si vs r fe! ' ( ' !; : ! Observer; v - j p i ' g . ii IS AND aSSBm if : -a . at V VOT. XXVI. RALEIGH N. jC., THUKSDAT MORNING. MARCH II. 1886. NO. 99 r. mm ; At)o!iit PQre. rhu powder never varies. A marvel of ,nrlfT, strength and wboletomenea.' More ennomtesJ than ordinarv kinds and cannot ba tM la eomp&ftion with the multitude of lowj ' Bold nly ta cut Botal Backo towns : Co 103 Wall Street, New York Sold by W C A A B Stronach, George T Etmnach aid J B Ferrall & Co. 1 THK BgtRUAlS HODU OF RAL1UH. If people will think for a moment, common sense will teach them that the merchant who buys goods on time and tells on time must sell his goods higher to coTer his losses. All lines of merchandise go through a regular chan nel of trade. There are distinct profits charged and to each of them am extra " :i : ten per cent is added to xover the losses by credit. Count this up: ten per cent ' by the manufacturer who sell to the job ber, ten pel sent bj the jobber who ells to the retail merchant and twenty ive 'per cent by the merchant who sells to you, and you have at the least esti- mate thirty-five per oent which you ,, i - i ,. , - I , : ' " nave to pay to cover theloases caused by men who never pay. Upon each one of 'these transactions six per cent can be ', taken for cash or a total of eighteen per cent, making 48 cts. on the dollar. Thu is a tax which the consumer has . to pay u- . ;" '- ' and it must all jcome from the hard- -. ' ; . . '. earned dollars of the laboring masses. Now you can see the difference between the credit and eash systems. This credit 'plan takes from the producers -just about one half what they grow to foot up the bills of the men who 1 never pay. Now how do vou like the system T YVe should think you would get very tired jf it. Any system which detracts 'from the prosperity of the oountry is a curse to it. The. credit system is full of dis aster. Get out of it. '. .! The KACKKT STuRE has all the ad vantages of having buyers always in the market, with the cash in hand to secure bargains from the disastrous results rhusheome to men who so in deot- now eome to the RACKET STORE, get your gooaf anu sayv ywur muuej, sj just opening seme Spring Styles Prints, Choice for c; jrorth 7c. Great bargains :in Bleached and Brown Muslins and Notions of all ainds. -We are ah agents for ButtericJt'a Patterns and Fublica- tions. Sheets and Catalogues for Spring Fashions just received. Call and sec them and get a catalogue. VOLNEY PUR8ELL & CO. . or i ADULTERATED LARD. It looks well, but the odor trom it when cooking detecU tt. JCxamlae for jouraelves and be Mire you are not tutu it. .; CASSARD'S "STAR BRAND'.' LARD its ocaa'TSBO rcaa. Put up In ail stj ol packaK. - Ask your grocer lor tt and If h luwntlt to stock lend toui adtircHto B. U. WO VKLt, ttajn eltflt. H.O, aaa 701 wUl be supplied, j sr. ua&feajpd & Son, iiAuTlJioKa., bU. l Curers of tu Ulebrated ua Brand Hlld Cured Uams and Breaktaat Baoon. GRANITES AND. SAND8TONK8. - P. Linehan & Co: 40O fayetuvu Bald, Jt. O, re prepared 10 make aeatrasU en tM Most rVfubl Term tor upiilo; eraolte 8aa flauti of tbe beet (jututty ia aajr uaaatula elsslred. uusmae at ueaofcrson aao bora,N. U Amv4o tacUiiksior teaaunx an ZTA f qmek htpmaatse auy KOlat, itaerw RUM STORE BEWAKE riNt(ei,Mc3Me. , , sjoleetty - v ; nkws observations. I I EllaiWheeler-Wileox "says nothing flatters a man's vanity like being told he is hot like other men. - - An Italian astronomer declares that the inhabitants of Mars are making sig nals to this' planet, and he is trying to discover what they are up to. J A new bill to pension all the sur- L Tiring soldiers and sailors of the Mexi can war,; who have, served at least Bixty days, has been reported to the House by the committee on pensions. . Town Topics says just now poker parties are much; in Vogue in New York, and there are; several really brilliant players among unmarried, as well as married, .women in society. There f are two or three whose luck is proverbial, and they bluff," ; "raise you," : "see you" aa4 ''rlfca isj the pot" with as much sang froid as- a professed gambler. -The Pennsylvania board of health is makiag preparations to hold a national sanitary oonviibtion in Philadelphia in May: It is : intended to make the con vention one of - the largest ever held. Invitations will be sent to physicians and sanitary engineers throughout the' United States and Canada and to the representatives of the national board of healtji. c i- i ' : iIow doubtful the relation is be tween sises, and values was well . illus trated at the Morgan sale of brioa-brac ih.New York. Monday evening.