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TORNADD IN ARKANSAS
Demolished Many Towns .in
Northwest‘efn‘l’a;rt of State.
MUCH PROPERTY DESTROYED
Little Rock, Ark,—According to dis
patches received, meager because of
the remoteness of the section affect
ed, more than a score of lives- were
lost and many other persons were in-
Jured in a tornado which swept the
northwestern section of this state,
completely demolishing several towns
and razing vast tracts of timber.
The tornado, approaching from the
southwest, crossed the Arkansas river
several miles south of the settlement
of Piney, and proceeding in a north
easterly direction, swept through the
towns of London, Wallerville, Jethro,
Lodi, Lewisville, Paterson and Berry
ville and outlying portions of Mulber
ry, either completely wrecking or lay
ing waste the larger part of these
places and destroying timber and crops
throughout the intermediate country.
At Piney, it is stated that twelve
persons were killed and a number in
jured. Practically the entire settle:
ment was demolished,
At London ten are reported to have
lost their lives, and considerable dam
age to property cccurred.
Wallerville and Jethro are reported
in the path of the storm. In the vi
cinity. of Mulberry the death list is
placed at five,
At Berryville, cne woman, Mrs, J.
O. Hoskins, was seriously injured, and
several other persons sustained lesser
injuriés. A path of 190 yards wide
was cut through the town, six build
ings being completely wrecked, and a
number of others damaged, either be
ing torn from their foundations or un
roofed. Here the property loss is es
timated at $25,000.
From the outlying districts consid
erable damage to property is also re
ported, but no loss of life,
At Lodi three buildings were de
stroyed, and one woman seriously in-
Jjured. .
Advices from Lewisville, in the wes
tern portion of Lafayette county, re
port the destruction of several build
ings at that place, and at Patmos con
siderable damage to property as well
as injury to a number of persons is
reported,
: MONEY FOR NAVY YARDS.
Strong Plea Made for Extensive Na
; val Improvements,
Washington, D. C.—Rear Admiral
R. C. Holliday, chief of the bureau of
yards and docks of the United States
navy, makes a strong plea for more
extensive improvements at insular
~stations, and for a higher standard
in the maintenance of home navy
;fiflfigin his annual report to the sec
retary of the navy. A No extensive
*lmprow"iements, hg says, have been
mac> during the last yea w&fim«
lar:-stit!m sl %’W# a§t. R
- The estimates for navy yards and
stations recommended to be submit
ted to congress at its coming session
are as follows: ;
Public works, including repairs and
preservation $9,811,730; maintenance
yards and docks, 1,500,000; contingent
yards and docks, $30,000. Total, sll,-
341,730.
The estimates include: Navy yard,
Charleston, S. C., $442,500; naval sta
tion, Guantanamo, Cuba, including
$400,000 for a dry dock to cost $2,-
500,000, $450,000; naval station, Key
West, Fla., $30,000; navy yard, Nor
folk, Va., $£11,000; naval station, at
Pearl Harbor, including an estimate
of $200,000 toward the construction of
a dry dock to cost $2,000,000, $1,000,-
000; navy yard at Pensacola, Fla., $35,-
000, -
AMMUNITION APPRCPRIATIONS
Granted By Government to State
Troops Very Liberal.
Washington, D, C.—The division of
militia affiairs of the war department
has announced the allowance of am
munition for the present fiscal year
made to the national guard under the
act of May 27, 1908, being fifty per:
cent of the allowance to the regular
army.
The total which is set aside for this
purpose is $643,124, divided among
the states according to the enlisted
strength of their national guard:
Alabama, with 3,010 men gets $17.-
681 for ammunition; Georgia, with
2,806 men gets $17,559; North Caro
lina, with 1,835 men gets $12,032; |
‘South Carolina, with 1,714 men gets
$11,718; Kentucky, with 1,590 men
gets $10,250; Tennessee, with 1,430
men gets $9,595.
s
PRINT PAPER FAMINE,
Conditions in the Industry Never So
Dubious as at Present.
