THE DAILY FREE PRE PUBLISHED EERY EVENING EXCEPT SUNDRY, Vol. in No; 53. KINSTON. N. 0.; THURSDAY. JUNE 7. 1900. Price Two Cents GENERAL HEWS. Matters of Interest Condensed Into Brief Paragraphs. At Eichmond, Va., Tuesday, William Witeon killed himself by drinking carbolic acid through, mistake for juniper tar. . Stephen Crane American novelist and a noted war correspondent, died Tuesday in Europe.. He was only 30 years old. ' Our troops are still having skirmishes -with Filipinos. They have taken a good many prisoners and secured much ammu nition. . t 'j Attorney General Griggs has decided that the Cuban civil courts have jurisdic ,' tion to try an American soldier who kill ed a Cuban. Wm. H. Hummell was hanged at Wil liamsport, Pa., Tuesday for the murder of his wife and three children. He killed - them with an axe while asleep. Gen. Maximo Gomez may try to become the first president, of free Cuba. Ic is said his return to Havana is the begin - ning of a campaign for the place. The street car strike situation at St. Louis has assumed Buch a serious phase ,- that 50 prominent men have asked the , governor of the state to call out the militia. Fire destroyed the machine plant of the Standard Lime and Stone Co.. at Kear neysville, W. Va., Tuesday," The loss is 130,000, and about 100 men are thrown out of employment. 1 v . . The historic Confederate white house at Montgomery, Ala., was badly dam aged by wind and rain Tuesday evening. The roof was blown off, the chimney blown down, and the interior drenched. The Socialist Labor party? in conven tion in New York Wednesday, nominated Joseph F. Maloney, of Lynn, Mass., for president of the United States, and Valen tine Rennell, of Pittsburg, for vice-presi-dent. . ;. r... -, : - -V ' .V ; When the British flag was hoisted in Johannesburg a Boer soldier, looking cn, - refused to take off bis hat. A bystander was about to remove it forcibly when a British' soldier interfered, with the re mark: "Let him alone; he fought for his flag; you are too cowardly to fight for any flag." The Maryland Democratic convention left the delegates to the national conyen- " tion unihstructed, but declared thatWni. J. Bryan is the choice of the Democrats of the state. New York Democratic con vention declared for Bryan and bimetal- ' lism; does hot reaffirm the Chicago plat form, but declares that the party in the state will support the platform of the Kansas City convention, v BOERS WITHDRAW IN GOOD ' ORDER. " The British Hold Pretoria, But the Birds Have Flown. ' , London, June 0. It appears .evident that the Boer commander-in-chief, Gen. Botha, with all his guns, withdrew from Pretoria in good Order, probably along the Delagoa Bay railway with the view of joining President Kroger. So the Transvaal forces remain practically in tact with Presidents Kruger and Steyn and Gen. Botha and Secretary of State Reitc all safe and in a position to con tinue the direction of affairs. The more optimistic in the fact that President Kruger's wife and . Gen. Botha's wife were left at Pretoria an Indication that the president does not count on a long resistance. In any case it will probably take Lord Roberta at least a week to or ganize a campaign of pursuit. , Get your neighbor to subscribe to Thc Fekk Press. ON THE ROAD TO f.v 1 TcrtJ r.:-o:. It J - - .-i .t- BYNUM REJECTED. His Nomination Fails to Secure the Necessary Majority. Washington Pott. The nomination of W. D. Bynum, of In diana, to be a general appraiser, failed yesterday of confirmation. This result has been repeatedly predicted in The Post. There was only brief discussion of the nomination in the executive session. Mr. Bynum's name stood at the head of the list of nominations, , and Mr. Fairbanks said that rather than cause other nomi nations to be unacted upon before final -J! ' 1. I 1 J lot being taken. The vote was 33 to 33, Mr. Bynum is a gold Democrat, who supported McKinley in 1890, and who was (riven the aDnraisershiD as a reward for his services. He was opposed in the senate because he was nominated as a Democrat, the five appraiserships assign ed to the Republicans under the-Jaw being already filled, and it was claimed that he ought not to be charged to the