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LI RARY
SI A I E l)_0 9glILaY IAVALS ZToRES, L EIsK ERSo fEtERAh fNDOVRSTRIAl~ FIntI IAh 3 5lEWSPAPE&O J = LJACKSONVILLE, FLA. SAVANNAH, GA. XIV ,. CONSOLIDATED NAVAL STORES COMPANY. Home Office: JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Branches: Savannah, Ga., and Pensacola, Fla. OFFICERS. W. C. POWELL, Premaent; B. F. BULLAKD, H. L OOVINGTON. J. A. CRANFORD, D. H. McMILLAN, B. R. POWELL, C. M COVINGTON, JOHN H. POWELL, Vice Premedents; C. P. DUSENBURY, Saretary and Treasurer. LXtECUTIVE COMMITTEE: W. C. Powel, C. B. Rogers, H. L. Covington, B. F. Bullard, J. A. Cranford. DILjY'TORB: W. C. aowell, B. F. Bullard, C. B. Rogers, J. A. Cranford, W. J. Hillman, John H. Powell, W. Co chman, H.L. Covington, C. Downing, D. H. MeMillan, R. B. Powell, C. M Covington, 8. A. Alford. NAVAL STORES FACTORS Paid in Capital Stock, $2,500,000 Owned and Controlled by Practical Operators. The 'Consolidated" is purely a co-operative Company. Its Interests are Identical with those of the Producers. The patronage of turpentine operators everywhere Invited. Two Million acres of land and Timber for sale on easy terms. Producers are invited to call or correspond. COVINGTON COMPANY, WHOLESALE MERCHANTS. Dry Goods, Notions, Men's Furnishings Blankets, Corrforts, Convict Clothing, UNION-MADE OVERALLS. McMillan Bros. Southern Copper Works Manufacturers of TURPENTINE STILLS Complete Outfits and Extra Kettles, Caps, Arms, Worms, Fur- nace Doors and Grates always on hand d ills taken in part N and repairing done ld Slls payment for New Work in the country Heavy Coppersmithinf, Steam Pipe and Special Copper Work Jacksonville, Fla. lso Fayetteville,N. C. Savannah, Ga. Mobile, Ala. I WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. PUMLISHD EVERY SATURDAY. DEVOTED TO NAVAL STORES, LUMBER AND MANUFACTURING INI Urvua -4*dabd legL 8Ii hL a.y a mude Cmlm.t-s d ts Tuip limOApemlm AMmWi msoimd (cOUriC I id irn, .d d ed SdeL q Amd C m m C a0 e d is Gem l Amed Adm SqPl l- 03w d Orv i Owm dTwpmr T m. W mAs' A..mm -i. A A p 1 2. is.. OeW Oa. -of do i..a Cm Gwe., A ..m. nd. by Gers iSsews Aine,. r. om mla ,sof i S% Genewh Am Anwims MEN WHO MADE A SOUTHERN EPOCH. Strong Men of a Quarter of a Century Ago Who Were Moving Spirits in Stimilating the Material Upbuilding of the South. (Manufacturers' Record, Baltimore.) In reviewing, as is done in detail on other pages of this issue of the Manufac- turers' Record, the industrial progress of the South during the last quarter of a century, the mind naturally reverts to thoughts of the men who twenty or twen- ty-fve years ago were among the moving spirit in stimulating the material up- building of the South. Many of the noble band whose co-operation and enthusiasm in those early days gave inspiration to the work of the Manufacturers' Record, men upon whom it called without stint, have long sine passed away. Many are still here, ome enjoying the fruits of well- earned victories in material affairs, while others have lost out in the struggle aad are almot forgotten by the South in the busy rush of the present hour. And what a band of enthusiastic workers for the revival of the South were these men, who united with pen sad voice, and sometimes with money, in quickening into activity te long dormant industrial life of the South Ranking high among them were Bmn of Northern birth, who, like Judge elley, a man whose tireless devotion to protection resulted in securing for him his beat known title of "Pg-Irer Kelley, fa- milarly known as the either of the House of Representatives. He was a Pennsylvan- ian, treemadously interested in the up- building of his own State. But looking out beyond his own immediate section to that broader horizon of American develop- meat, Judge Kelley traveled through the both, and wrote for the Manufacturers' Record a series of comprehensive stories as to ts resourema. It was of Western Cosallna that he wrote: "It is the most glorious land upon which my feet or eyes have ever rested." It was after he had ee the marvelous riche of the coal and htra of Alabama that he added in another letter: "'Te South i the coming r1 Do- rado of Amerian adventure. May the Almighty speed its onward progress. It was after he had rounded up his trip, which covered a very large part of the South, that in a personal letter he used an expression immediately adopted by the Manufacturers' Record as its motto: "The development of the South means the en- richment of the nation." His letters, re- published from the Manufacturers' Record in nearly every daily paper in America, awakened thousands who had known but little of the South to the possibilities which he saw and to the wealth which he anticipated even years before the public had cou meneed to realise it. And then in rounding out his fnal story of the South he aid: "The States south of the Ohio and east of the UMisssippi, with their 500000 square miles of area, contain a wealth great enough for a continent-a wealth so vast, so varied in its elements and character, so advantageously placed for development, that these States alone can sustain a population far greater than the population of the United States today. * * It was the building of an empire in the West that relieved andn enriched the East as well as the West. The enor- mous energies, the 'plant' used in that task, unparalleled in the magnitude of the work and the greatness of the reward to all, is now seeking a new field of invest- ment, and there is no spot on earth suf- ficient for it and within its reach but the South. I do not consider that there ever existed in the West, great as its wealth is, nor in any other portion of the country, anything like the natural wealth of the South. A very large part of the South is blessed with a climate unexcelled, if equalled, elsewhere in the world. As to the mountainous region of the South, it is richer in natural wealth and in advan- tages for the development of that wealth, it has a finer climate, better water and higher conditions of health than any re- gion of which I have any knowledge, and is, withal, one of the most beautiful re- gions of the world." Another Pennsylvanian, still living to see the fulfillment of his enthusiastic pre- dictions of the South published so freely nearly a quarter of a century ago, is Col A. K. MClure. Of this section he wrote with enthusiasm rivaling that of Judge Kelley. Referring to its iron interests, he said: "We cannot war with destiny; we can- not efface the beneficent gifts of Him who leads the waters to the sea and sends them back in the dews and rains of heaven. Alabama has been gifted far beyond even our boasted empire of Pennsylvania." Then looking to the future he pointed to the time when a "large portion of the great iron and coal products which enter competing centers will be supplied cheaper from Alabama than from any State in the North." Abram S. Hewitt, rightly, when living, called "the first citizen of America," was one who in speech and by pen and by investment of his own money proved his boundless faith in the South. With that marvelous ability to forecast the future which marked Mr. Hewitt's life, he saw in advance of others the coming of the time when basic steel would take the lead in metallurgical interests and when the water-powers of the South, which at the time he wrote were counted as but of lit- tle value, would come into play as great factors in the creation of wealth. Writing of iron and steel, he predicted that the time was not far distant when "Alabama would dominate the basic-steel industry of the world." Then, turning to other things, he said: "The water-powers of the South are upon a scale of grandeur unequaled else- where, and will in the future be all uti- lized for productive industry. * There is no corresponding region on this habitable globe which has so many ad- vantages as the South all available by natural or artificial communication, and capable of more economical operation than in any other part of the country. * If it is acted upon, the South will become the garden of the world." Frederick Taylor was one of the first of New York's bankers to sing the praises of the South. Returning from a careful study of that section about twenty years ago, he wrote: "The country through which we trav- eled was varied, and in many respects beautiful; its valleys fair as the vale of Cashmere, its mountain scenery wild at times as the Alps. * To any young man of today of pluck and grit with the world before him and his fortune to make, I should say, 'Go South, young man. Go South!'" In calling such a roll Edward Atkinson of Massachusetss must not be omitted. As one of the most earnest sup- porters of the Atlanta Exposition in 1881 lie began an active advocacy of the South, which ended only with his death. Nearly twenty years ago Mr. Atkinson wrote for the Manufacturers' Record a comprehen- sive analysis and forecast of the world's iron trade, predicting that the future situs of the world's iron and steel making would be in the South. This article commanded the widest attention throughout Europe as well as America. But time and space would fail to quote the enthusiastic tributes paid to the South by the far-seeing men of that day, who looked at it not with the partial eyes of Southern-born men, but with the cold, practical light of the expert and the busi- ness man born and reared in other see- tions. Their enthusiasm was matched by that of the seers and prophets and the doers of things among Southern men. There was Henry F. DeBardeleben, who in those days boasted of being a "pinpy rooter," coming from the pine regions of the South, where coal and iron were un- known, and becoming one of the pioneer developers of the coal and iron interests of Birmingham; in those days he was a man among men, a man whose work re- sulted in giving new inspiration to the South, and who drew into that section for many millions of dollars. Who can ever pay a full measure of tribute to DeBarde- leben, to Sloss, to hook and their asso- ciates, who bore the brunt of the great struggle to develop the wealth of the coal and iron in the Alabama regions in the days which, indeed, tried men's souls; to E. C. Gordon, long since passed away, whose daring spirit made possible the establishment of Shefeld, thought by many for some years to have been a blun- der, but now proving the soundness of the faith that was in its founder, and to Sam Noble? When a young boy he had moved from Pennsylvania to Alabama with his father, whose machine-shop equipment was shipped by sailing vessel from Philadelphia to Charleston or Savannah and finally lo- cated at Rome, Ga. There this infant industry expanded until during the war the Nobles were busy making cannon and balls for the Confederacy. Removing a few years after its lose to the point in Alabama where Anniston now stands, uam Noble and his brothers, with General Tyler of Connecticut, founded the iron industry out of whose profits grew, Irst, a cotton mill and then the town of Annis- ton, which, wisely, a few years age erected a monument to the memory of one of the South's greatest pioneers in Industrial life, a man who helped to shape the destiny of the South, and who, if he bad bat lived a few years longer, might have materially helped to prevent the depression wbic for some years swept over the hion interests of that section. Another man who helped to lay broad and deep the foundation of Anniston's development, and who, like Sam Noble, has passed on to the better land, was Col John MeKleroy who was pred- dent of the Anniston City