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Jackson Daily News from Jackson, Mississippi • Page 7

Jackson Daily News from Jackson, Mississippi • Page 7

Location:
Jackson, Mississippi
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE SEVEN JACKSON EVENING NEWS: THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1905. PLANS OF 600LYARS WEATHER IN DECEMBER BLAC HAND THE PAY OF Sunn ylbroofk NEWS OF MISSISSIPPI A PERFECT WHISKEY. Awarded grand prize and gold medal at St. Louis Fair for Purify, Flavor and Genera! merit. 4 Full Quarts for 4 Quarts Itoyal Seal $1.00 4 Quarts Clark's Pure 4 Quarts Puck 4 Quarts Maryland Pure Rye $5.00 4 Qts.

Lexington Club, prepaid Wachenheim Gilbert VICKSBURG, MISS I Sands, Key Ort General Contractors i ROUTE TO BE FOLLOWED BY ROAD INTO JACKSON. 4 Contract From Monticello to This City Will be Awarded Early Next Year Work on the Southern End Nov In Progress. Mr. I. C.

Enochs, of this city, manager of the lumber interests of the Goodyear syndicate in states that the work of grading the Orleans Great. Northern road from Slideil, northward to Monti-cello, is progresir.g steadily, men and teams at, wkr oldna TEE Contractor Oliver has a large force of men and teams ut Work, and it is expected that the line will be completed to Monticello by the first of September, Kmc. If. is expected that President C. II.

Goodyear will arrive from New York within the r.ext few days to look after the interosets of the syndicate in Mislssihpl and Louisiana. He htm finally and positively announced that the road will be built northward from Montieeilo to Jackson, but the com pany lias no plans beyond this point, The contract for grading from Monti- cellu to Jackson will probably be awarded early next year. The logical Inference from this announcement ia that the Goodyear syndicate has made traffic arrangements with tho Illinois Central to handle Its lumber shipments northward front Jackson, on a basis somewhat similar to the existing contract between the Illinois Central and Gulf and Ship Island roads. The New Orleans and Gnat Northern was chartered to be built form New Orleans to Memphis, We make a specialty of Granolithic Sidewalks, Combined Concrete Curb and Gutter Reinforced Concrete Foundations. Estimates Fur- nlshed.

Seutter Building, Rcim 501. PHONE 133 JACKSON, MISS. When You lumber Want. JUST WRITE. YOUR ORDERS OR TELEPHONE TO.

Jackson Lumber Company Our Prices are Reasonable. We West Capital Slrest Our Prices and Method of Business Mata Us Popular When builders are busy bo are that Is why you should let us fcavt your orders. We deal In all kinds of lumber, and If you want prompt deliveries, we will pleased to serve on. Sash, Doors, Blinds and all 1 terior finish we execute unusually quick. Let us figure on your next order.

but It is not regarded as likely that the i ley in 1901. syndicate would attempt to parallel! Some of the least monthly amounts the Illinois Central northward from 'of precipitation recorded were as fol-this point. The construction of the hows: o.3) Inch s.t Batesvillo in Inn:) line from Slidcll. to Jackson, how- and 0.29 inch at, Greenville and 0.31 ever, is quite feasible, a.i the road will inch at Water Valley in 1S9G. pass through a magnificent belt of long The average snowfall ranges from leaf yellow plr.e fur almost the entire about two inches in the extreme north-distance, and the construction from era to a trace in the gulf Momicelio to Jackson will nut be ac- counties, December 1594 snow fell cunpanicii by any engineering difTkul-j to a depth of six inches in Clay counties, as the road will come diiectly up ty.

the Pearl river valley. Clouds and weather: Average Manager Enochs shows hit; custom-, Per of clear days. 13; partly cloudy reticence in discussing the plana days, and cloudy days, 13. H. S.

