you to dreaa in such a way
that when you appear on the screen
every man there will givo n short
whistle and every woman will raise
her eyebrows and say, "O-o-oh!"
1 Thus Edward Dillon instructed Hel­
en Sullivan, "the other woman" In
"Parlor, Bedroom and Bath” a t the
Metro studios. This photoplay Is
ndapted from thd stage success by C.
W. Bell and Mark Swan and shows
tonight at the S tar Theatre.
/The young jvoman immediately set
forth to the shop of a modiste (not
modest) in Hollywood and repeated
her director's orders..
The modiste, having knowledge born
of many dealings with the foibles of
the fllckerite brought out a creation
striped in black-and-white—the kind
of stripes that convicts and zebras
wear.
* "Horrors!" exclaimed Miss Sullivan
when she saw the'short skirt, the low
neck, the shiny, block sash about the
hips nnd the stripes that fairly
screamed " Look!" It was a dress
that might be called, daring, sinuous,
audacious, dashing and even "risque."
When Miss Sullivan wore it on the
set, Director Dillon took one all-en­
compassing glance and cried, "Excel­
lent!"
“ Parlor, Bedroom nnd Bath" In­
cludes in its all-star cast such screen
fnvorites ns Eugene Pallette, Ruth
Stonehousc, Kathleen Klrkham and
Henry Miller, Jr., son of the famous
actor and producer. It has to deal
with the adventures nnd misadven­
tures of n young married couple, the
better half of which wanted a hus­
band who was wild nnd who was as
rough on the hearts of the Indies as
the eighteenth nmendment is on the
old soaks. It is n play jammed to
the top with absurdities and hilarious
situations of the sort which cannot be
explained arn^ yet which have to^ be
somehow.

quent Sunday. It is believed that the
baseball men hnve admitted defeat by
TAXPAYERS. TAKE NOTICE!
pleading guilty nnd paying fines nnd
it' is likely thnt the affair will end
Tax books nre now open for .the
with this.
payment of State nnd County taxes
for 1920. A discount-of two per cent
is
allowed for payment in November
Send in your locals to the Herald
nnd one per cent in December.
office. Phone the news to 148. We
JNO. D. JINKINS,
wnnt every bit of it. Tell us the 11-13-dlw,
Tax Collector,
news each day.
w-2t
Seminole County.

SPECIAL EI^GAGEMENT

Claaaified advertisements, 5 centa 'a line. No ad taken for lesa than
25 centa, and pool lively no. claaaified ada charged to anyone. Caah
moat accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit ac­
cordingly.
*
^
.
WANTED
WANTED—House or apartm ent of ^
or 4 rooms, unfurnished, for man
and wife with two school children.
Best of references. See or write, G.
B. S.. job dept. Herald office, dh-tf
Buy your post cards a t the Herald
office.
WANTED—Team work.

Duy your post cards a t tho Herald
office. Beautiful views, lc each.
Gasoline enginra. Brand new and
In perfect condition.—Herald Print­
ing Co.
tf
WANTED—BY DEC.. 1 st OR
SOONER, 3 OR 4 UNFUR­
NISHED ROOMS OR 3 TO 6
ROOM HOUSE. UNFURNISH­
ED OR PARTLY FURNISHED.
WILL LEASE BY MONTH OR
YEAR. BEST OF REFERENC­
ES GIVEN. ADDRESS “SOON”
CARE OF HERALD.
193-12tp

$10,000.00 TENT THEATRE
B E G IN N IN G

FOUR ACT DRAMA

PLANTS FOR SALE—Cabbage per
1000, $1.50; Cauliflower, Handers
Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B.
B., per M, $1.50; Ice Berg, per M,
$1.50; beets, Crosby's Egyptian, per
M, $1.50; Onion, yellow Bermuda, per
M, $1.50; onions, white Bermuda, per
M, $1.60; Celery, yellow golden, per
M, $2.00; Sclf-blcachlng Imported
celery, per M, $2.00; French celery
seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.00.—
Clay County Gardening Co., Green
Cove Springs, Fla.
1*1-12
FOR SA L E -O nc 1020 Cole Eight 7passengcr automobile rug only 6500
miles. Bargain. One 1020. 7 pas­
senger Bulck run only 3,700 miles,
price right. Extras. Box 470, De­
Land, Fla.
• l93-6tp
FOR SALE—Good
mule, cheap.
Would exchange for good milch
cow. p. O. Box 445.
193-4tp
FOR SALE—One cottage, 6 fooms
and bath, corner Third Street and
French ave. Mrs. Baldwin. 193-4tp

TO RENT or for sale, large ware­
house with railroad siding.—Chas.
Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co.
■
__________________
156-tfe
FURNISHED ROOMS—Two furnish­
ed bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park
Avenue. .. .______________ 157-tfc
BEST CREAMERY
MISCELLANEOUS
BUTTER, per lb
ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week,
109 East First street, over Union
Pharmacy.
163-tfc
PURITAN HAMS,
DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 San­
Per tb ..............
ford nvenue, pay cash for furniture,
bedsteads, chairs, etc. What have
you?
174-30tc POTATOES
Per peck
BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run
your battery until she Is entirely
dead. The battery Is the costliest ac­ 8-Ib Can SNOW.
DRIFT LARD
cessory to your car. We re-eharge
and re-hulld nil makes of .batteries.
—Ray Bros. Phone 548, old Ford
Garage.179-tfe
LOST—Western Union branch de­
posit book. Finder please return
to Western Union office.—J. P. Hall,
Mgr.
_
180-tfc
LOST OR STRXYED^One red“ plg,
4 months old. If found notify E.
B. Randall, Jr., 825 First Street.
10 1-tfc
FOR SALE—ShastQ.dnisics, $1 per
dozen. English Shnmrock Oxalys
."0c per dozen. Ring 207-W. 18.1-12tc
Special reduction in men’s nnd la­
dies’ W. L. Douglas shock.—A. Knnner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.
___________________________ 166-tfc
FOR SALE—1Vi H. P. and 2Vi H. P.
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
In perfect condition.—Herald P rint­
ing Co.__________________________tf
New line of Congoteums and Art
Squares—A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford
Ave. Phone 650.
166-tfc

'

RAISENS
BROWN SUGAR
DATES
FIGS

SPICES of all klnda
NEW FLORIDA SYRUP
APPLES, 75c per Peck

Sanford

Florida

A Trial Solicited

Pure Food Market

JONES’

Tillts, Prop.

402 Sanford Ave.

We Guarantee All
Every Battery repair we make i»
guaranteed for six months. We are
able to do this because In repairing
any make of battery we are Urent^d
to use patented features which have
made Vesta batteries famous.

Sanford Bakery Service Co.
I~ A. RENAUD, Prop.

Phone 189

CHULUOTA INN
Will Open Scnion 1927-21 on

Thanksgiving Day
Turkey Dinner

Cash and Carry
FOR (XPERT ALTO REPAIRING

Cor. First and Sanford Ave.
a R IN G

National Madza Lamps
25 to 300 W att in 110 Volts.
20 to 75 Watts in 32 Volts

—■■-­
Everything Electrical
Expert Installation and
.
Repair Work

G IL L O N &amp; F R Y
Phone 412

115 Magnolia Are.

Ball P a r k G r o u n d s

I Sell It

SANFORD

J . E . SPURLING

by

Post Cards
Sanford's Most Popular Hotel

Beautiful
Views

SEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL
Under Management of
WALTER B- OLSON

Five Vaudeville Specialties Between Acts

Mile Long Open Cage

------------------------------- --------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------T------------------------*------------- ^

Street Parade |

Admission 40c and 25c, including War Tax

.
'

ADVERTISE

MONDAY NIGHT WILL PRESENT

CURRANTS

BRADLEY MATTRESS FACTORY
Orlando, Fla.
Makes old Mattresses new at oneFOR RENT
J. H .
third the cost of a new one.
Kr,N r —Unc mcely furnished
16 BRYANT ST. Phone 105
room, 320 Oak Ave. Phone 308-J. PHONE 801
ll-1511tno-p
187-tfc

FOR SALE—One new 1920 nnd one
1917 Ford touring cars. Two tonta
10x12 and 12x14, also four army cots.
All in good condition. Call for Mr.
.Lehman. Phone No. 112.
103-6tp

America’s Best Dramatic Company will present HighClass Royalty
Plays—Change of Program Each Day
■
r

ORANGE PEEL
CITRON

Special reduction on Georgette Silk
and' cotton shirt waists.—A. Kanner,
21.1-215 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.
We have, ju st received a lino of

FOR SALE—One horse, wsgon and
harness. Apply M. Hanson Shoe
Shop.
189-12tp
Sec our line of electrical lamps-—
A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Avenue.
Phone 550.
..
166-tfc

Herald—by the pound—15c.
WANTED—Brick and cement work,
chimneys, Hues, piers, cement
floors, sidewalks. — A. L. Ray, 206
Park Ave.
173-30tp
WANTED—Pupils, Violin and Piano.
—Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.

LEMON PEEL

FOR SALE—1W n . P. and
H. P.
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
in perfect condition.—Herald Print-

'

COMEDIANS

THANKSGIVING (TURKEY
Everything for Your Fruit Cake

10:30 A.M. .

Our Specially— -Sem inole’*
famous $1 Sunday Dinner
de luxe.
A La Carte S ettle* all day.

�.V.. r -khr f ., \ -

•

‘ t-

S R ’ •-- •'

.-, W !''-3pr-;-V ■

Vi-votv*-

?f $ Si*

jupwcg

• - v'- I
TH E 8ANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1910
EXPLOSION KILLS SEVERAL
**«
1 (B/ Th. AuoeUU4 Pr.u.)
* ROCKVILLE, Md., Nov. 18.—An
exposition joccurrede here today in
which the home of Jam es Bolton, a y
I
farmer, was destroyed killing two chil­
dren. Mrs. Hattie Shipley, Bolton's
housekeeper and seriously injured
Phone 428
Bolton. Vernon Thompson, a neighwas a good attendance and the ladies bor, was arrested.
thoroughly enjoyed their work nnd |
------------------the social time together. A delicious ! COOLIDGE AGAINST
CANCELLATION CONTRACTS
refreshments course was serve'd.
Thursday—
Saturday, Dec. 4th, was the date
Evcry-woek Bridge Club with Mrs.
d r TV* A***«UW4 Frat*.)
chosen for the Christmas bazaar and
M argaret Bnmcs.
BOSTON, Nov. 18.—Cancellation of
supper, the place to be announced nt contracts by trades people who were
T. N. T. with Mrs. J. B. Lawson.
a later date.
Friday:—
'
caught in the falling markets with or­
Spendthrift Club with Mrs. 8.1 M.
ders for go&amp;ds nt high prices were
SUNDAY MORNING CLUB.
Lloyd.
condemned by Governor Coolidge in a
D. A. R. with Mrs. A. R. Key.
Men, where do you spend your Sun­ letter to the Boston Boot and Shoe
day
mornings? You will be entertain­ Club today.
Miss Adelaide Higgins has returned
ed
and
benefitted If you will meet
from Waco, Texas, where she repre­
with
the
Sunday Morning Club, a . CORNER SELLS LETTUCE.
sented the state of Florida at the cotbunch
of
live
men with a real teach­
Albert Domer gives us the follow­
'to n convention.
er—next Sunday morning nt 9f30 at ing interesting Information this morn­
Mrs. Margaret Barnes has as her the Baptist Temple. If not affiliated ing:
R. R. Eldridge has sold Albert Apguest, Mrs. N. F. Peyton, of Wash­ with sonje other church you arc want­
ed nnd needed here.
polio Dormer's lettuce to A. H. Moses
ington.
fo r | 1,000 cash for the first car.
CECELIN PROGRAM
There arc more to follow every dny.
Mr. nnd Mrs.. I t S. Sheldon were
A large number of patrons nnd
Albert was only farming four years
th e guests of their daughter, Mrs.
friends
attended the recital given by before ho came to Sanford. He wan
Alex Fitts for a few days last week.
1 ST: LARGE CAPITAL AND WORKING RESERVE.
the Cccilinn Music Club last Saturday a pioneer flyer - for 7 years, spent
2ND: TRAINED MEN IN CHARGE-M EN OF SEVERAL YEARS EXf
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. B arrett have re- .afternoon. Mrs. Munson gpohed the jm a n y sorry, unhappy and cheerful
program
with
n
talk
on
the
life
of
the
.
days
when
he
flew
with
John
B.
Moisturned to Sanford after a two years
• pbrience .
absence. They will be with Mrs. Cc- Immortal M aster Haydn and empha-|0nt&gt; Graham White, Crolol Johnson,
3RD;. THE CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBLIC, WHICH IS PROVEN nY
cU G abbit until the first of the year. sized many valuable lessons to the . Fred Schneider, the sons of President
THE DAILY ADDITION TO OUR LINE OF DEPOSITORS. .\
young music student from the facts , Carranza, Rcne Simon, Andree HoupX
zi
K
Urs. Norman Nash nnd (of his efforts nnd success; the strug-^ crt ftml Miss’!!. Quimly, also Mntlidn
4TH: PROTECTION BY TWO EXAMINATIONS EACH YEAR BY TUI?
M rs.'N ash's mother, Mrs. E. F. Hoyt glcs that so gloriously triumphed.
Molsant with n 30 h. p. Aznni motor.
STATE RANKING DEPARTMENT, TWO AUDITS EACH YEAR
o f Itostdln, arc gucstn of the Valdez
In addition to the usual piano num­
BY AN INDEPENDENT RECOGNIZED PUBLIC AUDIT COM­
•for tlir winter.
bers, Miss Lilly Ruth ’Spencer ac­
PANY AND TWO SWORN STATEMENTS SUBMITTED TO TIIE
The B. &amp; O. Garage has nn nd in
companied by Mrs. Claud Herndon, this issue of the Herald, announcing
STATE COMPTROLLER BY THE CASHIER, GIVING THE
R. W. Pearmnn, Jr., nnd Judge Geo. gave a group .of vocal solos. Miss
.BANK’S CONDITION IN DETAIL. ALL OF WIHCn INSURES
big cut in the price of the well
H erring have returned from Tnllnbns- Spencer Is n young student of the
REGULAR, SYSTEMATIC AND THOROUGH OPERATION OF
known Kokpmo Auto Tires. Here's
foc. They were in Tallnhnssee in the Sanford High school and
THE BANK.
possess u „ chance to save soiue real money—it
.interests of the people of Sanford in splendid and most promising voice.
will pay any nuto owner to equip his
5T11: THE ADVICE OF A COMPETENT BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
th e Southern Bell Telephone Company
The entire program was delightful- Pnr with ncw tircs n|| „rolind, ns the
WHO MEET WITH THE OFFICERS
REGULARLY
EACH *
case. . The hearing wns recessed until Iy rendered and included the follow- ( pr jf0 j* fnr |&gt;clow any quoted here in
MONTH AND ADVISE TIFEM AS TO THE OPERATION OF
a complete audit of the (hooks can be ing piano selections:
;jnnny moons. Perrq- Jcrnignn hns
TIIE BANK.
*
made which will probably take n 1. Sonate in D— , ........ ..........Haydn pone to Tampa for n few days nnd you
year.
6T II: INSURANCE OF ALL DEPOSITS EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR.
Georgia Mobly
, Hhould tnke ndvnntngc of the oppor­
2.—Concert M azurku______ Pessnrd tunity before his return ns he may
THIS IS A PROTECTION NOT COMMONLY FOUND IN BANKS
TUESDAY CLUB
Agnes Perritt
AND IS AN ABSOLUTE PROTECTION FOR YOUR FUNDS, IN
raise the price to get even on the
Mrs. Reginald Holly very charm­
ADDITION TO ALL TIIE OTHER USUAL SAFEGUARDS.
3.
—Vulsc in I) flat___ Chopin trip.
ingly entertained her Ilridge Club nnd
Chnrlott Smith
;
_________________
a n extra table Tuesday afternoon nt
THESE ARE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD DO BUSINESS WITH
4.
—Polish D an ce............Schnrwcnku
E.
C- Hnrrinton, of Wekiwa
b r r home, 311 Park nvc.
US. AND WE BELIEVE THAT NO BANK CAN OFFER BETTER IN­
May Holly
J Springs, was in the city today chroute
.
The house wns most attractive in
DUCEMENTS.
f 5.—M editation........................ Szlntt to Daytona. He is a former nevsparoses, ferns nnd poinsettas. At the
|
Sara Wheelis
per man, h i\ np nt one time been cn
conclusion of the game a delicious snl1 0.—In art Alabama Cabin___ ._
| the Ontngo county papers.
tul course was served.
___ __ Chris. Wakefield Cadman
-------------------------• The club members present were:
N
en
ie
Stone
(
*NEW
ORLEANS,
Nov. | 8.—PresiM rs. John $mith, Mrs. Donald Smith,
.—B olero.............................. llvorth dent-elect Harding will not stop nt u
M rs. Archie Betts, Mrs. D. C. Mar­
Marguerite Garner
[Me-xican port on his voyage to Pana- Y
WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS
Y
low, Mrs. Robert Hines, Mrs. Harry I*
|
8.—
Evening
S
tar
---Wngner-Liszt
nm
ns
invited
by
Mexican
officials.
W alsh, Mrs. Henry Burden.
The
, Miss H eld Terwilligcr
f
-------------------------- .
guests were: Mrs. Fodder, Mrs. Ed. |
9.—Mazurka
J. Louis Brown AN OFFICIAL CANVASS
-----------1 — ■
—
■
-------------- .......... —
' ■■
TJcttx, Mrs. Harris nnd Mrs. R. J.
OF LATH ELECTION
Miss
Izcttn
Stone
Holly.
10.
—Vulsc in A fla t__ Gurlitt
(Continued fronj page one)
Pearl Robson
PIPE ORGAN CLUB.
—Full of Fun .......... ljiwson '092; Baird, 6,428; McDougall. 1,080;
The Pipe Organ Club of the Bap­ 11.
GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES
Crum, 17,088.
Ruth Henry
tis t Church were delightfully enlerThere were 34,504 votes case for tho
— Little Folk Group—
J u st Lay Them Down and N a ll- T h a t ’s All
Phone 110
tnineil liy Mrs. Kent Rossitter at her 12.
Doll..Newton
Sw
ift'
constitutional
amendment
nnd
54,510
(a)
Japanese
home on Celery avenue Monday after­
T here is To It
;
Corner Sanford and Celery Avenues
(li) Hopper Toad .................. Oorth votes case against the amendment.
noon.
&gt;
&gt; The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold nir—rain, sleet, &lt;
Mary Helen Morse
The vote on the constitutional
A pleasant nfternoon of sewing nnd
!
etc.,
from forcing its way thro ugh the roof.
J
diacussion was enjoyed by the mem­ My First Piece..M rs. Crosby Adams amendment by counties is ns follows:
J
The
Shoulder
of
Protectio
n
is
also
the
Seif-Spacing
Device.
‘
Counties—
Frederick Williams
2-lb CANS STANDARD. HANDbers who were present It wns decid­
■
Makes
Inying
easy
nnd
rnpid—
thus
saving
time
nnd
money.
Blnehun
PACKED TOMATOES,
ed to have the Chrlsnmas Bazaar on Ding Dong Bell .................. Spnuding
■
These Asphalt Shingles n re surfaced with nnturnl colored Red ,
B a k er
Helen
Douglass
PER
CAN ......
..........
December 4th, however, the place hns
or
Green
Crushed Slate. Enc h rain washes away the accumulated
Hay
.Swing Song
Hehrins
not been d ecid ed upon
+
[
dust—reviving
perpetually the originnl rich colors.
Bradford
Itorothy Haines
Delirious refreshments were served
Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered—
Brevard
EXTRA FANCY GRADE MAINE
during the afternoon.
1
because
they .are fire-resisting.
the
Broward
.
CORN,
PER
Everything for the office at
Give
us the dimensions- df your roof. Wo will estimate the
Herald Printing Co. We can fit you . Calhoun .
CAN .............—.....................
PIPE ORGAN CLUB.
cost
free
of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.
The Pipe Orgnn Club wns enter­ out with nil that you need in fine 'C itrus i . .
tained Monday nfternoon by Mrs. printed stationery nnd office supplies Clay
MAXWELL HOUSE
*A
Columbia
_________
147
K ent .Rossiter ht h e r’home on Celery nt all kinds.
COFFEE.
1-lb.
can.............4
Dade ............................ 3,283
uvenue.
Office supplies nt the Herald.
| DeSoto .......................... 732
in spite of inrlemrnt weather there
Duval ...........
7,441
EXPORT SOAP.
Escambia . . .
3,709
PER CAKE ..............................
Krnnklin
.
92
S P E C IA L B A R G A IN S
'Gadsden ___________ __
FOR THE FIR ST
SWIFTS’ PREMIUM
J
Hamilton . . _______
223
C O M P L E T E H O U S E B IL L
Hernando
___
383
HAMS, Per lb. ............ - . - 4
Hillsborough ................... 1,980
C A R T E R L U M B E R CO.
H o lm e s_______ .1 ___ 659
Try a Herald Want Ad.—It pays.
play b y
Jncksoif ______
757
Jefferson
_________
142
A u g u y f ity
Lafayette
...........
33
Ijiko ______
479
Leo __________
585
Flagler ____
204
Okeechobee. ..._______
77
I-con _______ ___ . . . .
306
Levy ..............................
165
96
Liberty ........ .......... ......
Madison ___________ _ 219
Manatee ____________ 280
320
Marion __ ______ ___
286
Monroe _____ '_______
Nassau ______ _______ 252
O kaloosa_______ 1__ _ 333
O r a n g e ________ ____ 654
00
Osceola ______ ______
708
Palm B e a c h _______
Pasco ___ _____ ____ &gt;469
Pintfllarf_________ ____ 752
Polk
........................... 633
P u tn a m _____________ 343
T h e most complete line of Records
St. Johns . . . . . . . . . . . 1,083
in the city.
: l .
S t Lucie ....................... 288
Santa R o s a ___ ______ 667
her "romance with Danny was respon- Sem inole_________ _— 170
SYNOPSIS.
Though Maria Inez Lopez had
66
S u m te r __ ____ _____
been taught by her father, El Capitan loVc turned to hate. She loti a raid Suwannee __________
88
o f nn insurgent band, to hate Arncri- on tin* frontier town, but the Ameri­ T a y lo r............................ 108
&lt;ca nnd the "Gringo," she could not can forces were the victors. I.opcz, V o lu sia _, __________
476
T e stst the ardent love-m aking of wounded, was trapped in the burning Wakulla .........................
109
i
♦
Danny O'Neil, a Texas ranger, who jail and saved by D anny.'
i Walton ...................... — 1,337
The climax is reached when the dy­ Washington _________ 313
aavctl her from capture by the Mexi­
ing I,o|&gt;ek is taken to Danny's homocan police.
•
Lopez was caught smuggling arms and rccogniz6d by his foster mother
Total ...................... ..34,564 54,510
iicross the Rio. Marla Inez believed as her long lost husband.
•No vote reported.
w are
M m
*

Six Kinds o f Safety

X
X

X

X

A

X
X

X

t

JH';
K

Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank
where you deposit your money?
The first consideration is the capital, which should be
ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank
is to serve.
,
The next question to consider is the officers in charge.
They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.
Then there is the question of confidence. The public
should have confidence in the officers and in the bank.
These three principles determine the success of a bank.
We adopted these principles in the outset of our career
and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase
our usefulness to the community as the years go by.
We Offer You:

X

I
i

X

PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD

M. D. GATCHEL

m

*.• L u

’

!Vulcanite Shingles:

9c

20c
[0 c

&amp;;

Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co

J

Sc

ftio Grande

:8 C

Thoavst

Full Line

Prices from $50 to $300

Terms to Suit Yourself

Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins

Prices Right

-

•

.*

�E^rivife s
______

_

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18,

tor
Figuring
JEventi

tbA M iN G O ) A BIRD OF
BEAUTY a n d m y s t e r y ,
is SAVED FROM
v EXTINCTION
Assurance that the flamingo, bird of
b^uty
mystery, will escape ex­
tinction is contained In a letter from
U. E. W. Grant, colonial governor of
the Ualitmsa, which says:
-You will be glad to hear that an
nrder In council haa been patted giv­
ing complete protection to the flamlnjo. Tbli glory of our mnrahes owes
tbe expedition a debt bt gratitude."
Tbe action of the Bahamas' council
taken following an expedition,
frfclch trailed the flamingo, the most
beautiful of the world's larger birds,
(o Its lost stand, took motion pictures
of tbe timorous creatures; and brought
•bout a realisation of bow near they
were to becoming extinct In tbe new
world through annihilation by native
•ponge fishermen.
These fishermen
bunted them down for food purposes
at the nesting and molting season.
The first American naturalist to lo­
cate and study the gorgeous flamingo
was Dr. Frank M&gt; Chapman In 1001,
v hen be estimated that some 20,000
flamingoes were to bo found on one
of the .little known Islands of the
Bahamas group. Since then It Is be­
lieved that fully two-thirds of the
colonies have perished.
The expedition that spent ten days
In the abysmal salt swamps of Andros
Island, filming the flamingo and study­
ing his habitat for scientific pur­
poses, was sent out by the Miami
[iquarlum association.
A yacht was the mother ship of the
.expedition and un express cruiser was
prod as a scout boat. Canvas canoes
were taken along to get Into tbe shal­
low salt creeks, and nose Into the la­
goons for deep entrances to the murky
suumpi where the llatnlngo hides. A
Ilnhanm guide. Peter Bannister, who
had aided Doctor Chapman's parly It)
years ngo, also went with the party.
After penetrating to the utmost
navigable points with the canoes It
was necessary to traverse miles of the
"swash" or tidal mnrl marshes, carry­
ing the heavy cameras nod motion pic­
ture machines. In search for tlm birds.
Wading In water lip to tbe waist, knee
deep In the marl mud, was the dully
program, while blinding swarms of
mosquitoes compelled nightly retreats
to the yaqht, anchured several miles
off shore.
But lln: hardships found n worthy
reward tVlien the party came upon col­
onies of several hundred birds, de­
scribed by a member of the party ns
"a flaming mrtss of brilliant scurlet
bodies, Jet black beneath tbe huge
wings, with their long, slender necks
gracefully lowering mid raising their
Roman-nosed heads as they sought Ikjneatb Ihc water the tiny spiral shell
known to scientists ns 'Cerlthltiiu.' up­
on which the flamingo lives exclusively
In Its native habitat."
SARDINIA: THE ISLAND OF
PYGMIES AND WOLFRAM
A traveler of tine Imagination sug­
gests that travel Involves a double
|ournoy—“one forwnrd through space,
ihe other backward through- time."
Four steamboat ticket from Civi­
tavecchia, the port of Rome, entitles
you to an eight-hour voyage to Sar­
dinia, but affords n premium of sev­
eral thousand years backward to Kurope’a earliest traceable history.
Sardinia has a double Interest Just
pow because of tbe reported native
demand for home rule, and because
Americans have found tracts contain­
ing wolfram, highly prized as u source
of tungsten.
Second only to Sicily among Medi­
terranean Islands. Sardinia has been
referred to ns the lost Isle of that
sea. Geographically It has been said
to turn Us back on Italy, for Its east
const Is mountainous. This Isolation
bus a comiieiisutlun In preserving the
homogeneity of u people who Imve n

SERVICE

" v ■! **'r

** v :

ffiTs view lliat there Is an entire ab­
sence of that awe-lnsplrtnfl and most
paralyzing effect which strikes the vis­
itor dumb with wonder and amazement
when Niagara bursts on his near
vision,-’
“On first sight of the Victoria Falls
one Involuntarily exclaims, *Oh, how
beautiful t' but they lack the majesty
of our grand Niagara.*
“No stngfe visit can adequately re­
veal tho fullness of their charms, but
repented excurnlona must bo made to
their Islands and precipices, tbelr grot­
tos and palm gardens, their rain for­
ests and projecting crags, their rain­
bows and cataracts and many-sided
views of their exquisite setting In tho
emerald framework of Woplc forests,
before tbelr Indescribable beauty can
bo appreciated.
srm
"Had the falls bean In America, the
Indians would surely have named
them Minnehaha, Laughing Waters."
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
IN REGULAR SESSION

Sardinian Miners.

special Interest for students of racial
history, .Sardinians are small of
(Continued from page one)
stature. Even their soldiers have an co-operate with the Board of County
uverage height a fraction under flve Commissioners when, doing work in
-feet, four Inches.
' this county.
. But tho most conspicuous curiosities
Comr. L. P. Hagan offered the fol­
of Sardinia are Its nuraghl, great
round towers, relics of the bronze age. lowing resolution and moved its adop­
which served as fortified dwellings for tion, same being seconded by Comr.
some prehistoric people. There arc C. W. Entzminger.
5,000 or more of these towers, some 00
Whereas, as the public highway in
feet high, usually about 80 feet In dl* Seminole County, Florida, beginning
ntneter at the base, made of stone a t the intersection of the brick road
blocks and smeared with clay on the leading west from Sanford, with the
Inside. ' Stairways lead to upper cham­
brick road leading to DeLand, and run­
bers and plntfonna.
Interesting as are these relics of un­ ning thence in n westerly direction to
known Inhabitants, even more fasci­ the Wekiva river and connecting with
nating are tho traces of ancient civili­ Lake county, is a main thoroughfare
zations to be found In the dally life leading to Lake county, and should be
of Sardinians of today. One may mid designated as n State Aid road.
oxen plowing as they did In the days
Therefore, Be It Resolved, That the
of the Roman empire. Implements State Road Department be and they
which were Introduced by the succes­
sive occupants, one Catalan tuwn are hereby requested to designate said
(Alghero) where there Is no Jarring highway ns a State Aid Road.
And Be It F urther Resolved that,
note In the Illusion of old Spain, mid
dances of the classic Greek period at the Clerk of thin Board be instruct­
the mountain feste.
ed to forward a certified copy of this
Only In Sardinia and Corslcn Is the resolution to Hon. Forest Lake, chair­
tmiflonl, predecessor of our sheep, to. man of the State Road Department,
he found. Wild doer and wild hoar !flt TnllahnBSCC, Fla.
are plentiful In the mountain districts.
Adopted this 3rd day of Nov. A.
Tunny fishing Is n major Industry.
'
" *
J
area Sardinia Is comparable lo D. 1920.
Comr. L. P. Hagan offered the fol­
v , '; »Font, but has more than twice tin*
lowing
resolution and moved Its adop­
population of that state. The Island
lies directly south of Corsica, ami Is tion, same- being duly seconded by
separated therefrom by Ihe narrow Comr, E. II. Kilhee.
straits of Bonifacio In shape It lias
That the Tax Collector be and he
been compared to a human footprint. hereby is authorized nnd directed to
xpay all funds collected by him on ac-

CAROLINE ISLANDS: AN
OCEANIC MUSEUM
Whatever tbe political future of the
Caroline Islands, which Japan seized
from Germany, they are .bound to be
objects of scientific Interest for gen­
erations to coiue.
Who bull! the massive stone struc­
tures which glvo evidence of n high
degree of civilization at some prehis­
toric-time) .
What was the origin of J he stone
currency, some “coins" of wfilch weigh
five tons!
These are hut two of fa&lt;_mnnj
questions which these Pacific Ulnnde
of mystery present.
The stone ruins extend from Ponnpe,
an Island toward the east of the group,
to Yap, on the west. Yap will be re­
called as the Island which figured so
conspicuously In the peace treaty dis­
cussion because of Ihe proposal to cede
It to the United States.
On Yap arc great stone terraces, em­
bankments and rouds, composed of
neatly laid stone blocks, stone graves,
stone platforms nnd enormous cham­
bers resembling council lodges with
gables and tall jtlllure, frequently
carved.
Ponnpe Is the "Pacific Venice." There
the ruins are partly submerged. A|e
parcntly they once stood on an Island
city, unless their site wns connected
with other Islands before n terrific
upheaval Inundated them.
What remain)* today Is more than
half a hundred rectangular walhu
uteta. projecting atxn'e Hie waters
lagoon. There Is sn outer lagoon.*
a n te d by a breakwater three mllcl
long. In all this construction huge ba­
salt blocks were used. Apparently
they were untouched by Iron tools.
Itecent study has confirmed the belief
that these mighty megallthlc monu­
ments antedate the present native pop­
ulation of the Curnllnrs.
Origin of the unique (done colnnge
Is not known. Shell money seems to
have supplanted the unwieldy stone
disks for "small change” long before
the white man arrived. The stone
"money" Is made from- limestone or
calclte. It prohnhly was employed for
primitive banking rather than for gen­
eral circulation. Its security from
theft was assured by lls weight. Spec­
imens are found piled about the homes
of native chieftains.
1mi tiding reefs not Inhabited, the
Caroline Muuda number more than
■"&gt;00. Of the total land area of !UHI
-qmtro miles 107 square tulles Is coin-

AIRPLANES TO WHIR OVER
°f Florid“ Groves I,rainafJC r,is, . , n c n n i ic c a i i c
, trtet on Assessment Roll of 1920, to
THUNDEROUS FALLS
|hp BoIK, TrURtcc(l of tho Mf(, norida
Willie Niagara Kails will cotitlmw
to bold tbe.r own a*» a meern for lion1ey-mooners
’
_ ,,they
and, other travelers,
must hence forth submit to comparts.,n
with another natural wonder, the Vic­
toria Katls of the Zambesi, ns Africa
heroines frequented by tourists,
I roni being a place of mystery, so
feared that Livingstone, who discov­
ered the falls In 18.5.5, had great dilllruh.v In persuading his followers to
accompany Idol, the foils now- are visInte from n railway that crosses. Iht
river hnlf-tnlle below them, nml they
Re under the route of the proposed
Capo to Cairo aerial service.
Louis Livingston Seaman, In a com­
munication lo the National Geographic
society, describes a visit to Victoria
Kails and contrasts them with Nlngarn. ns follows:
“Early In the morning of ihe thlt»l
day, we were suddenly awakened by
the guard and treated to a accne of
beauty haver to be' forgotten. Some
ten miles distant five enormous col­
umns of vapor were shooting their
roseate-tinted shafts hundreds of feet
heavenward, while the faint roar of
the falls told us tiie Mosloa-Tunga—
tho smoke thHt sounds—wns no longer
a mystery.
“Each moment Increased tlio beauty
and vividness of the scene. With the
first rays of the rising sun came a
picture of color of wondrous loveliness.
Delicate tints of violet, crimson, and
tferyl played through the mounting
spray as It shot 'higher and higher*
ultimately disappearing as virgin
clouds In heaven, white the evec-ln*
creasing thunders of the waters lent
an added solemnity to the view.
“Hardly could we wait to reach our
destination, so great was our enthusi­
asm. But our hopes were doomed to
momentary disappointment, only to be
more than realized after a study of
Ihe cnvlromuent; for, notwithstanding
tbelr magnitude, the first view of Vic­
toria Falls Is decidedly disappointing.
“Although" nearly a mile In width
and 400 feet in height, the grandeur
of their proportions Is eclipsed by the
sudden tl!sapi&gt;*nrnnce of the river, as
It plunges Into a narrow, rocky, fissure
extending across Its entire wldlh. Only
at a single central point Is there a
breach In this fissure through which
the falls can be seen and appreciated
In their full proportions, where ihe
converging waters rush madly to the
zigzag canyon below. So restricted Is

C r„ v„

Thanksgiving

that big day is only* one week distant
—and you have hat, Buit, coat, or
dress for the various events of the
day or evening to select.
Or you may have to think of linen,
cutlery, china, glassware for the din­
ner table—
■
This store is thoroughly prepared
with complete stocks of the newest
and best in Quality merchandise and
each department presents many fav­
orable opportunities for economical
•buying^
A particular advantage la the large
and varied showings from which you
may choose—showings which you
would only find In a large department
store, such as this.
“Where All Central Florida Shops"

Yowe!l-Drew Co.
Orlando s Largest Department Store

. O rlando, Florida

Sanford
Machine &amp; Foundry
Company

D rainage D istrict, and Is ad-

. . .
vised that the levy1 assessment is for
lhp "oIp P"rimse of paying interest
on bonds and for n sinking fund, and
that the Bond Trustees of the said
District are O. P. Swope, B. F. Wheel­
er nnd L. A. Sheldon.
Dr. J. T. Denton appeared before
the board in reference to his work ns
county physician.
* *
Other communications were receiv­
ed, read nnd ordered filed.
Fire arms bond of B. F. Whitner,
jr., wns npnrovcd and license ordered
issued.
Notary Public Bond p i- Lila Mae
Johnson nnd D. M. Martin were ap­
proved.
F. F. Dutton appeared before the
Board in reference to new road thru
his farm on west city limits line.
Motion of C. W.* Entzminger, sec­
onded by E. II. Kilbee, nnd carried,
Comr. L. P. Ilagnrl nnd Engineer Fred
T. Williams are hereby appointed a
committee to confer with the city
commissioners in reference to road on
west cjty limits line.
Pension claim of IxmiRn T. Philips,
wns approved.
Motion of L. P. Hagan, seconded by
E. II. Kilbee and carried, Chairman
L. A. Bromley, is hereby authorized
to'sign w arrants to pay the clerk and
inspectors of the election held Nov.
2nd, 1920.
Motion of L. P. Hagan, seconded by
E. H. Kilbee, and carried, thalrm an
L. A. Bromley Is Instructed to confer
with the city commissioners in referenceto road yrork on Ifellonville nve.
Motion of C. W. Entzminger, sec­
onded by E. II. Kilbee, and carried,
the bondsmen of J. C. Jacobs, in the
sum of $1 ,000.00 arc hereby rolensed
from SAid bond, and the clerk is in­
structed to return to # Ir. Jacobs the
certified check for $.100.00 held by
county.
t
Motion of C. W. Entzminger, sec­
onded by L. P. Hagan and carried, the
bridge over Wckiwa river one half
mile north of the road leading from
Altamonte to Forest City is to bo dis­
continued as a public county bridge

For the Day *of

GENERAL MACHINE AND BOIL­
ER WORK
I1RAS9 CASTINGS
GAS ENGINE REPAIRS
ACTEYLENE CUTTING AND
WELDING
Special machine for turning Auto
Crank Shafts and Crunk Pins to
within .0003 accuracy.
IRRIGATION NIPPI.ES
PULLEYS nnd SHAFTINGS
ROUND ANI) SQUARE IRON
King of Must D istrict and One of His
. " Wives.
*

1*
prised In Ponnpe, Yap. Kusale nnd Ilo.golu, or Tufik. In ltllt the total pop­
ulation was about 55,000, nnd of these
fewer than 400 were Europeans.
The Islands extend for about one
thousand miles cast nml west. They
He more than fifteen hundred miles to
the oust of the Philippines and-about
a thousand miles north of New Guinea.

Walthall &amp; Estridge,

Ci

P rops.

Welaka Building

Specials For Today
Choice
Western and Florida
M eats

MRS. B. E. TAKAC1I
Proprietor
Corner of Park Avenue and
Commercial Avenue

SANFORD, FLORIDA
nnd thnt Comr. C. W. Entzminger be
instructed to post said bridge.
Reports of the several county offic­
ials were received, rend and ordered BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
AT THE HERALD, EACH___ *
filed.
Warrants paid during the month of
October were ordered cancelled of rec­
ord.
Bills aR audited by the clerk and
approved by this board were* ordered
paid.

Dally Service

CtfANDLER CARS

P h o n e €6

FRANKLIN CARS |

“WE GIVE YOU SERVICE
—ASK ANYBODY”

Post Cards at the Herald office, lc.

WIGHT TIRE CO
Kelly-Springfield Tires

Diamond Tires

OUR PAINT SHOP
Is kept busy by knowing nutomobilUts
who send their cars to us to be re ­
painted. T h e '“wise ones*' know th a t
their cars will be returned to them
looking sm arter and better than when,
bright new from the factory. The rea­
son for this is that all our work is
custom work which means th at only
the best of materials are used by
skilled workmen.

CUT OFF 5 0 PER CERT. OF YOUR HEAYY LOAD

Buy your Fire, Theft, Collision, Liability or Property Damage In»
surance at Actual Cost with

The Belt Auto Indemnity Association
Ask J. II. Lawson, Chas. Kanner, Dr. Langley about how The Belt
pays its Claims. Then call phone 46 or write Box 156 for rates. “It
will pay you'* to see

G. C. Fellows,
Manager tor Sanford
P S p p fl^ ll
.* M S B ftacfc

•

* r ,

Veal, Pork, Mutton9
Sausage

PARTS ACCESSORIES Is Your AUTO Insurance Heavy?

-’

CITY MARKET

C tttk i RubbtrProcess
m a J te s t f i t m

•

SMITH nROTHER8
Expert Repair Work

Phone 112

S a n fo rd Heights

�4

*
9

THE SANFORD DAILY I1KRALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1920

PACE FOUR

Perkins describes these structures of
the Creek ?burc!i os follows:
“GETTING SOMETHING FOR NOTHING IS THE
"There Is s legend, perhaps It Is hi*(J C fZ tp u ^
HARDEST AND MOST DISAPPOINTING TASK tor7 , that there eras once a ruler In
IN LIFE; WHILE WITH A LITTLE WELL 1)1- Constantinople wRo disliked his broth­
KECTED EFFORT ONE MAY SUCCEED IN OB­ er and wished to banlah him to the re­
TAINING LIFE'S FULL REWARD. MAKE YOUR EFFORT COUNT motest comer of his kingdom. Con­
BY INVESTING IN SOUTHERN UTILITIES COMPANY 8 PER CENT sequently the monarch built a monas­
tery on n well-nigh Inaccessible moun­
R. J. H O L L Y .......................... -Editor CUMULATIVE PRIOR PREFERRED STOCK. THERE'S NONE BET­ tain In Thessaly and founded a broth­
V
N. J. LILLARD..Secretary-Treasurer TER.
erhood, nbout four hundred years ago,
General Manager
H. Aj NEEL
In what seemed to be the uttermost
comer of the earth.
J*. P. RINES---Cireulatlon Manager
"The monastery was called 'MetePhono 481
will give about two million dollars
ora,'
meaning 'domicile of the sky.'
ODESSA: PARIS OF THE
A S n rtn ta s B»t«* llid * Known on Applietttoa jtcr year derived from taxation; the
After the ori^nai wns built 23 others
UKRAINE
grouped themselves around and were
federal government will match this
Before
the
war no city of'the Near Inhabited for a while. They were,
amount with an equal amount, which
East save Bucharest so nearly resem­
will give the State Road Department bled Paris and Vienna In Its hectic however, finally abandoned, with the
exception of three which are still In
Dtllrvrnd la City ky Carrlor
four million dollars per year beside night life as did Odessa, conspicuous
13 Cents the auto tax and the use of state con- In the fighting of Ukrainians, Poles
vlcta. This is enough for any one and Uolshevlkl,
Member of the Associated Press
&gt;oard to spend in the state of Florida
Odessa had hundreda of sidewalk
for one specific purpose. DeLand cafes, Its municipal opera and Us pal­
aces of chance. It bad more than half
News.
a million population, yet It Is one of
Only a few more dAys till hunting WEATHER, CROP CONDITIONS the newest cities In Europe. Moscow's
history extends over a thousand
Season.
years, that of Odessa only a little be­
n Florida for the Week Ending No­ yond a century.
No finer place in the world to hunt
vember 16, 1920.
There Is a unique analogy between
than right In Seminole county.
Odessa and the capital city of the,
Temperature: On the whole the United States. Doth were started aF bearing testimony tbat man has
But get your license from the coun­ temperature was moderate during the ubout the samo time—during the lust climbed and bum and lived on crags
ty judge before you venture into the week, except on the 13th when freez­ decode of the eighteenth century—and that aecm Impossible for goats to
ing occurred over flie extreme north­ both were begun because of the far- climb.
pinoy woods.
"The whole of the west plain of
west portion, and where the tempera­ seeing wisdom of the chief executives
Thessaly
lay at our feet, and the white
of
the
two
nations.
ture
deficiency
was
6
degrees
to
8
A day In the woods and by the
mountains
of the Plndos range rose
Perhaps
the
oddest
coincidence
Is
degrees
for
the
week.
The
tempera­
lakes and streams wit) net you all the
rugged
and
Imposing beforo us. At
game and fish you want—if you can ture averaged warmer than usual for the fact that they both were planned -the base of the rock on which Trinity
by
foreign
civil
engineers
of
the
same
the period in the pcninsuln.
get them.
nation. While Major L'Enfunt was de­ Is lurched, like sn eagle's nest, our
Precipitation: The week was feat­ vising the "city of magnificent dls-' guides hallooed and heat with a stick
Weather report says the frost will ured hy much cloudiness with rain in lances" to bu erected on the banks of on a tin can found In tho bushes. 8oon
be on the banana bush tonight. Hope all divisions—heavy in much of the the Pototuuc, Vuland, also a French­ an answering coll came back, and oyer
the precipice, some three hundred feet
it will not be strong enough to kill peninsula, the week’s total exceeding man, Intel out Odessa on the shore of nhove us, the peering faces of several
tlie
Block
sea.
W h i l e P r e s i d e n t Wash
2
inches
ot
Jacksonville,
Lake
City,,
the beans and other tender stuff.
monks were seen. Then something ser­
Gainesville, Davie, Ilypoluxo. Moore Ington was dreaming Into being the pentine flew Into the air, and as It
beautiful city which bears his name.
Everything points- to a grand ses­
Czarlnn Catherine the (Jrcut was spon­ dropped perpendicularly we saw dan­
soring (he upbuilding of a municipal gling from a coll of rope what looked
sion this year ns far as the fruits
stepping stone toward the chief object like a small fish net. Down came the
and vegetables of Florida arc con­
of the Russian Rear's stealthy trend— cable until It touched the earth at our
cerned. Good prices will mean much
feet, and the fish net proved to be a
Constantinople.
to our growers when the freight rates
large-sized rope bag which opened and
Like Washington, Odessa was laid
and labor prices are so high.
out In the midst of a virtual wilder­ spread out flat on the ground.
ness and swnmp. An Isolated Turkish is^Onc at a tlmo pe were Invited to
The next big day is Thanksgiving
(pvi, KhnJI-Bey, stood on the site of step Into the middle of this net and
the presdnt city at the time, 17811. squat Turk-fashlon. The edges were
Day. And again we can all give
when It pnssed to Russia. In early gathered together onto a largo Iron
thanks that we nre living in Florida,
years of the Christian era Greek colo­ hook, a shout wns given and the "net
the best state In the union where
nists had taken advantage of the bny soured upward, while Its occupant felt
there are no coal shortages and the
somewhat like an orange at the bot­
of Odessa.
eun shines 3150 days in the year.
tom of a market woman's ling.
Until five years ago the railway dis­
"The ascent takes Just three min­
tance between Odessa and Moscow was
more than a thousand miles, hut a new­ utes, Occasionally the openwork eleline, via Rakhmntch. reduced that dis­ vnlor swings Into the rock with a
tance to 814 miles, The Hteainghlp hump, hut the monks at Ihe top wind
tin- windlass slowly, rnd the humping
distance between Odessa am) Constan­
does
not hurt, and as a compensation
tinople Is 300 miles.
the view grows more beautiful every
From Its history It Is evident why second, At Inst the top wns reached."
Odessa was far from a typical Rus­
sian city. Mark Twain found the only
Russian thing! about It to be the shape BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
of the droshkis and the dress of the AT THE HERALD. EA CH ...
drivers. He might hove mentioned the
glided domes of a few churches. There
NEW GREEK PREMIER
the Russian likeness ends.
A few miles to the north and also to
the southwest are three "limans." or
1» I
(Bf Tfc* Associated Pt««i)
,e ! ATHENS, Nov. 18.—George Rhal- lagoons, famous for mud baths believed
lis, the new Greek premier with three to benefit persons with rheumatism,
cabinet members took the oath of of­ gout and skin diseases. The most pop
j.r o t » «
fice before Admiral COundouroitia re­ ular of theso Is 20 miles long, a mile
wide, 10 feet deep and lies 10 feet
gent. Immediately, after qualification below the level of the Illnck sea.
TIP TO THE LEGISLATURE
Itballis demanded the regent's ry.'fltgI t will be necessary to increase the nation and other cabinet member.! will
amounts to be turned over to the qualify before Queen Mother Olga.
T H E O R IG IN A L
State Rond Department, ot the next Vcnlzclos ho* left the country of ra
SK Y SC R A PE R CH URCH ES
session of the legislature. Two ways .nice trip on his yacht escorted by
l'luti" to erect In an American city
of increasing this amount have been British war vessels. Crowds paraded a "skyscraper church." to tie used bom
mentioned—one by a idightly higher the street acclaiming former King is a place of worship and an oilier
mlliage (tlie p r e s e n t levy is tw o Constantine and firing revolvers ns •lUlldtng. recall thin the uticlent mon­
asteries of Thessaly are iiHture-made
mills), nr.d the other by doubling the token of rejoicing.
-kyscrupees, reached hy unique ele-1
auto license.
j
-----------------------vntora. In h communication to the Na&lt;
To double the nuto license means
About six different hunting parties tlunal Geographic society "Elizabeth
that the large Innd owner, the corpor- 1 nr*' getting, ready for the wood* next
atlon which' uhcs the roads and mostly Friday. There will be some tall bomPURE-FRESH
benrfits from any increase in value of hording when they get strung out in
•the land of the state, the railroads
and telegraphs, will entirely escape
Send in your locnls to the Herald
bearing its share of the expense,
which is to Ik- of benefit to the entire office. Phone the news to 148. We
REAL HOME-MADE
state.
SEASONED JUST AS IT
I want every bit of it. Tell u%*the
To place the entire burden on the
SHOULD BE.
news each day.
ftUto driver will be unjust. It might
just ns well he placed entirely on the
hotel keeper, or on the railroad which
hauls more people into the state and
more produce out ns a result of good
roads,
PHONE 122.
.Most of the increased revenue
should be raised by tnxntion on Innd
•nd. buildings. To do this it should
CcITee 5c Sandw iches 10c
not be necessary to increase the total
P ier, hom e m ade 10c cut
mlliage levied by the state. The past
two years an- the only ones in fifty
Best Ccffcc in Sanford
years when state taxation has exceed­
ed eight or ten mills. The legislature
Princess Theatre Bldg
should cut down on unnecessary ex­
penses and appropriations, and de­
vote at least four mills from tho pres­
NOW MAKING
ent lovy to road purposes. Four mills

OFFERS YOU A SAFE AND SANE
WAY OF REACHING YOUR GOAL
—WHATEVER IT MAY BE^-IT ASSURES YOU YOUR BANKER’S IN­
TEREST IN YOUR FUTURE WEL­
FARE AND IS AT ONCE THE
ONLY SURE AND DEPENDABLE
WAY IN WHICH YOU MAY OB­
TAIN PERMANENT SUCCESS.

First N ational Bank
F. P. Forster, President.

B. F. Whitner, Cashier.

“ W hy don’t you get some bread that I can eat?”
That’* never heard in the family that lisc* the new
Butter-Nut Bread.
For its appetizing taste tickles the palates of young and
old alike.
T he MfMT

has all the quality of the old Butter-Nut; we could
not improve that.
But in addition we've perfected a new mixing
process which enables us to* turn out a lighter,
daintier loaf than ever.
Get a loaf today, for Butter-Nut is its own best
advocate. At all good gr occrs. The genuine bears
the Butter-Nut label.
MILLER'S BAKERY

T R Y A HERALD W A N T AD

COME
6 REAT

-y

We have anticipated your every need
in the Hunting and Sporting Goods
Line and have a complete stock of

Brown’s Market

Quick Lunch

EVERYTHING

Pecan Nut Roil
Daily
$1.00 POUND
F resh

From, the Foundation

Water’s Kandy Kitchen

Seed, Our Business.
Honesty, Our Motto.
Purity, Our Watch

NITRO CLUB Water-Proof SHELLS, with
Steel Lining—without doubt the best shell oft
the market—there
every purpose
ave a comp
stock of .Turkey .Calls,
ng Horns,
ts, Coats, Puttees and
ns—in fact, ever
rtsmen
( [H UN ITE
V I c i i n D l fll

Quality-Servicd-Price

'cane

COME IN AND SEE US.
(Southern Seed Specialist*)
Weklwa Bldg.

BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
Sanford, Fla. AT THE HERALD, BACH—

H ardware Co

�PACE FIV E

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18. 1920

Little Happenings
Mention of
Matters In Brief
Personal Items
of Interest

In and A b o u t
*

The C ity

Summary of the
Floating Small
Talks Succinctly^
Arranged for
Herald Readers

U. KcHermnt!l(of Tnmpa, represent­
ing the Dalton Adding Machine Co.,
v as in the city today calling on the
local trade.

the question of the raise of rates of
the Southern Bell Telephone Co. The
caBe was continued until an audit of
the accounts could be made which
means that the m atter will not come
The thermometer went down some up again for many months *and tho
last night but no damage has been re- matter of the ruisc will he in statu
ported lo nny of the vegetables in quo for some time.
this section.
Time to send out Thnnksgiving
Don't forget that you should send a cards now. The Herald Printing Co.,
Sanford post card to your friends to­ has a fine line of Thanksgiving greet­
day. Advertise your city and keep up ings. Only one cent each.
your correspondence at the same time.
Come in and inspect that wonderful
Sanford cecUinJy needs a bunch of line of stationary at the Hernid of­
new houses to keep the people here fice. You can get yqur monogrnm
■who are already here and take care of printed on them, mnking one of the
those who arc coming in every day.
finest and most substantial Christmas
gifts that can be purchased.
If any o f'o u r subscribera have a
Weekly Herald of November 12 and
-will bring It to the office wc will pay
them for it. Wc$ need a copy of that
date.

county home. Ha Is some beggar all
right and intends td sell the post carda
for tho benefit of the Red Cross or of
the county* home or some other good
purpose. Al enjoys the life and wc
should worry.
Perry Jemignn, of the B. &amp; 0. ga­
rage, left this morning for Tampa
where he will spend the day on busi­
ness.
Bud PelJ was taken to tho FernaldLaughton hospital today and Ail) be
operated upon this nftemooiy for ap­
pendicitis.
V
Next week is Thanksgiving and the
stores should be preparing fot the big
week by advertising in the Dally Hcrald. The holiday season is here and
the people are beginning to buy. Get
ready for thcml
All the hotels are being filled every
night now and the need of more hotels
1a npparent in Sanford. This city is
noted for its good hotels and there
should be plenty of them to Bupply
the demand.

D. G. Wagner, of Kissimmee was in
the city today calling on his pinny
friends. He Is state agent fo r a life
Insurance company and it keeps him
busy making the entire state.

W. A, Rayncr, of Celery avenue,
brought a head of lettuce to the Her­
It. A. Jenkins, of Longwood, was ald office yesterday that was the fin­
a m o n g the ninny visitors to the city est we have seen this season. It was jDenn, Lake City, Fla.;; 11. Kellerman,
j I. II. Bradley, W. Kilt and wife, Tam­
today from Longwood. 11c w in ncpa; Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Turner, Spartvompanied by Mr. Short, _«u*r Vji f \ h e
’onburg,
S. C.; Mr. nnd Mrs. A. R,
new nnd progressive cB/fi-ns of that
Buckler, Lewiston, Me.; H. W. Bucksection.
tin, I^cwistqn, Ml».; 11, F. Cook, Bir­
mingham; L. A. Anderson, Jackson­
Secretary Pcarmun, of the Sanford
ville?; J. A. Jones, Plnlnville, 0«.; J,
Chamber of Commerce and City At­
E. Kskey, Tampa; J. G. Herrin, Grovetorney Geo. C. Herring, representing
land,
Flu.; C. Mane, Mnria Vista, Cal.;
the city of Sanford, have returned - Al Dorner is passing his pictures
Lee
W.
Wicker, Jacksonville.
from Tallahassee where they appear­ around showing him in the role of a
Tuesday
arrivals were:
ed before the Railroad Commission on beggar man asking for money for the
E. M. Stubbs, Jacksonville; Mrs. M.
McClelland, Tampa; Mrs. II. Bell,
Tnmpa; Lee W. Wicker, Jacksonville;
A. Gerbs, Baltimore/ Md.; I). T. Ush­
er, S. E. Poole, Palatkn; J. F. Odnm,
Sanford; F. N. Greppi, Jacksonville;
A. Ehret, Canton, ().; E. Solmger,
Buckeye 1-nke, Ohio; C. P. Johnson,
Elmira, N. Y.; Geo. Crews, Jackson­
ville; J. Tillman, J. Shepard, Jr., Ar­
cadia; R. C. Elan, J. F.. Bledsoe, la k e­
land; C. I. Harris, Kissimmee; Pat
Burns, Kansas City, Mo.; Ralph
Cmlghton, Atlanta; P, It. Smith, Erie,
N. Y.; J. B. Watson. Ccntnilin, III.

At Reduced Prices

Everybody should Send postcards to
their friends. The Herald has them of
Sanford nnd also Thanksgiving cards,
holiday cards, etc. They are only one
cent each and worth twice as much.
Rend a card today.

For 5 Days
Beginning

RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy
which this institution has been manage
the first day the doors were opened.

since

That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the
constant and gratifying growth in business.
It is the desire of the officers of this Bank to con­
tinue adding new accounts of those individuals
desiring most efficient and responsible hanking
On our record of RESPONSIBILITY
tronage is invited.

Reduced to

Seminole County Bank
Reduced to

Is owned, controlled and managed by home
people, who are interested in the development
andjupbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County

IU .U U
•
32x3 1-2 Non-Skid1 Reduced to

List, $28.10

With our large resources and strong financial
connections we are in position to assist our cus­
tomers at all times in the handling of their finan­
cial needs. LET US SERVE YOU. -

Reduced to

4 Per C ent Interest Paid
LOUISE GLAUM in'SEX
At the Star Frldny nnd Saturday

Reduced to

Seminole County Bank

AT THE STAR THEATRE
TODAY
Special Super Feature
"RIO GRANDE”

Reduced to

TOPICS OF THE DAY
and a Comedy

The Logical Treatment

Reduced to

^Fabrics guaranteed 6,000; Cor ds 10,000.

SANFORD, FLORIDA .
. . . .

For Many num an Ills.&gt;
We hold this to bo n Truth:—vis:—
That Circulation is tho BASIC factor
of Human Health.
The "Energizer" process will DO
MORE Benefit to Any Adult's gen­
eral condition than nny other method
known.
COME IN nnd talk it over.
108 Park Ave„
Next Door to Mobley's Drug Store.
L. C. CAMERON
Box 399 Sanford, Fla. Phone 184

TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS-lc A WORD

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              <text>SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION&#13;
Volume 1&#13;
Sanford, Florida, Thursday, November 18, 1920&#13;
Number 194&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------&#13;
Hunting Season Opens Saturday Of This Week Report Game Plentiful.&#13;
Hunters and Huntresses Are Making Up Many Parties.&#13;
DEER-TURKEY-QUAIL&#13;
&#13;
PETER CARNER GIVES SOME GOOD ADVICE ON HOW TO CONDUCT YOUR TRIP.&#13;
&#13;
The following from the St. Augustine Record is so good for all counties that we reproduce it:&#13;
  The hunting season in Florida opens on Saturday, November 20th, and a goodly number of licenses to hunt have been procured by sportsmen at the office of the county judge. However, in view of the nearness to the opening of the season, the number of licenses is not as large as it should be, indicating that scores of persons, as usual, will attempt to hunt without license, the proceeds of which go to the school fund.&#13;
  The county game warden has the co-operation of the sheriff's office in the enforcement of the hunting statutes, as well as the backing of every law abiding sportsman who has paid his license fee and does not approve of shooting more game in a season or day than the law allows. Shooting out of season will not be tolerated, and unmerciful slaughter of birds and other game will be punished, officers declare,&#13;
  An individual hunter may take only one deer, two turkeys, twenty quail or twenty-five other birds in a day, and killings for the season shall not exceed three deer, ten turkeys, and three hundred other birds. Pheasants and grouse are so scarce in Florida that the open season is only one month—from November 20 to December 20.&#13;
  With the approach of the hunting season it is only appropriate that that branch of sport be given mention. Locally the season promises to be the greatest ever witnessed. Hunters throughout the vicinity are busily preparing for it and indications point to a plentiful year of game. Much stress has been laid, and rightly so, upon violations of the game laws.&#13;
  While on the subject, which brings forth a lot of kick each season from people who do not understand or love the sport, it is appropriate also to mention a few cautions, which if observed, will do away with the howl of the opponents of the sport. Peter Carner, editor National Sports Syndicate, has admirably covered the questions. His “don’ts” follow:&#13;
  Every year the hunting season brings with it its spoils in the form of human sacrifices. For the benefits of gunners who are going after game this fall the following list of don’ts is given:&#13;
  Don’t take any chances. The function of a shotgun is to scatter shot, but be very careful where you scatter it.&#13;
  Don’t blaze away in haste and don’t get excited. Many a shooter has filled his favorite dog full of lead, just because he was over anxious.&#13;
  Don’t point a gun at anu person in test. It is always the gun “he didn’t know was loaded” that goes off and does the damage. The only time to point a gun us when you intend to kill.&#13;
  Don’t take every rustle of a bush or a bough to be a sure indication of game. Remember sometimes as inquisitive person has a penchant for being in strange places.&#13;
  Don’t carry a loaded gun through the street or in a car, trains, automobiles or any other kind of vehicle, or leave it around farmhouses to have some child playfully blow a head off.&#13;
  Don’t get excited and shoot without making sure your object is game.&#13;
  Don’t shoot until you see the rabbit, or whatever it may be, and then be sure that he is clear of both man and dog.&#13;
  Don’t drag a gun under a fence with the muzzle pointed toward you. &#13;
  Don’t climb over fences with your gun or lean it against trees until you get over. Put it through the fence and on the ground, business and before.&#13;
  Don’t hunt with anyone that you know to be careless. Carelessness with three and a quarter drama of powder behind one and one-eighth ounces of shot is inviting “sure death.”&#13;
  Don’t load your gun until you are actually ready for business. At all other times it should be empty. Keep your finger off the trigger until you are looking along the barrel at your game.&#13;
  Don’t use a cheap gun, as it is apt to explode when a heavy charge is used.&#13;
  Don’t borrow a dog or gun or loan either.&#13;
  Don’t rest on the muzzle of your gun.&#13;
  Don’t violate the game laws. It is not only criminal, but sometimes very costly.&#13;
  Don’t “hog” all the game. Leave some for the next fellow.&#13;
  Don’t rest the muzzle of your gun on the ground. A gun muzzle clogged with dirt or mud is a dangerous proposition.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
THREE NEGROES ARE KILLED BY GEORGIA MOB&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
DOUGLAS, Ga., Nov. 18&#13;
&#13;
Two negro men and one negro woman implicated in the killing of Pearly Harper, a young planter here today, were lined up and shot by a mob of a hundred and fifty men who overpowered the sheriff and his two deputies while attempting to take the negroes to a place of safety.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
WRANGEL’S ARMY PLANS TO COME BACK&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
Constantinople, Nov. 18.&#13;
&#13;
20,000 men of Wrangel’s anti-Bolshevik army were taken out of Sebastopol after the Bolshevik victory and are planning to reorganize and go at it again.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
NATION-WIDE STRIKE OF FARMER’S UNION COMBAT LOW PRICES&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
KANSAS CITY, Nov. 18 -&#13;
&#13;
A nationwide producers strike to combat the falling prices on farm products is urged on a call sent by the National Farmers’ Union to local unions throughout the country.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
HARDING SPEAKS AT NEW ORLEANS&#13;
AND SAYS, SANITY, CLEAR THINKING, COMMON SENSE, HONESTY AND CO-OPERATION SHOULD RULE THE WORLD.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 18. -&#13;
President-elect Harding in a speech here today declared plain living and square dealing are the nation’s strongest reliance during the coming period of after war readjustment. “Sanity, clear thinking, common sense, honesty and co-operation” are the prime necessities in meeting the demands of new world order.&#13;
  “If we seek understanding which reveals mutuality of interests no difficulty can long abide. Such solution cannot come from greedy thoughts of profiteer or revolutionary agitation of those who would destroy. There has been wild contemplation of earnings whether in wages or dividends, terms of dollars rather than purchasing power. We must be more concerned in the substance of the reward for nativity than in the coin measurement. We want fortune and common progression with the cotton farmers of the south having their reward with the wool grower and wheat grower of the north. We want Southern factories turned to music of the mills of the north. There is no sectionalism in righteous American ambitions.”&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
ARGUMENTS TODAY SHORT LINE ROADS FOR WAGE INCREASE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 18.&#13;
&#13;
Arguments over the wage increases demanded by employees of a hundred “short line” railroads opens today before the United States Railroad labor board meeting here.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
EXPERIMENTS WITH FROZEN FRUIT&#13;
(two column photo of man wearing glasses and a white shirt who is in front of a table full of fruit in baskets.)&#13;
&#13;
Frozen fruit is a comparatively new act in the experiments of the department of agriculture. The photograph shows several baskets of small fruits which have been in cold storage for three months without impairing their flavor or quality. The experimenters believe the freezing process to be more economical as well as more satisfactory than canning.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
Sanford Theaters Are All Right&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK CATASTROPHE CALLS UP FACT THAT OUR THEATRES ARE WELL CONSTRUCTED.&#13;
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There should never be a catastrophe in the moving picture theaters in this city such as occurred in New York one night last week. In one of the crowded theatres on the East Side the cry of fire was raised and many children were trampled to death in the rush to get out of the door and the proprietors of the theatre have been arrested and will be held responsible for the deaths of the little ones as they did not have the proper means of egress from the theatre. The theatres of Sanford all being on ground floor with many doors on the sides are especially adapted for clearing the houses in case of fire and this is especially true of the Star Theatre that has two doors on each side of the building and many windows and the front doors are made to open either way in case there was a rush to the front.&#13;
  This was called to the minds of many people last night when little Osborn Herndon put a piece of film on the stove near the entrance, making a blaze and caused a momentary rush at the front door by several who saw it. The others were kept back by the presence of mind of a few who told them to sit down as there was no danger. It could be seen though that it was the impulse of everyone to start for the front doors worst thing to do as it is this crowding of the people in the back that tramples the youngsters under foot. Should the audience in any of the theatres in Sanford ever become panic stricken for any cause let all those on the left side of the house go out the left side entrance, the same on the right and let the ladies and children go first and every real man in the house will see to it that the children ger out first of all, ladies next and then it will be time for the men to go as they can always move faster than women and children. We hope this time will never happen but of it should, bear this advice in mind.&#13;
  Manager Herndon has made every provision in the world for the safety of the people here and while these exits have never been used for fire escapes they are used now for people who wish to get out of the buildings when the shows are over and they should always be used in case anything happens that calls for a quick exit of the theatres in Sanford. It is not a matter of fire but anything that should happen to startle an audience into starting for the front doors in a mad scramble to get out and usually it is a small matter but always enough to stampede a crowd. If it ever occurs in Sanford remember the side exits and use them but remember that if you are man your safety is only a secondary consideration and crowd the aisles which is the_?.&#13;
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Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
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County Commissioners In Regular Session&#13;
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The Honorable Board of County Commissioners for Seminole County, Florida, met in regular session Nov. 3rd, 1920, at 10 o’ clock a. m.&#13;
President: Chairman L. A. Brumley, and Commissioners: L. P. Hagan, C. W. Entzminger, and E. H. Kilbee, with V. E. Douglass, Deputy Clerk, and E. E. Brady, Sheriff, in attendance. &#13;
Absent: Com. O. P. Swope.&#13;
  Minutes of the last regular meeting and also special meetings of October 12th, 27th and Nov. 1st and 2nd were read, approved and ordered filed.&#13;
  Mr. F. P. Forster addressed the Board in reference to the use of the Court Room for the dance to be held by the American Legion, on the night of November 11th, 1920.&#13;
  Hon. Forest Lake, Mr. Donald Whitcomb and Mr. S. M. Lloyd addressed the Board in reference to the use of the Court room for the dance to be given by the American Legion on the night of November 11th, 1920.&#13;
  The following resolution was offered by Comr. C. W. Entzminger, who moved its adoption, the same being duly seconded by Comr. L. P. Hagan, and adopted.&#13;
  Whereas the Campbell-Lossing Post of the American Legion, have requested the use of the Court room on Armistice night for the purpose of holding a dance under the auspices of the American Legion, and,&#13;
  Whereas, this Board has adopted the policy, heretofore of not granting the use of the Court Room for social purposes, and,&#13;
  Whereas, this Board does not in the future desire to be bound by a precedent established permitting the use of the Court room for social purposes, and,&#13;
  Whereas, we feel disposed to grant the request of the American Legion, and permit the use of the Court room as desired by them for the purpose of holding a dance of Armistice night.&#13;
  Therefore, Be It Resolved that Campbell-Lossing Post of the American Legion is hereby granted permission to use said court room on Armistice night for the purposes desired, provided, however that this action on the part of this board shall not be construed in the future as a precedent established in reference in granting use of the Court room for social purposes.&#13;
  Adopted this 3rd day of Nov. A. D. 1920.&#13;
  F. H. Trimble addressed the Board in reference to the new vault, and stated that same was completed and the good shape.&#13;
  Miss Virginia Smith, reported to the Board her finding in reference to Mrs. Shirley and on motion of Comr. L. P. Hagan, seconded by Comr. C. W. Entzminger, and carried, clerk is instructed to draw warrant each month to Miss Virginia Smith for the sum of $10.00 for the use and benefit of Mrs. Shirley.&#13;
  Hon. Forest Lake, chairman of the State Road Department appeared before the Board in reference to work to be done by the State Road Department and stated that he intended to (Continued on page 3)&#13;
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SOVIET GOVERNMENT WILL BE RECOGNIZED IS GENERAL VERDICT&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
LONDON, Nov. 18.&#13;
&#13;
A wireless dispatch from Moscow says “General Wrangel’s destruction will make great impression western countries.” Information that England is carrying on an agitation in the United States favoring renewal of trade relations with Soviet Russia. There is no doubt the western countries will be forced to recognize the Soviet government, it was announced today.&#13;
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GERMANY REFUSES TO ENTER LEAGUE EXCEPT AS EQUAL&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
AIX LA CHAPPELLE, Nov. 18-&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Simons, the German foreign minister, said Germany did not desire to enter the League of Nations unless they were allowed to enter as equal.&#13;
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POLICEMEN SURRENDER THEIR CHARTER&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
Boston, Nov. 18&#13;
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The policemen’s Union here voted today to surrender their charter.&#13;
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FOOD PRICES FALL&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Retail food prices decreased three per cent throughout the United States in October, the Labor Department announced today.&#13;
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AN OFFICIAL CANVASS OF LATE ELECTION&#13;
RETURNS AS CANVASSED TO BE RETURNED TO THE STATE BOARD AT TALLAHASSEE&#13;
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TALLAHASSEE, Nov. 17 -&#13;
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The following are the figures which will be presented to the state canvassing board when it meets to officially canvas the election returns this morning. These figures have been compiled by the secretary of state’s office from the official returns of the several counties and their correctness verified by a careful check. The official canvass therefore, will show the following vote:&#13;
&#13;
  Democratic – Carrabello, 89,846; Corr, 87,307; Jones, 88,984; Knott,90,515; Sharon, 87,122; Wells, 87,812.&#13;
  Lily White Republican – Allen, 10,118; Clough, 7,122; Drummond, 6,557; Locke,6,199; Moffett, 6,192.&#13;
  Republican – Archibald, 44,853; Brelsford, 37,408; Chubb, 37,409; Smith, 35,357; Pope, 36,542; Wentworth, 28,811.&#13;
  Prohibition – Coffin, 2,941; McAulcy, 4,720; Nanney, 1,757; Smith, 4,286; Bryant, 5,124; Rechard, 3,773.&#13;
  Socialist – Cole, 5,189; Hayes, 3,940; Henri, 3,447; Jackson, 6,316; O’Kelley, 3,223; Pillsbury, 3,647.&#13;
  For Governor - Hardee, 103,407; Gay, 23,788; Van Duzer, 2,654; Whitnker, 2,823.&#13;
  For Secretary of State – Crawford, 96,700; Dyson, 24,179.&#13;
  Comptroller – Amos, 96,584; Northrup, 19,405; McCarthy, 4,545.&#13;
  Treasurer – Luning, 88,200; Hunt, 21,271; Ewing, 7,656.&#13;
  Attorney General – Buford, 91, 786; Gober, 22,572.&#13;
  Superintendent of Public Instruction – Sheats, 92,756; Jenkins, 26,696.&#13;
  Commissioner of Agriculture – McRae, 85,589; Hull, 18,411; Porter, 2,835.&#13;
  United States Senate – Fletcher, 98,957; Klock, 2,847; Martin, 3,525; Cheney, 37,065.&#13;
  Congress, First District – Drane, 26,385; Jeffries, 4,729; Haines, 1,608; Smith, 1,074.&#13;
  Congress, Second District – Clark, 15,143; Cubberly, 2,281[?]; Case, 392.&#13;
  Congress, Third District – Swithwick, 16,301; Owens, 2,673.&#13;
  Congress, Fourth District – Sears, 28,355; Bowen, 11,159; Hunt, 2,019.&#13;
  Justice Supreme Court – Ellis, 77,148; West, 81,192; Marsh, 19,119; Axtell, 6,711; Pettingill, 18,510.&#13;
  Railroad Commissioner – Wells, 82,___.&#13;
-- (Continued on page 2)&#13;
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FOURTH ANNUAL MEETING SEMINOLE COUNTY CHAPTER AMERICAN RED CROSS&#13;
Reports of the Year’s Work show Good Progress&#13;
ELECT NEW OFFICERS&#13;
HEALTH CENTERS WILL BE ESTABLISHED AND HOME WORK CARRIED OUT.&#13;
&#13;
The fourth annual meeting of Seminole county chapter A.R.C. was held at the Presbyterian church on Tuesday, Nov. 16th, with a good attendance.&#13;
  Reports of the year’s work were given and the annual election of officers was held.&#13;
  The meeting opened with prayer by Dr. Brownlee followed by an interesting address by Mrs. Endor Curlott, who is the efficient chairman of Seminole county chapter, Mrs. Curlett is bending every effort to establish Health Centers in Seminole County, and also hopes that after the roll call the chapter will have sufficient funds to put on a public health nurse.&#13;
  The report of the treasurer, Mr. R. W. Deanne, was as follows:&#13;
&#13;
Bal. in Bank, Dec. 1, 1919			$  801.81&#13;
Membership dues			 		 1,189.00&#13;
Donations and sales			    		    43.95&#13;
Home Service Fund					     6.60&#13;
Total, inclu.   Bal.				$2,041.36&#13;
&#13;
Disbursements&#13;
Remittance to Div. Headquarters, mem dues	$594.60&#13;
Revolving fund							  50.00&#13;
Town and County Nursing Service			  70.25&#13;
Supplies to poor						  10.00&#13;
Miscel. Expenses						   8.50&#13;
Telegrams and tele.						  16.95&#13;
Sec. salary							 595.00&#13;
Stove and oil							  11.48&#13;
Postage, stat. &amp; ptg.					  14.39&#13;
&#13;
Total Disbursements					   $1,371.07&#13;
&#13;
Balance in bank Nov. 1, 1920			   $  670.29&#13;
&#13;
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  The Secretary’s report shows that the chapter is still very much alive having held meetings each month except through the summer months. Funds in memberships and donations raised by the branches in 1920 are as follows:&#13;
&#13;
Altamonte					$ 32.00&#13;
Chulota					  19.00&#13;
East Sanford				  97.00&#13;
Geneva					 158.00&#13;
Longwood					  00.00&#13;
Oviedo					  63.00&#13;
Colored auxillary			  51.00&#13;
Funds raised in Sanford		 742.00&#13;
&#13;
The Home Service Secretary’s report shows that part of the work is indeed active. Cases on file, 162; visitors to office, 257; county and city cases, 17.&#13;
  At the request of the government Red Cross goes forward for the men in uniform and in all camps and training stations.&#13;
  Home service is still in demand and thousands who wore the khaki in the own Home Service office there are many cases on file which shows that settlements for allotments are yet to be made.&#13;
  The ex-service man depends upon the Home Service Secretary to help him make out allotment affidavits, which must be sent to Washington before their unpaid allotments are settled for.&#13;
  The Home service secretary expressed her appreciation of the loyal support given by the executive board and the home service committee.&#13;
  The report of the nominating committee of five, composed of Dr. Brownlee, Mrs. Puleston, Mrs. Whitner, Mr. Woodruff and Mr. Whitcomb as follows: For chairman Seminole county chapter, Mrs. Endor Curlett of Geneva, vice-chairman, Miss Allie Grafford; secretary, Miss Virginia Smith; treasurer, Col. G. W. Knight; members of the executive committee from Seminole county chapter as follows: Mrs. E. M. Galloway, Mrs. S. O. Chase, Dr. S. W. Walker, J. C. Hutchinson, and H. C. DuBose.&#13;
  The meeting was closed with an earnest plea by Dr. Walker for every one to enroll in the Red Cross.&#13;
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Get your office supplies and school supplies at the Herald Printing Co. where you can get what you want at very reasonable rates.&#13;
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 &#13;
Page Six	The Sanford Daily Herald, Wednesday, Nov. 17, 1920&#13;
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At the Star Theatre – Tonight&#13;
&#13;
Is your husband gay enough? Is he the gay rascal he made you believe? If not, do you think he could be? These are some of the questions Angelica asks herself in&#13;
Parlor, Bedroom and Bath&#13;
From the famous Broadway Stage Comedy Success by C. W. Bell and Mark Swain. As for the answer Angelica gets…. No, somebody might overhear, better let her show you on the screen.&#13;
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Methodist Bazaar&#13;
Sanford is on a boom – not a vacant store-room to be found on First street, but undaunted “The Truth Seekers” of the Methodist Church will erect a tent on the old Sanford House site and hold their Annual Bazaar FRIDAY and SATURDAY. COOKED FOOD AND OYSTER SUPPER SATURDAY NIGHT.&#13;
Your Patronage Solicited.&#13;
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ST. PETERSBURG BASEBALL MANAGERS PLEAD GUILTY AND PAY FINE&#13;
St. Petersburg, Nov. 17. -&#13;
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On pleas of guilty, Dr. J. L. Moorefield and “Babbles” Hargrave, owner and manager of the St. Petersburg baseball team in the Florida winter league yesterday were fined $1 and costs on charges of violating the law that forbids playing baseball Sundays. The local club owner and his manager went before Magistrate R. R. Carter, who issued the warrants and entered pleas of guilty. The nominal fine was imposed.&#13;
  Warrants were sworn out yesterday by John P. Lynch, who lives close to the ball park and who is a leader in church work. He had tried to prevent the game being played here Sunday afternoon when the locals met in Tarpon Springs, and failing in this had the club leaders arrested.&#13;
  Whether an attempt will be made to play here again next Sunday is not known. There is some talk of having another game, but the general opinion is that there will be no game. Those opposed to Sunday ball are prepared to swear out warrants for all the players and other connected with the game if there is a contest at Moorefield park next Sunday or any subsequent Sunday. It is believed that the baseball men have admitted defeat by pleading guilty and paying fines and it is likely that the affair will end with this.&#13;
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Send in your locals to the Herald office. Phone the news to 148. We want every bit of it. Tell us the news each day.&#13;
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SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT: MELVILLE’S COMEDIANS. $10,000.00 TENT THEATRE.&#13;
1 Week—SANFORD--1 week. &#13;
Beginning Monday, Nov. 22. Belt Melville and Company.&#13;
40---People---40. America’s Best Dramatic Company will present High Class Royalty Plays---Change of Program Each Day.&#13;
Monday night will present BROKEN HEARTS. FOUR ACT DRAMA.&#13;
Five Vaudeville Specialties Between Acts. &#13;
Admission 40c and 25c, including War Tax.&#13;
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HELEN’S DRESSES EYEBROW-RAISERS&#13;
But the Director of “Parlor, Bedroom and Bath” to Blame.&#13;
&#13;
I want you to dress in such a way that when you appear on the screen every man there will give a short whistle and every woman will raise her eyebrows and say, “O-o-oh!”&#13;
  Thus Edward Dillon instructed Helen Sullivan, “the other woman” in “Parlor, Bedroom and Bath” at the Metro studios. This photoplay is adapted from the stage success by C. W. Bell and Mark Swan and shows tonight at the Star Theatre.&#13;
  The young woman immediately set forth to the shop of a modiste (not modest) in Hollywood and repeated the director’s orders.&#13;
  The modiste, having knowledge born of many dealings with the foibles of the flickerite brought out a creation striped in black-and-white- the kind of stripes that convicts and zebras wear.&#13;
  “Horrors!” exclaimed Miss Sullivan when she saw the short skirt, the low neck, the shiny, black sash about the hips and the stripes that fairly screamed “Look!” It was a dress that might be called, daring, sinuous, audacious, dashing and even “risqué.”&#13;
  When Miss Sullivan wore it on the set, Director Dillon took one all-encompassing glance and cried, “Excellent!”&#13;
  “Parlor, Bedroom and Bath” included in its all-star cast such screen favorites as Eugene Pallette, Ruth Stonehouse, Kathleen Kirkman and Henry Miller, Jr., son of the famous actor and producer. It has to deal with the adventures and misadventures of a young married couple, the better half of which wanted a husband who was wild and who was as rough on the hearts of the ladies as the eighteenth amendment is on the old soaks. It is a play jammed to the top with absurdities and hilarious situations of the sort which cannot be explained and yet which have to be somehow.&#13;
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TAXPAYERS, TAKE NOTICE!&#13;
  Tax books are now open for the payment of State and County taxes for 1920. A discount of two per cent is allowed for payment in November and one per cent in December.&#13;
&#13;
JNO. D. JINKINS, Tax Collector, Seminole County.    11-13-dlw, w-2t.&#13;
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CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
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Classified advertisements, 5 cents a line. No ad taken for less than 25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cash must accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit accordingly.&#13;
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WANTED-&#13;
WANTED – House or apartment of 3 or 4 rooms, unfurnished, for man and wife with two school children. Best of references.  See or write, G. B. S., job dept., Herald office.  Dh-tf.&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office.&#13;
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WANTED – Team work. Inquire of M. Hanson Shoe Shop.  189-60tp.&#13;
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WANTED – Your old batteries to rebuild. Let us make your starting and lighting a pleasure. We are authorized “EXIDE” dealers and have a Battery for all makes and automobiles. “EXIDE”, the Giant that lives in a box.” – Ray Bros.  Phone 548, old Ford Garage.  179-tfc.&#13;
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Get your Scratch Pads from the Herald – by the pound – 15c.&#13;
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WANTED – Brick and cement work, chimneys, flues, piers, cement floors, sidewalks. – A. L. Ray, 206 Park Ave.  173-30tp.&#13;
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WANTED – Pupils, Violin and Piano. – Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.  175-20tf-p.&#13;
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--Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf.&#13;
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WANTED – By Dec. 1st or sooner, 3 or 4 unfurnished rooms or 3 to 6 room house, unfurnished or partly furnished. Will lease by month or year. Best of reference given. Address “soon” care of herald.    193-12tp.&#13;
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FOR RENT --&#13;
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FOR RENT – One nicely furnished room, 320 Oak Ave. Phone 308-J. 187-tfc.&#13;
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FOR RENT or for sale, large warehouse with railroad siding.  – &#13;
Chas. Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven. Co.    156-tfc.&#13;
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FURNISHED ROOMS – two furnished bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park Avenue.   157-tfc.&#13;
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MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
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ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, 109 East First street, over Union Pharmacy.  163-tfc.&#13;
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DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture, bedsteads, chairs, etc.  what have you?   174-30tc.&#13;
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BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run your battery until she is entirely dead. The battery is the costliest accessory to your car. We re-charge and re-build all makes of batteries. – Ray Bros. Phone 548, old Ford Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
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LOST&#13;
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LOST – Western Union branch deposit book. Finder please return to Western Union office.  – J. P. Hall. Mgr.   180-tfc.&#13;
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LOST OR STRAYED - one red pig, 4 months old. If found notify E. B. Randall, Jr., 825 First Street.  191-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE&#13;
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FOR SALE – Shasto daisies, $1 per dozen. English Shamrock Oxalis 30c per dozen.  Ring 207-w.  183-15tc.&#13;
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Special reduction in men’s and ladies’ W. L. Douglas shoes. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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For sale – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf.&#13;
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New line of Congoleums and Art Squares. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – one new 1920 and one 1917 Ford touring cars. Two tents 10x12 and 12x14, also four army cots. All in good condition. Call for Mr. Lehman. Phone No. 112.   193-6tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf.&#13;
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Special reduction in Georgette Silk and cotton shirt waists. – A, Kanner, 213-215 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.&#13;
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We have just received a line of silverware and casseroles. – A Kanner, 213-215 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tf.&#13;
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FOR SALE – One horse, wagon and harness. Apply M. Hanson Shoe Shop.  189-12tp.&#13;
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See our line of electrical lamps. – A. Kanner, 213-215 Sanford Avenue. Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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PLANTS FOR SALE – Cabbage per 1000, $1.50; Cauliflower, Handers Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B. B., per M, $1.50; Ice Berg, per M, $1.50; beets, Crosby’s Egyptian, per M, $1.50; Onion, yellow golden Bermuda, per M, $1.50; onions, white Bermuda, per M, $1.50; Celery, yellow g, per M, $2.00; self-blenching importing celery, per M, $2.00; French celery seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.00. – Clay County Gardening Co., Green Cove Springs, Fla.   11-12.&#13;
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FOR SALE – One 1920 Cole Eight 7-passenger automobile run only 6500 miles. Bargain. One 1920. 7-passenger Buick run only 3,700 miles, price right. Extras. Box 478, DeLand, Fla.    193-6tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – Good mule, cheap. Would exchange for good milch cow. P.O. Box 445.   193-4tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE- One cottage, 5 rooms and bath, corner Third Street and French ave. Mrs. Baldwin.&#13;
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BRADLEY MATTRESS FACTORY. Orlando, Fla.&#13;
Makes old mattresses new at one-third the cost of a a new one.&#13;
PHONE 804   16 BRYANT ST.    11-1511mo-p.&#13;
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Cash and Carry.&#13;
BEST CREAMERY BUTTER, per lb	  66c&#13;
PURITAN HAMS, per lb		  38c&#13;
POTATOES per pack			  50c&#13;
8-lb can SNOW-DRIFT LARD		$1.85&#13;
Jones’ Cash and Carry&#13;
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Advertise Sanford by Post Cards. Beautiful views. 1c Each. Sanford Herald.&#13;
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SPARKS 3 RING SHOWS. A NATIONAL INSTITUTION. &#13;
COMING TO SANFORD Ball Park Grounds&#13;
Tues., Nov. 23 Mile Ling Open Cage Street Parade. 10:30 A.M.&#13;
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Please Phone In Your Orders&#13;
For THANKSGIVING TURKEY.  Everything For Your Fruit Cake.&#13;
LEMON PEEL – ORANGE PEEL – CITRON – CURRANTS – RAISENS – BROWN SUGAR – DATES – FIGS – SPICES of all kinds. NEW FLORIDA SYRUP. APPLES, 75c per peck.&#13;
L. P. McCuller.  Sanford, Florida.&#13;
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Buy Meat You Can Eat.  We carry a choice line at all times. A trial solicited.&#13;
PURE FOOD MARKET.  J. H. Tillis, Prop.  Phone 105.  402 Sanford. Ave.&#13;
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We Guarantee All Battery Repairs&#13;
Every Battery repair we make is guaranteed for six months. We are able to do this because in repairing any make of battery we are licensed to use patented features which have made Vesta batteries famous.&#13;
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Sanford Battery Service Co.  L. A. RENAUD, Prop.  Phone 189.&#13;
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CHULUOTA INN. Will Open Season 1920-21 on Thanksgiving Day Turkey Dinner.&#13;
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SEE URK FOR EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING. Cor. First and Sanford Ave.&#13;
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National Madza Lamps.&#13;
25 to 300 watt in 110 volts.  20 to 75 watts in 35 volts.&#13;
Everything Electrical. Expert Installation And Repair Work.&#13;
GILLON &amp; FRY.  Phone 442.  115 Magnolia Ave.&#13;
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Real Estate. I Sell It. J. E. SPURLING. The Man Who Sells Dirt Cheap.&#13;
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Sanford’s Most Popular Hotel. SEMINOLE HOTEL AND GRILL &#13;
Under Management of WALTER B. OLSON.&#13;
Our Specialty – Seminole’s Famous $1 Sunday Dinner De Luxe. A La Carte Service All Day. &#13;
PAGE TWO.   THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1920.&#13;
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Society.  MISS KATHRYN WILKEY, Editor.    Phone 428.&#13;
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SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK.&#13;
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Thursday – &#13;
Every-Week Bridge Club with Mrs. Margaret Barnes.&#13;
T.N.T. with Mrs. J. B. Lawson.&#13;
&#13;
Friday –&#13;
Spendthrift Club with Mrs. S. M. Lloyd.&#13;
D. A. R. with Mrs. A. R. Key.&#13;
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Miss Adelaide Higgins has returned from Waco, Texas, where she represented the state of Florida at the cotton convention.&#13;
&#13;
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Mrs. Margaret Barnes has as her guest, Mrs. N. F. Peyton, of Washington.&#13;
&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Sheldon were the guests of their daughter, Mrs. Alex Fitts for a few days last week.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Barrett have returned to Sanford after a two years absence. They will be with Mrs. Cecil Gabbit until the first of the year.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. Norman Nash and Mrs. Nash’s mother, Mrs. E. F. Hoyt of Boston, are guests of the Valdez for the winter.&#13;
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R. W. Pearman, Jr. and Judge Geo. Herring have returned from Tallahassee. They were in Tallahassee in the interests of the people of Sanford in the Southern Bell Telephone Company case. The hearing was recessed until a complete audit of the books can be made which will probably take a year. &#13;
&#13;
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TUESDAY CLUB&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Reginald Holly very charmingly entertained her Bridge Club and an extra table Tuesday afternoon at her home, 311 Park Ave.&#13;
  The house was most attractive in roses, ferns and poinsettas. At the conclusion of the game a delicious salad course was served.&#13;
  The club members present were: Mrs. John Smith, Mrs. Donald Smith, Mrs. Archie Betts, Mrs. D. C. Marlow, Mrs. Robert Hines, Mrs. Harry Walsh, Mrs. Henry Purden. The guests were: Mrs. Fedder, Mrs. Ed Betts, Mrs. Harris and Mrs. R. J. Holly.&#13;
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PIPE ORGAN CLUB&#13;
&#13;
The Pipe Organ Club of the Baptist Church were delightfully entertained by Mrs. Kent Rossitter at her home on Celery avenue Monday afternoon. &#13;
  A pleasant afternoon of sewing and discussion was enjoyed by the members who were present. It was decided to have the Christmas Bazaar on December 4th, however, the place has not been decided upon.&#13;
  Delicious refreshments were served during the afternoon.&#13;
&#13;
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PIPE ORGAN CLUB&#13;
&#13;
The pipe organ club was entertained Monday afternoon by Mrs. Kent Rossiter at her home on Celery avenue.&#13;
  In spite of inclement weather there was a good attendance and the ladies thoroughly enjoyed their work and the social time together. A delicious refreshments course was served.&#13;
  Saturday, Dec. 4th, was the date chosen for the Christmas bazaar and supper, the place to be announce at a later date.&#13;
&#13;
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SUNDAY MORNING CLUB&#13;
&#13;
Men, where do you spend your Sunday mornings? You will be entertained and benefitted if you will meet with the Sunday Morning Club, a bunch of live men with a real teacher-next Sunday morning at 9:30 at the Baptist Temple. If not affiliated with some other church you are wanted and needed here.&#13;
&#13;
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CECELIN PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
A large number of patrons and friends attended the recital given by the Cecilian Music Club last Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Munson opened the program with a talk on the life of the Immortal Master Haydn and emphasized many valuable lessons to the young music student from the facts of his efforts and success; the struggles that so gloriously triumphed.&#13;
  In addition to the usual piano numbers, Miss Lilly Ruth Spencer accompanied by Mrs. Claud Herndon, gave a group of vocal solos. Miss Spencer is a young student of the Sanford High School and possess a splendid and most promising voice.&#13;
  The entire program was delightfully rendered and included the following piano selections:&#13;
&#13;
1.-Sonate in D			Haydn&#13;
   	Georgia Mobly&#13;
2.-Concert Mazurka		Pessard&#13;
   	Agnes Perritt&#13;
3.-Valse in D flat		Choplin&#13;
	Charlott Smith&#13;
4.-Polish Dance			Scharwenka&#13;
	May Holly&#13;
5.-Meditation			Szlatt&#13;
	Sara Wheelis&#13;
6.-In an Alabama Cabin	Chas. Wakefield Cadman&#13;
	Nezzie Stone&#13;
7.-Bolero				Hvorth&#13;
	Marguerite Garner&#13;
8.-Evening Star			Wagner-Liszt&#13;
	Miss Helel Terwilliger&#13;
9.-Mazurka				J. Louis Brown&#13;
	Miss Izetta Stone&#13;
10.-Valse in A Flat		Gurlitt&#13;
	Pearl Robson&#13;
11.-Full of Fun			Lawson&#13;
	Ruth Henry&#13;
12.-Little Folk Group&#13;
	(a)	Japanese Doll	Newton Smift&#13;
	(b)	Hopper Toad	Oorth&#13;
	Mary Helen Morse&#13;
My First Piece			Mrs. Crosby Adams&#13;
	Frederick Williams&#13;
Ding Dong Bell			Spaulding&#13;
	Helen Douglass&#13;
Swing Song				Bebrins&#13;
	Dorothy Haines&#13;
&#13;
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Everything for the office at the Herald Printing Co. We can fit you out with all that you need in fine printed stationery and office supplies of all kinds.&#13;
&#13;
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Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
&#13;
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Advertisement art – 3 people (2 men and 1 woman). The men are dressed in traditional dressy cowboy suit from Mexico. The woman in a tiered skirt with a long, lace scarf and her hair pulled back in a bun.&#13;
&#13;
Title: ‘Rio Grande’ from the famous play by Augustus Thomas.&#13;
&#13;
SYNOPSIS&#13;
Though Maria Inez Lopez had been taught by her father, El Capitan of an insurgent band, to hate America and the “Gringo,” she could not resist the ardent love-making of Danny O’Neil, a Texas ranger, who saved her from capture by the Mexican police.&#13;
  Lopez was caught smuggling arms across the Rio. Maria Inez believed the romance with Danny was responsible for her father’s capture, and her love turned to hate. She led a raid on the frontier town, but the American forces were the victors. Lopez wounded was trapped in the burning jail and saved by Danny.&#13;
  The climax is reached when the dying Lopez is taken to Danny’s home and recognized by his foster mother as her long lost husband.&#13;
&#13;
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EXPLOSION KILLS SEVERAL&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
ROCKVILLE, Md., Nov. 18.&#13;
An explosion occurred here today in which the home of James Bolton, a farmer, was destroyed killing two children. Mrs. Hattie Shipley, Bolton’s housekeeper and seriously injured Bolton. Vernon Thompson, a neighbor, was arrested. &#13;
&#13;
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COOLIDGE AGAINST CANCELLATION CONTRACTS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
BOSTON, Nov. 18.-&#13;
Cancellation of contracts by trades people who were caught in the falling markets with orders for goods at high prices were condemned by Governor Coolidge in a letter to the Boston Boot and Shoe Club today.&#13;
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DORNER SELLS LETTUCE&#13;
&#13;
Albert Dorner gives us the following interesting information this morning:&#13;
  R. R. Eldridge has sold Albert Apollo Dorner’s lettuce to A. H. Moses for $1000 cash for the first car. There are more to follow every day.&#13;
  Albert was only farming four years before he came to Sanford. He was a pioneer flyer for 7 years, spent many sorry, unhappy and cheerful days when he flew with John B. Molsant, Graham White, Croiol Johnson, Fred Schneider, the sons of President Carranza, Rene Simon, Andree Houpert and Miss H. Quimly, also Matilda Moisant with a 30 h.p. Azani motor.&#13;
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The B. &amp; O. Garage has an ad in this issue of the Herald, announcing a big cur in the price of the well known Kokomo Auto Tires. Here’s a chance to save some real money-it will pay any auto owner to equip his car with new tires all around, as the price is far below any quoted here in many moons. Perry Jernigan has gone to Tampa for a few days and you should take advantage of the opportunity before his return as he may raise the price to get even on the trip.&#13;
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E. C. Harrinton, of Wekiwa Springs, was in the city today enroute to Daytona. He is a former newspaper man, having at one time been on the Orange county papers.&#13;
&#13;
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NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 18. – President-elect Harding will not stop at a Mexican port on his voyage to Panama as invited by Mexican officials.&#13;
&#13;
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AN OFFICIAL CANVASS OF LATE ELECTION&#13;
(Continued from page one)&#13;
&#13;
092; Baird 6,428; McDougall, 4086; Crum, 17,688.&#13;
  There were 34,564 votes case for the constitutional amendment and 54,510 votes case against the amendment.&#13;
  The vote on the constitutional amendment by counties is as follows:&#13;
&#13;
Counties-			Yes			No&#13;
Alachua			  537		1,962&#13;
Baker			   81		  182&#13;
Bay				  592		  170&#13;
Bradford			  376		  534&#13;
Brevard			  519		  428&#13;
Broward			  136		  406&#13;
Calhoun			  313		  245&#13;
Citrus			  243		  311&#13;
Clay				  162		  451&#13;
Columbia			  147		  818&#13;
Dade				3,283		1,912&#13;
DeSoto			  732		1,444&#13;
Duval			7,441		7,810&#13;
Escambia			3,709		  316&#13;
Franklin			   92		  314&#13;
*Gadsen			…		…&#13;
Hamilton			  223		  375&#13;
Hernando			  383		  140&#13;
Hillsborough		1,980		5,004&#13;
Holmes			  659		  705&#13;
Jackson			  757		1,310&#13;
Jefferson			  142		  444&#13;
Lafayette			   33		  631&#13;
Lake				  479		  801&#13;
Lee				  585		  295&#13;
Flagler			  204		   99&#13;
Okeechobee		   77		   38&#13;
Leon				  306		  398&#13;
Levy				  165		  597&#13;
Liberty			   96		  198&#13;
Madison			  219		  393&#13;
Manatee			  280		  681&#13;
Marion			  326		2,205&#13;
Monroe			  286		  859&#13;
Nassau			  252		  476&#13;
Okaloosa			  333		  413&#13;
Orange			  654		  980&#13;
Osceola			   90		1,048&#13;
Palm Beach		  708		1,189&#13;
Pasco			  469		  632&#13;
Pinellas			  752		1,985&#13;
Polk				  633		4,016&#13;
Putnam			  343		1,425&#13;
St. Johns			1,083		  581&#13;
St. Lucie			  288		  740&#13;
Santa Rosa		  667		  166&#13;
Seminole			  170		1,452&#13;
Sumter			   66		  793&#13;
Suwannee			   88		1,310&#13;
Taylor			  108		  380&#13;
Volusia			  476		2,870&#13;
Wakulla			  109		  223&#13;
Walton			1,337		  872&#13;
Washington		  313		  481&#13;
&#13;
Total		    34,564	    54,510&#13;
*No vote reported&#13;
&#13;
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SIX KINDS OF SAFETY&#13;
&#13;
 Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank where you deposit your money?&#13;
 The first consideration is the capital, which should be ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank is to serve.&#13;
 The next question to consider is the officers in charge. They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.&#13;
 Then there is the question of confidence. The public should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. &#13;
 These three principles determine the success of a bank.&#13;
 We adopted these principles in the outset of our career and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase our usefulness to the community as the years go by.&#13;
 We offer you:&#13;
  &#13;
  1st: Large capital and working reserve&#13;
  2nd: Trained men in charge – men of several years experience.&#13;
  3rd: The confidence of the public, which is proven by the daily addition to our line of depositors.&#13;
  4th: Protection by two examinations each year by the state banking department. Two audits each year by an independent recognized public audit company and two sworn statements submitted to the state comptroller by the cashier, giving the bank’s condition in detail. All of which insures regular, systematic and thorough operation of the bank.&#13;
  5th: The advice of a competent board of directors, who meet with the officers regularly each month and advise them as to the operation of the bank.&#13;
6th: Insurance of all deposits every day of the year. This is a protection not commonly found in banks and is an absolute protection for your funds, in addition to all the other usual safeguards.&#13;
  These are reasons why you should do business with us, and we believe that no bank can offer better inducements.&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD. We want your business.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
M. D. GATCHEL GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES.&#13;
Phone 110. Corner Sanford and Celery Avenues.&#13;
&#13;
2-lb Cans Standard, Hand-Packed Tomatoes, Per Can – 9c&#13;
Extra Fancy Grade, Maine Corn, Per can – 20c&#13;
Maxwell House Coffee, 1-lb. can – 40c&#13;
Export Soap, Per Cake – 5c&#13;
Swifts’ Premium Hams, Per lb. – 48c.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Try a Herald Want Ad. – It pays.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Vulcanite Shingles&#13;
Just Lay Them Down and Nail – That’s All There is To It.&#13;
&#13;
The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air – rain, sleet, etc. from forcing its way through the roof.&#13;
 The Shoulder of Protection is also the Self-Spacing Device. Makes laying easy and rapid – thus saving time and money.&#13;
 These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red or Green Crushed Slate. Each rain washes away the accumulated dust – reviving perpetually the original rich colors.&#13;
 Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered – because they are fire-resisting.&#13;
 Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the cost free of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.&#13;
&#13;
Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR THE FIRST COMPLETE HOUSE BILL. &#13;
CARTER LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Full line Columbia Phonograph.&#13;
Prices from $50 to $300. Terms To Suit Yourself.&#13;
The most complete line of Records in the city.&#13;
Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins. &#13;
Prices right. &#13;
H. L. GIBSON.&#13;
 &#13;
PAGE THREE.	THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1920&#13;
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Header art of a square with a line drawing of a world in it and the title:&#13;
Today’s Geography. Little Journeys to Places Figuring in World Events.&#13;
&#13;
Prepared by The National Geographic Society, Washington, D. C. for Department of Interior, Bureau of  ??&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
THE FLAMINGO, A BIRD OF BEAUTY AND MYSTERY, IS SAVED FROM EXTINCTION&#13;
&#13;
  Assurance that the flamingo, bird of beauty and mystery, will escape extinction is contained in a letter from H. E. W. Grant, colonial governor of the &#13;
Bahamas, which says:&#13;
  “You will be glad to hear that an order in council has been passed giving complete protection to the flamingo. This glory of our marshes owes the expedition a debt of gratitude.” &#13;
  The action of the Bahamas council was taken following an expedition, which trailed the flamingo, the most beautiful of the world’s larger birds, to it last stand, took motion pictures of the timorous creatures; and brought about a realization of how near they were to becoming extinct in the new world through annihilation by native sponge fishermen. These fishermen hunted them down for food purposes at the nesting and molting season.&#13;
  The first American naturalist to locate and study the gorgeous flamingo was Dr. Frank M. Chapman in 1901, when he estimated that some 20,000 flamingos were to be found on one of the little known islands of the Bahamas group. Since then it is believed that fully two-thirds of the colonies have perished.&#13;
  The expedition that spent ten days in the abysmal salt swamps of Andros island, filming the flamingo and studying his habitat for scientific purposes was sent out by the Miami Aquarium association.&#13;
  A yacht was the mother ship of the expedition and an express cruiser was used as a scout boat. Canvas canoes were taken along to get into the shallow salt creeks, and nose into the lagoons for deep entrances to the murky swamps where the flamingos hides. A Bahama guide, Peter Bannister, who had aided Doctor Chapman’s party 19 years ago, also went with the party.&#13;
  After penetrating to the utmost navigable points with the canoes it was necessary to traverse miles of the “swash” or tidal marl marches, carrying the heavy cameras and motion picture machines, in search for the birds. Wading in water up to the waist, knee deep in the marl mud, was the daily program, while blinding swarms of mosquitoes compelled nightly retreats to the yacht, anchored several miles off shore.&#13;
  But the hardships found a worthy reward when the party came upon colonies of several hundred birds, described by a member of the party as “a flaming mass of brilliant scarlet bodies, jet black beneath the huge wings, with their long, slender necks gracefully lowering and raising their Roman-nosed heads as they sought beneath the water the tiny spiral shell known to scientists as “Cerithlum.” Upon which the flamingo lives exclusively in its native habitat.”&#13;
&#13;
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SARDINIA: THE ISLAND OF PYGMIES AND WOLFRAM&#13;
&#13;
A traveler of fine imagination suggests that travel involves a double journey – “one forward through space, the other backward through time.” Your steamboat ticket from Civitavecchia, the port of Rome, entitles you to an eight-hour voyage to Sardinia, but affords a premium of several thousand years backward to Europe’s earliest traceable history.&#13;
  Sardinia has a double interest just now because of the reported native demand for home rule, and because Americans have found tracts containing wolfram, highly prized as a source of tungsten.&#13;
  Second only to Sicily among Mediterranean Islands, Sardinia has been referred to as the lost isle of that sea. Geographically, it has been said to turn its back on Italy, for its east coast is mountainous. This isolation has a compensation in preserving the homogeneity of a people who have a special interest for students of racial history. Sardinians are small of stature. Even their soldiers have an average height a fraction under five feet, four inches.&#13;
  But the most conspicuous curiosities of Sardinia are its nuraghi, great round towers, relics of the bronze age, which served as fortified dwellings for some prehistoric people. There are 5,000 or more of these towers, some 60 feet high, usually about 30 feet in diameter at the base, made of stone blocks and smeared with clay on the inside. Stairways lead to upper chambers and platforms.&#13;
  Interesting as are these relics of unknown inhabitants, even more fascinating are the traces of ancient civilizations to be found in the daily life of Sardinians of today. One may find oxen plowing as they did in the days of the Roman empire, implements which were introduced by the successive occupants, one Catalan town (Alghero) where there is no jarring note in the illusion of old Spain, and dances of the classic Greek period at the mountain feste.&#13;
  Only in Sardinia and Corsica is the mufioni, predecessor of our sheep to be found. Wild deer and wild boar are plentiful in the mountain districts. Tunny fishing is a major industry.&#13;
 In area Sardinia is comparable to Vermont, but has more than twice the population of that state. The island lies directly south of Corsica, and is separated therefrom by the narrow straits of Bonifacto. In shape it has been compared to a human footprint.&#13;
&#13;
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AIRPLANES TO WHIR OVER THUNDEROUS FALLS&#13;
&#13;
While Niagara falls will continue to hold their own as a mecca for honeymooners and other travelers, they must henceforth submit to comparison with another natural wonder, the Victoria Falls of the Zambezi, as Africa becomes frequented by tourists.&#13;
  From being a place of mystery, so feared that falls Livingstone, who discovered the falls in 1855, had great difficulty in persuading his fol1owers to accompany him, the falls now are visinte from a railway that crosses the river half-mile below them, and they lie under the route of the proposed Cape to Cairo aerial service.&#13;
  Louis Livingston Seaman, in a communication to the National Geographic society, describes a visit to Victoria Falls and contrasts them with Niagara, as follows:&#13;
  “Early in the morning of the third day, we were suddenly awakened by the guard and treated to a scene of beauty never to be forgotten. Some ten miles distant five enormous columns of vapor were shooting their roseate-tinted shafts hundreds of feet heavenward, while the faint roar of the falls told us the Mosioa-Tunga- the smoke that sounds-was no longer a mystery.&#13;
  “Each moment increased the beauty and vividness of the scene. With the first rays of the rising sun came a picture of color of wonderous loveliness. Delicate tints of violet, crimson, and beryl played through the mounting spray as it shot higher and higher, ultimately disappearing as virgin clouds in heaven, while the ever-increasing thunders of the waters lent as added solemnity to the view.&#13;
  “Hardly could we wait to reach our destination so great was our enthusiasm. But our hopes were doomed to momentary disappointment, only to be more than realized after a study of the environment; for, notwithstanding their magnitude, the first view of Victoria Falls is decidedly disappointing.&#13;
  “Although nearly a mile in width and 400 feet in height, the grandeur of their proportions is eclipsed by the sudden disappearance of the river, as it plunges into a narrow, rocky fissure extending across its entire width. Only at a single central point is there a breach in this fissure through which the falls can be seen and appreciated in their full proportions, where the converging waters rush madly to the zigzag canyon below. So restricted is this view that there is an entire absence of that awe-inspiring and most paralyzing effect which strikes the visitor dumb with wonder and amazement when Niagara bursts on his near vision.&#13;
  “On first sight of the Victoria falls one involuntarily exclaims, ‘Oh, how beautiful!’ but they lack the majesty of our grand Niagara.’&#13;
    “No single visit can adequately reveal the fulness of their charms, but repeated excursions must be made to their lslands and precipices, their grottos and palm gardens, their rain forests and projecting crags, their rainbows and cataracts and many-sided views of their exquisite setting in the emerald framework of iconic forests, before their indescribable beauty can be appreciated.&#13;
  “Had the falls been in America, the Indians would surely have named then Minnehaha, Laughing Waters.”&#13;
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COUNTY COMMISSIONERS IN REGULAR SESSION&#13;
&#13;
(Continued from page one)&#13;
&#13;
Co-operate with the Board of County Commissioners when doing work in this county.&#13;
  Comr. L. P. Hagan offered the following resolution and moved its adoption, same being seconded by Comr. C. W. Entzminger.&#13;
  Whereas, as the public highway in Seminole County, Florida, beginning at the intersection of the brick road leading west from Sanford, with the brick road leading to DeLand, and running thence in a westerly direction to the Wekiva river and connecting with Lake county, is a main thoroughfare leading to Lake county, and should be designated as a State Aid road.&#13;
  Therefore, Be It Resolved, That the State Road Department be and they are hereby requested to designate said highway as a State Aid Road.&#13;
  And Be It Further Resolved that, the Clerk of this Board be instructed to forward a certified copy of this resolution to Hon. Forest Lake, chairman of the State Road Department, at Tallahassee, Fla.&#13;
  Adopted this 3rd day of Nov. A. D. 1920.&#13;
  Comr. L. P. Hagan offered the following resolution and moved its adoption, same being duly seconded by Comr. E. H. Kilbee.&#13;
  That the Tax Collector be and hereby is authorized and directed to pay all funds collected by him on account of Florida Groves Drainage District, on Assessment Roll of 1920, to the Bond Trustees of the said Florida Groves Drainage District, and is advised that the levy assessment is for the sole purpose of paying interest on bonds and for a sinking fund, and that the Bond Trustees of the said district are O. P. Swope, B. F. Wheeler and L. A. Sheldon.&#13;
  Dr. J. T. Denton appeared before the board in reference to his work as county physician.&#13;
  Other communications were received, read and ordered filed.&#13;
  Fire arms bond of B. F. Whitmer, jr. was approved and license ordered issued.&#13;
  Notary Public Bond for Lila Mae Johnson and D. M. Martin were approved.&#13;
  F. F. Dutton appeared before the Board in reference to new road thru his farm on west city limits line.&#13;
  Motion of C. W. Entzminger, seconded by E. H. Kilbee, and carried, Comr. L. P. Hagan and Engineer Fred T. Williams are hereby appointed a committee to confer with the city commissioners in reference to road on west limits line.&#13;
  Pension claim of Louisa T. Phillips, was approved.&#13;
  Motion of L. P. Hagan, seconded by E. H. Kilbee and carried Chairman L. A. Brumley, is hereby authorized to sign warrants to pay the clerk and inspectors of the election held Nov. 2nd, 1920.&#13;
  Motion of L. P. Hagan, seconded by E. H. Kilbee, and carried, Chairman L. A. Brumley is instructed to confer with the city commissioners in reference road work on Mellonville ave.&#13;
  Motion of C. W. Entzminger, seconded by E. H. Kilbee, and carried, the bondsmen of J. C. Jacobs, in the sum of $1,000.00 are hereby released from said bond, and the clerk is instructed to return to Mr. Jacobs the certified check for $300.00 held by county.&#13;
  Motion of C. W. Entzminger, seconded by L. P. Hagan and carried, the bridge over Wekiva river one half mile north of the road leading from Altamonte to Forest City is to be discontinued as a public county bridge and that Comr. C. W. Entzminger be instructed to post said bridge.&#13;
  Reports of the several county officials were received, read and ordered filed.&#13;
  Warrants paid during the month of October were ordered cancelled of record,&#13;
  Bills as audited by the clerk and approved by this board were ordered paid.&#13;
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Post Cards at the Herald office, 1c.&#13;
    &#13;
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CAROLINE ISLANDS: AN OCEANIC MUSEUM&#13;
&#13;
  Whatever the political future of the Caroline islands, which Japan seized from Germany, they are bound to be objects of scientific interest for generations to come.&#13;
  Who built the massive stone structure which give evidence of a high degree of civilization at some prehistoric time?&#13;
  What was the origin of the stone currency, some “coins” of which weigh five tons?&#13;
  These are but two of the many questions which these Pacific Islands of mystery present.&#13;
  The stone ruins extend from Ponape, an island toward the east of the group to Yap, on the west. Yap will be recalled as the island which figured so conspicuously in the peace treaty discussion because of the proposal to cede it to the United States.&#13;
  On Yap are great stone terraced, embankments and roads, composed of neatly laid stone blocks, stone graves, stone platforms and enormous chambers resembling council lodges with gables and tall pillars, frequently carved.&#13;
  Ponape is the “Pacific Venice.” There the ruins are partly submerged. Apparently they once stood on an island city, unless their site was connected with other islands before a terrific upheaval inundated them.&#13;
  What remains today is more than half a hundred rectangular wullen [?] islets, projecting above the waters of a lagoon. There is an outer lagoon, separated by a breakwater three miles long. In all this construction huge basalt blocks were used. Apparently they were untouched by iron tools. Recent study has confirmed that belief that these mighty megalithic monuments antedate the present native population of the Carolines.&#13;
  Origin of the unique stone cottage is not known. Shell money seems to have supplanted the unwieldy stone disks for “small change” long before the white man arrived. The stone “money” is made from limestone or calcite. It probably was employed for primitive banking rather than for general circulation. Its security from theft was assured by its weight. Specimens are found piled about the homes of native chieftains.&#13;
  Including reefs not inhabited, the Caroline Islands number more than 500. Of the total land area of 300 square miles 307 square miles is comprised in Ponap, Yap, Kusate and Hogolu, or Tuak. In 1911 the total population was about 55,000 and of these fewer than 400 were Europeans.&#13;
  The islands extend for about one thousand miles east and west. They lie more that fifteen hundred miles to the east of the Philippines and about a thousand miles north of New Guinea.&#13;
&#13;
A photo of the King of Mual District and One of his wives. Both are dressed in western casual clothing.&#13;
&#13;
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SALES – SERVICE – PARTS – ACCESSORIES. REO AUTOMOTIVE.&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO. Phone 66.&#13;
&#13;
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Is Your AUTO Insurance Heavy?&#13;
CUT OFF 50 PER CENT OF YOUR HEAVY LOAD&#13;
Buy Your Fire, Theft, Collision, Liability or Property Damage Insurance at Actual Cost with&#13;
The Belt Auto Indemnity Association&#13;
&#13;
Ask j. h. Lawson, Chas. Kanner, Dr. Langley about The Belt pays its Claims. Then call phone 46 or write Box 156 for rates. “it will pay you” to see&#13;
G. C. Fellows, Manager for Sanford.&#13;
&#13;
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Art of a polar bear with a large tire in front of it.&#13;
&#13;
Gillette Tires and Tubes.&#13;
Chilled Rubber Process Makes Them A Bear for Wear.&#13;
Smith brothers. Expert Repair work.&#13;
&#13;
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[advertisement]&#13;
&#13;
For the Day of Thanksgiving&#13;
That big day is only one week distant – and you have hat, suit, coat, or dress for the various events of the day or evening to select.&#13;
&#13;
Or you may have to think of linen, cutlery, china, glassware for the dinner table &#13;
&#13;
This store is thoroughly prepared with complete stocks of the newest and best in Quality merchandise and each department presents many favorable opportunities for economical buying.&#13;
&#13;
A particular advantage is the large and varied showings from which you may choose – showings which you would only find in a large department store, such as this.&#13;
&#13;
“Where All Central Florida Shops”&#13;
Yowell-Drew CO.  Orlando’s Largest Department Store, Orlando, Florida&#13;
&#13;
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Sanford Machine &amp; Foundry Company&#13;
GENERAL MACHINE AND BOILER WORK – BRASS CASTINGS – GAS ENGINE REPAIRS – ACTEYLENE CUTTING AND WELDING.&#13;
Special machine for turning Auto Crank Shafts and Crank Pins to within .0003 accuracy.&#13;
&#13;
IRRIGATION NIPPLES. PULLEY and SHAFTINGS – ROUND AND SQUARE IRON.&#13;
&#13;
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Pico Hotel&#13;
MRS. B. E. TAKACH, Proprietor&#13;
Corner of Park Avenue and Commercial Avenue. SANFORD, FLORIDA&#13;
&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL, POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH …1c&#13;
&#13;
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CITY MARKET – Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props. Welaka building.&#13;
Specials For Today.&#13;
Choice Western and Florida Meats. Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage.&#13;
City Market.&#13;
&#13;
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Lord’s Purity Water. As Good as the Best. Daily Service. Phone 68&#13;
&#13;
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CHANDLER CARS – FRANKLIN CARS.&#13;
“We give you service – ask anybody” –&#13;
WIGHT TIRE CO.&#13;
Kelly-Springfield Tires.  Diamond tires.&#13;
&#13;
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Art of a circle. Inside it is a line drawing of a mechanic changing a tire.&#13;
&#13;
OUR PAINT SHOP&#13;
Is kept busy by knowing automobilists who send their cars to us to be repainted. The “wise ones” know that their cars will be returned to them looking smarter and better than when bright new from the factory. The reason for this is that all our work is custom work which means that only the best of materials are used by skilled workmen.&#13;
&#13;
REHER BROS. Auto Painting.  Phone 112.  Sanford Heights.&#13;
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 &#13;
PAGE FOUR      THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1920&#13;
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&#13;
SANFORD DAILY HERALD – Published every afternoon except SUNDAY at The Herald Building, 107 Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, Florida&#13;
&#13;
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THE HERALD PRINTING CO., INC. PUBLISHERS&#13;
-----&#13;
R. J. Holly		Editor&#13;
N. J. Lillard		Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
H. A. Neel		General Manager&#13;
F. P. Rines		Circulation Manager.  Phone 481&#13;
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Advertising Rates Made Known on Application&#13;
&#13;
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Subscription Prices in Advance&#13;
One year			$6.00&#13;
Six months		$3.00&#13;
Delivered in City by Carrier&#13;
One week			15 cents&#13;
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Member of the Associated Press&#13;
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Logo of Union Label [?]&#13;
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Only a few more days till hunting season.&#13;
&#13;
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No finer place in the world to hunt than right in Seminole county.&#13;
--&#13;
But get your license from the county judge before you venture into the piney woods.&#13;
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A day in the woods and by the lakes and streams will net you all the game and fish you want – if you can get them.&#13;
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Weather reports says the frost will be on the banana bush tonight. Hope it will not be strong enough to kill the beans and other tender stuff.&#13;
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Everything points to a grand session this year as far as the fruits and vegetables of Florida are concerned. Good prices will mean much to our growers when the freight rates and labor prices are so high.&#13;
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The next big day is Thanksgiving Day. And again we can all give thanks that we are living in Florida, the best state in the union where there are no coal shortages and the sun shine 360 days in the year.&#13;
&#13;
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There is no reason for getting excited over the milk situation. The state board of health has simply demanded that the dairies keep the kind of premises that the regulations demand and in case they do not they will not receive a permit to sell milk. Those that keep clean and sanitary dairies can sell milk and those who do not conform to the regulations cannot sell. This has been done in practically every county in the state and there is no reason in the world why the dairies in Sanford should not conform to the same regulations that are demanded from every other dairy in the state.&#13;
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TIP TO THE LEGISLATURE&#13;
&#13;
It will be necessary to increase the amounts to be turned over to the State Road Department, at the next session of the legislature. Two ways of increasing this amount have been mentioned-one by a slightly higher millage (the present levy is two mills), and the other by doubling the auto license.&#13;
  To double the auto license means that the large land owner, the corporation which uses the roads and mostly benefits from any increase in value of the land of the state, the railroads and telegraphs, will entirely escape bearing its share of the expense, which is to be of benefit to the entire state.&#13;
  To place the entire burden on the auto driver will be unjust. It might just as well be placed entirely on the hotel keeper, or on the railroad which hauls more people into the state and more produce out as a result of good roads.&#13;
  Most of the increased revenue should be raised by taxation on land and buildings. To do this it should not be necessary to increase the total millage levied by the state. The past two years are the only ones in fifty years when state taxation has exceeded eight or ten mills. The legislature should cut down on unnecessary expenses and appropriations, and devote at least four mills from the present levy to road purposes. Four mills will give about two million dollars per year derived from taxation; the federal government will match this amount with an equal amount, which will give the State Road Department four million dollars per year beside the auto tax and the use of state convicts.  This is enough for any one board to spend in the state of Florida for one specific purpose. – DeLand News.&#13;
&#13;
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JP says – Getting something for nothing is the hardest and most disappointing task in life; while with a little well directed effort one may succeed in obtaining life’s full reward. Make your effort count by investing in southern utilities company 8 per cent cumulative prior preferred stock. There’s none better.&#13;
&#13;
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WEATHER, CROP CONDITIONS&#13;
In Florida for the Week Ending November 16, 1920&#13;
&#13;
  Temperature: On the whole the temperature was moderate during the week, except on the 13th when freezing occurred over the extreme northwest portion, and where the temperature deficiency was 6 degrees to 8 degrees for the week. The temperature averaged warmer than usual for the period in the peninsula.&#13;
  Precipitation: The week was featured by much cloudiness with rain in all divisions – heavy in much of the peninsula, the week’s total exceeding 2 inches at Jacksonville, Lake City, Gainesville, Davie, Hypoluxo, Moore Haven, Titusville, and locally elsewhere in the several divisions. Low lands are rather too wet in some localities, as a result of the rainstorm that passed over the section during Tuesday morning.&#13;
  Condition of crops: The well distributed rains were beneficial to truck, and the setting of lettuce, celery, cabbage and some tomatoes continued. The early planting of most truck is much improved. Some beans, onions, cauliflower, and other truck in market. The soil was improved by the rain and the planting of oats was resumed. The change to colder weather on the last day of the week, when a cold wave was indicated, will improved the condition of citrus fruits, which, as a result of the previous warm weather, has matured slowly, although shipments continued from all portions of the belt. Ranged are in fair condition.&#13;
&#13;
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NEW GREEK PREMIER TAKES OATH&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
ATHENS, Nov. 18.&#13;
George Rhallis, the new Greek premier with three cabinet members took the oath of office before admiral Coundouroitis regent. Immediately after qualification Rhallis demanded the regent’s resignation and other cabinet members will qualify before Queen Mother Olga. Venizelos has left the country of ranice trip on his yacht escorted by British war vessels. Crowds paraded the street acclaiming former King Constantine and firing revolvers as token of rejoicing.&#13;
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About six different hunting parties are getting ready for the woods next Friday. There will be some tall bombarding when they get strung out in Seminole and adjoining counties.&#13;
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Send in your locals to the Herald office. Phone the news to 148. We want every bit of it. Tell us the news each day.&#13;
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Welaka Coffee. Deane Turner. Phone 497. Welaka Building.&#13;
&#13;
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Cozy Café – Quick Lunch.&#13;
Coffee 5c – Sandwiches 10c – Pies, home made 10c cut – Best Coffee in Sanford.&#13;
Princess Theatre Bldg.&#13;
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NOW MAKING Pecan Nut Roll – Fresh Daily. $1.00 POUND. &#13;
Water’s Kandy Kitchen&#13;
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Seed, Our Business. Honesty, Our Motto. Purity, Our Watchword.&#13;
The L. Allen Seed Co. COME IN AND SEE US (Southern Seed Specialists)&#13;
Wekiwa Bldg.  Sanford, Fla.&#13;
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ODESSA: PARIS OF THE UKRAINE&#13;
&#13;
Before the war no city of the Near East save Bucharest so nearly resembled Paris and Vienna in its hectic night life as did Odessa, conspicuous in the fighting of Ukrainians, Poles and Bolsheviki.&#13;
  Odessa had hundreds of sidewalk cafes, its municipal opera and its palaces of chance. It had more than half a million population, yet it is one of the newest cities in Europe. Moscow’s history extends over a thousand years, that of Odessa only a little beyond a century.&#13;
  There is a unique analogy between Odessa and the capital city of the United States. Both were started at about the same time – during the last decade of the eighteen century – and both were begun because of the farseeing wisdom of the chief executives of the two nations.&#13;
  Perhaps the oddest coincidence is the fact that they both were planned by foreign civil engineers of the same nation. While Major L’Enfant was devising the “city of magnificent distances” to be erected on the banks of the Potomac, Voland, also a Frenchman, laid out Odessa on the shore of the Black sea. While President Washington was dreaming into being the beautiful city which bears his name, Czarina Catherine the Great was sponsoring the upbuilding of a municipal stepping stone toward the chief object of the Russian Bear’s stealthy tread – Constantinople.&#13;
  Like Washington, Odessa was laid out in the midst of a virtual wilderness and swamp. An isolated Turkish fort, Khaji-Bey, stood on the site of the present city at the time, 1789, when it passed to Russia. In early years of the Christian era Greek colonists had taken advantage of the bay of Odessa.&#13;
  Until five years ago the railway distance between Odessa and Moscow was more than a thousand miles, but a new line, via Bakhmatch, reduced that distance to 814 miles. The steamship distance between Odessa and Constantinople is 300 miles.&#13;
  From its history it is evident why Odessa was far from a typical Russian city. Mark Twain found the only Russian things about it to be the shape of the droshkis and the dress of the drivers. He might have mentioned the gilded domes of a few churches. There the Russian likeness ends.&#13;
  A few miles to the north and also to the southwest are three “limans,” of lagoons famous for mud baths believes to benefit persons with rheumatism, gout and skin diseases. The most popular of these is 20 miles long, a mile wide, 10 feet deep and lies 16 feet below the level of the black sea.&#13;
&#13;
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THE ORIGINAL SKYSCRAPER CHURCHES&#13;
&#13;
Plans to erect in an American city a “skyscraper church” to be used both as a place of worship and an office building, recall that the ancient monasteries of Thessaly are nature-made skyscrapers, reached by unique elevators. In a communication to the National Geographic society – Elizabeth Perkins describes these structures of the Greek Church as follows:&#13;
 “There is a legend, perhaps it is history, that there was once a ruler in Constantinople who disliked his brother and wished to banish him to the remotest corner of his kingdom. Consequently the monarch built a monastery on a well-nigh inaccessible mountain in Thessaly and founded a brotherhood, about four hundred years ago, in what seemed to be the uttermost corner of the earth.&#13;
  The monastery was called ‘Meteora,’ meaning ‘domicile of the sky.’ After the original was built 23 others grouped themselves around and were inhabited for a while. They were, however, finally abandoned, with the exception of three which are still in use.&#13;
  “As we looked in wonder at one detached pillar of stone we discovered on its seemingly unattainable summit a building. This habitation of man, half natural rock and half artificial, seemed most extraordinary. Our guides drew attention to the higher precipices, and as we grew accustomed to their outlines we saw on all sides monasteries tucked into the ledges of the perpendicular walls. They are not all inhabited today, but they are there, bearing testimony that man has climbed and built and lived on crags that seem impossible for goats to climb.&#13;
  “The whole of the west plain of Thessaly lay at our feet, and the white mountains of the Pindos range rose rugged and imposing before us. At the base of the rock on which Trinity is perched, like an eagle’s nest, our guides hallooed and beat with a stick on a tin can found in the bushes. Soon as answering call came back, and over the precipice, some three hundred feet above us, the peering faces of several monks were seen. Then something serpentine flew into the air, and as it dropped perpendicularly we saw dangling from a coil of rope what looked like a small fish net. Down came the cable until it touched the earth at our feet, and the fish net proved to be a large-sized rope bag which opened and spread out flat on the ground.&#13;
  One at a time we were invited to step into the middle of this net and squat Turk-fashion. The edges were gathered together onto a large iron hook, a shout was given and the net soared upward, while its occupant felt somewhat like and orange at the bottom of a market woman’s bag.&#13;
  “The ascent takes just three minutes. Occasionally the openwork elevator swings into the rock with a bump, but the monks at the top wind the windlnss [?] slowly, and the bumping does not hurt, and as a compensation the view grows more beautiful every second. At last the top was reached.”&#13;
&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARD AT THE HERALD, EACH … 1c&#13;
&#13;
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PURE FRESH Pork Sausage.&#13;
THE REAL HOME-MADE KIND, SEASONED JUST AS IT SHOULD BE.&#13;
Come and get it – it’s as cheap as the other kind.&#13;
Brown’s market.  Phone 122.&#13;
&#13;
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EVERYTHING for THE BUILDER. From the Foundation to the roof.&#13;
Hill Lumber Co.  Quality-–Servicd–-Price.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH … 1c&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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A Bank Account&#13;
&#13;
Offers you a safe and sane way of reaching your goal – whatever it may be – it assures you your banker’s interest in your future welfare and is at once the only sure and dependable way in which you may obtain permanent succeed.&#13;
&#13;
First National bank. &#13;
F. P. Forster, President.  B. F. Whitner, Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
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Art of a man and woman standing at opposite ends of a dining room table. There are dishes on the table. A buffet behind them also has dinner plates plus a lamp on it. The man seems to be upset and the woman calmer.&#13;
&#13;
The Call of the wild&#13;
&#13;
“Why don’t you get some bread that I can eat?”&#13;
That’s never heard in the family that uses the new Butter-Nut Bread.&#13;
For its appetizing taste tickles the palates of young and old alike.&#13;
&#13;
THE NEW Butter-Nut Bread&#13;
&#13;
Has all the quality of the old Butter-Nut; we could not improve that.&#13;
But in addition we’ve perfected a new mixing process which enables us to turn out a lighter, daintier loaf than ever.&#13;
Get a loaf today, for Butter-Nut is its own best advocate. At all good grocers. The genuine bears the Butter-Nut label.&#13;
&#13;
Miller’s Bakery.&#13;
&#13;
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TRY A HERALD WANT AD.&#13;
&#13;
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(line drawing of two pine trees, mountains behind them and large rocks in front of them. Caption ‘COME TO THE GREAT HUNTERS’STORE’.&#13;
&#13;
Hill Hardware Company&#13;
We have anticipated your every need in the Hunting and Sporting Goods Line and have a complete stock of Winchester and Remington Repeating Guns and Rifles, and the Fox and Smith double-barrel Guns.&#13;
&#13;
Also a Line of Good Cheaper Guns.&#13;
&#13;
NITRO CLUB Water-Proof SHELLS, with Steel Lining--without doubt the best shell on the market—there is a shell for every purpose.&#13;
&#13;
We have a complete stock of Turkey Calls, Blowing Horns, Tent, Coats, Puttees and Leggings—in fact, everything for sportsmen.&#13;
&#13;
Hill Hardware Co.&#13;
&#13;
(line drawing of a forest, lake and mountains with a sign on top of a rock ledge that says ‘Hunters Supplies’). &#13;
&#13;
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 &#13;
PAGE FIVE.   THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY NOVEMBER 18, 1920.&#13;
&#13;
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 Little Happenings. Mention of Matters in Brief. Personal Items of Interest. &#13;
In and About the City.&#13;
Summary of the Floating Small Talks Succinctly Arranged for Herald Readers.&#13;
&#13;
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H. Kellerman, of Tampa, representing the Dalton Adding Machine Co., was in the city today calling on the local trade.&#13;
&#13;
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The thermometer went down some last night but no damage has been reported to any of the vegetables in this section.&#13;
&#13;
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Don’t forget that you should send a Sanford post card to your friends today. Advertise your city and keep up your correspondence at the same time.&#13;
&#13;
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Sanford certainly needs a bunch of new houses to keep the people here who are already here and take care of those who are coming in every day.&#13;
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If any of our subscribers have a Weekly Herald of November 12 and will bring it to the office we will pay them for it. We need a copy of that date.&#13;
&#13;
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D. G. Wagner, of Kissimmee was in the city today calling on his many friends. He is state agent for a life insurance company and it keeps him busy making the entire state.&#13;
&#13;
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R. A. Jenkins, of Longwood, was among the many visitors to the city today from Longwood. He was accompanied by Mr. Short, one of the new and progressive citizens of that section.&#13;
&#13;
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Secretary Pearman, of the Sanford Chamber Of Commerce and City Attorney Geo. C. Herring, representing the city of Sanford, have returned from Tallahassee where they appeared before the Railroad Commission on the question of the raise of rates of the Southern Bell Telephone Co. The case was continued until an audit of the accounts could be made which means that the matter will not come up again for the many months and the matter of the raise will be in status quo for some time.&#13;
&#13;
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Time to send out Thanksgiving cards now. The Herald Printing Co., has a fine line of Thanksgiving greetings. Only one cent each.&#13;
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Come in and inspect that wonderful line of stationary at the Herald office. You can get your monogram printed on them, making one of the finest and most substantial Christmas gifts that can be purchased.&#13;
&#13;
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The Sanford boosters, under the leadership of the Chamber of Commerce, are thinking of taking up the proposition of the Baptist Hospital and will attend the meeting in Kissimmee with a bunch of cars and a bunch of boosters at the meeting to be held there soon.&#13;
&#13;
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W. A. Rayner, of Celery avenue, brought a head of lettuce to the Herald office yesterday that was the finest we have seen this season. It was hard and firm and he said he had just sold two cars of it through F. F. Dutton Co., and realized a fine sum of money for it. Mr. Rayner is one of the successful growers of this section and knows how to raise the best of everything.&#13;
&#13;
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Al Dorner is passing his pictures around showing him in the role of a beggar man asking for money for the county home. He is some beggar all right and intends to sell the post cards for the benefit of the Red Cross or of the county home or some other good purpose. Al enjoys the life and we should worry.&#13;
&#13;
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Perry Jernigan, of the B. &amp; O. garage, left this morning Tampa where he will spend the day on business. &#13;
&#13;
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Bud Pell was taken to the Fernald-Laughton hospital today and will be operated upon this afternoon for appendicitis.&#13;
&#13;
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Next week is Thanksgiving and the stores should be preparing for the big week by advertising in the Daily Herald. The holiday season is here and the people are beginning to buy. Get ready for them.&#13;
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All hotels are being filled every night now and the need of more hotels is apparent in Sanford. This city is noted for its good hotels and there should be plenty of them to supply the demand.&#13;
&#13;
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ARRIVALS AT THE SEMINOLE&#13;
&#13;
Guests registering at the Seminole Wednesday:&#13;
&#13;
Edw. T. Lewis, New York City; E. M. Stubbs, Jacksonville; D. F. DeShazo, Greensboro, N. C.; R. P. Fair, Jacksonville; J. M. Massey, Macon; Henry M. Fitzhugh, Westminster, Md.; F. M. Chaffee, DeLand; W. H. Huffman, Tampa; Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Dean, Lake City. Fla.; H. Kellerman, I. H. Bradley, W. Kill and wife, Tampa; Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Turner, Spartanburg, S. C.; Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Buckler, Lewison, Me.; H. W. Bucklin, Lewiston, Me.; H. F. Cook, Birmingham; L. A. Anderson, Jacksonville; J. A. Jones, Plainville, Ga.’ J. E. Eskey, Tampa; J. G. Herrin, Groveland, Fla.; C. Mane, Maria Vista, Cal.; Lee W. Wicker, Jacksonville.&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday arrivals were:&#13;
E. M. Stubbs, Jacksonville; Mrs. M. McClelland, Tampa; Mrs. B. Bell. Tampa; Lee W. Wicker, Jacksonville; A. Gerbs, Baltimore, Md.; d. t, Usher, S. E. Poole, Palatka; J. F. Odam, Sanford; F. N. Greppi, Jacksonville; A. Ehret, Canton, O.; E. Solmger, Buckeye Lake, Ohio; C. P. Johnson, Elmira, N. Y.;  Geo. Crews, Jacksonville; J. Tillman, J. Shepard, Jr., Arcadia; R. C. Elan, J. E. Bledsoe, Lakeland; C. I. Harris, Kissimmee; Pat Burns, Kansas City, Mo.; Ralph Craighton, Atlanta; P. R. Smith, Erie, N. Y.; J. B. Watson, Centralia, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
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At Reduced Prices – LONG LIFE KOKOMO TIRES AND TUBES &#13;
for 5 days beginning Nov. 18&#13;
&#13;
30x3 	Non-skid	List, $19.70		Reduced to $13.70&#13;
30x3 1-2 Non-skid 	List, $23.50		Reduced to $15.50&#13;
32x3 1-2	Non-skid 	List, $28.10	Reduced to $19.50&#13;
31x4 	Non-skid 	List, $32.80	Reduced to $22.80&#13;
32x4 	Non-skid 	List, $37.40		Reduced to $24.80&#13;
33x4 	Non-skid 	list, $39.25	Reduced to $25.40&#13;
34x4 	Non-skid 	list, $40.10		Reduced to $26.00&#13;
&#13;
Fabrics guaranteed 6,000; Cor da 10,000.&#13;
&#13;
B. &amp; O. Motor Co., Sanford, Florida.&#13;
&#13;
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Photo of Louise Glam in a long, flowing, multi-tiered (Roman-inspired) gown.&#13;
Caption – Louise Glaum in “SEX” . &#13;
W. W. Hodkinson distribution.  At the Star Friday and Saturday.&#13;
&#13;
AT THE STAR THEATRE TODAY. Special super feature “Rio Grande”&#13;
TOPICS OF THE DAY and a comedy&#13;
&#13;
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The Logical Treatment “ENERGIZER” For Many Human Ills.&#13;
&#13;
We hold this to be a Truth: -viz: - That Circulation is the BASIC factor Human Health.&#13;
The “Energizer” process will DO MORE Benefit to Any Adult’s general condition than any method known.&#13;
&#13;
COME IN and talk it over. &#13;
108 Park Ave., Next door to Mobley’s Drug store.&#13;
&#13;
L.C. Cameron.  Box 399.  Sanford, Fla.  Phone 184.&#13;
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Just received. Large shipment of shoes. Bought on lowest market. &#13;
Come see ‘em&#13;
&#13;
Perkins &amp; britt&#13;
“The Store That Is Different”&#13;
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-----&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY.&#13;
RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under which this institution has been managed since the first day the doors were opened.&#13;
&#13;
 That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the constant and gratifying growth in business.&#13;
&#13;
 It is the desire of the officers of the Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals desiring most efficient and responsible banking.&#13;
&#13;
 On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your patronage is invited.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
Is owned, controlled and managed by home people, who are interested in the development and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County.&#13;
&#13;
 With our large resources and strong financial connections, we are in position to assist our customers at all times in the handling of their financial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.&#13;
&#13;
 4 Per Cent Interest Paid.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
White &amp; Wyckoff’s Superb Stationary&#13;
THE HERALD’S office supply department has just received a large and complete line of this beautiful stationary – no two boxes alike – and we will print any monogram on paper (or cards) and envelopes – in one, two or three colors.&#13;
&#13;
An ideal and inexpensive Christmas gift.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD FOR RESULTS—1C A WORD.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
---------------------------------------&#13;
---------------------------------------&#13;
---------------------------------------&#13;
END OF DOCUMENT&#13;
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on November 18, 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>
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                <text>Original 6-page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, November 18, 1920; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida</text>
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                <text>Transcribed by Karen Daniels.</text>
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                    <text>IN THE HEART OF TH E W O R L D 'S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
NUMBER 195

SANFORD, FLORIDA. FRIDAY. NOVEMDElt 19. 1920

VOLUME 1

■

NEW GROCERY
SANFORD NEEDS HOMES
AMERICAN FARM BUREAU FEDERATION
FOR SANFORD
MAS MILLION MEMBERS IN AMERICA OPENS TOMORROW MANY PEOPLE ARRIVING
HOUSES VERY JSCARCE
Organizations In Thirty-five
-

Slates Affiliated

(Br Th« AlMX-tiUd Preu)

Another grocery will open in San­
ford tomorrow—the Sanford Cash
Grocery—and It will be one o f the
big institutiona In the city having ob­
tained the store room in tho Bower
A Roumillat building at the corner of
Park avenuo and First street, tho
room next to Fleetwood’s place and
here will be found everything in the
staple nnd fnney grocery line. The
Store room-has been remodeled and is
one of the prettiest In tho city, being
all done in pure white and looks right
Op-to-thc-minute in every detail. It is
under the careful eye o f 0. H. Stenstrom, who will manage the store.
Oren is no stranger to Sanford, hav­
j ing lived here since he was a young­
&lt; ster and having served many years In
"&gt; the grocery business In the store of
JJ L. P. McCullcr and he has a large
following o f friends throughout the
country- The new store will be op­
erated on the Cash and Carry plan
and nothing will be charged nnd noth|ing .will )ae delivered and In this wny
the money saved Is saved to tha cus­
tomer nnd the prices will make you a
w permanent buyer at this store.

DOORM, Holland, Nov. 19.— Form­
JACKSONVILLE,
Nov.
er Empress Augusta Victoria of Ger­
19.— Opening yesterday at
many, is suffering from heart trouble
noon at the Hotel Mason for
and is regarded as in a grave condi­
a two-day session, the Flor­
WILL SEEK BETTER TRANSPOR­ tion. The family have been summon­
ida Realtors' Association be­
TATION AND FARMING ANI)
ed.
gan ita annual convention,
I
BETTER SELLING METHODS
which promises to become
RUSSIAN RADICALS
historic in Florida real csAWAITING DEPORTATION
(Br Tb* IlM c U u a Pr««»)
atatc circles. The principal
CHICAGO, Nov. 19.—J. R. Howard,
(Br Tb* AwacUUd rr*««t
matters for consideration
president of the American Farm Bu­
WASHINGTON, Nov. 10.— Over
before the organization In­
reau Federation, announces that the
five hundred Russian radicals are
cludes the proposed state li­
federation has now over a million
awaiting deportation the Labor De­
censes law for real estate
members and has 35 state organisa­
partment said today. They are de- 11
operators, which was the
tions affiliated w^h it. The national
iayed by the refusal of the Scanda- j
subject at the opening meetfederation took permanent form here
nuvinn countries to receive them.,'
ing of an address by T.
last spring and established headquart­
Hammond,
o f Tampa, state
ers in Chicago this past summer.
MINES RETURNED TO OWNERS.
president.
Land title reg­
Sketching the character o f this new­
istration,
taxation
and oth­
(Br Th* Au*«Ut*4 Frew.)
comer among the national farm or­
er
features
of
interest
to
MEXICO
CITY,
Nov.
19.—
Mines
in
ganisations, together with its pro­
the
general
public
as
well
Couahila
which
have
been
under
gov­
gram, Mr. Howard, himself an Iowa
ns the real estate men, were
ernment) protection during the strike,
fanner, said:
liscusscd also.
were
returned
to
their
owners
after
"The federation is an alliance of
J
.
assurances
that
there
would
be
no
state
farm
county farm bureausinta s
this
In
turn
Uisofders.
bureau federations tnd thi
DISEASES SPREAD IN
became federated Into a national or­
THE IRISn ARMY
ganisation aa the American Farm Bu­
reau Federation,
(By Tb* Am k U U ( Freti)
“ Ita purpose is to work for the eco­
LONDON, Nov. 18.—Sir Hnmnr
nomic, social and educational advance­
Greenwood, chief secretary of Ireland
ment o f the farmers o f the United
stated In the House o f Commons that
States and for the general welfare of
during n
a rnm
raid troops
hnd cupiurcu
captured uuvdocauring
iroopn nnu
the Ration. It is proposed to develop
uments sent by the commander of the
this work by means o f bureaus.
|
_____
Irish Republican army to his chief of
Our bureau o f agricultural econo- 0 VER A MILLION DOLLAR DAM- staff containing horrifying statements
mics nnd statistics has already been
AGE DONE BY ATTEMPTING
regarding •the spread^ o f
typhoid
set up. It will make a study of costs (
T 0 STRAIGHTEN STHEET
* * M « * - r e the wm
. j u a
a and
a u u s .glanders
lu siu e i o
1•among
troops
among
of production of the principal agricul
t
cavalry
horses.
,
(By Th* AresctiUd Preu)
urnl products and will direct and
PITTSBURGH, Nov. 19.—Over
HOOVER RE-ELECTED
ompilo statistics in
million dollars damage is expected ns
he Department of Agriculture, and ^
from ^ Undt„ de down the

HAS HIGHAMBITIONS

LAND SLIDE
IN PITTSBURG
BURIES HOUSE

NEW HARDING SUITS

(By Th*. A ..~ I .U 4 Pre«i

hillside on Bigelow boulevard, threatWASHINGTON, Nov. 19— Herbert
p
^ t W y lv n n U mi]wad ata. ‘
Hoover was elected president of the
*
b„»|dlne was buried nnd
FVderatyd Kngincering Societies tonine ateam shovels are busy moving day.
^
whjch 8tarted 8Udinjr nft, r
.
. . . . . to straighten .a
engincers attempted
PAPERS WILL PAY ANOTHER
street hero todny.
INCREASE IN EXPRESS

|

(Dj

Auocttud Fr»«*.)

I WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.—Next
! year will be “ Harding Year" in men’s
clothing styles, designers announced
u„|ny. Conservative suits leaning to
blue nnd dark grays will be the
yogur.
I
LIFE IMPRISONMENT
TO HE PUNISHMENT
GIVEN 'TH E CRANK"

(Continued on page 2)
PHILADELPHIA!! Nov. 19.— Life
imprisonment is the mnxlmum penal­
ty thnt can be imposed upon August
Pnsqunle (The Crank), self-confess­
ed nlwluetor nnd slayer of 13 months
old Binkley Coughlin, who yesterday
pleaded guilty in the Montgomery
county
court to second degree mur­
’ KOtllHITlON OFFICER
der
and
kidnapping for extortion. The
SET UPON IN JAIL IIY
OAKHAM REFORM IRISH
commonwealth accepted the plea of
OTHER PRISONERS
INVESTIGATING COMMISSION
second .degree murder, which carries
lll.FW SAFE AND IIAn BAG FILL­
(Br Th* A*&gt;*«t*n4 Treat.)
(Br Th* A»**c1*t*d Preu)
a penalty o f 20 yenra imprisonment,
ED WITH MONEY WHEN
SPRINGFIELD, 111., Nov. 19.—S.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.—John
hccnusc o f Its inability to produce the
CAUGHT.
jlcnn Young, n phoribition enforce- p nrhamf n city comminsioner o f Ral- j
body of the child or n witness who
rent officer, was benten pnd dowsed brlggan, Ireland, who Is testifying ;
hnd seen the body.
(Br Th* Aueclatcd Preu I
with hot water by prisoners in the ^.forc tbo commission investigating
ROANOKE, Nov. 19.— In n battle
The pennlty for kidnapping is life
ounty jail here todny wh -n Voung
(he jrjsh -----------8|tunlion today
with
tbe
poiifC(
a* •nmn
•
• said troops
vv*VII V
IIW Jiuili
V| •
•••••• known ns both
~
imprisonment.
vnn locked up charged
.
» ui—
—
u the streets ***
—
J K t '- —
red with murder dra(JJred
him *1
through
of Jame8
p. Rodgers of Philadelphia
and1
if an alleged “ bootlegg*
logger
! oung *jja||,rij;Kan( ransacked nnd burned his Charles Myern of Atlanta, was killed
FRANCE FEEDS SELF.
va.n later released on n writ o ' Hnbens fU)re&gt; giving no renson for the out- nnd william Porter and Charles Cnr(By Tk* AtxxUUd Pi'll'
orpus.
i me.
ter captured, charged with blowing
■
—
i
_______I
I
L L I _ —1 _ l . n n l . ■ ! n l x a i » / &gt; U '
NEW
YORK, Nov. 19.—Good crops
open nnd robbing a bank at Glasgow.
IOKKOKH, ANOTHER BIG
ANOTHER POLICEMAN IN
\ baif filled with Liberty bonds and makes the devastated regions of
GRAFT EXPOSED TODAY
HAD IN NEW YORK jcwc|ry waB recovered from the nu- France nble to feed themselves for
tomoblle In which the men were rid-' the first time since 191-I, according to
(By TV* A***ct*t*4 F!**».) ,
(By.TV* AneeUUd Freit) ,
cable advices.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 19. — ThirNEW YORK, Nov. 19.—Steven
y-aig chandlery and ship repair Birminhnm, n member of the New
Irms, operating In Southern ports.

