' The ' Mqrnimq
RALEIGH, N. C.t WEDNESDAY; SEPTEMBER 24, 1902.
No. 96
Vol
: :
i
m -mm
second Day s veDQie
just a i.rme. warmer
avA"C 31 ol""
a a . -
With Craig, Who scores
Senator Pritchard
Severely
Br - n rl,,LLIW
v N- c.. Sept. 23. Special.
5i-' " " " ,fc"ja. the joint debate
: . i-n;cbard and noa.
r.-jTVv, irjrai. Today was the
is
a
Ktnstoo,
pain, loom n V, w.t.nr Sinnn, riand in the afternoon session rthe nomi-
any Johnston Lee Overman, Cjr A Atson, biainons, fcd tions be m3de. s - .
ppines army, Pou and others. (Applause.) j "a"w .
Y. M. C. A, Secretaries "
Senator Pritchard. (Tremendous ap-j report of the committee on. resolutions,
plause and cr'cs of " "Pay jomx debts, 'which i had been expected to send in the
senator, pay your debts." It was a Ptform this afternoon. Mr. Lanterbach
irrpit hit for afr Ornic- i announced , thai the coitiittee had not
great hit for air. LTaig. had time enoush to coOder all of the
I never saw a Republican in y life,-nrftro?l nlanks and thct it w.nnted nn
who was not a revenue officer, but who extension., , This was granted and the
was ashamed of his party. "On the convention took a recess until 10 o'clock '
! other hand, I never saw -a Democrat tomorrow-morning. The platform will
who was not Dfoudof "Jefferson. Vance, roe presented k to-mprrr.-x tor , ndofftioii.
Young
Relates
cation of the treaty with Spain.
know whether thtre were
countv bov in the PhllipDi
bat I tell you the Democrats In Con-. The canipaizning -party left this af
grrss spent two-thirds of their time in ternoon for Fayettevllle, .where they
trying-to prove that those soldiers were SDeak today.
$ -:
scoundrels and the Filipinos r-ere lit-tle
aliels. Thry pnt themselves on record
against giving conifor: and aid to the
ilck and dying in the camps in that far
away land."
'-Mr; Pritchard again touched up the
Democrats in lively . fashion for their
manaeement of State affairs, the in-
..." .... .Mr njtvCUT.
1'yir. and he
, , An i tee geatleiuen in thi
- j atieudauie was not a
I - - t K. lTlaAN
rt oi yeMeruay i 'U3lvu
...t 4 i-m . . beine Dres-
icB.:0H.:. .ourt house. Lake
the crowd
was re
he pane-
time.
&t . . ..i ui.ie.it n.Til forMful.
h " J . , a.u iitfeue of Deai-
n r ill :K ivxuvvratic btste admin
ri , a betttr ?wh than
tor
he
on
as
A . ' I I . . 1 11 ill LUC
, . .-w,-h. 1 here was a ypnnk-
it.J kfpn: :. sn !n the audience, andi
r 3-11 w:tn fl'3rt PPlnse to
;,r jsb a: Mr. Craig, and
if,." were dIareJ hk Sena
.-.L oa the :aef hand, while
. .iir. vj lierhars not
7 Bsaa:.n-"ki-
us Tcrdict of the large
Boy Instantly Killed
Aberdeen. Jf. C, Sept. 23. Special.
A colored boy was Jnstantly' killed at
lhi place "t?his evening by the Aberdeen
create of the -governors salary, the cost & Ashboro passenger train No. 11. The
of the Impeachment tr:al, w&icn, ne go- wag supposed to hare been swinging
flared, was a shame and disgrace to the the tra,n Bm1 t liaTe beeQ canght
Mr. Cralz says a great deal abont the, .brtween the coach nn old cotton
care of the Confederate soldier, and I . platform near tlie
want to tell him I am a better friend
to them than he Is. My father and
brother were among them. Where was
yonr father, Mr. Craig?"
Mr. Craig Senator, I hope you "will
not allode to my father again in these
discussions.' My father was over sixty
years old and a minister of the gospel.
