n Morning Post THE WEATHER TODAY For North Carolina : Partly c'oudy, warmer. For Raieigh : TEMPERATURE: Temperature for th$ past 24 Hours: Maximum, 67, Minimum, 43. J . G cioucy, warmer. Vol. VII RALEIGH. N. C. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 24. 1904 No. 35 'TO" I I , The Speaker at His Best and a Large Audience nil Sympathy With Him Ex-Govefnor Joiinson of Alabama Sets the Meeting in Motion Editorial Correspondence vn, X. C, Sept. 23. Special. vrats of this place were o a rich feast tonight by v.;G vamlidate for elector at I"; ink H. i-'pruill. The court v.-.? en) .vclod and Mr. Spruill best. The crowd hung-on -. . : 1 and the speaker's well I sentences, spoken with an el t'.it few men can equal, were ; to the echo. Before Mr. mwenced speaking, Ex-Gov--.-a-on of Alabama, who is vis was introduced and made : K-iicitcas speech. i- v.js the nrst time many or me : ,::, !;. : ' had heard Mr. Spruill, and j. ih ; c been any doubt about the r.,ni;: iv Guilford the strong and force-.- ; ; , burning eloquence and great ;i:-ss of the speaker would haVe -:.t z v.-avf of enthusiasm in motion x:-,r vr.uM sweep everything before ;- ;o f.v?at victory in November. The v w-kv. Democrats who composed the bu'.k -: the audience tonight were spurred to greater efforts, and what hv- b-r-on" regarded as certain, victory -a :.-:i' ir.-ade .doubly certain. r I "". lien A. Battle of Alabama. r f i: v t-r of t; nh'1 i? 1' $20,000,000. We bought it not for the sake of freeing the Filipinos, but for conquest: for the love of conquest and greed of ve'aith were running mad in our veins. And what has it cost us? In the five years our flag has waved over the ' Philippine Islands we have spent a thousand million dollars, 100,000 Filipinos have been killed, 25,000 Ameri can soldiers have lost their lives, and 25,000 soldiers are in American mad houses, raving maniacs, and the end is not yet in sight. The ideal of Ameican citizenship has been destroyed, and in its place is substituted a greed of gain and lust for gold. , .Who is responsible for this? The Republican party. The Republican convention held in this city recently was composed mostly of fed eral office holders, and in consequence thereof one of the best known Repub licans of the state, a citizen of 'your city, left the convention and said it was a disgrace to the state. The Re publican party, in its recent dealings with the Philippine Islands, has writ ten the blackest page of our history. About six j-ears ago, when Cuba, was making a war for independence against LYNCHING DEFENDED An Atlanta Editor Proposes to - Revive the Ku Klux Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 23. Defending lynching and advocating a revival of the Ku Klux Klan, John Temple Graves, editor of the Atlanta News, comes out in a leading editorial today. He says: "The white men of this southern .country must protect and will protcet their women from the unspeakable lust of unspeakable brutes, and neither law nor statutes, nor public opinion, nor armed forces, nor federal courts, nor any other courts will prevent the stern expression of the popular . horror and outrage toward this 'greatest and most infernal of all human crimes. "There is no need to try to scare the people of this southern country with the threat of the federal court. If the federal court invades the state's au thority and takes charge of these cases, there yet remains the memory and the renaissance of the Ku Klux Klan, which was perhaps after all the most effective that this southern coun try has ever known against the crime and lawlessness that followed a pe riod of war. "Let us discard for this crime the noisy gallows, the daily newspaper notices, the newspaper reports, thS good fare, the comfortable quarters, the ride to the gallows, amid a shout ing multitude, the last speech and the publicity which makes the criminal a hero and the cynosure of a thousand eyes. Putting these things away and dealing with a seventh century race, let us surround the criminals of the civilization with the elements of dark ness and of mystery to apply to their superstitious dread, and carry more dread than all the vengeance of modern legal retribution." CUBAN RECIPROCITY Not Yet Certain That it Is a Failure : Havana, Sept. 23. It is held by some persons here that the failure