|
![]() |
|
| UFDC Home |
myUFDC Home | Help | RSS
|
|
ALL ISSUES
CITATION
THUMBNAILS
PAGE IMAGE
ZOOMABLE
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Full Citation | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
STANDARD VIEW
MARC VIEW
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Full Text | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
I t.~~diEJ1r:j! "' 8 FERNANDINA P NEWS- RECORD sowell. 1tt. . match : Florida tHeas VOLUME 33. NO. 3 FERNANDINA, FLA.. FRIDAY, DEC'RMBR 12i 19 ONE DOLLAR A YEAR FEANIASMi Ell N IIFMMTA Etadin 616l liii's kkr' TO CoOm - ieuim d Suiti- UShe l k9ImhidhpL C i IlaUP shoui T.0 the laysnaan, I ntled to mna1'y of the abipping fraternity, tfle mtsention of Fernatlnina mtans, little ,or noth- ing. Exanltawlions of ac-ual condi- tions, however, gives evidence that Fernandina aId |lbosphate are elose- ly associated. Fernandina is the primelpal export outlet for Florida hardrock phosihate. Situated on a deep water harbor, Feranadina, by reason of its clo-e proximity to the phosphate belt and the excellent facilities which it en- toys, has recently leaped into proin-u- Europe has always relied, to a pit extent, upon Florida, for her- ferdlsar requirtmenjta in the shape of phosphate rock. With the removal of atringeldt export restrictions that: were in force during the war the de mand for plo-phate haa beeomne al a ut insatiable, anti mines, shut down over the peot few yea-r-. are mow working night and dlay shifts in their endeavors to fill orders. Fuor thec4nrrent year, it lish been extialted tlhat iree hundred th si- and toes of the rock fertilizer .wi .I t malded. Normally, the output runs from aii to seven hundred thouimnild tons. Depending mainly uploan is- phate for caignt, oMhing like a si'he- dile service is maintained Durinig the umouthi of August, S'Iptenlber and October, aixty thousand tons moved through Fernaldina, and, from oders now in hand, the inldia- Utis for November are that upwards of sixty thousand tons of phoesphAte reek will be cleared. The ardroek miners now have plans Mderway for the construction at Fernandla of a rotary dr)l ng pluat, carrying dry storage for ab -it thirty thousand tons, and wet storage for about fifty thousansnd tas. Miners Instead of burning and drying tmweir rock before shipping to pwrt, will Amt % reCk Witbe cimveyf Inuto steamers bv belt .envfyorTs at asl average rate of about three hundred tIm per hour. The Itpne of time say d to all eoucernutd will be iostlt import- ant. The f ll board of County Commis- GMoaen m t WalneWdiy. i The First National bank of Fer- MadiNa and the Callahan State bank of Callahan were designated as couely A. largely signed petition froni cituemam of Fernandima asking for relief from ,,expensiveand dangerous ferry service" was read and filed. The matter of repairing the draw bridge was taken up. Bid from the Jacksonville Utility Co. was receiv- ed and Sled for further con-ideration. The county attorney was authoriz- ed to write the UatUed States en- gem"er's oee about matters partain- log to the Amelia river draw bridgP. gmuwiu mB JacksoMvllle, Dec. II.-Cotem- plating more active health measures In the rural communities, the SMate Board of Health has secure I the ser- vices of Dr. John A. Ferrell, dfel di- retor of the international Health Board, In an advisory capacity. Dr. Ferrell will come to Florida the first part of Jamutry for a eonfrenace with Dr. a N. Orees, regarding the amot tective health campaign for the rural districts. Together Dr. Ferrell and Dr. Jrees will go into the raral communities to work out a practical program of needed sanitary work. * In addition to obtaining the advice of Dr. Ferrell, Dr. Green has arrang- ad to seeere approximately $25,000 rohm the Rockefelr foundation, whihb will be devoted solely to betl- l amaltary conditions in the rural dutriclt The program will concern itself principally with the ellimatlon of malaria nd bookworwm, with generalI pumslinm to improved sanstatllon. -N - A printer who wats or need work oam he maem.mmded at this"ome. Fair wages paid to good all-runmd nawmpaper and job man. Write, eta- tins ali. miAd enlMlmdom. Uston The delegates to attend tlie rc- organiization smleeting of the Missis- sippi, (ulf and Atlanstic association left Savannlah, U yesterday morn- ing, at 10 o'clock, on board the U. 14. 8 Shamut. The Sharaut east anchor in Cumbertand sound in the after- noomn about 6. Trie ship drew too much water to carry to, delegates to St. Marys where the meeting was held, and they were taken to the Georgia city in lighter draft vtwmelt. The second session is now being held in Fenrandina today, after lunching at theK7Ty-ne hotel. Flity dele- gate-s are in the party which arrived here thi- afternoon, amnirg them men m of nat ion-wide note. They were met mon arrival by a committee from the Fernanulina Chasisher of Comainerce ii autlotnobiles aul taken to the lyceumia hall, where the meeting is being held That Fernandi, ans and the ir friends have purchased approximately 20,000 Red Crosas Christmas seals, the income from which is used to combat the White Plague, speaks volnme-ne for our city. So far we have not re- ceived any report from Callahan or Hlilliard which were assigned 10,000 seals each, but doubtless a report will be mende vet this week. Also Praf. %V. H. Peek has large of the sale among the colored people and will make a report later. The splendid showing made so :ar in Fernardina is due to the leader- ,hip of Milss Elsie Stell, meeretary of the local lRd Cro-ss Chapter, who se- lected for her assistants the following aU mined young latiiet: Misses Ctirine Hernanl z, Laura lielle Jeffreys, A. a4w Muras. Lr*4ae Sael. UiMt M ay liutugbreys, Vreterica Whitivey, Lillian Barney, Alice Ualphin, Jesn- nie Rutishauser, Titeo Waas, Corine Sharp, Grace Kelly, Theekiosia Kelly and Nasicy DavIs. To the-e young ladies I want inl this pudlie manner to experts smy sincere thanks. They are worthy of all praise foAr their meal and effieiency. I wish also to thank the public fa4r its hearty response to the eau-e relwresent- ed by the sale of seals When we consider that In former years lied Cro.s C :risiumas ses i sale a usmnted to aloxmt $20 00, the sale this year is shalost remarkable. 0. L..MARTIN, County Chairman. m ii moos= Work on the Strachan terminals is progressing nicely. The surveyers have this week been marking off the different locations on which buiklings and docks are to be built. A permit was also received this week from the War Department to conm- mence dredging, and the dreigeboat is to be here Wednesday The home of Mrs. A. 0 Tompkin%, 115 Lakawanna avenue, was the acene of a pretty wedding on the even- itg of December 3rd, when Miss Myrtle Tompkins became the wife o Mr. John Danm, Rev. E. M. Hender sm, pastor of the Woodlawn Baptis church, officiating. O The bride had as her attendants Miss Eimle Tompkins, maid of honor and Mi-s Agnes Dana, bridesmaid Mr. Dana had as his best nun Mr 0. A. Fouraker, while Mr. Lama Truell acted as grTumsman. Following the ceremony a brief re eeption was held daring which puna was served, Mrs. t 0. Cassels, Plant City, and Mr. J. U. RobM presiding at the punch bowl. Mr. and Mrs. DIea have a host 0 friends In Jacksonville and elsewbhe in Florida, who-will wish them long and happy married life. Among the out of town guests the weddIng were M T. Dana, Fermandlna, and Mrs. lemmiq way, of Waldo. Mr. and Mrs. Dna expect to co tinte to make Jackmonvllle the Eul r M u m" 3111175 *IN NNW Hamm Up to and including Wednesday. De, n Br 10th, 1919, according to returra received by U. C Burge.., Counity Orgagzer: Ca-h paiM Total pled'gs QUvodI legl Church Pledre-s on pl.l' a Cai a (h (p ear to church Bravmly Branch ......$ 1.92950 $ 319.65 ......... $ 1.929 54 $ 1.00.00 Callahan ................ 2.38250 2550 16 00 2,39 60 35 00 40 Epheu............... 80200 102.00) ......... 80 00 2.504 00 T-ernanlin.t............ 6,805.00 250.00 1000 5 ~i ho 0 %O U mi Moist 1Olive aim-i Be thay............... 765.00 107.04 33 00 798)0 2,250.00 Yulee................... 270.00 21.0(1 1,00 2 S 1,000.00 Total ............. $11,954- 0) $ 824 20 *$ 00.00 $12,014.10 *'ash contributlone paid In full. I desire, as we are reaching the ckliag scenes of our great campaign, to heartily congratulate mny felow'BapIlt on the goal that hasIetmn aees,- plished through co-operative effort, and for the splendid stand thatthey h ve taken towards the exten-lon of the kingdom of our Lord. It will he seen from the above that we are only ehort S4855 90 (n rpaehing our ll t'"l q Itas of $12,500 for the county, and I am amsured ;hat tlis will b. I suocribed within the next few days, and we will themn be ."Ower the Top My flual and closing report will be given in next week' i s me. r0 C. BUIESS,. County Organizer. lmrnandina, Fla., Decemnner 10th, 1919. JELLYFISH'S STING NO JOKE Past Known in "Poertuguese Man-of. War' Is Dreadf Vby Bathers, for Excellent Reasons. The Jellyflsh has long heen the sub- ject of mirth and jest. but at times It Is aggressive and formidable, and Its sting ls a source of fear for bathers. The sting of the southern Portuguese jellyfish, known technically as the No- imens, Is very severe.I Jellyfish are found In the trade- wind belts of all oceans. Each Por- tuguese "man-of-war." as the Jellyfish Is sometimes known, ls made up of a . number of small animals of the Jelly- fish order, which have In common an Iridescent colored. buhhle1ike float, about the size of a man's hand, which I rests on the surface of the water. A fin or sail enables the float to make headway across the wind, rather than with It. The Jellyfish has long paper- like tentacles, and these are equipped l with the stings. When they brush' against bathers they burn and leave@ " red welts that Itch and burn for houras- and should two or three pass over a man's arm at once, they would almost paralyze it. Some years ago scientists discovered a little man-of-war fis that accompanies the man-of-war jellyfisbh. It swims around the float until danger threatens, when it sneaks underneath and Is safe from harm under the pro- tection of the Jellyfish's tentacles. Possible Cause of Fever. . t The Medical Journal asks It *'al& f!g ,. ar *t t at a.nter preportl' ot o It. may not be due to soMe change in the fluids of the body which prevents water from being available as perspir- ation which lhy Its evaporation serves to keep the body cool." It may le that the practice of mak- Ing a fever patient perspire freely has another purpose than the washing out of Impurities from the blood, this be- ing an actual cooling by evaporation. "An abundance of water has been found beneficial in fevers, and there are many clinicians who are decidedly of the opinion that cold-water bathe have much more than merely a direct and mechanical refrigerating purpose, for they are followed by rather free diuresis and often also 10 perspira- tion. Indeed, one of the great Indica- lons for bath in fever Is that the skin Is dry and hot. for It is under these circumstances that the bath will do much god&." Birde' Speed Deceptive, An Interesting check on aome et those gunners who know their bird was fylying 100 mlles an hour because they bad to lead him steen feet would be to paint a duck on a long board at the end of an express train running at, say 00 ifiles an hour, and let the gunner blaze away at the painted duck at normal duck-shooting ranges to check-up the speed of the painted bird, with the "lead" necessary to give the charge to hit the wild duck allowed to have gone 100 miles per. Neither train nor long-winged honker gives a fair Idea of the actual speed, because they are both large; the little bird often de- telves. * Optimist. i Growler-Yes, tn the end, we a get alx feet of earth. " Cheerup-What would you do If they t discovered oil on your plot before you ir r of n re a iat of g- Air died? Hammered In. "The school of experience one." is a bar *"Thorough. though, very thorough. What you learn there, you kMw."-- Louisville Courier-Journal. Speiemu of keetsors. Specimens of all species of mow quitoes found in army camps wUl be displayed In the army medical mu seum at Washlntoem. D. C. RaoMsaWu Patrolsaim. Whenever I meditate upon govern ments I am happy to find to my inve's tigatlons new reasons for lovoag that of my own country.-Roassa . Pantt Pie Pa.L An Inventor has patented a ple pet Into two asetons that can be take' anmrt without dancer of breakft 1i Ed I Isl Ea to wi Ne td ,d LURE TO THE ADVENTUROUS All th Ages Man Has Dawted Evy ODaniia In te Sear:-~er "Naquful ThinOgs. 4Now, a thing of beauty that is rare erl md dINeult to obtain seems ever to ive 0aalAAd an Irresistible lure to bi faOWN$= mamn. To possess it he ea N w the hardships of the high- W it maintain cUmb. or risk the al- eat certain dsngers of disease In ie asc Ia W4 ilW dare death at Stands a savage enemies and pur- rel his quest far Into the regions of di: nk1aown wilds. th late the depth mf shark-Infested lan MU he dives wtth the hope of secur- h ig a lustrous pemar Then to the top- Mat Alpine peak he cltmbs for a rare peatmen of the edelwelts. A gjitter- o4A ig Jewel In an Idol's head may tempt to dm to Invade the sacred preeiste .of * inlan temple, or a beautifttow- r lure him far late the primeval for- st. of Bail, Oolombla or Plru. ly lb this dptrit the elvilzed world - we not only Its greatest geographic us Iseoverlee and Important additions J I scifntlie knowledge, but to it Is Iso due the discovery of mana of atuams choicest things of beauty. "t haugl whose practical value may be at @light, but whose appeal Is to the rtlate and esthetic sense.