Crowds Leave Oxford On a Special for Jackson. TO CAPITAL They Are Loyal Rooters fcr the Oxford Football Team Wedding at Oxford and New Express Agent-Bother State OXFORD, Nov. 30. A large number of citizens and students of the university left on the special train this morning for Jackson to witness the football game this afternoon between the University of Mississippi and the A. t- M.

college. Thanksgiving services were held this morning In the Presbyterian church. The survivors of the I.aroar rifbs ore holding their nnnua! reunion here today. Ed rrcn, a prosperous farmer of near Delay, this county, dropped dead yesterday of heart failure. Ike Slaughter, aged 2d.

son of R. O. Slaughter, residing near town, died last night after a lingering illness of typhoid fever. The German club will give their annual jrerman In the opera house tonight. Will Sims of Water Valley and Mrs.

Nettle Aston of this place were united In marriage last night at the home of the bride's mother. Mrs. Joe Butler. The happy couple left, last night for their future home near Orrwood. T.

Grady of Pyersburet. has been appointed express agent here to succeed J. W. Strawn, who resigned cn count of ill Generaly Observsd. Nov.

Thanksgiving day was generally observed here, and scr i ices were held in the local ehurchet. Wots on the te-w hank building, to be crectctd bv the Columbus Insur-' a nee and Banking company, is expected to begin wi'hin the next few-' weeks. The Columbus Hosiery mill is to be crRanUed, the ejnie having been placed in the bands of the Progres-i sive Union, which will soon issue a eircuhir giving its rtn. Nearly Ail Sold. HATTIESM'RG.

Nov. SO Nearly nil" of the cotton crop of Perry comity has been marketed. There is some cotton being held by the farmers, and the few who have cot tin are showing no disposition to turn It Upbuild the City. VICKSBURG. Nov.

30. Another meeting of the of this city was last night, the avowed intention being to push along the up-biulding of the city. The progressive element of Vfcksburg is determined to push the city to the front if pos sible, and it is believed that, much good will result the citizens. from the efforts of Mr. J.

S. Vattght, ot Newton, was at the cnpital last evening. mm 1 Arm l3 i lt''4A 1. I V.i 4 MISS DOROTtlY CtAItK," 2130 OroriDhaw St tUlCACiO. LITTLE a 1 lfti mm BUREAU ISSUES INTERESTING STATISTICS ON SUBJECT.

Not Intended ao a Foi-ccsst, but Shows What May be Ressonably Expected, Beted on Figures of Previous Years. The following data, coverclng a period cf seventeen years, have been compiled from the weather bureau records at fifty-five observation stations in Mississippi. They are issued to show the conditions that hare prevailed in the state, during December, for tha above period of years, but must not lie consulted as a forecast of the weather conditions for the coming month. Temperature: Mean or normal temperature, 48. The warmest month was that of 1S89, with an average of (10.

The coldcnt month was that of 1003, with an average of 4.1. Some of tho htth.st temperatures recorded were as fellows: Eighty-three at Port Gibson in 1SK2 and C5 at Crystal Springs in 1901. Some of tho lowest temperatures recorded were as follows 7a ro at Kiply and Holly Springs in 19M1. Precipitation Average for the month 41 inches. Average number of days with 0.01 inch or more, (1.

The greatest average monthly pre-cipltatlen was 8.54 inches in 1S9T. The least average mon'hly precipitation was o.fil inch in 1SM. Some of tho greatest monthly amounts of precipitation recorded were as foih.ws: 14. TS inches at Ed- wards in lt07 imd 13.70 inches at Rip- Wind: The prevailing winds have bv mirth. THE LUMBER ADVANCE.

Various Grades on Which Prices are Put Lip a Notch. Meiiiion was made a few days since in the News that the lumber manufacturers of Mississippi had been instructed by the executive committee of the Southern Lumber Manufacturers Association to make an advance in prices. Formal notice of the advance has been received by manufacturers in Jacksen, and the prices advanced as Advance all flooring $1 per M. Advance ail ceiling, partition, siding, casing, base, finish, jambs 50 cents per jM. Twelve-inch No.

