. - 1 - For North Can lina: Fair. " Temperature for tha past 24 hours: Max. 74; Min. 54. VoL XII RALEIGH. N. O.. THURSD AT?.! OCTOBER 29. 1903 No.-126 - -: .r - . : ' . .- . . i V - "i ' . - i. x i -" T':"- ' . :: ' ' ' - I " ' ' - ' . 3 f Southern Railway Wiilj Add Two Fast Passenger Trains to Its Service Between Washington and Chari6t:e Washington, Oct. 8. Specialj It is not at all likely that the state de partment will take any notice of the press report, Giving an account of the imposition of a fine by Italian official- on Richmond Pearson, minister to Persia, for the alleged Insult of fered a railway : officer. If the Italian government should present the matter officially to this government then the incident ould be considered; but this is an ovent unanticipated and most improvable. Such is the attitude of . the state department as expressed by.; an official today. dav the addition of two more iasi.jp consrer tmins on its system between d Charlotte, which will Washington an be put in operation Sunday.- In. addition to its spndid passenger ser- vice important changes in schedules, effective Sunday, are also announced, The change give3 the Southern four fast trains out of Washington' every, night. The new trains will be known; as No. 3S and 24 and will be operated between Washington and Charlotte. This ad dition to the service of the system ia for the purpose of relieving, the heavy traffic on the through trains. No. 33 . will, leave Washington daily at 9 p. m., f arriving at Greensboro at 6.20 a. m. and at Chirlotte at 9 a. m. Nd. 34 will eave Charlotte at 9 p. m., Greensborc. it li:59 p. m., and will arrive in1 Wash- ington at 1015 a. m. These trains will nake direct connection at Charlotte a-ith trams to and from Columbia, 5a- .annah, Augusta and other south. Stops will be made at pcints ReJds- v-ille, Greensboro, High Point, Thomas . ille, Lexington, Salisbury, Concord. A sleeping car will be inaugurated on t rose trains for the accommodation ot engers. . ' j v Xo. 0 will be changed to leave here it 7:19 p. m. instead of 9 p., m., as it loss at present. This train will ar rive at Greensboro at. 4:05 a. m. and Charlotte at 6:55 a. m. Itv-ill leave Tharlotte at 7:10 a. m.. arriving at At anta at 4:35 'p. m. Reidsville, High Point, Thomasville and Lexington are :o be made regular Ftops for this train. General Manager Ackert, ;of the Southern, has isstxed an order trans ferring the line from Salisbury to Nor wood,. N. C, and the Union; copper mines branch of the system from the Mbel Cechtel's" Life Taken in Her Own Ho Her Lover and Members of the Family Un der Suspicion Allentown, Pa., Oct. 28. The mystery surrounding the death of Mabel Bech- ' :el, the pretty mill girl jvho?e body with the head crushed inp was found in an alley-way adjoining her home j yesterday morning, took a surprising : turn today when the police discovered what they regard as almost conclusive f vider.ee that -the girl's death was ac- ' comp:ihed at her own home.! - This evidence was in the shape of blood stains found on the wall onU fioor of a room sometimes occupied by the girl, and of a small hatchet with the handle broken, in a bureau in the garret. On the hatchet were some stains, which the police .believe- are 5tains of blood. The police, have un der arrest on suspicion Eeksteiri the girl's lover, to "whom she is said to have hPPn wrfl ar,rt hPr brother Tom Bechtel Thev are held in $1C0 bail for the action of the coroner's jury tomorrow. .Both have as- serted that they know nothing about the crime, as have the whole Bechtel family, all the members of which have been subjected to the "sweating pro- ress'V at various times today. . David Weisenberger, the cigar sales- man, who gave himself up to the New York police, has been practically eliminated :frjom tha mystery. His alibi seemed to -be perfect. He wasvto released on baiL : The Bechtel" family 'consists of a mother tba ViT-nthprs and ' two "sisters, besides the dead girl. One of these fisters, a Mrs. Davis, lives in Phila- delphia. The other members of the ; family occupy a neat cottage in the row of the same kind of houses in Cedar street. Of the brothers, none hac; 0 nnrllnnl'irlv rmnA T-rii tn t Jrn nnd Tom, the eldest, several times has been in trmiWp . x A;wek flrt tho miU learned to- day, Tom had a quarrel with Mabel, in the rnnr of xcWh it.' m said he . rr.s . 