of reci procity with the United States has not been demonstrated yet because of the large purchase made in Europe in No vember and December, 1903, in view of the approaching treaty with America. The Cuban market was thus supplied for the first three months of 1904. The failure of Cubans to purchase in the United States is due partly to the greater cost of production in that country and possibly also to the fact that European merchants give longer credits and consult local tastes. Rice is not considered a good article for American growers to bank on so far as Cuba is concerned, owing to the high price of the United States pro duct. It is stated that Louisiana rice is quoted at about $3.50 per 112 pounds, while other rice is sold for $1.9S. It was foreshadowed some time ago that the reciprocity treaty might not make any material difference in the trade be tween, the two countries. NEWS AND VIEWS OF THE WAR IN THE EAST Japan Concerned About Raising the Sinews A De cisive Battle at Mukden Predicted A Tokio View of the Persistency of General Stoessel -n 1 Governor Johnson in a man-. - r th: t vt once caught the crowd and yov-: ! a ftorm of applause to begin Governor Johnson's rem'arks, i nv.rh bri-f, were spicy and put ev rybGy jn a good humor. But it wes Gt :nv Mr. Spruill to set the grqut vv -:f applause in motion which M audience riveted in closest at r v; v. He spoke for more than an "vhich seemed all too short. The r G- r was strongest in his arraign ; v.t, of the record of the Republican rty. Fr? from invective, but strong .ad powerful, convincing and eloquent, .t was a vote getting and vote win-5 ring speech, and if it could be made oGore the voters of all the doubti'l t;Ges it would mean the election of bvlire Parker, for no man who is in :.' 'ubt about how to vote could hear Sr.ain. the oeonle of the United States Dr. H. W. Battle, P-i v1 vp frep. nnd the world First Baptist church here, sto?(1 by and appjauded. We sent out on a visit to his son, m- niir , tt'Pins to Mnnila. Rav. where the Filipinos had declared their inde pendence under Aguinaldo. We made him our ally, the battle of Manila Bay was fought and Spain was conquered; but how have we kept faith with Agui naldo? ' I charge that the Republican party, by its governmental policy, has enabled the manufacturers to charge me more than they do the people of Europe. For example, suppose a coat can be manufactured for six dollars. Eng land can manufacture it for exactly the same. The tariff on woolen goods is 50-per cent., and therefore the Eng lish manfacturcr must sell the goods at nine dollars in this country. The American manufacturer sells the same goods at $8.50, puts the $2.50 in his pocket at the same time he Is selling goods in England at $6 and competing masterful argument of Frank S. v. ith the English manufacturer. I only rvrl and not be convinced. lie j want a fair chance and even start, but .1 in rmrt: j under Republican legislation I cannot ri i A i? room in this country, broad j get it. As a patriotic and liberty-lov- i is. for only two political parties, j ing citizen I cannot vote for a party : rni I parties., such as the know .' that by its policy makes in thirty years Gin- the prohibitionist, the populist, : T-.OOO people each worth $50,000,000 and v Faring tip and live for a day; j over, and at the same time turns out " Gy two real parties can live in ,50,000,000 mendicants and paupers. antry. And it is a good thing j I am glad to see capital settle in turn away from these short lived j North Carolina, but I want to see the : ' ' .''-ntemp.late a party one j government treat the laboring man and : rM y. ars old. For the first timeG the capitalist alike. Done in Two Rounds Baltimore, Sept. 23. Philadelphia Jack O'Brien won a decisive victory over Billy Stift of Chicago tonight be fore the Eureka Athletic Club. The contest was scheduled to go fifteen rounds, but the westerner proved him self no match for the clever Quaker City lad and was knocked out in the second round. Old Ammunition Explodes Manila, Sept. 23. While a number of four-inch shells and a quantity of small ammunition, surrendered by the Span iards in 1898, were being loaded on a lighter today in front of the arsenal preparatory to being dumped in the bay, there was an explosion that killed two men and mangled seven. The