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PATTERSON ANDKITCHIN
Tennessee and North Carolina
Name Candidates for Governor.
SIXTY-ONE BALLOTS IN N. C.
Prohibition and County Unit Plan of
Voting Main Issues in Ten
nessee.
Nashville, Tenn—ln Saturday’s
democratic primary, after the hardest
fought, bitterest and most picturesque
campaign ever known in Tennessee,
Governor M. R. Patterson won the gu
bernatorial nomination over E, W. Car
maci, '
For supereme court judge, D. L.
Lansden was sutcessful, B, D. Bell, in
cumbent, being an extreinely close
competitor., For railroad commission
er, Prank Avent won over W. C.
Whitthorne, :
The nominations are to be made in
convention, the primary being on the
county unit plan, county committees
naming delegates in accordance with
the vote cast.
The ninety-six counties will send
1,318 delegates to the coavention, and
of taese Patterson will have over 700.
His popular majority is between 8,000
and 10,000.
State-wide prohibition was the issue
on which Carmack based his fight,
while Patterson defended the present
status, practically local option, which
has come under his administration.
To Carmack’s banner tie Woman's
Christian Temperance Union and the
Anti-Saloom League were rallizd, and
the state had been traversed by wo
men campaign orators, some from
other states. The women and children
continued to work for Carmack at the
polls,
Under the present law liquors are
only sold in Memphis, Nasnville, Chat
tanooga, La Follette and Binghamton.
La Follette voted against surrendering
its charter so as to come under the
provisions of the present law. Bing
hamton is a manufacturing town in
Shelby county, six miles from Mem
phis.
Aside from prohibition, Carmack's
chief fight was made against the coun
ty unit plan, which was adopted by the
state committee over his protest, his
contention being for a general state
wile primary,
These two counts have been the
main oneg in the indictment he drew
against Governor Patterson in a series
of joint discussions throughout the
state. - Great crowds heard the de
bates, which were remarkable for the
forcefulness, eloquence and satire dis
played by each, as well. for the height
to which feeling ran between both the
debaters and their partisans.
Patterson i 3 serving his first term
as governor. The rivalry between him
and Carmack is not only political, but
personal.
In the election of 1906 the late Gen
eral Josiah Patterson, father of the
present governor, was defeated for re
election 10 congress in the Tenth dis
trict, g e Memphis district, by Mr.
Car “ WAL T P I
- Charlotte, N. C.—William Walton
Kitchin, for twelve years representa
tive in congress from the fifth North
Carolina district, was nominated for
~ the governorship of North Carolina by
the democratic state convention at 8
o'clock Saturday after the warmest
fight in the annals of the state,
Tie convention has neen in almost
at noon and the nomination required
continuous session since Wednesday
_sixty-one ballots. In every respect the
~contest has been remarkable. Lined
up against Kitchin were Locke Craig,
of Buncombe county, one of the most
‘Popular democrats in the state, and
Colonel Ashley Horne of Johnston, a
promiaent business man,
W. C. Newland of Caldwell county,
was nominated for lieutenaat gov
ernor,
FIRST BALE OF NEY £OTTON,
Brings 35 Cents i New York, and Was
Immediately Shipped to Liverpool,
New York City.—The first bale of
this year's cotton crop was sold -at
auction at the New York Cotton Ex
change. It was fully strict good mid
dling in grade, and brought 35 cents
per pound. This bale arrived at Hous
ton, Texas, on the morning of June 20,
and was sold at auction there at 54
cents per pound. It was immediately
expressed to this city and following
the sale was hurried on hoard the Mau
retania, sailing at noon for Liverpool,
where it will again be sold at auction
according to the usual custom. This
is said to be a record for rapid hand
ling of the first bale, which has trav
eled from Houston to New York and
will be sold in Liverpool within a pe
riod of ten days. g
SPECTACULAR OIL FIRE.
100,000 Barrels Burned by Fire Result
: ing From Electric Storms.
Pittsburg, Pa.—Over 100,000 barrels
of oil consumed by fire, tiiree valuable
oil refineries destroyed and an estimat
ed loss of about $500,000 are the re
sults of electric storms which passed
over western and northern Pennsylva
nia, * 2
The ignition of the large quantity of
oil by lightning caused three specta
cular fires at Bradford, Warren and
Washington, Pa.