Land Co., and who, in conjunction with the late Dunema Parker, an associate of the Nobles in iron and banking, made that city for a time one of the most progressive places of which not only the South but any part of this country could boast. In fact, the gait which these men set is one with whieh Anniston or any other city in the Sooth would find it even now to keep pace. When the mind runs beek over those olden times. one naturally thinks of Ma- ior Jed Hotchkiss, who had followed his leader, "Stonewall" Jackson, as chief en- gineer through all the valley campaigns, and who for some years after the war stood almost alone like a mountain peak above those about him in his boundless faith in the riches of the Virginia. It was through his work that the Norfolk & Western was induced to build into the Pocahontas coal fields, and largely through his work that many of the great industrial the upbuilding of coal and iron interests interests and the great railroad enterprises THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. of Virginia and West Virginia exist today. Georgia, blessed an it always has been with men of great ability, had Gov. Joe Brown as a leader in its dark days, and then Col. Isaac W. Avery, at that time editor of the Constitution and literary godfather of that marvelously gifted ora- tor, Henry Grady. At Augusta, James R. Randall, as the editor of the Augusta Chronicle, was doing a work for the broad- eat upbuilding of the best interests of the State, rivaling that of Avery and Grady in Atlanta, and what a mighty power for good Avery, and after him Howell and Grady and Hemphill, made of the Consti- tution. Then came Pat Walsh, who added to the influence of the Chronicle, and af- terwards as United States Senator contin- ued his enthusiastic work for the South. Over in Charleston was Dawson, who made the News and Courier one of the great conservative powers of the South. In the same city was Major William A. Courtenay, a leader among men, identified for a time with the coal and iron interests of Alabama, and afterwards with the up- building of cotton-spinning in Carolina. In Charleston was Pelzer, whose great faith in cotton caused him to invest large- ly of. his fortune in such splendid mills as that of Pelzer and others. Smyth, whose management of that mill gave to the world one of the first pre-eminent demon- strations of the power of the cotton-mill- ing industry, had as co-workers Orr and Hammet and Hickman and Phinizy and many others, who were, indeed, giants when giants were needed in the cotton in- dustry. In those early days, shortly after the establshiment of the Manufacturers' Rec- ord, there drifted into the office one day a young man who introduced himself as D. A. Tompkins, an engineer, who, having forced his way by hard work to fair suc- cess in his chosen profession, had decided to return to his native land and establish himself in Charlotte. On a subsequent visit, a yar or two afterward, Tompkins told about the possible profits in the cot- tonseed-oil business in new and up-to-date mills in competition with the many mills which were then being absorbed by the American Cotton Oil Co., many of which, started in the early stages of the industry, were crude and imperfect in every way. He promised to write a series of articles on this subject, and the Manufacturers' Record published "No. 1," but waited in vain for "No. 2" A few weeks thereafter it was found that the more he studied the strategic importance of the situation which he had undertaken to cover in this series of articles, the more he was im- pressed with the opportunity for the in- vestment of capital, and later he advised the Manufacturers' Record that it had been found wise to use the data which he had been gathering for these articles for a confidential circular and prospectus, which resulted in the prompt organization of the Southern Cotton Oil Co., with a capitalization of $5,000,000. As we re- member it, that was in April or May, and in order to make possible the utilization of the seed of that summer it was decided to build before fall eight mills at an av- erage cost of about $250,000 each, scatter- ed over the South from North Carolina to Arkansas and Texas. As the organizer of the company, the work of doing this was entrusted to Tompkins and those as- sociated with him. When the fall season opened and the seed were ready every mill BUYER'S ACCOUNTANTS. T. 0. Hutehinon, .acksonville, Fla. Walter Mucklow, Jacksonville, Fla. AXES. Briggs Hardware Co., Valdosta, Ga. BANKS Commercial Bank, Jacksonville, Fla. BEER-WHOLESALE. Chas. Blum & Co., Jacksonville, Fla. omaeph Zapf & Co., Jacksonville, Fa. BOXES AND CRATES. Cummer Lumber Co., Jacksonville, Fla. BRICK Geo. B. Foster, Jr, Jacksonville, Fa. BUILDING MATERIAL. Geo. R. Foster, , Jacksonville, F BUSINESS COLLEGES. Tampa Business College, Tampa. CARPETS. E. E Cleveland Furniture Company. CIVIL ENGINEERS. Roland Woodward, Jacksonville, Fla. CLOTHING. urag & Bro., J. A, Jacksonville, Fla. Standard Clothing Co., Jacksonville, Fla. COPPER SMITHS. MMilln Brothers, Jaeksoflle, Savan- nah M Mob ile. M. A. Baker, Brunswick, Ga. COOPERAGE. blorida Cooperage -o.,Jacksonville, Fla. DRUGS. Wm. D. Jones, Jacksonville, Fla. DRUGS-WHOLESALLE Tan= Drug CLo, Tampa, Fla. Soun Drug Mfg. a., Jackdonville, Fla. Groover-Stewart Drug Co., Jacksonville, DRY GOODS-WHOLESALE. Covington Co. The. Jacksonville, Fla. ENGINES. Merrill-Stevens Co., Jacksonville, Fa. Sehoeld'a Sonn Co., J. S, Maoa, G. Lombard Iron Works and Supply O., An- 3uW4. Ga. FERTILIZERS. Bours & Co., Wm. A., Jacksonville, Fla. FURNITURE. E. E. Cleaveland Furniture Co., Jackson- ville, FI. FOUNDRIES. i-'boled'- Sons Co., J. ., Maeon, Ga. GENTS FURNISHERS. Stuart-Berntein Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Craig & Bro., J. A, Jackabnville, Fla Standard Clothrg Co., Jacksonville, Ia. GROCERS--WHOLESALE. Williams Co., J. P, Savannah, Ga. Young Co, John R., Savannah, Ga. HARDWARE. Bond & Bourn Co. The, Jacksonville, FLa. Briggs, W. H., Hardware Co., Valdosta, Ga. rampa Hardware Co., Tampa, Fla. W d & Co.. J. D., Savannah. a. HAY AND DRAIM. Bonu & Co.. Wm. A.. Jacknvile, Fla. HATS. Craig & Bro, J. A., Jacksonville. Fla. Standard Clothing Co.. Iac oaville, Fla. HOTEL&. Aragon The, Jacksonville Fla. Fifth Avenue Hotel, New York, N. Y. Telford Hotel, White Springs, Fla. IRON WORKS. Merrill-Stevens Co., Jacksonville, Fla. SchoAeld's Sons Co., J. 8., Macon, Ga. INSURANCE. Florida Life Insurance Co, Jacsonville FaR. Cay & MeCOl, Jacksonville, ha. JEWELERS. R. J. Biles Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Greenleaf & Crosby Co., Jaeksonville, Fa. Hess & Slager, Jacksonville. Fla. LIQUORS. R. M. Rose Co., Jacksonville, Fla. Casper Co.. Roanoke, Va. Blum & Co., Chas., Jacksouvlle, Fla. Altimaer & Flatan Liquor Co., Maeon, Ga. Joseph Zapf & Co. Jacksonville, Fla. MEDICINES. Spencer Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tena MACHINE WORKS. Selhofleld's Sons Co., J. S., Maeon, Ga. .ombard Iron Works. Auguta, Ga. MATERIALS FOR TURPENTIE PRO- CESS. Schofeld's Sons Co., J. 8, Maeon, Ga. METAL WORKERS. Mcillan Bros. Ce, Jsaeaenvfle, mavan- ash and Mobile. Baker, M. A, Brunswick, Ga, and Pema- cola, Fla. MILL SUPPLIES. Schofield's Soas Co., J. S., Maseo, Ga. Tampa Hardware Co., Tampa, F Weed a Co., J. D., Savannah, Ga. Malby Machinery Co., Jadtkomville, ri. Briggs Hardware Co., Valdoeta, Ga. MONUMENTS. Tampa Monumental Works, Tamp, a i M MULES AND HORSE W. A. Cook, Tampa. Fl NAVAL STORES. American Naval Stores, Co., Homn Ofice Savannah. Ga. Peninsular Naval Store Cn., Tampa, Fla. Barnee & Jesup Co., JacksovTle, Fa. Consolidated Naval Store Co., Jackson- ville, Fla. Union Naval Store Co., Mobile, Ala. West-Flynn-Harris Co, Jacksonville, Fla. Williams Co., J. P., Savannah, Ga Young Co., John R., Savannah, Ga. southern States Naval Str O., avan- nah, GI. PAINTS. Bond & Boure Co, Jacksoville, Fla. PHOSPHAT SUPPLIES. Tampa Hardware Co, Tampa, Fl. PUMPS. Merrill-Stevens Co., Jacksonville, F. Schofield's Sons Co., J. 8., Mamoa, Ga. RAILROADS. Atlantic Coast Line. REAL ESTATE Brobston & Co., Jacksonville, Fla. SEEDS.' Bours & Co.. Wm. A., Jaeksnville Fla. SHIP YARDS. Cummer Lumber Co., Jacksonvilla Fa. Merrill-Steven a Co.. Jacksonville, Fa. 8HOES-WHOLESALE. Covington Co. The, Jacksoille, Fl. Joe. Roenheim & Sons, Savannah, Ga. STEAMSHIPS. Clyde Steamship Co. The, New York City. TANKS. Schofleld's Sons Co., J. 8., Maeon, Ga. TURPENTINE STILLS Baker, M. A., Brunswick, Ga., and Peas- cola, Fla. McMillan Brothers .Co, .Jackavflle, Savannah and Mobe TURPETINH TOOLS. Council Tool Co.. Jacksonville, Fl. Operator Tool Co., Grme Cowe Btprtn FL. WATCHDu Greenleaf Crosby Co., Jaekoville, ra. Hess A Slager, Jacksoville, Fla. R. J. Riles Co., Jacksonville, Fla. YELLOW PINE LUMBER. Cummer Lumber Co., Jacksonville, Fla. East Cost l umber Co., Watertown, FI WHISKIES GINS AND RUMS "ROM $1.50 to$5.00 per Gallon ......AGENCY FOBR...... Lewis 18M6 oI Me-t Venim Pure Rye Wbindkle Controllers Blum's Monogrm and Sylvan Rye-Agenta for Juagt Cindhw ti sad Pabst Milwaukee Ber. Priems n ap plicatio. OHAS. BLUM & CO. 517 ftnd fI WEST MAY sTREET JACAlSONI"Vi rPIA. WM. D. JONES intSCEmPTI SMPECIST FAMILY DRUG IST 107 E. BAY ST. Nai Ordmers Um L Cay & McCall etaiUSatd J 3u hin ag I. Walter Mucklow, CERTIIED PU1LC ACCOUnTANT, Rmm, 4047-48 MutWMl LUf 1ig Teleam afb JACUOMVLLE, FLA. "THE DEVILf TODA" Bis wrk in th me B. Creh. Q oh . Busimn. PotUcs and ev wrlk f hife. A book Prtai the sve dam foIund la ditios of Ulife. P=i7l sad meboi-s Mai& tbn. t warming mtiinv amen and weme from wrtek adr ul. Thli book i having a hu rol We want agents to edl th above book wb a ful Ha of Standard gSubMrcita BDok iRd latter Psa dTrel a srl'r ae- isre will be sot free Thib i s opportunity tI mab mw aid worth your investigatkh. We hbs aso who have brn wil M aymmr Wrole tI. D. E. Lrter Publiisig Co. 12-14-16 Tri ty Ave. Atlut, a. HUTCHINSON AUDIT CO. PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS & AUDIORO Dyal-Upehreh R1116if, Pheme $Is. Ji N. DIRECTORY -- `-- -- ---I---~ -1"1 i ~;~?OS~EJE~EE?~F1EEJF~F~n 1 ~FI~SEJSSFJ~FSE~E~'~~E~E~E~~' -E~rr~;~,~lirri~i~,-il~iir;~;r;cr~i-~ a ~868. THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. 