V ? j / = n i i. iri."= FUL,L RETL CEIVED O. all the ntecimcts - u the esuan seiid i jmmii y8tes Aycock, Mlxon, Rumley and Ricfca. Rodman. Wlndley and Mallitoa Lead for Thctr P Respective Offices. The Clerk of the Superior Court has received the returns from all the different precincts of the county rot' ins for the recpectlr* county officers *s Saturday last. The Dally News in consequence ofe the fall returns la enabled to fire Its readers the total ' rote each candidate received " throughout. the oounty. The total rote in each precinct follows: f, -V RWMte OP DBBHt OUtvr Rnmlar ...... . .C ... 1,11? W. H. Boa IS* W. T. Hudnetl . Sit O. ]L Kick. l.Ott Samuel W ladle j 3(4 W. W. Hooter . . 4IS lttjUtUR. it R. Mlaoa 1.495 ?.' ' '. A MflSMMBW. W. C. Rodman ... 1.034 B. D. ROW. 167 J. r. Latham f. 406 fUCOOKDKR ? WA8HJ!tOTON DI8 ? I Ihi" W. D. Orimes 164 ' M_J. Fowler St W. B. Wtndley S67 CLDOL nOOBMR'S COURT. , C. C. Cratch SOS William 8wanner 71 Bd Malllaon I 6*4 . COURT* COMMISSIONER**. . 'j M % jf H. C. Bragaw 861 |L Williams -.. IN 1 W. A. Bleunt 647 W. M. Swindell S71 O. B. Wynn ; 856 5 H. C. Mayo "t&f W. 8. D. Stern ... ...... ?7? ] , C. P. Ayeock l.SfS 39 Mm CAROLINA~ COUNTMARANTINED Washington, Sept. 11?It was announced yesterday by the Departiment of Agriculture that the counties of Moore, Harnett, Johnston, Northampton, Hertford, Bertie, Gates, Chowan, Perquimans, Pasquotank, Camden, Cnrrltack, Edgecombe. Martin, Waahington. Tyrrell, Dare, Hyde. Beaufort, Pitt, Wayne, Sampson, Cumberland. Hoke. Scotland, Robeson. Bladen, Greene, Lenoir, Craven, Pamlico, Carteret, Jones, Duplin, Onslow, .Pender, Columbus, \ Brunswick and New Ijtanover are quarantined, because of ; . Texas fever. - (V From the counties in the State of North Carolina quarantined for splenetic, Southern, or TeXka fever, cat; r tie shall only be moved or allowed to move Interstate to potnta outside of , ^ the .quarantined area la accordance j with the regulations for immediate i :-",lw,rI Mr. C. C. Pagan. of Dardeas. N. C. ll U a boslneas visitor today. ===== " ? Water and Sewer, $e Discus Remember the mnse-meeting to bo , held at the CtKr Hall thta evening called byhoard of aldermen to dlscoee the water aad tower age problem la Washington. The hoard la In favor Of the city owning Its own water - ^ and sewerage hunt and the opportanity le to be given tba cltiaene tonight to fully disc ess this Important matAltl HHISHOl- lltKI.ANIVS BIRTHV" f ! at. Paul, Ulna.. Sept. 11.?Arch! bishop freUnd entered upon his seventy-!! rth year today and the occasion was marked by the receipt of a I . number of congratulatory measages from fiends thronghout the eogatry. ?" The Arehblshop U a native of Ireland. bet has resided la the United States pj Mace boyhood, i Hs was ordained e KL priest asm thai bait a eaatury age aad baa been agchhisbop of St. Peal kh8iJIB2TI^b85K5K?^A'5<S*TT *" I i / v% ? i I I JRNS REF PRIMARY WILSON HIVES M,,Ki (Bjr C. k Tstuumt.) Special Correapoadance. WaaktactOD. Sept. 11 ?Oorernc Wllaoti baa Indicated In tbe speacb< he has made thus far in the campaig that he attaches a great deal of in portance to the Question of the taril sa It affects farmers. The Democrat! candidate put this -whole questlo into a nut shell when he said: j "The farmer does not derive an benefits from the tariff when he go? to market to eell hie products, bnt o everything the farmer buys there i an artiflcally high price due to th tariff tax." High protectloaiste in Cosgrei bare for many years deeelved th farmers into believing thst becsuse tariff is kept oh wheat and corn th farmer ia necessarily benefited then by. That 18 la > is fafce logic is ai parent to any student of America Import and export statistics. Thl country produces mere wheat am corn than the American people coe| same, which obviously makes It in possible for any country of Rdro^ to sell wheat or corn here. RurOpJ which, la the great market for sui plus American grain, uses ell th grain produced there for home cob sumption, and in addition, the Eurc pean countries have to send over her for more. If there were no tsriff on grali therefore, the American farme woeld not be menaced by the pom billty or foreign competition, for th reason that foreigners hare no grai to sell. Bat the situation ia vastly dJffei ent with the farmer when he corns 4? buy the tools, machinery, clothins and other necessities of life. H find# every article that he ueea ii producing his erope taxed bighe and, higher. udtll, aa