The Fort Worth Record and Register (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 286, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 7, 1904 Page: 1 of 24
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hd
IVOR VIII.
nr two PARTS.
FORT WORTH, TEXAS, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 7, 1904.
PART ONE.
■ar
hI
T
RACE QUESTION AN ISSUE
FALL OF PORT ARTHUR
>
k
IN NATIONAL CAMPAIGN
IS ONCE MORE REPORTED
PLUM-
4
»
not Hold Out Long.
4
2a
(
2
S65
DISCUSSION OVER THE BAKER LETTER-
RUSSIAN ARMY AGAIN OUTFLANKED
(b
>
7 (
Y
M
f<
su
Kvv
I
III ll
9
/1<
d
‘A.
Tour
Fnst Hiberian r- kimenta be
Hiherjan
baltalon
ROOT-I'D IKE TO HAVE THE PLUM, BUT EIATS A SAVAGE LOOKnG DOG.
)
Curm
Ihl. time '
5
I
legislat
{
hi
ances of
2
immediately after congress ad-
‘Senator
Gorman
In
tion and the publication of Baker's let-1 went for a horseback ride with Mrs.
member or the executive
CORTELYOU BUSY
I »
t
}
L
Missouri.
TAGGGART AMD GORMAN
fted th*
Of Jniy
e war office has not re-
EIGHT MEN IJURED
FIRE IN GALT HOUSE
Loutavies ni Motel Damaged by Fire
20,
6—Fire broke
bitum!
r1
ALABAMA LYNCHING
inyslelan rimnced bi. own ut.
rencue. A
restoratives to those hart.
■ling on his hand, and knees an-
ora
GAVE HIM A SHOCK
■
Q
1
the.
Ma
"5
J
Ji
Me Tien Paw Mtanchuria, Au* ». via
Han Franeiaeo, Aue • — "Night nuhtne
l. th. Mal 01 motdtet»," remarke one
Republicans Are Still Keeping Up Their
Work of Trying to Make Political
Capital Out of the Negro.
No Doubt About Its Genuineness, but Some G. O. P.
Leaders Claim It Was Written by White
ManEven Deny Booker Washington
Dined With Roosevelt.
While Report is Discredited Russians
Themselves Admit Fortress Can-
mdent Deseribes the Night At
Marti on no rien Pass.
such denial
The thing re
w wovernor
state. The
A, "fh"#5
it It to not
an thousanas
rof
th.
d
rock and
The M
461,31’ I
*
i
ears that
s ta Ala-
Henry B
Washing-
Lntter Promines to Enter Heartily into
the Campnigm. ’
•3
I
t it was con-
itary rgfiny
05.
T
militarv
faele
7 If
> 3
rned in.
ines in
ire was
THE FORT WORTH RECORD
AND REGISTER
HI in th. banement or tM Gait houme,
one of the larkest hontetrtes in the eity.
nt ns early hour thio morning. and tor
l apnistanee that the natlon-
furnlah.
1
28
I
()
gs
C-
■*• or Xecmoes Tako WogMOa From
orsoean aad Haag 2m.
Belma, Ala.. Au* 6—Eamond Belt. a
negro, was taken from three constabies
by a masea mob at about three hun-
Journed last spring.
Then there was the Indianola post-
office case, wherein the citizens of the
i0d
"a
race that
natloa of w
•t in 1M«.
Senate members; Arkansas, James H.
Berry; Florida, J. P. Taliaferro; Idaho,
Fred T. Dubois; Missouri. W. J. Stone,
Virginia, Thomas 8. Martin; Montana.
Washington was based on a desire to
control the vote in question, while, on
the other hand, there are reasons for
cannot be said of the other things
enumerated here, however, or of many
practleally a
committee and
early lections. L, -
th* wpeaking campafgn
•win*.
r
been nharpened for further use
Althush the fght had bexun only
three hours before, th* Japanese ad-
T
a
Washington, Aug. <.—Chairman Cow-
herd of the Democratic cengressional
committee today announced the mem-
bers of the Democratic campaign com-
mittee as follows:
Alabama. Joseph H. Burnett, Arkan-
sas. Hugh A. Dinsmore; California, E.
