iJXiJjELfjajsjjJSJSijJS jl jlli, THINGS. VOL. VII. COLUMBUS, N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1902. NO. 51. 9 I . - ...-. ' I ' I " . ' ' i T " : , ? .. .I'v: ' 7 ' : : ' , i . A PHILIPPINE PLAN Scheme For Government of the Peo ple Submitted. THE BILL IS FINALLY COMPLETED Financial Plan Decided Upon - The Silver Dollar is to Be Made a Legal Tender. Washington's Monday completed- nrpscribitis a form of government S? tSSS&a isla nds and . autlui ized Senator Lodge to report it to the Senate after voting down the Demo- VUbf SSUSnS forrta cetusf l0-That whenever the existing insur rection in the Philippine Islands shal lave leased and a condition of general and complete peace shall nave een es tablished therein, and the fact shall be certified, to the President by the Philip nine commission, the President upon being satisfied thereof, shall order a r;iSo nf the Philippine Islands to be taken such cexlsus in its inquiries re lating to the population shall take and make so far as practicable full report for all the inhabitants, of name age, sex race or tribe, whether native or foreign born, either in Spanish, natve dialed language or in English; school " attendance and ownership of home and sjich other1 information separately for each island, each province and municipality, or other civil division needful to inform the President and Congress concerning the capacity, tit- moa npcit! nt an me ueuyie vi. the Philippine Islands, and of particu lar islands, provinces, and municipali ties, and other civil divisions,, for the establishment and maintenance in the Philippine Islands or certain of them, of a permanent popular representative government." After the completion of the census the Philippine commission is required to report fully to the President and Congress, their recommendations based on such census and upon the opera tion of the local government provided for, whether or not all or certain of the Philippine Islands are capable, fit j and ready for the establishment of a; permanent, popular representative gov ernment. The Philippine commission is con tinued in effect and there is no further hint than that above quoted of a pos sible change. The following provision is made for the extension of the com mission's authority: "That the Philip pine commission meantime are hereby authorized and directed in their discre-, tion to continue to establish additional municipal and provincial governments in the Philippine Islands, with popular representative government so far and so fast as communities in such civil divisions are capable for the same, the. qualification of electors in elections in municipalities and provinces to, bo the same as now providedby law for elec tors in municipal elections; and said Philippine commission, whenever they find other male -inhabitants of lawful age in such municipalities and prov inces capable of self-government, with the purpose of gradually extending to municipalities and provinces perma nent popular representative govern ment." After authorizing the Philippine gov ernment to establish a mint at Manila and extending the coinage laws of the United States so far as applicable to the islands, the following is inserted as a section: i "That the said Philippine govern ment is authorized to coin a silver dol lar which shall contain 416? grains , of standard silver, and! the standard of said silver coins shall be such that of 1,000 parts by weight, 900 shall be of Pure metal and 100 of alloy and the al loy shall be of copper. And upon the said silver dollar there shall be devices and inscriptions to be prescribed by the government of the Philippine Islands with the Secretary of War of the Unit ed States, which' devices and inscrip tions shall express or symbolize the" sovereignty of the United States and that it is a coin of the Philippine Isl ands, together with' the denomination I the coin expressed In English, Fill Jhio and Chinese characters, and the. eof its coinage, ; "That any owner of silver bullion "jay deposit the same at the mint in jae Philippine Islands, to be coined as hereinbefore provided. Silver bullion brought to the mint of the Philippine isianas tor -coinage, shall be received and coined by the proper officers for tje benefit of the depositor: Provided, that it shall be lawful to refuse at the aunt any deposit of less than $100 and aiso any bullion so :base as" to" be un suitable for the operations of the mint. And provided, also, that