Gov. Wllao says, "It Is getting to be next to im possible for the American farmer t make a legitimate profit". The farm er'a implements, his smaller tools wagons, household articles, clothing lumber and harvesting machlner: has steadily risen in price. ; That this rise in prices has beei due to artificial causes la proven b: | the-fact that the Identical article used by the American farmer arc sold abroad for from 26 to JO pe cent. less. B. IX Towneend. In hi report to President Roosevelt on th harvester .trust, reported that th< same harvesting machines that wen made by Uie trust' In Chicago. an< sold to the American farmer for $215 are told In Russia for $80 and $90 Nothing but the tariff thus enable the trusf to rob the American farm er, because, If it were not for th< tariff, the danger of competition fron Canada would force the America] trust to sell its machines for on< prlco to all. Governor Wilson has shown a deej grasp of the tariff question as it af fects farmers, an^l it Is certain ths before the campaign Is mnch oldei be will have _ some illuminating things to say to the farmer on tht Its! aubject. ri. ; ============== age Is to sed This Evening wr. t It behooves every interests* clUseu to Attend afd give expreeelor as to the beet method to proceed it the nutter. Everybody cordially In viW. The meeting la called (or S:l( o'clock eharp. Be on head ready tn act. ' The water and eewerage prob lem should eotS be procrastbutee longer. M 'tit ' /t'-V "' i i i i ? MARVI.AN'M Sl'.VDAY SCHOOLS. rftfuWhi ltd.. Sept 11?NotoC Sunday school workers (rem all over the State aaeetabled la rrederick today tor the (orty-nlalh convention ol the Maryland 8under , School Aasoelation. The galkerlag opens wtth a welcome demonstration tonight and the boeineee session win occupy Thursday and Trlday. Mrs. Mary T Bryner, o( Chicago, aad several othet representatives of Ui? international ingt. *va8hi>rjton. Worth car v = Probably Fi ? T , ^ ^^ZZ. ir "'< J Becker to Fact For Mur e - 5 I'figCf'SMel ?. ' 9 New YorlC Setft. 11.?Ten o'clock et t_- tomorrow morning before Justice - John W. Ooff presiding over in ex- * e treordinary term of the criminal 61 branch of the Supreme court, la the i, time fixed for Police Lieutenant it Chas. A. Becker to face the bar on I- a charge of murdering Gambler Her- ' e man Rosenthal. The general belief a* n is that the trial will proceed with- t~ out further delay, though It is a ? v certainty that Becker's counsel will 1,1 a, flcht to U? limit tor A-?ootp?heiii?iit ? r. Palling (n an attempt to delay the e tr'al, counsel for the accused will ask fa a for a change of venue, r Th^ trial of Becker which is ex- ro u pelted to unfold tales of the New >Q * York underworld hitherto undream- to o ed of by the general public, though ** i- familiar enough perhaps, to the ten- J?1 i. derloln habitues, has put every resf. ident of the metropolis on the tiptoe 1 y of expectation. The Mollneux case, the Thaw case might be recalled in cu ? vain to find anything approaching ge f a parallel to the amount and depth 8U s of the public interest that now cen- *'e f ters in the case of the accused police ^ r lieutenant. ? The cause for this extraordinary * ? display of public interest la not dlffl- * b cult to find. Back of the murdhr & are believed to lie crimee of an even I more serious character, crimes that * ? affect directly or Indirectly every . . citizen of New York. It is in this ? ? phase of the case thkt public inter- B - est centers?the possibility or prob- * ? ability, that the trial of Rosenthal's i secrets of police extortion and lead t to a more complete exposure of the ?j? 9 so-called' "system" than ever could * have been brought about by the tes) t'mony that Rosenthal threatened ? - to lay before the grakd jury. . "*?i t EovntB have moved swiftly since ^ f Herman Rosenthal, one of the best co| f known of New York gamblers, was ? ' * riddled with bullets and left to die f* on the sidewalk in front of the Met ropole Hotel in the early morning . ' hours of July 16. Within 5 bouts ^ after the murder the grand Jury began an lhvestlgatidn of charges that a f Police Lieutenant Becker was a part' nor of Rosenthal in the gambttng Pi Two days after the killing of I Rosenthal Becker wap relieved from i active duty and on July 29th he was / t arrested on a charge of mnrder. Meanwhile the detective's from the district attorney's ortee had been .. ' busy uneattfclng the details of the v murder sonsplraby. With little