k i n , ay r vr v ' - f z mm - . : , th :i 3 A REPUBLICAN, NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING OF AMERICAN HOMES AND AMERICAN INDUSTRIES. VOL. I. BURLINGTON, N. C.; FEBRUARY 24, 1909. NO. 41 WASHINGTON LETTER; rr.vu our lieffular Cofrespdndent. Wa.-hi ngton, Feb. 'l9.--Siuce ' 1 laft wrote Presidentelect -Taftaml the -HstingtiisbetJ etireers' yhti ae-: companied him to Panama Irsre re tnnu'd and made their report and the I'resiuent in turn pas vseufc a me,sage 10 . wDnriptae Torth ;and S:uth America is be ioforuiation that has already-been UmiVorp nl mn n 5,nfliv" 2iveu that the lock type of canal is the only one approved Dy tne en gineers and the President-elect who, after a very carfefuV, study 'of the ground have expied. their pre ference for this type rather than for the sea level canal. The Presi dent has sent a special -message 4to Congress on the subject in : which he characterizes further advocacy of the less desirable and more expen sive sea level canal a& "foolish." The President-elect has made it known that he will after the inau guration, call Congress' in special session to be assembled on March the 15th. The apparently petty complica tions standing in the way of Sena tor Knox of Pennsylvania, to -his acceptance of the highest cabinet of fice under the new president have been swept away by special enact ment of Congress and there now ap pears to be no doubt that he will be the Secretary of State under the new administration. The President-elect has returned to his Cincinnati home, while Mrs. Taft, it is understood, is adding to her wardrobe, in New York. Only about ten legislative days and nights remain for th;s Con gress and there are a number of im portant appropriation bills not yet enacted. There has been filibustering in the jSenate and threats of filibust ering in the House. The Housa is restless and even recalcitrant under the despotism pf Speaker Cannon. There is much talk among the in surgents and mutterings of revolts from both Democrats and Republi cans. The same condition prevails in the Se'nafe, where Senator La Follette of Wisconsin is effectively protesting against the autoacy of Aklrieh, Hale, Penrose and Galling er. During the week he has suc cessfully resisted Senator Hale, who attempted the immediate passage of the naval appropriation bill; and al so St-nat.jr Penrose, who attempted t rush the Post Office bill through without debate. Mr. La Follette began with arguments against the general policy of withholding ap propriation bills until it was too late for other senators to inquire in to them. This led Senator Penrose of Pennsylvania to ask, with sar casm, if the Senate had to be com pelled to listen to another Chatau qua lecture. Mr. La Follette, un- I mindful of the interruption, contin- "cu uu uis retnarKs aua mtimarea that Penrose had not given enough attention to the preparation of the Post Office budget and that the measure had not been properly pre pared. Then Mr. Penrose arose in wrath and in a few moments there was a sensation, recognized both on the Senate floor aud in the galleries. His arraignment was bitter and he concluded it with the remark that Mr. La Follette's arguments "might better be made by a vender of pat ent medicines, from the tail end of a cart in some obscure village in sin than by a Senator of the Lnited States." It became evident yesterday that tie plans for the conservation of the natural resources of the country had Passed the exnerimpnta.1 stocw nnrl have become continental instsad of national, inasmuch as Canada and Mexico are giving enthusiastic co operation to the great enterprise. Th ese facts became annarpnt in the address of President Roosevelt this week in the East Room of the VK; u' i i "lie .nouse auu uie sentiment was strengthened later in the dav in tbp State Department by speeches made representatives from other gov ernments. In these speeches, it was recognized that international streams a re affected by cutting forests on either side of the boundary and that consrvation plans, to be effective, must be international. Mr riepbum ot Iowa, one ot AN INTERNATIONAL RAILWAY, Hinton Rowan Helper's Dream May Yet Be Realized. : '!". . '7', - v . ' , J. '" Troy (X. Y.J 'Times.