J. Livernash; Colorado. John F Shaf-
rotk; Connecticut, Wlliam 8. Pardee;
Delaware, Henry A. Houston; Florida,
8. M. Sparksman; Georgia, James M.
Grigga; Idaho, Henry M. Helt felt; Illi-
nols, Joseph Crowley; Indiana, W. Ie M.
By,Nept. 20, however,
----- will be in fulk
ed by
ir the
Pennsylvania. Marcus C. Kline; Rhode
Island. D. L D. Granger: South Caro-
lina. D. E. Finlay; South, Dakota, C.
/
Loutnvm., K94 K“E* 1
a ponse, has gone to the wcene of the
lynching
MB
‘.i
etacle of a lUtle white girl
negro boy together oa the
the r^a*
The treatment.-Of th* Ruprfan vie-
time of the inee mpetency ft their of-
ficers was all that the most enisht-
ened natian couid expeet When the
ginia, H. I* Maynard; West Virginia,
David H. Johnson; Washington. George
Turner, Wisconsin, C. P. Weise, Wyo-
ming, John E Osborne; Arizona, John
F. Wilson; Tistrict of Columbia, J. L.
Morris; Indian Territory, R. U wens;
Oklahoma. 8. P. Freedling.
The Westher.
Washington, Aug. 6-Forecasti
Wetern Texa and M*w Mexico:
Fair Sunday and Monday
Oklahoma. Indian Territory and
Arkanas: Showers Sunday and
aran
produetion was 100,-
valued at $94,694,050,
9
g
excepting the rtfa.,1 at the president
to eecep the hede flag toward bin
by a kippiea girl—to its refumal to
atapatch to the
rgt to tter to
»» lair 31 an4
th 2
only as A 1
equal at 1
that.the S
and a litt
has been good enouh to promise us
Ma assistance and advice. He merely
did not want to be tied by appointment
that would entail certain duties upon
him."
t orpa;
lunging
given,
menu
wherein the writer,
called attention to
gro was treated not
qual, but as a social
go eonventien, and
, count the letter
Baker and publit
ton Poot of July 1
they are sufficiently numerous to hold
the balance of power. To do Mr. Roose-
velt full justice. It should perhaps be
said that ibere is no direct evidenee
to show that his action In dining
and for a long time the people of the
community got their mail from a powt-
office which they maintained at their
own expense. Finally when the Cox
woman"s term r “ —
‘ eps a Baltimore negro named Cum-
nua When, after the first mention
o"thepresidents name by Mr. Black,
it beeame evident that the demonstra-
tion was about to cease after the first
K,
-2,
1
J
1
Czar Claims Signal Victory Over Mikado's Forces
Near Houtsiatze, a Three Days’ Fight Cost-
ing the Japs Thirteen Thousand
Lives—Other War News.
of the foreign attarhen when he vizited
thecene of yeeterday s bte nty afair,
and the Japnhese eertainly have
%
2)7
■
publican MWHHfk It
tor Balley Mid today: The "Aational pe
Democrat’e v'mmHU, Ms not eontem- hr
Iye body, the president having
im another “vacation appoint-
Boyd Barrett; Tennesnee, Rice
Plerce: Texan, C. B Randall: Utah.
H. King; Vermont, T. W. Matlory; Vir-
About the smallest thing this pur- rescue. A phi
passingly small Admintetration and its to administer
head have evet done dome—not even
The building Kas only partly flat shed.
The rain is supposed t> have weakenea
ths masonry. A potazeman, who was
standing near by, saw the nout wall
begin to crumble near th, Dase. Bricke
ten. Suddenly there was a lurch, and
he called out a warning just • the
wall fell inward, carrying the noors
with it The crass wet heard for many
blocks ana noundea like a bigexpteloi
PETROLEUM* OUTPUT
There were more than 300 guests in
the hotel. all of whom were awakened
and ••caped to the Street Non* of the
guests were injured, so far as known
The da mace will amount tn neveral
thousand dollars, caused principally by
water and amoke. Two firemen, Fisher
Guthrie and Harry 8 wain, were thrown
from a truck in the run to the fire and
, pointment was made and conditions re-
< turned to their normal state.
