Onfy 7 Afternoon Paper Between Richmond and Atlanta With Leased Virc and Full Press DSspalcTies 3 LAST EDITION. All the ma LEIGH ENING TIME VOLUME 30. RALEIGH, N. C, TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1907. PEICE 6c. THE ltttOPS MAY BE ENFORCE THE Alabama Looks for Thrilling Denouement in tbe Strug gle With the Railroad IS PREPARED TO ORDER MANY ARRESTS It Is Pretty. Certain That Aid fjouth ern Will Not Halt Business, and on flic Other Hand That No Ar rests Will be Made Before Tomor row Southern's Lawyers Hold a Conference Which Ends ; Only With the Dawn-Each Side Seems Waiting for the Other to Move. (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Montgomery, Ala., Ausr. 6. Gov ernor Comer says that he will call out Alabama troops stationed at Pickett Springs, near here, if neces sary today t enforce "outlaw" act against Southern Hallway. Montgomery, Ala., Aug. 6. As the grey of early dawn streaked the eastern horizon, five eminent law yers, champions of the Southern Railway, tt.rned out the lights in their su. to in tho new Exchange Hotel after a conference that had lasted from 10 o'clock last night. All Alabama and tho south await the firing of tho first gun. It may go off totyy, or firing lines may not be advanced an inch in either direc tion before? tomorrow. It seems utterly Impossible to ob tain knowledge of the modus that will bo followed In the struggle. Certain it is, the state officials are looking for any possible move, while the railway lawyers are strengthen ing their positions either to attack or defend themselves and their com pany. If the facts of the present status were bared, It Is pretty cer tain that It would be found one side Is waiting for Vhe other to move. Wltli this Idea In view, the Hearst Newsservice man, acting as a neutral envoy, Informed the railway officials to this effect. It will, In all proba bility result In a conference between the officials of tho Southern and the governor and his staff: This may be hold today. It is pretty certain that the matter cannot be compro mised, so the state looks for a thrill ing denouement of the struggle be tween the Alabama authorities and the Southern Railway Wednesday. Several companies of militia and cavalry are stationed for their sum mer outing at Pickett Springs, two miles from Montgomery. These sol diers will be utilized tomorrow If the governor decides to begin tho ar rests of railway employes and labor ers. No bloodshed Is anticipated, however. It is pretty certain that the South ern will not halt business. This was decided at the conference last night. Tho lawyers hold the act under whkh the Southern was dis franchised unconstitutional and that the railway can lose none of Us rights by the operation of an uncon stitutional law. BARNEY OLDFIELD , SAYS HE'LL RETIRE. (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Minneapolis, Minn., Aug. 6. Bar ney Oldfleld, the automobile racer, says he Is going to retire from the racing game. "I have seen it from start to fin ish," ho said. "I was first In this country and . now I am last. .-. The game Is dying out here. It costs the manufacturers too much to build expensive racing cars and to keep them on the road." Oldfleld says he will go to work elllng automobiles, RICHARD MANSFIELD REPORTED TO BE BETTER. (By Loasod Wire to The Times.) New York, Aug. 6. Ex-Judge A. J. Dlttenhoefer has received a telegram from Mrs. Richard Mansfield, who Is with her husband at Ampersand, N. Y., relative to the reports ot his Ill ness, as follows: . ''. "Please contradict ; reports. Idv proving. Had attack sciatica, brought on by damp wenthor cross ing ocean." CALLED TO OUTLAW ACT STATE FIREMEN W. E. Springer, ttie Mayor Welcomes Them A BRIEF SESSION HELD This Afternoon Was Given Cp to Sight-Seeing and Trips to the Beach Another Session Will be Held Touight The Tournament Contests Will Begin Tomorrow. (Special to The Evening Times.) Wilmington, N. C, Aug. 6. The twentieth annual convention of the North Carolina Firemen's Association was formally opened this morning at 11 o'clock. President McNeill of Fay ettevllle, presided.