T r C. Iand YER. 3.- t VOL. XXVL RALEIGH N. C, FRIDAY MORNING, MAUCH 5. 1886. NO. 94 OfeSER S ();:. i : C I ; V l Absolutely Pure. fhu powder merer varies, A marvel of lmrtr, 'strength sod wbokseomenes. Mort ennomlcal than ordinary klads and cannot be old la 'competition with tbe multitude of low teat, abort weight, alum orpboaphate powder Sold only tn cans. Eotal Baubtg Powds Co., lOSi Wall Street, New York. Bold by W C A A B Stronaeb, George T Rtronack and J & FerraD Co. mm store.. THI BtBttAUT HODU Or HA UIIK. 'y i If people will think for a moment, '.J - . t: . - ' '! ' I ' , oommon aensewill teach them that the merchant who bays goods on tune ' and tells on time most -sell his goods higher to eover his losses. All lines of , merchandise go through a regular chan- CONGRESSIONAL. ;' ' I ' , j TE BEWATiC DEVOTES ALL ITS TIMB TO THE SLA IK BILL. , CMbaon Take t ie MfQBfWt Foealblo eroutf In Ita Favor .j i v JsWS OBijEBVATIONS.f .nj. y. i. ; - 7 : Congressman Springer describes the prevailing fashion of evening dress for women as the "low-and-behold style.'.' M. Pasteur has announced that his system of inoculation proved successful in 325 eases of persons bitten by mad dogs. . . ;i ' ; ' A remarkable fact developed by the recent cold snap in Florida the sweet orange trees - stand the cold better . than Abe sour ones. I r ; : Kttssia! finances are in yery bad shape again so bad, in fact, .that , we may expect shortly to hear that Russia is about to go to war. ; ' General Longstreet'is said to be about to go Washington to force a settle ment by the government of his accounts as United States marshal 'The : news from Paris is: j that Prboe Plonl'lon has issued another manifesto. Plon-Plon is apparently the (jorge i'rahcia Train of Europe. ; - ' Kx?Speaker Randall on March 4 will have been in Congress for twenty -three yeara. Thirty-two yean ago he was elected: to the Philadelphia city councils.- JJ ' : f Th6 judiciary committee of the House has agreed to an adverse report upon! the Senate bill providing for an increase of the salaries of tbe judges of the United States distriot courts to $5,000 per an num. : :- . j . A.' company of Brooklyn amateurs are going tot give : theatrical perfor maaoo for the benefit of a home for eon sumptiTes. Appropriately enough, 'the play they hstve selected for representa tion 5'Th Irnit O.hoat i I I : . S" r : T I atnra inrt if thnxr ninli nnti - The Primrose Leaeue, composed of aontA thn in .k,, fhAmiif kiv ISnglisb ladiejho wish to exert tf bat- guard them, & had meant ino offense ever political ufluenoe they may possess to a Senator from North Carolina. m tbe furtnerance of conservative prin- ; rrl vn Wrib at.tmteil Mt nn tfcA i0 iiU' increubifthe riension of widows Of dU.UUO members. Us and dependent relativna crfdeceaned Tbe Georgia Phosphate Company is soldiers, but allowed Senators to pro- utjw utvruuguiy-urganuea, wiuiapaiu- i ceea wiin ine education dui. Washwqton4 D. C, Marcbi 4. Ssn at. -Mr. Sewell, from tbe : committee oh library, reported favorably a joint resolution accepting from William B. Vanderbilt and Juli Dent 0rant : ob jects of value; and art presented by foreign governments to the late General U. S. Grant. j i j J On the suggestion of Mr. Walls, it was changed to the form of a bill. . On the suggestion of Mr. j Log an, it was also changed so that the name of Mrs, Grant should precede that of Van derbilt. Mr. Logan ' said he; thought that would be th more appropriate or der. The bill then passed. i Mr. Sewell, from the committee on military affairs, reported favorably the House bill for the relief of Gen. Fits-John Porter, with a report giving the views of the majority of the committee. Mr. Sewell added that Mr. Logan ' would, later, submit the views of the jminority. Mr. Riddleberger said that some re marks of his yesterday had been con strued to be offensive personally to some Senators and especially to the Senator from North Carolina.! If anything that could be so construed was printed in the Record he would be glad to erase it before the revised edition of the Record was printed. Bis only object had been to protest against the admission of pro fessional loDbyiflts t4 the fldor of the Senate; men who came to persuade Sen and if they could not! persuade nel of trade. There are distinct profits up capital of $100,000, and owns 1,200 acres of rich pnosphate deposits situated at the e&d-waters o the- Little &itUla river, f Operations will begin in a few weeks. imS . f';" '. ' if I- I The Hon. H. Wi HiUiard hasfbeen requested by the supreme court t of Georgia to deliver before that oourt an , address on,-the- late Robert Toombs. by credit Count tis up: ten p4r cent t-f. ana n. wui .bv the manufacturer who seU to tbe job vToombsi Alexander Stepheni and sworn in on the same day. . i , A- statement has' oeen published to tne eneot that a cabinet crisis is impend- charged amd to each of them an extra ten per cent is added to cover the; losses r ber, ten per sent Vy the jobbeir who ells t? the retail merohant and twenty I The education bill was taken up. The yeas and nays were taken on Mr. Doteh's amendment, offered yesterday, and re sulted yeas 17, nays 28; so the amend ment Was rejected. (It Was jupon this amendment that Mr. Riddleberger rais ed his joint of Order yesterday.) Mr I Logan ; moved hb amendment, already suggested, increasing the appro propriation to a total; amount of ft 136, 000,000 in ten years,' apportioned in a Similar i ratio to the present -bilL The amendment was defeated after : a long idebate. - I I Mr; Gibson favored the bill.: Having spoken fully on it at 'the last; session, he been demonstrated, '1 Mr. Qibson said, that Congress possesses the power ! t torney-veneral garland, and their fixed lo you, sad you bare; at the least snate ! thirty-five per cent w have to pay to cover the losses caused political rehabilitation committed chiefly to her former Uegro'alaves, elevated not only to be free .men, but enfranchised and entrusted with political control: The i conditions referred to warranted the legislation of this bill, as a tem porary expedient to meet a great public exigency. The aid offered should be regarded not as daily, bread, but as medicine for a grave national disorder. Mr. Logan, to test, as he said what the friends of education meant.moved an amendment appropriating $20;000,000 in building school-nouses in communi ties of sparse population, among people no wouia una it comparatively a lmcuit to erect school-houses This amend ment was adopted after a debate which consumed the remainder of the day's session. In its course Mr. Van Wyck said the voting of the colored man of the South was nauseating to the whites Weald these whifetfceuple be any better satisfied with the negroes . voting when they should become educated ? : He ap- fealed to the Senator froiii South Caro ina (Hampton) tor information. Mr. Hampton said he, personally, was not obnoxious to the criticism made by Mr. Van Wyck, for he (Hampton') conld claim that he was the first man in the South after the war, and he believed the first man in America, that proposed to give the negro the right to vote, and he did that immediately after the war. Mr. Van Wyck was proud to hear that, ! but asked "Did the hite, men of South Carolina follow your example in that direction? Did the people of Mississippi follow your example? There was the misfor tune. There had been a leader with the right impulse, but the followers were rebellious as of old." (Laughter.) Mr. Voorhecs said the Senator from South Carolina (Hampton) was too modest to say what he (Voorhecs) would say ; that the people of South Carolina had so far followed that distinguished Senator as to make him Governor of that State iu a way that "stuck" ; and the negroes had made him such a Gov ernor. Mr. Van Wyck was glad of that, too, and glad to know, that Mr. Hampton was bold enough, and brave enough to stand up in advance and advocate the princi ple that became so important a feature of the constitution. Mr. Van Wyck disclaimed any unkindness in bis re marks. . i ' Mr. Logan's amendment provides for $20,000,000 to aid in the building of scboolhousea in localities where the opulation is sparse ; not more than one- the expense of a building to come from the fund and no more than $150 in any event. . : M The speaker laid before 'the House a communication from the secretary of war, recommending an appropriation for employ- about ballot-box stuffing and then de monstrated by his own speech if there was corruption and villainy and iniquity shown in Ian election in any country on earth, it was in the State of Ohio, and in the cityiof Cincinnati, of which the gen tleman was so proud. After; short i speeches by Messrs. Springer, Burrows, Hammond and others, Mr. Henderson, of Iowa, took the I floor iand again attacked Southern