♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦*»+* ♦ THE WEATHER TODAY. ♦ ♦ For Morth Carolina: ♦ Ishowors Fair.; VOL. LII. NO. 140. Leads all Mor*' OaFolina Bailies in Mews and THE CAMPAIGN IS 0?P T BY DEMOCRATIC JKERS And Republican Sophistries Begin to Crumble in the White Blaze of Truth Thrown Upon Them. STRONG ADDRESSES ON ALL THE ISSUES Sledge Hammer Blows by' Kitchin and Womack- R IDICALS LEAVE A LEGACY OF DEFICITS Judge Womack Shews Conclusively That the Republicans Were Respon sible for Extravagant Expenditures With Which Pritchard Sought to Saddle the Democrats. Hon. Robert N. Page Delivers a Ringing Demo cratic Speech, and Gives Cold Com fort to the Republicans. State and National Policies Discussed in Mas terly Style by Judge R. W. Winston, Dan Hugh McLean. Claude Kitchia, Congressman Thomas and Many Others. In every section of North Carolina yesterday the campaign began with the presentation of Democratic truths by able and eloquent people. The messages they carried were of a State going for ward in every respect, rehabilitated and redeemed from a dark night of Republi can-Fusion misrule. The telegraphic reports tell of splendid and delighted audiences, and of great enthusiasm greeting the speakers. It was a field day for Democracy. KITCHIN AND POU AT SMITHFIBLD, Great Speeches to The People Made at John ston’s County Seal. (Special to the News and Observer.) Smithfield. N. C., Sept. 2.—The on slaught against the Republicans and their deluded allies, the “Independents,” was begun with .ledge-hammer blows here today when Congressman W. W. Kitchin and Hon. T. B. Womack deliv ered the sound doctrine of Democracy to a splendid gathering of the people. Congressman Kitchin’s speech was a masterly and convincing effort. He dis cussed trusts, imperialism and “Inde pendents.” He showed how the trusts were throttliug the people and fatten ing upon them and how they had grown so powerful as to dominate and rule the Republican party, now in charge of na tional affairs, and he told how neces sary it was that the Democrats, opposed to and fighting the trusts, should be put iu charge of the government. His discussion of Republican imperialism and all the disasters which were com ing in its train was convincing, and when he discussed the matter of In dependents” he laid on with liberal hand and showed how their course was dan gerous to the best interests of the coun try and demoralizing in all respects. John Atwater, who as an “Independent,’ seeks Congressional halls from this dis trict, was in the audience, and he got the benefit of a full broadside from the eloquent and forceful speaker. Mr. Kitchin was followed by Judge T. B. Womack, who made a strong and clear presentation of the financial con dition of the State as between Fusion and Democratic rule, and showed bow the Republican-Fusion crowd was re sponsible for deficits in the State Treasury. It was a crushing blow to the Republican claims made by Pritchard. (The full text of Judge Womack’s speech is given on page three of this paper.) JUDGE WINSTON AT GRAHAM- Fe Deals Blows for the Income Tax and Othe r Democratic Measures, (Special to News and Observer.) Graham, N. C., Sept. 2.—Ex-Judge R. W. Winston addressed a good audience in the court house here today at the noon adjournment of court. He reviewed na tional and State policies for the past quarter of a century and denounced the Republican Supreme Court for declaring the income tax unconstitutional. He made it very clear to his audience that the Democratic party had always been the friend of the common people and pre dicted that it would yet live to bury the Republican party as it had the Whig, the Federalist and the Know-Nothing parties. He arraigned the Republican party for not making concessions to the strug gling Cubans, and said that we had left them in as bad a fix as they were under the Spanish regime. He denounced the Republican party for fostering the trusts, and showed that Mr. Roosevelt and At torney General Knox were not sincere in there pretended fight against these corporations. He devoted much time to State affairs and contrasted Russell’s ad TheN ws and Ob.semi ministration with Aycock’s. He paid a high tribute to Governor Aycock and Joy ner for their greqt work in behalf of the school children of the State. His speech was well received and will do much to help bring about a great Defo cratlc victory in Alamance county this fall. Extracts from Judge Winston’s speech follow: Since 1572, when the Democratic party came into power in North Carolina, it has given us peace and law and order, strengthened our free schools and given to each a four manths’ term. Our Gov ernors. Senators, judges, Congressmen and legislators have been clean, honest and faithful public servants. We have had no strikes as in Pennsylvania, no riots as in Hay Market in Chicago, no feuds in Kentucky, and we have just and equitable laws. North Carolina has an