when gold is combined with the said bullion in such small proportion that it cannot be sep advantageously no allowance ;Spi;r.5?ade for such sM to the SERIOUS SOUTHERN FLOODS. High Water Does Damage In Many Places. Meridian, Miss., Special. Meridian Is entirely cut off from the outside world, except that two Western Union wires are still in operation, and not a train is moving with 50 miles of the city. A fast freight on the Northeast ern Railroad is 6. feet under water and the crew is In danger of being swept away. Efforts to reach the train by boats have been futile, owing to the swift current. Tfyo relief parties start ed to swim and wr.de streams, but noth ing has been heard from them since Thursday night. Water at Enterprise 12 miles south, Is rising at the rate of 18 inches an hour. There is no prospect fer the .resumption of traffic for two or three days. The southern section of this city has been under 3 feet of water for 24 hours and many families have been forced to leave their homes in the low lands and escape to higher ground. New Orleans, Special. The wind and rain storm which has prevailed over southern Mississippi for the past 48 hours has demoralized all railway traffic and telegraphic communication The town of Hazlehurst, Miss., has. been completely isolated for the past two days on account of the heavy rains. Many streams in the country overflow ed their banks and all traffic from the country has been stopped, with no trains or mails. The rainfall has caused great damage by flood at Newton, Miss and there, is little probability of the trains running through for severa days. About ten miles east the water 13 running over the railroad tracks six feet deep and four or five miles wide and two miles of track have been swept away. Telegraphic lines are prostrated on all locations. No mail has been re ceived over the star routes since the rain. - . . . . Mobile, Ala., Special. The rain storm that has caused serious floods in the upper country set In here Friday 1 iL 1 1 V a. .mm . w.in sieaay dui not neavy rain ana w Ind. The outer bar is reported as ex ceedingly rough. No vessels have at tempted its passage since Thursday ight and no vessels passed through the ship channel since this morning. The coast steamer Alpha, which is the last to arrive, reports a very-rough ex perience on the bar. The Louisville & Nashville Railroad Is operating as usual, no damage being reported. The Southern is also operating. The Mo bile & Ohio Is tied up at various points. Jackson, Miss., Special. The flood situation is somewhat improved so far as the railroads are concerned, but traffic has not yet been resumed from New Orleans, Vicksburg or Meridian. Mall from the North arrived Friday 36 hours late, but no mail has come in from the South in two days. Pearl riv er continues to rise and is now spread out over a wide portion of country in the vicinity of Jackson. The flood from the upper country is being felt here and Pearl river has already backed up to within 100 feet of the old capitol. Scores of families moved to high ground. So far there has been no loss of life. ' Meridian, Miss., Special. Eleven in ches of rain has fallen here during the past 45 hours. The streams are raging and many farms are under water, bridges have been washed away and railway traffic in this vicinity Is at a standstill. An Alabama Great South ern freight went into a washout near Newark, Friday night. Two trains were lost on the Alabama & Vicksburg this morning, and on the New Orleans and Northwestern, 20 miles south of Meridian. No trains have entered or departed from Meridian since Thurs day afternoon. ( Several serious wash outs are reported. Many telegraph wires are down and some points are entirely cut off.; r Mobile, Ala., Special. Traffic on the Mobile & Ohio, Railroad in Mississippi has been seriously interfered with by the floods of the last two days. Friday night a trestle 30 feet long, just souths of Shuqulak, Miss., was washed out and the track is under water from Por terville, Miss., to Iron Bridge, a dis tance of two miles. Minor washouts are also reported between Artesia and Tuscaloosa, The passenger train which left Mobile larrt night was turned back at Enterprise. Decatur, Ala., Special. A very se rere wind and rain storm ac'compaln-' ed by a heavy fall of hall, struck here about 4 o'clock Friday afternoon, last ing one hour. H&avy damage was done and severe and serious washouts were Incurred by roa ds. Haywood