Not a breath of suspicion rests upon
anr act of his nor npon his name.
Mr. Psttrhard Well. I wxm't. I will
never mention yonr father again.
"I Introduced a Mil to appropriate
Another
About the Murder
He Contrived the Schsms to
Disposa of the Body After
Story
Eiiiman Killed Her.
The Story Is Not
Believed
FAR OVL . SEA
French Aeronauts A
to Crosshe Mediter.
iting
an
i
Charlotte, NrCJ., Sept. 23. Special.
The Y. M. CiA. ficretaris conference
of -Jhe CaroKhas spembletl here taday.
for a two ' days' sesjion The meetings
arc being oorupied in the reading of
papers regarding the work of the as-'
sociation aijd a general discuasJon of
subjects of . interest to the Y. M. C. A.
Work. J f
. ." 9 - , ; -
THE ISULTAN DEFIANT
General Sumner Expects to
f!rilih thfi mnrn llnriainCP Hughes, Lawyer'Hart and ixey Anzer.
. , - T; r 0 r loung had in a measure recovered his
Manila, Sept. 23. Captain Pershing, ' self-control this morning. He had had
who headed the expedition against the the Srst good night's rest he had ex-
rebellouB Jforos in Mindanao, ba re- perienced since the crime, and, relieved - says that his friend took flight at pnee.
New York, Sept. 23. William (Hooper
Yonng, handcuffed to iDeteetive Sergeant
Peter Finley, boarded a train at Derby,
Conn., at 7:18 this morning for New
York. Lawyer Hart abandoned the
Idea of making a fight against the re
moval of the prisoner to New York and
this morning had a'boslutely nothing to
say about the case. On the train with
Young, besides Finley, were Detective
breathe . put my hand nnder ker wairt
and felt her heart. Itwaa not beating.
Then I decided to notify the police, but
thought that Instead of calling a policeman-
I would go to police hadjaartra
which I thought .was in th city hall.
I got on a' train and started xlown towa
and on the way I got to thinking what
a lot of disgrace th affair would bring
npon me nd my father. That mce me
decide to get rid of the "body. 1 took
a long knife and cat into the 'body,
intending to cut the- body up co that I
could get it lato a trunk. I did not
carry out this plan, however."
Captain Titus said that the prisoner
described Eilling as being a man about
23 years old, smooth face, 0 feet 7 inches
in height with a "bright, clear leok. In
his eyes pale face and waaring dark
clothes with a straw hat when last
eeen." :
Captain Titus said that Young had
not explained how the woman came by
the wounds on her head.
Young says he alone hatched up the
plan for the disposition of the body. lie
Paris, Sept. 23. The latest tidings turned to Camp Vdcars. He simply re-' to a moderate degree of the awful eus-j acting at his (Young's) earnest sollcita-
pense and encouraged by hi attorney, tion. .
his mental condition was much better. The police say that they do not be
The man has supplanted his- confession ! lieve Young's story Implicating the other
made last night with, a positive state- man. They go so far as to assert that
Yon would prefer to turn the rana, wnica piCKea up 'a pigron wiia a lae euiuxn s r iorces rejeciea iapiain - ' "iwc ts ucu uiu. j.ue aouwriim
rratrards Into fields or let the bogs message from he count last evening. : Pershing's, proposiUon for ilieir surren- killed by his accomplice, Charles EUling, j of Bridgeport were communicated with
root them np thaa to bury the old war The message read: i der as they regard their pcsitilon as im- us. says, nves in 'Bridgeport, onn. , as soon as loung made his confession
Federal money to Confederates, and you from Count De La Vaux and the aero- t-cmnoitered the. Macin country. He dis
people wouldn't have Northern money to nauts who are trying to cress the Med-. ; covered"that it was strongly in-trencTied
clean up the graves of the Confederate itcrranean In an airship were brought ! with a number of small forts command-'
ki?.J7M to Cette today by the steamer Souths inff A penull auxronndd by swamps.
