4 4 •a • - ■«■ ... jin the state has depressed business but all have confidence tn the future, and that Florida will have a steady, legitimate growth from I now on. Tampa was just on .he | edge of the big hurricane last September and no damage result- ! ed here. »■■■' bòlidi lüiho ,"Í£A1 ALGIERS AWES ARABS Antedates Christianity by at Least Two Centuries. (Cmtlitri from Pace 1) I Ing bold and fixing up thing*. Tarpon Springs, 27 miles north They ara way behind the Pacific coast state« in that respect, but on the gulf, is the base of the are making- improvements. Florida sponge industry and a very in­ is working out a big road program teresting place to visit. Sponges that will be an attraction to mo­ that would not go in a washtub torists. The Old Spanish Trail is are on exhibition, as well as all sizes for commercial use. Many being rebuilt about 600 miles a- curious and novelties are also on cross the northern part of the I sale in the shops. A large open state, and a road is now under court with cells of barred doors construction that will circle around hold the separate through the southern part. There like a jail, is a private toll road circling Lake “catches” of the sponge divers, who Ochechobee and across a section go down as deep as 35 fathoms of the Everglades, coming into for the best sponges, a dangerous to Palm Beach, but no road to the occupation, sometimes having west coast across from Miami, ex- fight sharks and octopuses, while the heavy water pressure often in- cept that under construction. All permanent disability, Tampa has a tourist bureau open flicts at all times where one can register along the beaches as far south as and get information. There are St. Petersburg we saw pieces of water sponges washed desks for writing, checker and shallow -card games going on, and it is ashore, These, however, are of no generally full. “Bachman’s Million value. Billy Sunday was just finishing Dollar Band” plays every afternoon In Plant Park, where seats ac­ an engagement at Mobile, Ala., comodate several thousand people, when we passed through, as we and a splendid program is given. learned afterwards, and will open We attended the concert Sunday here the later part of this month. evening, and it was delightful to Under the caption, “Still Carry sit under the large shade treeB Insurance,” the Orlando Reporter and listen to the excellent music, Star printed the following: Mayor with the temperature just right Wall, of Tampa, opposed the lo­ ! without any wraps. We have seen' cation of the Billy Sunday taber­ no mosquitoes here and very few nacle on account that it would in­ flies. crease the fire risk. But Billy claims Business men admit that the that the men who take hie advise collapse of the real estate boom thereby avoid the fire risk. KITCHENWARE Special NEW ENOLAND WARE THREE DAYS Thursday, Friday and Saturday 5c 1 qt. Pudding Pans, l'o Qt. Milk Pans, Drinking Cup, Soup Ladle and Mixing Bowl. “V 19c Wash Basins, Lip Sauce Pans, 9” Pie Plates, 3 qt. Milk Pan, 2y2 qt. Mixing Bowls.__________ 29c 14 qt. Dish Pans, 4 qt. Pudding Pans, Wash Bas- ins, 6 qt. Milk Pans, Mixing Bowls. Mellinger Hdwe QUALITY MERCHANDISE Your Opportunity for Today ....................... The opportunity that is yours today, to be able to equip your car with Firestone Gum Dipped Tires at their present low prices, is one that you cannot afford to pass lightly by. These wonderful tires — tires that assure ex­ tra safety, comfort and economy — are selling at prices lower than at any other time in motoring history. Come in; let u» tell vou more about Firestone Tires. Our stock is complete in every size and type. rl Tires Jiresto tie Tubes CRAWFORD MOTOR CO Vernonia, Oregon ■ Paris.—A mysterious tomb, regarded with awe by the lowly. Arabs of the region, stands on the crest of a lofty hill, about fifty miles from Algiers. It is known as I.e Tombeau de la Chretlenne, the tomb of the Christian woman, although French scholars re gard It, without proof, as a Punic structure antedating the Christian era by at least two centuries. So little 1» actually known of this mausoleum that small wonder Is »cca- sfoned by the fantastic legend handed down about It In truly Oriental style throughout the countryside. The Ara^s themselves call it Khour Er Eoumia, which «leans European or Christian tombs, the use of the plural suggeFting thut they regarded It as a multiple tomb. Even their legend throws little light on the origin vf the strange edifice. The mystery that hangs about It is deepened by current Arab legends, which Imply the fixed belief that much undiscovered treasure lies burled in­ side. Al the top of the hill which rises a thousand feet «above the Mediter ranean, this extraordinary relic of au-i rlqufty rears Itself an additional 100 j fpet. The structure is a circular maanl of dresi-ed stone, at least 200 feet In j diameter. Sculptured Columns. Sixty engaged columns, sculptured} In relief and resembling the Ionic In | style, decorate the lower circumfer­ ence of rhe tambour, a drum-s! aped edifice, originally surmounted ’ v a I lofty cone of rock. At the font car­ dinal points of the compass huge false portals are sculptured. A design on each of them, resembling a great « toss . Is responsible for the present French DHiue of I he ruin. In an effort lo discover the treuswe two small tunnels were long ag< dug through the center. On one side near the summit Is a considerable depres-1 Alon made b.v Baba Mohammed Ben Othmun, pasha of Algeria, in 1776, j when lie used cannon to demolish the [ I tomb The French government has now pur a stop to the work of treasure ( hunters and other vandals and some 1 years ago restored one of the prlncl- 1 pal facades. Entrance is possible through a low and very narrow pussage which earlier excavations revealed in the substruc- 1 »lire beneath one of the false portals, | that facing the east. This entrance ( leads to a fairly spacious vaulted ! chamber whose solid stone masoned walls had apparently never horn«- dec­ orations. But the right-hand wall has ! small relief sculptures of a lion and , lioness. Directly underneath these b.is-re- i llefs another short, constricted pas- 1 sage, which has to be traversed on hands and knees, leads to seven as­ cending steps and then into a spacious and beautifully vaulted gallery built of large blocks of neatly dressed stone. This gallery, spiral In fornj, is more than 400 feet long. At the end a third passage leads first into a small I chamber and then into a larger one. This was supposed, until recently, to be rhe exact center of the monu­ ment. but it is now known that ft is somewhat off center, whether through •accident or design has not been deter­ mined. Place for Cinerary Urns. The purpose of rhe chambers is also In doubt. Nothing has been found In them or in the spiral gallery. It may be supposed that the first was a vesti­ bule to the second. In which three niches are sunk in the bare walls. It Is a further guess that the niches were Intended to hold cinerary urns. It is pu* slide (hat these supposed mortuary Chambers are blinds, like the four por­ tale. and that the real vuults lire deep In the foundations, approuclied by Vertical shafts with lioi'izootal pas- sages at the bottom. Tills manner of entombing the dead, filling up aud disguising the shafts, after each interment, corresponds with the Phoenician and Punic practices of antiquity. If this supposition be true, the totnb still guards its secret, and ■ the local Arabic tradition of the mul­ tiple tomb is not without meaning. I The builder, whoever he may have I been, chose well^the site of his last i resting place. To the north, a thou­ sand feet below, stretches the waters I of the Mediterranean ; to the south, I long green slopes reach Into the frult- I ful valley of the Mitldja. Along rhe | southern horizon the cedar bearing i Atlas mountains rear tjieir purple wail. from which clear streams de- I scend to make the valley prosperous. Plant Life It Traced to North Pole Origin I Philadelphia.—The evolution ot modern plants and of modern clirnafea began together at the North pole some six or seven million years ago. when the last of the dinosaurs were still lumbering about the earth. It con* tiuued with increasing speed through the tertiary uge, which followed, until the comparatively recent time of the glaciers. It was during this time, ac­ cording to the record of the rocks, that the plants of the earth began to show evidences of being divided Lnto growth sones Influenced by climate; until then all the earlier plants were of types such as d * jw grow in ths tropics, and they were distributed evenly over the whole earth, Indicat­ ing the prevalence of a uniformly warm climate. the moo Ung of Amotjraa ;; I tteor.v that the first temperate sone pl mt life evolved la the Polar regions. T te higher forms ef (ewerlng plants, he said, are primarily sdaptatlofib to u climate of alternating warm and cold seasons, and their final Invasion of the still uniformly warm tadplrt has been recent «nd Is a matter ot competition with the plants they found there rather than a response to a climatic urge. It Is In the tropica today that the only relies of the vegetation of an earlier world, the cycada and aiiullat plants, remain to eontast with the late- coming modern plants for a foothold. Plant fossils of tertiary age from the tropics are very Utile different from the living plants of tl>e same aeglons, whereas tertiary foaslls from the re­ gions of the earth where winter comes show evidences of radical amj rapid evolution. _________________ lts - p . v , March 3, 1927. Xt 1 b rummeu llc '.kgu'.i, . ... a thj i.> die- LiZiUi 6Uiili*d. -¡LaC ui.e.c.ij ; . 6 geo contained lu two te ¿spoonfuls ot afv cettxrd to be u mere superstition, water were converted into helium. It because of the Mchievenieut« thun Car is reasonable to believe that 200.00« recorded by science Iu the ascertufn- kllowujt hours of energy would be ment <»f radio active substance*. liberated. “for example let uh lake a lump I "It Is my honest conviction aleag of coal. Scfeuce has ascertained that scientific lines that the time Is com­ the lump is simply hu IncomprvhcA- ing. suy In about 200 yeurs, when the albij Urge number of electrical par­ energy of the atom will be so con­ ticles clustering together. centrated us to do the work of the “Now U these particles In that lump entire human race.” of coal could be liberated ami con trolled. They would provide vastly If you have anything you want more power than would be needed to to sell rent or buy, advertise in operate ail the machinery ever con­ the Eagle classified columns. structed throughout the whole world. Eagle want ads get results. SEES PUVER1Y ENDED BY ATOM Scientist Makes Glowing Pro- diction for Futur«. Philadelphia.—If foe alum nuclei, which speeds through the air at Uie rate of 1,200 miles per eeeonfi. could be separated from the electrvua. which It gather« during the Hight, and tightly packed together In one sokd uiass, the weight alone of one cubic Inch ng such matter would exceed 100.- 000.000 tons, Dr. Karl Frederick Beblissel, one of Germany's most vrn iuent scientists, touring the United States, and Incidentally attending the sessions ot tbe Aaiertcao scientists here, said In an exclusive interview. I 'The time Is not far distant, only a few hundred years. In tbe ussier in which science measures time,” said Doctor Schllssel, "when, with libera­ tion of the atom, man will forget tHt« ever was such a thing as poverty and suffering. »X USl. bi UiM For the convenience of our patrons and our­ selves we have provided ample and safe protect­ ion for money and valuables in our burglar proof vault.— As an additional factor of safety we carry at all times Holdup and burglary insurance in suf­ ficient quantities to cover any and all anticipated losses. There are many other ways that we can safe­ guard and protect your interests. Let your home bank serve vou. 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