1.1.. - - - Light 'Shed on! Mill J mm nu Asheville division to the Charlotte di vision. . " ;j: Major Robert M. Thompson," a native of Guilford county, N. C, i?ho had re county, x. ., wno naa re - nxost of his life ' died lasi sided here night. Major Thomson ser-ed in the sixth Tennessee union cavalry regiment during the civil war. Since then he has held a position in the treasury de partment. 1' pattle Ground Monuments rreensboro, N. C, Oct. s 2S. Special. Mr. R. P. Johnson, who succeeds Col. E. E. Winslow as civil engineer for the government, is in the city today. He visited Guilford Battle Ground this af - tetnoon to arrange for the erection of the Nash and Davidson monments. The battle ground was chosen as the site for the location of these monuments several months ago, but since then nothing has been heard concerning them. Minister's Mother Dad . N." C, Oct. 28. Special. MethoJist church here, has i received a telegram announcing j the death of his aged motner at fceima, im. . y-. ne was called to her bedside last (week, but returned in a few days, leaving her much improved. "Her death was not unexspected. She is nearly seventy years 'old and -has had fivfij strokes of paralysis. Owing to a delay In the de- livery of the U gram. Mr. Hocutt was llot atie to leave here in time for the funeral. I - . ! - ' j NOT TE CONSUMER j . ; mi trhamberlai n I el IS Where H IS . .' ... i j n l j - Tariff POIICy WOUld HUrt Liverpool, Oct. 28. Speaking at a luncheon here today,' Mr. Chamberlain said his hearers must have been struck by the manner in which the new tariff proposals had been received abro3G. The -feeling on the continent and in the United States was not against thi: policy but in-favor -of .preparation to meet it, and to meet it byj concession? which he described. Moreover, he wa of the opinion -that if these ?oricession: were- not. extended it would b foreign countries and not the British con- sumer who would, suffer, colonial secretary declared The former that it was because the two great objects of hi? life, which had been devoted to 'the amelioration of the condition of the working classes, and the strength of the empire, were connected one with the other, he had taken off his coat, so to speak, for the struggle.' raer..;.riys;Te.rv Ae;over the girl's treatment of Eckstein. - Eckstein, who is a furniture polisher, (has nothing against his character. He j admit? having been in Jove with Mabel. Evidence goes to show that the girl j wa? not averse to treceiving attention? from other men and . that her char lacier was not of the best. Weisen I berger, who lves in South Bethlehem, lis a traveling fman. His eXfcumsta-nces ; v.-ere better than Eck'stein's. He was able to. take Mabel driving often and spend money, on ner, vu,n me . res.m that Eckstein recently had been losing favor with the girl. j The? mother, brothers and the sister were taken to -j police headquarters early this morning,, and for several l.-urs the chief of police, the mayor and coroner -questioned jthem. They stuck to their story. All of them took particular pains to tell of Weisenber- Pr's attenti.Qn-to the. .girl and of his engagement to take her jto drive. While the family- were at headquar ters the chief and detectives went to the house and made a more careful search of the premiss, jln the. front bed room of the secondj floor they found" a larje stain on the wall and one on- the carpet, which looked as though effort? had been made to scrub , it. Continuing their search further, they found the hatchet tucked away in a bureau drawer In a comer of the attic. The hatchet ordinarily was kept down stairs, the police say. The stains have been cut put; of the walls and carpet ior.l analysis. . The family -was taken -jto; the house this afternoon j and confronted with the stains. They insisted that ihey knew nothing -abpt them, but it was '.noticed , that,.where:they jwejie inclined talk before they became very re ticent. .Mayor Lewis, who has in. charge the invrfitisml'on. made" & statement to- 1 night In which- he said the evidence against the.