1 boards and ship-lap, all lengths. 50 cents per M. Four ill' and imh No. 1 fencing, ail lengths, 5o cents per M. Two by S.

2x10, 2xLx22 and 24 -foot i No. 1 C( $1 per M. No. 1 lath, 25 cents. No oilier changes.

I Mr. C. A. Coon, of Woodviiie, is inn Exposition visitor. nr.

iA t-1 't MISS I I CV MAY, 603t 1- oret tile CHICAGO. Mfiwi.TftN thicker than the crown of glory of most inrhea nf tho to en rtn i 1 W4 it K.i I'-'tl jVcw Line Heaters SOLDIERS CUT The Men Now Get Two Moroccan Soldiers Do Not Enjoy Working For This Magnificent Salary Some of the Soldiers Are Living On Robbery and There Seems To Be a Very Bad State of Affairs. TANGIER, Nov. 30. Soldiers at 2 l-4d a day are the result of the frantic efforts made by the Moorish government to rehabilitate their finances.

In an order just issued for the reduction in pay of all branches of the government service, the military find themselves reduced from 3 l-2d to 2 l-4d a day. Desertions are very numerous In consequence, as this sum is naturally Insufficient for the dally requirements of the soldiers, nnd the more so as prices are ruling very high through the bad harvests. The camps of the various government forces at Fez and Tangier are already being reduced in number by these desertions, and the soldiers will be scattered over the country, starving and penniless, and will eventual1 be driven to gain a living by robbery and oilier outrages, as they take aw.ty their arms and ammunition 'on deserting. The salaries of customs officers, secretaries, and police officers have been reduced by half, and it is also rumored that the salaries of the viziers have been totally abolished, if this Is so, it will lead to more corrupt practices and extortions on the part of these high officials, already a great burden on the inhabitants of the country. Th enew reigulaticn Is said to be due to the emptinesa of tht state treasury.

Since its Issue the Moorish government have arranged a loan with some German financiers, in the hope cf tiding over the present dtcffiultr. a fifth man, was waiting. They rowed a block south and landed. A story was printed that he was the last of five brothers to be murdered In an Italian political vendetta. 1 found this to be fake; that he had been paykig the Black Hand regularly, but had stepped.

Antnlo Ctrattl was murderously assaulted near his home, in Catherine street, Jamaica, October 12. His left ear was cut off. Ceratti was saved by neighbors. An unidentified Italian was murdered at 10 o'clock on the evening of October 14 at North Eighth street and Driggs avenue, Brooklyn. Five men surrounded him and shot him through the heart.

At least one hundred Italians left the Eastern District of Brooklyn within twenty-four hours to avoid identifying the man and testifying, Michael Fironde was murderously assaulted ot Elton avenue aiM One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street, October 23, and Is in 1 Lebanon hospital. He had been warned, but why he did not know. John Clearwater, or Giovanni Aqua-bona, was shot twice and stabbed sit times at Westfield October after disregarding Black Hand warnings. I.uigl de Balla was fatally s'abbed by Black Hand agents at Canandiagua September and though there were abundant witnesses the murderers escaped and no Information could bo got to trace them. Gaetano Pe'sce was October 4 in Atlantic City.

He was In hiding at home, but the assassin forced his way into the house and killed Pesce before the eyes of his family. Nteolo Gavzara, a feeble old man, was shot, down by fJamuel Searano, a young man, in the midst of a crowd of school children at Bayonne, N. dctober 4. The Black Hand blackmailed Gavzara for a long time up till a year ago. Nelson Hoover, a young carpenter of Sun bury, devoted much time to trying to solve the Hickory Ridge Black Hand murder last July.

The gang warned him to desist Three attempts to murder him have been made since September 24. Three Black Hand letters sent to Adolf Harowitz, at No. 3 Barclay street, in the heart of the city's business district, having been unnoticed, the front of a store next door was wrecked September SI by a bomb. Ludovico di Giovanni of No. 30C Marion street, Brooklyn, stepped out of the door of the tenement in which he lives on the fuse of a dynamite bomb laid on the step.

