THE HATTIESBURG NEWS
Published Every Afternoon (Except Buaday.)
. Mter.
Business Manager.
». D. LANDsR ..
». R. FARRELL.
Entered as second-class matter ou w«y 2ï 1907. at the postoffice at Hat
tiesburg, Miss, under the Act of Congress of March 2, 1879.
OFFICIAL PAPER CITY OF HATTIESBURG AND COUNTY OF FORREST.
MEMBER OF THE A880CIATED PRESS.
CiiMlON
LARGEST CIRCULATION OF ANY SOUTH MISSISSIPPI PAPER.
THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1911.
TELEPHONES:
Editorial and Newt Rooms.
Business and Job Department.
few
36
...13'
GETTING TALKED ABOUT
The
News
has had considerable to say during the past
months concerning the possibility of s ouring high class free publicity in
conjunction with the settlement and ,'evelopment of Mississippi cut-over
pine lands.
The state movement for the settl »ment and development of this vast
area, has as its strong feature the ways and means of securing not only
this free publicity but also large quantities of paid advertising without call
ing upon anyone in Mississippi for cash subscriptions, and only asking that
the large land
iwners set aside a small percentage of their immense idle
holdings for advertising purposes.
to
You have heard it said and it is true, that it is harder to make and
save the first thousand dollars than it is to make the next several thou
sand.
The same is true in settling a country,
few started, tiian it is to get others to follow,
will follow; and once they get to coming fast, they will follow like sheep.
It is harder to get the first settlers, than it is for the first settlers to write
back and induce their friends to Join them in their new home.
It is harder to get the first
After a fe'
come, others
It takes "PUBLICITY" and a whole lot of it to get an immigration
movement started.
Resources and advantages, water, soil, climate, are
good things to talk about, to give publicity to, but if they are not talked
about, if they are not given publicity how is the world to know about
them, and who will come to buy them? If large holders of vast acres of
cut-over lands are content to sit supinely still and wait for something to
turn up. they will die while they are waiting. Things don't turn up these
days; they have to be turned up. :
One result of this state movement in Mississippi is that Mississippi has
received more attention in the public prints during the last year than ever
before.
best and most effective form.
For instance, in Everybody's Mag izine there is an illustrated story on
the South in which some kind things are said about Mississippi's cut-over
pine lands. Among other things this paragraph:
The effort and study must be to keep this publicity going in its
"In Mississippi, the state has set a remarkable example of
bich many are emulating. A few years ago
the state agricultural school bought one hundred
soi] conservation.
and sixty
acres of typical sandy land covered with stumps and branches
—what is called a 'pine slashing.' It was waste and Idle land.
such as Mississippi hits today in millions of acres of her area.
The students of the agricultur.il school cleared
ings, spread fertilizer—seven dollars'
plowed, barn
uvay the slash
worth to the acre—
ved, and then ppinied string-beans for a winter
two dollar an acre. The winter crop sold
acre. When it was liar
Tlie land cost
for eighty-five dollars an
crop.
in Chicugt
spread fertilizer again—two
ill,- acre—and planted sweet potatoes for a summer
Orleans, produced eighty dollars an
per acre in a year from two dollars' worth
of land and nine dollars' worth of fertilizer. Three crops in
enn usually be pro laced in southern Mississippi,
service guaran
hey pulled some stumps.
vested. I
dollars t
crop. These, sold in Ne
total of $1
aci
stead of two
and the truck market and the express railway
eturns."
tee excellent
vriter milres this observation:
In conclusion t lie same
"Transform the consumers hi tlie city imo producers; save
in tlie country; restore, in a degree, tlie balance
wo forces ot' production and consumption; it is
ill never
ornplete sin ■ css untn Hie .Rates officially recognize
lie distribution of
the waste soil
between the
worth national attention and national support: it
the
attni
and sup] ■ i t some practical mo einem for
city peoi'l*
v
ipon tVie waste land
■ ■ riioi- E. F. Noel, who has already given his personal and
th' State of Mississippi bus recognized a practical move
■arry the fin . u-lul bunion, nnd to furnish the ex
publicity but to bring set
fanning communities.