«

WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.—The in­
INCREASE IN PKEACftF.RS SALARIES terstate commerce commission has
approved an express rate Increase of
(Br Tb« A»*o&lt;i*Ud Pre««1
a half a cent per pound on n short
NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—Million dolPaul of newijinpers.
Inr increases in the salaries of the
Protestant ministers were paid Inst i
year, according to nn estimate made
today.

Yeggmen Are Killed
Right In the Act

i«iek»iCe/T^

mOULD USE LORD’S
PURITY WATER

CO-OPERATIVE PURCHASES
OF FARMERS SUPPLIES

up

(By TK* A***cUt*d Fret*)

Chamber Commerce to Take
U{&gt; Matter at Once '

a seriou T s it u a t io n

* 1

In Iowa formation by farmers of a pride.
'
million dollar corporation having pur- | Weather is becoming more fsyorchase o f farm supplies as one o f ita able as the season ndvances but More
chief functions la reported.
, cold n l g l ^ a r - needed to produce the
j The general plan Is atate4 to be to color, especially on oranges. Below
pool purchases and sell by mail or- is given the carload movement o f
. der.
both fruits to date with figures ahow-

'fit

ADMISSION
OF GERMANY
INTO UNION

added to Sanford lists and many
residences but the crying need la fmr
the present when people arc tearing
IS URGED BY I1RITI8II DELE- hefe every duy because they cannot
find homes. This means' not only
m GATE BEFORE LEAGUE
.thnt
the building of homes has b o n
f
OF NATIONS
neglected for some time In a ratio
ftj Tho AiiodiUi ProtiT
c o m m e n s u r a te with the demand and
GF!NEVA, Nov. 19.— Immediate ad­ it men ns also that many morn people
mission of Germany and other form­
arc' coming here than ever before.
er enemy states to the League of
That there will be ninny new build­
Nntions wns urged before the League ings erected here soon is a settled
Assembly by George Nicol Harms,
fnct. There nrv ninny big projects on
the nritish delegate. He .declared
foot hero that will go a long way to ­
tho British laboring people demand It
ward mnking Sanford n great city but"
because the co-operation of the form- 1
nQW wc im, conf ronlcd with the
or enemy states were needed to res- \
^
^
^
^
c u e

the world from ruin.

|now if wc nro to keep tho people

here who are visitors nnd to keep
! even our own people who an? hefny
forced out of their houses nnd will be
i obliged to get houses here or else­
where. We ennnot afford to either
let the visitors lenve or the home peo­
ple leave nnd something should be
. (Br Tk* Ai*eet*t*d Freti)
•
LONDON, Nov. 19.— An Athens dis- done at once by tho Chamber o f
pateh to the I^ndon Times nays Ad­ Commerce anti tho City Comrhfsxfoiltoward „getting
temporary
miral Coundoritos resigned the regen- ers ______
.......... up
.r
. .
,
ey in fnvor of Queen Mother Olga, homes for the people who arc tU rtuho issuetlji message announcing as- or|nj, for them so loudly. Many t&lt;wn»
sumption of tho office1“ on account of
Rtnte nre investigating tho
the absence of my well beloved son, qU08tion of tents for temporary quar1crs nnd a firm on the Fiist (.oast
Constnntlne."
is mnking n specinlty of tent citfc*
RETAIL FOOD PRICKS FALL
where nil the furniture and equip­
ment for camping out nre furnished
WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.— A de­
to a city for a certain sum that would
crease of 3 per cent in retail food
mean a r°ml Investment fo r nnyoi**
prices In October throughout the
desiring to take up the plan. Then*
United Stntcs wns noted in statistics
nre many vacant lots In the city 'giaaon the cost, o f 22 article# of food,
its thnt nre not working amfl thify '
made public today by the Depart­
fould be utilized for Irttlb money fa r ~
ment of Ijibor.
Greatest decreases were in ’ prices these tents. In this manner risiny
of sugar, 24 per cent, and potatoes, people could be nccommodafcd/ 'OM- 7
fortably during the wlntcy monwhie^
^ b•
“
III
15 pcr cent. The prfee: U1
of leggs
in­
The
average
nn&lt;^ *n the *PrinK the situation will be
creased 14 per cent.
family expenditure for the 22 nrticlcs relieved. It would be woll fo r tha
commercial bodies nnd the city fa lh o01f food
1000 ccreased
ccreaseu in nil
nn the 61 cities
from which monthly prices were tab« ^ e people to investigatq
-r _
ulnted except Houston, Texas, where : these conditions.
ing shipments to corresponding dates :!;-»re was an increase of nppr;&lt; .i mte- |
.
a
last scasbn:
iy r&gt;10 of 1 per cent.
j .* LASKAN INDIANS STARVING.
Grapefruit
The greatest decrease, 6 per cent,'
--------,
,B’
Shipmcnta up to Inst Saturdayi . 1,489 was in Omaha nnd SL Paul. In MilSame prrio »l!i 1019__________1,041 waukee, Minneapolis, Portland, Ore.,' SEATTLE, Nov. 19— Hundreds o f
For week ending November 5._ 353 nnd Seattle, the decrease wns 5 per Ainsknn Indians arc facing ntanraFor same days last week-------- 334 centj in Chicago, Cincinnati, Denver, tinn bccnusc o f the failure o f tha salKind threi days this week.......... 217 betroit, Indianapolis, Memphis, Pitts- mon fishing, according to report*
F’or same daj*s Inst year ..1 ..-. 190 burg, .Portland, Me.; St. Louis, San reaching here today.
Francisco and Springfiuld, III., 4 per j
-------- —
Orange
,
1
•
cent; in Atlanta, Cleveland, Colum- |l A£T OF AMERICANS
■&gt;
Shipments up to last Saturday. 6G0 bus, Kansas City, Little Rock, Los
HAVE IJEFT SIBERIA
Same period in 1919 . . . . . . . . . . 627 Angeles, Louisville,'Manchester, Mo­
For week ending N ovem ber.... 365 bile, Newark, Nrw Haven, Emporia,
(Br Tk* A***cltt*4 Fre*,)
For same days last year . . . . . . 209 Worcester
____ _________
__________ _3 p e r' SAN FRANCI8C0, Nov. 17— T h r
and Washington
F’ lrst three days this week----- 289 cent; in Baltimore Birmingham, Bos- last o f tho American forces have left
For same days last year— . — 105 ton,
Bridgeport, Buffalo, Butte,' Siberia, Brigadier General Graves said
— New York Packer.
Douglas, Fall River, Jacksonville, todny.
_
New Orleans, New York, &lt;Philndcl* 1
■ • ■■ ■
CENTER HILL, Nov. 19— About phia, Providence. Salt Lake City, Sn- 1 Probably nothing la more thoughta barnyard fowl and, while
fifteen hundred cratea of fancy green vnnnnh and Scranton, fl.per cent, and *0**
11st? Glaum, the celebrated
beans were shipped from here last in Charleston, Newark and Richmond Ml**
may find much pleaaweek. The prices ranging from $2.50 1 per cent.
mo'
her handsome p et
___________________ui
to $3.26 a crate f. 0. b. platform. This
a chicken around with
Don’t wait to write a letter. Send a br
week they are going o ff at the rate of
ibon, we doubt If ahe evt _
nearly a thousand a day. Center Hill post card descriptive o f Sanford. You _
____ sleep In her lap.— T a r shipa more green beans than any can get them o f the Herald fo r one lets J
cent each. *
’
pon Sj “ngs Leader.
point In Florida.
*

Florida Fruit Shipments
Equal Last Years Output

j JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 19.—Up to
(a* Tk* aiMcuud Fre*»)
ft»c end o f last week, the Florida cit(Br Tk* A*Mfl»t*d Fret,)
SA!
KM
Ohio
n o v .
,
CHICAGO,
Nov.
19—
Co-operative
m s fruit movement hnd totaled 2,155
SALEM, Ohio, Nov. 19.—Seven
lundred* and eighty persons are suf-.i purchase of supplies by farmers run- cars compared with 2,268 cars 16 the
erlng with tvrhoid fever here in a ning co-operative grain elevators Is corresponding date last year. The
own of less than ten thousand popu-, now upder way in a number o f (mid- grapefruit movement o f 1,489 cars to
ation. Four emergency hospitals die western states and the movement that time was only 169 cars behind
isvc been established. Impure clly is rapidly developing, according to the, movement to the same date last
rater la blamed.
headquarters of the Farmers Nation- year.
k
_______________ . .
nl Grain Dealers Association here. Ita
Tho orange movement has already
SIXTEEN DROWNED
officer* say there is likelihood that a passed that o f last season, and had
— -----•
; national co-operating purchasing or- 39 cam to the good at the close o f the
(Br Tk. Are«*uwd Frew.)
Biml*atlon will be formed here In De- week. There were 353 cars of grape
BANGOR, Me., Is0V,J' '
1
cember afi the association's first Wit- fruit shipped last week and but 335
icrtcd that sixteen woodsmen were ^
C0J)Tent,0n
{ears last Season during the eorresIrowned In Chesoncook
V j Qhio ^armert wj,o hsve organised a ponding time. Oranges totaling 8S5
rhen a motor boat raug
o
. ^100|000 pUn.},asing company ars re- cars were shipped Isst week against
lo particulars are available.
ported to have contracted for the 209 n year ago. Considering the late
_______ , n rttv r
output of a coal mine and a feed beginning of the citm s fm lt moveB M ip W ^ -B L E C T II
mill and to be buying materials, such ment this year the weekly optput is
18 'TAKING T .
“ ■
, ag fcnciDB and sugar, by the carload. looked upon with no small degree of
ABOARD STEAMSHIP PARIS,
dlna Wireless Nov. 19— Presidentlect Harding Is enroute to Panarta
tnd la enjoying the balmy
gulf
ircezea under a clear sky. He read
nW!88 atanatches today and
'took it easy.'*

MYSTERY CLEARED

COUNCIL BLUFFS, la., Nov. 19.
— Mystery surrounding the three mil­
lion five hundred thousand dollnr mail
robbery here was cleared up today by ,
arrests, one confession nnd n large j
amount of money in a chicken house. HOME PEOPLE AND VISITORS
ARE NEEDING ACCOMMODAGRADUATE NURSES HOLD
ATIONS IN SANFORD
ANNUAL CONVENTION
Anyone living here and noting the
TAMPA, Nov. 19.—Graduate nurs­ many hundreds of new people on tho
es o f Florida opened their fifth an­ streets every day and seeing
the
nual convention here yesterday. Tho many arrivals at the various Sanford
attendance was larger than at any hotels will perceive that Sanford is
previous meeting. A reception will the stopping place for many people
be held at the DeSoto hotel for the during the season.) They come here
visiting delegates and tho Tampa phy­ by the Clyde Line and by the rail­
sicians nnd their wives.
roads and by autos and coming here
An .interesting two days' program stop over maybe for a day or a week
has been arranged. Much interest or a month just ns fancy or business
centers in the election of officers, for dictates. It all points to one great
which there are several contests. The necessity here now and that la more
election will take place today. The buildings in which to house not only
session will close, with n directors' the winter visitors but the people whoPRESENT SELLING
meeting at 7 p. m. today, at which come here to stay ant^ the home peo­
PRICES CONTINUE
the
standing committees will be ap­ ple even who arc out o f homes on ac­
' IN STEEL CIRCLES
pointed nnd the next meeting place count of the many transfers in real
(By Th* AtrecUWd Fu m )
selected.
'estate thnt are taking place every
NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—The Unit­
1day when people fail to rent homee '
ed States Steel Corporation an­
and are forced to buy them thu^ disnounced a recommendation to con; posseasing others who are renting.
•
...
.
! “ "Ur the present base selling prices
I It is almost certain that in another
year there will be many1 more apart­
^
necessary and propment houses nnd one or two hotels
fr t0
‘'hanges._______

u i i i v k k

ommisslon
bor U
vd cr, 1 I V I I U W
nission to answer charges of
ox giv- 1
i iiurpnu(,
|(Un&gt;nu„ Inainlainrd
lnainta,nctl by u
uiK,r
Loader
n|,CKed thnt hc ,8 con'
ng -gratitutles to captains, officera Brind&lt;jU |t
wjth the a|,c|fcd building trust.
ind employees
__r . . . __ of ships
. to induce pur- ,
i n a of a
n n n l i o l flT
lIl rrepair
O D fl T O
T lll'T ? !.
hases
supplies
nnd
orders.

ilk
**fea
W

.

*

FORMER GERMAN EMPRESS
. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ +♦ »♦ *♦ ♦♦♦»♦+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
VERY ILL IN HOLLAND
!*
REALTORS WILI^ABK
— HAS HEART TROUBLE
STATE LICENSE LAW

he various
rill give a much better insight into
he supply and demand of agricultur»1 products, with the thight that this
- ■------;— •
•«*&lt;*
marketing.
Our bureau of transportation is
making n study o f necessary transpwrtation facilities, both by land and by
sater, for the marketing of our farm
:rops. The purpose of this burenu is
to get at the’ real facts in the trans­
portation problem nnd govern its ac­
tions accordingly. It proposes to esahlish rate nnd traffic files, which
w e never yet been built up for ng■icultural products.

di

Queen Mother Takes
Throne of Greece

�PAGE SIX

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD,

Plantation Granulated
Sugar
per pound
CUptUicd advertisements, 5 cents a line. No ad taken for Ieaa than
25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cash
must .accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit ac­
cordingly,
WANTED
W A IT E D — House or apartment o f 3
or 4 rooms, unfurnished, for man
and wife with t * o school children.
Best of references. 8ec or write, G.
B. 8 ., Job dept. Herald office,
dh-tf
Buy your post cards at the Herald
office. *
WANTED—Tfam work.
M. Hanson Shoe Shop.

«|
X

10 lbs to a Customer
Irish Potatoes

Dolls,' 10c to |20.00.— French Shop.
194-tfc
FOR SALE— 1Vi II. P. and 2Y, n. P.
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
in perfect condition.— Herald Print­
ing Co.
tf

Apples, Apples, peck

Special reduction on Georgette Silk
and cotton shirt waists.— A. Kanncr,
213-215 Sanford Avc._______________
Phone 550.
Toy Airplanes, French Shop. 194tfc
Inquire of

We have jusi received a line of
silverware and casseroles.—A. KanNew Florida Syrup
ner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.
Phone
550.__________________________ lC6-tfc
Sinkablc submarines, French Shop.
Apalachacola Oyster
194-tfe
PVot\ the faaoour
FOR SALE— One horse, wagon and
harness. Apply M. Hanson Shoe
pi»y b y
Shop.
.
189-12tp
A u g u s t fu y
Toy
pinnos,
French
Shop.
104-tfc
Get your Scratch Pads from The
T h o m
a s
Herald—by the pound— 15c.
T*e~ our line of electricaHamps.—
WANTED—-Brick and cement work A. Kanncr, 213-15 Sanford Avenue.
166-tfe
chimneys, flues, piers,
cement Phone 650.
PLANTS
FOR
SALE^Cabbage
per Sa*nford
floors, sidewalks. — A. L. Ray, 20£
1000,
$1.50;
Cauliflower,
Handers
Park Avc.
173-30tp
WANTED— Pupils, Violin and Piano, Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B.
SMALL BOY’ S CHANCE.
carrying of water for the elephants! MELVILLE COMEDIAN8
B., per M, $1.50 Ice Berg, per M,
— Ruby Roy, 200 Park Av^.
“ What’s the use?” asks Manager
AT TENT THEATRE
$1.50; beets, Crosby’s Egyptian, per
17S-20t-p
Various Methods Will Be Found to Sparks, o f the circus. “There arc
—1_____
M, $1.50; Onion, yellow Bermuda, per
Buy
your,
post
cards
at
the
Herald
Get to the Circus.
hydrants near the lot, so why break
The first performance o f Mel- office. Beautiful views, 1c each.
M, $1.50; onions, white Bermuda, per
the backs o f all the small boys in villaV Comedians pleased more than
M, $1.50; Celery, yellow golden, per
town? Logical, but sad. For to go |two thousand people ?fcst night In the
M, $2.00; Self-bleaching imported
hack to the old days, it would seem big ten* thousand dollar' tent on the
celery, per M, $2.00; French celery
these small boys were quite willing to high school campus. Between 500
seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.66.—
have their backs broken.
and 1,000 others were turned away beClay County Gardening Co., Green
WANTED— BY D EC
1st OR
However, there Is hope for the j cause the management feared that
Cove Springs, Fla.
11-12
SOONER,
3
OR
4
UNFUR­
small boys who haven't the money to ! tho ,---tent----would
— be overcrowded.
Largest assortment of toys ever in
NISHED ROOMS OR 3 TO 6
The title o f the play was “ The
Sanford, at, French Shop.
194-tfc
ROOM HOUSE, UNFURNISH­
Broken Hearts" and that it pleased
F O iT S A L E ^ O n T '1920 Colo Eight*7ED OR PARTLY FURNISHED.
the audience very touch was proven
passenger automobile run only 6500
WILL LEASE BY MONTH OR
by the hearty applause that greeted
A Trial Solicited
miles.
Bargain. One 1920. 7# pas­
YEAR. BEST OF REFERENC­
every net. Bert Mellville, comedian,
senger
Buick
run
only
3,700
miles,
ES GIVEN. ADDRESS “ SOON”
was the hit of the evenin, but Miss
price right Extras. Box 478, De­
CARE OF HERALD.
193-12tp
Lillian De Armond and others o f the
Land. Fla.____________________ 193-6tp
company, also received hearty approv­
FOR SALE— Good
mule, cheap.
al. The company an a whole was
FOR RENT
J. H. Tillis, Prop.
Would exchange for good milch
good, and is the best that has ever FOR RENT— One nicely furnisher
cow.
p.
O.
Box
445.
193-4tp
shown in the city.'
TAXPAYERS. TAKE NOTICE!
room, 320 Oak Ave. Phone 308-J
Phone 105
402 Sinford Ave.
Bring the children to sec the toys i
There were a variety of acts dlsat the French Shop.
194-tfc
p'aying comedians, musicians and ac­
tors o fmuch ability. While of course FO RENT _ or for sale, large ware­ FOR SALE— One cottage, 5 rooms
house with railroad siding.— Chas.
and bath, corner Third Street and
Tyler, care Znchnry Tyler Ven. Co.
•
•
_ ___________________________ 150-tfc French ave. Mrs. Baldwin. 193-4tp
FURNISHED ROOMS— Two furnish
ed bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park FOR SALE— 1 pair black mar^s, five
and eight years old. Can be seen : Every Battery repair we make i»
Avenue.
157-tfe
nt Dutton Fnrm Number 2.
194-ltc ! guaranteed for alx months. We are
FOR RENT—Two or three furnished able to do this because in repairing
any make of battery we are licenced
in. Owner, Box 117.
194-Ctp to use patented features which have
made Yesta batteries famous.
FOR SXl.E—0 rpmn cottage, large
yard, fine garden, various kinds of
fruit trees and two separate five
Phone 189
acre fnrms close in. Owner, Box 117. L. A. RENAUD, Prop.
R. A. Jenkins, of Longwood, vivas in
' ' _________________194-6tp
the city today nnd reports that city as
FOR SALE— One five passenger Ford
being filled with new. people and ev­
touring car. Must go quick. San­
erything progressing. They are hav­
ford- Heights camping grounds. Fred
W ill O pen S ca ro n 1920-21 on
ing a difficult time getting the new
Ford-_______
194-3tp
comers settled in houses nnd manyCircle D of the Presbyterian church
new homes arc being built as a conse­
will
hnve a cooked food sale Saturday,
quence. Aniong-them nro the follow­
morning at Bower and Itoumillnt's
Turkey Dinner
ing:
Drug
Store.
194-2tc
Will Woodcock, is building n nice I.OST— Western Union branch de­
bungalow; E. E. Manly is building n
posit book. 'Finder please return FOR SALE— A real place in Lake
county at a bargain. 100 acres of
most comfortable home and Conner to Western Union office__ J. P. Hall,
land,
near two good towns, good house
Williamson is building a nice six room Mcr.
180-tfc
and
water
works, piped all over place,
house. Several other ^Longwood men LOST OR STRAYED'^One red pig,
spraying
machine,
etc. 28 acres old
are contemplating building nnd it is
4 months old. If found notify E.
bearing grove orange and grapefruit;
also said that a store room or two B. Randall, Jr., 825 First S treet
40 acres in cultivation, balance timber
would be built soon.
lend. Price'$33,000. Terms. Address
Pox 195, Clermont, fin.
194-3tp
The Herald Printing Co. has ev­
erything in the office supply line that
,E— Shasto daisies, $1 per FOR SALE— 10 acres good citrus
you are needing. The price is right
English Shamrock Oxalys
land, cleared nnd fenced, 1 3-4 miles
also. L&lt;*t us fit you up with your
zen. Ring 207-W. 183-i2tc to town. Good roads. A bargain nt
25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts.
stationery nnd office supplies.
Special reduction in men's and U­ $80 nn acre. As we need the money.
20 to 75 Watts in 32 Volts
es’ W. L. Douglas shoes.— A. Knn- Price $45 per acre. Addicts 195,
r, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 650. Clermont, Fla.
194-3tp
_____________________ •_______166-tfc
Everything Electrical
Four-Act Drama; 5 Vaudeville Specialties Between Act*.
FOR SALE— 1V4 II- P. and 2 Yi H. P.
Gasoline engines. Brand new and BRADLEY MATTRESS'FACTORY Expert Installation and
Orlando, Fla.
in perfect condition.— Herald Print­
On the first of. each month
ing Co.
tf Makes old Mattresses new at oneRepair Work
your rent Is due.
Why give
New line of Congoleums and Art
third the cost of a new one.
Squares.— A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford PHONE 801
other people your money. Buy
1C BRYANT ST.
Ave. Phone 650.
*•
166-tfc
you a home and each month
11-1511mo-p
115 Magnolia Ave.
Phone 442
instead of paying out rent
FOR SALE—One new 1020 nnd one
money, pay on a home that U
1917 Ford touring cars. Two tents
10x12 and 12x14, also four army cota.
Beautiful home* on Park,
All in good condition. Call for Mr.
Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and
Lehman. Phone No. 112.
^193-6tp
Myrtle
avenue*.
Sanford
(By “ JONESEY” — O. B. Secretary Kiwanis Club of Tampa)
Height*. Building Iota in any
BEST CREAMERY
location,
w ;
Too bad all "show folks” are not like Bert Melville and his pop­
BUTTER, pcr*!b
ular company, who at present are playing to capacity business here—
ADVERTISE .
WANTED— Your old batteries to re­
build. Let us make your starting
and lighting a pleasure. We are au­
thorized "EXID E” dealers and have
a Battery fo r all makes automobiles.
"KXIDE, the Giant that lives in a
box.”— Ray Bros. Phone 548, old
Ford Garage.
179-tfc

Pure Food Market
We Guarantee All
Battery Repairs

Sanford B alleiy 5 m i(e Co.

CHULUOTA INN

Thanksgiving Day

National Madza Lamps

December 1st

G ILL O N &amp; F R Y

K IW A N IS CLU B E N D O R S E S

M E L V IL L E ’ S C O M E D IA N S

they deserve It.

speraed between the acta with Variety Vaudeville that plcaae the most
fastidious.

I Sell It

They are presenting clean, up-to-date playa, interThe Real Estate Man”
M

|

W

'

n r w ftr m l

Kiwanis la strong for show folks o f Mr. MeMUc’s type,

SANFORD

J.E . SPURLING

POTATOES,
Per peck

and Tampa should be.— From Kiwanis Magazine.

8-R&gt; Can SNOW­
DRIFT LARD

M ethodist B a z a a r

Beautiful
Views

Sanford ia on a boom—not a vacant store-room to be found on First
street, but undaunted “ The Truth Seeker**' of the Methodist Church
will erect a tent on the old Sanford House site and hold their Annual
Bazaar FRIDAY and SATURDAY. COOKED FOOD AND OYSTER
SUPPER SATURDAY MGI1T.

Your Patronage Sqlicited

PURITAN HAMS,
Per lb - ______

Sanford’s Mast Popular Hotel

SEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL

JONES’

WALTER B. OLSON

Cash and Carry

Our Specialty——Seminole’*
famous $1 Sunday Dinner
dc luxe.

U K AUTIFUtri’ OST CARDS

BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS

AT tH E HERALD, E A C II...

AT THE HERALD, B A C H ...

Under Management of

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD.

PAGE TWO
SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR THE
WEEK
Friday—
Spendthrift Club with Sirs. S
gnan Lloyd.
D. A. R. with Mrs. A. R. Key.

a

J. G. Ball returned Thursday from
business trip down the East Coast,

Mrs. Forest Lake, Mrs. I). L.
Thrasher, Mrs. A..JL Key/ and J. D.
W oodruff and Hawkins Connelly mo­
tored to Eustis Wednesday.
Mrs. W. E. Coulbourn, o f Palmetto
is the guest of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. H. II. Chappell on Celery avenue.
\
HUNTING PARTIES.
Quite a number o f camping parties
leave today to be early In the hunt­
ing field Saturday. One.very con­
genial party going to Hand's Ranch
Is: Mr. and Mrs, R- J. Holly, Mr. and
Mrs. R. S. Holly, Mr. and Mrs. J. B*
Lawson, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smith,
Mr. and Mrs Henry Purden and Mr.
and Mrs. S. M Lloyd
Another party that goes to Fort
Christnuu each year for the opening
o f the Reason Is D L Thrasher, Dr.
£L Puleston, Billy Hill, Bob Newman,
George Knight and G. Al Spear,
Vance Douglass, Stanley Walker,
Roy Symmcs and Judge E. T. Ilonafcolder leave today to be gone until
after Thanksgiving.

Bridge Club and on extra table, on
Thursday.
The prizes for high scores were
mostly attractive, the club prize, a
French dressing bottle, was won by
Mrs. Thigpen and the guest prize n
Maderia handkerchief, was won by
Mrs. Loucks.i
•&gt; .
Delicious refreshments were served
at the close df the game.
The club members present were:
Mrs..Vorce, Mrs. Watson, Mrs. Lake,
Mrs. Keclor, Mrs. Key, Mrs. Barrett,
Mrs. Thigpen and Miss Wilkey. The
guests wore Mrs. Payton, of Washington, Mrs. Puleston, Mrs. Loucks,
Mrs. Fitts and Miss Irwin.

ARRIVALS AT THE SEMINOLE
1 J. G. Lege, Ocala; F. B. Branden­
burg, -Jumison, S: C.; A. E. Collins,
Tampa; J. T. Burckhaltcr, Eustis; Dr.
Wood, D. F. Collins, James Fozzi,
do; J. S. Bone, Milledgcville, Gn.; D.
Webster, Fla.; B. Beacham, Jr., OrlanD., Jacksonville; Florence I. Bean, Angcllton, Tex.; Mr. and Mrs. T. B.
Karl, Hoboken, N. J.; C. A. SizclAve,

BASKETBALL TONIGHT
There will be a double-header in
basketball tonight between two pick­
ed teams from the town (boys and
girls) and the Sanford High School
boys and girls. Admission, 25c. 8:00 Worcester, Moss,
p. m. A good time is guaranteed.
Ohio.
“ Getter and Baker" are undertak­
ers in Jacksonville, in cane the
What’s-ln-a-Name club wants to take
the matter up. And “ Berry and
Wrott” are coffin dealers of New
Brunswick.—St, Augustine Record.
Have you seen that beautiful line
o f box stationery at the Herald o f­
fice? Just the thing for “ The Girl"
for Christmas. Get it printed with
her monogram.

Everything for the office at the
Herald Printing Co. Wc can fit you
EVERY-WEBK BRIDGE CLUB
out with all thnt you need in fine
• Mrs. Margaret Barnes very delight­ printed stationery and office supplies
fu lly entertained the Every, Week of all kinds.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1920

ODD FELLOWS AND HEBEK
A IIS, ATTENTION I
Sanford Lodge No. 27, I. O. O. F.
will give an entertainment at
their hall, Monday evening, No­
vember 29th, to which all Odd
Fellows and .their families, and
Kebekahs are invited. All trahslent and visiting Odd 'Fellows
will be most cordially welcome.
ll-19-2t

Office supplies at the Herald,

where you deposit your money?
The first consideration is the capital, which should be
ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank
is to serve.
The next question to consider is the officers in charge.
They should be men of experience, high character and success­
ful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.
Then there is the question of confidence. The public
should have confidence in the officers and in the bank.
These three principles determine the success of a bank.
We adopted these principles in the outset of our career
and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase
our usefulness to the community as the years go by.
LARGE CAPITAL, AND WORKING RESERVE.
TRAINED MEN IN CHARGE—MEN OF SEVERAL YEARS EX­
PERIENCE.
THE CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBLIC, WHICH IS PROVEN BY
THE DAILY ADDITION TO OUR LINE OF DEPOSITORS. ,
PROTECTION r,Y TWO EXAMINATIONS EACTT YEAR BY THE
STATE BANKING DEPARTMENT, TWO AUDITS EACH YEAR
BY AN INDEPENDENT RECOGNIZED PUBLIC AUDIT COMPANY AND TWO SWORN STATEMENTS SUBMITTED TO THE
STATE COMPTROLLER BY THE
CASHIER,
GIVING
THE
BANK’S CONDITION IN DETAIL, ALL OF WHICH INSURES
REGULAR. SYSTEMATIC AND THOROUGH OPERATION OF
THE BANK.
, ... .
THE ADVICE OF A COMPETENT BOARD OF DIRECTORS,
WHO MEET W ITn THE OFFICERS
regularly
each
MONTH AND ADVISE THEM AS TO THE OPERATION OF
TIIE BANK.
• ,

For a dandy Farm, with or without crop
21 acres, 10 1-2 tiled; 5 wells
good house, 2 1-2 m. o f Sanford
6 a.celery, 3 a.lettuce, 3 a.beets

10 acres; 5 acres tiled; 3 wells
good house, 5 1-2 miles from
Sanford. 5 acres in lettuce.

INSURANCE OF ALL DEPOSITS EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR,
THIS IS A PROTECTION NOT COMMONLY FOUND IN BANKS
AND IS AN ABSOLUTE PROTECTION FOR YOUR FUNDS, IN
ADDITION TO ALL THE OTHER USUAL SAFEGUARDS.
THESE ARE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD DO BUSINESS W IT n
US, AND WE BELIEVE THAT NO BANK CAN OFFER BETTER IN­
DUCEMENTS.
,
:

I can make immediate delivery on these places if
desired, at a very low figure. See

106 N. Park Avenue

Phone 349

W hether

YOUR

MOTHER

Y O N D E R " looking down at you, or
whether she is still loving you here—
she would love to know that you were
in G o d ’s House Sunday

Select Your Christmas Phonograph and
Get $25 Worth o f-New Records
There' s no string to this offer; no joke in it.
$25 worth of Pathe or Actuelle Records free,
if you buy a Pathe Phonograph ( except the
small models 3 and 6, which are not included)
No matter if you pay cash, or extend the terms on
easy payments— the $25 worth of Records will be
delivered with the instrument as quickly as you make
your selection.

J
,
1
. ______:= = = =
t^±r^T r s Eal
11

$25 Worth of

RECORDS FREE
with any

*

Pathe Phonograph
(Except Nos. 3 and 6)

And You Pick Them Out Yourself

Gosts no more
than the ordinary

Phonograph
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦

For Her Sake Come

erian Church
Sunday 1 I
WISE GLAUM in’ SEX
STAR THEATRE TONIGHT

TRY A HERALD WANT AD

�PAGE THREE

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1920

Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props

Welaka Building

Specials For Today
t

And with a Pathe Phonograph at that!

Choice
Western and Florida
Meats

ANY PathePhonograph (except 2 small tablcmodels).
This would be an unprecedented offer with any
phonograph— BUT THIS IS THE PATH S— the one
supreme instrument: Supreme in tone, supreme in de«
sign, supreme in cabinet quality, supreme in reputotion— the very phonograph you would prefer even
without this offer o f a complete outfit of records ($25
worth) free— all latest up-to-the-minute records, yo u r
own selection. N o Needles lo Change!

Veal, P ork9 Muttonf
Sausage
MINNIE THOMPSON

NOW M AKIN G

Pecan Nut Roll

who is coming to town on Tuesdny,
Nov. 23rd, with Sparks Three-Ring
Circus. Miss Thompson’s picture re­
cently graced the page of the New
York Times which paper acclnimcd
her to be America’s greatest horse-

COSTS NO MORE THAN THE ORDINARY

P la ys all R ecords

Fresh Daily
$1.00 POUND
W a te r ’ s Kandy Kitchen

THE LADIES WITH SPARKS’
CIRCUS ARE ATTRACTIVE

The Path6 has no equal as a musical instrument.
Free records with a Pathe make it i&gt; jproachable.

Pretty and attractive women are
one of the features o f the Sparks' Cir­
cus which is coming to Sanford on
Tuesday, Nov. 23rd for a day’s stay on
the base ball grounds.,
' Probably one of the prettiest, as
,well as one of the cleverest is Irma
MRS. B. E. TAKACH
; Connors, who is an exact replica of
Proprietor
Here's
the world’a famous screen actress,
Mary Pickford—in fact among her as­
Corner of Park Avenue nnd
where
sociates of the circus she is known ns
Commercial Avenue
"The Mnry'Pickford of the high wire."
SANFORD. FLORIDA
Included in the mnny difficult fonts
accomplished by this little Miss is the
grnceful execution o f all modern ball­
room dances now in vogue.
Then there is dainty Flora Bedini
and Bessie Hollis, both equestrienne
stars whose beauty adds greatly to
their
truly wonderful exhibitions of
Phone 66
riding. Another of the Sparks galnxy of pretty women is Minnie
Thompson, Amerien’s greatest horse­
woman and whose likeness has graced BEST CREAMERY
Ithe pnges of mnny o f the leading mngBUTTER, per lb
|azines nnd Horse Show publications.
I Miss Thompson will Introduce Caesar,
, champion high jumping horse of the
j world at both performances in this
! city and an attempt will bo mado to
: lower his own record o f 7 feet 4 inchGENERAL MACHINE AND BOIL­ 1i s. Of course there nre many other
beautiful women with the Sparks Cir­
ER WORK
BRASS CASTINGS
cus
nnd they will all be seen in the 8-lb Can SNOW­
GAS ENGINE REPAIRS
two
mile long street purnde at 10:30
ACTEYLENE CUTTING ANI)
DRIFT LARD
WELDING
Special machine for turning Auto
Post Cards at the Herald office, le
Crank Shafts and Crank Pins to
within .0005 accuracy.
IRRIGATION NIPIM.ES
Plantation Granulated
PULLEYS and SHAFTINGS
HOUND AND SQUARE IRON

W o rth o f

F O R A L IM IT E D T IM E
}

Sanford Furniture Company
SanforJ, Florida

Sportsmen’s Headquarters

JONES’

perpou n d

1 2 C

10 lbs to a Customer
Irish Potatoes, peck

Cash and Carry

Season Opens Nov. 20th
ARE YOU READY?

Sanford's Most Popular Hutel

Under Management of

WALTER B. OLSON

Apples, Apples, peck

Our Specialty---- Seminole's
famous $1 Sunday Dinner
de luxe.

A la Carte Service all day

New Florida Syrup
Apalachacola Oysters

I Sell It
J.E. SPURLING
Sanford

Florida

Just Lay Them Down and Nall—That’s All
There Is To It

Chilled Bubbcr Process
’

nw A rs fAcm
SMITH BROTHERS
Pf-nalrNvork

*

J
|

The Shoulder o f Protection1 keeps hot or cold air— rain, sleet, -J.
etc., from forcing Its way thro ugh the roof.
'
The Shoulder of Protcctio n is also tho Self-Spacing D cv ic^ t
Makes laying'easy nnd rapid— thus Having time nnd, money.
*
These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red %
or Green Crushed Slate. Eac h rain washes nwny the accumulated 1
dust— reviving’ porpctunlly tho original rich colors.
Where these shingtes arc used the insurance rate Is lowered—
because th&lt;ty are fire-reslstin g.
Give us the dimensions of your roof, We will estimate the
cost free of charge. _ Samples and prices

Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co

Easiest
kind o f
easy
terms

Sporting Goods

�.1

THE SANFORD DAILY IIBRALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1920

P A G E FOUR

++**♦♦♦♦♦♦
H H ItW

»T »rjr i f t o n o n

im jt

l u i i r

“ WHEN A SIAN IS DISSATISFIED WITH THE
COMMUNITY IN WHICH HE LIVES, IT IS SURE
SIGN THAT DISSATISFACTION
IS
MUTUAL.
I)ONT BE A KNOCKER. BE A HUSTLER AND A
Ht OWN COMMUNITY, CITY,
COUNTY
AND

t l Th,

Htnli BalUUr, 107 HiraclU At«do*
B u fn f n»rU*

EVERYTHING

T H E H IST O R Y O F
SUCCESSFUL M EN

Editor
B . J . HOLLY
N . J . IJ1.LARD.. Secretary-Treasurer
General Manager
n . A j NEEL

always reads the same in the begin
ning.

F . P. RINES__ Circulation Manager
Phono 481
_____________________________________
have always
#4«*rtuiar a*ui K«da Known on Application boosted it and having always boosted it
they know more about the actual
needs o f the city than those who have
not been active members and done
D alit, rad In C ltj V/ CirrUr
their part in keeping the city moving.
13 C*ota
And meantime there will be a way
whereby
more houses will be built to
Member of the Associated Press
accommodate ail the people before
another season.

moat important departments o f the
entire state government, and shoulc
never bd hampered in its work by e f­
forts o f the legislature to abolish it.—
St. Augustine Record.
The above is a sample of the many
nice things that are being said o f Mr.
Lake by the newspapers o f the state.
But wo all have a right to expect
much o f the new chairman. Here in
the fourth district ho has made sevCHAIRMAN FOREST LAKE
eral unsuccessful campaigns for conThe State Road Department under gross on the platform of a business
the leadership of Forest lake, of San- man fo r congress and made considcrford, is doing things, and ns it result i nble impression upon the voters along
it Is receiving the compliments and |that line. Now he will have an oprespect of the people o f the state. Ev- j portunity to demonstrate ,his business
cn those who would rather tie state ability to the people of the entire
rend department would do things oth- state, and we believe he will mnke
cr than those It is doing arc pleased good. The legislature will never be
to see the pep and spine that Mr. permitted to abolish the road depnrtIake has injected' into the body j ment so long as it ia making good.—
which unqucstioAably is one o f the Melbourne Times.

ADVERTISING THE CITY
A party interested in Sanford called

up the editor today and wanted to
know why the Board of Trade was
■pending so much4 money on adver­
tising the dity of Sanford when there
w as no room now for the people who
are hero and for those who are com­
ing. This is a pertinent question and
one that is confronting every city in
the United States and other countries
a t present There were no new build­
ings constructed during the world war
and with the high prices of materials
and labor after the war the building
program was curtailed. Sanford is
no different from the other cities In
this rpBpect and up-to-dato there hns
been no remedy suggested that would
relieve the congestion this year at
lesat A t the present price o f build­
ing homes there are few to be built
fo r investment purposes but in n few
jnonths we hnvc reason to believe that
knstcrial and wages will come down
•omewhnt and therrf will be plenty of
bouses fo r next season, This will not
help those who are looking for houses
now, however, and we do not know
what can be done to relieve the situa­
tion. Some cities in Florida have
tried to obtain tents from the govern­
ment nnd Los Angeles, Callfomin,
wanted D,000 tents but could not get
them as the government) hns no tents
fo r private uses.
A s to the Board of Trade taking
money from either the city or County
fo r advertising purposes the sugges­
tion is a mistake. The Board of Trade
has not printed any advertisements
fo r three years, the last booklet* be­
ing printed nt least thnt long ago and
they are still using them when inquir­
ies arc made about Sanford. But the
Board o f Trade nnd the Herald cannot
i*y down on the job of boosting the
eRy regardless of the dearth of houses
and neither can the city of Sanford
har the doors to the newcomers re­
gardless of whether they are buying
homes and putting other people out.
The Board of Track* is trying to get
people here right now who-will build
houses and hotels nnd
houses and these neon

S P E C IA L B A R G A IN 8
FOR THE FIR ST

C O M P L E T E H O U S E B ILL
CARTER

LUM BER

CO.

Is Your AUTO Insurance Heavy?
CUT OFF 5 0 PER CENT. OF YOUR HEAVY LOAD

Persistent and Systematic Sav

ing until an Earning Surplus la ob

x

From the Foundation

•

tained.
Consistent saving will start you for
ward on thd right road to success.

F. P. Forater, President

B. F. Whitner, Cashier.

Q u a lity-S ervicd -P rice

Quick Lunch
Coffee 5c Sandwiches 10c
Pics, home made 10c cut
Best Coffee in Sanford

Princess Theatre Bldg

W hat S e ttle d the Argument
W c have Bwussels carpet”
" We have lace curtains.'’
“ We have Fwench mirrors.”
,“ W c have Butter-Nut Bread every day!”
And that settled it, for of course there’ s nothing better thaq

Prime

Buy your Fire, Theft, Collision, Liability or Property Damage In­
surance at Actual Cost with

The MEW

The Belt Auto Indemnity Association
Ask J. It Lawson, Chas. Kanncr, Dr. I^ingley about how The Belt
pays its Claims. Then call phone 46 or write Box 156 for rates. “ It
will pay you” to see

G. C. Fellows, Manager tor Sanford
OUR PAINT SHOT
Is kept busy by knowing nutomobilists
who send their cars to us to be re­
painted. The "wise ones” know that
their cars will be returned to them
looking Bmnrter nnd better than when
bright new from the factory. Thd rea­
son for this is thnt ail our wotk is
custom work which means that only
the best of materials arc used by
skilled workmen.
,

PORK and MUTTON
SAUSAGE o f All Kinds .
HAM and BACON
A TRIAL SOLICITED

has oil the quality of the
not improve that.
Hut in addition we’ve
process which enables us
daintier loaf than ever.
Get a* loaf today, for
advocate. At all good gr
the Butter-Nut label.
.

old Butter-Nut; we could
perfected a new
to turn out a

mixing
lighter,

Butter-Nut in its own best
ocers. The genuine hears
%

Mtf.T.RB’R HAKFRY

Pure Food Market
J. H. Tillis, Prop.

’ hone 105

. 4 0 2 Sanford Ave,

T R Y A HERALD W A N T AD
**♦*♦♦♦♦

COME

ym

Phone 11 2

Sanford Heights

+♦♦♦♦*+♦****♦+*+*+*+ •&gt;**+***+++++++♦++++*+*+♦*+***+*+
CHANDLER CARS

FRANKLIN CARS f

WE GIVE YOU SERVICE
— ASK AN YBOD Y”

t k

» «

GREAT

W e have anticipated your every need
in the Hunting and Sporting Goods
Line and have a complete stock of

W IG H T T IR E CO

W inchester and Reming-

X

Tires
Diamond Tires
+* * *Kelly-Springfield
* * * H -+ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

ton Repeating Guns and

THE WILMINGTON (N. C.) STAB, SEPT. 21ST, SAYS:
*TIIE
CLEANEST AND BEST CIRCUS SEEN HERE IN MANY A DAY WAS
SPARKS’ THREE -TUNC H?.CUS WHICH EXHIBITED HERE YESTER­
DAY, THE CROWDS TAXING THE CAPACITY OF THE HUGE TENT.
•CLEAN AND CLEVER’ SUMS UP THE SHOW AND THE CROWDS
XVV.nv. ORDERLY.” .

Rifles, and the F ox and

MAMMOTH INSTITUTION
MERIT ANDJORIGINALITY

MX
Tjft

f l COMPREHENSIVE E N S E M B L E M
V THE WORLDS BEST PERFORMERS *
. AMD THE FINEST TRAINED ANIMALS

9

Smith double-barrel Guns

N IT R O CLUB Water-Proof SHELLS, with
Steel Lining—without doubt the best shell on
the market—there
every purpose

) f l MULTITUDE E S T R A N G E AND

C itron,

&gt; CURIOUS FEATURES FROM ALL ^
&lt; END S.Q F THE E A R T H "
A
f lN EXHIBITION^THAT kt IS WORTH W HILE*

jCom on 5 *qql,
Orange 5*ooi,

C O M IN G TO'

a comp
Horns,
-in fact, ever

Puttees and
* Sportsmen

uzaisms
l S e e d e d a n d S eed / ejs)
C u r r a n ts ,
5 )a to s ,

Ball Park Grounds

H IN T te tt
SUPPLIES

J 'ig s

Hardware Co
IS ea n e U urner
£PA»wt» 4 9 7

VUe/aAa OJmtttfdf
-*+-S&gt;+*+*^+v*++++*+++***M *+++++«+**e*+++**+++++++*+.|.+.&gt;.|.+*4.+.g.++*++++**.f+4-*+*+*++++

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD,

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19. 1920

PAGE FIVE

ts an old friend of N. J. Llllard and H.
A. Neel, o f the Herald Printing Co.,
and paid thia office an appreciated

William Aheam is in the city again
for the winter and will be in the vege­
table game, buying and selling San­
ford products in car lots. Mr. Aheam
has been coming to Sanford for many
years and has many friends hire who
will be glad to welcome him and his
family home again.

Men’s H eavy G ray Colton Sweaters,

Mrs. Ralph K. Gore and two chil­
dren went to Orlando yesterday after­
noon to attend the wedding of Miss
Flora Hodges and Mr. Charles G.
Woods, which took- place at the home
of ^hc bride last evening. Mr. Gore
and vMr. Deane Treadwell went over
later in the evening in Mr. Tread­
well’s car. *
W. M. Igou, of Eustis, write the
Herald that he has a car load of fine
mules just in from Northern states
and they will be at his bams in Eus­
tis for sale. He has an advertisement
in the Weekly Herald telling about
them and invites alt his old customers
from this section to go over and seo
the stock at Eustis.

with Thanksgiving cuts of all kinds
and the merchants should take ad­
vantage of this season o f the year to
J. T. Burkhaltcr, o f Eustis, was go after new business.
among the prominent visitors to the
Mrs. Lucy Harbor and daughter,
city yesterday from Lake county
Miss Thelma, nre expected in Sanford
Bonnie Beacham, of Orlando, was in a few days and they will spend the
in the city yesterday on business nnd winter* here ns usual. They arc from
Commerce, Georgia, nnd have many
visited his many friends while here.
friends here who will be glad to learn
of their coming.
R. J. Rlvenbdfk, travelling passen­
R. II. Strain, manager of the T. R.
ger agent of th j A. C. L. with head­
quarters In Jacksonville, was in the Miller Mill Co., of Brewton, Alabama,
city yesterday n guest of the Seml- is in tho city looking after business
in the ernte material line. Mr. Strain

At Reduced Prices

Mr. and Mrs. II. T. Jackson, of New
York, are in the city for a few days.
Mr. Jackson is the representative of
the New York, Chicago and Philadel­
phia Produce Bulletin,
formerly
known ns thu Green Sheet. Mr. Jockson has been coming to Florida for
the past twelve years and has many
friends h e r e who are always glad to
see him.

National Madza Lamps

Among the camping parties going
out today nre Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Purden, Mr. nnd Mrs. Donnld Smith,
25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts.
Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Holly, Mr. nnd
20 to 75 Watts in 32 V olts
Mrs. R. J. Holly, Robert Holly, Mr.
nnd Mrs, J. B. Lnwson, Mr. and Mrs.
Everything Electrical
S. M. Lloyd nnd scvernl others who
will camp nt the'ranch house on thq Expert Installation and
Econlockhatchie Creek for severnl
Repair Work
days. The girls will try tho life for n
few days nnd if it suits them will
camp several times during the sea­
*
son.
Rhone 112
115 Magnolia Are.

G IL L O N &amp; F R Y

Seed, Our Business.
Honesty, Our Motto.
Purity, Our Watch
word.

AT THE STAR THEATRE
TODAY
LOUISE GLAUM in
•’SEX"

For 5 Days
Beginning

S P E C IA L

S A L E commencing S A T U R D A Y
and lasting Ten Days

SEE THE VERY LATE ST STYLES AT THE

FOX NEWS nnd
KENT DODGERS'

AND

Duvetyn gives way to lustrous velvets. Though black undenlably holds the key to the lint situation one notes with pleasure that
winter modes also favor the sunset colors and forest tones that made
such guln entrance early in the Fall. Shapes may be said to vary
with upturned effects undoubtedly in the lend.
A black chiffon velvet toque with swirling feather trimming
though designed for afternoons may well he worn in the evening.

Q U A L IT Y SHOP

COME IN AND SEE US.
(Southern Seed Speclallata)
Wckiwa Illdg.
Sanford, Fla.

SATURDAY AT PRINCESS
Specinl Production

Reduced to

Also the
VANISHING DAGGER

R E SP O N SIB L E

The Logical Treatment

Reduced to

E N E R G IZ E R

bankihg is the

p

which this institution has been me
the first day the doors were opened

For Many Human Ilia.

Reduced to

Reduced to

Wc hold this to be n Truth:—viz:—
That Circulation is the BASIC factor
of Human Health.
The "Energizer” process will DO
MORE Benefit to Any Adult's gencrnl condition than nny other method
known.
COME IN nnd talk it over.
;
108 Park Ave.,
Next Door to Mobley’s Drug Store.
L. C. CAMERON
Box 399
Sanford, Fla. Phone 164

That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the
constant and gratifying growth in business.
It is the desire of the officers of this Bank to con­
tinue adding new accounts of those individuals
desiring most efficient and responsible banking

record of R ESPO N SIB ILITY

We Guarantee All
Reduced to

Every Battery repair we make la
guaranteed for six months. We are
able to do this because In repairing
any make of battery we are licensed
to use patented feature* which have
made Vesta batteries famous.

Sanford Battery Service Co.
Reduced to

L. A. RENAUD, Prop.

Phone 189

December 1st
On the first of each month
your rent Is due.
Why give
other people your money. Buy
you a home and each month
Instead o f paying out rent
money, pay oh a home that Is
yours.
Beautiful homes on Park,
Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and
Myrtle
avenuee, * Sanford
Heights. Building lots In any
location.

Reduced to

Fabrics guaranteed 6,000; Cor ds 10,000,

■'

,V - . V

i • '.1 •• • &gt;

• .*

E. F. L A N E
SANFORD, FLORIDA

rx.fi.

‘ ‘The Real Estate Man"
m
sot n&gt;N Brnii

tronage is invited

Sem inole County
Is ow ned, controlled and managed

by hom e

people, who are interested in the development
and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County
;e resoui es and strong financial
connections w e are in position to assist our cus­
tomers at alLfimes in the handling of their finan­
cial needs.