democrats, saying ho had no apologies for anything contained in his previous speech. iHome of his former utterances. whicn dm oeen most criticised and an swered.ibe now repeated and he closed the debato. he said, as he had begun it, without one rancorous feeling in his heart. In the course of his speech Mr. Henderson Was frequently interrupted by the applause of his party colleagues. Mr. Warner, of Ohio, replied to an at-i t&cK upon him by Mr. tiros venor and in turn assailed Mr. Grosvenor After; farther debate the committee rose and reported the bill to the House. Mr. Townsend, who had charge of the bill, took the floor, but expressed his desire of yielding to a motion to adjourn, as he might wish to make some remarks on the! bul tomorrow. lhe House would not i listen to this idea and cries of "vote!" "vote!" came from all sides. Mr. Townsend stood his ground and de clared that! the yeas and nays must be taken on the bill, A roll-call, he said. would demonstrate that the inflammatory and unjust speeches made on the other side were uncalled for and a waste valuable time. He went into ad rgument to show that the charge that commiBSiener Dudley had turned the pension: bur eau into a partisan machine was true and read from affidavits and men who never pay. ' Upon each one of - 4 ;..-.; I 5. these ; transactions six per cent can be '' i I..:.-'- I. taken for cash or - ; :if r-. i -1 : . i . '$-3 cent, making 48 cti. on the dollar. This; r, under the constitution to make a grant extra duty pay to enlisted men h m:i ".""fv rv,r tj- ma. a.,4 ad miimut ed at Fort Monroe-, Jtererred. r-. hicb-iou o a reporter :S -You can deny the story. XTTt: : Mr. Crfcm. of Georiria- from the eom- -ihi for there is not One word of truth in;it, t rZZ.Z:? .m it on ntd th viw. YT T TT Ttf w v -"v ,r-w"E r f maka a trrant hf nnblic monvs from the of the minority on the DU1 to imnf rtr nnril it niAnin 1, Vurtis, ot Syracuse, Says I -aaan-v kn..r Pamivlj in mA nt there are 10,000,000 cows in the United I ajVAB;n In 9. 1 T mti.t wnfe. it i Uies , ine money value otuietr year-i.-i, i;vfl that to dficlk war. so . . M ; n . . . .... . . . . - I ST w VI M " - - " - - w ly -product ia i,uoo,ooo,ooo, ana ne iMe to abuse that I would hot resort to ' ? ' is a tax which the "consumer has to pay '." :! U : . ' :f :iJ- i and it must all come from the bar d '!.' ". " : i l- I'v' Wi '-'-' earned dollars of the laboring masses.; , . . 7 - ; . - 7 i - ;1i" ' Nowjyoucan see the . difference between the credit and cash yltems. This credit 7:;J J"' ; , - .. ,!",.- ft i plan j takes from the producers just u.. ,.;(' - - - 1 . '1 about one half what they grow to foot ' : - ' ap the bills of the men who never pay Kow how do you like the system T ;We should think you would get very tired A it- Any system which detracts from f - tbe prosperity of the country is a curse - to it. The credit system is full of dis- ii'-' aster. Get out of it. h The RACKhiT STuRE has all the ad . 1 Tantages of having: buyers always in tne jnarket, with the cash in hand to secure bargains from the disastrous results which come to men who go in debt. Now 4odw to the RACKKT STORE, get your goods and save your money. - We are Just opening some Spring Styles Prints. . ' - Choioe for 5c; worth 7o. (ir eat bargains - an jUleached and Brown Muslins and Motions of all kinds. We are also agents for Butterick's Patterns and : Publica tions. Sheets and CaUlogues for Spring, Fashions just received. Call and see them and get a catalogue. : ; r VOLNEY PURSELL & CO, incorpor ate '.the Atlantic & Pacific ship railroad company. Committee of the whole. The minority, after detailing the objections hich they have to the bill, say : "We I 1 01 tne P,a P"nt necessary it a pujrpoBe to esUbliah an undeviat- regard this proposition as one . granting a total of eighteen per their support $3t&00,000,000 Last in.