Show HORRORS OF THE CYCLONE I I Letter From Gainesville Gav Telling of the Calamity J G Souther of this city is Just in I receipt of a letter from his sister Mrs 1 S R Haynes of Gainesville Ga giving giv-ing some thrilling facts about the I I calamity that recently visited that community com-munity The letter is dated Juno ICth and is as follows I i Ve have just passed through the worst cyclono over known In the history i his-tory of the State One hundred and I forty hands were employed In the I Gainesville cotton mills when it struck i Thirtyfive were killed outright All I others were more or less crippled and Homo have sines died The storm thiic II came from the south was upon us and was gone before we could realize it Then the work of removing the dead and caring for the wounded began The I cries of the latter were heartrendlnjj rl I We lost our boy Oran who was In the fifth story of the mill when the 1 building went down Andlcc our I daughter was badly hurt and was I I taken to the hospital She is now on vIIi I the road to recovery Dont see how F41 I I I any one escaped death 14 I 1 The storinn path was four hundred 1 I yards wide and destruction and desolation deso-lation marks Its course New Holland mills arc blown away and not a store or building in the path I of the storm is left standing Hundreds are left homeless home-less without food or clothes But t the good people of Georgia arc looking after af-ter us and the Government has sent us tents to live in as we are torn up and L homelesM You have Idea ot I no the condition I con-dition Cannot write more at present I t but will later p |