- A lit tle. Chinese .porcelain vase brought eighten thousand .dollars out of the pocket of a Baltimore collector, in whose city excellent brjck dwellings, one hun dred and fifty thousand times as: laree as hK vase, change . hands daily at half the price, t : I - V-Jet and colored iridescent beads,; also brown wood hcad for dresses j are again imported in gallons that have straight edges, or'else with one edge only : scalloped and the upper edge straight, to iorm dog-collars and cufis, and also in verjr ; large ornaments that will ooveit tix entire back of mantles or else their fronts i ih Vest Bhape- i A novel combination Is that of oxidised silter, with, jet beads leaves or antique beads of the silver being set In the midst of jet beads of different sixes, some fine, and seed-like, others large and flat as nail-heads and many out to droop in flower shapes, ot like bangles, sequins, eto.; : As jet b to .be used on colored dresses, if is found dombined with color ed beads, especially with garnets and; with ; finely cut steel beads ; Another novel way of inlroducine a littl color amid jets is that of adding clusters of real seeds, such as linseed and the seeds of the ; firTtree. " Cashmere colors in single ornaments ana m gauoons j are; shown inlth! iniallest fine beads like mosaic bits. ; ;The I rosary I carved beads are now : most seen in! brown shades, and are very effective in the new leather trimmings, that are grlloout made of narrow leather strips braided; together and 4otted with leads. There are also undressed kids of natural beige shadesi cut in very fine strips, and made up fin balls, frinzea and caUboni! with wood beads, and also with class ! Steel-colored glass beads aud other col ored crjstaj beads are effective trim-: mings, and are to be used alike on bon-j nets and son ' dresses. Parisienhes con-; aider jet trimmings as( sppropriate fori coh)red wooL dresses as Americans do; for their best black silks, and use them on bronie, i brown, or blue woolens,: Grenadines ' ;tof , fine net, with fine jet; beads in he mashes or in "all-over' designs, are gain seen among the newest goods. Jettrimmings of loug slender, tassels promise t6 be restored to favor, and there are many mixtures of color ed beads, such as garnet, bronze, or steel, with iet infringes. Bronze beads and eopper beads of -different shades are about to supersede the eilt beads so much used last year v .. : Unless a return is made; to a con stantly cropDed. apil, exhaustion must follow -It; mav take: a Ions term of years before, the, accumulated fertility of the prairie nas : peen so mucn reaucei that manure: must be applied to insure a profitable crop. ; Ihe poorer a sou gets the more necessary to; make complete returns pf the plant food, needed for the trrnwth f the , saoceedinsr oron. AOilS that have been long cropped may be xpoaea upon as lactones mvu vuwu vue crude materials are poured, and out of them the manufactured products are ob- tained. The: food materials thai man needs to' supply are included ; under the jtmH itisMMilind fe)rtilisen. If the amount of plant food applied to and re- j tamed in the soil exceeds that taken off in the crops, the land is improving in fertility. All Alif UaM. St Loois. Mo. , March 10. -Perfect quiet reigns atj all the yards ind depots owned by the roads .whose employees have struck y All passengers trains left from their accustomed places at the union depot this morning and most of them on time At the Iron Mountain yards no, force is on ! duty, except that sufficient to-make up the passenger trains. All the engines there have been placed in the ; round-house except one used for switching purposes- No die turbance of any kind occurred at that place. ; At the Missouri Pacific yards the same quietness prevails. Small groups of strikers assembled early this morn ing, ' and ' these together with those guarding the property of the railway company! aid a fe r yard masters now employed as switchmen, are the only ones to be seen there. j r Bsbxiw. Prussia, March 10, A dis astrous fire occurred today in a nax drying houso Oels, a 8ilesia. Several wot town : of Prussian women were burned to death, and many others injured. The total iuunber of easaltief U thirty-lye hGHESSIO.NAL. R. PtfiR'S LEHOTUf ARD KE.ABOR. U i Are ANSWER ' Tm MMtor Edaandi' rrwtaMlM '4 With tb PmldMt. or i WabhIhqtom, i). C, March 10 Sin at. -During the transaction of routine morning, business (the pceseptation of reports from committees,' etc.i) Mr. Blackburn said : " Mr., President, I am directed by the committee on naval af fairs to report favorably on the nomina tion which I send to the desk. "What is that?' said Mr. Harris, "A nomina tion?' 