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, is- t I 1 t 0 & BSERV , I. H H K VOL. XXII RALEIGH, N. C. TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 25, 1884. NO. 107. News and BAKING POWDERS. 1,11 AbcoIutelyJPure? ruin powder never varies. ' A marvel (if ?u ity, strength and wholesomness. M ore economical than the ordinary kinds. o1 cannot be soil M competition with, t he multitude ol low test, short weight, ilain or phosphate powder. Sold Only in sans. Borax. BAKiirei Powdba Co., 106 Waii-st, N. T. . -ei , V !.: SOLD ONLY IN OASES WHOLE SALE BY W G. & A. B. Ayefs Cherry Pectoral. OrrrtUo. Ohio. &pfc 10, 188tJ COLDS. - Having been anbfcet to a bron chial afreotion. with rreqaeB cold, for a number of years; I hereby er- ' tify that Avkr'b Chmbt Pwetorajl. giiws me prompt relief, and U the wort effective Atm&tjL bare ever tried. s ' r v ' Jams A. HuntToir, ; I p ji Editor of -put OnueetU." ' "Mfcflllead, Ohio, ins 26.1882. , COUGHS. " ned ATXB'a Cspsbt I Pktokai, this spring for! a se vere cough and Inns; trouble with good effect, and I am pleased to reoonunend It to any one similarly affected IEiim BAtTGHKAJr, : : , Proprietor Glob Bote," Dr.J.O.Ayer&Co.jLowelt.Mat. I BoMtyaUDrtiggWe' DRY, GOODS. ' ' JEW BARGAINS AT 111 ONEPKI0E STORE, 16 EAST HARGETT TREET AND 208 WILMINGTON STREET 6.000 Yards! Arnold's & Maccheiier Prints 4 t ' the best that are made 6 cts a yard, 1 AHA YARDS LADIES' FANCY LJJJ bordered handkerchief? at 4 1-2 cents each. I'rir1! YARDS OHILPKEN'S X KJ KJ KJ J Fancy bordere1 hand kerchiefs at 2 1-3 cents each. 1 rr v r ladies skirts at 48, 1 J KJ 63 99 cts. and 1.06, 1.20, 1.88, 1.95, 2 00. 2.23, 2.75 and 3.45 each. - . , . ( r - i ; V- ;v,: 1 O 'K rPAIRS LADIES' Pantilettesat 1 (J UJ 30, 50, 69, 75, 98, 96 cts and $Tri0, 1.55, 165 and $1.95 a pair. ' rrAv NIGHT DRESSES at 50, 7 cts. I J KJ and 1.15, 1.20, 30, 150, 1.60, 2.00, 2,25, ana 2.90 each, ft f ; O mrm CHEMISES at 29, 47, 69, AmKJKJ Kjm, 87 cts, and 1.0, 1.35, 1.40, 1.78, 2.87 each. 3 r 75 CORSET COVERS ceits each. I at 40, 05 aad1 95 New lines in all kinds ot EiMriBS and My 8prin Stock is complete In all line. LADIES AND MISSES' In all new shapes. HATS MY WHOLESAL'JSTOCK FOB THE SPAINO TRADE 18 COMPLETE. : ! 'f't TflllDES. HEWN QHWEKV ATIO.IS' ow that the sun has "croesf-d the line" we hope there will be no farther bashf illness. The bojs and girls and flowers and farmers and merchants are all ready for spring business. The Lancet reports a lecture on tea and ooffoe, in which people are advised to put the coffee for breakfast in an earthen ware vessel, pour cold water over it, let it stand jover night, and bring it te the boil ing point bj plaoing it in a water bath or doable boiler in the morning, thus pre serving all the aroma. ---"Hatched, matched, dispatched," was a sufficiently flippant paraphrase of "born, married, died," bat it was reserved for an Australian journal, the Melbourne Bxdlc Kiit0 suffuse the simple reoord with eenti ment,' and, under the general heading of "The! Garden of -Life," to enumerate "Bttds," "Blossoms' and "Cypress."' The Bltimore canned goods packers are doing their best to defeat a bill now before the New York legislature, requiring all cans to be stamped with the date of packing. If rime does not impair the quality of their goods, at they would rep resent, it is difficult to know why they should be so bitterly opposed to havine the date stamped. -The leading real estate firm in Rioh mond states that not within ten years have they received so many inquiries from the North and Northwest about Virginia lands j as they have had within the last ninety days. They state that from the . r . TTT i , . i rone oi ineir western corresponaenu n looks! as if thousands of those thrifty tanners are about to move to Virginia to avoid the ions, cold winters and destruc tive storms in summer. The foot and' mouth disease ia still so alarming as to threaten the cattle-grow ing tadastry of the West. It is already waking terrible destruction among the Kansas he ids, and last reports tell of its appeirnco in southwest Missouri. Only prompt action will keep the disorder from spreading to the great p ains, and to the stockyards of Kansas City, whence