He told the police of six Black Hand letters recently received. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. Take LAXATIVE RPOMO Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E.

GROVE'S signature Is on each box. 25c. TO GET BUSY Much Grime in New York Just Now, There it Murder, Assault and Kidnapping, Arson and Other Outrages Which Keep the Police in a Perfect Stew all the Time Many outrages Attributed to the Black Hand. NEW YORK, Nov. 30.

With the coming of winter, the return of Ital ians from the labor camps with their summer earnings and the recentralista-tion of the parasites that prey upon them, there has been an astounding and shocking renewal of Black Hand atrocities in and around New Yorjv A month ago tenement dynaniitings and murders were an every-day occur rence, and there has been compara tive quiet since, liut the quiet Is on the surface only, for these recurrent out. hursts of bold, terrifying crimes are merely for the purpose of creating Mich an atmosphere of terror in the colony that the collectors of the Black Hand Rnnps wlil meet with little re siwtanee to their demands. Several days have passed without an outrage, but thousands and thousands of dollars have been collected in (hat time. The Italian quarters r.ek wlih black mail and intimidation, and when the victims become rebellions and refuse to disgorge or dare tro to the police, then will come more spectacular crimes. A few days since Detective Sergeant Joseph Pertos.no, who is the head of the police organization that looks after the welfare of the Italians, declared In public statements that the Illack Hand condition had grown to a point of vlclousness and widespread ramifl cations such 'hat he and his handful of detectives could no longer cope with It, and aid from federal or higher au thorities wa Imperative.

Immediate ly Chief Wilkie. if the Secret Service tame out with a statement voicing hi unbelief in the lilack Hand and savins that it was Inuwfisible for the police of the national government to co-optv rate tw the of Italian criminals, them wts no legal excuse for it. This statement was rather hi licroti -to who know the inside of condition, as Secret Service information on the Plack Hand is limited to one case, that of an insane Austrian, and whi Petrosino spake of appeal to the federal authorities he had no thought of the Secret Service, but mean! the immigration authorities, who can deport these criminals under sections 20 and 21 of the immigration laws. The one encourapeing feature in the whole outlook for the last ff-w weeks has been the death of "Ret hi the Ox." the leonine butcher who had the pawn, ticket of the watch taken from Pene-detto Madonia, the victim of the barrel murder. On the nifcht of October 21, in Urownstown, near Piitston, where he was living under the name of Luciano Pavino, he was called to the door of his home and riddled by an unknown man.

The first shot struck the revolver in his right hand and rendered him defenseless. Throe days before Hi Primo, the brother-in-law of Benedetto Madonia, was released from Auburn prison, where he had been during the time of the former murder, nnd from which secure refuge he aided the police to trace the band thaat killed Madonia. Five other men who were under arrest at that time have left New York and are In hiding from the vengeance that. Is on their trail. The outlook is that Rome of the leaders of the Black Hand in America are about to be eliminated from the game.

The following is a list of cases that will leave little doubt in the mind of any sane man as to whether the Black Hand is a myth or not: Guarded day and night in a barricaded house in Boston, Ferrucclo Gasps ri-nnettl and Mario Spera, two young: Italian musicians, have for weeks been awaiting the advent of a Black Hand murder. Their friends have been guarding them day and night. dl Teresano, a wealthy Roman silk importer of Philadelphia, sailed with his entire family' on a Hamburg-American liner for Italy, driven from his property and business by the Black Hand. Donato Calo of No. 224 East Twelfth street.

In hiding a month after being warned of his death for testifying against a blacksmith, ventured out of his house September 27, about 2 o'clock in the morning, and was shot at the street doorway. He is recovering. Spechano do Puria of No. 334 East Sixty-third street, died October 9 from stab wounds received from several Black Hand agenls. Gaetano Costa, a wealthy butcher of No.

