The News j I Entered as second-class matter on May 22, 1907, at the Dostofflce at Hat tlesburg, Miss., under the Act of Con OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE NEW [ 1 Published Every Afternoon. (Except Sunday.) Office, 112 Front Street. .Editor .. .Manager Advertising .Circulation EDGAR G. HARRIS M. J. EPLEY. T R GORDON. A. B. HOBBS. Telephones: Editorial and Counting Rooms, Both Phones No. 35. Society Editor, Cumberland No. 429. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: (By mail outside the city. $4.00 One year .... Six Months .. Three Months 2.00 1.00 (By Carrier.) 15 cents 50 cents By the Week By the Month HEARST TELEGRAPH AND CA BLE SERVICE received daily, the ex clusive franchise for which is owned by the Daily News. gress of March 2, 1879. COUNTY OF FORREST. VAST WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1908. j "1 ; ! i I ■J j * j •> •>❖<•❖•>•> j 1 I i | I DEMOCRATIC TICKET For President WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN of Nebraska. For Vice President JOHN WORTH KERN of Indiana. .;. * .;. ♦ ♦ ♦ THE TICKET. ♦ > •> •> For Mayor—Dr. J. D. Donald. For Marshal—J. F. Williams. For Police Justice—J. E. Davis. For Treasurer—John Williams. For City Clerk—A. Fairley. For Street Commissioner—Cwen Reedy ALDERMEN. Citv-at-Large—M. J. McGrath. Ward 1 —E. L. McGowan and Dr. E. J. Mitchell. Ward 2—R. A. Cameron and H. C. 1 ;■ Greer. Ward 3—A. T Powe and C. F. Lassiter, i Ward 4—R. C. McKinzie and X. R. Me- I Cullough. j j | I | j I j 3 Walter Wellman is something of a r ■N Sworn Circulation On October 1st. I, A. B. Hobbs, circulation man ager of th" Hattiesburg News, certify that the daily circulation of said paper, as shown by the books and records of the office and the press counter, is 1,818 I further certify that the in crease for the month of Septem ber was more than 300 subscrib ers. A. B. HOBBS, Circulation Manager. Subscribed and sworn to be fore me, a notary public in and for the City of Hattiesburg, this October 1, 1908. J. E. DAVIS, Notary Public^/ Job's Comforter. Job's comforter. The close personal friend of Mr. Taft, the trusted confi dante in questions political of Mr. Roosevelt, it would seem that his re port of political conditions, with the election but two weeks away, would be such as to lead, if possible, to a quiet sleep o' nights by the two who have chosen to make the matter of the pres idency a joint contract to be ratified by the pliant will of the American voter. Instead. Mr. Wellman, in his reports from Ohio and Indiana, appears to be animated by a spirit of perversity, having as its purpose either the ma licious desire to weaken Mr. Roose velt's belief in the subserviency of his subjects or the more kindly, though more disconcerting one, of preparing his friends for the disappointment which his prophetic eye tells them is; surely coming to them. J It is not impossible that, in declaY i log that the Democrats have all the best of it at the present writing in Ohio, and that Mr. Taft has about one chance in twelve of carrying Indiana, Mr. Wellman wishes to dissipate a dangerous feeling of over-confidence on the part of the presidential con tractors. That is the cheerful view to take of the case. On the other hand it is not probable that Mr. Wellman, as a veteran observer of all the presi dential campaigns of the past thirty years, would fail to recognize the ad vantage given the enemy by practical ly conceding to Mr. Bryan before the election two states essential to Mr. Taft's success. Voters, like rats, have a way of deserting a sinking ship, and it is not probable that Mr. Wellman has deliberately put two such holes be low the water line of the Roosevelt Taft ship of state for no other rea son than to make its captain and crew awake to (he further dangers of the channel. To concede Ohio and Indiana to Mr. Bryan at this stage of the game, with the south an admitted unit in his sup I port and the west already practically won for him, is little else than a pro phesy of Mr. Taft's defeat, and yet, that is just what Mr. Wellman has done. it is not likely that he has derived much pleasure from so doing. In fact to judge from his own admission, the reverse is true. But Mr. Wellman was sent out to get the facts and the [ facts, as he sees them and as they re late to Indiana, he sets forth as fol 1 lows: "It is probable this announcement that Bryan has Indiana today, with j f. vrrv P r0S Pcct of being able to hold it to the end, will come as a shock to the managers of the Republican national campaign and to many thou sands of loyal members of that party. Many political loaders and newspaper writers have printed statements that Indiana is for Taft by a reduced plu rality. President Roosevelt included Indiana in his list of states safe for the Republican ticket. At Cincinnati a few days ago. I found Judge Taft quite confident of Indiana, basing his conclusion, of course, upon the reports made to him by his lieutenants. Undef such circumstances, naturally one feels great reluctance to set his infor mat ion and judgment against those of others, all well worthy of respect. One does not like to be the messenger with ill tidings, the destroyer of pleasant dreams. But the first duty of the in dependent observer is to tell the truth