.; I: 4". 'ft':' m itr Hi..; . V: J iiit mi .. :Ki:. t: m i itv I - -i r j -j -? - -i XX VL RALEIGH N. C, TUBDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 9. 1886. i Hi ,... 75 .. .. ii -:: -:-- lit- i : ,,. ' ! .y. ' i ; : Mm OBSK EVER. Wf 1,1 w m J L 1 royal Kawf a ;'!iiJ Absolutely Pure. ! Tbu powder wrw rartoa. ,A murel of HtT, titngtk and wbolmene. Ifw efmomlral Utan ordintfy klnda and eumot b id fa eompetltion with the multitude of low lot; tbert weight lam or phosphate powder ' 8old only fai cana. Botai. Bajedio Powdc : OAh lorWall StoeeVXw Yorlt.:' I- c " Sold bjW C A i B Strooach, George T BACKET" STORE. i' I;; . ; &?. - - " . r t '. f ? t . ;-r ;: i . i AffOI'IUR RIti llOIEL. ; ffl ' i. j; i . .; C"i A lleavy Trant.tlon In Real Fstmt- Spfcial tg the Ngws ano'Qbsrvkr. , J Asiiktillk, X. C., Feb. ; Maj. W. II. Brown, of this city, ied at 6 o'clock f . m. todny, after a stjoVt iiloess. '? ' . ; ' Thie Warm Springs 'syiyJicate today completed Hhe purchaso of 140 acrcB of laodv hear 'the depot, for 050,000. Maj. Kollins and.Capt. G. M. Roberta are the grantors. Among the improve ments 'contemplated is a mammoth hotel. . JH " I- v ; - iL p. v.: TIIK sit '.H QUEHflOX COSIES CP IM. lIKEiltliV IN IrHENKNATE, Mmtlmtu mt tb Xt Oritaai Sb-Tras : a HOWLHU MOB Tlriaally Takvs PuMPiwieii : London, Feb. tJ. At J this evening all that part of the city iq the neighbor hood, of the national calltry, Carlton club and Bt'furm club is in the possep 8ioti of nuihs. Several factional fijrht have alrt-ly token plciB anyone the di xn it way to ,riotra attd a farmns mbh is now march through St. Jmeas8irisfitjin,iJ b1 ii tuarblQ Lbusta f the Vice-Presidents f Washikgtoh, February 8 Sksati. The chair laid before the - Senate a me morial of the legislature of Mississippi, favoring the Eadsship railway scheme. Appropriately referred. Among the measures favorably re ported from the committees and placed on the calendar were the following: By Mr. Hoar, from the committee ou privileges and elections, a bill fixing the time for the meeting of Congress in 1887, and every second year thereafter the first Monday in October, and in 1886 and every second year thereafter the second Monday Of November. ' By Mr. Voorhees; from the committee on additional accommodations for the library,: a resolution : providing that The great bargain house 'tof Raleigh; The only house in the State i irj; (II 'M buyer always in the New York market. We buy audi sell all kinds of goods . M 'mi-H which can be bought and,old for less than their market value. T: (We. tidd, a ;amall orofit, regardless of,; dost, .and v " - fill ji'-m jnake rour hundreds of bargains -make a meeting. - The mob is cursing the au thorities, attacking shops, sacking sa- lons, getting drunk and smashing win- uowa. 1 yu its way to nyae rarlt tho i'ront of tue mob made an flfort to enter the iwaf office, but )turhed away when a sentifel at the en- tranco cottronted the intruders with his bayohct. ! 0onipifu'U8 'among the build ings attacked byllie mob was that occu pied by the Devonshire dub and that occupied as the residence of Arnold Morley, the newly appointed patronage secretary. The police; along the route to liyde Park were. brushed out of the way by the rioters as if they i were men; of straw, and many of the :; officers were terribly whipped: for their interference.: 'M- 1 : A Kiot la Louden. liONDOS, Feb. 8. The I starving me-i naaics oi ijondon today neld a mastt meeting m Trafalgar Square around the pielsdn nonuinent, and it resulted in a riot.; The proceedings were opened tth an assemblage of 10,000 men. The our bosiness. All are re and see us. rr:?' ii quested 11:811 mm- uf to mil We are now opening fine aasortment of Laoes of all kinds, bought from ! the ' "slaughter-pens of eredifin New TtofTc, 4 great aacrifioeu ' , ' ' at great . bargains. ThefwUlbesold HAmbartf 'adirinirs and Inserting!, Oriental Laces,' Torchon, Kit . Irish Trimmings, PiUow; laewf of all grades. We are also opening some great bargains in Cashmeres at 3d cents; all wool, worth 60. Kentucky jeans at 21 cents, worth 35 cents. ' Choice' prints at 5 cents. Two auires note paperfor 5 cents. Envelopes for 3 cents pack Tins.SS cents per paper. Needles a .cents pe paper. 