444444444444444444*44* t THE WEATHER TODAY. 4 * For North Carolina: + 4 Occasional Bhowers and 1 i Thunderstorms. J VOL. LII. NO. 112. Leads all Morthi Carolina Bailies in Mews anr- wl’^ulation HARMONY DINNERS AND THE DISCORD THEY CREATE There Can Alway be Harmony Among Democrats Who Have the Purposes Jefferson Had, Declares Bryan. HE OUTLINES BASIS OF TRUE IIARMONV Senator Carmack and Mr/ Shepard Speak. CARMACK SPEAKS AS SOME SEER OF OLD If We Would Perpetuete This Repub lic, He Cries, We Must Preserve Un broken the Walls Our Fathers Rear ed and Stand Fast by the Constitu tion as by the Ark of the Covenant of the Living God. (By the Associated Press.) Boston, July 24.—There were three notable speeches delivered before the New England Democratic League at the annual dinner held at Nantasket Beach today. Mayor Patrick A. Collins, of Boston, presided, and addresses were made by Wm. Jennings Bryan, Edward M. Shepard and Senator Carmack, of Tennessee. Mr. Bryan responded to the toast, “The Basis of Harmony.” He sa id: “In view of numerous harmonv din ners, and the discord they have erected, it may not be out of place to consider the basis of harmony. The word •har mony' is euphonious, and the idea which it conveys is a delightful one. How it soothes the ear and ealis up vis ions of peace and love and joy-. Harmony, whether among the heavenly bodies v hose movements make the music of the spheres or among the bodies terrestrial with their conflicting interests and vary ing moods, who can resist its claims or dispute its sway? Harmony is but a synonym for order, and is not the result of chance, hut a product of inexorable law. The musician must learn the scale and properly arrange the notes, or har mony, no matter how earnestly wooed, can never be won. “Harmony in government Is likewise the result of fixed md unchangeable rules. Jefferson shifts two of these rules —namely, absolute acquiescence in the will of the majority and frequent (lections—the second aids the first by giving hope of a remedy from present ills, however gricvcu3. If lie were living today hTs observation would probably sug gest a third rule, namely, the ascertain ment of the will of the methods so direct, so fair and so honest that minority cannot doubt that that will has been actually expr ssed. “Jefferson also laid down the rules by which, and hv which alone, real harmony can be secured within a party. I say real harmony, for that harmony cannot ho considered worthy of the name which, like the harmony temporarily existing be tween the confidence man and his vic tim. is purposely employed for deception and injury. THE TWO PARTIES DEFINED. The great founder of the Democratic party whose profound philosophy s'o.und ed all the depths of human nature and measured the height and breadth of hu man government, not long before the end of his eventful life, said in a letter to Mr. Lee, that there were but two per manent parties, the aristocratic and the Democratic; that these two ex isted in every country, and that where there was freedom to think, speak and write, these parties would become ap parent. With the aristocratic party he classed ‘these who fear and distrust the people and wish to draw all power from them into the hands of the higher classes.’ With the Democratic party he classed ‘those who identify themselves with the people, have confidence in them, cherish and consider them as the most honest and safe, though not the most 1 wise, depository of the public interests.’ i Every well informed student of history w ill recognize this distinction. In every community you can draw a lino sepa rating the aristocrat from the Democrat. It will not be a perpendicular line, nor will it boa horizontal one; it will not | separate those of illustrious lineage ; from those of humble birth: it will not 1 separate the rich from the poor; it will I not separate the educated from the un- : educated; it will not be along lines of, vocation or occupation; hut it will sepa rate those ‘with the tastes, spirit, as sumption and traditions of the aristo cracy’ from those who ‘believe in a gov ernment controlled by the people and j favor political and legal equality.’ “Jefferson was born of refined and well- j 10-do parents: he was even rich for one of that period, and he was educated far i above the most of his associates; he was | a lawyer and his social connections were j f avorablc to aristocratic ideas, but he j was a Democrat. He believed in the brotherhood of man: he asked for no privileges that could not be granted to all; he claimed no rights that all did not enjoy, and he sought for himself no governmental care that he did not de The News and Observer. mand for others. He believed in the rule of the people, in their capacity for self-government and in their right to the control of their own affairs. He did not doubt that they would make mistakes, but he knew that they would bear pun ishment for their own mistakes with more complacency than they would en dure punishment for the mistakes of others, and he was certain that their errors would be unintentional ones. He knew that, as they found no profit in bad laws, they wouAl strive to correct them and would profit by experience. He was a friend of everything that helped the people, and the unrelenting foe of everything that, injured them. He was identified with the masses, and consider ed that in so far as by inheritance or by his own efforts he* possessed any ad vantage over others he held that ad vantage as a trustee for those less for tunate. The people loved him because he first loved them. He organizd a party that has lived for more than a century, and he so impressed his ideas upon the party that no defeat, however over whelming, has been able to crush its spirit or disintegrate it. A GREAT GULF BETWEEN THEM. “There can always be harmony among Democrats who have the purpose that Jefferson had and are willing to employ the methods that Jefferson employed. There can always be harmony among Democrats who believe in a government of the people and are willing that all the departments of the government shall be by the people and for the benefit of the people. Differences of the mind can be reconciled: differences of purpose can not. Between one who is at heart an aristocrat and one who is in reality a Democrat there is a great gulf fixed. And, it may be added, among the aristo crats there will be found the same divis ion that exists among the beasts of prey—some have the courage of the lion, and others the cunning and treachery of the fox, but they can hunt together if their object is spoil, whether it be avowed or concealed. Between those really Democratic in purpose there can be no personal or permanent alienation, because having no ulterior motives they are open to arguments and amenable to reason; being honest in purpose, they have confidence in the triumph of their cause, and are content to employ honest methods. They will neither conspire against others nor against each other. If they make mistakes in judgment, as all are liable to do, they are not only willing, but anxious to.correct their mis takes. In politics, as in religion, there is an essential difference between a doubt of the head and a doubt of the heart. “It is impossible to secure harmony between people of opposite sympathies and it is a difficult thing to change a man’s sympathies; it requires a political regeneration to make a Democrat out of an aristocrat. It is much easier task to show a man that the principles he has been advocating and the policies which he has been supporting are aristo cratic in their present effort or in their tendencies. The Republican party of to day is aristocratic in its policies and pendencies for it is controlled by a few in the interest of a few, but there are many Republicans who remain with their party only because they do not under stand the change which has taken place in that party within the last few years. When the policy of a party is controlled by its voters, then the party stands for the will of the majority, but when the party is dominated by a small minority then the organization stands not for the will of the majority, but for the will of those who dominate it. A PARTY LED BY THE NOSE. There can be no doubt of the Democratic instincts of a large majority of the riiembers of the Republican party, but that party tntav is so controlled by organized wealth that the rank and file of the party are not consulted about the policies nor are the interests of the rank and file considered by the leaders. With the exception of the tarjtr question the Republican party has not in recent years honestly sub mitted a single important issue to the arbitrament of the ballot, or even to the judgment of the members of its own party. It has written ambiguous plat forms and forced its policies through Congress after elections. In 1596 it used a promise of international bimentallism to conceal its real purpose to fasten the gold standard on the country. In 1900 it practiced the same deception jpn im perialism and on tfte trust question. Even within a month it has refused to announce its purpose in regard to the Philippines, and has put off until after November the passage of the subsidy bill and the consideration of the trust ques tion. The leaders of the party show their lack of vital faith in the doctrine of self-government by their unwilling ness to take the people of the country, or even the voters of their own party, into their confidence. The hope of the Democratic party lies in bringing this fact to the knowledge of those who have RALKIGH. NOKTH CAROLINA. KRIDAY MORNING. JULY 25 1902. been in the habit of voting the Repub liacn ticket. One aristocratic p.uty