SGI Fourth avenue, Brooklyn, was murdered in one of his three shops on the evening of October 11. Four men watched from a near-by saloon until they saw him alone, then entered, shot him dead and ran to the river front, where a boat, rrunrded by up. Connection free where building is piped for gas of the Goodyear syndicate regarding several largo paichast-i cf plae timber lam's now in It is positively known, however, that these deals art; on foot, involving at least ttoi worth of pine lan's. and will doubtless bo clewed before the end of tho year. The state officials, summoned to Erfttidon yesterday to give testimony in the Pave Puckett cawe, defendant being charged with crttl and Inhumane treatment of a convict, returned heme on the evening train, hoarins of evidence having been omcimied.

The attorneys wete allowed six hours for each side to deliver arguments. In lifung the premiums yesterday thf name of Miss Ada Wolny, who tci ike premium for Pyrogr.iphy, "A Chair," unintentionally omi'ted. Abo Mrs. W. T.

Stevens for lace work and Miss Alice Brown for cross stitch embroidery. These omis sions were made by the judges in compiling thoir awards. Pr. E. V.

Wils-m, of French Camp, a ing visiter. GREW THIS 'HAIR Jackson Gas muAkirc 50, 424. and Bui treat you Right. Phcne. 22.

322 VICKSBURG ISS. just received Light Company eunu Drinim Ail RTDFFT SHOW ROOM 413 PEARL STREET, MARX LEVI, PoprMor PHONE 133 AGO LA ST. 4 Iding Material I and MULES BROS A- ACCIDENTS OCCUR But rot often to those who buy their vehicles from tis. Wo provide against break down? by selling only ho very best. Should a break occur, you are stil on the safe side because ttr guarantee protects you.

We have the finest turnouts in the city. 'Phone AND WE CAN PROVE IT. RtwlH from its are QUICK and PERMANENT. (Japital City Stables HORSES, ft 1ARES Fti'Ay We will keep on hand for sale a tiring the fill and spring mouths a big supply of well broke horses, mares and mules. A big shipment Just received 40 head.

Ca and Inspect this stock. TERRY 505 E. PAS -'toi'j. in h'7 fit, i it To The Members of the South-ern Cotton Growers' Association. Your executive committee at Asheviile, N.

has uamed 11c as the inlnlnium price at which their members will dispose of this gear's cotton crop. Under present conditions we believe that price fully justiable end that It will he more than realized before this seasons' end and to enable all those who desire to hold their cotton, we will advance two-thirds of the above stated price 11c per pound, on cotton in hales of average wilght classing middling or above and delivered In the compress at Jackson. Our rate of interest and handling charges are very reasonable. Correspondence invited. "FRANCES MARIE K.NUWLTON, 980 Garfield Koukevard, Chicago, 111.

Age 4 lenrt. FRJlPiflFS" MARIF If whose photograph appears herewith has a most beautiful head of golden hair, mature women. 1 ranees is only four rears old. and her hair hancs within t- treiitrthening qualities of Danderms has prown for this little girl the most admirable head of hair ever possessed by a child ot her age in the world. The other two ladies whose photographs are shown here are certainly delighted with the results they are getting.

Neither of them havinghair that would reach to theirwaists before beginning the use of Dinderine. V. T. DAVIS CO. I io ruji art.

unu L.nltlMlHLn I in fjf HLSULTSm AVhen applied to the scalp on either old or young, it makes the hair sprout and grow thick, long and beautiful, and there 18 no waitinsr around for wpoks nnd mnntha tn Kwfl i n. i JACKSON, MISS. I CompllSh feVerV result Wfi flim. NflW firnrrriKt in ilw OK viutp, rma aim 1'cr IDUIO, flFE 1 quickly Danderin we will send a lureo saiaplo for l.y return mall to auv an who sends thia advertlsemeut to the KnuwlUn.

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About Jackson Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
57,714
Years Available:
1899-1924