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USTRIAL , MilPllR SS Sil'1 III 'IIE A~o i~. Ii~1il *iII5 RECORD FKI~bY PAVAL E ToES. I, 0 PVSTRWIA FAiMGIAls G) tTEWPAPEkRg) JACKSONVILLE, FLA. ATLANTA, GA. SAVANNAH, G A. z I r -------------- r- s -- NOE= ~-, B== President, W. C. POWELL: Vice-Presidenta, who with the President, constitute the Directory and Board of Managers, W. F. COACHMAN, B. F. BUL- LARD, H. L. COVINGTON, IL A. McEACHERN, JOILN R.YOUNG, J. A. CRANFORD, D. H. McMILLAN, C. DOWN- ING, J. R. SAUNDERS, C. B. ROGERS; Auditor, JOHN HENDERSON. CONSOLIDATED NAVAL STORES .. COMPANY.. JACKSONVILLE, FLA. SAVANNAH, GA. PENSACOLA, FLA. NAVAL STORES FACTORS SPaid in Capital Stock, $2,500,000 SOwned and Controlled by Practical Operators. Small Amount of Stock Yet in Reserve to Sell to Operators Who Can Arrange to Buy. The Consolidated is Purely a Cooperative Company. Its Interests are identical with those of the Producers. The Patronage of Turpentine Operators everywhere Invited. Plenty of Money and Plenty of Timber for Everybody. YARDS AT JACKSONVILLE, SAVANNAH, FERNANDINA AND PENSACOLA All Producers are Invited to Call or Correspond. . . . . . . . . - - - - - -. ., ,,^. - -1 1 -M WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY. DEVOTED TO THE NAVAL STORES, LUMBER AND MANUFACTURING IN bKfs lS, Ailud l 212 byi0 Ihie Exutiv Camniee c e TurieuiT e Op Ami i aiE O Orga md aed 802. i* Amul CmwnuieiA u a-n O6 Orgab ai the eenr Aofseif Ato"ped SeptL. B 0m the orcOrnc d Turpenie Opertors' Aocidain. Adopted April 27,1903. (U. Orfic Orgn d the biter-Sie CO Growers'cia. Endorsed br Georgi Swum Asminat OFidOrga Slheerm Stoc Gwroers Asoiei. SOUTH CAROLINA PRESS ASSOCIATION S. H. Hardwick Speaks. White Stone Lithia Springs, S. C., July ant crops. The Man With the Hoe, as typ- 14.-Proposed railroad legislation by Con- ified by Edwin Markham, has been practi- gress and the steady advance in general cally eliminated from the South, and has conditions in the South were discussed been succeeded by the man with the mod- in a speech made here to-night by Col. S. ern cultivator. The whirl of thousands of H. Hardwick, passenger traffic manager of spindles of the South is fast becoming tlhe the Southern Railway. The occasion was hum of such machinery in other sections. the thirty-first annual meeting of the The lights of the miners' camps in the South Carolina Press Association. Colo- South arc as multitudinous as fireflies on nel Hardwick opposed the enactment of a summer's evening. The extension of the the Esch-Townsend bill, urging that such railroads, by construction of new lines and legislation will put the South back for development of older ones, is one of the many years. greatest activities of the whole country Mr. Hardwick's Speech. to-day. Mark that the railway transpor- Mr. President, lalies and MeImhers station of the South is not surpassed by SPreAsie nt, Ladies an e ers that of any other section, and, indeed. State PressAssociation of South Carolina: is called by few. Think where the Receive. I beg you, my compliments an South wouldl be to-day without her rail- my thanks- wavs. And yet we know that while the "I think the South requires the aid of South is now coming into her own, the her sons now more than at any period of story is Iut begun. her history. As you ask my purlpose, 1 B1t unhappily the South is not yet left will state that I have no thought of aban- unhinderel in her Inareh of progress. The doing her unless rcmpelled to do so. South is now onfronted with a most in These are the words of the noblest an .idiou evil, the more dangerous in that grandest chieftain of the South and of t appears in quite a plausible guise. worSplendid as is the record of Lee through- She is now desired to understand that Splendid as is the record of Lee throg what se, along with the whole country, out every day of his life, great as had really needs is for the final rate-making been his military achievements beginning power to be conferred upon a bureau of at West Point, including the Mexican and the national Government. The proposed Indian Wars, and illumined with the great- new Interstate Commerce Commission is eet glory as general of the armies of the to he composed of seven instead of five South, embracing all the details of the men. service, including his visit to South Caro- These seven Conimissione s to do what lina to see personally that her coast de- many thousand men are now engaged in fenses were in proper condition, on through doing. the only difference being that these all his glorious career, through victory or are railroad men who are constantly going temporary defeat, there is no period of hi about the contr and with years of in- great, good life which approaches the sub- telligent experience, ascertaining the needs limit of his quiet life and example after of the people, the resources of the country he had ordered his armies to finally dis- th to obtain information upon which band and return to their homes. It was poper rate adjustments shold be ade. inthapt timetat his grrtofthehardthear, over-p r rate adjustments should he made. in that time that his great heart, over The many thousands appoitned are rail- flowing wi th love for te South and for road men. while the seven i ,en are to be the role country, he with knightliest appointees of the President of tihe United courage gave himself no rest or leisure, lbt States. Yet all these many thousand men. at once gave immediate response to tle in tie final analysis, are not considered need of the South for her sons. to know what th pope reay de.rire, nor Lee'a Devotion to the South. thie wlioti conditions of markets, or other Lee couilll have left his mother country substaial conditions ons n which proper aned been honored and worshippeil by the rates reli ade. I say these many thoms- world abroad as one of her greatest anti mis-dre not supposed to know as well, princes. He could have had sinecures of nor be as reliable, because forsooth, they all kinds for merely the use of his great are appointed by railroad companies and name elsewhere. But he knew the need spend their lives in that work; while, of thle South, that her sons must care for on the other hand, these seven Commis- her. bind up her wounds, build up her sioners are appointed by the President of waste and war-worn places, and so he ac- the United States for varying lengths of cepted his part of the hard task and he- ternin, and ean cannot have as good means of gan to work for the South, with the coming in contact with the people to en- menger income of a college president, to able their fully or fairly to obtain all the build anew that college. and to he forever information upon which to fix a rate-a an example to teach the youth of the rate fair to the shipper and the railroad. South by his counsel antd personal asso- When a railroad company nowadays citation anl give solace and encouragement wants to appoint a man to one of the tor the whole desolate South; aye, also to higher positions in charge of its revenues, the stricken North, and indeed to our which are. of course, its rates, that com- whole great country, and to all the world pany deliberates a long while and finds beside, and to a all men ho e and are much difficulty in getting a properly train- yet to follow his example and give heed ed expert for the place, on account of its to his words, tremendous importance and responsibility. Glance backward for a moment and see But under the proposed bill the President what the extremity of that need was. of the United States is expected to select Think of the South in the days when the and appoint seven men who can do this great Lee spoke these words. with prac- superhumtan work of final rate-making for tically no railroad system; all destroyed, the whole country. and wreckage all that was left. Railroads Working for the South. The Rebuilding. At present it is tlhe hbuiness of railroads Come quickly along the intervening years of the South to see that the South shall and let us give thanks and rejoice ever compete for all traffic to anti from all do- anew that we had so great and so wise a meslic and foreign markets possible, and leader as Lee. Think of thile magnificent this is done in tihe fairest consideration of work of the sons of the SOlth who Ibepin l:11 concerned. but of course the railroads iiimllediately tlen to lbrinlg order out of of tlie Soutlh nver Io'se sight of the fact chaos. See the glorious Southland blos- thaflit their interests and responsibilities are coming today as a rose and alounding in in the South. rich development of mines and manufac- Other railroads of other sections have tures, and her fields yielding superabund- similar ideas; hence competition is keen and active between the respective rail- roads throughout the country. If the Southern Railway, for example, finds that it cannot place the products of South Carolina in certain new markets by reason of existing differences in rates, it promptly endeavors, if practicable, to adjust its rates so that the competition may ensue. This could no longer be done under the Esch-Townsend bill. In such a case as I have cited, if the Commission had fixed a certain rate to that point, that must be the exact rate; nothing higher, nothing lower may be charged, and as no change in the rate could, under the law, be made without the consent of the Commission, then that competition would be shut off, and South Carolina, and so the whole South, must hear her loss of trade extension in that di- rection. In time the seven Commissioners will have fixed all rates doubtless upon a strict mileage basis. and competition be- tween railroads would cease. Pooling Already Prohibited. There is nothing in the present law stricter than the prohibition of pooling, yet here we find the Esch-Townsend bill actually fixing the limitations of competi- tion as the Commission may deem best, because by saying the rate may not be changed, not even lowered, these seven Commissioners do in effect pool the traffic to that particular point, as they thus tend to confine that traffic to certain lines and to exclude certain other lines, thus saying what revenues in that respect shall go to certain roads, and what to other roads; what sections or what localities shall be permitted to offer their productions in certain markets. Permit me here to give you the sub- tfnce of some views expressed by our third vice-president, Mr. J. M. Culp, who says: "It is clear that if there had been, when many of the rates were being made for the stimulation of traffic to and from the South. some central power authorized to name and fix rates, they would have been certainly made witl some relation to the distances. and this central authority would 'undoubtedly considered that it was not its business to make rates which would take traffic from one section to aid in the development of traffic in another section, no matter if such adjustment was necrs- sarv for the development of the new in- lduiistries. They would have held that the rates must le thie r~ame for the same dis- tances from varioms 1Mii.is of production to iie various Foint.s of consumption. Needs of the South. "The South. by reason of her raw ma- terial. such as iron, coal, cotton, timber. etc.. is in need of every aid to enable her to convert those raw products into finished material and ship them to the markets of consumption. This will not be accomp- lished with consistent rapidity, if ever at all, except by the aid of the railroads in the South, left free in the future, as they have been in the past, to make such ad- justments as they may find necessary for the fostering and benefit of the industries and producing centers of the South. It is easy to imagine how difficult it would have been twenty-five or thirty years ago to have had a commission or other central power to make these rates, assuming that complaint was made to them of the rates made or proposed on iron to the Fast, and West. or manufactured cotton goods or furniture, authorizing a reduction in thevte rates to the basis that was adopted, as against the efforts of the Northern rail- roads and the Northern manufacturers. But such a comniision or central power woull have prevented a reduction from Southern points unless corresponding or relative reductions were made from other established points of production." NEW FLORIDA RAILROAD PROJECTED The Jacksonville, Fernandina & South- ern Railway Company is the name of a new corporation, organized to build and operate a railroad for the transportation of passengers and freight between Jackson- ville and Fernandina. The names of the stockholders, as given in the legal notice, are as follows: Sam- uel A. Swann of Fernandina, William A. Evans of Fernandina, John R. Young of Savannah, William S. West and John W. West of Valdosta, Frank Adams of Jasper, and Charles Darby and Eugene West of Jacksonville. Each of these gentlemen is well known to the people of Georgia and Florida, and it is known that any enter- prise that they inaugurate is assured of success. The general nature of the business to be transacted by the corporation, as stated in the published articles, is to build, con- struct, maintain, manage and operate a railroad for the transportation of passen- gers, produce, goods, chattels, personal property and all other articles of freight whatsoever, for profit, with spurs and side-tracks connected therewith, as fol- lows: Beginning within, at or near the city of Jacksonville and extending thence through the County of Duval into the County of Nassau, to a point within, at or near the city of Fernandna, etc. The length of said railway, including spurs and side- tracks, will be about twenty-eight miles. The capital stock of the company is fixed at $250,000, divided into 2,500 shares of the par value of $100 each. The first annual meeting is tobe held on the second Tuesday in January, 1906, and until that time the officers of the company will be as follows: President, Eugene E. West; vice-presi- dent, John R. Young; secretary, Samuel A. Swann; treasurer, Frank Adams. The board of directors consists of all the stock- holders named in the beginning of this article and each of those named has sub- scribed for three hundred shares of stock of the company. The route of the Jacksonville, Fernan- dina & Southern Railway will no doubt be almost an air line from Jacksonville to Fernandina, for the articles of incorpora- tion state that the total length of the rail- way, including spurs and side-tracks, will be about twenty-eight miles. For a long time there has been talk of the building of a new road from Jack- sonville to Fernandina, and there have been all kinds of rumors as to one or an- other of the railroad systems centering in Jacksonville being behind the project. It is now seen that the railroad is to be built by entirely new corporation, composed of business men of Florida and Georgia, and men who are largely interested in the na- val stores and lumber business. The build- ing of the road, it is believed, will mean much to both ports. Fort McCoy, Fla., July 12-News was received here by the last mail that Hinkle & Son of Georgia had closed a deal with Hodges & O'Hara for the timber front 19,000 acres of their well-timbered land as fast as the gum could be extratced by the latter. The consideration was $1.35,000. The new owners say they will soon put in some up-to-date mills to cut this fine body of timber, and no doubt will put steam dummies in to haul the logs to the mills. This land was first bought by F. Long & Son, costing probably $22.000. Then front them to Hodges & O'Hara for $62,000. Tnis deal only includes the timber after the turpentine has been taken from it. About one month more and Captain Streator will have the timlier all pulled from Mill ('reek swamp, uhen lie will movee to Sunday Ilunff, where they are extending a railroad fur miles up to Mud Lake. on what is known as Eating Creek. It will in all probability take them a year to clean up that swamp. 