![]() ![]() |
![]() |
|
UFDC Home |
myUFDC Home | Help | ![]() |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Full Citation | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Full Text | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
"THE PINE AND ITS PRODUCTS." *s WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORIr .t Published Every Friday, Devoted to the Naval Stores, Lumber and Manufacturing Interests. Adopted Sept. 12t, 1902, by the Executive Committee of the Turpentine Operators Association as its Exclusive Official Organ, and Adopted Sept. Iltm 1902. In Annual Con- vention, as an Official Organ Also of the General Association. Adopted Sept. I I th, 1903, as the only Official Organ of the Turpentine Operators' Association. Adopted April 27th. 1903, as tae Official Organ of te Inter-State Cane Growers' Association. Endorsed by the Georgia Sawmill Association. VOL 8. NO. 10. JACKSONVILLE. FLA MARCH 4. 1904. SAVANNAH. GA. $2 A YEAR. *d~ee~dee***ee dd6&eee6~eeo66eb~i i:::s SMass Meet S ting of Sawmill Men j Stock Breeders to Meet Herem Enthusiasm for the New Rules Big Convention on larch 22,23. m m m w90~;;;933 1~3~wF~303 w m wuiiiPi9;~~ As a result of the call for a mass r. A. It. W(lworth. of A. L. Brooks As has already bee nannouncedl in'- ouls of Englishmen. who take especial meeting, emanating from this office, a & (,o.. welll. Mass.. was present and thlse pages, there will Iw held in this develop such dairy farms as delight the large number of prominent manufac- gave the meeting his views, which were city on the 22d and 23d of this month pride and joy in the celebrated English turers met in the rooms of the Jack- that the dealers would handle what was a meeting of the cattle breeders of Geor- dairy farms. Let us have the best stock sonville Board of Trade on Tuesday, sent them just as yell under the new gia and Florida. So great and wide-spread the world affords. The following are the March 1. 194. The meeting was called rules as under the others. i; the interest manifested in this meeting interviews referred to: to order by Mr. Arthur G. Summer and The meeting was in fact a decided that men interested in that industry from ('apt. C. E. Garner. president of the after the call had been read, Mr. Cum- success and the resolution passed will all over the country are writing and Board of Trade: "The Jacksonville Board mer was unanimously elected chairman, doubtless have due weight with the Geor- making inquiries as to the scope of the of Trade appreciates the importance of and Mr. B. F. Ulmer secretary of the gia Interstate Sawmill Association. work proposed and expressing an inten- the coming meeting of the cattle breed- meeting. The only business before the Th'e Record is especially pleased with tion of being present on that occasion. ers. In fact the call for the meeting was meeting was a discussion of the proposed the result as the meeting was arranged The R cord has interviewed several of -tarted under the auspices of this Board. new rules and a very interesting debate ,y it, this paper being particularly anx- our citizens who have given the matter Of course the Board would not undertake ensued. Every gentleman present gave to go into the cattle business, but it his views and it became speedily evi- E tfff has always been its policy to take the dent that the meeting was in the nature initiative in every move that will redound of a love feast, as, with small minor T 4 to the tbtterment of Florida, for what- technicalities, every one was agreed in H E L E O eve"- benefits Florida benefits Jackson- the necessity for making the radical ville. We hope to have them meet in change these rules would call for. A our new building and will render them resolution was offered urging the Geor- Under Which Florida and South Georgia Saw Mill Men < very aid in our powr. but when they are gia Interstate Sawmill Association to Hope to Work in e Fuurerganized. our connection with it ceases. adopt the new rules at their next meet- H op 1o W r in e ure have for some years thought that ing and was passed unanimously. cattle would succeed timber in Florida. Among those present were A. G. Cum- The new classification will be Boards under 2 inches thick by 6 inches i \e the end of the turpentine and mer, of Cummer Lumber Company, Jack- and up wide; planks, 2 inches and up under 6 inches thick by 6 inches 1 ""Iler business here. The time is ripe to m Fake tile cattle business one of our lead- sonville, Fla.; B. F. lmer. .lacksonville. and up wide; scantling, under 6x6 to 2x2; dimensions, 6x6 and larger. nake te c e iness one of our led- Fla.; H. S. Cummings, of Rodman Lum- m inml .tries. The lands in the west ber Co., Rodman, Fla.; Samuel A Sizer, In pection--st. All lumber must be sound, well manufactured, full to have become so high in price as to pre- of Drew Lumber Co., Colum.bia, Fla.; size and saw butted, free from through splits and shakes, knotholes, cl lude their use for grazing purposes. F. E. Waymer, of Otter Creek Lumber loose and unsound knots. I l""nd at .$Y to $100 an acre is too valut- Jlde for raising cattle on. whereas there Co., Jacksonville. Fla.; Frank Payson, 2nd. A through shake is one through or connected from side to side, e millions of acres of land in tlorid Crescent City, Fla.; Dexter Hunter, edge to edge, or side to edge. on which the trees have been cut that Jacksonville, Fla.; Harold C. Weston, of to on which the trees have been cut that Weston & ville,-Fla.: C. Y. 3rd. Width and thickness of rough lumber must be counted before can hie Ioughlt for $1.25 an acre. Another tonthing, te cattle business heretofore has Herlong. of Diamond Lumber Co., Jack- dressing, in the measurement of dressed lumber, ing. hip entle business heretofor Cuhas sonville. Fla.; E. C. Long. of (;. S. Bax- i ient to Cuba. Now Cuba ter & Co., Jacksonville. Fla.; Thos. Dowl- These rules, adopted at Tifton, Ga., January 9, 1904, failed of final pas' has c;attle of her own, and better cattle ing, Live Oak, Fla.: R. L. Dowling, Live sage at Valdosta, Ga., February 12, 1904, and will be urged for passage than tho-e we shipped there. We must Oak. Fla.: A. Robinson. of Robinson &i at the next meeting to be held in Jacksonville, March 16, 1904, All therefore hunt a market for our cattle Mankin, Bayard, Fla.; J. B. Conrad, of friends of the new rules are urged to be present on that occasion. 4 in emlpetition with places having better Bond Lumber Co., (lenwood. Fla.; R. H. 4 m glradl than ours. This renders it nee- Paul, of East oCast Lumber Co., Water- g* ggggg qYYiPYiWWgWg a-sar* y to improve our grades of cattle, town. kla.; E. R. Powell. of Scotland I and al* o to improve upon the methods Mills, Jacksonville, Fla.; Fowler & Son. ions to see the wrongs of the Florida some consideration and their views are of raising cattle. Lennon, Fla.; 1. G. Christopher. Jack- and Southern (corgia sawmill men expressed below. W regret our inability i "'The bureau of Plant Industry at sonville, Fla.; E. E. WVest, West Bros., righted. to get more data from men more directly Wa\iington is co-operating with us in Levpnl, Fla.; Greer Bros., ;reer. Fla.;. A r. E. (. Harrell, of the Georgia As- engaged in the business of cattle rais- developing the cattle industry in this Levqn, Fla.; Greer Bros., (;reer. Fla.; S. da C. Richards. of R. H. Sizer & Co., New sociation, wa-s an interested listener at ing, but as they will Iws here on the 22d State. Mr. M. A. Crosby, of that Bu- York; E. A. Epping, of Taylor-Cook Lum- the meeting. and have their say then, we will try and reau. has written me that the Depart- ber Co., Brunswick, Ga.; James O'Hara. CASUAL NOTES. give it then. meant of Agriculture especially instruct- of Hodges & O'Hara, Buffalo Gap, Fla.: Dr. B. F. Camp, of B. F. & R. J. Camp, There is no doubt but that the time ei hIim to spend l considerable time dur- C. H. Tedder. of Tedder Lumber Co.. Nor- white rings Florida. arrived too late is ripe for tlw inauguration of such a ing tlle ext fe wars in studying the wood, Fla.; H. A. Hodges, of Hodges & to hear most of the discussion and so movement right n It is to l hope question of Winter Pasturage and For- O'Hara, Buffalo Gap. Fla.;. J. Kaul. of refrained from voting. that this section will in time supply age Crops in the Smothern States, and Kaul Lumber Co., Birmingham, Alabama; IMr. Coddington, of the Coddington the balance of the country with its best that he is anxious to get in touch with A. Beasley, Jr., of Stearns & Culbert Lu"mwr Company, and W. B. Stillwell, of l airy and beef cattle. We have several the leading stock men of the different Lumber Co.. Bagdad, Fla.; and J. E. Hud- the Southern Pine Co., of Georgia, were airie, but very few dairy farms. Flor- States. In fact he asked me to give him son, Hampton, Fla. (Continued on Page 9.) ida has area and material sufficient to (Continued on Page 9.) _ ____ Idd~~d~dd~~~~~Lrr~~&~&~?&a~yZ~j~ggg~,~Cg 1--f T iT -1-1-1-i-ITT O;-ITIT-7.71 I0r;P9;3;0i0+ 2 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD iett *****M t** 6*@ 4@4444 *4646 4646sadtNip!! C. B. ROGERS, PRESIDENT. W. A. GALLAHER and E. A. CHAMPLAIN, VICE-PRESIDXNTS. C. H. HODGSON, Szc, and TREAB'R. DIREC'ORS: C. B. Rogers, W. A. Gallaher, E. A. Champlain, H. A McEachern and J. A. Cranford, of Jacksonville; B. F. Bullard, Tampa; C. M. Covington, Pensacola. CONSOLIDATED GROCERY Co. PAID UP CAPITAL $500,000. Main Office and Storage Rooms, Jacksonville, Fla., with Branches in Tampa, Pensacola, Fla., and Savannah, Ga. The Consolidated Grocery Company is successor to the C. B. Rogers Company, of Jacksonville; the Florida Grocery Company, of Jacksonville; the grocery branch of Florida Naval Stores and Commission Company, of Jacksonville; the grocery branch of the Mutual Naval Stores Company, of Jacksonville; the grocery branch of the Gulf Naval Stores Company, of Tampa; the grocery branch of the Gulf Naval Stores Company, of Pensacola; the grocery branch of the West Coast Naval Stores Company, of Pensacola; the grocery branch ofthe Southern Naval Stores Company, of Savannah. Will handle everything in Heavy and Light Groceries, Grain, Pro- visions, Domestic and Imported Groceries, Turpentine Tools, etc. Shipments to all points that can be reached the cheapest through the branch stores of the Company, and prompt attention given all orders through the main office and branches. The Jacksonville Storage Rooms of the Consolidated Grocery Company Consist of onecThree-Story Building, 70x200; one two-story building. 50x390; one one-story building, 80x25C, making the largest space of any Company of the kind In the South. CONSOLIDATED GROCERY CO., * Headquarters Corner Bay and Bridge Sts., Jacksonville, Fla. SBrenches Tampa. Fla., Pensacola. Fla., and Savannah, Ga. * * 099)~~30',244~rPPP'H 10~~~30a~ THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD 8 TURPENTINE CUPS. If you expect to use the HERTY cup next season, place your orders now for future delivery. Prices and all infor- mation cheerfully furnished on CUPS, GUTTERS and all TOOLS used in the Herty system of turpen- tining. Address S CHATTANOOGA POTTERY CO., '-* DAISY, TENN. Built Upon Honor-Sold Upon Merit. CYPRESS TANKS, TUBS AND VATS. Any size, Any Shape. Our Cat- alogue for the asking. (. M. DAVIS & SON, PALATKA, FLA. ... NATIONAL ... Tank & Export Company Of SAVANNAH. GA., U. 5. A. ZINC NAILS FOR Turpentine Cups Approved by Dr. Herty. Made of a strong but soft light metal. They are the only Is/ which ill not injure saws when left in the trees. Salem Nail Co. 279 PaerIl St. New York, N. V. Also Headquarters for Galvanized and Tinned Nails, Boat Nails, Spikes, Round Iron Rods, Etc Slating and Roofing Nails, Slaters Tools, Copper Nails and Tacks. Grivot; Typewriters Dyal-Vpchurch Building, Jacksonville, Fla. All makes. For $L.oo will send you one of our best ribbons, and i dozen of our best carbons, and a catalogue of the best typewriter in the world-The Wonderful Oliver Typewriter. It writes in sight. JUST LIKE 1FI1WK M Y! Zs 21 TO TRADE WITH R. J. RILES. Railroad Watches, Diamonds and Jewelry. 225 WEST nBAY SIRET. JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA. Watch Repairing A Specialty. DID YOU KNOW thaLt the Florida Ostrich Farm ~- L- was a zoological park. where ene can see 150 fine ostriches, various wild and rare animals, or birds affording interesting entertain- I met for young and old srich WFR SEEWarm. The florida Ostrich farm The Florida Ostrich Farm, "Take Fairfield Car." JACKSONVILLE. JOHN R. YOUNG, President. J. P. WILLIAMS. C. W. SAUSSY. S. A. ALFORD, A. D. COVINGTON, Vice-President. DIRECTORS: C. S. ELLIS. B. F. BULLARD, P. L. SUTHERLAND. W. C. POWELL. J B PADGETT. WALTER RAY. J. R. YOUNG. A. D. COVINGTON. H. L. KAYTON, Secretarygand Treasurer. J. B. CHESNUTT. G. W. DEEN, RAYMONDCAY. J. L. CONOLY. Our tanks are well equipped and thoroughly enameled and are conveniently situated at the terminals of the S. A. L. and A. C. L. Railways. Our charges for storing have been revised. WRITE EITHER OF THE ABOVE FOR PARTICULARS. McMURRAY & BAKER, Saw Mill ind lTmenine Haornep. Corner Bly ud Liberty Streets. We are reivting dally up-to-date pleasure and buaness vebhles, M styles Iaprobe, whips, harness and horse furnishings, we have a nobby lne. Prke and goods In touch with all. Turpentine wagons and harness a specialty. Don't forget we can beat the world on hand- made harness. W. J. L'ENGLE. President. J. W. WADE. Vice-President. E. G. HUGHES, Sec'y and Treas. WMMURRAY & BIKL, 401 41L E. BIA ST. JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Union Naval Stores Co. PInvlu T. Christie, President Frank C. 0 rooTer. Vice-Pree. Marshall W. etwrt. 