-three men now Under bail was purely circumstantial. "We be- lieve," said e.'fthat-the girl' was murdered in the house and that one of the three men did it. It is almost r Art.i In tn nnm a" nut at thT Inauest to- morrow. Weisenberger's ! story is sup- norted bv' witnesses and would clear him in any court of law. We' are holding the brother because we found what we believe are blood stains on ls. Aujnr, a i ' h n v a -tftnf ieera . : f ion the same floor. He end the; others 1 insist that the stains found. Jn the' . . , rooms are tobacco stains, and till stick to. tne story tnat tneyt nave xoia an x usey menmunu, ysu esuus: iion sxlong. ;' Eckstein's mother said he went ; est Jo.'' first time' 2:194; The 'Span- to bed early Monday night when he says be got back from! the Bechtel's, but there is nothing to j show, tha t he did. not leave the house again . that night." : -1 The police regard the finding 'of the girl's hat, coat and shoes in- the par lor, which the mother j herself . told , about? as jone of the weakest points, in ! their story. - Qn the girl's body vas i her. waist, which had no blood . on "it at -all, while her chemise underneath, was soaked with blood. jThat. the body j was near a door leading . from the j tearway into the cellar the-police also ! regard as a suspicious; circumstance. j There is no evidence, that the girl had been assaulted or tnatj sne naa oeen af cotton goods from 1-8 to 1-4 cen,t a poisoned. Eckstein and Tom Bechtel yard. ; This advance has been due to jjire locked up tonight, being junable to the recent-. advance; in the price of raw furnish bail. Weisenberger's;. ball was cotton. Local . Jobbers have not yet ad furnished by Congressman Kline. j vanced their prices, and will not do :; The police have another member of so , until it becomes necessary to re- the family under suspicion. He . has not been arrested so far. He, , too, is said to have been enraged at the girl for her conduct with Weisenberger; ANARCHY A RELIGION Contention of Counsel in the Case of JohnlTurner New York, ,Oct. 28. John Turner, the English anarchist, who . was arrested wimc iwuiwsuig a, iuothws " i tained at Ellis Island for deportation, ! , ,A A ,J, ,. was before Lnited States Circuity Judge 1 Lacombe today on a writj of , hnbeas corpus. Hugh O. Pentecost, Mr.'-Tur- ner's attorney, attacked the constitu- tionality of the new law. tion was that the law is His con ten -contrary to thexfirst amendment Of the consiitu- tion, in that anarchy, .in effect was a religion and that the law also abridged a man's freedom of speech. "Mr. Turner," sa'id j Mr. : Pentecopt, "has been deprived of his liberty and of . the right to . consult counsel except in the presence of the j Irnmigration commissioner. It has! been a star chamber inquisition ail through like the administrative process of .Russia." J juuge j-.acoir.ee aspect ijor oners and reserved decision until Friday. TEXAS BOLL! WEEVIL Secretary Wilson Gane to In terview Him on. His Na- x tive Heath New Orleans, Oct. !28. Secretary., of j Agriculture Wilson left here today f or Texas to investigate 'damage done to. the cotton in that state? by the Mexi- j can boll weevil. The department would, he said, give a general (review of the boll weevil damage in the south; in its December report. Secretary Wilson goes to Texas to view! the situation for himself, to confer with experts- and see if some plan can not be adopted f 01. the extermination of "j this insect pest. If any plan can be devised,, the depart ment will, he . said, join- with the cot ton growers in demanding such federal assistance from congress as may be required to stamp out; tlie weevil. x PEONAGE AND PERJUEY . , I Antoln nn Investigation in Leads to Mixed 1 Results;" New Orleans, Oct. 128' The States grand jury for the nothern dis- j tnct of Louisiana, ,now in session at - Shreveport has begun the "investlga- tion of charges of peonage in Ouachita parish. A number of jwi negroes, were brought nesses, mainly to Shreveport testify. They bv the government to claimed that an Ouachita planter. living - near Monroe has kept several of his,' negroes in bondage and has on a ntim- b of 0-ccasiona rtripped and whipned them severely for theH threatening to! leave him. The planter. against whom the charge is made lis in Shreveport, but he did not testify.! After the inves- tigation all the negroes Were locked up charged vith perjury. ; FAIR AND RAGES A Raleigh Horse Takes; First Money in Trotting Event - Charlotte, N. C.J Oct. 28. Special. me city is uirongea wn visitors to- day and the crowd; at; the. fair sur- passes ;the most sanguine expectations, Tomorrow is the big day when the schools and business houses will give half holiday and the official ball will take place at night.; ..; " . ine.cuwi. event i.i imwi.ioudy the racing program, j Hereare the en- HM. . . J . . . . . , tries and the results of the races-his afternoon: J 2:20 trot, purse 300-Queen Bess,: Geo. Jj ver. Roanoke, Va. : Petronell, Geo.