Through (I
official suppoi'
nient that guarantees to
periehee and th'
r vs and transform stump lands into 'sperons
not on
"know-lu;
that all the p nple can ipprei
te a campaign which
.Mississippi and that
The News believes
-Will sfX'ii the publient ion of nice tin
bring people tills way.
about
ill
In commenting upon tlie show in
made by a number of different farm
ers in Mississippi, where the owners paid fTn their land in the cultivation
;
of one crop on a very small number o 1 »ores, the malinger of one of the
» agricultural experiment stations declares "when we succeed in making the
rest of the couni ry believe that these things can actually and generally be
accomplished, the rush to this country will be like tlie great rush of gold
t seekers to California."
Mississippi people must bear in mind, however, that we have much com
petition in Texas. Oklahoma, Georgia, and other Southern states, which
! have been far more progressive and have attracted a great deal more atten
tlon to their farm lands than have we.
It is no easy or economic thing to change the trend of immigration. It
takes a lot of money and a lot of "know-how." It takes an unusual amount
of the best sort of publicity. It must be somebody's business to direct and
secure that publicity and also to go Into the north and bring settlers.
If we have the opportunity to secure all these things in the best and
most effective form, let us he up and doing.
Get together and "start something."
Commissioner Hardy in discussin ; with a representative of The News
this morning, the recent bond issue, mid tlie fact that $5,000 of the proceeds
•if the bonds were to be used to fund an old flouting debt, stated that The If
News in a recent local news item, was In error in attributing this délit to j
the last administration. "The last city administration.'' said Mr. Hardy,
"did not make, or rather did not leave any debts unpaid which were con |
- .traded during their terms of office. They conducted affairs practically on
a cash basis. The debt is an accumulation from several administrations
previous to the last one, and some of it dates back eight years, when the
first paid fire department was organized by Ihe-city and heavy expenditures
had to be made for fire wagons and equipment."
i
«♦
Now that Gen. Win. H. Blxby, chief of engineers, U. S. A., has declared
that the battleship Maine was destroyed by the explosion of her three mag
azines, and that "no such effect as that produced upon the vessel could have
been caused by an explosion from without," let us try to forget rather than
to "Remember the Maine." All of which goes to show what a
I
criant
e the
jingoes, for commercial pelf, committed upon humanity by forcinj
upon Spain. j « i]
war
■> >
ut
Pypj
Around The State
it
A NARROW ESCAPE.
Natchez, Miss., July 6.— Scott Pin
cer
tard, cashier of the First National
Bank of this city, had most of his
clothing torn from his body Tuesday!
evening about seven o'clock by a bolt of
of lightning, lie was unconscious for
some (line, but finally revived, and
with the exception of a little nervous
ness is as sound as ever.
WANTS PARDON FOR WOMAN.
Biloxi, Miss., July 6.-—Every wo
mans' organization in Biloxi is afford
ing signatures for a petition asking
that the governor general of Canada
ty
pardon Angellne Napolitane, an Ital- is
inn woman, at Sault Sie Marie (Ont.) «
who has been condemned to death for
the killing of, her husband, who at-1 ing
tempted to make her sell her honor.
-
OFFICER KILLS BAD NEGRO. land
Enterprise, Miss., July 6.—-Deputy
Sheriff James Crane killed a negro | ing
Tuesday night at Stonewall, three !
miles south of here. The negro's
name was John Flournoy. The offi-1
cer was looking for the negro along a
wooded road. The negro came from I
,
behind the bushes, where he had been j of
waiting for the deputy, and attempted | s i°
to kill him with a shotgun. The offi- of
zz=r—-— - —:- I
is
a
I I—
lie
to
Selected
The Washerwoman's Song.
In a very humble cot,
in a rather quiet spot,
In the suds and in the soap,
Worked a woman full of hope;
Working, singing, all alone,
In a sort of undertone:
"With the Saviour for a friend,
He will keep me to the end."
are
as
1:
000
2,000;
The
for
000
fields
today
been
strike
Sometimes happening along,
i had heard the semi-song,
More in sympathy than guile;
And I often used to smile,
But i never said a word
In regard to what I heard,
As she sang about lier Friend
Who would keep her to the end.