income tax. Every cent above SI,OOO a man makes is taxed 1 per cent by the State. If I make $6,000 a year, I pay an income tax of SSO. So under Democratic administration in North Carolina the railroads have been taxed, and under a Governor a suit was brought, which took the Coast_ Line Railroad from the free list and put it upon the tax list, thereby putting thousands of dollars each year into the treasury, and distributing the burden of taxation. But the great thing this party has done, in much tribulation, hedged about by op position and bitter white enemies, is to preserve Anglo-Saxon civilization in North Carolina and in the South. You, men of Alamance, know what this means. You remember the day when the inso lence of negroes became unbearable. You met, you organized, you swore a bloody oath. The great Klu-Klux or ganization was born. It was decreed that North Carolina was to be a white State. You said that you would not run, and that you would not knuckle or bow the knee —no. not to a dark and an inferior race, neither to a tyrannical and over bearing political party—the Radical party—and your boldness, yes, the bold ness of men of Alamance and Orange and Caswell and Cleveland and Rutherford, excited the admiration and wonder of the civilized world. A people so bold in defeat had not appeared in history. And yet some men say that you ought to de sert this old, good Democratic, con servative party. The Republican party in North Caro lina has raised the specious cry of rings and extravagance. They charge ex travagance upon the Democratic , party in North Carolina, and when asked to specify they have not the nerve to say what they mean. It is not the increase of judges and the increase of the Gov ernor’s salary that they attack. They know that if it requires fourteen judges to transact the business of one and one half millions of people and one hundred and seventy-five millions of money in 1892, it takes sixteen to perform in 1902 the same duties by one and three-quarter millions of people and two hundred mil lions of wealth. They know that if Gov ernor Russell, who rarely’ left his home in Raleigh, was worth to the State $3,000 a year, Charles B. Aycock, the gallant, broad 1 , just educational Governor of this great commonwealth —spending his life, i his energy, his brain and his money for the little children of Dare and Cherokee, was and is worth the increase. It is not these things that they attack, though they so dqplare. It is really Confederate pensions and school appropriations that they attack. Do we not even hear Abe Middleton, the negro door-keeper of a Republican House, as he supplants a one legged soldier, declare that the Confed erate soldier has played out? Do we not recall the fact that when they had charge of our State affairs, they closed the doors of the University and that educa tion languished? There is indeed one item of expense to which the Republican leaders in North Carolina do really and seriously object. They object to the payment of money to defend the Democratic election officials in North Carolina, who were indicted in the Federal courts for violating the elec tion laws in 1890. These were the men who made possible the passage of our Constitutional Amendment. Had they not been fearless and intrepid, had they but shown for a moment the white feather, the hordes of negroes in North Carolina would have overrun the poles and driven the whites away, and the same old question of negro suffrage would be again in politics. If they really ac cepted in good faith the Constitutional Amendment, they would not now be quibbling and quarreling as to how it was passed. The Republican party was tried in 1868 and in 1870 and was found corrupt and incapable. It made a bid for votes in 1896 and again it wen. The people in large numbers voted with the Republi cans, they said that the crimes of 1868 were barred by the statute of limitations, and they tried the Republicans again. With what result let the laws of *95 and 97 declare. I will not undertake to re peat that dark and terrible Jiistory. You know it, and you will not again be fooled .iALEIGH. NORTH CAROLINA. WEDNESDAY MORNING. SEPTUM HER 3 1902. into voting with that party. When they took away the charters of Wilmington and Greenville, they traveled along the same way which cost Charles I. hi 3 crown and his head. Be of good cheer, my Democratic friends, the Old North State is steadfast of purpose and has some tar still left on her heel. On the ides of November next, we will roll up a majority of 50,000 votes for the entire ticket. On every side we see signs that the party is coming together. Study the men who will compose the next Legislature. They are wise and just and liberal, lhey will act with wisdom and justice, both by the rich and the poor; they will not oppress the railroads, nor any other corporation, and yet they will make all bear their equal burdens. They have the confidente of