7L:
ifnt and tnrn your batteries on things "We are nrer th -Mediterranean. I nrecnable.
Ill
made by Detective Sergeant, Hughes and
at retard the rrowth and development . . 1 j 1 1 n ... : .-
. t 1 . . . . a, . a l. u 11:11 1 n x 1 1111 m zn 1 x v an. iicnu . . v niiv us x li i.uuiuin - w
v It 1 uuuarr v c u or ine ?omn aour pr ae yjn 1 wia. j B Africa. The weather of the -troops, who are to proceed tne hearing was set far .September 30.
-a.n ju.ut iii.nujiuu. v nuum uvt in 3 tn iar iuai uiuxicj iw , . . . . ' . . . 'i he nropeenlncrl wei'P hrlpf and wtthnnt
JJ J, ,, i n .K- " , v ta x-mrw firm Kn Vi 0.0. 4a -n .n Tlia nira'nst tYi ,. f nm Tijio can. moieamj . J-UB yiutceuiufia wcxe uiiei. auu WILilMUl
. ' - . - .. "... " unv unimial inJrlpTit
course or j to tne suiran itrging mm to surrender
... -i,.a io.at dicasions oeiweea would not Jel you taite that money to , w' . y "
STt:s asl KepuUlcans were the; dean np and mark the graves, bnt you vrX fine but there is no wind.
n! 13-1 C" rx' f wouia uo 11 yoursei .vs. now many liavo . cAiuuciiui iu unci jug lue cuu
frie-i.ll.v
tie mo: rne:i.u.T pmooai i m- yon cleaned npf
a bt3 Senator Pritchard and Mr. j Mr. Pritchard again deplored the re-
WL-t mi s:.f there are s.ue iaps Tiral by Mr. Craig of the race issue.
.VVMrp a lid string, both men '-nd -aid: "You promised two vears ago! cvu. n cpun, ""I1"'" :"
" Wi::" an aai! ooth hat If the amendment was paWd ibis cended from Palavas at 4 o clock yester. op raon,
Tier little tilt and skarp re- fhould ceae. You -igued a paper staiing ay morning. j he w411 een
r .k. t... . r. I fan t K .v. J ! . I T m '. If 111 xy A. n 1 I 1. t. tn
xoung was arraigned , on an amaavit f and ail attempts to find such a man
have 60 far proved futile.
MadLevy, the physical culture In
structor, who formerly employed Younp,
declares the man Is .innocent of any
mnrderous Intention. MaeLevy pro
fesses to believe the accomplice end of
the confession and says Young was al-
following statement: . ways straight in his dealings with him.
eend a second expedition against L,.,.a n a!m .,n, n I v
r in . - . - iv . , , ; AittiAicu. uaiivo wiuiwu xAiiiaft cu- . aiicruiLttr:u
jiirspu p.. rtnr. .A srvmiinnnrp -mp mill, j itt'iiHra ouiiiiipr rrr TM-tf rn nni n a. . - i w
: t i V " ' . ; trai pane. ie accostea me. vve taiKea i
the balloon will begin aa soon as there i and also to return the horses he has I 71 V,T,; V weiwu
Is .nfflcient breeze." : t stolen from the -Americans, pwmising ;:r"..Jr JTiT
The count and hi companions as- in return ;fhat he (Sumner) will cease ! rllJi.. mauv wv
but it the sultan refuses
Young's counsel, W. S. Hart, after in-
ru try !'hoiam and fan the the amendment was constitutional. Ifi
a? wrtt oraitr a earn man von toll th truth then. thp i- no . fmm p.ha 1 tn. .nrt r? fD cwro i .s TI "
...... .h.i -anr.itP "i v.. - , --v vi and t acQuaInted. thoueh he was a tervif-win? Yonw. said:
. a.uu girl atquaiutcu, tiiuugu lit; was a.