92a. At Chicago when Mr. Roosevelt ws
nanimousiy chosen to succeed himself
one of the persons who seconded ex-
Governor Black’s speech of nomination
Seymour; Iowa, Martin J. Wade; Kan-
sas, A. M. Kerkson: Kentucky, James
N. Kehoe; Louisiana, D. F. Brosserd;
Maine. H. M. Pla is ted; Maryland, James
W. Denny; Massachusetts. J. R. Thayer;
Michigan. Alfred Lucking: Minnesota,
John LAnd: Mississippi, E. J. Bowers;
tairly to the interenee tho
sigued for use 0u th* mill- ...
.MhdO conatructin t.om Senui to the
a
ceivea any reports of later fighting,
and point* out that Houtsiatse I* a
couple of miles wentward of ¥ushn}
Paes, whence the Rossfans feft baek
on an opening of the ba UI* of July 11.
Itusela has commnnicated to the
Inted mates Che derision of the Vlad-
ivostok decree of court in th* cave of
the Portland and Asiatic Tine steamer
Arabia, captured by th* cruiser Gro-
mabal of the Vladivostok sauatron,
July 22, cenfisenting such part of the
cargo as was con Hl gued to the Japn-
nese ports.
The foreign of floe is carefully con:
lerin the objections raised abroad
in regard to Russla"s list of contra-
band but no diffieultr hes nceurre
From what the corresponents of the
Aswoclate Press ran gather, while the
desire 1s to avoid irritating neutral
there had ueen was evidenced by the
poola of bleed in, the ditch and red
trail* nmeared ail over th* graen and
stones on the hilinide before it.
In this fighting Lleutenant Kno
• ton* killed neveral Runlana. almost
severing their heads with a single
stroke of his sword. When he exhbb-
bte and given flags to wave. The boy,
in fact, was placed astride the head
of one active Roosevelt elaquer. The
spectacle did not appeal to the white
delegates or spectators, but the negroes,
who were numerous in both classes. inv
were so vociferous in their applause the
that for seme minutes their cries and +LA.
cheers drowned all other sounds.
Mr Cortelyou had a half hour's con-
ference with President Roomevelt today
before his departure for New York The
conference related •• personal matters
concerning the eampalgn, and no state-
ment about it was made.
SENATOR BAILEY
-Nagannkl Aug l. noon It is re-
ported here that Port Arthur baa bcen
captured by the Japenese
Mew York. Aug • it in not vrobahle
that Nagasaki would be ths first point
and the only point to luarn of the fall
of Port Arthur. There are no adviees
from Tokie to the Japanese teg atlons
at Washinston or London to condrm
the Nagasaki rep
A New York, Aug. Se(Speclal)-
w Chairman Taggart called on Senator
Gorman today and then visited the dlf-
4?
another, th. Republican managers art
keeping the agitation alive. Yet, de-
•pile all these faets, they charge the
Democtats with bringing the matter s-7 weis S..
uete.frontuna attempt • obesure auirhes MEthe‘orfie
Deereame- to Rwi
Washington, Aug. <—Tha United
States geological survey baa tumued re:
port, on the production la the United
statee during the year of 1903 or pe-
foleum, eshaitur and bituminus
wi Opem Campaten Work, at Mew Ton
Mendquarters „mmedtntely.
Washington, Aug. €- Republican Na-
tional Chairman G. H. Cortelyou, after
a very buoy Oar in Washinuton, left to-
day for New York. He will take up
immeqiately the campelga work at the
New York hendquartrn:
While the preliuminary wook of the
eampalgn to already well in hand, the
public campaign will not begin until
about the m bbl la or september, ex ept
in Vermont and la Maine, whfch hold
area of hiw race, eight mhes from Selma,
thi afternoon, and hanged to a tree
after which his body was riddled with
bullet. Tn ■etoy night Boll , ms oil
Bated Hopton Serugga another negro.
Today St Sarais, to the preliminary ex- --------
aminatien. Bell was bound over, and it Meranger Texta mWi Apperatus om
wee while an route to jail that the
lynching took place. The abort*, with
were badly________
being hurt internally
-- eentrabana and muftietent to w r-
rant the holdleg of It tor he 4-0
or a arise coupt. Free if coreicned
to private aew the burden ot pro t
that it Is @ Intend a for the *y*Ea-
ment festaVpon the conetengr and eon-
afgnee If it een bo proved that it to
intended for poncombatanta it wiul not
he eonfimeated" _
Ruada haw not yet replied to Oreat
Britain rearaing the lot tor's protest
an too nubJeet. ....