( nifmjteo!poUcy,and would exercise a subsidy that, may and probably will j ww,vvv,v- yvwa w it only under the stress and pressure of 000,000., This is hurting the diiryjin- ordin4rT- circumstances. Justification lor iu exercue at uiib buiie grows vui ui the most t calamitous and stupendous tcrests. The enrrent issue of Harper's p, sar says fine irenob cashmeres are largely imported by first-class' pier chants, and; wilt be used in combination with ; the - new sheer fabrics that are striped all Over, with plush Or with yel-' vet. . The softest doll' colors are Been in these cashmeres, but most prominent are the bronse and moss green shades iand all ecru and 1 beige tints. To edmbine green an4 beige is one of-the fancies for spring dresses that have already declared themselves in: certain fabrics; for;in! transaction of our centurr. the war between enlightened and powerful Com monwealth of : the American' Union, lasting, it is true, only four year years, yet barked by a sacrifice j of property and life, and followed by political and social revolutions- without parallel in the history of civilised men. The North that emerged triumphant from the con flict is not in all respects the North which entered into it. ; Material changes have taken place fin the vital atanoa the basaue and dranerv of brome conditions of society, resulting in the . : . . i. ' . . I ' 7 .f .11 . green cashmere, with a vest and panels disappearance oi ine oio, simpw ways or sxirt front of ecru canvas, with lengthwise! stripes I of bronse blusq in groups, or else.'with 'cross stripes of plush in gradnated widths, quite broad acosl the foot, and becoming the merest line near the belt.;. Beige cashmere, when used for Vtho basque and draperies, is associated with a similar sheer fabrk; of of living and the creation of a class, on one . hand, which possesses more con tracted wealth and power than.any order of nobility in any nation of Europe and exercise more extensive authority over take from the public treasury $37,500,- OOO for the nenent or a private corpora tion located and to be operated ex cluBivelyin a foreign country, without any corresponding benefit to our country or people, ' f In tbe morning hour the House passed a bill tor a puniic ouiiamg at Asnoviue, N. C at a cost not exceeding $30,000, and for a public building at Savannah, Ga-, at a cost not exeeding $200,000. On motion of Mr. Kandall further tie bate on the pension bill was limited to three hours, lhe ..debate was almost entirely political, with only incidental and occasional references to the pending pension bill Mr. Cabell, of Va., de- predated the slurs Which he- sai l nad been cast upon Southern members by the gentleman from Iowa (Henderson.) He had been a Confederate, but when he surrendered, he . had surrender ed in good faith and renewed an honest devotion to the Union of tbe btates and the' occupations oi the people man tne the constitution of the country and Federal government itself, and on the whatever the gentleman might ay or other nana, snowier class, aepenaing whatever he might intimate, he was as eoruround. on which are brolm plush npon their daily labor for their dally true and loyal today to the Union of States Btripea, or else a group of stript-s otdif- ferent colors forming one wide stripe, such as porcelain blue, chaudron, bronse green, brdwn and myrtle green -rScribner's Monthly says it is a corn- bread and separated from the former class by a deep and widening chasm. Without meaning to exaggerate the evils liable to grow from the disproportionate distribution of wealth, it would have to be admitted that education was mdis- TOBACCO.. ; he HVT.H noa or the tasuff du ties OH WRAPPERS. Npvrlsl Com r !- WlUa Btpmtiii Uvm r ah Tr4i. 1 f WASHiNGTOir, D. C, March 4 The sub-committee of the ' ways and means committee, consisting of Messrs. Hewitt, Breckinridge, of ! Arkansas, and Mo- Kmley, gave a bearing today to several gentlemen, tobacco-growers in Connecti cut, New York and Wisconsin, on the subject of the proposed clause in i the tariff bill relating to tobacco. The present law provides that leaf tobacco suitable for wrappers, of which it re quires more than 100 1 leaves to weigh a pound, shall nav adutv of 75 oentsj. Ar guments made before the sub-committee were to the effect that the limitation of a xiiOenr tbaoidt wn sotrru cab oliwa. - i - ; - u: MratriM WIT-SI ordr mmf Saleldo S)jr a StrMarr trmm UU StatU Or- . . I -.; . "::7;i:f A special to the Charleston News and " . t , ' Courier says a horrible tragedy occurred ' at Piedmont Tuesday morning. James . ; . 