LE T US SERVE Y O U . *

4 Per Cent Interest Paid

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              <text>SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
&#13;
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION&#13;
Volume 1&#13;
&#13;
Sanford, Florida, Tuesday, November 9, 1920&#13;
Number 186&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------&#13;
AMERICAN LEGION BUSY AT ARMISTICE DAY PLANS GUARANTEE GREAT PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
Costume Ball at Court House Will Be Event of Season&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM FOR DAY&#13;
&#13;
Will give everyone chance to enjoy themselves to the fullest&#13;
&#13;
According to the latest “dope sheet” arranged by Ned Chittenden, Hawkins and Walter Connelly and j. D. Woodruff and through the assistance of the D. A. R. Patronesses, the Armistice Day Ball bids fair to be a glorious success.&#13;
 The Dance Committee met with the executive staff of the D. A. R. last evening at which time plans for the decoration of the Ball room, the sale of tickets, and refreshments for the dance were discussed. The ladies, as usual, showed their willingness to assist Campbell-Lossing Post in any way possible towards making this ball the biggest affair of such a nature that Central Florida has over witnessed.&#13;
 Since the affair has been designated as a Costume Ball, the question has arisen as to what could be called a costume, for many of those who wish to attend feel that it will be impossible to procure a costume in time for Thursday evening. However, we still maintain that this shall be a costume ball in every sense of the word “Costume” to the individual. If the gentleman choose to appear in their business suits but varying the every day monotony by sewing or painting polka-dot on their shirt __  (Continued on page six)&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
FEDERAL OPERATION OF RAILROADS WAS COSTLY AFFAIR.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.&#13;
&#13;
America will never again see private control and operation of railroads unaccompanied by state and federal regulations, Chairman Clark of the Interstate Commerce Commission told the convention of National Associations of Railroads and Public Utilities Commission here today.&#13;
 He said the final figures will show that the American people paid a handsome sum for the federal operation of railroads during the war but as operation as a war measure, should be considered necessary war expense.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
HARDING PLAYS AND FISHES ON THE BORDER&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
POINT ISABEL, Tex., Nov. 9&#13;
&#13;
President-elect Harding appearing robust and vigorous, is fishing this morning and will play golf this afternoon. He is using a lunch supplied by Governor Hobby for cruises and plans an automobile trip up the Rio Grande valley. He may hurry his departure for Panama to be back in time to make a speech at Bedford, Va., December 5th.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
ENORMOUS POOL BEING FORMED FOR STOCK INDUSTRY&#13;
By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 9.&#13;
Bankers of Chicago and other cities meeting here today to complete arrangements for the formation of a $30,000,000 banking pool to assist in financing the live stock industry.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
DAUGHTERS HOLD REUNION AT ASHEVILLE&#13;
(By Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
ASHEVILLE, N. C., Nov. 9&#13;
&#13;
Delegates from thirty-six states are expected to attend the convention of the United Daughters of the Confederacy here today. Governor Bickett and others will speak tonight.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
OFFICIAL COUNT GIVES ANOTHER REPUBLICAN&#13;
&#13;
MEMPHIS, Nov. 9.&#13;
Official count of the Eighth congressional district, announces the election of Scott, Republican, over Browning, Democrat.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SANFORD CHAMBER COMMERCE PLANS EXTENSIVE PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
Eventually Lake Monroe Will Be A Mecca For Motor Boat Enthusiasts.&#13;
&#13;
The newly organized Sanford Chamber of Commerce has an extensive program before it for the coming year, which will keep a number of committees continually busy. Sanford’s reputation as the foremost celery producing section having been permanently established. It is now the intention of her civic body to exploit those innumerable other resources which she possesses, one of which, in particular, is Lake Monroe.&#13;
 This magnificent body of water will one day be the mecca of motor boat enthusiasts and plans are sufficient advanced to warrant the statement that a magnificent two and one-half million dollar hotel will overlook the lake of which Sanford is justly proud. These plans included a yacht basin, in which can be sheltered hundreds of light draft pleasure craft. Upon completion of these plans it is obvious that Sanford is not destined to be, but will be the greatest city in the central part of the  state.&#13;
 The opportunity of securing manufacturing interests to locate in Sanford is enhanced by the fact that Sanford has both rail and water rates in effect, also making it the logical center of distribution for the Southern part of the state.&#13;
 It will be the object of the commerce body to exploit these natural potentialities to the outside world, adding to her fame as the celery city that of tourist resort, and industrial and distributing center of central and Southern Florida.&#13;
 The problem of housing tourists is alleviated somewhat this season by the comparatively new Valdez Hotel which is acknowledged to have the finest appointments of any hotel in this section of the state. It is a monument to the progressiveness of the business men of Sanford, who, realizing the acute shortage of hotel accommodations, successfully promoted and financed the whole proposition. That, in the final analysis, is the spirit that builds towns, and is the spirit permeating Sanford today – Orlando Reporter-Star.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
AMERICAN CRUISER AGROUND IN CARTAGONIA&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.&#13;
&#13;
The American cruiser, Cleveland on duty in Latin-American waters is aground in Cartagonia, the Navy Department was advised today.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
FLOUR AND COTTON GOODS ARE OFF&#13;
&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 9.&#13;
&#13;
Family patent flour declined forty cents a barrel at one mill here today to the new low price of $10. This was in carlots, ninety-eight pound cotton sacks.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 8. –&#13;
&#13;
American and Algonquin percales prices have been cut from the last season’s 30c a yard to a 13 1-2c basis by M. A. Boardman and Sons and the Algonquin printing company, it was announced here today. This quotation is 1 1-2c a yard lower that the 15 cent basis named by Edward Converse and Company last October 18.&#13;
 The standard prints were offered for the new season at 12 1-2c a yard, a drop from 23c. Hereafter the goods are to be  sold without protection of price guarantee. New prices were named on overall denims today by the representatives of the largest  producers located at Greensboro, N. C. For 2.20 denims, white, black, 25c now is asked and for 2.40 a dozen and twist goods, 21 1-2c. During the fever of speculation in second hands the price of 2.20s reached 57c a yard, but the agents did not ask at any time in excess of 44 cents, for the grades repriced today, it was stated.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Dutton Ships First Cars of Lettuce And Romaine&#13;
&#13;
F. F. Dutton Co., has the distinction of shipping the first car of lettuce of the season, shipping a solid car this morning and also shipping the first car of romaine. The lettuce came from the west side farm of this company and the romaine came from the farm of c. Stuthoff, who has the reputation of having the first car of romaine each season. The Dutton car is probably the first car of lettuce to be shipped from Florida this season.&#13;
 George Fox Co., shipped the first lettuce by express and have the prize for shipping the first car of lettuce for the season.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Lettuce Moves Out First Today&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE FOX SHIPPED ONE HUNDRED HAMPERS THIS MORNING&#13;
&#13;
 That good old Sanford lettuce is moving from this section and while the movement is light today it will be going strong by the last of the week when the many fine patches of lettuce get headed up by the cool weather that is coming. The weather has been very dry for the past week but the lettuce is standing up bravely and a little cold snap will head up the crop in fine shape and the growers feel that they get good prices despite the fact that other crops in the north have not been getting the money this fall.&#13;
 The greatest thing about Florida winter stuff is that it comes into the markets that are usually bare of green stuff and Sanford lettuce should go through in fine shape and get on a good market provided the cold weather comes soon and heads up the lettuce in shape for carrying well to the farthest markets.&#13;
 The first lettuce of the season goes out today begin 100 hampers shipped by George Fox of this city, and they get first prize for being the very first of the fall crop. Others will follow in a few days and the season will be on in earnest in another week or so always providing the weather is cool. The shipment of lettuce from this section means much not only to growers and shippers but to every business in the city for it means money that will be distributed here in large quantities.&#13;
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REORGANIZE BASEBALL MINOR LEAGUE&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES OF TWENTY-ONE LEAGUES MEETING TODAY&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
KANSAS CITY, Nov. 9&#13;
&#13;
 Representatives of twenty-one minor baseball leagues of the country are meeting here today to vote on the proposed reorganization of baseball under control of a civilian tribunal. The indications were the Minors oppose the plan which threatens disruption of the Major leagues.&#13;
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BOLSHEVIKS FEAR WINTER IN THE CRIMEA&#13;
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(BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS)&#13;
CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. 9&#13;
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Bolshevik forces are attempting to crush General Wrangel’s anti-bolshevik army before winter sets in when they fear the Bolsheviks will become demoralized.&#13;
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UNDERGROUND RAILWAY FOR BOLS TO AMERICA&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
ROTTERDAM, Nov. 9 –&#13;
Reports were received here of an “underground railway” in Holland for returning deported Bolshevik agitators to America. Despite cordon guards on the German frontier Russians continue to cross the boundary.&#13;
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MATTHEWSON RECOVERING FROM T. B.&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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NEW YORK, Nov. 9&#13;
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Christy Mathewson, former star of the Major League, is recovering from tuberculosis at Saranac lake and physicians say he may make a complete recovery.&#13;
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Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
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SOLDIERS BODIES ARE SHIPPED HOME&#13;
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NEARLY NINE THOUSAND BODIES OF AMERICAN SOLDIERS FROM FRANCE&#13;
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(By The Associated Press)&#13;
PARIS, Nov.9 –&#13;
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Nearly nine thousand bodies of soldiers killed and died in France have been shipped to the United States and eighteen hundred more await shipment. Nearly 60 per cent of the bodies will be returned.&#13;
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LORD MAYOR OF LONDON INAUGURATED&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
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LONDON, Nov. 9 –&#13;
The inauguration of the newly elected Lord Mayor of London was preceded by gorgeous street procession today. Lloyd George probably will make important ministerial statements at the banquet tonight.&#13;
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MEN’S CLOTHING TO BE REDUCED SAYS WHOLESALERS&#13;
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(By The Associated Press)&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 9 –&#13;
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Men’s clothing was offered from ten to fifty per cent below the present wholesale prices and men’s shirts and similar articles greatly reduced at buying convention of the United National Clothies here today. W. l. Mohr, the general manager of the Association, said the public was not buying and the dealers were overstocked.&#13;
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ANOTHER INTERNATIONAL DIVORCE&#13;
FORMERLY CONSUELO VANDERBILT DIVORCED FROM DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH&#13;
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(By The Associated Press)&#13;
LONDON, Nov. 9 –&#13;
&#13;
The Duchess of Marlborough, formerly Consuelo Vanderbilt, was granted a divorce today on charges of the Duke’s misconduct and desertion.&#13;
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HUNTING SEASON TO OPEN ON NOVEMBER 20TH&#13;
&#13;
 The hunting season opens November 20th and numerous parties are making preparations to be in the woods at the break o’ dawn of the first day. Game, it is believed, will be fairly plentiful this season, and no doubt many quail and some turkeys and deer will fall victims of the hunters’ guns.&#13;
 The season opens the 20th on swans, geese, brant, ducks, coots, mud hens, turkeys, grouse, pheasants, quail and deer, extending to March 1st on all except pheasants on which it extends only to December 20th.&#13;
 Hunting license is required when hunting is done outside the voting precinct of the hunter. A resident county license costs $1, non-resident county license $3 and non-resident state license $15. To obtain either a resident county or non-resident license the applicant must have been a bona fide resident of the state for at least twelve months.&#13;
 The law specifies a maximum bag for one day of one deer, two turkeys, twenty quail or seventy-five birds of any other species, and a maximum season bag of three deer, ten turkeys and not over three hundred birds.&#13;
 Heavy penalties are provided for violation of any provisions of the law, such as hunting without license or exceeding the maximum bag-limit.&#13;
 License are obtained from the county judge.&#13;
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Offices supplies at the Herald.&#13;
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HOME SERVICE RED CROSS IMPORTANT&#13;
Few People Have Any Idea Of Large Scope Of This Work.&#13;
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After the signing of the Armistice war work relative to the care and comfort of the soldiers in the trenches and on the battlefield practically ceased. But the Home Service section of the American Red Cross is still actively engaged in serving the soldiers who are now in camps, hospitals and vocational schools. Even those who have returned to civilian life have found an ever-ready friend in the Home Service Society who has rendered and is still rendering a valuable service in helping them secure bonuses, back travel pay, belated allotments, filing compensation claims and countless other services, even to writing hundreds of letters for those who are unable to write for themselves. Although the correspondence regarding allotments, compensation insurance, vocational training etc., decreases as the months go by the Home Service Society is still acting as a medium of communication between the soldier and the army and navy.&#13;
 There are cases on file in the Home Service Office showing that many claims are yet to be settled.&#13;
 Within the year that the home service society has seen actively engaged in this work there have been put on file over 160 cases. Most of the applicants are soldiers; the help extended them embraces a wide range of service from getting a belated allotment to help in securing remunerative employment. Out of a war time organization there has developed a well launched peace program, which if carried out in full would mean much for the betterment of the county. In addition to Home Service we would have a public health worker and child welfare activities.&#13;
 After the roll call in 1919 the officers of the Seminole County Chapter, A. R. C. finding that the resulting finances were not sufficient to carry out the full program decided that the chapter had best confine its efforts to finishing up the war-work and co-operate with the churches, clubs, city and county in family relief work. Within the year that the Home Service Society has been engaged in this work there have been many cases out on file.&#13;
 The work among these consists in assisting the poor and destitute over hard places, giving them a helping hand just at the time they need it most, thereby enabling them to overcome present difficulties and in time become self-supporting. Clothing and board was given an expectant mother who was forsaken by her husband at the time she needed him most. Other mothers have been given layettes and clothing for themselves. Another family in time of sickness and distress was given financial aid.&#13;
 During the flu epidemic medical care and nurses were furnished several families who were unable to procure them.&#13;
 Hospital treatment has been provided for two unfortunate patients.&#13;
 A poor, deserving widow and her six children have, though the efforts of the Woman’s Club and the Home Service Society, been provided with much needed bedding, clothing and financial aid.&#13;
 The Home Service has also been instrumental in procuring for a poor widow financial aid from distant relatives, who had heretofore done nothing for her. Although good service has been rendered and much good accomplished in a small way much more efficient service could be given if the Society had some means of transportation, as no visits can be made in the out-lying districts except through and kindness of friends, and although many have cheerfully responded with their cars, every thoughtful person will see the imposition this is on the friends and the draw-back such an arrangement is to the work. Let us hope that after the roll call the secretary will be provided with be provided with ample funds with which to carry on the work as it should be.&#13;
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AUTO CAMP RULES TO GOVERN SANITATION MADE BY HEALTH BOARD&#13;
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Danger Of Typhoid Fever And Other Diseases&#13;
&#13;
MUST OBSERVE RULES&#13;
LAID DOWN BY STATE BOARD AND CITY OFFICIALS ARE HELD RESPONSIBLE&#13;
&#13;
JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 9 –&#13;
Furthering the efforts of the State Board of Health to promote sanitary conditions in the numerous auto camps being established throughout the state, George w. Simons, head of the department of sanitary engineering has issued notices to all sanitary inspectors to keep a close watch on camps in their respective districts. Town marshals and chiefs of police have also been instructed to give this matter their attention and to demand that the rules and regulations of the health board be carried out to the letter.&#13;
 Negligence in complying with these rules is punishable by fine. They are receiving as much publicity as possible that every tourist camper may become familiar with them. Every camp site will be posted with a set of rules and no effort will be spared for their rigid enforcement.&#13;
 This act of the State Board of Health to safeguard its tourist public as well as the citizens of the state has won the favorable comment from all parts of the United States. It is believed that by enforcing proper sanitation in these camping grounds, located on the outskirts of Florida towns, many cases of typhoid and other diseases will be avoided and the possibility of an epidemic considerably lessened.&#13;
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 Camp rules are as follows:&#13;
 &#13;
 Section 1 – All camp sites shall be dray and well drained.&#13;
 Section 2 – An adequate supply of portable drinking water shall be provided on the camp grounds. Water from wells other than a public supply shall not be used until it has been approved by the State Board of Health.&#13;
 Section 3 – Waste liquids and all slops shall be disposed of in a manner approved by the State Board of Health, so as not to create a nuisance and attract and breed flies.&#13;
 Section 4 – Sewer connections, water supplied, properly flushed water closets shall be provided where sewer connections are possible.&#13;
 Section 5 – Where sewer connections are not possible, sanitary fly proof privies approved by the State Board of Health or specified by the ordinance of the city wherein the camp is located shall be provided.&#13;
 Section 6 – All garbage and refuse shall be stored in metal cans with light covers and shall be removed from the premises and disposed of daily.&#13;
 Section 7 – Garbage and refuse shall be disposed of by incineration or burial.&#13;
 Any camper violating any of these above sections shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction be fined no less than ten dollars (10). Each and every violation shall be consideration a separate offense punishable by fine.&#13;
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WILL OPEN MONTEZUMA HOTEL&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. J. T. McLendon, of Winter Haven, have arrived in the city and are guests of the Montezuma. Mr. and Mrs. McLendon will take charge of the Montezuma Hotel as soon as the house can be put in shape and all the furnishings installed. Mr. McLendon is an experienced hotel man and intends to make the Montezuma one of the most popular resorts in this part of the state. The hotel has recently been put in first class shape and has forty rooms or with bath and is one of the most up-to-date hotels in Florida. K. R. Murrell, the owner has leased the hotel to the McLendon’s for the season and they will open in a few days for the winter season.&#13;
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Page 2.  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1920&#13;
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(Advertisement)&#13;
At The Star Theatre TONIGHT&#13;
&#13;
Wm. Fox presents Eileen Parcy in&#13;
‘HER HONOR THE MAYOR’&#13;
&#13;
Also Hank Man in&#13;
“AN HONEST GROCER”&#13;
&#13;
TOMORROW: Wm. S. Hart in SAND&#13;
COMING: Louise Glaum in “Sahara”&#13;
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FLORIDA AND TULANE BATTLED AT PLANT FIELD – TULANE WINS OUT&#13;
&#13;
TAMPA, Nov. 8 – &#13;
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After two hard fought quarters in which neither team could cross its rival’s goal line, Tulane's battling gridiron warriors tore into the Gators with a fury, in the last half, which brought the team to within one yard of the Florida goal line at the end of the third quarter and om the final session they pushed the ball across, kicked a goal, and rushed around the Gators ends for another touchdown and goal before the close of the play. &#13;
 Early in the clash between the two elevens it appeared that the opposing teams were so evenly matched that a battle to the last ounce of energy and the trick of strategy was in prospect.&#13;
 Frequent fumbles marred the early part of the game and once Florida was penalized for holding.&#13;
 First quarter: Tulane kicked off, Florida fumbled and Tulane got the ball on Florida's 12-yard line. Florida held Tulane for downs, and the Gators made two first down, then fumbled twice, and one the last one on attempt to recover the ball going to Tulane, but the Florida line held like a stone wall. An exchange of punts followed, which netted Tulane 10 yards. The quarter ended with the ball in Florida's possession on Tulane’s eight-yard line, which the Gators had four yards to go on their third down. Score, Florida 0. Tulane, 0.&#13;
 Second quarter: Carlton lost 15 yards on a delayed pass, and Florida tried for a field goal, but missed. Tulane punted to G. Anderson, who was dropped in his tracks on the 45-yard line. A pass to Carlton netted 25 yards , but the Gators could not gain through Tulane's line, lost the ball, and was penalized 15 yards for holding. Tulane made a first down. An exchange of punt followed, Florida punting to Whight, Tulane's speedy captain, who made a brilliant 60-yard run. Maloney substituting in Tulane's backfield celebrated his entrance into the game by an attempt at a field goal, but he fumbled. Recovering the ball, Maloney ran it back to Florida's 12-yard line, when the half ended, with the score still Florida 0, Tulane 0.&#13;
 Florida kicked off on the first play. Tulane penalized for off side, Brown went around right end for 30 yards. A pass to Richeson gave ten more. Three plays and McGraw carried the ball to the one-yard line. Florida held for downs. The ball went over and the stands cheered. Anderson kicked out of bounds to the 20 yard line. Brown went around left end for ten yards. Tulane penalized 15 yards for holding. Florida was penalized 15 yards for holding. An exchange of punts followed. Florida was penalized 15 yards for holding. Two first downs and McGraw went through tickle for five yards. Two plays put the ball on Florida's one-yard line. End of the quarter.&#13;
 An instant after the fourth quarter opened Dwyer went for the first touchdown and kicked goal.&#13;
 Tulane kicked off to Florida's 20 yard line, Florida could not gain and Anderson punted 10 yards out of bounds. Brown went 30 yards around right end and Richeson scored touchdown and Dwyer kicked goal. Florida opened an offensive which with a pass and two off tackle plays put the ball on Tulane’s 20 yard line. An incomplete pass gave the ball to Tulane who punted out of danger. The game ended with the ball in midfield.&#13;
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Tulane 14, florida 0.&#13;
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The line-up: &#13;
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Florida		Position		Tulane&#13;
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Driggers		R. E.			Wright (c)&#13;
Vandergift		R. T. 		Payne&#13;
Perry			R. G.			Killinger&#13;
Wilsky		C.			Reed&#13;
Meisch		L. G.			Fitz&#13;
Baker (c)		L. T.			Unsworth&#13;
Swanson		L. E.			Beaulseau&#13;
B. Anderson	Q. B. 		Richeson&#13;
Carlton		L. H.			Brown&#13;
C. Anderson	L. H.			Dwyer&#13;
Merrin		F. B.			McGraw&#13;
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CITRUS FRUIT OUTLOOK VERY BRIGHT PROSPECTS GOOD CROP AND PRICES.&#13;
(Continued from page one)&#13;
&#13;
Was for 13,500,000 boxes, of which total, approximately 8,500,000 boxes are oranges and 5,000,000 boxes grapefruit. On October first the government report said that prospective production showed very little change from the month previous. Condition of oranges had dropped slightly, but was still very much above the average at that time, being 91 per cent normal compared wit 85 per cent a year ago. The grapefruit situation showed no change. Condition was 70 per cent of normal compared with 87 per cent a year ago.&#13;
 The packer’s reports from the many shipping points over the state are most encouraging and show clearly that the orange crop is a good one, both in size and quality. In many sections of the state preparations have been made for the handling of crops 50 to 100 per cent larger than the last season. Increases in actual anticipated packs has been reported in amazing numbers. In oranges, the anticipated pack has been shown to be from 20 per cent to 100 per cent larger than that of last season, while the grapefruit reports show that the crop is short from 5 to 20 per cent and in many cases the anticipated output is placed at the same as that of last year.&#13;
 Last year’s fruit generally ran to small sizes. The fruit this year is showing up normal in most cases. It is not within the province of The Packer man to overestimate yields – it is merely a case of disposing of facts as they come from growers themselves at the many shipping points over the state, hence it should be said that according to these reports the 13,500,000 box estimate is very conservative, with a strong probability of the yield going considerably of the yield going considerably over that amount – possibly 1,000,000 boxes. In any event the crop is good.&#13;
 Growers are now deeply concerned about the expenses in picking, packing loading and freight. Wage scales vary somewhat over the state, but the average scale perhaps is about as follows:&#13;
 Spot picking of grapefruit 8c; clean picking 4c; for seeding oranges 12@20c; for budded, 6@10c; tangerines, 12@20c; for packing oranges, 7c; grapefruit 4c, box making 2c. &#13;
 Graders will receive not to exceed $5 a day, while nailers, loaders, generally classified as floor help, 25@30c an hour. Boxes f. o. b. factory this year are costing the growers 35c and up, compared with 28c last year.&#13;
 Freight rates have advanced and are making it double hard for the grower. Express rates are simply prohibitive so the grower has nothing to worry about there. It costs for example, $2.50 express to send a box of oranges from Miami to Charlotte, N. C. this is more by about 50 per cent than the grower is netting for growing his fruit.&#13;
 Practically all packing houses are now in full swing. What is now most needed of all is cold weather, as near the freezing point as the thermometer can go without crossing the danger line. A temperature of 35 to 40 degrees would place, in a few weeks time, several million boxed of market. The weather early this week was much colder and hopes are entertained that it will grow colder yet, and remain so for a few weeks at least. &#13;
- New York Packer.&#13;
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Get some of those late postcards at the Herald office. The Valdez Hotel, the Welaka Block, the Seminole Hotel and other points of interest. Only one cent each. Send a Sanford card to your friends&#13;
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YOUTH OF SOUTH SET EXAMPLE IN RED CROSS WORK&#13;
With Opening of Schools, Thousands Join Junior Organization&#13;
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Atlanta, Ga., Nov. –&#13;
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If the men and women of the south show one-half the enthusiasm in the Fourth Red Cross Roll Call that children of the south are displaying in renewing their allegiance to the Junior Red Cross, the southern division will show a record number of Red Cross members when the Roll Call ends.&#13;
 Truly, children are learning the way for the grownups in joining the Red Cross, according to figures given out today at Red Cross division headquarters in Atlanta.&#13;
 Reorganization of the Junior Red Cross was begun when schools opened this fall. Now, although but little more than a month has passed, more than twenty thousand children in the southern division have renewed their membership in the Red Cross, and before Christmas, it is expected triple that number will have enrolled.&#13;
 The Junior Red Cross, while auxiliary to the American Red Cross, is a separate and distinct organization, with its own program of service. It is organized through the schools, where it is one of the most popular and highly regarded of student activities. The Juniors have their own “roll calls”. The time varying with the different schools.&#13;
 Many juniors had their “roll calls” when school first opened this year. That the children are more enthusiastic than over in Red Cross work is demonstrated by the fact that, while less than 3,000 had joined the Red Cross by November 1, 1919, more than 20,000 have joined already this year.&#13;
 Last year the Junior Red Cross in the southern division had a total membership of 162,807. Judging by the way in which children are enrolling this year, the 1920-21 membership will go well beyond 200,000.&#13;
 The purpose of the Junior Red Cross and its activities could not be better explained than by James n. Rule, national director of the Junior Red Cross. He says:&#13;
 “The Junior Red Cross is the childhood of America mobilized through the schools – public, parochial and private – for the purpose of inculcating ideals and habits of service among children the world over, with the idea that the men and women of tomorrow will, as a result of this childhood practice, think in terms of service to others; for the purpose not nearly of training in citizenship for  the future, but of making unselfish, useful young citizens today; for the purpose of instilling respect and obedience to the law of the land, and for the purpose of transmitting America to succeeding generations cleaner, healthier and happier than it was found.&#13;
 “the requirement for membership is soley one of service. There is no individual membership fee. The usefulness of a Junior Red Cross auxillary in alleviating want and suffering among children at home and abroad depends on the initiative and enterprise of the classroom group and the teacher, the latter being the auxiliary leader.&#13;
 “Everything done is by co-operative effort of teacher and class, whether it be in raising money by some entertainment or industry; the making of garments, furniture, toys, scrapbooks, or in a community betterment activity. ‘Training in Citizenship Through Service’ and ‘happy Childhood the World Over’ are slogans of the Junior Red Cross which broadly characterize its mission.&#13;
 “Formed in 1917 to help win the war, the Junior Red Cross, with a membership of 10,000,000, produced in twenty months $15,000,000 worth of useful articles for American soldiers, sailors, marines and war – stricken people of other lands. But in this service the childhood of America was only awakened to a conscientiousness of its power for good, with the result that Armistice Day, 1918, sounded to this unprecedented childhood’s organization as a clarion call to ‘carry on’.&#13;
 “since then the Junior Red Cross has grown to approximately 1,000,000 members; has raised considerably more than a million dollars in money; has produced countless articles of practical use for destitute families at home and abroad, these articles including layettes, clothing, toys, tables and chairs, and has distributed free milk and other food in various forms.&#13;
 Essentially a school organization, the Junior Red Cross operates along educational lines, its relief projects being introductions for the promotion of goodwill, good citizenship and altruism.&#13;
 “Forty per cent of the auxillary funds raised by group co-operation is devoted to purely local relief among needy children. Sixty per cent is forwarded to National Headquarters in Washington, where it is administered without overhead expense.&#13;
 “This is being used for orphanages, schools, garden and health and playground activities in Albania, Montenegro, Belgium, Czecho-Slovakia, France, Greece, Italy, Palestine, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Siberia, China and the Virgin islands. Fully 400,000 of the 12,000,00 members of the Junior Red Cross are to Porto Rico, panama, Alaska, Hawaii, the Phillippine islands and in China”.&#13;
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CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES&#13;
Minimum charge for any one ad.			25c&#13;
One Time, per word					 1c&#13;
Three Times, per word					 2c&#13;
Six times, per word 					 3c&#13;
Over six times, 1-2c per word per issue.&#13;
&#13;
Cash must accompany order. Ten cents extra if charged. Advertising in this column in which the address of the advertiser is not given but which refers you to Post office Box Number or Care of the Herald MUST be answered accordingly. Please do not ask us for the names of advertisers advertising in this way. Usually we do not know who they are. And if we do we are not expected to tell you.&#13;
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ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, 109 East First Street. Over Union Pharmacy.    163-tfc.&#13;
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 Special reduction in men’s and ladies’ W. L. Douglas shoes. – A. Kanter, 216-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.   166-tfc.&#13;
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 FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 1/2 H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf.&#13;
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 See our line of electrical lamps. – A. Kanner, 216-15 Sanford Avenue.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
-&#13;
 FURNISHED ROOMS – Two furnished bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park Avenue.  157-tf.&#13;
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 New line of Congoleums and Art Squares. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.   166-tfc.&#13;
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 TO RENT or for sale, large warehouse with railroad siding. – Chas. Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven Co.   156-tfc.&#13;
&#13;
 WANTED – Pupils, Violin and Piano. &#13;
– Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.   175-20t-p.&#13;
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LOST – Scotch Collie dog, goes by the name of Carlo. Finder will return to fire station and receive reward.&#13;
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 WANTED – by November 15, a 4 to 6 room house or apartments, unfurnished or partly furnished. Best of references given. Will rent by the year. Address at once. “cottage,” in.&#13;
-&#13;
 Buy your post cards at the Herald Office. Beautiful views,  1c each.&#13;
-&#13;
 -Get your Scratch Pads from the Herald – by the pound – 15c.&#13;
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WANTED TO RENT – HOUSE OR APARTMENT OF 4 TO 6 ROOMS, FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED. WILL RENT BY YEAR. ADDRESS “APARTMENT” CARE OF THE HERALD.   tf.&#13;
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 Special reduction on Georgette Silk and cotton shirt waists. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.   Phone 550.&#13;
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 PLANTS FOR SALE – Cabagge, Onions, beets, lettuce and cauliflower. Yellow self-bleaching celery, guaranteed French imported seed, bought from Chase &amp; Co, write for prices. State quality wanted. – W. C. Post.    173-60tc.&#13;
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 WANTED –Brick and cement work, chimneys, flues, piers, cement floors, sidewalks. – A. L. Ray, 206 Park Ave.  173-30tp.&#13;
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 DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture, bedsteads, chairs, etc. What have you?   174-30tc.&#13;
-&#13;
 We have just received a line of silverware and casseroles. – A. Kanner. 216-15 Sanford ave.  Phone 550.&#13;
-&#13;
Buy your post cards at the Herald Office.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ h. p. and 2 1/2 h. p. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf.&#13;
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 LOST – Western Union branch deposit book. Finder please return to Western Union office. – J. P. Hall. Mgr.   180-tfc.&#13;
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 WANTED – Your old batteries to rebuild. Let us make your starting and lighting a pleasure. We are authorized “EXIDE” dealers and have a Battery for all makes and automobiles. “EXIDE, the giant that lives in a box.” – Ray Bros. Phone 548, old Ford Garage.   179-tfc.&#13;
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 FOR SALE – shasto daisies, $1 per dozen. English shamrock oxalys 30c per dozen. Ring 207-W.  183-12tc.&#13;
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 FOR RENT – Apartment of three rooms and bath, furnished or unfurnished at Elder Springs with Elder Springs water free. Phone 3606.   184-tfc.&#13;
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 WANTED – Young man to learn the oil business. Will place as warehouse manager. See O. R. Denning, Texas Oil Co.   184-3tc.&#13;
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 FOR SALE – Good second hand office desk, flat top. – Haynes &amp; Ratliff, 115 Park Ave.   183-3tp.&#13;
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 LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN – White fox terrier, brown spot over left side of face. Return to Fernald Laughlin Hospital and receive reward.   183-3tc.&#13;
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 WANTED – A young Holstein or Jersey cow. Must be fresh. Address box 103 Sorrento.   184-2tp.&#13;
-&#13;
For sale – 1 ½ h. p. and 2 1/2 h. p. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.   tf.&#13;
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 WANTED – an elderly lady, single preferred, to attend invalid lady. Address, 112 Elm Ave.  185-6tp.&#13;
-&#13;
 WANTED – Four good sober men as truck drivers, 3 hours a day. Salary $50 per month. Apply by letter by Tuesday night giving age, experience, etc., care Box 330, City. 185-2tc.&#13;
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 FOR RENT – Furnished front room, 218 Elm.   184-3tc.&#13;
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 FOR SALE – Dishes and cooking utensils formerly used by Park Ave, Cafe. Cheap. – Haynes &amp; Ratcliff,  115 Park Ave.  184-3tp.&#13;
-&#13;
 LOST – Pearl broach on First street. Friday afternoon. Finder please return to Herald Office and receive a reward.  184-3tp.&#13;
-&#13;
 FOR SALE – Five room cottage, large yard for vegetable garden, various fruit trees, also two separate five acre farm land; 5 gallon hot water heater. P. O. Box 117, Owner.  184-6tp.&#13;
-&#13;
 FOR RENT – Two or three furnished housekeeping rooms. P. O. Box 117, Owner.   184-6tp.&#13;
-&#13;
 FOR SALE – Very cheap, one 7-passenger automobile in good shape. Apply B. &amp; O. Motor Co.   185-6tc.&#13;
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&#13;
[advertisement]&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTMAS – ONLY SIX WEEKS OFF – BUY EARLY.&#13;
&#13;
Diamond rings		$25 to $1500&#13;
Diamond brooches		 25 to  1000&#13;
Scarf Pins			  2 to   100&#13;
Pendants			  5 to   100&#13;
Cuff Links			  5 to   100&#13;
Wrist Watches		 15 to   150&#13;
Electric Lamps		 10 to   100&#13;
Toilet Sets		 10 to    75&#13;
&#13;
IT WILL BE A PLEASURE TO SHOW YOU.&#13;
McLaulin the Jeweler.&#13;
&#13;
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EVERYTHING FOR THE BUILDER&#13;
From the Foundation to the Roof.&#13;
HILL LUMBER CO.&#13;
Quality – Servicd – Price.&#13;
&#13;
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Mayor Titus of Daytona says that he intends to enforce the “Blue Laws” of the state in his municipality. Garages will be closed and sale of auto supplies forbidden. Drug stores will be permitted to sell drugs only.&#13;
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Get your office supplies and school supplies at the Herald Printing Co where you can get what you want at very reasonable rates.&#13;
&#13;
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God has not promised us a gay and happy life always with out a shadow of pain.&#13;
&#13;
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Try a Herald Want Ad. – It pays.&#13;
&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH….1c.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
SALES   SERVICE   REO   PARTS  ACCESSORIES&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO.&#13;
PHONE 66&#13;
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RIVER BROS. CORNER SANFORD AND FOURTH&#13;
&#13;
Specials For Today.&#13;
&#13;
Men’s all wool genuine Melton trousers, &#13;
a real $10.50 value today 				$6.50&#13;
&#13;
Men’s heavy fleece-lined underwear,&#13;
the $3.00 kind, per suit				$2.20&#13;
&#13;
Big lot of ladies’ gingham&#13;
house dresses, worth $2.25				$1.85&#13;
&#13;
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--&#13;
Cozy Cafe  -  quick lunch&#13;
Coffee 5c. Sandwiches 10c. Pies, homemade 10c cut. Best coffee in Sanford.&#13;
&#13;
Princess Theatre Bldg. &#13;
&#13;
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December 1st&#13;
&#13;
On the first of each month your rent is due. Why give other people your money. Buy you a home and each month instead of paying out rent money, pay on a home that is yours.&#13;
  Beautiful homes on Park, Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and Myrtle avenues, Sanford Heights. Building lots in any location.&#13;
&#13;
E. F. LANE&#13;
“the Real Estate Man”&#13;
Phone 95	206 First Street&#13;
&#13;
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Lord’s Purity Water. As good as the best. Daily service. &#13;
Phone 66.&#13;
&#13;
CITY MARKET&#13;
Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props.&#13;
Welaka Building&#13;
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Specials For Today&#13;
Choice Western and Florida Meats&#13;
Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage&#13;
&#13;
CITY MARKET&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
The thirteenth annual Marion County fair will beheld this year Nov. 23-27, and the fair officials have no superstition about it being the thirteenth. They are ready “to tell the world” that this year’s fair is going to be one of the best yet held in the most versatile of counties.  &#13;
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PAGE 3.   THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1920.&#13;
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SOCIETY. Miss Kathryn Wilkey, Editor.	Phone 428&#13;
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SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday –&#13;
Bridge, Social Department of Woman’s Club, Mrs. Hal Wight, Hostess.&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday – &#13;
Literature and Music Department at the Women’s Club.&#13;
&#13;
Thursday – &#13;
Armistice Day.&#13;
Evening – Armistice Dance at Court House.&#13;
&#13;
Friday – &#13;
D.A.R. meeting with Mrs. A. R. Key.&#13;
T.N.T. with Mrs. Reginald Holly.&#13;
&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. Parker Henderson of Miami, were guests at the Valdez for the week end. Mr. Henderson is an ex-mayor of Miami and they both expressed themselves as greatly pleased with the Sanford of today, and its good hotels.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Steed, of Kissimmee are receiving congratulations upon the arrival of a fine baby girl at the Fernald-Laughton hospital. Mrs. Steed is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Ball and has many friends in Sanford.&#13;
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ST. AGNES GUILD&#13;
The regular meeting of St. Agnes’ Guild was held with Mrs. A. R. Key at her home on Park avenue Monday afternoon. A large number of members enjoyed a very delightful afternoon. Rev. Peck was present and discussed with the Guild its business matters.&#13;
 It was decided to have the Guild meet each week until the bazaar  so that the work planned could be finished.&#13;
 Delicious refreshments were served at the conclusion of the afternoon.&#13;
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MONDAY AFTERNOON BRIDGE CLUB&#13;
&#13;
The Monday Afternoon Bridge Club was attractively entertained by Mrs. Claude Howard Monday. The home was tastefully decorated in pink roses. All the club were present and there was an extra table of guests.&#13;
 The guest prize, a vase, was won by Miss Mable Bowler and Mrs. F. E. Roumillat won the club prize, a hand-painted tea tile.&#13;
 Ambrosia and fruit cake were served at the conclusion of the game.&#13;
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BOOK CLUB&#13;
&#13;
 Mrs. Harry Ward was the charming hostess of the first meeting of the Book Club Monday.&#13;
 Books for the year were discussed and after an interesting afternoon delicious refreshments were served.&#13;
 The following members, being all but two, were present: Mrs. Stella P. Arrington, Mrs. J. C. Bennett, Mrs. L. P. Hagan, Miss Annie Hawkins, Mrs. E. P. Morse, Mrs. J. E. Pace, Mrs. H. B. Lewis, Mrs. Fred Williams And Mrs. Henry Mclaulin.&#13;
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PIPE ORGAN CLUB&#13;
&#13;
 Mrs. Volie Williams was hostess of the Pipe Organ Club at her home on Oak avenue Monday afternoon.&#13;
 The afternoon was spent in sewing and in making plans for the Christmas bazaar. Refreshments were served.&#13;
 A large number were present and enjoyed a pleasant afternoon.&#13;
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MONDAY’S ARRIVALS AT THE VALDEZ&#13;
&#13;
 L. E. Seibert, Lakeland; R. C. Keibler, Tampa; J. C. Preno, Jacksonville; Mrs. H. M. Fish, Wellesley, Mass.; Miss M. Louis Fish, Miss H. W. Fish, Miss M. E. Spencer, J. T. Griffin, Wellesley, Mass.; Miss Cooper, Tampa; Tracy L. Smith, Philadelphia; J. R. Wiiliams, Frank M. Jefferson, New York; C. C. Butt, Jacksonville; L. H. Tribble, Lake City; S. Urban Way, Tampa; E. Duncan New Orleans; Jos. W. Ryan, Bristol, Va.; W. A. Grady, Orlando; Frank Paul, New Orleans; Geo. L. LeFile, C. M. Tyler, Mr. And Mrs. C. M. Tyler, E. L. Gibbs, Jacksonville; A. R. Haile, Palatka; A. J. Round, W. M. Mcleod, R. R. Kinat, Crescent City; R. L. Boyd, Jacksonville; Chas. E. Kittle, St. Augustine; Bernard Sacks, Washington; Julian R. Mindle, Washington; Geo. L. Hollister, Jacksonville; W. M. Watts, Savannah; M. Kleiner, New York; J.H. Lee And Wife, Lake Charm; J. A. Morgan, New Orleans; D. A. Nesbitt, New York; R. W. Cunningham, E. L. Scherer, Tampa; J. E. Sherman, St. Louis; J. W. Dougherty, Cincinnati; D. Destrucher, Petersburg, Va.; P. S. Cleveland, Tarpon Springs; E. M. Laws, Boston; Mr. And Mrs. E. Justis, Genevieve Estes, Jacksonville.&#13;
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Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
&#13;
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Americanization And The Public Schools&#13;
From an Address by Mrs. W. F. Blackman at Lakeland.&#13;
&#13;
 A recent address of Mrs. W. F. Blackman on Americanization and the American Schools” before the Lakeland Woman’s Club was so good that we reproduce a part of it here:&#13;
 Americanization is a word of wonderful stimulus. It can be claimed by no class, no sect, no party.&#13;
 Many of our industries are carried on almost entirely by immigrants who have come in immense numbers from southern and eastern Europe. Pioneers and immigrants of sixty or more years ago built, gave form to, and made strong the institutions of our republic.&#13;
 They were of another very different stock, that of northern and western Europe, and their descendants are today the leaders of thought and progress in the nation. Upon their descendants is laid a great burden and a great opportunity, the rescue of the county from the menace of Bolshevism, a danger that threatens our civilization. A French writer has said that the American conception of life is far superior to that of any other nation, especially evident in the desire of the fortunate that all may likewise benefit.&#13;
 Of all our institutions, the public school is the one best fitted to perform the work of Americanizing both Americans and foreigners, to weave more strongly into the fabric of American life the ideals of equality in sympathy, and democracy, of cooperation and service, vital in the common language and common tradition there taught.&#13;
 The public school are non-sectarian, non-exclusive, non-partisan. In them is laid the foundation of appreciation of the worth of the other fellow. Schools unite the members of the community in a common interest. “where the treasure is,, there will the heart be also.” It is a tremendous pity when the community does not make full use of the school to cement the life of the town in bonds of friendliness and co-operation.&#13;
 Mrs. Blackman presented sharply to her hearers the crisis which confronts our national school system – thousands of schools without teachers, seven per cent of all teachers with qualifications below the minimum requirements of their state; very large decrease in the number of those preparing to teach; the average service of but forty-eight months in a profession which needs the finest technique and ripest experience; low salaries for teachers’ insufficient equipment; millions for roads; billions for war. Education is the fundamental need in a democracy. Democracy is doomed without it. We must save the schools or our visions and traditions will go with them. If women will it, the schools can now be taken out of politics.&#13;
 Florida is one of the nine state whose state board of education is composed of ex-officio members, men who hold office because they were elected secretary of state, attorney-general, etc., not because they have the necessary time and qualifications to attend to the vital duties pertaining to education in our state. An appointive board has proven most satisfactory and it is imperative that the Florida State Board of Education shall be reorganized. Women will, more and more, take their places in county and state boards, and become state and county superintendents, and they will help elect the right men and women for these offices.&#13;
 A Florida representative (Sears) has promised to bring before congress as soon as possible, the Smith-Towner bill, which the National Educational Association and the Federation of Women’s Clubs are endorsing. It provides for a secretary of education with a seat in the president’s cabinet and a federal appropriation of $100,000,000 to be distributed among the states in proportion to school population, such funds to be matched, dollar for dollar, by the states received them.&#13;
 Mrs. Blackman concluded with an appeal to the club to keep wide awake to the needs of the public schools in our state, nearby rural districts and our own community, for the efficiency of the Florida school system must be greatly increased if it is to rank with the best state systems of our country.&#13;
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 Post cards at the Herald office, 1c.&#13;
&#13;
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Results of Football Played Saturday&#13;
&#13;
North -&#13;
Yale  14, Brown  0.&#13;
Syracuse  14, Washington And Jefferson  0.&#13;
Harvard  14, Princeton  14.&#13;
Penn State  20, Nebraska  0.&#13;
Dartmouth  14, Cornell  3.&#13;
Swartmore  21, Columbia  7.&#13;
Pittsburg  27, Pennsylvania  21.&#13;
Navy  21, Georgetown  6.&#13;
Western Maryland  21, St John’s  0.&#13;
Stevens  48, Delaware  0.&#13;
Wesleyan  7, Amherst  0.&#13;
Rochester  21, Colgate  14.&#13;
Randolph-Macon  0, Gallaudet  21.&#13;
Rucknell  7, Lafayette  10.&#13;
Johns Hopkins  17, Haverford  10.&#13;
Catholic U.  0, Maryland State  14.&#13;
Penn Military  9, Ursinius  0.&#13;
Carnegie Tech  32, Allegheny  0.&#13;
West Virginia  14, Washington And Lee  10.&#13;
Dickison  7, Franklin And Marshall  0.&#13;
Union  9, New York  7.&#13;
Boston College 13, Boston U.  0.&#13;
New Hampshire  7, Colby  7.&#13;
Bowdoin  7, Maine  7.&#13;
Williams  53, Lebanon Valley  0.&#13;
Gettysburg  34, Villa Nova  7.&#13;
Lehigh  58, Muhlenberg  0.&#13;
St. Mary’s  14, Susquehanna  14.&#13;
&#13;
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South – &#13;
Tulane  14, Florida  0.&#13;
Georgia  0, Virginia  0.&#13;
Sewanee 3, Chattanooga  0.&#13;
Virginia Poly  21, Richmond  U.  0.&#13;
Georgia Tech  7, Clemson  0.&#13;
North Carolina State  81, William And Mary  0.&#13;
V. M. I.  28, North Carolina  0.&#13;
Tennessee 4, Transylvania  0.&#13;
Alabama 14, Vanderbilt  7.&#13;
Auburn 49, Birmingham-Southern  0.&#13;
Furman 42, Oglethorpe  3.&#13;
Lynchburg  13, Emory And Henry  9.&#13;
Louisiana State  3, Arkansas  0.&#13;
Mississippi A. &amp; M. 20, Miss.  0.&#13;
Rice  10, Southern –Methodist  0.&#13;
Wake Forest 29, Elon  0.&#13;
Hampsen-Sidney 14, Roanoake  7.&#13;
Carson-Newman 16, Tusculum  6.&#13;
&#13;
West –&#13;
Stanford  3, Washington  0.&#13;
California  49, Washington State 0.&#13;
North Dakota Aggies  7, Fargo  0.&#13;
Missouri 10, Kansas Aggies  7.&#13;
St. Xavier 56, Rose Polytechnic  0.&#13;
Miami  7, Ohio Wesleyan  0.&#13;
Wittenberg  19, Ohio Northern  7.&#13;
Marquette 3, Haskell Indians  6.&#13;
Colored College  20, Wyoming  17.&#13;
Ames  17, Creighton  0.&#13;
Oklahoma  21, Kansas  9.&#13;
Dennison  17, Ohio U.  0.&#13;
Iowa  24, Northwestern  0.&#13;
Illinois  3, Chicago  0.&#13;
Detroit  U.  65, Tufts  2.&#13;
Wisconsin  3, Minnesota  0.&#13;
Notre Dame  28, Purdue  0.&#13;
Ohio State 14, Michigan  7.&#13;
Centre 34, Depeu  0.&#13;
&#13;
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SEMINOLE INDIANS TO NEW RESERVATION&#13;
(By The Associated Press).&#13;
&#13;
PALM BEACH, Fla., Nov. 9. –&#13;
Led by their chief, Tony Tommy, the remaining largest single group of Seminole Indians, soon will move from their old haunts in this part of the state to a new reservation on the Florida west coast, about 40 miles from Fort Myers.&#13;
 The new home of the Seminoles will consist of a reservation on approximately 21,000 acres, completely fenced in and including portion of the everglades. Although part of the reservation is under water, the arable portion is sufficient to support the Indians with land to spare.&#13;
 The Seminoles in their new home will be provided with schools and they have agreed to submit to compulsory education laws.&#13;
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FORMER FLORIDA AND PHOSPHATE MAN DIES AT SAVANNAH&#13;
&#13;
SAVANNAH, Nov. 9 –&#13;
&#13;
Joseph Hull well known Savannah capitalist, died yesterday morning at 10:15 o’clock at his country home near Savannah. He was a native of Florida, having been born at Live Oak, July 26, 1849. Before leaving the state he promoted the Prarie Pebble Phosphate Co., near Mulberry.&#13;
 After moving to Georgia Mr. hull became engaged in various enterprises in Savannah and was formerly president of the Merchants National Bank, and was one of the wealthiest men in Georgia. Mr Hull is survived by two sons, Joseph Hull, Jr., of North Carolina; C. B. Hull, of Savannah, and three daughters, Mrs. N. G. Ando, of Berlin, Germany; Mrs. St. Julian Stevens of Savannah and Mrs. Dana Stephens of Savannah and a nephew, A. B. Hull, Jr., of Tampa.&#13;
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Young’s New York shows, negro minstrel, are here today with a big band and numerous artists. They will no doubt have a large crowd.&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH  1c.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
Six Kinds Of Safety&#13;
&#13;
Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank where you deposit your money?&#13;
  The first consideration is the capital, which should be ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank is to serve.&#13;
  The next question to consider is the officers in charge. They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.&#13;
  Then there is the question of confidence. The public should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. &#13;
  These three principles determine the success of a bank.&#13;
  We adopted these principles in the outset of our career and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase our usefulness to the community as the years go by.&#13;
  We offer you:&#13;
  &#13;
  1st: Large Capital And Working Reserve&#13;
  2nd: Trained Men In Charge – Men Of Several Years Experience.&#13;
  3rd: The confidence of the public, which is proven by the daily addition to our line of depositors.&#13;
  4th: Protection by two examinations each year by the state banking department, two audits each year by an independent recognized public audit company and two sworn statements submitted to the state comptroller by the cashier, giving the bank’s condition in detail. All of which insures regular, systematic and thorough operation of the bank.&#13;
  5th: The advice of a competent board of directors, who meet who meet with the officers regularly each month and advise them as to the operation of the bank.&#13;
6th: Insurance of all deposits every day of the year, this is a protection not commonly found in banks and is an absolute protection for your funds, in addition to all the other usual safeguards.&#13;
&#13;
These are reasons why you should do business with us, and we believe that no bank can offer better inducement.&#13;
&#13;
Peoples Bank of Sanford. We want your business.&#13;
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M. D. GATCHEL GROCERIES AND SUPPLIES.&#13;
Phone 110.  Corner Sanford and Celery Avenue&#13;
&#13;
2-Lb Cans Standard. Hand-packed Tomatoes. Per Can		 9¢&#13;
Extra Fancy Grade Maine Corn, Per Can 				20¢&#13;
Maxwell House Coffee, 1-Lb Can					40¢&#13;
Export Soap. Per Cake							 5¢&#13;
Swifts premium hams. Per lb.					48¢&#13;
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Try a Herald want Ad. – It pays.&#13;
&#13;
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Vulcanite Shingles&#13;
Just Lay Them Down And Nail – That’s All There Is To It&#13;
&#13;
The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air – rain, sleet, etc., from forcing its way through the roof.&#13;
The Shoulder of Protection is also the Self-Spacing Device. Makes laying easy and rapid = thus saving time and money. &#13;
These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red or Green Crushed Slate. Each rain washes away the accumulated dust reviving perpetually the original rich colors.&#13;
Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered – because they are fire-resisting.&#13;
Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the cost free of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.&#13;
&#13;
Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co.&#13;
&#13;
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A 25c Want Ad in The Herald will Rent Your House For You.&#13;
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&#13;
Full line Columbia Phonographs.&#13;
 Prices from $50 to $300&#13;
&#13;
Terms to suit yourself. &#13;
&#13;
The most complete line of Records in the city. &#13;
Lines of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins. &#13;
&#13;
Prices Right.  H.L. Gibson&#13;
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Page 4	THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1920&#13;
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SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
Published every afternoon except Sunday at The Herald Building, 107 Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, Florida&#13;
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THE HERALD PRINTING CO., INC. PUBLISHERS&#13;
------&#13;
R. J Holly 	Editor&#13;
N. J. Lillard 	Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
H. A. Neel		General Manager&#13;
F. P. Rines	Circulation manager&#13;
Phone 481&#13;
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Advertising Rates Made Known on Application&#13;
Subscription Price in Advance&#13;
One year 		$6.00&#13;
Six months		$3.00&#13;
&#13;
Delivered in City by Carrier&#13;
One week		15 cents&#13;
&#13;
Member of The Associated Press&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
THOUGHTS OF ARMISTICE DAY&#13;
&#13;
Two years ago on the 11th of November the Armistice which ended the world war went into effect and the guns which had cost the lives of nearly ten million men ceased firing.&#13;
 Since that day profound changes have come over the world and its people. New times are ushered in and new conditions prevail. The very foundation of Government have been shaken and all human institutions have been put to the test.&#13;
 Out of war the world went into the speculation, extravagance and all manner of follies. Now at last the world has recovered its senses. The smoke of the war has cleared away, the passions it engendered have cooled a little and we begin to see in its true perspective the greatest catastrophe of all time.&#13;
 It is clear to us now that frightful destruction of war cannot enrich the world. We cannot create wealth by destroying it. There were many who thought the war had ushered in a period of unprecedented prosperity. We now are undeceived. We realize that the world has lost half its working capital and no alchemy of speculation, no legerdemain of statistics, can hide this momentous fact. The bubble of speculation has burst; the mania for prodigal spending has run its course.&#13;
 It took this bitter experience to bring the world to its senses. Humanity has just awakened from its delirium – a kind of brain fever that resulted from the surgical operation which cut off 10 million men. There never was a surgical operation like that. Never a fever road so fiercely as the one that seized the writhing body of the race and swept the whole world into folly.&#13;
 Now the fever is gone and the body of humanity is deeply depressed. Presently it will begin to gain strength. The one thing that will aid recuperation and hasten the recovery of strength is the old-fashioned virtue of industry, accompanied by another economy.&#13;
 The government’s propaganda on Thrift became tiresome to the prodigals, but now they would lay its truth to heart. They have personally proven the fact that there is no sure road to wealth, comfort or independence for an individual or a Nation, but by industry and economy. It is significant of a return to sanity that the sales of thrift and savings stamps increased 44 per cent in October.&#13;
 It is a good idea to make Armistice day a milestone which will mark the beginning of a new era of Thrift. It is that which will restore prosperity and make life worth living.&#13;
&#13;
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 A SENSIBLE PROGRAM&#13;
&#13;
The decision of the state road department of which Forest Lake of Sanford is chairman, to adopt a policy of undertaking some definite work and carrying that work through to completion, is a far-reaching importance to all Florida. Heretofore the department has, in its anxiety to please and to bring as much temporary benefit as benefit as possible to communities scattered all over the state, spread its efforts in such a way that it was impossible to point to anyone undertaking carried out to completion. This comment is not intended as a reflection on any member of the commission but it is mentioned simply as indicating the fact that in trying to please everybody the department did not succeed in pleasing anybody.&#13;
 Now the department has made up its mind to adopt the other alternative of paying no heed to the numerous pleas for road improvement here and there any, everywhere throughout the state but to inaugurate certain work and then proceed to carry that work thru until a finished product can be pointed to as a sample of what the department can and will do if the people of Florida will only afford the ways and means. In other words, a mile of well-built highway is considered of more value than 100 miles of partly built roads scattered in a dozen counties whose inhabitants are more dissatisfied over half-finished road work than they were before any road improvement was undertaken. Every newspaper in Florida will back the department in this program of starting something and then carrying that something through to absolute completion.&#13;
&#13;
St. Augustine Record&#13;
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&#13;
HISTORY REPEATS- SOMETIMES&#13;
&#13;
Under the rules of the games, as established by historical precedent, General Pershing should have been nominated and elected president this year.&#13;
 All previous wars in which the United States has engaged have furnished presidential timber in large quantities.&#13;
  The Revolution supplied George Washington from the military side, and three or four other presidents who distinguished themselves as statesmen of the revolutionary crisis.&#13;
  The war of 1812 was unpopular in some quarters. It was full of disaster to our land forces. Only one land battle was won – that of New Orleans – and it was fought after peace was declared; yet it gave us Andrew Jackson for president.&#13;
  One o four Indian wars gave us William Henry Harrison.&#13;
  The Mexican was was openly opposed by the Whigs. Yet one of the heroes of the war was a Whig – Zachary Taylor of Louisiana and he was elected to succeed Polk.&#13;
  The Civil War was lifted General Grant into presidential prominence and gave him two terms almost without opposition. For many years most of the candidates on both sides were men with war records. Hayes, Garfield and McKinley were all officers in the union army.&#13;
  Our war with Spain came next. McKinley was re-elected as an endorsement of the war and Roosevelt owed his nomination to the vice presidency to his war record. Taft was lifted into prominence by his services in connection with the Spanish war as as governor of the Philippines.&#13;
  Shall the world war prove an exception? It is singular to eay the least that the president-elect, chosen by the biggest popular majority ever cast, was only lukewarm toward America's entrance into the great struggle. Of all the candidates, so far as we can recall, Roosevelt was the only one directly connected with the operation of the war.&#13;
  It is singular too, that the group of senators who opposed the war, and throughout the whole contest went as far as they dared so in opposition to war measures, is now in full control of the senate. What so these facts signify?&#13;
-- Lakeland telegram.&#13;
&#13;
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Fresh Pork Sausage. Frankfurters and Smoked Sausage. Cooked Tongue, Boiled Ham.  &#13;
Deane Turner. Phone 497. Welaka Building.&#13;
&#13;
NEWSPRINT HAS ADVANCED 500 PER CENT&#13;
&#13;
 A current report of the government forest service says that the larger newspaper publishers of the country have been able to keep down the advance in cost of their newspaper to about 200 per cent because of their ability to contract in large volume. But the market price, according to the bulletin, has advanced 500 per cent since 1915. It is at this price that the small publisher is compelled to buy his paper stock.&#13;
  Primarily the reason for the advance in paper is due to a wood shortage. In earlier days the paper mills were built in the lumber regions and their pulp wood was a sort of by-product of the saw milling industry. But in most of these regions the saw mills have finished and they have packed up, burned out, or moved away for some other reason. But the paper mill cannot play the part of “carpet bagger” quite so easily, and as a result the northeastern part of the United States has become largely dependent upon Canadian wood. Spruce from Minnesota and Canada, for example, is being hauled from 700 to 1200 miles to Wisconsin paper mills. In New York state, where nearly 50 per cent of our newsprint is produced, 60 per cent of the pulp and paper mills have absolutely no timber supplies of their own. New Hampshire ad Maine appear to be the only eastern states that still have raw material for making paper, and there is a well-grounded suspicion in the paper trade that the day of profiteering in spruce, hemlock, balsam and poplar in pretty well under way.&#13;
 The big papers, in any event, are certainly eating up the little ones, and their “funny sheet,” magazine sections and other irrelevant features add to the tragedy of the proceedings.&#13;
--- st. Augustine Record&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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THE CARD OF THANKS&#13;
&#13;
We are every now and then requested to publish the obsolete “card of thanks.”&#13;
  William E. Curtis, of the Chicago record-herald, mentioned in s recent letter to his paper, a curious “card from a Georgia widow,” which was recently published in the Griffin Call of that state and reads as follows:&#13;
  “Mr. Editor: - I desire to thank most heartily in this manner the friends and neighbors for their cooperation during the illness and the death of my late husband, who escaped from me by the hand of death on last Friday while eating his breakfast. To my friends and all who contributed so willingly toward making the last moments and funeral of my husband a success I desire to remember most kindly. Hoping these lines will find them enjoying the same blessings, I have also a good milch cow and roan gelding which I will sell cheap. &#13;
 “God moves in a mysterious way and his wonders to perform, he plants his footsteps on the sea and rides Upon the storm. also a black and white shoat very low.”&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
  Get some if those late postcards at the Herald office. The Valdez Hotel, The Welaka Block, The Seminole Hotel and other points of interest. Only one cent each. Send a Sanford card to your friend.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Advertisement for a theatre--&#13;
Art of an oval with a man and woman from waist up. Man wearing a flowered tie and woman a polka-dot dress.&#13;
&#13;
Caption: WILLIAM S. HART and MART THURMAN in “SANDI”&#13;
A PARAMOUNT- ARTCRAFT PICTURE.&#13;
A tense moment tonight at the Star Theatre.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Sanford Milk Depot at City Market&#13;
&#13;
 cOn November 1 we secured the output of the PINEHURST DAIRY and now have the entire output of both the ROSELAND and R. I GARRISON DAIRIES. This gives us the opportunity to render first class service and by eliminating all unnecessary overhead expense by combining under one distributor, will enable us to give real service at a minimum cost. There will be no advance in the price of any dairy product. The regular morning and evening delivery will be continued as before the merger and in addition we will make auto deliveries at all hours of the day from the store, where the milk and cream is kept in our cold storage plant.&#13;
  Patrons will please so-operate with deliverymen by putting out bottles and ticket, so as not so cause a delay. Where there are no bottles or tickets there will be no milk delivered – this being the only way we can service you promptly and sufficiently.&#13;
&#13;
  Tickets can be secured at the store of from the delivery man.&#13;
  The patronage accorded us during the past week has far exceeded our most sanguine expectations and we earnestly ask a continuance.&#13;
&#13;
CITY MARKET&#13;
Walthall &amp; Estridge. WHERE YOU GET GOOD THING TO EAT.&#13;
----&#13;
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&#13;
CHANDLER CARS AND FRANKLIN CARS&#13;
“WE GIVE YOU SERVICE – ASK ANYBODY”&#13;
WIGHT TIRE CO.&#13;
&#13;
Kelly-Springfield Tires. Diamond Tires.&#13;
&#13;
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J. P. says:&#13;
The most fascinating and profitable pleasure in life is to cultivate a good investment and watch it grow. The sooner you begin planting a little money each month and cultivate this habit the sooner you will be harvesting dividends. The 8 per cent cumulative prior preferred stock of the southern utilities company is a safe garden to plant your dollars in. It bears regular dividends each quarter. There’s none better.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
----&#13;
AMONG THE PRODUCTS&#13;
Of civilization none is more notable than modern banking. In a sense, it is the only possible medium through which the individual may secure for himself and his business the organized service and co-operation that is a vital part of his success. You cannot afford to be without the benefits which are to be derived through connection with a strong helpful bank.&#13;
&#13;
First National Bank – F. P. Forster, President. B. F. Whitner, Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
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Chulota Inn Will Open Season 1920-21 &#13;
on Thanksgiving Day Turkey Dinner.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
---------------------------------&#13;
NOW MAKING PECAN NUT ROLL. &#13;
Fresh Daily $1.00 POUND. &#13;
Water’s Kandy Kitchen.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------------&#13;
SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR THE FIRST COMPLETE HOUSE BILL. &#13;
CARTER LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
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AUTO PAINTING&#13;
&#13;
THE NEW PAINT SMILE. &#13;
You’ll wear one too if we repaint your auto. Why go around with dim, dull, old looking car when for a few dollars we will paint and finish it like new? It’s good sense also to keep a fresh coat of paint on your car – adds to its value of you want to sell it or trade it in.&#13;
&#13;
Reher Bros Auto Painting. Phone 112. Sanford Heights.&#13;
&#13;
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advertisement-&#13;
Art: A loaf of bread with legs and arms is drawing an X over a weekly calendar. The X is over Thursday-baking day.&#13;
&#13;
Caption: Butter-Nut Banishes Baking Day&#13;
Many a woman bakes her own bread because she finds it impossible to buy bread as good as her family requires. But to all such women we say, try&#13;
&#13;
The New Butter-Nut Bread&#13;
Has all the quality of the old Butter-Nut; we could not improve that. But in addition we’ve perfected a new mixing process which enables us to turn out a lighter, daintier loaf than ever. Get a loaf today, for Butter-Nut is its own best advocate. At all good grocers. The genuine bears the Butter-Nut label.&#13;
&#13;
MILLER’S BAKERY&#13;
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Auto Movies by Smith bros.&#13;
Gillette Tires&#13;
&#13;
2 Cartoon panels&#13;
1 A man standing on an open car&#13;
“This is a good trick if I do it”&#13;
2 the man falls on to the ground&#13;
   “Carelessness causes accidents my friends”&#13;
&#13;
Many auto accidents could be avoided. Many catastrophes could be avoided by the proper knowledge or experience. If you haven’t had the experience take advantage of ours. We will be glad to seeist you.&#13;
&#13;
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PHONE 30. SMITH BROS REPAIRING &amp; GILLETTE TIRES&#13;
BRAZING &amp; WELDING. FIRST ST. &amp; OAK AVE.   &#13;
PAGE 5 – THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, NOVEMBER 9, 1920&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Buy Meat You Can Eat. We carry a choice line at all times. &#13;
A trial solicited. &#13;
Pure Food Market. J. H. Tillis, Prop. Phone 105. 402 Sanford Ave.&#13;
&#13;
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SEE URK FOR EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING. Cor. First and Sanford Ave.&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------&#13;
National Madza Lamps&#13;
25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts. 20 to 75 Watts in 32 Volts.&#13;
Everything Electrical Expert Installation and Repair Work.&#13;
Gillon &amp; Fry. Phone 442. 115 Magnolia.&#13;
&#13;
-----------------&#13;
Seed, Our Business. Honesty, Our Motto. Purity, Our Watchword.&#13;
The L. Allen Seed Co. COME IN AND SEE US. &#13;
(Southern Seed Specialists). Wekiwa bldg. Sanford, Fla.&#13;
&#13;
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Real Estate. I Sell It. J. E. Spurling. The man who sells dirt cheap.&#13;
&#13;
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Sanford’s Most Popular Hotel – SEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL&#13;
Under Management of WALTER B. OLSON&#13;
Our Specialty --- Seminole’s famous $1 Sunday dinner de luxe.&#13;
A la Carte Service all day.&#13;
&#13;
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We Guarantee All Battery Repairs&#13;
Every battery repair we make is guaranteed for six months. We are able to do this because in repairing any make of battery we are licensed to use patented features which have made Vesta batteries famous.&#13;
Sanford Battery Service Co. L. A. Renaud, Prep. Phone 189&#13;
&#13;
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Gillette Tires and Tubes&#13;
Chilled Rubber Process makes them A Bear for Wear.&#13;
SMITH BROTHERS. Expert repair work.&#13;
&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
 &#13;
WHAT WOULD YOU DO IF DISASTER HIT YOUR TOWN?&#13;
&#13;
30,000 Victims of Sudden Disasters Helped Last Year by Red Cross&#13;
&#13;
Atlanta, Ga., Nov.&#13;
What would your town do tomorrow were it suddenly stricken by disaster?&#13;
  The question is not as foolish as it may sound to people who are living today in safety and happiness and who no more anticipate disaster tomorrow than they do the end of the world.&#13;
  For no one knows when or where disaster will strike.&#13;
  There was no warning of the San Francisco earthquake and fire. One moment the people of that mighty city were bustling about their business utterly devoid of fear or premonition; the next their entire world was tumbling about their ears.&#13;
 One morning two miles of the city of Atlanta, Ga., were swept by fire in less than four hours.&#13;
  Wall street never expected a bomb explosion until it came and killed more than thirty people and maimed scores of others in less time than it takes in read this paragraph.&#13;
  Even gathering storms and rising floods, such as the south has known on its coasts and at river cities like West Point, Ga., give scant warning before homes are inundated and people forced to flee for their lives.&#13;
  To any one at any time, tornado, fire and storm may bring peril and suffering. So the question is asked again:&#13;
  “what would your town do tomorrow if disaster struck?&#13;
  It is to provide an answer to that question that the American Red Cross has been in existence for years and years. It is the recognized official agency for disaster relief, and it has lived up to its responsibilities in as wonderful way.&#13;
  That is one reason way the Red Cross deserves the support of everyone of its Fourth Roll Call – to maintain it so that, when disaster strikes, the stricken will always have a helping hand to turn to, the America Red Cross.&#13;
  The disaster relief part of the Red Cross organization has been so thoroughly perfected that it can answer calls for help in the briefest possible time.&#13;
  People of the south well remember how promptly the Red Cross responded to the need during the West Point flood last year, the Corpus Christi storm ans several other southern disasters, while fresh in the memory of the entire country is the fact that Red Cross doctors and nurses were “first on the scene” at the wall street explosion.&#13;
  In addition to furnishing such prompt relief as this practically every Red Cross chapter has a permanent disaster relief committee, which has made a survey of resources in their respective communities and is prepared to act promptly with the means at hand when disaster occurs.&#13;
  Illustrative of the genuine need for just such preparedness as this in the United States is the fact that last year alone, the Red Cross aided 30,000 persons in 164 communities a;; victims of 78 separate and distinct disasters.&#13;
  In the accomplishment of this relief work 140 Red Cross chapters were called upon to assist the sum of $900,000 in cash and supplies was expended. Thirty temporary hospitals were called into existence, twenty-odd motor corps were organized, seven special relief trains were sent out and 110 special representatives and nurses were furnished in addition to the aid given by the local Red Cross workers in the community visited by disaster.&#13;
  In these 73 disasters, including 19 tornadoes and cyclones, 2 hurricanes, 2 cloud bursts, 1 hail storm, 2 earthquakes, 1 landslide, 15 fires, 1 explosion, 9 floods, 10 shipwrecks, 1 train wreck, 4 riots, 1 motor accident and 2 droughts – 850 persons were killed, 1,500 were injured, 13,000 (approximately) were rendered homeless while property valued at $5,000,000 was destroyed.&#13;
  The largest and most destructive disaster of the year was at Corpus Christi, Texas, in September, 1919. Approximately 400 were killed and 4000 made homeless. The Red Cross division director with a staff of 35 assistants administered a fund of $400,000, giving aid to 3,600 families and four towns and rural districts and sufficient supplies to each family to enable on to stand on its feet.&#13;
  Because of tornadoes, the Gulf and Lake Divisions were called upon to sent emergency relief with trained workers to nearly 80 communities. The two droughts in Montana and North Dakota gave abundant opportunity for trained workers from the Northern Division to help the Red Cross chapters demonstrate their usefulness, while a number of shipwrecks proved the readiness of the Atlantic Division and the New York Metropolitan Area Committee to assist in that line of work.&#13;
  The record of last year emphasizes the need of abundant preparedness along the line of disaster relief, and has resulted in the organization of the Disaster Preparedness Committees by about 400 chapters and the settling aside of a special emergency fund by the National organization of $5,000,000 in addition to the regular annual appropriation for this purpose made in its budget.&#13;
&#13;
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DAIRY CATTLE ARE TO BE FEATURED AT STATE FAIR&#13;
Visit Big Exposition This Year and See What Florida is Doing On Developing This Important Factor.&#13;
&#13;
Jacksonville.&#13;
  Substantial increase I number of dairy cows in Florida since the first State Fair will be strikingly illustrated at the big exposition in thus city November 18 to 37.&#13;
  The fair management has set aside a separate building for the exclusive use of the dairy cow, and the indication are that the huge structure will be crowed to capacity.&#13;
  If you want to know what Florida is doing in the daily business, do not overlook this exhibit when at the state fair.&#13;
  Four years ago Florida was not considered a dairy state but accomplishments since that time have placed Florida on the dairy map with both feet as a visit to the dairy building will show.&#13;
  It is estimated that the number of dairy cows in the state has increased approximately 500 per sent since the initial state fair. This essential and important industry is keeping pace with the tick eradication work, and it is predicted that following completion of the tick work, Florida will rapidly forge to the front as one of the foremost dairy cattle states of the Union.&#13;
  So much importance is attached to the development of the dairy industry in Florida that last year at the risk of being barred from returning to their own state – because of the state law [prohibiting the entry of cattle from a tick area – the famous dairy herd from Frederick's Hall of Fredericksburg, Virginia, was sent to Florida for exhibition at the state fair. The management of the herd took this purely from an educational viewpoint, as it desired to show Floridians what good dairy cattle looked like and to demonstrate the possibility of accomplishing to Florida what has been done in Virginia as well as in other dairy states.&#13;
  Florida breeders are principally specializing in Jerseys, Guernseys, Holstein-Fresians, and Short Horn milking breeds. All these breeds will be on display in a single building at the fair this year. If you are interested in the dairy business, it will be worth your time and money to make a journey to the exposition soley for the purpose of seeing what Florida is doing in developing this industry.&#13;
  It will be an eye-opener.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
WIDESPREAD INTEREST IN FLORIDA STATE FAIR&#13;
Requests for Premium List Doing Received from Many States.&#13;
&#13;
Jacksonville, Fla.&#13;
The 1920 premium list of the Florida State Fair and Exposition, which will be staged here. November 18-27, will be off the press August 1, and will shoe approximately $40,000 in premiums – a substantial increase over the cash value of premiums offered last year.&#13;
  Already many requests for copies of the premium list are being received at the headquarters of the fair in this city. These requests, which are coming from all points in Florida, as well as neighboring and far distant states, indicate a widespread interest in Florida's big exposition, which this year will eclipse all past fairs held in this state.&#13;
 The distant states from which these requests have nee received included Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Kansas, Indiana, Illinois, Tennessee, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Georgia, South Carolina, Michigan, the District Of Columbia and even far away Island of Guam.&#13;
  As soon as off the press the premium will be placed in the mails.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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L. J. Baker&#13;
COR. SANFORD AVE. FOURTH ST. Just opposite Rivers Bros.&#13;
&#13;
SPECIALS FOR TODAY.&#13;
Maxwell House Coffee, Per Lb.		35c.&#13;
Blue Rose Rice, Extra Good, Per Lb.	10c.&#13;
2 Cans Tall Cream				25c.&#13;
Mother’s Crushed Oats, 1 1-2 Lb. Pkg.	15c.&#13;
&#13;
LOTS OF OTHER GROCERIES AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES.&#13;
&#13;
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(advertising)&#13;
Kremota makes the skin beautiful&#13;
&#13;
Beauty in Every Box. The Finest Face Bleach ever produced. Does wonders for a bad complexion. At dealers or by mail, $1.25. Free Booklet.&#13;
Dr. C. H. Berry Co., 2975 Michigan Avenue, CHICAGO.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
A LETTER OF GENERAL PUBLIC INTEREST AND THE REPLY.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
The Following Correspondence is of Vital Interest to Every Telephone User, Present and Prospective.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
“New Orleans, La. October 12, 1920&#13;
&#13;
Mr. J. Epps, Brown, President&#13;
Bell Telephone Co., Atlanta, Ga.&#13;
&#13;
Dear Sir, -- &#13;
&#13;
I have read the advertisements of your Company, but I do not understand why you must raise your rates now, when the prices &#13;
of everything else are falling. &#13;
Will you please explain this?&#13;
&#13;
  Yours truly, &#13;
_______________“&#13;
&#13;
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Atlanta, Ga., October 16, 1920.&#13;
Mr. ________, &#13;
New Orleans, La.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Dear Sir: --&#13;
&#13;
 Your letter of October 12th asks a very natural question, and one which demands a full and frank reply, which I am glad to make.&#13;
 While the prices of a great many things have, apparently, been reduced, these reductions in prices do not apply to articles used by the telephone company, or affect the expenditures necessary in the construction and operation of the telephone service:&#13;
&#13;
Labor: More than fifty-five per cent of the total expenditures of the Company in rendering service are for wages and salaries; less than one-tenth of one per cent of this being for executive and general salaries.&#13;
 The wages paid to our employees can not, and should not, be reduced. On the contrary they must be increased, in many cases, to bring our wage scale on a level with wages paid by unregulated businesses, so that we may retain our skilled employees necessary to give you efficient service.&#13;
&#13;
Material and Apparatus: Many items of material and apparatus are involved in the current maintenance of the property, entirely apart from the enormous quantities involved in the construction of new property, and this represents a large item of expense.&#13;
 There has been no reduction nor any indication of reduction, in the price of these essential articles, in practically all of which the labor, freight and hauling cost is by far the largest proportion of the total cost.&#13;
 We know that the manufactures of telephone equipment and material have orders booked for two years in advance, with a constantly increasing demand, and which in turn makes a reduction in price in the near future more improbable.&#13;
&#13;
Freight and Passenger Costs: Our annual expense for the transportation of freight and passengers is more than one million dollars. No one expects the Railroads to reduce their charges under the level of costs in rendering their service.&#13;
&#13;
Rent: Except in the larger centers our central office and stocks of material are housed in rented buildings, and even in the larger centers we rent varying amounts of properties.&#13;
 Like every one else, our rents have been greatly increased with no prospect of any reduction. Even in pre-war days all leases for property occupied by us were renewed only at higher charges than for the previous rental periods.&#13;
&#13;
Hotels: The board and lodging bill for our men, who must travel in connection with the operation and maintenance of the property, costs many thousands of dollars every year, and we can see no prospect of the hotels lowering their charges. Until they do we must pay the present high charges.&#13;
&#13;
Electric Power and Light; Street Car Fare. We spend many thousands of dollars every year for these services rendered to employees engaged in the maintenance of the property. In the majority of cases the rates charged by these companies have been substantially increased, and there is no thought of any reduction. The Telephone Company, like all others, must pay these increased rates.&#13;
&#13;
Paper, Printing and Stationery: We consume tons of paper for book keeping, correspondence and directory purposes, and pay many thousands of dollars for printing annually. This item of expense has increased in percentage more than the others, and no one has suggested that any reduction in these in costs is probable.&#13;
&#13;
Coal Bill: The Telephone Company purchases coal in large quantities to heat the buildings occupied by its employees in rendering the service. &#13;
We, of course, must pay whatever price is necessary to secure the coal for this purpose.&#13;
&#13;
Insurance: Even where the actual rate per one thousand dollars has not been increased, we are compelled to carry a larger amount of insurance than in pre-war days in order to protect ourselves in the reproduction of any of the property which may be destroyed by fire, and this is reflected in a very large increase in the total insurance bill.&#13;
&#13;
Taxes: This expense, both Federal and State, County and City, has increased every year we have been in business; the increase this year being unusually high. There is no probability of this expense being reduced.&#13;
 We do not pay any excess profit tax because we have never earned enough to be subject to that tax.&#13;
&#13;
Buildings: It is common knowledge that the cost of erecting any kind of building now, as well as making alternations and repairs, which constantly confront the Telephone Company and which involve material, labor, freight and hauling, is on an enormous higher plane than ever before. Insofar as the cost of materials may be reduced will this total cost be reduced.&#13;
 The only way we can furnish adequate facilities for your use from year to year is by constructing the buildings in which to house the central office apparatus in the larger centers; as well as enlarging existing buildings to serve the increased needs, and this work must be carried on from year to year without delay. This involves hundreds of thousands of dollars in expense to the Company.&#13;
 There are, of course, many other items of expense, all of which are now at the highest level in prices none of which show any sign of reduction for fundamental reasons.&#13;
 Until these necessary costs of operation are materially reduced we can not reduce the COSTS of furnishing telephone service.&#13;
 We have carefully studied and analyzed the advertised reduction on prices and find that they are upon articles of which we make but little, if any, use. Applied to the telephone business all known reduction in prices would not reduce the cost of furnishing telephone services one twentieth of one per cent.&#13;
 This is many times offset by the increase in wages which, in many places, we must make during the current year.&#13;
 Our present operating revenues are practically equaling by our operating expenses. If the present let down in general business continues for any appreciable time we will lose a material part of the gross revenue now received, which will make a still higher rate necessary if a deficit is avoided.&#13;
 We are not asking higher rates for the SAME SERVICE we furnished one, two or five years ago, but for a much GREATER SERVICE which we now furnish, consisting of facilities to add many additional telephones to our system during the past one, two and five years.&#13;
 This fact should be considered when comparing the increase in rates we ask with the increase in the charges of railroad, express and other public utilities for the same quantity of service.&#13;
 We hope, as every one does, that in the relatively near future prices and the costs of operation, except labor, will be lower, but we see no immediate prospects of this result as far the Telephone Company is concerned.&#13;
 The increased rates we are now asking are based, in a measure, upon this hope. If the present level of costs of operation go higher, through causes beyond our control, the proposed rates will not yield a fair profit.&#13;
 It is important to remember that no rate for a public utility is permanent. If conditions and prices so change in the future as to make the rates we are now asking yield too high a return, and if the Telephone Company should not reduce the rates voluntarily, the Public Service Commission would.&#13;
 Conditions as they are must be met, not as they may or should be.&#13;
 The highest and best interest of the public is conserved in having the Telephone Company in position to supply facilities adequate to the demand for telephones and service, and in this way be prepared to render at all times an adequate service. No community can expand and grow without adequate telephone service, with in turn means adequate plant facilities.&#13;
 With inadequate returns upon the bare cost of the physical property already in service, - the Company’s credit has disappeared. &#13;
 With no credit the Company cannot secure the millions of dollars required to provide the additions and extensions to its plant, which must be provided if the public demand for telephone is supplied.&#13;
&#13;
Respectfully yours, J. EPPS BROWN, President.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Salt Mullet – Mullet Roe – Fat Mackerel – Nice Fryers and Hens.&#13;
All Good and Churn Gold Olio. Clover Hill Butter.&#13;
&#13;
L. P. McCuller. Sanford, Florida.&#13;
&#13;
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Red Star Detroit Vapor Oil Store.&#13;
Heaters of Every Kind. OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT.&#13;
&#13;
HILL HARDWARE COMPANY.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Reduced Prices On FEEDS at West Side Grocery.&#13;
&#13;
If you don’t believe we handled Feed, just look at these prices:&#13;
&#13;
That good Omelene Feed, sack $3.95.&#13;
Shorts, sack, #3.50. &#13;
Scratch Feed, sack, $3.95.&#13;
Corn, Oats, Laro, Etc., received dayly. &#13;
RERUNA FEEDS.&#13;
&#13;
Your Phone and My Delivery Makes Me Your Nearest Grocer.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 166. &#13;
L. F. Roper, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
Page 6 – THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1920&#13;
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In and About the City&#13;
Little Happenings Mention of Matters in Brief Personal Items of Interest.&#13;
Summary of the Floating Small Talks Succinctly Arranged for Herald Readers.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
TRAIN SCHEDULE.&#13;
&#13;
		Arrival		Departure&#13;
No. 82	 1:58 a. m.	 2:03 a. m.&#13;
No. 84	11:45 a. m.	12:05 p. m. &#13;
No. 80	 3:05 p. m.	 3:25 p. m.&#13;
No. 83	 2:43 a. m.	 2:48 a. m.&#13;
No. 27				 8:40 a. m.&#13;
No. 89	 3:05 p. m.	 3:25 p. m.&#13;
No. 85	 7:30 p. m.	 7:35 p. m.&#13;
&#13;
Trilby branch&#13;
No 100				 8:00 a. m.&#13;
No. 24				 3:25 p. m.&#13;
&#13;
Leesburg Branch&#13;
No. 158				 7:50 a. m.&#13;
No. 22				 7:35 p. m.&#13;
&#13;
Oviedo Branch&#13;
No. 127				 3:40 p. m.&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
&#13;
Armistice Day Thursday&#13;
&#13;
--------&#13;
P. T. Wakefield was among the visitors to the city today.&#13;
&#13;
--------&#13;
The parade promises to be one of the finest that has ever been staged.&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
It looks like Sanford will attract a big crowd from all the surrounding cities.&#13;
--------&#13;
Everything is humming in Sanford now and everybody feels good over the wonderful prospects for the winter.&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
The American Legion boys are preparing for their one big day of the year and we should all help them celebrate.&#13;
&#13;
------&#13;
Send in your locals to the Herald office. Phone the news to 148. We want every bit of it. Tell us the news each day.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Lloyd, Mr. And Mrs. R. J. Holly, Mrs. C. M. Hand and little grandson, Charles Betts, and Mrs. Braxton Perkins and little son, Robert went over to DeLand yesterday to see Mr. Perkins, who is in the hospital recovering from an operation.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
The Daily Herald subscription list is growing so rapidly that new carrier boys are necessary each week. If you do not get your paper promptly phone 481.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--------&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. George Hart and little daughter have returned from Madison, Wis., where they accompanied the remains of Mrs. Hart’s mother, Mrs. Curtice, for interment in the old home burial lot.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
E. H. Kilbee, of Geneva, who is the county commissioner from the Fifth district of Seminole county, was in town today and he said it was necessary for the next legislature to pass a law to compel a man to serve on the election board and fix the pay he is to receive for it.&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
Thursday will be a holiday but the Herald is not able to take any any day for a holiday and would like to have the advertising and other copy in as early as possible on Thursday in order to allow the office force to at least see the parade and get off at noon to eat the “chow” with the boys.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
Mrs. Roland Marsh returned Sunday from Ocala. She was called there by the sickness and death of her mother Mrs. Gambel. who passed away, Saturday, Nov. 6th. Her father also passed away October 5th. The sympathy of their friends is extended to the family on this double sorrow.&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
The program for the big day on Thursday is published in today’s Herald and everyone taking part should study it carefully and get in line early in the parade. Make it one of the best in the country and make Thursday one of the greatest days in history for Armistice day is certainly the greatest in modern history.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
The West Side Grocery, L. F. Roper, proprietor, is bidding for your trade in Purina and other feeds. Some very attractive reduced prices are quoted in an ad on another page of the Daily Herald. Mr Roper states that your phone and his delivery makes him your nearest grocery and if you need anything in the grocery and feed line call 166 and you will get quick results.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Hall had the pleasure of a visit of Mr. Hall’s mother, sister and niece accompanied by friends, Miss Martin and Mr. Gonzalez, who motored from Tampa Sunday, returning the same day.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Mrs. L. C. Cameron left for Detroit Saturday to reach her mother’s death bed, having received word of her sudden sickness. The train had hardly left here when Mr. Cameron received another message stating that death had again won the race.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
J. C. Donahue, of the Johnny J. Jones shows, was in the city today looking after the advance of the show and the promotions of various kinds. Mr. Donahue says that the Jones Shows this season are bigger and better than ever and Sanford is promised a treat the first week in January.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----------&#13;
The “13” club held their regular meeting at the Seminole Hotel today with a full membership present and they had one of those fine feeds that have made the Seminole and Manager Olsen famous all over the state. The “13” club has grown somewhat and eighteen guests sat down to dinner today at the Seminole and discussed the Spring Festival and other important items for the benefit of Sanford.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
MAKES A FINE APPEARANCE&#13;
&#13;
The new City Market looks good in daylight but to one driving in at night from the west this grocery and meat market looks like a big city store. In fact there are none in the cities that makes any finer appearance. Messsrs. Walthall &amp; Estridge are to be commended upon their enterprise in giving Sanford such a good looking place and the best part of the story is not on the outside appearance - they also give you first class service - in every respect. Watch their advertisement for changes in prices and announcements of new goods.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
DISPLAYING WAR TROPHIES&#13;
&#13;
Bower &amp; Roumillat have two fine window displays of war trophies showing all kinds of guns, pistols, ammunition, shells, etc, and also photographs taken on the fields of battle and of many places of interest in France and Germany.&#13;
  There are helmets, caps and equipment of German and French and American armies and the display is probably one of the most complete that has ever been gathered. Dr. Stevens and Col. G. W. Knight, who were in the Engineer’s Corps in the world war and went all through the fighting in France and Belgium furnished the trophies for the display.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
ROLL CALL MEETING&#13;
&#13;
Tonight at 7:30 o’clock at the Red Cross headquarters in the Court House I desire ti meet all those who will work in the Roll Call beginning the 11th. Meeting for instruction and inspiration. Don’t fall.&#13;
&#13;
S. W. Walker, Chairman&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
Advertisement&#13;
AT THE STAR THEATRE TODAY&#13;
&#13;
Paramount Artcraft Presents&#13;
William S. Hart in “SAND”&#13;
&#13;
Also Fox news and “YOU TELL ‘EM LIONS”&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
Try a Herald Want Ad. It pays&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
LEXINGTON MINUTE MAN SIX&#13;
&#13;
1918 DODGE 				 550.00&#13;
1919 LEXINGTON, 7-passenger		1400.00&#13;
OVERLAND, 5 passenger			 350.00&#13;
&#13;
UNITED STATES, KOKOMO AND MILLER TIRES. ALSO COMPLETE LINE OF ACCESSORIES. DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE.&#13;
&#13;
B. &amp; O. Motor Co.&#13;
Distributors for SEMINOLE, LAKE, VOLUSIA, ORANGE AND OSCEOLA COUNTIES.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
OVER PRODUCTION BRINGS GAS DOWN IN GREAT BRITAIN&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Washington, Nov, 9.&#13;
“Over production” in the United States is the reason assigned today by the British oil companies for unexpected reduction in the price of gasoline in Great Britain.&#13;
&#13;
------&#13;
A GREAT PHILOSOPHER’S SENTIMENTS&#13;
&#13;
“The County that grows better races of fruits and beautiful flowers grow finer women and children.”&#13;
 These were the words of Aristotle 800 year B. C. and he was one of the greater philosophers the world has ever known. To cause the people of this section to grow better gardens to grow in these gardens the choicest of vegetables and beautiful border flowers blended together with a magnificent lawn is our platform.&#13;
  The entertainment of Company in the a Garden of Flowers in this Country of Liberty and Freedom is as rarer as MODESTY in a CONGRESSMAN.&#13;
 If we cannot accept the League of Nations platform we can at least beautify our yards, gardens, and lawns equal to those found in the Old Countries so let us get up each morning and look into the Bright Smiling Face of Beautiful Flowers and get that pleasure out of living here in Sanford that is due each and all of us. Call and inspect our full line if flower, seeds, bulbs, and lawn grass.&#13;
&#13;
THE L. ALLEN SEED COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
GOOD MESSENGER SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
Manager Hall, of the Western Union, has an up to date messenger service, having lately installed a new wrinkle in the call boy. All customers who have a certain amount of business can have the service when they need a messenger to take a wire they push the button and this is registered upon a ticker tape in the Western Union and the boy is sent to the right address. Not only is the right address on the paper but is kept for future reference and in case the boys stop to shoot craps or engage in other harmless amusements both ends can keep tab on him and there is no chance for the wrong number to be called. This city is getting a number of improvements in all kinds of business and it makes for better and quicker service.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
UNIFORM OF THE DAY&#13;
&#13;
The uniform of the day for the American Legion will consist of blouses, either wool or khaki. All ex-soldiers having helmets will appear in one section. Those with overseas caps, garrison caps, regulation hats will appear in another past of the Legion section.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Remember that the Herald Printing Co., has a stationery and office supply department that is ready to supply all your needs in the stationery and supply line. Postcards of all kinds showing Florida and local scenes and everything that you may want in the picture postcard line, wholesale and retail. &#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
HAD SUCCESSFUL OPERATION&#13;
&#13;
The many friends of Braxton Perkins of the firm of Perkins &amp; Britt, will be glad to know that he is recovering from an operation on one of his ears known as the mastoid operation performed by Dr. Ingram at the DeLand hospital yesterday morning. Mr. Perkins is doing nicely and expects to be able to come home about the first of next week.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
NOTICE, FARMERS -&#13;
&#13;
i am offering about 300 yards of seed bed covers 9 feet wide, any length wanted in fine condition, used only one season; price one-half of present cost of cloth. - J. R. Davis Farms. Bartow, Fla.  177-8tp&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Post cards at the Herald office, 1c.&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
&#13;
The Logical Treatment “ENERGIZER” For Many Human Ills.&#13;
&#13;
 There is such a thing as “ATERIAL AREA” and Arterial “Elasticity” in each person and after the body stops growing – at about 21 – there is a natural depreciation or loss in both area and elasticity, just as there is in an auto tire or a field that is not plowed and “cultivated.”&#13;
 It is ‘Aterial Hardening” that finally causes death – preceded by “High Blood Pressure” – and the ONLY real way of this condition being put-off is by getting better circulation.&#13;
 And the ONLY real way of improving Circulation is the “ENERGIZER” process, which furnishes “ACTIVITY” WITHOUT EXHAUSTION or work.&#13;
 It is YOUR OPPORTUNITY. Give YOURSELF some care.&#13;
&#13;
L. C. Cameron. Box 399, Sanford, Fla. Phone 184.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
-----&#13;
ARMY EXHIBIT&#13;
&#13;
An array of German Souvenirs and War Material will be on exhibition all day Armistice Day. Lieut. Bivins will also be here bringing with him a flying machine from Carlstrom Field to thrill the crowds with some daredevil stunts. There are so many features connected with this day that it just can’t help being the biggest day in Sanford yet.&#13;
ON EXHIBITION&#13;
At our place all the time is one of the nicest arrays of Men’s Clothing and Furnishings, so many nice things in fact, that it would take a whole page to tell you about a part of them. And we are selling them all at prices you’ll like.&#13;
&#13;
COME SEE FOR YOUR SELF&#13;
&#13;
Perkins &amp; Britt&#13;
The Store That Is Different.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
--&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY.&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under which this institution has been managed since the first day the doors were opened.&#13;
&#13;
 That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the constant and gratifying growth in business.&#13;
&#13;
 It is the desire of the officers of the Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals desiring most efficient and responsible banking.&#13;
&#13;
On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your patronage is invited.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
Is owned, controlled and managed by home people, who are interested in the development and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County.&#13;
&#13;
 With our large resources and strong financial connections, we are in position to assist our customers at all times in the handling of their financial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.&#13;
 4 Per Cent Interest Paid.&#13;
Seminole County Bank.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
FOOD&#13;
&#13;
That is prepared clean, cooked and seasoned just right, is hard to find. But we have it – and once you try it you will say, one kind, “the Best.”&#13;
&#13;
Combination dinner 75c   12 to 2&#13;
Home cooking. Home cooking.&#13;
&#13;
FLEETWOOD &amp; COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
TRY A DAILY HERALD ANT AD FOR RESULTS – 1c A WORD.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on November 19, 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>
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Vi ’7

