118 
rnished by her rich and varied eee Thus t 
“a 
as Itc esassa, or, better yet, the name of 7 other river, 
the Teen tchee. But, to even up, t es that 
were e sequent white man were, in turn, impos 
to t This is evidenced, for example, b lebrated 
river 5 e, whicl doubtless the best the to e 
it from the Saint John’s River w. empties into the Atlantic 
No fewer than iwenty Christian saints, with their titles prefixed, 
4 rated xe geography of Florida S are 
T general observations were forcibly impressed on us 
during an itinerary of more than two thousand miles on land and 
over five hundred miles on water during the writer’s exploration 
in Florida in April, 1920. 
The two main magnets of this trip were middle Florida and 
peninsular Florida. Middle Florida, in a general way, is the 
part of northern Florida that lies between the Apalachicola 
River and the Suwanee. Peninsular Florida is th eat 
tongue of land which esends — and separates the Gulf 
of Mexico from the Atlantic Oce 
a 
® 
e ‘m 
plumose on account of the myriads of nascent bu Not even 
was that usual eas er of spring, the skunk- ren (Spa- 
eriee in evider 
orough w ee of the cold winter was particularly etal 
in i total lack of greenery as far south as Maryland. Even 