Appleton, Wis.—Unless altogether
abnormal weather conditions prevaill
practically throughout the United |
States between now.and the first ot’
the new year this country, within six
weeks, will face a serlous paper fam
ine, according to the best judgment
of the large paper manufacturers of
Wisconsin,
Conditions in the paper industry
have never been so dubious as at pres
ent, and it is said the constantly de
pleting water power streams through
out the pdper-making districts, both
east and west, are adding daily to the
threatening aspect,
ON SAN JUAN HILL
Memorial Arch is Unveiled to the
Soldiers Who Fell,
Santiago, Cuba—The dedication and
unveiling of a memorial arch on San
Juan HiH, in honor of the American,
Cuban and Spanish soldiers who fell
in battle in 1898, took place here. Atx
the same time the corner stone of the
Raja Yoga school was laid, Eiabor- |
ate services were held, at which the |
American troops, under command of |
Colonel Yeatman, and a detachment of‘
rural guards were present, |
WILL SELL CANAL BONDS.
Cortelyou Announces Terms for $30,-
000,000 Bond Issue. ;
Washington, D, C.—Secretary Cor
telyou has made public the announce
ment that he would receive bids up
to the close of business on December
5 next for $30,000,000 of Panama Ca
nal bonds. or any part thereof, to
bear 2 per cent interest. The bonds
will be dated November 1, 1908, thus
making this a new issue, and interest
will begin as of that date. The bonds,
by the terms of the law authorizing
their issue, will be redeemable in gold
in ten years from their date and pay
able in thirty years. As an evidence
of gocd faith the secretary requires
each bid to be accompanied by a cer
tified check, payable to the secretary
of the treasury, for 2 per cent of the
amount of the bid,
The bonds will be issued in denom
inations of S2O, SIOO and SI,OOO of
coupon bonds, and of S2O, SIOO, $1,500
and SIO,OOO of registered bonds, They
will- be exempt from all taxes or du
ties of the United States, as well as
taxation in any form by or under nay
state, municipal or local authority.
The bonds will be available to nation
al banks as security for circulating
notes and receivable as security for
public deposits in national banks. The
law forbids their sale at less than par
and provides that all citizens of the
United States shall have equal oppor
tunity to subscribe therefor, ‘
In considering the bids the secre
tary will award the first allotment to
the bidders offering the highest price.
Of two or more bidders offering the
same prices, those asking for the
smaller amounts of honds will receive
priority in the allotment,
The secretory of the treasury will
issue the bonds under authority vest
led in him by acts of congress, approv
ed June 28, 1902, and .Decefilber 2l
1905, which authorizes the borrow
ing on the credit of the United States
of the sum of $130,000,000, or as much
therecf as may be necessary in carry
ing on the work of constructing the
Panama canal,
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR
Convention at Denver, Col.—Re-Elects
Samuel Gompers, President.
Denver, Col.—The result of the elec
tion in the American Federation of
Labor convention follows:
President, Samuel Gompers of
Washington; first vice president, tas.
Duncan, Quincy, Mass.; second vice
president, John Mitchell, Spring Val
ley, HI.; third vice president, James
O’Connell of “Washington, D. C.;.
fourth vice president, Max Morris of
Denver, Col.; fifth vice president, D.
A. Hayes of Philadelphia; sixth vice
president, Joseph F. Valentine of Ciu
cinnati, Ohio; eighth vice president,
John. R. Alpine of Boston, Fraternal
delegates to the British trade con
gress, John B. Frey, editor of the
Moulders’ Journal, and B. A. Larger
of the United Garment Workers of
America; to Canadian Trades Conveu
tion, Jerome Jones of the Georgia
Federation of Labor and editor of The
Journal of Labor. - Convention city
for 1909, Toronto, Canada. i .