4 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. WE WANT HOLLANDER& Jacksonville Should be American Terminus of the Burg Line. Irving H. Welch, general manager of the Southern States Land and Timber Company, of Jacksonville, is one of the most progressive men in Florida. He feels a keen interest in the development of the State's opportunities and resources and he is untiring in his efforts to build up. At tihe recent meeting of the Jacksonville Board of Trade, a letter from Mr. Welch was read which so fittingly illustrates this that it is printed in full below: "Jacksonville, Fla., July 12, 1905.--Cap- tain C. E. Garner. President Jacksonville Board of Trade. (ity: Dear Sir-This let- ter is written to urge the importance of securing a direct line of steamers from Holland. the effort for which was indorsed by the Board of Trade in June. "The fact that Brunswick and other ports are doing such strenuous work to get such a line should he an incentive to our people to leave no act undone tending to make Jacksonville the United States term- inus of the line. Such achievement would he of vast importance not only to the port of Jacksonville, but to the entire State of Florida. "A gentleman in the Government service tells me he was informed by a pilot that last Saturday there were twenty-seven feet of water over the bar, so lack of water -should he no hindrance. "Some advantages that might interest the steamship owners, aside from the im- mediate important commercial features. are the almost infinite possibilities of de- velopment of the immense agricultural territory trilutary to the city. Jackson- ville is the undisputed center of all that remains in this country for the naval stores operators. It is the distributing point for manufactured supplies and fool- stuffs of every sort for this part of the Southeast. "Jacksonville is the gateway of the most popular winter resorts in the whole country. It is the largest city of the greatest peninsula in the United States. "Jacksonville wants the agricultural re- sources of Florida developed, and recog- nizes the fact that the Hollanders will make most excellent citizens and valuable helpers in the cultivation of the land and production of crops, which can be made very remunerative through the gratifica- tion of the appetites of our winter visitors and for Northern markets. "Hollanders will find in Florida much they are familiar with: Salt water and fish in abundance. low lands that produce well their favorite vegetables and a most healthy, congenial climate. They are citi- zens we want-the best of domestics. trained truck growers. natural dairymen. religious, intelligent, thrifty. law-resppet- ing people, who will prosper and build up any community favored by one of their settlements. "The writer recently visited the Holland settlements in Michigan and South Da- kota, with a view to interesting some of them in locating in Florida. The colonies referred to are among the best, improved. richest portions of their respective States and the citizens the most respected. Their lands are too 'thickly settled and too high- privedl for the newcomers direct from the old country, and the surplus there are eager for information regarding Florida. "One of the first questions asked by the principal founder of a South Dakota col- ony was whether we have ships direct from the Netherlands. Tie said that would be a great indudcement. as the long rail- road trip from New York to the West was very objectionable to the simple folk who come to America to build homes "The y want to come in numlbers suffic- ient to establish their own Dutch Reformed Churches and have their own ministers at the start: then they will send the chil- dren to our schools, and cheerfully go to work to open their farms and learn the wavs of their new fatherland. "T never knew a Hollander to return to hle old country to live. Instead. they sentl back for their relatives and friendly in their own crowded little country in Europe to come here. where they have larger oppor- tunities and can get homes of their own and find employment for all members of their usually large families. "Twenty-two years' residence among the Hollanders in a new country convinces me that Florida cannot iposibly get a more desirable class of settlers than the Hollanders. and we should make every Impossible effort to secure this Voss)burgh line of ships, as that, it appears, will ma- terially help us. Yours truly. '"IRVING H. WI'LC11." As to the desirability of a direct line of steamers from Holdland the Record heiartilly agrees .with Mr. Welch andl the Burg line at this particular time is desir- ios of making some Soutli Atlantic port the American terminus. Why not .Jack- sonville? SOLD GRAZING LAND. E. E. Skipper of Bartow. was in thie city yesterday meeting here with a mIululmr iof Northern investors to consummate a deal for grazing lands in South Florida. Mr. Skipper is prominent ly identified with the business interests of D)Soito anid Polk Counties. anld is one of the most en- terprising men in that part of the State. The deal in which he was interested, and which closed at the Windsor lHotel in the afternoon. mean t the exchange of nimny thousand dollars for a tract of 20.000 acres of land. The land is wanted for stock raising. In connection with stock raising in South Florida. Mr. Skipper said: "There is much being done to improve this industry in South Florida. and the time for leaving stock to the mercy of the woods without a fenced pasturage is albut over. There is a desire on the part of the stock raisers to improve the breed of cat- tie and the indications are that in that part of the State a least here are to lie ,rent strides made in this industry during the next few years. Northern people are interesting themselves in stock raising, and a:re buying up great tracts of land. I Ite- lieve that the grom ing of the best stock. which i-s now an industry of thile West. is to be transferred to Georgia and Florida. and I am convinced that Floridla offers ev- ertlhing in the way of inducements for this industry." INTO BIG COAL FIELD. Central of Georgia is Making an Extension near Birmingham. SThe Central of Georgia Railway is bumill- ing an extension of its road near Birming- ham. Ala.. which will open a coal field of 9.000 acres and add greatly to the Cen- tral's coal tonnage. It will be completed within a short time. At tile meeting of tle Board of Direc- tors in Macon Monday, it was decided to issue t$400.000 in bonds to cover the cost of the extension. Col. A. i. IawtAn, first vice-president of the Central. said that thile new fields xwoul lie of great value to the road. "TIme tract covers about 9.000 acrcs," said Col. Lawton. "and is filled with a line qualitity of steam co al. It comtilins no domestic coeal so far as is known. The Central has ae(quired control of this tract aiii tile rtinnel Coal CoImainiy hams been organized. Te property will probably lie leased to some operator, who will mine tile coal. "The tract lies in the Upper Cahlha coal field in St. ('lair county Tll connecting road will be about. ten miles long and will connmet with our Hlenry Ellen spur. The Central has nott a this time any connec- tion over its own rails withli the Alabama coal fields and the extension will give ius one. "'T-he contract for building the extension has been let to Redmond & Ga(llhett. the latter hleing Mr. Cecil (:ablhett of Savan- nah. Work has liegun and it will not lie Imng leftre tile extension is completed. After thie fields are develols-d there will lie an outlpt, of n, t less than 2.000 tons ;a day. giving tlie central l an increased o al tonnage atnd providing a supply of fmurl for our own use. The lisnd is'.uep of $(tiO). 000 is secured byv mortgage on the ronal and will I-ear interest at 4 per cent. BUYS HENDRY RANCH. .\rea:dia. F'l:i.. .iilv 1: 'ie' ,, eshl(t. ,,f .I. N. l'iarker t, d;iay bought ill tihe grain, lands. consisting of twenty-three thousands acres and all the cattle, alout five thous- and head. belonging to the R. C. Hendry estate, for $75,000 cash. I I 5, R. C. DAVIS T. A. FULGHUVM R. C. DAVIS & CO., General Agents Fay-Sholes Typewriter We buy, sell, exchange or rent second hand machines, offering liberal inducements. Write for descriptions of the Fay-Sholes, which is the world's record machine for speed, simplicity and durability. R. C. DAVIS & CO., JAKSNLORID WILLIAM A. OURS JAMES DARBY WILLIAM A. BOURS & COMPANY THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED GRAIN AND D EE HOUSE IN THE STATE. Hay, Grain, feed, Garden Seeds, Poultry Supplies, Flour, Grits, Meal and Fertilizers. OUR MOTTO: Prompt Shipment, ReNaMe Goods. Catalogee Free 206 EAST BAY ST., JACKSONVILLE, FLA. NUBIAN TEA In Liquid Form This well known remedy is now put up in liquid, as well as pow- dered form. In the liquid it is READY FOR USE. It is a perfect medicine, and extremely palatable. Even children like it. It costs only 50 cents a bottle. It will cure Constipation, Biliousness, Indigestion, Dyspepsia and all diseases resulting from a torpid liver or disordered kidneys. WRITE US FOR PRICES. SSpencer Medicine Company. Ctattanots.a, Tenesse. Would a Turpentine Propestl on Interest You ? o What About Saw MiU Timber? , 20,000 acres best virgin pine in DeSoto county, $4.50 per acre. * 30,000 best virgin timber ini Manatee. $3. per acre. Several good turpentine places in west Florida. * Send for our list of saw mill and turpentine places. I BROBSTON, FENDIG & CO. a16 W.-Forame St. JaaIm lW~, toFla. SEmS~~~;;~~~~r~r;;rr ~ ~ rr~V~ECCECEE~1~rC~ ,S_~?C~XSCSCSCSC3C3CSC3CSCSC3C~X?~(aC~`' ~SOL3i9C~JESCSESCSCSCSaESaffS~X3CSES~~ __ Cs THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. 5 Cay, Shine & McCall FIRE INSURANCE. 2a1 Dyal-Upchurch Bidg THOSE. G. HUTCHINSON FELLOW AMEICAN ASSOCIATION Of PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS Room 7, Board of Trade Bldg. Pseus 312 JACKSONVILLE. FLA. Lombard Iron Works and Supply Company BUILDERS AND DEALERS IN ENGINES. BOILERS. Cotton, Saw, Fertilizer, Oil and Ice Ma- chinery, and Supplies and Repirs. Capacity for 200 Hands. Machine Tools, Wood-Working Machinery, Shafting, Pulleys, Hangers, Leather ann Rubber Belting and Hose, Railroad and Mill Supplies and Tools. Plans and estimates furnished for Power Plants and Steel Bridges. Steam Pumps. Feed Water Heaters and Hoisting Engines. AVGUSTA. GEORGIA. WHISKIES GINS AND RUMS IrOM $1.50 to $5.00 per Gallon ......AGENCY FOR..... Lewis 1866 and Mount Vernon Pure Rye Whiskies. Controllers Blum's Monogram and Syl- van Rye-Agents for Jungst Cincin- nati and Pabst Milwaukee Beers. Prices on application. CHAS. BLUM & CO. S17 I nd 519 WEST BAY STREET. JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Florida Electric Co. Contraction Electrical Engineers Sell and Install Complete Electric Light and Power Plants, Telephone Ex- changes. Wholesale Electric Supplies. Jacksonville, Fla. 14 West Bay Street, JACKSONVILLE, FLA. The CLOTHIERS EVERYTHING THAT IS GOOD AND SMART IN WEARING APPAREL FOR MEN AND BOYS. "'one 1955 FLORIDA LUMBER FOR PANAMA. lcensacila, Fla.. .uul 14.-Tlhe first cargo ,f luimler to ble shipliplI to Plianlina from I ensiacola is Ilow being loaded in tle har- lor. It will go out on the British steamer, Miramar, ciinsigned to llyer Bros.. and a largee part of it. has already been stored. Thle cargo will aggregate alsiut a mil- lion and a half feet of dressed lumber and is lthe oulll llt if iills ill this seetion. The 1nlrti.a'-t for)l flirlii lilg this class of huln- w:r i \;Is s 'llred bli a Chiago firmin from Ihe 1 'a I';aIna ( ial ( o'mnisioin. but tlhe lirm I,:rc-lhaseil tie tilllr here and the -hipmlent M ill go frnom this port. Whihl it is not dlfinllitely known, it is -Ull.iied tl ihat lhe lumnlcr is to be used :11 e!'eiting cottages and houses there and for other s;nilar purposes. \\Vhile this will lbe the first cargo of lum- Iwr to ti oult from l'ensacola it is lie- liev l that other shipments will follow, -IWiili i to t0i4l': ilt lihit I'eisa hola is the iearr il poi to Il( <':lial. and in addition tlie li.,t c.ih-s iof limller a: nd 111 l ll'r ipro- iUrable ciui lie plrch'laseid here and loaded ShIeaper than at any other port. At pres- ent the heavier class of tinilwr is being -hipped from the Mississippi coast. BIG MILL DEAL. Weeks & Wilder Sell to the Everglade Cy- press People. Loughman, Fla., July 12.-A deal has just been closed by which the Everglade Cypress Lumber (Company buys out the timber and entire plant of Weeks & Wil- der of Loughman, wlho have Ien operating one of the largest and Im-st equippi.d shin- gle nills in the State under the poporate name e f the Carter & Weeks Comany. The sulcess with which this latter coim- pany has met in establishing and handling this extensive shingle business during the past few years is too widely known to need comment. They started with a ca- pacity of forty to fifty thousand shingles per day, and worked it up to over one hundred and twenty-five thousand, or alxsut two carloads lpr day. They supply most of the best trade in South Florida. The Everglade Cypress Lumber (Coin- i'any, with principal ollices at Parkersburg. \\. Va.. have been for the past two or three yc;irs operating a cypress lumber m:;11 at Carters, Fla.. under the manage- ment of their superintendent, David Burns. lHaving just exhausted their timber supply at that point they recently bought a large tract of cypress in this territory, which was formerly owned by II. M. Pfann & Co., E. .1. Copley and others. Finding, after due investigation. that the location held by the Carter & Weeks Company was the most convenient and desirable for the iret ion of their large mills, a deal was cnnmmenced and terminated in the change -tateld. It is said that this is one of the largest cash transactions that has taken place in this county in a long time, the price. it is, understood, being about one hundred thousand dollars. With what timber the Everglade l)eople had alradv. their last purchase puts them in poI.