all classes. No panic can arise in any business when these men gather at Raleigh next winter. In conclusion, let us say a word as to our next national election. If Hill or Gorman or Olney or any other great Democratic leader, who rides no hobby, is named, and if Senator Simmons or some of our North Carolina Congress men or Capt. E. S. Barker, the wise, sagacious chairman of your Executive Committee, can have a hand in writing your national platform, we will assured ly win. While both parties are in a state of un rest, the Republican national party is the more torn of the two. In less thau three months Mr. Roosevelt, who is an honest and courageous man, will lack the enthusiastic support of Mr. Hauua and men of his kind, and a level headed can didate named by us will again fill the White House. Hon. Charles R Thomas Speaks. (Special to News and Observer.) Burgaw, N. C., Sept. 2—Congressman Charles R. Thomas, in his speech here yesterday said among other things: When the Republican party in tluir Greensboro platform referred to the ad ministration of the State government b> the Republicans and Populists as “clean,” they neutralized in great measure the effect of every other plank in their plat form. The people remember too well the flagrant misrule and scandals of that ad ministration. We accept most willingly their challenge and the people will never sustain them upon that issue. Their declaration in the Greensboro platform is: “If Senator Simmons and Governor Aycock will keep their prom ises to the people the negro question will be out of the realm of politics, etc.” The realm of politics, said Mrr. Thomas, is a very wide realm, and this declaration of the Republican platform leaves the Republican leaders the loop hole and opportunity to do as they please. The purpose is to secure a division of the white vote if possible, by this am biguous platform declaration. Until we are sure of our position, it is the duty of white men and Democrats to stand together for the protection of the amendment and for good government. He showed the record of the Democratic party in North Carolina since Fusion rule; the additional expenditures charged up to us by our opponents as reckless extravagance were for education, charity, the Confederate soldier. We have given the children of the State a four months' school; we have housed the insane in the jails in asylums, where they can have the benefit of God's air and sun light; we have spent for all these worthy objects but little more than the Repub lican party in Congress has appropriated 4n North Carolina annually to pension deserters from the Confederate army. The whole additional tax for all these ob jects imposed by the Democratic party would be thirty cents for each one of our population. How insignificant this small amount compared with the objects of the appropriation. Will they charge us with “extravagance” when, if we borrowed to meet the needs of the State two hundred thousand dollars they left a deficiency of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, selling the, State’s bonds accumulated for the sinking fund and running the penitentiary behind one hundred and ten thousand dollars. The issues of the campaign are all embodied in the State Democratic platform. In the State they are protection of the amendment and good government to which the Dem ocratic party pledges itself in its State platform. In national politics the issues are by common consent in North Carolina and the nation, tariff reform, trusts and the foreign policy of the Republican party, which is drifting us toward the British colonial system. Never before has the Republican party drifted so far in the direction of abso lute surrender to special interests and the strong centralized government. It regards the Constitution as a piece of india rubber to be .stretched to suit Re publican ideas and theories. When it suits them it is to be construed to per mit bounties and robbery of the Ameri can taxpayers and consumers by the highest kind of tariff, so that the trusts may flourish; so that one half of the Republic shall be free States and Terri tories £nd citizens and the other part island possessions and colonists. Mrr. Thomas discussed tariff reform, showing that goods manufactured by the trusts and highly protected manufactur ing interests are sold from 25 to 40. in some instances one hundred per cent cheaper in foreign markets, than to the American consumer and taxpayer. Referring to the trusts, Mr. Thomas showed the insincerity of the Republican party on this great question by. First— The growth of the trusts under the Ding ley law and the McKinley and Roosevelt administrations. Second —The surrender to the Sugar trust when the Cuban re ciprocity bill was before Congress last winter. Third—Failure and the refusal of the Republican party to pass any anti-trust law or to strengthen the Sher man law of 1890. , He then took up the foreign policy of