-National eograMl c Society Bulletin. ol hi Every-Day Felowmen. . ord to give all my reverence to sueh ci pritles; I want a great deal of those oellags for my every-day fellowinen. sl specaly for the few In the fore-ll round of the great multitude, whose t aces I know. whose hnnls I touch., for s8 Whom I have to make way with kindly ourtesy. . I herewith discharl O my conscience and declare that I have ad quite enthusiastic movements of admiratton toward gentlemen who a poke the worst English. who were SI ccaalionally fretful In thier temper. w and who had never moved In a higher w sphere of Influence than that of parish verseer; and that the way in which [ have come to the conclus-io that *' human mature Is lovable-the way I ri have learnt something of Its deep - pathos, Its sublime mysteries-has V been by living a great deal among peo- pie more or less commonplace and vulgar, of whom you Would perhaps w bar nothing very surprising If you I were to Inquire about ,~hem In the n elghbborboods where they dwelt.- t leerge Eliot. . Japaese Masks of Shame. h One of the most unusual features of a Japanese court to a stranger Is the fact that each prisoner has his head covered by a wicker mask, more like li an Inverted waste-lasket than any- thing elite, the object of which Is to s prove"t recognition of the prisoner, to permit hhim to hide his shame under the disuise and, very possibly, to pre- t vent him from making a bolt for llb- erty. The alght of a prisoner so arrayed Is ghastly, the malk bringing up the sag- gestlon of the hangman's cap. Once In the prisoners' box, how- ever, the masks are removed, while I the prisoners sit with deeply bowed heads In an attitude of the utmost hu- mtlity.-Boston Post. Navel Stunt In Advertising. They are not so slow In Russia as many of us Imagine. An American re- IMtes that while iln Moscow hefrre the war ha one day saw a crowd gathered around a little fellow who was bawl- Ing at the top of his lungs. Many asked him what th, trouble was, but he kapt em crying, sad the crowd ti- creaaad; then all Of a sudden he stop- pad sad aid In a clear, loud voice: "I am lot. Will somebody please take m home to Ivan Tobinsky, the chain- pla dothier of Moscow, who has a faull supply of autumn oercoata snttn, mectkes, shrts, bats and umbrellas, which he wll sell cheaper than anyone else in the city."-Boatenm Transcript. Cultivating Sugar Cane. The methods of cultivating sugar cane tn Trinidad are beginning to un- de n radical changes through the .- troducta oft Amartean plows and cul- tivaterm hay rakes mowing machine, iad auters and pulvertises C fd oldt to the Seaboard or the Dunellon - hophalte Co. The Reed mill site I I ELETS SFES ow occupied by fish scrap factories- At recent meeting f thie La Nr.try he Seminole factory the largest on the Association, D. P- Mular ,ey re-sign- Ltlantic coast of the United States. t as president, and Mrs. tG. L. We have a $125,000 government aliWtdl. as **cretary. F .llwinsm the iu.1 I;1g. ;:m upi-t-l.ate C-ity hIIh and irslati'alis, tlltv i n Mirtn was Unsty court house. made president, anil M11 ilwie 'eil I-.-*randitna owu: and operates itle secretary-treasurer. Mr-. J.I, rlure-r igli, water anl ice plants. was elected vice-li'i.lt. ant, ai i s 1 .v-. of the hltel lihe mentioned are following closen rass iia.,snter, f tlke tili here and are being operated. Board of Directaor: Mis. Emia m .li- WtV limieaeanthierhotel,the Kpystlom, ,liam-, Misq Virgirnia Carrio, Mrs. Ian i' tn a iuar with thei bht hotels. N. t r nleT, 311s4. K' lith Ctlad ick, 'lair -locks, or many of them, are Mr. D. P%. Mularkey a. Mr-s J. It. noa o'cupielI by shrismphouses. The Lynn. A uMetint gOf ltie n. v lt'i- was\ shrimp are now causa t was un- alI. and board will i* I *-..I it tI I kniu van *luring Mr. Oriditani tima its near future to cousider the iilter.-ti Fe-aniselina. About 400 sea going of the library and to timcre t-- its gas line boats are iHs operation and popularity ainl e.ll ewile.y. 'ae ti *risag shriutinp or prawn are caught at sea by made at the recent union lt Anitk "iv- drag inet-. Eight car loads of raw ing Service was expetaledl in the pur- shrianip v.ererecent.y sent out of Use chiseofa 1919 | l lilim of Web-;er-s cilt whik-h was one days catch, while Unabridged licti tsary, a iai teii two sisriup canning factories are in needed acquisition to h la I.lrary. dsi y operation. The head- of shriiop ate being turned into a vAiu- aNO F IF abl fert;.Jzar by a company here. i desire to express may hi.artll-t Plho. phate waspiso unknown when thanks to my friend s who as.id the quc-tioner rmfided here. A large [e during the illne-s alnd dth tf pht..-phate elevator linow being used, my dear wife; ale for t and while this article i being penned my dear wife; au to tf for t three tra.up steamers are here load- beautiful f IL .O . ing or waiting for their turn at the elevator, and his oceaurs frequently. NIE M.trh ands were of value years heannualofk ago, hlut right now men are at work Iohe annual o m.-ti,, i f tly ta.k on the marsb where a half million ho :re of the D..A.Kitly C,; will dollars will be expended in erecting be hlad at their fie ial We lont.-sy wharves and buildings. I Jantary I tth, 19.;0, at 4 o'elock p. mi But when It om to paying a r the election of directors for thI ein quarter of a dollar for three pounds suir.g yeat r amd the tran~actim of ui If .teak ad five ceIts a pound for other bsiu-iu as may legally c a'u sugor, weharve tostop. Tbo preim before the meeting. were daring the days of -Auld iAng P. C. KELLY, Pie-I aIt. m a s b,.tno thew am. n. otiLwe- 12(t, 1919. a 1., 5. ha a' fuwv.w E^ - ., - v Ut-yv Y I - - L, I ] I I I P I I J I ! I i i I + i t I ] I i I I i i I I ; t i + M at M byae -Toh Ws4hington, D. C., Dec. 8, '19. li or News-Record: Who among you denalzens of the c amid City rememben.t when Fer. ndina had: A regular line of steamers plying ( Charleston, S. C.? DA i steamern to and fe Bruns- t ck. Ua.? A daily steamer to Jacksonville, e a ? * Two lines of steamers Is and from I ew York eiay? Two good hotels: lst Masion and I e F'lorida bos-tx--bjh hotels crow- 1d durnag"the ta.uriMt mean*? Three large saw-mills: Preeman*s, Mt*s aiMLdt--eth one of them niutg to4heir fll eapeelaciy day and ghl? When nearly all the docks trere )owded with ve*o!s, loading heavy uber fior, principally, ports on the ,t etist of South America and the eit India4 Iand.-? WVt en W. K. Bauknight bad a rat- e pen near'the light house, and his tail iteatl shop in the down-town strict, where he sold good steak I ree pounds for a quarter of a dl.- r, and ice-cat with a hand-saw- eaper than it can be bought now? When there were two bath houses the river front that were a delight young and old during the summer 4s.n? - When sugar could be bought twen- lnMxnds for the dollar-now many in ions oL the country Is satleled to --whed they can get it -0" eetenitig" for tea and uffo, * I'ut theae questions to "ui. oldest inhabitants." . lteminicently yours, F. L. ORIDIAN. Mr. Oridian bha outgrown our rec- lection, but the different questions it asks have not outgrown his. But ,"pet lim next" to things that have nd Is trspthigbnbe lhe flboqpr ty, we Will pt imr waw-" Fernandina owns a trolly line, and I eightyfoot hard-surfaced rmad to ie beach and a modern sewerage Fernandina ha. not a vacant house. others are being builLt. A gasoline passenger and freight oat plies daily between this city and l. larye; also a steamer thi* runs e.kly between this city and Brun.- ick, (Ia. The railroad line (two %und tripe daily) between Fernanui- a and Jackbonville put a stop to the river boat, Fernandina has two good saw mill.. Here stood one of the saw mills of rhich he speaki the site was recent y T SlRY EArIAER U asi.ini hj hpsuiiskClark Washington, JIe,. 6 -(Special) One of the mopt far reaching and omptehensive waterways develop. ents for Florida and the entire far South was begeum h.re tod.iy when Congressman Frank Clark, of FDwi- da, offered a remolation calling upon thesecretary of war, for full infor- Mnatlt trading a survey Wor' a anal from umnberland Sound tothe maeoMIa# he Msaiamippt river, with n estimate of ct thereof. fuls plan co9A plates the use a0E * the 8uwannee and the St. Marys in Florida, and all other rivers alonli and adjacent to such route and pro- vides for a protected all-iuland e tual. 'ihe resolu'i callh for :ar e4 ,mite of the cost of a ea-levet ship-a-tital of such dilnli'roni- a4 to atccioetmm iate the largest set-going veats*; the coit of onstructing a lhk canIl of su':i dimensions ass to a)canunod.te the largest sea-goung ve+ el-; lthe c.)t of constructing a barge canal to be usedi for the carriage of reiglit ms ainy if the'Waters of tihe Unitel State s. tlhe zsuof $100,000 would Ir ap- proprialed for msiking su1'h eat;,uates. Mr. Clark has also off red a bill authorizing the s mrel.try of w.tr to make an examination aild -urvey .if Fernandina harb-or wilo a view to memuring a channel of not 1-. thaI thirty feet in dleptihi fr.ni tie wI arves to the Atlantic ocean. Senator Fletcher today intro la,.,I the f11l *wing bill provilJfue for .llti purchase ot a 4ite l.l:i ti e .'r* sIi If a bklic 'ukll'thig at Frt Myer: . "*.te mcretary of Ul&.tar b ihe author- ilnd 16th uire by pecasite, coinlean- dqikf or other vise, a ,site an I cane to be erected thereon a adiltabh buaill ing iael HNag lie,r if v.tilts, thet- i* and ventilating tImpptrra1tu4 a1 i approachess for the use a-rl a:- ." n n hlatIon of the poitomWie an I -t er oti- ees of the government at Fort MNers, S we-int of saimd ali tide tin tMitag iumes Union, Dec. 9. F blowing i- copy of time hill intr )- luced by i eplreentative C -rwk: 'A Bill to Provide for ai m x.ilmika- tlion and Sarvey of Frtri.t: li-it HIarbor, Florilat: ** it en.it en te ly to t. .I an llouse of ite4preseMHtl:ti'e f the United States'. f Aint te iln C I', .ti. Aisemible.l, ''ntht tli S.t -'etary of bVar be, and lie ai leretily, Autihs, izt* anus directed to caum-c a ex Ininaeion and survey to be aloude .f Ferni til in Harbor, Florida, with a view to se- curing a channel oft not 1,-H tIhan tairly feet in depth fromU th, wharve-s Sthe Atlantic O a ean." 'I b r I 2 FERNANDINA NrIWS4RACOD, DECEMBER 12, 1919 FEEMAI A REWS EmB MICKLE SAYS . e m.r. a the possms- at F rasa- PC-I : G : two V- W TIMELY SUGGESTIONS in, Nke WFf & t51*Ag 44 wal teIt" ,NV OM Um 'N)M -FOR I Dils IM I RS 0 Lea u a Leg sliam Itm, 4 5 SWe are prepared with many useful and ap- 3 / 2 propriate articles suitable for Holiday Gifts, and it W will repay. you to inspect our offerings now on S. display and attractively priced. SAN REV. J. W. BLAKER, ROecor. _Thinlr_ uxlay in Advent. Suinnday 8--h- 10 a. m. For Ladies For Men For Boys For Girls Holy COmmunion, 7:30 am. in. OAK MARKS VENERATED SPOT Morning prayer and Kid Gloves House Coats Suits Dresses Iru peanatd Whaoe Abrshem Erxm. clock. subject: *"The Credentials Silk Waists Hand Bags Hats Coats ed Altar to the Lord Has seeo Of the Messiah." Carefully Prrved. Evening prayer and sermon 7:30 Wool Sweaters Suit Cases Caps Sweaters It Is recorded that when ram ook. The eleventh of the r of Silk Hosiery Sweaters Hosiery Hosiery was prmolaed the at the the Apstlem' Creed will be Preached: land af Canaan and was oumaied $**FROM THENCE HE SHALL COME TO Coat Suits suspenderss Neckwear Cloves to "walk through the land," he *"r JUDGETHEQUICK ANDTHE DEAD" moved his tent. and came and dwelt Tuesday, 4 p. m., st. Margaret.' -Dresses Belts Belts Umbrella Ia he plain of Mamre. which Is In ild will meet with Mrs. C. W. Long Coats Neckwaer Handkerchiefs Waists Hebron, and built thee an altar t" Ltauerre. U. by o.ea g at ."t Ev ninth prayer and address Wed- Silk Lingerie Purses Cuff Buttons Hair Ribbons 3HOrttan, Jew and Mohammedan. It neuday 7R. 0. Iie MARTIN Pt I Sto i protection tMohamt mt eok. Emb. Handkerchiefs Cuff Buttons Gloves Handkerchiefs attribute its preservation In a s reoi dead ot almost all ftreeV. 0U MARTIN tP tr.a- r o amonItn aues. d m a (Eastern stan d ) For the Home you will find many things to make the beautiful and attractive. Nprtal, while stioned at general head- Suday school at 9:45 a. min. w. Below we enumerate a few things that may be helpful to you in making your selections; Art quarters of the Brditi Oml there ., Sinh~ Ouperltendent. Squares of Matting, Wool Fibre, Grass, and Wool Tapestries, Small Rugs in Wool Fibres, searsn which were recognized a the .. 6ATe"" .loe ... .. Tapestries, and Axministers; Congoleum Rugs in several sizes, and by the yard; Woolen Italt of Abraham's tree. Sir Jea'p : A .T Hooker visited the spot Ito 18 and Evening services 7:30 p. in. Sub- Blankets, Quilts and Comforts in various quliities. wanted to secure a specimen of the jet: "A Faithful Saying." " wood for ew, but no ome would ea Junior B. U. willmeel at 6:30. We invite your inspection of our offerings. Make our Store your headquarters while .... -.V" .1a m".