5 went promptly into operation. Can this be duplicated by any work that is being done in the South today? Connected with this great enterprise and with other oil interests was Fred Oliver, who had gone South from Northern New York. Oliver and Tompkins were leaders in those days in giving marvelous expansion to this then almost unknown industry nad to the development of the feeding of live stock on cottonseed products, many cattle being shipped at that time from Texas to Char- lotte to be fattened in order to make good the assertions which had been given to the world. And in connection with this work was that of developing the fertilizer industry. To prove how well-rounded such a combination could be, they planted a hundred acres in cotton and built along- side of a cottonseed-oil mill and a ferti- lizer factory and established a cattle-feed- ing yard, that they might show how, from the raising of the seed, through the oil mill and the fertilizer factory into the feeding of cattle and back again to the popuno-i9Jpaj p d 9 aiq!ssod s A aeaqi 'pos industrial potentiality. Out in Texas was Henry Exall, a man who twenty years ago was one of the greatest workers for the development of that State, a man whose speeches on Texas made to business gatherings in Bos- ton turned Texasward a vast stream of money for investment. Wherever a good word could be spoken for Texas, wherever energy and activity would help to develop its material interests, Exall was found. Though today his name is rarely seen, he should ever receive credit for the splendid work he did twenty years ago. In those early days A. H. Belo was making the Galveston News the great newspaper power of Texas. And speaking of Texas brings to memory the surprise and aston- ishment created in the Manufacturers' Record office one day shortly after it was established, when W. J. B. Patterson, of San Antonio, who was bringing into the State a very large amount of foreign money, sent in a check for twenty-three annual subscriptions to be sent to leading beottish and English financial concerns which he represented. Those who have not gone through such days as followed the starting of the Manufacturers' Record would not quite understand what encour- agement it meant to receive twenty-three foreign subscriptions from one concern. And so, recalling these twenty-three sub- seriptions of Mr. Patterson, it might be suggested that there are not even today many people in the South who are carry- ing on as broad a campaign for drawing money to this section as he was working out nearly twenty-five years ago. Turning again to the men, who, like Avery and Grady and Belo and Kingsbur3 and Randall and others, were through their pen proclaiming the future riches o0 the South, we recall M. B. Hillyard, .o New Orleans, a voluminous writer, whoa work on the South, published by the Man ufacturers' Record twenty years ago was spread throughout this country an< Europe. Hillyard was among the first tb tell with graphic pen the charms of th, Gulf coast, especially of Mississippi, am s0 the stock-raising possibilities of tha State. Though he is today among those whom the present South may have al most forgotten, he ranks high among those who, in the days when the South needed such men, were writers of such charm tha their words carried conviction wherever was a pioneer in the development of the tobacco industry at Durham, was busy at work in a town which has since numbered among its great industrial leaders men like Julian S. Carr, the Dukes, Watts and other millionaires and multi-millionaires. A Canadian, drawn South by its great resources, saw in the Cumberland Gap re- gion what he believed to be a unique opportunity for vast industrial operations and Alexander A. Arthur, almost forgotten by the South, drew into that section mil- lions of English money, created Middles- boro, and brought the building of the rail- road from Knoxville through Cumberland Gap, where it met the Louisville & Nash- ville on its southward journey. Though for a time Middlesboro suffered almost financial collapse, largely because of the failure of Baring Bros., and the consequent stagnation in England, from which Mid- dlesboro had drawn nearly all of its in- vestment money, and its founder was widely criticised and condemned, it seems destined yet to fulfill in part the enthus- iastic predictions of those who planned it, and of such men as the late .lohn E. Procter, who was among the first of the leaders in that day drawing attention to the vast mineral wealth of Eastern Ken- tucky. What a story could be written of Procter's life! As geologist of Kentucky for many years with a firm and unwav- ering faith in the future of that section, he, too, was among the many who con- stantly contributed to the Manufacturers' Record facts and figures about the South and its mineral wealth, aLter on, when invited by President Cleveland to become a member of thb Civil Service Commission, and afterwards its president, he made such a reputation in that trying field that lie was invited by President McKinley to remain as the head of the commission, ani there he stayed until his lamented death, ever an active, tireless worker for the South. As we think of the great work which is now being done in building a railroad from Carolina through Southwest Virginia into Kentucky to meet at the Breaks of the Big Sandy the $4,000.000 branch of the Chesapeake & Ohio completed about a year ago to that point, we are reminded of the work of Gen. John T. Wilder, a man of Northern birth, a vigorous fighter against the South from 1861 to 1865, who after the struggle settled in Eastern Ten- nessee and has given his life to the up- building of that section. The first manl in that region to build a coke furnace, lie turned his attention early in the eighties to the construction of a railroad from Charleston through Carolina and Virginia, through the Breaks of the Sandy on out to Chicago, a road known as the Three Cs, or the Charleston, Cincinnati & (Chi- cago. This daring venture, requiring as it would have done, many millions of capi- tal, was in advance of the times. In 1884 the Manufacturers' Record sent on n horseback trip over that line, in company with'General Wilder on his reconnoitering investigations, one of its old-time corre- spondents, a Northern man, Col. B. S. Pardee, who, like General Wilder, having fought from 1861 to 186s against the South, then gave his whole life to the upbuilding of the South. His letters pub- lished at that time on the territory trib- utary to he line, on the possibilities of the great coal region in Souhwest Vir- ginia and Southeast Kentucky, and on th" resources of the Ashland district and the they were read. adjacent territory, were as broad and corn- In North Carolina, W. T. Blackwell, who prehensive as any that have ever been "VALUE'S" ARE OUR.S. Nobody Can Meet Our Values. "Prices" are Everybody's, Any Dealer Can Shade or Imitate Our Prices. COMPARE THE FURNITURE Price Tags Indicate Nothing But Price. E. E. Cleaveland Furniture Co., Lartessta Olest mrniture Stoe Is JacksevlNe. : Standard Clothing Company One Price * I * C S S. One Price * FASHIONABLE CLOTHIERS AND FURNISHERS, * 17 and 19 West Bay Street, Jaccksonvie, Flersl S 8Stetuen and Hawes Hate. Special Attentin Given to Mail Orders "***I,,,a,.aue*a...aaaaeaseesummmaasmuuaee aaauueeaauu SMc KOY PATENT STurpentine Cup. The best and simplest cup on the market. Detachable Greater Capacity, easier dipped ,more easily placed on tree, stronger and prae- tically indestructible. Will 7 not rust. For catalog and price list write S'KOy PIIIITMRPIITIE P CO. S" 1015 Hibrmia Builing, P New QOrleans. U jOiu--. INVENTOR AND M. A. BA ER, MANUFACTURER OF THE BAKER IMPROVED SEAMLESS TURPENTINE STILLS. Write me for orice F. O.. B. ay point in th turpntn belt. AIl stills sold unmdr a gu.rantee. JOB WORK THROVGHTHECOVNTRAY PR.OMPTLYATTNDED TO The Largest and Oldest Copper Works in the South. My specialty Is large worms and heavy bottoms that do not leak. BRUNSWICK, GA. and PENSACOLA, FLA. J F. a 11M WEEKLY INDMUSTkUIAL 1CODb. p This Easy Chipper Saves time and Money. SChip escapes easier on account of hollow back. WRITE Cuts a shade streak easier as hollow back allows hack to WI SIto be closed more FOR Gum flows easier as there is less steel to drag over the PRICES fresh cut. .. Operator's Tool Company, Green Cove Springs, Fla. \ / written since of that section. Though Wilder secured the investment of several million dollars in building pieces of his projected line and in grading other parts, the task was too difficult, capital was too timid and the project was too far ahead for the people of that day, South or North, and so the enterprise failed. After twen- ty years, the men who are spending the 20,000,000 or 250,00,000 in building the South and Western Railroad and the Ches- apeake & Ohio people, who spent $4,000,- 000 on their branch line, the Big Sandy, are simply carrying out but a part of the comprehensive plan of John T. Wilder. And this reminds the writer of another Northern general whose works for the bouth were broad and lasting. We have in mind Gen. J. W. Burke, who while in the Northern army campaigned in Calhoun county, Alabama, and was so charmed by the beauty of the scenery that he vowed >o himself that whenever the war ended he would there build for himself a home. Just outside of the town of Jacksonville, then the county-seat of Calhoun county, General Burke did build that home, and up to the time of his death was unceasing in his work for the material development of the State. He was among those who early foresaw the need of river and harbor improvement and gave special attention to urging the importance of this work upon the country. Though he has long since passed to his reward, his work still lives. Dwelling upon Alabama matters, one nat- urally thinks of Tom Seddon, for years the president, during its days of stress anM trial, of the Sloss Iron Co. Called to its presidency by virtue of his ability as a business man at a time when he scarcely knew a piece of pig-iron from a lump of coke, Seddon brought to his great task keen financial ability and a determination to save from ruin an enterprise in which many of his friends were largely interest- ed. He bore the brunt of the reorganiza- tion of the company and its recapitaliza- tion, and lived to see it on firm and solid basis, with every dollar of investment safe and yielding a large profit to those whose faith in him had called him to so difficult a task. In North Carolina, while Tomp- kins and many others were leading that State, and, in fact, the whole South, into a broad conception of the potentialities of this section, the Holts were proving what could be done by steadily building new cotton mills. Probably no other fam- ily in America has ever had such a unique career in the building and ownership of cotton mills, and it has seemed in times past that the birth of every child made certain the building of another mill, that each son and grandson and great-grandson might become a millowner. Over at High Point, E. M. Armnfeld, a banker, growing weary of looking to outside energy and capital to do what he believed the people ought to do for themselves, organized with some friends a furniture factory, and with the profits earned in that they started others and urged the people to take up tue development of this and every kindred industry which could be established with local capital and operated by local men. As the outcome of this spirit of self-help and self-reliance, High Point has become the chief rival of Grand Rapids, and its furniture is shipped as far west as tWe Pacific coast and as far east as Africa. John M. Robinson, the president of the Seaboard Air Line, one of the first of the railroad people of the South twenty-five years ago to give his unstinted praise to the work of the Manufacturers' Record, was an enthusiastic worker for Virginia and the Carolinas, and it was under his administration that the Seaboard was pushed on to Atlanta. The Caldwell fam- ily of Iouisville helped mightily in the de- velopment of the iron industry of the aouth, and Dr. Caldwell of Birmingham, president of the old Elyton Land Co., whose work was largely responsible for making the stock of that company with a par value of $100 sell for $4500 a share; G. Gunby Jordan, of Columbus, who, as we look back over the last quarter of a cen- tury, seems to have been from the very beginning of that time as great a factor as he is today; William T. Walters, whose faith in the South induced him and B. F. Newcomer and their associates to concen- trate their energy and capital upon the ownership and development of the Atlan- tic Coast Line, and Governor Bloxham of Florida, Governor Fleming and Governor MacCorkle of West Virginia, ceaseless in their work for the upbuilding of their States; F. J. Kimball, president of the Norfolk & Western, under whose