-. Prayer was 'offered by the Rev. Mr. Noo of the Protestant Bpiscopal Church. Following the In vocation Mayor W. E. Springer deliv ered the address of welcome. Re sponses were made by several, Includ ing Locke Craig of Ashevilic. Mayor Hoyden of Salisbury, Charles V. Har ris of Raleigh, and S. M. Brinson of New Bern. The convention then went into a short business session, adjourn ing to meet again tonight. This afternoon was given up to sight seeing and trips to tho beach. Some thirty-five or forty companies have arrived and will enter the tournament contests, beginning tomorrow. MORTALLY SHOT AS HE ENTERED HIS SHOP. : (By Leased Wire to Tho Times.) New York, Aug. 6. Herman Wels man, foreman iron worker in a shop at Williamsburg, was shot and mor tally Injured as he was entering the shop today. William Aterky, whom Weisman had last week discharged on account of some trouble over labor, was ar rested after a sensational pursuit, and charged with the shooting. ALLEY'S SUICIDE IS A MYSTERY (By Leased Wire to Tho Times.) New York, Aug. 6. After bidding his frlonds a cheerful good-night W. S. Alloy, a prominent member of the New York stock exchange, walk ed into his room at the Larchmont Yacht Club house early today, and drawing a revolver, sent a bullet through his brain. He died five minutes later without having recov ered consciousness. The greatest mystery surrounds the suicide of the broker, which was accentuated by tho efforts of the of ficials of the club to keep the matter quiet. Members of his family de clare he had no financial difficulties notwithstanding he failed more than a year ago, and that his domestic life has been happy. American-Built Yacht Wins. (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Cowos, Isle of Wight, Aug. 6. The king's cup raco in the regatta of the royal squadron was won by Emperor William's Amcrlcan-bullt yacht Me teor today. COURT HARMED FOR OfllOUS LETTER (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Washington, Aug. 6. It Is an nounced by tho war department that a court-martial at Fort Monroe has convicted First Lieut. George A. F. Trutnbo, Twelfth Cavalry, for writ ing the following letter to a soldier's mother: "Mrs. 81ms, Clarksburg, W. Va.: ' "Dear Madam:--U gives me great plensuro to inform you that your son, CONVENTION Earl Sims, who is about the most worthless scoundrel I evor. saw, :1s 'a deserter from the; United States army". "I sincerely hope to see him behind the bars for at least two years. "Hoping this will be a source of condolence to you, I am, ; "' "Very respectfully, "GEORGE A. F. TRUMBO, "First Lieut. -Twelfth Cavalry., "Commanding Troop." The court sentenced him to be rep rimanded and confined to his post for two months, which punishment Brig adier General Grant, in reviewing the case, considered entirely Inadequate, characterizing the lieutenant's con duct in writing such a letter as "be yond the pale of the most ordinary decency." After reproving the court for its leniency, the general approved the sentence. Stephen S. Walsh, the New York KIicenmii who, branded as a coward,' was stripped of the insignia of a patrolman and ejected from police headquarters. Walsh was convicted of having hidden, while the maniac murderer, Frank H. Warder, made his escape. i FOR THE PERMANENT COURT AT THE HAGUE (By HAYXE DAVIS.) The Hague, Aug. 6. Tho Amer ica proposal for tho establishment of a permanent court at The Hague is being discussed by a special com mittee today. There is every rea son to believe that the institution of a permanent court is assured. The proposal Is acceptable to all the great powers, and while difficulties have arisen In connection with, the appointment of a judge which will probably prevent the adhesion of some of the smaller countries, the court will be established. , There is need for the tribunal. Great Britain and Amerlc.-i aloiio have enough cases to - keep it busy for a number of years. There is no doubt that once the court is in force, the Influence and reputation it -will pstablish will attract the countries who now hesitate to take part in its establishment. A number of the 'delegates hero are ill, some of them so seriousl;' as to keep them In bed. ThJ continual round of banquets and tho unusual ly damp climate have caused a gen eral Indisposition which has not done much In the way of keening the tempers In normal form. Much of. the recent quarclF.ome nature ex hibited at meetings was directly traceablo to the delegates being out of sorts. BLOODY FIGHT OF NEGROES ON TRAIN (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Decatur, Ala., Aug. G. One