The armo or own tedez vublisben.the
total • time serious conmequenes
•St*,- feared. A general alarma was tur
whieh brought all the Are eng
the city to the meene, aad the li
- --under control
fourth Eat Siberian regiments are
larger and the beards whieh moot of
them woer, after a season of campalem-
!' give them a parucularly fierce ap-
• pearnce. .
mhe bodiee of three Ruewtans who
had been kived on the parapet of the
ireneh were laid in the rood behtn4 it
longing to me iate en-mI Keuede
ter. They are much woree now. Parker.
It seems, too. that in some parts of! Xt was aald at Rosemount that no
the South the old etory in denial of the visitors wers expected today.
statement that Booker Washington .
dined with Roosevelt is being reyamped New York, Aug. 1 Chairman Tag-
^Wt»XcTS eart ot the Democratie national com-
necessary to reopen the fscusslon at mittee, called on Senator Gorman early
this time. The plain facta are, as today and then visited the different
everybody in Washington knows who is I buildings that are under consideration
-Tn- - •—.In a position to know, that the cole-1 for headquarters ip this city.
expired, another ap- "brated negro educator did eat at the Arrangements are about completed
. ....---- same tablj with the president and that, for the assembling of the Parker noti-
moreover, he went to the white house I fication committee in this city next
for that specific purpose, having been Tues day and the trip to Esopus neat
formally invited by Mr. Roosevelt. The I Wednesday morning.
Washington Poet and other nonpartisan
papers in this section have told these
facts more than once, end nobody whose
opinion is worth considering has ever
peruine tha Rumlane IM Japanee
dead had been f-mov** to a temple be-
hind the arest of the hill, and parties
of soMIrra from me of tho eompanies
in p-erve were going about tM field
with trenching •,«**• burying the dead
Mumtana where they lay and markine
ne rave* with a stake or a plie of
atonn. The KusetoM had Sone into
action wearing their heavy overcoata
and eerr,tag their hogs of black breud.
They had afopped both on the nela
Afrendy while wome qetaits were
buryine the dead and some earing for
the wounded, others Md gathered the
a Cowherd; Montana.
eapon afterward He edge
looked like a paw blade It haa omce
a 7
other of the same nature to which no
referenee haa been made. The worst
feature of the situation is that the
president and his party, by their crimi-
nal jugglng with the negroes, have
caused many members of the race to
hope for ano expect things which never
will be riven them, and which the Re-
publicans themselves will be the first
to refuse when the demand is made—as
It unquestionably wil be made Hhould
Theodore Roosevelt succeed himseif
and carry out his negro policy to its
logical conclusion. The sensible end
well balanced ngroes are experieucing
great difficulty in preventing their less
stable brethren from indulging in ex-
cesses which could net fail to result
disastrously. This is true, and cvery-
body who is acquainted with the sitwa-
tion knows it is true. The Re pub lira ns
have attempted to make politicl capi-
tal out of the negro and are still work-
ing hard in that direction. They have
already caused much trouble, and the
prospect of tho results they mar bring
about if they are allowed to dontinge
la extremely disquieting, to say the
least of it.
plsttormetipnconnatimn"iuhMr
• iugton and in other ways showig his
love for the negro, had so encouraged
NO. 286. '
stsel, commanding i hiet *1 Pori.
Arthur. I, compelled lo huspaud hi
ammunition. Ito tan manufacture
■h,UA but it lo Impouwibis <«• moko
proper exploniven Th* necosaIty ot
preparing tho mon for th* nnut Aturud
explain th* retrmat or im Museiaua .I, . ---
from tho atrons outpost posttion who, vrven iheir quaiity
their lonnen were tar lo** periovn ihan Protmbly no ineide
thone nuntainea hr thenwnaitantx - - -
Accoraing to thio nunnlan. General
stoeamel la in flatly communteation with
aiseIsaipD town of that name ob-
3ecte4 to tha appointment af a negress,
Minnie Cox. as postmester. Their con-
tinned oppositioin ao ehraged tM presit
dent that he ordered tha otnce elosed
TRIBUTES TO PARKER
Great Persensl Leos to the Beach of
New York State.