-"csion of one of the finest and large- t bodies of timber in this part of the State. They will at once begin the erection of an extensive plant for the man- iufacture of third timls'r into lumler, shin- Ales lath and other cypress products. They prop ose to eql ip their plant with an ellie- ient electric lighting system, which will enable them to run day and night. This will furnish employment to a large num- ler of mnen. The deal was consummated by David Burns. who handles his company; bunsi- ness in this sect ion. and George Weeks, Mwho manages the interests of his concern. BLOUNT LEASES CONVICTS. 'Thle Tampa (Fla.) Tribune say4: The county commissioners yesterday tsok the rather drastic and mnexpei'ted but decided- ly sensible action of leasing all of the voioulty convicts except the few sentenced Io Ie.- than :t0 dlys' ilmprisonlwnt, until lanllllaryv 1 1907. 1K. W. lliount, of the Tilimllois-lillount Naval Stores Company was tle successful bidder, offering $11 a month for all prisoners sentenced to 30 lilny or miore. including nmen, wonen and children, old and young. MYERSON CO., 105 107 Wet Bay St. JACKSONVILLE. FLA. '4 NOS a l c ssas w El aS EU1 4HE M i ass a Phone 1712. 3IBIIIIBIEIE3IUIUIIE5w EK H. D. WEED. J. D. WEED L CO., SAVANNAH. GEORGIA. Wholesale Hardware, Bar, Hoop and Band Iron. MAKE A SPECIALTY OF Turpentine Tools, Glue, Bafttings, Etc. Turpentine Cups If you expect to use the HERTY cup next season, place your orders now for future delivery. Prices and all informa- tion cheerfully furnished on Cups, Gutters eand ell Tools used in the Ilerty system of turpentining. Address -: Chattanooga Pottery ,. Company, Jacksonvile, lorida. You Want a Turpentine Location? You Want a Sawmill Location? S You Want any Kind of florida Land? You Mean Business? Call on or Write to J. H. Livingston & Sons, OCALA. FLORIDA. S Bottled from famous Suwannee SuwanneeSpc Spring water. Cures Rheumatism, Indigestion and Kidney Trouble. 4Gk The most refreshing, natural, spark- ling Ginger Ale known. Bottled and sold by the Live Oak Bottling Works, Live Oak, Fla. For sale by Consoli- dated Grocery Company, Jackson- ville, Johnson, King & Co., of Jack- A l, sonville, and M. Ferst's Sons & Co., Savannah, Ga. 4 ______________ IOSEPH D. WEED. W. D. KRENSON g ii mg Ii ol t Iu a IIIII If p IoIt f I Igo a Iuool ows 11 THE DIAMOND. Wholdsle ad Reta l Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Sole Adgnts for the State for Ladonan's Beer. also "WIlhelms Zuelle Min- i ral Water. Wo~4uurante all Brands;put up by us-full mneaurse as foUowes Creme de la Creme, bottle .... $2.00 Diamond Brand, bottle ........ 1.00 [ High&lr .uy Mcommc dicb Prorion] Heart Brand, bottle .......... .7 C. C. C. Brand, bottle ........ 1.50 Spade Brand, bottle ........... .60 Club Brand, bottle ........... 1.25 Premium Brand, bottle ........ 50 6 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. S. A. Alford, a prominent naval stores operator of Chipley. Ha., who is in the city on busines-, tells his friends here of the narrow escape of his family from being poisoned by a woman, who is said now to be a raving maniac. Mr. Alford was preparing to send his family to North Carolina to spend a part of the summer. Mrs. Alford had prepared the day before leaving C(hipley a hlnch for herself and the children. (hi the morn- ing that the took her departure the woman who plotted the death of the mother and children came presumably to say goodbye. On the way to the Alford hoime the wont- an purchased some strychnine. The lunch baskets were on the table of the dining room, and in passing through the house the woman artfully spread the strychnine over the lunch in one of tile baskets. Nothing was known of this until after the train hail left Chiplev. when the in- sane woman, who had poisoned the lunch, told her husband what she hal done. The husband at once rushed out of the house. and found Mr. Alford. The two went to the depot, and at once conllnenci'd ;a effort to locate the train upon which the mother and children were speeding on their way toward North Carolina. It was JACKSONVILLE DIRECTORY. The Record Company Will Publish the 1906 Book. The Daily Metropolis has the following to say of the Record and a branch of its work: Jacksonville will have a city directory in 1906 that will far surpass anything of * the kind ever published here heretofore. What is better, the directory will be owned and published by a home corpora- tion. The Industrial Record Publishing Company. which is one of the largest and most progressive publishing houses in the Southern States, lias secured the services of Mr. L. Gardner, who is one of the best directory managers in the country. to take charge of the Jacksonville directory for I0i. and the canvass has already begun for delivery early in the year. not later than February. Mr. Gardner is now plan- ning for the compiling of the work, and in the fall a little army of men will be em- ployed in this one branch of the work. Speaking of the Record Company's di- rectory for another year, Mr. Gardner to-day said: "The IM06 directory will contain all the features generally used in a work of this character, which are essential to its accuracy, also we will add such informa- tion as will enhance thle value of the work WALTER P. CORBETT. M 400 West Mi. Jalk two hours of dreadful suspense for the husband andl father, but lie received a telegram to ilie( effect that his family was all right. It appears that wlieii ile chil- dren wanted lunch at noon time the bas- ket which was on top was not tilte one which hail been poisoned, and the dinner was made from the contents of that bas- ket. lHowever, later the children wanted stoie chicken, anl went into the basket which had Iwen Imisoned. They took pieces of chicken. built there was so mucll stryclhnine on ille i eIat that tihe children complained of its hn'inir hitter. and threw it away. B:ut tnwo of theim l en caei ill from tile effects of andl str vehninle, and had to lie cared for. They have since fully re- covered. The woman who had; pllotted iaa inst the live's of tlie family hald been ian innate of tlie Florida Insane .\s\liii. and m Iwas evi- dentlly v insalle when she planned the whole- salte execution of iti' womaillnll anll children. When she .larne I that her lIushand had hetira'ved her, she attacked hliim itlh a large carving knife. miissing, him iionlyv a trille of an ililh \\ lin she threw it :it him. later slice ; altempil d ito destroy her ownli child, and was then taken in clihaire aind looked in ai slnioke house. Shel will be ret irned to the asvlulml. to our paitrinis. "Ieighnin, li with the forthlioiiming, hlok. we will take a coimpleli ccilns'u of thie city anilld s llb)i rls. 'hlowinlg tlie l mbllitr l f pli ei- pIe that ruii' inll e;ll houilse. This fol-i lowing illinlediately after tlie Statil, celslls . 1ho011hl iavi,\ tli' co-oCleit ';lion of ivt ryv hulm ine-s mian in -.lik-.oinville. as it elmbles us to give' the c-rrei-t ccvensus of the city as a whole. alld not just those who reside within tlie corporate limits. "\\'e lhve the facilities to do tlte work. We will eiplo y local men as assistants. We will piili'sh li better directory than Jacksonville lias ever had. We will take Slie 'ensils of the city, a feature alone which woiiul cost hundreds of dollars if taken singly. 'Ve will spend the revenell derived for help. supplies. itc., at hiome. and last, but not least, we are local peo- ple." As is well known, the .Jacksonville di- rectory for the past five or six yeai-s has lieen published by an Ohio corporation. who publish a striilng of directories in tlhe small cities all ,\ier the country. Thle libusirness people of Jacksolnville are to lihe congratmilatedi that a liiie clllicompany withi sufficient capital. enterprise and fa- eilities to compile and pluiilish tihe work even better thail heretofore, will take ad- vantage of the opportunity and make .lacksonville's city directory a purely holne institution. Successful Men appreciate, use and advise Life Insu- rance. The advice of successful men is worth following. Insure in THE PRUDENTIAL 'ISrAN M lmoer, JOHN F. DRYDEN, Pres. esiunlla Fla Hime Offlce Mewark J FUEL AND BUILDING MATERIAL. The Southern Fuel & Supply Co. AtFoom, gan a BsteuEt Oet, Jakts oCviml, FBrida, Ms. Fooaf Ilelffa S~b'm, Jalcksonville, Florida. ae+tem~t.*,iI,~ -.- JOS. ROSENHEIM & SONS MANVFACTVRERS AND JOBBERS OF SHOES 0 SAVANNAH, GEORGIA A * Best Shoes Made for Commissary Trade." I "i l BeIt I l I Mild I I for* 9* lCoia 4l Itrll Trld I I l I *i 11*1i> >4 t 1i1|1i| |I0 1 II IO011 I I I0ii I6iU I lmliii 3: PIICE LIST OF SEureka Wine and Liquor Co. : The Great Southern Mail Order House. EXPRESS PREPAID. Hatchett's Private Stock .... .. ...... Hatchett's That's Whiskey ........... Hatchett's Old Rye .................. Eureka N. C. Apple Brandy .. .. ....... N. C. Apple Brandy ........ ........ Eureka Malt .. .. .. ...... Eureka N. C. Peach Brandy .......... N. C. Peach Brandy ................ Eureka N. C. Corn .. ...... .... Eureka N. C. Corn, XX ...... ........ Eureka N. C. Corn. XXX ............ Eureka N. C. Corn, XXXX .......... Old Crow Bourbon .. .. .. .. .... TH-rmitage Rye .................. Sunny Brook Rye .................. Sunny Brook Sour Mash.............. Echo Spring ........ ................ Silk Velvet .. .. .. .. .... .... .. .... .. Oak and .. .. .. .... .... .. .. .... P Ga .. .. ..34 .. .... 4 .. .. .. 3 .... .. 4 .. .. .. .. .. .. 4 .. .. .. 3 .. .. .. 3 S .. 2 .. .. .. 3 .. .. .. 2 S .. 2 .. .. .. 4 .. .. .. 5 .. .. .. 3 .4 .2 FVLL QVART MEASVR I 'er Four 8ix Per gallon. Quartm. Quarts. Case. .00 $4. 00 $S.0 $1.00 .50 4.60 6.90 13.76 .2 3.20 -4.0 9.0 .75 4.75 7.00 14.00 .25 3.5 4.85 9.70 .00 4.00 6.00 12.00 .75 4.75 7.00 14.00 .25 3.25 4.865 .7 .25 3.25 4.85 3.70 .00 3.00 4.50 9.00 .75 2.75 4.15 8.30 .50 2.50 3.75 7.60 .50 4.50 6.75 13.50 .50 4.50 6.75 13.50 .75 2.75 5.65 11.30 .75 3.75 5.65 U.30 .50 4.65 6.0 12.75 .00 5.25 7.85 15.70 .75 4.00 6.00 12.00 4. GIN FROM $2.50 TO $3.50 PERLGALLON. DELIVERED 4 Save twelve labels of Hatchett's Private Stock and secure a bottle free. Save twelve labels of Hatchett'sOld Rye and secure a bottle free. SSave twelve labels of Hatchett's That's Whiskey and secure a bottle free. 0 Save twelve labels of Eureka N. C. Corn and secure a bottle free. Save Twelve labels of Eureka N. C. Apple Brandy and secure one bottle free. Save Twelve labels of Eureka Malt and secure one bottle free. Prices of all goods * bought at company's store are 70c per gallon less than when delivered. No 4 charge for jugs, boxes or drayage. An of my bottles are full measure. All * stai:lard brands of whiskies sold over my bar at 10c per drink. 15 S w'e also carry in stock liquors of cheaper grades. 10 All wines quoted on applictition. 4 Special prices in large lots, packed any sizes desired. Leaves 6 for you * Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. * EUREKA WINE AND LIQUOR COMPANY. * 135 WEST BAY STR EET, JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA. 1 tllI 111414t44*1 I 43 14141441 l*401 411i 14* II l lttill IL I I I I a a ILI e 0s a1 o PEARL WIGHT. Pres. T. I. McCARTHY. Vice-Prms MAURICE STERN. Treas. SOUTHERN STATES LAND & TIMBER COMPANY. IRVING H. WELCH. Manager. Florida Timber, Grazing & Agricultural Lands. 401-404 LAW EXCHANGE, JACKSONVILLE, FLA. i lisl w w ulf rll 11twlll l *e .vwln IU@WUIIEgg lg*f*ll ll ii ... NATIONAL... Tank & Export Company Of SAVANNAH, GA., U. S. A. JOHN R. YOUNG. President. J. P. WILLIAMS. C. W. SAUSSY. S. A. ALFORD. A. D. COVINGTON, Vice-President. DIRECTORS: C. S. ELLIS. P. L. SUTHERLAND. J. B PADGETT. J. R. YOUNG. B. F. BULLARD W. C. POWELL. WALTER RAY, A. D. COVINGTON. H. L KAYTON. Secretaryjad Tresurrer. J. B. CHESNUTT G. W. DEEN, RAYMOND CAY. 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. For all Purposes. SThe Industrial Record Pub. Co Jacksonville, Fla. Operator's Family Has Narrow Escape 21 &oil Ast l ratio 111 118616115,1 I THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. 7 FAVORS RECIPROCITY. Irving H. Welch, a membnir of the execu- tive committee of the Southeastern Stock Growers' Association, has been advised by Hon. S. H. Gaitskill, president of the asso- ciation, that he has appointed I. H. Welch, R. M. Storrs and Major W. L. Glessner, as delegates to the national reciprocity con- ference, to be held in Chicago August 15.10. The letter from President Gaitskill states that he hopes the delegates named by him to represent the Southeastern Stock Growers' Association, may be able to attend and that he feels that great good may be accomplished by this confer- ence. Each delegate is authorized to ap- point his own alternate, in the event that he cannot attend the conference. In the circular letter, announcing the call for a general conference upon the subject of reciprocity, the various organi- zations joining in the call says: "Standing on the broad platform enun- ciated by President McKinley in his last speech at Buffalo, the undersigned repre- sentative organizations hereby call for a general conference upon this subject to be held at Chicago, Ill., August 15 and 16, 1905, to urge the wisdom of substituting in our foreign relations the principle of reciprocity for that of exclusion and retal- iation. We care not whether the future of our foreign trade be safeguarded by means of direct reciprocity treaties or un- der the provisions of a fairly drawn maxi- mum and minimum tariff law, under the terms of which the Government could di- rectly negotiate advantageous internat- ional agreements; but the situation de- mands the establishment at once in some form of the underlying principle of con- ceding something to such nations as will concede valuable trading rights to our- selves. "You are, therefore, cordially invited to send such number of delegates to said con- ference as you deem necessary in order to properly present your views upon this great commercial problem-possibly the most important single issue before the American people at the present time. The time has come when the matter of obtain- ing broader markets for the surplus prod- nets of our farms and factories and of guaranteeing the markets that we already enjoy, must receive serious consideration." Inter-State Rules of 1905. Classiication and Inspection of Yellow Pine Lumber. RULES. Approved in conference of committee from The Georgia Inter-State Saw Mill Association, South Carolina Lumber As- sociation, New York Lumber Trade Asso- ciation of New York City, Yellow Pine Exchange of New York City, The Lumber- men's Exchange of Philadelphia, Pa., The Lumber Exchange of Blaltimore, Md., De- cember 10, 1904. GENERAL RULES. All lumber must be sound, commercial long leaf yellow pine (pine combining large coarse knots, with coarse grain, is excluded under these rules), well manu- factured, full to size and saw butted, and shall be free from the following defects: Unsound, loose and hollow knots, worm holes and knot holes, through shakes or round shakes that show on surface; and shall be square edge, unless otherwise specified. A through shake is hereby defined to be through or connected from side to side, or edge to edge, or side to edge. In the measurement of dressed lumber the width and thickness of the lumber before dressing must be taken-less than one inch thick shall be measured as one inch. The measurement of wane shall always apply to lumber in the rough. Where terms one-half and thirds heart are used they shall be construed as re- ferring to the area of the face on which measured. In the dressing of lumber, when not otherwise specified, one-eighth inch shall be taken off by each planer cut. CLASSIFICATION. Flooring. Flooring shall embrace four, five and six quarter inches in thickness by three to six inches in width, excluding 11/2xO. for example: 1x3. 