the Republican party, and discussed fully POCAHONTAS MIKES FIRED BY STRIKERS And Guards and Miners Ex change Volleys. APPEALS FOR TROOPS Governor* of Both the Virginias Ex pected to Respond. THE RABY MINE IS STILL BURNING The Fire is Now Believed, How ver to be Un der Control. All the Entranc* sto the Mine Are Heavily Guarded. (By the Associated Press.) Brarnwell. W. Va., Sept. 2. —The great mines of the Pocahontas Collieries Com pany are on fire. Strikers are said to have applied the torch to various portions of the mine near the west entrance, which is on the Virginia side and the mine began burning furiously. The guards and strikers fired volley af ter volley at each other. The Governor of Virginia has been appealed to to send troops to Pocahontas at once. At 2 o’clock this afternoon officials of the Pocahontas Coal Colliery Company claim that the fire in their leading mine is practically under control and they ap prehend but little more damage. Three strikers afe reported injured, the result of the conflict with tb guards soon after the fire was discovered. The mine in wT*)-’ the fire is in prog ress is • • Baby mine and is the sai tich twenty miners and a m - :iuls lost their lives several md the same where two hu i u■ ' lost their lives a dozen } ' It is the largest on the lie f Norfolk and Western and ha m es. Every entrance is now ’ • • guarded. Mine offi cials e ernors of both Vir ginia and \ inia to comply with their r ques* ops. Roam! V September 2. —In- formal t eh here today to the effect on S. rday night striking miners * he ant of the Russell Creek. Company, near Virginia City, in Wise county. The tipple, which was a very large building, wac totally destroyed, and the engine house and a number of other buildings were burned to the ground. A number of loaded coal cars were also burned. So far as could be learned, no arrests have yet been made, and there is no clue as to who fired the plant. ♦ ♦ its injustice and its dangers to the Re public; the dangers to the South in the development of agricultural countries producing the South's crops, cotton, sugar and tobacco with cheap labor. He show ed the value of the trade of the Philip pines was greatly exaggerated and the salaries alone paid to maintain our gov ernment there would approximate the present trade, if we secured it all. The policy was costing us three hundred mil lions annually and many human lives. McLEAN AWAKES ENTHUiIASM- Contrast Between Republican and Democratic Management of State Affairs (Special to News and Observer.) Salisburry, N. C., Sept. 2. —Hon. Dau Hugh McLean spoke here today to a good crowd. His speech was one of the most effective ever heard in Salisbury and en thused to the highest pitch the unterrl fied Democracy of Rowan. Mr. McLean contrasted the Republican and Demo cratic management of the State affairs, showing that the Republicans were in competent, while Democrats were always capable and patriotic in their adminis trations. The * independent movement was scored as a subterfuge on the part ■ of Republicans to divide the Democrats. The speech throughout was one of earnest, convincing, logic and left a pro found impression. Mrr. McLean has been invited to deliver two more speeches in Rowan during the campaign. WEBB BPEAKI AT BAKEBBVILLE. “Veracious Figures Explode Boastod Eepub lican Prosperity,” He Declares. (Special to News and Observer ) Bakorsville, N. C., Sept. 2.—The De mocracy of Mitchell was well represented here today, and the clear, forceful ad dress of Hon. E. Y. Webb as he expounded the doctrines of Democracy and con trasted them with those of Republicanism was heard with closest and greeted with round after round of ap plause. After an able, beautifully worded and eloquent defense of the expenditures of the Legislature of 1901, and a pointed arraignment of the inconsistencies of the Republican party in criticizing those epeuditures, Mr. Webb passed to the question of “Republican Prospertiy,” and in this connection, said: “Veracious figures explode boasted Republican prosperity. The full dinner pail is not so full as it once was. A year’s supplies for a single individual cost $77.78 on the first of January, 1896, and the same articles purchased Jan uary Ist, 1900, four years later, cost $101.56, or an increase in the cost of living of 26 per cent. A man working for SI.OO per day had to work 77% days for this year’s supplies in 1896, and in 1900, when he received SI.OB per day, he had to toil 94 days for the very same bill of supplies. A day’s work meas ured by the cost of tlie necessaries of life today, is cheaper than at any time Bince the first day of July, 1896. A bill of supplies including the necessaries of life costing $60.00 in 1897, cost in 1901 $76.80, which is aji increase to the con sumer of 28 per cent. Paid forwn wheat in 1897 it required 75 bushels, wmen in 1901 it required 105 bushels to pay the bill. Paid for in cotton in 1897, it required 