8I& ad Treaa MOBILE, ALA. PENSACOLA, FLA. NEW ORLEANS, LA. NAVAL STORES FACTORS. DEALERS IN Supplies for Turpentine Operators. Can offer at present quite a large number of desirable locations in West Florida, Alabama and Mississippi. Lib- eral advances made against consignments. Correspondence solicited. Office: MOBILE, ALABAMA. THE CHRI MltE-RoDR DRU GO. Rrt Wholesole DlgISlS cksnille, ufn. le Solicit Te hwiah lue[ TuFemmip CWisrlspft nI * *ni~~r I nr.irP~n NEtw (Pivr~uuire~r.n !nitMn Wlp Iii~ 1u 'Tn Princ 4 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD -------------t-----------------M--- 3--W--3 SJ. A. Craig (. Bro. S239 W. Bay Street EVERETT BOCK. ILeaders in Men's and Boys' Fine Cloth- ing and Up-to-Date Furnishings. Agents for Dunlap and Stetson Hats; largest stock in the City. T. MURPHY Jacksonville Machine and Iron Works ENGINEER, IRON AND BRASS FOUNDER AND MACHINIST Locomotive, Steamboat and Sawmill Machinery Made and Repaired. I Brass Castings, Phosphor-Bronze Journal Bearings. JACKSONVILLE FLORIDA. ron and Sta*** *******nd d C h******* Comy*********** " Standard Clothing Company i One Price W I O One Price 3 FASHIONABLE CLOTHIERS AND FURNISHERS, 17 and 19 West Bay Street, - Jacksonville, Florida. Stetson and Hawes Hats. Special Attention Given to Mail Orders. A~~~~~ A A A * A A A ************* * Do You Want to Sell Your Saw Mill or Tie Timber? SDo You Want to Sell your Tur- pentine Location ? f so, write us, we are In touch with many Northern, Western and Southern Millmen who want to buy. Brobston, Fendig &Co. SBrunswick, Ga. and Jacksonville, Fla. Cable Address. Florida Standard Naval Stores Company. DEALERS EXCLUSIVELY IN " i i R.OSIN AND TURPENTIN E. Jacksonville. Fla. MORTGAGES. RENTS. WILLIAM W. FRAZIER, Real Estate Broker. III W. FORSYTH STREET, JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA. ROBT. R. SIZER & COMPANY, JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Manufacturers and Shippers of Yellow Pine Lumber. Ports: Fernandina, Fla.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Brunswick, Ga.; Savannah, Ga., and principal Gulf ports. Use Southard's Code. 141 -Il l -I I lrl=-i1-r1 1 I l- r=I I; i1- 1- 1 l TI 1 I--Itl l -l-ll 1i 1:M14 11 I I "Are You Interested in Florida?- X Subscribe for the ITEM, published weekly, $1.00 a year, 50 cents for six Months. Tells about Farming and Fruit Growing in Florida. Send 10 Scents for 52-page illustrated homeseekers' number and free sample copy. . Address ITEM, San Mateo, Fla., Box 8 - To Advertisers:-If you want to reach the Florida farmer and fruft grower Advertise in the Item. No paper in the State has better filled advertising col- umns. Ask for copy and rates. :Itti 1 t t UIn -t! 1 II I III= !it 1I II 4 t i 1- 1 i- i 1 11 111 W. W. CARNES. Pres. W. C. THOMAS. Manager. C. T DUDLEY. Sec. & Tre STampa Hardware Co. 0 Wholesale Hardware STurpentine, Mill and Phosphate Supplies. SLarge Stock Council and Holmes Hacks and Pullers on Hand. N : TAMPA, LORIDA. W. H. BECKWITH. W. B. HENDERSON. G. C. WARREN. SBECKWITH, HENDERSON & WARREN. LARGE TRACTS OF TURPENTINE AND MILL LANDS. Rooms 1-2-3, First National Bank Building. TAMPA, .- FLORIDA. q~ ~ ~~~~ ----------_ .. _ S I IIIIIII 1 1 11 I II lt! I I I l i 11 1 I i 1I il 11 11 McMillan Bros. N SFlorida Cop per Works. SManufacturers of Turpentine Stills and: General Metal Workers. S Old Stills taken in exchange for new ones. Patching through the country a specialty. Orders by mail or wire will receive prompt j, attention at either of the following works: Fayetteville, N. C. Savannah. Ga. F SMobile, Alea. J. Jacksonville, Fla. I lt111111 Il il l i i l 14 111111t tii1111 tiIlif 11 il ll nII ' & & a & & & a & & & & & A THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD 5 MORE GRADES IN YELLOW PINE. This subject has been descanted upon several times heretofore in this (depart- ment, but a little episode occurred in a northern city recently that seems to give occasion for further remarks: The episode in iuest-ion was a meeting of a city council committee with certain experts in yellow pine and hardwoods. for the purpose of discussing particular- ly the subject of specification. for lum- ber wanted by city boards of works and similar corporations. It seems that the city Ibard had ad- vertised for yellow pine and other south- ern woods under specifications. The question was if under these specifications bidders could safely furnish certain well- known grades. or whether they would be obliged to bid on an uncertain grade, or whether specificationss were so indefi- nite that there would be a certain eli-- ment of risk in bidding at all. The specifications in qpestion called for the yellow pine of a certain charac- ter, it mattered not what, as that does not affect the principle of the case. With one exception, the experts stated that they would feel safe in bidding, but took occasion to state definitely that they did not consider the specifications called for any definite grade as made by sawmill men or dealers, but that they would feel obliged, when shipping. to practically make a grade to fit the spec- ifications. One expert stated that no such grades were made by the yellow pine men as were called for by the specifications un- der consideration, or, in fact, by the generality of such as made by city boards of works and many other cor- porations. While the experts, who were present at this meeting, may all of them Have been satisfied to take the risk of bidding on such specifications, it is undoubtedly true that the majority ot yellow pine manufacturers and dealers would con- sider that they must add enough to the bid to cove- a well defined amount of uncertainty as to just what ti- specifi- cations called for. It is a well known fact that. as a rule, men at the head of public works departments, or even of the lumber branch of such departments, are not, as a rule, lumbermen, but simply politic- ians, who are given the ollices as a re- ward for political work. The specifications are. tlhreforn, not made by them, they not knowing in a really practical way the chaii;acter or qualities of the lumler wanted; but, on thlu other hand. are made bv the cit\ or corporation engineers, or their assist ants and suordmlnates.wlio also are noni of them practical lumeiirnn. havin; only a theoretical or Ilsok knowledge o the subject. At the meeting referred to the iques tion was plainly asked by some of tbh city council commiitteemnen if grades cov ered by the specifications were not mad and the leading exlert among the luii be.men present frankly stated that the. were not. and that the yellow pine mel nmale only a small numlbsr of grade compared with grades of white pine. bu there was an intimation that such grade might be made. The real fact is that there is a chant for both sides to make a decided in provement in such cases as this. In tli first place, all boards of public work ling lumber should Ihave at least n(e good. ipractiil. tlorolugly c mpetent lauher expert in it, employ. without inference to Ills -ervlices ai i \1' rd hIeel cr. or iprecinct lioss. On iin oiler hanld. it might lie of advalntage- to the yellow pine Ilen tuo iiiake a; few morei grades in- tcrinediite 1ietwcen lhoiu ailrad iy manila. .li-st I why lhcy tdo not. it has thus far lu en iimpos-ible for anyl fellow to fiinlI ,mtl. Iunle-. it Ie nil idlispi.sition to take the trouble. (. . \lhitmnlre'. ill "'Dixie." Before buying an Automobile Call and Eee us. Our repair shop is the finest in the city. High class work only. u STATE AGENTS FOR THE FORD AUTOMOBILE. 'Tis the best Automobile on the market for the price. Circulars and prices on application. Polite and courteous attention to visitors. FLORIDA AUTOMOBILE CO., No. 132,134 E. Bay Street. The steamer lrolluois. Captain Wat- son,. was cleared last Friday for New York witl (65O0.000 square feet of luln- Ihr, 4.700; cro.stie-. L.4010 barrels of roin, 4.40( packages of lprovisioins and 480 packages of inistcellancous freight. FOR SALE. Spirit and large dip barrels for sale, witli or without rimns. QUlITMAN COOPERAGE CO., Quitman Ga. SALESMEN WANTED-Reliable men to carry as a side line an up-to-date line o. Advertising Fans, sold to Furniture, Hardware, Drug, Shoe and General Mer- chants. Convenient to carry. Prompt remittance. Geo. H. Jung & Co., Cincin- nati, 0. Business Directory CHARLES A. CLARK, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Sand 42 W. Forsyth St., Jacksonville, Fla Telegraph orders receive prompt atten- tion. Open always. JOHN ZAHM'B EUROPEAN HOTEL. 128 E. Bay Street. Saloon and Restaurant. Nicely Furnished Rooms. Open day and night. Bettillni's old Stand. CONOVER DRUG COMPANY. Stores Bay & Julia, Bridge & Adams Sts Send us Your Mall Orders. WE ARE PROMPT. J. 8. PINKUSSOHN CIGAR COMPANY. 51 W. Bay Street, Jacksonville, Fla. THE BEST OF EVERYTHING TO SMOKE AND CHEW The Largest Tobacconists In the South SNO FARM "'I 00 I S A GROVE OF 4e Puu j - 1 JACKSONVILLE, FLA O Je S. Schofield's Sons Company, 5 -' *Arl.*.~~a.~.s&.&.&e.eeeseeec6e~e**Oee A Ars They Are s"URN -- : GRIFFIN'S CATALOG TELLS ABOUT THEM. Twenty leading varieties of Pes Also a complete line of Fruit asd O- Snamental treas and shrubbery. SCatalogue Free. Address r THE RIFPINM IROS. Is. SJACKSONVILL.. PLA.. oe* 0O eOe @@~@ S il- 4. C C 4. I S I Headquarters for D Distiller's Pumping r Outfit. No plant complete without one. Hundreds of them in use in Georgia, J Flor-da, Alabama, Mississippi and South Carolina. Write us for particu- * lars and prices. We also manufacture *- Engines, Boilers and High * Grade Machinery, ;* as well as carry a tull and complete --stock of- Mill Supplies, Pipe, Boiler Tubes, Etc. S Advise your wants. SMacon, - Georgia. A Leadl SpecIalty of al lels of TIk Wrki for Tr letbe Steras Plmes 000* 0 os goille 000 e-Qefre 9eO59eY5 C0e#5959 sorecsdof things Oio 'he %aps will bc. laro e- an d the hapteelo of th sp eicrt a n dus- r.. th nts with pleasure. Smer wnt'WLL-rtSERVUn soniCCes. nIwl JaeLao.ville the Han e of on r tOf H S iAmerotea. Ladingo Trrade Journalmei. n' The We-kly Industrial Record of Jack- Flor sonville and Savannah has taken Its place A among the leading trade journals In the r United States, and as an authority on lum- ber and naval stores It Is being quoted not R only by the best and most carefully edited m class papers in this country, but by those Is in Europe also A London trade paper for reaching this omice yesterday gives liberal a fe space to the Record's views on market con- fve d41tlons. lot 1 This week's Issue of the Industrial Rec- "an ord is even better than usual, and It Is Th a strong and entertaining general Indus- trial trial newspaper. In addition to Its value Hi, as the champion of the two specific Indus- v.- tries It represents. It Is brimful of new Johr. Mtortes of development In the Southeast. plait among them being the story of a half-mill- fend lon-dollar corporation organized in Jack- Gi monville yesterday, and the organization of H. I several other b4g corporations during the and week In Georgia. and Florida. W* It has set the pace for enterprise, and it Walt well deserves the great measure of success wick It il receiving, both In Its subscription and advertising departments.carrying as It does. perhaps, one of the largest advertlidng pat- ronages given to any of the Southern tray r lJoernals. C m SBATr O A. J. LAINIXI/S In -ltnes. whor This Stl toedri 6 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD Special Notice. Spirits and Rosin are on a Boom, and so Arc McMILLAN BROTHERS' Celebrated Stills and Fixtures. Every operator that has used one made by us realize a saving from a gallon to a gallon and a half of spirits to a barrel of gum, to say nothing of the improved grade in rosin made by using our large, rapid condensing worm and smooth boiling kettle, which heat uniformly and generate the steam in a manner that no spirits are allowed to dry up before reaching the condenser. Twenty (20) outfits shipped last month, but a full stock left to select from. Write for full particulars and place your order with this reliable firm and save annoyance and loss by negligence and delays. Repair work through the country a specialty. McMILLAN BROTHERS' SOUTHERN COPPER WORKS, SAVANNAH, GA. J ACKSONVILLE. FLA. MOBILE, ALA. FAYETTEVILLE, N C. When you Visit Jacksonville Call to see the Record and be at home. Tell the Record all you know, that will Interest others. If you want to buy or sell advertise your place. If you owe the Record pay the bill. If you don't owe the Record make a bill. Order your Printed Stationery. Be sure and give the order for your Commissary Checks. Call on the Secretary of the T. O. A. Call at the Industrial Record Office. & P. HOLMES & CO.'S WEEKLY STOCK LETTER. Almost nothing can be said about the week's stock market. Its tone was firm. Quotations have been rising for three successive days, and yet, adding up the advances of the majority and deducting the accumulative declines of the minor- ity. the average is not changed 1 per cent. The market has been technically oversold, but the troublesome short in- terest is wholly in the room. As things have been running for a month and a half three days tendency in one direction or the other is about all the market will stad. Hence no one should be surprised if the tone should be soft for a few days on the usual petty volume of business. Tne buying of stocks, which has created a firmness of tone, was almost entirely short covering. It is a well-known fact that a very considerable number of room traders, imbued with the idea that the Northern Securities decision will be un- favorable, put out short lines of stock at the end of each week on the chance that the decision may come down. This has been done at least a half-dozen times. By Monday noon, where there was no longer a chance of a decision coming that day, the lines of stock are generally cov- ered. There is absolutely nothing to indicate when the decision will be handed down. The United States Supreme Court is tra- ditionally slow. It takes ample time to consider every point. The fact that last .week it cleaned up a large number of minor cases, indicated nothing whatever. It may be that the court is now devot- ings its entire attention to the Northern Securities case, but there is nothing to show it, and absolutely nothing official to indicate a divided court or difference of opinion. The ease in the money market, and the poor demand for bonds do not ac- cord well, but as a matter of fact the bond trade has seldom been good with money under 2 per cent. Among the news items was one that all trunk lines are shading grain freights to offset the differential in favor of Phil- adelphia. This follows great open cuts all around. Early in the morning an ar- ticle was given in great detail, showing that grain and sugar was beig carried everywhere between the Missouri river and the Mississippi river, Chicago and St. Paul. at from one-third t otwo-fifths of the normal tariff. It was demonstrat- ed two days ago that the week's gross earnings of the Chicago Great Western, for example, showed an increase as com- pared with last year. Yet grain receipts at distributing centers have fallen off materially. Absolutely opposed to this, comes the statement that the last week has developed only a slight improvement of congested conditions of roads operat- ing east from Chicago and St. Louis. All of the various lines, this statement adds, are still short of cars. Orders call for several thousand more than can be furnished from day to day. The reas- onable inference is that some one is ly- ing, or that rates are cut for the fun of the thing at a time when railroads are short of cars by the thousand every day. The steamer Seminole, Captain Staples for Boston, with 500,000 square feet of lumber, 3,000 cross-ties, 2,400 bales of shingles, 750 packages of naval stores, 1,200packages of miscellaneous freight. would be that such an aggregation of talent wolud be quietly ignored by the press; a thing that would hurt their vanity not a little. The Record believes the resolution was offered in a moment of temporary for- getfulness and regrets to add that it has failed to secure the secretary's 0. K. to this report. This paper, any way, pre- fers to print what it pleases and when it chooses. No meeting that means to benefit any part of a community can afford to try star-chamber methods. FERNANDINA'S SHIPMENTS. Some Large Cargoes Were Shipped Last Month. The Shipments from Fernandina, Flor- ida, during the month of February were 11.142,053 feet of lumber, 137,564 cross- ties, 9,520 tons of phosphate, 55,713 bar- rels of rosin, 340 casks of turpentine, 635 sacks distillers' grain, 2,690 sacks oil cake, 200 barrels crude soap, 40 bales of cotton. 