The fires are under control, but for
a wide area surrounding the destroyed
tanks thers is a scene of blackened,
smoking earth and charred vegeta
tion,
BIG CELEBRATION IN TAMPA.
In Honor of the Aerival of First Steam
;%.’3,_,, ~f,f"-‘fit.-N‘W Line. i
< Tampd, ' FLA.—The steamer Rio
Q,Granfie:‘ 2,700 tons, in command of
| Capté_ifln‘fi_,_%lf,’%ff the Mallory line from
New ¥ork to Tampa and Mobile, ar
«rived hepe on the first trip. This
is the ’2::[ Q‘g steamer to enter the
twenty-foot channel ai Tampa.
A big celebration was given the
event hgre, .
NATIONAL GUARD TROOPS
.
Plan to Put 250,000 Ready for Call of
: President.
New York City—The war depart
ment has perfected a plan for the vir
tual amalgamation into a trained army
of 250,000 men ready to answer the
call of the bresident, of the regular
and national guard troops in the
United States. Assistant Secretary of
War Oliver, who is at Pine Camp, wit
nessing the department of the east
maneuvers nas given cuat this informa
tion.
Secretary Oliver in outlining the
plan for the reorganization of nation
al and state troops declared that the
word militiamen is now a misnomer
and that the state troops since the pas
sage of the Dick bill by congress are
United States volunteers.
The war department plan means
nothing more nor less than that the
moment this country gets into troubl:
the so-called nationa) guard organiza
tions will cease to exist as such, and
immediate!ly become units of the reg
ular army, absolately under the con
trol of the pre‘sident, and the secretary
of war,
“The scheme,” said General Oliver,
“is the first move in the plan to make
this country a military power. Before
this we have had nd authority over
the state troops, better known perhaps
as militia and national guard organi
zations. What we propose to do is to
organize these state troops and all the
regular forces into eight army corps
and the New England states, New
York and other states in the military
division known as the department of
the east, will constituts the first army
corps.
“The maneuver grounds here on
Pine Camp, if the government buys
them, will be the place wiere the na
tional and state troops that will be ia
the first army corps will have their
field training. In other words it
means that two years hence 50,000
men will be mobilized on this plan.
“As at present planuned the war de
partment will ba able to put into the
field almost immediately an army of
250,000 men, 3
; A GROWING INDUSTRY.
|Two Hundred Thousand Barrels of
| Oysters Planted.
l Jackson, Miss.—According to ad
{vices received from the gulf coast,
|the Mississippi oyster commission is
{making good headway with the work
{of planting reefs in the, Mississippi
sound,
Over 200,000 barrels of shells will
be planted during the summer months
and, if former experience is repeated,
these beds will be furnishing fair
sized oysters within the next three
or four years, rThe former experi
ments have been remarkahly success
ful, and the commission is getting the
work of propagation in firstelass
shape,
According to members of the com
mission, the reefs are now in better
shape than for some time, - Shells
that were planted only three weeks
ago are developing clusters, and the
ratio of growth is much larger in the
waters of the gulf than along the At
lantic coast. :
| - CLUB WOMEN INJURED.
Tally-Ho Coach Turns Over On Steep
| Hill—Dozen in Hospital. ;
Newport, R. I.—Two women dele
gates to the Genera]l Federation of
Women’s clubs’ convention in Boston
were dangerously hurt and ten others
jmore or less serfously injured when a
tally-ho coach in which they were rid
ing capsfzed on a steep aill on Bath
road. All of the twelve women who
were in the coach were taken to the
Newport ho3pital, The delegates were
lon an excursion to this city. The
{identity of the injured and the nature
lof their injuries is withheld by the
}hospital authorities. -
{ It is understood that among the in
’jured in the accident were Mrs, Dr.
| Davenport of Watertown, Mass., and
ers. Sunden of Lincoln, N2b, Mrs.