'Mr. Sherman's breath seemed to have been taken away, , After a mo ment's hesitation he said, in something of an undertone, "It will be withheld." Mr, Blackburn begged pardon of the chair.! I j . i j -: Tbi chair laid ibefortl the Senate Mr. Logan's resolution, offered yesterday, to refer to the committee ion rulesi for in vestigation, the letter of Mr, Eads de nying that he (Eads) had any' represen tatives oh the floor of the Senate. Mr, Rlddleberger found in the" reso lution and . Eads' letter to Logan, as printed in today's Record, an attack upon hiinselt' for which he held Mr. Logan responsible and against which Mr. Logan protested. The controversy between these two gentlemen Occupied the greiter' part of the time until 2 o'clock, when the matter went over without f action, the chair then laying before the Senate; a resolution from the' judiciary committee concerning the re- lations of the Senate and the President. Mr, Pugh said he hid expressed his views fully upon; the subject of the de bate m the' report made fronj the ju diciary .committee by the minority, and the main object he had in what jhe had to say in-'reply to the Venator from Vermont was to prevent, if it was in his power to do so, (which he admitted was difficult undertaking) to prevent the Senator from changing the character of the question between the Senate and the President. The real character of that controversy could not be misunderstood or misrepresented, as it had arfeen upon theacts apparent upon record and re ported by the majority Of the judiciary committee. When the Senator from Vermont was at the wheel he Bteered by his own chart; he never ran on straight lines; ha never consulted other sailors, and be lost his temper when there was any question! of the skill of, his seamanship; and when the officer of the ship under took to select a crew to man it without his advice and consent he instantly headed mutiny. At the risk of incurring the displeasure of his honorable and distin guished friend he should call k reckon ing so that we might understand where we are , and whither we are j drifting. What were the facta by which it is the duty of ; all of us to be; guide! ? They were few and simple. : On the, 17th of July, 1885, George M. Duskin, being d is tr lot :, attorney of the southern d's- trict of Alabama, was suspended by the President and on the same day John DA uuxuet wu ucBiguaieu to uiacuarge ue duties of that office. On the 14th of December, 1885, the Senate being in session,' Burnett was npmniated to the Senate,, to get its advice and consent to his appointment.; That nomination was referred to the judiciary cominittee and it lay there over a month- Ini the mean time, on the 20th.of December! 1885, the term of .office of George M. Duskin expired the 25th of.January,I886. One month after the term of Mr, Duskin had expired he was no longer an incumbent of office. A resolutioq was sent by the. Senate: to the attorney general. (The Senator here read the resolution of the Senate -calling for the papers in the Duskin case and for what purpose he asked.fwas that the information sought by the Senate of the attorney general. ) The m.-jorjty of the committee stated distinctly the purpose, for which the Senator read from the; majority report a passage ending with the declaration that publio interest and public duty would require that the facts be made known in order that the Senate may un 'derstandingly and promptly advise their removal. It was useless Mr. Pueh continued (for i him to read other passages in the report . On making the same statement mat tne use the Senator intended to make of docu ments and papers sought from the attor ney general wad to enable, the Senate to exercise the power of revising the act oi uie rnoTai OI sain oy e rresi- dent 3 What was the character of the information sought by the Senate from the office of the attorney general ? The resolution spoke for itself on that sub ject f "Resolved, That the attorney gen eral of the United States 1 be and he hereby is directed to transmit to the Senate copies of all documents and papers." Not public ; documents ; r not official documents ; not public or official papers; but private documents and private p pers, relating exclusively to an official aot of the President in the suspension of Uuskin as district attorney. The in quiry proposed by the cenate was to he made with tne Knowledge of tbe fact that more than four weeks before the resolu tion was offered to the senate the term of Duskin had expired, j Then what possible use. could be made of infor mation