negro will die. one is seriously injured and several others are more or less in jured as a result of a free-for-all fight on passenger train No. 4 last night, a few miles south of hero. The train contained two .coaches filled with negroes bound for the phosphate mines at Prospect, Tenn. A difficulty arose among tho negroes and a fight began, which tho conductor and train crew could not control. All of the injured suffer from knifo wounds. The conductor telegraphed to this place for officers, and when tho train arrived the negro who Is said to have wielded the knife was taken Into cus tody. Thomas Lawson a Grandfather. (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Boston, Mass., Aug. 6. Thomas W. Lawson, Boston's famous copper millionaire and author, is a grand father. This morning at E;30 a baby girl was born to Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Lawson at their home In Winchester. Bulletins issued by the elder Mr. Lawson say that "the little lady weighs nine pounds, and both mother and child-are doing well." k v t vk r, j h i if ir i U1B0LZ HELD FOR SHOOTING HIS WIFE t (Bv Leased Who to Tho Times.) Atlanta, (In., Aug. 6.- II. 11. Krumholz, proprietor of a Turkish hath establishment, in Decatur street, is held by tho police pending an investigation of his wife's death, whom he shot, he says, accidentally, about -midnight'. ;'' Kruni:iolz says he and his wife were awakened about 1 1 o'clock last night and both rosf from bed to In vestigate".. '-.'They '..found nothing and retired. A few minutes' later Krum holz was awakened from a doze by another noise In tho room. His wife had gotten from hod and Krumholz shot hot' dead, '.thinking. she - was a burglar. '.:. An Investigation".!!' the coroner is still in progress today. At 2:31) this a I'l emoon the coro ner's inquest on the body of Mrs. H. B, Krumholz was completed and a verdict of accidental shooting ren dered. Kruniholn. who had been hold by the police pending the coroner's Investigation into his wife's death, whom he shol last night, thinking she was a burglar, was Immediately released from custody. SHOT DEAD AT SKATING RINK (Special to The Evening Tluuu.) Asheville, X. C 'Auk; 6. A trage dy was enacted at tho Waynesville skating rink last night, when W. W. Carter, wlio: went to Wiiyncsvillo a few months ago, was shot and In stantly killed by Theodore' Davis, son of a prominent and wealthy citizen of Waynesville. It seems that there was a quarrel between Carter and Clement Satter waite over a ticket, Carter acting as doorkeeper, when Davis Intervened and was struck by Carter. Davis, it is alleged, then drew bis pistol and shot. Carter dead. Davis was arrested. The deceased was 2 1 years old and leaves two brothers, residents of Hcn dersonville and well-to-do. A It It KMT OF AXAKCHISTS ! FOR .MIKDKB OF HIMBKUT. (By Leased Wire to The Times.) Milan, Aug. C. Dispatches from Lirgano, Switzerland, state that ton anarchists have been arrested at that place, charged with complicity In tho murder of King Humbert. MORE ASSAULTS BY THE SATYRS Twa Children and Four Women are Attacked CHASE THRO STREETS One of the Assailants Foiled by a Trained Nurse He Attacks, Flies from In-et to Street Amid an l'- roar .pi' Shouts and SlirichsWhile Dirtlcts Hisn After Hiiut" " (I!y Leased Wire A Tho Times,) .New York, A:ug'ti. These are the new victims of N'cw York's crime wave:: .. Tillie Fletcher, ' years old. of No. 253 Hamilton avenue, 'Brooklyn, attacked . by' Thomas Anderson in a stable. Adelaide Wilbert, a trained nurse of the hoard of health, attacked in a basement at One Hundred and Sixth street, near Central Park, west. Pie tro Gowrie, 26. years. old, 'a fruit mer chant, is held as Miss Wilbcrt's as sailant on her Idenlllcation. May Mace, of 860 Seventh avenue attacked at Seventh avenue and Thir tieth Street, by Giuseppe Tristore. Grace Winters, aged 8, of 13S Her kimer street, Brooklyn, and Amanda Barbi'er,. aged 9, attacked by John Antra near their home. Lena Weinstock, of No. 7!1 Kld ridgo streetattacked in Grand Street Theater building by Daniel Salor. Antoinette J'aluzzo, aged 8,-of Jer sey street. New Brighton, attacked by Leo Foiirzo, aged 29. at home. A Furious Chase. Attacked in One Hundred and Sixth street, near Central Park, by a man early today, Miss Adelaide' WH bert, '"a trained nurse