in the country is enough. Democratic suc cess must he won, not by imitating the Republican party, but by exposing it— not by making the Democratic party aristocratic, but by convincing the people that it is really Democratic and can be trusted to defend Democratic ideas and to cultivate Democratic ideals. As there are many in the Republican party whq_ have adhered to the party notwithstand ing the change that the organization has undergone, so, there are some who call themselves Democrats who have them selves undergone a change which has alienated them’ from the Democratic party, or from any party worthy of the name. “To attempt to patch up an apparent harmony between those who are not in sympathy with Democratic purposes is not only a waste of time, but would prove disastrous. The men who deserted the party in 189(1 may be divided into two classes. Those who left because they understood the issue presented and those who left because they did not under stand the real nature of the contest. Until the former are completely changed in their sympathies they cannot return to the party without injuring it. The latter will be reconciled to the party when they themselves become aware of the real character of the life and death struggle now being waged between plutocracy, because the aristocracy of today is one of wealth rather than of 1 irth, and it includes not only those who have been alienated from the common people by .the possession of great wealth, but those who, although without wealth, pander to it and moaeure all things by a money standard. Organized wealth has become ejp potent in governmental affairs that some even now despair of applying any effective remedy. But such under estimate the patriotism of the people and the strength of the public conscience. The people have a remedy within their ppwer. namely the ballot, and with It they can and will right every wrong and remedy every grievance. STAND FIRM FOR PRINCIPLE. The Democratic party must have a con trolling purpose, unchanged by victory or defeat; it must stand for that pur pose at all times and everywhere, un moved by threats of disaster and unin fluenced by promise of temporary gain. It must have a character, for character is as essential in a party as it is in an individual. No one will trust an unstable man or one so without principle that his position upon any moral question can not be guessed in advance. Neither will the people trust a party that is willing to write into its platform today any thing that promises to catch a few votes or strike out of its platform tomorrow anything that will alieDute a few votes. Even if it desired to do so our party ould not compete with the Republican party in the use of money in campaigns or in the deception or coercion of voters, because large campaign funds can j|nly be secured in return for the promise of favoritism, and our people are not in a [osition to coCrce. Our party must have principles and proclaim them; it must stand by them and defend them, relying upon its faith in the righteousness of those principles and upon its faith in the intelligence and patriotism of the neople. “The struggle between human rights on the one side and greed on the other is an unending one. Our party must take part in the struggle, but that struggle cannot be permanently settled by this generation or by any future one. As the children of Israel, wandering in the wilderness, could not store bread for the morrow but were compelled to gather manna each day, so the citizen finds it impossible to rest upon the achievements of yesterday, or to frame a government that will run itself. He must labor to day, tomorrow and while life lasts if he would be secure. He must meet each now problem and examine each new proposition that is submitted to the people, but in doing so he will employ the same purposes and apply the same general rules. He cannot tell what temptations he may have or of itfhat immediate gain he may have the promise if he will but surrender his manhood but he knows, if he is an upright man, that he will endeavor to resist every temptation, and he will determine to forego every advantage that requires a surrender of his manhood. APPLY DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES. “So with our party. We cannot tell what issues we may have to meet; we can only determine to meet them in a Democratic spirit, to apply to them Democratic principles and to take the people's side always. In 1892 the para mount issue was tariff reform and the Democratic party boldly asserted its de mand for a tariff for revenue only. It fought the campaign and it won, but its majority was so narrow that a few Sena tors, disloyal to the party on this sub ject, defeated the verdict of the people rendered at the polls. But the failure of the party to do all that it promised would not have been so