200 yards machine cotton fat oents per spool. Best 4-4 brown : cot tons at cents per jardjf Call and see us and savryour money. L ; . - I , U VOLNEY PJRSELL & COl ;. Black lead pencils 1 cent each. theUmted States shall be' placecT in the vacant niches in the senate chamber. Mr. Ingalls, from the committee on rules, reported adversely on Mr. Piatt's resolution, providing for the considera tion of executive nominations in open Senate. At Mr. Piatt's desire (Mr Ingalls not objecting) the resolution was placed on the calendar. Mr- Piatt said that he would hereafter take occasion to submit 'o the Senate the reasons which, in his judgment, made it desirable that the Senate should adopt his resolution, not withstanding the adverse report of the committee on rules, j Mr. Ingalls offered a resolution, which was agreed to, directing the committee on finance to enquire into the propriety of making such an amendment to section 3571 of the Revised Statute's as may be necessary to require the issue of United States notes of the denominations of $1 and 2v In offering this resolution Mr. Ingalls said United .States notes of de nominations less than $5 had practically disappeared from circulation, to the silver dollars for debts Or that they bad refused to sell merchandise for them. Mr. Kustis replied that he undrstood they were taking silver dollars only at discount. ; : . Mr. Morrill inquired I whether there had been any diminution of the clerical force since March 4. J Mr. Eustis was not aware that there had been. His criticism; he! said, was this: That if : it had! been the custom for the baukf to send their silver money to a gubireasury, subject to count, and to get a Sertificate o that effect; this custom had been suddenly changed as to the New Orleans sub- treasury, though not changed as to the sub-treasury at tew T-lrk. The New Orleans subtreasury, :Mt. Eustisj said, had refused to receive a shiDinent of 825,000 from the Mentis, Tebiwsee; Bank of Uommeroe and the ;V aco. cxas, State, bank of Waco. If that statemeut-RhouId be fen l-stin tinted. Mr Eustis continued, and if it should be proved that tbe cutonii had, prevailed and it was not violative of 1 hid that it now prevailed i;New apl other places, then he sail. the ptficial who had approTcd of the clhmje of -tU cudlom in the city of New Orleans exposed him self to very grave suspjeioun, to say the least. With reference if o the secret war against tho 8iver dollai;r, Mr. Eustis said he would i.iake u charge, in the absence of proof, but he Wanted to get at the. f;cts , ' . r l rP I great inconvenience of all who had small anrl UiAtf itnnnft uv that, thfl KAAia.liHt.in Is.. . . . element of London greatly predominated in the cro wd which was also managed by well -know socialists' and -extraordinary vigilance was ; ordered to : preserve the peoce at ail hazards, r ; ': Hew TrU Dtto Future. ; New Yokk,: Feb. 8. The Post Bays I Futures t the first call showed little change. : At the second call ; prices had fallen 4 to b below last baturday s clos ing and : at the third .call there were many eager sellers at ; a partial further deoltne of 1 j point, which brought in. buyers td carpr fbriuet shrt jgales; Qn hundred-bales ; FebruiryJ short notice brought y.U0,: li,&0U j March y,07, l,UUf April 9.17. 2.0UO May 9.27, 1,500 July 9.44 200 August 92,j 100 October' v.W. f utures eioscd- 5-!3iy, February 91 the balance 5 to ti-l0U lower than last; Saturday. ' ! , . i: . lt" " . : pl Fir mi Ahwm4 ' y . U J AfeocsTA, Ga.i Fb: 8 4-A fire earH this morning destroy od the stores of M Colclotigh, Mrs: S. II. Meyers, and E; K.aufman. 4 he loss is about Xl5rvuu; insurance $12,000. : ! i " f , ! 1 :i a homas A; bcales, a prominent young man of Augusta, wno took an overdose of morphine last Friday, i and who has , . . . ... . i . . i Deen in a critical cpnaiuon, is consiaerea to be in a fair way of recovery tonight.' 'i Tb Hllltta Fire Bthe Slb. ' I SsATftit, Washington Territory, Feb. ct-4-The militia were called out , today 6 preserve order. Theviwere set 'upon, . . . 1 t M.J 1 . 