it would be distributed over the Eastern Mififiiiiwippi States. : The Lynchburg, Va., News, of Tuea dy, published a letter from the represen tative or a party ci new xorc capitalists, offering to subscribe one-half of. the amount toward the erection of a cotton factory in Lynohburg, to cost $400,000 or $500,000. This at once elicited responses from two Lynchburg firms, one subscrib ing $10,000 and the other $5,000 towards the enterprise. The matter is to be ays tematioally canvassed, and there is every prospect that the subscriptions to start a eotton factory to cost f DOO.OOO will be obtained. A few days ago we printed the fol lowing clipping: "Blind Tom's present manager says Toms previous manages hare swindled him out of $40,000, and although he has been on the road twenty years; he doesn't own the clothes he weary, and his mother iiyes in a miser r a able hovel, with hardly; enough to keep body; and soul together. Mr. Thos. Warhurst, who is the present manager of Blind Tom asks us to say that the in formation contained in the paragraph was not given to the press by him and that he declines any responsibility for the state ment- in which it was eonveed. The London Lancet advises Mr. Gladstone to accept a peerage, as a more dignified form of jChiltern Hundreds, in the interest of his health. No doubt the upper house would afford an easier; berth for the leader of die Liberal Party than the Commons. Hut advice based upon that faot ignores the more important fact that Mr. Gladstone is not overworked by his position, but by himself. He may be relied upon to find for himself work for several men wherever he is and bo long as he lives. If he were in the upper house he would probably devote the leisure thus gained to writing a few books upon new subjects. In any ease it may be safely assumed that Mr. Gladstone, remembering what happened to the elder Pitt, has maae up nu mina to run his career as a oommoner. ine Duyers say that this will he a "muled" season that is, that no one style or group of styles or designs will predomi naie, oat inai nuoareos, uie navors in turtle soup, will struggle for supremacy, One! thing is certain, however ; it is this : that cloth tailor-made suits will men un disputed for the street. Young, stylish women are now quite alive to the superior effect of a well-fitting, well-made, com plete suit, over a f erazy costume or one made up of shreds and patches. Still, the latter has its exponents. Two of them attraoted immense attention the other day by walking down the upper part of Broad way! and Union Square, in satin-striped skirts, kilted; colors red and black, plain jackets with loose sleeves, lined with satin and; trimmed with chenille fringe. One red hat with high crown, tip-tilted at the baok; the other (with the gold jaoket) wearing a black hat with straight (Henry 11.)' brim and an upright aigrette of feath ers.i There was a time when the wearers of euoh costumes as these on the street would have been set down as "fast," to say the least, now they simply represent an "opposition" style, and one is not sux - prised to see that they belong to the "best families. - ; ! The ereat advantage of marl is that it dilute$, crackt, and is reduoed to powder by exposure to moisture and air. Marl in maes would be totally useless on the gKmnd; yet it is neoissary to begin by laying it on the ground in heaps, for the more it is heaped the more it dilates, splits and crumbles to dust, in which state it is fit to spread on the ground. . It op erates by sub dividing the sou and hast ening decomposition; its calcareous parti- oles disorganising all animal or vegetable bodies by resolvitt" them into their simple elements, in which state they combine with oiven and facilitating this union. The best time for mailing is autumn FORTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS, WUAT THK COUNTRY'S REPRESEN TATIVES DID Y ESTER OA Y. IllaJr'a Ertucatloual BUI Taken ni Senator Vance Mpeaka In It. Favor Relief for LoaUlaoa la Considered. Washington, March 24 8inatk. The Senate to day was presided over by Senator Sherman, who has been designated under the rule by the Vice President, for that purpose. The chair laid before the Senate "a