direc- tion the extension of that line was made into the coal regions, guided by Jed Hotch- kiss, as stated, into the Pocahontas devel- opment, and C. P. Huntington, with his ambition for a transcontinental line and his determination to built, at what he re- garded the ideal location of America, on Hampton Roads, the greatest shipbuilding plant in this country, and which he hoped to live to see the greatest in the world; H. I. Kimball, who did so much to build Atlanta; Major Hanson and Gen. E. P. Alexander and George Scott, in railroad and industrial work, were all men of mighty power for the South's upbuilding. Tennessee was greatly blessed in having as among its best and broadest leaders CbL J. B. Killebrew, who as Commissioner of Agriculture and afterwards Commis- sioner of Education, and later, in life a regular contributor to the Manufacturers' Record and other publications, was one of the nmst powerful writers about the South which the last generation produced. Great with voice and with pen as was Killebrew, there was in the same State the late J. W. Thomas, great, indeed, in upbuilding the railroad and business inter- I-1 LIGHT SAW MILLS SHINGEL AND LATH MACHINERY AND SUPPLIES EMames KBoln-. ritttas ~s Rpa--. Try LOMBARD WORKS AUGVUTA. GEOILGIA. PECAN 4uv tM wert paare t hfts co"mmy of cre crtalty of rtsit AN acop Nm-rthatble prodCt *per oro am nr THE OPPORTUNITY Of TODAY. The firm to pdht a panm growe wNll b t first to re a gret Mbw For tlil hIformlMI aply to THE 6RIFFI6 BROS Gl JakU-lvfL te rida. **-----------****--- "s"---* ----- SCraig Bros Co. 239 W. Buy Streeo EVERETT BLOCK. Leaders in Men's and BoEs' Fine Cloth- ing and Up-to-Date Frurniashins. Agents for Dunlap and Stetson Hats; largest stock in the City. I4w u -s::u&6;.--;.---- -------------; .. u(((aaaaaa*m**isa m ***mu **iriafru rs e ***** W. W. Ca es4 PlW. QW. m s emaw-. .. I Cames Se1 l =A a " Tampa Hararare Co. Wholesale Hardware Turpentline Mill rand Plaomphate Supplies. o TAMPA, FLORIDA. ta ma a m ui1)se |s ma a ai > m m gma: .u i MOTAI 941 RY PUBLIC. BLU PrmTu PUMF R ExamiMstSu aMI Tmbr Estlmstea. ROLAND WOODWARD. CONSULTING AND CIVIL ENGINEER. Ren 6. Beard of Trate Buillu. JACKMSVbLE. nA ------ ---- ---------- ---~.~------- ----il L THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. 7 Southern Drug Mfg. Company WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS AND MANUFACTURERS OF Flavoring Extracts, Packed Drugs, B. B. Bluing. Vinegar and Pyne's Popular Remedies. We handle everything in the Drug and Medicine line. Write for prices. JACKSONVILLE. FLA. eats of Tennessee. In Virginia there were, and there are still, such men as John L. Williams, James B. Pace, Joseph Bryan and many others who formed a coterie of influence and power in material upbuild- ing, both in their own city and in the South at large, such as could scarcely be duplicated in any other city in the South. But how shall we continue the story? It would grow to tireless length, were we but to name the men who in those early days S were among the South's great leaders- men who, if they did not more than match their successors of the present, yet certainly more than matched their work, considering the conditions under which they had to labor, for what the South is doing today is not one-hundredth part so difficult as was the work of those who took up the redemption of the South from poverty after 1865. Time and space fail even to name the giants of those days. Some whose names we have mentioned in this running com- mentary are still in the land of the living; many hive been called to "cross over the river and rest under the shade"; some are here enjoying wealth and honor; some are in poverty and almost forgotten. As the writer runs back to the time when, twen- ty-five years ago, he began the publication of the Manufacturers' Record, he can but remember with loving thoughts and deep gratitude the enthusiastic cheer which came from such men as Judge Kelley, and SHewitt, and Avery, and Killebrew, and DeBardeleben, and Courtenay, and Tomp- kins, and Dawson, and Hotchkiss, and Williams, and Robinson, and Thomas, and Noble, and Jordan, and a mighty host of others. It is not possible even to mention more than here and there the names of the men whos words of commendation gave courage to carry on the work; it is not possible even to recall the names of thousands who during the last quarter of a century have been esteemed as friend , though never seen in person. Would that it were possible for someone to write the story of the lives of those mentioned and of many others equally worthy of mention who did such a magnificent work in the early 80s and later on, men who never lost courage, despite the darkness of the clouds that sometimes lowered. With un- shakable confidence in the future, they saw with the eye of faith the time when the South, redeemed from poverty to pros- peritl, would become the center of the world's greatest business activities All honor to these men! It ought to be the * pleasure, as well as the duty of every newspaper in the South to go back over its old fles and write the story of what the people of its community were doing in those days and tell how these leaders among men were pointing the South to higher and better things than the poverty and woe and ruin of those times. Only in this way will history ever be able to do them justice. EXPERT ACCOUNTANrT. ANY BUSINESS eorrepomdeee solieitd; reference the bet. Fred E. Bankla, Jacksonville, Fla. Long distame phone 276. P. 0. Box 57L NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT. In Circuit Court, Fourth Judicial Circuit, in and for Duval County. In Chancery. Alice Welling Weiss vs. Thomas Alcott Weiss. To Thomas Alcott Weiss, Newark, N. J. You are hereby required to appear to the Bill of Complaint filed herein against you in the above entitled cause on or be- fore the 3d day of June, A. D. 1907. "The Industrial Record" is hereby des- ignated as the newspaper in which this order shall be published once a week for four consecutive weeks. Witness my hand and seal of office this 30th day of April, A. D. 1907. P. D. CASSIDEY, Clerk. By E. J. CANDEE, Deputy Clerk. C. B. PEELER, Solicitor for Complainant. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT. In Circuit Court Fourth Judicial Circuit In Chancery. of Flornua, in and for Duval County. Minnie B. Carson vs. Charles W. Carson. To Charles W. Carson, Savannah, Georgia. You are hereby required to appear to the Bill of Complaint filed herein against you in the above entitled cause on or be- fore the 3d day of June, A. D. 1907. "The Industrial Record" is hereby desig- nated as the newspaper in which this or- der shall be published once a week for four consecutive weeks. Witness my hand and seal of office this third day of May, A. D. 1907. P. D. CASSIDEY, Clerk. By E. R. HEDSTROM, Deputy Clerk. C. B. PEELER, Solicitor for Complainant. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT. In Circuit Court, Fourth Judicial Circuit of Florida, in and for Duval County. In Chancery. G. A. Henry vs. Creo. Henry. To Creo. Henry: You are hereby required to appear to the Bill of Complaint filed herein against you in the above entitled cause on or be- fore the 6th day of May, A. D. 1907. "The Industrial Record" is hereby desig- nated as the newspaper in which this order shall be published once a week for eight consecutive weeks. Witness my hand and seal of office this 19th day of February, A. D. 1907. P. D. CASSIDEY, Clerk. By E. R. HEDSTROM, Deputy Clerk. C. B. PEELER, Solicitor for Complainant. IN CIRCUIT COURT. Fourth Judicial Circuit of Florida, in and for Duval County. In Chancery. Jacksonville Development Co. vs. Ralph H. Doane, et al. Notice to non-resident: 'o1 Ralph H. Doane, Andrew J. Mosley and Bertha M. Mosley, his wife: You are hereby required to appear to the bill of complaint filed herein against you in the above entitled cause on or be- fore the 3d day of June, A. D. 1907. "The Industrial Record" is hereby des- ignated as the newspaper in which this order shall be published once a week for eight consecutive weeks. Witness my hand seal of office this 21st day of March, A. D. 1907. (Seal) P. D. Cassidey, Clerk, By E. J. Candee, Deputy Clerk. Owen & Royall, Solicitor for Complain- ant. W. L. WILSON, Pres. & Treas. JNO. E. HARRIS, Vice Pres. 6. J. SCOVIL, Sec'> 4 Seal. rgr. Florida Cooperage Company (Incorporated) Capital Stock *100,000 MANUFACTURERS OF Turpentine, Cotton Seed Oil, Dip and Syrup Barrels. Office and Factory Enterprise and Estelle Streels. Telephone 1855 Jacksonville, Fla. Barnes & Jessup Company Jacksonville, Florida. Navel Stores Fectors and Commission Merchants. OFFICERS. C. H. Barnes. Preeldent. J. C. Little, Vice-Preeldent. E. B. Wells. Secretary and Treasurer. DIRECTORS: C. H. Barnes, J. C. Little, Ralph Jessup, J. R. Saundere. E. C. Long, W. E. Cummer, R. H. Paul, G. W.i Saxon. G. W. Taylor. THE COMMERCIAL BANK JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Branches: Ocal and Lake City The largest leading State Bank in Jacksonville. Is conducted in an old- fashioned strictly conservative manner and is subject to regular examination by the Comptroller. trIndividual and Savings Accounts solicited. H. ROBINSON, W. B OWEN, H. GAILLARD, President. Vice-President. Casier. )CSEtC3(SXXXXXXXXXXXX---------------X--- W. J. L'ENGLE, "resident. J. W. WADE, Vice-President. .C. HUGHES, Ass't. See'y and Treas Union Naval Stores Co. MOBILE, ALA. PENSACOLA, FLA. NEW ORLEANS, LA. NAVAL STORES FACTORS. ..........DEALEaRS IM.......... Supplies for Turpentine Operators. Can offer at present quite a large number of desirable ocaties in West Fr- ida, Alabama and Misissippi. Liberal advances made agaiat casipamrmtas Cr- reepondence mocittd. Principal Office: MOBILE, ALABAMA. ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER PLANTS FOR MILLS AND FACTORIES. REMINGTON OIL ENGINES OPERATING ON KEROSENE. KARL FRIES - - BRUNSWICK, A. ^5 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. INDUSTRIAL RECORD JAMEI A. HOLLOON. Edlf srIn-C.Cht. A. H. MAR.SH Buslnwes Msanger. Pudslahed Even Saturday. Bsscummrrxou ames )..0134 Per Annum In ForeigW .... 8350.. "The Pine and Its Product. All emmnscatte shol be addressed The Industrial Iecord Company, Jackmonville. Fla. Srank Editoral andBu&sine Oftfice a Savanaalh. Ga. entered at the Pstofice at Jacksonville. Fla.. as aeoomnde-Maa matter Adopted by the Executive Committee of the Turpentine Operators' Association September 12, 1901, as its exclusive offi- organ. Adopted in annual convention September 11 as the organ also of the gsn- ral association. Adopted April 27th, 190, as the official organ of the Interstate Cane Growers' As- sociation. Adopted September 11, 190, as the only official organ of the T. O. A. Commended to lumber people by special resolution adopted by the Georgia Sawmill Association. THR RECORD' OFFICES The publihing plant and the main of- fSee of the Industrial Record Company are located at the intersection of Bay and Newna Streets, Jacksonville, Fla., in the ver heart of the great turpentine and yellow pine inftutriea, trad of the entire South. The ho-annah, Ga., office is in the Board of Trade Budding. Savanna is the lead- ing open naval stores market in the world. NOTICE TO PATRON& All payments fr advertin in the a- dustrial Ralcd and subcriptioa thereto must be made direct to the borne see in Jackeeville. Agents am nt allowed to make collectis under any circ1ataea. Bitl for averting and aulbsriptieus an met out frem the home egce, when due, and all remittane mrut e mai direct to thi cuman. ' bestrial Rece PRt lshing Co PASS THE IMMIGRATION BILL. The Knight Immigration Bill is one of the most important bills that has comeic before the present Legislature. It should be passed by all means. Florida cannot afford to lag behind her sister States of the South in matters of such vital impor- tance. The small appropriation will be a splen- did investment for the State. It is not enough, but it will form a nucleus on which to work for greater things in the future. The Industrial Record hopes to announce in its next issue the passage of I this splendid bill. IMMIGRATION BILLS PASS SECOND t READING. $ Friends of the Immigration Movement Feel C Much Encouraged. Tallahassee, May 16.