1 W. King, si resident of Piedmont, after accompanying to the depot bis brother-in-law, Phillips, who took the up-freight train, returned to his dwelling in1 the ; ' ' village, murdered his wife by - stabbing t-. her in the breast and throat with a knife, ' , and after this bloody deed cut his own ' " throat. I " Parties who suspected something wrong broke open the door of their room . and found Mrs. King lying on the floor in a pool of blood and her husband lying . across her, both dead: end , the . knife ' . . lying I in aun' blaaiWhat lad. to this dreadful event seems to be wrapt in ' mystery. Evidently Kbg and his wife iw leaves to a pound should De omitted did not live amicably together. A cir- and that the duty should be imposed on j cumstance creating this belief is that all leaf tobacco commercially known as I King had recently notified merchants of wrappers, 7b cents per pound if not riedmont not to let his wife have goods stemmed and $1 a j pound if stemmed. I on his account. - King earned his living Representative Buck,: of Connecticut, by ditching and some of his children argued in the same! sense, and E. M. worked as operatives in the Piedmont Crawford, of New York, president of factory. But little can be learned of the tobacco board of trade, gave ! his the people. They came to Piedmont as strangers from North Carolina. It is surmised that King had some family trouble and had become insane when he committed the awful tragedy. ' King was about forty-five or fifty years of Age. They leave, it is said, nine children, several of them very young. f L . . fp: , A lVoveljr Goaaflzlai. "What a lovely complexion,' views as to the proper wording of the law. The main objection Was to the competition of Sumatra tobacco,- which it is claimed interferes very sensibly with Connecticut seed leaf, i H Abvlll's PwbUe Baltdtaa-. ; - Special to the NswfAan Obsbrvik. Washingtox, Mrcb 4. The bill for public building at . Asheville passed etters fn fifeMn the pension bureau, ref- the House to-day. kepresentaUve Jonn atinc to tha Cincinnati election of 1884i. I j i. jl. fi- r i ! . . n F I Mill II1MI1H m M,W..fII 111 II. II VITT .u-i u: i i i ; : a I; t i r whuvk until nuiuicrs uu nccu uruiuueu T ,,U From Wiahlartoia. maincreaseq pensiuus ny omoiam w ,g w Difl teh fiaiamore Sim me pension "nice, u tuey wouiu vote me i - ; i ; Republicanktickot- laren .o. Mr, itandall moved the previous ques- rnumerous peutions from various sec tion, which was the order. The yeas I tions of the country are being sent to and nays were taken and the bill was the House of Representatives, urging the passed;! yeas 241, nays 1. Mr. Bennett passage of the Blair educational bill of N. O., cast the only 'dissenting vote; when it shall reach! tha: body. That it we often hear persons say. "I wonder what she does for it?" In every case? the purity. and! real loveliness of the com plexion depends upon, the blood. "Those who have .sallow, blotchy faces may make their skin smooth and healthy by taking enough of Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" to drive out the humors lurking in the system. I Mc Randall moved to reconsider the votej add table that motion, but Mr. Reedi interposed with an amendment to strike out the last three words in the title and upon -this motion he proceeded to reply to Mr. Townsend and more particularly to. the attack .on commis sioner Black for furnishing to individual members for partisan uses documents from the official archives of his bureaus! the" course of the further debate which 'this attack created it appeared that the letters and affidavits read by Mr Tow nshend were not a part of the official records of the pension bureau! but had been gathered by commissioner Black outside of the line of his official duty. ! Mr. Reid withdrew his' amend ment and the motion to reconsider and lay on the table prevailed without fur ther objection. ; Mr. Grosvenor, of Ohio, Amid that in the heat of debate he used ; language towards Mr. Warner which be wished I to have omitted front the Record. Mr. Warner said he desired to withdraw any objectionable language which he might have used Mr.; Wilson, of West Virginia, front tne committee on aDDroDnations. re ported the District of Columbia approf criation bill and it was referred to the committee of the whole. The speaker announced the special committee to investigate the facts con eerning the ownership of the Pan-lueo- tricr telephone stock by certain public A single copy of the ' first edition of 'Pickwick' was sold in London the other day for $140. . Pby-tlclans Hv Fond Omt j , That a contaminating and foreign ele ment in the blood, developed by indi- eestion, is the cause of rheumatism.; This settles upon the sensitive sub-cutaneous covering of the muscles and ligaments of the joints, causing"1 constant and shifting