dlf. ftcnlty they succeeded In finding the oJ|| , "murder car." the big gray automo- . bile In which they fled afttar the mut'der. C(H ' One of the first men to bo taken toJ into custody in connection with the ^ I crime was "Bald Jack" Rose, a not d New York gambler and a former W8 f partner 6f Roaenthal. Rose, in the l8 f language of the Tenderloin, lost no to time in "getting from under." He was promptly taken before the grand n jiy.' ;:'.jtt*to3'' - UCI U/ \JLIUTIL ; whom he accused of being ene of small ring of high polios officials ho divided among themselves the lormoos sum of 92,000,000 aa.anaal tribute for the "protection" of unbllnk and disorderly reports. With the information stop lied by we the ' district was ended to lay hands on nen^ %h of e "gunmen" accused of tAf? XQurder Rosenthal. Several were found hiding in this Citj^^lHHHH 4- they vnvTMtttrtdhSaW^made conMions that supported the main cts as told by Rose. Another of e gang was captured In the Adlndacks and atlll another was found Hot Springs, Ark., and returned New York. It is believed that thp o men who did the actual shoot1g are still at large. These are <efty Louie" and "Gyp, the Blood." strict Attorney Whitman believesi at these (two will be taken into Stody sooner or later, though the neral belief is that they were well pplled with funds with which they re enabled to get out of the counr. When Lieutenant Becker comes to al he will be confronted with the eged confession of Rose, "Brldgle" ebber and Harry Valloh, the aelfcused accomplices of the police utenant. It la believed also that > prosecution has several witnesses good character who will give tealony in support of the Btories told Rose and others, among them the icials of rariout banks who will called upon to tell of the large deslts made by Becker or his wife on tea corresponding to those on lch Rosenthal and other gambling use proprietors ?re alleged to have Id tribute. Conspiracy will be the defense of cker. John F. Mclntyre, chief inael for Becker, has said: . "We >1 that we will be able to reveal at ? trlal/a conspiracy framed up by > witnesses upon whom the State now relying outrivalllng ttyie plots d conspiracies formulated by Titus tea In the seventeenth century. 9D SIZE AUDIENCE HEARS REY^R. V. ROPE k large and appreciative audience ird wltjy profit as well as pleaaure sermon delivered by Her. Robert Hope, pastor of the^Christian urch, at the Payne Memorial irch, Nicholsonvllle, on last evenk aerlee of meetings are now being idncted at the church by the paa, Rer. Percy Pemberton and aldy considerable Interest baa been Attested. The services are <*">?! II attended nightly and th, ontlook that quite e number will be added the church TBere will ba eervlcee tin tkla evening and the gubyc re a cordial Invitation to attend. ^o^u^*broin^a0rWra0 f' la j >A11V t>N. SEPTEMBER U. HI*. * V orrow tier Rosenthal3 EXCELLENT PERFORMANCE ! AT LYRIC THEATER jj tb Those who. witnessed the perform- SI ance at the Lyric Theatre last night re are loud In their praise of the httrac- of tion, so much so that the manage- tb mqnt has been the recipient of nam- vc erous congratulations. The show pc last night was all that could be de to ifred by any pleasure seeker. The to patronage of the Lyric is growing all hi the while and Manager Sparrow is so endeavoring to give every one full or meakure. The theatre, notwithstand- he lng the warm weather, is always cool dii and pleasant. After supper pleasure in seekers always enjoy themselves at lie this well-known amusement house, pe Another attractive program is billed fo for this evening. It would pay all to tei attend. Ca vi? Another Primary for Recorder Washington ?. qu DC To the Democratic Voters of Choco- hii wlnlty, Long Acre and Washing- pu ton Township* and the City of eri Washington: to In the^>rlmary held on Saturday, a|, ocpn-iuiror 4 m, none oi ine canal- of da tea for Recorder received a major- tir ity of the vote cast, and under the ed I legalized primary law, there will he thi another primary between the two cr! 1 candidates receiving the highest lie |vote, via.: Mr. W. B. Windley ami Btj (myself. , .. _ wi j I wish to thank all my supporters 8U | for their assistance in the last pri- de mary and t0 ask them for a continuance of the same in the next pri- av mary. I also ask the support of all in (Democrats in the next primary. 