disastrous but for the fact that the Wilson bill, un satisfactory as it was to tariff reform ers, had to bear the sfns of a Republi can financial system which was support ted by our administration against the protest of an overwhelming majority of the voters of the party. The defeat of 1894 was more disastrous than any that the party has experienced since, and it was due to the fact that the adminis tration deserted the people on the money question.' In 1898 the money question had forged to the front, made paramount not by the action of the majority of the Democratic party, but by the attempt of a minority of the party to aid the Republican party to chain the country to an appreciating dollar. Without aban doning its position on the tariff question the party met this issue and took the side of the people. In spite of the de sertion of many formerly conspicuous in ' ts councils of the Democratic party I oiled a million more votes than it had ever polled before, and would have (Continued on Third Page.) I ARREST OF HARDING HUD MRS, STAFFORD Boarding the Boat at Norfolk For Baltimore. t A DENIAL OF IDENTITY Seaich of Their Trunks Renders This of no Avail. MR. STAFFORD LEAVES FOR NORFOLK A Warrant Sworn Out Against Harding For Kidnapping Mrs. Stafford and Requisi tion Asked FiOm Cover 'or Aycock on Governor of Virginia (Special to News and Observer.) Greensboro, N. C., July 24.—At five o'clock this afternoon your correspondent was wired by the Virginian-I’ilot that the eloping couple, Mrs. John YV. Staf ford and J. E. Harding, wore in Norfolk and asking for instructions. The matter was referred to Chief of Police Scott, who immediately notified Stafford. Upon consultation with the State attorney he went before Magistrate J. M. Wolfe and swore out a warrant against Harding for “fraudulently and unlawfully kidnapping and carrying out of the state, one Ida Stafford, contrary to the statutes in such cases made and provided and against the peace and dig nity of the State.” The warrant was for warded to Governor Aycock tonight for endorsement and a requisition on the Governor of Virginia. In the meantime a second telegram was received saying the couple would leave Norfolk at 7 o'clock tonight. Chief Scott, when informed of this, telegraphed that a reward was offered by Stafford and sent an order cn Norfolk’s chief of police to detain the party is possible. The Virginian-Pilot published a column telegraphic story of the elopement this morning with the above result. It will be a big legal battle as Hard ing has about fifteen hundred dollars in cash an 1 Stafford is -tenulnrd. Later.—The parties were arrested at 8 o’clock while taking the boat for Bal timore. They denied their identity, claim ing to have come from Georgia. They were held half an hour when an exami nation of their trunks showed no mis take had been made. Norfolk telephone message from the chief to me saying the parties fit the published description exactly, and the lady’s condition is unmistakable. Greensboro’s chief of police left with the husband for Norfolk tonight at eleven. Later: I have just seen Mr. Stafford, who says he is going with the chief to Norfolk and get his wife or send Harding to the penitentiary. He does not seem vindictive but appears dazed with grief. I)R HENRY SMITH LECTURERS Spiaks cn “dreamt of Inventors" at Summer Schorl of Bouth (By the Associated Press.) Knoxville. Tenn., July 24.—The Sum mer School of the South at the Univer sity of Tennessee has but one week to continue until the six weeks’ course is completed. However, many men are ex pected during that time. This morning Henry Smith, of Davidson College, North Carolina, lectured on “Some Dreams of Inventors” and tonight he will speak on “The Illectucal Advantages of the Inven tions.” This afternoon President B. C. Greg ory lectured on “The Application of F-robels Philosophy to Common Schools.” There are now 1,922 teachers enrolled at the summer school. They represent all the Southern and many Northern States. AUSTIN GETS FIVE YEARS- He Gives Notico of an Appaal The Case Con sumed Two rays (Special to News and Observer.) Asheboro, N. C., vja Aberdeen, N. C., July 24.—The famous case of the State against J. F. Austin, an ex-preacher, charged with perjury consumed the time of the court two days. Elijah Moffitt and J. A. Spence, of Asheboro, were prose cuting and J. T. Brittain. Judge ByDuir and Judge Stevens defending. The jury returned a verdict of guilty, and the prisoner was sentenced to five years on the roads. The defendant gave notice of an appeal. The case was hotly contested from beginning to end. Two murder cases are continued until next term. BTRONO DENTPS THE CHARGE. Jewels Pawned bv Him at May Yohe's Bequest Tor Her Benefit. • (By the Associated Press.) London, July 24.