Not in sorrow nor in glee
Working all day long was she,
As her children, three or four,
Played around her on the floor;
But in monotones the
She
"With the Saviour for a friend,
ill keep me to the end."
song
as ini mining ail day long:
sion
tinue
He
lisa song I do not sing,
For I scarce believe a thing
Of the stories that are told
Of tile miracles of old;
1 know that her belief
rs the anodyne of grief,
And
has
to
I. ;
ill always he a friend
That will keep her to the end.
Just n trifle lonesome she,
Just as poor as poor could be;
But her „spirits ul
Like tlie bubbles in the clothes,
And. though widowed and alone.
Cheered her with the monotone
Of a Saviour and a friend
ild keep her to the end.
I
j "IIow
j or
cents
ways rose,
j
i wid
!
I you
■j "I
, me
Who w
Human »opes and human creeds
human needs;
And ! should not wish to strip
Fi-oi ■ that washerwoman's lip
Any song that she can sing,
Any hope tliai songs can bring;
For the woman has a Friend
Who will keep lier to the end.
—Eugene F. Ware.
Hins tiieir root ii
A
pal
ed
not
him.
Spurs Up the Liver
i
!
5
You wouldn't care to have a simple case of liver torpidity develop
into jaundice would you?
It will if you allow your liver to become inactive and then neglect it.
Can't take pills—prejudiced against them?
If so you can take
Nyal's Liver Regulator
—use before breakfast—it will stir up that sluggish liver, act on the
If kidneys and improve digestion.
j
|
Just a fe«- doses and you will he sure of regularity of liver function
and the proper assimilation of food—after you have taken a bottle you
will wonder why you put it off so. long.
Nyal's Liver Regulator is Entirely Vegetable.—
prompt in its action but with no
unpleasant after effects
25c the bottle.
When we had a chance to get the exclusive selling agency for Nyal
Family Remedies we jumped at it. They are known among all drug
gists as the highest quality line on the market, and are prepared by a
great firm of manufacturing chemists, famous for fifty years.
Century Drug Store
Both Phones 64
' -A
bolt went down the chimney, which j
it demolished and tore up several
cer was too quick with his pistol, how
ever.
of M. M, Twiller, three miles south of
Lauderdale, was struck by lightning
Tuesday and badly damaged,
HOUSE STRUCK BY LIGHTNING.
Meridian, Miss., July 6.—The home
The ;
No one
walls and floors in the house,
was at home when the bolt struck.
HEALTH SCHOOLS.
Greenville, Miss., July 6,—The coun
ty health officer. Dr. H. L. Sutherland, !
is making a tour of his county, holding |
« health instruction
town every Saturday,
ing was at Boyle on July 1. The
second fs to lie at Merigold, July 8.
By special invitation of Dr. Suther
land he > s assisted by Mrs. Dell K.
Hohlenboff, of Shaw, state correspond
| ing secretary of the
! association.
-
BARTLEBAUGH SENTENCED,
Vicksburg. Miss.. July 6.—Waltei
I Bartlebaugh pleaded guilty to a charge
t-liool at some
The first meet
oman suffrage
1
_ I
,
j of impersonating a United States pen- ;
| s i° n examiner and Judge H. C. Niles,
of the federal court sentenced him to '
I three years in the federal prison. It
is thought Bartlebaugh secured quite
a lot of money fron, negroes to whom j
I I— -, j , ,
lie exhibited maps and charts In a way
to make his line of talk sound more ,
plausible.
VISIBLE GRAIN SUPPLY.
-
New York, July 6—The following I
are the visible supply of grain figures
as compiled by the New York Produce
Exchange for the week ending July
1: Wheat 23,836,000, decrease 653,
000 bushels; corn 7,482,000, increase
26,000 bushels;
crease 62,000; rye
2,000; barley 637,000, decrease 152,000.
The Canadian visible supply of wheat
for the week ending July l was 5,158,
000 bushels, increase 494.000,
a
Eighteen Lives Lost in Struggle Last
throughout the Irwin Gi-eensburg coal
fields in Wetmoreland county voted !
today to give up the strike that has
been on for the last 16 months, as the 1
Eighteen lives have been lost in the
strike and more Ilian a million dollars
oats 9,570,000, de
15,000, decrease
MINERS GIVE UP STRIKE.
ing Sixteen Months.