12 cases palmetto leaves, and 284 cedar logs. The exports foreign amounted to $583.742.13 in value, and coastwise shipments to $204,239.20. Among the large cargoes of the month was 34.000 crossties on the five-master. .Ias. W. Paul, Jr., equivalent to 1,330,000 feet of lmlber. The most valuable cargo was that of the steamer Palatina, which carried nav- al stores to the value of $183.100. The approach of the equinoctial sea- son is having its effect on securing char- ters. and fewer than usual are announced for next monthly. The British schooner Annie M. Carter. Captain Carter. for St. George. Granada. It. \V. I., with 34.500 feet of lumber. THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD Sam'l P. Holmes& Co. The Exports of Turpentine and Rosin. (Compiled From Government Official Reports.) (Members New York Cotton Exchange) SPIRITS OF TURPENTINE. R.OSINS. Stocks, Bonds, Cotton, To United Kingdom, in gallons: To United Kingdom, barrels 280 Month 1903-04 1902-03 1901-02 Month 1903-04 1902-03 Grain and Provisions. April.. ... ... 196,681 186,128 366,346 April ........ 79,243 55,387 May ........ 60,315 63,222 1,183,364 May ........ 60,315 63,222 Correspondents Miller & Co., June ...... .. 795,037 1,480,186 1,562,550 June ........ 60,748 67,542 100 Broadway, New York. July .. .... .. 973,759 289,934 1,530,070 July ........ 82,948 59,235 August.. .. ....968,890 1,767,874 August ...... 74,649 62,613 SNew York Stock Exchange, September..... 773,211 646,257 909,700 Septembr.... 98,471 42,8M New York Cotton Exchange, October .. ...... 711,434 498,240 1,059,89; October ...... 46,641 41,034 Members jNew Orleans Cotton Exchge,' Chicago Board of Trade. To Belgium and Netherlands, in gallons: To Belgium and Netherlands, bI Direct private wires to all exchanges. Month 1903-04 1902-03 1901-02 Month 1903-0 1902-0 Local stocks and bonds a specialty. April ...... .. 286,812 90,447 Included April ....... 16,709 53,015 Bell Phone 853 Baldwin Block May .... .. .. 23,706 51,513in all other May .. .. .. .... 23,706 51,51 June........... 507,693 267,210 Europe June ...... ..35,866 53,67 July ...... .. 576.188 819,217 869.388 July ........ 26,646 19,647 A WARNING. August........ 489,387 358,490 August .. .. 43035 47.2 September.. .. 265455 758,201 438,621 September..... 45,323 10,819 Just as thle sawmill men's mass meet- October ...... 30,914 210,001 121,480 October ...... 37,131 64,408 ing was adjourning and everybody want- O to erma0, in ---- ed to go to dinner, a gentleman present, To Germany, in galon: To Germany, barrels 280 lbs. ed to o to n er, a gentlean present, iMonth 1903-04 1902-03 101-0 Month 1903-04 1692-03 with a fondness for medieval methods April .. .. ........... 114,034 112,533 April .. ...... 40,568 37,844 and possibly of Russian or German an- May ... ... 33,283 68,436 230,056 May ...... .. 33,283 68,4 June .. .. .. .. 104,000 331,672 40,042 June 41,64 49632 ct-try, offered a resolution that no news- Juy .. ......100 3, 78,78 June .. .. 41,564 3874 July.368,116 180.412 78,787 July .. .. ......100,5 24,874 paper man should print a report of the i August .... .. 5.1,856 578,437 August ...... 178834 S4,21 meeting without having first submitted September.. 226,950 566.981 713,967 September.. .. 10,157 96,468 October ......257,316 91,644 148,597 October ...... 82,756 38,654 it to. the secretary for approval. It was passed in a hurry, without any- To all other Europe in Gallons: To all other Europe, barrels 280 1 Month 1903-04 1902-3 101-42 Month 103-04 16908 body realizing its importance, and it is April ........ .. 510 18,475 260065 April ........ 35,848 30,14 hardly necessary to add that no press May.......... 58,068 31,047 574,311 May ...... .. 27,102 40,721 man present obeyed the resolution. June ....... 145,a 1.000 6941a 8 June.......... 14,044 9682 July ......... 65,000 124,24 48,462 July ........ 45,513 51,61 If people nowadays hold meetings to August .. .. .... 2,000 2,500 August...... 8,85 30,119 discuss matters of public interest, they September.... 43,36 38,040 21,000 September.... 27,404 17,36 must expect to be reported. October ...... 10,000 42,832 17,050 October ...... 34,480 15,442 must expect to be reported. No writer, worth any respect for his Total Foreign Exports, in gallons, includ- Total Exports of Rosin, barrels 28 paper or himself, would submit to such Ing everything outside of the United Including Asia, Africa and Ame States: side of the United States: a rule. A censorship may be necessary Month 1903-04 1902-03 101-02 Month 1903-04 19-082 in time of war; it is quite often that April ........ 514,088 555,815 946,676 April ........ 19681 1818 a reporter will, when requested and not May ... .. 198,782 0 20144 2680 May ...... 198 20,144 June.. ........1,838,000 2,223,253 2,947,821 June........ 178,269 210,08 ordered, suppress information that might July .. .. .. ..2,181,803 1,651,015 2,493,849 July .. .. .. .. 30580 187,192 damage someone, but it is absurd to try August ...... 1,734,153 2,906,458 August .. ... 239,116 22,632 September.... .1,474,145 2,154,565 2,24,980 September.. 333,850 23303 to muzzle the press. The only result October ...... 1,480,261 1,002,897 1627,32 October .... .. 20083 37 Course of the Savannah Naval Stores Markets, SPIRITS OF TURPENTINE Apr. 1 Apr. 3 Apr. 10 Apr. 17 Apr. 24 May 1 May 8 May 15 May 2 Mar 0 ND ND 50 0 47 45 4I-2 461-2 41-2 4t June 6 June 12 June 19 June 26 July 3 July 10 July 17 July 24 July 31 Aug. 6 45 3-4 4 47 47 47% 47 3-4 48 50 G0 0 Aug. 14 Aug. 21 Aug. 27 Sept. 4 Sept. 11 Sept 18 Sept. 5 Oct. 2 Oct. 8 Oct. 1 52%-53 5% 53% 56% 54 3-4 57 ND 56 57 1-4 1-20 1-4 Oct. 22. Oct. 21, Nov. 6, Nov. 19, Nov. 5, Dec. 3, Dec. 10, Dec. 17, Dec. 31. Jan. 14 56 561-2 6 56 56 56 56 561-4 56 1-4 631-2-64 Jan. 22, Jan. 28, Feby. 11, Feb. 18,Feby. 25, (I5 b, 64 62 60. ROSINS WW WG N M K I H G F E D C-A April 1. . ...3.90 $3.60 3.50 $3.40 $3.20 2.85 2.40 2.20 2.10 2.0 2.0 215 April 3 . ..... 3.75 3.60 3.50 3.40 3.20 285 2.40 2.29 2.10 205 2.05 2. April 10 . . 3.60 3.45 3.35 3.20 3.00 2.85 240 2.10 2.06 2.00 2.00 2.0 April 17 . . ..50 3.35 3.25 3.15 3.00 2.85 240 206 2.00 1.96 1.35 L9 April 24. .... 3.40 3.25 3.15 3.10 3.00 2.85 2.25 2.06 2.00 1.95 1.5 1.9 May 1. ..... 3.35 3.25 3.15 3.10 3.00 2.85 2.26 185 1.80 1.75 1.75 1.75 May 8..... .. .3.35 3.25 3.15 3.10 3.00 2.85 2.25 1.80 1.75 1.70 170 1.70 May 15 . . .3.47% 3.27% 3.17% 3.12% 3.02% 2.87% 2.27% 1.80 1.75 1.70 1.70 1.70 May 22 .... .3.65 3.35 3.25 .20 3.10 3.00 2.35 1.75 1.70 1.66 1.66 1.00 May 29. ...... 3.65 3.35 3.25 3.20 3.10 3.05 2.40 1.85 1.80 1.75 1.70 1.70 June 5 .... 3.60 3.30 3.20 315 3.06 3.00 2.40 1.90 1.85 1.80 1.80 175 June 12. ..... .3.40 3.10 3.00 2.95 2.85 2.80 2.30 1.90 1.85 1.80 1.75 1.70 June 19...... 3.30 3.10 3.00 2.95 2.85 2.70 2.25 1.75 1.70 1.65 1.60 1.56 June 26 . .. 3.30 3.10 3.00 2.95 2.85 2.65 2.25 1.70 1.66 1.60 1.56 1.55 July 3 . . 3.30 3.10 3.00 2.90 2.80 2.65 2.25 .80 1.75 1.70 1.65 1.60 July 10 ..... 330 3.10 300 2.90 2 2.65 2.26 1.b0 1.75 1.70 1.65 1.60 July 17 . . 3.40 3.20 3.10 3.00 2.90 2.75 2.30 1. 1.70 1.0 1.60 1.60 July 24 . . 3.45 3.26 3.10 3.00 2.90 2.75 2.30 1.86 1.75 1.70 1.66 1.5 July 31 . . 3.40 3.20 3.05 2.5 2.85 2.70 2.20 1.75 1.65 1.60 1.55 1.6 August 7 . 3.40 3.2 3.06 2.95 2.85 70 2.0 1.7 1.6 1.60 1.5 1.55 August 14. . 3.50 3.30 3.15 3.05 2.95 2.80 2.30 1.85 1.75 1.70 1.70 170 August 21 . . 3.50 3.30 3.15 3.05 2.95 2.0 2.30 1.85 1.75 1.70 1.70 1.70 August 28. .... 3.70 3.50 3.5 3.15 3.10 2.90 2.40 2.00 1.90 1.85 1.80 1.8 September 4. . 3.70 3.50 2.40 3.30 3.30 3.00 2.50 2.15 2.05 2.00 1.90 1.5 September U . 3.80 3.65 3.50 3.45 3.40 3.10 2.50 2.05 1.95 1.90 1.85 1.76 September 18 . 3.90 3.75 3.60 3.00 3.45 3.20 2.60 2.15 2.05 2.00 1.95 1.80 September . 4.25 4.10 3.95 3.95 270 3.35 2.5 2.30 2.20 2.10 2.00 1.M October 2 .. 4.4 4.40 4.35 4.30 4.15 3.50 2.70 2.45 2.30 2.20 2.05 1.90 October 8 ...... 4.70 4.40 4.35 4.25 4.10 3.50 2.70 2.56 2.40 2.30 2.05 1.M October 16 .. .. ..4.45 4.40 4.20 4.00 3.85 3.25 2.70 2.55 2.50 235 2.25 2.1 October 22 .... ..4.20 3.90 3.80 3.80 3.15 3.05 2.60 2.45 2.40 2.35 2.5 .15 October 29 .... ....4.20 3.90 3.60 3.30 3.00 2.70 2.60 2.65 2.50 2.35 2. 2.15 November 6 .... ..3.90 3.30 3.10 2.90 2.80 2.70 2.60 2.55 2.50 2.35 230 2.0 November 13 ......3.50 3.25 3.10 2.90 2.80 2.70 2.35 2.30 2.25 2.10 2.0 2.05 November 19 .. .... 3.60 3.5 3.20 3.00 2.90 2.70 2.45 2.45 2.35 2.5 2.15 2.15 November 2 .. .. 3.50 3.25 3.10 2.90 2.80 2.60 2.40 2.30 2.20 2.10 2.10 .10 December 3 .... 3.50 3.25 3.05 2.90 2.80 2.55 2.35 2.30 2.20 2.15 2.16 2.15 December 17 .... 3.50 3.25 3.00 2.90 2.80 2.55 2.35 2.25 2.20 2.20 2.20 2.20 December 10 .... 3.50 3.25 3.05 2.90 2.80 2.55 2.35 2.30 2.20 2.20 2.20 2.0 December 31 ....3.55 3.30 3.10 2.96 2.85 2.60 2.40 2.30 2.25 2.25 2.25 2. January 14 ....4.00 3.60 3.15 3.15 3.95 3.00 2.95 2.80 2.70 2.65 2.50 2.50 January 22 .... 4.50 4.10 3.96 3.90 3.15 3.10 2.90 2.70 2.65 2.60 2.4 2.4 January 28 ... 4.50 4.10 3.95 3.90 3.25 3.30 3.15 2.90 2.85 2.85 2.75 2.75 February 11 ..3.75 3.45 3..35 3.30 3.25 3.20 2.S5 2.5 2 2.70 2.75 2.70 2.70 February 18 ... 3.i5 :..45 3.35 3.30 3.25 3.05 2.70 2.70 2.65 2.60 2.55 2.55 February 25 ...3.70 3.50 3.35 3.20 3.25 2.95 3.60 2.55 2.50 2.45 2.40 2.40 lbs: IM-, 61,85 .t510 SM.57 arrela 80 Included in all other Europe 4,271 34M,7T X.019 1US- Wan alm7 36.8 6.73 be: ,1,T6 MUN 16.M 0 pounds, rlca out- 131-1 SMI 12,10 8 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD The Bond (L Bours Co. WHOLESALE @ RETAIL HARDWARE Sash, Doors, Blinds. Paints. Oils and Glass. Stoves, Tinware, Country-Holloware. 10 WEST BAY STREET Jacksonville. Fla. "The" PAINT STORE, I. E. BAIRD f1 CO.. Jacksonville, Fla, lall paper, pictures, frames, painting and all interior and exzrior decorating. Hardware, glass, etc. If you are building a fine home, get Baird & Co. to do toe decorating that it may be in keeping with the building. Oldest and most ex- perienced house in Florida. BETTELINI'S SPECIALTY. I will send by express, prepaid, the following: Four full quarts Lincoln County, Sunnybrook Rye or Big Horn Rye .. $4.00 Single Bottles .................................................................. $1.2 I will send four full quarts of Somers' Corn, Melwood Rye, Golden Wed- ding Rye, Holland Gin, Tom Gin, Peach Brandy, Peach and Honey Whiskey, Gin and Manhattan Cocktails-any of the above for........ $3.00 One bottle of any of the above ........................ ... .................... $1 00 Four bottles of the following California Wines: Sherry, Port, Muscat, Catawba ........................................................................... $2.00 Single bottles .................................................................. . Five bottles Duffy's Malt ...................................................... 5.00 Single bottles ...................................................................... 25 Four bottles Wilson Whiskey, cased........................................... (600 Single bottles ........................................................ ..... $1. Bulk goods of all kinds. Special Prices on application. All kinds of liquors in jugs from $1.50 to $1.00, f. o. b. Jacksonville. F. BETTELINI. W Bay St, opp. Union Depot, Jacksonville, Fla The Larg st and Oldat Coppr Works in Georgia. M. A. BAKER, Inventor ad Manufacturer of the Baker Improved Seemless Turpen- P tine stills. Write me for prices and outfitl F. O. B- any point in Georgia, Flor- Idsa Alabama or Mississippi. Als itill. sold urder a guarantee. SJob work through the country a specialty. I3runswick, Ga. SMy specialty is large worms and heavy bottoms that do not leak. J. P. Williams, President. ST. A. Jenning 2nd Vice-Preldent. H. L. Kayton Secretary. J. A. 0. Carson, lt Vle-Pr~-le J. F. DuEsnbry, rd Vils-Pres. D. G. White Treasurer. J. P. WILIAr COMPANY, Naval Stores Factors and Wholesale Grocers. Branches Columbus, Ga. Jacksonville, Fla. Main Office Savannah, Ga. ,O***********0 4-:--:-.-:,:f-?t ,b,** .**** ****** SYou Want a Turpentine Location? You Want a Sawmill Location? I *You Want any Kind of Florida Land? * You Mean Business? t Cal on or write to * J. H. LIVINGSTON & SONS, * Ocala, Florida * "-9 C O O *""0--.-.--*-:.4,-M44*.< 4-# # # # # t #*$g g ; s Wanted and For Sale DEPARTMENT. Advertisements will be Inserted in Tils Department at the Following Rates: FIor one eek. cents a line. FFor t w, weeks, - 35 centsa line. F,,r three weeks, - cents a line. For four weeks, - cents a line. Nine words of ordinary length make one line. Heading counts as two lines. No display except the headings can he admitted. Remittances to accompany the order. No extra charge for copies of paper containinLa advertisement. Colp must be in this office not later than Thursday jiornintg to secure insertion in Friday's paper. Turpentine Men, Buy a Blakeslee Gasoline Pump- ing Outfit for your still. No. 1 outfit pumps 2000 gallons per hour at a cost of 3 cents and requires no at- tention while running. Started in one minute. Locomotives, Cars, Steam Shovels Four Standard Gauge Passenger Cars for sale or lease. T ti St A -A W THE Bethune Apparatus. The New Process. ou.ruo ves olllu u u or arrow Extracts the spirts without destroying tbe Gauge. wood fibre. Runs out a charge in less than The Cncinnati Equipment Co. twenty-four hours. Makes from twenty to Works: Cullom Sta. CINCINNATI, 0. forty-five gallons from cord of wood. Makes pure water white spirits, free from FOR SALE.