Demo cratic party. Many leading Republicans took the same view and joined. with the Democrats in opposition, v -Among the Republicans who voted aurainst confirmation were Bard, Davis, Chandler, Frye and Hale. Other Repub licans were in the cloak-rooms, ready to cast their votes in the negative if they were needed, so that there was no possi bility of favorable action at any time. It is not expected that the president, in view of this adverse sentiment, wiu reap noint Bvnum during the recess. There is no law to prevent such reap- E ointment, but the uniform practice has een, where a nomination has reached a vote and failed of confirmation, to accept this as sufficient indication or the senate's refusal to rive its consent. If no vote had been reached, the question would have remained open, and his reappointment could not have been criticised. Mr. Bynum's friends express the belief that he will be provided for in some other office, in which case no flgnt wm Demaae against him. , 'v'vVr'".:;' - LETTER FROM BRYAN. Democratic Leader Explains His Attitude Toward Trust Legisla During the house proceedings Tuesday, Representative Amos Cummings, of New York, secured the floor and bad - read a recent letter from William J. Bryan re garding trust legislation. The letter, which was loudly cheered by Democrats, reads: - v " Lincoln, Neb., June 3. My Dear Mr. Cummings: I see that th Republicans are asserting that think a constitutional amendment neces sary for the annihilation of the trusts. I have never said or believed that an (amendment was necessary. I have urged leirislation which I believe-to be consti- tutidnal, and have said that I favor a constitutional amendment u tne decis ions of the supreme court declare such legislation unconstitutional. The Repub lican party does not want to destroy the trusts. jJunngtnis session oi con gress the Republicans have unanimously supported a proposition to give the national banks control of the ' currency, and thn create a paper money trust. I inclose a copy of my Chicago anti-trust speech, which discusses the question of constitutional amendment. I -lours truly, ' 1 .W.J. Bbyan. Negroes Help Track a Rapist. - Raleigh, June 5. Louis Council, a negro, aged 25, was jailed here today to to prevent lynching. He was arrested near Fayetteville last evening charged with assaulting Mrs. James V est, a far mer's young and pretty wife. The people are so intensely aroused, that Council's quick removal to Raleigh was necessary. The negroes aided in tracking Council, and would themselves have lynched him last night. CIVILIZATION. M -v t V1 . f y-1 t frn cf y- --fa', I . ' CHIHA. VS. EUROPE. i, Dowager Empress Upholds the Boxers in Their Crusade Against All Foreigners. Situation at Pe kin Serious. London, June 6. The Berlin correspon dent of the Daily Chronicle says: In official circles here it is believed that the situation in China has grown worse. The powers are now exchanging dis patches regarding the appointment of a single commander for the united union and Americans; A dispatch to; The Daily Mail from Tien Tsin. dated June 4. says: The situation is very serious. The Boxers are approach ing Tien Tsin on all sides. 7 ' ' ' The Shanghai correspondent of The Daily Mail, telegraphing yesterday, says "The Boxers are within three miles of Tien Tsin. In audition to the marines, the defensive farce includes volunteers under the command of Maj. Higgs, late of the Sixteenth iLancsre. The town is practically under arms.", Will Oppose Foreign Troops. Shanghai, Juni 4. The China Gazette says it has the highest authority for stating that the dowager empress ' has ordered the Tsung Li Yamen to face all Europe rather than to interfere with the Boxer movement. . v Elsewhere it is asserted that , the vice sovereignty bas ordered the troops to oppose the further landing of parties from foreign - warships and that the troops now engaged in operations are designed.to prevent further foreign rein forcemeats reaching fekin. , . Situation at' Pekdn Serious. - Washington, June 5. Tho state depart ment has received a cablegram from Minister Conger, at Pekln, stating that matters have taken a much more serious turn there. No details are given, but it is indicated that Boxers' activity is ex tending very closely to the Chinese cap ital. ..