-M. ronell, Geo.-M. Harden, Raleigh; Lady Thelma, James farrow, Jtoper; Kate Campbell,, Price NeelyrVinstoq; Sam Patch , Henry L.- Upshur, Eastville, Va.; Estuary, J. L. Pride. Results; : Pettwiell, first. i time, 1:19; Ram Patch, second; Lady Thelmf, third; Estuary, fourth. . 2:18' pace, purse $300 Honest Joe, Geo. F. Dyer, .Roanoke, Va.; Jesse Fentofcf, : Joe Staton, Richmond, Va,; Jack tfiorner, H.J. Jamison, Roanoke, Va.; aryi;M., William Boswell. South i j ., . . - Boston va.; The Spaniard, - C. A. lard,, second; Mary M., third. ADVANCE IN f I C9IT0N GOODS Prices Are From 5 to 20 Per Geht. Higher Than They Were a Year Ago .Baltimore, Oct. 28. Manufacturers of I cotton: croods have 'within the oast few ' days Advanced the ! price of all grades plenish their present stocks at the , higher values. The present advance, dry. goods men say, will not affect the! consumer, out wiu proDamy De aeauci ed .from the profits of the retailer! Owing to the manipulation in the cot ton market during' the past summer there has been an almost continued ad vance in cotton goods. This advance ranges from 5 to 20 per cent, as com pared with the quotations current at this time last year. Bleached goods j have advanced from 5 to 7 1-2 per cent, brown - goods from 15 to 20 per cent, and ticks and cheviots from 15 to 20 per cent. I Linen goods are also higher, and -'com oared with last vpar the ad- J0B vance has been about 10 per cent. Cot- goods, which J this time last year ost 4 cents a yard wholesale, are now seiimB. 4 1.1 4, t2 flnd 4 3-4 cents a yard. " Local jobbers say that stocks of goods in the hands of manufacturers at present are very low and that it is - extremely hard to procure goods. Re- tail southern trade just at present, however,! is very well stocked, the fall trade having been nearly all supplied. MT TI BE JUDGE Governor of Porto Rico to 6ral Office in : Have a Fed Montana4 -Washington, f Oct. 28. It fs under stood tof be the intention of the presi dent to appoint Governor William Hunt of Porto Rico United States dis trict judge of Montana, r to succeed Judge Hiram Knowles, who expects to retire some time ing. winter or ear during the approach y spring. . was appointed to the n 1890 and has an- Judge Knowles federal bench noun red that he will avail himself of his privilege under the law to retire Governor Hunt1 formerly occupied a place on the supreme bench .in Mon tana. BOY'S NEGK SAVEI -$- An Alleged Confession Ruled Out by the Judge Norfolk, Va,, Oct, 28. When Judge ' ! Hanckel ruled out an alleged confes sion made to his father, a verdict of not guilty was given today in the ca?e of John Dey, aged 13, on trial for his" life for the alleged poisoning of his stepmother, Mrs.J Olin Dey, In August. It was alleged that the' boy . mixed strychnine, drunk by Mrs. Dey, to mur- Unitedider her sister who had had him pun- ished often. The; court ruled that the alleged confession to the father was extorted. 1 The father, while the boy being congratulated after his ac- ; qui ttai, Stooa at one siae witnout speaking jto his json, whose education, lne says, will have to be paid for by others j ' r - . . Maternal relatives of the boy will sna nim TO scn001 in ,Aja,umore- EXPECTS ITO BE BOS Dowie Says He Will Control j New York Politics in ! Five Years Now York, Oct. 28. At "healing service"-today Dowie said: "For j many( years I have held the balance of political power in Chicago and. I control over 50,000 votes there. Whatever way I say the election shall go it goes, and j I shall have the same power here some day. Fifty thousand votes would control the situation here If.JI had them, and in five yars' I will control that number in this city." Dowie today settled with Robert M. Farley, who sued him. for. $1,060' for his legal services in defendin T T f pierson, tne rormer Dowie roiiower, ar- rested i for allowfeg his child to die without a doctor. Mr. Farley attached Dowie's carriage 1 as he was about to drtv -Madison j Square Garden. Square Garden A - - .. 