1 tauntea, revuea ano. vimenuy attacaeu by the mob. . Finally the order ! was .given to fire, which the soldiers jexe- cuted and four of the rioters were shot. One was killed. daily transactions or were ensrasred in the retail trade. He had ascertained by examination of the statutes that the de nomination of United States notes was left entirely tb the discretion of the sec retary; of the treasury, with the single limitation that notes of denominations less than SI shall not be issued. Mr. Ingalls understood that the smaller notes had been withdrawn and practically re tired from circulation for the purpose of forcing silver into circulation and there by rendering silver unpopular with the people. He supposed that If all notes under 50 were withdrawn the result would be that gold would be forced into circulation. No effort of that kind, how ever, appeared to hive been. made. Mr. Ingalls impression was that the people of this, country wanted gold and silver as a basis of circulation, but did not de sire to earrv either metal in their nock ets. The people did. however, desire the restoration of small U. S. notes, and inasmuch as tney pay all the money in the treasury from- their : own resources and are the owners of whatever currency there may be in the country, he did not see' why the people's wish should not be gratified. He pad, therefore, offered his resolution Mr. Eustis offered a f eslution direct ing the nnance committee to inquue whether it had been the custom for the assistant treasurer at New Orleans to receive deposits of standard silver dol lars from shippers of the said coin and to issue to their correspondents at New Orleans receipts for silver, subject to count, and to issue silver certificates after the count of ? said dollars so deposited had been made; : ana whether said custom if it. had ; prevailed had been changed by instruction of ihe treasurer of the United states and the reasons therefor: also whether such a custom was hew in force at any other sub treasury; also whether there was an ad equate clerical force at the New Orleans Indium Aareat UnBrmMt. I Washington, February 8.The Sen ate todav confirmed the nomination of Robert L. Leatherwood as Indian agent 8Ub-treasury and if not what increase in North Carolina. I'i. H. H. S. TUCKER & CD EARLY SPRING OFFERINGS. - . . .1 . ?, .. .,.3 " We have Just reeetve'l for iour iprUig trade choice lines of ;. yt'i j:;;;; . ' Drees SilkSvM ' Blacks and Colon.. lv r. NEW WEAVES AND NEW SPRING ;! . SHADES: . fid TBOY BEST FOREIGN AVD AMEBICAtf JiAtt UF AVTU&XHa. - v There i land of bitter temi and wdlioita i r. . . ' . ii . ii . . v r A una nioHl rise ("at arrar one ukums kubw, Winer wan-racedfioue, with dark robes trail. -, log, is - :. A ; .. s In aid proceion moveslWows bound with . nw. s : -l i i ii i 5- lt 1 a Ufnd peopled fey wit low mortal ' (X mparea with them the virguu nve wf re : Wine ' ; ' ' It. And it la writ above Its gloomy ponali We did net thloa U paid toaavertiie." ' Black and Colored Failles Francaise, Black and Colored Grop Failles, ; i Black and Colored Tricotirine's 1 1 Satin Duchesne, Sutin Rhadamcs, S Grains. an I i Groa ( (JURRENCY.: J : - : It The Poetry of , Alvrttsl" mer case the President was wholly in dependent of the Senate, but not. so in the latter. : The debate partook largely of questions by the Democratic Senators named and extended replies by Mr. Sherman. The debate finally closed and Mr. Eustis resolution went over till tomorrow. After an exeoutive ses sion the Senate adjourned. HOCSS. Under the call of States the following wre introduced and referred ; By Mr. Oates, of Alabama A bill to forfeit certain lands granted to the Mo bile & Girard railroad company; to con firm the title to purchasers and to ab solve the said company from its obliga tions as a land grant railroad company. By Mr. Dunn, of Arkansas, to author ise the purchase of foreign-built ships by citizens of the United States, and te permit the same to be registered as ves sels of the United States. Bv Mr. ' Blanchard. of Louisiana, a resolution calling on the secretary of the treasury for a statement of all moneys or funds seized and collected by General Butler