vic tims were all Filipinos. Following the establishment of the Filipino currency there has been a rapid outflow of American silver to China. A shipment of $315,C00 was made today. Return of Volunteer Cruisers London, Sept. 23. The St. Peters burg and Smolensk, which as Russian cruisers created international compli cations by stopping and searching neutral ships In the Red Sea and af terward on the east coast of Africa, Tokio, Sept. 23. It Is believed that at the cabinet meeting Wednesday the question was discussed of raising funds for the ntxt fiscal year and that a salt monopoly and a tax on silk were de cided upon. A dispatch from Hakodate reports that yesterday the British steamer Crusader, a vessel of 4,029 tons, bound from Portland, Ore., for Vladivostok, attempted to pass through Tsugaru strait. She was captured by a torpedo boat and taken to Hakodate. A press dispatch from Liao Yang says that the Russian outposts on the east and southeast fronts have retired several'miles towards Mukden. The Kokumin, whose forecasts are usually based on special information, says it expects that a very decisive battle will be fought at Mukden. The Asahi interprets the Russian persistency at Port Arthur to the de termination of the czar and Admiral Alexieff to still make the-fortress the centre of the Russian general strategy. General Stoessel is making great ef forts, It says, to strengthen the court's view. While firing upon ambulances for the purpose of enraging the Jap anese troops he has made the garrison believe that they must defend the fort ress until the last. He says that the czar will hardly abandon the idea of saving them. Accordingly General Kuropatkin lingers at Mukden in the face of great topographical disadvah- FOUR KILLED MY A MILER EXPLOSION '. - . - i ' . . i - ' 0 ' v., jv -:' ' ... The Mill r Superintendent Among the Dead Bodies of All Badly Mutilated Dunn, N. C, Sept. 23. Special. A- down. The body of Mr. Fowler was but which ceased on beine notified to do so by the Russian government in.ataes- The PaPer remarks that the message delivered by a British cruisey rnore Persistent the defense of Port arrived at Suez today. i Arthur the easier the next campaign win De. The condition of the Crown Prince of Corea, who is ill with scarlet fever; has Improved. The authorities here, at the request of the Corean government, will dis patch two experts to reform the Co rean system of weights and measures. falling in the lake simultaneously with the appearing of the Islands, they claiming that the water should have risen instead. Several unusually large land slips have taken place in the Olj'mpic mountains and the water in Quinait Lake, on the west slope of the mountains, has fallen, the same as in Lake Washington. Financial Aid for Strikers Washington, Sept 23. President Gompers of the American Federation of Labor has issued a circular letter, addressed to "all organized labor," ap pealing to all its members for contri butions for the support of the 25,000 striking textile operatives at Fall River. The strike having received the endorsement of the executive commit tee of the councL of the federation, President Gompers urges all members of organized labor to contribute finan cially as well as morally to this most worthy cause. sr.rty-m-e years it is possible in 'ii Garoiina to reason about he In the third place, I would not vote for the present nominee of the Repub- tv r the your Fvnporf f rirnpe in th- first place, that the "T"j!':" '!n I'-'ny stands for all that ;. U) tiie liberty of the peo-. . ''; J- ixim was that all rights CV, ,, ; '"'y "iv,''i to the federal gov v. r ar- reserved to the states. m un reversed so as to a nsnts not expressly given r. ;' If i" T: T. I ir r ai situation w ithout appealing to j lican party if I were a life long lte G'K!i. AS 0f the peopie The: ne- publican. Rooseve't was born to in-b'-vn put out of politics, and . herited wealth and large income. Nu rir? an enfranchisement of the (one is fitted to be president of this Gn th in a 'disfranchisement of (country with its mass of plain people I am glad' to be able to ' who has not felt the sting of poverty. 