1 ca I have nto had a full term in this of- ex* jflc?. pri Respectfully, B1 W. D. GRIMES. on R. J. MANNING RETURNED HOME ON YESTERDAY" qu cri Robert J. Manning returned home mi last evening from Norfolk, Va., where ho ha has been for the pmat week. Mr. go Manning Btatea that he has been dr< away looking for employment. Ap- aft prbhenaton was felt as to the safety Go of Mr. Manning by hla .friends mi caused by the rumor that ho had sol met with an accident in Norfolk and d& aa the report could not be verified or he denied it was natural that concern be ou felt as to his whereabouts. He re- ly turned home yesterday totally ig- th? norant of the rumors and although am considerably worked-up over the cir- fdi eolations of auch ramors ha la glad to be home again and among hla tla 'friends. is sti PliAYKR MRRT1NG. Dt There wflj he prayer meeting eerv- ml km is all the different churches of enf the city this evening at the gai hour to which the general public has In a cortim Invitation. a* Asmicov. WmXAVAV The State Executive Has a Ernest M. Green of New Ing to Inform Young Men To the Editor: I see that Gover- ,< lor K itch in is still quoting from Col-^J ler's, so I append an article 1 wrote md published In the New Bern Sun . if April , if!2. I have reason to ( ;now that the governor saw the ar- | ide and ia aware of the sort of sheet Collier's Is, but the governor has a c nost convenient forgettery, and this , s published to Inform the young men t inacquainted with the revolution of \ 898. ERNE8T M. GREEN. f New Bern, N. C. 1 (Prom the New Bern Sun.) t Mr. Editor: I was glad to see that c he Newton Enterprise had held up a o the view of the Democracy of t forth Carolina Governor Kltchln'o t ecord of 1898. f What the Enterprise says "about n he governor's efforts to have the t om rait tee. accept Butler's proposi- f loh of fusion upon a purely "spoils q asls" is undeniably true. ii Nor*will the governor attempt to eny it, for the evidence is conclu- s Ive. S In his speech at Greensboro, which p ie governor sends to me in pamphlet o >rm, he points to the dire disasters n > flow from following Senator Sim- t! ions' leaderahin. Dam Cnv -? >1 lthe people what dread evils his si tadershlp, conjoined with Butler's c< nder fusion. If followed, would have ei unged North (Carolina into in 1898? o! ow the soul of North Carolina in B: lis good hour, mads possible under ai mmons' leadership, shudders and w: icolls at the simple contemplation w It. And yet the man who was ti< en holding office by aid of Populist ei ites, and is on record as having lm- fr irtuned the eoramittpg gt that year in efrter'that "dreadful brotherhood" pi the end that fusion might make fe s "callibg and election sure," feels hi secure in either the forgetfulnese wi forgiveness of the people that he pi is the efTrontery to warn them of as saster in following the man who nc her darkest hour led North Caro- su ta out of disaster into safety and rs ace. The man who scorned the So ul fellowship of Butler and its at- CI ndant evi]s in 1898, and led North la: rolina Democracy to the greatest foi :tory for civilization since recon- pe uction. jal The governor, to bolster up his na use in denouncing Senator Sim- "h )rs, is singularly unfortunate in ga otlng from "Collier's Weekly." in jes the governor hope to strengthen Nc s position by calling to his aid the sti blication which so insulted South- th: a womanhood a few years ago as be arouse the manhood of the South Mi most to. frenzy? Has the prospect Mi being out of? office for the first lie ue since his coming of age bo warp- rei Mr. Kltchln's political Judkment ha at he condones, by implication, the tel Ime of such a poblication as "Colt's"?the same vile slander subintially for which the negro Manly u? driven from Wilmlnrton bptu-aon n. ds In 1S0S and his printing plant ed stroyed by outraged patriots? X< Is it possible the governor is nn- pe fare that a great fraternal order efi this State-i?"The Order of Elks"? In used by resolution. Colliers to be eluded from Its Club rooms and ru ohlblted its being brought Into an k.s' building by a member? Verily! has North Carolina fallen Be evil days when the utterances of El e paid hireling of Northern publi- loi tion, which, but a few short years ad o, vilely slandered the womanhood Ke She State, are embodied even as a otation In a speech of Its Demo- po itlc governor to "black-Jack" the w< inhood of the State in its bitterest thi ur; and hour that tried men's ini ulrf as in a crucible, wherein the tic oss of political selfishness snd dem- bn ogy showed for Its true worth. In d's name