communication from the Attorney General asking for an appropriation of $10,000, to be applied to the defense of the United States in the case referred by Congress and the executive department to the court of claims. These oases, the Attorney Gen eral states, cover olaims amounting to $8,500,000, although the ac under which the cases had been referred, was passedaonly list year. The following bills were reported favor ably from the committees and placed on tho calendar : By Mr. Morgan, from committee on publio lands, granting right of way over public lands in Alabama and Florida to the Alabama Diagonal railroad company. Also granting similar right over publio lands in Alabama to the Gulf and Chicago railroad oompauy. The bill to reirulate the salaries of United States district judges was taken up. Mr. Coke offered an amendment making it unlawful for any relative of a circuit or district judge of the United States to hold office in the courts with which such judges are connected, and making it a misdemeanor for a judge to knowingly ap point any of his relatives to office ia his oourt. TLe bill was discussed until 2 o'clock without a vote being reached, when Mr. Blair's educational bdl came up. In course of the debate which followed, Mr. Vance spoke in support of the bill. The oolored people, he said, had been freed and enfranchised by the national government The Southern States had lost bo much and had been so bled by reptilian carpet-bag governments that they had not been able to do as much as they otherwise could have done for the educa tion of those people. Yet these States had been held by publio opinion of the North to as high a statdard ot advancement in educational and other respects as was expected of States or people whose civili z tion and society had not been disturbed tor 100 years. Not only was this expect ed of them, but the world was made aware of it. On every occa sion the Southern States had been "investigated." Now the bill was brought in to aid those States in educating their oolored people, and a singular spectacle was presented of opposition by gentlemen who had been moving all the powers of Congress in order that the sick calves of Kansas might be doctored. Some objection might naturally have been ex pected from "strict constructionists, but it came with bad grace from the gentle man from Kansas. Mr. Vance would not withhold his sympathy from the sick cat tle, but would not the gentleman from Kansas extend his sympathy to the illiterate ? As to the basis of distribution Vance thought there was no proper basis but that ot illiteracy. Population as whole was no proper basis. Did Senators wish to distribute money among college professors or members of Congress? It should be distributed where it was needed. Bat Mr. Vance did not expect the bill to pass. He had long believed, and he now stw, the confirmation of his belief that Senators on the other side cf the chamber were louder in professions than in acts in behalf of the oolored peo pie. While the party which they repre sented would send emissaries among col cred people to band them together for political purposes and take them to the polls, ho had always thought that when it eamo to really something tor those peo ple tbere would be failure, hence he (Vance) was not disappointed. He had no doubt that the Senator from Ohio (Mr. Sherman) attaohed more value to the negro as an ignorant person as a fruitful souroe ot investigation, than he would attach to the negro as an intelligent man and an intelligent voter; no doubt he an swered the purposes ot that Senator bet ter in ignorance than with intelligence. Mr. Ingalls congratulated Mr. Yanoe on the very adroit appeal he had addressed to Northern sentiment on this subject. He had said that whilej the white people.ot North Carolina were not asking tor money they were willing to accept it gratuitously for the benefit ot the oolored people. The census tables showed that the white illit eracy of North Carolina was thirty-two per cent, hence the gratuity would be very largely to the whites as well as to the blacks. 