sul Regenerate. After that he called on me
'J saSic. :t!ne bv each other in You"ve let Simmons load vou up again. nded there at Vhree o'clock this even, j tan s soldiers, who . are apparently the ; severaI daya at my flat,
.-.i.a. to have more kindly feel-'flna the charze was too heavv. Yon Thns has the count's second at-i sole :mportant rebels. On the c:2ht vtrs
. .-.l.ao- to have more kindly feel- and th rhara- wa too Iimtv. Yon ""B- lans has the coun
m t'iari eici other. Aftr the made a trade wKh the people two years tempt to cross the Mediterranean com
rtr t--lay Iemcrats an.i iieptu-l-!i
rr' standing about the
rrf.$ rb rf3l!v gnyinc rsch other and
Wr:t c:r what e.irh side -termed a
ago never 4o raise the negro question pletely failed. At nine o'clock thfo
again. I will nor discus this ques
tion with you. ; The negro is out of
politics and he hall stay out.
Martin's stealings were paid in full.
iwrasJ'nfieen minme ponred hot Ter n & M'- Ft.JJ01
rtt-v. and 13 jnbhnie eloquence en
r--r fir i' caamn on
2f. Cr:r firt tlny. and for
that you had to borrow "money
to pay that shortage. Did yonT party
iMlh rrats with the virtues vy mck in ivnooi innoinai was rn
tfr4 remrnt vonch.afed to he f Stephen D. Pool, a Democrat? No;
r- tv:rh Oraocratic success. IPs wa o to the school children of the
wj .u:i f force and thrilling Stat, and I Pool bniit a hoti.c with it-
rrS thut ar,vie.i men and fills campaln; money? Amt it contnb-
morning the balloon was . only . forty
miles fromgits darting place, Palavas
on the French coast.
STRIKE AT -ML AIRY
' -"
Seven Hundred Hands Qqit
Work' in FurniturVFactorUsV
Mt. Airy, N. C, Sept. 23. Special.-
The first strike 'that has struck tnis
The cholera epidemic lias almost dis
appeared. T - - a ; . "
The; University Withdraws
from Southern InUr-cpl-4
jljgiate Ath ietic ; As-"
sociation "
Chapel Hill, N. CL, Sept. 23. Spa-
cial, The strident body of the university
met in Gerard Hall
' tc night to Tecelve report of committee
appointed acme days ago to confer with
a eonrmittee of three members of . the
faculty itt reference to withdrawin,;
from the Southern Tnter-Collegiate 'A th
have determined he 5haU nottdo. And re tt ManteJ Company The trouble ,ed that fls a Msult of their delibera-
3If- ca the Jn,n,n. 'ho e11?1 . !n nwllra,fe the tions it wwld advi6able to witt dra,v
from the association. A motion to this
was made and carried amid a
r.pointed to notify all members of the
association of the action, of this univer
sity. . - ,
i Q
it;-i .r:hniatic determlnarion to by the dJgrnrtled Wall treet men
n tzl l a::le with might and mara , ho are diatisfi Jwith Itoosevelt s
v- .rwinM iantKmst speeches? Mr. Craig has made
j.'r:!j5.i!ii aMin!ted with telline Mndwiched speech here today, com- town for many yeara occurred yesterday ! t6"
i- n-r .. mpm. posed of tariff and negro a layer of . . ... J . . of North Carolina
-rijj.. - v - i . ii XL noon, wnra nnonr rurp nnnnran . . .