sougat. in mat case 1 it was a pure .fiction. ; Why the report of the majority declared that information was wanted to enable the Senate to discharge the great duty imposed uppu it of mak ing inquiry as to the propriety of an official act by the President, the power t6 do which was expressly conferred upon him by law to be exeroised within his ; discretion. If they ; had decided that the removal was improper or un wise, what would have been the effect of the decision ? Could it have restored Duskin? Was he still a suspended officer awaiting the adjournment of the Senate to be restored to the duties of his office ? The Senate was today engaged in an in quiry 'about the matter from which there could be no practical result.- It was a moot question merely, and the Senate was turned into a moot court to discuss purely an abstract proposition. The refusal of the attorney general, five weeks after the expiration of his term of office, in obedience to the express order of the President to send in the pri vate documents relating to the suspen sion of Duskin, was criticised in a reso lution of the majority as a violation of duty and a violation denounced as being subversive of the principles of government and of good adminis tration, an act so characterized as to make it sufficient ground for instant impeachment. What was the relation between the President and hi cabinet officers ? Mr. Pugh would let Mr. Edmund's own words answer that anes- tion. He quoted from one wfddr. Edmunds speeches on tenure of office act, to show that Mr. Edmunds held that a cabinet officer should be gen tleman personally agreeable to the President, being one of his confidential advisers. Yet the Senate was asked to pass resolution condemning the attorney general for obeying the President whose adviser he was, who stood in that re lation of trust and confidence in him in dicated by the quotation from the speech of the: Senator trom Vermont. The attorney general was asked by this reso lution of the Senate to disregard the position and order of the President, and thereby make himself liable to in tan t dismissal from the cabinet. The terms of that relation were stated by the Senator A from Vermont himself. The President1 could not with self-respect have held mat attorney general in nis cabinet a single moment after obeying the reso lution of the Senate Was that the way for one co-ordinate department of the government to treat another ?. Was not that a request from thi sgreat; law-making-power to the chief magistrate or his attorney general that ' would re sult in breaking up their relations of confidence and trust and making the at torney general liable to instant dismis sal from the cabinet ? What did the President say about the action of the Senate asking the attorney general for these papers ? Mr. r Pugh read at length from the President's : message: amone other things ' the statement that there ; "had been no official papers or documents filed in his (attorney general's) depart ment relating to the case within the period stated in his resolution." There, said Mr. Pugh, "is a state ment by the President of the matter of fact within bis personal knowledge, and the Senator from Vermont controverted the truth of that statement, having no foundition whatever for denial. There a square issue made in 'he report: of a majority of the ju diciary-committee with the President upon matter oi fact that is within his personal knowledge. &e attorney general such as this 8enate Are these papers called for from nai the rieht to have in the discharge of its duties? The President had stated that the papers were private and unofficial, and related to nothing over which the Senate had jurisdiction. : The ' majority of thti ju diciary committee and its distinguished chairman, the Senator from Vermont, said that although private and unofficial they would enable the benate to dis charge the duty it had to perform tho power it claimed of revising the oincial act of the President in suspending George M. Duskin as district attorney. That was the undisputed basis of the claim to these private unofficial papers. It was in the power of the Senate to exercise, the same control and revision over the 'act of suspension or removal that was claimed and exercised and given to the Senate expressly by the constitu tion, of advising and consenting to the appointment. There was no mistake about that being the claim asserted by the majority of the judiciary committee and there was a mistake that the resolu tion reported condemned the official act of the attorney general for the reason that he had withheld, on order of the