Iitcfdaowrilingtopostia regulatkmVat 1 thepomtSoutIipurt.N.C..aaawd-0cean i cLus f natter.' - " rmute montm. iixosths .... ...... . ; .00 Cents. D.NK YEAK... ;..... ...... 00 Sent by Mall. Payable in arivnnrv. Give pnntittce adnsm In full, including County and State. lUtnlt by draft, postofflee order, or re glsU-rcd letter, at our risk. - tSSTAd vertWng rates furoMuil n appli cation 1 No communk-ation will be printed in the Lk a DF.it without the name of tlie writer being known to tlie eilitrs. Obituary or death notices, of five lines. subject to editorial revision, fwv. Inger - not k-es. subj-t to approval, to be paid for In ndvanre, Tiik Ikairk cannot return rejecti-fl nuiniUM-ripts, no matter what tlieir charac ter may be. To this rule no exception will lie made with regard to cither letters or In closurcs. Xor will the edittr enter into any correspondence respecting rejected cotmnunicatloiis. All mutter not inserted Is destroyed. STEVENS & FABEELL Editors ami Proprietors. SOUTH POUT. IlrnnwirkCo..N.C. Soutiipobt, N. ('., Aritu. .10, 1891.. j THE POOR MAN PAYS. ; If there is one thing more than another which causes the small pro perty owner to feel sore, it is the amount which he jays in taxes on the assessed valuation of his property, in proportion to that paid by his richer neighbor or by the large manufactu rers and incorporate cotnianies of his city or countv. The small property owners of the country can be said to lo the ones who pay the taxes, nor is it necessary to particularize any sec tion where this is especially the case, for it can lie said to prevail throughout tho United States. What is meant by small projierty owners paying the taxes is that in proportion to their holdings, in reitl or personal propert', the poor man pays taxes at a ratio of perhaps four to one as compared to the rich man, manufacturer and incorporated . . '.!.. company. Nor will an increased tax rate make his situation anv 1 tetter, for he is now paying taxes on his property at a rate Prtant J service can and should be near its real value, while the taxes ofi furt"r recognized, and theroby digni his more tortunattt neiirhlw will not fiw, "X l"e National Government. be increased proportionately to make tilings equal. This unfairness in the amount of tax paid by the small and largo property owner must continue to exist until all property shall be assessed at its real value, for it is hardly in the nature of things to expect the great owners of property to declare their property nt a rate higher than the averago is now. Ilecause of the present existing state in regard to taxes paid, its unfairness for small owners,it does not argue for the greater honesty of the poor man, but the proportionate real valuation of tho property is too irreat for the small holder to overcome, and this propor tion increases as the value of the hold ings increases, to the disadvantage of the small holder. ' A uniformity in the plan of assess ment, by taxing property at iu real market value, would remove Jhe dj proportion now existing. The tax rate now existing everywhere is undoubt edly high enough to raise more than W ... ----- i enough money to carry on State affairs. if a real value rate was assessed, in-j stead of the present method of assess ing property at one-third or one-half its market value. In fact the tax rate would be' lowered very soon for the increased amount collected, by taxing all at the real valuation; would amount to more than that collected under the li cavui. ureinuu. unuer a real tax and they promise to be, if not abso valuation assessment all property own- j lutely bitter, at least a little puckering ers would stand. .equal, each bearing! to tlie taste. In the course of the his proportionate part oL the burden j next five weeks or less Mr. Foster must ot maintaining the -affairs , of citv. county, State and the National Govern-. ' ment. . , - , ; Assess ptcperty at its real value and K...t.m : aim . great owners of tviwix l ....... If J . - wiririW equaiuy wincu sfiouid be due 1 1 TTrT .. r -r1" cam a!to . . IWn,f and values will be found to be largely pprnriaieu, rcsuiung in benefiU now .mihUW-. I PIIXITSTStALLJIISJrDGED. !aefinate"lVa with theavi, While no more fault majr be found.fThe FiftyretCongresg, thooghit waal L ... ... tr; ; i-2 : pnoUge;Scrvi'co iion the Atlantic : or Gulf oi Mexico, than with 1 other" classes of servicer iflarineor inland, vet there ii a readiness at all : - . ... lti,nes to ve the bilot thtffullsliareofl asters cm the