I II- I "-.' " - ...... -,,.l. .,, . , - T ',m .. TH. RALEIGH, 1ST. C, THURSDAY, MAY S3, 1012 No. lO COL. ROOSEVELT CAPTURES OHIO I IN THE PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY Early Returns From Tuesday's Primary in the Buckeye State Gives CoL Roosevelt a lead of 18,000 Votes, While His Manager Claims His Majority Will Reach 50,000 The Ohio Primary Law Provides That the Winner in ft . ft- -If At TT m.1 1-V . -w . m Primary anaii rvisu nave me delegates at Large to tne National Convention The Vote in Some of the Congressional Districts is Still in Doubt La Foliette Received a Very Good Vote in Columbus, but did not Figure Much in State at Large The Latest Re turns Give Gov. Harmon a Majority Over Professor Wilson for Democratic Nomination. Columbus, Ohio, May 21. Out of Iu( ii!-on.' Congressional Districts Inplexity of the !,.. State totals computed at a time lin fewer than half the precincts ,r' counted indicated that Roose will have twenty of the forty-two .strict delegates and that Taft will ,tvc fourteen, while the returns are o incomplete that eight delegates at present cannot be counted by either Side. Aparently Mr. Taft has the first, Itcond, sixth, seventh, eighth, thir- eeiah and fifteenth. Mr. Rosevelt is H lieved to have won the delegates in he fourth, fifth, tenth, eleventh, welftli, fourteenth, seventeen, nine eetith, twentieth and twenty-first. The vote in the third is very close as t is in the ninth and sixteenth. t riends of President Taft declare he as carried the eighteenth but Roose velt supporters will not concede this. 5The eighteenth is on the eastern Jiorder of the State and returns have teen very slow. I Completely primary Republican re turns from 1,325 precincts out of 5, 392 in the State give Roosevelt dele gates a total of 59,054 and Taft dele- rates 41,435. An Earlier Story. Columbus, Ohio, May 21. With little more than one-third of the to tal vote in the State counted at 1 jo clock this morning, Colonel Roose- .volt's delegates on the Republican picket and Governor Harmon on the Democratic preference ballot led bhio's first Presidential preference primary. I Complete returns from slightly less than two thousand precincts of 5,192 Jin the State showed that Colonel Roo sevelt's delegates had a lead of more than 15,000 votes. Governor Har fmon's lead over Woodrow Wilson was Jconsiderably less than this. The close ness of his race with Wilson was indi cate by late reports from Cincinnati, povernor Harmon's home city. Here the Ohio Governor who had been well n the lead in the early returns was fchown to have 1,954 votes and Wilson jl,904 in 120 precincts out of a total Xf 361. A peculiar situation develop ed in the compilation of the results. fThis showed that while Colonel Roo sevelt had a lead of 15,000 in the to- i jtal number of votes cast for delegates pledged to him the vote by districts lould not have more than twenty-two cf the forty-two district delegates to jthe National Convention at Chicago. But while the Democratic Presiden tial was so close, the result could not )e foretold, th eindications were that .Governor Harmon would have at least 22 or 24 of the delegates to the Balti more Convention. The privilege of Naming the six delegates-at-large of he State however is carried by the pinner of the Presidential vote. I Of the Congressional District, Col. JRoosevelt, apparently has won the Relegates in the fourth, sixth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, fourteenth, fifteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, Nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty first districts. President Taft prac tically has been granted the first, sec pnd, third, probably the fifth, seventh, eighth, and thirteenth districts, v J The sixteenth district remained in jdoubt, although both sides claimed it. I Roosevelt supporters also claim two or three of the districts listed for Taft to-night. I Despite the close fight between the Taft and Roosevelt forces on the Re Publican ticket, United States Senator La Foliette, of Wisconsin, received considerable support, particularly in Cleveland where he was credited with everal thousand votes. In Wood jCounty, near Toledo, Senator La Fol iette ran second to Colonel Roose velt. - I Mr. Bryan and Speaker Champ Clark, although their names 'were not on the Democratic ballot, received a scattering vote through many pre- Mncts in the State. I Cincinnati, Cleveland, Toledo, Co fUinDUS. Davton. and a Anvon mnro. of the larger cities in the State fur- r,i)UCU me greater portion of to-1 'night's returns. Because of the com- nrimarv hi Mrt fha J mf w - - ' - f .....W.J vuiiui, lu; count in rural districts was unusual ly low. Fir.