1 vou without stirring up yourJX'would not vote for him, because he ' ': ; I am going to appeal J has tread upon the most sacred feet a a yry and convince you that i of the southern people in eating with party is unworthy of j Booker Washington, because he ruth lessly insulted Jefferson Davis, the ideal of thirty million southern peo ple. Mr. Roosevelt poses as the evan gel of civil service reform, yet in three years he has presided he has suspended the rules sixty-six times. He asked congress for a service pension, and when it was not granted he said, that it was already the law, and proceeded r-SPrvpr1 for- tVio fipfl - i tn snpnei the mrn a v rf thp TTniterl States ' t. Roosevelt is just as j without the sanction of the law. !! !'Gf it as William' of! Compare. Mr. Roosevelt with Judge r Nicholas of Russia. Tha Parker, the man the Democrats have ' : the Republican party is asked jrou to vote for. He is a man !- t! ?:. H is dangerous now j who started life poor. He has felt the : G oitixen to have a clash sting and strain of poverty. By his Geral office holder, merits and labor he has risen to the " :i g the face of a fourth- ; highest place, in the judicial system of ! ' r I am liable to indict- a great state. He refused the nomina- ' '-ajesty. - . tion for the presidency unless it came ,:';;'"!'n are fond of compar- with a platform upon which he could - ;1-'luisition of the Lousi- stand. Roosevelt stands for an empire, ; -'fo w ith the recent acquisi- j Parker for a republic. Roosevelt de- Bhilippines. There is no sires to be emperor, Parker to be presi- h Gween the two sections. ! dent. G'Choose ye this day whom ye ine consent, of congress will serve." G;r- hased Louisiana; the - that America had of the the Philippines came '' -vspapers. This purchase .. .... iumgiMc luuaiao . oaiicon ascension ana paracnute leap ns severe simplicity ask-;here today resulted in the drowning !nr -0,000 with which to of Mrs. S. B. Hendrick in the Rock . " an1 3'et that is what ! Island Lake here. At 6:30 this evening evelt did, and when con- !the balloon was inflated and the ascen- serious accident occurred at Duke at 7:15 this morning when the boiler of the ginning plant exploded and In stantly killed Henry C. Fowler, general superintendent of the Erwin Cotton Mills Company, Lee Hearst, fireman, H. G. Braswell and George McLean, col ored. Several others were seriously in jured. The boiler house was complete ly demolished. The dead are mutilated almost beyond recognition. The re mains of Fowler were sent to Burling ton, where he came from three months ago. Dunn, N. C, Sept. 23. Special. The boiler of the cotton gin of the Erwin Cotton Mills at Duke exploded early this morning instantly killing four men and seriously injuring three others, of which one will probably prove fatal. The dead are H. C. Fowler, superin tendent of the mill, Lee Hurst and a man named Braswell, all white, and George McNeill, colored fireman at the gin. The injured are all colored and the most "serious injury is from scalding. So terrific was the" force of the ex plosion that not a vestige of the boiler room was left standing and bricks were scattered for several hundred yards. The bodies of those killed were horribly mangled, that of Mr. Fowler being literally in shreds from his waist brought to Dunn and prepared for burial by undertaker R. G. Taylor and was taken td Burlington this afternoon. The bodies of the others were prepared for burial this afternoon. . Several reasons are assigned as the cause of the explosion, but the best in formation at hand is that the steam gauge was not working and Mr. Fowler was sent for and had only been in the room a few minutes when the explosion occurred. It is said that there must have been as much as 227 pounds pres sure on the boiler at the time, and it being of the crown sheet type could not stand the strain. Mr. Fowler leaves a wife and several children. Mr. Braswell also was mar ried and had a family. He had been working at the gin only a few days. There were several narrow escapes from injury from flying debris, and it is very fortunate that the fatalities were not greater. Ellis Wilson, about twenty years of age, was crushed, probably fatally, in the cotton press of his father's gin near here 'this afternoon. He was in the press packing lint and gave orders for the screw to descend, when it caught him before he could get out, crushing his shoulder and chest and lacerating his neck. His lungs are injured. The physicians