-:.v..".f:;.:e .wr- The state department still finds ' itself unable to do more than ft has ' already ordered , respecting the protection of Americas interests in China. Troops are not available, and even if .they were the government here is disinclined to participate in any joint demonstration that would menace the integrity of the lhmese empire. . ; , Russian Troops Ordered to Pekin. London, June 6. The Daily Express has a dispatch from Shanghai, dated Tuesday, which says: - "Russian troops have been ordered from Port Arthur to the neighborhood of Pekin to punish the Boxers for killing two Cossacks and wounding two." BATTLE WITH BOXERS. Many Killed. Japan and Russia Seem About to Plunge Into a War. v:,...: 'J- - Shanghai, June 6. The soldiers dis patched to attack the Boxers havefonght an engagement quite close to Pekin. Many were killed on both sides. In consequence of the representations of Japan, the landing of a large Russian force at Taku is alleged to have been stopped. It is believed here that should Russia persist in sending a preponderat ing military force to the front, a collision with Japan will inevitably result. Alarming report are current here of the hurried completion of the mobiliza tion of the Japanese fleet. The Russian minister to rekin. M. De Giers, has made another attempt to. in duce the Chinese foreign office to formally request Russian assistance to restore order, but the offer has not yet been ac cepted. .- Violent dissentions are. reported to ex ist between the Chinese commander-in- chief of forces, Jung In, and Prince Cbing Tuan, who, in accordance with the wishes of the dowager empress, is strongly sup porting tne cause oi tne lioiers. , The mobs who murdered the English missionaries, Robinson and Norman, mu tilated and disemboweled the bodies. The station at Yan Tin, three miles from Pekin, has been burned. Does it Pay to Buy Cheap? A cheap remedy for conghs and colds is all right, but you want something that wC! relieve and cure the more severe and dangerous results of throat and lung troubles. What shall you do? Go to a warmer and more regular climate? Yes, if possible; if not possible for you, then in either case t&ie the cklt remedy that has been introduced In all OTiized coun try's with sarM in severe throat and lar.gtrutibli,Ioschee't German Syrup." It not onlv heals and stimulates the tia- sips to destroy the germ disease, but a..2TS inflammation, cass eajyexpec torati -in, rives a rrod nirht's nt, and cures tbe t-ationt. TryoTE bct'Je. Tcora- r.- - VJr- r jyearst'Ya.I JrrT:ptia te won i. Tor r i'a ty tbe Ter. :; .U are ton Pre Co. It i wcrtb rr.cr tbia 10 c a wek : boor's to r.:n or.; r t v.-j diy 1 1 yc t - r.'-l I rrow r. i I"r- l'l : r.- 1 f - r r ' -. !;' a e' t i y - - ; KINSTON VICTORIOUS. Won First Game From Wilson, 24 to 4. EUnston Pounded the Ball All Over the Field. WJlson Boys Say Today's Game Will Have A Different Result. . , , It was a great day among the cranks yesterday when Wilson came, saw and was defeated. It was the second series of games we have played Wilson on our homegrounds, and it was the first time, we have been victorious over that town in baseball. This victory however, was emphatic enough to avenge the past. A large crowd of spectators greeted the boys at the opening game on their new grounds and considerable interest was manifested in the contest. Many felt that we could not beat the Wilson boys for two reasons, that they have beaten us heretofore and that our boys lacked practice. .