-st Story After Polls Cloel. Columbus, Ohio, May 21. Com plete Republican returns from 537 r.c r-.no o4.! give Roosevelt a total of 18,186 and tfco T.ft H0i0(,of0fl 1M17 t.. J from 481 precincts in the Democratic returns give Harmon 7,774 and Wil- son 6,875. Columbus, Ohio, May 21. On the face of the early returns in Ohio's first Presidential preference primary to-day, Colonel Theodore Roosevelt led the Republican ticket by 3 to 2 over President Taft and Governor Woodrow Wilson, of New Jersey, led over Judson Harmon, of Ohio, on the Democratic ticket by about the same percentage. These returns, however, were giv en on a basis of complete figures from little more than 250 precincts out of a total of 5,192 precincts in the State. Only on the Democratic ticket does the count present a direct Presiden tial preference vote. On computed is the total number of ballots cast In the precincts counted for delegates to the National Convention pledged to Col. Roosevelt or President Taft. It was impossible from the early returns to gather an indication of the number of delegateaeither President Taft or Colonel Roosevelt have gained. President Taft appeared to have carried Cincinnati by a large margin and also Toledo and Dayton, among the larger cities. This was more than oqset by the vote given Colonel Roo sevelt in Cleveland, Columbus, and other cities. The Roosevelt lead in the North end of the State it seemed would give the former President an advantage which Mr. Taft could not overcome by his vote in the South end of the State, including Cincinnati, his home, and the rural districts. Senator La Foliette received a lar ger vote than State politicians had predicted for him, getting a consider able fraction of the vote cast in the Northern end of the State, including! Cleveland. Governor Wilson, like Colonel Roo sevelt, was given his biggest vote in the city of Cleveland and the sur rounding counties. Governor Harmon polled a heavy vote in Columbus, the capital, and also in his home city, Cincinnati. Harmon's campaign managers, de spite the early figures, declared that their candidate had carried the State through the heavy vote they expected had been given him in the country districts. Governor Wilson's chief strength, they said, had been in Cleveland where Mayor Newton D. Baker had waged a strong fight against Harmon. Manager Dixon Declares Col. Roose velt's Majority Will Recah 50,000 in Ohio. Washintgon, D. C, May 21. At midnight Senator Dixon issued the following statemnt from the Roose velt. National headquarters: . "There is no further room for ar gument. On last Thursday at Colum bus, Mr. Taft in his speech said: " 'The vote in Ohio, my home State, will be the deciding one, and will set tle the question of the nomination.' "Ohio has spoken. "By a majority of probably 50,000 she has declared her preference for Theodore Roosevelt as the Republi can nominee for President. Roose velt will have 44 of the 48 delegates in Mr. Taft's own State. "Theodore Roosevelt will be nomi nated as the Republican candidate for President o nthe first ballot at Chi cago, and will be elected in Novem ber by the. biggest mapority ever giv en a Presidential candidate. This is the end of the contest." No statemnt was issued by the Taft managers to-night. It was stated at the President's headquarters that more, complete returns would be awaited before comment would be made, Both headquarters were selged by members of Con cress and political leaders to-night for sevi of the Ohio fight. Columbus, Ohio, May 22. Early returns show Roosevelt secured at least thirty-two of the forty-two dele gates to the Republican National Con ventlon in yesterday's primaries. Governor Harmon on the Democratic side, has twenty-eight delegates and Governor Wilson eight. Harmon, has a large lead in the Presidential pref erence rote. Roosevelt, it Is estimated, has ap parently twenty thousand plurality over Taft. Taft so far has carried ony three entire districts. SURE OF IXJXG SESSION. Senate Expectso Remain at Work All Summer Tariff Rattle In Sight j Lo rimer Case and Other Special j Legislation Will, in Consequence, Re Taken Up for Action. j (Special to The Caucasian.) Washineton. D. C May 21. Alii efforts to reach an agreement be-! tween regular and progressive Repub-i Means on the tariff having failed, and! the attitude of Democrats indicating j plainly that every one of the House I hills will h hrnntrht tn a vnt fn th Senate, if It takes all summer, an : air of quiet resignation has at last j settled upon the stalwart Republi- " , . , , . . The prolongation of the session be-! yond the Natlonal Conventions, also means that the various other meas ures of legislation, including the ap propriation bills, the naval program, good roads, and parcels post bills, canal legislation, and the Lorimer case, will have much attention. An early adjournment would have meant the postponement of most of this special legislation, or a vote af ter very hasty consideration. BROKE TWENTY-YEAR TION. RESOLU- Kansas Merchant Had Allowed Large Stock of Goods to Rot in His Store Open it to Save Stock. Wallace, Kansas, Dispatch. Peter Robideaux has at lafet brok en the resolution he made in 1887 to never re-open the store he then closed. It was the hardest thing Robideaux ever did to break that res olution, but his cattle were starving, while piled away in the back end of the big building were bales of hay which would keep them alive. It took two days for Robideaux to break his resolution. When he could stand the piteous lowing of the cattle no long er, he turned the rusty key in the rusty old lock, tumbled out the bales and locked the door again. Although it had been stored away twenty-five years, the hay still was fit to eat. Robideaux came to Wallace early in the sixties,, ahead of the railroad, and took up a claim, afterwards working on the grade. When he got enough money he opened a little store. He prospered, bought land when it was cheap, added to his stock and increased the size of his store- buildings until, in 1880, he had the largest store between Kansas City and Denver. Then came the drouth, the hot winds and hard times, and Wallace began to fade away until it ws only a ghost of its former self. Robideaux's trade dropped off stead ily and finally, one day in 1887, he sat from sunrise to sunset and not a person crossed the threshold of his store. That night he locked the store, turned his back on the $25, 000 stock of goods within and de clared he never would set foot inside it again. And Robideaux kept that resolution. Costly hardness and sad dles rotted away, clothing became nests of moths, groceries dried up or became prey for worms, hardware and cutlery turned to rust and. still Robideaux kept his resolution. When he wanted anything he bought it somewhere else. Often members of his family tried to prevail upon him to sell the stock or use what part of it the family might need, but he nev er would. Robideaux was wealthy, owning large areas of land in this section, and a big and well-stocked ranch northeast of Wallace. When he closed the store he retired to the ranch and has lived there since. The Secret Explained. (From the Youth's Companion.) , "I don't see how it is," Jenkins be gan, eyeing the tramp and his per forming dog with frank envy. "Here is this mongrel of yours doing all these tricks, and there is my dog, with a pedigree a yard long, that can't be taught a single thing! I've hammered at it till I'm tired, and he can't even be trusted on to roll over when he's told to." vWell, sir, 'tain't so much the dog," the tramp replied, confidently. "You have to know more'n he does, or you can't learn him anything' InAfF IPI IUEF7 WHQKV 1 Lttivli JUM iiLiVV JEUUiil President Taft and Go!. Roose velt are Now Speaking in That State TOE PiiUUlf ft EXT TUESDAY The New York Herald Statement on How the Two Candidate Stand Give President Taft 4fU Votes With 140 of the Number UtUa- trucked and Gives Colonel Roose velt 380 Vote If There is So domination on Vlrt Ballot at Chicago a "Dark Horse" May be Brought Into the Rare by the Un lnstructed Delegate The Bogus Delegations That Were Seated in Last State Convention. (Special to The Caucasian.) j Washington D- c- Ma 21 1912- The campaign in Ohio between Col.J Roosevelt and President Taft during j the past week, and which closed last ! night, has been the most strenuous i and remarkable campaign that has ever occurred in the history of this country. To-day the ballots are be- n, f . ?' tu mitted will determine the Republi- can nominee for the Presidency. In short, the vote of the Presidency of the United Staes for the next four years, the greatest prize not only within the gift of the people of this country, but the greatest prize of any man in the world, is now held in the balance and will be determined be fore sunset. Both sides are claiming the State, though both sides admit that the contests in that State, it being the President's home State, will be clos er than the contests in Illinois and Pennsylvania, and probably as close as the contests were in Massachu setts and Maryland. The claim made by Senator Dixon, Colonel Roosevelt's campaign man ager, Is'that he is sure of carrying eleven Congressional Districts and also sure to control the State Con vention which will elect the six dele gates at large. If he does, this will give Colonel Roosevelt twenty-eight votes out of the forty-eight votes of the State. If such should be the result, or anything near it, It is admitted by President Taft's friends that it will practically end his chances for the nomination. It is admitted by every one that for Colonel Roosevelt to get an even break, or even near half the delegates in Ohio, will be a great victory. The Next Struggle in New Jersey. The next State will be New Jersey, which has twenty-eight electoral votes. On Thursday both President Taft and Colonel Roosevelt will be gin the campaign in that State. If Colonel Roosevelt should get half or anything like an even break in Ohio, it is conceded that he will have the best chance to carry New Jersey. The Uncertain Elements in the Situa tion. In this connection, we give below the last revised estimate published by the New York Herald: While the Herald table gives 4 84 votes to President Taft and only 380 votes to Colonel ifoosevelt, yet the Herald, In an article In the same is sue, admits that "President Taft's candidacy is In a dangerous position." The Herald then goes on to show that of the 484votes claimed for Presi dent Taft that 140 are unlnstructed, though thought to be favorable to President Taft, and besides that there are nearly a humdred votes included in that list that are contested. The Herald admits that if the con tested votes and the unlnstructed votes were taken from the 484 votes claimed by President Taft that to day he would fall far below the 380 votes that are squarely Instructed for Colonel Roosevelt. It is known that the unlnstructed votes are unlnstructed because they really prefer a third candidate or a dark horse If President Taft cannot be nominated. This being so, it would seem to indicate that there is no chance of President Taft's being nominated .and that the only ques tion is whether or not Colonel Roose velt will get a majority, or will a third term candidate be named. Besides, the Herald admits that there are a number of Southern dele gates who have been instructed for Taft who are liable to break either on the first ballot or on the second bal lot for Colonel Roosevelt. This makes the whole Presidential situa tion extremely uncertain. The New York Herald Taft and Roosevelt Tables. Below we give the Taft and Roose velt tables prepared by the New York Herald as referred to above: t1rrSrt Taft. Istrtscte4 for. pledge!, or favor able to Alabama (cotsplete) Arka&sa (two districts ...... 4 Colorado (cosspiei) 12 j Cossrticut t compute ) ....... SI j Delaware (complete) t j District of Columbia 3 ( Florid (complete) IS Georgia (complete) 2Sf Hawaii C ! Illinois (Fifth District) ....... 2 Indiana (four delegate at largw 1 and eight districts) 20 j Iowa ( four delegates at large and 1 six districts) Hi Kansas (First District) 2 j Kentucky (4 delegates at large I and alt but 1 1-2 districts) . 23! Louisiana (complete) 20 Massachusetts (nine districts)... Michigan (six delegates at large and seTen districts) Mississippi (complete) Missouri (nine districts) ...... II j 0 f : ; .uuiuaua uuui(iric) .......... 9 , Nevada (complete) 6 1 New Hampshire (complete) New Mexico ( part ) New Vork i delegates at large and 39 districts) Oklahoma (two districts) ...... Pennsylvania (4 1-2 districts)., Philippines 821 4 9 1 orto ,i,co - ! Rhode Island (complete) 10 j South Caroliua (ix districts) 121 Tennessee ( 4 delegates at large f and eight districts) 20 j Texas (Ninth District) 2i Utah (complete) 8 . , . ,. . iiU Will UlBli 111 .......... Of Virginia (complete) 24 j Wyoming (complete) C Total for President Taft. . .484 v Theodore Rooevelt. Instructed for, pledged, or favor able to Arkansas (two districts) 4 California (complete) 26 Idaho (part) f 6 Illinois (all but one district)... 56 Indiana (five districts) 10 Kansas, all but one district) .... 18 Kentucky (1 1-2 districts) 3 Maine (complete) 12 Michigan (five districts) 10 Minnesota (complete) 24 Missouri (four delegates at large and seven districts) 18 Maryland (complete) 16 Massachusetts (five districts) . . 10 Nebraska (complete) 16 New Mexico (part) 2 New York (part) 8 North Carolina (four delegates at large and eight districts) .... 20 Oklahoma (part) 14 Oregon (complete) 10 Pennsylvania (part) 67 South Carolina (three districts). 6 farmers and the workingmen In the Tennessee (Ninth District) 2 j cities had tasted, bad been gorged, Texas (two districts) 4 j with democracy, and they determined Vermont (Second District) . 2 j to try to throw off the yoke or In West Virginia (complete) 16 j competence and oppression, of such a 1 thing were possible. Total for Mr. Roosevelt. . .380 j The Kingly court assembled the . j representatives, at Versalles, hopln' It Is interesting to note that the New York Herald gives Colonel Roo sevelt only eighteen votes out of the twenty-four In North Carolina. This Is very significant, In view of the fact that the Duncan machine suc ceeded In getting two unlnstructed delegates elected from the first Con gressional District, and in view of the fact that the same referee machine bosses have put up two contesting delegates against the Roosevelt dele gates in both the Third and Fourth Congressional Districts. The votes In these three districts, making six In all. If they go against Colonel Roose velt, will leave the table prepared by the Herald as to North Carodina cor rect. It will be interesting to know where the Herald got this informa tion that there were six votes in North Carolina on whom Colonel Roosevelt could not count. It will also be In teresting to Colonel Rosevelt and his friends in North Carolina and every where to know