as he sees it. and the truth about In diana. according to my lights is that Taft has about one chaitce in a dozen of snatching victory from the jaws of defeat. It is barely possible that if President Roosevelt were to take the •stump, appealing to the labor me/, and the nfhsses of Indiana to rally round Judge Taft, and this were to be supplemented by a big Republican campaign fund, the verdict as now made up might be changed, though even that is extremely doubtful." Wo do not envy Mr. Wellman his job. It is not to be denied that he is a manner which proves that he has not reached and 1 l ,ei ' r ° r mit'K it in i held fll s ' l' lace am «ng the political I writers for the press without of candor and courage. •arrant 4 The Herald's Predictions. j The New York Herald has for years j been regarded as a very true prog nosticator of the results in elections, and this year we look to it as usual | to show how the sentiment is drifting. On the surface, it. says, Mr. Bryan will apparently be beaten; on the surface I Mr Taft has most of the western states including Kansas, Illinois, Min | nesota, Wisconsin, Michigan and a j chance for Ohio. He has the better of j it in New York, New Jersey, Delaware I and Connecticut and in the remainder j of New England. This is all on the surface and it is suggested that the bad business conditions of various sections are offset by tremendous j crops and the great regions of the ] west are not yet willing to make a change. I Then the Herald goes underneath I the surface and makes a good show I for Bryan and a bad show for Taft. It says: "Underneath the surface there are I many disquieting disclosures. A I great blanket manufacturer came to Washington the other day from Ohio. He reported that his workmen, who j have for many years been Republicans : ar, ' ,his >' par ivdiR to vote for Bryan. Railroad presidents all over the coun try, who had under officials making inquiries, have brought reports that the engine drivers, firemen, switch men and telegraphers, who have been emphatically Republicans under Roosevelt's leadership, are now indif ferent to Taft, and a very little would be required to turn the scale and send them all to Bryan. "Under the surface in the far west there has been great resentment against the fact that President Roose velt would not run and that by the use of federal patronage he has dictated the nomination of Judge Taft. "Under the surface in great centers of population, such as New York and Chicago, there has been noted a marked disinclination of foreign vot ers who have in recent years been sup porting the Republican ticket to give their votes to Republican nominees. Added to this all over, the country are sharp lines of demarkation be tween support to the Republican na tional ticket and the Republican state ticket. Chaotic conditions in conse quence exist in New York, Ohio. Illi nois, Minnesota, ansas and a dozen other states that have heretofore gone for the Republican ticket. "Thus, roughly sketched, are the conditions existing with reference to the presidential canvass there weeks before the ballots are to be cast. "On form," on general appearances, on the confidence of men willing to wager their money, Taft ought to win. Mr. Bryan's hope appears to be in catch ing the great, silent, deciding vote, which he expects to detach from the great mass that went rolling into the Roosevelt column four years ago." The Herald gives the Republican ticket 188 votes and the Democratic ticket 166 electoral votes sure; the for mer needing 54 and the latter 76 more to secure the election. ♦ The Mislending Betting Odds. It is given out that the election players of odds are betting 2 1-2 to 3, or, in some instances, as high as 4 to 1 against Mr. Bryan's success. This is a trick that has won on several occa sions. It was in 1892 that it was first employed by William C. Whitney, and a number of other political friends of Mr. Cleveland. They appeared in the Broadway cafes and hotels a few nights before election with several thousand dollars and made Cleveland a favorite. There are always many voters who drift to the side which they believe to be a winner, and such evidences of party confidence are al ways convincing, have given odds in every subsequent presidential year. We do not know that these odds count for anything. There are several uncertain things in this world which all men acknowledge. One is a wo man's answer, another a jury's verdict, another a horse race and still another an election result. The gamblers on the curbs and in the cafes who give the odds can not have any information save what they secure from newspa pers. and this is the general property of us all. It may be that the Repub lican managers are confident. Almost certainly Mr. Roosevelt is. Likewise we have no question that Chairman Mack is convinced that Mr. Bryan will win. He has sources of informa tion upon which to base a conviction. So has the Republican committee. All talk encouragingly for their party, and every way attempt to buoy along their partisans. So far as this paper has been informed, and so far as the other papers of the country, irre spective of partisanship, tell the story, Mr. Bryan is unquestionably much stronger before the people than he has ever been. Mr. Taft, by the same