SANFORD D AILY HERALD
•IN T H E HEART OF T H E W O R L D 'S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION

volum e

NUMBER 196

SANFORD. FLORIDA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1925

1

LISBON PARALYZED
BY STRIDING OF
. LONGSHOREMEN

ENGLAND “ELBOW
TO ELBOW”
WITH FRANCE

have the Rev. Louis G. Wood n* the
preacher at the Church of the Holy
cur n&lt; a » wu m r»»«»i
The Herald is ir$ receipt) of the fol­
Cross, this Sunday night at 7:30 p.
NASHVILLE, Nov. 20.—The safe
lowing telegram, which Indicates that
m. Mr. Wood has the whole insight
(Br n&gt;« am*«uw4 rrw)
in the postoffice at Dresdea was
“ Peggy" is going after cither the
of the church and he goes throughout
PARIS, Nov. 20.— Premier Lk*yd(Br Tk» A**«UU4 Pf***-)
blown today by robbers who secured
first prize on lettuce or cabbage:
the church from the Atlantic to the
Gcorgc In an interview today wrttli
LISBON, Nov. 20.—Traffic nt this
a large amount) in stamps.
'T he midnight train from Tampa to
Pacific
and
from
Canada
to
the
Gulf
the correspondent of the Petit P »»i»—
port ha* been almost aparlyzed by a
Sanford pulled in about 5 this morn­
of Mexico. Recognizing the position
PARIS, Nov. 20.—The premiers of icn, declared the differences bet WLairr
[trike o f the longshoremen and Steve­
ing. jl loaded eight heads o f Butter
now of Holy Cross Parish, wgj are Great Britain are expected to hold a Great Britain and France do
n s and by workers on the state
Crust lettuce in n garden box, as UNION THANKSGIVING SERVICE 1given him for Sunday night, he beconferenc.| today to consider the ' amount to a quarrel and the r fc w »
railways. Meantime the city has been
sleepy as I was, for the1Jacksonville
The Union Thanksgiving service ing at Saint Luko a Cathedral in the Near East aituation, created by the held did not prejudice the alliance
given an evil appearance by a strike
fair. .Engineer F. Guinn, from San­
defeat of Venlzeloa in Greece.
(created during the world war. . E * ^ j
will be held this year In the Metho­ morning.
of the garbage wagon-drivers and
ford, mfule up the lost time— one
The Bishop and tho Diocese and
gardlng the proposed preparation* te*'
dist church at 10 a. m. .
street cleaners.
hour and seventeen minutes. He has
the
Church-at-large
having
this
confi­
PEKIN,
Nov.
20.—
It
la
reported
declared that England would
Rev.
Paul
C.
Burhans
will
preside.
Several foreign vessels were com­
been going with such n speed, good
dence in this Parish here in Sanford, the Bolshevlkl have resumed attacks "elbow to elbow" with France, but Is
Mr.
Burhans
is
the
new
pastor
of
the
pelled to leave the harbor without dis­
gracious, my lettuce turned to cab­
i in giving us Father Wood when the against the anti-bolsheviki in Eastern Insisted that the amount Germany fi
Congregational church.
charging their cargoes of provisions,
bage when I landed here.
'called upon to pay should be fix e d .%
Dr. George Hyman will preach the largest cities are claiming him, it is Siberia, capturing Borgia.
greatly needed In this poorly rationed
"PEGGY DORNER."
for Sanford churchmen and friends,
country, because of the harbor strike.
sermon.
WASHINGTON, Nov.
20.— The IMPROVEMENT IN RAILS
Dr. Walker will lead the Thanks­ to a man, to show themselves.
Lsboi* troubles spread also to. the PRESIDENT WILSON'S
.
It is not too much to say that there first Thanksgiving turkey arrived at
USED DY RAILROADS
crews of merchant ships and some of­
giving
prayer.
HEALTH IMPROVED
Mr. Brownlee will read the scrip­ is no more thoroughly able and gift­ the m i t e nouse today, weighing 38
ficers joined with the men in quitting
ed preacher than Father Wood and pounds, from the Chamber of Com(Br Tk* AmacUUA Pr*M)
(Br m Auocuus rnu.)
ture.
work on board the steamers.
those
Sanford
people
who
do
not
CHICAGO,
Nov. 19.— A great*
mcrec
at
Cufcro,
Texas.
director o f the choir at the
Pieces o f machinery were removed
WASHINGTON; Nov. 20.— Presi- 1 The
________
come to Sunday night service will be
provement
in
rails now in use in
from boats used for transporting pas­ •dent Wilson’s henlth has so improved, Methodist cmirch will have *chargc o f
ATHENS, Nov. 2 0 .-I t Is reported UnJtcd gu tM
« portcd by
always losers.
sengers and provisions across the Ta­ White House officials said today, it the music,
thnt the chief army command will be Amerlcan Rallway Engineering4
•
gus river and the boilers of some pf was possible that he might address j
given to Prince Andreas, brother of cjatjon Some ycara *go the number
THE FIDELIB CLASS.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
the smaller craft were filled with salt congress in person when it convenes ,
former King Constantine.
'o f rails that failed to give normal
Of the Baptist Temple meets every
’ The largest congregation’ was pres­
water so that when thd government in December.
vice or broke under moving train
Sunday
morning
at
9:30.
All
un­
ent Inst Sunday which has ever been
rent naval forces to'opcratc them the
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 20.— Prop- came alarmingly forge, tho worst •
married
young
ladies
are
cordially
inSHOULD HAVE GOT
,,......
...................
..................
present
nt a regular
service in the ................... _
boilers would not make steam.
erty damage estimated at two million duJ(jn
reached about 1905.
LONGER SENTENCE cburch. The Urge auditorium was vited to attend these meetings. We
As a result of the state railway
dollars
was
caused
by
a
water
front
J
&lt;
?d
tQ
investigation
by the Amei
full, which condition was not expected hmve a lnrgc class with Miss Marion
strike Lisbon was threatened with a
fire*
today.
The
blaze
is
believed
to
Ra„
way
Awocution
and later by U *
Gove, president, and Mrs. F. R. Sav­
dearth of provisions. The streets
have
been
started
from
n
switch
enrai|
way
engineering
association. NORWOTOW n T C iNo l l o . - A , - '
age, teacher. We are planning to do
were cluttered with Ul-smelling dirt gust Pascal, “the Crank," sentenced
I .&lt;A drop |n the rail failures f i w a
„ . mcotlne. Sun- things and would like to have you gine sparks.
h„ p , nnd filth . . . n , to the »trlh« of
77
„
*
. . almost 400 per 100 track miles ft**
help do them. You can do so by com­
WASHINGTON. Nov. .O .-Leadcrs
^
,n 100g
the cleaners.
--------'
’ .nitty ot kidnnppln. Blakely Cough- J j*
40
P"
* ' ing Sunday morning nnd if you arc
of
the
Socialist
labor
party,
today,
rey
As usual when strikes occur here, lin, the 13-months-old son of George , the SeniorL. t .
,ne
\ "
|n the 1914 rails is a decrease
not already n member enroll and be­ 01
ported he campaign re ce ip ts, t $18,- g(j
wrJtM „
reports were spread that they were H. Coughlin. Sentence was suspend- 1 Two were welcomed into the
Wfckhonrit,
come one of us. We arc there and 099 and expenditures at $16,146due to a bolshevist plat cmcnating ^ on tbe second degree murder C5U^
engineer
o
f
tests
of-the
The church is enthusiastic in ev­ want you to be there promptly at
from Moscow. Officials of the gov- chorKC
WASHINGTON, Nov. 20.— Racial association's rail committee
0:30.
'
ery
department.
emment issued n note stating that
populations announced by the census port^ just issued here
Sunday services:
they were informed of the details of
METHODIST CHURCH..
bureau today show increases in the feel elated over this
Sunday
School,
9:45
a.
m.
a proposed general revolutionary
negro populations since 1910 in Mem- ance and congratulate tho miTfs
Preaching, 11 a. m.
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m.
strike but were prepared to take steps
it the
phid and Knoxville and a decrease in railroads that brought
Intermediate C. E., 2:3(&gt; p. m.
Churqh, 11:00 a. m.
to suppress any disorders which might
suit.
Senior C. E., 6:45 p. m.
Nashville.
Subject: "A Great Character.”
result.
' "A close study of the ifctaff
Trenching, 7:30 p. m.
Epworth I-eague, 6:30 p. m.
ports
indicates that a furtlirr
Church, 7:30 p. m. Subject, "What
FORMER GERMAN
(Br Tk* Ai*»«i»ud r v «)
. . Monday
- night a banquet for I'rescrease of over
EMPRESS VERY ILL
LONDON, Nov. 20.—By reason of byterian men given by the brothcr- Docst Thou H ere!"
failures of tho 1914
the tempest stirred up as the result hood.
(Br Tk* AuotUUi Tr»iO
Visitors in town invited.
"IS THE DEVIL A CITI­
n nm rn Holland Nov
-&gt;0 —The of overtures hy Oxford professors to
GETTING BUSY ON
ZEN ON SANFORD"
J S S U T t S
l L
.
G .r........... «d Auetrlan educator, to
LEAGUE OF N
The lev. Paul C. Burhans, the new
empress who has been in failing Join them In burying the hatchet and
*. .
A
_&amp;?___1 AV... —-iL
At the Bnptist Temple Sunday evtBr Ttl A nor lata4 Prt«« )
I B r TV* A m m IaUS F r ill)
PEKING, Nov. 20,—Cholera is ad­
henlth since the suicide of her son
^
wilTbc ‘ here Sunday, ^he 21st, for ming I)r. George Hyman will s,Mmk
GENEVA, Nov. 20.—The
ding to lhc
the genera,
genernl dtatres.
distress in
In me
the
the former crown prince, is declared
“ ........... *
.both
. . mornlntf
morning nnJ
and evening
eve
services. A ®n thi. subject You are Invited W d|nR
the reviaion o f
famine-stricken district where from
N-ttofU coven* „t
to be worse, and grave fears are held
^dcnocincc(, the
letter full nttendnnct of members nnd hear this •rrmon‘
friends is‘ desired.
gins promptly at 7:30 (• m
-j;,,000,000 to 30,000,000 i&gt;eople arc . „
th# aiBcmb|y o f
for her recovery.
urging resumption of friendly relaby
At 11 n. m. the subject of discourse facing death by starvation.
Morning service, 11 o’clock.
when the Dutch foreign minister t o I tiuns between Germnn, Austrian and
will be "The Miff Tree.” This will
The AMOctnt«l I T ...
,,„y ,„ tnHlu„ d „ ronolutlon c llln *
Evening services nt 7:30.
|British educators ns "ill-advised nnd
be an illustrated sermon, nnd
the ,nt. who n-c.nlly l r . v . W
Ihroush
o( ,ho .rtld o i a l inopportune," and called the Oxford ,
members
of
the
church
will
be
urged
the
heart
o
f
the
territory
most
scr^
^
the
n&gt;Kl5trntion
of treatisau
YOUNG PEOPLE
i p ■ i\
,
men to nccount for failing to distin- j
iously
denuded
of
food,
found
condito
attend.
Every ^Sunday evening nt 6;30 the
gui8h between nnimoslties created in
The Sunday School, which is main- jtions even more desperate than had
England’ by the sinking of hospital Flake B. Y. P. U. meats on the third
'ships and bombing of open cities, on floor of the Baptist Temple. If you tninin(r its large attendance and real been indicated by information prev(Br TVi A»»ocl»nd Freii.)
. the one hand, nnd the black passions are a visitor in the city or a strong- MU()y will meet at 9; 30 in the morn- Jiously received here.
NEW YORK, Nov. 20 —R W. Boll
In the town of llwai-an where there
perpetuated er or if you are not connected with lnt,
the wretches who
ing, n brother-in-law of President "f
„
any other union we would be glad to
Qnc 0f i),t, features of Sunday’s ,were 100 families, 30 persons hnd
Wilson, wns today named in Conner- * ,,Sc rnm&lt;
s .
A iervicrfl w||| be the solo to i&gt;c sdng died of cholera and similar reports
The text of the Oxford letter fol- hnve you visit tho B. Y. P. U.
lion
with
a
$40,000
bribe,
alleged
to
. (Br Tin AwoeUUA Tnm.)
hearty
welcome
is
extended
to
all
nnd
Those who arc common from various other dis­
............... T ’
*
* I J InWQ*
nOUKVjr RUWiaiv
----- ---- ---------- ------ ^ ^ ra&gt; j &lt;nurn Betts.
have been paid by the Staten Island
^ ^
ProfcMOrn of thc Artl, i„ d w* try to make every one. feel at have heard Mrs. Betts will enjoy at­ tricts.
.
LISBON, Nov. 20.— Mcllo Barrette*,
Tho picture presented to the eye of Portuguese minister of Foreign
Shipbuilding Company ioi procure• un^ J ~ , ; d “ n im te n of the Uni- home/ We would bo pleased to have tending the Sunday morning service
the United
Umtcu btaics
ouucs
___ aoclctle!l
__ i .
the correspondent was n dismal one; ,
usual fnvoro from thc
flnd ]earned
ln G„ _ you enroll ns a member and become a nt which time she will sing.
.he .oil barren . . in mM-wInter. fair., &gt;»•
Shipping Board, wns made in testiAustriaworker with us. If you come once
The auditorium is nearing comple­
prieetr » .r m r , mih-rotlon ot Iho.e brimtll.,
,rom
m o n y b e f o r e t h e Congressional inves„ s^nce ^thcrc will be many o f you you’ll come again. Remember the
tion nnd notice’ will soon be given of having more money or enterprise, the government t n
e
lir-u n s commute., Tmk,r S.nd«
&gt;htrr our hrfrt, . lt , „ r„ w time and plnce, 6:30 nt thc Temple.
n n v in g m o r e m o n e y &lt;&gt;•
.............. —
...
.
,_ ;ii
the first service.
•
&gt; people living on «» diet of weeds, public can count on tbs good.
former vice-president of .
Com ^
^ f&lt;jr the hrt&gt;nch thnt the
Watch tho Herald for In
' '.holt, IhUtlea mill le » v c : ehlldren, (I n n Briteln. He «.!.! Unit
FOR CHURCHMEN
merclal National Bank, of
wnr has occasione ln our friendly Inthe
Temple services.
erneelally
ottered
tor . Lloyd
mtormrd
It is certainly a great privilege to
ton, said the money was P&gt; he split
s-pecially HUIe
iiuic «M&gt;.
- .......
—
. . . Ueorjr.
■ ....
.. _
tercourse, nnd since you cannot doubt
, ; v nl lhc a v rr.li, Iirlc, -I Ibr Miiall had In.l.lr.l " t lh» ST
between himself. Bolling, I *ter Sis(be sincerity o f the finding which en­
ChlncM mute; rholrr. from uniter- Jul&gt;- lliat »H
.
ler, former shipping ixnnl secretary
gendered- and cherished thn. old
feeding, suicides of individuals in e x - to Portugal.
'
and John Crnner, of Richmond.
friendliness you must, we believe, be
treme despair, old women and ch il-1 A L i s ^ n n o w s p a p e r m a n w h o f e ■haring our hope fo? its speedy re­
ANTI-PBOIIIB GETTING BUSY.
dren gleaning patches o f weeds, men terv.ewed the foreign m
'
establish me.nt.
with no work to do and clusters of .him whether i was true that A m n fa k .
"We, therefore, thc undersigned
(Br Tha Asm&lt;UU4 Frtu)
r r ,"7 . Ilvln, ln .hr A M - —
i "
^
doctors,
WASHINGTON,
Nov.
20.—
All
COUNCIL BLUFFS, In., Nov. 20.
. . . -w ...™ - — ,,
--------------- heads of houses,
, professors
,
,
(Br Th» A»ux-Ut»4 Ff«»«)
breweries manufacturing beer c o n -1nn(| other officers and teachers, in
c cncVn, Nov. 20.—The Germnn
The finding of n fortune in n chick- P ?nfonr T u 5 i obtained by the corres- (condition that England in turn^JU K J.
a
• «
_ than
at____ ___
k a l f of
n f one
nnr»
w fn rd
now
.
tnining
more
one-half
(y,e University of OOxford,
now DOTper- j,0Vl,rnmcn(
no longer considers itselfcn ( 00p and the nrrest of two more pondent) indicated that thft present \oft the debt* due her from a
per cent alcoholwill at once be seix-iaonn„ y approach you with the desire bound by the cjaUB0 0f the Versailles suspected persons
...............early
.
.yesterday
.
suffering is only a forecast of that tions and contracted
ed, the international revenue bureau lo diBpci the embitterment of nnimos- ttealy by which Germany aurrenders br0UKht thc investigation of last Sai- to come in the course of eight or 10 minister declined to iUscuhi lari
ities that under the impulse of loynl her coion(cfl to the allies, according to . un]ny*B Burlington Railway mall rob- weeks when thc real crisis will arrive, jeet pointing out that he bad nothing .
indicated today.
pntriotisro may have passed between nn offk.jai notc o f protest which has |)Cry ( invirhich estimates of losses run
Conditions in thc belt he traversed to do with financial affairs.*
OUR FIRST NATIONAL
us.
been presented to the league of nn- „ „ bl|fb
nB $u,500,000, to a point
,
.
.
in a journey by cart between two I
. . . .
WILL MAl^E A GOOD ONE i "In the field where our alms
tions.
i
&gt; where postal officials said tho case i;il,
,j &lt;§ ncaP Xechpw are ball«v- nre 390,000 people in tho ndrama*i one, our
our enthusiasms
enthusiasms the
the same,
same, our
The noto Aco\areB that the allies ------wa„ yirtunlly
complete,
(B Tt a
iT«4 Ttou)
|one&gt;
------------------1C(1‘ to bt. typical o f those generally ’ tratlve dlstricl in question.
and ambition generous, wo
bnv&lt;j
not xuiXIlica
fulfilled mcir
their unucrumn**
undertakings
thcrecovered
rivalry nnd
... hJ|V
e nol
AA count
count of
ot tne
recovered money •
In
In Nlng.Chlng two bankers
WASHINGTON, Nov.
2 ^ - ™ “ can surely look to bo reconciled ahd rcRarding the c,auac of the treaty found in n 8acW ln thc chicken house « i8t,nK .
rhihR Shantung w ere engaged In raising relief ftraSsr
Comptroller o f the Curroncy
fy h the fellowship of learning offers a concernlng the allotment o f tho Ger- back of the p. A. Daly homo here
j
| |It. ’ found inde’ said that tho crop had been an a
surd a call for Uie »tAtement o f Jh r0ftd whIch m a y-a n d f our «piritual man co,on!ca nnd mandates. It adds ahftWcd*lt n, to »l $26,000 in ton-doi- , " X t l e m i/cry and stoical facing of lute failure following two o r I
cond.tion o f nil National 1,nn
idcala bo alive m ust-lead to a wider |h||t having signed thc pact o f tho
b,Ua&lt; Federal agents are now tr y -]
millions of people who previous and serious shortage*,
close o ' business Monday, No e
sympathy and better understanding
flf nation*, Germany under-; ,ng to tocate * 10,000 which Mrs. Daly
h*d diaoosed of everything 10,000 families, they estimated
L&gt;etween our
our kindred
kindred na
nations.
ir,th’
;; between
ions.
Rtood abe wouid be admitted to the has said was carried awny from the |Baj(ib|L&gt; and MW fn tbe future nothing eight out of ten were practical^ w ftb I "While political dissensions B” league and eonsequently
take part in p aiy home ‘by one
l^e ^uturc
’ '
‘ o f the robbers. Ac■out meant. Ono of tho info
BLOT C r n W S g H T r isH E
D
“ -.-,,,..7 o f .mandadates,: but C0Hinr to statements made hy officfi.,
,
.
___
51
When thc frost will have killed thc said that he was the owner o f t t
able - comity of the great hur p an (bat nQW abe nQ jonger considers her- |ajB wbo muJe the arrests, the loot
unconsumed leaves and' weeds there largest pawnshop In tho vicinity,
states, we pray that we may help to ^
Uut clau#e o f ^ trea -‘ not found In the chicken house was
will be literally nothing to cat for at • "There arc constant stream* «
i n g * v r n t T N o v ^ 0 —The In- hasten that amicable reunion which
|burned.
•
least half the population. One out farmers comipg with clothlny, ftw *
teronU oiil^oU on'lM fue of thc west civilization demands. Impetret ratio
*
The men under arrest will be ar- of 10 has already migrated without ture, implements, anything &lt;4**
today- voted'To establish a “spot” cot- quod dies impetratur* est.
j The nupuUtes referred to in the ra id ed today before a United States money nnd without destination. In which to realize a few coppers. T I*
ton market here and will havo It In j Fifty-seven signatures are «P- Gcrtnan protest word provided for in commissioner.
the worst spots half the people are arc selling their chiidreh where pa
operatlon by the first of the new year, pended to the letter, Including those art,d e x x u o f lhc covcnant o f the J ^
of thc mcn, T. A. Daly nnd H.
'already subsisting on thc proceeds of sible, or. leaving them where,ther*
of W. G. S. Adams, professor o f Po- |caffUe 0f nations in the treaty of A&gt; Reod, are white and the (others are
the sale o f fu/nltvre and clothing, hopo that they may be fed," he saa
lltlcal Theory and Institutions; Sir Versailles. It was stipulated there nCKroes. Reed’s confession led to re- which means thnt those temporarily! Chaff and the residue from eoto
CHANGED THEIR TUNE.
Hugh Allen, director of the Royal that colonies and territories severed MVCIy o f part of the loot.
(
i^ a p in i sUrvation will ultimately seed after the oil has been extract**
(B* Tk» AimcUUJ ft***'
College o f Music; Rev. G. A. Cooke, from their former sovereignty by tho
-pbe total amount of money recov- ,
have become valuable beyond
'
r; Sir
byf peopiea
peoples oo ff backcrcd was
waB not
announced by
officials '
Yf°ihK’ American Sugar* Re- R f‘fiuB Profe,80r o f Hebrew;
Sir ArAr- war
war and
and inhabited
inhabited b
back- crrd
not announced
by officials
of ch ^ ch ow , which is reach of the average person, whd
neriea o f the
** . ^
thur Evans, professor of Prehistoric ward development should
------.n -* » il l ■ «
-•
-ahould be placed this morning.
morping. Ten
parsons-fn
^ g i.t r a t e informed the ists on a watery concotflon
inlng Company closed today as i n o .
,
R y A G. HesdUm, Re- under the tutelage o f more advanced und „ ar W
correspondent that out o f every three of leaves and weeds, with pcrhat|**:
result of the slight demand fo r the rtrcnacoiogy, ivrv.
----- t --------------- *».. ----------------------•
P
*
m
*
» .* * * * « *
a . K*m tnjn l.nilliei two
•lw Mid thry had ,mpl« ,tecto *_n J ,
otllw „n(lrr th»t t.tegory, Ik, Itet Inclod- and Uie
gruup. ot UUnd, In brforr ihr end of the year, U r r ln j rake, If h , I* «fflu ,n t *no gh.
effective relief from outside. There out of cotton seed waste.
were prepared to make prompt de-1 physical Philosophy and many
ing the African states, such as Ger- the Pacific.
1
,
r n ii
Hvery.
.
.well known college principals.
, : •. . r - -* •- •^
HOLY CROSS CHURCH SERVICES
^ For the Sunday next before Advent,
Church services will be:
7:30 a. m., Low Celebration.
0:46 a. m., Church School.
11:00 a. m., Morning service.
7:30 p. m., Vespers with Rev. L. G.
Wood, preacher.

NO FRIENDSHIP
,
FOR GERMANY

30,000,000 CHINESE
ARE FACING FAMINE

Exposing Graft In
High quarters

Declare All War
Debts Cancelled

Germany Refuses To $25,000 Recovered
Surrender Colonies From Chicken Coop

SlTmZlJSStZJSZJl

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-

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,uite . . . . . . .

�TUB SANFORD DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, l t »

PAGE SIX

STAR THEATRE
Today and Tomorrow

J. PARKER READ JR. prcfcut

Lo u ise Glaum
By C. Gardner Sullivan Directed
§
F

Fred Niblo

standi tor Sorrow and SuiferinJ tfcat art tbt
heritage of alJ women.
standi for Experience that refloat rikt SouJ

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

WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED—To rent, a Wicker baby ROOM AND BOARD, $11 p c f week,
109 East First street, over Union
carriage in good condition fo r four
Pharmacy.
■
163-tfc
months. Mrs. M. S. Wiggins, at the
DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 San­
Gables.
' .
195-6tc
ford avenue, pay cash for furniture,
WANTED— House or spsrtment o f S bedsteads, chairs, etc. What have
or 4 rooms, unfurnished, for man you?
-.
174-30tc
and wife with two school children.
Best of references. See or write, G. BATTERY TROUBLES! Do not run
your battery until she is entirely
B. S., job dept.. Herald office,
dh-tf
dead. The battery is the Costliest ac­
Buy* your post cards at the Herald
cessory to your car. We re-charge
office.
and re-build all makes of batteries.
WANTED— Team work. Inquire of — Bay Bros. Phone 548, old Ford
M. Hanson Shoe Shop.
189-60tp Garage.
179-tfc
WANTED—Your old batteries to re­
build. Let. us make your starting
and lighting a pleasure. We are au­ LOST— Pink saphire ring, solitaire
setting. Finder return to Agnes FOR SALK—One 1920 Cole Eight 7thorized "EXIDE” dealers and have
Berner,
Sanford Shoe &amp; Clothing Co.
a Battery for all makes automobiles.
passengcr automobile run only 6500
•
‘_______________ 195-3tc miles. Bargain. One 1920. 7 pas­
"EXIDE, the Giant that lives In a
box."— Ray Bros. Phono 648, old LOST— Western Union branch de­ senger Buick run only 3,700 miles,
posit book. Finder please return price right. Extras. Box 478, De­
Ford Garage.
179-tfc
to
Western Union office.—J. P. Hall, Land, Fla.
________________ 193-6tp
ir Scratch Pads from The
it.
Mer.
180-tfc FOR SALE!—Good
Herald—by the pound— 15c._________
mule, cheap.
WANTED— Brick and cement work, LOST OR STRAYED— One red pig, ‘ Would exchange for good milch
chimneys, Dues, piers,
cement
4 months old. If found hotify E. cow. P. O. Box 445.
193-4tp
Doors, sidewalks. — A. L. Ray, 206 B. Randall, Jr., 825 First Street.
B rin g th e children to see the toys
Park Ave. *
*
173-30tp
•
191-tfc at the French Shop.
194-tfc
WANTED— Pupils, Violin and Piano.
FOR SALE
FOR RENT—Two or three furnished
— Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.
rooms fo r light housekeeping. Close
175-20t-p FOR SALE—Shasjo daisies, $1 per
194-6tp
dozen. English Shamrock Oxaiys in. Owner, Box 117.
Buy your post cards at the Herald
20c per dozen. Ring 207-W. 183-12tc F oil SALE—One five pnssengcr Ford
office. Beautiful views, 1c each
Special reduction in men a and la­
touring car. Must go quick. San­
Gasoline engines. Brand new and dies' W. L. Douglas shoes.— A. Kan- ford Heights capiping grounds. Fred
in perfect condition.— Herald Print­ ncr, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.
194-3tp
ing C o.____________________________tf
__________________
166-tfc Ford.
WANTED— BY DEC. 1st OR
SOONER. 3 OR 4 UNFUR­
NISHED ROOMS OR 3 TO 6
ROOM HOUSE. UNFURNISH­
ED OR PARTLY FURNISHED.
WILL LEASE BY MONTH OR
YEAR. BEST OF REFERENC­
ES GIVEN. ’ADDRESS “ SOON”
CARE OF HERALD.
193-12tp

HbJlflt h y jy W.UODKIUTON CORP

Methodist Bazaar
Sanford is on a boom—not a vacant store-room to be found on First
street, but undsunted "The Truth Seekers'1 of the Methodist Church
will erect a tent on the old Sanford House site and hold their Annual
Bazaar FRIDAY snd SATURDAY. COOKED FOOD ANI) OYSTER
SUPPER SATURDAY NIGHT.

Your Patronage Solicited

Toy Airplanes, French Shop. 194tfc FOR SALK— One cottage, 5
and bath, corner Third s t r e e t ^
We ha Vo just received a line of
silverware and casseroles.— A. Ban­ French ave, Mm. Baldwin,
ner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.
Phone
FOR SALK— 6 room cottage, |m &gt;
yardi fine garden, various k i^ u ^
fruit trees and two separate r
harness. Apply M. Hanson Shoe
acre farms close in. Owner, Bb*
Shop.
,
189-12tp
Sinkablc submarines, French Shop.
194-tfc FOR SALE— 10 gallon water |
and oil heater for tank. WIT
Toy pianos, French Shop. *\194-tfc
sold cheap. Call at 321 Magnolia 1
Fpp our line o f “electrical lamps.— nuc. Phone 296.
A. Banner, 213-15 Sanford Avenue. f— — —
Aprucomoif ion nriT
Phono 5 6 0 .____ ______________100-tfc M0TI«T01—
or sssroan m r iu m
PLANTS FOR SALE—Cabbage per
1000, $1.50; Cauliflower, Handers
Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B. •n e t •• m* r*rt 1* heard, at
B.
, per M, $1.50; Ice Berg, per■1M,
lb* -Cueti llooae. make appllralkn
IlnoorabM Jamea W. IW lla*. jW d/,
$1.60; beets, Crosby’s Egyptian, per call
Ctoort o f the Nerenlh JiulHal 11.
M, $1.50; Onion, yellow Bermuda, per r w id a . for. an order appro,Inc th« „
rhartrr o f. uuMncwporalliur l&gt;,»
M, $1.50; onions, white Bermuda, per ber o f Cnmmerre. o t Sanford; k'lorlda ,
Jerl o f which atm 11 ha to promot* u J r
M, $1.50; Celery, yellow golden, per rial, avrimltural and Induairlal w , i r , „ ,
M, $2.00; Self-bleaching imported ford and HemlnoW Conaty. to anialra
properly, m ortcaf# and aefl tbe m im . h
celery, per M, $2.00; French celery to Inipmra the r r n .n l mndlt|,m, „i „
mnnlly b f Cooparatlos o f the pot.iir tun
seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.00.— laetw.
and frn e ra ll/ to do nhatere, it,
Clay County Gardening Co.* Green lara ahall think beneficial to S ta te d aa&lt;
note (Vmatf. tba name b r ln c u n&lt;a, pnfi
Cove Springs, Fla.
11-12 In* rt*t*rntlan: the ordinal perm ed rt,
artlrlra o f Inroq-orattno lain* now eo
Largest assortment of toys eVcr in tha offlr* o f tlw, rieth o f the ctrrult C
Seminole CoOnly. rW lO a. aa by law i n .
Sanford, at French Shop.
194-tfc

FOR RENT
FOR RENT— One nicely

furnished

FO RENT or for sale, large ware­
house with railroad siding.—Chas.
Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Vcn. Co.
________________________ 155-tfc
FURNISHED ROOMS— Two furnish'
ed bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park
Avenue.
. 157-tfe

l»«U County.
In I t E iU U o f

fj

c

t’ lof* nrar «ml Win. Brty. klthorn_
Notlr* I* Iwrrby * l,rn to nil whom ft w t
fonrrrn. it.at Slnab T. Rray u i . ' n t n , *
Clara limy artrl Win. lim y, minora wBt. aw t e
WHh day Of IVrrnihrr. A. P. Itrjn tf^ify ta Sw&gt;
llonnrablo K. f . Ilmi^iuhlrr. Ci-unt;
|»
and for tald fo t n iiji at his offlr* in In laid roonty. at to o'rtork. a. m.. nr aa
tbrm aftrr aa Ibo m anor ran be hoard. t e a * ,
tbority In tell, at pabtlr or private ,alr. o ,a
trrrat o f aald min o n In and to ibo
deorrlbod rral Oetatf. In aold (Vionty.
lo t r im IS) o f IIlock (C) arronlln* t o l a
O ttarr'a i’ lat o f Markbam Park llrlchu .
Wblrh application will lo baaed ,| »a th. M l
lloo for oal# now .00 fit# in oald (kart.
Paled Nov. 1Mb, A. P. I W .
•8IXAII T. SB.tr.
llth M Ir ,
i.'oorrUn

Circle D of the
FOR SALE— 1Vi II. P. and 2 Vi II. P. FOR SALE— A real plfco in Lake
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
county at a bargain. 100 acres o f
Will have a
in perfect condition.— Herald Prlntland, near two good towns, good house
i__r&gt;_
'
.
Pure Pood Sale
New line of Congoleums and Art nnd water works, piped all over place,
SATURDAY
MORNING at Bower J
spraying
machine,
etc.
28
acres
old
j
Squares.— A. Knnner, 213-16 Sanford
Roumillat’a Drug Store
Ave. Phone 550.
166-tfc bearing grove orange and grapefruit;
FOR SALE— One new 1920 and one 40 acres in cultivation, balance timber
J917 Ford touring cars. Two tents lend. Price $33,000. Terms. Address BRADLEY MATTRESS FACTORY
194-3tp
10x12 and 12x14, also four army cots. Box 195, Clermont, Fla.
Orlando, Fla.
All in good condition. Cali for Mr. FOR SALE— 40 acres good citrus Makes old Mattresses new at oarl^hman. Phone No. 112.
103-6tp
land, cleared and fenced, 1 3-4 miles
third the cost of a new one.
Dolls, 10c to $20.06.— French Shop, to tbwn. Good roads. A bargain at PHONE 804
16 BRYANT ST.
$80 an acre. As wo need the money.
1 Mr. lime*.
Price
$45
per
acre.
Addtets
105,
FOR SALE— U i H. P. and 2V, II. P.
Advertiso Sanford by sending ent a
•
134-3tp
Gasoline engines. Brand new and Clermont, Fla.
pOSt
card or two every day The IlerIn perfect condition.— Herald Print- FOR SALE—One Jersey cow, gives 8
aid has all kinds foF onp cent each.
gallons .of milk daily, 4 years old.
Special reduction on Georgette Silk $125.00. .Will Jones, corner 6th nnd Gpt a few now while the suj&gt;pfy
large.
nnd cotton shirt waists.— A- Kannor,
Hickory.
l$5-2tp
Sanford Ave. Phone 650.

WHAT THF. PRESS AND PUBLIC

WHAT THE PRESS AND-PUBI.K
THINK OF MELVILLE'S COME­
DIANS AND PLAYS.

COMEDIANS A M )
PLAYS

The World-Tents Theatre new piny,
“ The Broken Hearts," is cleverly
throughout skillfully constructed and
foliciously fine performance. One of
the real events of the holidny sea­
son.

\ j

The Tribune— “ We do not think wc
would be likely to overestimate the
proper atate o f the "Broken Hearts.”
One o f the truly noteworthy come­
dies by American authors.”
*
.
A iA
Evening Mail—"A fine and pur­
poseful, atudy ot current domestic
problems aa the theatre is likely to
house this winter, snd as well whit­
ten and well acted a play aa Broad­
way la likely to see. Its perform­
ance Inst night had a truly electrify­
ing effect."
The Times—“ The Broken Hearts"
is clever, adroit and Interestingblessed by an exception spirit and in­
telligent performance.

■

Tampa Times—by the Dean
of
American critics—Mr. Melville is to
be sincerely congratulated upon n
notable successful effort to redeem
the promise ninde at the opening of
the handsome tent theatre that it
should be he home of comedy, n gen­
uine
American comedy, dealing
freshly, humorously, satirically nnd
pntheticnlly with conditions of con­
temporaneous interest, and furnish­
ing food for reflection, as well as
amusement.

$10 ,000

o

Evening World—The piny, *THe
Broken Hearts,” makes n strong hu­
man appeal.

1 t
1 •
1

The American—"Wo sat. beneath
the spell of n four net play, "The
Broken Hcnrta” that enclosed come­
dy, drnmn, humor, brillinney nnd
charm. It is nn undenjnbln success
nnd if you miss it you will be sorry.
New ’ York
World—"Altogether
"The Broken Hearts" is the most
plensing play of the senson— the au­
dience wnH enthusiastic.

Athens, Ga., July 30, 1920.
To the Public i
The Melville Comedians played in
Athens for one week, and leave the
city with the good Wishes of every
one who attended.
The
performances were clean,
high class and entertaining. Respect­
fully,
JUDGE GEORGE E. THOMAS.-

0 TEN ! r THEATRE

M4O N I D . r, t«OV. 22

America’s Best Dramatic Company will present IlighClass Royalty Plays—Change of Program Each Day

Mlllcdgcville, Ga., May 20, 1920.
Hon. Mayor:
Melville
Comedians Thcntre i»
clean nnd was enjoyed hy our people*
who patronize them liberally.
Thcr
members of the show were affable*
am\ pleasant nnd made many friends
here. The tent was on the college
grounds.
^
MILLER BELL-'
Washington, June 30, 1920.
Mayor 'Macon:
Melville’s Show is first clnss. The?
-oopV composing the troupe arc O­
K. I can personally vouch for both
show nnd those composing it.
K. A. WILIIEITH, Mayor.
Madison, June 3, 1920.
To Mayor, Covington, Ga.:
Melville Shows arc good,, moraf
and a credit to any .city. I also at­
tended this show, in Mflledgcvllle.

MAYOr.
Gainesville, 1920.
The general public and myself an?
truly pleased with your show; up-todate and clean in every respect:
\ W. A. APIMOUT, Mayor.

MONDAY NIGHT WILL PRESENT

____

FOUR ACT DRAMA

Five Vaudeville Specialties Between Acts
Admission 40c and 25c, including War Tax

FREE

ONE LADY WILL BE ADMITTED WITH
EACH ADULT TICKET MONDAY NIGHT

JP J

- -

KIWANIS CLUB ENDORSES
MELVILLE’S COMEDIANS'
(By “JONESEY,” O. B- Secretary .
KiWania Club of Tampa—Too . bad
all “ Show Folks” are not like BerC
Melville and his popular' company,
who at present are playing to capac­
ity business here; they dFscrve itThey are presenting clean -up-to-dat*
plays, interspersed between the act*
with Variety Vaudeville that will
please the most fastidious. Klwanl*
is strong fo r Show FdlEs o f Mr. Mel­
ville’s type, and Tampa abould .be,
From Kiwants Magazine.

*

�M
r-.rgf B*-Z.

THE SANFORD DAILY nERALD, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 20, 1920

PAGE TWO

tiire. The Drices in many cases are cut in two. 1We are expecting to stand
losses caused bv the Decline in all Prices on Furniture, at Man y t hings we
may offer have pre war prices. d t Watch &lt;jur Show Windows for Bargains.

S3 -

T. J. MILLER &amp; SON
A COURSE IN NEWS
PAPER WRITING
The General Extension Division of

MISS KATHRYN WILKEY, Editor.

Rhone 428

LO THE POOR FARMER
Mm. W, P. Fields is in Jackson­
having gone to the Fair and to
My yard is full o f cotton
hear Billy Sunday.
And the crib is full o f com
Tm
n ramblin' wreck of poverty;
B. J. Starling In in Jacksonville at­
My
fnee is nil forlorn.
tending n general meeting of the A.
v ille

A . Company salesmen.

My porch is full of peanuts,
There's
’ Inters in the bank,
\
T. N. T.
My fields nre full of cattle,
The T. N. T. were delightfully en­
And the food stands rich nnd rank.
tertained Thursday afternoon by Mm.
X B. Lawson.
,
My hogs nre fnt nnd plenty,
A most pleasant afternoon of sew­
The enne waits in the mill;
ing concluded by ■a delicious snind
I'll make syrup for my family,
course were enjoyed by all the memAnd plenty more to sell.
Isem but one, nnd two guests, Mrs. R.
*l
X. Holly nnd Mrs. Emmitt Hunt.
I’ve hny out in tile open,
For I do not have the space
BAZAAR
To store all the provisions .
The “ Truth Seekers* Class" of the That ’ Ive made on this old place.
Methodist church are having n very
attractive bnznnr on First street on I've cotton seed nptenty
the site of the old Sanford House. To fertilise next year;
Against a background o f palms and I’ ve mules nnd plows and wagons,
ferns, booths decorated in many col­ And clothes enough to wear.
ored paper Gowers gives a gay and
festive air to the many beautiful nnd I've got tires on obi John Henry,
useful things that nre presented for Tho' the price o f gas is high
sale.
Hut it's wonderful tho sight of gas
The Indies in charge arc: of the A cord of wood will buy.
apron tooth, Mrs. W. S. Thornton and
Mrs. no ward P. Smith; o f the pillow And chickens, eggs nnd butter,
case booth, Mrs. L. P. Hagan; of the Sweet potatoes, lard and meat;
fancy work booth, Mrs. D. A. Kelly My old smokehouse is groaning,
nnt$ Mrs. Will Hoolihan.
And my garden can’t be beat.
There will be an oyster supper
oerved there this evening with prom­ Hut: still I worry and complain,
ises to be unusually good.
Until I’m out o f breath,
And if folks didn't know me,
..MELVILLE'S COMEDIANS
They’d Bwcar I’d starve to death.
*

The writer has, on several differ­
en t occasions, hnd the pleasure of
attending the performances of Bert
Melvilio'n Comedians, nnd have nl, w syn found the company to be com, posed of real theatrical people—:1ad fcs and gentlemen of high ability,
admirably suited to their different
parts. The vaudeville specialties nre
always good— in fact, tho people of
Oita nection have a week of rare en­
tertainment in store for those who
attend the performance of the Mel­
ville Comedinns, nil next week, in
flic big waterproof tent on Commer­
cia l street, nt the "13" Club Park,
n ext lo the Court House. This show
fo r white people exclusively nnd
the beat of order will be maintained.

IVnt a ramblin’ wreck of pove rty.
My face is nli forlorn;
I’m the most unlucky henthen
That ever has been bom.
—W. E. McDougaid
inC llto Clippings.
Ocala is greatly excited over the
dastardly deed of a negro burglar who
entered the Williams home in Ocala
Sunday night, sandbagged Mrs. Mar­
tha Williams and her companion, Mrs.
James F. 1-ong. Both are expected
to recover. The negro made his es­
cape. Mrs. Williams is the motherin-law of the lnte it. S. Hall. Mrs.
Long is the wife of a young soldier in
tho recruiting service who is now at
Live Oak, Fla.

the University of Florida, has been
offering an elementary course in
newspaper writing with the hope of
assisting the newspaper mon by giv­
ing amateur reporters throughout the
state some simple and helpful sug­
gestions concerning what is news, the
source of nows, the proper prepara­
tion of copy, some idea concerning
news values nnd the necessity for
brevity, order nnd sequence in writ­
ing news. This course is handled by
a member o f our staff who is a grad­
uate of the Missouri School o f Journ­
alism and has hnd six years ntyericnce on a big dniiy nnd one year in
n big publishing house- We would

Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank
where you deposit your money?
The first consideration is the capital, which should be
ample to meet the requirements of the community the. bank
is to serve.
The next question to consider is the officers in charge.
They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed
Then there is the question of confidence. Thi
should have confidence in the officers and in the bank.
These three principles determine the success of a bank.
We adopted these principles in the outset of our career
and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase
our usefulness to the community as the years go by.

ODD FELLOWS AND REBEKA lls, ATTENTION!

Sanford laidge No. 27, I. O. O. F.
will give an entertainment at
their hall, Monday evening, No­
vember 29th, to which all Odd
Fellows and their families, and
Hcbckaha are Invited. All trans­
ient and #siting Odd Fellows
will he most cordially welcome.

1ST:

LARGE CAPITAL AND WORKING RESERVE.

2ND:

TRAINED MEN IN CHARGE—MEN OF SEVERAL YEARS EX­
PERIENCE.

3RD:

T
CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBLIC, WHICH IS PROVEN BY
T!HE DAILY ADDITION TO OUR LINE OF DEPOSITORS.

4TII:

PROTECTION BY TWO EXAMINATIONS EACH YEAR BY THE
STATE BANKING DEPARTMENT. TWO AUDITS EACH YEAR
BY AN INDEPENDENT RECOGNIZED PUBLIC AUDIT COMPANY AND TWO SWORN STATEMENTS 8UJ1MITTED TO THE
STATE COMPTROLLER BY THE
CASHIER,
GIVING
THE
BANK’S CONDITION IN DETAIL, ALL OF WHICH INSURES
REGULAR, SYSTEMATIC AND THOROUGH OPERATION OF
THE BANK.
. . . ...
..
.

5TH:

T\lE ADVICE OF A COMPETENT BOARD OF DIRECTORS
WHO MEET WITH THE OFFICERS
REGULARLY
EACH*
MONTH AND ADVISE THEM AS TO THE OPERATION OF
THE BANK.

CTH:

INSURANCE OF ALL DEPOSITS EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR,
THIS IS A PROTECTION NOT fcOMMONLY FOUND IN BANKS
AND IS AN ABSOLUTE PROTECTION FOR YOUR FUNDS, IN
ADDITION TO ALL THE OTHER USUAL SAFEGUARDS.

•

ADVERTISE

SANFORD
Post Cards
-.L

Beautiful
Views
1 C

t

Jr-

THESE ARE REASONS W n Y YOU SHOULD DO BUSINESS W ITn
US, AND WE BELIEVE THAT NO HANK CAN OFFER BETTER IN­
DUCEMENTS.

PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD

Each

WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS *

SANFORDHERALDf

A

A

••
1&lt;
t TVTT t T t t t Vt Vt TT t T t YTY t YTY
•

Full Line

For a dandy Farm , w ith or w ith o u t crop
_ ____ :___ :____ __

10 acres; 5 acres tiled; 3 wells
good house, 5 1-2 miles from
Sanford. 5 acres in lettuce.

.

Prices from $50 to $300

Terms to Suit Yoursell

21 acres, 10 1-2 tiled; 5 wells
good house, 2 1-2 m. o f Sanford
6 a.celery, 3 a.lettuce, 3 a.beets

The most complete line of Records
in the city.
'

I can make immediate delivery on these'places if
.
desired, at a very low figure. See

Phone 3 4 9

'

V

;

gjj

. M •.••j'.

f

' •'

Line o f Violins, Guitars and Mandolins

Prices Right

LE W IS

106 N. Park A ven u e
TRY A DAILY HERALD W ANT AD FOR R E S U L T S -lc A WORD

^ T V T
.
ill

MM

�■-Jii-srVv
»

S

’ '

PAGE THREE

THE SANFORD DAILY IIBRALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1920
MELVILLE'S COMEDIANS
HERE MONDAY

Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props

Welaka Building

Specials For Today
Choice
Western and Florida
M eats

,

,

Veal P ork Mutton,
Sausage

i.PARKER READ JR

presents

LOUISE
GLAUM
N O W M A K IN G

Pecan N u t Roll
$1.00 POUND

Water’s Kandy Kitchen

t C. Gardner Sullivan
'irected by Fred Nlblo
rory
Splendor
Rl«fcw
Temptation
Conquer*.,
Refeoeretloo
ii LniirtthV.MMkiltdDKlHSCN CORF
AT STAR THEATRE TONIGHT

MRS. B. E. TAKACH
Proprietor
Corner of Park Avenue nnd
Commercial Avenue
SANFORD, FLORIDA

Daily Service

CONFESSIONS OF
A RAND LEADER
And now fgr the confession o f
band lender—and the reason that
circus band is different from a
other.
Did you ever notice that ? Did you
ever notice bow you can tell a cir­
cus band from any other collection of
musical instruments the minute you
hear it? And yet, most probably,

Phone Gfi

Sanford
Machines Foundry
Company

The following from .the Tampa
Times o f recent date, will be o f in­
terest to the amusement lovers of
this city, since Melville’s Comedians
will start an engagement in their
canvas theatre here Monday night:
"Tampa theatre-goers who missed
that famous drama o f the north­
west, "The Call o f the Wild," by Mel­
ville Comedians at the big tent, can
draw consolation only from one old
adage ‘ Where ignorance is bliss it is
folly to be wise,’ while the hun­
dreds o f enthusiastic attendants are
conscious that they witnessed one o f
the best staged, bes) acted, best
plotted dramas that has been staged
in Tampa in several years.
"The second week o f the indefin­
ite slay of this populnr company in
Tampa surely must be one of their
fenture weeks, for the program for
the last half. 'The Millionaire's Son’
and the 'Shop Girl' are proving equal­
ly popular with the big crowds that
visit this show every night.
"F or the first half o f next week
'The Church and People," will hold the
boards. This play was leased from
the author, together with special
scenery designed and painted under
the personal direction o f the author,
and everything has been done that
could give promise o f making its run
in Tampa one o f the most successful.
“ For the last half of the fourth
week 'The Brat’ is under contempla­
tion, but it has not yet been deter­
mined definitely.
Other celebrated
and special royalty plays scheduled
for nn early appearance nre ‘ Ishmaol,'
‘ With the Law’ and many others ones
that are well known to the successful
professionnPktage.
•'One of the unusual contributory
sources to the success o f the Melville
Comedians is the exceptional eiectrt|cal effects, which include more than
five hundred electric lamps, pan lamps
nnd color combinations, which are
capable of turning the ordinary light
jof night into the glow of full moon
rays.
^
"The tent is new and rain proof nnd
comfortably heated throughout nnd
every seat is within easy hearing of
the stage, .and occupies a full view o f
the entire stage.
“ The Melville Comedians are ex­
ceptional entertainers nnd the cordinl welcome extended makes each
and every attendant determined to re­
turn.”—Tampa Times.

Announcing

Next Door to Fleetwoods

Everything new and Fresh and
Crisp and at the V ery Lowest
Prices.
T h e Cash and Carry Plan—
Nothing delivered ancJ/Nothing
Charged.

T h e Buye

benefit of the

prices

rocery
O. H. STE N ST R O M . Manager

We Guarantee All
Battery Repairs
Every Hattery repair we make
is
guaranteed for six months. We are For Long or Short Distance
able to do this because in repairing
any make of battery we arc licensed
to use patented features which have
made Vesta batteries famous.
A IMG TIWCK

GENERAL MACHINE AND BOIL­
ER WORK
BRASS CASTINGS
GAS ENGINE REPAIRS

HAULING

ACTEYLENE CUTTING AND
WELDING
Special machine for turning Auto
('rank . Shafts nnd Crank I’ ins to
within .0005 accuracy.
IRRIGATION NIPPLES
PULLEYS and SHAFTINGS
ROUND AND SQUARE IRON

Sanford Ballery Service Co
I,.

A. RENAUD, Prop.

Phone

LSS

Sanford’s Most Popular Hotel

Building Costs are Lower

SEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL
Under Management of

WALTER B. OLSON
Time to semi out Thanksgiving
er.nls now. The Herald Printing Co.
has a fine line of Thanksgiving greet
mgs. Only one cent each.

Seminole's
ny Dinner

1his is good news to the many people nere wno
are anxious to build homes and buildings of all
kinds. Perhaps you did not realize that build­
ing cost? are lower—that quick service and upto-the-minute methods—nr/ean better construction
and cheaper costs in ever way.

December 1st
On the first of each month
your rent Is due.
Why—glee
other people your money*. Huy
you a home and each month
instead of paying out rent
money, pay on a home that is
yours.
Itcautiful homes on Park,
Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and
Myrtle
avenuea,
. Sanford
Heights. Building lots In any
location.

J.E. SPURLING

E. F. L A N E
AT THE HERALD, E A C H ...

Progressive methods in building construction and
personal supervision of all work gives you the
best in the market not only in materials but in all
kinds of construction. W e are ready to take your

Just Lay Them Down and Nall-That’s All
There, is To It .

a skyscraper building
_ to a garage and rrom a
sidewalk to a macadamized street through your
property/
IP

“ The Heal Estate Man"
Mn* #3

209 first S lfM I

BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS

The Shoulder of Protection keepa hot or cold air— rain, sleet,
etc., from forcing it* way thro ugh tho roof.
The Shoulder of Protectio n Is also the Self-Spacing Device.
Makes laying cosy nnd rapid— thus saving time and money.
These Asphalt Shingles arc surfaced with natural colored Red
or Green Crushed Slate. Eac h rain washea nway the accumulated
dust—reviving perpetually the original rich colors.
Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered—
because they arc firc-resistin g.
Give us the dimensions o f your roof. W c will estimate the
cost free of charge.. Samples and prices furnished ftec.
SMITH BROTHERS
Expert Repair Work

Keep Up With the News ot the Day and
Get Wise to Service in Building

,

We Plan Build, Construct any kind o f Building You Want

GEO. W. KNIGHT COMPANY
PH O NE 304

SANFORD, FLORIDA

Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co
KEEP

E Y E ON T H E HERALD W A N T C O LU M N

�r

— 7.. 'rrw stKM
TI1E 8ANF0RD DAILY IIERALD, 8ATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1920

PAGE POUR

“ MONEY IN TI1P. I'OCKET BURNS. IT IS nOUND
TO FRITTER AWAY BECAUSE MOST OF US
FAIL TO DISCRIMINATE BETWEEN THE PRESENT ACTUAL NEEDS AND THE.FUTURE CONONTINGENCIES
TiNGBNCIBS. PREPARE NOW FOR THE FUTUR
BY INVESTING IN 8 PER CENT CUMULATIVE PRIOR PREFERRED
Editor STOCK OF THE SOUTHERN UTILITIES COMPANY. IT WILL AL­
JL J. HOLLY .
Si. J. LILLARD Secretary-Treasurer WAYS STAND BY YOU. WHEN IN NEED. THERE'S NONE BET­
11. A j NEEL . . ...G eneral Manager TER.
fiU liM «T»ry .M.raoon iim |I 8aad»r at Th*
HstaU BuUdlaf, 107 Magnolia At. no.
Sanford. Harida

EVERYTHING

THE HISTORY OF
SUCCESSFUL MEN
always reads the same in the begin
nlng.

JF. P. RINES__ Circulation Manager
Phono 481
properly and to advantage. It was
so intended by the Creator.
And where do you find that rest?
Where do you obtain that spirit o f re­
Ddlrinl la Cltr bp Canter
pose which stimulates and rejuven­
.13 Cent* ates the entire human fabric?
There arc many wnys and places,
Member of the Associated Press
but one is more beneficial thnn all
others combined. Thnt is your week­
ly visit to the church on Sunday
morning, or evening, or both. Even
The hunting days ore here.
if you hear not one word the minis­
ter
says, the simple knowledge that
.And there is nothing better tham
you
arc jn the sanctuary of the Lord
ih r Florida woods und fields nnd
casts
a feeling of calmness, solemnity
.'streams.
and repose over you which is good for
And the visitors from other states the mind, the body and the soul.
who are here recognize that fact and
A PUMPKIN WITH A LANTERN
once they camp in Florldn they want
to come every season.
■nbacrlplaa Prlea a Adrtaaa

There is algo plenty o f game in the
ywoods nnd plenty o f fish in the
streams but they should be better
protected out o f season for even fish
and game are finally exhausted.
The Rod and Gun Club would be a
welcome institution in this city. It
would mean n place for the pleasure
yachts und a place for the visitors
to gather and a place for the home
people to meet at any time—some­
thing that we lack at present.
Sanford never looked prettier than
n t present with all the vivid coloring
o f tho many flowers nnd the yards nil
filled with trees and plants and
shrubs. And cnch yard should have
a few ornngo trees to show Jhe win­
ter visitors. They come down here to
see flowers nnd fruits and we should
have them to show.

IT a minister with a wife nnd five
children to support can get only |93 n
month for his ministry, should he
stick to the pulpit or look for another
jo b ? Thnt question was presented to
the judge of an Ohio court in a di­
vorce proceeding, in which extreme
cruelty in failing to provide was
charged by the wife.
The court
granted the decree, holding thnt nn
able bodied mnn who accepted n sal­
a ry o f that nmpunt was guilty of
cruelty to his family. The decision
w as probably justified by the special
Tarts o f the ense, hut how nhout the

.

ing until an Earning Surplus is ob.

From the Foundation

AArartutac R . t . i Mada An awn on Application

When nil the new building lhat is
contemplated in Sanford next year is
atarted this city will look like a real
city. And every citizen should stand
back of his city nnd help it to move.
That old grouchy feeling thnt disap­
proves of nil new movements nnd
wants to knock instead of to boost
should be thrown o ff forever nnd let
us all get together with the idea thnt
every building means so much for the
•town and regnrdless of who is doing
the building he deserves our assist­
ance in a moral way. It is the co­
operative spirit of "all together" that
makes cities and even hot air is bol­
der than cold water.

i

Persistent and Systematic Sar.

appeared in the North. The state­
ment o f the leader o f it that it stood
for law and order, that it was as tho
Enquirer-Sun so aptly puts it, mere­
ly "a pumpkin with a lantern in it,"
shows that it was merely foolishness
borrowing the wrong name. For the
old Ku Klux Klnn was not foolishness.
It was terribly in earnest and was
deadly in its operations. It Icillcd for
the salvation of the South and it sav­
ed the South in that way when there
was no other way to do it, When it
had accomplished its purposes it dis­
banded in a dny on tho order of its
chief officer. No nrmy that ever
fought was more thoroughly discipIt fought against law and order for
the upbuilding o f n better order. It
went through violence to peace und it
did what it did only because there
was no other way by which the pur­
poses could be accomplished.
But it caused n great deal o f disor­
der while it lasted by furnishing an
object of suspicion. If Smith hated
Jones badly enough to assassinate him
he assassinated him nnd put up signs
turning suspicion on the Ku Klux
Klnn. The Klnn was not responsible
for half the violence thnt was attri­
buted to it. It was not criminal but
it tempted to crime by furnishing
nn object o f suspicion.
Now the white people of the South
nrc in charge of their state govern­
ments nnd have in their hands all the
machinery of the law. This should
mnkc them use it with justice, for
the famed chivalry o f the South is n
myth if it uses its power to oppress
the weak.—Timcs-Union.
Post Cards at the Hernld office, 1c.

talned.
Consistent saving will start you for.
ward on thd right road to success.

F. P. Forster, President.

Methodist
Quick Lunch
Codec 5c Sandwiches 10c
I’ ies, home raadclOc cut
Best Codec in Sanford

Sanford is on a boom— not a vacant store-room to be found on First
street,-but undaunted ‘The Truth Seekers'1 or the Methodist Church
will erect n tent on the old Sanford House site and hold their Annual
Hazaar FRIDAY and SATURDAY. COOKED FOOD AND OYSTER
SUPPER SATURDAY NIGHT.

Y our Patronage Solicited

Princess Theatre Bldg

CHANDLER CARS

Prime

Republicans such nn overwhelming
majority in congress that they will he
more apt to mnke fools o f themselves
nnd give the Democrats a chance to
defeat them two years hence.
It in also true that it revived the
rnro issue which had been settled sat­
isfactorily to the whole people of the
South and made not improbable the
pnssnge of n force hill by the next
congress which will be overwhelm­
ingly Republican. It created n pre­
judice of the North ngninst the South
which will retard the development of
tho Southern states. It also fanned
the embers of nntugonism between
whites nud blacks, to the detriment
of both raccH. It is a pity that men
who do conspicuous things do not Sanford

FRANKLIN CARS ♦

W E G IV E Y O U S E R V IC E
— ASK A N YB O D Y”

WIGHT TIRE CO
PORK a lid M U T T O N
SAUSAGE of All Kinds
H A M nnd BACON

| Kelly-Springfield Tires.

A TRIAL SOLICITED

Phone 1 0 5

Diamond

Tires. ♦

Pure, Sweet, Wholesome
Delivered Fresh Every Day

J. H. Tillis, Prop.

MILLER’S BAKERY

4 0 2 Sanford Ave.

+ {'+ &lt; '+ t+ &lt; "K '+ H + + + + tt"H '+ + + 't+ t+ + + + t'+ t+ + + + + + 'H '+ + i+ + + &lt; '^ + + tH tl+ + + + + + t + + + + 'H 'W {% &lt; “H + f

Pemento
Pineapple
Roquefort
and
New York
Cream
Cheese

COM E
GREAT

}T D TUB &lt;1

M
uk18c q

W e have anticipated your every need
in the Hunting and Sporting Goods
Line and have a complete stock of

Florida
-

S P E C IA L BARGAINS
FOR THE F IR ST '

,

ANOTHER SUNDAY
-

•

OUR PAINT SHOP

-

is kept busy by knowing automobllists
who send their curs to us to be re­
painted. The “ wise ones’* know thnt
their cars will lie returned to them
looking smarter nnd better than when
bright new from tho fnctory. The rea­
son for this is that all our work is
custom work which means thnt only
the best of materials are used by
skilled workmen.

Sunday—n dny o f rest. Do you
make it such, or are you devising
w ays and means of swelling your
profit* during the week?
Sunday is a dny of rest, for one
reason, because the humnn mind re­
quires a certain amount of relaxation,
without which it becomes weakened,
and confused and foils to function

oComon {reel

Orange {Poet,

{Raisins
(S e e d e d a n d S e e d le s s )

Currants,
‘D ates, Jugs

U oano u u rn e r
4

{PAon* 4 9 7

C O M P L E T E HO USE B ILL
CARTER LUMBER CO.

WoiaA* S7*ti4i4g

Phone 11 2

Sanford Heights

Is Your AUTO Insurance Heavy?

N IT R O C L U B W ater-Proof S H E L L S , with
Steel Lining—without doubt the best shell on
the market—there is a shell for every purpose
w e nave a com plete stock of T urkey Calls,
Blowing Horns, T ents, Coats, Puttees and
Leggins—in fact ever
ng for Sportsmen

CUT OFF 5 0 PER CENT. OF YOUR HEAYY LOAD
Huy your Fire, Theft, Collision, Liability or Property Damage In­
surance at Actual Coat with

( fmJNTERSL, j

v |sUPP L »E S j^ f,

The Belt Auto Indemnity Association
Ask J. B. Lawson, Chaa. Kanncr, Dr. Langley about how The Belt
pay* its Claim*. Then call phone 46 or write Box 156 for rate*. “ It
will pay you” to aee

H ard w are Co

G. C. Fellows, Manager tor Sanford
^♦ ++♦ ++^+♦ +♦ **♦ ++ +4+

r

JJ

Quality-Servicd—Price

Pure Food Market

Good Fryers

B. F. Whltner, Cashier.

�the

LHUo Happenings
Mention of
Matters In Brief
Fereonal Ileme
of Interest

In and A b o u t
S

jdvid, were Orlando visitors yester£ y . Mr. Miller made the trip to
look at an improved oven, which he
expects to put in his bakery here.
I
Locals are kinder shy today but
gob Holly Is out In the stlckq get­
ting inspiration and accumulating
ptsterial for a lot o f hunting stories
to spring on readers o f the Dally
Herald next week.
11. A. Neel will leavtf tomorrow for
Jacksonville to purchapc a multiple

m gskine typesetting machine, that
tarries six different faces of type,
fliis addition to our equipment will
double the efficiency o f Tho Herald
plant and will enable us to issue a
paper in keeping with the progress
of fa n fo ld and vicinity. .We hope to
have the new machine in service the
latter part of next week.
George E. Hosmer, secretary of the
entertainment committee of the Flor­
ida Editorial Association, and editor
of the Journnl at Bradcntown,1wns n
pleasant visitor to the Herald office,
today. Mr. Hosnicr is enroute home
after an extended trip down the East
Coast in the Interest of the coming
visit of the National Editorial Asso­
ciation. Ho says he only hns (50,000
to raise to necurc the visit of the
newspaper men and we know a little
thing like thnt won’t even faze an old
Colorado newspaperman.
Wilful misuse and misapplication
*f tax funds is charged by Slnyton &amp;
Company, head brokers of Toledo, O.,
in a mandamus,proceeding4 against
the Dade county school board. The
court action involves
00,000 in out­
standing school bonds th*!' were
last Septe-’’
Attorneys assert this
to default in the
is the firsf conn
payment o:

d a il y h e r a l d ,

S a t u r d a y , N o v e m b e r 20.1920

He was a miner's boy in Pennsyl­
vania, but digging dark diamonds
wns not to his liking; it kept him tou
far removed from the people, and he
loved to be where people gathered,
where the. crowds were enjoying
themselves.
~w
lie bur.iie a newsboy. And here
we have Johnny J. Jones who was a
'newsboy, in which position it was
Tha‘ the work of the Rotary Club, undoubted’;1 first discovered that he
the Motor Club, the Real Estate had tots of brains, an! now he is
Board and the West Palm
Beach the sole proprietor of n great pgChamber of Commerce may be fur- Teyn.lb n of «&gt;Jt-door amusements,
thc rco-ordit:atcd, H. K. Robinson, an enterprise employing hundreds of
already secretary o f the first three persons, requiring 43 private enrs
organizations named, hns been elected to transport, a combination which
secretary of the West Palm Beach represents the acme of perfection in
Chamber of Commerce. New quar­ amusement organizations.
ters, sufficiently large for tho word­
It is no longer n show. It is an
ing forces of all the organizations, exposition and a ycry big business
are being sought, and although each proposition. Besides the 43 spccinl
will continue to keep its own business qnrs o f the Johnny J. Jones exposi­
distinct from the others, it is thought’ tion, he hns about 85 wagons, all de­
it will be advisable and beneficial to signed and manufactured by himself.
operate under one directing head.
He hns sofne thirty or forty feature
attractions, eight riding devices, and
TAXPAYERS. TAKE NOTICE
the completes! equipment for the
Tax books are now open for .the rapid erection and transportation of
payment o f State and County taxes his exposition in the world. He only
for 1920. A discount of two per cent goes to the biggi&amp;t fairs both in tho
is allowed fo r payment in November United States and Canada, and has
the very highest standing in the busi­
and one per cent in December.
ness world among the exhibition di­
JNO. D. JINKINS,
rectors with whom he has long, done
11-13-dlw,
Tax Collector,
w-2t
Seminole Copnty. business.
"I attribute my success,’’ said Mr.
Jones, "to two factors. My shows
are absolutely clean. No one need
fear to go into any one of them. The
AT THE STAR THEATRE
people
know that ,nnd they come
TODAY
again and ngain to see them. Then
I believe In the most systematic or­
LOUISE GLAUM In
ganization,
I run this business like
’
"SE X "
a bank. My accounting system Is as
perfect ns experts can make it. In
FOX NEWS and
behind, our staff Is forever* working,
RENT DODGERS
k ey in g accounts in shape, and check­
ing*^everything up. Everything works
like machinery."—Atlanta Journal.
Everybody should send postcards to
Advertise Sanford by sending out a
their friends, The Herald has them of
post
card or two every day, Tho HcrSanford and also Thanksgiving cards,
nid
has
nil kinds for one cent each.
holiday cards, etc. They are only one
Get
n
few
now while the supply la
•cent- each and worth twice as much.
large.
Send a card today.

PAGE FIVE

NEW YORK STATE
HAS SCRAP ON HAND

ALBANY, N. Y., Nov. 20.—The aupremo court of tho United State* ul­
timately will be called upon to dccido
the jurisdiction o f the Interstate
Commerce Commission over Inter­
state passenger and baggage rates, it
was announced today at the office o f
Attorney-General Newton. The order
of the commission yesterday that the
railroads operating in New York es­
tablish intrastate passenger and bag­
gage rates to conform to the inter­
state schedules by increasing the’ e
passenger rates from three to 3.G
cents a mile, will rot end th. fight
of the Etatc authorities fo r a restora­
tion o f tho iwo cent* a mile ra'a be­
tween Alban yand Buffalo, th» a t­
torney-general said.
"This is a sweeping and entirely
new decision," said Attorney-General
Newton, regarding the commission's
order. "Heretofore, the states alone
have exercised the power to fix local
rates. Durihg tho war congress fix­
ed all rates, but under the Esch-Cu'mwas held out that' wins bill the old state rates were restored,
might be found for the entry of the
"The appellate division o f the suJ
United States into the League. He Premc court at Albany decided last
said there never would be n League week
the old two-cent faro on
o f Nations until all nntlons, without tho mainline from Albany to Buffalo
exception, wore included In it.
w“ ® restored Sept. 1, when the Fed__________________ _
cral wartime control wns terminated.
JOHNNY J, JONES
Tho railroad appealed to tho court of
IL\S INTERESTING
appeals where the question will be
BUSINESS CAREER nrFued next Monday.
______
"The state will immediately appeal
Johnny J. Jones is the mnn who to the United States supreme court
is responsible for the new side shows j for n reversal of the order of the I.
at the-Southeastern fair. His show C. C. and probably the judgment of
is known ns the Johnny J. Jones’ Ex- j the court o f nppeals will be taken to

The C ity «£

Boy Jordnn, a thoroughly ?xpcrlfsced job and ad man, formerly of
Misrni, &gt;» now with the Daily Her-

Summary of the
Floating Smell
Talka Succinctly'
Arranged for
Herald Reader*

Ha n f o r d

Everything for the office at the
Herald I’ rintlpg Co. We can fit you
oiTt with nil that you need in fine
printed stationery and office supplies
of all kinds.
/

SATURDAY AT PRINCESS
Special Production
Also the
DAGGER

v a n is h in g

National Madza Lamps
25 to 300 Watt in 110 Volts.
20 to 75 W alts in 32 Volts

Nation Wide Campaign

Everything Erectricai
Expert Installation and
Repair W ork.

Church of the Holy Cross

G IL L O N &amp; F R /Y

Rev. Louis G. Wood

Phone 442

PARK1 AVENUE AT FOURTH STREET

115 Magnolia Ave

as Field Secretary—Priest o f tho Bishop and the Council
for the whole National American Church, will

Seed, Our Business.
Honesty, Our Motto.
Purity, Our Watch
word.

be

the

Special Prcachor this Sunday night, 21st November, 1920

It Is the K ing’s Business

Urgent

SUNDAY NIGHT, 7:30 O’ CLOCK, NOVEMBER 21ST.

The Logical Treatment

ENERGIZER
For Many Human Ills.
We hold this to bo a Truth:—viz:—
That Circulation is the BASIC factor
of Human Henlth.
The "Energizer” process will DO
MORE Benefit to Any Adult’s gen­
eral condition than any other method
#
known.
COME IN and talk it over.
108 Park Ave..
Next Door to Mobley’s Drug Store.
Box 399

L. C. CAMERON
Sanford, Fla.
Phone 184

COMB IN ANII SEE US.
(Southern Seed Specialists)
Weklwa Bldg.
Sanford, Fla
A A .4 . .e . .V. .4.

T R Y A H E R A L D W A N T AD

.V. A A A A

.V. A A . A J . .V. .4 . .V.
▼V V V v

t v

R ESPO N SIB LE
which this

banking is the polic

institution has been mana:

the first d ay the doors were opened.

Let Everyday
That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the
constant and gratifying growth in business.
It is the desire of the officers of this Bank to con­
tinue adding new accounts of those individuals
desiring m ost efficient and responsible banking

SANFORD
Get Them

record of R E S P O N S IB IL IT Y
tronage is invited

at t h e .

Herald Office

Seminole
Is owned, controlled and managed by hom e
people, w h o .are interested in the development
and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County
W ith our large resources and strong financial
connections we are in position to assist our cus­

T H E H E R A L D 'S Office Supply Department ‘ has ju&amp; re­
ceived a large and complete line of this beautiful stationery
—no two boxes alike—and w e will print any monogram on
paper (or cards) and envelopes—in one, two or three colors

tomers at all times in the handling of their finan­
cial needs.

LET U S SE R V E Y O U .