-e ti jte Urilatnr ereciallr lariii idu a iayer oi negv. iou uemo- , - . " .-
li- ::r S 'iS! S!oS;SPSrlS,f -dvocating a ery fanny propo-? h1f4 shu off eam and walked out of
r3f-.'r3t fMic. and his later sltjon anyhow, iou have fought and the .Mt. Airy Furniture Company b fac
yrl ir fl en--e of pensioning de- 1 worked hard to-eliminate the negro as : tory, about two hundred out of Xho
rrr. te rn who swapped the gray voter, and are now working hard to National Furniture factory and about
ai wardlv turned thir ; "'lB ",a" lovr,"ie A?. "e55 . the same number from th ML Airv Ta
r n t:r aiffhhors. Said he. as he
Trf.fx y frr".l upn th senator with
r-.VI hial. "5en.itnr Pritchard. don't
of h-.'M'r.r momments over the
n-M d-i-l: hn tell these people
.'fi hir .lne f r th living. Ao
T ror'. cnnnr. if yoa re glsd
a sr. k o-it of politic. Do yon
'" H Xorth r.rrl!n.i? Thank
t ?Vt all oat of offlci or nearlr
i. J.-si Y-'nar i. there yet".' bnt he's
. r iv-r-T ftRt. and t!iy will all rtar
f n?-rrir:i.-n in HWtfnr white cnae, and I sympathize with the poor
'. f"T. in an ! live with you before n,an-
B-r- t i ont of yonr hone. I Jlr. JT-itchsrd closed with a plfa foT
'"I ir w'tS TniV nn YttKF tr fair illtpnculnn of t-H A tam IT. ai.t
' of tie srnell by washing her he was a personal friend of Ed Fou.
r and was glad to sneak to an andienee of
-t rf!irt pnVe one hour n1 hia friends and neighbors. You have
tv r:-T. hrrin bv saying given me good attention, and I 4hank
i ,m f,-. .,. rM,. yon.
W -i . , . A Tt- fralir rim rrr fn- fiftA.o-mJnnte
Tr-r--!t:T -i -'! v. rejoinder and made bn bet hit of tha
Wl,."v,,wI "A dehnte thus far. He said: "Senator
raise money ti pay poll tax ought to part of the factories to allow hands to
lt dlfrnnrh!f1. T thintr ia -n-rontr Inn i ,i .
to take away from a man. on account itHrt ..v,t..: m. u.'ueLt
of poverty, the thing our forefathers .. "Tii " ' -' i xuC Bu.storm nf appianse A commPttee was
fought and died for. Of course I can:;" , " suu,e oi me Mnaa are ( aEpo4ntd to
educate niv ooy aud Mr. Craig can edu-;"7-"1" lunu-
c.Tte his children. He is a lawyer. If! The campaign wa opened here today
yon have never been poor yon drm't by Hon. Theo. F. KInttz who addressed
iS2Zi"il lLf.S. TI'TIX00 a rery w'wfeiic crowd of citizens
tnrned out without a dollar when my . n. .
r.tK. hi. itf. rnr u Sfth.i at .tne OP house in clean, clear cut
...... . U0 .... ... ' ' II I ... ... J . , , - .
' 1 - lrrr or O't ppmnt ii . t ,i i al.
vt n - nuns to wtiai wuuiu an on iiis
. -M.-t v. Mr. Craiz at- amendment. He failed to answer me
!T t" ctnb ont of ti charre about that thousand negro office-holders
r tf r!' en which lon.l were party put on the good people of the'
and forceful speech such as Cbnirres-
inan KInttz is fully capable of doing.
ALL CUT ANMRIED
New York Republican Con
vention Fixed up Beforehand
A HINT TO ROUMANIA
- , .
Her Own Interests Would Be
Served by Revising Her
Anti-Jew Legislation
Berlin, Sept. 23. The Cologne Ga
zette says the fact that th'e Berlin
treaty was signed at Berlin does not
imply 'that Germany as a single power
Is obliged to act specially in its defense
Saratoga. Sent. 23. Ante mnrontlnn apart from tUie other signatories. It
I' U L I ' ti I iiC fl'1l ITl' '15 VI lUC . ,
Um t it tnoo fioa t?tte. I asked him abont the appoint- .tVi. i nJtJ t , ,
'jil J. -? wt ef a cert.in negro postmaster. !kn.OT " LaU ldb ambers or the party. "We therefore do not feel called upon
T f- .nnnlnt. him " r.tortOrt 1 uc" lruu picturesque ieatures Or trt tnk a. lodinc rvnnf in tha nnootlnn
- : V ' ! a mnrtntliin 1 1 " " m"--
rr;;", :1 opened by EngMnd as regards the diffi-
On the night 31rs. iPulitzer died,
Eilling and I met her at Broadway and
Forty-sixth street by appointment I
1 can hardly believe the story. It
seems like the tale of a madman. His
motive could no have been revenge."
