DHDL era 4J kLM) 1JOOXK, WATAIHJA BOUNTY. X. C TIIUIWDAY, MAlt II & 1KH). VOL 2 xo. nr.. c3 WASHINGTON LETTER. Trem v Xfxdar. Cormpendat. For the"l)emocra t : President Harmon isnbout a road a man aa it would be possible to find in a days travel. He has become fully satisfied "that at least two men, prominently connected with the administration As sistant Posmnster General Clarkson and U. S. Treasurer Huston have been abusing him at every opportnnity and telling otherfriends that theyinlended to resign justas they could find an opportu nity to embarrass him by so doing. He also has under suspicion several other high officials nndit would not be at all surprising .if several resignations were perempto rily demanded by him in the near future. Balloting for the selection of a location for the World's Fair will begin in the House l ite this afternoon or tomor row and be kept up until the question is settled. Chicago will start in the lead, but your correspondent has the best of reasons to Lelieve that no World's Fair will be held at either Chicago or New York, even if one of them should be!selected. The Sen ate will kill any measure that does not locate the. I air at Washington, because they fear that its location at Chi cago would mean the loss of Illinois, or at New York City, the loss of New York in the next Presidential campaign This is in accordance with boss Quay's orders before he trio. Mr. Mills, of Texas, will make a strong effort to defeat the Fair bill in the House, but he will fail. The new styles of postage stamps were placed on sale Saturday by the Post-office department. The improve ment, if there is any, is hard !v visible to the naked eye. For many years one of the regular Congressional jobs has been the proposition to have the Government buy all the real estate south of Penn sylvania avenue between the Treasury and the Capitol. It " Wh hnen knocked out so ofl ten that it was thought to have been entirely abandon ed, but it is again on deck, and a bill has been in trod uc ed in Congress. Only a few montha ago, when there was a freshet in the Potomac riv er, the greater portion of this ground was under from six inches to lour feet of wa ter. Nice sort of property to ask Congress to buy to put public buildings upon isn't it? Notice has been given that as soon as the House finish es with the World's Fair the contested election cases are to be called up. There are four cases ready. Three of which the committee have, by a party vote, reported in favor of the republican con testants, and one, by a unan imous vote, in favor of the democrats now occupying the seat. The investigation of the Civil Service commission, whi chwas begun last week. will be resumed this week. Ex Commissioner Oberly is to be one of the witnesses examin ed. , The chairman of the New York anti-monopoly league, madenn nrgument against Mr. Wanamaker's ostal telegraph bill lefore the House Postofnce committee Friday. He opposed the bill leeause it proposed to give the business of the country to a private corporation. He said he represented the working people who sent few telegrams and who would get little if anv benefiit from the law, and that the Postoffice department had more busi ness now than it could man age satisfactorily without adding this exjeriment. Twelve bids have been made to theTreasury depart ment for the exclusive privi lege of taking seals in the wa ters contingent to Alaska for twenty years, and in every one of them the price named is much higher than the Gov ernment now receives. No award has yet been made. , It is hinted in inside repub lican circles that Mr. Harri son's trip to Pennsylvania last week was- really for a po litical purpose; he is trying to capture the State delega tion to the next republican national convention, and while Quay was in Honda he thought it a good time to visit the State, and the open ing of the free library at Alle ghany City furnished the op nortunitv. The Senators, or rather some of them, are growling Hhmit. the nevspnier men finding out everything the.y Ho in secret session, and are trying to devise means to prevent it. If they would have their ordinary execu tive sessions open, the trou ble would be encjed. The regular war on lotter- ... 1 - ! 1 .. ies which is maaem euny davs of every session of Con gress, by the introduction of bills, has begun. It'safarce. Whv not enforce some of the laws we now have on the sub ject, instead of wasting time enacting? The House and vV ays and Means committee aie.practi- cally at a stand- still in the preparation of a tariff bill. The financecommitteeof the Senate have decided to re port the bill for increasing the coinage of silver dollars to $4,000,000 a month. Ex-secretary Whitney is here with the New York Word's Fair delegation. Washington, Feb. 24. The Knights of Honor paid over to Mrs. Henry Grady $2,000, the amount of her husband, 8 life insurance pol icy while a member of that order. He had several life policies, but the -Knights of Honor was the first to make payment. This order has a large membership here. Reidsville Review. . There are many accidents and diseases which effect Stock and cause serious inconvenience and loss to the farmer in his work, which mav be quickly remedied by the use"of Dr. J. II. McLean's volcanic oil Liniment EEimsciKcrs, coamnoss UD HEWS ITEMS. NUMBER IX. For the Democrat. Carson Lake, a versatile writer