entertain slight hope of his recovery. Tunneling Scheme Abandoned London, . Sept. 24. The Tokio corre spondent of th?r Express says that the Japanese' have" abandoned their at tempt to tunnel under Port Arthur, owing to the difficulties encountered in the work. Wholesale cremation of corpses was necessary to prevent disease. The bodies were piled in great heaps and oil poured over them. Then they were set on fire. The stench from the de composed remains was so great that It affected Dalny. School Girls Meet Death in a Horrible Form Cincinnati, O., Sept. 23. Nine little with wraps. Mercifully, most of th03e Balloonist Drowned Phillipsburg, Kan., Sept. 23. The 1 to grant the request he The hiffh handed way in ic-ral court seized the At- s'on took place, the balloon drifting to the northeast. When above the lake Mrs. Hendrick made the leap, think iher she could swinsr the naraehute ' m Carolina Railroad, the away from the water, but her efforts state of North Carolina, failed and she was buried under the iitor criticised the judge parachute in twenty feet of water and 1 to prison for contempt a hundred feet away from shore. Pre , I ceding ' the leap Mrs. Hendrick ap- " 'uba as we promised. The jpared smiling and in the best of Antilles is now a repub- spirits. Before out of hearing she ahout the Philippines? We called out: "Hurrah for Roosevelt! - t bpain did not own. and ! and those were the last words her said she did not own. for friends heard her epeak, school girls met death near here today. About thirty girls, ranging in ages from eight to 14 years, were In the out house set apart for their sex at the public school in Pleasant Ridge, a suburb, during the recess this forenoon, when the floor suddenly gave way, pre cipitating all but one of them into the horrible pit beneath. Their cries were quickly smothered in the depths below. One little girl, who had been standing in the doorway, escaped falling Into the vault by a miracle. She turned and ran as fast as her little lees could carry her into the school building where she told Principal Zimmerman In halting, stumbling phrases of the frightful acci dent that had occurred. Zimmerman dropped his work and ran to the rcu as rapidly as possible Mr. Zimmerman was half maddened by the affair. Teachers and others came quickly to the rescue. Rake?, ropes and ladders were hurriedly brought. In a very few minute the de4 n4 living were removed from fhe ratiX Nine little bodijy w,-re carefully car ried into the ccjyxil bouse and coverei who perished had been quickly suffo cated, it is believed. Several of the rescued are severely burnt, one prob ably fatally. Little Elie Schorr, who was one of the children rescued, says that she was one of the first of the pupils to reach the outhouse. As the last of them entered the floor gave way and the entire party was thrown into the vault. Mi?s Olivia Ames had the presence of mind when In the vault to request the older girls to be quiet. Their strug gles to get a handhold on the walls naturally forced the ?mall children brt ncath the surface, and this accounts for the deith of the Httle children, while the older ones wrr 'LJ to get out Union Rejected Knoxville, Tenn., Sept. 23. After one of the most famous debates in the his tory of Knoxville Presbytery of the Cumberland Presbyterian church, which has just closed its meeting at Union church, near .Concord, Tenn., the burn ing question of union with the northern branch off the church was defeated by a vote of 29 to 13. Only five ministers voted for ! the union. The debate at times waxed warm and much prejudice of a sectional nature was engendered, the conservatives being in the minority. Many of those opposing uniting with the northern church, however, did so on other grounds. Chattanooga Presby tery also opposed union. Admiral Dewey's Anniversary Washington, Sept. 23. Admiral George Dewey, who commanded the victorious American fleet at the battle of Manila Bay, today celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of his entrance into the American navy. There was no reception or other formal observance of the occasion, but several of the ad miral's friends sent flowers to him. The admira.1 Is 68 years old, but does not look it and hopes that for many years to come he may be able to continue" his work on the general