and Gen. Banks while in com- LLEWXAM. FAKRACMHOTJa FEAST OF FACTS) FROM THE FEDERAL FROST. Ctoaerul CUeualajr mt Kveuta Truuaplr. MT the Capital. ' i Special to the News and OBSxavaa. . Washinotow, February 8. ; After a tolerably thorough "study of the subject, whereby I was put in pos session of many facts that convince me of the thorough honesty of j purpose of Messrs. Lamar and Garland in the Bell- Pan-Electric, telephone case, ' it is a source of gratification to me to add my bumble defence of the only two .South ern members of Mr Cleveland's cabinet. The journalistic hounds who for weeks have been barking at these men's ! heels (one paid at the rate of go per editorial line; others less) cannot convince Cleve land or the people that the i Bell tele phone company, or its hired labor, is any better than other monopolies Am mand of Ihe department of the Gu f their servants. I have it today from the durffigjth warand.partMularly of all moBt aathoriUtiv of authoritative amounts seized by Gen. Banks,' ttnder unnr tVi W -ill1 order No. 202, by United States officers land or imu regiDi M has been al- Xomlnatlou. WasmNGTONi Feb. 8. Among the nominations sent to the Senate today by the President were the following: Wm. C. Davis, postmaster at Elizabeth City, N. 0.; W. B. Burnett,, at Athets, Ga. . " St. Jnrottw Oil. j Professor T. Waraker, L. Lj D., In tercollegiate Law Ieeturer at Cambridge University, England, sayli it cured mem bers of his family of rheumatism and neuralgia, The man who allows his sidewalk to remain slippery rarely falls tdowh on it himself. He is preserved for a worse punishment hereafter. i - , Enigmas. . ' What yesterday, was-and tomorrow will be? Today. 'ou should go today and buy a bottle of Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein, for your child may have croup j tonight. Tomorrow will be too late. . . I , Even the honest farmer will Water his stock- S " r- SMXTT EHiuioa ur PSJRB TV in New Orleans from May, 1862, to May, 1865, together with the disposition of I the moneys and funds so seized and ap propriated; by the United States. u TM- f ' V 1 1 r : v:ii i Mr. McPherson said (he shipment of cria;te a oommwsion whoae dntv it shall :i jn.. r..i.j Uii r i- . . . . -J on ci uuii u a rcioi ru t vy j.ur. pjubi'B had been sent t thesubTtreasory'atNew urieans turougn an express company and. a reeeipt demanded - for it. It was sent to the sub-treasury to be placed to the credit of the State . national ; bank. Silver certificates had not been asked for. He (McPherson) wanted to know if it was part of the duty of assistant treas urers of the United States to furnish a place of deposit for funds belonging to btate banks or national banks. It would be asking too much of ihe government that it should order the sub treasuries to become intermediaries for the deposit of silver sent by one bank to another. Air. Eustis said nothing of that kind was asked". I: At 2 o'clock 31r4 Blair endeavored to call up his educational bill, but failed, the bill however retaining its place as unfinished business. : The discussion of Mr; Eustis' ! resolu tion proceeded. Mr. Gorman defended the administration The sub-treagurv at New Orleans, be said, bad been found deficient in clerical force to count all the silver dollar that were; or would bo presented. The treasurer of the Unitrd States had already stated to the: Senate that he had not issued orders to the sub-treasuries1 to decline receiving silver dollars and issuing silver certificates. When , the assistant treasurer at New Orleans had notified the treasury de partment that certain banks in Tennes see and Texas were trying to use the sub- treasury as a convenience merely to transfer from one bant to another and be to report upon the material and in tellectual progress made by the colored people Bince looo. . JJy Mr. Held, of North Carolina, to abolish the statute allowing seizing of ficers to destroy forfeited stills. Mr. Craine, of Texas, from the com mittee on labor, reported a bill consti tuting eight hours a day's work for all laborers employed by the United States government. The House went into committee of the whole on the-half gallon liquor tax bill. Weaver, of Iowa, took the leged, but that Mr. Cleveland ill up hold them in all they have done.