State Library' SEE OUR EXTRA ORDINARY CLUBBING' OFFER I SUBSCRIBE : Gkt Up a Club Fort THE CAMPAIGN ! '5 U ii in in ri it i lil 111 ,fi 70LUHE 25. HICKORY, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1894. 1IDIIBER31 press it-, t f j j SEC. CARLISLE'S LETT KB, MAIN FEATURES OF WHAT ME SAID ABOUT THE NEW TARIFF LAW. He is Opposed To Further Tart.'f Legation During This Session. Secretary of the Treasury Carlisle wrote ;i letter to Senator Harris, which the letter had read in the .Senate in regard to the 'SiggIe Shot1' Tariff Bills passed by the House' after hav ing passed a regular Tariii bill. The main features of his letter are here with presented to our readers, he says: According to the most careful esti mates that can ie made, if no change is made in the proposed revenue legis lation which has recently passed through-Congress, the total receipts of the treasury lor the pre sent (isc.il year will be as follow.: From duties on im ports, Senate bill, including i3,0'V 000 on sugar, $170, 000, 000; from inter nal taxois: whiskey 1,000,000, tobacco $33,000,000, fermented liquors '.:;: ,000, 000, incomes -.$1.1.000,000, oleomarga rine $1,00, 000, playing cards 1,000,' 000, miscellaneous x200.000, from sale of lands and other miscellaneous sour ces, kC0,OiJ0,GCW. Grand totals?'i7 )00, 000. The estimated receipts lor the pres ent fiscal year from the proposed tax incomes mid playing cards and the additional tax of 0 cents per g.ii loxi on distilled spirts, are, it will be observed, much less. Than i.; stated hi the various tabulated statements which have beeu heretofore used in the di.-.cussion of these subjects, but I am satisfied the amount here given are approximately correct. The propo-ed income tax will not become payable by the terms of the bill recently passed, until '"on or before July 1, 1895," which Is the close of the fiscal year; and it is estimated by the commissioner of In ternal Revenue that by reason of the large stock on hand, the receipts from the tax on playing cants will not amount to more than $1 000,000 during the year. The estimated increase of receipts on account of the additional tax on distilled spirits during the pres ent year has already been prevented to a great extent by the withdrawal of large quantities of. goods from the bon ded warehouses and the payment of the tax thereon at 90 cents, and this process is still going on. The total expenditures during the curreur iUeal year will be as "follows: Civil and, miscellaneous, including de ficiencies in postal revenues, $1X000, 000; war, h eluding new vessels and armament, x4J3, 00 0,000; Indians, $10, 000,000; pensions, $143,500,000; interest, $39,500,000; total $303,000,000. Estima ted surplus $13,000,000. The duty on sugar proposed in the recent bill will, according to importa tions of that article during the flsal year 1S03, yield an annual revenue or $13, 4 7i, 058, and the duties ontheother articles mentioned in your communi cation would yield under that bill about $1,000,000; that is to say, iron ore '$270, WO, coal $430,149, and barbed wire, fencing wire and wire rods, of iron or steel, when -imported for the manufacture of barbed wire fencing, about $309,000. It will be seen, therefore, that if su gar alone is placed upon the free list, the expenditures during the present fiscal year will exceed the receipts to the amount of $,478,058, and if . the duties are removed from all the arti cles specified in your letter, the deficit will be $29,478,058. not including any expenditures on account of the sink ing fumtf or the .payment of $2,3G3, 000 of Pacific Railroad bonds, which will mature during the fiscal year. In view of theexisting condition and re quirement of the present service, I n:n of the opinion that it would not bo tfe to place all the articles enumera ted in your letter, or even sugar alone, upon the free list, without imposing' taxation upon other articles or sub jects sufficient to raise an annual rev enue of about $30,000,000. Farmers' Alliancs Disbands inGeorgia. Atlanta, Ga.. Aug. 1C The Geor gia . Farmers' Alliance has gone to pieces After a stormy meeting held at Dublin, with only sevenitv-five dele gates in attendants, this course -was determined on. The leaders endeav ored ; to effect an amalgamation with the Populist party, but it was deter mined to close out the business of the ..alliance exchange, discontinue the HELPS THE COAL MINES SOUTHERN RAILWAY WILL GREATLY BEN EFIT O. TENNESSEE AND KENTUCKY COAL. Pocahontas Coal will be Displaced by Jellico and Coal Crek Coals. It is the opinion of coal operators and railroad officials that the consoli dation of the Richmond & Danville and Cast Tennessee railroads under one head will be of great benefit to the coal interests of East Tennessee. Before the consolidation the Rich mond iz Danville used Pocahontas coal in their shops and for engine fuel