Pittsburg. July 6.—The
miners
international executive board of the
United States Mine Workers in ses
sion at Indianapolis voted to discon
tinue paying strike benefits.
has been expended, besides large do
nations from sympathizers.
Overpowered.
"Are you stve you are strong enough
to carry this Hunk up three (lights of ;
stairs?" asked tlie maiden lady of the
roustabout she had summoned.
"Sure, mum." he responded heartily,
"IIow much du 1 git out of it?"
"Why, if you don't break anything
or spoil the walls i'll give you 10
cents "
a
"Sorry, mum, but I couldn't git away
wid dnt heavy trunk"
"Wh;
minute ago you were sure
you were strung
"I \îns, but ye
me weak."—fie'
ff»"
r generosity hns made
•«.-hind Plain Dealer
ui
By Way of Suggestion.
A |>ewiiol<'!' , r oiu c camu from bi«
pal ish « hui' !f b» iIn* bishop with tlio
complaint that a stranger bail intrud
ed in to ids pew. Ile çaid, "1 would
not disturb divine service by ejecting
him. but 1 took tile slight liberty of
sitting on iin but." Taber.
NAVAL GUN FOSTERS.
Uow They Arc Aided hv the Telescope
Sight ai
Crossbar
l'erbai>s very tew «»u'.sUle "i tbe
service know of Hu* iuip -it:.ut part
that the telescope and the
sight have played in the dcve' iptnent
of target work. Before the recent In
troduction of the telescope and the
crossbar the gun pointer strained his
eyes in the impossible effort to adjust
their focus to three widely separated
objects simultaneously, the rear sight
a few inches away, the front sight a
dozen feet distant from the rear one
and the target au.vwLjge from 1,000
to 13,000 yards. Ordnance experts
worked over this problem, and the
suit was the introducth.u of the P i
rossbar
for
It
escopic sight and the crossbars-two
pieces of crossed wire at th % d of
the telescope. When those "cut" on
the target the gun pointer pr
electric button and the gun d es ih, |
y
-S hi: 7
rest.
It is eminently spectacular,
great gun battery practice. This D
tills
from n description given to «lie writer
by an umpire whose station was on
one of the ships towing the target
"Through the glasses you could see a
needle-like flash from the firing ship, a
vessel so fur distant that her outline
at
by
was hut au indistinct blur upon the
horizon. Having caught the (lash, the
glass is dropped, the eye goes to the
stop watch, and you begin to count—
one, two, three, four, five, six, seven,
eight, nine, ten. eleven—and about
then you will hear a faint drone which
in the next fraction of n second swells
into a mighty roar—the roar of an ex
press rushing at the rate of thirty
miles a second. With the roar come
a flying of splinters from the target, a
Keyser leaping n hundred feet in air.
then auot,ler aml »not her, ns tlle rico
R ' ,e , l | , gU \ nce t a ' vav f e ,
wave, and then, last of all, the faint,
faroff boom of tlle BUn whlch h;ld hnr ,.
e d the missile."-Harper's Weekly,
_
to
DECORATED HIS SHIP.
8ir John Had Little Paint and a Fine
Sense of Humor
It is not often the administration of
England's unval affairs is attended
with any humorous features, but on
one occasion at least an officer of the
royal navy contributed quaintly to th"
archives of the admiralty.
Once, before the days of steel ships,
the allowance of paint in the royal
navy was very small, and sometimes
the officers had to pay large sums in
order that their ships might maintain
decent appearance. Sir John Philli
more resorted to a funny expedient,
either to soften the heart of the navy
board or, if that proved Impossible,
to express his opinion. He painted one
side of his yellow frigate black and
white and used the rest of the black
paint in printing on the olher side in
large letters, "No more paint!'*
The navy board wrote to call his
attention to the impropriety of his
con<Inct 1111(3 sl *» ed themselves, as
they did officially, "Your affectionate
friends." Sir John made reply that
he could not obliterate the objection
able letters unless lie were given more
paint and signed himself, in turn,
"Your affectionate friend, John Philli
more "
of
of
of
a
Ti
naval authorities thou called his
attention to the impropriety of the
signature, to which Sir John respond
ed, acknowledging the letter, stating
be regretted thiit lire paint had not
been sent und ending, I am no longer
your affectionate frlen-1, John Pliii'l
more."