- COX AND THE CIVIL 8SRVICB. Gen. Cox's views concerning the civil service are very properly given great weignt. en, see nere, rwewxam, remarked one of the ablest newspaper correspondents here a man' who is paid 010,000 per annum for his work, add who has more brains than two-thirds of the members of Congress -"your .rep resentative, Gen. Cox, is alnan to be admired for his backbone as well as his brainB." And so he Is by our people, I replied folks down our Jway admire men who are well developed in that anatomical feature, and that is why Cox is so popular. . There was; some little talk about the "mistake" the General .ur. weaver, ot lowa, tooJc the ncor .,t t .i.ii..! with a speech upon the financial qs- the civil service reform committee: but he didn t make any mistake at all. He dd tion and an attack upon the national banking system. He said the House might just as well face the music first us last. There were four thin&rs which this Congress must enact: First, it must provide for the unrestricted coinage of American silver; second, a law must be , passed for the issue of treasury note; third, the larger portion of the surplus in the treasury must be paid out m liquidation of the interest-bearing pub lic debt; fourth, it must forbid by law the wisest thing possible, under the cir cumstances? Howl Why, suppose he should have declined? Some Demo era tic mugwump would probably have gotten the place, and then' the devil would have been to pay fori Democrats. As it is, he is in a position to do every thing possible to open the official gates to Democrats; whereas as a simple M. C. he would have been but one of the 325 flies on the wheel of legislation. -Cox any further discrimination against silver I knoirB whllt he ig ,bout ni fo&t C4 Ltver OIL with HrionhinhltM. Ia rMMMiapIlM and Wamtiue; iDlaeuaea. Dr. C. W. Barringer, Pittsbiarg. Pi., says ; ' '1 think your iiJmulsioin ,( Cod Liver Oil is a very fine preparation, and , fills a lone felt want. It is vearV useful ! in consumption and wasting diseases. 'v The freeze almost destroyed! the , oat crop. Thu Uurarord Almanac and Ool. Bjlt mailed free on application to tihe Rum- k ford' Chemical Works, Providence; Rhode Island.. i DKLICACH3 IN KEWORK. Rainbow trout bring 1.25 a pound, and are in demand. , Canvas back ducks are scarce and are quoted at So a brace. Diamond back terrapins co8tw$48.00 a dozen.' - " Mot house mushrooms arei $1 quart. Frogs' legs are gl.50 per dozen. per ' Yen Have u Perfect Hlg-fat, when you demand a Benson's Capcinc of a druggist, to expect 1 to receive onetj. Yet there are, we regret .to say, a few i druggists 'of the Cheap John 'variety 1 who will try to persuade you to accept ( . some worthless substitute with a similar -soundine name; such asj' "Capswl he committee rose at 5.15 adjourned. and the House Fearful Beault of u Rattle Suahve Bit. Jaspkb, Ga., Feb. 8. The condition of Mr. t Sylvester Sams, a well-known citizen oi mis county, excites cousiaer- able interest. Two years ago Mr.. Sams, while walking over his farm, was bitten by a rattle-snake. He immediately re- that is there was uot clerical force nough sorted to- the native remedy, whisky, of to do it, the assistant treasurer had de- which he took copious draught. Moth There is a land that ' flows with milk i and Kot the eondeoaed, nor yet tbeaorghom raHWl i- I H :: ' JEa"h dw-l'r bears a grlpwck fat with taany, Bond", ctfupoas, atocka ana various otoer i- iraiait: : " - ; s '? ! H llappy are thette as at blgh tide, the flahea; Ho ter vota orown tne - laugnusr m ou . eyes; : ' s , I :.. ! ' . For bett r.liici; they have no eort of wlahef The' cake is tfaeira -the learned to ! adver tise, y l: "frrinters' Circular. ' i - ' : f - : v o .