1 ! King Delegate Not So He Said, and He Had No Ust for Checks When Cus tomers: Had Cash Not in Labor Business for His Health New York, Oct. 28. Walking Pele olntly gate Tim McCarthy, indicted with Sam Parks on two charges of ex tortion, and at liberty on $5,000 bail furnished by Big Bill Bevery's nephew. John J.-Byrne, has, disappeared. Byrne, who cannot find him, obtained j from Judge Foster in the general 'sessions today "a surrender , piece," which amounts to an order for the police or other persons to arrest McCarthy on sight. ' . . : f Parks' trial was continued today. Whereas in the Plenty ca&e Plenty was the only complaining witness, every one else connected with the case was a Parks man. .. In the Tiffany studios case,) at trial before j Judge Newberger, there are three men who had dealings with Parks, r and two of them were with him at one time when he made reckless statements. In talk ing to Louis, Schmidt and jPavid Fraze, Parks! said to them that he in tended to. uss for himself the JSOO he demanded ; beif ore he would call) off a ; strike on work, being done by the Tif- fany Studios Jcompany, and that after he got it they were at liberty to em- ;. ploy non-union men as they saw fit. ! Mr. Fraze testified that he went to Parks after Benjamin i Thackara said he had been to see him at a saloon in Third avenue and had been senti away, with the message to send some . one ; authorized td do business. J Mr. Frazej weiit and got Louis ; Schmidt, treasurer of the company, , and they went to Parks' house. Mr..' Schmidt objected to paying the fine because the union men wages. - "You don't ness for my Parks. Parks said a fine. "We Tiffany workmen were : union . 1 who were getting; think I am in. this busi- health, do you?" asked that the money was not call it an initiation fee," sounds better. Look at he said. "It the other companies doing business. ; They don't nave any trouble, because j they have been to see Sam Parks." j "Well, I suppose. we'll have to do the v same," "said Mr. Schmidt. "Does this ' money go to the union?" '! "The umoni be damned," said Parks." ; It goe3 to Sam Parks and few others." "I did not Mr. Schmidt bring the money," said "Do you want it in a "I want it in cash," said Parks. wasn't born yesterday. You can mark Was Attack With Daaaers On Governor of Caucasus Assailants Fly, but are Shot Down by Cossacks The Governor's Injuries are Mot Serious Tiflis, . Russian Trans-Caucasia, Oct. 28. Prince Galitzin, governor general of the Caucasus, - had a narrow escape from assassination yesterday in the outskirts of stabbed the .the town. ;Three natives governor general thrice. They fled, but were shot down by Cos sacks., J. Prince Galitzin was driving with his wife I when i j the would-be assassins rushed upon the carriage, daggers in hand. Two seized the governor general and attempted to drag ; him from the 'ehicle, while the third man inflicted the wounds on the prince's head and hand. ; ; A Cossack who was in attendance upon the . prince threw himself upon the assailants. While a hand to hand fight was in - progress the carriage was driven off at a7 gallop. Ultimately the assailants fled,; followed by a mounted guard of Cossacks who had hurried to the scene. The Cossacks chased the fu gitives through the brush, firing con stantly with their rifles. They killed one man (instantly. The other two were shot down and died soon after ward. After his Prince X3a injuries had been dressed itzin attended a reception given by the citizens of Tiflis. The outrage has produced great in dignation the governor general having become popular . on account of his in terest in,, the .welfare of the inhabi tants. .... RATTLER: STINGS A Freak Showman Has a Narrow Escape From Death i Charlotte, N C, Oct, 28. Special L. C. Crouch, owner of a show located on the midway at the fair grounds, He3 in a serious -condition at the Presbyte rian Hospital as the result of the care less handling. of a snake. Crouch, while exhibiting his collection of freaks to a Parks Born yesterday every bill if