--- . -r. s doing your Ch.ii1tnmqs Shopping. and which did not spare Hebren. had tRhod, leader. broken down one of the oak's bra~ne Y. W. A. Tuesday afternoon. Phone 18 for quictK delivery. he was able to secure a portion of it Prayer meeting, Wednesday 7:30 which IS to be sen to tbls day la one p. W practical fame awaits the tre te it we extend a cordial invitation to. Is with It that the Syrian forests wm public in general, and to strangers in probably be rehabilitated In the bright the city in particular, regardless of M L r L Turk ao longer rules the land. . Armenia. as well as Greece. had a REV. R. M. WILLIAMa, Pastor. .-. T- - -- Homer. Like Homer, Mose of Snday-shool 9:45. PEARLS FAMOUS II HIST,$ i How FroePreU t EWs 1920 Aut TOs Le---- Khoreoue, who wrote In the seventh Preaching 11.00 a. mi. and 7*30 p. ... In the m:,nner of dllsposlng of their .U AIO Legal| Notices I century, was held to be dbalng t- m. by the pastor. Romance Surrouni.ng T .hen T,. ggs many pecs of frog exhibit N R a d H with tradtn utl arle Prayer me tinug, Wednae-edy 7::0 sced That of o the urkale peculiaritie. One of theo uOW ea y u Cnt uge, ta t of seime of his pemsonag' were hIstorie, p- Paraguay. makes its nest in a blush For the Cmvenience of the public forida 8acerding to the Christian Scilece We rordially ihvile everyone to What unbellerabl, rofiance there is overhanging a pond. The lower ends applications for registratio.s of imoto.r in AEM En. tecatool MNototr. Semlramli. the quaee who come. JGive Gid |rt of His day by b n th- tho e ,roi h n, w? ot a number of leaves are drawn to- vehicles for the year 1920 MAY EBK eorgeAana. Nuinounty SDately admired, desire, a -alted, stolen, ge n xed n that posit breb t lvntt ea l whom It may describes Dido building the city f sold as bautful ave, then return ed number of empty gg epsul. The nlttance Tags l b ent out atbut ary, A. D. 1rS, I ahall apply to the Honor rds of the past bueen fo t he ctletiom [ M u3 Ci again to their glory in the oriental ggs are :also covered with a shield of the middle of l)ecenber in time fr *beJ. ee o d . Sou of the past; bet thre ci M oat D. th s empty oepsules to protect thea diadem or on the k utr empty to protect the from the new year.tameto of her day was overthrown by Or Dr. Eugene Daniel, Miniter an empress! Reflect upon which the sun and air. When the eggs are Plea see that all que.ntions are ie'orge. aeceeitil;ma t at sale ad his succesors, and the land e- (Eatern time.) were enshrouded thousands of years hatched the plug at the bottom ap awered and your n e and ree s rsrt dte period of a t ad thousand Su mday school, 9:0 a. in. ago In the jade casket of sme (I- Iears to fall out and the tadpole is printed or written plainly aoid nd orthe . when general Illiteracy obtained AMoraig service and rnum, 11:00. nese emperor, and which, suddenly ex. le te water cte the application wfr a Nary MARY A. LATAM among the population. Concerning Uirlstian Endleavor, 6:45 p. m. hunmed. tind new life In reflectiag the! Publite or a tme otier ul-in a .sal. this period practically no record su. Evening service and sermon, 7:30. kythe s And the F Etcaped. Bn e ure fr hake In the r t Ort rh Jdicia Vives. Not antll the fourth entry pryer r Wed day, 7::s0 tr. t oftt Oneof the queerest stories of auto- Justices ofthe Peace, Notaries Public Circit tof flore iaM d er did the land, now influenced by (tex mobile wreckF comes from Geneva. and County Omcers, or time Comup- NaianU Couty. tianlty, begin to find oaf.expnreo p. m. Fast, have received Imperial hoors A man driving along the state road troller. In Chacee. salt is hardly strange that what Mee -Thie patrici an women M. t re- toward Waterloo had the windshield ERNEST AMOS Ron wtm e mind us. decked themselves with mtate (Domptroller u oee wof horene wrote was long held to be earls during their slumbers top*osse tered through the open. i and hit oragonTCy ,t1oWS W-i wholly of his Imagination. The City Coteach of Fernandina them In their dreams, iad they aW entered the o nd To John Wllm s ewa P Ta hs eed aoOrdlnaee entitled, Pended them by threes from their eamrm om t efae He tri wheel rus Three.Ral Switchesd day of bruary. A. ? She Pearft T-nBesm t thi er Throe-Rail Swtereb red to er, snotthat thee dt tinkling of the pendantsA n e n Australalu engiu.-rs :s, inh.nted till of complaint for divorce filed herein A Ordlaee to Provide for the n ncoly. ran into the ditch and against you by Rea Williams I their- Stwo or three years a the sm Anmight remind them of their beauty o three-rail switilhes for use b. raiilr"ads ut courtof NasM costy. Florda. etof Japan. the Antilles or the taaie, Redemption and Bile of Tax Certifi- which they could not e. through a fne and had a bad ma whr thr ralThe rnadt ewReord hreby at a depth of not more than ten or cates Hekl by the tlty of Fernaudina, There was that pearl of a million p. And the worst the s to accommodate rolling stosk of differ- Isdei thh sf on whch weae twelve meters the marvel known as Florida, Covering Landq Sold to which Julius Caesar otered to Se frer can't to the By for daaagesue. for eight conBseeve weeks. a peard has Its birth, takes term ma Said (ciy. villa. mother of Brutus. There were" -Boalo Expresu. Wtn emy adOe rki a dtbeeAlol wows Is n Its rhel tkere Ifacy M there comes a day when suddenly. br- bhis Ordinae provlules that pro- PItvlere. of Mary Stuart, the gift of Measurin RainfalL C CA IDOt Bo C m 'rt. tany. something tragtc nd wonderful perty-owera who are delinquent for Catherine de Medici. and those of un R ain aCA APPLCATO James. E. -lkl. Bolietr. f ebi happens. After the great excitement City Taxes prior to eertala years may Henry IIL Pearls were present at e uantity or rain which falls is ocat dsJ mi of a rude unrooting, the pearl awakens Redees their property without hyv. dramatic moments, concernait which Sred by rain-gauges or. pluy aneIs b osatttuosal ons, nsd In the Circitt Foerth Judicial toe dayigh lik the mores of tte I meters which are variously conru-st tae by Circuit oinad fr to daylight like the princess of the laglto pay intere-t. After May 31-t, they tell us with more pasrse eO e oth ta t n ya are d take- falry tales. Passionate. mad eyes tleT atenl than wthe history a y-i e Is O taken laterally and acts thu nT mtf pon her. Perhaps. already, the divers 19^20 al t diug Tax rtificat time; and you can Imagine a thattho' Snon's rain-gange ost g of a he Mos Is the mucous sources the ad ThrsPla , are killing each other ov her. held by the City will be offered fto0 Sems which adorn the portratat thef f elad receiving vessel to catch sic Marine Hashers atarrmpay a master comes and assures her pro- sale wilthsat ltere or penaltlei. Florntne nsnce w andt knw g maet glas atsis soon trr t yes o Fod. cort o e tectlon. places her among complanl, Property owner ate Ured to call the tragie Intimacies of thMat s Imum ei r diameter to measure tgsf t To ane issie o dthebak and with them surrounds her with on the Clerk of the Urtait ort and steenth century. so grem u f the measure its usually one tenth he tmesa e Hairs Caa os iSteresed: thousand attentions by dint at which t m rderos. One pearl nce ha a- of m th the ela is what prdes ah w You are hereby noted that a Writ o she loes that look of extreme youth redeem their property and avoid moMn name. the name of a coromean.: m .Is epb ofe o g o r tme t iWatr piydng, and greenness which has intgered ftw frthermle k w cae La P n (lo tea &. t. C oiNET & Prowo.e Tienl a e.% the sojourn in the ocean. W. f WHITNEY, cAperate). It beleaed to i- ChanOe the Gearal Ari Se.h *demandt *a mntntoa a aee hudred douase y ~ 4Now. _unless you sharl mear ta maid ac- Cty tek FeMMlin Fla. Ip I of S d blat *em Charles' uncle was a tall man, and ti as o eruadm . s a.ithe sl Roe1iik s o teelon o (the historita) felt htlMelf t.ernd one day when he had Charles out for (eourS. fourth JSdisal CrS oo fdi3dS Rck so belokng to a tm having once heml It. for a' Is* a walk he forgot the length of a child's In Cout of County Judge, Stae of erua A. P.m, wme b feak g stones mlolar to ageolo stL stant. to his hands.-flanoMr," Ia i- b te,. and poor Chartes was almost Florida dered aga t you, abS yoer property m5 me of these reeking stones are made Th am tended epecial- dianapol Star. rnng to keep up. They came .to a Ina e tate of t th thtd day e Deember. A. D So by the force of the wind which cuts ly for ladigagloe and constipatiou. rts la the grade of the walk and V. V. M mald Nassa outy ". o C BUO . the dirt or send out from under them. They tone up the tomech and en- Inflamed YW C lr i s p and said: "O. undoe. Notie s berey given, to all whom it may febi Cagi eod Court. They are of harder material than *the .N wrb Xothing brings surer relief to In- please change Into low; I just cat eolan, tat on the third dy.of lebruary, S had emt tha th .ito perfo &Its fm mtontural- ftoned @ee than a wash with & Pla change Ito low; I J" Coast 't on hlriy bdirt and mtne which atnId t wSake it on high.- w J fsid AooD, a JIdge o tf So the harder reao after the t. ly. They getl o0 the lieOr 0an! acid water. And me thing that Its Pre so iAsa H o ty F i er or shifting material has been wern bowe, thetlq ntern the stao usVer anes remember is to have the meeNSed; at at t -ta.e ie will pro way. Other rockl s m aemt t nd bowetoa bheaty condition preparation free ftm an an The Corrt Wo l, Mt to s d Co my il u Ad. ....... ..... I&- I--. L.- S__ PftWt atld ff rem Carunr. . 4 1 I 0 .I - t . p FERNANDINA NEWS-RECORD, DECEMBER 12, 1919 REPORT OF CONDITION KT IIIIIAL 3IN AT Feaamnmas. is Tra rTAn or FLORIDA. AT T? CLWM OO BWntkRW NOVETRB 17, 1919. LIrSa tdo ebOts...... ................. I OWedraftsM unseen di. ..................... U. 8. Ba &to seeur elredlioa n(par U. &. SON& and tifi;ggl*lf Of indebted,-;tl t** asespibdto eum U. 8. Deposit PledS* to eores Petal Savings Do- pose4per vW ael ................... 2Mte Pledged aolatral for tate or other MdlPidloa bill Par"M.......... 2 .0ML War Peawm ie rilemtm eml 1 Thrift Stamps actam OuMy O .................. .. .... 9 .00 Total U. 8 4Govwramsesesuriloe. 'oads other than U. I. hoads pledged to secure Postal Maivlugs deposits... ,00ow.Oe Roamdt, oc-uritMies pledgMd %as eoltnral for mate, or other delpowitS or hlals payable (pnotal ex led .. .................. 21.ei. tlcuriirs olthr than U. S. boal. (not in- cluding stocks) ownsLntpltlexd ...... i&.C.t7 Collateral Trust and other not" of eor. poratloens Isued for not less than One Year nor more than Three Years' n41me........................4.. .96 ] Stock of Fas ilRos e.inmBsk (50 per cent of ubsciptimn.) .... .............. Value of baki ln ou aoe................. 114..ou Equity in bokibouMe.... ............... Firnitre and Axtiamrp ................... [awUld emrmm with Fedenral. Rerve Hank Items with Federal Reserve Banks In preoose f colleetan Ianot available as reserve)................ ............... ash la vault and net amounts due from National bank .................. ...... Met amount due from ihaak and bakers. and trust cmpaai, other tha above. ToWtlis I,41 r 15. dand 17.......... t.617,.9 Checks on banks located outside of city or tow a rortlmt ba k...... ...... Itedemptlon Flnd with U. -. Treasurer and due from U... Treurer......... nlatert erned bet not soltlected-ap- proximate-on Notes and Bills Re- cot"whi "t Poa d ............... Total.......................*........... .. LIUABILMIM Capital stoek paid ia.......... ........ Mandan Fund................. .............. lA-es r-eet auses, Interest. and taxes p .......... ..................... Intnst and diesoBnt ellected or credited. In advance of maturity aad ot earned ap roxmate)..... Af ie rs d for all Interme ac- as s ........ ........... ........... er ad e................... Due to baaks, aakeri alI truot companies (other tan above) .................... ( rtiedchbck................... ...... ir's hcks outandin........... TOtal oItemw, il,s and ... ..... 11,2uu.e 17.14 t4P~~34 (0 th< My stock is now complete with e Jewelry Line for Christmas. all the various goods in L. GRUNWALD, Jeweler. Island City Garage Cor. Center and Third Sts. Automobile Repairing Efficiently Done by Experienced Mechanics 3 750.0 311j511.47 12141t W'uIWI 5JWIASA 4646 bm's." 2Is.064 il,=w.44LO *vosAoe'.e 43,841.9 9AFillUsm w blis m d h a. Awhysm lad, G. P. McClendorn, Mgr. H. C. King, Prop PHONE 70 T *1 fam wee in spe ing Bro Fid i,1U.4a askee MDAND I PMIT5. ladividual dep-sits subject chee-C ..... a>.s.4 State. eouty or other mualewpal deposits.. 21,,7a.13 lilvidead unpaid.............. .........4..7.56 Total uii, addpr..................... sno.tt. Sll epoKl ............ 5.51 77 OtiherTilmee polatas...................... 5,61 ToW tha degiots subject to reserve ......40.77.39 Other United States deposits, including de. posits of U. 8. dibunrsing of rs..... ..,tltU 65 W.t t Total..........................................58.. I7.U414 STAIR OF FLORIDA, , CouTrr or NasmaA. I, C. BINNICKKR, Cahier oftie above named bank. do sole ly swear that the abtore stat ent i true to the beat eof my knowledge and belief. [8 kALl C. 8. BINNICKER. Cashler. gatscribed and swora to before aJe this 25th day of NMOmber. M19L KANSAS BAKER, Notary Public. State of orida. My coammumiMo rxpre May *, Ion Couaacr-Attest: ETBUnTT MIMULL. JAc nOm MISzal, .Dimrtora. Hmit J. B am.