4 Per Cent Interest Paid

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              <text>SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION&#13;
Volume 1&#13;
Sanford, Florida, Saturday, November 20, 1920&#13;
Number 196&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------&#13;
&#13;
LISBON PARALYZED BY STRIKEING OF LONGSHOREMEN&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Lisbon, Nov. 20 – &#13;
Traffic at this port has been almost aparlyzed by a strike of the longshoremen and stevedores and by workers on the state railways. Meantime the city has been given an evil appearance by a strike of the garbage wagon-drivers and street cleaners.&#13;
 Several foreign vessels were compelled to leave the harbor without discharging their cargoes of provisions, greatly needed in this poorly rationed country, because of the harbor strike. Labor troubles spread also to the crews of merchant ships and some officers joined with the men in quitting work on board the steamers.&#13;
 Pieces of machinery were removed from the boats used for transporting passengers and provisions across the Tagus river and the boilers of some of the smaller craft were filled with salt water so that when the government sent naval forces to operate them the boilers would not make steam.&#13;
 As a result of the state railway strike Lisbon was threatened with a dearth of provisions. The streets were cluttered with ill-smelling dirt heaps and filth owing to the strike of the cleaners.&#13;
 As usual when strikes occur here, reports were spread that they were due to a bolshevist plat emenating from Moscow. Officials of the government issued a note stating that they were informed of the details of a proposed general revolutionary strike but were prepared to take steps to suppress any disorders which might result.&#13;
&#13;
------------&#13;
FORMER GERMAN EMPRESS VERY ILL&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
DOORN, Holland, Nov. 20 –&#13;
 The consideration of the former German empress who has been in failing health since suicide of her son, the former crown prince, is declared to be worse, and grave fears are held for her recovery.&#13;
&#13;
--------&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Exposing Graft In High Quarters&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 20 –&#13;
 R. W. Boiling, a brother-in-law of President Wilson, was today named in connection with a $40,000 bribe, alleged to have been paid by the Staten Island Shipbuilding Company to procure unusual favors form the United States Shipping Board, was made in testimony before the Congressional investing committee. Tucker Sands, former vice-president of the Commercial National Bank of Washington, said the money was to be split between himself, Boiling, Lester Sisler, former shipping board secretary and John Craner, of Richmond.&#13;
&#13;
--------&#13;
ANTI-PROHIS BETTING BUSY&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Washington, Nov. 20 –&#13;
 All breweries manufacturing beer containing more than one-half of one per cent alcohol will at once be seized, the international revenue bureau indicated today.&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
OUR FIRST NATIONAL WILL MAKE A GOOD ONE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
Washington, Nov. 20 –&#13;
 The Comptroller of the Currency today issued a call for the statement of the condition of all National banks at the close of business Monday, November 15th.&#13;
&#13;
--------&#13;
SPOT COTTON MARKET TO BE ESTABLISHED&#13;
&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
Los Angeles, Nov. 20 –&#13;
 The International cotton league of the west voted to establish a “spot” cotton market here and will have it in operation by the first of the new year.&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
CHANGED THEIR TUNE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
New York, Nov. 20 –&#13;
 All six refineries of the American Sugar Refining Company closed today as the result of the slight demand for the commodity, officials announced. They also said they had ample stocks and were prepared to make prompt delivery.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
“Peggy Dorner Is Right On the Job”&#13;
&#13;
 The Herald is in receipt of the following telegram, which indicates that “Peggy” is going after either the first prize on lettuce or cabbage:&#13;
 “The midnight train from Tampa to Sanford pulled in about 5 this morning. I loaded eight heads of Butter Crust lettuce in a garden box, as sleepy as I was, for the Jacksonville fair. Engineer F. Guinn, from Sanford, made up the lost time – one hour and seventeen minutes. He has been going with such a speed, good gracious, my lettuce turned to cabbage when I landed here.&#13;
 “PEGGY DORNER”&#13;
&#13;
-------&#13;
PRESIDENT WILSON’S HEALTH IMPROVED&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
 Washington, Nov. 20 –&#13;
 President Wilson’s health has so improved, White House officials said today, it was possible that he might address congress in person when it convenes in December.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
SHOULD HAVE GOT LONGER SENTENCE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
 Norristown, Pa., Nov. 20 – &#13;
 August Pascal, “the Crank,” sentenced to life imprisonment on a plea of guilty of kidnapping Blakely Coughlin, the 13-month-old son of George H. Coughlin. Sentence was suspended on the second degree murder charge.&#13;
&#13;
---------&#13;
NO FRIENDSHIP FOR GERMANY&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
 London, Nov. 20 – &#13;
 By reason of the tempest stirred up as the result of overtures by Oxford professors to German and Austrian educators to join then in burying the hatchet and return to previous amiable relations, the text of the appeal is attracting widespread interest.&#13;
 The Times denounced the letter urging resumption of friendly relations between German, Austrian and British educators as “ill-advised and inopportune,” and called the Oxford men to account for failing to distinguish between animosities created in England by the sinking of hospital ships and bombing of open cities, on the one hand and the black passions of the wretches who perpetuated those crimes.”&#13;
 The text of the Oxford letter follows: “To the Professors of the Arts and Sciences and to members of the Universities and learned societies in Germany and Austria:&#13;
 “Since there will be many pf you who fully share our heartfelt sorrow and regret for the breach that the war has occasioned in our friendly intercourse, and since you cannot doubt the sincerity of the feeling which engendered and cherished that old friendliness you must, we believe, be sharing our hope for its speedy reestablishment.&#13;
 “We therefore, the undersigned doctors, heads of houses, professors and other officers and teachers in the University of Oxford, now personally approach you with the desire to dispel the embitterment of the animosities that under the impulse of loyal patriotism may have passed between us.&#13;
 In the field where our aims are one, our enthusiasms the same, our rivalry and ambition generous, we can surely look to be reconciled and the fellowship of learning offers a road which may – and if our spiritual ideals be alive must – lead to a wider sympathy and better understanding between our kindred nations.&#13;
 “While politician dissensions are threatening to extinguish the honorable comity of the great European states, we pray that we may help to hasten that amiable reunion which civilization demands. Impetret ratio quod dies impetratura est.”&#13;
 Fifty-seven signatures are appended to the letter, including those of W. G. S. Adams, professor of Political Theory and Institutions; Sir Hugh Allen, director of the the Royal College of Music; Rev. G. A. Cooke, Regius professor of Hebrew; Sir Arthur Evans, professor of Prehistoric Archaeology; Rev. A. C. Headlam, Rogius professor of Divinity; J. A. Smith, professor of Moral and Metaphysical Philosophy and many other well known college principals.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Where You Worship Tomorrow&#13;
&#13;
HOLY CROSS CHURCH SERVICES&#13;
For the Sunday next before Advent, Church services will be:&#13;
7:30	a.m., Low Celebration&#13;
9:45	a.m., Church School.&#13;
11:00	a.m., Morning service&#13;
7:30	p.m., Vespers with Rev. L. G. Wood, preacher.&#13;
--&#13;
UNION THANKSGIVING SERVICE&#13;
 The Union Thanksgiving service will be held this year in the Methodist church at 10 a.m.&#13;
 Rev. Paul C. Burhans will preside. Mr. Burhans is the new pastor of the Congregational church.&#13;
 Dr. George Hyman will preach the sermon.&#13;
 Dr. Walker will lead the Thanksgiving prayer.&#13;
 Mr. Brownlee will read the scripture.&#13;
 The director of the choir at the Methodist church will have charge of the music.&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH&#13;
 The largest congregation was present last Sunday which has ever been present at a regular service in the church. The large auditorium was full, which condition was not expected for five years yet. There was also a large Sunday school. The intermediate church had a good meeting Sunday afternoon and 46 were present at the senior C. E. Two were welcomed into the church. The church is enthusiastic in every department.&#13;
Sunday services: &#13;
Sunday school, 9:45 a. m.&#13;
Preaching. 11 a. m.&#13;
Intermediate C. E., 2:30 p. m.&#13;
Senior C. E., 6:45 p. m.&#13;
Preaching, 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Monday night a banquet for Presbyterian men given by the brotherhood. Visitors in town invited.&#13;
&#13;
 The Rev, Paul C. Burhans, the new pastor of the Congregational church will be here Sunday, the 21st, for both morning and evening services. A full attendant of members and friend is desired.&#13;
 Moring service, 11 o’clock.&#13;
Evening service at 7:30.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
YOUNG PEOPLE&#13;
&#13;
Every Sunday evening at 6:30 the Flake B. Y. P. U. meets on the third floor of the Baptist Temple. If you are a visitor on the city or a stranger of if you are not connected with any other union we would be glad to have you visit the B. Y. P. U. A hearty welcome is extended to all and we try to make every one feel at home. We would be pleased to have you enroll as a member and become a worker with us. If you come once you’ll come again. Remember the time and place, 6:30 at the Temple.&#13;
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FOR CHURCHMEN&#13;
It is certainly a great privilege to have Rev. Louis G. Wood as the preacher at the Church of the Holy Cross, this Sunday night at 7:30 p. m. Mr. Wood has the whole insight of the church and he goes throughout the church from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. Recognizing the position now of Holy Cross Parish, we are given him for Sunday night, he being at Saint Luke’s Cathedral in the morning.&#13;
 The Bishop and the Diocese and the Church-at-large having this confidence in this Parish here in Sanford, in giving us Father Wood when the largest cities are claiming him, it is for Sanford churchmen and friends, to a man, to show themselves.&#13;
 It is not too much to say that there is no more thoroughly able and gifted preacher than Father Wood and those Sanford people who do not come to Sunday night service will be always losers.&#13;
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THE FIDELIS CLASS&#13;
 Of the Baptist Temple meets every Sunday morning at 9:30. All unmarried young ladies are cordially invited to attend these meetings. We have a large class with Miss Marion Gove, president, and Mrs. F. R. savage, teacher. We are planning to do things and would like to have you help do them. You can do so by coming Sunday morning and if you are not already a member enroll and become one of us. We are there and want you to be there promptly at 9:30.&#13;
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METHODIST CHURCH&#13;
Sunday school, 9:30 a. m.&#13;
Church, 11:00 a. m.&#13;
Subject: “A Great Character.”&#13;
Epworth League, 6:30 p. m.&#13;
Church, 7:30 p.m. subject, “what Doest Though Here?&#13;
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IS THE DEVIL A CITIZEN ON SANFORD”&#13;
 At the Baptist Temple Sunday evening Dr. George Hyman will speak on this subject. You are invited to here this sermon. The service begins promptly at 7:30 p. m. &#13;
 At 11 a. m. the subject of discourse will be “The Miff Tree.” This will be an illustrated sermon, and the members of the church will be urged to attend.&#13;
 The Sunday school, which is maintaining its large attendance and real study will meet at 9:30 in the morning.&#13;
 One of the features of Sunday’s services will be the solo to be sung by Mrs. Laura Betts. Those who have heard Mrs. Betts will enjoy attending the Sunday morning service at which time she will sing.&#13;
 The auditorium is nearing completion and notice will soon be given of the first service.&#13;
Watch the Herald for notices of the Temple services.&#13;
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Germany Refuses To Surrender Colonies&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Geneva, Nov. 20 -&#13;
The German government no longer considers itself bound by the clause of the Versailles treaty by which Germany surrenders her colonies to the allies, according to an official note of protest which has been presented to the league of nations. &#13;
 The note declares that the allies have not fulfilled their undertakings regarding the clause of the treaty concerning the allotment of the German colonies and mandates. It adds that having signed the pact of the league of nations, Germany understood she would be admitted to the league and consequently take part on the allotment of mandadates, but that now she no longer considers herself bound by that clause of the treaty.&#13;
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 The mandates referred to in the German protest were provided for the article XXII of the covenant of the league of nations in the treaty of Versailles. It was stipulated there that colonies and territories severed from their former sovereignty by the war and inhabited by peoples of backward development should be placed under the tutelage of more advanced peoples under mandates from the league. Old colonial possessions come under that category, the list included the African states, such as German East African and the Kamerun and the several groups of islands in the Pacific. &#13;
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$25,000 Recovered From the Chicken Coop&#13;
&#13;
COUNCIL BLUFFs, Ia., Nov. 20 – &#13;
 The finding of a fortune in a chicken coop and the arrest of two more suspected persons early yesterday brought the investigation of last Saturday’s Burlington Railway mail robbery, in which estimates of losses run as high as $3,500,000 to a point where postal officials said the case was virtually complete.&#13;
 A count of the recovered money found the sack in the chicken house back of the T. A. Daly home here showed it to total $26,000 in ten dollar bills. Federal agents are now trying to locate $10,000 which Mrs. Daly has said was carried away from the Daly home by one of the robbers. According to statements made by officials who made the arrests, the loot not found in the chicken house was burned.&#13;
 The men under arrest will be arraigned today before a United States commissioner. Two of the men, T. A. Daly and H. A. Reed, are white and the others are negroes. Reed’s confession led to recovery of part of the loot.&#13;
 The total amount of money recovered was not announced by officials this morning. Ten persons in all are under arrest.&#13;
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Condensed Telegraph For Hasty Reading&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
NASHVILLE, Nov. 20 – The safe in the post office at Dresden was blown today by robbers who secured a large amount in stamps.&#13;
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PARIS, Nov. 20. – The premiers of Great Britain are expected to hold a conference today to consider toe Near East situation, created by the defeat of Venizelos in Greece.&#13;
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PEKIN, Nov. 20 – It is reported the Bolsheviki have resumed attacks against the anti-bolsheviki in Eastern Siberia, capturing Borgia.&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 - The first Thanksgiving turkey arrived at the White House today, weighing 38 pounds, from the Chamber of Commerce at Cuero, Texas.&#13;
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ATHENS, Nov. 20 – It is reported that the chief army command will be given to Prince Andreas, brother of the former King Constantine.&#13;
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NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 20 - Property damage estimated at two million dollars was caused by water front fire today. The blaze is believed to have been started from a switch engine sparks.&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 – Leaders of the Socialist labor today, reported the campaign receipts at $18,099 and expenditures at $16,146.&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 – Racial populations announced by the census bureau today show increases in the negro populations since 1910 in Memphis and Knoxville and a decrease in Nashville.&#13;
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30,000,000 CHINESE ARE FACING FAMINE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
PEKING, Nov. 20 – Cholera is adding to the general distress in the famine-stricken district where from 25,000,000 to 30,000,000 people are facing death by starvation.&#13;
 The Associated Press correspondent, who recently traveled through the heart of the territory most seriously denuded of food, found conditions even more desperate than had been indicated by information previously received here.&#13;
 In the town of Hwai-an where there were 100 families, 30 persons had died of cholera and similar reports are common from various other districts.&#13;
 The picture presented to the eye of the correspondent was a dismal one; the soil barren as in mid-winter, prices soaring, migration of those having more money or enterprise, the people living on a diet of weeds, chaff, thistles and leaves; children, especially little girls, offered for sale at the average price of the small Chinese mule; cholera from underfeeding, suicides of individuals in extreme despair, old women and children gleaning patches of weeds, men with no work to do and clusters of refugees living in the shelter of temples in market towns.&#13;
 Information obtained by the correspondent indicated that the present suffering is only a forecast of that to come in the course of eight or 10 weeks when the real crisis will arrive. Conditions in the belt he traversed in a journey by cart between two railway lines near Techow are believed to be typical of those generally existing throughout large areas in the provinces of Chihli, Shantung, Honan, and Shanai. He found indescribable misery and stoical facing of starvation by millions of people who already had disposed of everything salable and saw in the future nothing but death.&#13;
 When the frost will have killed the unconsumed leaves and weeds there will be literally nothing to eat for at least half the population. One out of 10 has already migrated without money and without destination. In the worst spots half of the people are already subsisting on the proceeds of the sale of furniture and clothing, which means that those temporarily escaping starvation will ultimately die from the cold and exposure.&#13;
 In the town of Chi Chow, which is typical, the magistrate informed the correspondent that out of every three families two are quite sure to stave before the end of the year, barring effective relief from outside. There are 390,000 people in the administrative district in question.&#13;
 In Ning Ching two bankers who were engaged in raising relief funding said that the crop had been an absolute failure following two or three previous and serious shortages. Of 10,000 families, they estimated that eight out of ten were practically without means. One of the informants said that he was the owner of the largest pawnshop on the vicinity.&#13;
 “There are constant streams of farmers coming with clothing, furniture, implements, anything upsets which to realize a few coppers. They are selling their children where possible, or leaving them where there is hope that they may be fed,” he said.&#13;
 Chaff and the residue from cotton seed after the oil has been extracted have become valuable beyond the reach of the average person, who exists on a watery concoction chiefly of leaves and weeds, with perhaps a few kernels of grain, and a sort of cake, if he is affluent enough, made of cotton seed waste.&#13;
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ENGLAND “ELBOW TO ELBOW” WITH FRANCE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
PARIS, Nov. 20 – &#13;
Premier Lloyd George in an interview today with the correspondent of the Petit Parisien, declared the differences between Great Britain and France do not amount to a quarrel and the views held did not prejudice the alliance created during the world war. Regarding the proposed preparations he declared that England would stand “elbow to elbow” with France, but he insisted that the amount Germany is called upon to pay should be fixed.&#13;
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IMPROVEMENT IN RAILS USED BY RAILROAD&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO, Nov. 19 – &#13;
A great improvement in rails now in use in the United States is reported by the American Railway Engineering Association. Some years ago the number of rails that failed to give normal service or broke under moving train became alarmingly-large, the worst condition being reached about 1905. This led to investigation by the American Railway Association and later by the railway engineering association.&#13;
 “A drop in the rail failures from almost 400 per 100 track miles for five years’ service in 1908 rails to 70 in the 1914 rails is a decrease of over 80 per cent,“ writes M. H. Wickhorst, engineer of tests of the engineering association’s rail committee in his report just issued here. “We may well feel elated over this good performance and congratulate the mills and railroads that brought about the result.&#13;
 “A close study of the detail reports indicates that a further decrease of over eighty per cent of the failures of the 1914 rails is possible.”&#13;
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GETTING BUSY ON LEAGUE OF NATIONS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
GENEVA, Nov. 20 – &#13;
The first formal step toward the revision of the League of Nations covenant was taken by the assembly of the League when the Dutch foreign minister today introduced a resolution calling for the reconsideration of the article doing with the registration of treaties.&#13;
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DECLARE ALL WAR DEBTS CANCELLED&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
LISBON, Nov. 20 – &#13;
 Mello Barretto, Portuguese minister of Foreign Affairs, has returned from London bringing assurances from the British government that the Portuguese republic can count on the good will of Great Britain. He said that Premier Lloyd George informed him that he had insisted at the Spa conference in July that full justice should be done to Portugal.&#13;
 A Lisbon newspaper man who interviewed the foreign minister asked him whether it was true that America was disposed to annul the war of England had contracted with them, one condition that England in turn, charge off the debts due her from small actions and contracted in the war. The minister declined to discuss that subject pointing out that he had nothing to do with financial affairs. &#13;
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PAGE 2 (page six) THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1920&#13;
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STAR THEATRE Today and Tomorrow&#13;
J Parker Read Jr presents&#13;
Louise Glaum in&#13;
SEX&#13;
By C. Gardner Sullivan. Directed by Fred Niblo&#13;
S	stands for Sorrow and Suffering that are the heritage of all women.&#13;
E	stands for Experience that refines the soul of all women.&#13;
X	is the great Unknown in the fascinating game of life.&#13;
DISTRIBUTED BY W. HODKINSON CORP.&#13;
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Methodist Bazaar&#13;
Sanford is on a boom – not a vacant store-room is to be found on First street, but undaunted “The Truth Seekers” of the Methodist Church will erect a tent on the old Sanford House site and hold their Annual Bazaar FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. COOKED FOOD AND OYSTER SUPPER SATURDAY NIGHT.&#13;
Your Patronage solicited.&#13;
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CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
 Classified advertisements, 5 cents a line. No ad taken for less than 25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cash must accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit accordingly.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED-&#13;
WANTED – To rent, a Wicker baby carriage in good condition for four months. Mrs. M. S. Wiggins, at the Gables.  195-6t&#13;
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WANTED - House or apartment of 3 or 4 rooms, unfurnished, for man and wife with two school children. Best of references. See or write, G. B. S., job dept., Herald office.  Dh-tf&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office.&#13;
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WANTED – Team work. Inquire of M. Hanson shoe shop.   189-60tp&#13;
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WANTED – Your old batteries to rebuild. Let us make your starting and lighting a pleasure. We are authorized “EXIDE” dealers and have a Battery for all makes automobiles. “EXIDE the Giant that lives in a box.” – Ray Bros.  Phone 548, old For Garage.    179-tfc&#13;
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Get your scratch pads from The Herald – by the pound – 15c.&#13;
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WANTED – Brick and cement work, chimneys, flues, piers, cement floors, sidewalks. – A. L. Ray, 206 Park Ave.   173-30t&#13;
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WANTED – Pupils, Violin and Piano. – Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.  175-20t-p&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H,P, Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf&#13;
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WANTED – BY DEC. 1ST OR SOONER, 3 OR 4 UNFURNISHED ROOMS OR 3 TO 6 ROOM HOUSE, UNFURNISHED OR PARTLY FURNISHED. WILL LEASE BY MONTH OR YEAR. BEST OF REFERENCES GIVEN. ADDRESS “SOON” CARE OF HERALD.   193-12tp&#13;
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FOR RENT&#13;
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FOR RENT – One nicely furnished room, 320 Oak Ave.  Phone 308-J. 187-tfc.&#13;
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TO RENT or for sale. Large warehouse with railroad siding. – Chas. Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven Co.   156-tfc.&#13;
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FURNISHED ROOMS – Two furnished bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park Avenue.   157-tfc.&#13;
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MICELLANEOUS&#13;
ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, 109 East First street, over Union Pharmacy.  163-tfc.&#13;
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DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture, bedsteads, chairs, etc. what have you?     174-30tfc.&#13;
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BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run your battery until she is entirely dead. The battery is the costliest accessory to your car. We re-charge and re-build all makes of batteries. – Ray Bros.  Phone 548, old Ford Garage.     179-tfc.&#13;
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LOST&#13;
LOST – Pink saphire ring, solitaire setting. Finder return to Agnes Berner, Sanford Shoe &amp; Clothing Co.  195-3tc&#13;
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LOST – Western Union branch deposit book. Finder please return to Western Union office. – J. P. Hall, Mgr.  180-tfc.&#13;
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LOST OR STRAYED – One red pig, 4 months, If found notify E. B. Randall, Jr., 825 First street.  191-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE &#13;
FOR sale – shasto daisies, $1 per dozen. English Shamrock Oxalys 20c per dozen. Ring 207-W.  183-12t.&#13;
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Special reduction in men’s and ladies’ W. L. Douglas shoes. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing co.  tf&#13;
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New line of Congoleums and Art Squares. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc&#13;
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FOR SALE – One new 1920 and one 1917 Ford touring cars. Two tents 10x12 and 12x14, also four army cots. All in good condition. Call for Mr. Lehman.  Phone No. 112.  193-6tp&#13;
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Dolls, 10c to $20.00. French shop.  194-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf&#13;
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Special reduction on Georgette Silk and cotton shirt waists. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.&#13;
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Toy Airplanes, French shop.  194tfc&#13;
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We have just received a line of silverware and casseroles. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – One horse, wagon and harness. Apply M. Hanson Shoe Shop.    189-12tp.&#13;
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Sinkable submarines, French shop.    194-tfc&#13;
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Toy pianos, French shop.   194-tfc&#13;
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See our line of electric lamps. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford avenue.  Phone 550.  166-tfc&#13;
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PLANTS FOR SALE – Cabbage per 1000, $1.50; Cauliflower, Handers Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B. B., per M, $1.50; Ice Berg, per M, $1.50; Beets, Crosby’s Egyptian, per M, $1.50; Onion, yellow Bermuda, per M, $1.50; Celery, yellow golden, per M, $2.00; Self-bleaching imported celery, per M, $2.00; French celery seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.00; Clay County Gardening Co., Green Cove Springs, Fla.     11-12.&#13;
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Largest assortment of toys ever in Sanford, at French shop.  194-tfc&#13;
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FOR SALE – One 1920 Cole Eight 7-passenger automobile run only 6500 miles. Bargain. One 1920. 7 passenger Buick run only 3,700 miles, price right. Extras. Box 478, DeLand, Fla.   193-6tp&#13;
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FOR SALE – Good mule, cheap. Would exchange for good milch cow. P. O. Box 445. 193-4tp&#13;
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Bring the children to see the toys at the French shop.   194-tfc.&#13;
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FOR RENT – Two or three furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Close in. Owner, box 117.  194-6tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – One five passenger Ford touring car. Must go quick. Sanford heights camping grounds. Fred Ford.   194-3tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – A real bargain in Lake county at a bargain. 100 acres of land, near two good towns, good house and water works, piped all over place. Spraying machine, etc. 28 acres old bearing grove orange and grapefruit; 40 acres in cultivation, balance timber land. Price $33,000. Terms. Address Box 195, Clermont, Fla.  194-3tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 40 acres good citrus land, cleared and fenced, 1 3-4 miles to town. Good roads. A bargain at $80 an acre. As we need the money. Price $45 per acre. Address 195, Clermont, Fla.  194-3tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – One Jersey cow, gives 3 gallons of milk daily, 4 years old. $125.00. Will Jones, corner 6th and Hickory.   195-2tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – One cottage 5 rooms and bath, corner Third street and French ave. Mrs. Baldwin.   194-4tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 6 room cottage, large yard, fine garden, various kinds of fruit trees and two separate fine acre farms close in. Owner, Box 111.  194-6tp.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 10 gallon water tank and oil heater for tank. Will be sold cheap. Call at 321 Magnolia avenue. Phone 296.  195-3tp.&#13;
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NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR CHARTER OF SANFORD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:&#13;
 Notice is hereby gives the undersigned will on Tuesday, the 21st day of December, A. D. 1920, at 10:00 o’clock a .m. or as soon there after as we can be heard, at DeLand, Florida at the Court House, make application to the Honorable James w. Perkins, Judge of the Circuit Court of the Seventh Judicial Circuit of Florida, for an order approving the proposed charter of, and incorporating the Sanford Chamber of Commerce, of Sanford, Florida, the subject of which shall be to promote the commercial, agricultural and industrial welfare of Sanford and Seminole County, to acquire and hold property, mortgage and sell the same, etc. and to improve the general conditions of the community by co-operation of the public spirited citizens and generally to do whatever its members shall think beneficial to Sanford and Seminole County, the same being a non-profit sharing corporation; the original proposed charter or articles of incorporation being now on file in the office of the Clerk of Circuit Court of Seminole county, Florida, as by law prohibited.&#13;
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  J. G. Ball, A. P. Connelly, R. J. Holly, Geo. W. Knight, R. C. Bower, John Meisch.&#13;
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11-19-d5tc&#13;
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NOTICE FOR APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO SELL MINOR’S LAND&#13;
In Court of County Judge, State of Florida, Seminole County.&#13;
&#13;
In Re Estate of Clara Bray and Wm. Bray, Minors&#13;
Notice is hereby given to all whom it may concern, that Sinah T. Bray as guardian of Clara Bray and Wm. T. Bray, minors will on the 20th day of December, A. D. 1920 apply to the Honorable E. F. Householder, County Judge in and for said County, at or office in Sanford, in said county, at 10 o’clock, a. m., as said thereafter as the matter can be heard, for authority to sell, at public or private sale, the interest of said minors in and to the following described real estate, in said County, to wit: lot Five (5) of Block (C) according to K. M. Garner’s Plat of Markham Park Heights.&#13;
 Which application will be based upon the petition for sale now, on file in said Court.&#13;
Dated Nov. 18th, A. D. 1920.  Sinah T. Bray, Guardian  11-19-d5tc&#13;
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Circle D of the Presbyterian Church &#13;
Will have a Pure Food Sale&#13;
Saturday Morning at Bower &amp; Roumillat’s Drug store&#13;
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BRADLEY MATTRESS FACTORY, Orlando, Fla.&#13;
Makes old mattresses new at one-third the cost of a new one.&#13;
PHONE 804    16 BRYANT ST.    11-1511mo&#13;
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Advertise Sanford by sending out a post card or two every day. The Herald has all kinds for one cent each. Get a few now while the supply at large.&#13;
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MELVILLE’S COMEDIANS&#13;
$10,000.00 Tent Theatre – Monday, Nov. 22&#13;
Bert Melville and Company – America’s Best Dramatic Company will present High-Class Royalty Plays – Change of Program Each Day&#13;
Monday Night will present BROKEN HEARTS. Four Act Drama.&#13;
Five Vaudeville specialties. Admission 40c and 25, including war tax. FREE One lady will be admitted with each adult ticket Monday Night. FREE&#13;
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WHAT THE PRESS AND PUBLIC THINK OF MELVILLE’S COMEDIANS AND PLAYS.&#13;
The World-Tents Theatre new play, “The Broken Tents,” is cleverly throughout skillfully constructed and feliciously fine performance. One of the real events of the holiday season.&#13;
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The American – “We sat beneath the spell of a four act play, “The Broken Hearts” that enclosed comedy, drama, humor, brilliancy and charm. It is an undeniable success and if you miss it you will be sorry.&#13;
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New York World – “Although “The Broken Hearts” is the most pleasing play of the season – the audience was enthusiastic.&#13;
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Evening World – The play, “The Broken Hearts,” makes a strong human appeal.&#13;
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Tampa Times – by the Dean of American critics – Mr. Melville is to be sincerely congratulated upon a notable successful effort to redeem the promise made at the opening of the handsome tent theatre that it should be the home of comedy, a genuine American comedy, dealing freshly, humorously, satirically and pathetically with conditions of contemporaneously interest, and furnishing food for reflection, as well as amusement.&#13;
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The Tribune – “We do not think we would be likely to overestimate the proper state of the “Broken Hearts.” One of the truly noteworthy comedies by American authors.”&#13;
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Evening Mall – “A fine and purposeful, study of current domestic problems as the theatre is likely to house this winter, and as well written and well acted a play as Broadway is likely to see. Its performance last night had a truly electrifying effect.”&#13;
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The Times – “The Broken Hearts” is clever, adroit and interesting – blessed by an exceptional spirit and intelligent performance.&#13;
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WHAT THE PRESS AND PUBLIC THINK OF MELVILLE’S COMEDIANS AND PLAYS.&#13;
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Athens, Ga., July 30, 1920.&#13;
To the public:&#13;
The Melville Comedians played in Athens for one week, and leave the city with the good wishes of every one who attended.&#13;
 The performances were clean, high class and entertaining. Respectfully, JUDGE GEORGE E. THOMAS.&#13;
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Milledgeville, Ga., May 20, 1920.&#13;
Hon Mayor:&#13;
Melville Comedians Theatre is clean and was enjoyed by our people who patronize them liberally. The members of the show were affable and pleasant and made many friends here. The tent was on the college grounds.&#13;
MILLER BELL&#13;
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Washington, June 30, 1920.&#13;
Mayor Macon:&#13;
Melville’s show is first class. The people composing the troupe are OK. I can personally vouch for both show and those composing it.&#13;
K. A. WILHEITH, Mayor.&#13;
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Madison, June 3, 1920.&#13;
To Mayor, Covington, Ga.:&#13;
Melville shows are good, moral and a credit to any city. I also attended this show in Melledgeviile.&#13;
MAYOR.&#13;
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Gainesville, 1920.&#13;
The general public and myself are truly pleased your your show; up-to-date and clean in every respect.&#13;
W. A. APIMOUT, Mayor.&#13;
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KIWANIS CLUB ENDORSES MELVILLE’S COMEDIANS&#13;
(By “JONESEY,” O. B. Secretary Kiwanis Club of Tampa – Too bad all “show folks” are not like Bert Melville and his popular company, who at present are playing to capacity business here; they deserve it. They are presenting clean up-to-date plays, interpreted between the acts with Variety Vaudeville that will please the most fastidious. Kiwanis is strong for show folks of Mr. Melville’s type, and Tampa should be –&#13;
From Kiwanis Magazine.&#13;
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PAGE 3 – THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD – SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1920&#13;
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Decline in Prices in Furniture&#13;
Beginning on Monday we will offer each Monday something special in Furniture. The prices in many cases are cut in two. We are expecting to stand losses caused by the Decline in all Prices on Furniture. Many things we may offer have pre war prices. Watch our Show Windows For Bargains.   T. J. MILLER &amp; SON.&#13;
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SOCIETY.  MISS KATHRYN WILKEY, Editor.  Phone 428.&#13;
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Mrs. W. P. Fields is in Jacksonville having gone to the Fair and to hear Billy Sunday&#13;
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B. J. Starling is in Jacksonville attending a general meeting in the A. A. Company salesmen.&#13;
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T. N. T.&#13;
The T. N. T. were delightfully entertained Thursday afternoon by Mrs. J. B. Lawson. A most pleasant afternoon of sewing concluded by a delicious salad course were enjoyed by all members but one, and two guests, Mrs. R. J. Molly and Mrs. Emmitt Hunt.&#13;
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BAZAAR&#13;
The “Truth Seekers’ Class” of the Methodist church are having a very attractive bazaar on First street on the site of the old Sanford House. Against a background of palms and ferns, booths decorated in many colored paper flowers gives a gay and festive air to the many beautiful and useful things that are presented for sale.&#13;
 The ladies in charge are: of the apron booth, Mrs. W. S. Thornton and Mrs. Howard P. Smith; of the pillow case booth, Mrs. L. P. Hagan; of the fancy work booth, Mrs. D. A. Kelly and Mrs. Will Hoolihan. There will be an oyster supper served there this evening with promises to be unusually good.&#13;
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Melville’s Comedians&#13;
The writer has on several different occasions, had the pleasure of attending the performances of Bert Melville’s Comedians, and have always found the company to be composed of real theatrical people – ladies and gentlemen of high ability, admirably suited to their different parts. The vaudeville specialties are always good – in fact, the people of this section have a week of rare entertainment in store for those who attend the performance of the Melville Comedians, all next week, in the big waterproof tent on Commercial street, at the “13” Club Park, next to the Court House. This show is for the white people exclusively and the best of order will be maintained.&#13;
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LO THE POOR FARMER&#13;
My yard is full of cotton&#13;
And my crib is full of corn&#13;
I’m a ramblin’ wreak of poverty;&#13;
My face is all forlorn.&#13;
&#13;
My porch is full of peanuts,&#13;
There’s ‘taters in the bank,&#13;
My fields are full pf cattle,&#13;
And the food stands rich and rank.&#13;
&#13;
My hogs are fat and plenty,&#13;
The cane waits in the mill,&#13;
I’ll make syrup for my family,&#13;
And plenty more to sell.&#13;
&#13;
I’ve hay out in the open,&#13;
For I do not have the space&#13;
To store all the provisions&#13;
That I’ve made on this old place.&#13;
&#13;
I’ve cotton seed aplenty&#13;
To fertilize next year;&#13;
I’ve mules and plows and wagons,&#13;
And clothes enough to wear.&#13;
&#13;
I’ve got tires on old John Henry,&#13;
Tho’ the price of gas is high&#13;
But it’s wonderful the sight of gas&#13;
A cord of wood will buy.&#13;
&#13;
And chickens, eggs and butter,&#13;
Sweet potatoes, lard and meat;&#13;
My old smokehouse is groaning,&#13;
And my garden can’t be beat.&#13;
&#13;
But still I worry and complain,&#13;
Until I’m out of breath,&#13;
And if folks didn’t know me,&#13;
They’d swear I’d starve to death.&#13;
&#13;
I’m a ramblin’ wreak of poverty, &#13;
My face is all forlorn;&#13;
I’m the most unlucky heathen&#13;
That ever has been born.&#13;
&#13;
  W. E. Mcdougald in Clito Clippings&#13;
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Ocala is greatly excited over the dastardly deed of a negro burglar who entered the Williams home in Ocala Sunday night, sandbagged Mrs. Martha Williams and her companion Mrs. James F. Long. Both are expected to recover. The negro made his escape. Mrs. Williams is the mother-in-law of the late R. S. Hall. Mrs. Long is the wife of a young soldier in the recruiting service who is now at Live Oak, Fla.&#13;
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A COURSE IN NEWSPAPER WRITING&#13;
&#13;
The General extension Division of the University of Florida, has been offering an elementary course on newspaper writing with the hope of assisting the newspaper men by giving amateur reporters throughout the state some simple and helpful suggestions concerning what is news, the source of news, the proper preparation of copy, some idea concerning news values and the necessity for brevity, order and sequence in writing news. This course is handled by a member of our staff who is a graduate of the Missouri school of Journalism and has had six years experience on a big daily and one year in a big publishing house. We would be glad to have you suggest to your reporters that they take this course and we will give them a scholarship which means that they will not have to pay the customary small incidental fee usually charged to help cover postage, etc. This offer is open until December first.&#13;
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ODD FELLOWS AND REBEKAHS, ATTENTION!&#13;
&#13;
Sanford Lodge No. 27, I. O. O. F. will give an entertainment at the hall, Monday evening. November 29th, to which all Odd Fellows and their families, and Rebekahs are invited. All transient and visiting Odd Fellows will be most cordially welcome.  11-19-2t&#13;
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Advertise Sanford by post cards. Beautiful views. 1c each. Sanford Herald.&#13;
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SIX KINDS OF SAFETY&#13;
&#13;
 Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank where you deposit your money?&#13;
 The first consideration is the capital, which should be ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank is to serve.&#13;
 The next question to consider is the officers in charge. They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without man of ability no institution can succeed.&#13;
 Then there is the question of confidence. The public should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. &#13;
 These three principles determine the success of a bank.&#13;
 We adopted these principles in the outset of our career and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase our usefulness to the community as the years go by.&#13;
 We offer you:&#13;
  &#13;
  1st: Large capital and working reserve&#13;
  2nd: Trained men in charge – men of several years experience.&#13;
  3rd: The confidence of the public, which is proven by the daily addition to our line of depositors.&#13;
  4th: Protection by two examinations each year by the state banking department. Two audits each year by an independent recognized public audit company and two sworn statements submitted to the state comptroller by the cashier, giving the bank’s condition in detail. All of which insures regular, systematic and thorough operation of the bank.&#13;
  5th: The advice of a competent board of directors, who meet who meet with the officers regularly each month and advise them as to the operation of the bank.&#13;
6th: Insurance of all deposits every day of the year, this is a protection not commonly found in banks and is an absolute protection for your funds, in addition to all the other usual safeguards.&#13;
  These are reasons why you should do business with us, and we believe that no bank can offer better inducements.&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD. We want your business.&#13;
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Full line Columbia Photographs.&#13;
Prices for $50 to $300. Terms to suit yourself.&#13;
The most complete line of records in the city.&#13;
Line of violins, Guitars and Mandolins.&#13;
Prices Right.  H. L. Gibson.&#13;
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Here is a chance for a dandy Farm, with or without crop.&#13;
EAsT sIDE – 10 acres; 5 acres tiled; 3 wells. Good house, 5 ½ mile from Sanford. 5 acres in lettuce.&#13;
wEst sIDE – 21 acres, 10 ½ tiled; 5 wells. Good house,  2 1-2m of Sanford. 6 a. celery, 3a.lettuce, 3e.beets.&#13;
I can make immediate delivery on these places of desired, at a very low figure. See H. B. Lewis. Phone 349.  106 N. Park Avenue.&#13;
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Try a daily herald want ad for results – 1c a word.&#13;
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 &#13;
PAGE 4 – THE Sanford herald. Saturday, November 20, 1920&#13;
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&#13;
CITY MARKET&#13;
&#13;
Waltham &amp; Estridge, Props. Welaka Building.&#13;
Specials For Today. Choice Western and Florida Meats &#13;
– Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage.    City Market&#13;
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Now Making Pecan Nut Roll. Fresh Daily. $1.00 pound.&#13;
Water’s Kandy Kitchen&#13;
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Pico Hotel&#13;
Mrs. R. E. Takach, Proprietor.&#13;
Corner of Park Avenue and Commercial Avenue, Sanford, Florida&#13;
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Lord’s Purity water. As Good as the Best. Daily service. Phone 66&#13;
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Sanford Machine &amp; Foundry Company&#13;
General machine and boiler work. Brass Castings. Gas Engine Repairs. Acteylene Cutting and welding.&#13;
Special machine for turning Auto Crank Shafts and Crank Pins to within .0005 accuracy. &#13;
Irrigation nipples, pulleys and shaftings, round and square iron.&#13;
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Sales, service.  REO.  Parts. Accessories.&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO.  Phone 66&#13;
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Gillette Tires and Tubes.&#13;
Chilled Rubber Process which makes them A Bear for Wear.&#13;
SMITH BROTHERS. Expert Repair work.&#13;
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J. PARKER READ JR. presents LOUISE GLAUM in SEX&#13;
By C. Gardner Sullivan.  Directed by Fred Niblo.&#13;
Luxury. Splendor. Riches. Temptation. Conquest. Regeneration.&#13;
AT THE STAR THEATRE TONIGHT.&#13;
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CONFESSIONS OF A BAND LEADER&#13;
And now for the confession of a band leader – and the reason that a circus band is different from any other. &#13;
Did you ever notice that? Did you ever notice how you can tell a circus band from any other collection of musical instruments the minute you hear it? And yet, most probably, you’ve never known the reason. Therefore, allow to be introduced one Prof. John Phillips, director of the combined bands of the Sparks Circus, which is to exhibit in Sanford on Tuesday, Nov. 23rd. Also allow to be introduced Prof. Phillip’s explanation of “Why a circus band is different.”&#13;
 “The whole thing lies in one instrument,” Prof. Phillips said the other day. That one instrument is the slide trombone. Without the slide trombone the circus band would not exist. It carries the whole weight of the band and its sliding notes and quick changes are what gives the music of a circus band its originality. Just listen closely to the bands of the circus when we come to Sanford and you’ll find that we have more slide trombones than three or four bands usually have. But we don’t call them slide trombones. They are “slip horns.”&#13;
 And so it is that soon there will be the blaring music of the slip horns, for the circus is not far away and they will be played not only in the parade but in the performances themselves which take place 2 and 8 p.m.&#13;
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Time to send out Thanksgiving cards now. The Herald Printing Co., has a fine line of Thanksgiving greetings. Only one cent each.&#13;
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December 1st&#13;
 On the first of each month your rent is due. Why give other people your money. Buy you a home and each month instead of paying out rent money, pay on a home that is yours.&#13;
 Beautiful homes on Park, Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and Myrtle avenues, Sanford Heights. Building lots in any location.&#13;
 E. F. LANE.  “The Real Estate Man”. Phone 95.  204 First Street.&#13;
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MELVILLE’S COMEDIANS HERE MONDAY&#13;
 The following from the Tampa Times of recent date, will be of interest to the amusement lovers of this city, since Melville’s Comedians will start an engagement in their canvas theatre here Monday night:&#13;
 “Tampa theatre-goers who missed that famous drama of the northwest, “The Call of the Wild,” by Melville Comedians at the big tent, can draw consolation only from one old adage ‘Where ignorance is bliss it is folly to be wise,” while the hundreds of enthusiastic attendants are conscious that they witnessed one of the best staged, best acted, best plotted dramas that has been staged in Tampa in several years.&#13;
 “The second week of the indefinite stay of this popular company in Tampa surely must be one of their feature weeks, for the program for the last half. ‘The Millionaire’s Son’ and the ‘Shop Girl’ are proving equally popular with the big crowds that visit this show every night.&#13;
 “For the first half of next week “The Church and People,” will hold the boards. This play was leased from the author, together with special scenery designed and painted under the personal direction of the author, and everything has been done that could give promise of making its run in Tampa one of the most successful.&#13;
 “For the last half of the fourth week “The Brat’ is under contemplation, but it has not yet been determined definitely. Other celebrated and special royalty plays scheduled for an early appearance are ‘Ismael,’ ‘With The Law’ and many others ones that are well known to the successful professional stage.&#13;
 “One of the unusual contributory sources to the success of the Melville Comedians is the exceptional electrical effects, which include more than five hundred electric lamps and color combinations, which are capable of turning the ordinary light of night into the glow of the full moon rays.&#13;
 “The tent is new and rain proof and comfortably heated throughout and every seat is within easy hearing of the stage and occupies a full view of the entire stage.&#13;
 “The Melville Comedians are exceptional entertainers and the cordial welcome extended makes each and every attendant determined to return.” – Tampa Times.&#13;
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We Guarantee All Battery Repairs&#13;
Every batter repair we make is guaranteed for six months. We are able to do this because in repairing any make of battery we are licensed to use patented features which have made Vesta batteries famous.&#13;
Sanford Battery Service Co.  L. A. RENAUD, Prop.   Phone 189.&#13;
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Sanford’s Most Popular Hotel&#13;
SEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL. Under Management of WALTER B. OLSON.&#13;
Our specialty --- Seminole’s famous $1 Sunday Dinner de luxe.&#13;
A la Carte service all day.&#13;
&#13;
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Real Estate. I Sell It. J. E. Spurling. &#13;
The Man Who Sell Dirt Cheap.&#13;
&#13;
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Beautiful post cards at the Herald …. 1c&#13;
&#13;
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Vulcanite shingles&#13;
Just lay them down and Nail – That’s there is to it.&#13;
 The Shoulder of protection keeps hot or cold air – rain, sleet, etc., from forcing its way through the roof.&#13;
 The shoulder of Protection is also the Self-Spacing Device. Makes laying easy and rapid – thus saving time and money.&#13;
These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural color Red or Green Crushed Slate. Each rain washes away the accumulated dust – reviving perpetually the original rich colors.&#13;
 Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered – because they are fire-resisting. Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the cost free of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.&#13;
Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co.&#13;
&#13;
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Announcing the Opening of the Sanford Cash Grocery&#13;
Next Door to Fleetwoods.  Cor. 1st and Park Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Sanford’s Newest Grocery.&#13;
Everything new and Fresh and Crisp and at the Very Lowest Prices.&#13;
The Cash and Carry Plan – Nothing delivered and Nothing Charged. The Buyers get the benefit of the very low prices.&#13;
Sanford Cash Grocery.  O. H. Stenstrom. Manager.&#13;
&#13;
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CALL 349 For Long or short Distance HAULING. A Big Truck&#13;
&#13;
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CHULUOTA INN will Open season 1920-21 on Thanksgiving Day Turkey Dinner.&#13;
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SEE URK FOR EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING. Cor. First and Sanford Ave.&#13;
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Building Costs Are Lower and Now is the time to build.&#13;
This is good new to the many people here who are anxious to build homes and buildings of all kinds. Perhaps you did not realize that building costs are lower – that quick service and up-to the-minute methods – mean better construction and cheaper costs in every way.&#13;
Keep Up With the News of the Day and Get Wise to Service in Building.&#13;
 Progressive methods in building construction and personal supervision of all work gives you the best in the market not only in material but in all kinds of construction. We are ready to take your order or anything in the construction line from a skyscraper building to a garage and from a sidewalk to a macadamized street through your property.&#13;
We Plan, Build, Construct any kind of Building You Want.&#13;
GEO. W. KNIGHT COMPANY.  PHONE 304.  Sanford, Florida.&#13;
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KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE HERALD WANT COLUMN.&#13;
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PAGE 5.  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1920&#13;
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SANFORD DAILY HERALD – Published every afternoon except SUNDAY at The Herald Building, 107 Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, Florida&#13;
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THE HERALD PRINTING CO., INC. PUBLISHERS&#13;
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R. J. Holly		Editor&#13;
N. J. Lillard		Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
H. A. Neel			General Manager&#13;
F. P. Rines		Circulation Manager.  Phone 481&#13;
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Advertising Rates Made Known on Application&#13;
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Subscription Price in advance&#13;
One year			$6.00&#13;
Six months			$3.00&#13;
Delivered in City by Carrier&#13;
One week			15 cents&#13;
-------&#13;
Member of the Associated Press&#13;
&#13;
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The hunting days are here.&#13;
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And there is nothing better than the Florida woods and fields streams.&#13;
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And the visitors from other states who are here recognize that the fact and once they camp in Florida they want to come every season.&#13;
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There is also plenty of game in the woods and plenty of fish in the streams but they should be better protected out of season for even fish and game are finally exhausted.&#13;
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The Rod and Gun Club would be a welcome institution in this city. It would mean a place for the pleasure yachts and a place for the visitors to gather and a place for the home people to meet at any time – something that we lack at present.&#13;
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Sanford never looked prettier than at present with all the vivid coloring of the many flowers and the yards all filled with trees and plants and shrubs. And each yard should have a few orange trees to show the winter visitors. They come down here to see flowers and fruits and we should have then to show.&#13;
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When all the new building that is contemplated in Sanford next year is started this city will look like a real city. And every citizen should stand back of his city and help it to move. That old grouchy feeling that disapproves of all new movements and wants to knock instead of to boost should be thrown off forever and let us all get together with the idea that every building means so much for the town and regardless of who is doing the building he deserves our assistance in a moral way. It is the cooperative spirit of “all together” that makes cities and even hot air is better than cold water.&#13;
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If a minister with a wife and five children to support can get only $93 a month for his ministry, should he stick to the pulpit or look for another job? That question was presented to the judge of an Ohio court in a divorce proceeding, in which extreme cruelty in failing to provide was charged by the wife. The court granted the decree, holding that an able bodied man who accepted a salary of that amount was guilty of cruelty to his family. The decision was probably justified by the special facts of the case, but how about the principle involved? What shall be done with the college professor who earns less than the hod carrier? Shall the newspaper man separated from his family because he can not earn as much as the bricklayer gets? How shall we dispose of the army of school teachers who draw less pay than common laborers? The question will require more than one judicial decision before it is finally settled. – Lakeland Telegram.&#13;
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ANOTHER SUNDAY&#13;
&#13;
 Sunday – a day of rest. Do you make it such, or are you devising ways and means of swelling your profits during the week?&#13;
 Sunday is a day of rest, for one reason, because the human mind require a certain amount of relaxation, without which it becomes weakened, and confused and fails to function properly and to advantage. It was so intended by the creator?&#13;
 And where do you find that rest? Where do you obtain that spirit of repose which stimulates and rejuvenates that entire human fabric?&#13;
 There are many ways and places, but one is more beneficial than all others combined. That is your weekly visit to the church on Sunday morning, or evening, or both. Even if you hear not one word the minister says, the simple knowledge that you are in the sanctuary of the Lord casts a feeling of calmness, solemnity and repose over you which is good for the mind, the body and the soul.&#13;
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A PUMPKIN with a LANTERN&#13;
&#13;
The Columbia Enquirer-sun quotes from a Northern paper comments on the recrudescence of the Ku Klux Klan and says:&#13;
 “it is to be regretted, of course, that such movements and organizations occasionally bob up to give the South a little more unfavorable publicity, and call forth ill-considered criticism of this section as a whole; which is all the more reason why the Enquirer-Sun, for one, takes this occasion to explode the idea that this particular “Klan” is in any way representative of Southern sentiment, or that it has any mission whatsoever to perform; other than to furnish, perhaps, a new order for “jiners” and a new job for “organizers.” In short, our 1920 “Ku Klux Klan” is merely a sort of Hallowe’en affair – a pumpkin with a lantern in it. As its chief “wizards” and “potentates” and such like, insist on explaining – obviously out of respect for law and public sentiment – for they know full well that the South will not tolerate any organization that attempts to set aside or override the law of the land, for they know full well that in these times and in this age the South no more that the North, will tolerate any organization that essays to set aside or over-ride the law of the land.”&#13;
 Undoubtedly reports of the Ku Klux Klan added to Harding’s majority, but he would have been overwhelming elected without its help. It is probable that it caused the election of a few Republican senators and representatives who would otherwise have been defeated but that only gave the Republicans such an overwhelming majority in congress that they will be more apt to make fools of themselves and give the democrats a chance to defeat them two years hence.&#13;
 It is also true that it revived the race issue which had been settled satisfactorily to the whole people of the south and made not improbable the passage of a force bill by the next congress which will be overwhelmingly Republican. It created a prejudice of the North against the South which will retard the development of the Southern states. It also fanned the embers of antagonism between whites and blacks to the detriment of both races. It is a pity that men who do conspicuous things do not use their heads before doing them.&#13;
 We refer to the Ku Klux Klan as it appeared in the North. The statement of the leader of it that it stood for law and order, that it was as the Enquirer-Sun so aptly put it, merely “a pumpkin with a lantern in it,” shows that it was merely foolishness borrowing the wrong name. For the old Ku Klux Klan was not foolishness. It was terribly in earnest and was deadly in its operations. It killed for the salvation of the South and it saved the South in that way when there was no other way to do it. When it had accomplished its purposes it disbanded in a day on the order of its chief officer. No army that ever fought was more thoroughly disciplined.&#13;
 It fought against law and order for the upbuilding of a better order. It went through violence to peace and it did what it did only because there was no other way by which the purposes could be accomplished.&#13;
 But it caused a great deal of disorder while it lasted by furnishing an object of suspicion. If smith hated Jones badly enough to assassinate him he assassinated him and put up signs turning suspicion on the Ku Klux Klan. The Klan was not responsible for half the violence that was attributed to it. It was not criminal but it tempted to crime by furnishing an object of suspicion.&#13;
 Now the white people of the South are in charge of their state governments and have in their hands all the machinery of the law. This should make them use it with justice, for the famed chivalry of the South is a myth if it uses its power to oppress the weak. – Times-Union.&#13;
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Post Cards at the Herald Office, 4c.&#13;
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J. P. says: &#13;
Money in the pocket burns. It is bound to fritter away because most of us fail to discriminate between the present actual needs and the future contingencies. Prepare now for the future contingencies by investing in 8 per cent cumulative prior preferred stock of the Southern Utilities Company. It will always stand by you, when in need. There’s none better.&#13;
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Citron, Lemon Peel, Orange Peel, Raisins (Seeded and Seedless),&#13;
Currants, Dates, Figs. Deane Turner. Phone 497. Welaka Building.&#13;
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Nice Fat Hens. Good Fryers.&#13;
Pemento; Pineapple; Roquefort and New York Cream Cheese; Klim Milk. 18c qt.  L. P. McCuller. Sanford, Florida.&#13;
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SPECIAL BARGAINS for the first COMPLETE HOUSE BILL. &#13;
Carter Lumber Co.&#13;
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OUR PAINT SHOP&#13;
Is kept busy by knowing automobilists who send their cars to us to be repainted. The “wise ones” know that their cars will be returned to them looking smarter and better that when bright new from the factory. The reason for this is that all our work is custom work which means that only the best of materials are used by skilled workmen. &#13;
REHER BROS.  Auto Painting Phone 112.  Sanford Heights.&#13;
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Is Your AUTO Insurance Heavy?&#13;
CUT OFF 50 PER CENT OF YOUR HEAVY LOAD. &#13;
Buy your Fire, Theft, Collision, Liability or Property Damage Insurance at Actual Cost with&#13;
The Belt Auto Indemnity Association&#13;
Ask J. B. Lawson, Chas. Kanner, Dr. Langley about how The Belt pays its Claims. Then call phone 46 or write Box 156 for rates. “It will pay you” to see. G. C. Fellows, Manager for Sanford.&#13;
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Everything for the Builder.  From the Foundation to the Roof. &#13;
HILL LUMBER CO.  Quality—Servicd—Price.&#13;
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Cozy Café&#13;
Quick Lunch. Coffee 5c. Sandwiches 10c. Pies, Homemade 10c Cut. Best Coffee in Sanford.  Princess Theatre Bldg.&#13;
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Prime Western Beef. Buy Meat You Can Eat.&#13;
PORK and MUTTON. SAUSAGE of all kinds HAM and BACON.&#13;
A Trial solicited. Pure Food Market.&#13;
J.H. Tillis, Prop.  Phone 105.  402 Sanford.&#13;
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THE HISTORY OF SUCCESSFUL MEN…&#13;
Always read the same in the beginning. Persistent And Systematic Saving until an Earning Surplus is obtained. Consistent saving will start you forward on the right road to success.&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
F.P. Forster, President. B. F. Whitner, Cashier.&#13;
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Methodist Bazaar&#13;
 Sanford is on a boom – not a vacant store-room to be found on First street, but undaunted “The Truth seekers” of the Methodist Church will erect a tent on the old Sanford House site and hold their Annual Bazaar FRIDAY and SATURDAY. COOKED FOOD AND OYSTER SUPPER SATURDAY NIGHT.  Your Patronage solicited. &#13;
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CHANDLER CARS. FRANKLIN CARS. “WE GIVE YOU SERVICE –ASK ANYBODY”&#13;
wIGHT TIRE CO.    Kelly-Springfield Tires.  Diamond Tires.&#13;
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Pure, Sweet, Wholesome. Delivered Fresh Every Day.&#13;
Genuine Butter-Nut Bread&#13;
MILLER’S BAKERY&#13;
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Come to the Great Hunter’s store.  Hill Hardware Company&#13;
We have anticipated your every need in the Hunting and Sporting Goods Line and have a complete stock of Winchester and Remington Repeating Guns and Rifles, and the Fox And Smith double-barrel Guns. Also a line of Good Cheaper Guns.&#13;
NITRO CLUB Water-Proof SHELLS, with steel Lining – without doubt the best shell on the market – there is a shell for every purpose.&#13;
We have a complete stock of Turkey Calls, Blowing Horns, Tents, Coats, Puttees and Leggins—in fact, everything for sportsmen.&#13;
HUNTER SUPPLIES.  HILL Hardware Co.&#13;
 &#13;
PAGE 6 --  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1920&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Little Happenings. Mention of Matters in Brief. Personal Items of Interest. In and About the City.&#13;
Summary of the Floating Small Talks Succinctly Arranged for Herald Readers.&#13;
-&#13;
Roy Jordan, a thoroughly experienced job and a man, formerly of Miami, is now with the Daily Herald.&#13;
--&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Miller and son, David, were Orlando visitors yesterday. Mr. Miller made the trip to look at an improved oven, which he expects to put in his bakery here.&#13;
--&#13;
Locals are kinder shy today but Bob Holly is out in the sticks getting inspiration and accumulating material for a lot of hunting stories to spring on readers of the Daily Herald next week.&#13;
--&#13;
H. A. Neel ill leave tomorrow for Jacksonville to purchase a multiple magazine typesetting machine, that carries six different faces of type. This addition to our equipment will double the efficiency of The Herald plant and will enable us to issue a paper in keeping with the progress of Sanford and vicinity. We hope to have the new machine in service the latter part of the next week.&#13;
--&#13;
George E. Hosmer, secretary of the entertainment committee of the Florida Editorial Association, and editor of the Journal at Bradentown, was a pleasant visitor to the Herald office, today. Mr. Hosmer is enroute home after an extended trip down the East Coast in the interest of the coming visit of the National Editorial Association. He says he only has $50,000 to raise to secure the visit of the newspaper men and we know a little thing like that won’t even faze an old Colorado newspaperman.&#13;
--&#13;
Wilful misuse and misapplication of tax funds is charged by Slayton &amp; Company, head brokers of Toledo, O., is a mandamus proceedings against the Dade County school board. The court action involves $160,000 in outstanding school bonds that were due last September. Attorneys assert this is the first county to default in the payment of bonds.&#13;
--&#13;
That the work of the Rotary club, the Motor club, the Real Estate Board and the West Palm Beach Chamber of Commerce may be for the co-ordinated, H. E. Robinson, already secretary of the first three organizations named, has been elected secretary of the West Palm Beach Chamber of Commerce. New quarters, sufficiently large for the working forces of all the organizations, are being sought, and although each continue to keep its own business distinct from the others, it is thought it will be advisable and beneficial to operate under one directing head.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
TAXPAYERS, TAKE NOTICE!&#13;
Tax books are now open for the payment of State and County taxes for 1920. A discount of two per cent is allowed for payment in November and one per cent in December.&#13;
JNO. D. JINKINS, Tax Collector, Seminole County.  11-13-dlw-w2t.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
AT THE STAR THEATRE TODAY:&#13;
LOUISE GLAUM in “Sex”. Fox News and “Rent Dodgers”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Everybody should send postcards to their friends. The Herald has them of Sanford and also Thanksgiving cards, holiday cards, etc. They are only one cent each and worth twice as much. Send a card today.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WASHINGTON, NOV. 20. – &#13;
Great Britain has extended a virtual defacto recognition to the Russian Soviet government in a proposed trade agreement the state department officials here believe.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
ANOTHER FATAL BLAZE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
New York, Nov. 20. – &#13;
Nine persons, including three children, burned to death in a fire that destroyed a five story building today.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
WANT UNITED STATES IN LEAGUE OF NATIONS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
GENEVA, Nov. 20.-&#13;
Italian Foreign Minister Tittoni addressing the League of Nations Assembly today declared that hope was held out that “without too much delay” a way might be found for the entry of the United States into the League. He said there never would be a League of Nations until all nations, without exception, were included in it.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
JOHNNY J. JONES HAS INTERESTING BUSINESS CAREER&#13;
&#13;
Johnny J. Jones is the man who is responsible for the new side shows at the Southeastern fair. His show is known as the Johnny J. Jones’ Exposition, and it is one of the best groups of fair side shows in the country. Like a great many circus men, his life history is very interesting just as his position as a manager is interesting. Since his name has become well known all over the world it might be best to give a little of his personal history.&#13;
 He was a miner’s by in Pennsylvania, but digging dark diamonds was not to his liking; it kept him too far removed from the people, and he loved to be where people gathered, where the crowds were enjoying themselves.&#13;
 He became a newsboy. And here we have Johnny J. Jones who was a newsboy, in which position it was undoubtedly first discovered that he had lots of brains, and now he is the sole proprietor of a great aggregation of the out-door amusements, an enterprise employing hundreds of persons, requiring 43 private cars to transport, a combination which represents the acme of perfection in amusement organizations.&#13;
 It is no longer a show. It is an exposition and a very big business proposition. Besides the 43 special cars of the Johnny J. Jones exposition, he has about 85 wagons, all designed and manufactured by himself. He has some thirty or forty feature attractions, eight riding devices, and the completest equipment for the rapid erection and transportation of his exposition in the world. He only goes to the biggest fairs both in the United States and Canada, and has the very highest standing in the business world among the exhibition directors with whom he has long done business.&#13;
 “I attribute my success,” said Mr. Jones, “to two factors. My shows are absolutely clean. No one need fear to go into any one of them. The people know that and they come again and again to see them. Then I believe in the most systematic organization, I run this business like a bank. My accounting system is as perfect as experts can make it. In behind, our staff is forever working, keeping accounts in shape, and checking everything up. Everything works like machinery.” – Atlanta Journal&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Advertise Sanford by sending out a post card or two every day. The Herald has all kinds for one cent each. Get a few now while the supply is large.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
NEW YORK STATE HAS SCRAP ON HAND&#13;
ALBANY, N. Y., Nov. 20 – &#13;
&#13;
The supreme court of the United States ultimately will be called upon to decide the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission over Interstate passenger and baggage rates, it was announced today at the office of Attorney-General Newton. The order of the commission yesterday that the railroads operating in the New York establish intrastate passenger and baggage rates to conform to the interstate schedules by increasing the passenger rates from three to 3.6 cents a mile, will not end the fight of the state authorities for a restoration of the two cents a mile rate between Albany and Buffalo, the attorney-general said.&#13;
 “This is a sweeping and entirely new decision,” said Attorney-General Newton, regarding the commission’s order. “Heretofore, the states alone have exercised the power to fix local rates. During the war congress fixed all rates, but under the Esch-Cummins bill the old state rates were restored.&#13;
 “The appellate division of the supreme court at Albany decided last week that the old two-cent fare on the mainline from Albany to Buffalo was restored Sept. 1, when the Federal wartime control was terminated. The railroad appealed to the court of appeals where the question will be argued next Monday.&#13;
 “The state will immediately appeal to the United States supreme court for a reversal of the order of the I. C. C. and probably the judgement of the court of appeals will be taken to the United States supreme court by the railroad or the state, whatever the result.”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Everything for the office at the Herald Printing Co. We can fit you out with all that you need in fine printing stationery and office supplies of all kinds.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
SATURDAY AT PRINCESS&#13;
Special production&#13;
Also the “VANISHING DAGGER”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
The Logical treatment&#13;
“ENERGIZER” For many Ills.&#13;
We hold this to be a truth: - viz: - That circulation is a BASIC factor of Human Health. The “Energizer” process will DO MORE Benefit to Any Adult’s general condition than any other method known. COME IN and talk it over.&#13;
108 Park Ave., Next Door to Mobley’s Drug store. L. C. Cameron  Box 399  Sanford, Fla.  Phone 184&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Let Everyday be Post Card Day in Sanford. Get them at the Herald Office.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
White &amp; Wyckoff’s Superb Stationery&#13;
THE HERALD’s office supply department has just received a large and complete line if this beautiful stationery – no two boxes alike – and we will print any monogram on paper (or cards) and envelopes – in one, two or three colors.&#13;
An Ideal and Inexpensive Christmas Gift.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Just Received – Large shipment of shoes. Bought on Lowest Market.&#13;
Come see ‘em.  Perkins % Britt.  “The store That is Different”&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
National Madza Lamps&#13;
25 to 300 Watts in 110 Volts&#13;
20 to 25 Watts in 32 Volts&#13;
Everything Electrical Expert Installation and Repair work.&#13;
Gillon &amp; Fry. Phone 442    115 Magnolia.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Seed, Our Business.&#13;
Honesty, Our Motto.&#13;
Purity, Our Watchword.&#13;
The L. Allen Seed Co.&#13;
Come in and see us.(Southern Seed Specialists)&#13;
Wekiwa Bldg.  Sanford, Fla.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
Nation Wide Campaign&#13;
Church of the Holy Cross&#13;
PARK AVENUE AT FOURTH STREET&#13;
Rev. Louis G. Wood as Field Secretary – Priest of the Bishop and the Council for the whole National American Church, will be the Special Preacher this Sunday night, 21st November 21st.&#13;
It Is the King’s Business    Urgent&#13;
Sunday night, 7:30 o’clock, November 21st.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
TRY A HERALD WANT AD&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY.&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under which this institution has been managed since the first day the doors were opened.&#13;
 That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the constant and gratifying growth in business.&#13;
 It is the desire of the officers of the Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals desiring most efficient and responsible banking.&#13;
 On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your patronage is invited.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
Is owned, controlled and managed by home people, who are interested in the development and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County.&#13;
 With our large resources and strong financial connections, we are in position to assist our customers at all times in the handling of their financial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.&#13;
 4 Per Cent Interest Paid.&#13;
Seminole County Bank.&#13;
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* t --t ;

D jA .ILY h e r a l d

J•

IN T H E HEART O F T H E W O R L D 'S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
SANFORD. FLORIDA.

VOLUME 1

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1920

NUMBER 197

LETTUCE SHIPPED SHIPPING BOARD PROBE
AID
FINANCIAL LEADERS SEE AMERICAN
OUT FROM SANFORD
FOR ARMENIA
REACHES HIGH PLACES
HOPEFUL SIGNS AHEAD
IS DISCUSSED BRING GOOD PRICE
HITS WILSON’S FAMILY
IN RECONSTRUCTION PERIOD
(Dr TU* AuocOt*4 Fr*u.)

GENEVA, Nov. 22.—The possibil­
ity of American aid for the Armen­
ians were discussed in a debate by
the assembly o f the League of Na­
tions on resolutions demanding intorvention by the League in Armenia.
J. Balfour, o f Great Britain said
the United States would make an
ideal mandatory over Armenia and
that the League has been unable to
accomplish any thing with the .Ar­
menian situation. Dr. Nansen, or
Norway, estimated 60,000 men would
be sufficient force to deal with the
situation and thnt if the Assembly
appealed to the whole world the
United States would do her share.

SANFORI) SHI PING

TEN

CARS

DAILY NOW.

The lettuce season Is on now In full
HOUSE COMMITTEES
blast and the markets promise to be
MAKE AN EFFORT
getting better all this week or cspccTO ECONOMIZE
before Thanksgiving ns all the
world wants Sanford lettuce for the
(Dy T)m AiKcUUd Prara)
(By Tk* A**oct*t*4 Pr**il
WASHINGTON,
Nov. 22.— Chair­
big
day.
■
WASHINGTON, Nov., 22— Blajor
There
were
fifteen
cars
of
lettuce
man
Good,
of
the
House
Appropria­
General Chamberlain, army Inspector
shipped out Saturday making a total tions committee said he will m ake;
general, declared in his annual report
for the week o f eighty care which la every effort to economize in govern- ]
that immediate revision of the meth­
a fine record for the first week of ment expenditures to actual needs. BUT NEVERTHELESS IT LOOKS
od
of
disposing
o
f
surplus
govern­
from FLORIDA BANKERS ARE
the movement. There will probably He said the War Department was
ment
stores
should
be
made
as
re­
LIKE nAD BUSINESS IN
INTERESTING AND MOST
bo twenty out today and the price' is heading for a deficit o f fifty million
cent investigations indicated spec­
THE BOARD
HOPEFUL. _
.
said to be very good although just to n hundred million at the present j
ulators had purchased cement from
what it Is bringing in New York lb rate of expenditures.
one government department for one
NEW YORK; Nov. 22— Allega­
Financial leaders of th*e South do
problematical, some saying it is high
dollar per ton and sold it U) the war
tions tending to implicate men now
not look upon the present period o f
and it must bo for it is bringing $2.50
department for six dollars.
and formerly connected with the
deflation and re-adjustment as a nat­
PERMANENT PEACE
hero for fancy stuff.
United States Shipping Doard with
ional disaster. On the contrary they
BROKEN BETWEEN
If the weather remans cool San­
alleged collusion In securing con­
eansidcr it an inevitable process,
RUSSIA AND POLAND ford growers will make A fine thing
tflfr
tracts for n ship building firm, were
which is the necessary preparation
&gt;
'
:.&amp;S|
out
o
f
their
lettuce
this
season,
prob­
mnde Snturdny by Tucker K. Sands,
(Bj Th* AuocUUd Bract.)
for sound growth and properity.
a witness before the Walsh commit­
WARSAW, Nov. 22.—Negotiations ably more than ever before.
(By Tk* AuatliWl rural
They do not expect a prolonged de­
tee investigating shipping board af­
for a permanent peace between SovFIUME,
Nov.
22—
D'Annunzio,
in­
pression and some of them predict,
faire.
I let Russia and Poland was broken NATIONAL FARM HOARD
surgent
commander
at
Fiume
declar­
quite definitely, n turn for the letter
TO
MAKE
AN
EFFORT
The men named and alleged to
WOULD NOT ATTEMPT TO KEEP o ff today. It la reported that the
ed unalterably thnt he was opposed
with the beginning o f the spring sea­
TO RELIEVE FARMERS to accepting the treaty of lUpnllo have participated In a distribution of
KING CONSTANTINE FROM
|Russians refused to proceed because
son.
*
.'TH E THRONE
|more Polish troops had not
been
settling the Adriatic dispute between more than $30,000 were R. W. Bol­
(Dy Tk* AtraoUUd Prara)
A number of men eminent in busi­
ling, brother-in-law o f President Wil­
withdrawn to the Armistice line.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.—The Italy: and Jugo-Slavia and would con­
ness and finance have expressed
(B7 U . AuocltUS Fiui l
___________________
National Board* of Farm organlia- tinue fighting until the just claims son and who later became treasurer
such views in letters to Governor M.
PARIS, Nov. 22.The French gov- HARDING AT PANAMA
o f the shipping board; Lester Sisler,
of Italy were met.
B. Wellborn o f the Federal Reserve crnmcnt will not oppose by physical
NEARS END OF TRIP tlons met here today to consider legformerly secretary of the board; ino.
is’ ntion to relieve farmers of the* re­
Bank, written In reply to the follow- f onc the return of former King Con- [
______
BELGRADE, Nov. 22— Prince Re­ W. Cranor, a representative o f- the
sult of falling prices of products.
Ing letter from him:
stantinc to the Greek throne which
,B* ^ Associated rr»t«.j
gent Alexander of Jugo-Slavia rati­ Downey Shipbuilding Company and
“My Dear Sir: In a period of TC-—
foreign office regards as inevitABOARD STEAMSHIP
PARISSands himself. Ho testified that he
fied the Rnpnllo treaty today.
adjustment, which is nlwnys accom- nblc 80 the Associated Press wan in- MINA, Nov.
22.— President-elect, MRS. FAIRFAX HARRISON
received the money in the form o f
l
DIES IN WASHINGTON
:«a
panied by Inconvenience, strain and formed today.
. Harding’s trip to Punamn is nearing
notes,
some
of
which
he
discounted
NEW SENATOR
some losses, it is a great help to the
______
nn end. He is expected to reach
and at different times described pay­
(Br Tk* A*m &lt;I*U4 Prara)
FROM DAKOTA
people if they arc animated by a
ATHENS,
Nov.
22.— Premier Crystobal tomorrow.
He willspend
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22— Mrs.
GIVES HIS AIMS ments to Bolling nnd Sisler as both
courageous, cheerful and pntient aplr- Gounaris said, “ Please call the at- five days inspecting the canal and Harrison, mother of President Fair­
"payments" and “ loans.” In another
It, with a disposition toward mutual tentions of theAmerican nntion that sight-seeing,
(Bjr Tk* AuocUUd Prara)
fax Harrison, of the Southern rail­
part o f his testimony he asserted
helpfulness and co-operation. In such wc arc now united and no longer tryFARGO, N. D., Nov. 22— Dr. E. F. thnt thin money was to be understood
way died at her home here today.
; COTTON REPORT
a crisis it la to them what morale ia ing to assassinate others."
Ladd, first U. S. Srnator elected ns n ns a commission to him for securing
PRIOR TO NOVEMBER 14
to the soldier and brings the same
candidate of the Non-partisan League a loan from the bank to the ship­
PROMINENT VISITORS HERE
LATE WIRES
nnnounced here that hls first aim in building company, with which the
splendid results.
(B 7 Th* A**&lt;xl*t*d f r t i i )
--------! WASHINGTON, Nov. 22— Cotton
Among the prominent visitors to ''Congress will be to promote'n better witness was then connected.
“The superb spirit which animated
^
,
ginned P ^ r to November 14th the city today were Willis R. Powell, I gy8tcm for marketing the grain and
our people during the war, nerved
The testimony o f Sands was pre­
GENEVA, Nov. . . . The le a g u e , , mounted to 8,907 076 running bales Secretary of the Lake County Cham-1
our soldiers for every conflict and
ofher food products o f the fnrm.
ceded
by thnt of Alfred W. McCann,
Assembly adopted a resolution Injlt(&gt;n&lt;u# BuWJ|U nnnounced.
her of Commerce; R. N. White, secre­
made them cheerful- under hardship ing the Council of the League of Na- , __ .
“ It is a serious problem that^nees u reporter for the New York Globe,
tary- of the Commercial Club o f Mt. congress," I)r. Ladd said.
*
and suffering will bring us safely tions to confer with the powers in
"Some­ who swore he hnd secured from Mr.
Dora and C. W. Williams, secretary thing must be done and within the Samfs an affidavit detailing the enand triumphantly through these try­ view o f constituting forces to end ENGLAND TO SEND
MORE TROOPS
of the Board of Trade of Eustls. All next few years if we are!to save the tjrc transaction.
McCann further
ing times.
hostilities in Armenia.
INTO IRELAND of them are I-akc county boosters
“ In order to cultivate such n spirit
farming industry from demoralize- testified (hnt when he took the affinnd they were eproutc to Jackson­ tlon. Even now the most of the men davit to Sanda for him to sign, he
I would like to send out broadcast ovPITTSBURG, Nov.
22— Three
IB* Tk- Awo^UUd Pi***)
er the district some brief but strong grmcij men held up the employees of 1 LONDON, Nov. 22— England is ville to take in the State Fair. They left on the farm arc middle' nged nnd declined to do so on advise of his at.- ? 4
statements by leading men whom the
Metropolitan Trust Company and seriously considering sending more were taken out to the Brumlcy form elderly—tho younger men arc looking tomey. Previous to submitting the
people will hear nnd follow. Let us escaped in nn automobile with the troops to Irclnnd, the war office nn- while here to sec tho Sanford lettuce for greater opportunities.
nffidavit for Sanda’ signature, howbeing shipped.
"I believe thnt dealing in futures over, McCann said he had taken tho
i nounced today.
•
crystalizc
publip sentiment that funds today.
on shorts— selling grain in which the document to the shipping board and
will meet the emergency in a mnnncr
seller never hnd nn equity, which nev- had it photostated. One of these copcreditable to the. South and the na­
WASIIINGTON, Nov.
22— The
tion. Our section has been very pros­ Western Union today applied to tho
cr existed nnd which will never be de- ion carrying notations in what wan
livered is a species of gambling which testified to bo Sands' handwriting ..
perous for the post few yehri&gt;, and District Supreme Court for nn Indoes not stabilize prices or benefit nnd which Sands afterwards testisurcly it is in good condition t&lt; meet junction to prevent Secretary Daniels
the producer or consumer. It is a fled to being “ correct except that
the present time.
from interfering in the construction
'T o this end I will be pleased to Qf n cobic between Miami and Miami LOOKS LIKE THEY WILI OUST °* Democratic postmasters with Re­ matter which every legislator ought some of tho facta may be a little difpublicans.
to study until he has n just comprc- ferent" was presented by McCann in
have from you at your earliest con- ueach, Florida.
EVERY DEMOCRATIC OFThe establishment o f a plan where­ hcnslon of it and then consider wheth- ’ evidence. The document, however,
venlence (a letter expressing y o u r,
,
--------FICE HOLDER
by any employe who has charges er it Is not worthy o f his attention.
was not made a part of the*stenoviews on the situation nnd the best ( PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 22— Seven
made
against
him
.
will
bo
given
a
"The
co-operative
movement
must
grnpher'n minutes o f the meeting,
way to meet It."
bandits were enught today after „ a I
(By P. H. McGowan)
hearing
to
see
the
evidence
against
go
hnnd
in
hand
with
helpful
lcgisln-,
,jn the course o f questioning by
TTie replies came from the states Rattle in the act of robbing a Penn- i
' tion in improving the situation. Fnrm- 'Chairman Walsh and Congressman
composing the sixth Fed-ral Reserve sylvania freight train at Metuchen, IWASHINGTON,
Nov.j 22. Goa- him is almost a certainty.
.................
_ #politicalWashington
_
_
Jt la being circulated here that n|enl mU8t come to own their buying Kelly, Sands said he did not think
District— Alabama, Florldn. Georgia, n . J., o f silk which
had been .placed sipy
is pulsatOne policeman was |n(: „ nd „|| agog over contemplated ninjority of the postal clerka now in nnd BP|||n,* organizations.
Bolling ever got a cent from anybody
p«rt of Louisiana, Mississippi and jn n truck.
Tennessee.
wounded.
rhnni-p* in the governmental chances1thc Bervlce ,n
reccnt clcct,on | "If fcgislntlon is passed making for aiding to get a contract— that
.
,
....
,
.
worked openly against the Democrat- f und(1 from federal reserve banks nnd money given him was a “ loan."
In Florida, where they h .v - a sue- |
.
when thc Harding administration ,c tickct nnd for thc RepUbliCans. It : fpdprnl lnnd banks available to these
Sands, who Is president o f the
cession o f cash craps of fruits and
NEW YORK, Nov. 22— Ole Hnnvegetables,
by thc phos- 8pr,( former
Seattle mayor, returning
National. Bank,. Washington,
........... ... reinforced
................. ...........................................
........................................
_ takes hold of the federal business oh la said that many o f tho o ffic ia l and ; organizations farmers will be able to .First
. . . . ______
_
.
J |
phate industry, the problem of fi- from abroad today anl’d "Everybody March 4, but nlrcady plana arc not no small part of the personnel of the hoIJ thcir craln8 untu they are need-! testified that it wan “ hla undcreUndnancing the cotton crop ia hardly from everywhere in Europe" were only being-, discussed,, but in some postoffice employes over the country ed Instead o f dumping them on the ing" that $2,400 he loaned Bolling
felt, and aa prices o f vegetables and trying to emigrate to the United Instances are well under wny for have been nt wnr with thc postmas- -market at the end o f thc harvest."
. ogainst his note nnd o f which Bolling
fruits have been’ good, the State.ia in states and advocated the toUl sus- ’ firing” Democratic office holders- ter general and, aa a result, they re­
Dr. Ladd added that effort should ;|ias nlrcady paid back $300, was Bola comparatively comfortable finan- pension o f immigration for two years. They will be supplanted by faithful refused to support Cox. and Rooae- be mqdo to bring a better school ays- ling’s share o f the $40,000 bribe.*
clal condition.
1
—*____
'
1{rotn the Republican fold. This gos- velt. It la now being said that the tern into rural districts and give the { Bolling's share o f the money, MrWithout exception the writers of
LONDON, Nov. 22— The House of »«P covers the white house, the sen- republican chiefs, having* had thc farm children the same chances for Sands said he understood, was to
these letters express a feeling or Commons today suspended Its session *1*. the house o f representatives and support of the big army of postal education ns hold in towns and cities, have been $6,200, but that Bolling
confidence and hopefulness. With a after Joseph Devlin, Nationalist, every government department and employes, want to see them, aatls----------------------------2did not take the “ balance" between
clear view o f the situation, fating Us came to blows with a unionist m e m - ‘ bureau, big and little, In and out o f fled.
.
RAIDED FOOTBALL GAME,
( it apd the $1,800 loaned him.
difficulties frankly, they manifest ber o f tho Irish question.
|Washington- In plain words, if you
Representative Martin M. Madden
MANY KILLED IN IRELAND | At another time he stuck to
a
are a Democrat and have failed to o f Chicago, the Illinois member of
calmness, courage nnd strength, with
hold down your place with aome kind the house, who •openly declares that
«.,
r,».,
"tu tT ent
B&gt;oWnt T*# l? *et
• cheerful confidence In the ability
.
his share of the transaction—that ha
SOUTH FLORIDA NEXT.
|
______
1
of
of
double
locked
contrivance,
juat
he
aces
no
objection
to
tho
same
LONDON, Nov. 22— It was offlcsllIer |6i00 0 -a n d that he h a j
of the people to meet and solve their
Tampa, Nov.22— To meet the
de- back on the farm or In tlic village schools for white and colored pupils, ially announced that thc assassins
problems.
, ,
, , n 1 l°aned Sisler for one of hla eompansame street
avreev cars for,
ror, the two
- y rac— tloni In Dublin
totalled ^
|B ^
on h|&gt; ^
whIch ^
space store, for thst is thc immediate ob- thee same
Several o f them emphasise the mand for increased exhibit
___
__
_______
a
thousand
Demoes,
»
general
use
o
f
Pullman
sleepfourteen
exclusive
of
the
Croke
Park
^
jjj
^
^
•
fact that with larger resources and from county and Individual exhibitors jective of many
greater reserve power thV Soath&gt; like o f’ d l '^ t i o n s of Ihe state, directors get the folks at home to take you ere and dlnlnrr care for negroes Hong casualties where It was estimated h(u]
contro
with Bolling 7n d
the rest o f the country, Is greatly o f the 8outh Florida Fair, to be held crat in the very near future. It la with white people, and that he has that twenty-flve persons were killed was on friendly terms with-him. He
strengthened by the Federal Reserve \ n Tampa from February 3 to 12, not only true but indicates at the no use in any way for anything sav- nnd a hundred seriously wounded also mixed into his testimony details*
System which enables sound busl- this week began the erection of new same time that the Republicans are oring of a "Jim-Crow" law la the when the Irish constabulary raided of a purchase by him from Bolling
ness to pass safely through a trying buildings and additions to ithose that taking cognizance o f the fact that chairman o fthe house committee on a football game here.
o f a lot for $900.
period, which, under our former In- have been In use heretofore. Increas- for the next four years they are to post^fices. With the leading men
~ | Sands testified he was now under
MEN'S BOWLING CLUB.
elastic financial system, might have cd space ia demanded in every depart- ba the proprietors o f the mammoth on the Democratic side o f this coro______
f Indictment for "allowing a company
rcsultcd In disaster.
ment, and particularly in buildings federal pie counter at Washington, .n-l’ tee defeated In the recent elecThe Men's Bowling Club was or. ' to overdraw -a shipping company, In
It is a noteworthy fact that Mr. devoted to the displays o f livestock
Incoming Republican senators and tlon landslide it will be easy sailing
_______________
ganlzeri at the Parish House |.8 t , which I warf interested-"
*
. . .
I T . ltestified
a a iU t .J S
L .4 Ihe
* . __
Mason Smith, of New Orleans, one and pou'try. One successful poultry house members have already passed for Madden, with his Republican col- 1
‘ “ " b I| He
that
was then con
« f the largest cotton men in the breeder will exhibit 40 varieties alone the word out along the line that they leagues, to bring out of the commit- ,^ednesday night wttt three teams in
u lf),
* '
South, who has to deal- With the fl- while national and International mean business; everything from the tee almost any radical bills they may j the field. The Clubs will^be known
o T w ^ n S o i T ’n u ralhiTr*"
nancia, problem o f that crop, take, champion cattle and swine, bred In president’s executive order o f 1917, desire. John
^
H
e
h
a
^
^
d
* hopeful view o f the situation. It Is Florida, will be prerented.
whereby all postmasters were placed was one
Democrats' battles, 8 o’clock. Tho standing o f the cluba without success to secure Mr. Bolalso worthy o f note that several o f
The directors have contracted for under civil service rules down to the who fought the .
...........
.
ling’s influence to have* this caso setour leading financier* express the the most novc» free amusement acta various departmental places in Wash- but now that will fall on the should- , will be published in the Herald once
opinion that the period o f deflation, yet shown in Florida and $he Johnny Ington are to boreorganized, this
era o f Congressman Bell o f Georgia, each week. In the next issue will be
*
*• rearing its end, and one o f the j . Jones Exposition shows, which are organization to be for the principal who will become the ranking Demo- 1 published the four highest scores up
| Get some o f those late postcards at
piost eminent o f them. Dr.’ P. IT. featured at American and Canadian puipoae ° t putting tho G. O. P. In cratlc member o f the postoffice com- to date.
tho Herald office. The Valdes Ho­
8aurdere, n leading financier o f fnj/V and exposition*, will again bd and the Democrat! out of business, mlttee.
Standing of Clubs
New Orleans, predicts that this pro- Kromjiit down from their homo quarTho Republicans assert that tho
The general postal situation indl-1
•
■
W
L tel, the Welaka Block, tho Seminote
crai will bo practically completed J jjA ftC Orlando. In every feature the order of the Wilson administration cates that with a Republican post- Team No. 1............................ 0
1 Hotel and other polnta of Intercat.
the South by March first, and tUatLFair promises to surpass those o f Just referred to will be revoked and master-general, amf with both the ( Team No. 2.................. .......... 0
1 Only one cent each. Bend a Sanford
the way opened to replace thousands
(Continued on page six)
jTeam No. 3 . . . ----- 7 - - -------- 1
0 card to your friends.
rmer years.
(Continued1 on page six)

No Long Depression Looked
For In the Sooth

SURPLUS GOVERNMENT
STORES SHOULD BE
HANDLED DIFFERENTLY

follow ing letter s

Banker Who Shared In Deal
Names President’s Brother

SAID TO BE A LOAN

D’Annunzio Bops Up
Again in Fiume Affair

France Not Opposed
to King Constantine

■; i t

Republicans Will Make More Pies

■

J

o
■

•'

'

*

.
‘

�TIIB SANFORD DAILY HBRALD,

PAGE SIX

STAR THEATR[E

EAST SANFORD

|

TODAY

:'

fn m n t tr

r

LOUISE
GLAUM
^

kSSP

t ’^r/fssr

lubuTeit by W W UODK1NW &gt;T*

GEORGE
GIVES VIEWS ON
VARIOUS PROBLEMS
LONDON, Nov. 20.— David LloydGcorgc in his address at the lord
mayor.’s banquet at the Guild hall last
night discussed briefly and pointedly
various problems with which the gov­
ernment is dealing. He plunged, im­
mediately into foreign affairs and ap­
pealed for tho patience for faith in
the world settlement, declaring that by the throat. Do not pny too much
the highest wisdom demanded that nttention to detailed accounts of dis­
prejudices and dislikes be kept under turbances nnd what they calf the hor­
con trol'of Europe to be saved from rors of reprisals given out by parti­
becoming a welter of raging hatreds. sans, who slur over the horrors, of
Referring to the “ questions be­ murder. There will be no real peace,
tween Germany and the allies,’’ Mr. no conciliation whilst this murder con­
George said that the real test of Ger­ spiracy is scattered. • '
"We arc getting the right sort of
man sincerity was disarmament, and
men
nnd arc dispersing the terrorists.
he added, “ the report.I have to give
Tho
government will seek
further
. on that subject is very satisfactory.’’
powers,
If
necessary
to
deal
with,
tho
“ The German army is rapidly being
situation.
If
it
is
war,
ns
the
terrorreduced to 100,000. There are still
too many rifles at large in Germany,1i8ts 8ny* tht‘n thcy cannot complain If
but they arc n greater menace to Gcr- thc Rovcrnmcnt employs some of the
many’s internal pence than to Gcr- rulc" of war "Rainst them."
many’s neighbors.”
--------------------------- Another important point said the
Gct 8omc o1 tho8c ,atc P0»tcards nt
premier, wns reparations. "Germany
Herald office. Thc Valdez Ho­
is prepared to submit certain propos­
als for the liquidation of her obliga­
tions," he continued, “ nnd ersonnlly
I am pleased with them. They will
bo considered nt the conferences and
it is satisfactory to note thnt Ger­ BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
many realizes that her first duty is AT THE HERALD, E A C H ...