-300 tons of 601-2-lb. steel re- the odor of tar or creosote. No chemicals laying rails, with angle bars, Alabama and used in refining the spirits. Needs to be Georgia delivery. 900 tons 70-lb. steel relay- distilled only once after coming from re- ing rails, with angle bars, Ohio delivery, tort. 500 tons 48-lb. seel relaying rails, with No trouble with bi-products, the spirits angle bars, Ohio delivery. 900 tons 56-lb. pronounced to be far the finest ever pro- steel relaying rails, with angle bars, West duced and from wood. Only one grade Virginia and Eastern and Southern deliv- of spirits produced and that the highest.. ery. 500 tons 63-lb. steel relaying rails, with angle bars. Northern delivery. 158 ABSOLUTELY NO DANGER FROM FIRE tons 58-lb. steel relaying rails, with angle bars, Northern delivery. 500 tons 60-b. Built of finest material by high-grade bars Norhendliveyw orkmen. The cheapest machine offered to steel relaying rails, with angle bars, South- torkmen. The cheapest machine o eto ern delivery. ISAAC JOSEPH IRON COMPANY We challenge comparison of output and Cincinnati, Ohio. quality of product. We guarantee output and quality. S Wat For full particulars, prices, samples, Wanted to Buy Location. etc., address-- Wanted to buy a turpentine lo- The rise Bdt CostKctim Compmy cation in operation, with plenty of P. Box M RALEIGH, N. C. round timber to back it. Address Naval Stores Manufacturing Co , Jacksonville, Fla. [ 110 l BP1 U. BUILDER AND DJaLIUM Io H. ROBINSON Pres. H. GAILLARD. Cashier W. B. OWEN. Vice-Pres. Commercial Bank, State Depository. BnANCH0S; Ocala. Fla.. Lake City. Fla Jacksonville, -- Florida. EN INES BOILERS. Notice. Cotton, Saw, Fertlier, Oi ad les M Notice. ehlnery, and BuppUee and Repara. The Holmes Company of Hawkins- CAPACITY FOR M HAND. ville, Ga., will on or about March 1st open Machine Tools, Wood-Worka Maclt a cooper shop at Gainesville, Fla., for Grr. Bhattinr Pulleys, HIage LAthm the manufacture of turpentine barrels. and Rubber BeltiBn and Hos. Rlread These barrels will be first-class in every and Mn smapldes anm T0s m particular, and this company will main- Plans and estlmatee frnidheds oe Plants and Steel Bridgen. tain at Gainesville the reputation for Steam Pumps Feed Water Iesite -= making good spirit barrels that they Holting Rntoes. have earned at Hawkinsville. Orders for barrels sent to this company at AUGUSTA. GA. Gainesville, or to the Union Cxoperage -- and Supply Company at Jacksonville, Fla., will receive prompt attention. TUPELO WAFER TANIS Equal to Cypress and 20 per cent cheaper. For delivered prices write A2 Your Herd! Telo Tlk ..,,3'uett.. You can find it among our Shorthorn or Here- fordbulls. The choice of breeding and rare in- MULES, HORSES AND MULES.-We dividuality. Ready for service, and will price hive E - them right. Will hold our spring auction about have at all times at our stables in Mar- April 1 .ianna turpentine mules and horses that PALMETTO PARK FARM, i suit the boys. We buy our stock in the Z C CHAMBLIsS&CO, Blue Grass States and are more adapted Ocala, Fa. when ready to go to steady work. We will unload carload of big mules and horses It you are thinkle f o.f buyin a in DeFunlak Springs next Tuesday. Jan. place, selling the one you have. or 26 fo trading If you are thinking of I 6, for one day only; also one car here. vestinta In ly IndMatrys If you wan Hoping to hear from you. to buy machinery of any Iad. dres the Idmtrial Record, a po l Yours respectfully, telllng of your wants. DILLON & PENUEL, Marianna, Fla. THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD 9 SOUTH ATLANTIC CAR & MFG. COMPANY Waycross, Ga. MANUFACTURERS OF Freight and Caboose Cars, Brass and Gray Iron Castings. CAPACITY: TEN CARS PER DAY. Located in the heart of the Lumber District gives us advan- tage of choicest material at lowest cost- MASS MEETING SAWMILL MEN. ienlts. Their efforts have converted the with a similar success. Did you know Continued from Payre 1. gun into millions of dollars in gold. that if you should draw a curved line * in the city, but presumably did not ar- "A.nd the turpentine men of to-day on the map of the United States that rive in time to attend. will probably he the cattle man ten years represented a distance of eleven hundred The committee appointed to consider hence. By that time most of the tur- miles from Jacksonville. using Jackson- the Gulf Coast Rules at the last meet- pentine will Iw gone, and he must hunt ville as a center, that you would in- ing of the Georgia Sawmill Association, some industry to occupy his time to take elude within it 85 lwr cent of the total were to have held a meeting. With only its place. In fact that is being done lH)pulation of this country? Well, it is! three members, Dr. B. F. Camp, W. B. already. I hazard the assertion that true. Jacksonville is nearer the center Stillwell and R. H. Paul being present, at least twenty-five per cent of the tur- of this population than any of the no action was taken, pentine and lumber men in this section Northern Atlantic Coast cities. Where Col. W. S. West, of Valdosta, was un- are cattlemen also. They already see do the Armour people bring their beef avoidably absent on account of a prev- the handwriting on the wall. One of from that comes to Jacksonville? The ious engagement in Atlanta. Several let- tle leading turpentine men here is also impression is that it comes from Chica- ters from lumbermen invited were read, one of the leading stockfarmers. go. Mistake. It comes from Texas. But all speaking in favor of a change. "It is a funny proposition, but a true as one of the outcomes om the coming This meeting was better attended one that our lands are worth more with cattle-breeders' convention, I expect to than any Association meeting has been the timber off as grazing lands than be- see within a few years Florida sending beef to Chicago. The impression is prev- lately, but the effect of such a positive fore the timber was cut. People from aent that the high price of beef is due demand for a change in the rules, will the North bought thousands of acres of to the beef trust. Another mistake. make the next Association meeting to land from our people, who are now sell- It is due to the fact that the cattle be held in Jacksonville. March 16, 1904, ing them back to our people again, ranges of the West are rapidly giving the best attended meeting on record. "The period of intensive farming will way to the small farms. The cattle- not come for some years yet, meanwhile men are more and more circumscribed STOCK BREEDERS WILL MEET. the stockmen will put in those easily year after year, and therefore cannot i (Continued from page 1.) raised crops that cattle like best, such c n the address of several of them, and I as the velvet ean and cassava. These p t un e as many cattle nor as cheaply as have done so. I have invited Mr. Cros- ow easilyut little cul they did a few years ago. It costs now I by to be with us on the 22d and address tivation. from five to six cents a pound to raise the meeting. Later he proposes to ar- "'.The meeting of the cattle breeders' their cattle, selling on the hoof. In Flor- range with some of the cattlemen for association in this city on the 22d inst. idla we will be able to sell them at less experimental work along the line of pas- will mark n era in the development and ts on the hoof, and make mon- turage, etc. Progress of this State. There will be! "There will be a good crowd here, and Pac I know but little o the t at tht meeting gentlemen who ,,many important uetions will be solved, cattle business, but I have made it my have made a study of cattle grazing ,on g them how s to improve their business to talk with men who do, and and cattle raising in Florida, who will r g o cattle wat kinmpr do best among them I cill mention Dr. H. T best among them I will mention Dr. H. T. open the eyes of those attending. You in Florida, improved methods of raising' Lykes, of Hillsborough, who only a short ,a k for some startling facts. and caring for the cattle, etc." time ago told me that he regarded the (ne gentleman will have the facts and Col. E. C. Iong, of (G. S. Baxter & Co.: plan of converting our waste lands into figures to prove that recently a man "It is about the best thing we can do cattle grazing farms perfectly feasible. ,lught 90 acres of land and sowed it with our lands after cutting off the tim- "I am looking forward to the meeting to velvet heans at a cobt of $3 an acre. Ier. to utilize theim for grazing purposes." with much interest." lI, lh.ught a stock of common cattle Arthur Meigs: "I have seen for a long Edwin Brobston. of Brohbston, Fendlig -m'ch as cou ll t he had in the neighbor- time that the time had to come when & Co.: -"Robert Toombs once said that ho1. turned them into this field and our eut-oer lands would have to be civilization was divisible into four pe- fattened them so in 71 lda.v that at the largely devoted to cattle-grazing. There riods. that of the huntsman, the herds- ndl of that time he sold them out at are several things to be considered, how- man. the agriculturist and the manu- ,a pIofit of .$3.4N). ev r. For instance. the wiregrass that * fairtcrar Th hllnsma n'u rivoation I lav ...... .. ... 0 in. roaming the virgin forests. The herdsman tended his cattl when the for- ests and game began to disappear. The agriculturist succeeded when the soil had to be tilled, and the manufacturer's plant took the place of -the worn out soil. "I look for splendidL results to flow for this meeting. IAsk at the turpentine indu-trv in this State. While it pros- lpered fairly, it was not a very profitable business until the T. 0. A. was organ- ized and put it on a paying basis. What has lcen done in the turlMntine business can and doubtless will he done in the grows up on this land has not mucn nourishment in it. It will take about live acres of it to sllpport one cow. An- other thing, after the timber has been cut. the stumps are left, and these will have to be taken up. The process of making wood turpentine out of these will utilize them. "Florida to-day you might say is ripe cattle business. The meeting of the tur- "Before Florida can become a grazing for the herdsman. The timber is rapidly luentine men in this city last fall brought State site must grow some grass better disappearing from the face of the land. together one of the finest Iwlxies of men than wiregrass. There is the Bermuda, It will he quite a number of years be- I ever saw. Men of wealth, culture, re- and the St. Augustine grass, but they fore Florida can be for the most part an finemn'nt anl reduction. Now you will re1luire some fertility in the soil and agricultural State. The turpentine men linrl that whln the (cattlemen meet there some cultivation tAo start them. The hav revolutionized things in this State. will be seen men of the same stamp. great problem is going to be. in my judg- They are extracting wealth from the pine It is to h hoped that they will perfect iment. finding a grass will the requisite tree and putting it into paved streets. an organization similar t the T. 0. A. amount of nourishment that can be handsome homes and other improve- I and that their eliorts will Ib crowned grown he.e at the ulinimnll i cost." 1904 EDITION Lumbermen's Yellow Pine and Cypress Reference Book "THE BEST BOOK OF ITS KIND PUBLISHED" AND Ulmer's Yellow Pine Code A Complete and CompreeLsMlv Teleraphic Ciphr Code, espec ly devised to meet the require meats of tUe YELLOW PINE TRADE PRICE LIST. Lumberman's Yellow Pine and Cypres Reference Book. 1904 Edition, Separate from Code for Inspectors, $ .50 per copy. $1.25 per 3 copies. 2.00 per 6 copies. Ulmer's Yellow Pine Code combines with Reference Book under same col er. S.00 per copy. $5.25 per 3 copies. 9.00per 6 copies. Dellivrinl Charges Prepd&l BENJAMIN F. ULMER COMPILER a.. PUBLISHEi JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA. I1 9 9, 9 9 9~ 9 I: 9 9 9 *1 9 L9 9i 9 9 I dGO. R. OS8R, JR., MANUFACTURER OF BRICK. WRITE FOR PRICES. Capacity of Yard 800,000 Per Month. 'PHONE 390. ~&b~dd~drC~L~L(C~,,,,~,~w 10 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD INDUSTRIAL RECORD. Q tion of Minim Prie rator the Tank Company will buy at the prices fixed, and save him. JAMES A. MHOI.OMION, The Review at Its o l Tricks Again And this regardless of the Review. Edtor and Man r. The Review at Is O d Ts a The Rev iew further says: Publtshed Every Friday. "If values should go off to the mini- w (Domestic) ...00 Per Annum The Savannah Naval Stores Reviev, I the very interests that had imposed con- ium prices indicated by the Executive dwimomIPTIOn (Foreign) .... 0 with remarkable faithfulness to the mas- fidence in it, and honored it by recogni- Cmmittee. as given above, and the buy- "The Pinre d Its Products." ter It is serving, is trying to create the tion, it stained its record with treachery, er, should refuse to take the spirits and "Th Pi ea I r s. -. r _L^ eis should refuse to take the spirits and impression that the recent movement and forever barred itself from further rin then under the arrangement, the AI communications should be addressed of the Turpentine Operators' Association, treaty lb those men of the deserted cause i t c priotucers in their capacity as a tank The Industrial Record Company, fixing a scale of minimum prices for i who hold honor as a sacred duty. ocpan vould buy the spirits and Jacksonville. Fla. naval stores, is a "Utopian scheme" (bor- It has been surmised that the v ins fom themsees an sore it, Branch Editorial and Business Office at rowing the phrase) that cannot succeed. was well paid as a "bear organ." Of crse with the intention of disposing of Savannah. Ga. Had such an opinion been rendered from this we know nothing. The Record has it later, either to the buyers or to the nted at the Potlee at Jac ville, an experienced and unbiased source, it l-ver and it will never pry into the pri- consumers dlirectlv. In the height of -teed at the Poatoffice at Jacksonvlle, Pa.. as second-elass matter. woul'l pos-ibly admit of the calm and vate affairs of any individual or company the season the receipts accumulate rap- conservative consideration of every fair- or corporation. With some people honor idly. and many thousands of casks of Adopted by the Executive committee of minded man in the industry; but com- is priceless: with others it is on the bar-piri of rosins come to the markets the Turpentine Operators' Association. Sep- irit aino of rosins come to the markets temper 12. 