Mr, Gompers was re-elected to the
“office he has held since the organiza
‘tion of the federation in 188 T, with ¥he
exception of one year, amid scenes of
the greatest enthusiasm, only one dis
contented representative of the so
cialist party voting against him. i
It was announced that there had.
been born in Denver a powerful rail
way emplooys’ organization to be
known as the railway employees de
partment of the Ameritan Federation
of Labor, with ten affiliated organiza
tions as members. The object is to
Jbring about a closer union -of all rail-i
road employees and to seek to affil
iate all railway organizations with the‘
organization,
The first convention is to be held
in Denver, and it is expected 500,000
employees will be represented by the
officers of their organizations, The
convention adjourned sine die, |
CERTIFICATES REDEEMED.,
Cost to the United States Was Less
Than $500,000,
Washington, D, C.—The redemption
of the treasury certificates issued by
the secretary of the treasury one year
ago has heen accomplished at a cost
to the treasury in cash of less than
$500,000.
The amount of these certificates
outstanding at the date of their ma
turity, November 20, 1908, was $13,-
936,500, and without exception they
were held in the treasury as security
for circulation. Of this amount, $13,-
288,250 have been withdrawn and law
ful money substituted for the retire
ment of circulation and $547,750 have
been surrendered and replaced by oth
er United States bonds in order to
continue circulation, leaving only
$100,500 undisposed of, This result
is eminently satisfactory to the treas-‘
ury officials, !
Monument for Lee and Grant,
Raleigh, N. C.—Governor Glenn has
endorsed heartily the plan for a suit
able joint monument by the people of
the north and south to the military
fame and glory of Generals Robert
E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant on the
famous bloody angle of Spottsylvania
battle ground,
The governor says: “The time has
come when all sectional animosity and
bitterness should be forgotten and for
given, That the south can but remem.
ber with gratitude General Grant’s
generosity and kindness to General
Lee, and a monument to both in spirit
of fraternal love would do a great deal
to cause them to be remembered joint
ly as heroes of a reunited country,’
ASIRVe NS R R
Natlonal Ginners Report.
Memphis, Tenn.—Thte report of the
National Ginners’ association ¢f the
number of bales of cotton by states,
ginned up to and including November
4th, is as follows:
Alabama, 1,002,000; Arkansas, 656,-
000; Florida, 51,000; Georgia, 1,553,
000; Louisiana, 341,000; Mississippi,
1,093,000; North Carolina, 449,000;
Oklahoma, 336,000; South Carolina,
941,000; Tennessee, 247:000; Texas,
2,881,000; Virginia, 6,000; Missouri
and Kentucky, 41,000. Totals, 9,597,
000,
THE CAMPAIGN FUNDS
Democrats Received .$620,644,
Republicans $1,700,000.
To the Democratic Fund---Charles. P
Taft Brother of President-cléct Taft -
Gave $160,000 to Republicans. e
G
Chicago, IL.—The democratic ma
tional committee received in all $620,-
644.77 and spent $619,410.06 during the
recent presidential campaign, leaving
a balance on hand of $1,234.71. _ So
reads a statement made public by the
officers of the committee. and the
itemized statement will be filed for
record in the office of the secretary
of state of New York, in compliance
with the resolution adopted by the ‘nas
tional committee at Lincoln, Neb., last
July ‘ % &
Auditor’'s office .... ... ..$} 866.50
Secretary’s 0% SR e R TORRE
Traesurer's: offffe ... .. .. 5373.21
Commercial tragelers .., 153.00
Club, organization bureau.. 5,020.76
"‘Labor bureau .. .. i .. 37,401.36
Advisory committee .. ~ . 3,020.95
Organization of states. .. 129,053.62
Purchasing agent departm’t 1,340.73
Finance committee, ~ .. 26,586.54
Congressional committee .. ' 3,625.00
iPublicity bureau ... .. .. 88,899:48
Ex-treasurer’s account,
' miscellaneous sigh t
.draft on Oklahoma bank 3,0‘10.85
Sergeant at arms . . ..o . ,016.37
Rocuments: o i Teiih 142 0830
Chairman and vice chair. 6,430.00
Reproduction bureau .. .. 5,115.69
Speakers’ bfireau ~ ‘.. .. 33.786.95
’General pund oo A 0 . as it
' Hent of headquarters . .. 13,746.72
Meleesams. ..., o Nii 19761 00
Felephomes ..~ .. & s ST Ea
‘Express charges .. .. .. 118,061.17
Postage: |, . o ey oler Rl ANR
$619,410.06
Balance on hand .. .. .. 1,23¢4.71
Total amount of money
| T recelved .. .. F . ri8690:844 077
~ New York City.—The Taft campaign
fund in round numbers aggregated sl,-
\700,')00, according to the Ilist of cou
{ributors made public by George R.