His frigate was permitted to retain
her original yellow, and thus the
navy board punished Sir'John's lm
pertinence,
The Last Laugh.
Hogan was ruffling a dock. He ivn
fairly suceo. sful in disposing of tickets
lu the s'kiji v. licic lie worked, but he
ran up against trouble wluni he can
vassed his neighbors 1 Topping in at
ne! ;hbuî'\; house, lie tried to se'd n
.
"It's a tine timepiece and it'll luk
folntf on vet- whatnot er mantel," says
Hogan cajoling!,'
"Gwan. the old clock doesn't run,"
replied the neighbor.
"Well," drawied Hogan, changing
front completely, "well, perhaps yez
won't win it and then ye'll have the
laugh on tlie fellow who does."—Mil
waukee Free Press.
Lengthening the Day.
A couple of laborers who bad beeD
working at the waterworks got into
conversation.
"I say, Bob," exclaimed one of the
men, "you are a bit of a scholar. Can
you tell me who it was that ordered
the sun to stand still?"
"I don't know," replied Bob. "Some
son of a gun of a contractor who
«'anted a big day's work out of the
laboring man. you »an bet.''—London
Answers.
Could Imitate.
Pater—Can you give my daughter
th«- comforts to which she has been
Suitor—Yes, sir. I've
breakfasted at your home, nnd I'm
certain that I can complain about the
•offee, rend the paper, demand the dis
charge of the cook and announce that
i'll dine at the club.- Toledo Blade
accustomed?
Making It Pleasant For Her.
Elderly Relative (snlffingi—Bertha,
Is It possible that you allow smoking
in your parlor? Married Niece—Cer
tninly, auntie. Yon can smoke yonr
pipe here If yoa like.—Chicago Tribune
Plenty of Chanoea.
It never Is necessary to hunt for long
or to travel far if one is looking for a
chance to do a good deed.— Chicago
Record-Herald.
PRESIDENT TAFT
r\
IS
Senator Cummins of Iowa, Takes a
Shot at President's India
napolis Speech.
il
Washington, .Tilly '!• The right
President Taft to negotia
Go
pin»,
and sem
dlan reciprocity agreement
form to
defend it. nnd ad-.
•ompleted
for enactment, to
congre:
It In a
| c-nncl 1 s i"c
in the
spec-lies
vocate it in
in the
sonnt?
issei-ted
country
y or tern: . t». Burl
i, of Ohio, at I he , sortn
speech
Ml (he V
ai I ant
support of
procity
The senate
else
ul dai!
ion of two days
at 11 o'clock.
earlier in the
iniinn.
by CM
day c
yesterday at Indianapolis.
Cummins
better for the president
mould an opinion by api>«*;iliii.ü to
people in -1 . ■
the power of the president - oi'li
if the sn
I'resh
d it
liclif
ry a
pass a bill through
,1i>
criticised vigorously the ! idiann;
speech in which PrefJdeni
the Canadian agreement
ably not. reduce th. cost
Burton strongly urged that t
agreement be adopted without cluing ■
vould proli
of 1 iv i I
DR. COOK'S ACCUSER
Seattle, Wash
Herscliel Parker, of New Y k, non
for his efforts to climb Mount M*
Kinley and for his c lung' - a
Dr. Frederick Cook, sailed for Valdez
today on the steamship Admiral
Sampson. While in Alaska, in will
make arrangements for an expedition
to ascend Mount McKinley next F' l>
ruary.
Professor
July
»linst
WOMAN'S PLANE ENLARGED.
Asheville, N. 0„ July 6.—Tlu- n
ture of today's session of tin Vuiin»
People's Southern Educational Mi
sionary movement was the »ddn-i
of H. W. Hicks, of New York, who ili
cussed "The New and Enlarged I' 1
of Women." This afternoon Mr. Hi !
delivered an address on "The ()!»
of the Missionary Movement
South."