pain, and. aggregating as a cal careous, chalky deposit .which produces stiffness and distortion of the joints, - No fact which experience has demon strated in regard to Hostetter's Stomach adopted, the chances , of success in the Bitters has strongervideTue".tof upr House will be doubtfuL Represent- Pvt than this: namely that this medioiM five Forney, of AlabAma whose long of comprehensive uses" checks. the service in the House and hi4 -knowledge formidable and atrocious disease, bor is of the members enable bim to form a U less positively established that it is pretty correct estimate of the sentiment preferable; to the poisons often used to of that body, says the educational - bill j arrest it, since the medicine contains 'ill certainly pass there if it comes in a only saiutAry ingredients, is is aiso p fair shape. He says there is a very de- I signal remeay for malarial fevers, eon cided majority in favor of aiding public 1 etipation, dyspepsia, kidney, and Wad- eomty ana ouier f aisor- will pass the Senate is a foregone con clusion, and friends' of the measure are beginning to bring: their influence: to bear upon the House." The ; success of the bill in the House depends very largely upon Jhe shape in which it final ly passes the Senate. If the Allison amendment, to apportion the fund to States having both white i and black schools in proportion to the illiteracy of tne two races, snail oe incorporated in the bill, or if any provision : looking to federal control of the fund shall: be education from the federal treasury, bu there is a strong and determined minor ity who oppose this; that if the Senate shall incorporate objectionable features in tne dui ne tears it would arouBe a discontent which might result in its de feat. Representative Willis, who 'had charge of the bill in the last Congress, believes that the favorable sentiment in the House is strong enough; to pass it, no mattter in what shape it may ;' 0ome from the Senate, after striking out ob jectionable features. It is scaroelv to be : -7 I z : K I ..... .. officers, as follows: Boyle, Oats, Eden, expected that the two houses will agree der ailments, debility ders. See that you get the genuine. Wiggins, the Canadian weather pro phet, says there will be a - great storm, with high tides, on the Atlantic coast on the 7tk instant. : i: and the constitution as : ttio man who sat in the White House or as the man who in an unmanly way made an innuendo to the contrary. But as long as he was a Representative k,. wAnli) AtA . a k & limn (tlit TvrAnt-tt in mon comjilsint that tbe farm fnd fenn pCnsable for' the welfare ot a people's u hU' conscience dictated J Standing behind the widow, some; gentlemen aSsailed the Southern members for their votes. Why not come in an honest way and say that the South must bear th i i BEWARE ! . or ;: ADULTERATED LARD, i t . It looks well: but the odor from It When coding detect it. Kxamluo tor jounelves aa4 b sure you are not uitina: it. . CASSARD'S "STAR BRAND" LARD JS OCABAJiTKKU FOR. Pat up In ah tle ot packmfMv .Ask your jrruoer lor It and if h iuun't tt la stock MDd your address to B. U. WO DKLL, tut- lu. N. C , you will he suppiutu. ,? G. Caisiard & Son, Curers of tBe Cabrated Star. Brand MUd Cured Hami and BraW Baaon. i QKAXTES AJTD SANDSTONES. , iP. Linehan l Co . 408 Fayettevttle 8t Ealelgli, K. O, ' Am nrafmrad ta waakm Metnets the MHl Favorabla Tatrna f or snDDtrlac GraaiU 8and stones ot tat Bart Quality fa aty Quantttks ilMirad. Quarries ai Hoalenoa and Wada boro, N. U Ample fautttos for handlins; ani saakug sek shtpmants to say point, attfcsrt wow tmn life are ndtj appreciated by our people, We long tor the more elegant pursuits, or tne ways afd fashions of he town But the 'farmer has the most sane and natural occupation, and ought to find life sweeter if, less: highly seasoned than any other ' lie alone, strictly speaking, has a home. 