- But the result shows how groundless were their appre hensions. Promptly at 5 o'clock Umpire W. S. Herbert called for play and the teams lined up with the home boys at the bat. ; The fun began immediately when Hick son, the first man at bat, lined out a neat bit to the left field and was followed by Jones , with a clean bit to centre. Chick got first by a fielding error and Wooten pounded a two bagger to left which scored three men. Oettinger fol lowed with a hit to left field and Steven son with another centre, scoring Wooten. Herbert went out with a long fly to centre, scoring Oettinger. Stevenson scored on a neat hit by Lewis to left. Morton got his base On balls ' and stole second. Lewis scored on a hit by Hick son. Jones struck out while Morton and Hickson scored on passed . balls. Chick went out from the pitcher to first base. Thus nine runs were made in the first in ning, three of them earned. Wilson was retired in short order, Moore struck out, Gay went out from short to first, Sugg flew out to second. In the second inning Kinston went out in the same short order. Wooten flew out to left, Oettinger struck out and Stevenson was retired from second to first. " Wilson again went out one. two, three - in this inning. Matt and Pas chall, in succession, were assisted out from the pitcher to first, and Alley struck out. Wilson scored one in the third by suc ceeding errors in the centre and left fields, and thereafter was shut out until in the eighth when, by the help of one bit, an error and two wild throws they put two men across the plate. In the ninth a sin gle and a two-bagger brought in one more run for them, but unearned as the runner gained second on a wild throw. Kinston scored, by combination of hits and errors, ,3 in the third, 4 in the fifth, 8 in the sixth, 2 in the seventh, 1 in the eighth and 2 in the ninth. The feature of the game was the bril liant play of Hickson, at short and at the bat, and the exceptionally fine bat tery work. : Morton pitched a good strong game, and while five hits are recorded against him, two of these were due to accidental causes inequality of the new diamond and out-field. ' . Lewis caught an errorless game, bis work being tht steady reliable article that always gets there. Several of his stops were brilliant and won applause from admiring spectators. Old Pat Stanly's mantle fell upon Jack Hickson in a double sense. He wore the dear old boy's uniform and, as if it en dowed him with all of its old possessor's skill, Jack played as never he played be fore and his play was never surpassed in Kinston, even by Pat himself. : KINSTON. ' Nm. AB RBHSBSHPOAE Hickson, u 7 6 5 4 oo Tone, 3b 7 a t i i I e Chick, rf .... . .... 7 J o e - i 6 a t o ...... It i o o e e Wooten. If. Oettinger. tb , OWVCMWU, W. ....... w . Herbert, ib a J 4 a 13 o i a e - I o 3 ' t 5 Unripe. S Morton, p 5 4 Total 54 4 " l) J II I) ' WILSON. . Name. A B R B H S B S H P O A E Moore, if... S e o e a o 1 Oay, cf .,.. ... S I o jot 51 i t o 03a 4 o 1 0 0 o 4 " o " o . o " o " 1 a o 4 o 1 10 o 40 o 0,01 3a a tot o l ao 4 o'o too SuIC. Matt, 3b Paschall, c Alley, ib KirkUnd, ab Meredith, p .......... Eest, rf, Farmer, p Total, - 39 4 5 a a . 19 t I ' The score by innings is as follows: Kinston. .....9 0 3 0 4 8 2 1 224 Wilson...... aO 1 00002 1 4 Bases on balls by Meredith, 2: by Far mer, 1. Meredith was replaced as pitcher bv Farmer at the end of the 5th inning. Two-base bits Jones, Wooten and Moore,' one each. Struck out by Mor ton, 6; by Meredith, 4; by Farmer, 4. Umpire, Xt. S. Herbert. Time of game, 2 nours. . TV rnm iM Aftpmrwirl will ha mnr intpppwtinar hvfaj than that of veeterdav. as Wilson has received some strong players to reimorce meir team. ADey are determined to wipe out the ijrnomiD inna ripJcnt at venterdav and mat no secret of the fact that the game today wi.i De somewrsat c.:;ereni irom tea 01 Kins -t -on r1.o has a lor?, lank conntry rnan, cf ll.t-prr.iaa extraction, who will make t:.:r l.rt j ia tne vox. Art.!--. : j b vc:i U tie V.zl jcj tt at rrz it'-: tt crrvx. , STATE HEWS. Interesting North Carolina Items In Condensed Form. There will be no damage suits arising from the coal mine disaster at Cumnock, Chatham county. The mine is now in operation. Rev. R, T. Vann, D. O., of Scotland Neck, was Wednesday elected president of the Baptist Female University to succeed Dr. J. C. Blasingame. - Ollie Pippey, a white man, committed rape Wednesday on Geneva Crabtree, a little nine-year-old girl, near Durham. Kippty is a bad character, and has been put in jail without bail. The Democratic members of the legis lature will meet in caucus next Monday, the day before the legislature begins its adjourned session. Senator Thomas Skinner is chairman of the caucus. Representative Kitchin has secured the passage of a