-The friends of the imnigration measures are anmwhat o n- W 8TH WEKL IDUTRIL ECRD courage by the fact that the bills of Abernathy's Appeal. Messrs. Knight, of Citrus, and DuPont, of Mr. Abernathy said he immigrated to St. Johns, have successfully passed their Florida twenty years ago, and had been second reading in the house without mate- glad of it for twenty years. Immigration, rial amendment, he said, is the crying need of the State. The former bill, which has the endorse- In 1900 Florida paid 75 cents a day, now ment of the State and different boards of $1.75 and $2.00, and he did not think im- trade, carries an annual appropriation of migration had hurt labor. He spoke of the $15,000 and the latter only $2,500. Both good results of bringing settlers into his are good bills in view of the friends of the county (Orange), and made a strong ar- immigration movement, though it is felt gument for the bill. that very little can be accomplished with Mr. Richbourg and Mr. Abernathy dif- the smaller appropriation. Still it would fered about Everglades lands in the course at least be a move in the right direction, of the latter's remarks and Mr. Aber- A determined fight may, however, still be nathy's declaration that the Everglades made when the bills come up again on were worth nothing brought applause. t-e third reading. Mr. Register spoke briefly against the Knight Bil. bill. The Knight bill, known as House Bill Mr. Willis of Levy moved to strike out 322, by Mr. Knight, of Citrus, was taken section 9 of the bill, which was laid on up as a special order at the morning ses- the table. wi;n .This is a bill creating a State bu- Mr. Kirkland moved an amendment rean of immigration and subordinate agen- striking out portions relating to foreign cles. immigration; amendment lost. Mr. MacWilliams moved the indefinite postponement of the bill. Mr. Knight, au- thor of the bill, said he was not seeking to create a real estate agency by the bill. He explained the workings of the Mary- land law of a similar nature, and explained that the primary object of the bill was to bring desirable settlers within our borders. He read from one of Hon. Champ Clark's letters in which it was said that "Florida is the best poor man's State in the coun- try." Ten years ago the State needed capital; now she needs people to put it into effect. He touched on the labbr prob- lem in the State, and said his bill was en- tirely non-political. The State is pros- perous now, we should make it more so. Mr. Knight spoke 25 minutes very ably and logically for the bill, and left the mat- ter with the house. Mr. Russell of Putnam favored striking out words "of any foreign country," and inserting citizens of certain Christian coun- tries of north Europe, excepting Russian Jews. Mr. Malone didn't want Cubans ex- cluded. Mr. Russell wanted to confine en- deavors of bureau to desirable citizens. Mr. Knight of Citrus thought discretion ought to be left to the bureau. The house adjourned at -12:30. Afternoon Session. The house was called to order at 3:00 p. m. by the speaker, amendment pending to Knight immigration bill, by Mr. Rus- sell of Putnam; amendment lost. Amendment by Mr. Clark of Jefferson, making general commissioner elective by people, accepted by Mr. Knight and adopt- ed. The question reverted to the indefinite postponement of the bill. Mr. Reese of Escambia, opposed the bill. He said the state needed immigrants. There is no dearth of labor. in Florida, and wages are good. He opposed the measure, because it sought to import for- eign labor, and sought to evade the fed- eral law, which prohibits individuals from importing contract labor. The American Federation of Labor had protested against the ruling of Attorney General Bonaparte in upholding the South Carolina statute, and the speaker hoped Florida would not import foreign labor to reduce the price of labor here. He referred to the prosperity of the cotton belt, and said there was plenty of labor already. Settlers, Not Laborers. The State needs immigration settlers, not laborers. Out of the 24,000,000 acres of tSate lands already more than 17,000,- 000 have actually been deeded to the rail- -oads, who would be the ones benefited by immigration. He referred to "that stal- wart leader of ours, N. B. Broward," as :he man who is trying to save the re- mainder of the lands to the people of Florida (Applause.) The railroads them- lelves should encourage immigration, in- tead of asking the State to sell the rail- -oad lands at the public expense. The measure would be unjust, either to the State or to the laboring men of Florida. He cited an Escambia county instance, in which some forty German families had been grossly deceived into purchasing lands ;o their own misfortune. He thought 15,000 a year could better be expended i n establishing a State good roads asso- iation. ir. Willis of Levy, criticised the bill for providing that the immigration agent should approve his own vouchers. Mr. Reese desired to state to the house that he was not employed by the labol unions or anyone else in the matter an< he hoped no other gentleman was employ ed by any special i terest in legislative matters. He opposed the bill because h4 considered it a vicious one. Mr. Abernathy slidl the bill was for thi purpose of assisting one laboring man an( the bill was not the result of corporation influence. Indefinite Postponement Lost The motion to indefinitely postpone wa- lost, yeas 27, nays 29. The house then took up house bill No 443 by Mr. DuPont, of St. Johns-Appro priation of $2,500 yearly for the encor- agement of immigration. Mr. Willis of Levy moved to indefinitely postpone. Mr. Wells of Leon moved to strike out $2,500 and insert $10,000. Mr. DuPont did not think the State able to spend $10,000 a year for this purpose at the present time, in view of the other demands on the State. Mr. Reese opposed the amendment as being too much. Mr. MacWilliams also opposed the amendment, which was lost. Mr. Willis withdrew his motion to in- definitely postpone. Mr. Williams moved to insert $5,000 in place of $2,500. Mr. DuPont moved to lay on the table, which was agreed to and house bill No. 322 and house bill No. 445 were ordered to the engrossing committee. ELEVATOR COMPANY FOR JACKSON- VILLE. Jacksonville is to have a grain elevator. The United Grain and Elevator Company has been organized and application will be made to the Governor June 18, for letters patent incorporating the company. The incorporators of the new company are B. G. Lasseter, C. H. Barnes, J. A. Ewing and E. C. Long, all prominent busi- ness men, whose names connected with any enterprise guarantees success. The application for charter states that the general nature of the business to be engaged in and transacted by the company shall be to buy, sell, store, deal in and manufacture and otherwise handle grain, feed stuff, mixed feeds and cereals of every description. To buy, construct, own, lease and other- wise acquire, possess and use elevators, mills, granaries, warehouses and structures of every nature and kind for storing, ship- ping, utilizing and selling grains, cereals, and agricultural products of every nature and kind, and for manufacturing, mixing and otherwise preparing feed and feed ituffs for market and consumption. To carry on a milling and manufactur- ng business, etc. To manufacture, buy, sell and deal in agricultural machinery and milling ma- ehinery, etc. To manufacture, erect, build, furnish, equip, construct, repair, maintain, operate, buy, sell, and in general, to utilize and deal n and deal with elevators and all kinds of hoisting machinery. Warehouse Receipts. To fit up, occupy and use a grain eleva- :or or elevators, and to carry on the busi- ness of receiving, handling and storing grain and merchandise received, and of is- suing receipts for grain and merchandise received and charging it to and collecting 'rom the owners or holders thereof reas- mnable charges for services done in and about the receipt, handling and storage >f grain and other merchandise. The capital stock of the new company s $250,000, divided into 2,500 shares of 100 each. Offices of Company. The annual meeting for the election of The Wealth of the Old families. Often disappeared, evaporated, and the new generation was left but one or two things of real value. Among these valu- ables (in 90 eases out of a hundred) was a chest of old silver, the most useful and beautiful heirloom that the young genera- tion treasured. Have you such a treasure to hand down to your heirs? If not, now is the time to start gathering it. If you are interested, come down and let us show you something in that line that is WORTH HAVING NOW and which will he highly treasured by your sons and daughters. R. J. RIES COMPANY, 15 W. Bay t., Jakeomaviih Flrida. 0 SOLE AGENTS FOR KNOX HATS Our Clathng Cat o eRight Fits Made c rai t Right Looks Well B J. Ski ST.IL. oTcer ogiati on ofthe t nirtueda gsin Well Feels S oWell Awfal well Naff Said THL STUART-BERNSTEIN CO. 14 WEST AT ST. JUCKioVILa pA. offenders will be on the third Tuesday in January of elch year, beginning January, 1908. The incorporators will meet June 28, 1907, at the office of the company, in this city, for the purpose of organizing, adopt- ing by-laws, etc. Until the officers are elected at this meeting shall be qualified the business of the corporation will be conducted by the following officers: President, B. G. ILnseter. Vice-president, C. H. Barnes. Secretary and treasurer, W. Frazier Jones. Directors, J. A. Ewing, E. C. Long and B. J. Skinner. The organization of the United Grain and Elevator Company means considerable to the commerce of this port. With ele- vators to handle grain and merchandise, cargoes will be brought here in bulk and stored and Jacksonville will at once secure a vast amount of business that is now done by other cities having elevator facil- ities, THE CLOTHIERS THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. 9 IFLORIDA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. CAPITAL STOCK ONE MILLION DOLLARS JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Writes all Forms of Life- and En- I dowment Insurance. Aredamesur wel V y -a sad -w -o lueSrs 51 Imgav5 m3leiask "] NOTICE OF MEETING. Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of stockholders of the American Oak Leather Tanning Company, for the election or directors, and such other bus- iness as may be presented, will be held at the office of the Secretary of the company in Jacksonville, on Monday, June 3, 1907, at 3:30 o'clock p. m. C. H. MANN, President. Jacksonville, Fla., May 16, 1907. 5-18-3t NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR DIS- CHARGE. Notice is hereby given, la pursuance of law, that the undersigned as Administra- tor of the estate of Joeephine C. S. Schu- macher will make return of his final ac- counts and apply for a final settlement and discharge as such administrator to Hon. H. B. Phillips, County Judge of Duval County, Florida, on Monday, June 3d, A. D. 1907. JAMES M. SCHUMACHER, As Administrator Estate of Josephine C. S. Sehumaeher. Nov. 99. 