'J he blaoks of that State in his (Icgalls) opinion made a muoh more commendable snowing in re gard to eduoation than the whites The principal neoeesity for the bill, to Mr, IngalU mind, was to be found in the white illiteracy, rather than the oolored illiteraoy of the South. He read from the census tables of 1880 to show the figures of white illiteraoy. In Alabama they were nearly zo per oent ot the white in habitants; in Arkansas zo per cent.; in f londa zu per oent ; in ueorgia Z6 per cent.; in Kentucky zz per oent; in Louis Una 181 per oent.: in Mississippi 16 3-10 per oent.; in North Carolina 31 per cent in Mouth Uarouna zz y iu per cent.; in Tennessee 27 3-10 per cent ; in Texas 15 3-10 percent; in Virginia 18 210 per sent. How could it be said that this money was required because this nation freed the slaves and gave them the right ef suffrage ? The faot was that the occa sion for the expenditure of the money crew out of the position of the Caucasian and not of the oolored race. Mr. Vance, replying to Mr. Ingtlls.sa'd he (Vance) had said nothing about the war: that war matter of history. lie had argued simply that it was the duty of those who were undt, to educate them. Mr. j Vance denied that the money of the bill was needed by the white people for them selves. They would be ablo to take cap of the'r own education if they did not have so large a oolored population. Mr. Ingalls said that in 1850, ic the halcyon days of the old regime, there were over 80,000 whites in North Carolina who could not read or write, and that was a argei proportion of illiteracy than evrn the present. Mr. Vance said that JNorth Carolina, poor State, had paid into the treasury twelve times as muoh money as Kansas, a rioh one, North Carolina having paid in, in 880, $Z,37z,zZb, while Kansas pakl only $239,762. Mr. Plumb inquired how much of North Carolina's amount had been on dis tilled spirits. Mr. Vance replied about one half of it on whisky, whichohad been drunk in prohi bition Kansas. Mr. Riddleberger wished the Senate could get back to the question involved in the bill. It made no daterdnce te the chil dren who were affected by the bill or how j the necessity for it arose. If it were right or little children to give their pennies to a missionary society without being asked what their fathers' politics were, then Senators should eliminate politics from this question and vote for or against the proposition on its merits. Mr. Butler said it was dear that the Senate was not prepared to vote on the bill to day, and therefore he moved that the Senate go into executive session. Agreed to, and when the doors were re opened the 8enate adjourned. House. Mr. fcllis, of Louisiana, asked unanimous consent to introduce a joint resolution, reciting that the waters of the Mississippi nver have risen to the high water mark of 1874 at New Orleans, which is the highest known in the flood annals of the great river, and are rising between St Louis and New Orleans at the rate ot two or three inohes a day; that the appalling calamity of the ovet flowing ot a city ol 300,000 souls is imminent, involving great loss of life and property, and appropriating $300,000 immediately, to be expended in the discretion of the Secretary ef War, iB preventing the over flow of the City of New Orleans and the country adjacent thereto. Mr.- Dunn, of Arkansas, reserved his objection ; until he should hear some ex planation of the resolution. He wished to know by what sort of legerdemain the committee on appropriations had leaped from the Ohio river to the city of New Orleans, disregarding the appeals made by 200,000 people in Arkansas and Missis sippi. Mr. Jbuis excepted to the word "legerde main," used so glibly by the gentleman from Arkansas. The object of the reso- ution was not for the! relief of the suffer ers, but was to prevent what might be the appalling calamity of the age. The water of the river was up to the top of the evees, and whenever the flood waters went over a levee that levee was doomed. There was nothing between the city of New Orleans and the river, sixteen feet above the level of the city, but a dirt walU The calamity that must ensue if the waters rose higher, could not be depicted by human tongue. It would be the calamity ot the age. Mr. Dunn withdrew any objection, but called attention to the fact that in his