Albany, N. Y., An*. 6— (Speclal.)--
The foRowing tributes were paid to
Judge Parker by his assoclates on the
occasion of his retirement. Judge-Wer-
ner said*: "Every member of this
court feels that it is a great personal
loss to have Judge Parker resign the
bench and the people sustain a great
losr because he has beern eminently
able and suecesful presiding judge of
this court."
Judge O'Brien: “All I desire to nay le
that I, and I think that all judges are.
am very sorry tho situation has arisen,
that in Mr. Parker's opinion, calls for
his resignation.
Judge Vann "It is a fubpect of pro-
found regret to every member of the
court that Judge Parker finds it nees-
sary to return. I think Judge O'Brien
has expressed the views of at all."
Judge Cullen: "We have all rejoiced
in the honors that have com* to the
chief judge. Our feelings would be
those of unmixed satitaction, if they
were not accompanied by the severs nr*
of our personal relations, and whatever
the future may have in store for him.
he will discharge these duties with
honor to himself and with satisfaction
to the people. I do not think I am
trying too much for my Republican
friends." ho added, turning to Juges
Vana and Werner, who nodded assent.
It was Maid during th, time the dis-
cussion ergused by the Washington din-
ner Inqident was at its height, that
Roosevelt had repented of his action in
the premises and he would take good
tare to prevent the reoucronceotany-
thing of the kind. Thia alleged fact
was aweit on at iength by Republican
organn- but subseqent development,
have ahown Ha fallacy in a dozen ar-
aerent WAY*' It wa» not long after
the principal of the famous Tuskegee
school dined at the White House that
the Crum cnee was brought up. Crum,
a negro, was appointed collector of cus-
tom* at Charleston, 8. C.. in the fece
of ptotests from practically all the bus-
inese men of the city, Republicans as
well aa Democrats, and was repeated-
jy reappointed aa 4 result of the action
or the senate in Jailing ana retuaing
to confirm the president's action. At
thia very moment, in fact, Crum le serv-
ing without the saneuonot the upper.
TM ptoduetion of copper wes 730,-
044,511 pouns, egai 655,508,544
pounds last year.
The production of •wphaitem and
Mtuminon» rock was 101,255 tons, val-
ued at *,006,466. This wm a -mailer
amount by over 4,000 tons in quantity
than the rear previous but lie -----
was 11 per cent greater at the
productloa, 46,157 tone, valued at
Hi, Vitas from Calirornie-
>an Nattomai Committee Win Net in-
tertere to New terk Leen Might
New York, Aug 1.— (Special.)—Mna-
I ,a Informed that denial that such
an incident was in evidence has been
Shade in Texas and elsewhere, specinc-
ally in Virginia, where one of the dele-
gatee from that state wrote to the
Lynchburg News to the effect that
. nothing of the kind happened. Either
this man was not present at the time
or, being present, did not witness the
scene, or in his letter he told s faise-
hood. TM thing did occur. I not with-
in thirty feet of the platform and saw
tM negro boy by the aide of the little
white girl as plainly as I sow ass ths
typewriter on which those lines are
being written. There is net the aint-
At shadow of a doubt as to what hap-
pened. and every sensible person ought
to knew it by this time, for had the
facts teen othsr than they were tbs
story would long ago have been denied
by some one in authority in the Repub-
lcan party. The Roosevelt managers
might not have felt called on to reply
to the numerous newspaper commento
on the incident perhaps, but they cer-
tainly coulq aot ignore the reterence
made to U by John.Sharp WUllams in
a speech ba made before tha Pemo-
eratie convention at at Louis Imme-
dintety after being introduced ao tem-
porary chairman Mr. willams re-
marks certainly dignified the story to
an extent which would warrant a de-
nial from the Republicans wore any
-____ . no incident ol the war hoc
pieced th Japanes mtalereIn a more
trying mituation than lb, night attack
at Mo Tien pan, and nowher• ,tae
far, nt bunains which are under eon-
e steeration for heaaquartere in this city.
I- "Wo are going to bat over the whole
n cougtry," he said.