attached to the board of health, was dragged into the basement of an apartment building, where she had a desperate battlo with her assailant. Her screams, together vlth the vigorous use of a hat pin, finally routed the fiend, and he fled just as two policemen appeared. The patrolmen chased him toward Central Park, and when he Ignored their shouts to halt, they opened fire on him, sending six shots at the fleeing man. ; During the chase hundreds of per sons living in fashionable apartment buildings along Central Park, west, Manhattan avenue and tho cross streets were roused, and realizing what, was taking place, the men rushed Into the streets, many of them with revolvers, while the women stood at windows and screamed. The fugitive vaulted over the stone fence on Central Park, west. Into tho park, .and hid In a clump of bushes. After a search of half an hour the pollco finally found Pietro Gowrio, 26 years old, a fruit merchant, at 2 ITS Eighth avenue. He denied hav ing made the attack and put up a light. The policemen gave him a se vero beating, and carried him to the West One hundredth street station. There he was identified by tho young woman. Saved hy Her Sisters, ' Lured to a coach In a stable In the rear of her home, 5 -ycar-old Tillie Fleischer was subjected to an attack by Thomas Anderson, aged 20, of No. 525 Court street, and only saved from serious Injury by tho timely Interven tion of her two older sisters. Ander son was arraigned today In tho But ler street, court, where tho child's father charged him with the attack. There was an angry crowd of citizens in court. TIGHTENING THE PRESS CENSORSHIP (By Leased Wire to The Times.) St. Petersburg, Aug. 6.- Draehlv sky, the prefect of police, has Issued an order notifying all editors that they render themselves liable to a fine of $3,000 roubles ($3,100) or three months' Imprisonment by pub llshlng, without permission, anything about the emperor or the members of tho Imperial family, or any com ments upon a trial before the render ing of the verdict. This order Is inspired by fear of public criticism that might have been made during the coming trial of tho persons mcciiBed of being Implicated In last month's plot against tho czar, the Grand Duke Nicholas and Pre mier Stolypln. Tho defendants In clude Naval Lieutenant Nikltenko at tho Imperial lycetim at Emmo. four lawyers and some women. WARSHIPS' BOOMING SET CASA BLANCA EIGHT KILLE Passenger Train Dashss Head long Into Wreck MANY PEOPLE INJURED Of These it is Thought That a Num ber Will Die Also, 'There May 15c More Bodies in (lie lUiins of the Train Which Collided With the Freight. : : (By Leased Wire to The Times.) -Pittsburg,' I'a., Aug. (i lOight are known to he dead and at least twenty injured more or. less seriously as the result of'-' passenger train No. 7.6 on the Buffalo &' Alleghany: Valley di vision, of t.be: Pennsylvania Railroad crashing into a wrecked freight 'train at Kelly, 1 miles south of Kit.tanirig. . . The dead, so. far as identified: . M. B. Irwin, engineer of tho pas senger train. . A 'number of the injured will die. Eight dead bodies have been taken out, and it is -rumored there are two more in the wreckage. One coach is lying over on the banks of the Alleghany river, a mas;; of splintered wood and tangled iron. A relief train reached tho wrc-k shortly before 1 o'clock. The scene about, the wreck was ter rible. Most, of the passengers.. : were from .Ktttantng,'. many being women and children. ! The direct cause of the collision was the breaking in two of a freight train. One car of the freight left the track and .fell ..'across-tho-passenger tracks Before a flagman could be sent back to warn No. 76, that train bore down on the wrecked freight car. Railroad men were near by at the time, but their shouts of warning came too late. The greater number of tho injured have bene started for Kittaning aboard the relief train. ; ATTACK-A PANIC Teheran, Persia, Aug. fi. The greatest alarm prevails in rruniiah. which is threat. :ied liy the six thou sand Turkish soldiers who have in vaded Persia t.nd the Persian sol diers who mutinied and joined the Invaders. -An attack is momentarily expected and the fifty thousand in habitants are in a state of panic. An appeal will bq Inn do to the pow ers to prevent further slaughter In Persia. The dost ruction of the vil lage of