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- THE HATTIESBURG NEW v You Know It i> True If the New* Say* So EVERY INCH A NEWSPAPER HATTIESBURG, MISSISSIPPI. MONDAY AFTERNOON. SEPTEMBER 21.-1908 VOL. II. NO. 105 PRICE FIVE CENTS BIG BLAZE IN CHELSEA Massachusetts City Suffers Heavy Loss By Burning of Several Large Factories. HRE IS STILL RAGING IN TENEMENT DISTRICT Thousands of People Will Be Ren dered Homeless Unless Prompt As sistance Is Secured—Fire Depart ment Unable to Cope With Situation. Hearst News Service Boston, September 21.—A general alarm this morning summoned assist ance from Boston, Everett , Malden and Charleston to combat the flames which have already destroyed the enormous box factory plant of At wood & McManus, at Sixth street in Chelsea. It Is said that dozens of big manu facturing plants In the Immediate vi cinity are doomed to destruction un less prompt assistance is obtained, as the Chelsea fire department has ex hausted its every resource and is to tally unable to cope with the situation. FOUR FACTORIES BURNED. Chelsea, Mass., September 21.—Fire which started here this morning in a box factory is still spreading. Fout of the largest manufacturing plants In the city are now a mass of flames. The local fire department is handi capped by bursting hose. Assistance has been summoned from Boston an*, other cities and special trains with flre-flghting equipment aire en route. The loss Is already well up into the millions. TENEMENTS BURNING. Chelsea, Mass., September 21.— Noon.—The Are is still spreading. Thickly populated tenements are now on fire and thousands of people will, he rendered homeless unless prompt assistance arrives. EARLE'S AFFINITY IS NOW AT HOME Hearst News Service. Monroe, N. Y., September 21.—The second Mrs. Earle, the artist's af finity, whom he was accused of beat ing, is against home and peace once more reigns In the family. It Is now believed that the prosecution of Earle will be stopped. The mother of the artist is believed to have been In strumental in restoring peace. P08T0FFICE SAFE • ROBBED OF $1,000 Erie, Pa., September 21.—Word re ceived from Albion early this morning is to the effect that thieves dynamited the postoffice there and succeeded in getting away with $1,000 in cash and a large quantity of stamps. * THE DAILY NEWS •> PROGNOSTICATOR. * <• •> -9 -9 *9 -9 -9 *9 >9 * 0 y. h •. V rtj O Washington, September 21.—For Mississippi: Local showers tonight or Tuesday. ILYNCHED BY BLACKS Yazoo County Negro Meets Death at the Hands of Members of His Own Race. CRAZED DY COCAINE RE KILLED WRITE MAN Barricaded Himself in Cabin to Resist Attack of Negro Mob, But Was Shot to Pieces.—Remains of Dead Mer.' chant Buried in Yazoo City. Daily News Special. Yazoo City, Miss., September 21.— Charles Jones, the negro who ran amuck while under the influence of cocaine and killed R. F. McCormick, a prominent white merchant, and a ne gro woman and child at Eden, Sat urday night, was captured and lynched by members of his own race near that village last night. Jones barricaded himself in a cabin, where he was soon surrounded by a mob of bloodthirsty blacks. Three approached the front of the house and two the rear, and when jones attempted to escape from the rear he was killed instantly, posse hunted the negro who sold the cocaine, and if he had been found the chances are that he would have met a quick end. The people of both races are thoroughly enraged and cocaine vendors will hereafter be dealt with severely. This is the first time in the history of this section that negroes have been so enraged as to inflict the death pen alty on a member of their own race. The remains of Mr. R. F. McCormick were laid to rest Sunday afternoon, the Woodmen of the World officiating. The j j CAR SILLS GO HIGHER Mills of the Hattiesburg District Can Now Cut Them at a Fairly Good Profit. "The lumber business is getting on its legs again," as this newspaper has said from time to time. Prices are advancing slowly, but steadily—and the mills are starting up one by one. A prominent mlllman said this morn ing that car sills had advanced from $12.50 to $14 per thousand feet within the past few days, and still further adr vances are expected. This means a great deal to this sec tion. Much of the smaller timber can be worked into car sills, and there Is a fairly reasonable profit In cutting them at the present price. Large orders for car sills are now being placed In this territory by the railroads and a number of the mills now resuming will make a specialty of this class of cuts. I BLAZE AT POWER PLANT WAS SLIGHT A slight fire In the boiler room of the power plant of tjie Hattiesburg Traction Company, shortly before 7 o'clock this morning did about $50 damage. The operation of the plant was not interrupted and the damage will be easily repaired. An alarm was turned In and the department respond ed promptly. IMPORTANT MEETING. The meeting of Hattiesburg Lodge No. 127, I. O. O. F„ to be held at 8 o'clock tonight will be of especial in terest and importance and the mem bers are urged to be present. Wifi® % s k ' ■ j j i i I i 4 '\ t, V. $ •;> y X. : ■ * III i ev t A Iv 1 at -4 * / i £1 (4 m • V , f ' Mb « mm 01 mr i ||g| • > S' j I I ^ & ■■ JWijFfi P 5 a FPjpjW - .J s ' MM w : : ■ X v. f w ,1 I •s 'g il i X m r mm ;• m 2, M] 1 PARIS POSTOFFICE LOSS OVER $5,000,000 | from a short-circuited Hearst News Service. vire. Reports tb.it it was incendiary are no longer Paris, September 21.