board jof the navy. Fireworks at Vesuvius Naples, Sept. 23. Mount Vesuvius is again active and the eruption is the greatest that has occurred in ten years. The western crater collapsed today with a tremendous explosion. The principal cone is filled with huge "fissures and it is thought that Its rupture will follow. Red hot rocks are being thrown to a height of a thousand feet. The torrents of lava threaten to destroy the Funicu lar railway, which runs up the moun tain. Thousands of persons are watch ing the spectacle, which is' one of unsur passed magnificence. Practical Joker Cilled Emma, Texas, Sept. 23. Dr. J. W. Carter, a prominent physician living here, was shot and fatally wounded last night whileGjlaying a practical joke on his friend, I lL. Lockwood, a druggist at EstacdcVhe body was brought here today. Carter placed a water melon rind on his head, cut to represent a death head, and suddenly appeared at iLockwood's window. The latter awak ened, and as quick as possible fired one shot, the bullet striking Carter in the chin and going through theneck. Japanese Transport Captured St. Petersburg, Sept. 23. The destroy ers belonging to the Russian squadron at Vladivostok returned to that port from a cruise today. While at sea they captured a Japanese transport and a sailing ship. No announcement has been made as to the place where these captures were effected. The cruisers Rossla and Gromobol, which have been repairing at Vladivos tok since . their battle with Admiral Kamamura's squadron, have sailed for Gensan. Corea, together with three tor pedo boats and three destroyers. Freaks of Earthquake T.i coma . Wash., f?pt. 2.1. Following Hundred of pfoplj .itl the ; slight w-lsmlc tremor, wtic.'ibl dur- pchool hou- this afternoon. I'lenrant in th pttrt fetr !jy, rrc-ptihlf din llidge is a place of mourn in ar, . undT-! turbanre hnv ben nil In th takers wagons i re plentiful Jn the ;rth's rrmt. Two small Jsiai.d have streets. ' j suddenly been format! In Lake Wish- Coroner Weaver ntrlved early from : Ir.Kton, while the fur fare of the lake Onclnrajti and bejrnn an tftmet that j I visibly lowered. Thf Islands are will lastj revra! days. lfr rays he hasthre aorr In length arnt are crossed disrmerf4 that the support of the in numerous liases h? fiur, Fefen nVor were rttt i and had teen entlrtljr I t!t to mhose .aifr.iiori th matter was ur.sae tor a lex llnjt, j brought f tryt,r.tl by th wattr Japanese Attack Repulsed St. Petersburg, Sept. 23. An official dispatch from Harbin says that two Japanese divisions, with a strong force of artillery, attacked the Russian left flank on the banks of the Hun river September 21. General Bilderling re pulsed the attack after three hours of fighting. The Japanese loss was over seven hundred. The Russians lost eighty-six killed and two hundred and seventy wounded. G' The Russian forces maintained their positions on a chain of hills before the Hun, ten miles southeast of Mukden. MOROS MASSACRED ; ; e ; . . New York, Sept. 24. The World's Washington special says a letter has been received from a soldier In the Philippine Islands detailtofr accounts of the killing of 250 Moros men, women and children on August 3 by United States troops. According to the story the troops "Killed every Moro in sight and then burned everything they had." "The private letter received says the Island of Mindano. Gen. Wood Is in command of tha district. In. conclusion the The World says: "The private letters received says the condition In the island are now worse than they were in Luzon during the regime of Aguinaldo. The Moros are fanatical and complain that the Amer icans have not kept their pledges." HIDDEN TREASURE Secret Revealed by a Con victed Train Robber Butte, Mont., Sept. 23. Forty thou sand dollars In money and a big bajr of diamonds, containing several thousand stones, have been recovered from a cache near Bearmouth, where they were secreted last Jun! by Hammond and Christie, the Northern-F.trlfto. train robbers. Christie, who has tnrM to seven years In the ptiltn tlary, took Detective Mc-KettridKo to th rarhe today. The treasure In th" earhe of Hammond, the man vh y frdhy wis sentriK'd to flf'!! yfar. Northern Fsclfle offi lal are r tl -nf. Th-y refuse t dis'UM th fii.d they espeet within the rest U w d ' to ft over more piandsr cf uwiy J