* I CISTiMAS FORS LOuK Picked Up About Town by BSy Pencil Pushers Buy BamW. better beef. If. John bSatler, paiter and paper- banger. Box 19k, Fe- madina, Fla. Roy Vandegri, of Jacksonville, is vi dIb biiter, Mr,. C. Donald, of Both Sixth sreet. Mrs. George P. Allan, of Young-- otwn, 0., is visinag her brother, T. J. Shave, anJ family, of this city. L. L. Owens, of Evergreen, and Mr. Wilson, of Callahan, were in the eity oa buitnesm matters today. Speestle and Eye-Ulass Lenses deplcated on short notice, frames re- paied, etc., by Huhrer, Jeweler. let, alaurday, November 29th, ladive Med Fox for neek piece. Re- wad if retmed to LOUIS A. KLARELB The Home Work Society of the Presbyterian church have decided to postpo their supper until after the Durham Duplex, Uem, Enders, Ever teady, Oilutelsad Keen Kutt- er ramur blades, strops, lather brushes, et., at Sauier's drugstore. Joha Thekara and sister, Misse Efas, for years were residents of this, caty returned here this week and will remmalu until after ChristmaC" The Junelsamat weather and high w dis eo the pet several days have pevelted tMe shrimp slet from go lug to ma. Indlmleatlo now point to air weather. B~maud Oome, a Feranmdina yowg man, is now operating a freidgh tn-u weeu Feruandlua and Jack- meavilla. Mblem if you want aSy- thing from Jacksonmvll right now. Oam L. tble ruetrmned to Fer- au- a this wen* ad s resumed- i pedeIti with Setlert's saovitg purists. Beu waealled Ito the os MaA ha ha ItAilemM at HiAninM Just arrived. Two Ford Sedans. The acme of mod- ern luxury and q oonminy in automobile riding. These Sedans will make the handsomest Xmas. gift that we know of. We in- vite vour attention to our Sales Room demonstration Buy gemipine Ford parts. Counterfits are dangerous 6 C. W. LASSERREProp. Buy Barnes' better beef. tL Mlisu Jean and Edith Allan were called to Fernandina this week by the serious illeae of their mother, Mrs. Mighten. We are pleased to state that Mrs. Migbten is much better. W. I. Grace and Co. are shipping through Strachan Shipping Co. as agents several ars of nitrate of oid frnm the Clyde warehoies to various frtilizer factories in Georgia and Florkida. __ The Young Womman Auziliary of of the Baptist church cleared over $200.00 at their bazaar sad supper Tuesday night. They want to thank their good friend for their liberal patronage, and the News-Record for its help in making the bazaar public. Attention is called to the adver- tlsment of Malarkey Broa. By perusing it carefully, this am will asait you in doing your Oriatimas shopping, as a number of useefl articles to give as prusetam e owa by them, and cam he foui at their etore. Mr. and Mrn. J. 8. ButtereMld and daughter, Mgarget, Mra. B. M. - Hall and daughter, Virginia, "md so, B. M., and Miss PaueaeoPer Jaekseuvil ml oeed over hem 8. Ammilma ilaS R mlami ad im d Buy Barnes better beef. tf. 'he Shivers Bros., with their lilies, arrived in Fernandina last k, conning from Angleses, N. J., their family boat. They will nd the winter here in shrimp fs.h- . They are related to the Hilton s., former owners of the Marine series Companp. lut .By B better b Buy Bornee' better bWef. Em Residence Property at 6'7 Ash Street, Fernandina, Fla. Apply to DR. CARROLL 11. FRINK, P. 0. a X 465, Jacksonville, FMsla. UC1D! EUCW! We advise you to inspect our aisort- ment of BICYCLES before c oozingg a Christmas present. Ojr line is, brand new, all wheels are equipped with coaster brakes, rubber grips and extra good saddles. We have a bicycle for yo-ir little girl or boy and for the grown-up boys. Shop early and avoid dissapoint- m was. FERNAND)INA GARAGE. To Keep Informed Read News-Recoird. --E -IE The Florida Times-Union printed more news and more advertising in November than printed by any Florida newspaper during any pre- vious month. The total space devoted to news and advertising amounted to 6,966 col- umns and included 1,202,628 lines of paid advertising. The Times-Union print day after day more news than any other news- paper circulated in this territory. The best Informen citizens of this community read the Florida Times- Union regularly. Although the price of white paper has greatly advanced, the Times-Unlio's subscription rate is now as it has been for more than a year, $9.00 per year for the daily and Sunday by mail, 4.50 for six mnionths. If we have no agent in your town, a good opealng awaits you, if you are a hustler. H4ad inquiries and sulMeriptlpto to the CirSlation Manager, the Florida Times-Union, Jacksonville, Fla.- Adv. The annual meeting of the stock- holders of the Kelly Brotlers i o will be lwdd at the oice of the company, in thecity of Fernandina, on Wednes- day, January 14th, 1920, at 4 o'clock p. m., for the election of officers for the enmuing year, and for the trans- action of such other business as may legally eone before the meeting. J. J. KELLY, President. I)ee. 12th, 1919. Ilippard's bakery is well prepared for making cakes of all kinds. If you bave a turkey to be baked, notify me. Special orders solicitedd. Bakery Third Street, between Centei and Alachua. Four street. tf MuIT rooms over store on Third Furnished or unfurnished. H. F. SAHLMAN. A eAAritat C/ws &akf wV rAM ihM fe4 Wrd S ra-u-,asawwnTOPQUALITT CLEAR AS A BELL THa theb .&ie.e-m-.t which woeb hihef s-core r md quedly af the P a ma-PacMc Expneitim THE Sonora as distinguished as the instrument possessing the greatest artistic merit because of its clarity and truth of tone and its loveliness and brilliancy of express- ion. The Sonora plays ALL makes ot disc records perfectly without extra attachments and was the first phonograph in the world to doso. Superb models at prices from $" to $1W. L. GRUNWALD, Agent HIGHEST MARKET PRICES PAID FOR FLORIDA RAW ANIMAL FURS Coon, $1 to 8.00; Skunk, $1.25 to 7.50; Opossum, 50c to S3; Green Salt Cow Hides, 30c Ib. CASPER HIDE & SKIN CO., FITZGERALD, GA. I wish to inform the public that my business has increased su fast, that I have installed a new and larg- er cose r of the latest improved con- struction, in order to handle my in- ereasing trade in a satisfactory and businees-like manner. I am carrying larger stocks of meats and groceries now, and am in a better position than ever to furnish my customers with the very best that Is to be had in my line. I have fresh meats and vegetables arriving daily, to insure my custom- ers fresh and seasonable goods. My prices are right,- and I guarantee every articlele 1 sell to give satisfact- ion; in other words, if it isn't right, I will make it right. Thanking you for your patronage, and assuring you that my best efforts will be to serve you at all times, I beg to remain, Very Reapectfully, 0. W. BARNES. Not a house In this city that Is un- uocepted. L. Grunwald Optometrist a and M a ate r Optician An do1 ts at vialesm aoiem- taU .sw1 ee d. DR.LYMAN L. BUNKER PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office withDr. Huphreys Phob e9. PRieue fleas W-W. Cela answered alat or day. LeROY McMURRAY DENTIST Rooms 1, 2, 3, Swana Building Phone 173 Fcrnandina Fla. J. R. LYNN DENTIST Rooms 1.2, 3, JeffIys Bildig, OffmLe Phone.4L ResidencePhoe ms Fernandina, Fla. W. T. HAILE & CO. m"Fi l maigbu imn m, JEminFmF S Room 4, JEFFREYS BLDG. BROUGHT STRIKERS TO TERMS African Explorer Put His Wits to Bear In Controversy With Obetrep- srous Paddlers. Although the plan Is not capable of wide application, the tale of a strike In central Africa, told by an exploring member of the English Royal Anthro- pological Institute. Is pleasant reading for the promptness with which the matter was settled.' The explorer was journeying by water and, coming to an African village where he needed a pew relay of paddlers, he found that all the available paddlers had truckck" aot for higher wages but against any paddling whatever. The expedition was held up. and the men who refused to paddle stood apart and evidently considered the plight of the explorer a matter of considerable unsympa- thetic amusement. The explorer, how- ever. thought he saw a way out. He asked some of the women of the vii- lag to coine aboard his boat and sell him od; and as soon as several of them were on board he unfastened the hawner, the boat swung out from tOi shore and began to travel with thb current. Ashore and afloat anxiety followed. Presently the men who had refused to paddle the explorer were paddling their own little canoes In pursuit and volubly demanding the return to their womenfolk. The larger craft, and presumably the armanment. of the traveler gave him an advantage. He was able to Issue an uliiutatum. No women, he said In effect. %itlhout peaddlers, but one woman for every man of the tribe who would ngre to help paddle the expedition through the next stage. The men accepted the bargain; and as there were saen thirty women on the InMt the expedi- tion got Its neee.suarY mplemnent of paddlers and the strike was over. Not Always Unlucky. Friday has not been unlucky In hl. tory. If it Is so considered by many. It was on Friday. August 3. 1492. that Co- lumbus st sail on his voyage of dis- covery. and Friday, October 12. that he first sighted land. Friday. Novem- ler 22.143, that be reached illspanola in his second voyage; Friday, June 13. 1494, that he reached the conuti- ie'nt of America. It was on Frielay, July 17. 1776. that the motion was made that the United colonie. are and ought to be free and inde|l'nd- ent. Many more occurrences could be cited. Maybe. "I wonder why tle Hottentot pn-ln- law makes the grooml pay for his wife? "u'nno." "P'erhaps on the ground that what you get fair nothing you don't appreciate."-Louilville Courier-Journal. Hats Eight Feet High. During their ceremonial dances the natives of Papua, New Guinea, %v-ar probably the tallest hats in Ihe world --a headdress vurylng from si to I eight feet In height and most gorgeous | coloring. Kryptok Glasses, the invisible Bifocals, clear, smooth, even surface, fitted in latest model traces. L. GRUNWALD Optician I The Keystone Hotel WILL SERVE Sunday SPECIAL Dinner FROM 1 TO 2:30 $1.00 Per Person Firsto-las service. THE KEYSTONE HOTEL mT D. SON, 'r. ALBERT D. SIMON, Ng'r. _ m ..... ..... Miss Mary Logan, flehl director in the Armenian and Syrian work, was in the city Wednesday appointing a county chairman for the Near Eit drive to begin February let and is to continue to the 22nd, for $30,000,000. U. C. Burgess, of this city, accepted the county, ehrirmanshly, The steamship Edgewood is un- loading ballast and .will take on a part cargo of phnlphbate for G ent. The West Cobalt is also in port and taking on a cargo of phosphate for Hamburg. The steamship Western Front is unloading ballast. The steamship Monticello, now at New- port New', Va., is expected hero at an early date. bhe wilt carry from this port 9;2000 toon pho Uhate, the largest that has ever been taken. The previous heaviest shipment was 7,100 I LAIM-11a WIVWPP I FERNANDINA NEWS-RECORD, DbCEMBER :'12, 1919 Chlidrm Cry far Fletcler's nhe Kind You Have Always Rought, and which has beea fa s0 ft wever thiry ea, has borne the signature of d ^ and has been made under his per- mal supervision since its infancy. Allow o oee to deceive you In this. Ag Counterfeits, Tmilations and "Just-as-good" are but Expeaments that trife with and emanger the health of Infants ad Childrem-Expediesce against pwrlnrhmat What is CATORIA Camda is a harmtei smlattate Castor 0i, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opitn, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age b its iusarantec. orw more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, FlauI -ncy, Wind Clic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimlatlosf F ood; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panma-The MotmS Fried. WUNK CASTORIA ALWAYS ft the Sinture of I Use F Over 3 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought YO sTPSAMU e@0 n-vUM. WW VOK C#rY. Southern Clergyman Known As Church 's "Adding Machine" This Ma's Serm In Figures La-ehes Epsi- al- Han Ups Greatest Move- most in Its History. Here Is the "super-adding-machine" et the Episcopal Church. His name ie the Rev. R. Bland Mitchell, and he has composed a ser-, aen ia statistics that has stirred 1.-' 00.000 men and women to the task of giving $4200.000. Mr. Mitchell has just emerged from a barrage of figures that "came over" from every city, town and rural die trict la the United States, from Alas-: ka and Latin America: from the Island territories and the Orient. From these figures he has made his sermon-the survey of the needs of the Episcopal Church in the period of reconstruction, upon which has been based the budget of the Episcopal Na- tion-Wide Campaign. Mr. Mitchell once preached in words, from a pulpit in Mississippi. Not; aay months ago he was preaching through the mails. as corresponding secretary of the Episcopal Board of Misions Is New York. And now, seem- egly not preaching at all, he has. a the executive office of the Nation- Wide Campaign, delivered to Episco- palans throughout the country this sermon In statistics, which churchmen pronounce one of the most Inspiring ever delivered in the Church. It all eame about through the Na- ton-Wide Campaign. By it the Church was to be inspired to meet te obligatioS of reconstructloe. New workers were to be enlisted and m ioes raised to increase the efficiency and extend the influence do the Chubr's work. Thea someone asked, "What doam the Church need?" That question was translated ntoo gtuly blanks. They were scattered broan6ast among the ms sions and parishes e the nation, to the stations to the far corners where o misionaris were at work. And while men were busy. every- whe, writing their part of the Churbas story on these Mlma, Mr. Mthes was drafted from the Berde of Missions, made manager of the mpsaign office and given the Job at weelving the results of this study and Too Crowded. The story of a New York woman who a number of years ago remarked, upon nee!ng three automobiles on Broadway In a single afternoon, that she "did not know what pass we are coming to." Is paralleled by the fol- lowing paragraph, taken from "Cali- fornia Desert Trails," S. Smeeste Chase's book: "The cowboy's liking fort luted range was Illustrated by. my friend's complaint that new-comers were crowding him out A neighbor a mnle away in one direction and another four miles off In the other were the grounds of objection; and the read was 'getting to be a durn boulevard: there were two fellows went by yesterday.