19 as its exclusive official or- ing, as it does front one whose whose gain counter. (Iil'. It is not unusual at the height an. Adopted in annual convention, Sep- record for consistency precludes even the \With this kind of a record staring it of the season for receipts to reach 20,000 st L 11. as th organ also of the general suggestion of impartial judgment, the in the face, therefore, operators are not casks of rsirits and 40,000 barrels of Adopted April 27th. 1903. as the official opinion of the Review is necessarily ac- liable to become skeptical or to be mis- rosin in a week, representing about $700,- organ of the Inter-State Cane Growers' cepted as a "matter-of-fact policy"-and, guided by any effort the Review may 000 in total value. It is accordingly p- association. Adopted Sept. 11, 190S, as the 000 in total value. It is accordingly ap- only official organ of the T. O. A. strange as it may seem, the producer make to keep the prices down this sum- parent that an enormous amount of Commended to lumber people by special still exists. mer. resolution adopted by the Georgia Sawmill I money can be speedily tied up if the plan Asmoelation. It is yet within the memory of every Now let us take up the Review's as- now suggested is resorted to." COPT POR ADVERTISING. Adverrteing esy (ehanmge or new advertliesets) should reach us Tuesday morning to isure sertl O in the tosm of the amu e week. THAT MASS MEETING. It is with great pleasure that the In- dustrial Record calls the attention of its readers to the report of the sawmill men's mass meeting. That gathering showed, by its unanimity that this paper has been correct in its views as to the necessity for the speedy adoption of the new rules; a necessity more urgent and important perhaps for Florida lumber- men, who are today almost a unit in demanding them. It is necessary, however, not to stop on the adoption of the resolution de- manding them. It is manifestly the duty of every Florida member to attend the meeting of the Georgia Association on March 16th and there insist on the im- mediate adoption of the rules ofl904. Further than that let them see that they are passed as they stand without addi- tions or subtractions. It is hardly necessary to again remind our readers that they still can tender on any specifications that may be offer- ed them-as they do now. The only dif- ference is that the new rules alone will be printed and all prices will be based on the official price for sound square edge. Two or three eastern dealers were present at the meeting; they all felt sure that no difficulty would arise from the change. Indeed, they were in favor of it and felt sure that the change would work a pecuniary benefit to the mill man. The Record is particularly proud of the action of the mass meeting, as it was the direct means of creating it and the result conclusively proves that if only the supporters of the proposed rem- edy will attend, in spite of all difficulties, the next meeting, there will be no diffi- culty in passing the rules. Let no sawmill man make any other engagement for the 16th instant. Re- member he is needed in Jacksonville. Mr. D. J..Strickland, one of the most prominent operators in Florida, was in the city this week. reader of the Record that less than a year ago a determined effort was made by the exporters operating on the Sa- vannah market to hammer the prices of spirits down below 45 cents a gallon. The Review acted as the champion of that scheme and led the bear fight at that time, resorting to every means within its power to accomplish its pur- pose. It has been alleged and so far as our knowledge goes, never denied that the editor of the Review was employed during the summer months of 1903 to precipitate all of the declines on the Savannah market possible. Certain it is that he resorted to unfair and even deceptive methods to accomplish that end. It will be recalled that he held up the question of substitutes and adulter- ants as a great bugaboo to terrorize the operators, and even deliberately falsi- fied as to the relative extent in produc- tion of the "wood distillation" product, at that time so prominently in the pub- lic eye. If we mistake not, the Review declared there would be from 25,000 to 50,000 barrels of this wood turpentine marketed during the present year, and that it would be a great and powerful factor in fixing market valuations--a scheme based on a falsehood to frighten the market to a low-water level. It has been said that the editor of the Review even left his office at that time and en- gaged in personal arguments with cer- tain factors in Savannah in an effort to substantiate and "vindicate" his policy of fighting any upward tendency in prices. At that time it was charged, and never refuted, so far as we know, that the Review was the paid mouth- piece of the exporting interests, who were trying by every method at their com- mand to buy as cheaply as possible to fill their European contracts, made in the winter preceding. In these connections, 'too, our readers will remember that the Review was at that time an official organ of the Turpen- tine Operators' Association, a position it sought and made a fight to gain on the floor of the convention of 1902. It had promised its hearty support to every movement in favor of the naval stores producer, and was by virtue of its offi- cial connection, if not otherwise, regard- ed as the champion of the producer's best interests. When it deserted its own, therefore, and led a fight against sertions one by one and couple them with the actual facts regarding the pres- ent movement fixing minimum prices, and with a little history of the market conditions last summer. The Review says: "This effect of this move on the part of the producer is, to say the least, prob- lematical. Artificial efforts, such as this necessarily is, to regulate prices, seldom meet with success." In the first place the movement is not an "artificial" one. The Turpentine Op- erators' Association realizes that naval stores cannot be produced at the present high prices of timber and uncertain la- bor conditions profitably at prices below the minimums named, which are regarded as extremely conservative. It realizes in the same connection that the exporters, who buy and sell for private gain, are closely organized for the purpose of ham- mering the prices down to the lowest possible level, and without protection against their manipulations they will re- peat this summer the tactics they have employed in the past. The Association, therefore, through its executive commit- tee, agreed upon a minimum scale and took the matter up with the Operators' Tank and Warehouse Company and the latter company agreed to protect the minimums by putting in a standing bid to take all receipts at the prices named, should the market decline to those fig- tres. The Tank Company therefore sim- ply becomes a buyer to protect the ope- rator in the same capacity that the ex- porters are buyers for private gain. The Tank Companies are thoroughly able to buy, hold, sell and generally deal in naval stores if they please, and if they propose to enter actively into hand- ling turpentine and rosin, it is as much their right as it is Mr. Sholter's or Mr. anybody else. iI it is not "artificial" for the recognized exporters to buy and sell for private gain, why is it "artificial" for the Tank Companies, duly organized cor- porations. backed by good and able men, to buy and sell, if it means protection to the operator? As a matter of fact the Operators' Tank and Warehouse Company does not want to buy a barrel; it does not pro- pose to do so, unless it is forced to pro- tect reasonable valuations. But before the exporter shall beat the prices down to a figure that means a loss to the ope- The above paragraph can be dismissed with a word. It was written to alarm some one but has probably failed. The Operators' Tank and Warehouse Com- pany is fully able to carry out any ob- ligation it assumes, and it is not seeking the sympathy of the Review now or hereafter. Quoting again, the Review says: "It is a mistake to suppose that con- surners cannot hold off at times to a suf- ficient extent to very much affect prices. At the very first intimation that the market was so weak that the producers had to buy their own spirits and rosins there would be a withdrawal of demand from all sides. Inside of three weeks pro- ducers could be carrying in the neigh- borhood of two million dollars worth of naval stores." The thought here expressed was prob- ably an "inspiration." We heard of a similar statement being made by an ex- porter before it appeared in the Review. Common sense teaches that it is the policy of the consumer to buy as cheap as he can. They are organized for that purpose. They take advantage of every opportunity to accomplish that end. If they can "hold off" this year what kept them from doing so before? What a foolhardy policy would it be for them to temporize with the inevitable, when they realize at the very beginning that there is a dead line below which no trading can be done. Any point that can be gained by holding off the consumptive demands this year could have been doubly gained in the past, and the conditions this year as to demands are not different from the past. Quoting a factor the Review says fur- ther: The producers, or the committee in charge, helped to defeat the very object they aimed at by having published an official minimum schedule of prices which they would be willing to accept.'" This is absolutely untrue. The scale of minimums agreed upon is not what the operators would be "willing to accept," but below which they would not accept. There is a vast difference between the two, and the meaning is so clear that a child should see and understand it. Trading must be at and above the mini- mums; it cannot be below. The exporter buys at one figure and runs the prices up to unload. The demands and the THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD 11 ationis nI n m t nec(,s-ariiy be above those [rices. Quoting froim tihe Revievw again, it "I hne thing only .-emsi to be accepted a; ; fact. that is that the publication to the world of this scale of minimum 1 rice. muiust inevitably tcnd to lead con- sum(ier. to expect prices to drop to the lower values set Iby the producers, and to govern themselves accordingly in ar- ranging for next season's supplies." in July. e believe we have shown above by in July. * The market touched 45 only one time, illustration and not by mere assertion, the first week in May, and the average that such a result is neither contemplated for the summer months, May-August, i nor Iprobalble. As to "publishing to the was about 48 cents. This was despite the world." we beg to advise the Review fact that the exporters made a deter- that the operators are not engaging in mined fight, joined into by the Naval any secret deals or star-chamber tran- Stores Review, to keep the prices down action Tey are an honest, hard- to 45 cents and below if possible. working set of men who are entitled to Why did they fail? a just reward for their labors. If they The Record is betraying no confidence choose to protect thesmeselves against The Record is betraying no confidence i when it declares there was a minimum nmanipulations designed to injure them it of 45 cents established and placed on it is their righteous duty to do so, and by a number of the leading producers, whatever course they pursue, it will be members of the Turpentine Operators' actuated by honesty of purpose and in it Association, below which no trading was they hve nothing to conceal. permitted. These producers sustained The Review cannot refrain, in its ef- the valuations last summer above the forts to prejudice and destroy, from minimum then adopted and they are pre- passing a scurrilous criticism on the Tur- pared on a larger scale to do so this pentine Operators' Association. We quote year. The increase of 5 cents in the min- from it as follows: imum was made this season because it "Too much stress has been laid during has cost more to produce this season.- the present season on the effect the T. The question of fixing and sustaining a O. A. has had on the market. As a minimum therefore, is not as new as matter of fact, it is doubtful if the T. O. some appear to believe and the operators A. had any great appreciable effect." are not such novices as the Review would It adds parenthetically that a state- make them. ment of this kind "sounds like treason." As to rosins the averages for the past The Review is thus unable to get away year have been as follows: from its own memory and is haunted by WW .......... ........ $3.70 its own record. The Turpentine Opera- WG........ .. ...... ...- 3.50 tors' Association kept the Review and N ........ .... .. .. ... 3.35 its owners from hammering the prices M .. K .. I .. H ...... ...... .. .. .. .. G .... .... .. .. .. ..... F . . . . . . . . . . . E .. .... ..... .. .. ... D .. ......... ACD .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. The scale of minimums fixed is lows- WW .... .. .. .. .. ..... WG.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. M .. .... .. .. .. .. ... K ......................... I ......................... H .. ..................... G ......................... G..... .. ...... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 3.10 2.90 2.50 2.20 2.15 2.10 2.03 2.00 as fol- $3.50 3.35 3.20 3.00 2.75 2.50 2.53 2.25 2.20 E . . . 2.10 A-D ................ .. 