839 pounds, while in 1901 it required 895 pounds-” Coming to the subject of trusts, Mr. Webb said: “The chief cause for the increase in the cost of living is the tariff-fostered trusts. These trusts sell almost every article which we eat and wear, and al most every farm implement cheaper in foreign countries than to our own peo ple, denying us the right to buy as cheaply as Arabs, heathens and aliens. “The Republicans denounced trusts in their platform, but let us see their sin cerity on this vital question. In the Fifty-sixth Congress, they pigeon-holed an anti-trust bill rather than let it come to a vote. In the last Congress the Sen ate killed an anti-trust amendment by a strictly party vote, the Democrats vot ing for the amendment and the Repub licans against it. This amendment too was in accordance with a recommenda tion of the President in his message to Congress.” “If when Adam was created the Al mighty had given him a salary of $22,- 000 a year, and Adam had been so frugal as not to spend one cent of his income, these six thousand years of salary would .not make him worth as much as this’steel trust has made off the people in oue short twelve months— sl4o,ooo,ooo.” “A few months ago one man conclud ed to raise the price of beef, and upon his assessment of the American people, millions fell - into his coffers, while in the shadow of this greas trust, starva tion and despair stalked among the peo ple. and fought with increasing keen ness ‘against the citadels of human life.’ This robbery flourished in the city of Washington, in the face of an anti-trust law, while a Republican President and Attorney-General sat quietly by, and watched the spoliation go on. never suggesting to a Republi can Congress, then in session, that this infamy could be stopped at once by abolishing the tariff on the products which the beer trust controlled.” The Republican Protective Tariff was next shown up in its true colors, in part as follows: “The most prolific breeder of these vampire combiifations is the Republi can Protective Tariff. We demand that every trust controlled article shall be put upon the free list- This will do more to dissolve trusts than all the civil suits that can be brought, but the Re publican party refuses to reduce the tariff on such articles and hence we must suffer and be patient. A protective i tariff is an unconstitutional tax, bur- I dening every citizen and enriching only a few. It restrains every man from | buying in markets to his best advan tages and compels him to purchase 1 where prices are highest.” ) ‘‘Our Southern farmers are compelled j to sell their cotton in foreign markets, | where they compete with the world. Our I cotton manufacturers sell their product i in China and other foreign countries, and therefore come in competition with , every manufacturing nation of the earth: but most of the articles which we buy from Northern manufacturers and trusts are on the protected list, which enables them to fix prices for us at whatever figures their greed may dictate or their conscience permit. The South's commercial existence depends upon free and open markets, for both our raw material and our cotton manu factures.” The Philippine question was touched upon in a vigorous, virile way: “Last February, the Republican party in the United States Senate voted against a resolution declaring our op -1 position to holding the Philippine Islands permanently or to annexing them as a part of our country, which leaves the policy of the Republican party in the . Philippines a matter of open conjecture. Their policy now seems to be to hold them indefinitely as conquered prov j inces, and to overrun them with carpet baggers of the civil war type. The I Democratic party demands that as soon 1 as a stable government is established ' there, we shall take our hands off the islands and bid them God’s speed, re serving to ourselves proper and ample coaling stations, and commercial treaty relations. “From a financial point of view, holding these islands is and will be a colossal failure. Already they have cost us more than a half million dol lars, not to speak of the pensions for soldiers who have lost their health, and wives who have lost their husbands in the islands. To hold them, would cost in the future, as much as fifty million dollars annually, and we would not re | ceive in return more thau $300,000. It ; is not necessary to hold them to obtain | markets, although this argument is ' made by Republican speakers for the purpose of misleading the unwary manufacturer, and enlisting his sym pathies on the side of Republican policies. “Cotton is cheaply and easily raised over there, and to hold the islands per manently would mean their exploitation by enterprising Americans and syndi cates, and very soon cotton mills would spring up all over the island, operated by labor which can live in luxury on 20 cents per day, and very soon these enterprises would