'Sheldon, treasurer of the republican
-national campaign committee. Charles
P. Taft, a brother of the president
\elect was the heaviest contributor. He
’snent $160,000 to help his brother to
the white house, J. Pierepont Morgan,
Andrew Cgrnegie, Whitelaw Reid auu
William Nelson Cromwell come next
with contributions of $25,000 each.
President Roosevelt gave one thou
sand dollars.
CATTLE SHIPMENTS QUARANTINED.
Contagious Foot and Mouth Disease
- Transmitted to Children.
Washington, D. C.—Alarming re
sults following' the outbreak of a con
tagious foot and mouth disease in New
York and Pennsylvania, causing those.
states to be quarantined agains
terstate shipments of cattle, etc., were:
's%dwnf in the advices which feachéd
Secretary of Agriculture Wilson, staf
ing that four children in Danville,
Pa., had contracted the disease. A rig
id investigatios: is in progress in Dan
ville and elsewhere to determine as
to whether otiiers have -become simi
larly affected. The officials believe
that the situation is grave and will
}require energetic and concerted ac
tion by the state and federal authori
ties to check the ‘disease.
FIRE FOLLOWED EXPLOSION
In Mississippi River Steamer—Ten
| Were Killed, e
~ New Orleans, La—Seven missing
and undoubtedly blown to pieces or
idrowned in the Mississippi river, three
fatally injured and nine less seriously
hurt are the tales of horror in a boil
er explosion on the steamboat H, M.
Carter, opposite Bayou Goula, La.
“The captain on the boat H, M. Car
ter was hurled seventy-five feet into
the river, He swam back and clam-.
bered on the boat, despite his injuries,‘
Several other men were hurled into
the stream by the force of the explo
sion. :
OPIUM SMUGGLING PLOT,
Cement Barrels Half Filled With the
Drug—Shipped to Manila,
Manila, P. I.—Evidences of an ex
tensive plot to smuggle opium here
from China have been discovered. Re
cently a wlorkmen employed .on the
?ilitary buildings at Camp Stozenberg
iscovered a quantity of opium con
cealed in cement which had been
shipped from Hong Kong, .
The epium has been turned over to
the customs officials, and the govern
ment is now investigating,
THREE MEN SHOT |
In Court House at Quincy, Fla.—One
Man Died, S
Quincy, Fla—Thomas R, Smith is
dead, his father, T, . Smith, shot in
three places, and Dr. Robert Munroe
seriously wounded in the leg, as the
result of a sensational shooting af
fray in the court house here, Two
Massey brothers and A.-D. Covington
are under arrest, charged with the
shooting,
All the participants are among the
most prominent men in the county.
Trouble has hbeen brewing for some
time, and friends brought the princi
pals together in the hope of settling
the differences,
et AL
ATTEMPT TO KILL EMPEROR,
Dynamite Cartridges Found On Rail
road Track—lnvestigation Ordered.
Frankfort-on-the-Main — An attempt
was made to blow up the train on
which Emperor William journeyed
from Donauschengen to Berlin.
The Royal railway administrative
officers make public a statement in|
connection with the incident, Accord
ingto this statement a dynamite car
tridge was found on the tracks near
thc station at Muhleim, between
Frankfort and Hanau, . {
FACHER gl |
10 PROTECT FLORIDA ?
SvoRCRME SRR |
Ll ‘a-,;:'\"“s g RS, o . i
incre iDu on Citrus Fruits is !