2.00 It will be seen by comparison there- fore that even should all sales during the coming year be at the minimum prices, they would be as generally satisfactory as during the past year, but the fluctu- down below 45 cents last summer. It will keep them from going below 50 cents this summer. It was organized three years ago when the operators were broke and when turpentine was selling for little above 30 cents. Look back over the history of the past three years. Has the Turpentine Operators' Associ- ation had any effect on the market? The Review hates to recognize it. So does Mr. Shotter. HEAVY VEGETABLE SHIPMENTS. The heavy shipping of lettuce and cel- ery from Florida continues, and the in- dications are that this will be the ban- ner week so-far as lettuce is concerned. Those who are forwarding this vege- table to the northern market claim that there will le an enormous shipment this week. The heaviest shipments are com- ing front the Manatee River section, from which point several carloads are leaving daily. Celery shipments were good from that section last week and they are expected to increase daily. The WestzRaley-Rannie Company, 114 W. Forsyth Street, Jacksonville, Fla. A. II. WEST, President. E. E. West, Vice-President. W. R. Rannle, Vice-Pres. M. V. Raley, Sec. and Treas. We can furnish you with whatever you want in Timber Lands, Saw Mills, etc., and can sell your property. Write us, and when in the city make our office your headquarters V84 4 4S 4 AAAA.r t.2AA..AA. .taA. n t fm a available supplies regulate the market. All the conditions for fluctuations are and necessarily must be the same now as ever. All trading, all fluctuations. however, must be above 50 cents for spirits and the minimums named for rosins. Now for a little history. By glancing at the course of the market from April 1 to September 1, 1903, it will be found that spirits reached 49 cents during the second week in April and fluctuated between 45 and 49 1-2 until the last week THOMAS DIXON, JR., President, B. W. KIL0ORE, Vice-President, New York. Raleigh, N. C. F. 6. HAMRICK. Secretary and Treasurer, New York. W. H. KRU,. Chemist. New York. PRESIDENT'S OFFICE: 96 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK. Standard Turpentine Company Builders of Wood Distilling Plants, by the New Krug Patent Steam Pressure Process. . CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED AND INSPECTION OF WAYCROSS PLANT IS INVITED. REFERENCES: Sarleld national Bank. New York; R. 6. Dun Co. JNO. W. THOMPSON, V A 4 i I rU superintendent Sales Agencies, - WAYCROSS, OA. E. H. TOlLINSON, Special Agent, Corner Hogan and Forsyth Streets, J CKSONVILLE, FL . 0 ~p2664g 46O- 662666~4WS44 aa6~+Ib464I~ ~O664MI~ I a IB I U Ix I I U U "Kingan's Reliable." Hams, Lard, Shoulders, Cheese, Bacon, Sausage, [Canned Meats, Butter, THE BEST ON EARTH. Eastern and Western Dry Salt Meats. Orders filled at lowest mar- ket price. Your patronage is respectfully solicited. See quotations-- this paper. KINGAN & CO., Ltd., E. BAY ST., JACKSONVILLE, FLA. W. I. THOMAS Presidet E E DEKLE Secetv & Tramrer. T. E. RO33TS Vicwe Peii Thomas Roberts Hardware Co. Wholesale & Retail Turpentine And Mill Supplies Hardware, Doors, Sash and Blinds, Paints and Oils, VALDOSTA, V GEORGIA. a _________________)"" +k ~aL NO. 88811 THE ATILATIC NATIONAL BANK OF JACKSONVILE. CAPITAL PAID IN. $350,000.00. OPEN FOR BUSINESS AUGUST i, 1903. OFFICERS: Edward W. Lane, President. Fred W. Hoyt, Vice-President. 9 Thomas P. Denham, Cashier. E iii~wrrrrrrrr~rr++rrr~lTr;rT~;rT~;r;TTPT w > . 12 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD FLORIDA PINE LUMBER. ests. woods and lands or marshes. cx- There is an unusually large quantity rept between February 15 and larch 31, of yellow pine lumber and timber now 'of each *year. shall be punished by im- being exported from Florida. coastwise 1ri-'ionimi'nt not exceeding sixty days or amd abroad. Much of this timber b'y ti ii ,nt exceeding $1IX.(M)." Persons is used in bridge work for railroads. The .X\ho Xi h to set fire to the wood be- qualitv being of -ounl hIeart miake~ it t\"ei. I.l,,n-uary I. an.l MaNih :31. are re- ,cry a.:a''.ihl," tfor tretlinii.'. Thi, pine *In'ire by the law t. gi ve two days pre- trees of Florilda are now ) ielini lotli 01th i" notice to all living within one mile turpentine andI hunl.mr. and it i- al.serted "f the wo,'l- ilntpni.. to be tired. Fail- that, Florida is the only vState now wher ureC t, gi~v sit-h notice may also be pun- large trees for timber. suitable for ,ti- i-h'l in tIhe -sae ay. V 1,ain purlposesn can Ieb had. as almost i The law a- it stand is nothing more the larger t- es in the other Slouthlnl ir le.- th an the granting to everybody l States have long since been utilized. free licsen- to seit fire to any one's The exports from Jacksonville. Fernan- i| '.1- u ring the time emlira-ed et ecn ,,ina. Apalachicola and Pensacola are inm- tlh twO dlatc's. It does not ssay whose mense, and it is said that much of the \"Hse. whether the incendiary be the exported lumlwr from Brunswick. Ga., is owner or not. Nor is there any limit manufactured in Flid a. ito the number of lires lie may set. all lhe: _*lnst custom from the beginning, gives the What if the person notified he not ready shipments in detail from Jacksonville. for the emergency? le may be away In this report is included crossties and from home. or ill, or any number of when brought down to lumber measure- things may prevent him from rushing out ment and added to the lumber makes a nd meeting fire with fire. If absent, good showing. Jacksonville lumber and the "notice" may have been left with ties added to that exported from other sonw one who may not care whether the points, will monthly carry the amount woods burned or not. into the hundred million feet. And the limit of punishment. The in- It can well be remembered when five cendiary may destroy ten thousand dol- and eight lion feet of lumber only lars worth of property belonging to his and eight million feet of lumber only neighlbor, anm get off with a fine "not were shipped from Jacksonville ler month neighbor, and get off with a fine "not .exceeding $100.00." The law has been and only small quantities from other ing $100.00." The law has been ports, but the scarcity of good timber in on the statute books for several years, and although the woods are fired at all many other States has caused an increas-nd although the woods are fired at all ed demand e, and ousands seasons of the year. and little or no no- ed demand here, and thousands of men are engaged in the business now where tice is given that it is going to be done, we seldom hear of any violator being only hundreds were twenty years ago.y b g So great has become the increase and punished. demand that associations of lumber dealers have been formed to maintain 0. J. Olmstead, a prominent turpentine pri nd rules of measurement. To- man from Mill Creek, was on a visit to prices and rules of measurement. To- Jacksonville yesterday. day, while this is being printed a meeting of the sawmill men of this and other THE STUCKMAN-Monthly, 50 cents States is being held in Jacksonville and per year. The only journal in the south- methods of self-protection and self-in- east devoted wholly to the live stock in- terest are being discussed. We invite dustry. Plain. practical, up-to-now. Ad- att ion th vertisers say it dos rin results. Send the attention of the business men to the your subscription to-day and begin with monthly report of transactions here as January number, if you want to. again presented on the first day of every R. W. STORRS, Editor. month of the year, not occasionally.- Metropolis. FORTUNE TO BE MADE AT GREEN- etropolis. VILLE. The Crescent Mineral Spring, pavilion, 6 houses, barn, orchards and Watch Next Week. z, acres of house lots within city lim- Mr. J. G. Christopher, the well-known its, for 8.500 though $10.000 cash was r. Christopher, the l refused for a portion when Greenville mill supply man will have an interest- had half present population. Win. Gold- ing announcement in next week's issue. smith J.r. (reenvi!le S C. will show it_ First Invoice. Max Myerson proudly displays in his windows receipt on account payment for tlhe first invoice of goils shipped from K oh n = F u Baltimore after the great fire. It is sign- ed by S. F. & A. F. Miller & Co., The Bond & Bors Co. Dry Goods, Clot Card appears in this issue. This com- MA pany has leen in business in Jacksonville for six years and have won an enviable goods furnished and for liberal treat- ment. The business is entirely managed by Mr. John S. Bond and every detail is personally watched by him. Our read- ers can be assured of satisfaction in sending the company orders for anything in the hardware and kindred lines. TI'E WOODS BURNING LAW. Wholesale SHOES A We n*,e mad-- reference on scve:;a! c- NEW YORK: 256 Chui casions t, the Ip .v of Florida ,.n the ., b- ject of burning the wssls. We said W e that the law was vague. inefficient and W unsatisfactory. It provides that "who- S ever sets fire to or burns any wild for- New Victoria. Corner Main and Adams. Jacksonville's New Hotel Rates $2.00 to $2.50. R. BIXLER, Proprietor. Tl.\KE I M MD)I.VATE POSSESSION anli enjoy \ one f thle love'iest locations in Flohrida. .\, "'lokiing beautiful lake, \\hli-,e \aters eqial the Poland (see anal- y..i-). ch-iariin hlioiuse. completely fur- nili'd. all icldiiled with lI.athouse and ilangiie ove. i rie. ri ;.i SO0. easy terms. \lppi'y tio oi nr. L. V. Creepy. on prem- i--'. opli <>1AN<; ES. The 1,e r or 'Cordova vine- yard: where lMr. Terry expended $15,000. Short drive from Polnce de Leon; thous- ands sciupperniong and Niagara grapes; forty acres enclosed in chicken wire for gaine Ireserve or nianlmmth poultry plant; hoilus. barn and shed. Price, $1.400: $500 cash balance 3 per cent.. See pictures of above in ('hapin's Illustrated (atalogue mailed to every hotel. Ask for it. FOR SALE--f90 tons 70-lb steel relay- ing rails, with angle bars, Ohio deliv- ery. 500 tons 48-lb steel relaying rails, with angle Iiars,, Ohio delivery. 2,000 tons 56-lb steel relaying rails, with angle liars. West Virginia and Eastern and southernn delivery. 500 tons 60-lb steel relaying rails, with splices, Southern de- livery. ISAAC JOSEPH IRON CO., 525-531 Hunt St., Cincinnati, Ohio. tf TAILORS I- nin~ nIlu BAILEY & MONTGOMERY, Commission MerchntsIo Nevel Stores & Cotton COTTON lmxcAem mmILDuaI, Yo1W ORK ClIT. Ltbemal sevaeeu isea4.o ssi ablpomomts. 0m0nanmumemot seesus M. W9 LRiENDON, 1388 3PRONT3a' orvum". ROSIN, TMUPUNTIN1[ TAX. nTCH, GUNM THUS, RICB1, 1to., Now Teab. Are you readliug your ow Se30 or one borwfrwoe a nelaro = If the later be the eare, write to-4yr and subaerlbe. Stetson Hats Suits to Order at Ready-Made Prices Mail Orders Given Personal Attentionw A'1Q W Qc IA-C-* TA c/1T I 1 =I A W. R. THOMAS GAINESVILLE. FLORIDA, Turpentine, Log and Phosphate Mules. Heavy Wagons, Harness and Buggies. rchgott= Company. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN hing, Gents Furnishings and Hats. LIL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION JACKSONVILLE, FLA. S'W 1W W W W qv W-A -wwwwwwwwwwwwww -.... - OVINGTON COMPANY, ND DRY 0OODS. 6 West Forsyth Street. Ch St. Jacksonville, Fla. Sch St. Sell Merchants Only. 'm IL ltA. 111, 1, ,1 a .0 A, Ao ' dh, a,"a ", &' H, A. Renfroe Co. _ ______ _A_1 */ TT V- u^- A AA ~1 U~LN~LLL~ L11I THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD 13 * _****_*_*___6*****_____444 ******ft******_ J. R. PARBOTT. ARCHaR S. HUBBARD. ARTBUR F. PRBRY President. Vice-President. Cashier. The Mercantile Exchange Bank, JACKSONVILLE FLORIDA. Capital. $200.000. - Surplus. $100.000 STATE DEPOSITARY. General Banking. Interest Paid on Saving Deposits. Safe Deposit Boxes. $5.00 per Year. I -- "" .. and try one at Review of Naval Stores for a Week 29 West Forsyth Street. Spirits for the Week at Savannah. Savannah Naval Stores Statement. c _l. 6 Spirits. Iosins. Pree -lpts Sales Exp. 19- ck April ......... 1.241 145.882 R.S. IlAI.L, Pres. T C. HALL, V. P. and Mgr. L. J. KmNIm T, Sec. and Treas. Mon. Feb. 29 !)9 9 41 617 1 . Tues... Mar. I1 5 )i 615 40 3i5 65 ie'i3 h ilAptA M,,,rch :3 ...... 10 r O I 3A ACO1 Wed.. Mar. 2 5 61 101 01 5 ieipl rvisy ...17 ARION HARD WARE CIO. Thur. Mar. 31 59 85 25 10 65 --- -- - Frid., Mar. 41 59 1153 281 0 l( 'T tal........... ..190)071 775.9941 Rosin for the Week at Savannah. Monday, Feb. 29. !i 75 Exports Mlarch : ...... 60 1.204 Exports previously ..... 183.739 706.(657 (: ......:.: 3.55 5 38 ..t ........ ..183.89.) 707.Hl1 .. .. .. .... 3.35 3.(0 Stock March 3 ..... 6. .172 68.133 S. . 3.30 3.40 Stock last year ..... .. 2.389 127.411) .. .. .. .. . 3.25 3.20 2.95 2.85 2.60 2.40 Tolar, Hart & Co.'s Review. 2.55 2.10 New York. Mar. 1, 1904. ..........2.0 2.00 The Industrial record. .lacksonville, Fla. ............ 2.45 2.00 Spirits Turpentine-Trade continues ex- 2.40 2.00 tremely dull. Stocks are ample, demand BC.. 2.40 2.00 very light, price gradually declining. .____ Stock. 1.744 barrels. We quote Machines Tues., March I-Market unchanged. 62 1-2 to (2 3-4 cents. Rosin-In the absence of demand with Wed., March 2-Market unchanged. easier prices South all quotations are nominal. \Ve quote: Thurs., March 3-Market unchanged. BM'. $2.75: 1). $2.80; E. $2.85; F, $2.90; ____ (;, $2.9.5; II. $3.L); I, $3.25: K, $3.70; Friday, March 4-Market unchanged. M. $3.0: N. $.20: WC. $4.35: WW, ___$4.60. TO(LR, IIART & CO. Six Years' Receipts. Turp Spirits. Rosin. .. ...... 329,466 1.123,942 Stock Feb. 13 .. ...... 309,465 1,076,815 I)el'd this wk ... .. .. 337,452 1,119.957 Since Jan. I .... .. 313.34u 1, i1,440 Price Feb. 15 .... ... 292,496 940,507 Mar. 3 inc. 188,830 630,.112. March-April .Ily-)ec. . (a) includes 9i! French. ltelprted b' Range of Turpentine and Rosin at Sa- vannah. 1903-4 1. 2-3 I. r l-01-2 Spirits 1 45] 5 42 65 1 31 53 Rosin I I || I II I .\V\ .. .304.i0 3 j:.)1 4.i25 2.2-5 13.. 95 WG... .. ....1014.70!!3.25!3.851l2.0013.70 entine at Lond 1904. 1903.3 25.279a 34.266 1.36i6i 1.769 on. 1902. 1901. 36.200 12..155 1.754 2.024 10.439 9.971 10.411 11 46- 43-3 30- 46-6 43-6 30-3 40-9 37-3 30-71/2 S735 French. (b) inclu vy James Watt & Son. .201 !5-6 18-6 27- decs Jacksonville Wolesale Lumber Marxet. (Corrected for the Industrial Record each Week). K ... ...... 12.8014.10i12.40'3.2011.65I2.45 Mlerchantab'e. F .... .... 1.65 2.80 1.20J2.101 1.10 1.50 ard schedules-$10.50 to $13.00. D .. ... .. .552.701.10 2.05 1.001.40 Sound ianI square sliediules, .l..50 to $12.00. SMerchantalde car material-- Bailey & Montgomery's Review. car material Average schedule of ,ills. :,( feet and New York. March 2. 1904. under, 10 inches and under, $13.00 to Spirits Turpentine-Stock, 1.5O8 bar- $14.00. rels. Special schedules --according to sizes Market during the week has been re- and lengths-prices steady. markably quiet. and has imet with some K. D. Saps--"6" and up 80 per cent decline on the dull business. clear, $9.50 to $10.00. Thursday. Feb. 25th. 64c. dull I looring: Friday. Feb, 26th, 64c. weak. $11.50; No. 4, $8.50. Saturday. Feb. 27th, 63 1-2c. weak. Cypress. Monday, Feb. 29. 63e. dull. First and seconds 4 quarter base, car- Tuesday, March 1. (k3. quiet. load prices. $34: selects. 4 quarter base, Wednesday, March 2. 