•'Just as soon aa the executive oom-
to the pollee that a boardet in his Muse
Md med. Mm unconmetou» by an -lec-
trie ynoek and while he was helpleem
robbed him. In his ewn room, of over
31,000. TM -tranger repremented hjm
Self as IM discoverer of a aew electric
proces. to cute rheumetimm end of
f.ird sehiomt-e h tn* treatmunt gratia
He attached hia apparatus to sehlom--
bach's wrist s sad iM vietim kasw l*
more for five hours la tM imterim tbs
ponrai secured s1,000 wk lek Bebdom.
■ehlesobash aad Aoba RMs
Asbury Part N. J, Ault 6 — Abraham
Sehtomabach of this place has reported
reasons for this action, ao eel forth by
Postmaster Geasrst Payne in the state-
ment wired Th* Record test Tuesday
night, ahow even a more contemptible
spirit than tM official net it meeks to
justify. A great many loyal south-
entero adn Democrats dissent from
soaK of Vardaman's raQica views
but even they have accepted in good
'•l*.*, demtei ozrenroneibti” M
ceran language attributed to him by
hia political enemies fluring ths stats
2z.tamm,pisusmhguru
Mve^Mto the ‘m thing" "m2* E"o5
-reapondent arrive,! at th, trsneh,
slier* less than a company of Japa:
ae, rumhing from th-ir bedm without
ume to arena, had staved ott the Run-
slsn onmlaug61, atjtret with bayom-t
and -worda, the nonatan dead and
wounded atin lay where they hod
fallen. Hew nerce that hour’* wor*
four kurop-a weuimenin be-
Yoodatatre comziqnea to is ene-
my‘a port ia Suf ft, lent euanuty it
create the per 00 mg tion that it is in
tended for use of th- sow row-* t'l
debris from th* field sad pites of coats
ana canteens and IM rifles with bayo-
nets attorned were wtueked on the tem-
ple atepm The Japaneee system to not
only thoroh but quick
There was a company of Japenene
solliters whose khaki coats went Mark
with mud and aweat gathered at the
trench qutptty dimeuspinegeventa, with
no sign of ezettement Two Nie Run-
sian prinoners not wounded were rest-
Jng there with a email Japanese eutun
Ttthem The Jupanene motalers ot
the colump are heavier men than tha
average ot most Kuropenn armies but
tM Ralan- to tM Tenth and Twenty-
of persons who were in tM big audito- L. ___________ ■ — .
rinm oa IM day Roomeven was momi- give tM name of Missinnppl"
natea -will attest to a new poetoffice in that 1
And now, according to private ad- — ----
vl coo aad expresston ta various Re-
„ with their pinurt-colored g
thrown over their fame. I
-for tie Tenth Beat Siberlan. —
:lgmy Mtoumes and capo withone any
fegimentat insignia, were oa the
ground bemae them. One wao shot
through both logs and had been bayo-
tiered in an arm and a leg, and had a
3 1
4
significant
TM Uss Tang t
Rouree Orxette ia (ho
General Kuropatkin.
Naw chwane Aug. • -A ntrone Jav-
anese naval toroo compomed ol wunbont
and torpedo bonte proceeded up Iha
Idea river yesterdiy The ehallow
draft of thene yen eta r no Ms* them to
eacand the rivar tar a nunqred mum.
These are io intezcep the HuMlen re.
treat to wentwara The v-tana a4atn
have Men out de need and compelicd to
retire.
81. Petersburg^ Aug. eThe report
of the tail of Pori Arthur received from
sagannki do« not' obtain greater ere-
denro at tn* admiralty and war otne
bare than pravious telegrama on ine
name sutler t
A Alepateh to tM Nourae Gosatta
from Lian Yang says that another
great bailie Ma been taught to the
nelgha orhooa of Houtetats* en the
rnifrona about fourteen mites west ot
1no Yaag. In which the Japanese
Inoses are eatimated to Meo been from
10,000 tn 12,000, end tM' Ramslan !<»««»
attempted to deny them.