—The latest theory of the origin of the fire which ; believed. | The loss is now estimated at $5,000, last night destroyed the postoffice 000 and the business of the city is building in this city is that it started I practically paralyzed. J Hearst News Service. Fort Gaines, Ga„ September 21.—W. W. Beard, sheriff of Clay County, was mortally shot this morning by a negro. The shooting occurred about 7 o'clock, while the officer was trying to effect the arrest of the negro, who is ac cused of killing the Bins brothers, two white men, at Shellman, in the same county last week. Sheriff Beard was armed at I time, but the negro had thrown up his hands and expressed a willingness to surrender. Beard put his gun in his pocket and had started to handcuff the Ben Holmes Says Bryan is Still Gaining Ground in Great Middle IV'st spent several days. Mr. D. B. Holmes returned yesterday from 'rtiousand Islands, Canada, where he attended a meeting of insurance He visited Cincinnati and other g of the political situation id Indiana, Mr. Holmes says thing points to a Democratic ge cities,; il tl men. points In Ohio and Indiana, where he In all of the li ' back, pulled a revolver and fired. The ball took effect in Beard s heart and he died almost instantly. The negro made his way into the woods after the shooting. He Is heavily armed and trouble is expected when he Is located by a posse of armed citizens now in pursuit. Sheriff Beard was one of the most popular men in this section of Ala bama and his murder has aroused the community to a high pitch of excite ment. A lynching will undoubtedly follow if the negro is captured. his prisoner, when the negro stepped Haskell Asks Hearst to Prove His Slander Hearst News Service. Chicago, September 21.—Governor C. N. Haskell, of Oklahoma, treas-! urer of the National Democratic Cam paign Committee, has sent the follow-1 ing telegram to William Randolph Hearst: "Sir—You are stating in speech and — fljjfe L 7 / mM J */. * % Attillo .Morosini and Mrs. Ernest H Schilling, the Morosini girl who eloped with her father's coachman, are shown in the upper part of the picture. To the right is the Mausoleum and at the bottom is the Riverdale gateway of the home of the dead banker. BIG DEAL DIIT TUDfi m IHKU Williamsburg Lumber Company Has Sold Out to a Big Eastern Timber Syndicate. DEEDS RECORDED AT COLLINS THIS MORNING Consideratioh is Said to Have Been Over Half Million Dollars.—Monster Mill is Now Running and There Will Be No Interruption. Daily News Special. Collins, Miss., September 21.— Deeds were filed ia the chancery clerk's office in this city this morning for the transfer of all of the timber j holdings of the Williamsburg Lumber Company to the Silverton Company, of ' New York, the consideration being i $525,000. j TMg , 8 , he , argest deed ever flled j f or record j n the chancery clerk's of flee of Covington county and one of j the largest ever recorded in Missis sippi. The sale was made several weeks ago. but the details of the transfer nave just been consummated. The New York syndicate becomes the owner of all of the vast timber holdings of the Williamsburg Lumber Company in this section for which it pays $500,000. fn addition to this, the concern has purchased the com missary, wagons and live stock be longing to the Williamsburg Lumber Company, and has leased the mam moth saw mill for a long term of years. For these latter concessions, it is said that the syndicate paid $25, 000 . The mill of the Williamsburg Lum ber Company is one of the largest in the state. It Is now running on full time and there will be no interrup tion. he says, sentiment seems to be about equally divided between Bryan, while the rural districts are al most solidly for the Nebraskan. Taft and press, in substance, that during the vhen Attorney General year 1899, Frank S. Monnett, of Ohio, had sev eral cases pending in the supreme court of that state against the Stand ard Oil Company, that I sought to in "I have said, and now repeat, that your statement is absolutely false, and that I never had any relations of any kind or character with the Standard I Oil Company. "Our conflicting statements prove [ | nothing. You, as a newspaper man. I ! may, and should desire a reputation for truthfulness; I, as a public official. < demand th'at those who accuse me! iluence him to dismiss those suits. stand forth and make known their] You know that a suit against ! proof. | you fdr civil damages or a criminal I ] prosecution for libel means long delay j land affords your character of journal-1 j ists a chance to cover your expense j before being called upon to settle. I do not want your money; I simply desire to expose you to the public as a false accuser, who has distorted pub lic records and manufactured state | ments for base political purposes. 