Roberts, a white man, and Tom Evans colored, were killed by live electric wires which were blnwn down." Wires fell down across street car tracks and killed two mules attached to a car, the passengers AN EASTER STORM Does Serious Damage to Property in Pittsburg FORTY PEOPLE BADLY INJURED Wrecks a Church During Services and a Panic Remits Heavy Dam . ages. - Pittsburg, Special. Oone of the fiercest wind storms ever known in this section struck the city just be fore noon Sunday ami did almost in calculable damage to property and in Jued many people, some of whom may die from the effects of their wonuds Scores of houses were unroofed, many trees were blown down, mill stacks toppled over and telegraph and tele phone wires? generally disabled. The most serious accident reported up to 9 o'clock was the unroofing of the Knox. ville Presbyterian v church, in Knox- ville. The church was filled with an Easter congregation numbering about 600 persons. While the minister was in the midst of hfs sermon, a strong gust of wind- blew over the large chimney, and lifted a portion of the roof off the building. The bricks from the chimney crushed through the roof and carried a huge piece of the ceil ing, measuring about 40 by 20 feet, down -upon the worshipers in the pews. An indescribable -panic en sued and a frantic rush was made for the doors and windows. The excite ment was soon quieted and the work of rescue begun. At least 40 persons were caught by the wreckage and more or less injured. Of this number five may not recover. The more seri ously Injured are: . , Dr R. J. Philipps, aged 40, concus sion of brain, may die; Curtis Ray McKnight, 4 years old, internal in juries, both legs crushed, probably fatal; Clarence McNulty, aged 17, internal injuries, badly crushed, may die; Fletcher Bryon, fracture at the base of the brain, serious; David Smith, 32, arm broken, head cut and badly, battered, serious; Joseph Adams, 21, badly crushed; Albert Schmidt, 14, both arms broken and head cut; John Meyer, 17, head and fade cut; Thomas Meherlln, 18, arms and head cut; Evan Jones, 22, seri ous scalp wounds; Mrs. Rachael Schultz, 35, arms broken. None of the other injured are seriously hurt. i In none of the other accidents re ported throughout the city were there any serious injuries to persons, though many narrow escapes are re corded. The towboat, Belle McGowan, was blown "over in the Ohio river op posite Mill Run and completely wreck ed. Her crew narrowlyi escaped drowning, but all were finally rescued by harbor boats. The corrugated iron roof of the union bridge at the point. was lifted from its fastenings by the wind and portions of; it carried a dis tance of a. mile. The Whittler School, near Mount Washington, was un roofed and its walls badly twisted. Jones & Laughlin's had 14 of their furnance stacks blown down, necessi tating: the shut-down of a portion of their plant for weeks. Reports from near-by ' towns are not coming in, probably on account of the crippled condition of the wires. It is feared that much damage has been done in those places. As Rev. J. W. English, pastor of the Robinson Run Union Protestant church, near McDonald, was raising. his arms to pronounce the benedic tion, lightning struck the church spire and it toppled upon the roof, crushing it and injuring a number of worship-.. ers, two of whom will die. :The in jured are: Robert Patterson, aged 10, skull fractured, will die; Leon Averill, 11. skull fractured, will die. Mrs. John Patterson, mother of Robert, severely bruised about body; Mrs. Mary Patterson, arm broken and badly bruised; Miss Mary G. Wal lace, badly bruised; Mrs. Averill, mother of Leon, , head and arms cut and bruised. The spire and portions of the roof of the Union Protestant church at McDonald was torn off. and the build insr considerably damaged, but no one was injured. The Noblestown Presby terian church was also unroofed, but the congregation escaped injury. . s The Forest ,011 Company had be tween 200 and 300 ' derricks blown down in its Mcponald region and con siderable ;r damage was sustained ; by Its pipe system. t v The offices of the Monongahela Con nectine Railroad; on Second avenue. this city, were destroyed by fire dur ing the afternoon, because no alarm could be sent in either by telephone 1 or telegraph. The Armstrong Cork Comoanv's Dlant on Libertv avenue! between Twenty-fifth and Twenty sixth streets, was unroofed and much damage done to machinery and stock. Reports