where, then. wa$ the pe in who arrogates unto himself the Un le-custody of the art of the covent of Democracy? Was his voice th< ard ringing from peak to peak of *Ti r everlasting hills like the Knight- net Aycock, or heard above the roar of su< I surf beside the chtvalric Craig tamonlng the Saxon hoatn to battle 'civilisation? If the attacks of such a South- * ndertng publication an '*Colllern^ * to he used by Mr. K itch in to de oy tnfe man whom the fighting mocrats of 'SI love for the ene ee he has made, may we not next PTthlm to circulate the "billing*. >! te" ef the polltlcak-pole-at Butler bl. rmvlsn at KaM?fc la Ika laat I palia aa a caa?aicm documantT a rnmmm j iS 1 - - ? KITCHIN I 5 WEEKLY I Forgetting Memory. Says Bern. PuhlUhee Follow* 9 With Facta. Certain it la that that so-called iM^h baa been circulated since the ipeniug of this senatorial campaign -ji >ut some of us, who are not among (r. Kitchin's political frMnds, have .? I ufflcient faith in his persona) honor ex cu pate him from that infarojr. -<d I It was devoutly hoped by all patrl- $ itlc North Carolinians that this cam- ;4 >aign fr the eentorship could be conlucted on t lent a decentp lane. We, 1 ere in Senator Simmons home, hare J or months permitted to go unchal- ".i enged the statement, by Innuendo, 4 hat Senator 8!mmons had grown rich ut of a lumber deal with Lorimer, I nd by Inference that said deal was he price of his vote. We believed A hen in the good sense and spirit of airness characteristic of North Caroinaians, os refused to dignify the ase slander with a denial, and oar lith in North Carolinans was hot ilsplaced for the LIE died "a bornlg." The governor can only get into the enate on his own record. Senator Immoni' record would not serve to ut the governor in, for there are two ther candidates for that office?with uch bcttCT monl. Ih.n g.? le governor can not hope to get to ?e Senate on hli TRUST record, ^3 nee the only case on record of as / jS >mplete a "fall-down" as the gov* nor's on 'Trnst Legislation is that ' Roosevelt on the Railroad Rate 111. I voted in the honSe in 1909. id in the Senate in 1911 for a hill ith teeth in it, and the governor as "particeps crlminis' to the operson. It may be that if there were ,' tfjm tough Baxter Shemwell's and his < tends, in North Carolina^!)* iftigfet.. * there uu IBCTlecbrd.^htft "haply for the State there are only a ; w in one district. So what except s personal magnetism*and winning j iys has the governor to offer to peoe with such good, hard, horse sense North Carolinians to induce them, it only to put the true and tried ch men of provea ability and worth Charles B. Aycock and Walter mmons out, but to prefer hfm to < an ark? It is true that the governor rs great stress on his personality. 1 r did he not aay that it was his rsonality, and not bis promises to & II the "Trust humans" that nomlted him over Craig? That old and shaking" ? "back-patting" me may "put you over once," and other states "then some," but in ?rth Carolina it's different. That *ain of the "canny Scot" running rough "Tar Heeldom" has got to shown a little 'more eveh than isourl. Nor will the little kame of irk Sullivan nt ra" and a certain newspaper cor- \ 'A spondent from North* Carolina tched in a room at the Willard ho. in Washington suffice. ERNEST M. GREEN, Scnotcr from 8th Senatorial Dlst. (The resolutions referred to by Mr. een in the above article were p&bsunanimously by New Bern Lodge >. 764 B .P. O. Elks in 1909 and spared in THE SUN, and for the bent of our readers we take pleasure again publishing same-.?Editor.) (Reprinted from THE SN of Febary 22nd. 1909.) Resolutions. At the regular meeting of the New rn Lodge No. 764 of th?- B. P. O. f -.'.m ks, February 16th, 1909, the folving resolutions were unanimously ptsd: tw Bejn Lodge No. 764 B. P. O. E.: We, your comittee, beg leave to rert the following: In behalf of men every Elk honors, .w4 feel at "Collier's Weekly" has grossly lulted the womanhood of the na>n and it Is our duty to let our others know of the Insult. Whereas, the following article spared In Collier Weekly, editorially. Mi der the date of October 94, 1901: Kt "Colonel Watterson observes that 'M i proprietor of the New York mes' deserves to be banged to the a rest lamp-post. In the same ls9 of his paper It is related that heContinued cm Page S. ? i Washington Home ftkchaage. Wm. Braav ft Co. Douw. Walt?r CnO, ft Co. Postern Cereal Oo. . ?

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