-'V , The -dream .of an international and intercontinental railway system by which it will be ; possible to pass readily toand trom remote points comihg'more and more an actuality. This is suggested by the announce ment that within a vert short time passengers may take a drawing-room carxat Portland or Seattle and re main therein until the City of Mex ico is reached, the distance traveled being 3,500 miles. The arrangement-being the outgrowth of recent developments along the Pacific Coast of the United States and in ft) exico. The trip mentioned, when one may go without change ot cars, will be through san Francisco, Los Angeles, Mazatlan, and Guadalajara, and is the result of the construction of new and connecting lines on both sides of the international border. There has been notable expansion in Mex ico, which is becoming gridironed with steel rails and is finding extra ordinary industrial and commercial development as a consequence. Such connections as are mention ed permit travel by rail not only in the manner mentioned, but to and from other sections of the- United States. Passengers from this part of ihe country, .as well as from the Pacific Coast, can go to Mexico with out chnge of cars, if railroad man agers choose so to arrange matters. And the roads in Mexico extending southward are reaching out to those coming up from the other direction. South America has many systems or parts of systems, the logical and in evitable destiny of which is to form part of a whole, by which that re gion will i e ioined to Central and North America. Wonderful things are ging on in that quarter, and many persons now living may see materalized the project suggested more than forty years ago by that then misunderstood genius, Hinton Rowan Helper, who outlined the ''three Americas railway," aud wrote vigorously and earnestly in support of an idea that was ridiculed by con temporaries, but is being carried out by his successors. Mr. Helper, although a Southern er 'born and bred, also urged the abolition ot slavery on economic grounds, and used a gifted pen in expression of his view. Thus do the visionaries of one period become iamous as true prophsts iu another. Ma. FonvihVs Land Sale. Saturday February 27th, 1909, The Piedmont Trust Co.j agent for L. J. Fonville, will sell 30 lots near the colored graded school. This sale will be conducted for col ored people and will enable any thrifty colored man to secure a home on reasonable terms. So far as we know this is the first sale of real estate conducted foi colored people, but white men are invited to attend and invest for the benefit of the colored people. The sale will hpcrin nt one o clock. lerms ot sale, $10.00 down, balance on easy payments. ftlissouri thanks the trust for its partnership offers, but she dosn't care to go into the oil business. the most capable and influential members of the loer house, attack ed the House rules this week and referring to a plank in the last na tional Democratic platform denounc ing the rules of the Hous as at present enforced, said: "1 am one of those who would condemn the ten commandments if by some ac cident the Democratic party should adopt them. For fifty years it has been my duty to criticize the Demo cratic party, but this particular plank is consoling: to my soul." Af- ter Colonel Hepburn's speech, Speaker Cannon agreed, to make a concession i the House insurgents by setting apart a day each week for the consideration of bills on the calendar. This is one of the prin cipal priveleees demanded by the : insurgents. CONGRESS MEETS . Piiflrtifrii Taft Announces Date of Extra Ses sionTariff Bill Will be Long l?irie Getting Through; Both: of ?the Houses. Washington, Feb. 17. Mr. Taft will summon the Sixty-first Congress in extra session on March 15. Yesterday he conferred with Senator Aldrich, and at his- request the latter saw Speaker Cannon this morning to ascertain J the date that would be most acceptable to both Houses. They agreed upon March 15. Mr. Taft was notified early this morning and immediately re plied that that date would suit him perfectly. Today in the House of Representatives, Mr. Payne, chair man of the Ways and Means Com mittee, announced the date. When the next Congress meets the Ways and Means Committee will have its tariff bill ready to re port to the House. In the House the program is to put the bill through as promptly as ossible,but to allow ample opportunity to every member to discuss the bill in gener al, or those features in which he is locally interested. It is hoped that the bill can be sent to the Senate by the middle of April. When the bill will pass the JSennte