4, 5 and 6; 1/4x3, 4, 5 and <6; 1 y..x3, 4 and 5. Boards. Boards shall embrace all thicknesses under one and a half inches by over six inches wide. For example: %, 1, 1 and 1% inches thick by over six inches wide. Plank. Plank shall embrace all sizes from one and one-half to under six inches in thick- ness by six inches and over in width. For example: 11/, 2, 21/2, 3. 3%/, 4, 41/2, 5, 51/4, 5 /t by 6 and over in width. Scantiing. Scantling shall embrace all sizes exceed- ing one and one-half inches and under six inches in thickness. and from two to under six inches in width. For example: 2x2, 2x3, 2x4, 2x5, :3x3, 3x4, 3x5, 4x4, 4x5 and 5x5. Dimension. Dimension sizes hall embrace all sizes six inches and up in thickness by six inches and up in width. For example: 6x6, 6x7, 7x7, 7x8, 8x9 and up. Stepping. Stepping shall embrace one to two and a half inches in thickness by seven inches and up in width. For example: 1, 11, 11/2, 2 and 21/2x7 and tip in width. Rough Edge or Flitch. Rough Edge or Flitch shall embrace all sizes one inch and up in thickness by eight inches and up in width, sawed on two sides only. For example 1, It/, 2, 3, 4 and up thick by eight inches and up wide, sawed on two sides only. INSPECTION. Standard. All lumber shall be sound, sap no objec- tion. Wane may be allowed one-eighth of the width of the piece measured across face of wane, extending one-fourth of the length on one corner, or its equivalent on two or more corners, provided that not over 10 per cent. of the pieces of any one size shall show such wane. Merchantable. All sizes under nine inches shall show some heart entire length on one side; sizes nine inches and over shall show some heart the entire length on two op- posite sides. Wane may be allowed one- eighth of the width of the piece measured across face of wane, and extending one- fourth of the length of the piece on one corner or its equivalent on two or more corners; provided that not over 10 per cent of the pieces of any one size shall show such wane. Prime. Flooring shall show one heart face, free from through or round shakes or knots exceeding one inch in diameter, or more than foin a board on the face side. Boards seven inches and under wide shall show one heart face; over seven inches wide shall show two-thirds heart on both sides, all free from round or through shakes, large or unsound knots. Plank seven inches and under wide shall show one heart face; over seven inches wide shall show two-thirds heart on both sides, all free from round or through shakes, large or unsound knots. Planks seven inches and under wide shall show one heart face; over seven inches wide shall show two-thirds heart on both sides, all free from round or through shakes, large or unsound knots. Scantling shall show three corners heart free from through or round shakes or unsound knots. Dimension Sizes.-All square I umber shall show two-thirds heart on two sides. and not less than one-half heart on other two sides. Other sizes shall show two- thirds heart on face and show heart two- thirds of length on edges, excepting when the width exceeds the thickness by three inches or over, then it shall show heart on the edge for one-half the length. Stepping shall show three corners heart. free from lihakes and all knots exceeding half inch in diameter, and not more than six in a board. Rough edge or flitch shall be sawed from good heart timber, and shall be measured in the middle, on the narrow face, free from injurious shakes or unsound knots. Wane on not usr 5 per cent of the pieces in any one size shall br allowed as on merchantable quality. Florida Bank and Trust Company Capital $1.000.000.00. Jacksonville, rla. DEPOSITARY OF STATE, COUNTY AND CITY FUNDS W. F. COACHMAN. President. W. S. JENNINM.S. Vice President. W. A. REDDING, Cashier. ARTHUR F. PERRY, Vice President. F. P. FLEMIN(. Jr., Trust Officer Receives deposit accounts of individuals, firms. corporations and banks. Pays 4 per cent on saving deposits. Rents safe deposit boxes. Buys and sells foreign exchange and issues letters of credit. Acts as trustee, transfer agent, registrar and fiscal agent for corporations and municipalities. Executes all trusts such as executor trustee under will or appointment of court, receiver and guardian. Unequaled Facilities. Accounts Solicited. Correspondence Invited. 1%%%%y$$%V < IMPORTS OF ROSIN INTO UNITED KINGDOM. 1900 1901 1902 From United States ..................... 87,116 87,29 79,015 From France .......................... 2,539 3,126 13,584 From all other countries. ............... 424 200 318 Total Tons ....................... 90,079 90,624 92,917 Percentage from United States ......... - Reported by James Watt & Son. 96.71 96.33 85.04 'U U I r0 i I 0 1903 81,542 2,486 510 84,538 96.45 1904 71,816 17,860 726 90,402 79.44 J. A. Craig (". Bro. 239 W. Bay Street EVERETT BLOCK. Leaders in Men's and Boys' Fine Cloth- ing and Up-to-Date Furnishings. Agents for Dunlap and Stetson Hats; largest stock in the City. 1 ( THE BOND & BOURS CO. WHOLESALE a RETAIL I HARDWARE SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, PAINTS. Oils, Glass, Stoves, Tinware. Country Holloware. 1* WEST BAY STREET. JACKSONVILLE. FLA. Jarmes Stewart. B. F. Hobgood. STEWART & COMPANY No. 505 West Building. Jacksonville, FIe. t y We have for sale one of the best timber and turpentine propositions in the State, consisting of 50,000 acres Virgin Timber in Washington County, Flor- ida, that will cut about 4,200 feet of Pine and 1,800 feet of Cypress to the acre and also about 60 boxes. Water transportation, and RAILROAD NOW BUILDING. DESIRABLE TERMS. Write for particulars. I1 I I tli1i4 i4 I ti 334 IIli*tIUII IIII3I II I I3 SttiIUI>* John R. Young. J. W. Motte. C. B. Parker, James McNatt, W. W. Wilder. President. Vice-pres. Vice-Pres. Vice-Pres. Sec. & Treas. ..John R. Young Co., Commission - Merchants. I Naval Stores factors. Wholesale Grocers. * Q * Savt nnh l IIL Brutlnswick Ga t tessaaesasijji I*sIj iitai* t A iii 4 ii i t Nes* !~d~~ltr~~6~-(~,ra~J+~t6QC,,~,,~,,~,~'- I, 8 THI WUNILY INDUMTRIAL RECORD. Joseph Zapf & Co. Whi m Is Baler la sd Btier d Anheuser Busch St. Louis Lager Beer Wholesale LIQUORS. WINES. Mineral Waters. Write for Priee. JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA JOHN S. FRANZ, Agent Write for and Prices Diebold Safe & Lock Co. Jaeksonville, Floridf Imiu INSURANCO-Lart a6t. la- ma EL GrenM Oo.& 0, d &1 6 rk BUng, Jaekuavisi, F1T. 1s. -- Meipolitan Talking Machine Co VICTOR Talking Maehlin and Reoerda. Write to Metropolitan Talking Machine Co. for catalogues of New Records and Machines. Victors only. Largest jobbing house in the South. Agents wanted in every town. Retail trade served. Old records exchanged. N. B.-Columbia, Zonophone and Vic- tors accepted. Metropolitan Talking Machine Co., 303 Mait St, JACKSONVILLE, FLA. INDUSTRIAL TRADE NOTES. It i, reported that the Carolina Wood p'II' Company of Georgetown, S. C., has purchased the wood-pulp mill originally owned by J. W. Gray, together with sev- eral acres of ground. They intend to immediately construct new building, re- model old plant and install up-to-date machinery and increase their daily capac- ity to 40,000 pounds of wood pulp. River Falls Turpentine Co., of River Falls, Ala., has been incorporated and cap- italized at $10,000 by G. B. Frierson and E. L. Moore of River Falls and W. W. Varn, of Pensacola, Fla. Charles Bucher is manager of the West Kentucky Coal Company, of Sturgis, Ky. This company is capitalized at $3,000,000 to mine coal, drill for oil, gas, etc., having consolidated various Kentucky coal prop- erties. The Planters' Rice Mill, of Abbeville, La., has increased its capital stock from $50,000 to $75,000. Greater Ghent Realty Corporation is the style of new realty company incor- porated at Norfolk, va.; capital, $30,000. Chilton Warehouse & Manufacturing Company will erect $30,000 plant at Clan- ton, Ala., for the manufacture of fertilizer, cottonseed oil, etc. It is reported that the Knoxville Power Co. will construct water-power electrical plant to cost $2,500,000 on the Little Ten- nessee River between Knoxville and Mary- ville. Curtis-Attalla Lumber Co., Attala, Ala., will rebuild plant damaged by explosion. Singleton Electric Co., Macon, Ga., in- corporated with capital stock of $1,500, with privilege of increasing to $10,000. The Southern Realty & Registry Co., Ltd., has been incorporated at New Or- leans, with $10,000 capital. Southern Land Company is correct title of new real estate company organized at Johnson City, Tenn. Attoyac Mining Co. incorporated at Dal- las, Tex., with $10,000 capital stock. The New Orleans (La) Naval Stores Supply Company is completing final ar- rangements for the erection of a turpen- t;ne still six miles from Voth, Texas. This firm has secured 4,000 acres of land and proposes to develop a turpentine orchard on this property. The Duncan Drug Co., of Birmingham. Ala., has been incorporated with a capital stock of $25,000. The South Florida Land Co., of Pensa- cola, has been incorporated with a $100.- 000 capital stock by Wm. H. Knowles, W. S. Keyser and J. M. Mulden. Work has begun in installing machin- ery to increase the present capacity of the Middle Florida Ice Factory at Tallahas- see. The Atlanta Telephone Exchange, of At- lanta, Ga., is preparing to build a five- story steel structure and contemplates having a capacity for 25,000 telephones. The Richland Lumber Co., of Mangham. La., has begun the erection of a hardwood sawmill. Boyee & Buchanan, of Balsam, N. C., will erect a sawmill with a daily capacity of 30,000 feet at a n early date. The Arthur Hardwood Flooring Com- pany, of Memphis, Tenn., has been in- corporated with a $50,000 capital stock. They will begin shortly the erection of a plant for the manufacture of hardwood flooring. The Columbia Package Co., of Memphis. Tenn., incorlprated, with capital stock of $2.5,000, has let contract for the erection of buildings and will install machinery for the manufacture of wooden pails. MERRILL-STEVENS CO. Boilermaking and Repairing Still Boilers and Pumps. SHIP BUILDING and REPAIRING. Jacksonville. Fla. .4. IIltlt 1144114tI11 ll1l l4)@t I tt4F44t*tIIIIIIII InI #r FOR SALE. 6,500 Acres Round Timber, just south of Stuart. Fronts Indian and St. Lucy Rivers; choice Pineapple lands. Must be sold as a whole, $3.50 per acre. C. BUCKMAN. 22 Hogan St.. JACKSONVILLE. FLA. CUMMER LUMBER CO. JACKSONVILLE. FLA. Rough and Dressed Lumber Long Leaf Yellow Pine. BOXES AND ORATES. It#I 11, >lt t 1 t 114t i It I I I I I I1 4 11 a 1`4 I t I I 1 1 t# at l t Standard Clothing Company 4.0 SOne Price One Price : 4 : FASHIONABLE CLOTHIERS AND FURNISHERS, : s17 and 19 West Bay Street, Jacksonville, Florida. 4 Stetesa and Hawes Hats. Special Attention Given t. Mall Orders. I*lllll11i 4 14*3llllIt4II *l*< 14 *il##* i J||I llIllll R. TOLAR. J. H. HART. T. H. BLACHLY. (Established 1672.) J. R. TOLAR, JR TOLAR, HART & CO., 160 FRONT STREET, NEW YORK. Commission Merchants and Jobbers of Navel Stores. Liberal Advances on Consignments of Naval Stores and Cotton. Members of New York Cotton and Produce Exchange. Orders executed for Cotton Futures. II. E. PRITCIIETT. Irs. P. P.. SUTHEIRLAND, Vice-Pres. A. D. COVINGTON, See'y. J. P. COUNCIL, Treas and Gen'l Mgr. THE COUNCIL TOOL CO., General Offices: JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Factory: WANNANISH, N. C. Manfaturers of High Grade Tools fer oravl Se OwpaWmm. 112 WEST FORSYTH ST. BELL PHONE NO. 592 HEDRICK'S REAL ESTATE AGENCY A. J. HEDRICK. Manager. Formerly of Hedrick 4 Raley Sole agency for Riverside and adjoining property on easy terms. (The choice residence portion of the city ) Improved and unimproved property in former burnt district, Springfield, LaVila and other suburbs. Choice business property and Investments. MONEY TO LOAN AND MONEY LOANED FOR INVSMTORIS. THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. 9 ABSTRACTS Title and Tax Abstracts, Maps, etc., of large tracts in all parts of Florida and South Georgia, prepared for owners and intending purchasers. Correspondence solicited.. REALTY TITLE AND TRUST CO. Law Exchange Bldg., Jacksonville, Fla. WM. D. JONES PRESCRIPTION SPECIALIST FAMILY DRUGGIST 107 E. BAY ST. Maff Orders Solicited. UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. 1789-1905. Head of the State's Educational System. DEPARTMENTS. Collegiate, Engineering, Graduate, Law, Medicine. Pharmacy. Library contains 43,000 volumes. New water works, electric lights, central heat- ing system. New dormitory, gymnasium, Y. M. C. A. building. 667 Students 66 Instructors. The fall term begins Sept. 11, 1905. Ad- dress- FRANCIS P. VENABLE, Pres., Chapel Hill, N. C. 0. R. OSR, JR. MANUFACTURER OP- BRICK. RITE IF PRICE . Capcity of Yard 800,000 Per Month. 'Pm 390. M. K. BEAN. C. L. BEAN. (Formerly E. Bean & Son.) FLORIDA PAPER COMPANY Dealers in all kinds of WRAPPING PAPERS, PAPER BAGS, FOLDING BOXES, TWINES AND FRUIT AND VEGETABLE WRAPPING PAPERS. Robinson Building, Viaduct. Teleph!e 19 7. Jacksonville. Correspondence Solcited. Sam'l P. Holmes& Co. Stocks, Bends, Cotton, Gral i and Provisions. NEW YORK COTTON EXCHANGE CHICAGO BOARD Of TRADE Direct private wires to all exchanges. Local stocks and bonds a specialty. BeU Pbose 853 Baldwin Block BAILEY I MONTOMERY,, Commission Merchants, Naval Stores & Cotton Libkal ad"aae made aCaioat ship- meats. Ce-.a m el s ted. 78-o Wall St, Rooms 813-14-15. NKW YORK CITY. INDUSTRIAL TRADE NOTES. The ell 411 regory Land (Co., chartered. of l..isvile. I'.I., lhs been organized wit $.,).