'How can a man take root and thrive without land! He Write: his history ttpon his field. How many ties, how many resources he has! His friend ship with his: cattle, his team, his Hog and his t trees; tbe satisfaction, in ? his growing crops, in his improved fields; his intimacy with nature, bird! and beast and with'the quickening elemental fores; hia co-operation with the cloud, the ea sons, heatf wind,; rain and frost. Noth ing will take the various social distem pers which 'the city and artificial 'lite breed ojit of a man like farming like direct and loving contact with the soil. It draws out the poison. - It bumbles him, teaches him patience and reverence and restores, the proper tone : to his sys tem. Cling to the farm, make much Of it, pat yourself into it, bestow Vour heartjsnd your brain upon it, bo that it shall savor bf yon and radiate your virtue after your day s work u done 77. T7I . m f . government; indispensable for! the so hi tion of problems involved ;in the rela tions of the citizen to the State and the limitation on corporations. " The peo ple will be enabled to govern themselves expense of pensions, and not come in an with universal suffrage by means of uni versa! education ; or sooner or later they will be eoverned. as in all the most powerful nations of Europe, by perma. nent class distinctions with special priv ileees. backed bv standing armies. Our own country is the only exception to this rule among tne great ana rion nations, Fwr! SwW 'I Loxnoir,lMsrch 4. The governmont has tolegraned authority to Lord Put (fern to defaitely annex Bamah. ? umnanly way and thrust continually in its face and say "We are your friends and we love you, but yoq .otused this debt to be put on tbe oountry and we mean-to mak-i you pay it.". That was the true inwardness of all this t;lk and it exhibited a want of manliness for men to assail others whom they supposed to Hall, Hale,; Ranney, Millard, Hanback and Moffatt. ; The House; at 1:45, ad journed. - X i ; , m m m i ' i ilifaifso Loavlna- California. El Paso, Tex. , March 4 In the last few; days a! large cumber of Chinese frnm : llalifrirnia have nassed throntrh til rato uu iueir wajr w i vneuui and Texas cities. Man v of them are also Kcating in territorial towns .- of New Mexico and Arizona. San Franoipco is represented - as Bwarniing with Mongolians wbo have been driven out of Qregan and Washington Territory and; the pressure, 'it is claimed, is being relieved by the Six Companies shipping them East where tbe antagonism against the; Chinese is not so strong as on the Pacific Blope. This influx, however, into the Territories of Arizona and New Mexico has; aroused latent anUgouism there aqd : anti-Chinese leagues hawe already been organised at Socorro and other towns in New Mexico, and at Tucson and Tombstone, Arizona, which places are suffering from the heavy in crease in their Chinese population and which may lead to their violent eviction, as was recently the case in Washing ton territory. in all particulars without first referring the bill to a conference committees Th advocates of the measure in the $ Sonate are not going to let it be sacrificed be cause of tenacity for Senate provisions. They will concede a good deal for its final Success, and therefore 'the outlook indicates that tbe bill will become a law. ! l I ' ' POND'S EXTRACT: During severe and changeable weather no one subject o Rheumatic Pains should be one day without Pond's Extract. It is of the greatest benefit for both Chronic and Acute or Imflamatory .Rheumatism. Pond's Extract is a wonderful and sooth ing remedy, and jpossessea decided ano- . dyne properties.The pain, lameness and . soreness are relieved, and the entire dis ease often cut short and subdued, l or sale everywhere. Be sure to get the Genuihoi- . ; v ThePresident overwhelms the Senate. ll- s LoNnoa, March 4. A News Paris correspondent sayt Pasteur asks a mil lion francs with which to start a hospital and fifty thousand francs per annum, for its support. Prime minister de iTeyitinot is in favor of the state s granting the latter Bum. ! .: mm and apd education as the surest safeguard of a republican government. : Better an intelligent ballot than the bayonet; bet ter co-opera ti cm and good understanding than measures of repression, Tbe South of today is not in all respects tbe South as she stood before the world : twenty- five years ago! Never !was the discom fiture and ruin bf a country more com plete. The exhaustion of Prussia un der Frederick, of of trance under JXa poleon, was not ; more thorough. Suc ceeding her. militaryj overthrow, she witnessed; all her local institutions, in dustrial, financial,, educational and re ligious, all the organised forces of her society, snaiierea ana puiveruea; ineir A lame back paaion, out St. away. is not a pleasant corn- Jacobs Oil! will drive it An order for ten hours' work abd in creased pay lias gone over all the B.and V. lines, affecting 1U,UUU