no one will guess. Alter it passes tne oenate it will remain in conference probab ly a month longer, so that no one here believes the tariff bill will be i tin . fjji. . a law mucn oeiore . tne miaaie or the summer. That it will be an honest revis ion, of the tariff no one doubts. Mr. Taft has made it plain both to Sen ator Aldrich and Speaker Cannon that he is thoroughly determined to sign only a bill which reaily revises the tariff1. It will be well for busi ness men to recollect. that in its fin al form the bill will prepared in the Senate. Too much importance must not be attached to the bill which Chairman Payne will intro- 1 T I 1 i auce. maeeu it is not. saying too ranch that the Payne bill will b largely tentative, with ample allow ance for the trades aud the conces sions that must ,be made in rates, both upward and downward to get the bill first through the House and then through the Seuate. Mr. Taft was here until 4 o clock this afternoon when he left for Cin- -w 1 cinnati. xUirly this morning he re ceived Senators Aldrich and Hale, the Senate leaders, and Speaker Can non, of the House of Representa tives. There was some discussion between the gentlemen as to wheth er the extra session should be limit ed to the sole enactment of the new tariff law or whether other legisla tion should be permitted. Mr. Taft and Speaker Cannon emphatically declared themselves in favor of per mitting only the tariff bill to come up for action, but Senators Aldrich aud Hale pointed ont that other legislation might be inevitable. They pointed out that with ouJy 15 days of this session remaining a number of Republican eenators wera filibustering against appropriation bills; that there still remain 10 oth er appropriation bills to be consid ered in the Senate, so that if. the present insurrection in the Senate continues there was every probabil ity that the sessiou would adjourn with less than one half of the indis pensable appropriation bills passed. Mr. Taft eonceded that in such an event it would, of course, be peces sary co consider the appropriation hills at the extra session as well as the tariff bill. The census bill too, must be passed at the extra session. There is so much trouble in Con- cress about what sort of conveyance shall be supplied President Taft, it is surprising someone has not pro posed the elephant. Senator Tillman gays he will "keep right after the President." This means, of course the .Presi dent will haVe to maintain a sharp lookout both fore and aft while in Africa. FLEET ANCHORS AT STARTING PLACE, The Great American Fleet Returns to Hampton Roads and is Re viewed ty President and Thousands of Visitors. Hampton Roads, Va., Feb., 22. This is a great day for the aavy aud the American people. Historic Hampton Roads has not witnessed such an event since the naval fight nearly half a century ago between the Monitor and the Merrimac. When the globe-circling battleship fleet cast anchor today in the im- mense watery triangle, bounded by Newport News, Norfolk and the gray old walls of Fortress Monroe, there ended one of the most specta cular and successful cruises in the history of the world. The fleet an chored after the review at the place where it started more than a year ago, ana it is home in almost as good condition as when it began its 42,000 mile journey, more than twice the distance ever sailed by any fleet in the history of the world. For a week the cities bounding Hampton Roads hav been "fleet mad" and the culmination of the enthusiasm and excitement was reached this morning when the great battleships steamed majestic ally into the Roads with the flagship Connecticut leading the procession and Admiral Sperryon the bridge. The theatre for this gigantic dra ma was in keeping with the actors and the date, Washington's birth day, is singularly appropriate. Ev erything in the great pageant oc cured exactly according to prear- rangement. Condenced Facts About the Trip Around World. Norfolk, Va., Feb., 22. Ships making up the fleet: Connecticut, flagship; Kansas, Louisana, Ver mont, Virginia, Georgia, New Jer sey, Rhode Island, Alabama, Illi nois, Kearsarge, Kentucky, Ooio, Maine, Minnesota and Missouri The scout cruiser Yankton also ac companied the fleet from port k port in advance, Commanders of the fleet: When the sixteen machines of naval war fare moved out of Hampton Roads on December 16, 1907 it was com manded by Admiral Robley D Ev ans. On May 9, 