*" Thirty-Two Varieties. REV. R. BLAND MITCHELL piecing them together into a compos- Its picture, a complete romance in figures. Month after month of labor follow- ed. The "super-adding-machine" of the Church completed hi work. And that work is credited with having sot the entire Episcopal Church upon what to called the greatest movement in Its history. CHURCH WILL ATTrEMPT RURAL WELFARE WORK Systematic welfare work Ina rural and mountain districts of the South. never attempted on an effective scale before, will be one outgrowth et the Natd e-Wide Campaign by which the Uplscopal Church is seskbag to expand the scope of Its activities and meftl- newa. In every Southern tate the campaign budget for permanent fu tare work Includes allowances for ao- thitles of this sort. The decline of the rural chabre. ar disclosed by car,'ul surveys ae thU Southern state-, iM a problem to re cetve serious consideration of ieadonr of the campaigns Work Hard and Play Hard. Regulnr daily reliaxation and partic ularly relnxation throui enithul-ia:sti hobby ritdiig hlia. the. awdl.lnt: iae of pro moving emioational control. an indli pensable factor in thie witning of sue. cess. To work hard. to play nratently, to live a decent, hygienic life in gener- al. sums up pretty- comprehensive lOy the secret of business succ-e s. F.I- lowing this plan. men of only aver.,ge ability can and'do advance by rapid stages. while without its aid more bril liant men falter and fail Take your typewrltine to Mis. Daisy Young, the stenographer. Competent, patient and reliable Prices ra-?mnahle. Office, Judg, Stay1' office, Cor. Ash and Fourth .. .. A . RANCHER NOW CROWS FRIEND Bird He Formerly Depsed Cam. t His Rescue and Waged War eo Destructive Werm. There's a rancher out at San h>r. nando valley way who has revise all his preconceived notions about crows, says a Los Angeles dispatch to the St. Louis Republic. Inasmuch as they have saved him $5,000, he feels that he is duty bound to chuck theI "se:trecriws" and cultivate his new-' fiound friends. In other words, he's off the anti- crow movement for life. Mr. Robert Fargo. program chair- man of the Los Angeles Audubon so, eiety vouches for the facts In the case. The farmer has 45 acres of tomatoes. They were coming along finely when he discovered some weeks ago that to- mato worms had Invaded the field and were destroying the plants . All hands-men, women and chll* dred-were drafted to wage war on the wonnrm. which multiplied at an ap- pulling rate. As many as 1.000 of them would be found in a single mor- Ing. The fight appeared to be hopeless , and the farmer In despair had almost resigned himself to the loss of his crop when the blackleg battalions of his rescuers arrived one morning. A veritable cloud of birds descend- ed on one corner of the field. At first he supposed it merely meant more trouble. In a short time he discovered his mistake. The new arrivals were after the wormnns and they got them, too. The loyal birds stayed right ao the Job for several days. A careful search of the field several days after they left revealed only three of the worms. Not a tomato plant-was disturbed by the birds, according to the rancher. He is now trucking his tomatoes In a nearby cannery which contracted for them. At the price fixed he will clear 5.000. If the crows had not arrived on time there would have been neither vine nor tomatoes left in a few days, so he credits them with having saved him the results of a year's labor, the cost of his plants, and returned him a neat profit besides. Finished the Pregrmm. The newlyweds moved M e aaMtt ment next to the settled old bach- elor. They had a ukulele and every night they entertained themselves and annoyed him by playing It and sting- Ing very sentimental songs together Usually they ended with "Home Sweel Home." lie endured It bravely and said nothing until one day he heard them having their first quarrel. That night he supposed he would have quiet, but quite as usual the bridegroom thrummed on his "uke" and very wild, weird tunes he thrummed too. F!rial- ly there was a long silence and the bachelor knew that they had ended I their concert without their unal "Home Sweet Home." Grimly he crossed to his Victrola, which had been silent since the ad. vent of the newlyweds and their so perior musical Instrument With ela- ,tion be took from the rack the ecord he had put there In hopes that some day his turn would come. And exult. antly the Victrola ground out "PTace 'p Your Troubles in Your Old Kit Bag and Smile. Smile, Smile." Enforcing Etiquette. "My oldest girl. ZanaHne, is right smart of a lady. If I do sy it," pride i fully admitted Gap Johnaon of Rum I pus Ridge. "Tuther night when young SBill-Dick Riggle was calling on her ie steps young Hamp Yawkey, and lowed She'd set up on the other side at her 'Peared like Bill-Dick preferred peace to etterkett, and was willing to arbi- trate about it. But Zanxamne knowed her mannered, and she hauled off with ; the fire shovel and smcked young lHamp flat with It, and ike to have heat him to death before he could tea! himself out of there. Then bshe turn ed to Bill-Dick and told him to go aon with his sparking. Aw. you bet you life. when It comes to etterkett. Zn zalile Is right there with the autbhe Ity r'-Kansas City Star. Asleep at His Pest. I was stationed, while In the army, at a camp In Texas, and had been working as a stenographer In the of-, flee of the executive officer. I had been out quite late to the night on the day previous and bad beem feeling quite sleepy while at work, se I folded my arms on- my machine, and before long was fast asleep. I had been asleep about ten minutes when the executive officer tapped me on the shoulder and said: "Don't you want one of these pillows, toorl It seems a woman who lived close to the camp had become acqualanted * with the officer and had sent him a * few pillows to be given out by him, and I was Indeed glad to receive ene * of them. but was much embarrassed t - the way I received It.-Exchan. Mild and AncisLt Y Shall we refer to that oppeq st i * uncompromslag terms as a grafterr m ked the Invaluable secretary. I "No." replied Senator SorghuM * 'Let's keep up-to-date sad make It strong. The profteern thee days ha made the old-fashioned grafter leek Like a piker." His GIhpes owf Wa e. "What are your apresno eof 'te Man's Land " "I didn't get Into the war," answered #A n-m_ .4 as.- 4sW_ ..A. W 20Ofor 20 cents PROVED CURVATURE OF EARTH Selentlet Settled Disputed Questse, But Leeoser Proved Himself to Be "Peer Sport." It will scarcely be believed that the question of the shape of the earth could ever have disturbed the peace- ful atmosphere of the law courts. Yet In 1879 the question, indirectly. Indeed did come before three learned Judges. and the case excited a deal of Inter- est and amazement. The circumstances were as follows: The plaintiff, one Hampden. enter. trained the opinion that the world was not round, and Issued an advertise- ment In a paper challenging phllooo- phers, divines and scientific professors to prove contrary from Scripture, rea- son or fact. He deposited $2,500 in a bank, to be forfeited to anyone who could prove to the satisfaction of any Intelligent referee that there was such a thing as a convex railway, canal or lake. The challenge was taken up by no less a person than the late Prof. Alfred Russell Wallace. who proved to the satisfaction of the referee the curva- ture to and fro of the Berford level canal between Whitney bridge knd Welsh's dam (six miles) to the extent Oe five feet. more or less. and the $2,- 000 was paid over to him. But he did not keep It. The plain- tiff apparently began to see that he was making a fool of himself, and brought an action and recovered back his deposit on the ground that the whole affair was a wager, and there tore llegal.-Springfleld Republican. Sma 1( Mima Many physicianu believe that any- one who has a had cold -shuld be completely isolated to prevent other members of the family and awnciatms from contracting the disease, as colds are about as catching as mea-sles. One thing More-the sooner one rids himself of a cold the less danger, and you will took a go4t while bef re you adn ai hebter menticiin thn lianChaahr.- -and the blend can't be coa ied Give Little Folks Allowance. Instead of ;i.;, th. little. f..I. Ounce of Prevention Better Than money in haphal;z:rntl .a hi.'. ;a ,l i.., Pound of Cure there tease for it. lt thIm.1 t I,. W'ith influenza again making in- stated sum each w.k. :ai.l then roads into the health (if the country, upon their kee.ing an tn.. IounIt f \i the old adagel, -'a ouceof preveotlon Is done with eve-ry ii..ny 44f it.- <'a i, ter thah a pound of ce," never M marshall in the Thrift .'ia-a;ziit. vI t unore than it does now. A t3ounte bottle of Dr. Willaws To Brighten Tiles. 01 'ontiwill save many pounds of To clean glaizedl til. -s %In sio,,tt.,i ure. 101 Tonic contains Quile rib them with it n l i,,, i.,i-t.,,.,* ii t l Irn and lagn Tbi isa proper turiewitil.e. Ti'i ; : ,,.k i, l,1. iconhination where fcateof (Cold-, la bright with w t rt ,rii Tih. -i,, (Irappe,. Fever and Malaria, a. well at not 1be t.s;>. l. .isiv r ih,-,.q t.hilh : *Fiu"' areto betreated orwardi 0o1ff damp eloth. amtii i.,.-di,'t-l :tii a lit:. ring the Intfluenst epidemie skim milk and water. which covered the country in October, 1918, the sales of 101 Tuool increased more that 600 per cent. This proves Bally Stupid Ideal that 101 Tonic ie so effective treat- "To prevent ti,.- f'o, tm.-i wterinrt mient for this diWasse. when peeling 4>ni..i-, 1. t 'hl. t;.i,; .lri. 101 Tonic not only treats the die' on them." says ani Ki.:1ih .,,-. 1 ii e1se, lut art'- *a a general tonk. fancy trying it. p.l .i # i.A- ith io a a (et I ktl T' lc at your drug store eyes under the tap. -.e and 50ec bttle&. Accept no sub- I4titule, for there i-6 no medical pre- paration -ol4d which ii like Dr. Wil- liam. No. 101 Tonic. Credit Out of Favor. arg A detail of colored engineers who A"a ~3~~a ~AflWEL HON COFFEE were working on the roads n thabe vi- cinity of Boucq were growling at the long hours, the scarce malls and the back pay. The sergeant, to comfort them. said: "But think of all the credit you get." "Ye-ab," came the answer. "Dat's all we do get---credil. Nevah see no cash around heah."- American Legion Weekly. Were Hearty Eaters. Many great musical composers had exceptionally large appetites. When Handel dined alone at a restaurant he usually took the precaution of order- iug a meal for three. Haydn. yet more voracious, was known to con- sume a meal that "would have iatU flti five ordinary appetites. unhese rypew~ruer. One of the most remarkable type- writers Itr the world was the machtne, I especially designed and built for LI Ilunx Chunni the Chinese stateNma 0 hA =mob "Knew wed- get together -Ch s.Fkdd j It S where the particular smokei meets the particular smoke-Chestr field. Particular is right Not only do we use the four choicest vufletles of Turkish to- baicco-Xanthl, Cavalla Smyrna and Sam. ount-but to these we add the rich, sun. ripened leaves of specially choice Domestle StohAccO. Fine as these tobacco are, it's the ex* soisd .process by which they are blended that gives to Chesterfields that astisfaing body, that mellow richness which makes a smoke mean something. Chesterfields certainly do ataMsf as no other cigarette has satisfied you before- and to top It off, they are packed in a glass Inm paper package that preserves for you all of that delicious flavor. b ob.,sn ~ FERNANDINA NEWS-RECORD, DECEMBER AFTER SLEEP OF CENJUMES laselanies May fo tSaid w HNmOs f rad to Earth for Few There was a I; gathering In the smea graveyard of an old priory ehirch. There was the rector and an old antiquary In rusty black, a few lghbrilaC squire, the county police sergent, the sexton and a laborer or twe, while an ancient stone coan. re- ellfy unearthed, lay on the ground. "Who do you suppose It Is, profe- err" Inquired the rector. The old man In black polished his glasesa and adjusted them carefully. "It must be Thomas DeBoebm's," he mid. "Thomas who was prior here in the time of Henry IL, abaut 1220. But weO daUa see. A huh fell a the group as the men set to work with hammer and chisel "Al ready," the saeton reported prestly. They took off their hats and the peollema removed his helmet. The poadeams Uld was slowly pushed aside and they were gazing at the calm, atrag face of an ecclesiastic In rich tilk vatmentas, wrapped In his 700 UT.e, it's Thomas," murmured the pragfm, with the air of one reog- shta an old friend. "Very like the canmpoMary portrait ot the vellum." AS they continued to gae., spell- baa, a weled thing happened. The vestamtM gradually lost their colgr- Ing and then all that the coffin con- talned crumbled before their eyes to a more habd2l of ashes. "Dust to dust," whispered the rec- tor. Very subdued and allent the little copaay dlspersed.