The prisoner reached the Grand Cen
tral station mt 9 4 o'clock. ""A 'mob
had made. We went to the flat tO-of 700 or 800 people surged about the
gether. I went out for some whiskey J gate to get a glimpse of him. Women
after we got there and left Eilling and struggled In the crowd-and leaned over
the woman alone. When I got back, I ; the shoulders of the men to peer into
found Mrs. iPulitzer lying across the
bed with a gag In her mouth. ; Eilling
had gone.
the face of the accused man.
Young read- the papers, chiefly tha
stories .of himself, and chatted vtilh the
"I split open her clothing and moved ; racers. He toM them.-whlskey had got
her hands back and forth over her head him into the scrape; that hereafter he
to induce respiration. ' When she didn't I would let It alone and be' good.
He Wants a Commission to Go
Over the Schedules Be
fore Congress Has a
Say About It
excitement for the
was that when tho
! cu!t:es of a. solu'don. On the other
Logansport, Ind., Sept. 23. The train
bearing President Roosevelt and party
which left Detroit at 2:10 this morning
for Indianapolis, arrived here at (7d5
amid the screeching of factory whistles
and the cheers of a crowd assembled a"t
the Wa'bash station.
The president , was escorted to the
high school. He spoke rapidly because
the speech as prepared was too long
for the half hour stop. As it was, the
train left Logansport twenty minutes
late. The president said In substance
that he favored the appointment of a
bi-partisan board of tanff comruissioners
which would taite the adjustment of the
tariff schedules out' of politics.
"On the stability of our business con
ditions," he said, "depends the stability
of our tariff laws and these laws can
never be stable as long as they are be
ing made the football of politics.
1 i t-
J'fi ii was on
rrnotion. Every i for
tlessness " about man-
alternates and speck
ed to point the way
inir session. A
September 0. lSf$. cotton sold here ! change came dnnng the delivery of the
7 S-10 a pound. address of Lemuel E. Quigg temporary
vuairuian ui iiie t-uureiiiion. wiiipu caneu
the Empire State met j ,nd it Is undeniable that the eimultane
n this morning there ons aotiion or two great civuized pow
C? Jrf- arenn-.ent on', TnrrrSf,nt in'thu t!ace showing that.f?r a dull and uninteresting session
w - - " - I A k M A 1 7 . I . A
ers must show Roumania that it would
k. nro.mta m a mw I o - j r:-ctm. I
-! air V , .-... .-rnai-r r iiium a.- . fcrth the applause, of all the delegates,
M tJ T'; tro,m :iV!lll ThM onlr bT th mnnnrr of delivery
f,v . lr- Cral lnders his If he ha I am rrond. of jt V hen Sim- b,lt aUo hy the snb!tauc? of its mnttoV
.'r h' "X taey are ex- 7n Mlrli rZi iMr. Quigg has seldom been in better
. Mr. Craig. I didn't ?0,Td lirTr? " SrK S " control. When he spoke of the leader-
TiTi rSit nJ5ffA wwiii- of President Hoosevelt, which he
W';-2:!aaa-.I.,tr,I oeom. tJ1 th Kennblicans of New York
Hd.;v, r-3 -I.tr.l people. ,fied thnje judge, .- State accented, there was applanse. Then
object should be stability, but not fos
Bilization." This important utterance came unex
pectedly. The occasion seemed to war-
have done better in its own rateresrs I is a thriving town of some 13,000 peo
to amend xte legislation concerning the f,n, Ai.fr - rief introduction he
Jews At all events Roumania U the : c,-nr,a fnrwmr rpfnspfl t"ho nsft of an
most interested party - in making the um,brella and made his speech. It is
Jewish question disappear fmui the or- one Gf the few addresses which the
. . " a .t
V. Ifl.? m Jror, to t(l31't kat
!tir-. --T icaores the manu
re -:V"'r:"' of the state.