191L.--mo. WANTED AND FOR SALE Rate for this column is 2 cents per word for first insertion and 1 cent per word for following insertions. No advertisement taken for less than 40 cents for first, and 20 cents for following insertions. Cash must accompany orders unless you have an account with uas * FOR SALE-Timber for small turpen- tine location on railroad. R. L. Martin, Ocala, Fla. 5-11-3t WANTED-Position wanted by a prac- tical turpentine man as manager of a tur- pentine place or side camp. I understand handling labor. Have a position, but don't like the locality. Can furnish good refer- ences. Kindly state salary you will pay, and address "Turpentine," care Record. 5-18-2t FOR SALE-Turpentine place, I. C. R. R., seventy miles from New Orleans. Healthy locality. Country gently rolling. Timber very best quality; well equipped. 9% crops virgin; 5 crops yearling; 12 crops round timber. Excellent opportun- ity to secure much more timber. Will sell whole or part interest. Would prefer to sell part to good reliable man. Good place; good prospects. E. A. McKoy, 1015 Hibernia Building, New Orleans, La. 5-11-2t FOR SALE.-Pine and Cypress Lands. Owing to extensive orange and other inter- ests in the State, owner will sell his pine and cypress land consisting of 10,000 acres pine and 2,000 acres cypress land, shingle mill and store in operation; small saw mill. Three hundred acres pine ready to be cut, remainder now being turpentined. Will sell as a whole for $75,000, small payment down, remainder to be cut as it can be cut from the land, or will sell shingle mill and cypress separately. Ad- dress by letter only, "Owner A," 205 Main Street, Board of Trade Building, Jackson- ville, Fla. , NOTICE.-It costs money to trade. It takes time and trouble to do shopping. Let me buy your goods and send them to you without any charge for the service. 1 represent the most reliable houses, and can give my time and experience in se- Iceting the best goods. Give me a trial order. MRS. JAS. E. FARMER, Phone 2437. 811 May 8t. References, Fla. Nat. Bank. FOR SALE-10,000 aeres virgin L. L. pine in Calhoun County, West Florida, one mile south of Dalkeith Landing, on Ap- alachicola River. S. 8. Alderman, owner. Address Wewahitchka, West Florida. 3-23-07 to 5-11-07 WANTED-All ommieaaaries to dean up their bares of al kinds of eed sacks and burlaps We buy everything in the way of sacks. Write us. American Fibre C., Jacksonrille, Fla. i Royal Typewriters * S 2 The Grand $100. j The Standard $65. - SThe kind that stay with you.: Send for Catalogue. * S S GRIVOT TYPEWRITER CO. 106 W. Bay Street. * -- **** ****** - JOSEPH ZAPF CO Wholesale Dealers in and Bottl rs r f ANHEUSER.-BUScH St. Louis Lager Beer Lieors, Wis, Mliral Waters Write for Prices ATTENTION ! Sawmill & Cross-Tie Men If you use Axes and want the best buy RIXFORD'S. They are a title high priced, it Is true, In fast the hlglbst priced club axe made-$14.OO per dezen In any weight, but yeou et wers thon your money s werth In quality. The best Is none tee eood and always the cheapest. SEND YOUR ORDERS DIRECT TO W. H. Briggs Hardware Co. Sole Southrn Agents VALDOSTA, GEORGIA Jobbers of Mill and Turpentine Supplies H. PlarruiErr, Pres. P. L SUTHERLAND, Vie-Pre. A. OOVINGTON, seey. J. P. COUNCIL. Trea sad Gaol Me. THE COUNCIL TOOL CO., General Offices: JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Factory: WANNANISH, X. C. Mudfaewwrs of l HIfh *r-ade rTofo | fc- -or 0 -10 O O . COMPARATIVE MARKET REPORTS. As we looked for, there was a slight decline in prices of spirit the first I part of this week. However, the market immediately braced up, and as we go to press it is in better condition. The rcsin market has had an upward trend the whole week, and is also in good shape at the time of writing. SSPIRITS OF TURPENTINE FOR THE WEEK HERE AND AT SAVANNAH. SPrice. ales. lipmeau. Receipts. atockl. Jax. Say. Ja. 8a. Jax. tar.a. .s .sv. Jax. aw. Saturday ...... .... 631/% .... 394[ .... 588 190 7831 7,249 Monday ....... 62% 63%/ 1,961 254 1,70 55 1,244 623 7,439 Tuesday .......62% 63% 473 308 74 105 246 1,03 6,983 Wednesday .... 601 61 981 1,7241 991 1,0661 242 584 7,155 Thursday ......6% 611 230 415 .... ..... 428 972 6,406 Friday ........ 601/2 601/ 18 298 1,718 882 402 560 6,834 ROSIN FOR THE WEEK HERE AND AT SAVANNAH. Saturday. Monday. Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday. Friday. Ja a J v. Jax. Iay. Jax. Ia. Jax. t. J wJaxv.ba Ja. isv. WW ...... 5.60 5.7015.60 5.65|5.60 5.6513.70 5.705.70 5.7515.70 5.80 WG .......15.55 5.605.50 5.55o5.50 5.5515.55 5.605.55 5.655.60 5.65 N .........5.40 5.405.35 5.405.40 5.405.40 5.455.40 5.505.45 5.52 M .........5.30 5.355.25 5.305.25 5.305.30 5.355.30 5.405.30 5.40 K ......... 5.25 5.255.20 5.255.20 5.255.25 5.255.25 5.305.25 5.30 I ..........4.87 4.854.82 4.874.82 4.904.85 5.904.90 4.904.90 4.90 H ......... 4.85 4.854.80 4.854.80 4.854.80 4.904.85 4.904.85 4.90 G ......... 4.80 4.804.75 4.804.75 4.804.75 4.854.77 4.824.77 4.85 F ........ 4.75 4.754.70 4.754.70 4.804.70 4.804.70 4.754.70 4.75 E ......... 4.65 4.654.60 4.6514.60 4.654.65 4.704.65 4.704.65 4.70 SD ......... 1445 4.4514.40 4.4514.42 4.454.45 4.504.45 4.5014.45 4.50 CBA ....... 4.37 4.40J4.35 4.4014.35 4.404.30 4.4014.25 4.4014.25 4.40 REPORT OF RodIN MOVEMENT HERE AND AT SAVANMAH iSale. isipments. Reeeipts. teeks. Jax. Sv. .-lx. biv. Jax. .av. Jax. tav. SSaturday ................. 1,436 1,922 2,251 8 52I 14 1,61120,940 24,886 Monday .................518 2,126 500 1 1,887 1,29619.203 24.920 Tuesday ..............3,601 1,6 600 3851,024 2,438120590 26,973 Thiur.inv .......... 12.068 2.0921 .... 25011,112 1.471117,178 27,642 Wednesday ............... 12,103 1570o4,700 1,838 914 1,2s21,014 26.421 Iuay .... ........... 2,230 1,23212,00 i666 852 1,70018,290 28,767 I I 10 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. THE GROOVER-STEWART DmouG co., FMamLV THE oHmrWTI_-aeoveR Dmue 0o. Whelesale DrBuyg, OhIemlels, Drumalasts rm dri1es aid Oemmla-ry Seods stAA1WVDLL, FLOM=&. THB OLDIBT WHIsKElY HOUsE Is mOeKI IA. (latabulsked In 1881.) OLD SHARP WILLIA -Pure Fine Old Rye. By the gallon 1.00; four full quarts $3.5, express prepaid. GEO. J. COLEMAN-Pure Pennsylvania Rye; Rich and Mellow. By the gallon 32.75; four full quarts $3.00, express prepaid. ANVIL RYE-Pure Substantial Family Whiskey. By the gallon $.60; four full quarts $2.90. express prepaid. CLIFFORD RYE-By the gallon 2.15; four full quarts $2.65, express prepaid. OLD KENTUCKY CORN-Direct from Bonded Warehouse; fine and old. By the gallon 3.00; four full quarts $.50 express prepaid. OLD POINTER CLUB CORN Rich and Mellow. By the gallon $2.50; four full quarts $.9%, express prepaid. We handle ali Le leading brands of ye and Bourbon Whiskies in the market and will save you from 5 to 60 per cent on your purchases. Send for price list and catalogue. called free upon application. The Altmayer iaL Flata Liquor Company MACON. GEORGIA. SHundreds of Lumbermen ARE LOSING THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS Each year investigating worthless propositions submitted by un reliable brokers. We have spent a great deal of time and money investigating timber lands in Florida and Georgia. and are prepared to give you absolutely reliable information regarding any tract of any size in either State. Propositions that we offer have been investigated by our ex- perts before being offered on the market. You might have your bank look us up before consulting us. Correspondence with bona-fide purchasers solicited. Brobston & Company ar6 West Forsyth Street. JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA ^%%55%%cs%% cn %%%%5%55%5%NL THE ARAGON JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Under new management. Thoroughly renovated and repaired throughout, in- eluding new electric elevator and our own electric light plant. ffBH I. N. O'NEAL. Prop. WILLIAM A. OUrns JAMES C. DAR0 Y WILLIAM A. BOURS & COMPANY THE OLDEST ESTADLUMUB ORAU A- NEED NOUSE I THE STATE Hay, Grain, feed, Garden Seeds, Poultry Supplies, flour, Grits, Meal and Fertilizers. Om MOVIT: PreAmt SBamemt. R, Oseed. 206 EAST BAY ST.. JACKSONVILLE, F Cataloue rree IA. NOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY printing and publishing; the buying and FOR LETTERS PATENT. i selling of stationery, books, papers and Notice is hereby given that the under- periodicals of every kind; the purchase, signed will apply to His Excellency, the sale and handling of supplies connected Honorable Napoleon B. Broward, Governor with and used in the business of printing of the State of Florida, on the 29th day and publishing; also, to buy, hold and own. of May, A. D. 1907, for Letters Patent to real estate and personal property. In gen- be issued to "The BoGiolaw Publishing eral, to have, exercise, and enjoy all the Company," upon the proposed charter of rights, powers and privileges incident to. said corporation, a copy of which is as fol- corporations for profit organized and ex- lows: isting under the laws of the State of ISAAC C. JENKINS, Florida. HENRY M. WHARTON, Article L. HARRY N. BURHANS, The capital stock of said corporation. CLARENCE H. FERRAR, shall be Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) Dol- J. O. HARRIS, lars, to be divided into one thousand FRED T. BARNETT. (1,000) shares of the per value of Ten' ($10.00) Dollars each. The capital stock PROPOSED CHARTER OF "THE BO- shall be payable in, and may also be used GIOLAW PUBLISHING COM- for the purchase of or payment for, prop- PANY." erty, labor or services, at a just valua- Article L tion of such property, labor or services- The name of this corporation shall be to be fixed by the Board of Directors at "The BoGiolaw Publishing Company," and a meeting called for such purpose. its principal place of business shall be lo- Article IV. cated in the city of Jacksonville, Duval The term for which this corporation County, Florida, with power to establish shall exist shall be ninety-nine (99) years branch offices and other places of buai- from the date of the issuance of the Let- ness at other points in the State of Flor- ters Patent. ida and in such other States as may be Article V. deemed necessary and advisable. The business of said corporation shall, Article II. be conducted by the following officers: a The general nature of the business to be President, a Vice-President, a Business transacted by this corporation shall be as Manager, a Secretary and a Treasurer,. follows: The printing anl publishing of which officers, by virtue of their election, books, periodicals, newspapers and maga- snail be constituted the Board of Diree- zines, and all and every other kind of tors for said corporation, with full power FIFTH A VENUE HOTEL Madison Square, New York. American Plan $5 per day. European Plan $2.00 per day The most famous representative hotel in America. New as the newest, always fresh and elear. The Iqation in Madison Square is the finest in the city. HITCHCOCK. DARLING : sxxxssatmt'wyit^^^^^^^^ ^v'^wsarwwew East Coast Lumber Co. ROUGH AND DRESSED LONO LEAF Yellow Pine Lumber m Bundled Rosin Barrel Staves in Carload Lots Steamer Shipments a Specialty. WATERTOWN, FLORIDA THE BOND & BOURS CO. WHOLESALE I ETAUIL HARDWARE SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, PAINTS. Oils, Glass, Stoves, Tinware. Country Holloware. JACKBONVIRA& FLA. 10 WWA MAY GTP.MT. T'HE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. 