-London Times. .Lil Plant.1 There Is a creeplag momn found as Jamaiea caBad the "life-plant." It Is beliga to be landetrctible by any m @an = except Immersion In boiling wa- ter or the application of a red-hot Iron. It may be cut up and divided In any maowr, and the smallest shreds wlM threw out root, grow and bud. Wen oklkt to Endure. Back"- h R.a-D.w, Weak, NerU Atlnat Ga. G:-"I suered for a long time froemi iam weakness which caused me to become all run- - down. weak and nervous, and I duf- Sfeed with beck aches and pains in myside. Iwasjust S as miserable as one could ever think of being when I began Staking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Preip- f' tion and it asoon i1fS // Ibuilt me up in h/ health and stM th and I felt so much improved in every way. 'Favorite Prearri)tion' is the best woman's medicine I have ever taken and I expect to continue to praise it as long as I live.-MIRS. ALICE MILAM. 67 Savan- nahb St. Aniuta, Ca.:--"Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre.4riwiont r.'t'ored me to perfect health who u I lA l evUlC e a complete nervous wr:*e-. I w.su siff I wis tKt ailc to do any work, I was so weak. I could not shl p, I w:a so nervoims. nial .- appetite w.s very l|,xr. I was jut u wrt.-ek wh.'n my motlwr gave me the 'Favorite Prescription' and when I had taken about five hottles I was well and strong."-MIUS. N. L. GOODWIN, 1731 Walker St. usHeam he1 .-. N&I. Macon. C;a.:-"At the turn of life I became t*rrildy weak, ver.' nervous and run-down. Onhie of my neighbors in Ala- Nimma had I,-en e-ured of a serious :'ilmnt in DIr. Pierce's Institution in Buffalo. and I h:ad always heard Dr. Pierre's medieincs si pken of sw highly that I just made up my mind to try *Favorite 'rw.-.riptio.' Two Ioattles of this nwdieiin. l>r hon liat mne thru theeriticai lime in splendid Iwalth and cured me of the hemorrhages and reousneas. I honestly do believe I r. Pierce'a Favorite Prescription to be the very best medicine a woman can take to help her thru this critical SIprnodof life."-1MR. JENNIE C. PADGETT. 1783 Third St. Moths in Closets. Get a wide-mouthed bottle, three ounce will do, and fill it with oil of mirluine. Leave the cork out of the bottle and place It In the trunk or closet In such position that It will not tip over. The fumes are very poison- ous to insets. For a very large closet ;ue a larger bottle and larger amount of oil. Renew the oil when needed. ; Sprinkle heavy blankets, quilts, etc., The Ugyptlan engineer who built the with the oil of mirbane before pack- famou water works at Aden con- ng awa*y. trueted the masonry so well that the crviaes td a plumber ever have been s and Stae regsed. Thei e water works were C M ommoe althst and State.l bet 000 years before the Christian Masschu s R t van e and are the most celebrated ad ginia and Kentucky are officially styl- antique .i t wori. ed commonwealths, although there The word "Highgate" Is derived ftkm a gate erected over 400 years age to receive tells for the bishop of Leader. At one time all travelers who tarried at HIghgate taverns ware requled to take am oath never to eat brown bread whmle they could get ee To o .e no pa u ar rea sn ex- rept custom, as it has practically the ' -rnmnent. such as that of each state of the Union. the four using the name -ommonwenlth not differing from the others As far back us 1036 the Mas- achusetts colony was spoken of as the commonwealth. I B d more house-; tie are needed 1 STILL DOING BUSINESS 1919 Itapm mdr, and sa-idl cumaoemrs who have sed our fertilizer yar ar year, wVho Malwys adly recwnmmnd r goods &so heir idIOsm a e- r awdvosimeat Ou pories Atm always the lowest, bat vdMan QUALITY is consadem never too high. Write forl prime lir, or send order and you wall be areted rikht FWRlUZES. ISACTICIDiS. SPRAYERS. POULTRY SUPPLIES ELO. PAINTED PRFBTILIZED CO. Jackionville. Floridr PHANTOM GAVE GOOD ADVICE Apparition That Appeared to French Shepherd Was Possibly Saome Re. lation to the Leprechaun. Every Irishman can tell you about the leprechaun, the little man who dresses In red with a peaked cap, and lives In the ditches. Only one person can see him at a time. and If he does catch sight of him. must never take his eyes off for a single moment Watching him carefully, he must ruan and catch him. and If he succeeds In doing so the Leprechaun will ransom himself by leading his captor to a creek of hurled gold. At least, so runs the legend. Some years ago a French shepherd of Aveyron lost two sheep. The fol- lowing evening a figure in a black robe and with tonsured head appeared to him. and told him to look for the lost members of his flock In a cave near Altes, adding that he would there find "more than sheep." The next day the shepherd found the cave mouth exactly as described. Inside were his two sheep. Beyond. he tcame ulmon a chapel carved In the rock and containing chalices, censse, and cmandle-sticks all made of solid silver, and of very considerable value. A letter found In a ml.-al showed that the pliae had been used as a place of worship during the Reigl of Terror in 1793. The shepherd took the orna- ments to his piri.sh priest and was well rewarded for his find. How Asbestos is Produced. The finest asbestos, and the great- er part of the world's supply, comes from Quebec. Asbestos Is a fibrous mineral that can be spun and woven Into fairies as fine as silk. which are unaffected by temperatures of from 2,000 to 3,000 degrees F. It is found In layers tilling fissures in certain ser- pentine rocks. It Is believed that. when the rock was forming and still hot. water penetrated the fissures, wid- ened them and dissolved some of the silica and magnesila. On drying, these crystallized as a hydrated silicate of magnesia, forming threadlike crystals building up from opposite walls nt the fissures and meeting In the middle. No one has yet discovered how fine- ly aslhestos fibers can be split. A microscope magnifying O00 diameters revealed fibers that are estimated to be five one-millionths of an Inch thick. Facts About Lightning. We see in the papers after a severe storm that "a thunderbolt" has fallen. This and another popular superstition -namely, that there Is a protected space under a lightning conducto,- were finally dispelled by the lightning research committee's report. We now know that the so-called "thunderbolt" is a very powerful flash. which disturbs the ground like a burst- Ing shell.,-The-arion a lightalng stroke on an Insufilently protected bulldilnm may be compared to the ef- fect of a very heavy rainfall on a house which has insufficient gutters and rainwater pipes. The water, before it can escape, will probably flood the building. A single lightning rod, fxed to the chimney-shaft, will do Its part by receiving some of the flash. Read News-Record. NOT VASTLY RICH Anident Men of Wealth Just Comfortably Off. Compared With the Stupendous For- times of Today Those Old Fellows Would Have Been Considered Merely as "Pikers.& For a long time the names of Croesus, Crassus and Monte Cristo were used In co'r::i.;on to express great wealth. The two first historical fgurea represented riches In Greece and Rome and the fictitions figure of: the latter did the same for recent I times. How rich Croesus was thereot is no way of judging. The value of the treasure which he displayed to Solon: cannot be estimated. A saying ascribed to Crassus gives at least some idea of what he considered affluence. lie declared that no one could be consid-1 ered rich who could not maintain an army. This. of course, would be a great undertaking even at that period. though an army then was not in size anything like an army of today, nor was the equipment or sustenance near- ly as costly. At Pharsali, Caesar had 22,000 legionaries, 1,000 cavalry; Pom-t pey 45,000 legionarie% 7,000 cavalry. Also history records that at the time of his election to the consulate with Pompey he feasted the Roman popu- lace at 10,000 tables and gave each family corn for three months. The question which came up, how- ever, was In regard to the financial resources of Monte Cristo. Nowhere In the novel are figures given from which a complete answer can be de- rived. The prices which the count paid for his possessions and for producing his spectacular effects are frequently mentioned, but not so often that the sum total can be known. However In the very last chapter, just before Monte Cristo disappears In the East. a hint to dropped as to the wealth which Dumas had in mind as original- ly belonging to the count and what ac- cordingly he believed constituted al- most fabulous riches at that time. In almost his very last words in the book, Monte Cristo says: "You do not know all the joy which life affords with a great fortune. I possess nearly 100.- 000,000." By this, of course, he would mean francs and therefore at the end of his career of reward and vengeance the eoant had $20,000,000. When Monte Cristo arrived In Paris he had his first interview with the banker. Dan- glars, which threw the latter Into such consternation that the count had an unlimited credit He declares de- finitely that he will need for the year during which he expects to remain In Prance 6.000,000 francs, perhaps more. though he says that he scarcely ianks that he wl --eceod that amount. The Interest on 100,000,000 francs would have been about 6,000,- 000 so that really Monte Cristo ap- pears to have been living nearly with- in hisl Inome. There is little or noth- ing to Indicate that he considered or rather that Dumas considered that his famous character had In any degree Impaired his fortune. Therefore, the Inference is that the figures set by Dumas In his mid as the wealth of Monte Cristo at the beginning cannot have been very much more compara- tively than $20.000,000. That, of course, Is a goodly fortune even In these days, but nothing very remark. able and certainly not fabulous. Of course, the purchasing sower of mon- ey was considerably greater in Dumas" lifetime and his hero might be sup posed to do much more with his riches. New York's Beginnings. The first street railway In the world was the New York and Harlem read, built on the Bowery in New York city and opened for travel from Prince street to the present site of UneIon square, in November. 1832. Two horsedrawn vehicles fashioned some- what like a stage coach of the period were run over the line on the day of the opening, carrying as passengers Mayor Walter Bowne, the city coun. cllme. and other Invited guests. The affair attracted many spectators and convinced the most skeptical that the new horse cars were certain to be a great convenience. The road was ex- tended to Murray Hill In 1838 and reached the Harlem river In 1839. Fares were paid in silver sixpences of the' old Spanish currency then In circulation, and one of the road's orig- Inal features still In existence Is the old Park avenue tunnel under Murray HilL Horse cars were discontinued (t New York city on July 28., 1917, when a few oeicials of the New York Rail way company and the public service emmlssleon boarded an old car of the Bleecker street line, and took turns in driving the antiquated vehicle on ita final trip. Saby UnVept.w Billy was left alone with the baby. who was asleep while mother went to the store. When a hereturned she found Billy trvng to pacify the baby by get- ting htM every plaything In sight and drmnuing a tin pan. "What are you doing. Billy?" she cried. "No wonder baby Is crying! Why didn't you keep still and let him deepr" "I did." replied Billy in an Injured tone. "But. mother, he unslept the minute you left the house." Stely and Sanity. "Anyhow." sald the optimist. we have made the Fourth of July safe and T ," rqplied the pessimist. "but ek* are M SOW days Inthe y-r 9 I was there to make a sketch of dren's Hour like a feast. or thO her. LWibM was jSt Vr, and tiny toddlers there is a varied sbe was taig toto a ittle kn t of meu. souetinies Uneeda Biscuit women. The first wolds I brd, nilk, sometlmun- Graham Crack. I sdid qletly tae a Mear seat, w Oatmeal Crackers or Lunch Bis. "National BiasLit," recalling it. This is changed oun special antly my own tasty Ueeda L to Okl Time Sugar Cook. eou. I liked ber a"mlNeti wtons and. rarest of fortably as she poke --- lre days when we had and ear boay. e cream and Mft h those "Between the dark and daylight, ere our seems waiting and listening-for children. Slame they w things, I've give that babies. First I Lad Then, whea to toddle, I me in : no pat NATIONAL BISCUrI hrB lis t we i-a-sa uauc marc package. pereP t eem Bear. but always "t eon, en t ays dainty., a- went -n o& ei rx-faing as only Nat'-oiunlt ma. They are t lovable an itProducts can be. Duri the most tractable after they've had years when my babies were arot xina something to eat National Blcuit up we never missed the Chil- dainties always begin our Chil-dren's Hour with Its tasty feast. 