assurances, is a much weaker candi date than was either Mr. McKinley or Mr. Roosevelt. There is no doubt, fur ther, that the Democratic party is more united and harmonized, as well as aggressive, than it has been since 1892. the Republican party in a dozen or more most important states, is torn asunder and divided into bitter fac tions as it never was since its origin. Mr. Bryan is making a strong fight. He has not niade one blunder. He is a leader who with spirit is leading a spirited following. Why should the odds of the betters be against him? It is true that he has never won and that the Republicans are in the habit of winning. But no race track tout but would refuse to be convinced by any such dope as that. From our aeroplane, looking down upon the great battle, we can not see anything but victory for Democracy. The Republicans i There is even less doubt that * Night Riders. The lynching of two prominent law yers at Reelfoot Lake in Tennessee yesterday by alleged "night riders" is one of the most revolting chapters in the criminal history of the south. Whether the crime was perpetrated by "night riders" or not, the stigma remains, and the lack of motive only adds to the infamy of the cold-blooded conspiracy, so cunningly planned and executed. Reelfoot Lake is a famous fishing It is not so remote from civil ization that the ordinary citizen bent on a pleasant vacation, close to Na ture and to God, should be compelled to go armed to the teeth to protect his body from the murderous hands of cowardly assassins. For the good of the great State of Tennessee, and for the preservation of the good name of the South, it is to be hoped that the perpetrators of this crime will be brought to speedy justice, and that the punishment af flicted may deter further assaults on the lives of men who have committed no other offense than that of pleading the cause of their clients before a court of law. ; resort. <• Duty—just the one word—sums up all that the ten commandments con tain. - 4 - There is little learning for those who never try. 4 It is said that Hitchcock and bis aides have raised a corruption fund of $2,000,000 to be expended in New York, Indiana and Ohio on the eve of the election. The Nashville Tennes sean, edited by former Senator Ed ward W. Carmack, says that the American people will revolt at such tactics, and that this attempt to buy the election will prove a boomerang to the Republican party. Henry Watterson is putting in some good licks for Bryan and the Demo cratic party when he isn't engaged in the pleasant pastime of roasting Edi tor Vardaman, of the Jackson Issue. 4 The injured Atlanta man who was "carried into a nearby plumbing shop for attention" had probably sprung a leak in his think-tank. ■ 4 - Policemen should be paid what they are worth. If they are not worth a good salary, (hen we should discharge them and get men who are. The total county and city tax levy is 28 mills, which is much lower than that usually paid in a city the size of Hattiesburg. The fleet is now- in Japan and there is no semblance of war. Will some one please get the smelling salts for Hobson. - 4 - The Houston Chronicle says that Republican prosperity was a political pipe dream. Guess that's about the size of it. The dispatches tell us that Taft has lost his voice . This ought to be a good excuse for President Roosevelt to dip in. Harry Thaw's predicament sug gests that It is easier to go crazy than it is to get out of the bughouse. It will soon be time for that "ocular demonstration" on the part of the street car company. ZION NEGRO BAPTISTS HAVE RIVAL PREACHERS Troubles among the members of the Zion Colored Baptist Church, out in the Arledge quarters, seem to mul tiply. For some months the mem bers of this church have been fussing and quarreling, the trouble growing out of factional differences. The old pastor continues to serve and recent ly a new pastor was called by a por tion of the congregation. There have been criminations and re-criminations and the members have been up before the courts on different charges. Efforts have been made by white people to stop the unseemly conduct of the membership of the church, but so far without avail. They appear de termined to scrap it out. The trial of seven of the members for disorderly conduct was - to have come off In Justice Bolton's court today, hut owing to the absence of the prosecuting witness, the hearing was postponed until tomorrow. Officers Cubley and McCaa this morning arrested Eliza Carter, a ne gress, on a charge of having stolen a ring, valued at $10, from Paul Gage a negro man. She will be tried in the police court tomorrow morning. HOW'S THIS? We otter One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. • F. P, CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known j F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and i believe him perfectly honorable In all • business transactions and financially j able to carry out any obligations made by bis firm. Walding, Kinnan & Martin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken intern ally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. | Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti pation. : r I Underwood Standard Typewriter The wonderful speed attained by Underwood