Are
t f- .:- iwr raw material there were a thorand Morlc Hannns
o. vote for rVAtr'thU Ktt. .1 am clad thHe are
It kia. f.r I t:i hm. and we are no going to
. rn ts i.... .i... nr of hi renresentatives here a
i f. t ?TV?l,c ihi .uVtlon. fotton went down to
JJzi lr r.-. n ,v" v' , " f lowest notch on. record while Mr.
IT-T U .1 . "? Kninea of the rinW wa r,rldent.
Cat,.v."' M of the traotsl Tt ro,t air hnndTed millions to s
'!- rrW.v "r 1 mT Inform- the MiiillDolnes. and you raise a
r-3!f7." afl! reports. Mr.
.rr-rr-...., ' " n. t oo. '
rin trf7Tr,.to Hichard
w ? ti, !: trnt-made arti-
tvs' . J'". ,ni Jeclarisl he
i'im l iii.. "'PUMican. for
sr." u f;:
plank in their
. 0!f .1.4
..,Lc.:"-tl on
course, and
fe:iow that
co mm on-
ndldate.
n&L X?.C3 rn0nM
J BqS1- Mr. Craig, if
TOIl
locating the ratifi-
and we frightened them so they dared
not touch It. The judge, were gnilty
of the charges and should have been
convicted. .......
Senator PritehPrd 'aid hkwi."ned
in
have
fter
tho
Mc-
nodne
great
cry abont three or four hundred thou
sand shortage In this state. Your part
of that i only 30 cents, Senator Pritch
ard. and the same for all others, while
each man's part of the PhHIppInes ex
pense is about $7.00. I want to pay
yon your 30 cents, senator. -
Senator Pritchard extended his hand
and. nuick as a flash, Mr. Craig handed
him SO cents, which was accepted.
Mt. Craig turned on him with a dra
matic gesture' and demanded: "Now,
pay me my $7-00 for my part of the
Phfiinoinea extravagance. Pay me,
he said: e are with hira: we are
back of him." And the hall rang with
cries of "Good, good," and cheers for the
preidecf.
When the convention met again in the
afternoon the appearance-of Mr. Oulgg
'on the platform was the signal for ap
plause. Lieutenant liorernor Woodruff
made the report for, the, committee on
permanent organization, recommending
that Senator .Timothy Ellsworth of
Niagara county bo made the permanent
chairman. Mr. Ellsworth was elected
and was escorted to tne platform bv ex
der of .the day.!
-j-
LOOKS LIKE A PLOT
.
Circumstance of Unlocking
the Jail Doors at Eliza
beth City
Elizabeth City, N. C, Sept. 23. Spe-
Wilcox, father of the alleged murderer. I won't have an umbrella over my neau
't XT': i -, . . . ... . . . i n n '
james wiiwi,' aecurea admittance 10 ir you wont bbtcuuc uih juw
president has read from manuscript
The dropssof water bothered him quite
a bit in handling his manuscript. He
wore a long rain coat.-"
The speech was one that received
careful consideration before the president-left
Oyster Bay. It was intended
to be one of the five principal speeches
of the trip west. i
(When the stand nvas reached the ram
economic policy, from which, as it re
gards the tariff, it may be too much to
expect the elimination, of political par
tisanship. But the proper aim. of the
party system, he declared, is to observe
the public good. "tVVmust inevitably
divide on party lines but woe unto us
if iwe are not Americans 'first and party
men second." Leading up to tariif re
vision, he said:
"'No nation can stand radical re-adjustments
of the tariff schedules at.
short intervals. Containual sweeping
changes cannot trat be disastrous, but
if the industrial needs shift as rapidly
as .they do. here, where we often live ia
one year what Europe does in ten, we
need the. reapplication of established
principles to changed conditions.