men. I j, ; Let us invoke any influence and agency, he helplosf and unable to say anything before the population becomes too dense m return for unkind, ungenerous and unwieldly'in favor qt popular rignts unmanlr remarks The gentleman from Ohio (Butterworth) had gone out of his way to tell tbe Southern people how wicked they were. . uentleinen wno undertook to talk about affairs in the South gained their information from a miserable set of vampires and vermin, that had fallen upon the South after tbe war with a more blighting effect than the locusts and lice of Egypt. This stuff was brought up from the South by those creatures who were so miserable that they had been spewed up by the North and had settled on the South. He wondered what these creatures had been made for, unless God in His wisdom, in order to show what a miserable thing He could make, had created; the carpet- Very foundations torn ap and destroyed; bagger and put him down in the South- oompUto bonleversement: and her l erB States. The gentleman bad talked !lfw York Oottan Fatur Njcw York, March 4. C. L. Green & Co,'s report: on cotton futures says: The bull feeling" continues rampant, with another advance of about he. made, business showing up full and market closing firm at nearly the highest rates of the day,; Some of tbe large opera tors j have continued steady: and free sclLri, and there has been a considerable amount of realizing, but the offerings did not stem the tide of the demand and were readily exhausted with only a few temporary reactions. New Orleans has been a large buyer to oover, and mate rially assisted the improvement abroad. Liverpool shows a somewhat responsive leeiing, dui tne comment ioiiows Slowly and j indifferently and keeps bids well below the purity of our market. TU Froaclk Prtue not to b xiU(l. Pvbis, Erano. March I 4. Amid great ; excitement the chamber of deputies this afternoon rejected a motion for the immediate expulsion of the French princes from France. : The vote against the measure was S45. to 170 its fvo Fortnno Favor ai Poor WonaaM. - I : Annie 8m 1th, colored, cook and washer. reniding at 113 Liberty street was the lucky holder of one-fifth of the ticket In the Louisi ana State Lottery wbleb draw the eaDita.: prize of $75,000 jon Tuoaday, Feb. 9u She was 8en at the office of the company yesterday noon, anu gave tne following iacu in relattn to the good fortune which has befallen her In a quiet way, devoid of the least excitement, : ahe 8Rid In ubtUDce: i "Mr osdm ia Annie Smith.! I am 40 reark of age and a widow. My place of natvtty Is Monroe, La. I came here to " live about five rears ago, since wnea l aave been earning my lying by cooking and washing. On Wednrs- dy, Feb. 3, my attention was attracted to ticket in the monthly,: drawing bearaig the numben 67,706. 'The eembination pl&sed me ani ooncludiag to try my lack on (ic, nd purchase of one-fifth of the ticket, for which I. paid the sum' of tl. This morning,: Feb. 10. 1 called at th" office ot toe company to learn the reault ol mr venture, and to my : g-et -toaishment and delight was told that I hl won 115,000." Hereupon tbe fortunate woman exhibited tbe winning ticket to the reporter, and said : 'Sir, that is all what I know to tar, xoept to express moat fervent thanks for the bleating that has come upon me." i i i ghe waa eongratulated of the reporter and by everyone in the office, and; adrl ed to take raod eare of her money. 8he received a check tor the amount on the Hew Orleans National Bank, and departed as peacefully at she cams but with gra nude : busy at her heart and plainly oepictea in her boa t face. The for tune all comes to her and to her owa dm. aa she tuu no children living) and is alone in the world. New uneuns (La.) Flcayune, Fetn " ' ('?'. !' 3) Man Ootnomp- MMUBnttft (MM Kfrmft m WOW wnirjm Strip vamttcm-iaoa, ano mm !fM4inUahrltarMO; W. SALVATIOrJOIL, Tbe Greatest Core on Eartta fo : Peto." Will reUeve more quickly than any other known remedy. Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Swellings, Bruises, Burns, Scalds, Cuts, Lumbago, Sore a, Frost bites, Backache, Wvucds. Headache. Toothache, Sprain. &c Sold by all Proggiata. Price 25 Cents a Bottle. KRAMER'S 5 CENT PUG ! ' t NONS B3TTER on the market Made jf Belected leaf and caaoot be excelled. , ; MANUFACTURED BT amnel Kraineif & Co -1 . it '1, ';;i7. i-4 7.N i:

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