from the different railroads tonight show that all Buff ered-more or, less from broken telegraph poles and , crippled service. All, however; were in good shape and trains "run ning by 8 o'clock. I 1 The baseball park in Allegheny lost one of its fences and a portion of the grand stand roof. More than 2,500 lights of glass in the Philipps conservatory were broken. The Mon tana apartment house at Pennsyl vania avenue and Fairmont street, East End,., and the Idaho building which adjoins it, were partially de stroyed. The damage in the Mononf gahela and Turtle creek valleys will reach thousands of dollars but no specially bad individual loss is re ported. Almost the entire eastern dis trict of this city is in darkness tb- night, the electric lighting system having been put out of commission by the storm. The down-town portions were repiared early in the afternooni The Btorm, which came upon the city; very suddenly, came up through the! Ohio valley and passed on eastward. It lasted only about 30 minutes, only five minutes of which was at a vjel locity unusually high. In- that five minutes prctically all the damage t done was accomplished Tired of Rebellion. Manila, By Cable. Rufino, who has spent $30,000 in his efforts to incite rebellion in the province of MlsamisJ island of Mindanao, now says he iaj tired of rebellion and has offered to surrender, with 75 rifles, to the native constabulary. General Chaffee will leave Manila April 10, on a tour of in spection to the island of Samar. He will visit every port in the island, and will witness the surrender there ohj April 15, of the insurgent general! Guevarra. After this surrender, the American garrisons in Samar will be largely reduced. Charleston May Get the Fight. T New York; Special. James Jeffries and Robert Fltzsimmons, having failed thus f ar to agree on a location for their proposed fight, will meet by proxy and open bids that have been received for their battle. The bids; will be two in number. One .from the Century Athletic Club, of Los Angeles of $25,000 guaranteed, the other from; the exposition company of Charles ton, S. C., of $26,000 The World says; that . the South Carolina offer is very attractive to Fitzsimmons. To Erect Monument. Washington, Special. A movement is under 'way for the erection of a monument in this city in memory of! the 1,457 soldiers, ex-prisoners of war i from Andersonville and Cabala, who lost their lives just the close of j the civil war by the explosion of the steamer Sultana, near Memphis.! Tenn., on the night of April 27, 1865. A bill appropriating $50,000 for the! monument will be introduced in both houses of Congress shortly. Not After Atlantic Coast Ljne. i Wilmington, N. C., Special. It is known almost to a certainty here thatj there is no truth in the report that the Pennsylvania Railroad has purchased, the Atlantic Coast Line. Railroad au-j thorities here are disposed to treat the rurmor Jightly and will not discuss the matter for publication. It Is be-j lieved, however, that a movement is on foot for a joint operation of the Plant' System by the Atlantic Coast Line and Southern. Ajtuinaldo Not Allowed to Testify. Manila; By Cable. Aguinaldo,with General Chaffee's permission, was in court in answer to a subpoena call ing upon" him to testify in the suit brought' against Senator yaledz, the editor of a Spanish weekly paper here, by two Filipino ; members of the Uni ted States Philippine commission (Dr. Pardo de Lavera, former president of the Liberal party, and Benito Legarda) but his evidence was not allowed, jon the ground that the truth , of the ar ticle complained of was : ; immaterial! Dr. De Vedero and Legarda were also not called for the same reason. . I ' 1 ' ' ' 1 " "": ' ; ' " -' Some Costly. Scenta. - Lavender ' gives a n"et ' profit of $100 an acre. Pure lard saturated with the seent of flowers ' (pomade) is worth from $6 to $7.50 a pound. Cologne; of the finest quality (obtained by soaking the saturated lard In alcohol),' brings as much as $17 a pint CfllTTHEDNJ IlMniTCTDI A I l UL1M 1 iUrlb The South in Planufacturing. Capt. W. H. Snow of High Point, N C, the pioneer in the woodworking- in dustry of that city, reviewing its prog-" ress during the past twenty-five years, shows that its population of 300, has grown to one of 6000, of .whom 300O are - -employed in nearly fifty . establish- ments, receiving about $8500 in weekly wages. More than $2,000,000 are in vested in mills in