President, information that he stated was private ; documents and papers that he said were unomcial and private aua withheld from the Senate on the Presi dent's positive orders; first, because they ' were ; private and unofficial, and secondly, because they related to no constitution or law imposed "It. aJJ- ..t- ,v.. m svid Mr, Puh, "In the history of the govenment to support this claim? The distinguished Senator from Vermont has presented a long array of what he calls precedents, 1 undertake to say ana 1 challenge denial on the fullest test that there is no case in the history ot the . . ... ... government for the last eighty years where any such documents as these called for in this resolution were ever transmitted to the Senate in execu tive or the public session on the order of the Senate upon an attorney general or a President. My honorable and dts tinguuhed friend paraded, in a manner. that indicated that he was about to achieve a great triumph over the Presi dent inthe production, the letter to the Senate from the judiciary committee and signed bv Allan if. inurman as its chairman, to the attorney general, I endorse all: that the Senator has so well said about Allen li. Thurman. Yesi Mr. President. Allen G. Thurman is the greatest and wisest and purest American statesman now living. I Ap plause in the galleries, whose occupants were notified by the occupant of the chair (Harris) that any further demon strations of applause would result in the galleries being cleared. I was surorised that the great Senator from Vermont in this peat law-making de partment of the government should in voke the name and fame and authority of that great statesman to sustain the claim now made en the attorney general for those documents. What bad; Sen ator Thurman said on the floor of the Senate in relation to this power of removal?" Mr. Pugh read from Senator Thurman's . speeches on the debate on the tenure of office act, in which he express the conviction that the power t of removal was an executive fower exclusively, residing ini the resident alone, i Yet the Senator from Vermont invoked an order signed by Mr, Thurman as chairman of the judi ciary committee, addressed to the attor ney general, which Mr. Pugh would read to the Senate.' Mr. Pugh read a letter, which was read yesterday bv Mr. Edmunds, calling for the papers bearing on tne removal :of judge Shaffer, of the Territory of Utah. That person, Mr. Pugh said, had been a judge of a Territorial court and in the provision conferring the power of suspension on the President there was an express ex ception of judges of the United States lne . question torial judges that language. Vermont kfcew was whether Terri were embraced in I The Senator from that the question was now before the judiciary committee. He knew that a great Senator and lawyer from New Yrk (Mr. Evarts) was a member of the sub-enmmittpp with & splendid lawye Jackson, from Tennes see, and that after two weeks or more of consideration they had made no re port oc the question submitted to them, of the power of the President in vaca tion to suspend a judge of a Territorial court. The ; Senator from Vermont knew the Senator from New York (Mr. Evarts): had expressed the opinion that these Territorial judges were not subject to the power of suspension by the Presi dent, That was today an open question before the; very committee of which the honorable Senator was chairman, with, the declaration by one of the most . dis tinguished lawyers that ornamented the judiciary 1 of the country, declaring it to . be bis opinion that .- this power of suspension given the President in sejtion 1768 of the Revised Statutes, did not apply - to Territorial judges. Then why was it that Senator Thurman, as chairman of the judiciary committee, sent that order or request to the attorney general! fie sent it under section 167, making them subject to removal, but only by and with the4 ad vice and consent of the Senate. There was a predicate for the Order of chairman Thurman upon the attorney general to send in all in formation, and papers relating to re moval; not to i appointment. (Mr. Pugh here read Section 1767 and con tinued) Under that section the power of-:j removal was ; to be exercised by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. It was in obedience to the provision of that section that the order was sent by chairman Thurman to the attorney general, calling for information in reference to the removal that required the advice and consent of the Senate just as in a case of ap pointment. There had been other Presi dents besides Cleveland who sent mes sages to the Senate, and he (Mr. Pugh) would read some Of these messages. Mr. Pugh read the messages of Presi dent Andrew Jackson, dated December 12. 