district the Mississippi river was ninety miles wide. There was a rise coming from the Missouri river, supplemented by the great rise out of the overflow of the Ohio river. There were to-day in his district 70,000 people whose homes were flooded. Mr. Rice, of Massachusetts, objeoted to the resolution, saying that it should be considered by the committe on appropria tions. Mr. Ellis appealed to Mr. Rice to with draw the objection, predicting that if there was any delay the House would be called upon to consider, not an ounce of preven tion but many pounds of cure. The city of New Orleans was doing all it could te prevent the catastrophe, but the State leg islature was not in session. Mr. Randall, of Pennsylvania, said that the resolution had been informally con sidered favorably by the committee on ap propriations, and in view of this statement Mr. Rice withdrew the objection. Mr. Beach, of New York, and Mr, York, of North Carolina, expressed their opposition to the resolution, but made no formal objeotion. Mr. Hunt, of Louisiana, stld that he had received a letter from one of the en gineers of the Mississippi river commission predicting the greatest disaster that could possibly be conceived of, if precautions were not taken to prevent the overflow of the eity of New Orleans. He hoped that no one would object to the resolution as a delay of one day might cost the gov ernment many times more than the paltry amount that was asked lor. Mr. Oates, of Alabama, doubted the constitutional power of Congress to appropriate publio meney for the relief of sufferers by flood, fire or storm. The joint resolution was lost yeas 95, nays 115, but by unanimous content it was reintroduced by Mr. Ellis and refer red to the oommittee on appropriations. Mr, Randall, of Pennsylvania, submit ted a conference report on the Senate res olution for an addition of $10,000 to the Senate contingent fund. Agreed to The House recedes from its amendment which confines the expenditure of this sum to investigations previously ordered and agrees to an amendment which eon fines the expenditure to the payment of current expenses ot epeoial and select com mi t tees. Mr. iunaau, irom the committee on appropriations, reported baok the little de fieienoy bill with Senate amendments, re commending concurrence in some and non oonoojrence in others of these amend- meats. The recommendations were agreed to. Under a call of the States a number of bills and resolutions were Introduced and referred. The House f pent the remainder of the day's session in legislation local to the Dis trict ot Columbia. Adjourned. Washimqton, D. C, March 24. The Treasurer of the United States has commenced preparing drafts for the pay ment ct claims for rebate on tobacco tax allowed by the accounting officers and will forward drafts as rapidly as settlements are made by the first comptroller and warrants of the secretary reach the treasurer's office. New Orleans, March 24. The river here is one inch above the rise of 1874, the highest point on record. The failure of A. G. Nicalapulo, a cot ton operator, was posted at the exchange this afternoon. . No statement is made. High Water Tnieatenlns; tne Town on the Miaatsaippi RlTer. New Orleans, Maroh 24. A dis patch fro a Baton Rouge to the Picayune says that since daylight this morning it has rained continuously. The nver now is at the high-water mark of 1882. Mulatto Point crevasse has been aban doned and ne , further effort will be made to close the opening. The force at that point will be distributed among the adja cent, weak or threatened points. " West Baton Rouge suffers to the extent ot sev eral hundred thousand dollars. Muoh un easiness is felt concerning the levees in this section. The rain will doubtless continue during the night and the river will surely advance several inohes. The general im pression is that there will be trouble in this neighborhood within the next twenty four hours. The general complaint made is that the pilots run their boats too near the shore, causing damage to the levees. The break at Mulatto Point is now two hundred feet wide and fully twelve feet deep. The Medora levee U reported gone. The back-water is steadily encroaching upon the