62 1-2e. dull. No. 1, $15.00: No. 2, $13.50; No. 3, Rosin-Stock, 27.200 barrels. $28; shop, 4 quarter base, $20. This market has also becn exceedingly Cypress Shingles-i-xIS A's. per 1.000 dull, also at the expense of values; all pes., $5.25: primes, $4.25; 4xlS, A's. $3.50; grades are moving very slowly. A, B, C, primes, $2.75. D. $2.70: E. $2.75 to $2.0): F. $2.85; (, Cypress 'aths. $2 per 1.000. $2.W9); 11. $2.95: I. $3.35: K. $3.70; M, Cylpre'ss ,..market strong. Mills have $4.00: Il. $4.10 to $4.20: W'(, $4.15 to m ore riderss than they cian fill. Prospects $4.25: W\V. $4.35 to $4.50. good for higher price. Dry stock scarce. -4FOR SALE.)- 50,000 acres timber land in Western Florida. Tract will cut one hundred and fifty million feet merchantable lumber. Has been turpentined and ready for the mill. $2.35 per acre. Mill near the timber can be leased for term of years, or can be purchased. One of the best opportunities in the State. C. BUCKMAN, Mrs..,?,.. ." J~mokro nrv ille, Cil i IAIRDWA I<, MILL AND TURPENTINE SUPPLIES, OCALA, FLORIDA. Herbert A. Ford, President. Geo. H. Ford, Vice-Pres. F. L. Watson, Cashier. The Central National Bank of Ocala OCALA, FLORIDA. CAPITAL, $30,000.00. DIRECTORS: R. L. Anderson, R. S. Hall, Clarence Camp, J. K. Christian, Geo. McKay, Geo. H. Ford, Herbert A. Ford. Accounts of Turpentine Operators and Saw Mill Men Solicited. Whiskies, Gins, KIRK & JONES ums DRUGGISTS. Rums,9 107 E. BAY ST. MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED. JACKSONVILLE. FLA. from $1.50 to $5.00 per gallon Agency for Lewis 1866 and'O steopathy. Mount Vernon Pure Rye Whiskies Controllers Blum's Monogram and Syl- The New Scientific Treatme n van Rye-Agents for Jungs, Cincin- nati and Pabst Milwaukee Beers. of the Body. Prices on application. CHAS. BLUM & CO. 517 and 519 West Bay Street, JACKSONVILLE, FLA. M. A. BRIGGS, President. DR. JOHN W PHELPS. Chronic and Nervous Troubles. DR. ELIZABETH BRICGG McELWAIN. Diseases of Women and Children 211 W. Adpmns. Jacksonville. H C. BRIGGS, Vice-President. J. C. McDONALD, Sec'y and Treas. W. H. BRIGGS HARDWARE CO. (INCORPORATED.) EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR The Celebrated Rixford Turpentine Axes. General Hardware And Mill Supplies. We are also Headquarters for all Turpentine, Supplies Including tools for immediate needs, such as Single and Double Edge Scrapes Spike and Socket Shove Downs. We are one of the oldest houses in the trade and solicit your business on the basis of correct prices, fair treatment and prompt shipments. W. H. BRIGGS P HARDWARE COMPANY, VALDOSTA. GEORGIA. FRED. E. GILBERT STATE AGENT FOR The Oldsmobile- The kind that go on Sandy and CountryRoads, used by Most all turpentine men. Call and see them *\V Last Year. 4A-2 W N M K I H G F E D A 1898-99.. 1899-00 .. 1900-01 1901-01 1902-03 .. 1903-04 to UIII-~~~~~~~~~-~- ~ ~ ~ ~ A A A 0% 0%~~ Cwo r~wr~~m~~Pi~-f~Pnt~4~~Yl~iP~'~t~;P~P~ ~a: I ----------N --" 14 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD QUALITY FIRST-PRICES RIGHT. McMurray Livery, Sale and Transfer Co. S. HORSES AND MULES. 5 0 on hand 100 to 150 head of all kinds and prices. If in need of any, give S -o us a call, or write for what you want. o r- E. B. DALTON, Manager, Jacksonville. Sr Printing Send your order to the Industrial S" Record. Prompt and satisfactory Service guaranteed. South Hogan St., Jacksonville, Fla. RECLAIMING DEAD TIMBER LANDS. ca.t for -tock raising. the Jacksonville ieo. T. iifford Iron W works Co. The following editorial from thie Am- I'l of Trade has become interested in W r . erican Lumberman. of Chicago. is of such the iatfter. and has called a convention Founders and M achinists. vital importance to the sawmill and na- of 4tockgrowers of Georgia, Florida and val stores men of the Southeast that we Alabama. to be held in Jacksonville on Special attention to Saw Mill and Turpentine Work. are glad to reproduce it: March 22d and 23d. Of course, lumber- Tifton, Georgia. men owning large bodies of timber that To Utilize Cut-Over Lands. are in the process of denudation are in- Lumbermen of Florida and South Geor- terested in this convention, for it means gia and Alabama who realize that their imucl to them as a method of perpetuat- large areas of pine lands, after the tim- ing the value of their holdings. her shall have been remove.i, will remain A prominent land owner and mill ope- on their hands a more or less unavailable rator of Florida, writing from Jackson- asset unless they can be utilized in some ville to the Lumberman concerning the way, have become deeply interested in proposed convention and its objects, the proposition that has been made to %ays: convert such denuded properties into "'From my standpoint the raising ot great pastures for live stock. cattle is of the greatest interest to the It has been demonstrated that the cut- lumbermen of the southeast territory. over lands afford excellent ranges for cat- All of us own large acreage of cut-over tie. The climate is so mild and winter- lands that are hardly fit for farming, but less that cattle can range the pastures, cattle raising and stock growing in the nm a F OL subsist and even fatten at a season when stock at the north is shut into tight barns or hovers miserably around straw and haystacks, thus losing flesh and causing loss to the owner. Anyone can draw a vivid comparison between the raising of stock in the mild climate of Florida and South Georgia and Alabama or anywhere in the Gulf States, and the cold climate of the North, so far as prof- itableness is concerned. In the pastures of Florida and South- ern Georgia the cost of raising cattle will simply be measured by the interest on the land, the taxes and the herding territory bids fair to develop most rap- idly in the next two or three years. This is evidenced by the fact that some of the Chicago packers have recently made purchases of a million acres of land in western Florida and southern Alabama for this purpose." The same lumberman and land owner states that, in his opinion, there is no question but that the southeast territory is superior to the west for raising cattle, and lie is sure that the discussion of the question at the forthcoming convention will open the eyes of everyone to the possibilities of the South for the stock- of the stock. There will be no bills for raising industry. The movement has al- carrying meadow lands, cutting and stor- ;neady aroused much enthusiasm and ing hay and caring for the cattle in the! there will he a large attendance at the winter. There may or may not be a .la.k-m)nille convention on March 22 and grain feed bill for hastening the fatten- :2. ing process to meet certain states of The t.anier ('omanche. ('aptam Platt. the market; but that will be a question for New York with 520.000 square feet of choice and profit to the owner, not of lumer. 4 packages of doormould- ann abslute necessity. le ings. 3.200 packages of fruit, 1,2(00 bar- " n vie of the illiant lities f naval stores and 950 packages of utilizing the cut-over lands of the south- merchandise. LARGE PUBLIC STORAGE TANKS FOR TURPENTINE AT JACKSONVILLE AND FERNANDINA. READY FOR USE OF ALL OPERATORS WHO MAY WISH TO STORE TURPENTINE. CHARGES VERY REASONABLE. OPERATED BY THE NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION AND TERMINAL CO. CONDUCTING Strictly a Warehouse and Transportation business for storage of Naval Stores. No Naval Stores bought or sold. Shipments received onlv through factors. For rates and information address your factors. 1 A - - - - - - - - - - -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ---0V%0W **%* THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD 15 --------------------- --------------------- I I M AMIMC*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ L ---------- -- ------ --LII~Ulllh~LeV MIIIIIIIMIM""'-'-- HOW TO MAKE A A WEATHERPROOF ROOF The manufacture of MF and U. S. Eagle NM (new method) Roofing Ternes is explained and described in our free booklet, 'A Fifty Year Roof,' which we will send free to any address-- even on a postcard request. This book also contains practical direc- tions for making a weatherproof roof, and many formulas and tables of value to architects, roofers, builders and contractors. M F Roofing Ternes was more than half a century the best roofing material made in the world. Lately we have developed from it the wonderful SU. S. Eagle NM (New Method) --'I a practically perfect terne, which will give even better service than MF. The free sample we send any architect, contractor, builder or roofer, will demonstrate the value of this new product. Our podbects are for safe hy all fhst-class wholesale metal houses. W. C. CRONEMEYER, Advertising iAgcntsl America" Sheet aid Ir rate CI., Frick Building. Pittsburg. Pa, co ~ 16 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD The Record's Special Quotations on Staple Goods. (For the Regular Retail and Commissary Trades.) The following wholesale prices, subject to market fluctuations, are corrected each week and are published by the Rec- ord for the benefit of the large commissary interests throughout the South reached by this paper: .. . z7 Butter And Cheese A. C. Creamery, 60 lb. tubs.. 25 A. C. Creamery, 80 " .. 26 10 .. 28 A. C. Creamery,50, 1 lb. prints Fancy Full Cream......... 124 Lard Compound Tin. 50-lb tin.... Market S' 50-lb tub.... Leaf Tin. 50-lb tin. ........... Vinegar Red Apple Cider bbl........ 1 bbl........ l New Syrup Ga and Fla, in cypress barrels, per gallon.... Oats t 2 6 Sugar Granulated "t Sugar, bbls..... 5 bbls.. 10 bbls.. S sacks.. 4 75 470 4 70 475 Coffee Reception Blend Moch and Java, 30 1-lb cans to case, per lb ................. 80 Simon Pure, 80 1-lb cans to case, per lb............. 22 Green Coffee good. ......... 10 Green Coffee, medium ...... 9 Green coffee, common....... 8 Arbuckles Roasted Coffee, 1 lb packages...... market price Lion Brand Coffee, 1 lb pack- ages............ market price Roasted, 100lb. drum....... 14 Ground coffee, 10-lb. pail.. 15 Tea Extra fine quality. Caddy Green Tea, 10 lb..... 40 S Gunpowder, 10 lb.... 50 English B'fast, 10 lb.. 46 Formosa, 10 lb....... 44 Pagoda Tea, 5 and 10c size 10 lbs to case, per pound-.. 40 Sa t 200-lb sack................ 100-lb sack................ Ice Cream, 200-lb sacks..... S 100-lb sacks..... Pocket Salt in bbls., 8-lb.... S. 2-lb .... 95 50 100 50 245 275 Pepper Whole Ground Pepper, 10-lb tin.............. 21 Ground 1-8 tin, 8 doz to box sifter top, per doz...... 45 Ground 1-16 glass pepper boxes, per doz......40 and 80 Corn 100 Sk Car Lot Lot W.Corn,llOlb, 1 45 1 47 S 1001b, 1 30 1 32 Mxd corn,1101b,1 40 142 S 1001b,1 26 128 Less 100 Sk 150 1 85 145 1 27 Car Lot W.clip'd,1251b,2 25 S 1001b,1 80 White 1251b, 2 15 White 1001b. 1 72 Mixed 1251b 2 10 1001b, 168 100 Sk Lot 227 1 82 227 1 74 2 12 170 Less 1(N) Sk Lots 230 1 85 2 20 1 77 2 15 1 73 Car lots consisting of Hay, Oats, Corn, of 20,000 pounds, same as 100-sack prices. Cash, 1 per cent in 10 days on Grain. Wheat Wheat, 100 lbs., choice .... 1 60 . fancy..... 1 65 Va. Seed Rye, per bushel.. Flour Highest Grade Patent in bbls per bbl................ 6 00 Highest Grade Patent, 96, 48 or 24 lb sack.........6 00 Highest Grade Patent, in 12-1b sacks............ 6 00 Pillsbury's Best ..... 6 50 Pillsbury's Beat bbl .... Flour, Gold Medal :........ 6 25 bbl........ Meal Meal, per barrel.......... 3 40 92-1b sacks...........1 50 Grits Grits, per barrel........... 8 50 S92-lb sacks....... 1 50 Rice Good.................. .. 5 Choice...... ............ 5 Fancy Head............... 6 Broken................. 3| Canned Vegetables Doz. Tomatoes, 8s, Chief....... 90 Tomatoes, 2s ........ 80 Clayton, 3s................ 45 Clayton, 2s ............... 70 Sifted Peas, 2s ............1 40 Rose L. J. Peas .......... 80 Okra, Tomatoes, 2s........1 20 Lima Beans,2s ...........1 00 String Beans, 3s........... 90 String Beans, 2s .......... 70 Baked Beans, 3s........... 90 Baked Beans, s ........... 45 Corn, fancy, 2s............1 40 Born Tomatoes, 2s......... Beauty Beets, 3s.......... Sauer Kraut, 3s ........... 85 Sauer Kraut, keg.......... Pumpkin, 3s .............. 90 Hay car lots Choice....19 50 No.1 Tim 18 00 No. 2 17 00 No.1 Cl'ler 17 00 100 bale lots 2000 1850 1780 1750 less quantity 2050 1900 1800 1800 Canned Fruits Pineapples, sliced, 2s, 2 doz to case, per doz........ 1 0 Pineapples, fancy 2s, 2 doz to case, per doz........ 1 40 Cherries, 2s, 2 doz. to case per doz................ 1 30 Apples, 3s, 2 doz to case, per doz.................... 90 Apples, one gall, one doz to case, per doz........... 3 00 Peaches, 2s, two doz to case, per doz................ 1 90 Peaches, 3s, two doz to case per doz ............... 1 40 Peaches, pie, 2s, two doz to case, per doz........... 1 75 Blackberries, 2s two doz to ease, per doz .......... 1 00 Damson, 2s, two doz to case. per doz.............. Brandy Cherries 2s per case 8 85 Candy Mixed 30-lb pails, per lb... 7 10-lb 8 Gum drops, 0-lb rails, per lb.................. 7 French cream, 80-lb pails, perlb................. 8 Sticks wrapped, 25-lb box, assorted, per lb........ 8 Sticks unwrapped, 25-lb box. assorted, per lb........ 8 Dried Fruits Evaporated Peaches Extra, 25-lb box, per lb....... 9 Choice Evaporated Peaches. 25-lb box, per lb....... 8. Fancy Apricots 25 Ib boxes. 13 Ex. Choice " " Ev. Apples, 50-lb. boxes.....4 25 Ev. Apples, 25-lb. boxes.....2 25 Ev. Apples, 48 1-lb. packages 80 Ev. Apples, 24 2 52 Currants, cleaned, 36-lb. case 8 60 Prunes, Calf cleaned 25-lb lx.x, 40-50............. 6.. Prunes, Calf cleaned 25-lb box, EO-60 ........... 7.. Prunes, Calf cleaned 25-lb box, 60-70............. 8.. SL Raisins, 3 crown..... 1 85 L. L. Raisins, 4 crown ...... 1 90 Seedless, 1-lb packages .... 12 Citron, 10-11 box ......... 1 50 Peanuts Fancy, H P, per pound.... 64 Extra H P, .... 5 Seed Peanuts, ... New Nuts Mixed, 25-lb boxes......... 11 Almonds............ ..... 18 Brazils ...... ............. 12 Peacans.................. 12 Filberts................... 12 alnuts............ ..... 14 Cotton Seed Meal Car 100 Les 100 lots Sk. Lot Sk. Lot Cottonseed Meal 28 00 28 50 20 00 S Hulls 11 50 12 50 1800 Matches Atlantic, per gross.......... 47 Woodenware Cedar Pails, 2 hoop........2 20 3 hoop......... Nest Measures, 5 pieces..... 80 Twine, boxes, per doz.......1 50 Sieves, per doz. No. 18......1 00 6" nested ......2 00 Bucket ,2 hoop pails,per doz 1 40 Scrubbing Brushes, per doz... 60 Ax Handles Two doz crates per doz.. ..1 20 Washboards D"s 78 Crown Combination.....2 20 178 Blue Jay...............3 00 175 Diamond Glass .........8 25 0. W. D., 17 inch, per doz 1 05 Clothes pins, five gross to box 75 Canned Fish Oysters, Is, 2 doz to case, per doz. .................. 95 Sardines, American, 100 to case, per case ........ 