operators is not alone due to the freedom of action and ease of manipulation of the machine. The Visibility, Tabulation, and Durability help mightily to accelerate the speed of the Underwood operator. The Machine You Will Eventually Buy ft n Underwood Typewriter Company (INCORPORATED) NEW ORLEANS, LA. 643 Gravier Street mm ARE BUSY Suburban Drug Store Entered By Two Men and Rifled of Many Valuable Articles OFFICERS HAVE CLUE AS TO PERPETRATORS One of the Robbers Wore a Number Six Shoe, According to Measure ment of Tracks, and This May Lead to His Arrest. The Suburban Drug Store, situated on Main street, just beyond the Mis sissippi Central crossing, was entered Monday night. It is believed that the work was A hole was done by two robbers, broken in the glass indow at the back of the store and through this it is be lieved the parties ran their hands and lifted the sash lock, and raised the window. The amount of goods taken cannot be learned exactly, but the manager of the store says as near as he can figure, it will amount to $200. The thieves took a good lot of jew elry, among which were chains, lock ets, breast pins, etc. They also took some cigars and a couple of hair brushes, among other things. One of the robbers wore a num ber six shoe, judging by the measure ment of a track that was made. It is believed that a pretty good clue has been found and that the robbers will soon be located. <• ❖ •> •> •> •> * * * * * * * i ♦ 4! 4 TODAY'S BEST STORY. » I • ■ .;..;. ❖ ♦ • Two village worthies were discuss ing a mooted point in grammar: as to whether a hen "sits" or "sets" when she takes to her nest. "Seems to me it's a heap more important," inter rupted a bystanding farmer, "whether she 'lays' or 'lies' when she cackles."— Harper's Weekly. A SUGGESTION ON ECZEMA. It is suggested that eczema sufferers ask the druggist at the Owl Drugstore or the Century Drug Store of this city what reports lie is getting from the jiatients who have used the oil of wtntergreen liquid compound, D. D. D. Prescription. Come to the KF.N O THEATRE TONIGHT Great Special Program OF NEW MOVING PICTURES. For Tonight New Illustrated Song: Change of Program Every Night and Only 5 Cents CITIZENS BANK VHE BANKER'S ATTITUDE The men who organize banks do not have selfish motives. Besides being a business proposition whereby a rate of interest Is earned on the money Invested In the banking business—a rate consistent with safety —the bank is a public Institution. The banker's aim is to help his customers financially to give each bet ter facilities with which he may carry on business, to furnish a sys tem that insures safety for business transactions, to render assistance to men in giving them credit for doing business. The experience and position of the banker enables him to judge a man's problems accurately and give him practical advice on financial matters. # The banker welcomes new business, he appreciates the business from his patrons and seeks the opportunity to help those who come to him for advice. He can diagnose a financial case and administer relief as well as the doctor in his line. He is in touch with business conditions, he knows the causes and remedies for business ailments, he can tell you how to regulate your business pulse and bring it up to normal. The banker's remedies and methods are not experiments, they have been administered to others and proven successful. Bring your business case to this bank for relief. Yours Very truly, J. C. BALLARD, Cashier. « COAST TRACTION COMPANY WILL EXTEND ITS LINES < Gulfport, Miss., October 21.—An- go to Bay St. Louis, but work was stopped because of the refusal of cit- ^ izens of Pass Christian to allow tracks to be laid on the famous beach drive. A compromise has now been brought about whereby the company's tracks will be laid on Second street, instead of traversing the Pass Chris tian beach. nouncement is made that the Gulf Coast Traction Comuany, after being delayed in its Dlans for several years, is now arranging to extend its line from Gulfport to Pass Christian, traversing one of the prettiest sec tions of the Mississippi coast. The road was originally planned to MONDAY October 26. THE AUDITORIUM America's Favorite Indoor Show AL. G. FIELD Greater Minstrels THE SHOW YOU KNOW PEOPLE 65 65 : PRICES 50c, 75c, $ 1.00, $ 1.50. Seats sale Thursday Morning on The American Box Ball Alley 112 MOBILE STREET OPPOSITE HOTEL HATTIESBURG E. D.: CAMPBELL, Prop. Y The most beautiful and interest ing game in America, developing muscle and quickness of hand and eye. t ::::::::::: 30 Balls for 5c See This Great Game. r A A GOOD FARM ONE YEAR FREE OF RENT I have five miles West of Hattiesburg about 100 acres under fence, about 75 acres of splendid farm land that hasn't been cultivat now for three years. I will give to the right man the use of this entire farm includ ing several other advantages one year free of rent and will agree on a nominal sum for several years following. The man must have at least one good pair of horses or mules with sufficient labor to cultivate at least 30 acres the first year and must be able to "fur nish himself" for the first year. •4 - IT b i No one need apply who can't give a good record for sobriety and Industry. Respectfully, THOS. M. FERGUSON. 610 Main Street. IV. J