("10 capital stock. Thle Gulfport & Mississippi Traction Company, of Gulfport, Miss., is complet- ing linal arrangemernts for the erection of their new electric lower house to cost $200,000. I)r. R. V. Powers and associates, of ..ackson, Miss., have organized the Miss- issippi Realty Co. capitall stock, $30,000. A. V. Snodgrass & Co., of Thomasville, Ga., are establishing a plant for the manu- facture of sash, doors. blinds and general house-building material. Armour & Company, of Chicago, have purchased a site at Nashville, Tenn., on which they propose to erect fertilizer fac- tory. Letters patent have been granted for the South Florida Naval Stores Company of Tampa, with a capital stock of $500,0Q0, to conduct a general naval stores busi- ness, cotton, tinllier and agricultural pro- ducts. J. W. C'allahan, R. S. Hall, .J. A. Fat, J. P. Ward, Jr., M. W. Ulmer and .1. G. Baya are stockholders of the corpora- tion. It is reported that the Carolina Tin Co., of Bessemer City, N. C., will open a new shaft and increase the output of its tin mines from 20 to 75 tons per day. Albert Fendig, William Nusshaum, of Brunswick, (a., and associates, have in- corporated The Forest Lumber Co., of Brunswick, Ga., with a capital stock of $10,000. COMPANY IS REORGANIZED. J. R. Porter Joins C. B. Mallard and Others in Big Concern. The reorganization of one of the large wholesale grocery companies of Jackson- ville took place recently, when J. R. Por- ter became connected with C. I. Mallard and others and a general change in the personnel of the Miller & Mallard Com- pany was effected. Philip Miller, who was the senior lmeai- her of the former firm. retires from active connection with the company and J. R. Porter has combined his business and that of the new concern. The company is to lbe known as the Mallard-Porter Company. The officers of the company are as follows: President--C. B. Mallard. Vice-Presidents-J. R. Porter and A. B. Chitty. Secretary-C. N. Kirkland. Treasurer-C. N. Griffin. A. B. Chitty, who came here several months ago, and hams been identified with another wholesale concern, has cast his lot with the new company, and will le one of the most active members of the firm in the management of the business. He is a young man of gooi Ibusiness training and brings to the firm a knowledge of tile con- ditions of the State which will be of great value. Mr. Porter is well known throughout tlhe State. lie has been in the jobbing busi- ness for many years in Jacksonville, and has always met with success. With near- ly every merchant in the State of Florida he has had business relations, and is re- garded.as one of the best posted men on the trade in the State of Florida. The stock of goods of the J. R. Porter Company have been moved to the large warehouses of the new company at No. 214 East Bay Street. The Mallard-Porter Company is capital- ized at $100.000. and nearly all of the stock has been paid in. The company is a suihi- stantial one with large business interests and an already well established trade. THE RECORD'S JOB DEPARTMENT. The Industrial Record, in its new home, is prepared, as it has never been before, to furnish quick and satisfactory service in printing for the Turpentine and Lum- ber businesses-books, stationery, office supplies, commissary checks, etc., etc. If you are not buying year printing supplies from the Record don't fail to do so in the future. " M ESSRS. HENRY FUNCK & CO.,of 22 Belliter Street, London E. C. England, who have represented the Antwerp Naval Stores Com- pany in London from August 1892 to the 15th of June this year, desire to make arrange- ments for the representation of a first class firm of exporters of Turpentine in the markets of the United Kingdom. B. R. POWELL. CHAS. 6. HARRIS, RENRY ASHLEY. President. VIce-President and Treasurer. Secretary DIRECTORS: B. R. Powell Chas. 6. Harris, f. McMlllan. P. L. Smtaerlaude. V. Covfmgtom. THE Southern Drug Manufacturing Company Corner of West Bay and Madiseo St. Jacksonville, Florida. Wholesale Drugs I Commissary Supplies We solicit the Turpentine and Mill Trade and will be glad to quote prices on anything in the drug line. We make packed drugs a specialty and can save you money. Mail orders are given prompt attention. SStandard Naval Stores Co., JACKSONVILLE Pays Turpentine Producers Full Savannah Market J M kes no Charge for Commission, Storage or Insurance This Beats Savannah so Ship to SStandard Naval Stores Co. JACKSONVILLE Joseph D. Christie, Business Agent Room 303 Dyal-Upclrch BulMInlg Jacksoavel, Fla. Telephone 455. If you want to locate in Florida and contemplate going into business, let me help you. If you have a business to sell, list same with me. W. J. L'ENGLE, 91resident. J. W. WADE, Vice-President. E. G. HUGHES. Sec'y and Tres Union Naval Stores Co. 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 Flor- ida, Alabama and Mississippi Liberal advances made against consignments. Cor- respondence solicited. Principal Office: MOBILE, ALABAMA. 10 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. INDUSTRIAL RECORD. JAMES A. HOLLOMON. Editor and Manager. Published Every FridLy. s_ .rzon t "The Pine and Its Produsoto. All communications should be addressed The Induatrial Record Company. JeIckonville. Fla. Pmaseh Editorial and Busines Offlos at Atldat., Ga. d1 savannr. Ga. Entered at the Poetoffice at Jacksonville, Fla., as second-class matter. Adopted by the Executive Committee of the Turpentine Operators' Association, September 12, 1902, as its exclusive offi- cial organ. Adopted in annual conven- tion September 11 as the organ also of the general association. Adopted April 27th, 1903, as the offi- cial organ of the Interstate Cane Grow- ers' Association. Adopted September 11, 1903, as the only official organ of the T. 0. A. Commended to lumber people by spe- eial resolution adopted by the Georgia Sawmill Association. COPY FOR ADVERTISING. Advertising copy (changes or new ad- vertisements) should reach us Tuiesday morning to insure insertion i the issue of the same week. THE RECORD'S OFFICES. The publishing plant and the main offi- ces of the Industrial Record Company are located at the intersection of Bay and Newnan streets, Jacksonville, Fla, in the very heart of the great turpentine and yellow pine industries. I The Atlanta, Ga., office is located inthe Equitable Building, No. 723. Atlanta is the center of the great manufacturing trade of the entire South The Savannah, Ga., office is in the Board of Trade Building. Savannah is the leading open naval stores market in the world. NOTICE TO PATRONS. All payments for advertising in the In- dustrial Record and subscriptions thereto must be made direct to the home office i Jacksonville. Agents are not allowed to make collections under any circumstances. Bills for advertising and subscriptoaare seat out from the home office, when due, and all remittances must be made direct to this company. Industrial Record Publishing Co. FLORIDA'S VAGRANCY LAW. Turpentine and mill men in Floridia will do well to see that the new vagrancy law, passed at the last legislature, is rigidly en- forced. The law says that vagrants are as fol- lows: Rogues and vagabonds, idle or dissolute persons who go about begging, common gamblers, persons who use juggling or un- lawful games or plays, common pipers and fiddlers, common drunkards, common night walkers, thieves, pilferers, traders in sto- len property, lewd, wanton and lascivious persons in speech or behavior, keepers of gambling places, common railers and brawlers, persons who neglect their calling or employment and misspend what they earn and do not provide for themselves or for the support of their families, persons wandering from place to place able to work and who are without means and who neg- lect to earn their support and live by pil- fering or begging, idle and disorderly per- sons, including those who neglect all law- ful business and habitually misspend their time by frequenting houses of ill fame, gambling houses or tippling shops, persons able to work but who are habitually idle and live upon the earnings of their wives or minor children, and all able-bodied male persons over 18 years of age who are without means of support and whose parents or guardians are unable to support them and who are not usually in attend- ance upon some school or educational es- tablishment, but who live in habitual idle- ness, are declared to be vagrants, and upon conviction shall be subject to the penalty provided. The law also says that upon proper in- formation made upon oath before an offi- cer authorized to act in such case he shall issue his warrant for the arrest of any person therein named or described who is charged therein with being a vagrant un- der any of the provisions of the foregoing section and such warrant shall be executed by any sheriff, constable, policeman or by a private person duly authorized thereto by the officer issuing such warrants, but any sheriff, constable, policeman or other lawful officer may arrest any vagrant de- scribed in the foregoing section without a warrant in case the delay in procuring one would probably enable such alleged va- grant to escape arrest. Any persons so arrested by virtue of a warrant or without a warrant shall be given a speedy trial, and upon conviction shall be fined not exceeding $250 or by imprisonment not more than six months. This law should at once put a stop to the trifling class of negroes who loaf around the camps, disorganizing the bet- ter class who are disposed to work, and in many cases gambling, stealing and "re- cruiting." NEW NAME OF THE BUREAU OF FOR- ESTRY. From July 1 the Bureau of Forestry is to be officially known as the Forest Ser- vice. The change was made by Congress last winter, when it provided for the Gov- ernment work in forestry during the com- ing year, and signalized an important ad- vance in the scope of that work. The actual control and administration of the national forest reserves, formerly under the charge of the Land Office of the Depart- ment of the Interior, is now in the hands of the Forest Service, the only branch of the public service possessed of the scien- tific and technical knowledge necessary for the enlightened care and use of the for- ests. This means that the reserves are to be made to yield to the people of the country the largest benefits which intelli- gent management can get out of them. Use, not reservation from use, is the es- sential purpose for which they exist-but use under such conditions as shall make their benefits permanent. Control of the reserves was turned over to the Bureau of Forestry last February, and the necessary reorganization is now well advanced. In taking up its new work, however, the Forest Service will not abandon any part of the old field of the Bureau. Its broad purpose will continue to be the furtherance by every possible means of the movement to introduce prac- tical forestry everywhere. It will do its utmost to assist this movement among pri- vate owners and in the several States, not only by scientific investigations but by advice and cooperation in the actual work of applying forestry. This is im- peratively demanded if the general wel- fare is not to suffer profoundly in the future from a shortage of timber supply. The Forest Service will continue the stud- ies of forest products, of methods of mak- ing timber more durable, of tree planting, and of all subjects which can promote wiser and more profitable use of our sec- ond greatest resource--fr in the value of their total contribution to our needs there can be no doubt that forest products stand next to those of agriculture. The field of the Bureau of Forestry has expanded remarkably in the past few years. The first Government recognition of forestry was in 1876, when Congress made an appropriation for a skilled man to prosecute a study of forest conditions, needs and uses, and make a report to Con- gress. This office was continued until the Division of Forestry was created July 1." 1886. Then from a mere office of informa- tion the Division stepped suddenly into the field of actual operations, demonstrat- ing by example how forestry could be made to pay, and thus furnishing the one argu- ment needed to convert private owners from scepticism as to the practicableness of a theory to the acceptance of a proved fact. Whea this vas accomplished a new epoch in the history of American forestry opened. Since that time no single step forward has been so important as that which the use of the new name, Forest Service, now marks. This the people of the country, and particularly the people of the West, where the reserves are, will come to realize as they grasp the fact that, scientifically and efficiently admin- istered, the reserves will soon reach their highest efficiency as contributors to the wealth and permanent development of the regions in which they lie. Regarding Fertilizers and Feed- ing Stuffs. Hon. B. E. McLin, Commissioner of Ag- riculture, has issued a circular for the in- formation of the public, addressed to all manufacturers, agents and dealers in com- mercial fertilizers, cottonseed meal and commercial feeding stuffs, manufactured, imported into and sold in the State of Florida, calling attention to the regula- tions and rules of that department of the State Government charged with the en- forcement of the law of commercial fer- tilizers and commercial feeding stuffs. The circular says: "Filing Oath of Analysis, etc. Section 5. -The attention of manufacturers, im- porters, dealers and agents is called to section 5 of both laws, requiring the filing of a description of the fertilizers or stock food with the Commissioner of Agricul- ture, before offering the same for sale in this State under oat; and penalty for fail- ing to do so. Necessary blanks will be furnished on application at this office. "Commercial Fertilizers, Section 11, Act Approved May 22, 1901.-Each package must have securely affixed thereto-on the upper end of each bag, or head of each barrel-the guaranteed analysis printed on a tag, together with the stamp showing the payment of the inspection fee as pro- vided by law; this tag shall show: "1st-The number of net pounds in the package. "2nd.-The name or brand of the ferti- lizer. "3d.