—Putnam Bradlee Strong, of New York, arrived in London this afternoon with the St. Paul’s pas sengers and went to a private West End Hotel. Former Captain Strong, in con versation with a representative of the Associate Press this evening, said he had pawned about $8,400 worth of May Yohe's jewelry at her request and for her bene fit after they returned from Japan and that she had received the entire ceeds from him at the time the jewels wa re pawned. “I have never had one dollar of May Yohe’s money and no person knows it better than she,” he continued. “The money on which I am now travelling was received from the sale of my library and of tpis fact Maye’Yohe is also aware. I have done many foolish and most unwise things, but I have not been criminal. “As to my future movements, I do not think they should interest any one greatly, but I will say that Ipurpose living quietly and endeavoring to re deem my good name. “As to the story that I rifled her safety deposit box, that is absurd on its face. May Yohe never had any safety deposit box that I know of, and if she had one any banker could tell you that without her authority I could never have had access to it. I had one in my own name at the Knickerbocker Trust C om pany, which I suppose my family has opened as I gave them full authority to do so.” FIRE AT HAW BERN- Meadows’ Guano Factory and Other Buildings in Flames. (Special to News and Observer.) New Bern, N. C., July 24. At 8:30 o’clock tonight an alarm of fire was turned in from box 15. The guano fac tory of E. 11. and J. A. Meadows was in flames. There were also small fires at Ellis’ shingle mill and Baugh’s ware house. The firemen are fighting under difficulty. A general alarm has been turned in. It is a large fire and we can not estimate the loss yet. GAS PIPE FXPLODEB A Man Blown Through a Plats Glass Window Into the Street. (Special to News and Observer.) Fayetteville, N. C., July 24.—While examining a leaking gas pipe at the Ho tel Lafayette at 9 o’clock tonight, an ex plosion occurred from a match held by a negro porter, Dave Monroe, who was blown through a plate glass door into the street and fearfully burned and cut. Mr. Matthews, the manager, who was standing near, had his hair and mustache burned and his eyes injured. Strikers Bent to Jail. (By the Associated Press.) Parkersburg, W. Va., July 24.—Judge Jackson rendered his decision in the “Mother oJnes” contempt cases this morning. The conclusion reached was that all the defendants had violated the injunction and were guilty of contempt of court. Sentence in case of “Mother” Jones was postponed; also as in the cases of the four foreigners who cannot speak Enlish, Thomas Haggerty was given ninety days in jail and the other five defendants sixty days. Opinion supported the right of the courts to use injunction and the right of laborers to work when they wish to do so without interference from organized labor or any other source. Judge Jackson, in his decision, said: “What is an injunction Is it the ex ercise of an arbitrary power by the courts of this country, or is it a power that has been recognized from a very early date as one of the branches of ad ministrative justice? I answer this question by affirming that the ordinary use of the writ of injunction is to pre vent wrongs and injuries to persons and their property, or to reinstate the right of persons to their property when they have been deprived of it. It is the most , efficient, if not the only remedy, to stay irreparable injury and to punish those who disobey the order of a court grant ing the writ. “It is a mistaken idea to suppose that . the courts of this country abuse this writ. In my long experience on the bench I cannot recall a single occasion when at a court, whether Federal, in State, ever abused in what is known as strike questions. “I do not question the right of the em ployes of this company to quit work at any time they desire to do so, unless there is a contract relation between them and the employer, which shoujd control their right to quit. At the same time I do not recognize the right of an employ er to coerce the employes to continue their work when they desire to quit. “While I recognize the right for all laborers to combine for the purpose of protecting all their lawful rights, I do not recognize the right of laborers to conspire together to compel employes h ho are not dissatisfied with their work in the mines to lay down their picks and quit their work without a just or proper reason (thereof. merely to gratify a pro f( ssional set of ‘agitators, organizers and walking delegates' who roam all over the country as agents for some combination who are vampires that live and fatten on the honest labor of the coal miners of the country and who are busy-bodies, creat ing dissatisfaction among a clasa of peo ple who are quiet, well-disposed and who do not want to be disturbed by the unceasing agitation of