Sunden was cut about the face and an
!kles,
5 ALL QUIET IN COLON.
!candidates of Obaldia Successful—No
Trouble at Polls,
" Colon, Panama:—General Obaldia’s
{candidates carried municipal elections
‘here Dby a majority of ninety-four
{votes. Throughout the election order
!prevailed. The government party is
{downcast by the result. United States
| marines are ashore in the canal zone
!to protect property of the American
{government but no trouble is expect
led,
’ As an additional precaution all the
‘docks and the railroad tracks in this
| vicinity were kept clear and fire hose
Iwas distributed throughout.the vicin
iity, A strict guard was ul\so main
| tained over all buildings belonging to
|the United States,
| BiG EICE }lli.LS _(}(IMBINE.
]Merger Formed With Two and One
-1 Half Million Capital.
{ New Orieans, La.—The big rice
| mills of Louisiana have formed = a
Ecombi.w or merger under the title of
:the United Irrigation and Rice Mill
{ing company, The La Palana, Hech
inger, Jumbie, Lichtenstein and other
rice Interests threughout Louisiana:
ithe Independent Rice Mill, at Crow
lley; Abbeville Mill, at Abbeyille; Don
|aldsonville, at Donaldsonville; Eure
ke Mill, at Estherwood, and Gueydan
Mill, at Gueydan, enter the consolida
tion, which also will control the Licht
{enstein and ths Hechinger Irrigation
[Plant at Crowley and the Abbeville
| plant in Vermillion parish, .
| HISTORY OF HIS LIFE,
iWill be Written by John D. Rockefel.-
i ler to Appear in a Magazine,
{ 'w York City.—John D. Rockefe!
ler, according to aanouncement, has
| decided to give to the world his own
| history of his life, It will be publish
{ed serially in a New York magazine,
i beginning in October.
| Mr. Rockefeller's autobiography is
|to be published under the title of
| “Some Random Reminiscences of Men
tand Events.”
Held at Princeton Home with
Fiiends and Acquaintances.
No Sermon or Address---Wordsworth’s
“Character of the Happy Warrior”
Read.
Princeton, N. J.—All that wag mor
tal of Grover Cleveland, former presi
dent of tae United States, was buried
in the Cleveland family plot in Old
Princeton's cemetery Friday after
noon, just as the last rays of the sun
fell acress the grave. A distinguished
party of statesmen as well as con
freres of the former official stood by
in silence and witnessed the last hon-
Ors to the dead ex-president. Then
the cortege left the cemetery. :
Agreeable to the wishes of Mrs,
Cleveland, the services both at the
house and at the cemetery were of the
simplest character.
Although the funeral was of a strict
ly private nature, those in attendanca
numbered many distinguished eiti
zens, including President Roosevelt,
Governors Fort of New Jersey, Hughes
of New York, Hoke Smith of Georgia,
former members of Presideat C.eve
land’s cabinet, officials of the Equita
ble Life Assurance society, members
of the Princeton university faculty ant
friends and neighbors,
Mr, Cleveland was buried with all
the simplicity and privacy that he him
self wished as a private cilizen rather
than as tae former chief executive of
the nation,
th: se'vices began with an inveeca
tion by Rev. Sylvester W. Beach of
the First Presbyterian church of
rrinceion, whica was followed by
Scriptural reading by Rev. Maitland
V. Partlett of the West Farms Presby
terian church of New York, a former
pastor of Mr. Cleveland, who read
from the 14th chapter of the book of
John, and also read a number of pass
ages from tihe 4th and 22d chapters of
the Thessalonians,
Dr. Henry Van Dyke then said:
“According to the request of one
whose slightest wish at this moment
we all respect, there will be no ad
dress or sermon, but there was a poem
writlen more than a hundred years
ago by William Wordsworth which is
expressive of his character.” ;
He then read the poem, “Character
of the Happy Warrior.” g
This was followed by readings from
the Presbyterian book of Commoan
Worship, the services at the ‘house
house concluding with this prayer:
The services were concluded at 5:30
and five minutes iater the casket had
been tenderly carried to the hearse
and the procession started on its way
to the cemetery. Alcag the streets
from the house to cemetery, national
guardsmen, mounted and on foot, po
liced the way, : wre Ee
-, - ™ o i N iy,
USED AS WASH RAG. 51
American F@u'ght to Regain Flagthe /
| . Was Pursued by Army. SBR
Washington, D, C.—The Amé
in Panama have had cause for WG~
|Drotests recently, not on accourt§ |
the Panama elections, but because Of
an incident which called in action a
portion of the Panama army. S
A foreign.commercial house in Co
lon insulted the American flag, using
it to, wash the windows of the estab-
Ilishment. Wayne O, Adams, of the
|canal zone, as the story goes, wit
(nessed the desecration of the stars
}and stripes and engaged in a hard
| fought battle for the possession of one
|of ‘the flags which were being used to
|clean windows, ;
| He was pursued, according to re
h)orts, by a section of the army of
'Panama, consisting of two policemen
jand a member of the militia in full re
|galia, >
| As a result of the disrespect shown
the flag by the commercial house in
| question tne canal zone from one end
|to the other is hung with boycott
!signs and the offenders have found
|less expensive wash rags. ,
~ ADVANGES T 0 ROYAL FAMILY.