--The name and address of the man- ufacturer. "4th-The Guaranteed Analysis: Which shall show the percentage guaranteed of ammonia (actual and potential) and the source from which it is derived. "Of potash (K20) soluble in water. "Of available phosphoric acid; "Of insoluble phosphoric acid; "And of chlorine; "And the ingredients from which the fer- tilizer is compounded. "The actual or minimum amounts of each ingredient guaranteed must be stated. Then follows a cut showing the form of tag adopted, to which all manufacturers must conform, substantially. Section 3 states that cottonseed meal for fertilizer must bear on each package a lag, affixed to the top end of each bag, an illustration of which tag is given. This tag must bear upon it a guaranteed analy- sis. It must hear the words "Phosphoric Acid" and "Potash," but manufacturers may or may not, as they elect, state the percentage guaranteed of phosphoric acid or potash. "Nitrogen must be guaranteed as am- monia (to comply with the Florida law), the factor used to convert nitrogen into ammonia being 1,214 (1.22). "The equivalent of ammonia as protein, may be stated in parenthesis only, as shown in tag. The factor to convert am- monia into protein being 5.15. Cottonseed meal, when sold for stock feed only shall conform in all respects, to a tag illustrated, guaranteeing the per- centage of protein (protein being equal to 6.25 times the nitrogen); the starch and sugar ano the fat as shown in the illus- tration. "Commercial Feeding Stuffs, Mixed Feeds, Brans. Middlings, Gluten Feeds, etc.-(See Section 11, Act approved May 24, 1905.)-All commercial feeding stuff shall be tagged as above, excluding the equivalent of ammonia and including statements of the ingredients from which it is made," as shown in the illustration of a fourth tag in the circular. The circular continues: "All guarantee tags on commercial feed- ing stuff, commercial fertilizer or cotton- seed meal shall have affixed the inspection stamp and shall be securely attached to the upper end, or filling end, of the bag; or to the head of the barrel, to facilitate inspection; by no means to the side of the bag or barrel, where it cannot be conven- iently examined. "Each package must have affixed the guaranteed tag and stamp before being offered for sale, or delivered to the trans- portation company, or the purchaser. "This regulation will be strictly en- forced; inspectors and sheriffs are directed to seize all packages not bearing the guar- antee tag and stamp, sold or offered for sale in the State, and report the facts to this office immediately. "Guarantee tags must be printed in plain, clear type, with black ink. Rubber stamps will not be recognized on guar- antee tags. "Manufacturers of fertilizers have gen- erally complied with the spirit and letter of the law. Cottonseed meal manufactu- rers have frequently been careless in affix- ing tags and stamps to eah package; deal- ers have also, on occasions, been careless in demanding that the tag and stamp be affixed to all packages. Hereafter all packages not bearing the tag and stamp required by law will be seized and the dealers held responsible, as provided for in section 6 of the laws. "Duties of Sheriffs.-It is made the duty of the sheriffs of the various counties to seize and sell all packages of commercial fertilizer or commercial feeding stuff im- ported into or sold in the State which does not have securely attached the guarantee tag and stamp, or evidence that the same has been attached. The attention of sher- iffs is called to this duty, and the neces- sity of its performance for the protection of the citizens of the various counties from the imposition of fraudulent, adul- terated or inferior fertilizers and commer- cial feeds." The commercial feeding stuff law be- comes effective after August 22, 1905. Af- ter which date, all commercial feeding stuff, as defined in section 11 of the law approved May 24, 1905, must have on each package the guarantee tag and stamp pro- vided for by law, or be subject to seizure and sale. A copy of the commercial fertilizer law and the commercial feeding stuff law has been sent to all the persons concerned in the manufacture or sale of commercial fer- tilizers. cottonseed meal and commercial feeding stuffs, and we reproduce the cir- cular, without the illustrations, four in number, for the benefit of our Florida readers. THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. 11 THE CHRISTIE GROOVER oDG co., WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. -DMWI Y D OM AU M A MIAavIEA tlIE eAND 101Er. JdAMOiOlLL, FIWLDA. Jacksonville Grocery Comp'y W. HAI Wholesale Grocers and Distillers' Supplies. a- OftA. cM ad Wad~rbomse VI aMot A. O. L. Ry. daoksemMlle, FlsIad Review of Naval Stores for a Week. Spirits for the Week at Savannah. Price Repts Sales Exp 1904 Tues. July 11.. 58% 1,366 322 9 .?53,i Wed. July 12.. 57% 821 1,619 7 53% Thur, July 13.. 571/ 7,48 9 (i; 1I53 Fri, July 14.. 57% 0 624 053% Rosin for the Week at Savannah. Tuesday, July 11. Last Year. WW ............ 4.60 4.70 WG ........... 4.25 4.40 N.............. 4.05 3.95 M.............. 4.00 3.85 K .... .... .. .. .. 3.95 3.5.5 1 .............. 3.90 3.45 H .. .... .. .. .... 3.85 2.871 G .... .......... 3.80 2.72%1 F .............. 3.75 2.70 E ............ 3.57 /2 2.621/2 D...... ....... 3.35 2.57%/ ABC ............ 3.25 2.52%/ Receipts 3,797, sales 2,525, exports 2,498. Wednesday, July 12.-Rosin firm; sales, 2,892; receipts 2.744; shipments 2,327. Quote: A. B, C, $3-35; D, $3.40; E, $3.60;. F, $3.75* G, $3.80; H, $3.85; I, $3.90; K, $4.00; M, $4.06; N, $4.10; WG, $4.30; WW, $4.75. W. F. COACHMAN, President. Thursday. July 13.-Rosin firm; sales 1,796; receipts 3.283; shipments 3,597. Quote: A B C, $3.30; I), $3.42 1-2; E', $3.65; F. $3.75; (1, $3.80; 11, '3.90; 1. $3.95:; K. $4.00; M, $4.05; N, $4.10; WO, $4.30; WW, $4.75. Turpentine at London. 1905. 1904. 1903. 1902. Stock June 24..18.793a ..... 10,596 15,.09 Deld this wk.. 921b ..... 2,408 654 Since Jan. 1.... 37,342 ..... 42,758 43,624 Price June 24.. 50- 41-3 38- 35-3 Sept.-Dec. ..... 45- 40-9 37- 34-3 Savannah .. 60c. 521/c. 47%/. 471/2c. (a) includes 1,132 French. (b) includes 279 French. Reported by James Watt & Son. SAVANNAH NAVAL STORES STATE- MENT. Spirits Exports ........................ Exports for season .......19,775 Last year ................22,065 Coastwise ................ 50 Coastwise for season...... 33,179 Last year ...............37,545 Receipts Friday, July 14.. 1,822 Last year ................ 701 Rosin. 38,357 36,190 939 116,122 135.922 2,201 2,573 J. P. WILLIAMS, Vice-President. Ieceipts since Sept. I ..... .1.0.S4 Iast year ................ 73.529) Stock Friday, .uly 14 ..... 36.53:; 1,ast year ................ 19.414 Friday. July 14. Tone ... Firm Spirits ... 57%/ Sales ... 624 Rosin ... Firm. \W\V ... 4.75 W( .... 4.30 N ...... 4.10 M ..... 4.03 K ...... 4.00 I ...... 3..95 S . . . 3.85 F ...... 3.80 E . . . 3.10" 1) ... 3.45 C HA .. 3.40 Sales .. 2.807 202.4S7 1 4.6W0 73.343: 57,04:1 Thursday. Last Year. .luly 11. Firm. Firm. 57 /4 53:!4 960 :167 Firm. Firm. 4.75 4.70 4.30 4.40 4.10 3.95 4.05 3.85 4.00 3.55 3.90 3.45 3.90 2.S7 /., ( 2.90 3.180 2.721/, 3.75 2.67'/ 2.70 3.65 2.62 '/. 3.421,; 2.57 /2 3.30 2.521 S 1.79 | 3.143 WEEKLY NAVAL STORES MOVEMENT Spirits. 1!904-05. Stock April 1 ........... 5,400 6,495 Receipts w'k end'g .'y 14 8.170 5,748 Receipts previously ...... 75,914 67.781 Total .................. 89.84 80.024 W. J. KELLY, Vice-President and Treas. Explortas- Foreign ................. 19,775 22.06C New York .............. 12,303 17,784 ('oastwise and interior.... 20.876 20.761 Total ................ .52.954 60,610 Stock ................... 36,530 19.414 Rosins. 1904-05. Stock April 1 ........... 25.335 44.550 receiptss w'k end'g J'y 14 17,581 16,868 Receipts previously ...... 164,06 167,737 Total ................ 227.1,22 229,155 Exports- Foreign ................. 38.357 36,190 New York ............... 42.235 28.665 (oastwise and interior .. 73,887 107.257 Total ................154,479 172,112 Stock ............... .. 73,343 57.043 GEO. E. WOOD DEAD. He Was President of the Wood Lumber Company. (aryville, Fla., July 14.-eorge E. Wood. president of the George E. Wood Lumber Company at Caryville. died at his home in Chicago on the 10th inst., after a short illness. E. P. THAGARD, Seretary. The Naval Stores Export Company Capital, $1,250,000.00 Branch Offices: SAVANNAH, GA. FERNANDINA, FLA. PENSACOLA, FLA. TAMPA, FLA. NEW ORLEANS, LA CHICAGO, ILL. NEW YORK. FPRINCIPA Jacksonville, Fla. COMMENCED BUSINESS JUNE 1, 1905 Owned and controlled by Naval Stores Producers and Factors throughout the Yellow Pine District in South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas The Object of this Company is to Bring Producer and Consumer into Closer Relations. For Quotations and Particulars. Address, THE NAVAL STORES EXPORT COMPANY 602 BOWLING GREEN BLIYG NEW YORK. 1128.1130 UNITY BUILDING CHICAGO, ILL. SCJESaESEXrJCSaC3rrrcrurrrrrrrcrrcccrrrr s~-~Esfr~;~;xrr~nclr~~r~iacscscs3E3ac Jacksonville, Fla. 12 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. LUDDEN & BATES. fir&5re 1 IY Sb..et, JW.P.sorWN1i, laW W. P. ENNIS, Mg,.~r :-,* 26: The South's Largest and Most Reliable Music House. W, ft,....... m Wanted and For Sale DEPARTMENT. Advertisements Win be Inserted In This Department at the Followrln Rates: For one week. 20 cents a line. For two weeks, 35 cents line. For three weeks, 50 cents a line. For four weeks, 65 cents a line. Nine words of ordinary length make one line. Heading counts as two lines. No display except the headings can be admitted. Remittances to accompany the order. No extra charge for copies of paper containing advertisement. Copy must be in this offce not later than Thurday morning to secure insertion in Friday's paper. Position Wanted. As general manager. A good stiller and first-class woodsman. Can furnish the best of references. Married and thor- sughly sober. Address Manager, care In- dustrial Record Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Tarpentinc Location Wanted. Wanted a good turpentine location now in operation, with freight rates to Pen- S sacola. Address J. A. T., care Industrial Record Co., Jacksonville, Fla. 4t Turpentime Location Wanted. Wanted, a good turpentine location; will buy at once or at end of season. Address Busy, care Industrial Record. For Sale. Turpentine location, 17,150 acres of tim- ber. Fifteen and one-half crops of virgin boxes on same near transportation. Low freight rates to Pensacola, Jacksonville and Savannah. Will sell for immediate delivery or at end of season. Address Producer, care Industrial Record, Jack- sonville, Fla. 4t Turpentine Men. Buy a Blakeslee Gasoline Pumping Out- fit for your still. No. 1 outfit pumps 2.000 gallons per hour at a cost of 3 cents aind requires no attention while running. Started in one minute. J. P. Campb II, Ocala, Fla. Help Supplied. Write us at once for prices on Commis- sary Checks and general, turpentine print- Naval stores men can secure help by ap- ing. We have the facilities for turning plying to the City Employment Bureau, out all classes of printing promptly and at 840 West Bay Street, Jacksonville, Fla. conservative prices. Special Notice. READ THIS CAREFULLY. In answer to numerous inquires, I de- sire to state to my many friends and business acquaintances throughout the South, that I have no interest in or connection with the Ludden & Bates' Southern Music House, which was es- tablished by me and J. A. Bates about thirty-five years ago. I am now inter- ested largely and solely in the LUD- DEN & SMITH MUSIC COMPANY, and in the LUDDEN-CAMPBELL- SMITH COMPANY, of Jacksonville, Fla, who continue the same policies and business dealings which built up for us the largest music business in the South. WM. LUDDEN. I desire to have it known to my friends and acquaintances that I have no connection with or interest in the Ludden & Bates' Southern Music House, established by Wm. Ludden and myself in 1870. Mr. Ludden and my- myself and Jaspersen Smith, many years associated with us, are now in- terested in the LUDDEN-CAMPBELL- SMITH COMPANY, of Jacksonville, Fla. Co far as I am aware, not a sin- gle individual who helped to make the Ludden & Bates name so well known throughout the South is now connected with the same. J. A. BATES. We print the above letters in order to correct certain misleading impressions which are being made among our many friends and customers. We believe that most buy- ers wish to deal with the PEOPLE whose policies and methods gave them the greatest reputation ever accorded any piano dealers in the South. LUDDEN-CAMPBELL SMITH CO., 18 West Bay Street. Pianos, Organs, Musical Merchandise. HOTEL BARTHOLDI Y" CRhiSty.rt Facing Madison Square Park. Newly Furnished Throughout. Near all Big Stores and Places of Amusement. Cars Pass the Door for all Railroad Stations and Steamboat Landings. Large Sample Rooms for Commercial Travelers. Here you find no grand and magnificent deco- rations; no luxurious grandeur; no awe-inspiring surroundings; no elaborate bill of fare, printed in French; no clerks that will disdain to No employees in any wa, inattentive. S speak to you. 4 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 cook- ing, and affable and courteous treatment. MILTON ILOBLEE. Proprietor. f well and lasts forages without decaying. Located as we re, right in the great cypre forests, we ar able to secure the best selection of the wood and at very low prices. We have been buildingtanks for more than a quarter of a century and boldly assert that no tanks are better built or will la longer. s Send for catalog and prices. G. M. DAVIS (l SON PAL.,ATXA, FLORIDA St. George Hotel EUROPEAN PLAN. Rooms: 75c, $1.00 and $1.50 P, N PHONE 317. .. MRS. GEO. W. BROCK. PROPRIETRESS. es si aessea sse**su* e*s** s*eIIKIXIIXI I i7heI t C $5.00 CART i I|I I:* j Vletrop s the Paper you want. I publishedd daily and is frorr o 16 hours ahead of any o0 laily newspaper in Florid; a Year $2.50 Six Full Telegraphic and St reports. If you want to k posted on the news, get Metropol s. ER& RUSSELL I JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA. oils t is 112 other a o Months ock eep the PUB. C. nT~SITISIS13C3iYU14;+r3E~;~rW ~I~I,~~I~I~~~I~~ THE WEEKLY 1bDuix tIAL RECORD. 13 C. H. Hargraves Co., WHOLESALE GROCERS. GRAIN, HAY AND FEED. Special attention to Trpentine and Sawmill Mms Relirements. A lorida Finr for froalm. LOW 514-516-518-520-522-524-526 EAST BAY STREET, JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA RATES FOP Special Occasions VI A SOUTHERN RAILWAY SUMMER TOURIST RATES TO ASHEVILLE, HOT SPRINGS, WAYNESVILLE, HENDERSONVILLE, LAKE TOXAWAY AND OTHER DELIGHTFULLY COOL PLACES IN SUMMER TIME. Spend a vacation in the beautiful "Land of the Sky" and "Sapphire Country." Write for booklet descriptive of the North Carolina resorts, giving passenger fare and hotel rates. J. C. LUSK, District Passenger Agent, Jacksonville, Florida. Cer. forsyth and Cedar Sts., JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Dealers In Carriages and Wagons Carriage and Wages Material, Wheels, Spekes, Rim, Ailes, Etc. S Turpentle and Mill Harness, Wagons Bugles, Saddlery, Dump Carts. Delivery SWagos. Swrries and everything kept In a first-class establishimet. Largest Dealers in Florida. Pres., W. G. Toomer. Vice-pres. & Mgr.. C. O. Patterson. Treas., H. C. Hare, See., Froman Smith STANDARD ELECTRIC COMPANY 16 Forsyth St. Jacksonville, Fla. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS AND SUPPLY DEALERS. W. W. CARNES, Pres. W. C. THOMAS, Manager. C. T. DUDLEY, See. & Treas Tampa Hardware Co. Wholesale Hardware STurpentine, Mill and Phosphate Supplies. LARGE STOCK COUNCIL AND HOLMES HACKS AND PULLERS ON HAND. TAMPA. FLORIDA. 1XX XX1 #| I to I I 1 #CX1 1t5 11t4lll1 tllltll l 41111t 11111111 .I alI Ie The Cooperage Company Manufacturers of High Grade Western White Oak Spirit Barrels Capial $100,000. JACKSONVILLE. FLA. Orders sent direct to us will receive prompt and careful attention. We are now prepared to furnish barrels from six shops advantageously located. OFFICERS:, J. C. LITTLE, President. E. H. MOTE, General Manager. JOHN E. HARRIS, Vice-President. C. H. BARNES, Secretary and Treasurer. J. C. LITTLE, JOHN E. HARRIS, W. C. POWELL, DIRECTORS: C. H. BARNES, W. F. COACHMAN. J. W. WEST, E. H. MOTE. W. J. KELLY ~aclwa~3Escsacscsc3cscs~3Esc3cxxlrrsc~c3 ~~LI~L~LII~)~~)~~~~LLU--~~LIIIIIIIIIIIII CII~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~LIl-~~--U--U-----~~ 11 0 q --- ----- A~~UI~MI~~ ~~ 14 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. THE COVINGTON Co. JACKSONVILLE. FLA. Wholele SHOES - Wholesale: DRY GOODS. " Success For Our Customers is Success For Us." COTTON'S CONDITION. Washington, July 11.-The Weather Bureau's weekly crop bulletin says: In the Carolinas, Georgia and Florida, over the greater part of Alabama, and in Southern Mississippi cotton has generally done well. Good growth is reljorted from the central and western districts, but much of the crop has suffered deterioration, largely from lack of cultivation due to continuous heavy rains. In Tennessee, Northern Mississippi and Louisiana fields have been abandoned to grass. Too rank growth is more or less reported in all dis- tricts, except the Carolinas and Florida. Wet weather in Texas has favored the increase of boll weevils which are also causing damage in Louisiana. The general condition of tobacco is promising, though the crop is suffering for cultivation in Kentucky. Good growth is reported from nearly all of the tobacco producing States. CONDITION OF FLORIDA CROPS. Jacksonville, Fla., July 11.-Section Di- rector Mitchell in his weather and crop report for the week ended yesterday, nays: "The week gave about the normal warmth, with the amount of precipitation varying from insufficient showers to local- ly heavy rains. Precipitation was ample, however, over the greater part of the State. In Hamilton County the distribu- tion was altogether unsatisfactory. Cot- ton is doing very well. It suffered no spec- ial drawback during the week, except that some locally heavy rains over small areas were unfavorable. Some crops in west- ern counties are somewhat backward, al- though the prospects are reported as good. Early corn is generally matured. The crop, as a whole, is a very good one, al- though a decided shortage is evident in some counties, as a result of insufficient rain. Late corn very generally was bene- fited by rain. Cane is doing well, and a goodly acreage was planted to sweet pota- toes. Citrus trees show a good growth. There will be a short crop. The pineapple crop has been shipped. Shipments of melons and cantaloupes continue fairly active." JOHN W. DODGE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ROOMS 4 AND 8, 91 WEST ADAMS ST. JACKSONVILLE. FLA. OENERAL PRACTICE AND OPINIONS ON TITLES. Light's Restaurant 503 West Bay SL. JACKS NVILLE. FLA H ROBINSON.Pres. H. GAILLARD. Oshier W. B. OWXN. Vice-Pres. Commercial Bank, State Depository. BuAcau: Ocala. Fl.. Lake City. a1U Jcksonville, - - Flrida GETTING'S ...FOR... FURNITURE 22-30 West Bay Street JACKSONVILLE Send for Catalogue Do You Went a Perfect Standard TYPEWRITER. HE:EA P SNAP.BARGAIN * In our wholesale department we have the following special "pick-up" bargains in type- writers: One new FAY-SHOLES, just out of the factory and never opened, $87.50. The regular price of this machine is $110, and it is one of the best machines made. One new SMITH-PRIBsIKR, a snap at $73.00. One REMINGTON No. 7, but little used and good as new, $60. Everybody knows the Remington, the "old reliable." One SMITH-PREMIER, second-hand, but in perfect order, $55. One FAY-SHOLES, good as new, a real bargain at $55. If you want to buy a typewriter and want to save money, buy one of these before they are gone. Better write quick. . We rent typewriters, too, to responsible parties. Industrial Record Co. Wholesale Departm't Jacksonville, Florida tW WSV(tX<6SX -sg~rC? -U -CSSSCCC3S3(f Kohn = Furchgott = Company. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Dry Goods, Clothing, Gents Furnishings and Hats. MAIL ORDERS OVEN PROMPT ATTENTION JACKSONVILLE. FLA. ~SSCS~SCSiSC3C3C3CSC~C3C3C3C~rrrrrrrrrrr ~rrrrrrrrrr~c~urrrrrrrr~c~ SCJafSESES~Sma~ I THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. 15 GUARANTY TRUST & SAVINGS COMPANY, N. E. Corner Bay and Ocean Sts. JACKSONVILLE, FLA. OFFICERS. James W. Spratt, W. M. Bostwick, President. Vice-President. Harlow Barnett, Sec'y and Treas. Capital $100,000 4 per cent interest paid on all deposits. THE NATIONAL BANK OF JACKSONVILLE JACKSONVILLE. FLA. CAPITAL $300,000 SURPLUS and UNDIVIDED PROFITS $414,760.91 We issue Time Certifcates of Deposit, which draw interest at the rate three per ceNt per anIrI, if held ninety days or longer, Take =;a.ta:e Of thls nd let yror seal ns be eringl* sonetlMi ftr yen. Particular attention paid to Out-of-Town accounts, sending deposit by mail ~d~&66ft**t6f **e**oe*e*oe6** S southern BOARD OF TRADE BUILDING. 213 MAIN ST. ...... INSTALLATION OF...... Electric.. Electric Wires of Every Description. Elevators Installed and Repaired. Motor and Fan Work a Specialty. Com pany Electric Fixtures. BELL PHONE 1330. JACKSONVILLE. FLA. The Clyde Steamship Company g-' ''iT^v J. W. WEST, President. D. FLYNN. JOHN E. HARRIS, V. J. KLEY. VicePlruidedns. H L RIOJOND, Scey OW TrfA. D. L VWIUAMS. Assl Scc'Y aid Tres. WEST FLYNN & HARRIS CO. R GERMANIA BLDG. Savanna.h. Ga. GENERAL OFFICES, WEST BLDG. Jacksonville. iea. NAVAL STORES FACTORS; NAVAL STORES RECEIVED AT SAVANNAH, GA., JACKSONVILLE, FLA., AND FERNANDINA, FLA. Wholesale Grocers also Dealers in Hay. Grain and Heavy Harness. SOLE AG VTS t h Celebrated Union Turpentine Axes, SOLE AGE I and Wilson & Childs Philadelphia Wagons. MERCHANTS WAREHOUSES. SAVANNAH, GA. JACKSONVILLE, FLA. TAMPA, FLA NEW YORK, CHARLESTON AND FLORIDA LINES The magnicet steamships of this line are appoitel to iail a folow4 eslli at Charleton, S. C. both ways. TI eA Nmn. Monday, June 26, at 3:00pm. .COMANCHE... Wednesday, June 28, at 3:00pm..APACHE ...... Friday, June 30, at 3:00pm.. ARAPAHOE... ..**xONONDAGA Saturday, July l,at3:00pm..IROQUOIS..... Tuesday, July 4,at 3:00pm..ALGONQUTN.. Thursday, July 6, at 3:00pm..COMANCHE... Saturday, July 8, at 3:00pm. .APACHE ...... ..*xCHIPPEWA. Tuesday, July 11, at 3:00pm..ARAPAHOE... Thursday, July 13, at 3:00pm.. IROQUOIS..... ..**xONONDAGA Sunday, July 16, at 3:00pm..COMANCHE... Tuesday, July 18, at 3:00pm. .APACHE...... Friday, July 21, at3:00pmn. ARAPAHOE... ..*xCHIPPEWA. Saturday, July 22, at 3:00pm. .AITOONQUIN... Wednesday, July 24. at 3:00p)m. .COMANCHE... Tuesday, July 25. at 3:00pm..IIKROQUOIS..... Friday, July 28, at 3:00pmn..APAC1E. ..... ..**xONONDAGA **-Boston via Brunswick and Char leston. Brunswick. rom Jaesuvtll ael Cbasulestes and Now York. Saturday, July 1, at 4:30am Monday, July 3, at 4:30am Wednesday, July 5,at 6:00am Friday, July 7,at 7:30am Friday, July 7,at 8:00am Sunday, July 9,at 9:30am Tuesday, July 11, at 11:30am Thursday, July 13, at 1:00pm Thursday, July 13, at 1:00pm Sunday, July 16, at 4:30am Wednesday, July 19, at 6:30am Friday, July 21, at 8:00am Friday, July 21,at 8:00am Sunday, July 23, at 9:00am Wednesday, July 26, at 11:30am Thursday, July 27, at 12:00n'n Friday, July 28, at 1:00pm Sunday, July 30,at 1:30pm Monday, July 31,at 4:00am Wednesday, Aug. 2, at 5:00am Friday, Aug. 4, at 6:00am xFreight only. *-Boston via TI DUVAL Frank IM.Turpin THE DUVAL Propritr. JACKSONVILE, FLA. Open the Year Round. Opposite Government Building. Most Centrally and Conven- iently Located. Thoroughly Repaired and Renovated. Newly Furnished and Equipped Library Connected at Popular Prices. STAiVS NONE BETTER MADE V Prompt Shipments. OTTER CREEK LUMBER CO., Jacksonville, Fla DRINK A BOTTLE OF DELICIOUS AND REFRESHING THE CLYDE NEW ENGLAND AND SOUTHERN LINES. otret sorvtee Between Jaekasnvllae, Boaeto and Preroldosme ad anl me-.- era Point., Oallirs at Charlesto Beth Ways. SB]I-WBIKLY SAIJNGS. southbound.. ....... .. .. * *......... ....rom LewIk Wharf. Bo toa Northbound.. .... .. .. .. .. ** ** * rom toot of Catherine street, Jacks mvll CLYDE ST. JOHNS RIVER LINE Between Jiekaotarll ad Snefore. Stopping at Palatka, Astor, St. Prmae s. Beretford (De Lad) and intermonte landings on Ut. Johns river. STEAMER "CITY OF JACKSONVILLE" Is appointed to all as follows: Leave Jacksonville. Sunday, Tu day and Thura- daym, S: p. m. Returning. leave Santord, Mondays Wednedays & Friays s: a m. SOu) i BOUND.I NORTHBOUND. Read down. II Bd . Leave SJ p. m. ...... ........ ........ Jackonvlle........ ....... .......lAri : a. m. Lean 8:* p. m ...... .. .. .. ..... ..paltf .... ...... eve :m p. m. Leave 8 a. mi...... ....... ..........Astor................ ..... ........ ILave I:O p. m. Leave 4 a. m.M...... .................St. ran .................... ... Leave 1 p. m. ...............I........ ....Beresford (DeLand).....................ILreave .- noea ArrvJ a. m. ......................anord................... .. .... ave o a. Ar. 10:00 a. m. ................. Enterprise.................... .Lv. 10:00 a. m. GENERAL PASSENGER AND TICKET OFFICE, 122 W. BAY ST., JACKVILLE. F. M. IRONMNONCER, JR.. Asst. Gen. Pas Agent, 122 W. Bay St. Jacksonville, Fla. W. G. COOPBR, JR., Local Frt. Agt., sJk 'vlle. C. P. LOVELL. Ast. Supt.Jaeck'vlln Foot Hogan Street, Jacksonville. A. C. HAGGERTY. G. B. P. A, New York, CLYDB MILNW 0. A-. Now Ti,.L TU1 O. Q. BORa, WE. P. CLrDIm C 0. Opera Manager. Oenera AeStA. Chessarouhs Buildin, i "tate stret. Now TYst. Proved by the highest medical experts to be the most healthful drink in existence. Sold by the JACKSONVILLE COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., 624 West Bay Street R. S. HALL, Pres. T. C. HALL, V. P. and Mgr. L. J. KNIGHT, Sec. and Treas. Marion Hardware Company, Hardware, Mill and Turpentine Supplies OCALA, S- FLORIDA. i11 IIlI llII I 1 111lli1111 tt iiiiI I 1 11111r i i i 1111 - J. P. WIitanm. President. J. A. G. CARBON. 1st Vice-President -T. A. Ju Nos, 2nd Vice-President. J. F. DusWNBURY,3d Vice-President SH. L. KArroa, Secretary. D. G. White, Treasurer. - J. P. WILLIAMS COMPANY, i- I s11 ES ID MOITO FICmRS nID WiOLESLE GR(OERS. SMain Of rries SXVANNaH, GEOROGIL. - rnch Oi: PENSACOLA. FLR. I Branch Grocery House, S Branch ofrtlee: JAJCKSONVILLE, FLAJ. COLUMBUS, GAI. " Naval Stores Producers are Invited to Correspond With Us. S 1111 1 11 1 I l lll ll l llllillll IIII ll I l il 1 11111111 Irer New York, (Pier as North niver). - --- -- --- 16 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. Buyers' Directory If you want anything look through this classified list and write to the firm appearing therein. The Record guarantees a prompt response. ATTORNEYS. Jno. W. Dodge, Jacksonville, Fla. ABSTRACTS. Realty Title and Trust Co. ACCOUNTANTS. T. .G Hutchinson, Jacksonville, Fla. BANKS. Atlantie National Bank, Jacksonville, Fla. Commercial Bank, Jacksonville, Fla. Guaranty Trust & Savings Co., Jackson- Fla. Florida Bank & Trust Co, Jacksonville, Fla. National Bank of Jacksonville. BOXES AND CRATES. Cummer Lumber Co., Jacksonville, FI. BRICK. Foster, Geo. R., Jr., Jacksonville, Fla. Southern Fuel & Supply Co, The, Jackson- vile Fla. COCA-COLA. Jacksonville Coca-Cola Bottling Co., Jack- sonville, Fla. CLOTHING. Craig & Bro., J. A., Jacksonville, Fla. Standard Clothing Co., Jacksonville, Fla. CLOTHING-WHOLESALE. Kohn, Furchgott & Co, Jacksonville, Fla. COMMISSION MERCHANTS. Bailey & Montgomery, New York City. Tolar, Hart & Co., New York City. CONVEYANCING. Realty Title and Trust Co. COOPERAGE. Cooperage Co., The, Jacksonville, Fla DRUGS Kirk & Jones, Jacksonville, Fla. DRUGS--WHOLESALk. Southern Manufacturing Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Christie-Groover Drug Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Covington Co., The, Jacksonville, FI. Kohn, Furchgott & Co., Jacksonville, Fa. Henry Jacobs, Jacksonville, Fla. ELECTRIC SUPPLIES. Southern Electric Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Florida Electric Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Standard Electric Co.. Jacksonville, Fla. National Electric Co., Jacksonville, Fla. ENGINES. Lombard Iron Works & Supply Co., Au- Merrill-Stevens Co, Jacksonville, Fa. Schofleld's 8on Co., J. 8., Macon, Ga. gusts, Ga. FERTILIZERS. Bours & Co., Wi. A.. Jacksonville, Fla. FOUNDRIES. Schofield's So Co.. J. 8., Macon, Ga. FUEL. Southern Ful & Supply Co., The, Jack- sonville, Fla. FrumxMlluE. Getting Furniture Co., Jacksonville, Fla. GENTS' FURNISHERS. Craig & Bro., J. A., Jacksonville, Fla. Kohn. Furchgott & Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Standard Clothing Co., Jacksonville. Fla Sluart-Bernstein Co.. Jacksonville, Fla. GROCERS-WHOLESALE Bours & Co., Wm. A., Jacksonville. Fla. Consolidated Grocery Co., Jacksonville, Fla. 