that the man who claims to be Colonel Roosevelt's per sonal leader in North Carolina, Mr. Richmond Pearson, is responsible for Colonel Roosevelt losing these six votes. If he loses them, as shown in an editorial in this issue of The Cau casian. It was Mr. Pearson who made a deal with Mr. Duncan and seated his bogus delegates -which made it possible for these contesting delegates to be sent to Chicago. New Bern Insurance Man In Ohio. Arrested A New Bern, N. C, dispatch dated May 21st, says: "Sheriff Biddle received a telegram late this afternoon from the chief-of-police at Omaha, Neb., stating that Harold T. Pratt who for several years was the represenfaive in this city of several large insurance companies, but who a few months ago left un expectedly,, after having committed various offenses, had been apprehend ed in that city and was being held pending Instructions from the local authorities." 5 2jThe French People Expert ence Ancinor ucnuine Crisis a ncaD moot nEvouma T tNrf4e ltaS Agmia KwbS a iJUnll and tmcAethla U e The I rrch Klagxkwa Wral Democratic Onr Mora asuS Ttwrsi Trottfel IWas Wlwm Ih Vwrmh NoUlttf Was YoaeI With tle CH. Uilkicstllle. N. C, May 14. 1112. Correspondence of Ths Caocssisa- Knterprts. Early Jn the year I7tt France ex perlenced another real crisis, Th darkest periods tn awl or her stortay history. ui about to break out; and ?htttory prote that the retoiuUoa i U2 otnetbtn real. The peasantry (the common people ) and the nobil 1 Ity, mere at lof rerbead. The ! mon people had endured much; but ; matter ere giro la one al the while. No matter who ut Kin, no I matter If the U-makrr did pretend ; to deviiie measure or relief, the re- lift old not peem to ihow up. A war with a foreign foe micbt unit the people (or a time. Hut arn re both cruel and expentie; and Franc had probably ent her pitcher to the i war well too often awlready. The present outlook wut for a war be tween foes and foea and 'between friends and friend the kind or a war no country can engBge In with out serious, if not fatal consequence, to the country Itself. Taxation fell with unusual severity upon the till ers ov the soil, while the great land owners and officeholders seemed to go - practically free of such"' burdens. France wuz on the rente or coin Democratic once more, an we awl know that this means and spells "ruin" with full emphasis upon ev ery letter. A good writer, an Ingeni ous writer, can take the word dem ocracy and twist hit about and make some startling and glowin promises or mere meaningless claims. But when It comes to actual perform ances, to a full and practical demon stration, there lx nothing tangible about hit. If ghosts were a reality, the ghost ov Thomas Jeffer&on hex long since given up in despair; and the brand ov democracy which the aristocrats ov France tried near th close ov the seventeenth century wus az bad az the world ever saw, an' that must her turned the stomachs ov j both saint and sinners. The French to influence the proceedln's and make matters worse we mutt sup pose, for there wuz no apearance or actual betterment. Like the story told ov the foolish mountaineer, probably a North Carolinian, who, in order to her a full yoke, hitched him self with hiz one ox. and when the team, the beefy part or hit. ran away the mountaineer ix said to her called loudly for help, saying: "Here w go, darn our fool souls, won't some body stop ust ' The French nobility wuz rapidly aproachln a scene like that; and hit got thar quick enough. Both the clergy and the nobility failed to attend the Versalles meet In. The citizens who did attend went about things, so earnestly and so ef fectively that the King and hlx sup porters were alarmed and they lea rned lately offered several Important concession, but spoiled things some what by entering the conference ac companied by soldiers. The King ad dressed the assembly and ordered the members to separate Into three bod ies, proof, that he wuz an arbitrary scoundrel, for such a course would her broken up the meetln. what he hoped for, no doubt. But the dele gates refused to divide. M Ira bean, one or the prominent delegates, re plied to the speech by the King and declared that only a superior armed force could In any manner affect the meeting. The nobility did not glre up. bow ever. In a few days the King bad 20,000 soldiers under orders at Paris. At the same time the only cabinet of ficer who had any influence with the masses, M. Necker, wuz dismissed. Hiz dismissal took place on Saturday, July 11, 1739. On Sunday the 12th the masses In Paris heard ov the dis missal o? their friend at the Kingly court, or, from the court. The spark bad found hits way to the powder. Carmllle Desmonlins, & shrewd, but characterless demagogue, offered to lead the mobs. Hit wuz a pity that the crowd wuz practically forced to accept such leadership at such a time, but he seemed to be the only one la . (Continued on page 3.) s