1 Fl
I
Happv, Happy,
' Use TIZ
a Marvel For oore Feet. Acts Right CfT
:
V,
Si f/
l- 7
\)
mÆW y
!
ic
<
Sort! Feet? Never After Using TIZ
Good
. •••lien tcf.t. R
feet, tired icet.
Good-bye corne, callou.e s and I.
Luis and raw »pots.
You've never _ tried
T!7, before for your feet,
eut from anything ever before v-ld
it acts at once and makes tliq feet
feel remarkably frc.-li and sore-proof
TIZ is not a powder. Powders and
other foot remedies clog up the pores.
TIZ draws out all poisonous exuda
tions which bring on soreness of the
feet, and Is the only remedy that does,
TIZ cleans out every pore and glori
fies the feet—your feet.
You'll never limp again or draw
your face in pain, and you'l! forgot
about your corns, bunions
louses. You'll feel like a new
If you don't find ail this true after
trying a box of TIZ, you can get your
money right back.
TIZ is for sale at all druggists at
25 cents per box, or it will be sent
you direct if you wish from WALTER
LUTHER DODGE & CO., Chicago, (1!
aching
feet,
sore
ity
feet
anything bU- !
II is differ
up
and cal
person
j it 12 4
■
0?£H AN '".i.UH ;
/ . kkäÄT«
OoMMEftÇtü 'J*
On T,ESBURG - f* 55
S? UC DFFOSITARY
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3*8
Wm
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WÀ
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of jewelry,
Go over you'- assortmen
pin», etc., and oee if you cio net t'sed
scmeti.int: to complete your s.m
er
outfit.
a camplete as
cut of SCARF PINS. BRACE
will fina
Here you
sortn
LETS. FOBS, NECKLACES. RINGS.
SHIRTWAIST PINS, and evarytl
:-.g
else th t is worn in gold and silver
jewelry.
Reasonable prices prevail of course
—and Honest values likewise.
.
JEWELts
ß I
; T'
_
TS
TE V
¥
rieiiced sales
sful record
i in;: machines,
" atm-s or gasoline
• im-s I I-I t-- the farmers, jilant
living in the country,
lighting system
country p-cple rid it takes an
ref'll Mild tactful
:. who haw a snci
■»111
Ye sell a liigh-clai
experienced, i s
• alesinan in K.n-i cssfully sell our
tin«. Pe.-itioii i ■ ? salnrv .«100.00 per
ind com
N'ont ut experienced and
ecessful salesmen ne d apply.
Address: Eagle Generator Company,
St. Louis, Mo.
fission.
jnll&5
1 Fl HI RENT—Tin ii
Hardy street, f.-i
:. T. Dll' i
home
■1!
mi house and 15
acres land, crop growing, one mule
I »ini wagon, pit
['ols, and every
Hiing complete for an ideal dairy,
poultry yard and truck farm.
Can
The right
give Ii
years.
e for tlio
iglu man. Write or
P. R. Perkins, Citizens Bank
Hiiildii.i:. Hattiesburg.
Phone
6-tf
WANTED
Painting »ml paper-hang
k c ranteed.
7-5- into
First
ing
'Hi Am
i i it mod
e:.i ear
"Home,"
5-2t
: FOR RET
in. 4
T—Nice f
Ferres:
C iOSQ
street.
C'umber
19-tf
hone 244.
\) ANTED— Sale8intii
to
carry as a
side line up-to-date lino of trunks
The Petersburg Baggage
! and bugs.
Co., Petersburg, Vu.
2U-6t
hand.
4
4
!
«
luing
FOR SALE—15
H. P. Foot
engine ut a bargain. ;
Gasoline
tl( ally
30-Gt.
new. j. n Burkett.
WANTED—You
or Home 265,
furniture packed or stored,
tlesburg Packing & g t o . ' c '
to ring Cumberland
Je» wish
Hat
;03
•hen
10-tf.
WANTED
171 W. when
You to ring h 0 „
'e Phone
'nut your furnl
ipbolsti red—all
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