become our dangerous rivals in the sale of cotton manufac tures to China, for Hong Kong is only 600 miles from the Philippines, while we are 7,000 miles away.” Mr. Webb concluded as follows: “The record of the Republican party is one of crime and corruption, from the theft of a President's office to the em balmed beef scandal, the stealings of Rathborne and Neely to the court mar tials in Manila, all the way; but the history of the Democratic party is one of glory and honor, and her future mis sion is even grander to preserve our Re public, protect our people and stand for human liberty everywhere.” HON. J, M GUDGEE SPEAKS A Clean, Forceful Presentation of Doctrines and Issues (Special to the News and Observer.) Robbinsville, N. C., Sept. 2. —There was a great outpouring of people at this place to hear the address of Hon. J. M. Gudger, Jr. His speeeh was powerful, pointed and full of the earnestness that is convincing. He did not juggle with words but went directly to the root of things, showing so plainly the results of Republican-Fusion misrule on the one hand and of Democratic manage ment on the other that no one could possibly need clearer light upon these matters. \ Mr. Gudger said in part: In 1868 the Re publican party had complete control in every department of the State govern ment. Incompetency and corruption were the crowning characteristics of the par ty’s history, and no man in this day will attempt to defend the administration from ’6S to ’7O. The Democratic party has administered the State’s affairs for a quarter of a century, during Which time hundreds of miles of railroads have been built, pub lic institutions have been enlarged and new ones established, and in all this long period not a single instance of corruption can be cited. In 1900 a great crisis in the history of the State had been reached. The ten dency of the negro to demand his so called “rights” at elections endangered one-third of the counties of this great State and negro domination was immi nent. The Democratic party bravely ad vocated an amendment to the constitu tion which eliminated this perilous dan ger, and the people of North Carolina, adopted this amendment by an over whelming majority. The school houses dotted all over the State with thousands of children gather ing together on the hillsides and in the valleys are unmistakable evidences of Democ- atic rule. The whistle of the steam engines and the hum of the fac tories heard everywhere speak in clarion notes of Democratic prosperity. The de velopment and growth in every part of ill is State is an assurance that the peo ple have implicit confidence in the wis dom and integrity of the Democratic party. The Democratic party stands for a clean, upright judiciary, for the protec tion and care of the unfortunate insane, for the education of the deaf and dumb and blind of the State, for a longer school term than has ever beer, known in the history of the State, for the main tenance of the unfortunate and decrepit! Confederate soldier, for the protection of the weak against the strong, for justice to all mankind. The Republican leaders are attempting to prejudice the people against the Demo cratic administration by drawing a com parison of Republican-Fusion rule —with that of Democratic rule—in the way of expenditures. They fail to tell the peo ple that they had a deficit of two hun dred an! fifty thousand dollars in the State Treasury, and that they left the penitentiary in debt one hundred and ten thousand dollars. The Democratic party has appropriated in three years for school purposes $600,000. $140,000 for the insane and $200,000 for the disabled Confederate soldiers in excess of the appropriations theretofore made. Mr. Gudg?r then touched upon national issues, the imperialistic policy of the administration in the Philippines; the vast and steadily growing power of trusts and combinations enriching the few and pauperizing the many and threatening the very foundations of our system f government; the reckless and extravagant appropriations made by the Republican Congress. He said in con clusion: "Let the people who believe in a pru dent, eoononiical adminstration cf our National affairs respond at the ballot box in November. “Let the declaration be heralded to every portion of this broad land that we must not, and will not. have any more billion dollar Congresses.” HENDEB3ON AT LiNCOLNTON. The Able Speaker Discusses Fully The Issues of The Campaign (Special to the News and Observer.) Lincolnton, N. C., Sept. 2.