'owling & Co., F. M.. Jacksonville. Fla. Hargraves Co., C. H., Jacksonville. Fla. Jaelksonville GCrocery Co., Jacksonville, Fla Williams Co., J. P., Savannah, Ga. Young Co., Joln R.. Savannah, Ga. GINGER ALE. Live Oak Bottling Works. Live Oak, Fla. HATS-WHOLESALE. Kohn, Furchgott & Co.. Jacksonville, Fla. HARNESS. Vehicle and Harness Co.. Jacksonville, Fla HARDWARE. Bond & Bours Co., The, Jacksonville, Fla. Marion Hardware Co., Oeala, Fla. Tampa Hardware Co.. Tampa, Fla. Weed & Co., J. D., Savannah. Ga. HAY AND GRAIN. Bourn & Co., Wm. A., Jacksonville, Fla. HATS. Craig & Bro., J. A., Jaksonville, Fl. Standard Clothing Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Stuart-Bernstein Co., Jacksonville, Fla. HOTELS& Aragon, The, Jacksonville, Fla. I)uval Hotel, Jacksonville, Fla. Hotel Bartholdi, New York City. St. George, Jacksonville, Fla. Light's Restaurant, Jacksonville, Fla. IRON WORKS. Lombard Iron Works & Supply Co., Au- gusta, Ga Merrill-Stevns Co., Jacksonvill, Fla Schofield's Sons Co., J. 8, Macon, Ga. INSURANCE. Cay, Shine & McCall, Jacksonville, Fla. Loren H. Green & Co., Jacksonville, Fla. JEWELERS. Greenleaf & Crosby Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Hess & Slager, Jacksonville, Fla. LIQUORS. Blum & Co., Chas., Jacksonville, Fla. .Myerson, Max, Jacksonville, Fla. Altmayer & Flatau Liquor Co., Macon, Ga. Eureka Saloon, Jacksonville, Fla. loseph Zapp & Co., Jacksonville, Fla. MEDICINES. Spencer Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. Southern Manufacturing Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Christie-Groover Drug Co.. Jacksonville Fla. MAPS. Realty Title and Trust Co. MACHINE WORKS Lombard Iron Works & Supply Co., Au- gusta, Ga. Sehofield's Sons Co., J. S., Macon, Ga. MATERIALS FOR TURPENTINE PRO- CESS. Schofield's Sons Co., J. S., Macon, Ga. METAL WORKERS. Baker, M. A., Brunswick, Ga. McMillan Bros., Savannah, Ga. MILL SUPPLIES. Marion Hardware Co., Ocala, Fla. Schofield's Sons Co., J. 8, Macon, Ga. Tampa Hardware Co., Tampa, Fla. Weed & Co., J. D., Savannah, Ga. MILLINERY. ienry Jacobs, Jacksonville, Fla. NAILS. Salem Nail Co., New York City. NAVAL STORES. Baily & Montgomery, New York, N. Y. Consolidated Naval Storm Co., Jackson- ville, Fla. Standard Naval Stores Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Timmons-Blount Co., Tampa, Fla. Tolar, Hart & Co., New York, N. Y. Union Naval Stores Co., Mobile. Ala. Williams Co., J. P., Savannah, Ga. West-Flynn-Harris Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Young Co.. John R., Savannah, Ga. lJacksonville Naval Stores Co., Jackson- ville, Fla. PAINTS. Bond & Bouro Co.. Jacksonville. Fla. PHOSPHATE SUPPLIES. Campbell, J. R., Ocala, Fla Marion Hardware Co., Ocala, Mae Tampa Hardware Co., Tampa, Fla. PAPER. IFlriida PIlper Co., Jacksonville, Fla. PIANOS. liildlen & Bates. Jacksonville, Fla. PUMPS Merrill-Stevens Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Schofield's Sons Co.. J. S., Macon, Ga. White Blakeslee Mfg. Co., Birmingham, Ala. TANK STORAGE. National Tank & Export Co., Savannah, Ga. REAL ESTATE. HIroblton. Fendig & Co.. Jacksonville, Fla. 0'. lhieknin. Jacksonville. Fla. C'lri-tieJ..1. D., .ackonville, Fla. Livingston & Sons. J. H., Ocala, Fla. Southern States land and Timber Co.. Stewart & Co.. Jacksonville. Fla. HTodrlcks Real Estate Agency, Jackson- ville, Fla. SAFES. )inhll Sqafe and TLck Co., Jacksonville. SEEDS Bours & Co., Wm. A., Jacksonville, Fla. SHIP YARDS Cummer Lumber Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Merrill-Stevens Co.. Jacksonville, Fla. SHOES-WHOLESALE. Covingtnm Co.. The, Jacksonville. Fla. Jos.Rosenheim & Sons, Savannah, Ga. TYPEWRITERS AND SUPPLIES. R. C. Davis & Co., Jacksonville, Fla. STEAMSHIPS. Clyde Steamship Co., The, New York City. STOCK BROKERS. Holmes & Co., Samuel P., Jacksonville ,FX. TALKING MACHINES. Metropolitan Talking Machine Co., Jack- sonville. Fla. TANKS. Cypress Tank Co, Mobile, Ala. Davis & Son, G. M., Palatka, Fla. Schofield's Sons Co., J. S., Macon, Ga. TITLES AND TAX ABSTRACTS. Realty Title and Trust Co. TURPENTINE APPARATUS. Chattanooga Pottery Co, Jacksonville, k . TURPENTINE STILLS. Baker, M. A., Brunswick, Ga. MeMillan Bros., Savannah, Ga. TURPENTINE STILL TUBS. Davis & Son., G. M.. Palatka, Fla. TURPENTINE VATS. Davis & Son, G. M., Palatka, Fla. TURPENTINE TOOLS. Council Tool Co., Jacksonville, Fla. VEHICLES. Vehicle & Harness Co., Jacksonville, Fla. WATCHES. Greenleaf & Crosby Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Hess & Slager, Jacksonville, Fla. YELLOW PINE LUMBER. Cummer Lumber Co., Jacksonville, Fla. East Coast Lumber Co., Watertown, Fla ELECTRIC LAMPS MOTORS AND FANS WIRING National Electric Co, 520 Main St. Jacksorvfle. ifa. Trade Checks FOR THE COMMISSARY BUS118IS. THE INDUSTRIAL RECORD manu- factures more of them than all the print- ing and office supply houses in the South combined. COMMISSARY CHECKS Send all orders for Commissary Checks, any color, any denomination, padded or loose, to the Industrial Record Go. THE OLDbST W ISKBY HOUSE INI GEORGIA. (BiatabliHed Im 181.) OLD SHARP WILLIAMS-Pure Fine Old Rye. By the gallon $1.00; four full quarts $.50, express prepaid. GEO. J. COLEMAN-Pure Pennsylvania Rye; Rich and Mellow. By the gallon $2.75; four full quarts 3.00, express prepaid. ANVIL RYE-Pure Substantial Family Whiskey. By the gallon $2.5; tour full quarts $2.90, express prepaid. CLIFFORD RYE-By the gallon 83.X; four full quarts $2.5, express prepaid. OLD KENTUCKY CORN-Direct from Bonded Warehouse; fine and old. By the gallon $3.00; four full quarts U.S, express prepaid. OLD POINTER CLUB CORN Rich and Mellow. By the gallon $Z.60; four ull quarts $2.M0, express prepaid. We handle all the leading brands of Rye and Bourbon Whiskies in the market and will save you from 25 to 50 per cent on your purchases. Bend for price list and catalogue. Mailed free upon application. The Altmayer tL Flatau Liquor Company, MACON. GA. AND BIR.MINGHAM. ALA. DIAMONDS AND WATCHES We sImply ask a call. We can show yo, at correct and mosey savng prices, many papers of loose pure waite, perfect DIAMONDS. It Is our desire to continue belg the largest Diamond dealers n Jacksorville, and our specialty Is flue rousd- cat gems and ilgh-grade Waltham and Elgin Watches. Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, HESS & SLAGE HESS & SLA R 11-13 1ai St., 3311. ay, Jickskunie Flh. M. A. Baker, INVENTOR AND MANUFACTURER OF TUH Baker Improved Seamless Turpen tine Stills. Write me for prices and outsts F. 0. B any point in Georgia. Tr- Ids, Alabama or Mississippi. All stills sold under a guarantee. JOB WORK Through the Coutry a Specaity. The Largest and Oldest Copper Works in Georgia. Brunswick, Ga. ir My specialty is large worms and heavy bottoms that do not leak. L,, I I THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. 17 F. M. DOWLING COMPANY. WHOLESALE GROCERS. PROVISIONS. GRAIN. HAY, FLOUR. GRITS and MEAL. JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA. SAVANNAH NAVAL STORES RECORD FOR 1903-04 AND TWO PREVIOUS YEARS Receipts. 1903-04 1902-03 1901-02 Spirits, casks ................................ 193,647 292,490 314,346 Rosins, barrels .............................. 650,938 940,507 1,071,446 Total ................................... 844,585 1,233,033 1,385,780 Exports. Spirits, casks ............................... 188,393 296,430 314,876 Rosins, barrels ............................... 752,270 975,428 62,637 Foreign. Spirits, casks .................................. 93,384 206,109 217,446 Rosins, barrels .................................. 338,171 504,173 535,042 New York. Spirits, casks ................................ 35,658 42,765 53,763 Rosins, barrels .............................. 87,353 133,121 129,095 Sundries. Spirits, casks ................................ 59,351 37,556 43,637 Rosins, barrels .............................. 326,746 337,734 398,539 The receipts of spirits are less than 1902-03 by 98,849 casks, and of rosins, 289,569 barrels. Crops of Spirits and Rosins for Three Years. Crop 1903-04. Crop 1902-03. Crop 1901-02. Spirits. Rosin. Spirits. Rosin. Spirits. Rosin. Wilmington ....... 16,511 89,667 18,883 113,968 16,921 109,484 Charleston .......... 2,409 3,159 3,007 11,835 3,004 13,270 Savannah ...... ....176,418 650,938 270,670 940,507 313,085 1,071,440 Brunswick ......... 55,002 184,527 68,947 144,106 79,669 286,125 Mobile ........... 12,315 50,380 18,969 79,272 21,080 88,572 New Orleans ........ 36,017 133,126 33,103 108,033 21,038 94,336 Carrabelle ......... .closed closed 3,34 32,148 8,177 47,497 Georgetown ........ .7,515 44,214 10,307 46.899 8,458 50,515 Pensacola ........... 42,554 205,982 38,275 192,205 37,786 154,350 Jax. & Fernandina. .. 187,210 653,210 91,976 375,211 70,000 245,000 Tampa ............ closed closed 13,565 40,664 15,424 51,779 Totals ...... ....535,915 2.020,925 571,096 2,184,818 593,492 2,212,413 Imports of Turpentine to United Kingdom. From official returns; cwts turned into barrels at 320 ewts, 16,230 kilos, 100 bbls. 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 From United States ................... 174,446 193,429 155,122 143,851 144,400 From France ........................ 2,283 859 1,656 4,630 2,859 From other countries .................. 840 53 904 516 11 177,569 194,341 157,682 148,997 147,270 Russian Turpentine .................. 8,521 6,861 8,711 17,595 17,765 Total barrels ....................... 186,090 201,202 166,393 166,592 165,035 Percentage of Russian .............. 4.57 3.41 5.24 10.56 10.76 Average price of American ........... 35-4 27-1 33-1 42-2 41-2 Reported by James Watt & Son, London, England. COMPARATIVE PRICES OF SPIRITS AT SAVANNAH FOR FIVE YEARS. April .......... ....... April 8 ................. April 15 ................ April 22 ................ April 29 ................ May 6 ................. May 13 ................. May 20 ................. May 27 ................. June 3 ................. June 10 ................ June 17 ................ June 24 ................ July 1 ................. July 8 ................. July 15 ................ July 22 ................ July 28.............. Ang. 4 ................. Ang. 12 ................ Ang. 19 ................ Ang. 26 ................ Sept. 2 ................. Sept. 9 ................. Sept. 16 ................ Sept. 23 ................ Sept. 30 ................ Oct. 7 .................. Oct. 14 ................. Oct. 21 ................. Oct. 28 ................. Nov. 4 .................. Nov. 11............... Nov. 18 ................. Nov. 25 ................. Dec. 2 .......... ...... Dec. 9 .................. Dec. 16 ................. Dec. 23 ................ Dec. 30 ........... ..... Jan. 6 ................. 1904-06. ND 53 54%/ 54% 53% 55 54% 543/4 53% 54 52% 52% 52% 53 52% 52% 53% 53% 52% 531/ 54% 541/4 52/ 521/ 52 52% 52% 52/, 52 52/4 511/ 50% 50 50 487% 48C(& /, 50% 494/ 50 1903-04. ND 50 49%/ 47 45 45 47% 47% 49 45% 46 46% 47% 471/4 47% 48 49% 50(q % 491 52 52 55@% 54 54% 56%1/ 57 55 57 55% 56% 55% 56 561/ 56 56 56 56/4 561/4 56/4 57% 1902-03. 45 42% 42/, 43 42%@43 43 45 45 45% 451/, 45% 47/ 481/ 475% 44% 45'/4 44 <4 44 431/ 43% 44% 44'/4 44% 45 44% 46 46% 47% 50 51% 5:1/,2 4!) 52 50 51 50-/, 51 501% 51/, 52 52% 54 1901-02. 34 32 321/4 31%/@32 32 32 31% 32% 321/4 32% 32 33%@% 341/, 33% 34% 341/4 33 32% 34 33 34 34 33% 34/4 34 33% 34 34% 35 35% 35% 35 3514 35 35 35% 35% 36% 36% 37% 1900-01. 53% 53% 46 471 46% 47 48 49 49 46 44% 43% 42% 43% 43% 44% 43 42 39% 39% 38 35% 34 35% 35% 361/4 37 37 373/, 40% 40% 40 41 40 39 39 381/% 371/ 35 35 37 Atlantic National Bank of Jacksonville RESOURCES THREE MILLION DOLLARS. We invite especial attention to our Savings Department, which is operated under GOVERNMENT SUPERVISION. INTEREST COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY. -i THE ARAGON JACKSONVILLE, FLA. NOW OPEN Under new management. Thoroughly renovated and repaired throughout, in- eluding new electric elevator and our own electric light plant. H. N. O'NEAL, Prop. 0,***@*$*9* * **@e**@*@*@e*e*@* *#***(*e*$*0* @ J. S. Schofield's Sons Company, e****.**b*oe,*e*e*oo*oe,*o*e*** O ,******0***9**O** SHeadquarters for *-* Distiller's Pumping o pl Outfit. No plant complete without one. * Hundreds of them in use in Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and South Carolina. Write us for partiou- Slars and prices. We also manufacture Engines, Boilers aid High ? *Grade Machnry, s well as carry a full and complete * --socof- S- Mill Supplies, Pipe, *' Boiler Tubes, Etc. Advise your wants. S. O ,Macon, - Georgia. ALeauig Sulty of a SlM& of Tak Wor f Twerpstih Steraw Pur t*t *e s t*S a tetet-- --------------t***** -*--e----- \V^%SX Timmons- Blount Co. W. W. TIMMONS, President. B. W. BLOUNT, Vice-President J. P. CARSON, Sec'y & Tre Naval Stores Factors And Dealers in Supp'tes of all Kinds for Turpentine Operators. Correspondence Solicited. Addroeu TIMMONS- BLOUNT CO. American National Bank Bldg. TAMPA, FLORIDA. East Coast Lumber Co. ROUGH AND DRESSED LONG LEAF Yellow Pine Lumber Bundled Rosin Barrel Staves in Carload Lots. Steamer Sbipments a Specialty. WATERTOWN. FLORIDA. 18 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. U L OPERATORS Regular Stock Complete Outfits, New and Second- hand. Extra Kettles, Worms, Caps, Arms, Furnace Doors, Grate Bars, and all other at- tachments pertaining to- Turpentine Stills and Fixtures. Bear in Mind That During Your Busy Season YOU YOU YOU YOU MEET WITH A MISHAP BREAK DOWN BURN OUT NEED US Over in the Left- Hand Corner Will Interest You. McMILLAN BROS., Southern Copper Works. JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Savannah, Ga. Mobile, Ala. Fayetteville, N. 0. CAPITAL STOCK $300,000.00. Jacksonville Naval Stores Company JACKSONVILLE, FLA. A NEW COMPANY-Will do a general naval stores commission business. We guar- antee Savannah prices upon day of arrival, and to make prompt return. A MUTUAL COMPANY-Each shipper invited to become a stockholder. It is but fair and right that the operator should share in the profits of the selling end of his product. We have ample capital and facilities to take care of our customers. Your business solicited. JACKSONVILLE NAVAL STORES CO., Blum Building, Rooms 21-23. Jacksonville, Florida. D. C. ASHLEY, President. | M. M. SMITH, J. L. CONOLY, J. G. CRANFORD, J. F. FENDER, Vice-Presidents. J. N. BRAY, Secretary and Treasurer. 1 1w 1 1 1 1w 1 W WW W'W -------------v - -v-vw W.'A. GALLAHER and E. A. CHAPLAIN, VICE-PRESIDENTS. DIRECTORS: 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 of the 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 one Three-Story Building, 70x200; one two-story building. 50x390; one one-story building, 80x250, making the largest space of any Company of the kind in the South. CONSOLIDATED GROCERY CO., Headquarters Corner Bay and Bridge Sts., Jacksonville, Fla. Branches Tampa. Fla., Pensacola.. Fla., end Savannah. Ga. aamaaaamaIIu eeaeeeaaaeea baaaaaeeeaamma mea eammea u ufhu mmu e e ae au uu5IuuIEIu uII* CIII liii l)ll I~la-" ll1111l111IIIII I I III 11111111111,1111111111111 Kill a 1111- ~)~~111111119^"""~' C. B. ROGERS. PRIBBIDUNT. C. H. HODGSON, Sac, and Tua~sa. GREENLEAF C& CROSBY C 0. Jewelers and Importers, 41 W. BAY STREET. JACKSONVILLE. FLA. I Diamonds /\ Diamonds WE HAVE BEEN / DEALERS IN DIAMONDS We Save You AND OTHER PRECIOUS STONES We Save You The Middleman's "'"CE THE ESSHMEr The Middleman's Profit IMPORTERS FOR MORE THA Profit. TWEWTY YEARS.- \SATISFACTION ASSURED. DIAMONDS \ DIAMONDS Write Us-Mail Orders R.eceive Prompt Attention. Half Tones=Zinc Etchiings 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 SPECIRlTI IS M1DE OF MIlmNEm1, IRENTO C11 IIIN U IBISH PIOTRINAS li PICRES. 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. |