machinery, and most of taht money has been accumulated from industry at High Point. The Wil miongton Morning Star holds High Point to be a striking lllustratibn ot the . benefits of manufacturing to ! a community, not only as a means of - livlihood for direct employes, but also for supplies of raw material and food. , , It finds other illustrations in Greens boro, Charlotte and Fayetteville, andv points the general moral that the rich est community is not the one which produces the greatest quantity of crude 3 material for industry, but the one which converts that material into some ; . useful article for. which there is a de mand. 7. -( -. . ' .,. At many points in the South the truth of this moral is being emphasiz ed, the more significantly because of the long career of the South as a pro ducer of the raw material which has. been manufactured in other sections,- . to their great gain. The- South? , was gradually changing to a producer 'of more or less finished articles when war intervened, and it was hot until 1880 and later that its proper pace was set. That it is coming into its own ,is ikffi unOz eucJs.aFJl cmfw cmfw cmf demonstrated by the fact;, that while the value of manufactured products in." the whole country increased 142 per,, cent, between 1880 and; 1900, the value of manufactured products in the South increased in the, same period 220 per cent. In the meantime the value ot manufactured products in the, South has increased from 8 per cent, to 11' . per cent of the value of manufactured products in the country. That fact, taken in connection with the obvious expansion of manufacturing in the South during, the past ten years shows that muchof ! the increase in its manu facturing has been but ah increase in the first handling of material for moro' lucrative manufacturing elsewhere, for. with a population of 23,000,000, the South's manufactured products In 190O , were valued at $1,466,000,000, while tha rest of the country, with a population of 53,000,000, produced to the value of $11,574,000,000. Still, the South has the proper gait and the rise in recent years of new industrial centers in near- . ly every Southern State from West Virginia to Texas, and the enlargement -of undertakings in older communities, with the ' manifest tendency toward ' diversification in manufacturing; ihdi- , cate the deterniination of the South to . . use to the utmost all of its magnificent resources for its own enrichment and f or . the welfare . of the whole country, Manufacturers' Record. ' Coolernee flills Developing. The . extensive cotton . manufacturing . enterprise of the Cboleemee Cotton. Mills at Cooleemee, N. C, continues to develop towards the ultimate size ori ginally planned. Contracts have Just been'awarded for the erection of nine ty Operatives' cottages andve officers a weinngs, wnicn will be required for the additional employed kdon to bo ' needed. These employes will be re quired because of the additional .5000 spindles and 168 looms just contracted for, which latter will increase the full complement to 25,000 spindles and looms. The betterments connected with the Improvements will cost nrobably $100,000, the company's capitalization. already being $250,000. The enlarged plant will use about llOO horsepowers" , more than half that available from th I cooleemee rails. Later on an electric- . lighting and a sewerage system will be established, and a 75-barreI flour milL recently equipped, is already being ' operated. E. W Thomas. suDerlntend ent, is now. planning to open a night . textile . school' f o rthe operatives. .. . Wagon Factory Fqr.Igh Point A High Point, N. C., special to the Charlotte Observer- says: ; . The High Point Buggy Company haa been organized . to do business-at? this place, wth a capital of $125,000. .Tho stockholders are J. ElwoodCox, Wes cott Roberson- and othefs. Mr, TJ.'A, White is secretary and treasurer of the new enterprise. This will be among the largest wood-working establishments here. It will be located on the Kendlll. Improvement Comp nys land. ' Textile Notes. Tavora Cotton Mills of Yorktille, S. C vrK 1 increase capital from $40,000 tc 1 $65,000. This company recently suc ceeded Sutro Cotton Mill Ca, having a 6912-spIndle plant. .'; ' Crawford Woolen' Co. of Martins burg, W. Va., has declared an annual dividend of 20 per cent; Its capital la i $50,000, and the surplus at the end 'of the year's business amounted to $134,- ooo. - being severely-shocked. - r .