in ji New York daily, " The Vivss," fills n column of that pnjer several times each week with reminiscences sim ilar to the following: J. J. r.iiiu ne of Snokane Fulls. Wawh. in a tending Democrat of the new State. He has the est ern relinh for a good story, even when it hitx one ot his own uartv friends, and he told me one yes terday. Karlyin the seventies Ohio Democrats carried that State for Governor, their cani- dat6 Iteii'g n ulian Allen, a veter an who had sat in the United States Senate before half of the voters of the day were born. He was variously dubbed "Old Hill Allen" from his age. "Fog horn Allen" because of his tie mendos voice, with which he was said once to have drowned the the shrill whistling of a locomo tive, and "Iliae up, Bill Allen," liecnnse he was literallv draertred out of obscurity into the fied of modern politics, uo tne morn ing alter the Ohio election Mr. Browne was on a railroad train nnnroarhiner Chicasro. where he saw in the morning pajM?r the a nouncment that Allen was elec ted. Stepping off the tra'n, he met an old Democratic friend, named Dousrlns. when this con versation took place: "I sav. Douirlas. have vou heard the news from Ohio? Allen is elected." "Is that so? No.it can't be true. Are you in earnest?" "Certanlv. Here are the head lines of the news in the morning paper. See, Allen elected. ' . "We . thnt. H a hiesHiner inaeea God must have stufled the ballot boxes for In in. 1 The political success and career of William Allen was curious. About 1802 three young men hailing from the same neighborhood, left the Shen andoah valley in Virginia and emigrated to Ohio because they desired to escape from the blighting curse of slavery with which the Old Dominion had been afflicted since the landing of the pilgrims in Massachusetts in 1620. One was named McArthur, an other Lucas; the'name of the third has escaped my mem ory so completely that lean- not recall it. All these young men became governors of their adopted State. Mc- Aruthr was particularly con- spiekms in the early history of Ohio. Hehad already been governor when the said Win. Allen, (also a native of Vir ginia and uncle to Allan G. Thurman, who ran for Vice President on the ticket with Grover Cleveland in 1888,) married his daughter. Young Win. Allen studied law with Gov. McArthur, and was well thought of by him as well as by most if not all his acquaintances. Till 834 or '36. Gov. Mc Arthur was nominated by the Whigs for Congress. Win. Allen was always a Democrat. It was universally supposed that McArthur had a walk over in his district, so no Democrat ot distinction car ried to contest with aim for the honors of representative n Conerress. This beinc the n - case Wm. Allen easily won the nomination in opposit ion to his father-in-law. He took a curious position in the canvass, which was to represent himself as filling a j. i i j .i.:i. gap in uie cou test wiuuu uu other Democrat cared to oc cupy because McArthur was so sure of leing elected, but he wanted to get as many voteH ns possible, so as to, in some measure, approximate the old mans vote. He was popular with the young Whig lawyers and also with hundreds of young Whigs who were not lawyers. So he appealed to them to vote for him, since McArthur was sure to elected, and ob tained a promise from ns manj'of them us possible. In the meantime he incited the Democrats to work as though .success was possible if not probable. The result was that when the polls closed and the votes were counted Wm. Allen received one more vote than his pop ular opponent, to the great disapointment and chagrin of the lug party. A great many of those young Whigs who pledged themselves to vote for Mr. Allen and did so regretted their action exced ingly. The Whigs accused Mi. Al len of having used unfair means to induce miuors and repeaters to vote for him, which was realy and infact the truth, but McArthur re fused for family reasons, though urged thereto by many of his supporters. I remember coming across an elderly man in 1807 who assured me that he voted for! Wm! Allan on that occasion, though he was but 19 years of age the time. He also said that many voted for Mr. Allan who had .no right to vote. I was in Ohio in 1839. The Whigs had an overwhelming majority in the c unty in which I then was. But for some reason, the Whigs were attacked by General Apathy and lost their representative by one vote. It was brought about by two many stay-at- homes and one man who dearly loved the sweets of life. This latter was a young farmer who remained at home at work on his farm till after dinner and then started for his polling place. He lived six miles from it. On his way by a short cut through the woods he dis covered a bee tree and deter mined to regale himself with some nice honey, lie was a long ways from any house At the first one he came to he borrowed an axe, return ed and cut down the tree and stuffed himself to satiety. He then resumed his journey to the polls to" hear, before he fairly reached the polling place, the unwelcome sound of the judges voice, "polls closod." A Democrat was e lected to the legislature by one majority. His vote would have tied the candi dates. The legislature was Democratic by one majority a joint ballot, or by one ma jority in each house, I forget which. At any rate, Win. Al len was elected U. S. Senator for sixjyears in the whiter of 1839-40, by one vote. Mr. Allen took his seat in the U. S. Senate in due time. And he made the "welkin ring" when he rose to speak. Hen ry Clay once said that if Mr. Allen could plant one foot on "about seven millions of ne the Rocky Mountainsnnd the groet in the State, and the other on the Alleghnnies he negro question has lierome a could U; heard from tl;e At- lan tic to the Pacific. Mr. Allen was elected gov ernor of Ohio ill the early seventies bv less than yOO' majority, to be beaten by Rutherford It. Hayes in the the nex,t two yen; by a very much larger majority, for it reached to the thousand. J.S. W. L'mville Fvb. 