$10,000.00 TENT THEATRE

MONDAY, NOV. 22
Com m ercial Street

Mrs. Coffon, o f Marlon, Ind., and Mr.
and Mrs. Filbert, o f Peoria, IlL They
all have cars and xamc in a party
from the north, coming all the way.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Grier and young
people joined them Sunday and went
into town to hear Dr. Walker preach.

Mr. and Mrs. A. Corpany and Mr.
and Mrs. C. E. Charpcnlng drove to
C
L
*
S
s i r ! t 1 &gt;
A
&amp;
S
Apopka and other points in the Com­
pany car on Sunday.
Classified advertisements, 5 cents a line. N a ad taken for less t
The state convict road gang has
25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone, c
been doing some' work on the Cammust accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit
cron Villa road, South Cameron ave­
OVEIDO
cordingly.
nue and the road running parallel
On Sunday afternoon at two o’clock
with the A. C. L. railroad west of
the marriage of Miss Gladys Lazctto
Cameron City,
WANTED
Slnkable submarines, French Shop
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Miller arrived of Oviedo to Ralph Hill o f Bassford,
WANTED—To rent, a Wicker baby __________ _____________ _ _ _ 134-tfe
o
f
Jacksonville,
Fla.,
was
solemnised
homo Monday in the rain'from the
carriage in good condition for four
See our line of electrical
— ‘
beach and will leave on another trip at the Methodist church. The church
months. Mrs. M. S. Wiggins, at the
this week.
2 1 3 - 1B
Gables.
195-Gtc
Mrs. J. C. Fall, Mrs. Mahlon Wight
P iA N TS FOR 8 A L g = 5 S S r ^
WANTED— House or apartment o f 3
and Miss Mamie Steel arc soliciting
1000, |1.50; Cauliflower, Hander*
or 4 rooms, unfurnished, for man
fo r the Red Cross drive in East San­
Snow Ball, per M. S2.K0..
and wife with two school children.
ford.
Best of references. Seq or write, G.
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Cameron, Miss
B. S., job dept, Herald office, dh-tf
er
o
f
the
class.
The
bridal
party
Clnir nnd Mrs. D. A. Long drove ov­
Buy your post cards at the Herald
er to Tavares Armistice day to visit marched into thd strains o f Mendel­
friends. Mrs. Cameron’s friends will sohn’s wedding march beautifully ren­ office.
bo much pleased to know her health dered by Mrs. T. L. Lingo. Leading WANTED— Team work. Inquire of
will permit her taking so long a rtho party were Messrs. Joe Lcinhart
M. Hanson Shoe Shop.
189-GOtp
drive and trust she may enjoy many nnd R. R. Wright, following Mr. Lin- WANTED—Your.old batteries to re­
ihnrt were tho bride and maid o f honmore drives. •
build. Let us make your starting
Mr. and Mrs. McBride,*of West jbr, Miss Olivo Lczette, sister o f the and lighting a pleasure. We are au­
■First street, were visitors at the Joe bride. Thd groom and his best man, thorized "EXIDE" dealers and have
Largest assortment of toys ever in
'Cameron home Sunday, .the McBride’s C. Langcton, o f Jacksonville, ontcro ’ a Battery for all makes automobiles.
_ ___ ____________________ 104-tfc
have just returned from
several by a side door nnd met the bride at ’’ EXIDE, the Giant that lives in a
months visit with relatives in North tho altar. The ring ceremony was box.’’— Ray Bros. Phone 548, old FOR SALE1— One 1020 Cole Eight Tpassenger automobile run only 650o
performed by Rev. L. E. Wright, pas­
Carolina and report a fins visit.
Ford Garage.
• 179-tfc
miles.
Bargain. One 1920. ^ p ^ .
The
Mr. King, of Zclna, M o , was hire tor o f tho Methodist church.
—Get
your
Scratch
Pads
from
Thi
senger
Buick
run only 3,700 miles,
to sec Mr. llaydin, on a business trip bride wore a dark blue traveling suit Harold— by the pound— 15c._______ .
price
right
Extras. Bbx 478, De-'
last week. Mr. and Mrs. King Ilv^ i and carried a beautiful bouquet of WANTED—Brick and cement work
orchids.
Miss
Olive
L
c
z
e
t
t
f
193-6h»
a short time here a few years ago and
chimneys, flues, piers,
cement Land» Fla*
mule, cheap.
expect to return the first of the year was o f green Georgette with hat to floors, sidewalks. — A. I* Ray, 20(1 r u n s a l e —tiood
match.
Would exchange for good milch
to buy a place.
Park Ave.
•
173-30tn
in c oui-or-town guests were: Mr.
cow.
P. Q. Box 1145.
193-4tp
Mr. nnd Mrs. A. Corpnmy and Mr.'
and Mrs. C. Langston, o f Jackson­
Bring
the
children
t
o
s
c
e
thc~toyi
nnd Mrs. J. C. Ellsworth, after view­
ville; Misses Annie Leo and Marion
at the French Shop.
194-tfc
ing the finest parade cvct seen in
Groves and Mrs. George H uff of San­
Sanford, on Armistice Day, drove over
Buy your post cards at the Herald FOR RENT—Two or three furnished
ford.
west o f Orlando sight-sce:ng, through
rooms for light housekeeping. Close
office.
Beautiful views, lc each.
The bride nnd groom accompanied
Ocoee, Winter Garden and Oakland.
in. Owner, Box 117.
194-6tp
by Mr. and Mrs. Langaton, left at
They b b w many fine grovps nnd gar­
FOR
SALE—
One
five
passenger
Ford
once for their future home In Jack­
dens.
.
touring
car.
Must
go
quick.
San­
sonville. The bride is the daughter o f
Rev. W. T. Raucher will be here Mr. and Mrs. N. F. Lczette and has
ford
Heights
camping
grounds.
Fred
WANTED— BY DEC. 1st OR
from Apopkn JJuftday, the 21st, to many friends in Oviedo who extend to
^_____
194-3tp
SOONER. 3 OR 4 UNFUR­
prench at the usual hours at Moore’s her their heartiest congratulations.
SALE— A real place in LaS
NISHED ROOMS OR 3 TO 6 . ------t---------------Station church, his Inst visit bef »re The groom is from Valdosta, Ga., but
ROOM HOUSE, UNFURNISH- I county at a bargalIn. 100 acres of
'the conference.
through his connection with the
ED OR PARTLY FURNISHED. ^ Iand!, near two good towns, good house
Mr. nnd Mrs. A. D. Shoemnker nnd Studcbnkcr Corporation is now locat­
and water works, piped nil over place,
WILL LEASE BY MONTH OR
ins! ed in Jacksonville.
litMc Elizabeth reached hero
spraying machine, etc. 28 acres old
YEAR. BEST OF REFERENC­
'Friday in their enr from Fonnkor, Va.,
bearing grove orange and grapefruit;
Mrs. W. P. Carter spent several
ES GIVEN. ADDRESS “ SOON"
nnd are guests nt tho Steel h^mc. days last week in Fort Myers, tho
40 acres in cultivation, balance timber
CARE OF HERALD.
193-12tp
They are looking for a location nnd guest of her sister, Mrs. Mntheson.
.
lnnd.
Prico $33,000. Terms. Address
WANTED— Shirts to make, Mrs. J.
expect to remain permanently this
Box
195,
Clermont, Fin.
194-3tp
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Lawton spent
A. Williams, 809 Magnolia. 196-Gtp
time. They made ninny friends dur­ Wednesday in Orlando.
I1OR SALE—40 acres good citrus
ing their previous residence here who
M. D. Polston and family and Mrs.
land, cleared nnd fenced, 1 3-4 mile*
furnished'
will be most happy to welcome them C. J. McCully spent Saturday in San­
to town. Good roads. A bargain at
room
back ngnin.
ford.
$80 an acre. As wo need the money.
An executive meeting o f the C. E.
A jolly party is camping at tits
Price $45 per acre. Addreis 195,
iClnrk Beck residence in Cameron City. was held Monday night at tho home
Clermont, Fla.
19l-3tp
Mr. nnd Mrs. Charles Beck, Mr. and of Miss Katherine Young. In spite
FOR SALE— One Jersey cow, gives 3
of the rain, about half o f the mem­
_____________ gallons of milk daily, 4 years old.
bers were present nnd some very im- !
Two furnish $125.00. Will Jones, corner (&gt;th and
pnrtnnt business was transacted.
Hickory.
195-2tp
Mrs. L. R. Mitrhell left Saturday
FOR SALE—One cottage, 5 rooms
for Mobile, Ala.
MISCELLANEOUS
nnd bath, corner Third Street and
Mrs. S. W. Swope, Francis Swope,
ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, French ave. Mrs. Baldwin. 193-4tp
Miss Mablc Swope and Elizabeth
109 East First street, over Union
FOR SALE— 0 room cottage, large
Lawton spent Snturdny in Orlnndo.
Phnrmacy.__________________ 103-tfc
ynrd, fine gnrden, various kinds of
Alton Fnrncll spent Sunday nt DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 San­
fruit
trees nnd two separate five
home.
ford avenue, pay cash for furniture,
ncro
farms
close in. Owner, Box 117.
bedsteads, chairs, etc.
What have
194-6tp
TRAIN SCHEDULE
you ?
174-30tc
BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run FOR SALE— 10 gallon water tank
Corrected on November 15, 1920,
nnd oil heater for tank. Will be
your battery until she is entirely
Snuthlmund
sold
cheap. Call nt 821 Magnolia ave­
dead. The battery is the rostliest ac­
nue.
Phone 290.
195-3tp
cessory to your car. Wc re-charge
Arrive
and re-build nil makes of batteries.
2:30 a. m.
Send in your locals to thc Herald
— Ray Bros. Phdhc 548, old Ford
office. Phone thc news to 148. We
Garage.
179-tfc
-------- 1:28 p. m.p
want every bit o f i t Tell us the
------ 2:55 p. m.
news each day.
. •
____ 7:30 p.m.
LOST— Pink saphire ring, solitaire
North Bound
setting. Finder return to Agnes

;

U PARKER READ JR.,

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1920

13 Club Park

Arrive
------ 1:48 a. m.
----- 11:45 a. m.
___ 2:35 p.m.
___ 4:00 p. m.
___ 10:00 p. m.
I^esburg Branch
•
Arrive

Departs Berner, Sanford Shoe &amp; Clothing Co.
:03 a. m.
195-3tc
:05 p. m. LOST—Western Union branch de­
:55 p. m.
posit i&gt;onk. Finder please return
:05 p. m. to Western Union office.—J. J’ . Hall,
Mgr.
180-tfc

Arrive

Departs
8:00 a. in.
3:25 p.m.

----- 0:30 p. m.
-----2:00 p. m.
Oviedo Branch

America’s Best Dramatic Company will present HighClass Royalty Plays— Change o f Program Each Day
MONDAY NIGHT WILL PRESENT

FOUR ACT DRAMA

Five Vaudeville Specialties Between Acts
Admission 40c and 25c, including War Tax

E

ONE LADfY WILL BE ADMITTED WITH
EACH ADULT TICKET MONDAY NIGnT

I? J

Arrive
....1 1 :0 0 a. m.

Daily, except Sunday,

3 RING

LOST OR STRAYED—One red pig,
Departs
4 months old. If found notify E.
7:30 n. m. D. Randall, Jr., 825 First Street,
7:35 p. m.
191-tfc

-----4:00 p. m.
____11:55 a. m.
Trilby Branch

Departs

FOR SALE— Shnsto daisies, $1 per
dozen. English Shamrock Oxnlys
30c per dozen. Ring 207-W. 183-12tc
Special reduction in men’s- and l a ­
dles’ W. L. Douglas shoes.— A. Knnncr, 213-15 Sanford Ave. Phone 650.
__________________________ 100-tfc
FOR HALE— l»/i II. I’, nnd 2Yi H. P.
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
in perfect condition.— Herald Print­
Ing Co.
if
New line of Congoleums and Art
Squares.— A. Knnncr, 213-15 Sanford
Ave. Phone 550.
106-tfd

*«£

A NATIONAL
INSTITUTION

SANFORD
Ball Park Grounds

FOR SALE—One new 1920 and one
1917 Ford touring cars. Two tents
Circle D of the
10x12
and 12x14, also four army cots.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
All
in
good condition. Cali for Mr.
Will have a
Lehman. Thone No. 112. - 103-6tp
~ b olls, 10c to $20.00~Frencirshop.
SATURDAY MORNING at Bower A
194-tfc
RoumilUt'a Drug Store
FOR SALE—11', H. P. and 2 ^ 1 1 7 P.
Gasoline engines. Brand new and
BRADLEY MATTRESS FACTORY in perfect condition.— Herald PrintOrlando, Fla.
Special reduction on Georgette Silk
Makes old Mattresses new at one- nnd cotton shirt waists.— A. Kanncr,
213-215 Sanford Ave. Phone 550.
third the coat of a new one.
Toy Airplanes, French Shop. 194tfc
PHONE 801
16 BRYANT ST.
ll-1511mo-p
nor, 213-15 Sanford Ave.
Phone
About six different hunting parties 550.___________________ \______ ICO-tfc
are getting, ready for the woods next FOR SALE!— One horse,' wagon and
harness. Apply M. Hanson Shoe
Friday. There will be some tall bom­
barding when they get strung out in Shop.
. .__________ ' 189-12tp
Seminole and adjoining counties.
Toy pianos, French Shop.
194^tfc

Mile Long Open Cage

Street Parade
•

1 0 :3 0 A . M .

�i.

*

•

f s r- '-=•.

Vt»

♦

P.

r-'i' to#'
PAGE TWO

:_~--!i _---—±p—±

*

TUB SANFORD DAILY HERALD,

t==gJ*.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER'22, 1920

.Citrus Exchange, II. T. Montgomery
1921 DESK CALENDAR.
DIVERSION ORDER
HITS AT FLORIDA &amp; Sons, Tampa; A. C. Terwllllnger,
--------- .■
«
|Titusville; Porter-Jtfdy Co., JJdcksonThere is nothing quite aa handy M
the desk calendar pad. &gt; They are th
Holding that the new reconsign- Jvilte opd several others
busy office man or woman’s great­
THE PEOPLE WILL NOT STAND ment and diversion rules of tho In­
FINE STATIONERY
est help nnd have been difficult to
terstate Commerce Commission givo
FOR IT.
obtain up to the present time. The
an unfair advantage ito California
The Herald office is headquarters
It has been publicly denied that and the rest o f tho long haul states,
Herald Printing Company has a few
for fine stationery of all kinds from
John
J.
Mendenhall,
now
serving
a
o
f them and if you want your calen­
and
discriminate
against
Florida,
with
Phone 428
5JISS KATHRYN W1LKEY, Editor
r r
the printed letter head to the beautl- dar you should lose no time in or.
life sentence for the murder of Mra. “ nu u‘~ ‘r ; r 7 " E * " ”
m“ rkc‘ J ful stationery In
b o ... thnt I,.0 dear
Chnrles Eliot, of this city, and still o‘ ff the nation, representatives
dcrin git now. Come in nnd sec them
hand lundc, beautiful baby clothes.
SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR T llE
01
to
the
ladies’
hearts.
You can get today. Herald Printing Co.
Supper served each evening from under Indictment for tfcc murder, at Florida fruit and vegetable growers
WEEK.
to p,
Ithe same time of her dai
aughter, Susie will formally protest to the commis­ this stationary and have your mono­
1.
n
Have you seen that beautiful line
Eliot, will seek, or is seeking a par­ sion against the decision in case No. gram printed on it, making the Hol­
*• Menu
/ • g j Monday—
•
iest Christman gift that you. haVe o f box stationery at the Herald of­
don.
This
public
denial
came
follow­
Oyster Cocktail,
10,173.
i •
St. Agnes Guild at the Parish
ing the united protest o f the women’s
Oyster Stew
They decuare that Florida, rcqulr- avcr Been “ nd one ° /
S£ ; fice? Just the thing fo r “The Girl"
. House.
clubs
of
the
state
after
a
"rumor”
got
ing only 25 to 30 hours fo r the move- tJoncry f oat*
thc8e d y. . *7 for Christmas. Get it printed with
Scpllopcd Oysters
Pipe Organ Club with Mrs. C. J.
•
ruent
of
its
products
east
or
west,
o
u
J
-txtJonaiy
ta
very
Jn her monogram.
out
that
application
would
be
made
Baked Ham
Rines.
for executive clemency prior to Jan. should not bo discriminated against pr ce an pos Va J
Home Baked Beans
’ ..
. . BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
Monday Afternoon Bridge with
1, 1920.
under a ruling made to fit other ^
can ^
See It at the Herald
Potato
Salad
Mrs. W. C. Hill.
AT THE I1BRALD, E A C H ....
When wo see whnt the mere rumor states which require from five to sev- ° “ cc*
Hot Frankfurters with 'or without
jv. .*?. Tuesday—
applying fo r n pardon for Menden­ cn days to reach their markets and
mustard
Social Department Bridge at Wo­
hall has done, what will be the result establish a diverting point.
Hot
Home-made
Rolls
man’s Club, Mrs. J. M. Wallace,
In Florida when the application fo r
Pickles
J. J. Stowers, representing the
hostess.
the
pardon
is
published?
The
Trib'
Celery
shippers
and growers' associations o f
Wednesday—
A CARLOAD OF FIRST CLASS BANANAS ON THE A. C. L
uno does ,not believe there would bo-' Florida, Mississippi and Alabama, left
, Pie
Cake
■ Literature and Music Department
housing accommodations enough in Jacksonville Friday to enter oral pro­
TRACK, NEAR EXPRESS OFFICE, ARE ON SALE NOW AT
Tea
Coffee
at the Woman’s Club.
* *
LOWEST PRICES. Come everybody and buy a bunch o f bananas
Dancing last evening from 9 to 12. Tallahassee to take care o f those who test before the commerce commis­
i~' V Bridge Luncheon Club with Mrs.
would flock to the capital protesting sion, and many other representative*
for Thanksgiving Day.
Good music, 75c couple.
R. A. Newman.
Everyone asked to come and enjoy against the pardoning o f this man, o f Florida's biggest shippers of fruits
Bridge Club with Mrs. George DcB. BRO W N
found guilty o f the most cold-blooded and produce will also appear, as
these two evenings.
Cottes Thursday (Thanksgiving).
spectacular murder o f the elder wom­ Florida growers are intensely Inter­
22-24*26-28-30_5t
- Friday— *
an and who still has hanging over ested In the hearing.
.
t
Spendthrift Club with Mrs. S. M.
his head in case he should be pardon­
CAMPERS RETURN
E. D. Dow, traffic manager of the
• Lloyd.
*
ed, another charge of murder, that 'Florida Citrus Exchange, left Friday
Mother’s Club at Baptist Clftrch,
o
The party composed o f Mr. and f the younger woman.
to attend it.
at 3 o'clock. I
J. F. Thomas, vice-president o f the
T. N. T. with Mrs. A. R. Key.
Mrs. Henry Purden, Mr. and Mrs. S. " The Tribune kept silent while the
rumor was being spread, and later Snvcr-Thomns Co., fru it and vege­
Saturday—
M. Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smith
Cecilinn Music Club, 3 o'clock at and little daughter, Evelyn, Mr. and denied; hut now that it Is prpven Men­ table shippers, Jacksonville, also left
the Studio o f Mrs. Fannie S. Mrs. R. J. Holly, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. denhall Is actually working for a par­ to attend the informal hearing and
don and is admittedly seeking to over­ will confer with Florida, Mississippi,
Munson.
Holly and Robert Holly returned lato j,
come tho protest of the wbmen of tho nnd Tennessee representatives prior
Inst night from Camp N. N. N. at
Mrs. W. H. Irwin, Mrs. J. W. Ir­ , the ranch on the Econlockhntchic and state ngninat hl» release, The Tribune to entering tho hearing otr Tuesday
TURKEYS
win and little Miss Mary J. Irwin they had a grand time. They used ' declares that Mendenhall must not and the preliminary conference on
have come from Daytona Beach to v the ranch house for sleeping quart­ be released from tfic punishment of Monday next between interested
CHICKENS
be the guests of Mrs. Julius Schultz ers and cooked out in the ynrd at the Ihis crime.
growers nnd shippers.
"Let justice he tempered with merover Thanksgiving.
M r.‘ Thomas will represent at this
'big camp fire. Henry Purden and
FRUIT CAKES
cy" will ho urged. True; hut there hearing the interests o f Bevcrat
1Don Smith were the champions in
Harry Perrin, of Eustis, was the the fishing line taking n fine string is always to remnin, Justice. Justice Klorlda shippers,
.■ ,
guest of his sister, Mrs. D. L. Thrash- of speckled perch and trout and they demanded o f Mendenhall his life in ' Marshall &amp; Bell, attorneys, Wash­
CRANBERRIES
expiation o f this bloody crime; Mer­
•V
or Sunday.
ington, D. C., will represent the Flor­
)ividcd honors in the hunting line
cy stepped in nnd spared thnt life for
RAISINS
ida interests who have membership
with Roghnhl Hotly nnd about fifty
.. .
..
Mrs. Thomas E. East and little
,
. . . . .
;the very purpose which seems to
in the American Fruit &amp; Vegetable
squarrcls
were
brought
into
camp*.
,
,
„
.
.
.
.
.
.
East’s
daughter are visiting Mrs.
' ,
„ I . ,,,. , 4
, n ! have been nttaincd by him—repentShipping Association, with headquar­
while there. Ralph Wight nnd Bob.
,
.
, , ,,
FIGS
parents in Oklahomn, Miss.
, .
*
,
,
,,
|nnce for his sin; hut Mercy stops
Kennedy happened along for dinner .
. .
, , ters nt Chicago, III, Memberships of
.
.. . ..
. . . . .
.
short of defeating the lawful ends of the "Florida growers and shippers' in
swelled the larder with n brace , . ...
, ,
,
,,
,, ,
NUTS
Mrs. Martha Vnnvalznh and daugh­ and
. . .
,
.
, ,
Justice, and to pardon him would be
the
American
Fruit
and
Vegetable
of
ducks
nnd
some
snipe
and
they
ter, Eunice, Miss Alice Strother and
to set at defiance Justice nnd to en­
•Shipping Association is ns follows:
Miss Ednn Keating, of
Daytonn, were such good fellows they were courage hope ii^ criminal
GRAPES
breasts
Nix &amp; Bugbec, Hastings; Chase &amp;
made
to
stay
over
for
supper.
Mr.
were the guests of Mrs, 0. P.» Hernthat no matter howl dastardly the
Co., and Snyer-Thomns Co., Jackson­
nnd Mrs. Chus. Hand nnd Mr. and
* don last Saturday.
crime, n pardon will come upon show­
ville; R. O. Applegate, Jr., Miami;
i Mrs. Archie Betts enme out for Suning that the prisoner is repentant.—
Nocat
tee Fruit Co., Nocatcc; Stand­
Mr. and Mrs, A. W. I,ee nnd Capt. day dinner bringing a big basket of
Tampa Tribune.
ard
Growers’
(Inc.), A. J. Nyc, Dr.
Bloomberg, of Jacksonville, have re- (lunch nnd they found the table piled
I*.
Phillips
Co.,
Orlando; American
turned from a motor trip down the high with everything in the game lino
TRAIN SCHEDULE
Fruit
Growers'
(Inc.),
E. F. Dutton
East Const.
nnd had n big Sunday dinner of
Florida
(Inc.),
Division;
Sanford
Truck
baked duck, fried squirm! and snipe
Corrected on November 15, 1920.
Growers’ (Inc.), Sanford; Florida
Mrs. D. 1 Thrasher goes to Eustis and fish nnd everything. The party
Southbound
Tueadny to spend Thanksgiving .with hnd glorious weather nnd enjoyed
relatives.
the trip so much thnt the indies arc
Arrive
Depart*
***
******* *+*
*** K++1*
+** **+*l+*+*+*+K*
*** *** *** *** *&lt;
-------- importuning their hushnnds to take No. 83. ____ 2:36 a.m.
2:46 p. in.
No.
.
_
_
_
_
27.
8.10
a.
m.
Mrs. Roy Symes and children were them ngnin about Thanksgiving time
nnd maybe the enmping idea will be­ No.
91. ------- 1:28 p.m.
1:38 p. m.
in Sanford Saturday,
come a permanent thing. The camp No. 89. _____ 2:55 p.m.
3:20 p. m. T
7:45 p. n». T
Mr. nnd Mrs. Edward Rush have was named the N. N. N. camp for No. 85. ____ 7:30 p. m.
returned to their home in Charleston, reasons known only to those who
North Round
S. C., after spending u few days the] were there nnd while'.it is not n perArrive
Departs
gUesta of Mr. nnd Mrs. T. L. Dumas. ' manent name the next camp
will No. 82. ____ 1:48 n. m.
2:0.3 n. m.
-------j havo to go some if there is any more No. 84. _____11:45 a. m. 12:05 p. m.
Mrs. Jofln T. Leonard! was called enjoyment than the first one. Mr. No. 80. _____2 :35 p. m.
2:55 p. nt.
to Lakeland Sunday by the death of nnd Mrs. J.*B- Lawson could not go No. 92. ___ 4:00 p.m.
4 :05 p. m.
nn tho trip ns Mr. Lawson was taken No.
her grandmother.
28. ____ 10:00 p. m.
ill at the last moment hut he loaned
Leesburg Branch
the party Ids truck and the
only
ANNUAL BAZAAR WOMAN’ S
Arrive
Departs
GUILD. HOLY 1 ROSS (T Il’ ItUH. drawback was the fact that the I-nw•No.
lf.H
____
r
J
7
:30
a. in.
sons hnd to stay homo at the Inst
No.
22..........
7
:3S
p.
m. T
The Woman’s Guild of Holy Cross minute. The camp also had a miiBchurch, will hold their annual Bu­ cot in tlio shape of a stray fox tcr- •No. 157............. 4:00 p.m.
..1 1 :55 a.m.
zaar Wednesday and Thursday, Dec. 1rier who was promptly named “ Doo- No.
Trilby
Branch
lst and 2nd, from 3 to 12 p. m. each dies" in honor of one of thq Indies.
S. M. I.loyd nnd R. J. Holly quali­ •
day in the Parish house.
Arrive
Departs
The will bo a fancy work booth, fied as first class camp cooks nnd •No. 100..........
8 :00 n. in. T
with beautiful hand work, everything they can cook flap jacks and fry •No. 24_____
3:25 p. in.
you need for a most attractive Christ­ squirrels with the best o f them now. •No. 101............. 6:30 p.m.
mas gift; flower booth with palms, In fact everybody in camp was on *No. 25.......... 2:00 p.m .
crolons ferns and plants of all kinds, the job and the boys think it is fine
Oviedo Branch
t o have the girls along to’ show them
also cut flower*.
Departs
Arrive
’ Japanese booth with Aprons, hags, how to really cook ducks as they
•No. 126........... 11:00 a.m.
fruits, home made candies, jams, Jel­ should be cooked. Henry Purden is
'N o. 127..........
3:40 p. m.
nlso recommended to nnyonc wanting
lies and preserves.
— -**S t Agnca Guild booth, everything a good truck driver and cook com‘ Daily, except Sunday.
•.
bined although at present ha Is very
busy at his old Job with the A. C. L.
Railway.

Bananas! Bananas!

Dinners

-

L. P. McCULLER

Sanford

&gt;x

t

±

Six Kinds of Safety

J

Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank
where you deposit your money?
The first consideration is the capital, which should be
ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank
is to serve.
T
The next question to consider is the officers in charge.
They should be men of experience; high character and success­
t ful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.
Then there is the question of confidence. The public
t
should have confidence in the officers and in the bank.
These three principles determine the success of a bank.
±
We adopted these principles in the outset of our career
T
t and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase
T
X our usefulness to the community as the years go by.
We Offer You:

xx
x
x
x
x

x
x
x
xx

,sl-if•.

Full Line
I MM

1ST:

LARGE CAPITAL AND WORKING RESERVE.

2ND:

TRAINED MEN IN CHARGE-M EN OF SEVERAL YEARS EX­
PERIENCE.

3RD:

THE CONFIDENCE OF THE PUBLIC, WHICH IS PROVEN BY
THE DAILY ADDITION TO OUR LINE OF DEPOSITORS.

4TI1:

Prices from $50 to $300

.

Terms to Suit Yourselt
The most com plete line of Records

PROTECTION BY TWO EXAMINATIONS EACH YEAR BY THE
STATE BANKING DEPARTMENT, TWO AUDIT8 EACH YEAR
BY AN INDEPENDENT RECOGNIZED PUBLIC AUDIT COM­
PANY AND TWO SWORN STATEMENTS SUBMITTED TO THE
STATE COMPTROLLER IIY THE
CASHIER, &gt; GIVING
TnB
BANK’S CONDITION IN DETAIL, ALL OF W n iO I INSURES
REGULAR, SYSTEMATIC AND THOROUGH OPERATION OF
THE BANK.
* * - •
_ * •. *- * ^ ‘
'-2' ‘ ■=* jw/r*
5TII: THE ADVICE OF A COMPETENT BOARD OF DIR
WHO MEET WITH THE OFFICERS
REGULARLY
EACH
MONTH AND ADVISE TnEM AS TO THE OPERATION OF
THE DANK.
6TH;

INSURANCE OF ALL DEPOSITS EVERY DAY OF TUB YEAR,
THIS IS A PROTECTION NOT COMMONLY FOUND IN BANKS
AND IS AN ABSOLUTE PROTECTION FOR YOUR FUNDS, IN
ADDITION TO ALL THE OTHER USUAL SAFEGUARDS.
•

__ _____________...

______

—

Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins

L-

WtrSf*; *
B

Prices Right
I
i
-

THESE ARE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD DO BUSINESS W ITn
US, AND WE BELIEVE THAT NO HANK CAN OFFER BETTER IN­
DUCEMENTS.
.

PEOPLES BANK OF
WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS

i

■ t e i

»/ ,-ii: * ■
S=FW,BSS‘ ,

i
^

-Mfi- i

y ; ■-

‘ \m

Twlrfer^

.
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i

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AKr£r=.rh=HJ

i;n
?.i

-

�— *■—

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22t 1920

Walthall &amp; Estridge, Props

Welaka Building

Specials For Today
C hoice
W estem an d Florida
M eats

.htU&amp;JL

-

Veal, P ork, M utton
Sausage

„

,

N O W M A K IN G

Pecan Nut Roll
Fresh Daily
$l.(HPPOUND

W ate r’s Kandy Kltehen

MR8. B. E. TAKACH
Proprietor
Corner of Park Avenue and
Commercial Avenue
SANFORD. FLORIDA

Phone 66

Sanford

CIRCUS PARADE A
WINTER PARK LAD IS
MIGHTY PAGEANTRY
RUN OVER BY TRUCK
AND NECK IS BROKEN
When &lt;the circus' glad-voiced cal­
WINTER PARK, Nov. 22.— As the liope pipes forth on the street to­
result o f a broken neck, due to being morrow morning at 10:80, starting
run over by a heavy truck, James the parade over the usual route
Arthur Stephens, the 14-ycar-old son there will be many spectators 'on the
of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Stephens, curbstones to cry “ Welcome to our
is dead. The accident occured Sat­ City" to Big Zulu, the skyscraper
urday afternoon at the corner o f elephant and the lesser members of
England and Park streets.
the two elephant herds. It will be
The lad, who was riding a bicycle, the finest^ circus parade that has
swung sharply around the comer o f been gotten o ff the front steps and
England street into Park street, di­ sidewalks for an age.
rectly in front o f an oncoming truck.
The first thing to daszle the eyed
The lad became confused and at­ is the band wagon in the lead with
tempts by the driver to avoid a col­ its ten dapple grays. Dotted here
lision were of no avail.
and there down the rest o f the line
The injured boy was taken to a are other bands, chimes and calli'
nearby doctor's office and upon ex­ opes. There are elephants, camels,
amination was found that his neck ponies and high-stepping thorough­
was broken and the boy died fifteen breds. In all there are 200 all prise
minutes later.
winners from the’ world's prise stock
A com or’s jury rendered a verdict shows.
o f death due to an unavoidable acci­
The menagerie cages are open, dis­
dent, absolving the driver from all playing all sorts o f creatures from
blame.
V
jungle and plain; beautiful tableaux
Mr. Stephens and family arc new wagons and floats— all resplendent in
residents of Winter Park, having gold and glitter—are interspersed in
moved here from Georgia a few the lineup. Taken as a whole the
weeks ago.
Sparks Circus parade is a thing of
__________________
beauty and well worth seeing.
ESCAPE FROM FLORIDA
- The performance tomorrow after*
8TATE PRISON, CAUGHT
noon begins at 2 o’clock and in the
AT LITTLE ROCK. ARK. evening at 8 o’clock, the doors open­
ing at 1 and 7 to permit an inspec­
LITTLE ROCK; Ark., Nov. 2 2 - tion o f the menagerie and horse fair
Earl C- Fuller, wounded recently by for which this circus is famous.
police here from whom he tried to
escape after his arrest on a charge o f
ARRIVAL8 AT THE SEMINOLE
robbery, Friday admitted, according
to the police that he had escaped
F. E. Brock, Rome, N. Y .; W. Bak­
from the penitentiary at Ralford, er, Jacksonville; S. O. Vickers, At­
Fla., after serving one month of a six- lanta; J. W. Gillsrd, Jacksonville;
year sentence. Fuller, the police said, Gifford Garret^, Jacksonville; J, II.
has agreed to return to Florida with­ Lunday, Atlantic Coast Line; Mrs.
out requisition papers. He is also said Jeanne Drake, Cincinnati; Leo Blib,
to be wanted in Houston, ex., and Cleveland; W. B. Hunt, Wilmington,
Fresno, Calif., on robbery charges.
N. C-; A. D. Smith, Birmingham; Mr.

Announcing the Openi

_

FINE STATIONERY
The Herald office is headquarters
for fine stationery o f all kinds from
the printed letter head to the.beauti­
ful stationery in boxes that is so dear
to the ladles' hearts. You can get
this stationery and have your mono­
gram printed on it, making the nift­
iest Christman gift that you have
ever seen and one o f the best. Sta­
tionery costa money these days but
our stationery-is very reasonable' in
price and positively the best that
money can buy. See it at the Herald
office.
METHODISTS RESOLVING *
AGAINST SUNDAY TRAINS

and Mrs. R. F. Weld, Schneotady, N.
Y.; W. T. Tburmood, Commerce, Ga.;
E. W. Raife, W. E. Dunn, Ja-kaonvllle; C. D. Whilden and wife, Vcro,
Fla.; E. P. Johnston, Atlanta; W. E.
Boyd, Chattanooga, Tenn.; E. R. Engbit, New York City; Mr. and Mrs. J.
L. Sheppard, Palatka; O. J. Mapp,
Jacksonville; H. A. Boyd, Columbia,
S. C.; G. W. Laughlin, Florence, 8.
C.; Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Reynolds,
Fremont, Nebr.; E. M. Stubbs, Jack­
sonville; Ralph W. Rogue and wife,
Philadelphia, Pa.; Grant A. Martin,
Violef LeClcar, .Melville /Confpany;
Mrs. E. Sutton and Miss L. Sutton,
LaFayette, Ind.; R. E. Blayer, Jack­
sonville; Robert Ingram, Atlanta.

Ne%t Door to Fleetwoods

Con 1st and Park A v e, | ;

Everything new
and Fresh and
a
Crisp and at the V ery Lowest
Prices.
T h e Cash and Carry Plan—
Nothing delivered and Nothing
Charged.

T h e Buyers get the

benefit of the very low prices.

roce
O. H. STE N STR O M , Manager

Office supplies at the Herald.

ROCKY MOUNT, N. C., Nov. 22.
C A L L 340
—The
North Carolina Methodist con­
GENERAL MACHINE AND BOIL­
ference in session here Saturday
ER WORK
nitABS CASTINGS
For Long or Short Distance
adopted the report, o f the temperance
GAS ENGINE REPAIRS
and social service board, which goes
ACTEYLENE CUTTING AND
on record as opposed to the operation
WELDING
is
of trains on Sunday, the printing of Every Battery repair we make
A BIG TRUCK
Special machine for turning Auto Sunday newspapers and the playing guaranteed for six months. We sre
Crank Shafts and Crank Pina to of baseball or golf on Sunday.
able to do this because in repairing
within .0005 accuracy.
any make of battery we are licensed
IRRIGATION NIPPLES
to use patented features which have
1921 DESK CALENDAR
PULLEYS and SHAFTINGS
made Vesta batteries famous.
There is nothing quite as handy as
ROUND AND SQUARE IRON
the desk calendar pad. They are the
buay office *man or woman’s great­ L. A. RBNAUD, Prop. ’■ Phone 189
est help and have been difficult to
obtain up to the present time. The
Herald Printing Company has a few
of them and if you want your calen­
Sanford’a Most Populsr Hotel
dar you should lose no time in orSEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL
derin git now. Come in apd see then*
today. Herald Printing Co.
Under Management of

We Guarantee All
Battery Repairs

HAULING

CHULUOTA INN O F F
Will Open Season 1920-21 on

“

“

™

“

Thanksgiving Day F(*
*®fjl
T u r k e y D in n e r
• Cor. First' and San

Sanford Battery Service Co.

WALTER B. OLSON
When you pass the Herald office
glance in at the window and see that
new line o f box stationary for the
Christmas trade. You will want it
"pronto" and kiso “depeche vou«."

Our Specialty— -Seminole's
famous $1 Sunday Dinner
dc luxe.
A la Carte Service all day

December 1st
On the first of each month
your rent la due.
Why give
other people your money. Buy
you ■ home and each month
instead of paying out rent
money, pay on a home that is
yours.
Beautiful homes on Park,
Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and
Myrtle
avenues,
Banford
Hoighta. Building lota In any
location.

This is good news to the many people here wh&lt;
are anxious to build homes and buildings of a!
kinds. Perhaps you did not realize that build
ing costs are lower—that quick service and up
to-the-minute methods—mean better constructio
and cheaper costs in ever way.

I Sell It

. Get Wise to Service in Building f

J.E . SPURLING

Progressive methods in building construction and
personal supervision of all work gives you the^
best in the market not only in materials but in all
kinds of construction. W e are ready to take your
order for anything in the construction line front
a skyscraper building to a garage and from a
sidewalk to a macadamized street through your
property.

BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
AT THE HERALD. E A C H !..

Pure, Sw eet, Wholesome
Delivered Fresh Every Day

MILLER’S BAKERY

*■

W e Plan, Build, Construct any kind o f Building You )

GEO. W. KNIGHT COMPANY
S P E C I A L B A R C A IN 8
FOR THE FIRST
8MITH BROTHERS
Krutrt Repair Work

C O M P L E T E H O U S E B IL L
C A R T E R L U M B E R CO.

.

SANFORD. I

KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE HERALD WANT COLUMN

�THB SANFORD DAILT HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER M, 1»W

MICK1E SAYS
• ' " t h e AMERICAN PEOPLE ARE CONSUMING
( 7 C f Z n M A ANNUALLY $ 175,OOP,000.00 WORTH OF PER/H f
V7
FUME, $80,000,000.00 WORTH OF CANDY, $42,000,►- iMLi
000.00 W ORTn OF CREWING CUM. WE ARE A
T
1r*1
SWEET SMELLING, CANDY, CHEWING PEOPLE. LET US ALSO BE
A GOOD INVESTING PEOPLE, BY INVESTING IN THE SAFE. SOUND
AND
CONSERVATIVE 8 PER CENT CUMULATIVE PRIOR PREFER­
Editor
HOLLY
RED
STOCK
OF THE SOUTHERN UTILITIES COMPANY. THERE'S
ARD--Secretary-Treasurer
NONE
BETTER.
1L - _____General Manager

not for a season only, but for »U-theyear round-service

J U N E S - -Circulation Mans,
Phono 481

secure

for

yourself and your children the pres­
tain no clement o f news, arc dis­
tressing to many innocent
people,
and their publication could serve no
good purpose.
Sometimes the editor is criticised
for his forbearance, but at least
some of his critics do not stop to re­
member; that possibly the paper is
just as forbearing regarding an inci­
dent or two of their own lives.
There are many things to be con­
sidered before putting it in cold type.

U U l X *4* Ka.wn ea S p p lk » U (.

S t l l n n j la C ltj Vy Cirri*r

ib«; of the Associated Tress

after that get ready for Christ

MORE PRAISE FOR PRESS

Small city dailies and the country
Ith maybe a few bank holidays
weekly press of Florida mny become
vn in for good measure.
affected with what is vulgarly known
as the “ swell head" if the words of
best season in our ' history
praise heaped upon them continue.
\ us.in the face. Get your buckHowever, that may be, it is with par­
edy for the shower of gold that
donable pride that the press of Flor­
Aid.to come to Sanford./
ida may consider itself just a jump
or two ahead of the press o f any
vMather ia ideal for the crops, other state, population considered.
o r hunting, ideal fo r the win- Further commendation for the small
iltora. In fact this season ia town press is glvei) by the Jackson­
^ the best from the weather ville Metropolis, which says:
oint that one could want
“ When the editors o f large dallies
advocate state and national policies
lyor Peters, of Boston, will atop which later are overwhelmingly de­
Urtlng-on Boston Common. Well, feated by the people, it is indicative
&gt;r, give us your hand. If you that something vitally essential has
It:on Boston Common it can be been omitted from their arguments;
« d .anywhere. And mayor, you for after nil Is said, the press is one
.a big job on hand, but we be- of the three most powerful institu­
you are big enough for the job. tions
ir/ our government.
Its
strength is based on the power o f
■crybody pull for a bigger San- suggestion and if this strength loses
and in pulling remember that its virility, then there is reason to
Chamber o f Commerce is the begin searching for causes.
“ But that is only a preface to the
►'where the pulling counts.
No
ge,'.hamlet, town or city ever subject. The editor o f the small city
ip tw to anything without a good daily or the town weekly is not car­
,boa(d o f trade or chamber of ried to extremes by his own ideas.
5&gt;ertta or boosters club of some Ho ia closely associated with his peo­
takes concentrated effort to ple; he is nt nil times susceptible to
0 a real town and concentrated their opinions; his hand is never re­
■ dbi only be obtained through a moved from the public pulse. The
Riat has all the business men of enthusiasm nnd the throbs of the
community are a part of his being.
ItyAnrolled as members.
That is the vital essential!
“ To the men of the neighborhood
Frank."
he is
hrough any" depression is to They dr0P
hl* ahoP. discuss the
things on the bright side and bumes of the day with him, criticize
oney 1s tight spend less. If hla “hcct» Pralae ft» offer suggestions
jot afford this thing and that
oftentimes are practical, more
tat is really unnecessary cut often mpractlcnl but suggested in s
tntll you can afford it. The *Plrit of real friendship; and after
ould be better o ff If put on n they are gone, ho slta down to his
[Is and each one was mnde to typewriter, nnd unconsciously perwhnt they obtained nt the f,nPa hls expressions arc rationalized
y obtained it. And the world *nnd mn,,e morc 80,id by the nssorin&gt;g to this period in a few ^ on ° f ideas.
ears. * We are all spending
“ Florida has morc high class smnll
an we are able to spend. Tho city dailies nnd town weeklies than
I situation Is summed up ln ,nny at*tc in lhc unlon- Thcao papers
16 in this issue.
wield n strong nnd wholesome influ-

j

;Nt&gt;V l* the time to advertise. From
lUTvfeck on until the last horn blows
ettf JL’card*Dsy there will be n stream
^•^boppers In nnd out of the city
Ejd.Uley will come here if you adverU k M bring them in. If ydu bring
tem here they will buy, for Sanford
jfafrhjphts have the goods but unless
9 r advertise even your own people
pi; go to some other town that ndy-Uses and gets them by the prices,
ifr e never was n time when ndveralng jvould get you such sweeping
jjMfitf. And our subscribers are pntinUibg the merchants who display
fair^warea in the Doily nnd Weekly
Don’t forgot; that.

and

ent and future benefits o f the best

this class to refrain from participa­
tion in local affairs other than by
treating the subject as news matter,
most of which Is packed on the front
page, and the inside (section i? filled
with ''bolter-plate.*'
But \ happily
this is not the cose In Florida. . The
editros maintain the editorial pages
for a constructive (purpose, and in
preparing copy usually they toss the
gloves aside.
"This state has a .wonderful in­
stitution In its fpress. The radical
element ia confined to a minority and
is completely overshadowed by the
constructive contemporaries.
"It would be a blessing to (the 'big
league' editors if they, could drop
from their high horses into the com­
panionship add confidence o f those
moving About them, as long since
their brothers o f less self-importance
have done. Then true the large dail­
ies, in proportion, would be as pow­
erful as the small dailies And week-

this modem Institution

service

' F. P, Foraikr,'President. B. F. Whitaer,'Cashier.

EVERYTHING

a &gt;■
i
'i
a ' 'd . •; •
\
• Sanford is on a boom—not a vacant store-room to be round on First
street, but undaunted “The Truth'Seekers^ o f the Methodist Church
will erect a tent on the old Sanford House site and hold their Annual
Baiaar FRIDAY and SATURDAY. COOKED FOOD AND OYSTER

Solicited

AN EXPERIMENT IN CO-OPERAT­
IVE SLAUGHTERING

CHANDLER CARS
From the Foundation

FRANKLIN CARS

WE GIVE YOU SERVICE
—ASK ANYBODY”

W IG H T T I R E CO

which are: First, the low price of
meat on the hoof. Second, the high
price of meat o ff the hoof.
They might take a lesson from the
cattle growers of a county in South
Dakota, who tikewisc got tired of sell­
ing their stock to the packers at a
low price, and buying it back ns beef,
at a high price. Those South Dakota
stockmen decided it would be better
to sell to themselves and buy from
themselves, and they formed what
they called a community meat ring,
with that end in view. The results
are given below, and show what can
be , accomplished by co-operation.
Florida stockmen can do the Bame If
they wilt, and by so doing render a
valuable service to the community,
and secure u profit ,to themselves,
which now goes to foreign packers.
The figures:
Community Local Meat
Meat king
Markets

Keily-Springfield Tires

Diamond Tires

Quality-Servicd-Price

Just Lay Them Down ami NalKTKarfTAIT
There is To It
*

Quick Lunch
Coffee 5c Sandwiches 10c
Pieft, home made 10c cat
Best Coffee in Sanford

Princess Theatre Bldg,

Steaks) _____
Roasts-• _____
Boiling Meat
Sou p bones .
Heart - ........
L iv e r _______
Tongue ____
S u e t_______

The Shoulder o f Protoctio n keeps hot or cold air— rain, sleet,
etc., from forcing its way through the roof.
Tho Shoulder of Protectio n Is also the Self-Spacing Device.
Makes laying easy and rapid— thus saving time and money.
These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural colored Red
or Green Crushed Slate. Esc h rain washes away the accumulated
dust—reviving perpetually the 6riginal rich colors.
Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered—
because they arc fire-resisting.
Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate tho
cost free o f charge. Samples and prices furnished free.

Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co

Prime

OUR TAINT SHOT
is kept busy by knowing automobilista
who send their cars to us to be re­
painted. The “ wise onca" know that
their cars will bo returned to them
looking smarter and better than when
bright new from the factory. The rea­
son for this is that all our work is
custom work which means that only
the best of materials are used by
skilled workmen.

Tampa Times
Time to sepd out Thanksgiving
enrds now. The Herald Trinting Co.,
lias a fine line o f Thanksgiving greet­
ings. Only one cent each.

PO R K and M U T T O N
SAUSAGE of All Kinds
H A M and BACON
A TRIAL SOLICITED

THE WILMINGTON (N. C.) STAR, SETT. 21ST, SAYS:
"THE
CLEANEST AND REST CIRCUS SEEN HERE IN MANY A DAY WAS
STARKS' THREE-RING CIRCUS WHICH EXHIBITED HERE YESTER­
DAY, THE CROWDS TAXING THE CAPACITY OF THE nUGE TENT.
•CLEAN AND CLEVER' SUMS UP THE SHOW AND THE CROWDS

Pure Food Market

WERE ORDERLY."

Phone 105

'

of

J. H. Tillls, Prop.

4 0 2 Sinford Ave.

P hone 1 1 2

S a n f o r d H e ig h t s

TELLING EVERYTHING,
he editor' is popularly aupposed
lo r everything, hear everything,
or;everything and publish cveryg thnt is going on.
utf.Bometimes he doesn’t see It—
want to see it—bceauao, be­
an editor and trained to weigh
angles o f every question, he
g*’ that it is better for the comity If he does not see i t
arc are many things the editor
not publish because they con-

r i HAHMOTH INSTITUTION V
L MERIT ANDjllllGINALITY

For a dandy Farm, with or yvithout crop

f l COMPREHENSIVE E N SE M B L E M
V THE WORLD'S BEST PERFORMERS ,
. AND THE FINEST TRAINED ANIMALS
r f l MULTITUDE V STRANGE AND
V C U R IO U S FEATURES FROM ALL M
ENDS V T H E ^ E A R T H /S
f lN E X H IB IT IO N THAT
« §0

4

to 15 WORTH WHILE-

Y

emon

Orange treat,
Siaisins
a n d Soedlass)
*’

m

COMING TO IM B

SAN

10 acres; 5 acres tiled; 3 wells
good house, 5 1-2 miles from
Sanford. 5 acres in lettuce.

21 acres, 10 1-2 tufedj-f?1wells
good house, 2 1-2 m. of Sanford
6 a;celery, 3 a.lettuce, 3 a.beets

I can make immediate delivery on 1
,-f*
desired, at a very low figure

Ball Park Grounds

Currants,
1r&amp; -

«-■ ~ -

*

% ) a io s ,

S ’i y s

{Jeane Uurnor
ilM»» 4 9 7

W*/aAa SJutHMg

4&gt; Phone 349

106 N. Park Avenue

�. _ r/.

LBUe Happening*
Mention of
Matter* In Brief
Par son al Itema
o f Intercet

In an d A b o u t
*

Summary of the
Floating Small
Talks Succinctly!
Arranged for
Herald Reader*

CRANE PARDONED
AND ORDERED RELEASED FROM PRISON

TALLAHASSEE, . Nov. 22.—The
state board, of pardons announced re­
cently that former stato Senator Jas.
E. Crane, convicted In Hillsborough
SANFORD NEGRO WANTS
county o f grand cmbexxlcmcnt and
•
v- TO COME BACK HOME sentenced to five years In tho state

S- The C ity &lt;£

WEEK'S WEATHER

PAGE FIVB

DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1828

*

*

South Atlantic and East Gulf
gtetesz
Local rains beginning of
The following letter from a negro
week and again Thursday or Friday, to Mr. W. P. Stone shows that many
otherwise fair; normal temperatures. of them find disappointment when
they go north to aeek work:
Tbe stores are getting ready for
Chicago, Nov. 17, 1920.
Thanksgiving.
,
. Mr. W. P. Stone, Dear Sir I rite
you a few lines to let you here from
'f h k is some lively week with one
me Mr. Stone if you will send for me
•ah&lt;nr all week, minstrels tonight and I will come and work fo r you Mr.
circus tomorrow,
l
Stone please do this favor far me
*'
-f =_ » - ■*
H, t
' *
*
■L-1" -T~
MrJ
Stone you can keep this letter so
Many familiar fnccaQif the various
if I don’t pay you can put me in jail
■atoran are absent th ls'veek ns the
Mr. Stone please do this fa r me so I
bagm are away on hunting tripe.
fo r me and I will come right to you.
Abe Kanner, o f Jacksonville, is will please do it. Send a ticket by
-visiting home folks. He is now one telcphgram to 4828 Even avenue,
tat the rising young attorneys o f that Chicago ill please Mr. Stone if you
wilt send it when you get the letter
city - , •- ' • :
I will be there I will get there next
■ Cat your Thanksgiving cards at Thursday Mr. Stone please do this
tk a Herald office. Greetings o f the for me and I will come right to your
a tM o a all highly colored. Send them please Mr. Stone do this for me and
I will pay you interest o n y o u r mon­
4 * you r friends.
ey Mr. Stone I wants to come back
Everything in the post card line to dear Sanford Fla do this for me
a t the Herald office, wholesale and Mr. Stone send it to me at once to
xrtaiL I f It is post cards you wont 4828 Even ave Chicago please Mr.
•ore bare. them.
Stone so I can come at once Mr.
Stone please do this favor so I can
Frank Grayam is home today from come at.once Joe Nolan 4826 Even
’h£* duties’ as Citrus Fruit Inspector avenue Chicago ill please send It by
That takes Him over the East Coast telegram so I can get there ri^Jit
a n d other parts o f the state.
away and go to work for you please
do this favor for me Mr. Stone Joe
H. G. Lovelcss&gt; has desertc^ the Nolan 4826 Even Ave Chicago ill
.-automobile business and taken up the please Mr. Stone do this for me.
g r ocery business and is now one of
The force o f the City Market in the
PAID FINE IN PENNIES
•grocery department.
Albert Domer paid the fine of
Mra. Edward E. Gore, o f Rusk in, George Devaux in pennies this morn­
T l* ., arrived in the city Sunday af- ing in police court. Young Devaux
Tenwon where she will spend two or wn sriding on top of Iho cars coming
Three weeks visiting at the home of Into Sanford last night from Jack­
Jicr step-son,' Ralph K .. Gore, and sonville ns he was short on monyy
family.
nnd wanted to get to Plant City to
join his mother? He was arrested
Herbert Mosmnn, of the Canton |here for taking the outside of the
Journal, Canton, Mnss., was in the tear instead o f the inside nnd Albert
•city today und nnid the Herald office i took him under his wing nnd fixed
van appreciated visit, lie Is spending him up so he could proceed on his
the winter in Florida and leisurely way rejoicing. Albert plays this penTravelling around looking them over. I nv Pag on the court whenever ho
gets the chance but he does not per­
Mr. and Mrs. Pullman Connelly,
turb either Judge Maine» or Chi°f
anil young son, James Arthur, nnd
Sja*cr as they arc perfectly willing
Mias AJa McNeill and Loren Connel­
to take the money ns long ns Albert
l y drove over Sunday morning from |wishes
to shell it out whether it. Is in
Orlando to spend the day with Mr,
pennies or in dollars,and with nil of
.und Mrs. Ralph K. Gore. Mr. Con­
it Albert has a big heart and is al­
nelly is employed as nmke-up man
ways doing something for somebody
von the Morning Sentinel at Orlando.
somewhere.
Mr. and Airs. P. P. McGrow, nnd
M r. McGrow’s father, of Orlando,
-were in Sanford today &lt;?nroute home
Yrom Daytona where they had spent.
-Sunday. Mr. McGrnw has been with
the Morning Sentinel for the past
-eight yeora *s linotype mnehinistopcTatnr and is one of the best in the
-state. Ho paid the Herald a pleasant
■•call while here.

Tax books are now open for the
payment of State and County taxes
for 1920. A discount of two per cent
i9 allowed for payment in November
nnd one per cent in December.
JNO. D. JINK1NS,
11-13-dlw,
Tnx Collector,
w-2t
Seminole County.

Advertise Sanford by sending out a
-post card or two every day. The Hor-ald has nil kinds for one cent each.
-G et a few now while the supply is
la rg e.
.*

Everything for the office at the
Herald Printing Co. Wc enn fit you
out with all that /you need in fine
printed stationery and office supplies
of all kinds.1'

TAXPAYERS. TAKE NOTICE!

James E. Crane was convicted o f
cmbcxxlement o f about $21,000 o f
the sinking fund o f the hard road
bond issue o f 1803. He was one o f
the board o f bond trustees for that
bond Issue and ita secretary and re­
ceived the monies from the county
understood
tax collector,
that Mr. Crane invested the county’s
money in an unfortunate land specu­
lation. Ho was unable to meet the
demand for it when payment was
due on certain of the bonds.—Th^
Tampa Tribune.
SWEET POTATOES ON
THE TABLE.
Sweet potatoes on the table is the
title o f a bulletin recently issued by
the Home Demonstration Division o f
the Florida State College for Wom­
en. Miss Sarah W. Partridge wrote
N +++++++++++++++++++++++++
this bulletin. Miss Partridge is state
agent for extension work with wom­
en nnd girls, nnd she is a recognised
authority on subjects of this nature.
In this bulletin the sweet potato is
compared with the Irish potato nnd
the comparison is in favor of the
sweet. There nre few people who
know that the sweet potato is ac­
tually (letter for food thnn the Irish
potato. The fuel or energy value of
the raw sweet potato is found to lie
50 per cent greater than that of the
Irish potato, wihlo the fuel or energy
value of the cooked is gfonter by
more thnn 100 per cent.
In this bulletin there arc 21 re­
cipes from
Southern chefs and
housewives. Fried potatoes, cro­
quettes, ; mashed
methods, half
shelled, glared, candied, souped, nnd
just about nnything in tbe category
of cooking nre told of in this pamph­
T
let. It even tells how to make n po­
tato cake. If you cannot cook po­
tatoes or if you would like to be n BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
better potato cook, write to the Home AT THE HERALD. EACH..
Demonstration
Division,
Florida
State College, Tnllnhnsjce, and ask
for a copy o f Bulletin .72. It will
help you.

Let Everyday
be

|

We admire the fight that the Palatka News nnd the. Sanford Herald
are making to force free bridges in
25 to 300 W att in 110 V olts.
this state. They are beginning at
home with their own sections in an
20 to 75 W atts in 32 V olts
effort to uboliBh the toll bridges nnd
If necessary will carry the fight to
the end of having the county con­
struct another bridge. This business
o f charging people money to cross n
public thoroughfare, just becnusc
there is no other way around it, Is
an injustice nnd when n stranger
comes into the state and meets with Phone 142
115 Magnolia Ave.
such n hold-up, he don’t get a very
favorable impression. Perhaps that
is one reason that so many people
have in the past known more about
the east coast of Florida than the
west.— Lakeland Star.

National Madza Lamps

Everything Electrical
Expert Installation and
. Repair W ork

Post Card
Day

G IL L O N &amp; F R Y

SSANFORDf

Sbed, Our Business.
Honesty, Our Motto.
Purity, Our Watch­
word.
H

Get Them
at the

Everybody should send postcards to
their friends. The Herald has them of
- *, 1
Sanford nnd nlso Thanksgiving cards,
holiday cards, etc. They nre only one
COME IN AND SgE US.
cent each and worth twice as much.
(Southern Seed Specialists)
Send a card today.
Wekiws Bldg.
Sanford, Fla.

Herald Office I

AT THE STAR THEATRE
TODAY
An All-Star Cast In
"BLIND YOUTH”

RESPONSIBLE banking is tbe policy
which this institution has been managi

Also HANK MANN in
"DON’T CHANGE YOUR MRS.’’ *
and PATIIE NEWS.

since

the first clay the doors were opened.
V. ,'f;,

r*H-

That this policy is appreciated is indicated b y the

Try a Herald Want Ad.— It pays.

constant and gratifying growth in business.
COT OUT THIS COUPON AND PRESENT IT MONDAY NIGHT

The Logical Treatment

“ E N E R G IZ E R ”
M elville ’s C omedians
•$1 0 ,00 0 .00 T ent T h o a tro
T h is T ic k e t A d m it s O n e
S p e c ia l In vitatio n
M o n d a y N ig h t If A c c o m r
panled b y 1 A d u lt T ick e t

LADY FREE

M onday
(&lt;R r n k p n
N ig h t F r e e
P r O K e il n c d flo

OUR GUARANTEE:

M onday
W ight F r e e

Your Money’s Worth or Your Money Back

Vaudeville Between Act*.

Admission Adults 40c; Children 25c

PDtCKB INCLUDE WAN TA X

It is tbe desire of the officers of this Bank to con ­
tinue adding new accounts of those individuals

For Many Human Ills.
Wc hold this to be a Truth:—vix:—
That Circulation is the BASIC factor
of Human Health.
The "Energixer" proeesa will DO
MORE Benefit to Any Adult’s gen­
eral condition thnn any other method
known.
COME IN nnd talk It over.
*
10B Park Ave..
Next Door to Mobley’s Drug Store.
L. C. CAMERON
Box 399
Sanford, Fla.
Phone 184

desiring most efficient and responsible banking
O n our record oM R E SP O N SIB ILIT Y
tronage is invited.

Seminole County Bank
Is owned,

controlled and

managed

by home

people, who are interested in the development
and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County
W ith pur large resources and strong financial
connections w e are in 'position to assist our cus­
tomers at all times■in the handling of their finan
US SERVE Y O U .

4 Per Cent Interest Paid

:

■

-

.
■

v-i1, t -

Idii

.