front, and there is now but a narrow strip of dry land left. Plantations never before overflowed are now under water. Death of a Well Known Banker. New Yoek, March 24. John Jay Cisco, a well known banker of the firm of John J. Cisco & Co., died yesterday in his 79th year.: He was assistant treasurer of the United States during the oivil war. He was appointed in 1854 and resigned in 1864. New York. Cotton Futures, New Yoek, Maroh 24. The iWs cotton report says: hutures closed steady. Maroh 7-100, April 6-100, May to Sep tember inclusive, 6-100 higher than last Saturday. Chronic CoatiTenea Curad by alrra n dreth'a Pill a. Bully Bueno Millb, Abizoha Tee., Jan. 24, 1883. For the last two years I have; been greatly troubled with oostireneas, often 10 or a days elapsing witnouc any move ment or my bowels, i nave tried man remedies, bat none with success until aseavoar vegetable ruia tailing tnree pills and increasing one each night until I took nine, then decreasing one eacn mgnt. Since then my bwela nae continued regular each day, and my headache, sour stomach and general lassitude have left me, and I feel like another man Which is entirely owing to your pills and I would not be without them iu this new country. A. Mi. nliiAln. Contributions for the Western sufferers are said to be large. Duekee's Salad Dressing is the best thing of the kind ever sold. With it supeib salad of any kind can be made without delay or trouble. It is also one of the best sauces for cola meats etc. The Texas legislature has made fence cutting a felony. AN RIVALLED H LIB DRESSING Producing; as Rich and Cleanly Ap- pearance asii nature Aione baa lui, parted it. B URNETV8 COCOA INE Is. the best and cheapest Hair Dressiug kills dandruff, allays irritation, and promotes a vigorous, and neaitnv s-rowtn er tne nair. jso otner compound produces theai results. Tne superiority o is U un mi l s t LA VUKINU JSXTKACT3 consists in their perfect purity and great strength. They are warranted free irom tne poisonous oils and acids which enter into the: com position of many of the fictitious fruit flavors now in the market. The cold snap impedes farming opera- Uons considerably. If you are suffering from a sense of ex treme weariness, try one bottle of Ayer's Sarsapamla. it wtfl cost you but one dol lar, and will do you incalculable trood. It in i l.i .1 .1 T: A give you new life and energy. The best Yiotory is to vanquish one's heart. Wihdsob Manor Pure Home-made Pickles, Stuffed Mangoes, White Onions, Mixed Pickles and Ohrklns at W. J. & A. B. Btxonach's. Peabcx's Soda. Wilson's Wafers. But ter, Pilot, Boston, Lunch, Milk and Hlh Toast Crackers at W. V. A A, B. Btronach's Away with your old hard shoes and go to Heller Bros' shoe store and get a pair of those soft broad bottom gaiters or button boots just received. , Ye tender-footed call at Heller Bros shoe house and get a pair of those neat and French kid button or Uonrress gaiter, new spring styles just received. Fresh Sponcce and Lady fingers Orange Buns, Extra Jumbles, Albert isiaouit at YV, V. s a. a. Htronacn's. Neat But Not Gaudy those new style gent's gaiters and lafee hook bals, just re ceived at the regular shoe and leather house OI IISLLBB BHO'S Tucnkb, Valises, satchels, shawl straps : closing out low to make room for spring stock oi shoes now coming in at . xIkller lino's shoe Btore, Ladikh glove button and lace boots. also glove kid slippers for tender feet jus opened at Hxlleb Bbo's. VANCE ON THE-TARIFF, I1E STJBJUTS THE MINORITY RE PORT ON THE AMERICAN BOG, A .Protective System Wnlch Bala Great Wall Bnt Does not Pre tect Retaliation Wnlch Wont Succeed, Etc Washington, Maroh 24. Senator Yanoe, in the minority, report from the committee on foreign affairs, submitted day, expresses the opinion that Ger many has the right to exclude American hog products on the ground that they are unwholesome, if Bhe deems it proper, anl that this government is not justified in impeaching her motives. "If it be true," continues the report, "that our pork is to any extent unwholesome, we should en deavor, by a rigid system of inspection, to remove the cause of complaint. If it be that fear oi trichinosis is only a pre text and that the real reason