this class of“peo ple. i he strong arm of the court of equity is invoked in this ease, not to suppress the right of the free speech, but to re strain and inhibit these defendants whose only purpose is to bring about f rikes, by trying to coerce people who are not dissatisfied with the terms of their employment, which results in in flicting injury and damage to their cm- I lovers la well as the employes. “The right of a citizen to labor for wages that he is satisfied with Is a right protected by law and is entitled to the same protection as free speech and should he better protested than the abuse of fiee speech in which the organizers and agitators indulge In trying to pro duce strikes.’,’ The court then referred to “Mother” Jones' speech near the Kinnlckkinnick mines, saying her utterances were the outgrowth of the sentiments of those who believe in communism and anarchy. “Tim evidence showed that “Mother” Jones had called the miners slaves; suid she did not care anything for injunctions, that it wag a duty to urge the men at work to lay down their tools, and advise the men to strike: that the judge was a hireling of the coal company and the coal operators were all robbers. She said in her speech to pay no attention lo Judge Jackson or to the court; but just make the miners lay down their tcols and come out. “It is true,” says the court, “that ‘Mother’ Jon°s denied some of the state ments of the witnesses, but her denial was not positive, but equivocal.” The court, after reciting other arts in violation of the injunction, concluded: “I reach the conclusion that the de fendants in this ease who served with notice- of this Injunction have violated it, and have treated with contempt the court. FOB BIVEBS AND HABBOBS Estimates For Improvements Submitted to the Chief of Engineers (Tty the Associated Press.) % Washington, July 24. —The Thief of Engineers today received several annual reports of officers In charge of river and harbor improvements, making estimates for the final year 1904. Lieut. Col. Chas. J. Allen submits an estimate of $40,000 for the Rappahannock River. Major James B. Quinn submits the fol lowing for the Norfolk. Va., district: Harbor at Norfolk and it’s approaches $240,731: improvement of Hampton Roads, Va., s2l. r >,000; Appamattox River, Va., $156,000; harbor at Cape Charles City, Va., $40,000. Captain J. C. Sandford submits the following for South Carolina: Waccama and Little Pee Dee Rivers, $25,500; Great Pee Dee River. $45,000; Winyah Bay, $1601000; Wateree and Congaree Rivers, $70,000; inland water way between Charleston harbor and op posite McClellansville, $50,000; Charles ton harbor 26-foot project, SIOO,OOO, and for 21-foot project $25,000. FBOM NORFOLK TO CUBA Stoannhip Lin* to be Established Marks Be ginning of Close Trade Relations (Tty the Associated Press.) Norfolk. Va.. July 24.—A steamship line between Norfolk and the Island of Cuba is the latest enterprise for thfS city and on August Ist a regular service will be established. The first schedule will be a monthly one and this will be made shorter as the business increases and warrants the doubling or even the tripling of the ser vice. A movement has been on foot for some time past to establish trade rela tion* between the Southern States and the Islands of Cuba and Porto Rico, and the Norfolk-Cuban line is the first to as sume real proportions. Col. Wm. Ijarnb, of Norfolk, is one of the promoters of the enterprise. Trappist Monastery Burned, (By the Associated Press.) Oka, Quebec, July 24.—The celebrated Monastery of the Trappists here was entirely destroyed by fire last night. Loss $300,000, insurance SIOO,OOO. There were ninety-seven monks in the monas tery, all of whom escaped. Ten thous and gallons of cider and 4,000 gallons of wine were destroyed. The fire, the origin of which is un known, destroyed every vestige of the magnificent building which required many years to build. Two monks, brother Soraphin, who was blind, and another who was suffering from consump tion, were rescued from the top floor by priests at the risk of their lives. It is feared they will die. Five Armed Convicts Located. (By the Associated Press.) Pine Bluff, Ark., July 24.—Five con victs who recently effected their escape from the State prison at England, Ark., have been located in a building on a plantation fifteen miles from this place. It id understood that the men are well supplied with arms and ammunition and are prepared to make a desperate fight before surrendering. Four o fthe con victs are negroes. Boyoott the American. (By the Associated Press.) Norfolk, Va.. July 24 —The National Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employes today endorsed the position of the local building and trades section, who are on strike; endorsed the label of the Inter national Cigar Makers Union and placed a fine of $lO on any delegate using the products of the American Tobacco Com pany. • The Lehigh Mining (oal. ' (ITy the Associated Press.) Tamaqua, Ja., July 24.