11 TAMPA MONUMENTAL WORKS, DE ALRIS IN Monuments, Headstones, Iron Fencing and Italian Statuary NO JOB TOO LARGE. NO JOB TOO SMALL. MAIN OFFICES 310 ZACH STREET, TAMPA. FLA. to prescribe rules and regulations and to formulate by-laws for the conduct and management of the business of said cor- poration, and appoint such other agents, officers and employees as they may deem necessary for the proper conduct of the business of said corporation. The officers above-named shall be elected by the stock- holders at an annual meeting to be held on the firt Monday in February of each and every year, beginning with the year 19008 Section 2. Until the officers elected at the first annual meeting of the stock- holders shall be qualified, the business of this corporation shall be conducted by the flowing officers: President, Isaa C. Jenkins, lake City, Florida; Vice-Presi- "ent, Henry M. Wharton, Germantown, Pemt ylvania; Business Manager, Harry N. Burhaa, Jacksonville, Florida; Treas- urer, Clarenee H. Ferran, Lake City, Flor- ida; Secretary, J. O. Harris, Lake City, Florida, who shall also constitute the first Board of Directors. Artcle VL Te highest amount of indebtedness or liability to which this corporation can at any time subject itself is Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) Dollars. Article VIL The names and residences of the sub- seribing incorporators, the amount of cap- tal stock subscribed for by each are: Isaac C. Jenkins, Lake City, Florida, 87 share, $87000. Hurry N. Burhans, Jacksonville, Fla., 50 hares, M000. Fred T. Barnett, Jacksonville, Fla., 10 .hares, o$00.. In witness whereof, the subscribing in- corporators have hereunto set their hands and seals this --day of April, A. D. 1907. ISAAC C. JENKINS, (SeaL) HARRY. N. BURHANS, (Seal.) FRED T. BARNETT, (Seal) State of Florida, County of Duval: Personally appeared before me Isaac C. Jenkins, Harry N. Burhans and Fred T. Barnett, to me well known and known to be the persons described in and who exe- cuted the foregoing Articles of Incorpora- tion, and acknowledged before me that they executed the same for the purposes therein expressed. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my official seal, this 25th day of April, A. D. 1907. RAYMOND D. KNIGHT, JR., Notary Public State of Florida at Large. (Seal) TO THE JAMESTOWN POSITION VIA THE ATLANTIC COAST LINE TY. People all over Florida, see the Atlantic Coast Line "Purple Folder" for schedules to the Jamestown Exposition. Two daily trains each way, with through Pullman buffet sleeping cars. Season sixty days and fifteen days limit excursion tickets on sale daily from April 19th to Nov. 30th, at low rates. Coach excursions at very low rates. For further information see your near- est railroad agent, or write Frank C. Boylston, District Passenger Agent, Atlan- tic Coast Line, Jacksonville, Ila. DIAMONDS AND WATCHES We Fampy ask a ca. We cam show yen, at correct and money S srng prices, many papers of eese pare wahte, perfect aDAMONDS. It Is or desire to contimne being the largest Diamond dealers I Jacksonville, dad oar specialty Is loe roamd- cat gems aund hgt-grade Waltham and Elgin Watches. HE A S 1A ER Diamonds. Watches, Jewelry. HE"" &L StAOE11-13 Mai. St., 331W y, Jasluovilk, Fla - III ff111E *******@ **OO**S****-**w****0*O** L W. VWST, DR RL.YN IL L. RIC0M S IO #HAls S.ey md Tre. dV. ) KE EY. D. VILUAMS ViP..;rir i A~W S'ryJTn - WEST FLYNN & HARRIS CO. GE4IANMIA BLDO. Savannh.. Ca L O rI ET BLDO. Jac Dksnivlle. la. NAVAL STORES FACTORS. NAVAL STOMMS RECIVED AT SAVAAH, GA., JACKSON VILLE, FLA, AND FRMNANDINA, ILL Wholesale Grocers also Dealers in Hay. Grain and Heavy f Harnebs. SOLE AGENTS e ebrte Union Turpentine Axes. SOJ~IX AGvy A amd ilaonitChil ihalpboehi Waonas, MERCHANTS WAREHOUSES. SAVANAn, GA. JACKSONVILLu, rLA TAMPA, VLA 3 ,usauusauualsumsmse .g********usIuIu** umsg1uug1ggusgu* JOS. ROSENHEIV SHOE COO SMANWrACTVIdR AND JOIUXER OF 4 SHOES SAVANNAH. GEORGIA "Bes Shes Made for Cenmlamry Trad" 684848844#1 go$ I F tells$a muIse llusu 1188u 86u 9898166 Reliable Whiskies. When we make Claims for our goods we are certain of the facts. We operate the finest open fire copper Distill- ery in the World. We do our own bottling and packing and no expense or labor is spared to have every drop of our Whiskey absolutely pure and of the highest quality. We guarantee every Order to be perfectly satisfactory, or return your money. Four Full Quarts Rose's "Old Corn" or "Old Rye" or assorted $3.40, express prepaid. W rite for complete Price-List. R. M. Rose Company, 16 West Forsyth Street, JACKSONVILLE, FLA. "ASK THE REVENUE OFFICER." JOHN 5AVARX89 Trirser. I. BERGER.. 2c ry-Trm TAMPA DRUG CO. Wholesale Manufacturing Druggists, TAMPA, FLORIDA. Full and complete line of all minds of Drugs, Chemicals and Patent Medicines. SPECIAL ATTENTION 10 COMMISsARY TRADE. PROMPT ATTENTION TO ALL ORDERS. -Ileltl*l l *41lI 11 a I sIIII I $ se I &l|l|4i SMERRILL-STEVENS CO. SBoilermaking and Repairing Still Boilers and Pumps. SHIP BUILDING end REPAIRING. Jacksonville. Fla. Silelle lllo$lsl e eas e Is$ eeee 4 W. B. HENDERSON Pros. W. R. FULLER, Vice Pres. 1~ --I--RI ----WWWWWrrLWWPsW-r-~-r'r 12 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. K. ASH Piresident.r S.P.SHrTR. OADMNxTeaurr E. S. NASH. President. J. F. C. MYERS. Vlio-P Amer Exporters and TAR, S. P. SHOTTER., G. M. BOARDMAN. Treasurer. 'resident. Chairman Board of Directors. C. J. DeLOACH, Soretary. ican Naval Stores Company OF WEST VIRGINIA) Sumcessors to S. P. Shotter Company, Patterson Downing Company, Dealers in All Grades of ROSIN, PURE SPIRITS TURPENTINE, PITCH, ROSIN OIL and all other products of the pine tree. NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO ST. LOUIS CINCINNATI LOUISVILLE HEAD OfflGES: SAVANNAH, GtORGIA. BRANCHES WILMINGTON FERNANDINA BRUNSWICK TAMPA JACKSONVILLE PENSACOLA NEW ORLEANS MOBILE GULFPORT You Want a Turpentine Location? You Want a Sawmill Location? You Want ny Kind of florida Land? You Mean Business? SCJ oL n Wrt P J. H. Livingston & Sons, OCALA. lrLORJDA. Brick and Building Material. WIen you need these, Portland Cement, Paster Paris, Hard Wall Plaster, Hair for Plastering, Shingles, fire Brick or Clay. Write to GEO. R* FOSTER, Jr., Jacksonville. Fla. Confederate Veterans Reunion, Richmond Virginia, May 30th to June 3rd VIA Atlantic Coast Line Railway Tickets on sale daily from May 26th to 30th inclusive. Rate for this occasion is $13.75 from Jacksonville for the round trip, or virtu- ally one cent a mile for distance traveled, with correspondingly low rates from all points. Extension of limit to July 6th can be obtained by depositing ticket with special agent and payment of fifty cents at time of deposit. For full information and Pullman reservations write or call on- For full information and Pullman reservations write or call on FRANK C. BOYLS TON, District Passenger Agent, ATLANTIC COAST LINE, JACKSONVILLE, FLA. A MACHINERY Portable and Stationary Engine- and Boilers, Saw Mills, Wood- working Machinery and Supplies, Complete line carried in stock. Liberal Terms. Write for cata- logue. State Agents. for the Olds Gas and Gasoline Engines. Address all communications to MALSBY MACHINERY CO., 22 Ocean Street, Jacksonville, Florida Le"n Distance Phmo n547. Sllllll III IllI IlII11 l 111i 111i iI llllisillul1ill S J. P. W AI.rIA President. J. A. G. CAozI It ViC-Prideat ST. A. JUNNINGs. 2nd Vice-President. J. P. Dusawmar. M Vim-Priddeat SH. L. KATTON, Secretary. H. P. E. ScHUgEmI, Tmamurer. SJ. P. WILLIAMS COMPANY, SIIIl STOfRES I rTTOII FICI U OI IIUE OM. Main Office JIAVJLAKMH, OOMOIl. urmnch Offices I PENIACOLA., ieL. irmmel Osery moue., JACKcSONwVI&LL, rL. COLU UU.V OL. - Naval Stores Producers are lavited to Correapod With Is. STurpentine Cups .'. '. .'' .,. IM POr I ,A X . S.As our supply of eups is limited, we mu- gest that intending pureiisrs smd In t. heir orders promptly to i urs deivery. Few ir*Pes On Cups, Gutters and all Tools Us ee I rtU m t" - Address Chattanooga Pottery ,, Company S"' "-"J "'- ... .. "' Ji Florid , .. ., .',-. ^' ... -."*:-. "- :.k a v~e l r d ;+1~lslf~~f~EE~'PIYYC~PLPLP~PCPC I w 1111 ~ I II1 1111191111I II I I I II I I I I I II I I I THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. 13 PLANTERS "Old Time" Remedies THE JOY Of THE HOUSEHOLD. Them fou great remedies, ulian Tea, Benedicta, Cuban Relief and Cban OL ar the joy of the household. With them near at hand, a NTeu ma i ready for ay emerge. He has a safe, reliable and speedy relief gglite for wife, children, self or stock. With these remedies you can keep the CUno doctor' hands out of your poekets, and yet have a healthy, happy famny. Cubae Beside, you man cre your stock of any ailment that may befall them. MNUIAN TEA-In Lquid er Powder Form-Is the great family medicine. I will eure all former of Liver and Kidney Complaints, Prevents Chills and Malaria Fwer. Cures the comma ailments of children; and as a laative tonic it is without an equal-afe and reliable. In the liquid, it i extremely palatable-eve children Like t-a it is READY FOR USE. WXDICT A is a woman's medjeins. It will mure all the disease common t w.mn, amd eleased as Female Trouble. It will bring youth back to the laded womai Swho has ame spring bemuse she thought it woman' lot. It will are for th y gir t w ntri, womanhood; and prepare the young woman for the sare CUBAN 1M F-The instant Paint Killer, for either man or beast. Relieve I-staly, oile, Camp Cholera Mrbus, Dirrhoea, Dystentery and Sick Headaeb Ar eale in hrm iet an infallible remedy and is guaranteed to give relief in Av CUBAN OIL-The Beat Be3 adt erve Liniment. Is antiseptic for cut W or tora aesh, and will Instantly relieve the pain. Cures insect bites and sting l a burns, bruises and sore, chapped hands and face, ore and tender fee eleve r1umatle pains, lame bk, stiff joints, and in stock cures wire fence cut sat.hts, thrmh, split, dollar soes, saddle gall, and diseased hoofs. Writ a fo Prica. SPENCER MEDICINE CO.. Chattanooga, Ten The M etropolls Is the Paper you want. It is published daily and is from 12 to 16 hours ahead of any other daily newspaper in Florida .. $5oo a Year $2.50 Six Months Full Telegraphic and Stock reports. If you want to keep posted on the news, get the Metropolis. CARTER & RUSSELL PUB. CO. JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA. JOBEP D. WEED. H. D. WEED. W. D. KRENSON. J. D. WEED & CO., BAVA"NAH. GEORGIA. Wholesale Hardware, RAILROAD SPIKES, Bar, Band and Hoop Iron. Turpentine Tools, Etc. SUMMER LUMBER COMPANY JACKSONVILLE. FLA. Rough as Dressed Lumber ong Leaf Yellow Pine. BOXES AND ORATES. SJ. S. Schofield's Sons Company, neadqurters for "d Distiller's Pumping . ? N Outfita e *. mNo plant complete without one. SHundreds of them in use in Georgia, t Florida, Alabmna, MisaisuipDi and t a South Carolina. Write us for pardton- *, lars and prices. We also manufacture Engines, Sellers and itfh G g Grade Mba iMhry, * 4.H as well as cry a fll and omplete an rd!,,& nersf., s..noD 6. I Mill Supplies, Plpe, Belier Tubes, Etc. Advise your wants. I i Macon, - Georgia. A ALef Sealte of a1 l KMls ef Tles Wert fwr TlMatmJ Pea illg Lr@eSrug 6gaeIri ****- *mIumIl-iiuiiire*****i-t 4008000880800|800000|008|6||008080000|||088080|0 J. W. Motte, President. C. B. Park VieO-Pros. James MoNatt, Vioe-Prea. W. W. Wlder, See. &Trs. John R. Young Co., Commission Merchants. Naval Stores factors. Wholesale Grocers. Savomnah *1 Brunswick. Gel DIRECTORS: D. C. ASHLEY, President DIRECTORS: D. C. Ashley, B. W. BLOUNT, 