Favored. |
‘é”;, ‘y:‘ D. C—The _ so-called ‘
_Starchelrust” was under fire at the
hedring of tariff revision before the |
house comittee on ways and means. |
‘Fhe *erossexamination of J, B, Wal- |
ol ‘representing the, Corn Products
Refining Company, the so-called trust,.|
formed the most interesting incident |
at the hearing on the tariff schedule |
covering agricultural products ~and |
provision, Citrus fruits also occupled |
con Q}fl"&file-attemion_ ‘,
~ Mr/Walton admitted that his com. |
pany sells corn starch'at a loss in the §
United Kingdom, at a price forty cerits
‘%I am it is 80ld in this country. |
. Florida fruit growers gave the com. |
miftee information on citrus fruit, |
pineapples and vegetables, especlally |
‘a§ affected by competition with Cuba, |
‘ands requested ,either the retention of |
the present tariff on these articles or |
an increase in the duty. g
. The argument that “the states of |
Florida, Arizona, Louisiana and Cali- |
fornia can in time produce all of the |
citrus fruits used in the United States” |
wx put forth by B. P. Porcher of |
Jaeksonville, Fla., for a protective duty |
on oranges and lembons. ’
J. G. Chase, representing the Jack- l
‘sonville ,board ‘of - trade, was urging
‘protection duty on eitrug fruits, when |
‘Répresentative Underwocd of Ala- |
bama asked: 1
_“Do you believe in the general idea !
Of protection?” "
~ “Yes,” was the reply, “so far as it ‘[
‘does not harm the people of the coun- |
. g‘ls‘that the attitude of the Jack- |
‘gonville board of trade?” questioned |
Mr, Underwood," A
Mr. Chase answered affirmatively. |
. “And it's the attitude of all the |
people of Flarida, isn't it?” urged Mr, |
‘Boq_tell,"repfiéllcan member from Illi- l
‘nois, B ¥R .
~ Again the fruit grofier agreed, add- |
‘ing: “Of all the thinKfng people.” J
‘T just wanted to know about it," |
said Mr. Bnderwbod, “because Flori- |
‘da gave its electoraMvote for a party |
whose platform *fayors a tariff for rev- |
enue,” % g 5
| Representatives Clark and Sparkman !
of Florida, asked leave of the com
miftee to file *hriefs on the subject oi 3
tariff on citrus fruit, and F. G. Me-
Mullen for the Klorida pineapple grow- ;
‘ers, asked*for & 70 per-cent duty on |
pineapples. “# : 4
500 PERSONS EACE DEATH
. b
When Two Steamships Collide in New
.. .* York Bay.
‘New York Cigy.—The lives of more
than five hundred persons were im
eriled, when the fruit*steamer Admi
&l ‘Dewey, inyard bound from Jamai
€, _crghe&'yjn? the: steamer Mount
‘gmert, outward ** boun% _from Bay
\Aidgffiffl ‘the fiéhing afiks.» The
‘Admiral Dewey, .comin _suddenly out
of a fbs‘i;bankg'fltlffig. &i Lount: Des
ert almost mldsliil";:fi;wfi ling 4 gash
in the fishing vessel that extendep
%y: the "f"ppxfii; deck to the water >
P A Bl o/ (“gk
Panfe immediately ‘followedt thewcol.
lision, and it was due to the prompt
action of Captain Davidson of the Ad
miral Dewey, that a.catastrophe was
averted for the passengers on the fish
ing steamer began piling over the
guard rail of that vessel, and leaped
for the deck of the Admiral Dewey,
Had he backed his steamer away,
many would have fallen into the wa
ter. Captain Davidson kept the steam
er moving slowly ahead, and this held
the prow of the fruit steamer into
the rent that had been made, and af
forded a boarding place for the fright
ened passengers of the Mount Des
ert.