you want to and go down' and have Jerome mark It too. I've got money enough to keep me the1 rest of ray life, and next month I am going to; take a trip for my health. After that it is not likely that you will . hear of Parks in labor circles." Mr. Schmidt added the story of the payment of the money to Parks. Several witnesses were called to show that the men at work on the Tiffany Job belonged to Parks union. Whitecap Warning I Austin, Tex., Oct. 2S. The negroes of; Robertson j county, situated north of here, have been warned by white cappers to leave the county under; threats of being whitecapped If the warning is not obeyed. Printed noticed containing the warning have been tacked on trees throughout the coun try districts. The negroes are much alarmed and many of them' are leav ing to avoid trouble. , - RUSSIA AND FRANCE The Czar Suspicious of His Ally's Intimacy With xf England Paris, Oct. 28. Russia's uneasiness regarding the recent development of a French rapproachment with Great Britain and Italy is shown by the ob jects of Cjount Lamsdorff's visit to Paris, which are admitted to be as fol lows: to communicate the results of the recent conference between the czar an! Emperor Francis Joseph; to explain the proposed interviews between the czar and Emperor William, and to dis cuss with Foreign Minister Delcassfc the next move in Macedonia should the sultan definitely refuse to accept the Austro-Russian reforms. Count Lams dorff, while expressing the czar's satis faction with the improved relations with France, England and Italy, seeks to know the full obligations under taken by France. It is known that during the past few months France has quite abandoned her attitude of tutelage In her foreign relations toward Russia and that the St, Petersburg government has now taken serious alarm. , It Is denied that Count ( LamsdorfTs visit is connected with the far eastern question, jit is affirmed on high Rus sian - authority that the" most , critlqal point in the Russo-Japanese negotia tions was successfully; passed days ago, when for ja brief .time war seemed aT question of hours only. . The Russian authorities here declare in the most positive terms that the danger of a rupture of peace has entirely disap peared forj the present. It is asserted that no crisis of any nature Is expected to arise within the next few months. crowd in his little tent, last night, picked up a big rattlesnake by the neck. The reptile wound its sinuous folds around; the showman's arm, tightened its grip and caused the mus cles of the; arm to relax. Then it quick ly released its; head and sank its fangs into Crouch's arm. Crouch threw the snake from him first and then at tempted to pick it up to replace it in its box when the snake repeated the biting performance. This time, the showman, thoroughly frightened, ran out of the tent, boarded a car and went to town He entered the first saloon he found, and calling for a pint of whisky, drank It down at a gulp. By this time his body was swollen to enormous size and the apibulance had to take him to the hospital. Several physicians work ed heroically with him during th night and morning. This afternoon they think he will probably recover.; SAVE THE COUNTRY; Mr. Parry's Convention Has I a I ask Set Before It j Chicago, Oct. 28 Dr. M. Parry, of the National Manufacturers' . Association, and other delegates who will meet to morrow to form a national employers association, .arrived in Chicago today and took rooms at the Auditorium Annex. - . '. j "The purpose of the meeting tomor irow is toj form a body that will have many aims," ! said Mr. Parry today. "The greatest work, perhaps, will be an effort to save the republic. It is stime thera was something done. On jditions are so bad that it.'will not be long before the nature of our govern ment is changed, and. we, shall have socialism We propose' to see that there is no change in our governmen -and that the existing condition of" affairs' is preserv ed. L We shall show the vre i a better .way to improve mg .men their condition than through the un;o,i. as they j now exist or through s-ri i -ism." '!- ;; "j ! Delegates are arriving from all Pi; of tha country, and there i5 every iii dicatlon that the federation v:.i! formed with a large charter w?i:il- ; chip.'- ' : . . s.