resolution authorising the E resident to appoint David Bagley, rother of Ensigu Bagley, who waskilled at Cardenas, Cuba, during the Spanish war, to a cadetship at Annapolis. Iron ore, said to be of fine quality, has been found in the southern part of Wake, county. It may be part of the same ore bed as that in Johnston county, which is now being mined, the ore going to the Greensboro iron and steel works. Charlotte Observer, 6th r T. B. Harris, a white flagman on the Southern, was found dead early this morning under the overhead bridge on Morehead street. His head had been crushed by a wheel, and it is presumed that he met his death while trying to board a passing car in the shifting train. Statesville Mascot: VA friend of The Mascot says that Mr. Jim Perk, of Ter rell, Catawba county, has a remarkable fowl, a fit subject for a dime museum. This bird lookl like a rooster and crows like a rooster, but lays eggs, hatches chickens and raises the brood, in these last named qualities partaking largely of the nature of the hen. - The dead body of Henry Smith, a white man 40 years old, was found by the rail road track near Pomona, Guilford coun ty, just before 12 o'clock Monday night He bad been ran over by a passing train, which bad terribly mangled his body. He had spent the day in Greensboro and left for his home beyond Pomona late in the evening in an intoxicated condition. - Washington Messenger: The titizens of the suburbs of the town Thursday afternoon were the witnesses to a fight the cause of which was out of the or dinary. A colored funeral had been in progress, and as the pallbearers were re turning from the cemetery a dispute arose which ended in an interesting. com bat as to which one of the pallbearers . toted the heaviest end of the corpse, and it was not many minutes before blows were exchanged. . , Ibe Murphy (Cherokee county.) Dem crat, June 1st, thus speaks of a real gentle, ' joyous and festive excursion: "A very ' unfortunate affair, in fact several unfor tunate affairs, occurred on the excursion from this place to Marietta last Wednes day. One man, Bob Smith, of Morgan ton, Ga., was killed, and several others cut and kicked and we are told one or two were knocked off the train. The killing was at first reported to have been done by a very quiet, steady and peace able citizen of Murphy, but we under, stand there is now considerable doubt as , to who did it." t. . Fayetteville Observer: . A well dressed and rather prepossessing youpg woman, not more than twenty years old,' with a little two-months-old boy baby, ar rived here Saturday on the noon train from Wilmington and registered at the Davis house as Mrs. Harris. Saturday night she asked Mr. Davis, the proprietor U secure her a hack, that she wished to Sto meet the north bound Atlantic ast Line train on whfch she expected her husband to arrive. - She left her baby in bed with a bottle of milk and a satchel of clothes, drove to the station, secured a ticket for Greensboro .and' de parted on the train. The woman was arrested at Sel ma, and taken back to Fayetteville. She was committed to jail, but was afterwards released and allowed to depart. She said her right name was Mrs. Ada Stoker, of Conway, S. C, and for certain reasons she wished . to get clear of the child. Lincolnton Cor. Charlotte Obterven John Rhyne, a negro who lives near . Harden, shot and killed Will Dellinger, another negro, Monday. Rhyne had accused Dellinger of being too intimate with his wife and had forbidden Dellin ger from coming to his house. Monday morning Delnger came there and was ordered off. After creating considerable disturbance and making some threats be left. John Khyne tbeu went to visit his mother, and on his way back, as he was walking up the railroad, be was attacked by bellinger. After Del'JD?er had emptied bis rixtol he grabbed a club and started up the railroad bank toward Rhyne, when Uhyne landed a bullet in bis neck, killing Lim almost intant!y. Kbyte at once went to a nailer's bon and got the neighbor to bnr? tim to I.iaeo!nton, where be pars tirr:t,f t? totheri CiDe. Alter aa IaTet:-ation the IK'TO was turaed ltx ca to rro"- ;s that be was entirely j::tlii in k. j Lis aivrrrs.ry.