The purpose of moot of these mani-
testauon» of affection for the negro—-
If not all of them—was unquestion-
ably to secure tha negro vote in tM
border states, where some-of the eol-
ored, people sometimes cast their bal-
Jota for Democratic nominees and where
to the raain i Mre ana four
regime nta in al? forty-eigat
mittee meeta and arranges the details
the campaign will Mgln by organisa-
tion. or ntrengthenink the erkaniza-
tion of the Democratic forcen in every
•tale end the campalgn will be left to
the focal erganixationa with the nasur-
Ss“
"-5
eN—-
prejudice agalnet the Republican party
and Ila present head. This view of the
mutter has been taken up in some parts
of Texas according to private advices
received at the Washington office of
The Record, and ia .being used by Re-
publicans in some of the supposedly
close congressionai districts.
There is not the faintest foundation
for any such declarations. Xope of
those who assert that the letter was
not genuine can have any knowledge of
the real facts, and It is therefore ap-
parent that in their case the wish is
John A McNeill; Nebraska, C, D. Van-
duser: New Mexico, A. V. Craves; Nsw
Hampshire, ienry F. Hollis: Nsw Jer-
•ey. Allan Benn; Nsw York, W. R.
Ryan; North Carolina, w, W. Ki tabla;
North Dakota, J. B. Baton: Ohio. John
& Snoqks; Oregon, F. M. Hallman:
seven were killed and fort, wounded,
ineludlng qeneret D-MIIIIn command:
ne tn TNiry .first rHlery sri«ad-
tn ad Hl ion , iwetit orgie" ar* minK
and one ott^or died from Mu,,ai.roha
Th* paper 44 not ear thia la a eom-
w|«te Hat The utn.rrv are tram •
thirtern ntawty regment« nf Whirs
plated offering advice or suggeatloha
to wtraighteg out tM Murphy-MeCar-
ren right and I hope such a courge will
not be neennary. If I were asked to
attend • eonterence on matters Iocai
to New York I should certainly decline
to do ee.
People from other states should set
Intsrsfers and peole should know what
they want and what is best tor them.”
insignificant _ „ '
TM aiupnieh lo th* Rourne Gazette,
which is datea Thursday eveninK "ay"
ihere Ms been flares righting Tuezday
Weanedny and Tburwiay. Ths Japa- 4
nem mAAe a vigorous ettaek on the "
center of th* Rnaeian position si nout
Mils* The enemy was fifty-four but
tallona strong, thirty-thy-e of whieh
were regular troop, and the balanez
renrve men Generai Kuroki -mpteye4
tM'. reserve men in the attack while
the 'regulars carried out the reinte in-
tended to delude the Rwten-. .
Thu renerve men attacked with de"
-■•ration The ranks were der imated
by the kumatan fire each tim- they nd-
vanrad. but IM vacanclaa were qu1 K
ly f-a up with freah men. The Ru«
alana uitimately slowly rttired to suit-
Bbl* pomtttons, whenee they inqteted
urent lome, on th* Japan*** by heavy
artlilevy tiro Th* Japanere loam*
plana at from 10,000 to 12 •»• men Th*
kumntan ionses were eomparatively in-
Caught Under Cellapatme Hrtek Wall
la Enat Aew kerb
New Tork, Aug. A—Eigtit men have
been badly injured, two fatally, in Bart
New York in the oollapse of a wall of
a two-story brick building. Six of the
men were buried under tone of beams,
masonry end noorime. All would have
periene had not policemen and Areme
assistea tM workmen in the work of
have they sained • mora enmpiete yle-
tory nuainst great diandvantnke- Neou
o< th* correpondenea with Iho my
heretotore have been p-rmit~‘ to wit-
nens fighting el elorer fix, v tete
view ut Hie eremming ot me rain r-m
a safe and comfort able -mineneen tM
•alls of WUu, when eormep-dena
or military attashe have t-mpted
to get in the netuni mom ot • onto
their untalinly r- cwarainn
el ways hove rebmet 'Mm * ■ on- es
pianatjon that it to .a ew
that mey ar uesta W the J t-
government, and the wovernment la re-
ponhibie tor their safety.
On thio neeanion, howavet, tho enr-
respondent or too Aame tatna Prene was
alii, to see the eondue t ot th* woidlere
on the field and metr teatment of
woundgd and captured enemies tn IM
heat of nentine
Whataver rasong or military wove 1
mar reader srereky donrapie, there
eortainly is nothing in •he netien• ot
its otdler that need make th’ Japa-
nem government krep wpeetatov to
vne was half a mie flown the valley
William A. Clark: Tennespee, E. W. ---------
Carmack: Texas. Charles A. Culberson, al .sommitte gan
Nevada, F. C. Newlands. “nt n—
while the Texas production decreased
over 1,006,000 barrels.
1
hem".s-, lav.
7
V
Vlaitvostek, Aug 6 --Tne prise cour
yesterday adjuiged the eunken stesmer
Knight iommraner and itu vargo a
lawtul prie Th* tril of the an and
nn muventintion of the stesmerta pA-
•
ard onstetinK prinetonlly of rnlway
materini was conaianed hrouah •
m port te c
pm _e uU «« ma... powers as mgeh as poneible. In r^gurA
bruised besides, ft to feared, to the eclaratlon »n th* sybleet- of
----t- ftrA stuffs, it la pointed out that when
th* list was publtsbe no poner ob-
jected Funsin’s pomition, at giated hr
an oficfal, fs as fonlowst
('
FEY C. ARTHUR WIIIAMS.)
' Washington, Aug. 6.—(Staff special.)
—-It is becoming plainly evident, as the
campaign progresses, that the race
question to to be made more or less of
an issue. Mr. Roosevelt started the
movement in that direction when he in-
vited Booker T. Washington to break
bread with him, the Republican party
as a whole gave, it, 4 push at the Chi-
cago convention and now, in pne way or
HORRORS OF WAR *
Chefoo, Aug. •, 1 p m Port Arthur
certainly will fall innide of on* er two
months dependiuK on how Iast Cha
Jnpanese move Thla opinion was ax-
prenesd today by an edu ated R<»s*Un.
who haa junt arrjved from l’urt Arthur
by junk lie had MIi-a $ hipitiols
but th* party lertthe Ausalanzetrng-
hold six days ag.
Tha itussiknn Occuted an important
semlofnlaiposiienat Pori Awkhur and
his viewjure regarded ua valuable. He
anyn that while the Japanesd eonalapi-
ly recqive reikoreementa ev,ry Kuslag
casualiy decreanes the defennive ef-
Ncleney of Fkn garrison dh ike Rua-
siane rawnM be T bintorned General
-eF
i belief that he seriously regretted
it action subsequently. The same
father to the expression. The - plain
truth is that the letter was genuine and
that it appeared in the Washington
Post of th* date named in exactly the
form 1n which it was telegraphed the
*-i "—ic Z—1 that night. In-
egniries at the office of Mr. Seott G.
—E JUDGE PARKER GOES THROUGH HIS MAIL
He has frequently brought in comm uni- f •
MS® COWHERD NAMES THE COMMITTEEMEN
In thia city and section, I .
In order that full justice may be done
to all parties concerned, it should be
stated that one sensible colored man Esopus, N, Y. Aug €__Juda* Parker
has since written the Washington Post gc, . °"*, L Y * t ’ “e
to the erfertet that he personally dis- spent a quiet but busy morning after
approves of the opinions expressed by the events of yesterday, when he closed
Baker and that it is his belief that most a period er nearly thirty yearse gery.
of the members of his race loin 4a thla A24 t* Acg( -548
disapproval. On the other hand, there ce.1n the judiciary in the state of New
is the unmistakable evidence of added -or: , .. .
Impudence and presumption on the part After breakfast Judge Parker Con-
or hundred, ot negtos, to be keen on centrated attention upon the very targe
tM street cars and elsewhere by any lqotresponaence which has accumulated
one-who is at all observant. The Wash- during the past few days, during which
tagton negroes were bad enough in that f he has devoted all his spare time to
particular before the Chicago conven-jhis speech of acceptance. latter he
bulla* hole in the
was ehot to tM ton
five minutes or no, ome of the expedients
resorted to by the managers k-their
efforts to revive the flagging Ksqu-
biasm was the placing of a NOK
white girl and a little negro boyA
the platform at the same time. TNB
children were lifted as high as possi-
which haa ao
Incientally,
naval forees, is prima
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The Fort Worth Record and Register (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 286, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 7, 1904, newspaper, August 7, 1904; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1498455/m1/1/?q=Simon+P+Holmes: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .