pic Oiieefcly max. t Art. If AuVAh 23888888888858388 rfssssssiiifsfsfi. 53SS8S35S8?583S? S8S8888S8888S58? , 3S8888S828S8SS8S? 738888S88388888s all "it i ; ?SS8S88SS883888? 2SSS33888S8888? OOOk CO g TO r -' r. c " " " " the Post Office at Second Class Ma ilmtgton. -1.1 N. C. SUBSCRIPTION P j , Subscription price of the We CE. iy Sunt is as $1 00 00 so " Smooths DEMOCRATIC TICKET. FOB CONGRESS. Sixth Pistrict--John D. Bellamy, of New Hanover. FOR SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES. 1 First DiSf-ict Hon. George H. Brown, of Beaufort. Second District Hon. Henry R Bry an, of Craven. , Fifth District Hon. Thomas J. Shaw.T of Guilford. Sixth District Hon. Oliver H. Allen, of Lenoir. Seventh District Hon. Thomas A. "McNeill, of Robeson. Eleventh District Hon. W. Alexan der Hoke, of Lincoln. FOR SOLICITOR. Sixth District Rodolph Duffy, of Onalow. Forjudge of Eastern Criminal Circuit ; Posse v Battle, of Edgecombe. Now Hanover Count v. ' ,,. FOB STATE SENATOR. Tenth District W. J. Davis, of Bruns wick. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Jos. T. Kerr and Geo. L. Peschau. Sheriff Walter G. MacRae. Treasurer H. McL. Green, ierk Superior Court Jno. D. Taylor. Register of Deeds W. H. Biddle. Coroner Dr. W. W. Harriss. Surveyor Jos. H. McRee. Commissioners Roger Moore John Barry, W. F. Alexander. Constable ( Wilmington Township) Wm. Sheehan. Sr. PLATING THE SAME OLD FAKE. The Republican and, Populist campaign speakers always assume that the people whom they address arfe ignorant, and easily imposed upon $ad therefore they try to im pose upon them. The once famous Republican machine manager, Col. Ike Young, of Raleigh, had an axiom, -'lie like h 11 and stick to it," which he commended to the Republican speakers of his day, and they are Tollowing it up yet. Some of them are now telling the people to whom they talk that if the Democratic party gets back into power it will disfranchise the Re publicans aiJd Populists. The Char lotte Observer quotes Hon, Office Hunter Dockery as saying in his speech at Huhtersville, in Mecklen burg county, that if the Democratic party get back into power it will disfranchise "poor men." For several years Succeeding the war the white Republican bosses" heldnheir grip on jthe colored contingent by making them believe that if the Democrats got into power they would disfranchise the negroes, and went even so far as to declare that it would reduce them to slavery again. But after the Democratic party got into power and continued in power and the negroes saw that they were neither re-enslaved nor dis franchised the Republican bosses had to drop that fake.. But now they are beginning to play the dis franchising rot on the white men, and the pegrOes alike, and Mr. itcclwvy becomes brazen enough to assert that- poor men will become the victims of this proscription-; But how" will these mendacious deceivers explain how the Democrats I could if they would disfranchise Republican and i Populists without disfranchising others? and how will Hon. Office Hunter Dockery explain how they could disfranchise poor men? and why they should want to disfranchise the bulk of their n party, which is composed largely wpoOT men? And then after they have balked and given up trying to explain any oi these things how will they ex plain, how the Democratic party, if would, can disfranchise anybody? There isn't one of them who does j not knpw better, and there isn't one of them who makes any of these assertions that does not make them knowing they are false and With the deliberate numosfi to de ceive the people before whom they arernade. mi - A ue Democratic party cannot control the question, of suffrage. iiiat is fixed by the constitution of e btate 48 amended by th'e consti tutional convention oi 1875. This f!ftnot;..i: -..vumto a8 lt stands now is a Democratic document, with the in dorsement of a Democratic yention. con- oection lof article 6, prescribes j-ao.ine voters shall be thus: UniTli S male person born in the X!t J1 states and every male person m!L rafJbeen naturalized, twenty-one f,S?.i14or upward, who shall have nTrt mJthe 8tate twelve months d!" Pretceding the election and ninety tow ?.e county in which he offers - anan oe deemed an elector." fVOL. XXIX. The only exceptions are persons adjudged guilty of felony or other crimes infamous by the laws of the -Statue, after the adoption of the con- srautiti, unless restored to citizen ship in the manner prescribed by law. V This prescribes who is a citizen or may become a citizen -and who may not exercise the rights of citi zenship, axvd gives the reason why. It is pretty broad and includes every male person, native or natura lized, over twenty-one years of age, (not demented) .yho has not been adjudged guilty of Certain crimes. Now tow woiildthe Democrats go about disfranchising any of them? There are only two ways, and both exceedingly difficult ones, if not absolutely impossible. Either by a constitutional convention or by leg islative enactment, in both of which the people to bo disfranchised would have a voice. The constitu tion prescribes how a convention may be called, thus: Sec 1 Article 13. "No Convention of the people of this State shall ever be called by the General Assembly unless by the concurrence of two thirds of all the members of each House of the General Assembly, and except the proposition Convention or no Convention be first submitted to the qualified voters of the whole State, at the next general election, in a manner to be prescribed by law. And should a majority of the votes cast be in favor of said Convention, it shall assemble on such day as may be pre scribed by the General Assembly. "- "We see here that no convention can be called for any purpose "with out a vote of two-thirds of both Houses of the General Assembly (not a vote of- two-thirds present, but a vote of two-thirds of the actual members) and then not unless the people endorse that two-thirds vote at the pOlls. That's a pretty good safeguard as far as calling a conven tion is concerned, so that before the Democrats could (if they desired) call a convention and change the suf frage laws they would have to con trol two-thirds of each House of the General Assembly, and then get a majority of the votes when the ques tion was submitted to the people, and then have a majority in the con vention when it met. The. other way is by amendment by the General Assembly, the method bf which is thus prescribed in. - "Section 2. Article 13 No Dart of the Constitution of this State shall be altered, unless a bill to alter the same shall have" been agreed to by three fifths of each House of the General Assembly. And the amendment or amendments so agreed to shall be submitted at the next general elec tion to the qualified voters of the whole State in such manner as may be prescribed by law. And in the event of their adoption by, a major ity of the votes cast, such an amend ment Or amendments shall become a part of the Constitution of this State." With this section inview, is it an easy matter to alter the constitution by an act of the Assembly? If the Democrats desired' to alter the suf frage or any other provision in it, they must first be able to control three-fifths of the votes in each House of the General Assembly, cj t and then the bill passed by this three-fifth vote would have to be ratified by a majority 'of the elec tors of the whole State. After this the man who would tell the people that there is danger of anybody be ing disfranchised if the Democrats get control of the Legislature is a pitiable imbecile or an unscrupulous liar. The thing is just simply im possible, that's all. ASTUTE MB. SIMS. Mr. John A. Sims is a Populist. He is also chief clerk in the State Auditor's office at Raleigh. Mr. Sims had the sagacity to see the white supremacy question looming up, and he had the astuteness to ad vise his nartv to catch on in time A I and declare for white supremacy. He also had the sagacity to foresee what the result of the failure to eatch oh would be, and was prophet flnonch-to nredict some of the re- a suits. . Be is a member of the Populist St.at.fi Committee, and at one of its meetings some time ago introduced a resolution declaring that the Pnnnlist tartv was a white man s - -x- -,- porty, and should declare lor wmte nrmvfimacv in North Carolina and make its fight in 1898 on that issue. This, of course, meant a dissolution of partisanship with the Republicans and would put an estoppel on fusion in the future. The committee sat dnwn on that resolution and it died in T.nfi nrame. mi . onus roa togethertisfied at the fate of his Tosn nf nn nri therefore he wrote a letter to the chairman of the com mittee giving some of the reasons why the party should divorce itself from the colored contingent ana proclaim itself white, from which we auote the following : "Let them (the negroes) have charge institutions of learning here, by placing pnly those of their people who are thoroughly competent over the same. There can be no ob jection to this, although the white man mav nn v a nart. and it may be a greater part of the tax which supports u; :.tfdim hut. Iaavb the leerisla- tion and the general management of U11V . -- Via q ft a i r or nonn uaroima w ' ' txtVi-w ffom a nolitical standpoint, do I say i t is to the advantage of the to lAave the affairs of North The Carolina to the whites? Because as soon as it becomes a fact which will be known and read to all men, .that the negro is in authoritv in North Carolina, then the white men who have come out "of the Democratic ranks1 who now constitute the Pop ulist party, will flee, every mother's son of them, back to the Democratic camp. "The main issue before us now in North . Carolina, and not as yet fully agreed upon, is, who shall manage the mi airs or our own beloved (Jommon wealth. 'Just here allow me to savtfeat I give all the honor to that noble band of forty odd Populists, who stood solidly as a stone wall in the last Gen eral .."Assembly of North Carolina, against some of the vicious legislation that was attempted to be thurst upon th cities of Eastern Carolina (as well as some of the western"), but for these the management of the cities referred to would nave been turned over to those wholly incompetent to say the least," " "1. for one. am onoosed to further misleading the negroes of North Caro lina. "Now. Mr. Chairman, ifvou could only see some of the many letters now in my possession from parties throughout North Carolina, who en dorse the course that I took before the recent meeting of the State executive committee, you would see that, as a party, we cannot afford longer to fail to give expression on the question of white supremacy, if from .no higher motive, we are compelled to do it in soli-defense. And pray, tell me. why not? The Populist party is a wmte man s party, while the great est issue involved affects all classes, conditions and colors of men and it should be a party composed of all, and more especially of all laboring men, yet tne fact remains that the negro is a Republican and ever will be. (I know of but one townsttp in North Carolina where the negroes are stick ing to the Populist party.)" This in the main is good, hard sense, toovhich most of the white men of North Carolina will sub scribe, and it speaks well for the political sagacity of the writer, but it didn't have much effect on the machine manager to whom it was addressed for he was one of the main movers in the recent fusion deal with Republican machine managers who represent a party composed of three-fourths negroes and one-fourth whites, and Mr Sims forgot it him self for he was one of the committee that fixed tipiihe fusion deal. He and the chairman will now get into harness and pull, alongside the negro just as if they were born that way- - ; But for all that he grasped the situation from the standpoint of politics, and also from the stand point of patriotism, if it may be as sumed that he was honest and sin cere in what he wrote; As ia politic cian he foresaw and predicted that if his party didn't secure a divorce from the negro "party and declare for white supremacy, when that is sue came up (as it would) the white men in his p"arty who had been Democrats would desert it and "flee back to the Democratic party" just as they are doing, and just as some Republicans who have never voted the Democratic ticket are doing. It does him credit (or rather it would do him cTedit if he had con sistently refused to return to the fusion wallow) that he was opposed to turning over Eastern cities and counties to negro rule, and it does his candor credit to virtually admit that they had been "misleading the negroes," when he declares that he is opposed to "further misleading" them. If he thought it was time to quit misleading the negroes, the negroes have come to the conclusion that it was time lor them to cease rjeing led by the white men who have been leading them for the sake of offices the leading brought, and are pro claiming a leadership of their own and putting in a claim to the offices, or at least what they consider their share of them. Mr. Sims may be tired of the as sociation, he may deprecate the rule of the "incompetent, to say the least," and he may possibly sympa thize with those communities where the negro has been put on top, but he will go right along helping to keep him on top by continuing to "breathe life into the dead bulk of the Republican party," as Populist Senator Atwater, of Chatham coun ty, said the Populist party had done. But Mr. Sims in his letter wrote a erood deal of sense, even if he were o - simply talking from a political stand point and were inspired by no higher or more commendable motive. A DISPENSER OF JUSTICE, The presumption is that a magis trate who is empowered to i sit ii judgment on the people brought be fore him, and decide cases pertain ing to person or property, should be at least an ordinarily intelligent per son, capable of writing what is necessary for him in his official ca pacity, to write, and to understand the law as applying to the eases that come before him. That was the kind of men who served as magis trates under Democratic rule, but that is not always the kind of men who serve under Bepublican-Popu-list f usion rule. V Steven Bryant is a negro magis trate in Wayne county, elected by the fusion Legislature of 1895 for six years, ' A case came before him in which a laborer sought to levy on a crop for labor done, whereupon the sable justice issued the follow ing unique document, which we clip Wee WILMINGTON, N. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER, 16, from the Raieigh Post, in which levy is made on the whole township and county. ' "North Carolina, Way en county. "Goldsboro township befor S.- L. Bryant, J. P. "Elexander T. Hook claimant $3.50. "The said Abe Whitly hereby files his lien against the said township and county said lien is for work and labor done on crops of said Abe Whitley for bill of particulars here with filed the said crops being upon the land of said Abe Whitley situat in said county and township and adjoining the Land of Benet andl. B. Fonsill and upon said Elexander t Hook His Ben Elexander t Hook claims, Sept. 18, 1895, this day befor me S. L. Bryant J. P." "On the corner of the document is this figuring: 65x60x $3.50, is $4.75." It may be observed that the sable dispenser of justice -didn't forget his costs. There are do-nbtlesi more of the same kind. And these are the kind of law dispensers the usionists would give North Carolina, because the negro must be recog nized to keep the white bosses in office. ONE OF MANY. There are thousands of Populists in JNorth Carolina who withdrew from the Democratic party, but, disgusted with the faithlessness and mercenary bartering of the so-called cadcrs of the Populist party, are re turning: to the Democratic fold. Many of them give the reasons why they do so, and good reasons, too. Wc hase published letters from a number of them, found in our State exchanges, and herewith present an other which we find in the Lumber- ton Robesonian: A Editor Robesonian: Fearine that the Democratic party, under the lead ership of Cleveland, was drifting from its true principles, 1 joined the feople s party, believing that it was what it contended to be, for free silver, a low tariff and an economical administra tion of the government. But I find now that the leaders of the party -those who want office have placed the party on the block to be oil on by the highest bidder by that party which will give the leaders the most offices. We see them joining the Republican party whose every principle is opposed to their platform, for they are for gold, a high tariff and an expensive administra tion. They are placing the black man over the white man and the white woman in the South, while they dare not do it in the North. For these reasons I have deter mined to return to the Democratic party ; the white man's party ; the party which has always defended the middle classes and fought the trusts : the party of my fathers. And I sin cerely hope that all those who with drew from the party fpr the same rea sons that 1 did will also see their error and return again to its flag and table. Our chairs have never been occupied and are now waiting for us. K U. i'AUL. Lumberton. Sept. 5. 1898. 'J This man has the courage to-act on his- convictions. He had the courage to go out of the Demo cratic party when he believed it was under wrong leadership, and he has the courage to go out of the Popu list party when he discovers that the leaders of that party are false to it, deserters of their professed prin ciples, and in the lust for spoils consort with men who are opposed to everything that the Populist party in former days contended for. Honest people, in the possession of their senses, with eyes and ears, can't be fooled all the time. The Populist office traders have carried the fooling too far. "CONTEMHBLE PIE HUNTERS." This Is What Butler Called Those Who Favored Co-Operation in 1897. Here is what Marion Butler said in his paper, the Caucasian, in Feb ruary, 1897: "The co-operation of the Populists and Republicans in this State has been a dismai and disastrous failure. Only the contemptible pie-hunters see any good in it." If you do not believe Marion But ler's paper said this, ask him whether it did or not. He dare not deny it. If "co-operation" had no "good in it" in 1897, is there "any good in it" in 1898, when Negro Dopiination is staring us in the face? What Marion Butler said in the Caucasian in 1897, is exactly what every decent white man in North Carolina believes now. Four preachers are disputing over which converted Capt. Philip, of the Texas. That doesn't seem to have been a yery difficult job, but if they want to have something that will justify a lively wrangle let them try their powers on Hon. John Sher man. Col. Roosevelt on parting With his "rough riders" gave them some good advice, and among other things told them not to "pose." Men who pose very often expose their weokness. Emile Zola is coming to this coun try to lecture. He is going to talk abxnit himself and Dreyfus, This country has to stand a good deal of lecturing for the misfortunes of other people. That Cincinnati Populist conven tion seems to have entirely lost sight of Tom Watson of Georgia, who is, or was, also a middle-of-the-rpadist kly NOT ENOUGH. One of the leading Croatans in j Robeson county writing to the Lumberton Robesonian says it is not j enough to elect John D. Bellamy to . Congress, Democratic Judges and the Democratic county ticket, but a Legislature must be -elected in I whose hands the Croatans, as well 1 as other citizens will be safe, and therefore, they must work to elect the right kind of men to the Leg islature from that county. He was speaking as a Croatan for Croatans but when he emphasized the impor tance of electing members to the Legislature who would see that his people Were not unf airily dealt with he showed that he" appreciated the necessity of looking to the Legisla ture. 1 If the -Croatans are interested in seeing the right kind of men sent to the Legislature, so is every man who desires the welfare and happinsss of North Carolina. It is not enough that we elect Demo cratic Congressmen, Democratic Judges-and Democratic county offi cers, for important as all these are and they are of vast importance they are of less importance than the right kind of a Legislature. , There is no person in North Car olina however humble, whether he pay much or little toward the sup port of the State government, who is not interested in the election of the right kind of men to make our laws or to unmake the laws which unscrupulous or stupid men made. There is no section of the State f North Carolina which is not in terested in this, for all sections must profit from good laws and suffer from bad laws. Certain, laws may apparently operate more against one section than against another. The West, for instance, does not as keenly feel the effects of the laws which in the Fast are giving the negroes such conspicuous position in the government of cities and counties. The East suffers more at first because it is the first struck, but how long will it be before the blight will be felt in the West, which has heretofore rested in fan cied security? t The Legislature makes laws for the whole State, and the character of those laws will be shaped by the character of the men who make them. The Republican party is three-fourths black. The black three-fourths are becoming very assertive and very aggressive, and are beginning to declare their inde pence of if not their contempt for the white fourth, With the color line drawn by" the negroes them selves and welcomed by some of the boldest of them; with conventions demanding the fuller, recognition of the negroes and asserting their claims to their full portion of the offices, how long will it be before they will be electing themselves to the Legislature, and how long will it be before they become a danger ous if not a dominating force in that body? Then they can dictate the legislation not only for the East, as they have been doing in the last two Legislatures, but for the whole State, and thus the West and the Centre would'f eel the effects of negro domination without having negro commissioners sitting in their court houses, negro magistrates, dis pensing justice, negro school com mitteemen directing their schools, negro aldermen making ordinances for their towns or negro policemen patrolling their streets. There might not be much or any of this,,but they would feel the blight of negro rule all the same. The laws that regulate traffic and prescribe the duties and the privi leges of common carrires, such as the jailroads, in as. far as they do not conflict with interstate traffic, are passedvby the Legislature. This be ing so, how long would it be until the; railroads of the State would be jnade the special objects of legisla tion by the colored solons: who. would insist that companies have no rjght to adopt rules and regulations that would exclude a negro from riding anywhere on a train that he saw fit, regardless of his personality or hisoffensiveness? There is a good deal of that now, but there would be more of it -when emboldened by such encouragement. How long would it be before they would be regulating the hotels, boarding houses, places of public amusement, etc., and legislating to throw their doors open without dis crimination of race, or previous or present condition of servitude? This would, of course, lead to a great deal of conflict and un pleasantness from which the West or the 'Centre could not escape any more than the East, for their peo ple must travel on railroads, and they have their hotels boarding houses and places of public amuse ment. The. State -Government ib sup ported by taxation on real estate and personal property. The lands and personal property are assessed as to value, and on this valua tion the tax is figured. ' If the East should pay one-third of Star 1898. the gross amonnt required for State purposes, and her lands and other property depreciated in value uritil she paid less than one-third other sections would have to pay piopor tionateiy more to meet the State ex penses, . or the treasury would be come bankrupt. Therefore it is to the interest of each section to see that no legislation be enacted that wffl depreciate the property of other sections, and render them less able to bear their full proportion in con tributing to the support of the State Government. For this reason the Centre and the West have a pecuni ary interest, if they have no other, in desiring good government in the East, government that will have a tendency to develop, make strong and build up, rather than cripple and destroy. It does hot take a moment's re flection to show that immigration will not flow in, nor capital flow to a section where the status is uncer tain and no one knows what to look for, where the vicious rule and the better class are ignored. More than this, for this better class, wearying of the struggle, will eventually leave the viciouslt ruled section and find homes in more congenial quar ters, which would be the inevitable result of continued negro rule. The right -kind of a Legislature can save North Carolina from these perils, save the East from becoming a wreck, and this is why the right kind of a Legislature, a white Leg islature, white not only in color but in feeling, is an imperative necessity. OLIVER HOT HONEST. When 0ffice Hunter Dockery spoke at Huntersville, Mecklenburg county, he devoted most of his speech to an appeal to the Populists, and to an effort to deceive them into the belief that he would not betray them if elected to Congress. He told that touching story (although somewhat belated) of how he had promised his dying father never to "go back on silver, the poor man's money." He showed how filially he kept this pledge by acting with the Republican party, and endorsing its declarations for gold up to the time when D. L. Russell knocked him out of the nomination for Governor, and he was tempted to subscribe to free silver by- the offer of the Populist nomination for Lieutenant Governor. Up to the time that he was laid out in the Republican State conven tion one of the strong points he made against his competitor, -Russell, was that he was not sound on gold and was too much tinctured with silver, and then seduced by the prospect of a Lieutenant Governor ship, with a nimbleness that a circus tumbler couldn't hold a candle to, he tumbled right over to the silver side. He realizes the position in which he now stands and tries to wriggle out of his change 'Of base thus, as we find him quoted in the Populist organ, Home Rule, pub lished at Raleigh. "I am asked how I can run. as a protectionist and a free silver man,? How I could be a Populist two yean ago and now a Republican? I was not a Populist two years ago, though I did affiliate with that party and help to carry tbe State for Bryan. This co operation movement is not fusion. After the victory is won, each party will march back to its own with its organization intact." - This is neither honest, nor a clever attempt at deception. Hg is not asked "how he can run as a protectionist and a free silver man." He is not running as a protectionist and a free silver man, but as a pro tectionist and a gold standard man, for he stands squarely on the gold platform adopted by the Republican convention which nominated him, and he tries to dodge when he lugs in protection and leaves out gold. , He says he was not a Populist two years ago, but neither was he a Republican. He seems to be nndor the i impression that the people have forgotten that open let ter which he published denouncing the Republican party as the tool of the money power, as the betrayer of the people, declaring .that it was an unfit party for any honest man to affiliate with, and therefore he with drew from it. He was talking for himself when he severed his allegi ance to the Republican party. The! Republican party has not changed, has not come to him. It is as strong or stronger for gold now than it was when he denounced 4t, but he has recanted, subscribed to its gold declarations, and is, to use the anguage of the sponsor who did the recanting for him, as good a Repub lican as ever. ; There is no honesty in this kind of cavorting, and Dockery must either be playing foul with the Re publicans who nominated him, or with the Populists for whose votes he is pleading. ' -' When General Miles landed he also landed a pretty heavy docu ment on the War Department, and contrary to Secretary Alger's ex pectation he didn't take back any -those utterances attributed to rhim. Alger has a clear case now if he wishes to discipline Miles. NO. 48 . FUSION REFORM. Uatil the F usionists -got into power they were loud for retrench ment, reform, economy, and all that sort of thing, but their retrenchment has cost the people about $400,000 more than the Democratic "extrava gance" which they denounced cost in the same period of time. Instead of reducing taxes they have increased them, and have re sorted to a system of deception to prevent the people from discovering that their taxes have been increased. This was by increasing, through boards of equalization, the valuation of property, thus making the tax greater while the tax rates romained as they were. . Their professed zeal for economy did not extend to reducing the num ber of offices, which, on the con trary, waS increased, nor to reducing the salaries of their officers, which remained as they were, if they were not increased. . ! Places were especially created to fill with dependents of the bosses, or with: partisan tools who were thfis rewarded for services ren dered. In some of the Departments this has been done so scandalously that the chiefs of those Depart ments have refused to publish the list of their employes, with the date of appointment and duties per formed, because they were afraid to let the people see how these Depart ments were being utilized to give jobs to favorites and to party tools. They propose to run the business in the same way if they be ,con tinued in power. Now that they are in they are illustrating What they meant by the howl for "reform" when they were trying to get in. WATCH THE BORDERS. The Fusion machine managers in this State are totally unscrupulous as to the methods they employ -to Win the Offices they are striving for, The last election was carried by fraud so palpable that no reasonable man could for a moment doubt it, and no one does doubt it. There was more money spent than was ever spent in any preceding election for it was necessery to carry the Leg islature toelect a Republican Senator and a "Republican Senate with the Senate as evenly divided as it was , was necessary to the Republican party. They got a Republican Governor, a mongrel Legislature, and a Repub lican Senator, who was elected with the aidf of Populist votes. ThejT got about all , they expected, but it cost them hard work and much cash. . Colonizing negroes has been a pretty common thing with the Re publican machine managers, but their colonizing never before reached the proportions that it did in the last election, because it is a very easy matter under the present elec tion and registry laws to utilize the colonized voter. Under the former registration and election laws there was some chance to prevent fraud ulent registration, and fraudulent voting if the fraud did register, but now there is not. AH he has to do is to swear thathe is entitled to registration, a very easy thing for most of the imported to do. and then his vote cannot be kept out of the ballot box although it may be known to many that he has no right to vote. He registers and votes, it is true, subject to penalty for fraud ulently registering and for fraud ulently voting, but in the meantime before action can be taken to punish him he can pull up stakes, go to his old beat in another State and be bevond the reach of prosecution or punishment. They are posted on all that before they attempt to register and that makes them bold. They know there will be no prosecution, and the men who import them know it, because the prosecution must be at the ex pense of the prosecutor, and it is rarely the case after an election that the frauds are prosecuted because the victorious party does not think it flWorth while and the defeated party would see little to gain by it, outside of establishing the fact that frauds had been committed, and they would gain very little by that, save perhaps in the case of a closely f contestectelection. But the fraudu-1 lent vote, the vote of the imported voter is counted. He accomplishes what he was imported for and the importers reap the benefit. Colonization is a very easy matter in this State. With Virginia on the the North and South Carolina on the South, there is a large colored contingent to draw from, who can bW verywell spared from those States, and tare within convenient distance, where long and costly transportation is not necessary. Alongthe border counties of Vir ginia and South Carolina, reaching nearly the full lengh of the State on either side, with, as we have said, a large number of negroes to draw from, it would be a very easy matter to plant ten thousand of them in North Carolina, and so scatter them as to attract very little attention; and a very easy matter to register and vote them, because, under the resent electiom laws, registering and voting are made easy. , The imported come in, of course, under the guidance of fellows who are selected for that business and know where to locate these recruits where they will attract the least at tention, and can be best held on hand to be utilized on election day. They find work for them where they can if they keep them on .the ground, get them registered and then turn them loose with the un derstanding that they will come to time on election day and earn their money. Of course they will be dis tributed according to the require ments for votes. In close districts a few votes in each township would give aggregate votes enough to car ry a close county, and these, carry ing out the plan for a close district, would give votes enough to carry the district. These managers are, generally speaking, sufficieatly familiar with .the political status to know about how the respective parties normally compare, how many homo votes they can reasonably depend upon, about the number of votes that can be cast against them, and they can there fore calculate pretty closely on the number that it will be necessary to import and they make their arrange ments and import accordingly. It isp-'t easy to keep up with the colored contingent for they, especially the young men, are disposed to be nomadic in their habits and do much Of Iheir perambulating between Sup per and breakfast, very frequently taking supper in one county and breakfast in another. Moving around as they do, it isn't easy to identify themor be positive that they are new importations, although eight white men out of ften who are pres ent when they come to register feel morally certain than they are new comers. But by organization and a close watch a good deal of this im portation and registration may be prevented, although all cannot be. Democrats in the .border counties, at east, should put their pickets out and be on their guard so that they may follow up these importations and keep track of them. ANOTHER OUTRAGE. We have asserted in these columns that there have been more bur glaries by negroes, and more out rages and attempted outrages on white women since the present mongrel rule began than there were in all the years of Democratic rule. It is an exceptional week .when some of our stat e exchanges do not record either burglaries or outrages, and sometimes both. The Snow Hill Standard bf last week tells of a double crime of burglary and at tempted outrage thus:. . ' 'Last Tuesday night about 12 o'clock John Best, a negro who lives on the place of Mr. J. R. Ham, about seven miles from. Snow Hill, entered the house of Mr. Jesse Ham and attempted that awful crime which he will pay for with his life.j Mrs. Ham was the victim. She was aroused by this devil in human form before he accom plished his purpose and screamed for her husband, who was in an adjoining room. The negro then attempted to escape, but was recognized, a warrant issued and he is. now in the county jail. We have heard some indignant threats, and the hellish nend may meet speedy justice at the hands of an ) outraged people." With a satanic impudence and levity the editor of the negro organ in-this city, in that brutal slander on the white women of this State, reminded fathers and mothers that if they "left their : goods out of doors over night" they had no right to com plain if they, "were taken away," an apology for rap as trifling as it was brazen. In this case "the goods were not left out of doors," but the black fiend boldjy entered the sanc tuary of the home under the cover. of darkness to do his hellish work, in which he was happily foiled by the timely appearance of the hus band of the assaulted woman. We will nOt charge the" white nen who lead this mongrel party with direct responsibility for these fre quent outrages, but there is no denying the fact that under their regime the negroes have become bolder and more lawless, ' until it is not safe for ai unprotected white woman or girl to venture from home, and every house, must have its watch-, dog and shot-gijin. How long is this thing going to last, white men - of North Carolina ? DIDN'T FOOL ANYBODY. When decoy duck Norment pulled out of the mock race for Congress in" this district in favor of Office Hun ter Dockery, he didn't fool anybody. He certainly didn't fool the Stab, which remarked shortly after he bobbed up that he would soon bob down. Of course there is a consideration, quid pro quOf to come in. He will hardlv be satisfied with a nom ination for the Legislature for there is not substance enough in that for patriots of the Doctor's build. He probably has his eye on something better, which will come on certain conditions, one of these conditions being that Office Hunter Dockery can fool men enough in this district to vote for hikn and elect "him to Congress. In that event the Dr. may get something to his liking. A Northern contemporary re marks that for an old man who had to leave the Cabinet because of the befogging effects of age, Mr. Sher man talks with' surprising 'spirit. He spent part of the Summer in haling the invigorating air of Alaska.