1833, and January 13, 1835, assert ing the co-ordinate power of the Presi dential office. Mr. Pugh inquired what was the explanation of the opinions of the Senator from Vermont? .Where would the foundations of those opinions be found; the opinions expressed in his very remarkable speech of yester day? The foundation of that opinion was that this power of removal was not vested 4 in -the President by the constitution, either expressly or by implication, 'but it was a legis lative power vested alone in Congress, and that the President had no power either of; removal or suspension except such as he derived from an act of Con gress. That was the precise issue made in the first Congress under the constitu tion in 1789.' That was the precise is sue made by Clay and Calhoun in the contest with Jackson in 1835. If this power of removal was a creature of law and-there was no power to make a law except by the two houses, then we could find a predicate for the statement of the Senator from Vermont,' that either house of Congress could call for the papers under that view of the constitution Under that view 4f the power 'of re moval the Senator from Vermont Was fully justified in stating that either house by virtue ot the power it possesses over this matter of removal had a right : to call for this information Mr. Pugh read from speeches of Mr, Edmunds during the debate on the tenure of office bill, to show that Mr. Edmunds then maintained that removal was a leg islative act. In that debate, Mr. Pugh continued, there was no doubt the be inning of this view entertained by the enator ; today. He (Pugh) had no doubt that it was the legal opinion of that distinguished lawyer (Edmunds) that under i the law-making power of Congress this power of removal could be vested in the House of rlepresenta tives alone, or the Senate alone, or in the speaker of the House or the Presi dent of the Senate alone, or that i could be vested in the two houses jointly That it was a pure creature of law and under absolute control of Congress. Mr Pugh read from the speeches of Calhoun and Clay, to show the views entertained by those publio men. He supported the view of Mr. Edmunds, that removal, was a legislative function and under con trol of Congress. He had Senator Walthall read for him from the speech of Senator oprague in tne senate in the debate On the tenure of office bill. The v careful statement of the question here involved, Mr. Pugh said, (which statement was known to have been written by chief justice Chase) expressed the conviction that the only function of the Senate In cases involved in discussion Was merely One of assent or dissent, and strongly controverted the point that i the func-i tion of removal wasj a legislative one: He (Pugh) boldly challenged a reply to that paper as direct authority to sup port the views of Madison and the view that was understood to be that of chief justice Chase, just read., Mf. Pugh read from a report of the minority opin ion of the supreme court delivered by justice Miller in the case of Kil- bourn vs. Thompson. There was. he said, in that opinion; a recog nition of the proposition that when one co-ordinate department. entrusted with special powers, called upon.another co-ordinate branch for information in gelation to the exercise of power belong ing exclusively to the other department it was the duty of the first to inform the other of the use intended to be made of information so it might appear to the department having it in its: possession whether it was a duty to transmit in formation in order': to promote the exer cise of constitutional functions of the government That was precisely the question involved; in this case. Now, he continued, let it be true that this was not the substantive executive power vested by the constitution in the Presi dent alone. Let it. be true that like the power of appointments the Senate shared with : the President the power of removal. Let it. ; be true that the power of removal was a legislative power and not an executive power and that it belonged alone to Congress under the constitution. Let all that be true and he would now call the attention of the Senate to the expe diency and practicability of such power being exercised by the Senate. He read from the report of the minority bearing on the point, and a portion ; of ah extract from a message of President Grant, in 1869, calling attention to the embarrassment likely to arise from leav ing on the statute-books the; tenure-of- office