8 75 Sardines, 5 case lots........ 8 65 Salmon Is, Tale 4 doz to case per doz Alaska......... 90 Salmon, Is, 4 doz to case, per doz Col. River .... 2 35 Salmon, 4 dz to case, per doz Beardley's Shredded Cod Fish 90 two doz in tins........ 1 80 Canned, Hominy, 31b...... 95 Salt Fish New Cape Shore Mackerel, 20-lb pails........... 8 50 Sea Sides, 1&2-lb brick, 40 lbs to box..........:. 2 40 Grand Bank Codfish, per lb. 8 Kingan's Meats. "Reliable" Hams, 8-10 avge ... 141-4 "Reliable" Hams, 10-12 avge 14 "Reliable" Hams, 12-14 avge 131-2 "Reliable" Shoulders, 7-9 avge.. 91-4 "Reliable" California Hams, 6-8 9 iireakfast Bacon, light av. .... 131-2 I). S. Bellies, 16-18 av. ........ 83-4 D. S. Bellies, 20-22 av. .......... 81-2 D. S. Bellies, 25-30 av. .......... 81-8 D. S. Plates .................. 71-2 Bacon P'ates .................. 81-2 D. S. Butts .................. 63-8 Bologna Sausage ............... 7 Sausage in oil ................$3.75 Butter and Cheese. "Strawberry" Creamery, 60-lb tube 30-lb tubs S60s, Is... "Ladybird" full cream cheese .. 25 251-2 261-2 12 1-2 Kingan's ard. "Indiana" Pure Leaf ........... market. "Sea-Foam" Compound ........market. Kingan's Canned Meats. "Reliable" Corned Beef, Is ...... Corned Beef, 2s ....... Roast Beef, Is ........ oast Beef, 2s ........ Potted Ham and Tongue 1-4s ........................ SSliced Beef, -2s Vienna Sausage, 12s .. Tripe ................. $1.25 2.25 1.25 225 .35 1.15 .85 1.60 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD 17 r 1891$181811019 te*4i* 1691919*i111191$11 191919111 10019 1 419t191o1$1+ 1 o* ***************************O+r * President, W. C. POWELL; Vice-President a, who with the President constitute the Directory ana Board of Managers, W. p. COACHMAN. B. P. BUL- LARD, H. L. COVINGTON, H. A. McEACHERN, JOHN R. YOUNG, J. A. CRANFORD, D. H. McMILLAN. C. DOWN- ING, J. R. SAUNDERS, C. B. ROGERS; Auditor, JOHN HENDERSON. CONSOUDATED NAVAL STORES COMPANY, Jlaksliille, 110. Savoin, Io. pensacola, flo. NAVAL 8 i ORES FITORI . P ilm Mi l SIocK, $2,50000 0. Ownl d iCon olld b Pracicol Oleolols Smlll wIoof Stock Yel ti in esee o Sell to OlrIolrs Who g0 Io 1e 10 BtI. The CoMsoiloled is PM rel Cooer0li e Con01N . 01 Ihe Produers. 113 Interests I ore IMenicl! With Tho lTe Polronle 01 Tlwelilit Oleralors eeriw1 ere Iviled PIlen o0 Mone ind Ple ol Timler 1or vrbioil. YARI 8T J1ACSON ILLE, SAVANNAH, FEI ANIINA Il PENSAiO L. Ill Produces ile Milld to Coll or Clresonl if i*(I I 3*I$*1*i S0 1*I*10 Ii 1*i*ott9 O111001*1*10100M!ot *l 1 rot* 1 ? 141 4e4 mt* ******* eOeeO 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 q 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 I 4 4 4 4 4 4 18 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD The Augusta Chronicle DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKLY. Fuel and Building Material. The Southern Fuel and Supply 0o. Anthracite, Steam and Blacksmith Coal, Lime. Cement, Brick, Paints Semi-Weekly is issued Tuesdays and Fridays, contains all the news Foot Hogan St., Jacksonville, Fla. of the world. Especial attention paid to the market in Angusta, New York, Chicago, New Orleans and Liverpool. A fine Family Paper. The Semi-Weekly will be sent for one year together with one of the best N aval Stores M arK et magazines of the United States for $1.00. Address Chronicle, Augusta, Ga 4--'i,' 11 ; t-i t- 1,--'111 1 i--iI II--i- 11 -!! i-i ,1a1 ar d Stochk R report SPORT OF FERNANDINA. Published Daily in The For accurate news of the commerce, shipping, financial and public at- -, fairs of this growing port, read - THE STAR, Subscription $1.00 per Year. Advertisers will find it the best medium to reach these interests and the - people of Fernandina and the two adjoining counties of Nassau (Fla.) . and Camden, (Ga.). At home everybody reads The Star. Abroad, every- S body sends for it. 11n n 1 n 111 i -i 1 i--111 m .i M--I-Mi-n--i-H -i-i 111 THE TAMPA TRIBUNE. DAILY, SUNDAY WEEKLY. The Morning Tribune is the only morning paper printed in South Flor- Ida and is delivered by carrier in six towns of adjacent counties. It is recognized as the best advertising medium in the South. The Weekly Tribune is the largest, handsomest and best paper printed in Florida. It goes everywhere and is read by everybody. As an adver- tising medium it has no equal this side of the Rocky Mountains. TamIM, F/o f. For Beautiful Illustrated Edition, CONTAINING OVER ONE HUNDRED VIEWS OF Ft. Myers, the Gulf Coast of Lee County and the Tropical Caloosahatchee River Section SEND TEN CENTS TO THE FORT MYERS PRESS, FORT MYERS. FLA Jacksonville Metropolis, Twelve to Sixteen hours ahead of any other daily Florida newspaper. Subscribe for'it now. $5 A YEAR; $2.50 SIX MONTHS. BIG PRIZES: A trip to Europe, to St. Louis Saratoga, to New York and to Exposition, to Asheville N. C. Absolutely Free to the winners in the Great Metropolis Sub- scription contest. Write for particulars. Carter & Russell Publishing Co. Jacksonville, Florida. Half Tones-Zinc Etchings Illustrating and Engraving Department OF THE FLORIDA TIMES-UNION. Splendidly equipped for business. Half Tones and Zinc Etchings made to order in the most improved and artistic fashion. Illustrations for newspapers and all kinds of Commercial Work, Pamphlets. etc. I SPECIALTl IS OF 0 DSIGilllG, RETOUCHliG IND EMBEISHING PHOTOGRAPHS II PICTURES. IN WRITING OR APPLYING FOR PRICES, GIVE THE MOST EXPLICIT DESCRIPTION OF WHAT IS WANTED GOOD WORK AND PROMPT DELIVERIES PROMISED A Florida Enterprise. Try It. . ___.___ b P THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD 19 East Coast Lumber Co. ROUGH AND DRESSED LONG LEAF YELLOW PINE. Bundled Rosin Barrel Staves in Carload Lots. Steamer Shipmnets a Specialty. WATERTOWN, FLORIDA. Cochrane's Book Store. Wholesale Stationery, Fishing Tackle, Pipes, Notions, Stencil Ink Brushes, Lumber Crayons. PALATKA. FLORIDA. Write for Prices. Have hundreds of articles suitable for the Commissary Trade. JOSEPH D. WEED. W. D. KRENSON. J. D. WEED L CO., SAVANNAH. GEORGIA. Wholesale Hardware, Bar, Hoop and Band Iron. MAKE A SPECIALTY OF Turpentine Tools, Glue, Battings, Etc. *I I:IT11: II: -14l- I 111: T I-11 1--11P=l II Hl H Levy Times-Democrat *-*-6 Is the only newspaper published in Levy County, and Is the only medium through which the 10,000 inhabitants of Levy County can be reached. Our * rates are low, and it will pay advertisers to use our columns. Subscription $1.00 a year; samples free. Homeseekers should come to Levy County. Here Is the famous Gulf Hammock, abounding in wild game, and one of the richest spots on earth. Address, C. J. FARMER, Editor, Brenson, Florlda. i llt1111-1-1tI I=I! Iw!I t = 111 11 SThe.. Daytona Halifax Journal. Published at Daytona, Flordia, is the rec- lively interest In all that pertains to the ognized representative of the most beau- welfare of Florida and the South. tiful village in the South and gives all the Republican in politics, it is not bigoted local and general news relating to it. nor intolerant to those holding opposite While especially devoted to the interests beliefs. of Daytona and the East Coast, it takes a Subscription price, $1.50 per year. J. M. JOLLY, Editor and Proprietor. *I II I ll II IIIT IIIII II !=I -1 -I I 11 1 1-IIII- I- 1 T I 1 -1 T A All about the Lower East Coast of Florida may be learned by reading S5he Miami Metropolis Published at Miama, Fla. S The moat Southern City in the United States. - Subscription Rates: Daily, 45.OO per annum; Weekly, $l..?. An advertisement in the Me- - - tropoiis reaches the most prosperous fruit and vegetaibe crru"ers in the country. I 1 1 11 11 = 1 1!!t 111I 111 1 111 1 I ii -I I 1 1I-I- I II -- I E1 F4 I i I[ J. R. TOLAR. J. H. HART. N191" 319q9l?949 9BW9 99IWIWP J. R. TOLAR, J. T. H. BLACHLY. (Established 1872.) TOLAR, HART & CO., 160 FRONT STREET, NEW YORK. Commission Merchants and Jobbers of Naval Stores. Liberal Advances on Consignments of Naval Stores and Cotton. Members of New York Cotton and Produce Exchange. Orders executed for Cotton Futures. W. B. Huger. W. T. RMley, C( USmvL President. Vice-Prealdent. Bey a Tg UNION COOPERAGE AND SUPPLY . (INCORPORATED.) DTERS m A11 Kind1 O! Cooperate. SPIRITS OF TURPEWTIE BARRELS A SPECIALTY. WITH DISTRIBUTING POINTS FOR TURPENTINE BARRELS LOCATED IS FOLLOWS: ATLANTA, COLUMBUS, BAINBRIDGE. MACON. SAVANNAH, VALmO TA. TIFTON, HAWKINSVILL., GA.; OCALA, PEN8ACOLA. LIV OAK LEIBBTTRG, LAKE CITY, JACKBONVILLE, TAMPA. FLA:; MONTOOMM , ALA.; CHARLEBTON. a C. ALL ORDER TO ABOVE POINT OR SAVANNAH OUWIC WLS W U OEmY PROMPT AT lNTn ON. -- AAA .L.9 J.J. OJ AtJ .LO.U n-2.3 9 iJUL QUABARJL J- ..J3 0L U A93JA A o SPECIAL BARGAINS IN DIAMONDS. 0 30 YEARS RELIABILITY. Hess Slager, Diamonds, Silverware, Watches and Jewelry. CORNER BAY AND CEDAR STS. AND t1 & 13 MAIN. Slro rrn-a-a-O n-rrmmnnrT (6 mFlSTT ((ToWE irlr(nDUnF ((6 'mrfO TAKE I WOULD HAVE bEEN IN THE RI AoDVUD Cornfort TO TAXt'OMFORT' For Rheumatism. Kidneys, Bladder and Urinary Organs. This picture illustrates before and after taking Comfort. We have thousands or testimonials. They come in daily, telling of the wonderful cures of Rheumatism and other troubles relating to the Kid- neys, Bladder and Heart. The man walking with a stick, threw his stick away after taking one bottle of Comfort, and after taking the seventh bottle he was entirely cured. Take Comfort to-day, for to-morrow I imay be too late. Comfort is pleasant to the taste and Sqick inits work. Price 50 cents a bottle at all drug- gists and commissaries. SI'' Our Afco Female Pills make weak women strong and delayed periods easy. Price 50 cents a package at all druggists. Afcolets, the world's laxative, works while you sleep, never sickeas, weak ens or gripes you. Aids digestion and cures constipation. Prices, 10 and 25 cents a package. For further information, address The Afco Chemical Company Jacksonville, Fla. All correspondence strictly confidential Ay one of the three remedies will be mailed to any address: on receipt of price 99~U9~P99~899g~~"~~~~O~ LI C0008900g~ BLAKESLEE PUMPING OUTFIT. This outfit can be directly connected to a pump and will g supply sufficient water for general farm and household ue. 4 Why not have a water works plant of your own at a small 4 cost, and this is the most desirable power for use in cas of fire or other necessity; it can be started at a moment's notice. You don't have to wait for the wind; it's always ready for work. I The engine can instantyl be made ready for other pow- Sher purposes, such as grinding feed, churning, etc., by di- connecting the pump. This outfit Is simple, durable, economical, easily operated. 4 and ready for work any minute. No country home is complete without this ideal a labor saver. We build a complete line of pumping plants for mines. Irrigation, 4 fire protection, railway supply, and install water works plants for city service. 4 Will be pleased to furnish any additional information on request. 4 WHITE-BAKESLEE MFG. CO. Birmingham Ala. Builders of the Blakeslee Gas and Gasoline and Connected Outfits. 4 ~g~E999~P9~ 20 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD J H C.OSBY. President CM rULLER. Vic-President JAS F LANE. Becy f Tree -1-70ated 096 Greenleaf & Crosby Company Diamonds and Other Precious Stones Fine Gold Jewelry 3eDtmkro anb bilbetsmnitbolr American and Foreign Watches and Clocks 41 West Bay Street J',cksonville Th lasts a.d Roat stock in ti part of tbe l States. prompt attention to manl orden Sterling Silverware Electro Plated Ware Choice Cut Glass Fine China Dinner Sets and Fancy Pieces Write for Catalogue European Novelties 4L THE COUNCIL TOOL Co.i of Wananish. N. C., Formerly of Council's Station. N. C., are still selling Diamond Edge 0 Hacks at 1LO0, Black Joe and Standard at $5.00, Old Style and Patent * Pullers at 8.00 a dosen. They should average a little better than ever. We have brought out a new brand, the Blue Line Hacks at $8.00 and Pull- ers at 88.00 which are warranted. All wholesale dealers in naval stores supplies carry our lines and should supply operators. F0,9nW ww999999v999999999wWW D. G. McKETHAN, Prtde&t. Jacksonville, Fla, SALFRED A. McKETHAN, L't U. S N. et'd Sec'y and Treas, Constructing Engineer, Fayetteville, N. G. Pine Product Construction Co. INCORPORATED Fyetteville. N. C. Spirits of Turpentine, Oil of Tar, Creosote, Tar, Disinfectants; Wood Preservative. Paints, Wood Stains, Etc., and Charcoal, from Lightwood Stumps, Box-facings. Profits increased. Time of distillation reduced. Condensation controlled at will. No danger from fire. Plant erected complete, and men taught the process. Fur- ther information, write Alfred MacKethan, general manager, Fayetteville, N. C. THE PHILADELPHIA TAILORS JOHN B. GIANCAGLINI & BRO., MERCHANT TAILORS AND IMPORTERS 48 W. Bay Street. JACKSONVILLE, FLA. w-* ........ I 1 -1 -7 ....LX1,-Z -7.;ee.u; ss;;u ;_ y; HOTEL BARTHOLDI, BROADWAY AND 3d ST., NEW YORK CITY. Facing Madison Square Park. Newly Furnished Throughout. Near all Big Stores and Places of Amusemett. Cars Pass the Door for all Railroad Stations and Steamboat Landings. Large Sample Rooms for Commercial Travelers: Here you find no grand and magnificent decorations. no luxurious grandeur; no awe-inspiring surroundings; no elaborate bill of fare, printed in French; no clerks that will disdain to Speak to You. No Employees In Any Way Inattcntative. But just a cozy, home-like little hotel that will appeal to the hearts of those who are looking for solid comfort. Good. plain American cooking, and affable and courteous treatment. MION ROeit, Pfwr.bsmr John R. Young. President. C . Eli, Vice-President. J, W. Motte, Jr.. Secretary and Treasurer. The ELLIS-YOUNG CO. SCommission Merchants | NAVAL STORES FACTORS i- AND WHOLESALE GROCERS | Savannah and Brunswick, Ga. J. W. HUNT. President. J. E. HARRIS, S0 V. Pres C. SHOUS, See. & Treas. P. L PEACOCK, 1st V. P" W. J. KI.LY, 3d V. P. H. L RICHMOND, Asst Sec'y-Trea Peacock-Hunt & West Company, General Offices: 20 Bay Street, E, Savannah, Ga and aWest Building, Jacksonville, Fa. NAVAL STORES FACTORS. (We are strictly Factors. Our interest and the producers' is mutual We never take to account, nor are we interested in any company that buys spirit Turpentine and rosin.) WHOLESALE GROCERS, Hay, Grain and Heavy Harness. Coopers' Tools and Naval Stores Hardware Our Specialty :NTS FOR- The Celebrated Un.. .itine Axes and Wilson & Ghilds' I delphia Wagons. Naval Stores Received at Savannah, Ga., and Jacksonvill and fernandina, Fla. I , 4 4 C_ ~VOIi~t9~i~i~01~~i~i9~k+,~i~9~+~i~i~ am / Departments |