0 O- .OgO. D - S WHEN YOUR HOME DEALER CANNOT SUPPLY YOU Do Your Holiday Shopping O by Mail with a Responible i Florida Firm Thousands of Good Suggestions in our Big 0 Store for all Ages o 0 Books for Every Taste Stationery in Gift Cabinets MoAGianm Stationery, Engraved Cards Pictures, Framed and Unframed . Office Accessories . o Kodaks, Kodak Supplies o Safety Razors; Ingersoll Watches Thermos Bottles and Specialties Toys, Games, Athletic Goods I Fine China, Lether, Cut Glass 1 Ivory and Basketry Novelties, Etc. g IF YOU COME TO JACKSONVILLE BE SURE AND VISIT US j o THE H. &. W. B. DREW CO. * *0 45-49 W. Bay Street .6 a~. The Meanest Man. The meanest man in the world, re- gardless of previous conclusions, is the man of our acquaintance-you know him, too-who took Vut a card In the American Society of Astronomy and now doesn't have to give excuses when he gets In at 4 a. m.-Tampa Tribune. To Renovat. Before you renovate the furniture remove all dirt and the old varnish. This Is quickly accomplished by using a warm .-iluutiun of soda and unter. Just So. S1 ve daylight as we may, night al- way arrive. in dIew time.-Boston Transcript. "Number, Please." "I spedd In numbers, for the number cam.." said Alexander Pope. But that was Wmefore the era of the telephone.- BIMLingham XOws. Powerful Dam. By rai-ing eight and a half feet the dam whi< impounds water for Bom- bay its e; :aclty was increased 10,80..- OOD.0 0 gallons. Old Rule Ignored. D!Il you ever notice how often a "gertleneu's agreement" ignores the old rule. "First catch your geatle- man?'"-Louisville Courlgr-JournaL Perfume From Phillppines. The shrub from which the French manufacture the perfume known as cassie has been found growing abhund- antly In the Philippines. N Ti mUW TIn LS? If u 0do not enjoy your meals your dligestion is felly. Eat ma#der- ately, 4,qwpally of mes, Mstlleite your food thoroughly. Let flve hour- elapse between meals and take 0oe of Cheasbertaln's Tablets Ins- meditely after spper sad yoe wWU soon find yw meals to be a rel IrJM I Offended the Herring. In the fifteenth and sixteenth cen- *urles Helgoland was a center of the North sea herring fisheries. Then the b-rring veered lack t. S4cotland's coast and the Islanders handed down a tale of the impiety by which they forfeited the boon. Yearly they would form in procession to march about the land to Invoke the coming of the Woh. One spring, hin they had gone but half the route, the herring were sighted. They aianldoned the rite and u:ade for the boats. The herring nev- er came again.-National Geographle MI:!gazlne. Only Real Peace. No peace :as 1.ver \,un from fate by subterfiuge, r aruairi-nt ; no pe:wce Is ever In store for iainy of uxdut thIat which we shall \Jin lovy victory over shame or sin-victory over the sin that opipre.s ,s% as wll as over that whlicih corrupts. -Ruskin. The H. C. L. Again. The Laundress-I'll hlave to get $2 more this week. I can't wash at the old rates. The Housewife-But you seemed satisfied when I gave you a raise last week. The Laundress-Yew'm. but furs an gasoline an' motor accsenories lIa.ve went up something terrible since then. Would Have Pleased the Queen. Mrs. Styles-II *ee It stnted that when the I~elgian king fle-. over Net York In an airplane he would no* al- low his qnua-n to fly with hiin. Mr. Syli.--That was unkind of him. for .hita really would have had the opportunity of seeing an awful lot ol women's hats. 12, 1919 qw I PERNANDNIA NEWS-REWRORDIECEMBER 12, 1919 DUGS FEARFUL AND AWFUL i 08Cm namtune tW Our ANN They Had Mofmedl aVh- nhoeaogo mdealm e Gwa toem 0ec dt ays soend meet etaelaMi Y to wear r As late f t e t 0 mth enary dried toad was Nerloy con- Wred a speP aOpf the plagu m b m article or the Mer Tak Mi bl JwraDl Dr. Willima 3me M~ glat Oantidote o da.M tlai a few oft the maehms in addg A own later ade1 s thle wan a- rums to caer. Bleshes Wasgu p-ro m e all aIn oscomn even i the th inoe o te tana or m edae, B te edena wree dy ow mn was u "- 1meItred fer. t an mthe fmou, d emt auntidote ofDme ms, ph pidmo aase dA te ased ted the ga tenlared that te arrival et 3 mo thadn 120 Ingowenti nglatnIL The tmeilac I orw thembeamU- Oder whc fItst uCoMely -13 1 o -d derived from the areal o terWom, dowa would do bears the te wscoeaid- ae a city than that t passes i sm @Tooe ue teale Itwthe fumO se a eftthan that o0 U s Is"d mm m i Petroleume Discovery. I 1850. on the 28th of August, pe treleum was discovered at Watson'm Flats. Pa.. near the head of the Alle gheny river. Edwin Drake bored the first oil well, sad before the end of the Year Drake, under the firm name ot Drake & Bowdltch, bored through the reeck at Titusville to a de: th of 74 feet and struck an oil well that yielded 1,000 gallons a day. This discovery started the enormous oil industry b northwestern Pennaylvania. Lucky Moetho According to Dr. Marcello Bolalmi .me of Italy's greatest scientists, met horn between January 1 and March 3V are stronger, taller and superior In to tdligence to those whose birthdays fat In other months. This view is born out by the researches of another Ital. ian scientist, Deela Bovere. iSgenteus Pfta. Little Dickle was vistling tais rand ma. and after lunch she spoke to bin about taking his afternoon nap. He looked shyly at her and did not speak After a short pause she again men toned his nap, and he said: "Why grandma. you wouldn't put your comr pany to bed, would you?" Wanted-Red- Blooded Men! Raiway nd SUeMt Poo& Wry- wb Arer Alvwas Ia hrat Doyg m-a-nd g Poto-Maga Prods Better Bleei--I la ainik d aA Tablte PrW (et into the red-bloodled cla If you arem utotheremw. Take few weeks' counie of Ohat splendid tonic-Pepto- Manpan and note how you Improve Iin bealtlh lid loks. Pepto-Manw is a rled-WMl maker and for sale at the drug t re right near your home. It I@ put up in both liquid and tablet form. Teke which you choose, but see ibthat UMe naieu *Ude" is 'in the package. Without *O ie"It is not PeploMaligan. It is the cr. everywhere-"Wanted -Red-Bloodu-l Men." The soldiers and msiior4 that %m the war were red- hbilded, two-isted fellows. l btusi- cm s it Is tie red-blooded man that stumnls the strain and wins the big sue- c-e,. The world has no place for the thit.-luoded weakling. It is natural, too, that red-blooded mnen and women should have more friends. and they do. They are better human heings that the thin-blooded anemicse who are likely to be *"grochy" and irritable inoit of the time. Needed Help. Rather pretty young woman Pnu small son on Clifton car. Gentleman sits opposite; stronger to lady ano. boy, but a lover of children. CultO vates acquaintance of youngster b3 means of smiles and winks. Boy re cePtive, but has not yet acquired th, art of winking with one eye-can onia) qunlat with both eyes at once. Thinks ale stranger deserves better recogni tleon; peremptorily and loudly calls om his mother for assistance. Th'ts MAiamma, wink at that man, I can't.* -Cleveland Plalndealer. A Pit Marred. "I hear that the grocer discharge, you for swindling him." remarked Macklndle to a friend. "It's a lie! said the latter. "He asked ae tq puI a lump of lead under one of the scalk" and I did so, and! then in a few da.y when he examined it he told me it leave. "Did you not fasten the lear on properly? asked Mackindle. ")Oh certainly, I fastened It right enough.' was the reply, "but It was under thb wrong side of the scale that I put it and It weighed against himself I" A Lot of 'Em. It's a queer world. If you don' think so try to count all the goo, friends who have been away on vaca tons that you haven't missed. House room needed in Fernandina NOTICE Notice ii' hereby Klven to all ComeOSmOd, that a meting of the City Council of Fez. nandlna. tl. siltIng r a l MoardOf e qilatlon Novemb erg, Sand s. 1ll. the follow. tg-deaerited property wa ra ld tot eamotast opposite tereto. Notice Is also given that a meeting of tIbeelt.v Conci will b oold eon Wednem-. I ieember 17th. 11M. at 8 p m.. at the Council h'lamber la the Ctlt Hall to bear compnanta, If any therebe, why the valuation raised by the lity Council ball not sand: Name Deser. ptson rom TO J. H. P. Morrow Estate. Improvemntaoa Lot No. 1, Block No.3 3........ $ ,40 S I .:.Be J A Smith ......... Improvement LoNa 14. s16, Block No. 18 .. 44v .4 Mr BIl'Angel ...... .. In lot No 4. block No U............... ..... ......:i., W s Rivers ......... I mprovemenataon lot No 16. block No .. 701m 41 Mr intilit ... .....improvemont. on lot No I. block No 6 ............ :Iai 0 0 J R ann ....... Improvement on lot No 9 block Nob4....... .... . A Allan ... ... Imrovennts on lot No.L block No .. ....... o r m Bhrne* ............ Improvements on lota Noo 4.6. block NoX! ... ....M 1 )h Adalis,.' l......aImprovemaentmon lot Noo, block V ............... 4 44 . (A Kiagg vA m' .. (On lot No 4. block No 3 .... ........................ m Fodlle Bros .*.... ....lnIprovementaon lot No WoftS. blo-k No g .'... Oii ,.2. A Alan ............... l I improvement on lot No I. bdork No4;#............. 6 a5 Irving rances............ Improvement on lot Nos]'o01. block No 4...... i.... mt 'hna WilltMiamn. ....... Improvements onltel No tgg of bloak No4 .... .... li. Pireto Via'nnlnghaiun ... Improvemaentson lot No 4 of S. block No 74 .... 140 I 'ha. A Vyd ..... lImpvm'lson lomNoN" of 22.'iof 4, blk No l88 Si M)* SU Sw rtn en ....... Improvementnon lot No N o -, block NoIo .la.. swo k * M:zrllaindld ilrrM ........imiprovemienta on Water Lot I No I.............. 3i01 4.0 Milgell and el iher .... I noprovemi: tsion Water e lots No ................ w i3 1 U Mirlld o...e........I.mprovementaon Water lot No2 8and Nilft. of 544 1.44, "ernn Fernantinn Packing and torw rding Co.... ...Imprvlton lotIto e. block No 2tOldTown ... ", 011rafta"MAt Name Amell Fistah Prawn Co.....$ Atlantic Fls'h & Shrimp Co... Anadeion. J W ................ Amumpra, Manuel.......... Asun sapit'O, obtainn o........ Burg*.'l B C.... ........ ...... s ll. w H .................. ....... Brown. r ............... Brm'Amin. Mag e............. Hles k. Mrj s gI .e.......... K:arte. q W .................. ol rrie I ... ................. Itarefoot. W A.. ........ attte.'Jotlnn ... ......... Baker Henry ........... carter I) ................... t'elt tlno, Joe................. Cro s Manuel ................ (TV mon.J ...................... Camldy, II J ........... ... Cubberly. i L ................ Cook. F s ..... ............... Calboun Mamie...... ....... tanburg.OJ ................... Davt sM, a M s ................ Uavis. Allen............. I *eleld sam ..... ........... Diana. Tom ................. )STDnport. A B ............ oo, elomnoxo ... ......... lOugI..M I" ................. J oeMott.Rot ........... ... 7.ilTes .o R MN.......... ... ernandina Cash Groery...... Yel eirma LA.............. "Irst National Bank ......... 'loyd. C A.... ............... rmnaandloa lumber Co....... loebler. Morris.... ........ .erandina Packing Co...... trmandln lack,. & ForOL 0 'edaske. a ..................... rodaea. M................. 'erretr.Ch, i V.............. Oatewood. ierthm ............. Orunwaid. L................... lover .Alet a ................ G(ea Iu. Joe................... Gluck, W. .................... barra, Corneia ............... arris. Ge............ ........ bernandes. F E................ au e, Jo R................. Sotbein. V H.................. 4a rvey.M B ................ Laia Go...................... Jol0eo.6John................. Aavtetlck. 0 M .............. ,--Raleid-- Kelly. The DA Ceo ......... 5.250 1 O.4 From To Kelly Broas Co. The ............ 5750 ioto l^o0 $ 6.000 KIng, H C................ ,0i l..0 1,"0 ,les Kennard. I J Jr............... IO o WI ... e rer. L A............ ...... . ...1 .... .arkwo.ra~lle.............. "5 &, o a.srre, C W.................. I, 4,0e, u0oman Re............... ..... an L.o 1.n5 hLowe, (oe .................. sO T7&m fI 1 ,oaton land `o ............ .... .. ,0it u 1 u.lvlingllon. HO .... .... .... 1Wt .2 1~n ao re, ng L E .................... .... 1It .... so soore.MC. .... ........... so o ...... ~s M iller. Titer ................. a O ) Is N Miaey. en .... .......... .... .... a o dd o m, nanuet...... ...... .... Morrow. R.................. .... .o SO loo Memick, I R .... .............. .... .. Me Donald. Rinaldo ......... .... MeDonald. Frank: ........... 2 to .... 30 McNell. Augtlne ........ ... .. SO. MeMurray. LeRoy ........... ..... Norrs.P ....................... .... . 250 Nolan.R V .................. 30 3 5 .... Noyes. Henry....... 50 Osmer. T ................... 44. .... O senjA..A ........ ............. S S 0 Otte0 vFi.J D...................... .5 So iver.F ank .................. .. ]G s0 O'NII. Mnamie ................ ....Pek.%W H .................... S o R MrsE Na m Estllto ......... Sa 7; 1.6 Hobiamon. Nick ............... 6 .a lee toMasa. L R............... ..... i0 s s "eclpoi te@ ................. I4. i.0s aoyler. Walter ............... .W 0 * 5 l.ae Sltay*.J H ................ ltO s. U,0 W So tSwearingen. J T ............ .'O eW 2 t,9 ooreonmn.* E N................. ..si 75) S00 7TS ttSims.WH ............... l. o : U, 1 2 Mi.Ms lm. Fmmons. Ur ............ .... 2W 1.00 2^01 bth Atlantic Calaing Co. 1.00 11,2 M 8- Smlpson. F E A .... .. ....... 4) Ms 2w0 HbortChris.................... 0 o tImitthHUM ................. .... .., 140.... l Seve tare Hall ........ .. ... no I .... I tbJ.J A..................... .... ,do l.s0 .w llver.Janmes.................. .... to S i 60 Underwood. J L.............. s twO SWM sO Wlliamrs.Josh ............ 5 11 uS a0 Williams. MJ ................. So a 60 WIlllams. Loas ............ So i 10 WilltamsCts ............... S. 1S O V4 Williams Joe ............. .... 10 b0s 1(Wu Williams. teve............ .... I, .Lm .. 1.m Watson, Anrthur..... ......... .. 1e 50 lO0 Wagoc. &da................. .... I|e .. 0 Wlllmh, MAnn Tonsg...... weae e% Wiaias.UGayor ............. .... 1J 40 n Yo ag Maevolest oeeot... M so .... Y oun ab................... ts 0 The Days of '40. ralifnali:a was as popular 70 years ago 1s It is 1ow, judging by an extract from a copy of a Missouri paper In the iNus.session of a Blythe (Cal.) man. dattd 1,-l9. The extra Is an adver- tisement for an auction sale. "P'ublic :tale. state of Missouri. como- ty of Pike. To whom It may concern: The undersigned will. on Tuesday. September 2., A. D. 1849, sell at pub- lic outcry for cash, on the premises. where Coon creek crosses the Old Mis- slon road, the following chattel, to- wit: Six yoke oxen with yokes atd chains; two wagons with beds, three nigger wenches, four buck niggers, I three nigger boys, two prairie plows, twenty-.ive steel tracks, one barrel pickled c(-ambage, oe hogshead tobac- co, a lot of nigg hoes, one spinning wheel. one loom. thirteen fox hounds, a lot of coon, fox and k k skins and a lot of other articles. 1 am gwlne to California. "N. B.-Gingerbread and hard elder free on the grounds." Gets 'Em on the Fly. The Wilson warbler is the champloo fly-catcher of the United States. His method of getting most of his food Is to dash out from the limb of a tree and snatch passing insects oa the wing. They catch other Insects which are flitting about or sitting on the foliage or blossoms of the trees. You will often find these little birds in ap- ple trees when in bloom. Their olive green and yellow plumage harmonies with the green leaves of the trees. The male bird has a black crown patch on the top of Its head. while on the female this cap Is greenish like the back. This bird Is found throughout the eastern United States but winters In Central America. Assyria's Great Queen. Semiramis is called the "legendary" queen of Assyria, but Babylon was an old city before Nebuchadneszar trod Its dust. Semiramis had been the wife of Omnes. general In the king's army. In the siege of Bactria she herself led a forlorn hol|e against the walls and captured It. Enchanted by her power, King Ninus resolved to make her his queen. Omnes committed suicide. At the king's death, Sentlramls ruled the kingdoml. founded Babylon, conquered I'ersia and elgypt, and made incur- sions into Indin. where In personal combat ulth King Strabobates she SVa woumhdel. She died at sixty-two, milder, terror, charmer-a great woman. The WatAh the Sun's Halo. sun's halos are good weather Many weather proverbs based upea the observation of halos are founded upon sound selentific princ- ples. Studies of the relation of halos to rainfall show that during the sum- mer months 56 to 00 per cent of all halos are followed by rain within 36 bowrs. During the winter months 70 to 75 per cent are so followed. True Poesy. True poetry, like true eloquence, is the voice of nature appealing to the heart with it& utmost sublimity and power . Instead of teaching merely, it persuades, elevates, Inspires. It excites a feeling where the other leavo an opinion or a maxim. It pro- poaes examples of Ideal excellence, and raises virtue into heroism.-Hugh Swiaton Legare. Curtaling the Time. "' cant keep my watch from gain- aC tIme," remarked the man who to always fretted about something." Can't a jeweler fix it?" "I doubt it. I begin to suspect that watch was made In one of those fac- tories where nobody thinks about any- thlag except shorter hours.* SH.- C-CI m-K "As I feel that every family should know what a splendid medicine Chamberlain's Cough Remely is, I am only too pleased to relate my ex- perience and only wish that I had known of its merits years ago," writes Mrs. Clay Fry, Ferguaon Stat- ion, Mo. "I give it to my children, when they show the slightest 'ymlp- tomes of beeing crony, and when I have a cough or cold on thlie lungs a %ery few doses will relieve ime, and by taking it for a few days I soon get rid of the cold" SNOW HOUSES QUICKLY BUILT Residence That Sat:sfies Eskimo Can Be Put Together in Something Like Six Hours. It take alnunt six hours to build a first-class winter re.idenlice in -F-kii.o, land. The material, snow cuti fioll a blank that ius li have been maiile' in ai single storm, must lie solid :andl homo- geineous, thie, yet soft (isouthl to lie easily mut with saw or snow liniff. The blocks are three or four fett hloni. two feet high and six to eight Inches thick. They are piled on onie aiihot'r., so-lt- thing like In bulihitg a brick holuwe. save that they are |litne'd to form a spiral, inclined inwardil, to formni a dilole-shalled iurture. \~Vlin tih :ii!*d the ho\,e is 10 or 12 feet high ianil 12 toi 15 feet In diameter. and hall t tie ap- peara(nce oft a hemiislph of siowv set on its flat side. An entrtiian'-,. big enough to crawl through is made one one side and on either shlde of it are, cubby-holes for the stir:age of hnlixnrt's, spare foodl. etc. A window Is 1euin the wall and covered with seals' In- testines, sewed together. These are translucent and admit d:t.llhiJt. In lieu of that a slab of elhair firsh- water Ice may be used. The ihousie Is lined with skins to prevent the wairmi air from the luside fr iom ineltinhl the snow roof. Between the skins and the wall there Is always a ianyer of cold air. There is also a suan:ill hole cult in the roof for ventilation, and to lpro- vide a draught for the f:anilly linap. On the side of lth. li'u, o1om-ite tIh entrance a liroad snow b,'.nlh is built. with a long pole for all etelg. This Is the family tied. For a mitlre-ss a thick layer of shrubs Is .-spread uiluon it and over these ni:iy d-eerskilns. Clothes, when taken off. iare r.>lleld up and put under the skins for Ipillowhs. One blanket of skins serves to Nervous? Restle at Night? Ever Have Headaches? e- Is Largest Custom House. New York I its hle l;ir- *'i <*,,o house in the world. Cost, ;t.-."t .. SKY ONLY, LIMIT FOR NEWSPAPERMEN HERE IS ONE WHO BECAME A BISHOP Rt. Rev. Charles Sumner Burch, for 0 Thirteen Years an Editor, Now One 9 of Joint Commission Directing Na- tion-Wide Campaign. Out of the noise and tension of editorial rooms, news- papermen have gone to positions strangely contrasted 1 to those they left Here is one who left the editorial desk to achieve a bishop's robes. . For 13 years he was Charles Sumner Burch, news- paper ediit,.r of K:I;nas City and Detroit. Today he is the Right Rev. Charles Sumner Burch, Episcopal Bishop i of New York. Formerly his wor.s went fro-n the typewriter to the composim,: r.,ni and so to the columns of the dailies, to ..4 help mould public opinion. N.)w they go out to the . members of the I;','iscopal Church in the Diocese of New York, and beyond, helping to inspire the Church to meet the resporsiLilities which the day of reconstruc- tion has t idt, :i it. For when t', supreme body of the Church, the trien- ricl g-'ncral convec:.ion, met recently in Detroit-the city where the Bishop of New York once turned out "copy" for the press-it appointed him to the Joint | Cor"'.-;srn wV.'ich, with the authority of the entire Church Lc!'ind it, is directing the $42,000,000 Episcopal Natio'-,\ :.e C..:npai'n by wh-:ch the Church plans to expi.;d its work irn exery fieI4 and play it, full part in building a new order o'.t of the present ch-'s. Bishop E.r :'i 3awy-peri aps .i':t t'e old "**ws sense . -the i:npor:ance of the Nation-%Viae Ca:ti aign from 4 tLz .1r Z. - "'rovide.." :7:id he, in his first pastoral address to the Diocese of New York. following. his c:.at-ion to the , bish< ':" -:..s :: I ;s. -.t the -,ri: o :.,g of our rfw ,. t!al r-.lationship, with a task worthy of our *'T1.e N %a:. .-\'1 !! C~ar; .. n is inatcr' to roach and touch t! -e ;:AJ I):r- of every: ". '. and child connected d.rectiv or re:r.-;. v. :' Church's existence. If the Clurch of C.r:-: a- to ' fast to and conserve th;e g:. t sp; it,.l ;a.:sz! o. through the heroic sacrifices w.'in ly o'trA d oy o r 16-- -. A . . ..-.. ..-... .. .- :; lime WOI?.aS Tonic Do ym es hooiwak, s 37. wers-oanftyew Inakooobdi~bam krm amy d o onS ewe CdamaI"? It thoidM elydo foryes wh omoift d mgbwm urn who esdkn" show bhelpyam bwk Ask mm left MW who hu I*= COA ohe WE u yen bow I &a -~ -'-~ WISDOM IN JUDGES CHARGE Irish Jurist Warned "Good Meu mi True" A:inst Being "ObMut- cated" by the Lawyer I Round the library fire in the Four Courts. Dublin, Irish barristers long have gathered to spin yarnms of their profession while waiting fog briefs. One of these stories was of a novel charge to a Jury given by a Gaelic judge. which Is recalled by a writer in the Irish World. as follows: *"(;.ntleinen of the jury," a judge be- gan when counsel for the defense had emcesiclted an eloquent and elaborate addre.ss. "Gentlemen of the jury, there are two courseqs. do you observe, to be adopted by counsel. The first I sim- ple eiiouih. If he has a middling case he endeavors to convince the jury. But if lie hIas no case at all. If the evidence is all one way and the gullt of the prisoner Is as plain, do you see. as the no-se on his face. and no one hut a fool or a juror could be asked to have a doubt about It. then counsel endei-.vors to obfustlecate the jury! For ,iiunsetl seeSin to think that when in- tellient mien income Into*. jury box the hang tlt their common sen. with their lits. and csats on the pegs be- Shind them." How abont your daily cup of coffee? you try a change to Inst ant Postum This delightful cereal beverage pomse:s-es a fine coffee-like fla- vor, but L'3 none of the harm- ful after--eects thru which cffee so often prevents vigor- ous, red oc.ded health. Costs less, too. Made by phma Cereal Comprny, Bante Creek, Michigan Said by C-ruocr, a"d Gemel Stain p. PLACES PLAME 01 MERCHANT Ace.Idlas te Engir Visitor, He Is Reon forI Exreme Style. AdOpd by Wemen. TIe more important question uOn deni ath the clothes question Is what sort of appeal the new audaciousw" styles are Intended to make, or do in:lke. says the Boston Transcript. Mrs. Beatrice Forbes-Robertson Hale's entertaining talk on this queUste starts off by saying frankly: "I do lot- believe that dress is based as a sez appeal." She thinks It is rather the reflction of a class appeal-the at- tempt to display wealth. After democracy had done away with man's lace cuffs, frills, wigs. vel- vet cloaks and such ostentatious lux- ury of attire It became bad form for a man to show his class by his clothes, and so he advertises his prosperity by dressing up his wife. "The modern American wife," says Mrs. Hale, "is nothing short of a shop window for her husband; ado shows off his success. I speak of the average human critter, of course, not of the Intellectual man. The cause of the In- herent snobbishness of overdress comes from aping the thoughts of the old society system of Europe. Our edu- cation In dress here in America has come from the merchant who has goods to sell; we don't know where we are today, trying to wear all the styles these merchants are willing to sell us. We do not wear flimsy ma- terials because we are trying to make a sex appeal, but because It is to the interest of the merchant to sell us something perishable." What terrible creatures these women are who think and know how to speak I The mistake was In letting them learn the alphabet! Coal's Uncertan History. The story of coal is a very eucer- tain one. No one seems to know when It first began to be used for fuel. All through the centuries it pops In and out of Enlilsh literature as something taken for granted. and when It was finally found well in the van of the great industrial expansion of a cen- tury or more ago It occasoleed no special comment. Quaint Baptsal Cuadst A pretty custom is followed at bap- tisms in Helgoland. While a palm Is being sung. a proceeml of Uttle boys and girls troop In, passing In flrot of the altar. Each child carries a panal- kin of water, the contents of which are poured into the baptismal font Home Brew. "Come on up to the house for dinner nod we'll give you some good home- nmade bread." "You have some good homemade beer, too, I supposeT" -se r I I I I |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| MILLISECOND | CLASS.METHOD | MESSAGE |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Application State validated or built |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Navigation Object created from URI query string |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | Retrieving hierarchy information |
| 0 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | Found item aggregation on local cache |
| 0 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 0 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 5 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |