r X r ' ' ' " VERNON W. LONG, Editor and Publisher. A NORTH CAROLINA DEMOCRATIC FAMILY NEWSPAPER FOR NORTH CAROLINA PEOPLE, IN THE STATE AND OUT. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $I.OO PER YEAR. Vol. xxxii. Ko. 15. WINSTON-SAIiEM, X. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1888. A BLOCKADE-RUNNER. HOW CAPI". WILSON IiOST AND RECAPTURED The Emily St. Pierre. An Episode of the War Seized by KeIraI Men-of-War While Running Out vf Charles ton with Cotton. ifrt. Carrie Jenkins Harris in 2T. Y. World. One dark, rainy night in the sum mer of 1866 the deck of the Emily St. Pierra, a rakish looking sailing vessel anchored off on one of the larg est wharves in Charleston, was the scene of unusual commotion. She was heavily loaded with cotton, and her cargo, valued at $100,000 was con signed to Trenholm, Fraser & Co., Liveropol England, the largest cotton firm in the world. Her sails were being unfurled, and as they caught the wind that blew half a gale the swaying of the vessel impeded some what the rapid movements of the crew as they hurried along the slippery deck in evident preparation for the journey. The steward, a burly negro j vho had been born a slave in the fkiiiily of Mr. Trenholm, was t he only one who took things leisurely. Find ing the sailors too busy to listen to him, he too! peeiing into the darkness, whence shown, far in the i distance, the light on Fort Sumpter, and, further still, a faint glimmer on the indefinable horizen, which he knew came from one or more men-of-war that were on the watch for a chance to .Blockade vessel. This negro steward knew every inch of the harbor as well as he knew the deck on which he stood. The sough ing of the wind, and driving gusts of rain, together with the intense dark ness of the night seemed to impress him unfavorably and awaked some of his superstition. He muttered to himself as a sudden rush of wind struck the bellying sails: 'I don' like dis. De soun' dat wind brings from the de pine barrens is like de moanin of a lost au' wand'rin'sperrit. In de ole days Mas'r an' me sent our cotton outen dis port in broad day light. Now we sneaks out wid de whitest an' de finest dat grows on the Sea Islands jes' like we had been er stealin' somebody's chickens. No flag aflyin', no sunshine on de deck, no wavin' of de bandannas en de wharf, but jes, so in de dark, sly like er fox, an' dodgin' dem forts an' gunboats like we couldn't no longer hoi our heads up big an' high as eny body. I'll give Mas'r a talk on dis tubject if Gord spars me to come back an,' jes' as shore es my name is John Calhoun, di3 is my las' trip under sech sarcumstancea. While Calhoun soliloquized, two men were talking earnestly on the wharf. One was George A. Trenholm, the head of the firm, and at that time Secretary of the Treasury of the couth em Confederacy. The other was .known as Capt. Wi!son, the com mander of the Emily St. Pierre. He was called Capt. Wilson because he did not choose to use the name of an - ancient and noble house nhat had borne the fieur de lis on its uzure shield in the days of Bourbon supremacy in his native France. The Eily St. Pierre had been named for the beautiful daughter of Mr, Tren holm, who, though a mere girl, stood in the window of the main office of the cotton warehouse, looking cut on the scene before her. At her aide stood a boy of about ten years, who was also ready and eager for a journey. Like Calhoun, the girl seemed to have a forebodying of the coming dan -ger and silently held the hand of her companion, as if she wouldlike to keep him at her side rather than . see him go aboard the restless ship The boy's hand returned her warm and friend ly clasp, but his eyes were concentrat ed on the tall sinewy form of bis fath er on the wharf belw him. Tren holm. was saying: "Wilson, do not -take Leolyn with you. It is a perilous voyage. Leave him with me. I will be a lather for him if anything should .happen to you. The sum of $25,000 -shall be put to your credit in the Bank of England as soon as youc-car-goxeaches Liverpool, and your suc--"""" -cess is more assured without the child than with him."- "Eutreaty is usele s," Wilson an swered firmly. I must have him with ., me. He must become accustomed to perils. His forefathers were brave men, and ne7er commenced an enter prise with a failure. I am deter mined to have him educated in Eu rope, and I see no promise of a better opportunity to take him on a voyage . with me The wind and rain are in our favor, and in an hour's time we ought to be beyond the forts. As he finished speaking he made a high musical note on an antique silver whistle he carried on his watch-guarc When the boy heard it his eyes bright ened, and drawing the girl's hand through his arm he carefully led her down the office steps and towards the two gentlemen. In a few minutes Mr. Trenholm returned with his daughter and -5 was. driven to his home , in Charleston. - Every sail on the Emily St. Pierre was stretched to its utmost tension and as the anchor chain rattled over her - sides she sailed away. By sunrise she had safely passed the gunboats and Calhoun s uneasiness would have en tirely disappeared if the sunbeams of the morning had ; fallen on the famil iar flag lie had been accustomed to in "de ole dajs' instead., of the Union Jack that was unfurled to the breeze as she sped over an open eea. . ; ' A few days afterwards, however, two large Federal men-of-war saw and signaled the susptcious-Iooking ship. With the sails spread she gave them a long and hard race, but as they gained on her and brought their heavy ordinance to bear directly on her sides she paused and surrendered. An at temp at a fight with such odds against him would have been suicidal. Capt. Wilson received the officers who boarded the blockade -runner with all the courtesy of a man who welcomes his honored Iguests. A brief investigation showed them na ture and mission of the captured ship. The spurious Union Jack was hauled down the Stars and Stripes soon took its place. The crew wore made prisoners of war, and transfer red to one of the conquering ships. The dauntless Capt. Wilson whose self-possession never left him, sug gested that he should be left with the Emily St. Pierre, as she was an old boat with peculiar machinery, and carried a cargo that was just then es pecially valuable, lo his request the officers assented. They also agreed to retain the negro steward who ex pressed an earnest wish to stay. The new crew was composed of eiht ex perienced sailors besides the two naval , orhcers who were to take the blockade-runner to New York in the wake of one of the men-of-war. A friendship soon sprung up be tween the officers and the suave Cap tain. They found the Frenchman was a master of navigation, a charming con versationalist and was of invaluable assistance to them in managing the queer craft on which they sailed. Ev ery evening Capt. Wilson amused them with wild adventures he had ex perienced in his journeys of the past few years, and made himself so useful that the young officers got into the habit of treating him more as a broth er officer than as a prisoner of war. They even sent him below to order the sailors to do certain work on the ship on several occasions. The cap tain s pretty boy became quite a pet with all the crew, and both father and son seemed to etura with eraert heartiness the evident favor which whichthey were regarded. Capt. Wil son spent a part of every day on deck with his son for whose amusement he whittled all sorts of odd playthings from pieces of wood. The officers would sometimes pause and laugh at the comical jumping-jacks and other toys their ingenous and versatile pris oner had carved with his pocket-knife for the bright child, to whom he seem ed devotedly attached. Capt Wilson whittled thse playthings every day with remarkable persistency, and the child seemed to develop an unusual fondness for them. In the presence of the offieers he would tease his fath er to come with him on deck and make him new toys. One day, as he was thus engaged, he asked the boy : ' Leo, if the occasion required it, could you face great dan ger without shrinking, that you and I might succeed in a difficult under taking?" The child's laughing face grew ser ious in an instant as he answered : "Try me. I can shoot a pistol with as steady a hand as you can, and I have known," he added . in a whisper, though no one was near them, "what you have been working on while you pretended to be making my toys. I am no baby, as you know, papa, to care for such playthings, but I saw you wanted to make those odd little things you have in your pocket." The man looked at the child in astonish ment for one moment, and then draw ing him to his arms he kissed him again and again. The officer who came near at that moment turned away'and sighed as he thought ot the probable fate of the father, when he should be delivered to the -authorities and held to account for the contra band business he had pursued with such notorious daring that he could not hope for mucd laercy. He con siderately left them together longer than usual and went into his cabin to calculate how much longer his prison er would enjoy the companionship of his only child. The man of-war had long since dis appeared and would reach New York several days ahead of the Emily St. Pierre. Left alone with the boy, Capt. Wilson said :. .''Follow me closely this afternoon, and when you hear my sil ver whistle, come directly, but without showing any signs of haste, . into the Captain's cabin. -1 am going to put you to a test from which a strong man might shrink, but you must prove yourself worthy of the trust which I repose in you."- . - - "I will," said the child, and that instant, hearing approaching footsteps, he brought back the careless smile to his face that had grown suddenly pale at his father's , ominous words, and when the second officer in command came, up he was apparently absorbed in a pile of wooden playthings he had scornfully dashed away a moment be fore. ; A. little later Capt. s Wilson arose and walked away, followed at a short distance by the boy, who car ried with noisy - solicitude his wooden soldiers and other toys fit m . . m vapt. wiitou -went into tne com manding officer's cabin and . found him- still bending over the chart. With a pleasant remark, and a re quest that his entrance should not dis turb hira, Capt. Wilson walked up behind the .officer and with a powerful and quick effort slipped a wooden gag in his mouths In a few moments the dumb officer whs securely tied to his chair with a cord the wily blockader had carried on his person several days fer the purpose. At a note from the silver whistle the boy glided through the door. His father handed him one of the officer's pistols and said : "Guard this door till I return, and if the other officer comes in kill him instantly." He' took the weapon and calmly stationed himself near the door. The intrepid Wilson hurried off to find the steward. He put a revolver at his head, stated his plansto the frightened negro and forced him to swear implicit obedience to him. The negro readily entered into Capt. Wilson's plana for recaptu ring the ship, and took the offered revolver to prevent the access of the marines to the second officer's cabin. In a few minutes more by a'clever and reckless ruse Wilson had this officer als gagged and bound flat on his back in his own berth. " This much accomplished, Wilson went below with his jauntiest air and told the marines that the command ing officer had ordered him to go with them into a certain part of the ship to make some needed repairs at once. Not doubting the statement, one by one the eight men went down the nar row stairway. As quick as the last one had disappeared Wilson quickly clooed and secured the hatchway, xie called to them to wait until he Bhould return. He went to the Captain's cabin, relieved his earless son of in tense anxiety, told the officer he thanked him for the kindness with which be had been treated, an?. re gretted that he would be forced to keep -both him and his comrade secure ly bound until the Emily St. Pierre should reach Trenholm and i raser's wharf in Liverpool. He told how the eight marineis had been made prison ers, assured the commanding officer that he should be made as comfortable as possible, and took the gag out of his mouth, lhen with his son and the steward, both heavily armed, he opened the hatchway, and called to the men and told them what he had done. Only one man could ascend the narrow stairway at a time, so they were.entirely at his mercy. He spoke plausibly to them, promised them im mediate liberty and $25 apiece when he reached Liverpool, and a plenty of rations during the voyage, which he assured them would be as brief as the utmost speed of the Emily St. Pierre could make it. Under the shadow of the Stars and Stripes and at the cost of almost superhuman mental and physical exertion for three days, on the part ot Wilson and the steward the Emily St. Pierre sped on to Liv erpool. At the end of the third day Wilson became so exhaustad that he was compelled to bribe one of the ma rines to help him manage the ship He succeeded and the man walked up the stairway while his comrades held back before the three cocked revolvers above them. This bribed recruit was constantly watched by Wilson or the steward or the courageous boy, , who never showed the least sign of fright throughout the terrible journey. The ship aachored off Liverpool Harbor at night. A member of Trenholm & Eraser's firm came aboard and carried a detailed account of the unprecedented exploit back to the city, and the Liverpool Mercury devoted its first page to a detailed statement of it. The next morning the city was wild with excitement. The Emily St. Pierre touched Tren holm & Iraser s wharf flying both I the Confederate flag and the Union Jack. She was welcomed by a mob of people singing "Rule Britannia" and the "Southern Marseillaise." Wil son was the hero of the heur and for six months remained in England the guest of numbers of her proudest no bility, at whose dinner tables he re counted again and again the story of the recapture of the Emily St. Pierre. He kept his pledges to the Federal ofteers and marines and attended to all their necessities before his caigo was unloaded. The cotton was sold at a fabulous price. Twenty-five thou sand dollars was deposited in the Bank of England to the credit of the brave boy by his. father, and friends in En gland forced him to accept an Oxford scholarship. The cotton merchants of Liverpool ordered a snug, swift boat to be built for Capt . Wilson, which they presented to him, and in which he made one other successful trip. Calhoun returned to Charleston in this boat and expressed himself so for cibly on the perils of blockade-running that he was excused from all fu ture service of the kind. . When the Stars and Stripes again floated from the citadel in Charleston, Calhoun said the reason he was glad to see it was because "he and Capt. Wilson had whipped ten men on the broad ocean jes' qn account of de ole flag hoatm above de ship. lie Trags yet about the incidents of that memo rable voyage, and prides himself espe cially on the enthusiastic reception accorded him "de las time he crossed de water." When the price of cotton is discussed he becomes oracular, and tats it will never reach the figures at which he sold the last cargo he carried to Liverpool. 1 Some years after the surrender at Ap pomattox Uapt W lison became a rav ing maniac, and after a long confine ment died in an asylum in Paris. '.. His physicians said he never recovered from the intense excitement and men tal strain incident to his last cruise on the Emily St. Pierre. His son was graduated with high honorr at Oxford, and arrived in Paris in time to catch a Pbice 5 Cents. glimpse of fond recogoition in his fa ther's eyes before they closed forever With the money realized from the perilous blockade-running, which Capt. Wilson had wisely deposited in the Bank of England to his son's cred it, a portion of the paternal estates were purchaskl, and now'near the Chateau de St. Lambert has recently been erected a beautiful Gothic chap el sacred to the memory of Jean Fran cais Leolyn Alexis, Marquis da St." Lambert. Under the altar of this chapel rests all that is mortal of the captain of the Emily St. Pierre. OUR PUBLIC SCHOOIUS. . NEEDS OF THE NATION. discu&sed mr SENATOR VANCE. ZEBU- 15 in or in or LETTER NUMBER .FOUR. According to the last returns the whole number of white, and colored children between the ages ot 6 and 21 years was 566,270. The white chil dren, during the last four years, in creased from 321,561 to 353,481 ; to tal in four years 31,920 or 9.92 per cent. During the same time the col ored children increased from 193,843 to 212,789 ; total 18,946 or 9.77 per cent. Thus it will be seen that the rate of increase is yery nearly the same for both races, the whites having in creased only lo per cent, faster, or in 10,000. Last year there were enrolled the white schools 57.2 per cent. 202,134 out of 353,481 children ; the colored schools 57.8 per cent. 123,145 out of-212,789. The average daily attendance in white schools was 35.2 per cent., 'and in the colored schools 33.5 per cent. Looking baek over tour yeara the figures show that there is a small increase ia both the enrollment and average attendance of the whites and a small decrease of the colored. I state this because it is sometimes said that the colored people attend the public schools better than the whites. - This may be true for some communities, but it is not for the State according to the returns made to my office Besides, the whites have a much larger proportional attendance in private schools than the negroes have. " Because there are enrolled iu our public schools only 57 or 53 children out of every 100 there is au opinion among many people that the remain ing 42 or 43 do not attend at all. This is not the fact. Our school age is from 6 to 21, a period of 15 Vears. During any one session a large num ber of small children within school age will not be enrolled, who at some subsequent time will be ; and also a great many, say from 16 to 21, drop out of the pubHc schools to engage in work or pass into the private schools and colleges and are not enrolled in the public. The fact is that during the short time our schools are in session we have enrolled in them a larger per cent, of population than Massachu setts, Connecticut or New York. We have enrolled 20.03 per cent, of the whole population including men, wo men, and children, of all ages, or ono person in five, while Massachusetts has only 18 per cent., Connecticut 18.61 per cent., and New York I8.7I per cent. The figures are taken from the last report of the Commissioner of Education and are based on the Uni ted States census of 1880 and the latest school censuses of the States compared. And further, our daily average attendance in proportion to the whole population is better than in New York or Connecticut. . I am free to say that quite a large number of our children do not avail themselves of the facilities they, have, but the greatest - difference between the educational status of our btate and those . I have mentioned above, and other northern States, consists in the length of annual school terms. North Carolina has 60 days per an num (just about' the same . for both races), Massachusetts 172, Connecti cut 179 and New. York 178. With nearly the same rate of enrollment and average attendance and, say three times as long terms, the public educational forces in these three States .ate three times as great as those of our State, granting that our teachers are as well prepared for their work. We are indeed far behind in the educa tional race, but still our public schools- are improving in efficiency and attend ance, and our many private schools are giving valuable help both in the instruction of children who are not in cluded in the public school enroll ment, and in providing higher educa tion to those young persons who have passed beyond the , public school course. ; In estimatine our educational facil ities I have taken the average for the State. We must not lose sight of the fact that, while the average school term-is 60 days or three months, some counties have only about two months, and others have four months or. more. This results from several causes: " 1. A difference in valuation of prop erty in the different counties. 2. Closer oollections of school funds by officers of some counties . than of others. - ' . -' 3 Receipts from license of retail liquor ' dealers, which are large in some counties and small or nothing in others. 4. Special levies for schools ; by some county commissioners and none hy others. S. M., Finger,- -Supt. of Public Instruction The executive committee of the North Carolina Agricultural Society have fixed the time of the next State Fair for'October 16, 17, 18 and 19. The Poor Pay the Tariff Tax Senator Vance on the Spoils System of the High Tariff Men. .sr.'-.-. ;. . From the Baltimore Sun. ARTICLE HI. vln the formation of our government one of the earliest things to recieve consideration was the matter of taxa tion. In the estimation of freemen it .'as also most important and deserved Jad Received the most mature and ear nest examination. And surely no people on earth were better fitted to deal with it than those who established our government. It was the prime cause which had led to separation and independence. For centuries our En glish ancestors had struggled against their princes for just principles of tax ation, and their statesmen had sounded all the depths and shallows of the sub ject. Their wisdom " and experience were the richest mhentage of their children in the American wilderness. Profiting by these lessons which ihe history of their ancestors afforded, our founders established such kinds and methods of taxation as were best suited to the situation of our commu nities and the upholding of liberty. The States, for the support of their lo cal governments, having the power of direct taxation ot wealth, licenses. lolls and the like, were forbidden to impose either duties or burdens on either foreign or inter-state commerce. To the federal government was given the power to tax foreign commerce as all the other objects of taxation on which the States were permitted to levy. In short, the taxing power of the State was limited ; that of the fed eral government was unlimited, in the particular that it was both foreign and domestic. The only restriction laid upon it wa3 that direct taxes up on the property of the country must be imposed in proportion to popula tion. This has in many ways proved uniortunate. It is manifestly so un equal and unjust as to deter the law makers from resorting to it when it could possibly be avoided. This for ced the bulk of taxation into methods les3 offensive but really more unequal and unjust still, where it remains entrenched. The debates in the First Congress on this subject show a decided prefer ence for tariff taxation over the direct kind. In this the representatives fol lowed the recommendation of Hamil ton. In fact, there was scarcely a dis senting opinion. The primary object was revenue, and one of the reasons most fervently given for adopting this rather than this direct taxation was that it would at the same time inci dentally encourage or protect, if you please, our infant manufactures. Such were the origin and intention ot our first tariff laws, and such continued to be their object for more than a quar ter of a century. Those who claim that Alexander Hamilton and the members of the early Congresses were protectionists per se, and ei acted tar iffs for protection and not for revenue, assert that which cannot be proven by their words or deeds. Admitting, then, that a tariff for revenue is constitutional, and is sanc tioned by unbroken usage from the first, I desire to show the great import ance of regarding Buch laws with jeal ousy and confining them within reas onable and legal bounds. At the ve ry best a tariff operates most unequal ly. It is scarcely possible to frame one that will bear with equal weight on every man. Knowing this, legis lators are less solicitous in striving for equality, and the temptation to give one clas3 or section an advantage over another is very great. The diffi culty of evenly adjusting the burdens andot detecting the inequalities af fords ample shelter, for this iniquity, Of course, the natural and undisputed basic element ot justice in taxation is found in the requiring of every man to pay in proportion to his ability lhat 13 to Bay, that every citizen of a State shall contribute to the support of the government which protects him, in proportion to the interest which he has protected. Accordingly, as all men have an eaual interest in the pro tection of their lives, persons and liber ties, so in all countries the personal tax is the same. So in all State tax es on property the amount levied against each individual is an ad valo rem percentage on his taxable pos sessions. There is no other rule which shakes hands with strict justice. No man ,in America would submit without a struggle to any other in the levying of direct taxes. A direct tax on persons and property which con tained as much ot injustice and ine quality as is covered by our existing tann laws would provolce armed re sistance all over the United States in ten days. But the tariff methods are imperceptible to the ordinary victim. He finds prices high, perhaps, but at tributes it to natural causes. He does not. know that they are artificially pro duced tor the benefit of his neighbor. If he did, that neighbor would, ' per haps, hear "something -drap' some line morning. Hence the dangerous nature of tariff taxation. It is said there is no sensation more pleasant and soothing than that of bleeding. yet there is nothing that more certain ly ends in death. .The process of pay ids taxes without knowing how or whm i& equally soothing, but its inev itable ending is equally certain. - The difficulty is always great of awaken ing the patient to the danger he is in curring. The chief inequality of a tariff aris es from the fact that it is a tax upon consumption. Whilst it is true that men do not consume alike and equal ly, the deficiency in their consump tion is not nearly so great as the dif ference in their wealth. If there was a certain and well-established ratio between wealth and consumption, so that the greater the one just so much greater the other, then consumption would be as fair a measure for the imposition of taxes as any other and as convenient. But there is no such invariable proportion; not only so, but verykfrequently the position is in verted, and the man of least wealth pays largely the most taxes. Duties upon food and clothing will illustrate this. A common day laborer will eat and drink as much and wear as much clothing as a millionaire. The only difference is that the millionaire con sumes costlier food and raiment, and thereon pays mor'e tax ; but the just proportion of the amount which each should pay is by no means ob served. They are miles and mile3 apart. To tax each one in propor tion to his ability to pay would take from the man whose income was $60, 000 per annum hundreds of times as much as would be required of the la borer whose income the year round was $6. per week. Estimating that uch a man pays annually tariff dut ies on what he consumes so low a fig ure as $10, it is not in the capacity of any sane human being to consume so much of taxable articles as to bring the duty on them up to" five thousand times that sum. Practically, the duties on consumption which such a man or dinarily pays is not one-tenth of that amount. Social conditions and the variable dispositions of men every where aggravate these inequalities. The man of moderate means and a a large family consumes vastly more than the rich-man without a family or the miser. The whole income ot the farmer may be, and often is, ex pended m the cousuptiou ot dutiable goods, whilst the millionaire spends no more, and his houses, lands, furni ture, horses, plate and jewelry, worxs ot art, vehicles, stocks and bonds, and securities of all sorts pay not one dol lar to the support ot the government. Wild horses, chained to his limbs and struggling to burst forth, could not make an honest man say that kind ot taxation is right and just. Yet such is the operation of tariff taxes every day, even with the most judicious which can be levied, and whose only aim is the proper one of revenue. There is always much endeavor to meet the force of this consideration by talk of discriminating in favor of the people of small means by impos ing higher duties on luxuries than on the necessaries oilife. Even if this was fairly done, and it never is, it could not by any possibility remedy the in equality of the tax, for the reason al ready stated, that the rich man can not in the very nature of things con sume as much more than the poor man as to make his taxes greater in the proper proportion. In short, it is physically impossible to attain to ab- increased as the net income becomes larger," and in all cases when the in come sinks below a given point This is a manirest discrimination 1 the rich not reconcilable with justice; but men forgive it on a of its obvious humanity, But ever heard of any country sav America, by any law save our rill tariff, inventing the proce taxing the poor more than the increasing the rate as the abi! pay is decreased so that th. map's poverty becomes a crir which his country punishes hu pains and penalties and shorte allowance of his children's bre. diminishes the warmth of their ing ! Let any man look tit tha and.study -its effects before he these things. He will find all stated to be true, and based upr official reports of the Treasur par t men t To such absurdities and outr results doe9 unconstitutional ta lead when once we depart fron ciple. No matter how good our tions may be it is dangerous tc any laws or 'methods of taxing t izen that is n t grounded in j There is no safety, the preacht us, ontside of the church. So tl no securitiy for our rights and tics outside of the organic law guarantees them. For the g.. mankind it is provided that ou law will avenge itself. If, the we violate the manifest dictates tice in the matter of taxation, v be sure that one portion ot th raunity will suffer in proportior to the beneht which has been reaped other. We cannot escape the law of compensation. We mu whatsoever we have sown, seed be injustice, the harves needs be suffering . Therefore capitulate, whilst a constit uional tariff is at th best open t mtmy ana serious ODjections and ha avenues leading to monepol injustice, yet as it has beco settled policy of our count tariff reformer wishes to cht for another. But we do de; nestly to restore our system ti- iginal and only lawful objects, firm it to justieo and humani and make it as nearly as possib. j free from oppression and all kinds of in equality. In short we strive t; make the taxing power of the govt eminent the shield and support of the iJ- opk, J ana not tne dormant partner .f tho manufacturing firms. Z. B. V.v-.Jt. :ainst trict ouat lor and Ji .' to poor for with 1 the ! and enie1 ucre tho Da- eoua tion rin- en-; act -lb . 1 'JO. ;..ll - is r .ch : of ged ore, co na if an reat reap t' tha must to re- many aad e th& y, no u-ja it e ear ts or Hi f.on- FROM THE NATION'S CA1VTAL. Mills Tariff Bill Crowing In Favor, sensible VTlew of the Sltuatlo 1 i y the Editor of the Post. A North Ctroll n Woman and Her Mission. Special Correspondence lo the Sentinel. Washington, D. C, April (1. Tho House lias spent the past two days and newly a whole night in a fili buster over what is known as the di rect tax bill. This measure has already passed the Senate and is popular with a majority of the House, including the members of the N. C. delegation with the exception of Col. Tom Johnston who votes against it. The direct tax stract justice and equality in taxation I bill appropriate $17,500,000 to those Y . - 1.--. .. . . by a duty on consumption, in our present laws it has not even been at tempted though the talk of discrimi nating against luxuries is in every man's mouth whenever the subject is mentioned. Thoy are faamed with special reference neither to the wants of the government nor the needs of the people.but to the interest ot the man ufacturers alone. In reality, the bulk of whatever discrimination there may be in the law is against the nece-saries of life and in favor of luxuries. A glance at the treasury reports of du ties collected will satisfy any one of this. In most wookn goods the great er the cost the less the duty. Iron and steel goods pay four to five times as much duty as gold and silver jewelry; common spirits five to six times as much as fine wines ; common cotton goods twice as much as fancy straw goods and furs. Common woolen goods pay fifty per cent, more than silks and satins, whilst common win dow glass is taxed six times more than polished and silvered plate glass ot the same size ; a homely illustration of this species of iniquity may be found in an ordinary whisky toddy. The whisky of which it is the chief in gredient is taxed in the neighborhood of 400 per cent., the sugar which sweet ens it 13 taxed 82 per cent., and the which is grated upon it for flavoring is free. That is a fair sam ple of the - discrimination of our tariff against luxuries. Nutmegs cannot be grown in the United States, therefore a tax on nutmegs would protect no body, but would go straight into the public treasury; therefore to that ex tent it obvates the necessity of taxing some article which is made or grown iu the United States; therefore it stands in the way of some manufac turer, therefore the duty on nutmegs is repealed, and pro tanto, it is placed on salt, or trace-chains, or children's slates, or some other item of prime ne cessity. Of all the wrong3 contained in the existing tann there is not one more flagrant than the admission of tropical luxuries free of duty in order to force the heavy taxation of the necessities of life. There is no law, human or divine, under which it can. be justified either in policy or morals It ia unjust to all ; it is cruelty to the poor. In the imposition of income taxes it ia sometimes provided that the rate is who paid a certain land tax immediate ly after the war. It the bill passes, North Carolina will get nearly $4,- 000,000 which will be sent to Raleigh and paid out to those who can prove they paid this land tax. The bill will probably pass. The tariff bill continues to grow in popularity. It is generally conceded that it will pass the House, beveral leading Republican organs have giv en up the fight and admit that the measure will receive the endorsement of the Democratic House. It then goes to the Senate, and if it is defeated in that body the onus of that defeat falls on the Republican party. Ihe Post of this morning devotes its lead- to this subject and states very stroDgly what the situation will be in case this should be the outcome of the 5gle. The editor of that paper says: "But the l ost is not anxious, except on financial grounds, that the committee's bill shall go through the Senate. Let it pass the House and be killed in the Senate, and the issue will be in splen did shape in such shape that Repub lican voters by the thousnad win come over to the Democratic side every day till election time. The Republican party stands pledged for tariff revision. The protection organs and speakers have attempted no denial of the pledge, but have repeatedly and in many ways conceded the necessity for its fiJiillment. In a number of tho str ngest Republican, states and one or two of the doubtful states the Re publican masses are demanding tariff 1 .. . mi r c ir: reduction, ine ianucis ji miuurauia rise up and denounce the war tariff as robbery and indorse the President's tariff message. In all the cities of the Northwest there are veteran Repub lican leaders wh are calling on the Republicans in the House of Repre sentatives to formulate a tariff reduc tion bill? But instead of such a meas ure. the minority of the Ways and Means Committee has nothing to of fer but a proposition to repeal some of the internal revenue taxes! The talk about free sugar and a bounty is nonsense. If the Republican party could have its own way the sugar duty would go, but no party will vote bounty to any industry. The day of that sort ot folly went by long ago. It we could feel sure that the ac cumulation of surplus would not dis turb the business of the country we ask nothing better than a campaign on the issue presented by the committee's bill and the minority's proposition a proposition that oners a stone in lieu of bread, a serpent in lieu of a fish ; a proposition that insults the intelligence cf the American people and makes the gmt Republican party look meaner and. more contemptible than even its enemies like to see it. We frankly conf ess that it is mortifying to a Democrat who is proud of his coun try and glories in its history to see a great party, a party with a record, shrivel up with premature senility and prove itself a silly dotard on an oc casion when it ought to rise to the full stature, physical and intellectual, of vigorous manhood." ' The above cannot prove very pleas ant reading to the G. O. P. in North Carolina, and yet it is strictly true. There is as much common sense in the article as in any I have read for a long time. Judging from what I have learned recently from a number of sources, it is a just and dispassionate vief of the situation. In clo3ing, the writer adds: V. "The situation is extremely cheer ful just now, for the high-tariff army is on the run. It is demoralized and panic-stricken. Its old charmi will not work. The phrases with which the apostles of high protection have htherto conjured us are worthless and impoten as the idle wind. The most gigantic system of robbery ever plan nod by the brain of man tumbling from its foundation. Our friends in the House have only to continue faith ful to duty and the long-prayed-for victory will come. J lean while we bespeak for Mr. Randall something of indulgent chari ty from his high tariff masters Why lay the lash so pitilessly on his shoul ders, gentlemen ? He has served you wit 1 rare fidelity. He is not respon sib' a for the dwindling of his following. Fa; e is against him aad you. The rig it is coming uppermost; justice is. , goiag to be done. Let Mr. Randallj, alone and, goiug tothe othter end of the Capitol, devote your time to culti-; vating the friendship of the distin- g whed Protective Democratic Sena tor who occupies the unique position of being at the same time an eloquent ad vocate of protection to labor and an extensive lessee of convict labor. Thia is true and generous, I am glad to gay. I never felt inclined to read am Randall out ot the party becausa he was and is a protectionist. His ser vices to the party, aside from this issue, his ability as a statesman, his fealty as a Democrat, his character as a man, all entitle him to consideration and forbearance, even in the fightyef vital importance to the party. Mr. Cram'i constitutional amend ment changing the date of inauguration day and of Congressional terms was defeated. The opinion that the Chief Justice will be a Northwestern Democrat gains ground. Of courso he will bo a first rate lawyer. Miss Dora Jone?, Vice Principal of Greensboro Female College, spent sev eral days in this city last week. She was the recipient of a great dial of attention from North Carolinians here. She is visiting the leading schools and studying the new methods in vogue in this city, Baltimore and New York. Senator Ransom exerted himself to further her researcher;, and his strong letters of introduction she found of great assistance to her. Mrs. Senator Vance madf an appointment with Mrs. Cleveland for her to meet Miss Jones, Miss Louise Morehead, and other ladies. I think Miss Jones' trip cannot fail to be beneficial to the col lege. Having so admirable a repre sentative cannot fail to be creditable to it. She is a handsome, self-possessed, refined highly educated woman. She can hold herjowu against any typi cal Boston school ma'am, so far as culture goes, and I have seen few whose personal presence was so pleas ing. Besides accomplishing the ousi ness part of her mission, Miss Jones enjoyed the social phase of her visit very much. Sho made many new friends who will not be likely to forget her. Dr. J. M. Hays, a brother of the popular author, John W. Hays, Esq., and a rising young lawyer of Oxford, (iranville county, spent several days in this city last week. He is on his way to Eurepe. He will make a tour of the most noted places in Germany, England, Italy, ranee and Austria, studying new methods in his profes sion, and will take a special course at Vienna with a view ot giving special attention to the diseases of the eye and ear. Dr. Hays tells me that while he was attending medical lectures in Charleston, S. C, he had a case similar to the one from which the Emperor of Germany is suffering. He says the man got well, the tube was discarded, and he is living and talkjng to-day. He thinks the German Emperor has no cancer, judging from the reports in the leading medical journals of Eu rope. Granville. J v7 V What a wonderful State we have. A few weeks ago Romulus Lianey Esq. found a plastic substance in Al exander county which hardened into stone when exposed to the air for a few hours and now a paint mine has been found ! (