FERTILIZER COMBINE PLANNED, |
O ——— |
Independent Companies in South to |
. Unite and Form Big Company. |
Baltimore, Md.—lndependent fertll-{
izer men throughout the south met at |
New York to consider a proposition
to join a hew fertilizer combination,
which will take out a charter under
the laws of New Jersey and have a
capitalization of $75,000,000. Of this
sum $50,000,000 will be stock equally
divided between common and prefer- |
red, i
The new concern will he called the
Independent Fertilizer company ond
will be controlled by interests identi
fied with the Tennessee Copper com
pany. The chief subsidary of the new
corporation will be the 310,000,0001
chemical company recently organized
to handle the sulphuric acid output |
of the Tennessee Copper company,
Already options have heen obtain- |
ed on some of the Jargest independent |
plants in the country, including the |
two of the Armour Packing company,
in Baltimore and those of the Swiss
Packing company at Wilmington, Del.,
and Atlanta, Ga,
Big Tobacco Deal Glosed,
Louisville, Ky.—The big deal be
tween -the American Tobacco com
pany and the Burley Tobacco society
for the 1906 and part of the 1907 crops
of tobacco, which has been hanging
fire for several weeks, was closed
here, The price agreed on in the
transaction, which is the largest of its
kind ever put through, is an average
of 20 1-2 cents for the 1906 crop and
17 cents per pound for the 1907
The deal involves nearly 80,000,000
pounds of tobacco held in the pool by
the Burley Tobacco soclety and an
outlay of something like $14,000,000
on the part of the American Tobacco
company, practically all of this money
being placed in circulation at once
.~ Criminal Law Defective,
Pittsburg, Pa.—That the American
criminal law has very serious defects
and that if the American people wish
to rule they must “thoroughly ration
ally and honestly recast the criminal
law,” were asserted by Attorney Gen
eral Charles J. Bonaparte, in his an
nual address as president of the Na
tional Municipal League,
His subject was “Tho Criminal Law
as a Means to Enforce the People's
Wi11.,”
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SONNY DROO ‘h e A |
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% P lrvgtea.wfashl Qon.c‘ - - 4 A“ % 5,
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_ _ ,THE PURE.FOOD
It is distilled in the good old honest Kentucky way and its rare
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DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOU EXPRESS PREPAID
BY ANY OF THE FOLLOWING DISTRIBUTERS:
D. ', & C. P. Long, Jacksonville, Fla.
Bedingfield & Co., Jacksonville, Fla, ~
Chag. Blum & Co., Jacksonville, Fla,
C. C. Butler, Jacksonville, Fla.
Bottles §
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Rye or Bourbon
Shipped in plain bc;xel. Send remittance with your order,
— No goods shipped C. 0. D, : —
s of All .
D AAKS 1= CRE
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manufacturers, Call and see it. We can show you how it will
save you money and fence vour fields so they will stay fenced.
FOR SALE BY MIZELL & PAXTON, FOLKSTON, GA.,
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§ NEAT PRINTING ;
¢ Creates a good impression nmoniyour cOTTes- :
¢ pondents and helps to give your business pres- ¢
; tige. We do neat printing at reasonable pricea. :
VIRV 2BULBTLIVCBLC VRVALLLLDULDLSIDVNRS
Bottles §
Full Quarts 5
Rye or Bourbon
.oeo.Old Folks' Bibles
veensds S, Teachers' Bibles
veers Family Bible
«...Red Letter diblu
e, S, Bibles
..o..Pocket Bibles and Test't
ve..Child’s Life of Christ
+v...Child's Story of the Bibl
.....Bible Stories
«eee. Bible Dictionaries
vise,Children’s Story Books
eeeChildren's Histories
A S M SRS U SR L VDS GNP, B P
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Street and No., P, O, Box, or R.F.D,
...i.Books for Girls
versßookgfor Boys
......Novf, High Grade
vvees Yourlt People’s Library
eer. Business Guide
eeo.Cook Book
e Stock Book
s Doctor Book
wver. Dictionaries
cvere- Kings of Platt'm & Pulpi
conns-American Star Speaker
vveoe. Wild Beasts, Birds, ete.