.. t id
i'cmT

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              <text>THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD&#13;
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION&#13;
Volume 1&#13;
Sanford, Florida, Monday, November 22, 1920&#13;
Number 197&#13;
&#13;
--------------------&#13;
--------------------&#13;
--------------------&#13;
&#13;
FINANCIAL LEADERS SEE HOPEFUL SIGNS AHEAD IN RECONSTRUCTION PERIOD.&#13;
No Long Depression Looked For In the South.&#13;
FOLLOWING LETTERS&#13;
FROM FLORIDA BANKERS ARE INTERESTING AND MOST HOPEFUL.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Financial leaders of the South do not look upon the present period of deflation and re-adjustment as a national disaster. On the contrary they consider it an inevitable process, which is the necessary preparation for sound growth and prosperity. They do not expect a prolonged depression and some of them predict, quite definitely, a turn for the better with the beginning of the spring season.&#13;
&#13;
 A number of men eminent in business and finance have expressed such views in letters to Governor M. B. Wellborn of the Federal Reserve Bank written in reply to the following letter from him: &#13;
  “My Dear Sir: In a period of readjustment, which is always accompanied by inconvenience, strain and some losses, it is a great help to the people if they are animated by a courageous, cheerful and patient spirit, with a disposition toward mutual helpfulness and co-operation. In such a crisis it is to them what morale is to the soldier and brings the same splendid results.&#13;
  “The superb spirit which animated our people during the war, nerved our soldiers for every conflict and made them cheerful under hardship and suffering will bring us safely and triumphantly through these trying times.&#13;
  “In order to cultivate such a spirit I would like to send out broadcast over the district some brief but strong statements by leading men whom the people will hear and follow. Let us crystalize a public sentiment that will meet the emergency in a manner credible to the South and the nation. Our section has been very prosperous for the past few years, and surely it is in good condition to meet the present time.&#13;
  “To this end I will be pleased to have from you at your earliest convenience a letter expressing your views on the situation and the best way to meet it.”&#13;
  The replies came from the states composing the sixth Federal Reserve District - Alabama, Florida, Georgia, part of Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee.&#13;
  In Florida, where they have a succession on cash crops of fruits and vegetables, reinforced by the phosphate industry, the problem of financing the cotton crop is hardly felt, and as prices of vegetables and fruits have been good, the State is in a comparatively comfortable financial condition.&#13;
  Without exception the writers of these letters express a feeling of confidence and hopefulness. With a clear view of the situation, facing its difficulties frankly, they manifest calmness, courage and strength, with a cheerful confidence in the ability of the people to meet and solve their problems.&#13;
  Several of them emphasize the fact that with larger resources and greater reserve power the South, like the rest of the country, is greatly strengthened by the Federal Reserve System, which enables sound business to pass safely through a trying period, which, under our former inelastic financial system, might have resulted in disaster.&#13;
  It is a noteworthy fact that Mr. Mason Smith, of New Orleans, one of the largest cotton men in the South, who has to deal with the financial problem of that crop, takes a hopeful view of the situation. It is also worthy of note that several of our leading financiers express the opinion that the period of deflation is nearing its end, and one of the most eminent of them, Dr. P. H. Saunders, a leading financier of New Orleans, predicts that this process will be practically completed in the South by March first, and that (continued on page six).&#13;
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SURPLUS GOVERNMENT STORES SHOULD BE HANDLED DIFFERENTLY&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.&#13;
&#13;
Major General Chamberlain, army inspector general, declared in his annual report that immediate revision of the method of disposing of surplus government stores should be made as recent investigations indicated speculators had purchased cement from one government department for one dollar per ton and sold it to the war department for six dollars.&#13;
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France Not Opposed to King Constantine&#13;
&#13;
WOULD NOT ATTEMPT TO KEEP KING CONSTANTINE FROM THE THRONE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
PARIS, Nov. 22-&#13;
The French government will not oppose by physical force the return of former King Constantine to the Greek throne which the foreign office regards as inevitable so the Associated Press was informed today.&#13;
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ATHENS, Nov. 22. &#13;
Premier Gounaris said, “Please call the attentions of the American nation that we are now united and no longer trying to assassinate others.&#13;
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LATE WIRES&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
GENEVA, Nov. 22 -&#13;
The League Assembly adopted a resolution inviting the Council of the League of Nations to confer with the powers in view of constituting forces to end hostilities in Armenia.&#13;
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PITTSBURG, Nov. 22- &#13;
Three armed men held up the employees of the Metropolitan Trust Company and escaped in an automobile with the funds today.&#13;
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WASHINGTON, Nov. 22-&#13;
The Western Union today applied to the District Supreme Court for an injunction to prevent Secretary Daniels from interfering in the construction of a cable between Miami and Miami Beach, Florida.&#13;
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PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 22-&#13;
Seven bandits were caught today after a battle in the act of robbing a Pennsylvania freight train at Metuchen, N. J., of silk which had been placed in a truck. One policeman was wounded.&#13;
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NEW YORK, Nov. 22-&#13;
&#13;
Ole Hansen, former Seattle mayor, returning from abroad today said “Everybody from everywhere in Europe” were trying to emigrate to the United States and advocated the total suspension of immigration for two years.&#13;
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LONDON, Nov. 22-&#13;
&#13;
The House of Commons today suspended its session after Joseph Devlin, Nationalist, came to blows with a unionist member of the Irish question.&#13;
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SOUTH FLORIDA NEXT&#13;
&#13;
Tampa, Nov. 22 – &#13;
To meet the demand for increased exhibit space from county and individual exhibitors of all sections of the state, directors of the South Florida Fair, to be held in Tampa from February 3 to 12, this week began the erection of new buildings and additions to those that have been in use heretofore. Increased space is demanded in every department, and particularly in buildings devoted to the displays of livestock and poultry. One successful poultry breeder will exhibit 40 varieties alone while national and international champion cattle and swine, bred in Florida, will be presented.&#13;
  The directors have contracted for the most novel free amusement acts yet shown in Florida and the Johnny J. Jones Exposition shows, which are featured at American and Canadian fairs and expositions, will again be brought down from their home quarters, Orlando. In every feature the Fair promises to surpass those of former years. &#13;
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AMERICAN AID FOR ARMENIA IS DISCUSSED&#13;
&#13;
(By the Associated Press)&#13;
GENEVA, Nov. 22-&#13;
&#13;
The possibility of American aid for the Armenians were discussed in a debate by the assembly of the League of Nations on resolutions demanding intervention by the League in Armenia.&#13;
  J. Balfour, of Great Britain said the United States would make an ideal mandatory over Armenia and that the League has been unable to accomplish anything with the Armenian situation. Dr. Nansen, of Norway, estimated 60,000 men would be sufficient force to deal with the situation and that if the Assembly appealed to the whole world the United States would do her share.&#13;
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PERMANENT PEACE BROKEN BETWEEN RUSSIA AND POLAND&#13;
(by the Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Warsaw, Nov. 22 -&#13;
Negotiations for a permanent peace between Soviet Russia and Poland was broken off today. It is reported that the Russians refused to proceed because more Polish troops had not been withdrawn to the Armistice line.&#13;
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HARDING AT PANAMA NEARS END OF TRIP&#13;
(by the Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
ABOARD STEAMSHIP PARIS-MINA, Nov. 22 –&#13;
President-elect Harding’s trip to Panama is nearing an end. He is expected to reach Crystobal tomorrow. He will spend five days inspecting the canal and sight-seeing.&#13;
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COTTON REPORT PRIOR TO NOVEMBER 14 –&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22-&#13;
&#13;
Cotton ginned prior to November 14th amounting to 8,927,076 running bales to Census Bureau announced.&#13;
&#13;
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ENGLAND TO SEND MORE TROOPS INTO IRELAND&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
LONDON, Nov. 22- England is seriously considering sending more troops to Ireland, the war office announced today.&#13;
&#13;
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LETTUCE SHIPPED OUT FROM SANFORD BRING GOOD PRICE&#13;
Sanford shipping ten cars daily now.&#13;
&#13;
The lettuce season is on now in full blast and the markets promise to be getting better all this week or especially before Thanksgiving as all the world wants Sanford lettuce for the big day.&#13;
  There were fifteen cars of lettuce shipped out Saturday making a total for the week of eighty cars which is a fine record for the first week of the movement. There will probably be twenty out today and the price is said to be very good although just what it is bringing in New York is problematical, some saying it is high and it must be for it is bringing $2.50 here for fancy stuff.&#13;
  If the weather remains cool Sanford growers will make a fine thing out of their lettuce this season, probably more than ever before. &#13;
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NATIONAL FARM BOARD TO MAKE AN EFFORT TO RELIEVE FARMERS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22-&#13;
The National Board of Farm organizations met here today to consider legislation to relieve farmers of the result of falling prices of products.&#13;
&#13;
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MRS. FAIRFAX HARRISON DIES IN WASHINGTON&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22-&#13;
  Mrs. Harrison, mother of President Fairfax Harrison, of the Southern railway died at her home here today.&#13;
&#13;
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PROMINENT VISITORS HERE&#13;
&#13;
  Among the prominent visitors to the city today were Willis R. Powell, Secretary of the Lake County Chamber of Commerce; R. N. White, secretary of the commercial &#13;
Club of Mt. Dora and C. W. Williams, secretary of the Board of Trade of Eustis. All of them are Lake county boosters and they were enroute to Jacksonville to take in the state fair. They were taken out to the Brumley farm while here to see the Sanford lettuce being shipping.&#13;
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REPUBLICANS WILL MAKE MORE PIES&#13;
&#13;
LOOK LIKE THEY WILL OUST EVERY DEMOCRATIC OFFICE HOLDER&#13;
(by P. H. McGowan)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22-&#13;
  Gossipy political Washington is pulsating and all agog over contemplated changes in the governmental changes when the Harding administration takes hold of the federal business on March 4, but already plans are not only being discussed, but in some instances are well under way for “firing” democratic office holders. They will be supplanted by faithful from the Republican fold. This gossip covers the white house, the senate, the house of representatives and every government department and bureau, big and little, in and out of Washington.&#13;
 In plain words, if you are a Democrat and have failed to hold down your place with some kind of double locked contrivance, just back on the farm or in the village store, for that is the immediate objective of many a thousand democrat in the very near future. It is not only true but indicates at the same time that the republicans are taking cognizance of the fact that for the next four years they are to be the proprietors of the mammoth federal pie counter at Washington.&#13;
  Incoming Republican senators and house members have already passed the word out along the line that they mean business; everything from the president’s executive order of 1917, whereby all postmasters were placed under civil service rules down to the various departmental places in Washington are to be recognized, this organization to be for the principal purpose of putting the G.O.P. in and the democrats out of business.&#13;
  The Republicans assert that the order of the Wilson administration just referred to will be revoked and the way opened to replace thousands of Democratic postmasters with Republicans.&#13;
  The establishment of the plan whereby any employ who has charges made against him will be given a hearing to see the evidence against him is almost a certainty.&#13;
  It is being circulated here that a majority of the postal clerks now in the service in the recent election worked openly against the Democratic ticket and for the Republicans. It is said that many of the officials and no small part of the personnel of the post office employees over the country have been at war with the postmaster general and, as a result, they refused to support Cox and Roosevelt. It is now being said that the Republican chiefs, having had support of the big army of postal employees, want to see them satisfied.&#13;
 Representative Martin M. Madden of Chicago, the Illinois member of the house, who openly declares that he sees no objection to the same schools for white and colored pupils, the same street cars for the two races, the general use of pullman sleepers and dining cars for negroes along with white people, and that he has no use in any way for anything savoring of a “Jim Crow” law is the chairman of the house committee on post offices. With the leading men on the Democratic side of this committee defeated in the recent election landslide it will be easy sailing for Madden, with his Republican colleagues, to bring out of the committee almost any radical bills they may desire. John A. Moon, of Tennessee, was one of the southern members who fought the democrats’ battles, but now that will fall on the shoulders of Congressman Bell of Georgia, who will become the ranking Democratic member of the post office committee. &#13;
 The general postal situation indicates that with a Republican postmaster-general, and with both the&#13;
&#13;
(continued on page six)&#13;
&#13;
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HOUSE COMMITTEES MAKE AN EFFORT TO ECONOMIZE&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON. Nov. 22-&#13;
&#13;
Chairman Good, of the House Appropriations committee said he will make every effort to economize in government expenditures to actual needs. He said the War Department was heading for a deficit of fifty million to a hundred million at the present rate of expenditures.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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D’Annuzio Bops Up Again in Fiume Affair&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Fiume, Nov. 22 –&#13;
&#13;
D’Annunzio, insurgent commander at Fiume declared unalterably that he was opposed to accepting the treaty of Rapallo settling the Adriatic dispute between Italy and Jugo-Slavia and would continue fighting until the just claims of Italy were met.&#13;
&#13;
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Belgrade, Nov. 22-&#13;
&#13;
Prince Regent Alexander of Jugo-Slavia ratified the Rapallo treaty today.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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NEW SENATOR FROM DAKOTA GIVES HIS ALMS&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
&#13;
Fargo, N.D., Nov. 22 - &#13;
Dr. E. F. Ladd, first U.S. Senator elected as a candidate of the Non-partisan League announced here that his first aim in Congress will be to promote a better system for marketing the grain and other food products of the farm.&#13;
  “It is a serious problem that faces congress,” Dr. Ladd said. “Something must be done and within the next few years if we are to save the farming industry from demoralization. Even now the most of the men left on the farm are middle aged and elderly – the younger men are looking for greater opportunities.&#13;
  “I believe that dealing in futures on shorts – selling grain in which the seller had an equity, which never existed and which will never be delivered is a species of gambling which does not stabilize prices or benefit the producer or consumer. It is a matter which every legislator ought to study until he has a just comprehension of it and then consider whether it is not worthy of his attention.&#13;
 “The co-operative movement must go hand in hand with helpful legislation in improving the situation. Farmers must come to own their buying and selling organizations.&#13;
  “If legislation is passed making funds from federal reserve banks and federal land banks available to these organizations farmers will be able to hold their grains until they are needed instead of dumping them on the market at the end of the harvest.”&#13;
 Dr. Ladd added that effort should be made to bring a better school system into rural districts and give the farm children the same children the same chances for education as hold in towns and cities.&#13;
&#13;
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RAIDED FOOTBALL GAME, MANY KILLED IN IRELAND&#13;
(By The Associated Press)&#13;
London, Nov. 22.&#13;
&#13;
It was officially announced that the assassination in Dublin yesterday totaled fourteen exclusive of the Croke Park casualties where it was estimated that twenty-five persons were killed and a hundred seriously wounded when the Irish constabulary raided a football game here.&#13;
&#13;
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MEN’S BOWLING CLUB.&#13;
&#13;
The Men’s Bowling Club was organized at the Parish House last Wednesday night with three teams in the field. The Clubs will be known as Teams No. 1, 2 and 3 and they will bowl every Wednesday night at 8 o’clock. The standing of the clubs will be published in the Herald once each week. In the next issue will be published the four highest scores up to date.&#13;
&#13;
Standing of clubs&#13;
                     W		L&#13;
Team no. 1 _________ 0		1&#13;
Team no. 2 _________ 0		1&#13;
Team no. 3 _________ 1		0&#13;
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SHIPPING BOARD PROBE REACHES HIGH PLACES HITS WILSON’S FAMILY&#13;
&#13;
Banker Who Shared In Deal Names President’s Brother&#13;
SAID TO BE A LOAN&#13;
BUT NEVERTHELESS IT LOOKS LIKE BAD BUSINESS IN THE BOARD.&#13;
&#13;
New York, Nov. 22.&#13;
&#13;
Allegations tending to implicate men now and formerly connected with the United States Shipping board with alleged collusion in securing contracts for a ship building firm, were made Saturday by Tucker K. Sands, a witness before the Walsh committee investigating shipping board affairs.&#13;
  The men named and alleged to have participated in a distribution of more than $30,000 were R. W. Bolling, brother-in-law of President Wilson and who later became treasurer of the shipping board; Lester Sisler, formerly secretary of the board; Jno. W. Cranor, a representative of the Downey Shipbuilding Company and Sands himself. He testified that he received money in the form of notes, some of which he discounted and at different times described payments to Boiling and Sisler as both “payments” and “loans”. In another part of his testimony he asserted that this money was to be understood as a commission to him for securing a loan from the bank to the shipbuilding company, with which the witness was then connected.&#13;
  The testimony of Sands was preceded by that of Alfred W. McCann, a reporter for the New York Globe, who swore he had secured from Mr. Sands an affidavit detailing the entire transaction. McCann further testified that when he took the affidavit to Sands for him to sign, he declined to do so on advise of his attorney. Previous to submitting the affidavit for Sands’ signature, however, McCann said he had taken the document to the shipping board and had it photostated. One of these copies carrying notations in what was testified to be Sands’ handwriting and which Sands afterwards testified to being ‘correct except that some of the facts may be a little different” was presented by McCann in evidence. The document, however, was not made a part of the stenographer’s minutes of the meeting.&#13;
  In the course of questioning by Chairman Walsh and Congressman Kelly, Sands said he did not think Bolling ever got a cent from anybody for aiding to get a contract – that money given him a “loan.”&#13;
  Sands, who is president of the First National Bank, Washington, testified that it was “his understanding” that $2,400 he loaned Bolling against his note and of which Bolling has already paid back $300, was Bolling’s share of the $40,000 bribe.”&#13;
  Bolling’s share of the money, Mr. Sands said he understood, was to have been $6,200, but that Bolling did not take the “balance” between it and the $1,800 loaned him.&#13;
  At another time he stuck to a statement that Bolling was to get his share of the transaction – that he “gave Slater $5,000 – and that he had loaned Sisler for one of his companions $5,000 on his note, which note he still has. He said he had never had a controversy with Bolling and was on friendly terms with him. He also mixed into his testimony details of a purchase by him from Bolling of a lot for $900.&#13;
  Sands testified he was now under indictment for “allowing a company to overdraw – a shipping company, in which I was interested.”&#13;
  He testified that he was then connected with the Commercial National Bank of Washington, “its cashier.” He also testified he had endeavored without success to secure Mr. bolling’s influence to have this case settled.&#13;
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Get some of those late postcards at the Herald office. The Valdez Hotel, the Welaka block, the Seminole hotel and other points of interest. Only one cent each. Send a Sanford card to your friends.&#13;
&#13;
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 &#13;
Page six				the Sanford daily herald, Saturday, November 20, 1920&#13;
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STAR THEATRE Today&#13;
J Parker Read Jr presents&#13;
Louise Glaum in&#13;
SEX&#13;
By C. Gardner Sullivan. Directed by Fred Niblo&#13;
S	stands for Sorrow and Suffering that are the heritage of all women.&#13;
E	stands for Experience that refines the soul of all women.&#13;
X	is the great Unknown in the fascinating game of life.&#13;
DISTRIBUTED BY W. HODKINSON CORP.&#13;
&#13;
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LLOYD-GEORGE GIVES VIEWS ON VARIOUS PROBLEMS&#13;
LONDON, Nov. 20.&#13;
&#13;
David Lloyd-George in his address at the lord mayor’s banquet at the Guild hall last night discussed briefly and pointedly various problems with which the government is dealing. He plunged immediately into foreign affairs and appealed for the patience, for faith in the world settlement, declared that the highest wisdom demanded that prejudices and dislikes be kept under control of Europe to be saved from, becoming a welter pf raging hatreds.&#13;
 Referring to the “questions between Germany and the allies,” Mr. George said that the real test of German sincerity was disarmament, and be added, “the report I have to give on the subject is very satisfactory.” &#13;
  “The German army is rapidly being reduced to 100,000. There are still too many rifles at large in Germany, but they are a greater menace to Germany’s internal peace than to Germany’s neighbors.”&#13;
  Another important point said the premier, was reparations. “Germany is prepared to submit certain proposals for the liquidation of her obligations,” he continued, “and personally I am pleased with them. They will be considered at the conferences and it is satisfactory to note that Germany realizes that her first duty is to repair the devastation the German armies wrought.&#13;
  “I wish I could speak as hopefully of the Russian problem, where we have to do with men professing the ridiculous, crazy creed of Bolshevism, who unfortunately fail to realize how important it is they should respect their obligations.&#13;
  Speaking of the Irish question the premier said:&#13;
  “Unless I am mistaken, by the steps we have taken, we have murder by the throat. Do not pay too much attention to detailed accounts of disturbances and what they call the horrors of reprisals given out by partisans, who slur over the horrors of murder. There will be no real peace, no conciliation whilst this murder conspiracy is scattered.&#13;
  “We are getting the right sort of men and are dispersing the terrorists. The government will seek further powers, if necessary to deal with the situation. If it is war, as the terrorists say, then they cannot complain if the government employs some of the rules of war against them.”&#13;
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Get some of those late postcards at the Herald office. The Valdez Hotel, the Welaka block, the Seminole Hotel and other points of interest. Only one cent each. Send a Sanford card to your friends.&#13;
&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH ….. 1c&#13;
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MELVILLE’S COMEDIANS&#13;
$10,000.00 Tent Theatre – Monday, Nov. 22&#13;
Commercial Street – 13 Club Park&#13;
&#13;
Bert Melville and Company – America’s Best Dramatic Company will present High-Class Royalty Plays – Change of Program Each Day&#13;
Monday Night will present BROKEN HEARTS. Four Act Drama.&#13;
Five Vaudeville specialties. &#13;
Admission 40c and 25, including War Tax. &#13;
FREE One lady will be admitted with each adult ticket Monday Night. FREE&#13;
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EAST SANFORD&#13;
&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A Corpany and Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Charpening drove to Apopka and other points in the Company car on Sunday.&#13;
  The state convict road gang has been doing some work on the Cameron Villa road, South Cameron avenue and the road running parallel with the A.C.L. railroad west of the Cameron City.&#13;
  Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Miller arrived home Monday in the rain from the beach and will leave on another trip this week.&#13;
  Mrs. J.C. Fall, Mrs. Mahlon Wight and Miss Mamie Steel are soliciting for the Red Cross drive in East Sanford.&#13;
   Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Cameron, Miss Clair and Mrs. D. A. Long drove over to Tavares Armistice day to visit friends. Mrs. Cameron’s friends will be much pleased to know her health will permit her taking so long a drive and trust she may enjoy many more drives.&#13;
  Mr. and Mrs. McBride, of West First street, were visitors at the Joe Cameron home Sunday, the McBride’s have just returned from several months visit with relatives in North Carolina and report a fine visit.&#13;
  Mr. King, of Zelna, Mo., was here to see Mr. Haydin, on a business trip last week. Kingand Mrs. king lived a short time here a few years ago and expect to return the first of the year to buy a place.&#13;
  Mr. and Mrs. A Corpamy, and Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Ellsworth, after viewing the finest parade ever seen in Sanford, on Armistice Day, drove over west of Orlando sight-seeing, through Ocoee, Winter Garden and Oakland. They saw many fine groves and gardens.&#13;
 Rev. W.T. Raucher will be here from Apopka Sunday, the 21st, to preach at the usual hours at Moore’s Station church, his last visit before the conference.&#13;
  Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Shoemaker and little Elizabeth, reached here last Friday in their car from Fonaker, Va., and are guests at the Steel home. They are looking for a location and expect to remain permanently this time. They made many friends during their previous residence here who will be most happy to welcome them back again.&#13;
  A jolly party is camping at the Clark Beck residence in Cameron City. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beck, Mr. and Mrs. Coffon, of Marlon, Ind., and Mr. and Mrs. Filbert, of Peoria, Ill. They all have cars and came in a party from the north, coming all the way. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Grier and young people joined them Sunday and went into town to hear Dr. Walker preach.&#13;
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OVIEDO.&#13;
&#13;
On Sunday afternoon at two o’clock the marriage of Miss Gladys Lazette of Oviedo to Ralph Hill of Bassford, of Jacksonville, Fla., was solemnized at the Methodist church. The church was beautifully decorated with palms and ferns with an arch in the center of the altar. The decorating was done by the S.S. class of which Miss Lazette was a member under the able direction of Mrs. I. W. Lawton, teacher of the class. The bridal party marched into the strains of Mendelsohn’s wedding march beautifully rendered by Mrs. T. L. Lingo. Lending the party were Messrs. Joe Leimhart and R. R. Wright, following Mr. Linhard were the bride and maid of honor, Miss Olive Lezette, sister of the bride. The groom and his best man, C. Langeton, of Jacksonville, entered by a side door and met the bride at the altar. The ring ceremony was performed by Rev. L. E. Wright, pastor of the Methodist church. The bride wore a dark blue traveling suit and carried a beautiful bouquet of orchids. Miss Olive Lezette’s outfit was of green Georgette with hat to match.&#13;
  The out-of-town guests were: Mr. and Mrs. C. Langston, of Jacksonville; Misses Annie Lee and Marlon Groves and Mrs. George Huff of Sanford.&#13;
  The bride and groom accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Langston, left at once for their future home in Jacksonville. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. F. Lezette and has many friends in Oviedo who extend to her their heartiest congratulations. The groom is from Valdosta, Ga., but through his connection with the Studebaker Corporation is new located in Jacksonville.&#13;
  Mrs. W.P. Carter spent several days last week in Fort Myers, the guest of her sister, Mrs. Matheson.&#13;
  Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Lawton spent Wednesday in Orlando.&#13;
  M. D. Polston and family and Mrs. C. J. McCully spent Saturday in Sanford.&#13;
  An executive meeting of the C. E. was held Monday night at the home of Miss Katherine Young. In spite of the rain, about half of the members were present and some very important business was transacted.&#13;
  Mrs. L. R. Mitchell left Saturday for Mobile, Ala.&#13;
  Mrs. S. W. Swope, Francis Swope, Miss Mable Swope, and Elizabeth Lawton spent Saturday in Orlando.&#13;
  Alton Farnell spent Sunday at home.&#13;
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TRAIN SCHEDULE&#13;
Corrected on November 15, 1920.&#13;
&#13;
Southbound		Arrive				Departs&#13;
&#13;
No. 83				2:36 a.m.		2:46 a.m.&#13;
No. 27										8:40 a.m.&#13;
No. 91				1:28 p.m.		1:38 p.m.&#13;
No. 89				2:55 p.m.		3:20 p.m.&#13;
No. 85				7:30 p.m.		7:45 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
North Bound	Arrive				Departs&#13;
No. 82				1:48 a.m.		2:03 p.m.&#13;
No. 84		   11:45 a.m.		 12:05 p.m.&#13;
No. 80				2:35 p.m.		2:55 p.m.&#13;
No. 92				4:00 p.m.		4:05 p.m.&#13;
No. 28			 10:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Leesburg Branch&#13;
						Arrive				Departs&#13;
*No. 158									7:30 a.m.&#13;
 No. 22									7:35 p.m.&#13;
*No. 157			4:00 p.m.&#13;
 No. 21		 11:55 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Trilby Branch&#13;
						Arrive				Departs&#13;
*No. 100									8:00 a.m.&#13;
*No. 24									3:25 p.m.&#13;
*No. 101			6:30 p.m.&#13;
*No. 25			2:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Oviedo Branch&#13;
						Arrive				Departs&#13;
*No. 126			11:00 a.m.&#13;
*No. 127									3:40 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
*Daily, except Sunday.&#13;
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Circle D of the Presbyterian Church will have a PURE FOOD SALE &#13;
Saturday morning at Bower &amp; Roumillat’s Drug Store.&#13;
&#13;
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BRADLEY MATTRESS FACTORY, Orlando, Fla.&#13;
&#13;
Makes old Mattresses new at one-third the cost of a new one.&#13;
Phone 804			16 BRYANT ST.  				11-1511mo-p.&#13;
&#13;
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About six different hunting parties are getting ready for the woods next Friday. There will be some tall bombarding when they get strung out in Seminole and adjoining counties.&#13;
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CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
 Classified advertisements, 5 cents a line. No ad taken for less than 25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cash must accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit accordingly.&#13;
&#13;
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WANTED-&#13;
WANTED – To rent, a Wicker baby carriage in good condition for four months. Mrs. M. S. Wiggins, at the Gables.  195-6t&#13;
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WANTED - House or apartment of 3 or 4 rooms, unfurnished, for man and wife with two school children. Best of references. See or write, G. B. S., job dept., Herald office.  dh-tf&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office.&#13;
--&#13;
WANTED – Team work. Inquire of M. Hanson Shoe Shop.   189-60tp&#13;
--&#13;
WANTED – Your old batteries to rebuild. Let us make your starting and lighting a pleasure. We are authorized “EXIDE” dealers and have a Battery for all makes automobiles. “EXIDE the Giant that lives in a box.” – Ray Bros.  Phone 548, old For Garage.    179-tfc&#13;
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Get Your Scratch Pads from The Herald – by the pound – 15c.&#13;
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WANTED – Brick and cement work, chimneys, flues, piers, cement floors, sidewalks. – A. L. Ray, 206 Park Ave.   173-30t&#13;
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WANTED – Pupils, Violin and Piano. – Ruby Roy, 206 Park Ave.  175-20t-p&#13;
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Buy your post cards at the Herald office. Beautiful views, 1c each.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H.P., Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf&#13;
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WANTED – BY DEC. 1ST OR SOONER, 3 OR 4 UNFURNISHED ROOMS OR 3 TO 6 ROOM HOUSE, UNFURNISHED OR PARTLY FURNISHED. WILL LEASE BY MONTH OR YEAR. BEST OF REFERENCES GIVEN. ADDRESS “SOON” CARE OF HERALD.   193-12tp&#13;
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Wanted – shirts to make, Mrs. J. A. Williams, 809 Magnolia.  196-6tp&#13;
&#13;
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FOR RENT&#13;
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FOR RENT – One nicely furnished room, 320 Oak Ave.  Phone 308-J. 187-tfc.&#13;
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TO RENT or for sale. Large warehouse with railroad siding. – Chas. Tyler, care Zachary Tyler Ven Co.   156-tfc.&#13;
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FURNISHED ROOMS – Two furnished bed rooms. Inquire 311 Park Avenue.   157-tfc.&#13;
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MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
--&#13;
ROOM AND BOARD, $11 per week, 109 East First street, over Union Pharmacy.  163-tfc.&#13;
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DIXIE FURNITURE CO., 321 Sanford avenue, pay cash for furniture, bedsteads, chairs, etc. what have you?     174-30tfc.&#13;
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BATTERY TROUBLES? Do not run your battery until she is entirely dead. The battery is the costliest accessory to your car. We re-charge and re-build all makes of batteries. – Ray Bros.  Phone 548, old Ford Garage.     179-tfc.&#13;
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LOST&#13;
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LOST – Pink sapphire ring, solitaire setting. Finder return to Agnes Berner, Sanford Shoe &amp; Clothing Co.  195-3tc&#13;
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LOST – Western Union branch deposit book. Finder please return to Western Union office. – J. P. Hall, Mgr.  180-tfc.&#13;
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LOST OR STRAYED – One red pig, 4 months old. If found notify E. B. Randall, Jr., 825 First street.  191-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE &#13;
FOR SALE – Shasto daisies, $1 per dozen. English Shamrock Oxalys 30 per dozen. Ring 207-W.  183-12tc.&#13;
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Special reduction in men’s and ladies’ W. L. Douglas shoes. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550. 166-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing co.  tf&#13;
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New line of Congoleums and Art Squares. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc&#13;
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FOR SALE – One new 1920 and one 1917 Ford touring cars. Two tents 10x12 and 12x14, also four army cots. All in good condition. Call for Mr. Lehman.  Phone No. 112.  193-6tp&#13;
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Dolls, 10c to $20.00. French shop.  194-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – 1 ½ H. P. and 2 ½ H. P. Gasoline engines. Brand new and in perfect condition. – Herald Printing Co.  tf&#13;
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Special reduction on Georgette Silk and cotton shirt waists. – A. Kanner, 213-215 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.&#13;
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Toy Airplanes, French Shop.  194tfc&#13;
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We have just received a line of silverware and casseroles. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Ave.  Phone 550.  166-tfc.&#13;
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FOR SALE – One horse, wagon and harness. Apply M. Hanson Shoe Shop.    189-12tp.&#13;
--&#13;
Toy pianos, French shop.   194-tfc&#13;
-- &#13;
Sinkable submarines, French Shop.    194-tfc&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
See our line of electrical lamps. – A. Kanner, 213-15 Sanford Avenue.  Phone 550.  166-tfc&#13;
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PLANTS FOR SALE – Cabbage per 1000, $1.50; Cauliflower, Handers Snow Ball, per M, $2.50; Lettuce, B. B., per M, $1.50; Ice Berg, per M, $1.50; Beets, Crosby’s Egyptian, per M, $1.50; Onion, yellow Bermuda, per M, $1.50; onions, white Bermuda, per M, 1.50; Celery, yellow golden, per M, $2.00; Self-bleaching imported celery, per M, $2.00; French celery seed, guaranteed, per M, $2.00; Clay County Gardening Co., Green Cove Springs, Fla.     11-12.&#13;
--&#13;
Largest assortment of toys ever in Sanford, at French shop.  194-tfc&#13;
--&#13;
FOR SALE – One 1920 Cole Eight 7-passenger automobile run only 6500 miles. Bargain. One 1920. 7 passenger Buick run only 3,700 miles, price right. Extras. Box 478, DeLand, Fla.   193-6tp&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE – Good mule, cheap. Would exchange for good milch cow. P. O. Box 445. 193-4tp&#13;
--&#13;
Bring the children to see the toys at the French shop.   194-tfc.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR RENT – Two or three furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Close in. Owner, Box 117.  194-6tp.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR SALE – One five passenger Ford touring car. Must go quick. Sanford Heights camping grounds. Fred Ford.   194-3tp.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR SALE – A real bargain in Lake county at a bargain. 100 acres of land, near two good towns, good house and water works, piped all over place. Spraying machine, etc. 28 acres old bearing grove orange and grapefruit; 40 acres in cultivation, balance timber land. Price $33,000. Terms. Address Box 195, Clermont, Fla.  194-3tp.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR SALE – 40 acres good citrus land, cleared and fenced, 1 3-4 miles to town. Good roads. A bargain at $80 an acre. As we need the money. Price $45 per acre. Address 195, Clermont, Fla.  194-3tp.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR SALE – One Jersey cow, gives 3 gallons of milk daily, 4 years old. $125.00. Will Jones, corner 6th and Hickory.   195-2tp.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR SALE – One cottage 5 rooms and bath, corner Third street and French ave. Mrs. Baldwin.   194-4tp.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR SALE – 6 room cottage, large yard, fine garden, various kinds of fruit trees and two separate fine acre farms close in. Owner, Box 117.  194-6tp.&#13;
--&#13;
FOR SALE – 10 gallon water tank and oil heater for tank. Will be sold cheap. Call at 321 Magnolia avenue. Phone 296.  195-3tp.&#13;
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Send in your locals to the Herald office. Phone the news to 148. We want every bit of it. Tell us the news each day.&#13;
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SPARKS 3 RING SHOWS – A NATIONAL INSTITUTION, COMING TO SANFORD&#13;
BALL PARK GROUNDS, TUES., NOV. 23. Mile Long Open Cage Street Parade. 10:30 A.M.&#13;
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 &#13;
PAGE TWO   –   THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD – MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1920&#13;
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SOCIETY.  &#13;
(masthead of Society column. A man dressed in a long tailed coat next to the stylized word Society)&#13;
MISS KATHRYN WILKEY, Editor.  Phone 428.&#13;
&#13;
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SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Monday – &#13;
St. Agnes Guild at the Parish House.&#13;
Pipe Organ Club with Mrs. C. J. Rines.&#13;
Monday Afternoon Bridge with Mrs. W. C. Hill.&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday –&#13;
Social Department Bridge at Women’s Club, Mrs. J. M. Wallace, hostess.&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday – &#13;
Literature and Music Department at the Women’s Club.&#13;
Bridge Luncheon Club with Mrs. R. A. Newman&#13;
Bridge Club with Mrs. George DeCottes Thursday (Thanksgiving).&#13;
&#13;
Friday – &#13;
Spendthrift Club with Mrs. S. M. Lloyd.&#13;
Mother’s Club at Baptist Church at 3 o’ clock.&#13;
T.N.T. with Mrs. A. R. Key&#13;
&#13;
Saturday – &#13;
Cecilian Music Club, 3 o’ clock at the Studio of Mrs. Fannie S. Munson.&#13;
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Mrs. W. H. Irwin, Mrs. J. W. Irwin and little Miss Mary J. Irwin have come from Daytona Beach to be guests of Mrs. Julius Schultz over Thanksgiving.&#13;
&#13;
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Harry Ferrin, of Eustis, was the guest of his sister, Mrs. D. L. Thrasher Sunday.&#13;
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Mrs. Thomas E. East and little daughter are visiting Mrs. East’s parents in Oklahoma, Miss.&#13;
&#13;
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Mrs. Martha Vanvalzah and daughter, Eunice, Miss Alice Strother and Miss Edna Keating, of Daytona, were the guests of Mrs. O. P. Herndon last Saturday.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Lee and Capt. Bloomberg, of Jacksonville, have returned from a motor trip down the East Coast.&#13;
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Mrs. D. L. thrasher goes to Eustis Tuesday to spend Thanksgiving with relatives.&#13;
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Mrs. Roy Symes and children were in Sanford Saturday.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rush have returned to their home in Charleston, S. C., after spending a few days the guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Dumas.&#13;
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Mrs. John T. Leonardi was called to Lakeland Sunday by the death of her grandmother.&#13;
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ANNUAL BAZAAR WOMEN’S GUILD, HOLY CROSS CHURCH&#13;
&#13;
The Women’s Guild of Holy Cross church, will hold their annual Bazaar Wednesday and Thursday, Dec. 1st and 2nd, from 3 to 12 p. m. each day in the Parish house.&#13;
  The will be a fancy work booth, with beautiful hand work, everything you need for a most attractive Christmas gift; flower booth with palms, crolons ferns and plants of all kinds, also cut flowers.&#13;
  Japanese booth with Aprons, bags, fruits, home made candles, jams, jellies and preserves.&#13;
  St. Agnes guild booth, everything hand made, beautiful baby clothes.&#13;
  Supper served each evening from 6 to 9.&#13;
&#13;
Menu – Oyster Cocktail; Oyster Stew, Scalloped Oysters, Baked Ham, Home Baked Beans, Potato Salad, Hot Frankfurters with or without mustard, Hot Home-made Rolls, Pickles, Celery, Pie, Cake, Tea, Coffee.&#13;
&#13;
Dancing last evening from 9 to 12. Good music, 75c couple.&#13;
Everyone asked to come and enjoy these two evenings.  22-24-26-28-30_5t.&#13;
&#13;
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CAMPERS RETURN&#13;
&#13;
The party composed of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Purden, Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smith and little daughter, Evelyn, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Holly, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Holly and Robert Holly returned late last night from camp N. N. N. at the ranch on the Econlockhatchee and they had a grand time. They used the ranch house for sleeping quarters and cooked out in the yard at the big camp fire. Henry Purden and Don Smith were the champions in the fishing line taking a fine string of specked perch and trout and they divided honors in the hunting line with Reginald Holly and about fifty squirrels were brought into camp while there. Ralph Wight and Bob Kennedy happened along for dinner and swelled the larder with a brace of ducks and some snipe and they were such good fellows they were made to stay over for supper.&#13;
  &#13;
  Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hand and Mr. and Mrs. Archie Betts came out for Sunday dinner bringing a big basket of lunch and they found the table piled high with everything in the game line and had a big Sunday dinner of baked duck, fried squirrel and snipe and fish and everything. The party had glorious weather and enjoyed the trip so much that the ladies are importuning their husbands to take them again about Thanksgiving time and maybe the camping idea will become a permanent thing. The camp was named the N. N. N. camp for reasons known only to those who were there and while it is not a permanent name the next camp will have to go some if there is any more enjoyment than the first one. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Lawson could not go on the trip as Mr. Lawson was taken ill at the moment but he loaned the party his truck and the only drawback was the fact that the Lawsons had to stay home at the last minute.&#13;
  The camp also had a mascot in the shape of a stray fox terrier who was promptly named “Doodles” in honor of one of the ladies. S. M. Lloyd and R. J. Holly qualified as first class camp cooks and they can cook flap jacks and fry squirrels with the best of them now. In fact everybody in camp was on the job and the boys think it is fine to have the girls along to show them how to really cook ducks as they should be cooked. Henry Purden is also recommended to anyone wanting a good truck driver and cook combined although at present he is very busy at his old job with the A. C. L. Railway.&#13;
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THE PEOPLE WILL NOT STAND FOR IT.&#13;
&#13;
  It has been publicly denied that John J. Mendenhall, how serving a life sentence for the murder of Mrs. Charles Eliot, of this city, and still under indictment for the murder, at the same time of her daughter, Susie Eliot, will seek, or is seeking a pardon. This public denial came following the united protest of the women’s clubs of the states after a “rumor” got cut that application would be made for executive clemency prior to Jan. 1, 1920.&#13;
  When we see what the mere rumor applying for a pardon for Mendenhall has done, what will be the result in Florida when the application for the pardon is published? The Tribune does not believe there would be housing accommodations enough in Tallahassee to take care of those who would flock to the capital protesting against the pardoning of this man, found guilty of the most cold-blooded spectacular murder of the elder woman and who still has hanging over his head in case he should be pardoned, another charge of murder, that of the younger woman.&#13;
  The Tribune kept silent while the rumor was being spread, and later denied; but now that it is proven Mendenhall is actually working for a pardon and is admittedly seeking to overcome the protest of the women of the state against his release. The tribune declares that Mendenhall must not be released from the punishment of his crime.&#13;
  “Let justice be tempered with mercy” will be urged. True, but there is always to remain, justice. Justice demanded of Mendenhall his life in explanation of this bloody crime; Mercy stepped in and spared that life for the very purpose which seems to have been attained by him – repentance for his sin; but Mercy stops short of defeating the lawful ends of Justice, and to pardon him would be to set at defiance Justice and to encourage hope in criminal breasts that no matter how dastardly the crime, a pardon will come upon showing that the prisoner is repentant. – Tampa Tribune.&#13;
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TRAIN SCHEDULE&#13;
&#13;
Corrected on November 15, 1920.&#13;
&#13;
Southbound&#13;
					Arrive				Departs&#13;
No. 83		2:36 a.m.		2:46 p.m.&#13;
No. 27								8:40 a.m.&#13;
No. 91		1:28 p.m.		1:38 p.m.&#13;
No. 89		2:55 p.m.		3:20 p.m.&#13;
No. 85		7:30 p.m.		7:45 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
North Bound&#13;
					Arrive					Departs&#13;
 No. 82		1:48 a.m.			2:03 p.m.&#13;
No. 84		11:45 a.m.			12:05 a.m.&#13;
No. 80		2:35 p.m.			2:55 p.m.&#13;
No. 92		4:00 p.m.			4:05 p.m.&#13;
No. 28		10:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
Leesburg Branch&#13;
					Arrive					Departs&#13;
*No. 158									7:30 a.m.&#13;
 No. 22									7:35 p.m.&#13;
*No. 157	 	4:00 p.m.&#13;
 No. 21	 11:55 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
Trilby Branch&#13;
					Arrive					Departs&#13;
*No. 100									8:00 a.m.&#13;
*No. 24									3:25 p.m.&#13;
*No. 101		6:30 p.m.&#13;
*No. 25		2:00 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
Oveido Branch&#13;
					Arrive					Departs&#13;
*No. 126		11:00 a.m.&#13;
*No. 27									3:40 a.m.&#13;
&#13;
*Daily, except sunday&#13;
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&#13;
DIVERSION ORDER HITS AT FLORIDA&#13;
&#13;
Holding that the new reconsignment and diversion rules of the interstate commerce commission give an unfair advantage to California and the rest of the long haul states, and discriminate against Florida, with its proximity to the great markets of the nation, representatives of Florida fruit and vegetable growers will formally protest to the commission against the decision in case No. 10,173.&#13;
  They declare that Florida, requiring only 25 to 36 hours for the movement of it products east or west, should not be discriminated against under a ruling made to fit other states which require from five to seven days to reach their markets and establish a diverting point.&#13;
  J. J. stowers, representing the shippers and growers’ associations of Florida, Mississippi and Alabama, left Jacksonville Friday to enter oral protest before the commerce commission, and many other representatives of Florida’s biggest shippers of fruits and produce will also appear, as Florida growers are intensely interested in the hearing.&#13;
  E. D. Dow, traffic manager of the Florida Citrus Exchange, left Friday to attend it.&#13;
  J. F. Thomas, vice-president of the Saver-Thomas Co., fruit and vegetable shippers, Jacksonville, also left to attend the informal hearing and will confer with Florida, Mississippi, and Tennessee representatives prior to entering the hearing on Tuesday and the preliminary conference on Monday next between interested growers and shippers.&#13;
  Mr. Thomas will represent at this hearing the interests of several Florida shippers.&#13;
  Marshall &amp; Bell, attorneys, Washington, D. C., will represent the Florida interests who have membership in the American Fruit &amp; Vegetable Shipping Association, with headquarters at Chicago, Ill. Memberships of the Florida growers and shippers in the American Fruit And Vegetable Shipping Association is as follows: Nix &amp; Bugbee, Hastings; Chase &amp; Co., and Sayer-Thomas Co., Jacksonville; R. O. Applegate, Jr., Miami; Nocattee Fruit Co., Nocattee; Standard Growers’ (Inc.), A. J. Nye, Dr. P Phillips Co., Orlando; American Fruit Growers&#13;
(Inc.), Division; Sanford Truck Growers’ (Inc.), Sanford; Florida Citrus Exchange, H. T. Mongomery &amp; Sons, Tampa; A. C. Terwilliger, Titusville; Porter-Judy Co., Jacksonville and several others.&#13;
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Fine stationery&#13;
&#13;
The Herald office is headquarters for fine stationery of all kinds from the printed letter head to the beautiful stationery in boxes that is so dear to the ladies’ hearts. You can get this stationery and have your monogram printed on it, making the niftiest Christmas gift that you have ever seen and one of the best. Stationery costs money these days but our stationery is very reasonable in price and positively the best that money can buy. See it at the Herald office.&#13;
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&#13;
1921 desk calendar&#13;
&#13;
There is nothing quite as handy as the desk calendar pad. They are the busy office man or woman’s greatest help and have been difficult to obtain up to the present time. The Herald Printing Company has a few of them and if you want your calendar you should lose no time in ordering it now. Come in and see them today. Herald Printing Co.&#13;
&#13;
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Have you seen that beautiful line of box stationery at the Herald office? Just the thing for “The Girl” for Christmas. Get it printed with her monogram.&#13;
&#13;
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BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH… 1C.&#13;
&#13;
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Full line Columbia Photographs.&#13;
Prices from $50 to $300. Terms to suit yourself.&#13;
The most complete line of records in the city.&#13;
Line of Violins, Guitars and Mandolins.&#13;
Prices Right.  H. L. Gibson.&#13;
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Bananas! Bananas!&#13;
A CARLOAD OF FIRST CLASS BANANAS ON THE A. C. L. TRACK, NEAR EXPRESS OFFICE, ARE ON SALE NOW AT LOWEST PRICES. Come everybody and buy a bunch of bananas for Thanksgiving Day.&#13;
B. Brown.&#13;
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Advertisement with a black and white Image of a turkey bird standing.&#13;
&#13;
Everything for thanksgiving Dinners&#13;
Turkeys, Chickens, Fruit Cakes, Cranberries, Raisins, Figs, Nuts, Malaga Grapes&#13;
L. P. McCuller. Sanford, Florida.&#13;
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SIX KINDS OF SAFETY&#13;
&#13;
 Have you every paused to consider the safety of the bank where you deposit your money?&#13;
 The first consideration is the capital, which should be ample to meet the requirements of the community the bank is to serve.&#13;
 The next question to consider is the officers in charge. They should be men of experience, high character and successful. Without men of ability no institution can succeed.&#13;
 Then there is the question of confidence. The public should have confidence in the officers and in the bank. &#13;
 These three principles determine the success of a bank.&#13;
 We adopted these principles in the outset of our career and we expect to live up to this high standard and increase our usefulness to the community as the years go by.&#13;
&#13;
 We offer you:&#13;
  &#13;
  1st: Large capital and working reserve&#13;
  2nd: Trained men in charge – men of several years experience.&#13;
  3rd: The confidence of the public, which is proven by the daily addition to our line of depositors.&#13;
  4th: Protection by two examinations each year by the state banking department. Two audits each year by an independent recognized public audit company and two sworn statements submitted to the state comptroller by the cashier, giving the bank’s condition in detail. All of which insures regular, systematic and thorough operation of the bank.&#13;
  5th: The advice of a competent board of directors, who meet with the officers regularly each month and advise them as to the operation of the bank.&#13;
6th: Insurance of all deposits every day of the year. This is a protection not commonly found in banks and is an absolute protection for your funds, in addition to all the other usual safeguards.&#13;
  These are reasons why you should do business with us, and we believe that no bank can offer better inducements.&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLES BANK OF SANFORD. We want your business.&#13;
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 &#13;
PAGE THREE – THE SANFORD HERALD. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1920&#13;
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CITY MARKET&#13;
&#13;
Waltham &amp; Estridge, Props. Welaka Building.&#13;
Specials For Today. Choice Western and Florida Meats–Veal, Pork, Mutton, Sausage.    City Market&#13;
&#13;
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Now Making Pecan Nut Roll. Fresh Daily. $1.00 pound.&#13;
Water’s Kandy Kitchen&#13;
&#13;
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Pico Hotel&#13;
Mrs. R. E. Takach, Proprietor.&#13;
Corner of Park Avenue and Commercial Avenue, Sanford, Florida&#13;
&#13;
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Lord’s Purity water. As Good as the Best. Daily service. Phone 66&#13;
&#13;
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Sanford Machine &amp; Foundry Company&#13;
GENERAL MACHINE AND BOILER WORK. BRASS CASTINGS. GAS ENGINE REPAIRS. ACTEYLENE CUTTING AND WELDING.&#13;
Special machine for turning Auto Crank Shafts and Crank Pins to within .0005 accuracy. &#13;
IRRIGATION NIPPLES, PULLEYS AND SHAFTINGS, ROUND AND SQUARE IRON.&#13;
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SALES, SERVICE.  REO logo [the good standard of values].  PARTS. ACCESSORIES.&#13;
BRYAN AUTO CO.  Phone 66&#13;
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Gillette Tires and Tubes.&#13;
[image of white polar bears and a large tire]&#13;
Chilled Rubber Process which makes them A Bear for Wear.&#13;
SMITH BROTHERS. Expert Repair work.&#13;
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WINTER PARK LAD IS RUN OVER BY A TRUCK AND NECK IS BROKEN&#13;
&#13;
WINTER PARK, Nov. 22 – &#13;
As the result of a broken neck, due to being run over by a heavy truck, James Arthur Stephens, the 14-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Stephens, is dead. The accident occurred Saturday afternoon at the corner of England and Park streets.&#13;
  The lad, who was riding a bicycle, swung sharply around the corner of England street into Park street, directly in front of an oncoming truck. The lad became confused and attempts by the driver to avoid a collision were of no avail.&#13;
  The injured boy was taken to a nearby doctor’s office and upon examination was found that his neck was broken and the boy died fifteen minutes later.&#13;
  A coroner’s jury rendered a verdict of death due to an unavoidable accident, absolving the driver from all blame.&#13;
  Mr. Stephens and family are new residents of Winter Park, having moved here from Georgia a few weeks ago.&#13;
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ESCAPE FROM FLORIDA STATE PRISON, CAUGHT AT LITTLE ROCK, ARK.&#13;
&#13;
LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Nov. 22 –&#13;
&#13;
Earl C. Fuller, wounded recently by police here from whom he tried to escape after his arrest on a charge of robbery, Friday admitted, according to the police that he had escaped from the penitentiary at Raiford, Fla., after serving one month of a six-year sentence. Fuller, the police said, has agreed to return to Florida without requisition papers. He is also said to be wanted in Houston, ex., and Fresno, Calif., on robbery charges.&#13;
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FINE STATIONERY&#13;
&#13;
The Herald office is headquarters for fine stationery of all kinds from the printed letter head to the beautiful stationery in boxes that is so dear to the ladies’ hearts. You can get this stationery and have your monogram printed on it, making the niftiest Christmas gift that you have ever seen and one of the best. Stationery costs money these days but our stationery is very reasonable in price and positively the best that money can buy. See it at the Herald office.&#13;
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METHODISTS RESOLVING AGAINST SUNDAY TRAINS&#13;
&#13;
ROCKY MOUNT, N. C., Nov. 22 –&#13;
The North Carolina Methodist conference in session here Saturday adopted the report of the temperance and social service board, which goes on record as opposed to the operation of trains on Sunday, the printing of Sunday newspapers and the playing of baseball or golf on Sunday.&#13;
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&#13;
1921 desk calendar&#13;
&#13;
There is nothing quite as handy as the desk calendar pad. They are the busy office man or woman’s greatest help and have been difficult to obtain up to the present time. The Herald Printing Company has a few of them and if you want your calendar you should lose no time in ordering it now. Come in and see them today. Herald Printing co.&#13;
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When you pass the Herald office glance in at the window and see that new line of box stationery for the Christmas trade. You will want it “pronto” and also “depeche vous.”&#13;
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December 1st&#13;
 On the first of each month your rent is due. Why give other people your money. Buy you a home and each month instead of paying out rent money, pay on a home that is yours.&#13;
 Beautiful homes on Park, Oak, Magnolia, Palmetto and Myrtle avenues, Sanford Heights. Building lots in any location.&#13;
 E. F. LANE.  “The Real Estate Man”. Phone 95.  204 First Street.&#13;
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CIRCUS PARADE A MIGHTY PAGEANTRY&#13;
&#13;
When the circus’ glad-voice calliope pipes forth on the street tomorrow at 10:30, starting the parade over the usual route there will be many spectators on the curbstones to cry “Welcome to our city” to Big Zulu, the skyscraper elephant and the lesser members of the two elephant herds. It will be the finest circus parade that has been gotten off the front steps and sidewalks for an age.&#13;
  The first thing to dazzle the eyes is the band wagon in the lead with its ten dapple grays. Dotted here and there down the rest of the line are other bands, chimes and calliopes. There are elephants, camels, ponies and high-stepping thorough-breds. In all there are 200 all prize winners from the world’s prize stock shows.&#13;
  The menagerie cages are open, displaying all sorts of creatures from jungle and plain; beautiful tableaux wagons and floats – all resplendent in gold and glitter – are interspersed in the lineup. Taken as a whole the Sparks Circus parade is a thing of beauty and well worth seeing.&#13;
  The performance tomorrow afternoon begins at 2 o’clock and in the evening at 8 o’clock, the doors opening at 1 and 7 to permit an inspection of the menagerie and horse fair for which this circus is famous.&#13;
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ARRIVALS AT THE SEMINOLE&#13;
&#13;
F. E. Brock, Rome, N.Y.; W. Baker, Jacksonville; S. O. Vickers, Atlanta; J. W. Gillard, Jacksonville; Gifford Garrett, Jacksonville; J. H. Lunday, Atlantic Coast Line; Mrs. Jeanne Drake, Cincinnati; Leo Bish, Cleveland; W. B. Hunt, Wilmington, N. C.; A. D. Smith, Birmingham; Mr. And Mrs. R. F. Weld, Schnectady, N. Y.; W. T. Thurmond, Commerce, Ga.; E. W. Raife, W. E. Dunn, Jacksonville; C. D. Whilden And Wife, Vero, Fla.; E. P. Johnston, Atlanta; W. E. Boyd, Chattanooga, Tenn.; E. R. Engbit, New York City; Mr. And Mrs. J. L. Sheppard, Palatka; O. J. Mapp, Jacksonville; H. A. Boyd, Columbia, S. C.; Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Reynolds, Fremont, Nebr.; E. M. Stubbs, Jacksonville; Ralph W. Rogue And Wife, Philadelphia, Pa.; Grant A. Martin, Violet LeClear, Melville Company; Mrs. E. Sutton And Miss L. Sutton, Lafayette, Ind.; R. E. Blayer, Jacksonville; Robert Ingram, Atlanta.&#13;
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Office supplies at the Herald.&#13;
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We Guarantee All Battery Repairs&#13;
Every batter repair we make is guaranteed for six months. We are able to do this because in repairing any make of battery we are licensed to use patented features which have made Vesta batteries famous.&#13;
&#13;
Sanford Battery Service Co.  L. A. RENAUD, Prop.   Phone 189.&#13;
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Sanford’s Most Popular Hotel&#13;
SEMINOLE HOTEL and GRILL. Under Management of WALTER B. OLSON.&#13;
Our specialty --- Seminole’s famous $1 Sunday Dinner de luxe.&#13;
A la Carte service all day.&#13;
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Real Estate. I Sell It. J. E. Spurling. &#13;
The Man Who Sell Dirt Cheap.&#13;
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Beautiful Post Cards at the Herald, Each…1c.&#13;
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Pure, Sweet, Wholesome. Delivered Fresh Every Day.&#13;
Genuine Butter-Nut Bread&#13;
MILLER’S BAKERY&#13;
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SPECIAL BARGAINS for the first COMPLETE HOUSE BILL. &#13;
Carter Lumber Co.&#13;
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Announcing the Opening of the Sanford Cash Grocery&#13;
Next Door to Fleetwoods.  Cor. 1st and Park Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Sanford’s Newest Grocery.&#13;
Everything new and Fresh and Crisp and at the Very Lowest Prices.&#13;
The Cash and Carry Plan – Nothing delivered and Nothing Charged. The Buyers get the benefit of the very low prices.&#13;
&#13;
Sanford Cash Grocery.  O. H. Stenstrom. Manager.&#13;
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CALL 349 For Long or short Distance HAULING. A Big Truck&#13;
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CHULUOTA INN will Open season 1920-21 on Thanksgiving Day Turkey Dinner.&#13;
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SEE URK FOR EXPERT AUTO REPAIRING. Cor. First and Sanford Ave.&#13;
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Building Costs Are Lower and Now is the time to build.&#13;
&#13;
This is good new to the many people here who are anxious to build homes and buildings of all kinds. Perhaps you did not realize that building costs are lower – that quick service and up-to the-minute methods – mean better construction and cheaper costs in every way.&#13;
&#13;
Keep Up With the News of the Day and Get Wise to Service in Building.&#13;
 Progressive methods in building construction and personal supervision of all work gives you the best in the market not only in material but in all kinds of construction. We are ready to take your order or anything in the construction line from a skyscraper building to a garage and from a sidewalk to a macadamized street through your property.&#13;
&#13;
We Plan, Build, Construct any kind of Building You Want.&#13;
GEO. W. KNIGHT COMPANY.  PHONE 304.  Sanford, Florida.&#13;
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KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE HERALD WANT COLUMN.&#13;
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 &#13;
PAGE four.  THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1920&#13;
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SANFORD DAILY HERALD – Published every afternoon except SUNDAY at The Herald Building, 107 Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, Florida&#13;
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THE HERALD PRINTING CO., INC. PUBLISHERS&#13;
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R. J. Holly		Editor&#13;
N. J. Lillard		Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
H. A. Neel			General Manager&#13;
F. P. Rines		Circulation Manager.  Phone 481&#13;
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Advertising Rates Made Known on Application&#13;
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Subscription Price in advance&#13;
One year			$6.00&#13;
Six months			$3.00&#13;
Delivered in City by Carrier&#13;
One week			15 cents&#13;
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Member of the Associated Press&#13;
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Thanksgiving this week.&#13;
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And after that get ready for Christmas&#13;
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With maybe a few bank holidays thrown in for good measure.&#13;
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The best season in our history stares us in the face. Get your bucks ready for the shower of gold that is bound to come to Sanford.&#13;
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This weather is ideal for the crops, ideal for hunting, ideal for the winter visitors. In fact this season is one of the best from the weather and point to one could want.&#13;
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  Mayor Peters, of Boston, will stop the flirting on Boston Common. Well, mayor, give us your hand. If you stop it on Boston common it can be stopped anywhere. And mayor, you have a big job on hand, but we believe you are big enough for the job.&#13;
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  Everybody pull for a bigger Sanford and in pulling remember that your Chamber of Commerce is the place where the pulling counts. No village, hamlet, town or city ever amounted to anything without a good live board of trade or chamber of commerce or boosters club of some type [?]. It takes concentrated effort to _____ a real town and concentrated effort can only be obtained through a club that has all the business men of the city enrolled as members.&#13;
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  Don’t worry about the outcome of the reconstruction period. The way to get through any depression is to look at things on the bright side and when money is tight spend less. If you cannot afford this thing and that thing that is really unnecessary cut it out until you can afford it. The world would be better off if put on a cash basis and each one was made to pay for what they obtained at the time they obtained it. And the world is coming to this period in a few short years. We are all spending more than we are able to spend. The financial situation is summed up in an article in this issue.&#13;
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 Now is the time to advertise. From this week on until the last horn blows new year’s day there will be a stream of shoppers in and out of the city and they will come here if you advertise and bring them in. If you bring them here they will buy, for Sanford merchants have the goods but unless you advertise even your own people will go to some other town that advertises and gets them by the prices. There never was a time when advertising would get you such sweeping results. And our subscribers are patronizing the merchants who display their wares in the Daily and Weekly Herald. Don’t forget that. &#13;
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TELLING EVERYTHING&#13;
&#13;
  The editor is popularly supposed to see everything, hear everything, know everything and publish everything that is going on.&#13;
  But sometimes he doesn’t see it – doesn’t want to see it – because, being an editor and trained to weigh all angles of every question, he knows that it is better for the community if he does not see it. &#13;
  There are many things the editor does not publish because they contain no element of news, are distressing to many innocent people, and their publication could serve no good purpose.&#13;
  Sometimes the editor is criticized for his forbearance, but at least some of his critics do not stop to remember that possibly the paper is just as forbearing regarding an incident or two of their own lives.&#13;
  There are many things to be considered before putting it in cold type.&#13;
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Citron, Lemon Peel, Orange Peel, Raisins (Seeded and Seedless),&#13;
Currants, Dates, Figs. Deane Turner. Phone 497. Welaka Building.&#13;
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JP says: the American people are consuming annually $175,000,000.00 worth of perfume, $80,00,000.00 worth of candy, $42,000,000.00 worth of chewing gum. we are a sweet smelling, candy, chewing people. Let us also be a good investing people, by investing in the safe, sound and conservative 8 per cent cumulative prior preferred stock of the Southern Utilities Company. There’s none better.&#13;
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MORE PRAISE FOR PRESS&#13;
&#13;
  Small city dallies and the country weekly press of Florida may become affected with what is vulgarly known as the “swell head” if the words of praise heaped upon them continue. However, that may be, it is with pardonable pride that the press of Florida may consider itself just a jump or two ahead of the press of any other state, population considered. Further commendation for the small town press is given by the Jacksonville Metropolis, which says:&#13;
  “when the editors of large dallies advocate state and national policies which later are overwhelmingly defeated by the people, it is indicative that something vitally essential has been omitted from their arguments; for after all is said, the press is one of the three most powerful institutions in our government. Its strength is based on the power of suggestion and if this strength loses its virility, then there is reason to begin searching for causes.&#13;
  “But that is only a preface to the subject. The editor of the small city daily or the town weekly is not carried to extremes by his own ideas. He is closely associated with his people; he is at all times susceptible to their opinions; his hand is never removed from the public pulse. The enthusiasm and the throbs of the community are a part of his being. That is the vital essential!&#13;
  “To the men of the neighborhood he is “Bill” or “Tom” or “Frank.” They drop by his shop, discuss the issues of the day with him, criticize his sheet, praise it, offer suggestions that oftentimes are practical, more often impractical but suggested in a spirit of real friendship; and after they are gone, he sits down to his typewriter, and unconsciously perhaps his expressions are rationalized and made more solid by the association of ideas.&#13;
  “Florida has more high class small city dailies and town weeklies than any state in the union. These papers wield a strong and wholesome influences for they are accurate reflections of the existing conditions and pulsate with the many phases of local environment.&#13;
  “Another happy feature of the Florida papers of that their editors have the courage of convictions. They do not evade issues. They either defend or attack them. It is a tendency in some states among editors of this class to refrain from participation in local affairs other than by treating the subject as news matter, most of which is packed on the front page, and the inside section is filled with “boiler-plate.” But happily this is not the case in Florida. The editors maintain the editorial pages for a constructive purpose, and in preparing copy usually they toss the gloves aside.&#13;
  “This state has a wonderful institution in its press. The radical element is confined to a minority and is completely overshadowed by the constructive contemporaries.&#13;
  It would be a blessing to the ‘big league’ editors if they could drop from their high horses into the companionship and confidence of those moving about them, as long since their brothers of less self-importance have done. Then true the large dailies, in proportion, would be as powerful as the small dailies and weeklies.”&#13;
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AN EXPERIMENT IN CO-OPERATIVE SLAUGHTERING&#13;
&#13;
  Florida has many thousand cattle grazing on millions of unoccupied acres. The cattle owners have claimed and been granted special privileges, against which many truckers, farmers and town residents are complaining and protesting. Still, not withstanding their privilege, the stockman have grievances of their own, among the most prominent of which are: First, the low price of meat on the hoof. Second, the high price of meat off the hoof.&#13;
  They might take a lesson from the cattle growers of a county in South Dakota, who likewise got tired of selling their stock to the packers at a low price, and buying it back as beef at a high price. Those South Dakota stockmen decided it would be better to sell to themselves, and buy from themselves, and they formed what they called a community meat ring, with that end in view. The results are given below, and show what can be accomplished by co-operation. Florida stockmen can do the same if they will, and by doing so render a valuable service to the community, and secure a profit to themselves, which now goes to foreign packers.&#13;
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  The figures:&#13;
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                 Community meat ring               Local meat markets&#13;
                 Cents per pound                   Cents per pound&#13;
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Steaks           18 – 25                           40 - 50&#13;
Roasts           13 – 18                           35&#13;
Boiling meat      9 – 13                           28 - 35&#13;
Soup bones        5                                25&#13;
Heart             8                                35&#13;
Liver             8                                30&#13;
Tongue            8                                30&#13;
Suet              5                                20&#13;
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Tampa Times.&#13;
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Time to send out Thanksgiving cards now. The Herald Printing Co., has a fine line of Thanksgiving greetings. Only one cent each.&#13;
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The Wilmington (N. C.) Star, Sept. 21st, says: the cleanest and best circus seem here in many a day was Sparks three-ring circus which exhibited here yesterday, the crowds taxing the capacity of the huge tent. ‘Clean and clever’ sums up the show and the crowds were orderly.&#13;
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(image of black background with 1 lion and 1 leopard near the edge. white type on it.&#13;
COMING: SPARKS CIRCUS&#13;
A Mammoth Institution of Merit and Originality&#13;
A Comprehensive Ensemble of The World’s Best Performers and The Finest Trained Animals.&#13;
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A Multitude of Strange and Curious Features From All Ends Of The Earth&#13;
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An Exhibition That Is Worth While&#13;
Gorgeous street parade at 10:30 A M.&#13;
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Coming to Sanford ball grounds – Tuesday Nov. 23&#13;
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Advertisement - cartoon of young boy&#13;
Mickie says: Yeah! Some folks who ain’t got nuthin on their minds but their hats think its smart to see if they cant find two er three typographical errors in th’ paper ev’ry time it comes out, th’ poor sapheads th’ boss says he’s noticed that folks who amount to anything are allus too bizzy to do ann ‘small-time’ knocking!&#13;
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-	If you are looking for neat printing, this is the place!!&#13;
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EVERYTHING for THE BUILDER. From the Foundation to the Roof. &#13;
HILL LUMBER CO.   Quality-Serviced-Price.&#13;
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Cozy Café – Quick Lunch. Coffee - 5c., Sandwiches - 10c., Pies, homemade 10c. cut – Best Coffee in Sanford.  Princess Theatre Bldg.&#13;
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Prime Western Beef – Buy Meat You Can Eat.&#13;
Pork and Mutton – Sausage of All Kinds – Ham and Bacon&#13;
A Trial Solicited&#13;
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Pure Food Market – J. H. Tillis, Prop. – phone 105 – 402 Sanford Ave.&#13;
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Make This Bank Your Bank&#13;
&#13;
Not for a season only, but for all-the-year round-service and secure for yourself and your children the present and future benefits of the best this modern institution of service has to offer.&#13;
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First National Bank&#13;
F. P. Forster, President, B. F. Whitner, Cashier.&#13;
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Methodist Bazaar&#13;
Sanford is on a boom – not a vacant store-room to be found on First street, but undaunted “The Truth Seekers” of the Methodist Church will erect a tent on the old Sanford House site and hold their Annual Bazaar FRIDAY and SATURDAY. COOKED FOOD AND OYSTER SUPPER SATURDAY NIGHT.&#13;
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Your patronage solicited.&#13;
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CHANDLER CARS – FRANKLIN CARS.&#13;
“WE GIVE YOU SERVICE – ASK ANYBODY” -- WIGHT TIRE CO.&#13;
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Kelly-Springfield tires.   Diamond Tires.&#13;
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Vulcanite Shingles&#13;
Just Lay Them Down and Nail – That’s There is To It.&#13;
&#13;
 The Shoulder of Protection keeps hot or cold air – rain, sleet, etc., from forcing its way through the roof.&#13;
 The Shoulder of Protection is also the Self-Spacing Device. Makes laying easy and rapid – thus saving time and money.&#13;
These Asphalt Shingles are surfaced with natural color Red or Green Crushed Slate. Each rain washes away the accumulated dust – reviving perpetually the original rich colors.&#13;
 Where these shingles are used the insurance rate is lowered – because they are fire-resisting. Give us the dimensions of your roof. We will estimate the cost free of charge. Samples and prices furnished free.&#13;
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Hill Implement &amp; Supply Co.&#13;
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OUR PAINT SHOP.&#13;
Is kept busy by knowing automobilists who send their cars to us to be repainted. The “wise ones” know that their cars will be returned to them looking smarter and better than when bright new from the factory. The reason for this is that all our work is custom work which means that only the best of materials are used by skilled workmen.&#13;
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Reher Bros. Auto Painting.  Phone 112.  Sanford heights.&#13;
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HERE IS A CHANCE for a dandy farm, with or without crop.&#13;
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EAST SIDE&#13;
10 acres; 5 acres tiled; 3 wells good house, 5 ½ miles from Sanford. 5 acres in lettuce.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
21 acres, 10 1-2 tiles; 5 wells good house, 2 1-2 m. of Sanford. 6 a. celery, 3 a. beets.&#13;
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I can make immediate delivery on these places if desired, at a very low figure. See&#13;
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H. B. LEWIS – phone 349 – 106 N. Park Avenue &#13;
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PAGE 6 -- THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1920&#13;
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Little Happenings. Mention of Matters in Brief. Personal Items of Interest. &#13;
In and About the City.&#13;
Summary of the Floating Small Talks Succinctly Arranged for Herald Readers.&#13;
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WEEK’S WEATHER&#13;
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South Atlantic and East Gulf states: Local rains beginning of week and again Thursday or Friday, otherwise fair; normal temperatures.&#13;
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The stores are getting ready for thanksgiving.&#13;
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This is some lively week with one show all week, minstrels tonight and circus tomorrow.&#13;
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Many familiar faces of the various stores are absent this week as the boys are away on hunting trips.&#13;
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Abe Kanner, of Jacksonville, is visiting home folks. He is now one of the rising young attorneys of that city.&#13;
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Get your thanksgiving cards at the Herald office. Greetings of the season all highly colored. Send them to your friends.&#13;
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Everything in the post card line at the Herald office, wholesale and retail. If it is post cards you want we have them.&#13;
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Frank Grayam is home today from his duties as citrus fruit inspector that takes him over the east coast and other parts of the state.&#13;
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G. L. Loveless has deserted the automobile business and taken up the grocery business and is now one of the force of the city market in the grocery department. &#13;
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Mrs. Edward E. Gore, of Ruskin, Fla., arrived in the city Sunday afternoon where she will spend two or three weeks visiting at the home of her step-son, ralph K. Gore, and family.&#13;
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Herbert Mosman, of the canton journal, canton, mass., was in the city today and paid the herald office an appreciated visit. He is spending the winter in Florida and leisurely traveling around looking them over.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. Pullman Connelly, and young son, James Arthur, and miss ala McNeil and Loren Connelly drove over Sunday morning from Orlando to spend the day with Mr. and Mrs. ralph k. gore. Mr. Connelly is employed as make-up man on the morning sentinel at Orlando.&#13;
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Mr. and Mrs. P. P. McGraw, and Mr. McGraw’s father of Orlando were in Sanford today enroute home from Daytona where they had spent Sunday. Mr. McGraw has been with the morning sentinel for the past eight years as linotype machinist-operator and is one of the best in the state. He paid the Herald a pleasant call while here.&#13;
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Advertise Sanford by sending out a post card or two every day. The herald has all kinds for one cent each, get a few now while the supply is large.&#13;
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SANFORD NEGRO WANTS TO COME BACK HOME&#13;
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The following letter from a negro to Mr. W. P. stone shows that many of them find disappointment when they go north to seek work:&#13;
&#13;
      Chicago, Nov. 17, 1920&#13;
&#13;
  Mr. W. P. Stone, Dear Sir I rite you a few lines to let you here from me Mr. Stone if you will send for me I will come and work for you Mr. Stone please do this favor far me Mr. Stone you can keep this letter so if I don’t pay you can put me in jail Mr. Stone please do this far me so I for me and I will come right to you. Will please do it. Send a ticket by telephgram to 4826 Even avenue, Chicago ill please Mr. Stone if you will send it when you get the letter I will be there I will get there next Thursday Mr. Stone please do this for me and I will come right to your please Mr. Stone do this for me and I will pay you interest on your money Mr. Stone I wants to come back to dear Sanford Fla do this for me Mr. Stone send it to me at once to 4826 Even ave Chicago please Mr. Stone so I can come at once Mr. stone please do this favor so I can come at once Joe Nolan 4826 Even avenue Chicago ill please send it by telegram so I can get there right away and go to work for you please do this favor for me Mr. Stone Joe Nolsn 4826 Even Ave Chicago ill please Mr. Stone do this for me.&#13;
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&#13;
PAID FINE IN PENNIES&#13;
&#13;
Albert Dorner paid the fine of George Devaux in pennies this morning in police court. Young Devaux was riding on top of the cars coming into Sanford last night from Jacksonville as he was short on money and wanted to get to Plant City to join his mother? He was arrested here for taking the outside of the car instead of the inside and Albert took him under the wing and fixed him up so he could proceed on his way rejoicing. Albert plays this penny gag on the court whenever he gets the chance but he does not perturb either the Judge Maines or Chief Speer as they are perfectly willing to take the money as long as Albert wishes to shell it out whether it is on pennies or in dollars and with all of it Albert has a big heart and is always doing something for somebody somewhere.&#13;
&#13;
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TAXPAYERS, TAKE NOTICE!&#13;
Tax books are now open for the payment of State and County taxes for 1920. A discount of two per cent is allowed for payment in November and one per cent in December.&#13;
&#13;
JNO. D. JINKINS, Tax Collector, Seminole County.  11-13-dlw-w2t.&#13;
&#13;
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Everything for the office at the Herald Printing Co. We can fit you out with all that you need in fine printed stationery and office supplies of all kinds.&#13;
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CUT OUT THIS COUPON AND PRESENT IT MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
MELVILLE’S COMEDIANS - SANFORD BEGINNING MONDAY, NOV. 22&#13;
$10,000.00 Tent Theatre&#13;
&#13;
This Ticket Admits One Monday Night If Accompanied by 1 Adult Ticket.&#13;
Special Invitation LADY FREE&#13;
&#13;
Monday Night Free “Broken Hearts” Monday Night Free&#13;
&#13;
Our Guarantee: Your Money’s Worth or Your Money Back&#13;
Vaudeville Between Acts. Admission 40c; Children 25c&#13;
Price includes War Tax&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
AT THE STAR THEATRE TODAY:&#13;
An All-star cast in “BLIND YOUTH”&#13;
Also HANK MANN in “Don’t Change Your Mrs.” and Pathe News.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
Try a Herald Want Ad. – It pays.&#13;
&#13;
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The Logical Treatment&#13;
“ENERGIZER” For Many Ills.&#13;
We hold this to be a Truth: - viz: - That Circulation is a BASIC factor of Human Health. &#13;
The “Energizer” process will DO MORE Benefit to Any Adult’s general condition than any other method known.&#13;
COME IN and talk it over.&#13;
108 Park Ave., Next Door to Mobley’s Drug store. &#13;
L. C. Cameron,  Box 399, Sanford, Fla.  Phone 184&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
White &amp; Wyckoff’s Superb Stationery&#13;
THE HERALD’s office supply department has just received a large and complete line of this beautiful stationery – no two boxes alike – and we will print any monogram on paper (or cards) and envelopes – in one, two or three colors.&#13;
An Ideal and Inexpensive Christmas Gift.&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
Just Received – Large shipment of shoes. Bought on Lowest Market.&#13;
Come see ‘em.  Perkins % Britt.  “The store That is Different”&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
Let Everyday Be Post Card Day in SANFORD. Get Them at the Herald Office.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS AT THE HERALD, EACH … 1c.&#13;
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We admire the fight that the Palatka News and the Sanford Herald are making to force free bridges in this state. They are beginning at home with their own sections in an effort to abolish the toll bridges and if necessary will carry the fight to the end of having the county construct another bridge. This business of charging people money to cross a public throughfare, just because there is no other way around it, is an injustice and when a stranger comes into the state and meets with such a hold-up, he don’t get a very favorable impression. Perhaps that is one reason that so many people have in the past known more about the east coast of Florida than the west.  – Lakeland Star.&#13;
&#13;
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Everybody should send postcards to their friends. The Herald has them of Sanford and also Thanksgiving cards, holiday cards, etc. They are only one cent and worth twice as much. Send a card today.&#13;
&#13;
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National Madza Lamps&#13;
25 to 300 Watts in 110 Volts&#13;
20 to 25 Watts in 32 Volts&#13;
Everything Electrical Expert Installation and Repair Work.&#13;
&#13;
Gillon &amp; Fry. Phone 442    115 Magnolia.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
Seed, Our Business.&#13;
Honesty, Our Motto.&#13;
Purity, Our Watchword.&#13;
&#13;
The L. Allen Seed Co.&#13;
Come in and see us.(Southern Seed Specialists)&#13;
Wekiwa Bldg.  Sanford, Fla.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY.&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBLE banking is the policy under which this institution has been managed since the first day the doors were opened.&#13;
 That this policy is appreciated is indicated by the constant and gratifying growth in business.&#13;
 It is the desire of the officers of the Bank to continue adding new accounts of those individuals desiring most efficient and responsible banking.&#13;
 On our record of RESPONSIBILITY your patronage is invited.&#13;
&#13;
Seminole County Bank&#13;
Is owned, controlled and managed by home people, who are interested in the development and upbuilding of Sanford and Seminole County.&#13;
 With our large resources and strong financial connections, we are in position to assist our customers at all times in the handling of their financial needs. LET US SERVE YOU.&#13;
 4 Per Cent Interest Paid.&#13;
Seminole County Bank.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
END OF DOCUMENT&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on November 22, 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>
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                <text>Original 6-page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, November 22, 1920; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida</text>
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