'J.'. A Dying Statesman. It is usless to conceal the mournful fact that Samuel J. Randall is slowly sinking- dying by inches. The brave heart bears up, and the clear eyes look cheer fully into the anxious faces about him, but the grand face bears the seal of death. Talk about the will power of rwilitml Richelieu 1 I his man has it, with more than the old Frenchman'scourage and integrity back of it. Sam. Randal belongs to the old race of statesmen the ,y ovt a rt tbtt better davs of the republic. More than once he has shown the country that he would rather be l ight than be President. His ca- 1 A- reer almost leaas one iu think that some old Roman has stepped out of the pages of Plutarch into our com monplace American life. When Sam. Randall dies we must build him a mighty and massive shaft of granite. Nothing else will so fitly rep resenthim and commemorate his glorious virtues. As the leader of a forlorn hope he was matchless. When hestood between the stricken South and her enemies he was as a stone wall. When the little mp of his nartv wanted to move him he stood for right as he understood it, ready to be sacrificed, but as far as ever from the swarm of huck stering politicians below hira. No one misjudges him now. His enemies are silent. His mistaken friends in late re- pentence whisper with bated breath, "What shall we do without him?" Does no echo of this reach our stainless knight, as his stout heart flutters and his stalwart arm falls nervously by his side? Does he not know as he closes his eyes and goes to pleasant dreams that his countrymen are dreading that fatal flash a- loni? the wire that shall an- o nounce Sam Randall dead. Atlanta Constitution. Cardinal Gibbons on the N?ro. Baltimore. Md. Feb. 24. Before beginning his sermon yesterday at High, Mass Cardinal Gibbons made an appeal to the congregation in behalf of negro and Indian missions. His Eminence re minded his hearers that, in compliance with the decreeof the last Plenary Council ot Baltimore, an annual collec tion was taken up in behalf of those missions on the first in Lent in all the churches o the country. "There are now," said His Eminence, serious problem to tlieAmer ican iieople. The beist solu tion of this problem, in my judgment, will bo found in christianizing the neToe. In some sections of the coun try, if reports are true, their religion has degenerated into a kind of fetishism and is entirely emotional,- devoid of all rcliiriou restraint and obligations." K "The negro race is natu rally a religiou s jeople. They are kind, affectionate and grateful, submissive to au thority, and their conduct towards the close of the late war, when they had power to do mischief, was above all praise. By proper religious and christian instruction they are sure to become a most useful element in any community." TALHAGE ON GRADY. Dr. Talmage has preached a funeral sermon on Grady from which we make the fol lowing extract: "Mr. Grady might have had any political reward in the gift of his State, said Mr. Talmage, but he wanted none and remained "plain Mr. Gra dy." Ho stood for the new South, "and was just what we want to meet three oth er men, one to speak for the new North, another for the new East, and another for the new West. The bravest seech made for the last quarter of a century was that made by Mr. Grady at the New England dinner in New York about two or three years ago. I sat with him that evening and know som thing of his anxieties, for he was to tread on dangerous iround and might by one misspoken word have antag onized forever both sections. lis speech was a victory that thrilled all of us who heard him and all who read him. "Who will in conspicuous action represent the new North as he did the new South? Who shall come forth or the new Easi and who for the new -West? Let old political issues be buried ; let old grudges die., Let now theories be launched." In conclusion Mr. Talmage said: "And now, thou great and magnificent soul of edit tor and orator I under bright er skies we shall meet again. r rom iroa tnau comesi ana to God thou hast returned. Not broken down, but as cended. Not collapsed, but irradiated. Enthroned one! Coronated! Sceptered onel Emivirndised one! Hn.il and well. News and Observer. Whpn nntnre falters n,nd re- qures help, recruit her enfeebled energies with Dr. J. H. McLean's strengthening Cordial and blood pnnher Sfl.oo per bottle. Physicians prescibe Dr. J. H. McLean.s tar wine ping balm, ni it they find no trace of . opium or morphia, while its efficacy in enriner all thront or lung diseas es is wonderful. Children will freely take Dr.J.IL Mclean's Tar Wine Blood Balm unlike cough syrup, it contains no opium, will soothe and heal any disease ol the . throat or lungs quieker thau any other remedy.