| Demand fer Vigorous Investigation of
Affairs in Portugal,
| Lisbon, Portugal.—A mass meeting
organized by the republicans and pre
sided over by Bernadino Machado, the
republican leader, passed resolutions
demanding a vigorous investigation
of the advances of money to the royal
|family and the misuse of public funds
during the regime of the late King
|Carlos, A sirong force of police sur
‘rounded the meeling place, but there
| was no interference with the speakers,
some of whom were most violent in
their expressions. No untoward in
| cidents tool place,
| CHINESE EXCLUSIGN,
| Minister Wu To Know How Many Wil
{ be Admitted.
| Honolulu—~The Chinese committee
| which has charge of the agitation for
{a modification of the exclusion laws
|laws so as to permit of a limited im
| migration of Chinese to these islands
|has received a letter from Minister
| Wu Ting Fang at Washington askiog
what number of Chinese immigrants:
lit suggests should be admitted here
{annually, The committee has replied
| that it desires that 5,000 a year should
ibe admitted for about seven years, in
{addition to their families. It esti
| mates that with such an immigration
;there would be at the end of ten
| years only about 50,000 Chinese in the
| territory.
| SPANISH SHIP AT HAVANA.
?First to Visit Cuban Port Since Amer
ican War,
| Havana, Cuba—The schoolship Naut
{ilus, the first Spanish ship of the navy
| to enter Cuban pnrts since the relin
|quishment of Spanish sovereignty in
i the island, came into the haibor of
Havana and was hailed with enthusi
|astic expressions of delight by the en
| tire Spanish colony of the ecity, many
thousands of Cubans joining in the
| demounstration,
LATE NEWS NOTES.
General.
Lawrence Friend, a brakeman, was
mangled beneath the wheels of the
Knickerbocker Special at Paris, 111.,
after he had saved scores of lives by
preventing the fast Big Foar passen
ger train from crashing head-on into
a row of freight cars, Friend turned
the switch in time to swing the pas
senger train on to a side-track, but not
quickly enough to get out of the way
of the engine. He was decapitated
and has body dragged ‘several hundred
yards before the engineer was able to
stop the train,
Consul General Richard Guenther of
Frankfort, Germany, advises that, as
cording to press accounts, negotiations
are now going on between the cotton
spinners’ associations of England and
Germany, having for their objeet an
agreement to regulate—that is, limit—
the production of cotton yarns in the
two countries.
The board of health of the city of
New Orleans has a plan by which they
hope to exterminate a large number
of rats, with which the city is over
run; They secured fifty large rats and
inoculated them with virus that will
produce fatal diseases and turned
them loose in different parts of the
city. The experiment is being watch
ed with great interest by other cities
similarly afflicted. /
Former Alderman William 8. Clif-\
ford of New York City who pleaded
guilty to bribery, was sentenced in the
superior court to pay SI,OOO fine or to
serve 1,000 days in imprisonment, * It
wag said that friends would furnish
the money for Clifford.
Upon information made by National
Bank Examiner Folds of Pittsburg,
~Pa., J. W. Tiers, discount clerk of the
First National bank of Pittsburg, is
under arrest with $51,000 on the wrong
side of the balance,
The property, franchises and entire
rights of the Brooklyn Ferry company,
said to be worth $10,000,000, were sold
at public auction for $25,000 to the
New York Terminal company, It is pre
dicted that all but two of the com
pany’s seven ferry lines will be shut
down because thoy are operating at a
loss.