"We fnust re-a'djust without resorting
to a violent surgical operation, the
threat of which alone would paralyze
the ibusiness of the country. We mast
solve this problem with partisanship as
a secondary consideration. There are a
number of ways of bringing this about.
Oly own personal preference would be
an investigation of the entire subject by
a preliminary body of experts, who
would deal with the matter merely from
the standpoint of the business world.
Our ! This machinery can be provided and can
operate successfully if the people make
up their minds to believe that it will
handle .the question from a 'business
standpoint. Protection - is in the inter
est of American producers. Its' lmpera
tive need exists in the choice of main
taining the high American standard of
living of the American workingmen
the best fed, best educated and most
intelligent woraingman on the- face of
the earth."
Upon the platform were seated 150 .
persons and the president shook hands'
with a few of these before leaving. He
overlooked the outstretched .hands -and
stood In the carriage raising his hat and
bowing. '
The crowd seemed to resent this, for
when he was here during the last cam
paign he shook hands with every. one
was coming down hard. A great manyj who could get near enough
nmhT.aTIaa . worA rnlsprl .and pries f rODO I ' $
UUi Krx
those in the rear who conld not see the
president induced hica to say:
'I will mate a barsain with vou: I
wanted soiled The crowd laughed and a great many
A third party of the nmbrellas were lowered.
nooTl
When Mr. Ellsworth spoke of the
president carrying ov.t the policv Inld
ont in a general way by Mr. McKinley
there was a resoonse of cheering, and
v-hon he asserted that it was easy to
foretell that Mt. " Roosevelt , would be
retnrned to the office of president the
convention responded with applane. The
first dsy of the convention ended with
th delegates ready to take their hats
off and cheer for the party- and Its
po"T at' any time.
vaja Mr. Ellsworth, called for-tha
UNDER THE WHEELS
the jail. He said he
clothes for the laundry.
followed and sougnt concealment on top c -a-.A ,anA rvwtir.0ccmn
Senator Sloan- of Oswero and Frederick f tne 8t? ti"? nSar tfie,mulrivfni Landis joined the party at this place,
h! KHlbmn.. Then Mr. Ouigg introduced j J&. 3t& W , LSS5AS fnlSaJfli , was - introduced
him and Mr. Ellsworth began his I -""7 A: Llt " 1 --W-.i,. .. w
selves of the opportunity to escape, and his remarks-by thanking the people for dent at noon 'today. biJ on ieav n
three remained, Wilcox being , one of coming out to hear him oirsuch a bad the s-nops for dinner, met t ie ...
Liicc-t. v 1 - - . . v u - - i.r ann psnpriniiv me iiitfiiiueAa ui iudi
wuiu " aLZ Vk-- X 2 u ' Grand Army of the Republic.
lOCK llg iue uu iM n , inHnstHnl wpII
Both Legs of an Old Negro
Badly Crushed
New Bern, N. C, Sept. 23. Special. ,
Sandy Ellis, a colored employe otf the
Atlantic &T North Carolina Railroad.
met with a serious, if cot fataU acci-
Vv-. . . . . . .
.a.i 1 A cor ifhat Vilpoi had an ntwwirtn-
nity to escape jrud refused it, thus ere- ing or make shiftless and idle men pros
atlng a change in sentiment. The recol-; perons," he said,' at the -outset of his
lections of the jiVer and an inestlga-i speech. Then he spoke of the lmpor
tion by officials and reporters unearthed Unce 0f individual endeavor in contrast
a strong? chain of clrcumstanSaI -iw.th comfcination . He referred to the
matter.
xity of our financial system , and our
attempted to board the plow on. the fro.t
of the engine, shipped and Tea r.auer
the wheels, which crushed both legs so
badly ;hat they, had to be . amputs.-.ed.
Trs. R. S. Primrose id Du.fcld r?n
dered' necesaary medical aM. .Sandy
is CO year3 of age. . He has been iu
the employ of the road Tor 30 yetrs.
: '
i
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m. -- ir -
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