-; i i.o-ii ,'- 1 : . i 2 : ; .1. The hole before the groundhog crawled in it. 2. Same hole after the groundhog drew it in after him.. Mather "You haven t given the SPECIAL., We adviao our lady patron that it la baiter to buy tit early rather than; titer on. The prlc of apun and re'd nHk ar SOto 80 per cent. ..igier thu laH aen; t j , C Th ' -hv Uliw' are raw, fl?'rtns:;awi lwtut.t 1 1 ruse iht eanri 1 loi Uupli Gated ai U we lit- our cuwnvra lhi uavan4 tagw low price aad beat goods. I; i W, II. it. S. l UUKB iCQ child" any Ho1 s always pmej" Teacher "Alas', idle. Mother "Then he's 1 1 deoprviugia prize for perseverance. Exchange. . ; I. 1 j ' A man ieame into a cigar store, bought a cigar, and threw a bad five cent piece on the counter. He was. hurridly de parting when thu dealer called - afu r him "Hold on, hold on. it's bad!" NeverNmind," answered the purchaser as he quickly passed but; "I'll smoke it aoyhof ' N Y.Commercial Adver User. ! was necessary there to enable the sub treasurer to carrV ' out the law. Mr Eustis stated that; the cashier of national bank at New Orleans had writ ten him, stating that shipments of silver dollars bad been made by ; banks in the interior to their correspondents in New Orleans, but that the sub-treasurer at New Orleans had refused to receive the silver dollars on deposit and that that refusal had been approved by the treas urer i of the United States. The only sub-treasury south of Baltimore being at New Orleans, th . business : of the'? States of Teunesseee; Ark ansas, Mississippi, Texas, Alabuurii, and others with the treasurer of the Uni ted States had to i be done through the New Orleans sub-treasury. It therefore became a; most important question whether that sub-treasury was con ducted in compliance with law and with recognized and approved customs. It seemed that the law in favor of the cir culation, transmission and deposit of sil ver dollars had been practically sus pended by the officials of the United States. What was the consequence? A strong prejudice against the silver dol lar. Mr. Eustis had received informa tion from; another cashier of a bank, giving the startling information that country merohants were ; refusing to re ceive silver dollars except at a discount. . Mr. .-Dawes inquired i whether sub treasuries were required to receive sil ver dollars, the property of private in dividuals, on deposit? Mr. Eustis replied that the holders of silver dollars had by law a right to de posit them in a sub-treasury and receive certificates therefor, . Mr. Coke read the provision of law on the subject, to that effect Mr. Chue asked whether Mr. Kustis meant that merchants had refused to take clined to have anything to do With it, and the treasury department had said: 'You are quite right; the sub-treasury is not to be made a! convenience, in such a case decline to receive silver that you cannot count? and Issue certificates for the day it is presented Mr Uorman deprecated the use of the treasury department as a convenience between three or four banks, involving the payment of express and other charges by the government- This would be the silver iden run mad. He was not opposed to silver. He believed in silver, but he believed in an honest silver dollar. Mr. Sherman said that if the transac tion under consideration involved a re quest from a bank that an assistant treasurer should open an account, with that bank for silver dollars deposited .with the i sub-treasury,-, the government official .was right in refusing to open such accounts. Mr. Sherman said the inquiry was entirely proper, and that the Senate had a perfect right; to any thing on the executive fiUs Cither re lating to this subject or to executive ap pointments, suspensions or removals This precipitated a dcbte upvn the question so long pending in: caucuses and comuiitfe meetings and secret ses sions, as to the right of the Senate to in formation regarding removals. I Mr Eustis' resolution . and i s -ul ject ere entirely lost sight of in tlio debate whicn KiU'jweu. xur. oucniian naa made tho ptati inent tUat auy tivxen had aright to go to a sub-treasury; with his silver dollars and receive curtihcuuis ler them, and that it was not rigi.t for the governmi nt to refusfl to give itbat ac commodation. Mr Morrill nsked, jocu larly, "Can he ask for their reasons if thev refuse !" This was greeted with mg more; was thought of the matter until six months ago, when Mr; Sams betrayed symptoms of St. Vitus' dance. lie