“Jackie” Clark, the Australian bicy
cle rider, lowered the world's three
mile record at the trask at Salt Lake .
City, riding the distance in 5:49 34,
An offer by Dr. Hamilton Fisk Big
gar, John D. Rockefeller's physician,
to kiss any woman who would give
SIOO to the propaganda fund, created
the merriest time of the Homeopathic
National convention at Kansag City.
The fun continued for thirty minutes
-and $5,000 was pledged, enough of it
by women doctors to keep Dr. Biggar
busy trotting up and down the aisles
trying to catch-the givers and fulfill
“hig part of the contract.
A list of pensions granted by the
‘English government in the past year
for services to science and literature 1
include $250 yearly to aul Foun
tain, an American traveler and writer,
“in consideration of his contributions
to literature and his strained circum
| % lille temporarily insane, Mrs. Au
. & P. Johnson of lda Grove, lowa,
M&, yned her four little children in the
twen@n at their farm house.
i{i,- special dispatch from Corunna,
AU n, says that the Spanish steamer
e - Rache went on the rocks near
#ros. It has been ascertained that
the number of passengers and crew of
the La Rache totalled 150. Sixty-five
persons are known to have heén saved,
but the fate of the other eighty-five is
not known, and- it is feared that most
of them perished. /
The law passed by the last Texas
legislature taxing barbers has been
declared unconstitutional Dy the
courts of that state, inasmuch as It‘
makes a class distinction.
The will of Benjamin Hart, an Amer
ican millionaire, who died in Paris,
which has been filed in New York and
“which left his entire estate to his
housekeeper, has been attacked by
his adopted daughter on the grounds of
‘undue influence,
As tha result of an explesion in the
plant of the Babst Chemical company ‘
at Chicago five women were burned
to death aad more than a score of oth
ers seriously injured.
Following prolonged negotiations
both at Tokio and Pekin on the gener
al subject of the commercial depart
ment of Manchuria, the Japanese gov
ernment instructed its charge d’af
faires at Pekin to notify China that
Japan wouald throw no obstacle in the
way of the development of Chinese
territory in Manchuria.
e ; Washington,
The-United States National Muszum
at Washington has received as a gift
from. J, N. Leger, the Haytien minis.
ter to tine United States, a case con
taining models representing over 100
different vegetables and fruits of Hay
ti, arranged for exhibition purposes,
Acting Secretary of State Adee and
Mr. Godoy, the Mexican charge, ex
changed ratlfications of a general ar
bitration treaty. Tae treaty is simi
lar in provisions to thoze hztween thf
United States and various Kuropeah
governments,
Admiral Capps, chief of the bureau
of navigation and construction, left
Washington for San Francisco, from
whence he will saill with the fleet to
inspect Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, where
tne government will spend millions
oh a naval station,
The following Georgians have been
granted patents: 7Two-color printing
press, H. A, Agricola, Jr., Atlanta; sec
tional umbrella stick, Martha W, Mun
ford, Hawkinsville; operating tables,
J. H. Downey, Gainesville; wrench,
W. A, Fiowers, Tifton,
~ The completion of the arbitration
treaty between Spain and the United
States has been announced. This one
of many treaties heing concluded with
European powers in pursuance of Sec
retary Root's policy.
President Roosevelt has held np the
re-appointment ¢f Dr, J, C, Barbosa to
hig third term of service as a member
of the exeentive council of Porto Rico,
Dr. Barbosa ig a !sader of the republi
can party, and is affiliated with the
natiogalists. » The American members
of the council favor him for a third
term, hui thera is scme oppositio
which has delaved appointment,
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>GG Gt SRR JEEE N@b ST ) S e .. W
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§ DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOU EXPRESS PREPAID :
: BY ANY OF THE FOLLOWING DISTRIBUTERS: ;
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1 oedingfield & Co., Jacksonville, Fia.
<. . Butler, Jacksonville, Fla.
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5 Y. F. Seeba, Jacksonville, Fla.
o J. J. Wiiliams, Jacksonville, tia.
2 ; D. F. & C. P. Long, Jacksonville, Fla.
" B Bottles § Bottles §
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