Mava'.ieh, accompanied , by the slaughter 'of. seventy-eight per sons, most of them. Christian women and children, is taken as an indica tion that, the soldiers will not halt where they are, Crumiah cannot resist such a strong force, and if tho anticipated attack is realized, there will be fright Till' results: -' I'rumiah, which Is twelve miles east of Lake I'rumiah and sixty miles from Tab riz is the scat of tho Fiske seminary for girls, the Vrnmiair college, and is a center of missionary activity. There iire many Christians in th" town, against whom "the-' Turks are fanatically bitter, .. HIT HIM WITH A BAT, SAYS JUHGK LAND1S (By '.Leased Wire to Tin: Times.) Chicago, Aug. "(!. .ludgo. Kenesaw M. Landis, who tried the Standard Oil rebate case, Is not a candidate for political prel'ertne.tt. He quelched a lively boom to make him a candi date for governor of Illinois, by say ing: "If you hear any one 'talking of mo for governor or president hit him on the head with a 'baseball bat." COLLISION I11AH FEARS - ; . ' GUNS AFLAME A pndred and Fifty Natives are Killed by Charges With Bayonets FRENCH TROOPS FIRED ON BY MOORS OF CITY The Troops Had Been Landed to Pro tect the French Consulate- They Were Attacked by the Moors, and This Attack Was Quickly Followed by a Terrific Bombardment of the Town by the Warships of France and Spain Four Hundred Moors Struck by Bursting Shells. (Ry Leased Wire to The Times.) Tangier, Morocco, Aug. 6. French warships have bombarded Casa Blanca as the result of Moorish tribesmen fir ing upon, troops landed to protect the French consulate. ' Many casualties are reported. The situation is ths gravest since the be Kitinis? of the trouble, It is said that thct'.Moorls'H (cadcr lias been ordered tii surrender to the French consul un ite r threat of the town being razed by the French Kims. .. - Advices late this afternoon from Casa . Rliiiiea state that 150 natives have been killed in bayonet charges and 4(111 were struck, by fragments of bursting shells. Part of the town was in flames when the message was sent. The greatest excitement prevails. Great damage was dono by the heavy guns o!' the French and Spanish ships. Troops from Alcazar are marching toward Fahs to co-operate with the forces of Kald Bagdanl to effect the capture", of Uaisull,. the bandit, who holds General Sir Harry MacLean prisoner. TURKU ITALIANS KILLED IX TIIM MOORISH OUTBREAK. (Ry Leased Wiro to The Times.) Rome, Aug. 6. The minister of foreign affairs announced today that three Italians were killed and a num ber mortally wounded In the Moorish outbreak at Casa Blanca. WARSHIPS DEMANDED TO . PROTECT GERMAN INTERESTS. (Uy Leased Wire to The Times.) Cologne, Aug. G. -The Rhenish Westphalian Gazette energetically calls upon tho German government to land troops on tho Atlantic seaboard of Morocco as a safeguard of German commercial interests at Casa Blanca and elsewhere. SERUM THAT WILL CURE MENINGITIS (Lty Leased Wire to The Times.) Cleveland, Ohio, Aug. 6.- Accord ing to private advices received here from New York and from Castalla, Ohio, Dr. Simon Flexnorj of New York, has discovered a serum which will cure spinal meningitis. Experi ments made at Castalla, it is said, have demonstrated beyond doubt the efficacy of the serum. Dr. Flexnor Is at the head of the Rockefeller Insti tute for medical research In New York. "it was a most remarkable dis covery," said Dr. S. Gorsuch, of Cas talia. "Not one of the patients could have possibly got well. A girl, one of the first attacked, was almost dead when the serum was applied., -No one thought she would recover, yet now she is getting well." FEARFUL 'rEVBNE WREAKED BY A BOY IBy Leased Wire to The Times.) Foggia, Italy, Aug. 6; Pasqual Glannini, a 13-year-old boy. took fearful revenge for being discharged by an apothecary to whom he was ap prenticed. He vowed a vendetta, and before he left the shop he mixed a quantity of arsenic with cream of tar tar. The mlxtnro was dispensed by tho druggist, and two deaths have so far resulted. A dozen persons are in a serious condition from the poison. Sonio ot them will die. - The boy has been arrested. Ho maintains a stolid Indifterenco, ; The druggist also has been placed undor arrest. , It Is sur prising that more, deaths did. not re sult, for the boy mixed enough ar senic, with the cream of tartar to kill a regiment.