1 "For the purpose of forever settling this infamous slander which you are circulating in your newspapers and on the stump, I now propose that a committee of five, or any three of \ them, composed of the editors of the i Springfield (Mass.) Republican, the I Chicago Journal, the New York World, l the Indianapolis News and the St. | Louis Republic, be selected to hear i you and me under oath, and all other ! pyidence they may desire as to the J trui ]j or falsity of your charge at the earliest possible moment, and render their decision to the public in writing, ! "Should this committee find your ! charges sustained I shall withdraw from all connection with the present Should the ■presidential campaign, verdict be against you, as I know it will, there need be no other penalty than the public contempt due every assassin of character. TiH MURPHY Played to a Crowded House at the Auditorium Saturday Night and Pleased All. The theatrical season in Hatties burg opened last Saturday evening with Tim Murphy's new comedy suc cess, "Cupid and the Dollar." packed house greeted the perform ance. which was one of the cleanest and best attractions ever seen in this A city. Mr. Murphy is at his best is the leading masculine roll of the new play, while Miss Dorothy Sherrod as the leading lady is most captivating. The company is a strong one and the play so distinctly American that it arouses the admiration and patriotism of the audience and maintains Intense inter ! est from curtain to curtain. MILLS IDLE IN ENGLAND Hearst News Service Manchester, Eng., September 21.— Four hundred cotton mills were clasea today by the walking out of 30.000 operatives. The strike threatens to be j the most disastrous In the history of ; the country. DICKSON IS NOMINATED. Hearst News Service. Natchez, Miss., September 21.—Prac tically complete returns from Satur day's primary show that W. A. Dick son is nominated for congress over Jesse Webb by about 700 majority. NEW ROAD Hattiesburg is After Main Line Of New Orleans, Mobile and Chicago System. [ I BIG $35,000 SUIT MAY BE COMPROMISED Hattiesburg is Willing to Pay the I Money Subscribed Several Years j Ag0 Under Certain Conditions.— Lawyers Now in Conference. The litigation between citizens ol Hattiesburg and the Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad, involving $35,000, subscribed to the road with the understanding that this city was to get a main line instead of a branch | will probably be settled by compro j mise. j if the compromise is effected, Hat tiesburg will after all get a main line j of the road to New Orleans and the ! local subscribers to the fund will be | satisfied. The citizens of Hattiesburg who had ,000 to the M., J. & K. C., met this morning and after conferring with their attorneys, de cided to leave the matter witji the attorneys, Messrs Travis and Hill to effect a settlement w ith the attorneys of the railroad. This decision makes possible the adjustment of the dispute at once and will mean the extension of the road as a main line to New Orleans when the adjistment is ef fected. subscribed the The citizens of Hattiesburg allege that they subscribed $35,000 to the Mo bile, Jackson & Kansas City with the distinct understanding, and with the promise by the road's representatives that the road would be built to Hat tiesburg instead of Laurel and Ellis ville, and that the line to Hattiesburg would be a main line and not a branch. They claim that they were handed a large and juicy lemon in the build ing of the jerkwater branch which connects this city with the woods out at Saratoga, and that the road failed utterly to keep its promise in regard to not biuldiug to Ellisville and Laurel. They refused to pay the money when demanded by the railroad and the case was carried to the courts and was tried in Laurel, a decision in favor of the railroad resulting. The case was then appealed to the Supreme court and the decision of the lower court reversed, offer to compromise, and the meeting held to day will probably result in a satisfactory adjustment of the dis Then came an pute. Attorney McIntosh of the M., J. & K. C. Railroad has been in the city all rith Messrs day in close conference Hill and Travis, who are the attorneys for the people of Hattiesburg. Under its reorganization, the rail road is now known as the New Or leans, Mobile and Chicago, and the intention of the promoters is to extend from Hattiesburg to New Orleans. If a contract to this effect can be con sumated, Hattiesburg is willing to pay the $35,000 as the city would then get what it bargained for—a main line of the road. STOLYPIN IN CHARGE Hearst News Service. St. Petersburg, September 21.— Premier Stolypin today took personal charge of the campaign to stop the ravages of cholera In this city, number of incompetent officials have been discharged and new sanitary die tricts created. The disease is In creasing at the rate of 400 patient* a \