was never Btul, not even in his sleep, twitching his muscles and moving incessantly. lately he has developed violent v symptoms and has beaten' his wife and family, and in fact all who came within his reach. .. He now acta like a man with a well-defined case of rabies, only instead of barking he makes a rattling sound. He has been taken to Canton jail, where a strong guard will be kept over him until the crisis of bis case is reached. , j ' 4 acwMlaaal Coiatuittae WorBU Wasuinqtos, D. C, Feb. 7.In the House of Representatives tomorrow, after the eall of States for the introduc tion of bills and of the committees for reports, the House will probably resume in committee of tho whole the consider ation the; half-gallon tax bill upoh which a general debate is now proceeding. Mr Morrison will attemnt to confine the disenseion to the merits of the bill, but of the Democratic party is ; the nearest thing to his political heart, f He! repre sents one of the most intelligent con stituencies of any Congressman; they know him; thev trust him. "Well, they ought to, he replied, f and we parted. i . '' . i .;: 3 :- ; . Oa P0RTXB WttL BE PABDONIO. The flood-gates of ieloquenee and in vective are to be let loose in the House this week, beginning with Thursday's session of that body, on. which day the fitx-Jobn Sorter bill as m special con tinuing order for one week-r-will come up. There is no donbt of the passage of the bill reported from the House com mittee for Porter's relief in both houses, but the enemies of the old General must have their say, and the country will be glad when the tbmg is over with, j Xou will remember a; similar bill passed in the last Congress, : but f i vetoed by Arthur. Cleveland ,J however,' will not follow the "precedent," and Fits-John will Soon be happy. j THB 8SMATOBIAL SMlLK has measured about nine inches with the Democrats (and I desire to explain! right here that by "smile ; 1 mean the faeial expression known by that,' name) since last friday, when: B a tier, of South Carolina, got the laugh on Harrison; of Indiana, who was 'acting as guardian to the Dakota bill. Benjy, in the course of an alleged "reply" to ; Senator But ler s speech, attempted a little fanny business,' and advanced' 'the 1 opinion that the only hope for Mr : Butler was for that gentleman to put himself under Pasteur for treatment tor madness. Mr nvin7 ii thfl widft latitude riven bv the rules governing debate in committee it Butler iaimediatelj inquired $ the virus is likely that several speeches relating to be used in the process of inoculation to the siver onestion will be delivered; waa to come froin Mr. Harrison. It is the intention of the appropria- (Laughter.) "It so I prefer not to be nnsinn treated for that comnlaintv : The gen- aDprorriation bill for taction Tuesday, tlcman from Indiana, he thought.had laughter, Vut Mr. Sheruuin immediately precipitui: d a debate, not withstanding the abseu'.j ot Mr. iv-iuuu is who has a large interest in the qu"tion. M. Edmunds, howeccr,;. has frequently maintaiiittl that the qm-ntiou' at issue was more'y a' moot'! question and not a practical one Mr.; Sherman spoke at great length and with much vehemence. His main point was the broad; assertion that -tho ' Senate hal a right to call for and . to receive, frmn the President all docuuiauta. The Senate, he maintained, was not obliged to give reasons to anybody for what purpose it wished papers; but it had a right to possess tho same sources of information possessed by the Presi dent, to do with them as it pleased. Messrs. Pnh,; Saulsbury and Morgan combattod Mr, Sherman's preposition, and upheld the view; expressed in Mr. Pugh s resolution Bonie days jagd.J Mr. Pugh began by stating that; Mr. Sher man's speech was wholly irrelevant to the resolution before the Senate. He stated his proposition, that the matter of ibis biU usually provoMe little discus siou. but the recent agitation as to new pension legislation may fon thin occasion elicit a general expression of opinion on the measure should it receive final action Tuesdav. and should tho bill alo be disposed of, Wednesday wi!l be de voted to the consideration of the Atlan