1904, Rear Ad miral Thomas succeeded Admiral Evans, who was badly crippled with rheumatism and who retired while the fleet was in Californian waters. Admiral Thomas held sway ver the fleet just six days. Then he was succeeded by Admiral bperry, who brought the fleet home. Distance made by the fleet: 1 he fleet in its tour steamed 40,000' miles. The route from port to port was from Hamptou Roads to Trin- dad to Rio Janeiro, to Port Arenas, to Callao, to Mgdalena Bay, to Al bauy, to Manila, to Yokohoma, to Honolulu, t Manila, to Singapore, to Columbia, to Suez, to Gibraltar, and thence to Hampton Roads. The battleship line tormation to day is ten miles long. The fleet has been manned by 12,000 jackies. On its cruise the fleet used 365, 000 tons of coal. The cost of coaling ,o;n the long trip is $2,600,000. The cost tor tood tor the crew has been' $200,000. The fleet is being welcomed to day with naval ceremonies on a larger scale than ever attempted in the Uuited States before. A wel coming fleet steamed out to sea and met the fleet, consistiug ot thfe toi lowing warships: Maine, Alabama, Mississippi, and New Hampshire and the cruisers Montana, North Carolina, Salem, Chester and Bir mingham. The trip was a pleasant one and marred by very few unpleasant in cidents. Upon the trip the officer ed son of Admiral Evans was court-martialed, at Gibraltar Cap tain Qualtrpugh, of the Georgia, was court-martiiled for, drunken- PANAMA CANAL PLANS Gatun Dam ho More Impracticable 1 Than one at Gamboa. New York Tribune. , There will be no change in the plan of the Panama Canal. It will be completed according to the lock plan, within six years, and possibly in less time. The total cost, includ ing the original purchase of the French title and the lease of the Ca nal Zone, will be considerably un der $400,000,000. The' , cost of a sea-level canal would.be something over 50 per cent more than the lock type. The engineering difficulties in the way of a sea-level canal, chief of which would be the construction of a dam 170 feet high, to control the Charges River, as " opposed to the Gatun Dam, which will be only 85 teet high, will, in the opinion of all who have seriously investigated conditions in the Canal Zone, pre vent any chauge from the lock plan. These facts and various oth ers became known to a high official of the administration here. The consulting engineers declined to talk for publication, saying that, as they wee busily engaged in com pleting their report for the Presi dent, it vould not be proper for them to make a preliminary report through the press. The. engineers discussed the situation, however, with their superiors, although the discussion was informal. All the engineers agree with regard to the general plan of the canal, and it is doubtful if their report will contain a single recommendation iu favor ol the sea-level type. The engineers regard as almost too obvious for explanation the proposition that the Charges Dam, which would be made necessary by the adoption of the sea-level plan, would be as much more difficult to construct with safety as the propor tion of 170 to 85, although that no vice may need to be reminded that only the height of a body of water controls the pressure of the dam with which it is sought to restrain it, and the pressure on the Gatun Dam, despite the fact that it consti tutes thp. retaining wall of a lake 23 miles long, will be no greater than if the lake were only a mile' or half a mile long. The result is that the pressure against the Gatun dam would be 5,312.5 pounds a lineal square foot, as against the pressure on the Charges dam, which would be made necessary by a sea-level ca nal, of 10,625 pounds a lineal foot. The argument that an earthquake may destroy the Gatun dam or oth er works of the lock type, while not regarded as particularly forceful by tfce engineers, becomes, it is pointed out by them, of increased force when applied to a sea-level canal which would involve the construction ot a masonry dam 170 feet high. Death of a Child. Willie, the little si a-months-old daughter of Mr. and. ftlrs. Wood Allen, died at the home of her par ents near Elmira Feb., 19, and was buried at Pine Hill cemetery on Feb.. 20, the funeral ' service was conducted by Rev. J. D. Andrew. These parent have the sympathy of a large number of friends, since this is the third time death has tak en an infant from their home. ness.