to a great extent. Now it is believed that all the coal used by the Southern Railway Company in Virginia aud the Carolinas will come from the Jellieo and Coal Creek districts. The South ern will also make an attempt to sup ply the domestic trade in the Carolinas from the East Tennessee mines. Un der the old dispensation they were compelled to divide freights on Poca hontas coal with the Norfolk & Wes tern road. It se-mis reasonable that they vould prefer to encourage traffic within their own territory and for which they would receive the sole benefits. Owners of stocks and bonds of the Southern Railway Compauya've largely interested in coal miners along the Knoxville & Ohio, and their inter ests are common. One of the local officials of the Southern, when interviewed on the subject, said there had been no appre ciable increase in coal shipments to he Carolinas as yet, but. that he looked for The development of a big trade in that dire-lion in the near future- ' The Southern will he 1- the South what the Pennsylvania is to the North the great coalj carrying system. The Georgia Pacific penetrates the Alabama coal -fields, and the Knoxville k Ohio covers the famous coal fields of East Tennessee. Coal will be one of these days the largest item of traffic on the Southern. Knoxville Tribune. STARTLING SUICIDE. Bank Examiner William stiller Shocts Him self at Altoona. AltooXA, Pa., 17. Bank Examiner William Miller, who has been working on the accounts of the suspended Sec ond National Bank, of this city, for the past two weeks, committed suicide at 1 o'clock today by shooting himself through the head. He died instantly. The examiner had just returned from dinner, and, after talking a moment with J. P. Levan, President of the bank, in the private office, walked into the counting-room. A minute later a shot was heard. When Mr. Levar entered the room Miller was ly ing on the lloor with blood and brains oozing from a hole through his head He had just completed the examina tion of the affairs of the bank and submitted the result to Washington. A CRUEL RUMOR. The Duke of York Was Not riarried Before His L Union With Princess Afay. K Londox, Aug. 13. A letter signed by Sir Francis Knollys, K. C. M. G., one of the grooms-in-wniting upon the Prince of Wales, dated Marlborough House, is republished today, saying that the Prince of Wales directs him to say that there is not a shadow of foundation for the report that the Duke of York was married previous to his union with Princess May of Teck. The letter adds that the report of a previous marriage was obviously in vented to cause pain and annoyance to the young couple. The Farmers Alliance. ' The State Farmers" Alliance elected all their old officers. A labor exchange was discussed. Home ma nu .'act are of shoes was another question that came before the convention. The salaries of the executive committee were cut from C. to $2 a day. and that ot the secreta ry and treasurer from si,P0a year to sl,ooo. Iu the future lady members will be taxed live cents jht month in stead of going in fre as heretofore. The membership of the Alliance is much smaller than a few years ago. They will no doubt henceforth eschew polities in their organization. To Succei-J Bunn, The Democratic Congressional conven tion for the Fourt h district, nominated Charles M. Coke of Franklin county bv acclamation. SUN'S FACE WAS SPOTTED Holes 111 Its Surface Big"Enough to Accommodate many Worlds Like Ours. U MAT DO THEY POltTESD? Old Gentleman wit a Telescope flakes a Side Show of Old Sol in Broadway. This earth is but a little thing after all, as any "one with any sort of a ser viceable telescope might have realized yesterday by taking a peep at the sun. There were phfinly visible there a. dozen or more spots, some of them large and some small, but any one of them representing a hole so big that the earth might have droj:ped into it as easily as a housewife slips a dum pling into a great iron pot. The larg est of the depressions would have accommodated-no less than eight earths without crowding. There are many theories regarding these specks on the great shining, eye of the orb that lights up the noonday sky. The spots a j-e there admittedly, but why they are there and what th'ey are and wiiat they effect, are questions that are enshrouded in the darkest mystery... Some say that as sure as the sun's face becomes Jbct tied there will be magnetic disturbances on the ... earth, and this seems to be borne out by the fact that in many individual eases the appearance of sun spots has been fol lowed by magnetic storms, with a bril liant exhibition of the" Aurora Borealis. On the whole, it is not altogerher uncertain that whatever influence the sun spots exert upon earthly meteorol ogy is not very slight, if it exists at all. As a matter of fact, with men of science so much at odds upon the sub ject, it is not -wholly unreasonable to take sides with still another class of "knowing ones," who will tell you that the sun spot is simply an omen of war, and that yesterday's exhibi tion was only a certain precursor of the carnage of universal tumult. It remains that there were spots on the sim yesterday, and that any one not blind and with a cash surplus of at least ten cents might have had a peep at them from the northeast cor ner of Broad wav and Thirty-third street, where a grizzled old gentleman, with a battery.straw hat and a marked German accent, had set up a small but powerful telescope on a - tripod, and hung out a sign inviting all to step up and look. The spots were very plain to be seen through the old gentleman's instru ment, being clearly defined, and the fringing penumbra was equally clear. Text books on astrouomy describe this penumbra as being made up of fila ments directed outward from the sun spots radially in almost straight lines, but yesterday's ieiiumbra looked like light, wavy lines, something like a spiders web. around each of the spots. The astronomers at Columbia Col lege took some measurements from their observatory during the after noon. New York Herald 15th hist. News From the Capital. Wasuixgtox, Aug. IS. President Cleveland signed tli3 sundry civil ap propriation bill at Gray Gables today. This afternoon the Treasury De partment began mailing printed cop ies of the new tariff lull to customs of Ieet to gull hem in putting the new, law into effect. Each eopy is ex actly like the enrolled bill, errors of ! punctuation included. t No word wi;s gn i out at the White House tonight that the President had signed the river and harbor bill, which is her.- in the possession of Private Seeretarv hu -.. . Iu view of the Uu i ihat no veto mes sage on the subject was sent to Con gress today, it is generally considered that the bill ha become a law with out the President's signature. riASONS IN CONCLAVE. Triennial fleeUfsz of Members of the Royal Decree. The triennial convocation of the Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Masons which begun in Topeka on August 22, yesterday, and continues one week is an event of unusual importance to the power of organization which iu repre sents and of interest to similar secret fraternities throughout the United States. Over 300 delegates are present, representing 100,000 members. The convocation w.as to have taken place some weeks ago, but was ixstponed on account of the? great railroad strike and the uncertainty of securing trans portation. All the Past Grand High Priests take part in the deliberations. The most prominent of these is George L. Mc Cahan, Deputy General High Priest, who, by the death of Joseph Potts Horner, becomes Acting General G ratal High priest and presiding officer of the assembl v. ' Among the other notables is General Grand High King Reuben C. Lcinmon, of Obdo; General Grand Scribe James W. Taylor, of Georgia General Grand Treasurer Daniel Stri ker, of Michigan; Richard H. Parker, of New York; George E. Carson, of Wahington; Bernard G. Wilt, of Ken tucky, General Grand Master of the Second Vail; Nathan King?ley, of Minnesota, General Grand Master of the Third - Vail; General Grand Prince Sojourner Joseph E. Dyas, of Illinois, and General. Grand Captain of the Host Authur G. Pollard, of Massachu setts. . The necessity for choosing a success or to General Grand High Priest Hor ner will bring about several important changes in. official positions. Nathan Kingsiey will probably become Gener al Grand Rojai Arch Captain and Her nard G. Witf will succeed him as Gen eral Grand faster of the Third Vai I. George L. MjeCahan will, no doubt, be promoted tobe"General Grand High Priest. One of the important things to be dealt with will be the ritual. Various deviations froui established forms are reported from grand chapters through out the country. This is said to be particularly true in some of the Wes tern States where it is even asserted by the Eastern brethren the true meaning of the Masonic code of cere monies is not understood. While there will be nothing absolutely binding in 'whatever decisions the convocation may arrive at on this point the royal arch fraternity constituting .a sort of republic in which Stale preserves its own autonomy there is no doubt that everything will be amicably settled and that there will be a gen end acqui esence in any conclusions which ex press the opinions of the inajority of the high officials taking pur in the deliberations.. The jeo-tza Ifcci.';c 53J. ATLXXTA. Ga.. Aug. 1H. Tii- t-.-r-gia Pacific Railway was bo.ig':f i-'. ,:y by Mr. C. H, Colter, of the v Morgan Company. Th-r- a o! one bidder and one b."d, C-V'' - .The Georgia Pachic extend from Atia j .i. j through Birmingham, .o Oret-nv iKe, on the Mississippi riv.--. I- uiile.-tr-j is i about 1)00 mile This sde wa under i a mortgage made May, ;th. U2. the Central Tru-st Company, of Ne-.v York, trustee, and other p i . :es iei:str hiter i ested. The Georgia la -ifi v. ;,.-, one of the Richmond Terminal O'M.pijiv's J properties, and was operattf by 1 he I Richmond & Daiivi I iLulfiv.u i ;.: pany. In common .". tli - o:i;r "i Richmond Terminal lint-, tie .r- j gii Pacific -wa- thro'.vu into v.--.vyr-fship two years ago. Mr. Coster put up the ?"0.b)'J -;ar-antee as the auctioneer mounti-J' a barrel at the freight depot, where the sale was condneted. No other deposit was made and Mr. Stetson sug gested to the auctioneer that under the tt-rrns of the sale no bid could be accepted except after a deposit had been made. The sale" was -'quickly over, and the Georgia Pacific pasH-s into the Southern Railway system. Siisizess Rfvlvlnx. From every where come the glad ti dings that business ijj reviving in 'all departments. I he news froui all parts of Europe is the fame. They feel it over there on account of the lessening of the tariff duties, and they are pre paring to ship goods to this country. It will not !c long until all banner will be as formerly. General news. Both Chinese and Japanese troops are pouring iuto Korea. Japan has called for a loan of fifty million, and it has been taken in its own country. China is trying to negotiate a large loan in Europe, but is not meeting with much encouragement. The President has signed tho ill' to allow the States to tax Nations I Bank notes and U. S. Treasury notes. John Gray Evans was nominated by the Populists of South Carolina for Governor. But Dr. Pope, one of them, charge fraud and ring rule and will not abide the result. Old Uncle Pete Turner has been nominated by the State Democratic convention of Tennessee as the candi date of the party for Governor. Old man Pete is the ian. There is a story going the rounds that if the House had held out - two days longer on the tariff bill, the Sen ate would have compromised: This brings up the old story about if.M There is a rod in -pickle for Charles I. J Taylor, recentl y appointed re corder cf deeds for the District of Co lumbia. It seems that he has been se- riousl v violating the civil service law. . f Under the tariff law as passed, and unless amended, a dash of bitters in a barrel of whisky renders it exempt from all revenue taxes. Chairman Wilson .has been authorized to over come the trouble. President Cleveland's departure from Washington and trijb to Buzzard's Bay is rather remarJcable. He is greatly improving in health by the trip. He had run down considerably by the worry and excitement over the tariff bill. He returns to Washington greatly improved. Mr. W. A. Harris, for 20 years secre tary of the Georgia Senate, . died Fri day at his home in Worth county. He had been a prominent figure in Geor gia politics for 40 years. His influence in his own section was such that he was styled the "King of Worth coun ty.' He was our special friend. We. mourn his loss. Representative Thomas DunuJI; g'ifeh some time ago announced the 1. he would not be a candidate for ra- election; but, after a reconsideration of ihe matter, has announced that he will make the race for election to the Fifty-fourth Congress. His defense of the principles of personal liberty in the New Jersey Legislature, has se cured him the support of the German element in his district irrespective of party affiliations. He was born in 1319 and i. the oldest member of the House. Mr. English is four years 'older : than ex -Speaker Grow, and three years the senior of 2 1 r. Hobnail. He is the au thor of "Ben Bolt," and was at one time an associate of Edgar Allan Poe. To ths Patrons of the Public School.,' The pub'ie school of Hickory will open September. 3rd. The teachers desire t L m ke the school as useful as possible. For a iv v.oik to be ?ucceful,'it must int dm.e systematically. The principal o" ih? school will endeavor to adopt tu h a system of work as will best suit a' school of the kind, and re spectfully asks the patron to aid 1dm in carrying It gut. All pupils hould be at choo! r:ot earlier tlian eight tior later tlian a quarter after eight oV!ock. Each pu pil should have books of his own.' The M?hool will be divided into three departments, and the day into three periods. The pupils in the higher de partments will be required to devote each period 0f tfje to a different study, with such supplementary work as may le necessary. AH regulation neees4sary for the gooil of the M-Lool will be enforced. . The aim in teaching and discipline will be thoroughness in a-tudy and ole-, dience to authority. The teachers -will ue the :-: tIeit means possible for the 'attainment of these results, and will resort to harsh er tneasures ocly when absolutely tiec-essary.':- .'.-. i The teachers deaira all pupil to bit present the first aay and he regular in attendance. A. I. Wiii5kxiu st Principal.