—The' Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company today it sumed operations at it’s >Jo. 12 mine, one of the largest collieries in the region. The move of the company was unexpect ed. This is the first large colliery to resume. So tqr the striking men have made no effort to c lose down the place. It is believed other companies will now make an effort to nvine coal. Bisho A, Coke Smith, (Special to News and Observer.) Asheville, N. C., July 24.—An attempt is to be made by the Methodists of this city to induce Bishop A. Coke Smith to make his home in Asheville. Three cricket teams have been or ganized here and will play a series of games, beginning Saturday. Captain Spencer Cosby submits the following for the Mobile, Ala., district: Mobile harbor, $600,000; Black Warrior River from Tuscaloosa to Daniels’ Creek, $200,000; Warrior Tom and Bigbee Rivers, $520,000; Bigbee River from mouth to Demopolis, $280,000, Padcagoula River and Horn Island harbor, Miss., $400,000. 444444 >44 444 >4444r>4>" X THE WEATHER TO-DAY. 4 4 For Raleigh: | Fair; Warmer. | 444♦44444444♦♦♦♦♦♦4444 PRICE FIVE CE^TS. TWO LYNCHED AND THE RACES IN ARMS One Negro Shot to Death in Station Hou^c. ONE IS HANGED OUTSIDE Other Lynchings Are Exp acted to Follow Thesa. NEGROES ARE LEAVING ON EVERY TRAIN The Event Loading Up to These Tragedies Was the Murder of Chief Bud Wilmith. Womslsdorf is in a Ftrm ;nt. (By the Associated Press.) Philippi, W. Va., July 24.—Two negroes whose names are unknown, were lynched at Womelsdorf, near here last night by an angry mob numbering several hun dred And their mutilated bodies left on i the common. The first victim was shot and killed in the station house; the second was taken to the park, where he was hanged andu then riddled with bullets and cut to pieces. Both whites and negroes *are en raged and in arms. A conflict is hourly expected. The trouble grows out of murder of Chief Bud Wilmoth on July 23rd. Several other ar rests had been made and lynching seem ed imminent on every side. The dead blacks were caught near Bellington and were locked up there, officers fearing lynching if taken to Elkins. Negroes are leaving on every train. On the Diamond. National League. . At Chicago— R H E Chicago 0000 30 0 0 x—3 5 2 Cincinnati ..0 0200000 o—2 7 2 At St. Louis — R H E St. Louis 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1-2—5 9 0 Pittsburg 0 1020000 I—4 0 4 At Boston— R II E Boston 00000002 x—2 6 2 Philadelphia .. ..0 0000000 I—l1 —1 9 2 At New York— R H E New York .. ..0 0100100 o—20 —2 9 0 Brooklyn .. ..00000000 o—o 5 1 American League. At Boston — R H E Boston 10101010 x—4 12 4 St. Louis .. ..0 1000 00 0 2—3 3 0 At Washington— R II E Washington ...JIO2OOOIO x—3 8 2 Cleveland .. ..0 0000 10 0 o—l 7 2 Eastern League. / i ' Montreal, 4; Newark, 1. * Buffalo, 3; Providence, 1. Fire at Clarkton. (Special to News and Observer.) 1 Clarkton, N. C., July 24.—Monday night Messrs. N. A. Currie & Bro.’s gin house grist mill and saw mill were burned down, together with all the machinery, two mowing machines, a road wagon, some cotton seed, rye, etc. The fire was caused by lightning striking the gin-house. The office of the Express, just across the street, and the postoffice building, were badly scorched. Mr. J. C. Causey, of the Cane Fear Lumber Company, and a force of rail road men aided valiantly in fighting the flames. The loss is estimated at about $1,500. Death of an Kx-Confederate. (Special to News and Observer.) Tarboro, N. C., July 24, —Van Huron Sharpe, an old Confederate hero. Is dead at his home at Whitakers. He was a i native of Edgecombe county and was a I member of Company I, 75th North Car- I lina troops, of which he became first lieutenant. H. & B. BEER’S MARKET LETTER. , (Special to News and Observer.) 4 New Orleans, La., July 24. —Advices from Liverpool wore discouraging, conse quently our market in sympathy opened 6 to 10 points lower on near and about 4 points on the late months, subsequently* declined 13 to 16 additional points on the near months, 7 to 8 points on the late, owing to favorable crop reports and a bearish crop telegram from a leading New York operator. The net loss on the day was 18 points on July, 24 points on August, 11) points on September and 11 to li points on the other positions. Good rains were again reported in Texas and scattered showers generally fell through out the belt. Showers are predicted for Louisiana and the greater portion of Texas tonight and Friday, and elsewhere partly cloudy weather with occasional showers will prevail. The crop outlook oa the whole is favorable at present, but *he demand for spots and future weather conditions will regulate values. H. & B. BEER.