—There was a great gathering of the true and tried Democracy of Lincolnton county hero today, when Hon. John S. Henderson, of Salisbuy, opened the campaign at this place. The immense crowd was ap preciative and enthusiastic* and was most orderly and well behaved. In his admirable speech Mr. Hender son covered a wide *cope, embracing in his remarks the following subjects: Cuban Reciprocity, the Philippine Prob lem, Subsidies and Trusts and the State Government, including the educa tion of the children of the State, pen sions to Confederate soldiers and pro visions for the insane, and the deaf, dumb and blind. He attacked the reck less, extravagance of the Republican Congress, and justified the expenditure of $453,000 by the Democratic State ad ministration for the education of the masses and the pensioning of Confeder ate soldiers. “Appropriations for this cause.” he said, “must not be reduced, but be con tinuer, and if possible increased wlth (Continued on Second Page.) MM The sional Campaign ! THE VOLUMEJUSnfIHp | Equal Rights to All, Special® leges to None. THIS SLOGAN EMBLAZONS TITLE PM s It is Devoted Chit fly to a Discussion of tH Trusts arid imperialism, But There is l| No Lack of Other Strong Matter. ; (By the Associated Preai.) » Washington, D. €., Sept. 2.—The Demo cratic Congressional Campaign Book which made its appearance today is a volume of 384 pages, the major portion W of which is devoted to the discussion of ■ imperialism and trusts, 240 pages being devoted to these two topics, 115 to the 1 former and 125 to the latter. Upon the title page is the Democratic slogan, “Equal rights to all, special privileges to none.” The volume opens with the plat form cf 1900 and the resolutions adopted by the Democratic members of the House at their conference, June 19, arraigning the Republican party for failure to give relief to Cuba and to enact proper anti trust legislation. Then follows an ex tended criticism of the Republican Cam paign Book, many statements contained therein being challenged as to accuracy, especially those dealing with the trust question. Under the head of Imperialism there is a general review of the Philippine policy under the following heads: “Attempts to divert the issue, rartisan censorship, War Department policy of suppression, farcical investiga tions, War Department Investigation and that of Senate contrasted, a court mar tial stopped because it would prove too much, court martial trials a farce, cruelty committed and encouraged, crimes of war and not of soldiers, American expansion, versus Roman imperialism, colonialism and trade, statistics against colonialism. Keep American capital at home, the bur dens of militarism, Philippine venture beginning of general policy of colonial ism, our war-like President, Philippines a source of weakness, shall we spend peo ple's taxes at home or in distant lands, a government for and spoliation, statehood for the Philippines.” This review is succeeded by chapters on General Miles and the administration, disgraceful record of the military au thorities at both ends of the line in the Gardener case, the Smith court mar tial. torture as a policy, review of evi dence involving the War Department and certain army officers in the Philippines in violation of the laws of war, the sys tem, not the individual to blame, De mocracy the remedy for barbarities, fun damental objections to the Philippine Government Act, slavery and polygamy under the protection of the flag, and vice and loathome disease in the Philippines. The chapters on the tariff and trusts are crowded with statistics and figures, much attention being devoted to an at tempt to show that protected trusts and manufacturers get the benefit of all the tariff in our markets and sell in foreign markets at greatly reduced prices. Fac similes of export price lists are given and comparisons are made with domestic prices of like articles. A number of big trusts are discussed in detail to shew (that they sell their products abroad much cheaper than at home and the whole question is summarized in a chanter on the evils of protected trusts, which Is subdivided as follows: 1. Political corruption. 2. Watered stock. 3 Concealment of export prices. 4. Juggled and manufactured statistics! The records of the two parlies on the trust question are contrasted. generally is denounced as a “humbug.” The remainder of the volume is devo ted to a variety of subjects, including government by injunction, the Ship Sub sidy Bill, Chinese Exclusion, Foreign Af fairs and the Schley caße. ASHEVILLE POSTOFFICK ROBFEt). The Safe Flown Open With Nitro Glycerine- The Officials Investigating. (Special to News and Observer.) Asheville, N. C., Sept. 2.—Experienced safe crackers entered the postoffice here last night, and blew open the safe nitro glycerine, securing one hundred and W thirty dollars in cash and seven hundred in stamps. The officials are working oa J < lews, which give indications of results. I which will solve the robberies in thin M section for the past three years. ; Southern League. Atlanta, 0; Memphis, 8. MBk Birmingham, 0; Little Rock. 3. Chattanooga, 3; New Orleans. 4. Nashville, 4; Shreveport, 3. Eastern League. JJHI Worcester, 6; Providence, 4. Buffalo. 9; Montreal, 6. j ersey City, 13: Newark, 0. ;j Toronto. 17; Rochester, 3. ' (Second game)—Toronto, 7; Roches ter, 4. t