1st Vice Preidet B. W. Blount. G. A. Pet-way, and General Manager. B. A. Carter, Cbaa. H. Bron,. CARL MOLLER, 2nd Vice Preso. T. G. Culbredt J. G. CroMl, G. A. PETTEWAY, 3d Vice P-es. G. Lastieger, J. G. CrManor, B. G, Loowier H. Weibert S. H. BERG, Sec. end Tres. Moer. S. H. Berg. A C. BACON, Asst. Sec. and Tress. W. T. B. Harrisoa. PENINSULAR NAVAL STORES CO. Commission Merchants and Wholesale Grocers Jacksonville and Tampa, Florid. Capital Stock, $l.000.000. _ __ 14 THE WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RECORD. OTICB O INTENTION TO APPLY FOR LETTERS PATBET. Notice i hereby given that the under- slned intend to apply to the Honorable Naoieo B. Governor of the State of &lorids, at allahaee, Florida, on the 52th day of May, A. D. 1907, for latter Patent incorporating the MUTU- AL INVESTMENT COMPANY under the laws of the State of Florida, under and with the following proposed charter, the original of which is now on file in the of- em of the Secretary of State of the State of Florida. EDWIN BROBSTON, JAMES A. HOLLOMON, WALTER P. CORBETT. PROPOSED CHARTER OF THE MUTU- AL INVESTMENT COMPANY. The undersigned hereby associate them- selves together for the purpose of becom- ing incorporated and forming a corpora- tiou under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Floida, with and under the following proposed charter. Aticle L The ame of this corporation shall be the MUTUAL INVESTMENT COM- PANY, and its businee shall be conduct- ed in the State of Florida and other States of the United States of America, and in foreign countries. The principal ofice of ld corporation shall be in the City of Jadukonil, State of Florida, and the aid corporation may have such other g.ts and places of business in the State of Florida and elsewhere a may hereafter be established. Article II The general nature of the business to be tr acted by said corporation shall be to buy, ell, own, lease, rent, hold, convey and mortgage, exchange and deal in real estate; and to build upon, improve andl develop the same; to buy and sell real and personal property of every kind and descrptio either for itself or others, on eommiaon, and to mortgage or pledge the same as security for money, and to loan money to others and to take in se- curity for same mortgages or pledges upon real or personal property; to carry on a general real esatte and rent collecting business; to act as real estate broker and agent; to act as broker and agent in the sale or purchase of bonds, stocks, notes or other securities; to guarantee, sub- scribe for, purchase, hold, sell, assign transfer, pledge, or otherwise dispoe of the shares of the capital stock of, or any bonds, securities and evidences of indebt- adne isued or created by any other cor- poration or corporations of this State, or any other State, county, nation or gov- erament, and while the owner or holder of sah stock, bond or obligation, to exercise all the rights, powers and privileges of ownership thereof and to exercise all and any voting powers thereof; to own, man- age, register and dispose of trade marks, copyrights ad patents, and to sell and di4pe of article and products covered by the same and any rights growing out of the same; to receive payment for any or all of the capital stock of this corpora- tio, in property, labor or services, at a just valuation thereof to be fixed by the Board of Directors at a meeting called for that purpose; to act as agent for others in promoting and establishing business enterprise, and to receive compensation therefo; to make contracts of any kind whatsoever for the furtherance of its pur- poees and businesses, and generally to ex- ereLe such powers as may be incident or convenient to the purposes or businesses of said corporation, and to have, exercise and enjoy all the rights, powers and priv- ileges incident to corporations organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Florida. Article II. The capital stock of said corporation shall be fifteen thousand dollars, to be divided into one hundred and fifty shares of one hundred dollars each. Ten per cent of said capital stock shall be subscribed and paid before the corporation shall transact any business, the balance of the capital stock to be paid as the directors shall determine. All or any part of the capital stock of the corporation may be payable in or issued or used for the pur- cnase of property, labor or services, at a just valuation thereof to be fixed by the Board of Directors at a meeting called for that purpose. Article IV. The term for which aid corporation shall exist shall be ninety-nine years. Article V. The business of said corporation shall be conducted by a President, a Vice Presi- dent, a Secretary and a Treasurer, and a board of not less than three nor more than seven directors. The offices of Sec- retary and Treasurer may be held by the same person. The directors shall be elect- ed by the stockholders at each annual meeting. All other officers of this cor- poration shall be elected annually by the directors. The annual meeting of this cor- poration shall be held on the first Tues- day in January of each year. Until the officers elected at the first annual election shall be qualified, the business of the cor- poration shall be conducted by the fol- lowing officer: Edwin Brobston, presi- dent; James A. Hollomon, vice president, and Walter P. Corbett, secretary and treasurer, and Edwin Brobeton, James A. Hollomon and Walter P. Corbett, dirc- tors. Article VI. The highest amount of indebtedness to which this corporation shall at any time subject itself shall be one hundred thou- sand dollars. Article VI The names and residences of the sub- scribing incorporators of said corporation, together with the amount of capital stock subscribed by each, are as follows: Edwin Brobeton, Jacksonville, Fla., 50 shares James A. Hollomon, Jacksonville, Fla., 50 shares. Walter P. Corbett, Jacksonville, Fla., 50 shares. EDWIN BROBSTON, JAMES A. HOLLOMON, WALTER P. CORBETT. tate of Florida, County of Duval S. C. Littlefield, Jr., a Notary Public in and for the aforesaid county and State, do hereby certify that on this day personally appeared before me Edwin Brobston, James A. Hollomon and Walter P. Corbett, each of whom is well known to me and known to me to be the individuals described in and who executed the fore- going Articles of Incorporation, and sever- ally acknowledged that they executed the same for the uses and purposes therein contained and expressed. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand ad affixed my notarial seal, in the City of Jacksonville, Florida, this 27th day of April, A. D. 1907. 8 C LITTLEFIELD, JR. Notary Public State of Florida. My commission expires February 16, 1911. Clyde Steamship Company .^^-1ss, NEW YORK, CHARLESTON AND FLORIDA LINES The magniecent ste hipe of this line are appnt to small a fellows, eaing at m eri ,rk, C, bh w .Ja av (Pler 36 Nrth Rive.) 8TEAME. Cds lsM NMew Yst Friday, April26, at3:00pm... COMANCHE ....Wedneeday, May 1,at 10:0am Saturday, April 27, at 3:00pm..... HURON ..... urday, May 2,at 10:M Tuesday, April 30, at 3:00pm..... APACHE .....Sunday, May 5,at10:lm Wednesday, May l,at3:00pm.... IROQUOIB ....Monday, May 6,at 10:00m Friday, May 3,at3:00pm .... ARAPAHO ..... wednesday, May 8, at 10:08m Saturday, May 4,at3:00pm... ALGONQUIN ... nday, May 10, at 10:00m Tuesday, May 7,at3:00pm..... HURON ......Sunday, May 1, at 10:00 Friday, May 10, at 3:00pm ..... APACHE .... Wednesday, May 16, at 10:0m Saturday, May ll, at 3:00pm.... IROQUOIS .... Friday, May 17,at 10:00am Tuesday, May 14,at3:00pm... ARAPAHOE ...Sunday, May 19, at 10:00m Wednesday, May 15, at 3:00pm... ALGONQUIN ...Monday, May 2 at 10:00m Friday, May 17, at3:00pm..... HURON ......Thursday, May 23, at 10:00 Tuesday, May 21, at 30pm. .... APACH .....unday, May e, at 10:0am Wednesday, May 22,at 3:00pm.... IROQUOIS ....Monday, May 27, at 10:0am Friday, May 24, at 3:00pm .... ARAPAHOE. .. ..Wednesday, May 2, at 10:00a Saturday, May 25, at 3:00pm ...ALGONQUIN..... Friday, May 31, at 10.00am Tuesday, May 28, at 3:00pm ...... HURON....... Sunday, June 2, at 1O:00 Friday, May 31, at 3:00pm ...... APACHE..... Wednesday, June 5, at 10:0m Jacksoaville to New York direct. CLYDE NBW ENGLAND AND SOUTHlERN LINES. relght Svice Betwea JackMnve and mPrvame e an alr Et Calling at Chal Mte t Ways, FREIGHT OILY. Fam Seath & IMr Jhet Lews Wharf, Beoten STA Jeadm-onv "Via Charleston. *Via Bruswiek. Saturday, pril .......... OHICAN............ trday, April Friday, April ........ ....."CHIPPEWA.......... LFday May 8 Tuesday, April 30........ .. KATAHDIN ........... Tuesday, May 7 CLYDE ST. JOHNS RIVER LINE etmween Jacks ille a Mfrd. Stopping at Palatka, Astor, St. Fraus, Berford (De l), ad tea t landings on t. John River. STEAMERS "CITY OF JACKSONVILLE" AND "FREDRICK DE BARY" Are appointed to sail as follows: Leave Jacksoaville daily emeept Batwdys at 3:30 p. m. Returning leave Sanford daily except Sundays at 9:30 a. m. 8CHEDUIL SOIJUmOUNuNDf D Read down I 0 = Lave 3:30p.m................... JaekMsnvli ................ I-l . Lsave 8:4pm................... Palata .................... .L.. .:wp.m. Leave 3:00a.m................... Astor ....................Pm 3st . .............. .. re or (D n ) .............. : p. . Arrive 2: .m. .................. Smanf ** ................... am.* * Arrive 10:00 a.m................. BotwellN .................. bVe 10:-m- GENERAL PASSENGER AND TICKET OFFICE, ias W. BAY T., JACK'ILIXE F. M. Im MONOEA I Jr. C. P. A.. Jacftscsert PJ. JOeN PENDrAEL. P. A. A. C. *Me Er, e. E. P. A. Jacks.rvI, Pe. PMiea 3JN. X..Nw Y ar- 0. TAYLoR. rPss- Traiec M r. C. c. AWW. Wi Fass. A~t- 290 Broadrway, Nw Yore. Plsesears W. W. ASHBURN. Molrie, Ga. N. EMANUEL, Brunswik. Ga. W. K. BOWEN, nitagersd. Ga. D. T. FURSK. Savanah, Ga. .J J. DOMINY. nroxton, Ga. B KIRK-LAND, Nichols, Ga. O. T. MoINTOSH, Savanaah. G. Southern States Naval Stores Co. Savannah. Ga. Factors end Commission Merchants Ship to Savannah Get Competition Highest Prices Promptest Returns Correspond With Vsa )k^1^1^^Me06%^^^ ^^^^fMn L. 0. JONES, rF.P. A. Jactsrville rla. W. e. COOPIA, Jr., P- A. Jcseardie, PFI. L. S. SCROM . A. sLeestrs. le. CLYrae MIA 6. r. A. Mer J3 N- *New Yer C. P. LOVErL, Agest. Jacsewafle, Ple. HEAVY TURPENTINE MULES, AND SADDLE AND DRIVING HORSES ALWAYS ON HAND. PRICES RIGHT. W. A. COOK, Sala Stabl, WSS.," TAMPA. Industrial Record Publishing Co. M PRINTERS PUBLISHERS A With one of the largest and best equipped printing plants in the South and with a full complement of skilled labor, we are prepared to execute high-class work promptly and at reasonable prices. No Job Too Large or Too Small for Our Careful Consideration. A I _~ ___ ~_ rlIIIlIlIlIIIlIIIlI IIIIIIIII+IIIIIIIII ICIIIIIIIIIIII+IIII ~I~~L~~C+~~II b+++))l~~+l~C~I)~I~ IIILI IGREENLEAF L CROSBY CO., 41 West Bay Street Diamonds, Wedding Watches, and Fine Anniver- Jewelry, sary Gifts, Clocks, Sterling Cut Glass Novelties, Toilet "1847 Articles. Rogers" Plated Ware Prompt Attention Comparison to of Prices Mail Orders Invited At the Sign of the Big Clock, Jacksonville, Fla. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE Half Tones--Zine Etchings Illustrating and Engraving Department OF THE FLORIDA TIMES-UNION Splendidly equipped for business. Half Tones and Zinc Etchings made to order in the most improved and artistic fashion. Illustrations for newspapers and all kinds of Commercial Work, Pamphlets, Etc. A Spalt Is Mai d DWOulg, Rtdschidg aid Emibllishig Photspals ali Petmrs, 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. -- |