coast "or rivers, "and j this whether be may be directly or indirectly involved. The sin of omis siou is charged to his account as cheerfully as any act of commission, while services faithfully discharged are taken as a matter of course. The simule securing of his branch is not all I . - . - 1 'there is in it, lor me constant improve- nents bing made in nearly every river i ... , i aud the changing of marks, new lights, buoys, etc makes it necessary for the pilots to keep posted, whether actively j employed on the entire limit of his i commission or not, as any hour or day his services may -he required for duty. Thou the duties of a pilot while they may "hot la al ways dangerous, yet there is a constant hazard attached to the service which cannot be eliminated. One misjudgement most invariably passed upon pilots is coLsidenng them as a class, lazy. This opinion is passed usually by persons on land' who, en gaged themselves in active business affairs, meet tho pilots when off duty, their time for rest, and judge from see ing them not occupied that a pilot's life must lie one of comparative case and idleness. Hut take a trip on any of tlie coast pilot boats, and let the weather lie fine, even, and our land friend can see enough to convince himself, that the pilot service is one requiring loth brain and muscle. Another charge, frequently brought against pilots, is not being on duty, or negligent in their watch for vessels, and this complaint is usually brought up by vessel captains. The charge is an easy one to make, and many plau sible arguments will be given to sustain the vessel captains position, especially if tho captain of a vessel has & grudge against the pilots of a port which he wishes to pay off. Each year, the Lea der is glad to note, this important branch of the marine service is atv quiring a greater itnMrtance and dig. nity. The pilot of years ago, was generally a hard worker, honest on duty and conscientious, but a rough fellow on laud. The pilot of to day, with a iKJtter education, mingles with society on land when off duty, and is ttt """ pio"aoi icnow, iohows .,.., : 1.1.. 11." n. local and national affairs to a degree which to the pilot of a number of years ago was totally unknown. This im- By employing coast pilots on all Men of-War, when off our coast, or enter ing any of the seaports wonld give an importance to tlie pilots and provide an additional safe-guard for these vessels, tho necessity for which was illustrated in the cases of the war vessels, Galena and Nina going ashore on the New England coast, when all uncertainty as to their position would have been cleared away if coast pilots had been iu charge of the vessels. The day has passed when the requi sites of a pilot were considered to be a :smeH f fisb and tar with a dash of i8'1 water. The pilot of to-dav is w m willing to' rise or fall on his "merits, asking only a fair hearing of his case when complaints are brought against him. And with a letter knowledge of this important branch of the marine service, a gradual improvement in the tone and character of the men, better education among those growing "upT respect is taking the place of prejudice in the mind of the landsmen for his pilot brother and with this better knowledge will come fairness and justice towards the pilots, where mis judgements have formerly prevailed. THE PROSPECT IN TO E TREASURY. The first' fruits of the economic policy of the last Congress are now about to lie served up at the Treasury, make up his mind what lie will -do with the 4 J per cent, bonds that fall due on the 1st of September. There ai-e in all about $60,000,000 of them. j of which some $25,000,000 are held by ... ? the Treasury as security for the circu noiesoi in national banks. : rvenu quesuomt, all interesting and j ,xne pretty urgent, will present them- selves to the SecreUry of the Treasurv There is aljsolntcly no provUion of nearly 'fifteen months, "paid WottbeSent of the Woroen't PreM Association' slightest attention to this business,' fthongh it-was perfectly sure to -com&Jbxbzrx Jrietchie . , , - . . -J ..... . - ft . '. up ana nie; jate sirincag wpusil3 conic up was perfectly"We4h kPowhavingbQittn the -island - ol Corfri A That Congress ras busy about many i things, botlmaJring - provisioirfor the orderly and ! advantageous meeting of Treasury obligations was not one of them, ; -. j r .J. ;. r?:.v -The most natural . way of dealing with the question, and the one most consistent with the policy of the Gov- ernment In previous cases of like kind, 1 1.1 ? . . ! woum nave owu iw uuiress w ymxt a law authorizing new bonds for which 1. lti: .1.... st. u.. the bonds falling due might be ex changed at the option of their holders, who would have the choice of taking the new bonds or lading paid in cash. There; is no reason to doubt that with proper authority and discretion the Secretary of the Treasury might have refunded the 4 per cents at 2 per cent, and possibly at 2 per cent, for a sufficiently long liond. Hut while the Fifty-first Congress was willing to go into all sorts of legislation for the benefit of sil ver speculators, or for that I of pet manufacturing monopolies, it had no time to spare for the considera tion of a refunding bill. Left without any legal authority or iniidance in the c u . . r .n u ' 1. luaiivj, mi . A' uawr iiiuat tail inm:iv uinju . . . ... i ms own resources witli sucti am lie can j get from precedent. The most conspi , ; .. . . ! cuouspreceueni is, )t course, tne action . of Mr.YVindom when in Gen.Uarfield s - Cabinet in "continuing" the 5 per cent, bonds, then falling due, at -3 per cent.' This was necessarily purely voluntary j vii. 1.110 iai i a iiiG t uviitiiuiiuior iiv -1 i ' , . -- though there was no specific authority for the course of the Secretary, there was no one in, the. then existing cir cumstances to question its legality. I he bondholders who accepted the Secretary's offer could not do so, and those who did not get. then monev in j full, and there was an end of the business. j nut .Mr. V inuoni was in a position ! . to make this proposition with entire j equanimity, because he had plenty of money on hand to pay the bondholders who might elect to take it. Mr. Foster is not so fortunate. With the opening of the new fiscal year, July 1 tne new and liberal appropriations of the last session of the; Fifty.first Congress will have to be met, and the condition of the revejiues as compared with these heavy expenditures is uncertain and ; not likely to be favorable. The actual available cash in the Treasury is re duced to a point scarcely beyond the safety line for ordinary expenditures, so that Mr. Foster is said to be' trying to devise some j form of bookkeeping that will make it appear larger, and is even contemplating counting the frac tional currency as part oi the available reserve. The situation is complicated by the fact that so large a proportion of the 4 per cents belongs to the bunks and is held by the Treasury as security for circulation. Since the Government by law imposes its own bonds as the particular and only form of security that a bank is allowed to give for circulation, it assumes a cer tain, obligation., with reference to changes in those bonds. It is not cer. tainly required always to provide the bonds, but when it has provided them: and they fall due and the Government is not prepared to pay them in full, as at present it is hot prepared, it is, at least, only fair that it should deal with the bonds in such a . way as to inflict as little loss as possible 011 the banks, and also, to make as little disturbance as possible in the supply of currency. Mr. roster 1 would hardly, wish to produce any avoidable' contraction of the bank circulation. 1 1 remains to be seen what, he. will or can ds. He is a business man, and lie knows the risks to which he is exposed. Whatever method he may discover to deal with the situation, he may well i wish that the Fifty-first Congress had not been quite so lavish. Even 5 per cent, of the now famous billion of ' dollars would be very 'handy."--N. Y. Times. . . , ( PRESS COH9ENTH. s The Homestead, published at Des Moines, la), is a fanners journal, re presenting the best thought and most advanced agricultural methods of the great 'Northwest. Coming from so important a section; and advocaUng as it does such interests,' the Leadek welcomes it most heartily to its desk in the great Southeast; V The Wilmington JJauhgtr, appears ; this week as four pa-e, eight column daily. It daily. Iu new form is decidedly pre, posessing and indicates the progressive ideas and promises of its new manage. j meut. j ; i PEWNAL A III PERSONAL. . e f r VMiift Rlfnr? iErgtcr. Prcsi- of the-Facinc coast, is a grananiece 01 Mrt -W-ft -M ft . T I ana Jsnrpress nraoeui 01 ausuiu palace that will contain 1 28 rooms, and ill cost nearly $l,000f00. .Sen! Pettigreir will drive a trained moose against a trotting horse for $200 a side at t he State fair to be held at Sioux Falls, S. D., next fall Ex-Speaker Keifer, for 14 months' ! services as attorney and receiver of the w.;t , w,v snMnrfiM. r O., returned a bill for $27,000. De Lesscps is now 86 years old. At 80 he was a rugged, enthusiastic, and vigorous octogenarian, but since the collapse of his great Panama Canal scheme he has aged and broken per ceptibly. Henry C. Lewis, of Fitchburg, Mass. is the proud possessor of a watch which the Marquis de Lafayette 'gave to an aide or orderly. Capt. Jonathan Moore, during the Revolution, and which is at least 115 years old. WILHIXUTOX ADVERTISEMENTS. GENTLEMEN DESIRING TO LIGHTEN THEIR WIN- , . . . . . . ter Flannels are advised that we nave opened our summer weight all-wool Hygienic Shirts and lowers. VV eare also showing a line of Ludcrwcar m real Balbnesan. Thread, and Cot ton garments at prices to suit. HJSUKIUK LADIES' Balbrigan, Ribbed and Cotton-knit- Vests, from 10c. each up. HEDRICK. HOSIERY. Ladies' and Children's Hose in Fast Black Ml,brin- X Ur JkT GRENADINES chiss "-tiods! Plain and Striped. First IIEDRICK. GENTSV SUITINGS. A pretty lot of Spring Suitings and Pan taloon Stuff, suitable for Men and Boys, made to order at a saving of 25 per cent, from ordinary prices. HEDRICK. SPIBITTINE BALSAM. . Cures Rheumatism. Relieves Pain. PERSIAN INHALENT. For Consumption, Asthma, Catarrh, and La Grippe. PERSIAN OINTMENT the greatest Skin Cure in the world. For Saleby all Druggists. Spirittinc Chemical Co., HANSEN & SMITH, Managers, WILMINGTON, N, C. ACKNOWLEDGED. It is acknowledged by all who virited that TAYLOR'S BAZAAR has the largest and most complete and fashionable MILLINERY HOUSE in the State, and are furthermore Leaders in - LOW PRICES. All those that have not been to this es tablishment since it has been extended, are cordially invited, so as to satisfy themsel ves. - ; , . No one urged to buy. Salesladies will politely wait on all callers at 118 and 120 HABKET STBEBT, WILMINGTON, N. C. Orders by mail promptly' filled at wholesale and retaiL ELEGANT GB0C1 KEE QLASSWABE, TiAT.TPS and hotjse nrnmsHinQ goods. Chamber, Dinner and Tea Sets a Hpeelaltj. S. A. SCI I LOSS & CO. 21 aud 23 Blarbet Street. WILMIXttTOX, X. cl VISIT J. NAUJIBURG -FOR- SO MEN'S FURNISHINGS. HATS ALL 3 AUD STYLES. 113 Princess Street, S. H.FISHBLATE The King Clothier, wnuraoTOH, H. 0. Has a large line of SPRING SUITS roR Men, Youths, t Boys and Children. Agent for the celebrated DUNLAP HAT. Gents Furnishings in large variety and supply. Satisfaction guaranteed on all pur chases or money refunded. ALDERM AN & ; PLANNER, Importers and Wholesale DEALERS IN HARDWARE, STOVES TINWARE, Etc. Ho. 114 ITorth Front Street, WILMINGTON, N. C. IF YOU WISH TO PURCHASE A PIANO 0B AN ORGAN. WriUtocrciUtttJieliaiable MUSIC HOUSE 07 E. VAN LAER, Ho. 402 and 404 ff. Fourth Street (corner of Walnut street ) ' f-- ;:.'- .-; t ' Where you wfll find the largest afcfc. W 1 j 13 ys assortaent of instranenta in thejutcnUon. State. We gnaranted LOWEST PRICES and the BEST GOODS. : . E. VAN LaER. Xo. 402 and 401 North Fourth Street IKhUhLL MEARES, ATTORNEY AT LAW. -Oflco, 17 Princcci Sfrect lVILSilNGTOK. K. C. Prtlc in all State and Plerl Court. fl TU R T TO! I-Aiav The Only Stricl j BeUil Dealer In Kne BOOTS, SHOES ANI&LlMllS- I seU no shoddy goods, but sell u nne ail lesmertaoca u are manufic tured in the" United BUcf . L L GREENEWALD 118 narket Stmt TTIlnlcsUa, N.c. HEINSBERGER TIICUVK . ; BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER. Fancy Gcn, Pre onto, Oil Paintinjjo, Steel Enjpivin Chrezncs. Pianos, Organs, Guitars, Violins, Bniss Instru ments Etc;, Etc. WILMINGTON. N.C, A Handsome Line of MATTING Just Receired, Selling at4 Low Fncei. A FEW PATTEBHS OF CARPETS LEFT, which we are selling out Cheap. mLIAlIS 6 EOBHISOH, Next to The Ort on. WILIIINGTON I MARBLE YARD,1 f P JOHN MAUNDK1W . Proprietor. AV1LM1NG1X)N, X. C. North Front Street, R -:o:- M ON I'HKNT 8 AND (iHATK Stokcs Mack to Ordkb. THEORTON WILIIIHGTOH, H. 0. The Favorite Hotel for all Northern Travel. ' QUIET, ELEGANT, HOMELIKE " THE OltTON " Oaten to the highest class ol patronage Trith Cuisine and Service eqnal to any in the South. Careful attention paid to Business Hen and Tourists- -Uates: $2 per day and upward. JT. E. MONTAGUE, Manncr. V-,JIEnitY,SIIITH, Carpenter and Builder. lleffldeoce. 310 K. Ninth Street. Your patronage i re?pectfnllj soliciteJ XOrdersleft at the itoreof kins & Mitchell will receive prornp p L 1 - .cu. . T. V. WOOD, 123 PrfnCeSS St. WflmingtOD, H.0- ? 1 lOllilviri nHiiuir 18 r7