tic and Pacific land forfeiture' jbill, ac cording to a special order made Friday last. . TlieFitz-John Porter bdl will be taken up Thursday, but it is understood that a voto wiu uot do rcacnea .nis weeje. : ' . - i Troops for the Mexlra'u Harder. Foht; Wonxa, iTfxas, Febi 7. A compiiay of United States soldiers came in yesterday en route for Fort Conchas. They are fifty in number and1 are from the barracks at Columbus, Ohio, where they were recruited. Several i soldiers staged .that recruiting officers had been instructed to enlist all the available men at once, and that it was reported ' in Ohio that trouble with Mexico on the border was a possibility at no distant day..' .' i - C. ap- cin,':' "Capsicum, "Cdpucii, sicme, etc., prefixed sometimes with the ) name "Burnon" 'or Benton.," Cheap John will , offer one of these wretched imitations for half the price of the genuine, as he can well afford to do, its real value being nothing, and its . cost but little more. Bensonfs iare the - only porous plasters that can be' de pended upon to cure every ailment sub 5ot to i ternal treatment. -They are prompt, suref and thorough. 'jTdiecK yourself against deception byj buying of reliable druggies only.. Ihe genuine bears the "Three Seals" trademark and has the word "Capcine" tfut in tbe centre. .. .' '' .R ' '! : w There is one thing that is always pret ty sound about a church, and that is the Dell. ; an a ek? i ! BnaduSaTWAOOFloC Coush. Inrtpian Conomp- peraon in arimicfKt itaMof VW WLIi IW i ' - wv tio. Sii Oentiiaa ,Xm BuU't vovam egrrwp si mnu mir whit wrapper, aad nous cm recistnred Trada-liark to vriti AVull'w Iltrui in a firvte, J Br- I A BrltUU Nteamhlp Bar Bed. Richmond, Va , Feb. 8. -Saturday nigh while the British steamship Cam den waB lying at a dock at West Point, Va., loading with cotton, smoke was noticed coming out of the forward hold. The fire alarm was sounded and water was promptly turned on, a hole was cnt in the deck and a quantity of bagging taken out. The damage will probably showed much madness, but he was quite certain he (uu tier) had net been bitten (Great laughter.) : ' . MONET FOB THB MILITIA. 1 As foretold in a former letter to the News and Observer, Senator Sewell's bill passed the .Senate Friday, increas ing the annual appropriation to : the militia of the . diffV rent States from $200,000 to $600,000. As before inti mated, the House may still further in crease the appropriation i to $1,000,000 (the amount asked by the national con vention of militiamen) and, if so,; the Senate will doubtless concur in the in crease. 1 ' ' yl.-: . ; 'DEES HE DIDS'T ! : Speaker Carlisle evidently made no mistake when he appointed Congress man Cox, of North, Carolina, chairman of the House committee on civil Bervice reform. ---New York Evening Post.1 Mr. Carlisle is not in the habit of making mistakes. Washington Post. Neither is Gen Cox, ai some "smart Alecks" will discover to their chagrin PKxcav PABISGS. j! : I - One of Hon. J. W. Reid'a revenue bills will, I learn, be reported favorably from the committee. i U f!ol John Stanles was in Wash ington several days last ;week, looking well and "feeling better.0 i 5 ; ) C. H. Brenner, of North Carolina, has been appointed to a position in the government printing office, i s -8 i- i 1 ' j, :: i; LUWXAK removal from, office was wholly apart m0 to gl.OOO, the cotton in the Trimi ui imiiiMijiiHin mtiii in Lun ili r I . - M . . . M A 4 - r - t f - ; - - TKHCl WM hvi uaiuagpu Let us hope Gladstone's backbone 11 1 .1 . ' i- v, , ; .! r ... wm liana wc strain. SALVATION OIL, : " Th Greatest Cure on Earth for Pain," Will relieve more quickly than any other known remedy. Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Swellings, Bruises, Burns,-1 Scalds, Cuts, Lumbago, Seres, Frost bites. Backache, Wound. Headache. Toothache, Sprain. &c iSoldbyall Drngfeista. Price 25 Centa a Bottle m 1BJ ?,upy not' pu 'II3 la jrai5Uj pnoA oiiav ' o ssaa s aS3JJ J9l S3AVO Apf "B aubj kvuyova i i i:-;li i; :"?:) i "-: i: - T - j I - , .i i! J i , : 5 Vi - - .y -. . . .;,4 -. I I I ' . i : ' t: '. a5! . I . i'l; t -I ,-l. - 'ji.. if; ' . fy T .:. i :: .U X .; , 5 : .ii