for excluding our hog products is a desire to protect their own producers, then we are the last people on earth who ought to com- plain. Alter surrounding ourselves tot more than twenty years witn a pro tective tariff wall so high as to ex- olude virtually all the prod acts of Germany whioh compete with ours, it is rather late for us to advance retaliation against a gov ernment which merely follows, our exam ple. In faot, Germany'a action is re taliation and the cry ot "stop thief cannot change the Jrue condition of things. We have got to learn that we . are not so great and independent as , to enable us to defy the laws of political economy and the amenities of international trade with im punity. We have been told again and again that our true policy was to shut up our manufactures from the competition of the world, and that all nations thus excluded would be compelled, nevertheless, to buy our breadatuffs and provisions ; that they could not do without them. We are greatly surprised and indignant when one important customer says he can get along without our hog products and lorbids their comin&r in, and we propose to retal iate. For what? For simply and frankly forbidding them to be imported. Suppose instead of doingthis Germany had imnoaed a dntv of 100 ner oent on them, which as effectually prohibits their importation. What then? Where would be our so-called retaliation? The under signed can see no difference whatever in the two methods of prohibition, so far as the results are concerned, only that one is manly and direct, whilst the other is indirect and based on false pretenses. Our great meat industry must indeed be eared for. It with kindred, agricultuarl indus tries furnishes nearly all of our foreign trade, and they deserve all thai Congress ean do for them. But this bill does not propose the true way to do it This way is to remove as far as possible all restric tions upon the trade and enlargement of the market for our Ifannera products all over the world, by liberal treaties and tariff laws. The last section of the bill is espe cially objectionable, not only in the pro posed retaiiation,but in the relegation of the whole matter to the executive. We pro pose thereby to arm the chief magistrate of a constitutional republic with the same arbitrary power over commerce that is now exercised by the prime minis ter ot feudal European despotism, in order that on equal terms they may inflict feudal injuries on their people until one or the other gives in; this too whilst Congress is in session and the representatives of the people are present ready to say if they wish to begin this war, and ou what articles of commeroe they prefer the fight to be made. The section in effect is an abdi cation of the powers and duties of Con gress and the delegation thereof to the better judgment of the President. If suoh measures of so-called retaliation toward Germany or any other nation should be deemed necessary or advisable tmprt u, let Congress say so, and- let it likewise prescribe all the details of suoh measures, and the articles on whioh the struggle is to be made. It is the President a bust ness to execute the laws, not to make them, and it is as certainly the duty of Congress to make them and not to shift the task on somebody else. Those sections of the bill which provide an inspection of meats designed for exportation and whioh forbid the importation of adulter ated and unwholesome artioles ot food or drink, constitute proper legislation, and whilst not regarded as sufficiently thor ough, are vet in the right direction. When perfected by expenenoe and a sin cere desire to give the world wholesome food, whioh it is not doubted all our pro duoers entertain, in the opinion ot the un dersigned all will have been accomplished that is desired by the mends of the bill. The Lail First. Mr. Andre v Mark ey. 75 Henry street. Mew York, says he found no relief for hla chrnio rbenmatlam, until St. Jacobs Oil was applied which cured him. Most of the fruit is killed in the western part of the State, it is alleged, ffis ever so. i e Advice to Mothers Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used when children are catting teeta. it relieves tne nttie aaaerer