-- When the fleet first touched Ma nila there was a cholera scare, on which precluded the possibility'of sailors landing. The fleet took 65,000 pounds of frozen mutton. Jack Tar consumed 35,000 lbs. of. bologna sausage. He ate 140,000 pounds cheese. If all the foodstuff were piled in bulk it would reach to the height of a fifteen story sky scrapet. The fleet has been gone one year, two months and six days. Note The Maine and Alabama started with the fleet from Hamp ton Roads but were ordered back and their places were taken by the Nebraska and ; Wisconsin. WILLING? OF COURSE! I WHAtNEXtl Charlotte Observer r ' K " Col. Bryan said again at Denver,' Col., .Saturday,:- what he bas said many ttmes since the, , last election; in reference, to making a fourth race . for the presidency: "I am ,ffot an cut-and-out candidate, but if the people of this country and my own party should demand that I make the race again, standing for my well' known principles and ideas, why, I do not rery well see how. I could refuse." He said in the same con nection that fie had made himself "clear on this subject time and a- , gain, and if the people have sense enough to understand it, why, what's vhe use of explaining it over again?" We scarcely see. And here we have it once more, except a little more definitely, perhaps. VV e do not know but what it will be just as well to have it over again not, as some would argue, in or der to "get rid" of him, for another experience would be ineffective for that purpipse; it has been said that defeat is not a cure; but because he would defeat any other candidate aud better he than a better man. Why, do we say that? Witness: In a speech at Urbaua, O., in 1904 he said: "The Democrats in 1892 playr ed a confidence game on the people and put a bunco-steerer Mr. Cleve land at the head of the party. In the campaign of 1904, while "sup porting" Judge Parker for Presi dent, he said: ' "A Democratic victory will mean very little, if any, progress on eco nomic questions so long as the party is under the control of the Wall street element. Mr. Parker ' is as thoroughly committed to the side of the financiers as Mr. Roosevelt. Af ter the party had rejoiced over the harmony secured by the omission of the money question from the plat form and after he had secured the nomination he injected his views upon the subject at a time when he could not be taku from the ticket without demoralization. The nom ination was therefore . secured by crooked and. indefensible methods. This is the sort of "support" he' gives Democratic candidates. With a great many people, enough to turn the scale in an election, Bryanism is a religion. Therefore any Dem ocratic candidate whom he wants beaten will be beaten and he wants any one beaten excepting himself. The Norfolk VirginiaPilof, here tofore one of his most loyal support ers, has suffered an exhaustion i of patience and we copy a few sebtetf- ces from an interesting editorial in its issue, of Saturday: Tbe mistake was made last , time of allowing him to assume the part of 'It without interruption or contradiction until he hud all the, strings uf the situation in hand and no choice was left to Democrats but to support him or desert their par ty. He is now playiug again the double role of oracle and organizer, and if the waiting policy should be repeated by other leaders and by the press h will turn up in 1912 with another organized army of noisy shouters, formidable enough to scare all possible competitors into their holes and eager to do his bidding to the letter. He must be discounted and discredited now, at the incep tion ot his campaign, or it will be wo late. If it- is not too soon for v Mr. Bryan to be laying his pipes and stretching his wires for a fresh exemplification of his Kingship of Democracy, , .it is not too soon for those who think he has already too long and too often led the party to -defeat" to take up arms, against him i and inaugarate active : measures to circumyent his ambitious and im pudent scheme for ruling the future as he has ruined the past of the par- ty- - 1 - V ; - "Selfish, self-centered aelf-mag-nified, the human pack must-be un loaded or the patient donkey will die outright. So far as that frac tion of the Democracy for which this paper speaks is concerned, there is to' bevfrom now on flat repudia- Continued on page eight. 1!' ;v "V- . i - 4 i I i I V i! - - r i r r. iri f i 'I i . 1 J1 1 . J V, 1'J i ; t ! i' i f 1 1 1 i J t " . :. A - -