i once; it produces natural, quiet sleep by relieving tne child irom pain, and the lit tie cherub awakes as "bright as a bat- ton." It is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regulates tne liowels, and la the best known remedy for diarrhoea, wiietaer arising from teetliin or other oauaes. Twenty-live ofcois a hot tie. The Marquis who is to marry Mrs Frank Leslie ean shoot his initials in board, and he writes poetry with the great est ease, lie bad better shoot the poetry. ' i RiKiuBZB, on Tuesday night next will be the last opportunity you will have to se cure some of those beautiful marble and alabaster works of art. MEDICAL. For the Cure of Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Bronchitis.Croup, Infhi-I enia, Asthma, Whooping Cough, In-I cipient Consumption and for the re lief of consumptive persons in advan ced stazes of the Disease. For Sale by all Druggists.- Priced s 5 Cents. A SURE 'RECIPE Fop fine Complexions. I Positire relief and immuni ty from complexional blem ishes may be found in Hagarts Hagnolia Balm. A delicate and harmless article. Sold by druggists everywhere. It imparts the most bril liant and life-like tints,and the closest scrutiny cannot detect its use. All unsightly Discolorations, Eruptions, Ring Marks nnder the eyes, Sallowness, Redness, Rough ness, and the flash or fatigue and excitement are at once dispelled by the Magnolia Balm. , j It is the one incomparable Cosmetic, jt ' Congress Spring THE STANDARD MINERAL WATER. CATHARTIC, i ALTERATIVE. A m. Ciflc for disorders ef tho MTO.nACII, LIVKK and KIDNEYS, ECZEMA, BIA LAHIA and all Impurities of tho blood SO enviable a name haf- this famous Mineral. Water, that the Tianisrers of inferior mineral springs, desirohs ol Imi tating the natural parity of the ;botMed' water oi uongresa spring, infect a power- ful add in their bottled water to jreeerve the crude ingredients in eolation, being so heavily laden with LIME 4Jn IRON DEPOSIT. i . With such contri vances, bogus testimo nials and docored analysis cards they seek to rival the pure medicinal waters- of uongreaa spring.; i . . ; - - is ' TAB regular season via tor to Saratoga i fully underataud these crude, harah waters, many of them after painful expe riences. In proof ol this faot we can pro duce a great many responsible names. But the Saratoga visitors without experi ence, aud many who use the bottled waters(ofteu labeled a? curatives for disor ders which they positively aggravate), should remember, that erode mineral waters produce headache, a souse ot burn ing and internal irritation, and do Irre parable injury to the digestive organs and kidneys. U Congress Water. Pure Natural and Reliable. NtiWEGfcNUlNEsOLD UN DUAUHT. For sal a by Druggists, Qrocers, Wine Merchants and Botels. jan 18 eodSm ROYSTER&STRUDWICK Successors to Roycter & Co, IMPORTERS. We make pecfaltlesjof GENUINE GEBIoN HIT AND ROYSTER'S We have large stocks at Norfolk, Ports mouth. West lolnt, Wilmington, More head City and Washington, and can al ways ship from' the most accessible port, thereby Insuring the lowest rate of freight te purchasers. . We sell only the best grade of Fertll izers. and will guarantee to meet any com petition in price and terms. Write na ror quotations. KOYSTER 8TEUDWICK, Nouroi.lt, Va. i ! I FARMERS' Manufactured by Head ft Co., 84 Beaver BL NbwYobz. The most popular Fertiliser wherever it baa been sold. Unrivalled iu uniformity of analysis, and unequalled in fine m o ban leal condition by any Fertiliser sold in Norm Carolina. Guaranteed In every respect AS GOOD A3 THE BEST. For circular, price and terms, writ te KOYSTER t 8TRTJD WICK, General Agents for North Carolina, Noktolk, Va., -oa- WILLlAMSON fr TJPOHTJBCH, -Agtnts for Wake and Chatham counties and Clayton, In Johnston oounty WANTED An experienced manager and energetic agents in this city to operate the best and most popular system of mutial endowment 11 Inauxanoe la Amarlit IJhtnlt.nna R.f.MnH rm quired. Aidrea 1QUXTABLK LTFf absuu'w. Maxtinsburg, w. va. Hi H Pints Friend Fertilizer i. -A-1 it h i 4' J- j : It k If f I
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 25, 1884, edition 1
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