act and asking what faith the Pres ident could put in the subordinates forced upon him and how such officials1 would be likely to serve an administra tion knowing it had no faith in them. The information Bought of the attorney gen eral by the resolution of the Senate, he said, was to enable it (so said the ma jority report) to decide whether it would advise and consent to the removal, of these suspended officers so that if they did not advise and consent to - the sus pension or removal of these officers they might by operation of the tenure-of-office act go back into their offi ces when the senate should adjourn. What was that but exercising power by the Senate of selecting agents for : the President to exercise his constitutional duty ? What was it but compelling him to take into his; trust and confidence a man whom he had suspended from office? Mr. Pugh further read from the , report of the minority and from the journal pf Congress extracts from speeches of Sen ators Morton and Sherman upon : the proposed repeal of the tenure of Office act, and from those of Calhoun and Clay upon the powers of the senate in : the matter of removals. In conclusion, Mr. - Pugh Said his object had been to define tbe character of this con flict of authority between the President and the benate and to fortify the view that had always been taken by the Democratic party and to fortify it by authorities, commencing at the first Con gress and running down to the latest period. Mr. Cleveland had no fear of an appeal to the people. He was re sponsible to them. He supposed the majority in the senate had no fear of ppealing to. the people in favor of the omnipotence of the constitution and the integrity of President Cleveland's ad ministration. Mr. Wilson, of Iowa, was recognised by the chair, but gave way to a motion to take up an urgent deficiency bill. The part of this, appropriating $30,000 to pay the expenses of Gen. Grant's funeral, was agreed to. j An item of XLSd.UUU for witnesses' and ju rors fees nearly brought on a new dis cussion of the issue between j the Presi dent and the Senate. The bill finally went over. The Senate adjourned, leav ing Mr. iidmunds' resolutions the un finished business for 2 o'clock, Mr. Wilson, of Iowa, having the floor. - BOUSl. Mr. Herbert, of Alabama, from the committee on naval affairs, reported 1 bill to increase the naval establishment Committee of the whole. : . Mr. Pulitzer, of New York, from the committee on civil service 1 reform, re ported adversely the Seney bill to repeal the civil service law. : Mr. Stone, of Missouri. ; asked that the bill be placed upon the calendar and that he have leave to hie a minority re port. So ordered.' At the expiration of the morning hour the House resumed, in committee of the wJhole, the discussion of the Indian ap prooriation bill, which lasted until o'clock, when with the Indian bill stil pending, the House adjourned. A tug Blowa ( Atom. Boston, March 10. The tug John Markel left her berth at T wharf at 6:30 o'elock this morning and started down the harbor in search of vessels desiring her services, There were a large num ber of persons on the wharf who watched tne boat steam away, Just as the boat arrived off Lone island an exnlosion occurred on board, the noise of which was plainly audible in ! this city. The boat was blown completely to atoms and her crew of five men were in stantly killed. The crew ; consisted of Capt. CUrus A. Nickerson, who resided at Wo. oi London street, east .Boston; engineer Geo. R. Procker; i Frank Crooker fireman; Albert D. Smith, cook and James Hutchins, deck-hand. The bodies of the captain and engineer were recovered by a tug cruising inthe ' bay. They were brought here and taken to the morgue. WaR TO THq KNIFE THE HINNUl'KI PACIFIC RAILWAY PICKS CP rilR CtAicXTLEr. I ( II Ntriue (be Samti r all Strikers f rom Mm I .!.! oil Employees. St. Louis. Mo , March'lO. The Mis souri Pacific railroad todky issued the following circular to the strikers : "You are hereby .notified that your action in withdrawing from the employment of tho. Missouri Pacific railway company was a voluntary abandonment of the service of the company and that you are no longer in its employment, and - that your names have been stricken from the rolls. '. All such who are now about the company's premises are hereby notified that they must at once leave the same, to tbe end that this company - may re sume its traffic. (Signed) Wm. Kerri gan, general superintendent." This order includes the delegation of men appointed by the Knights of Labor to guard the company's property.' AI though the officials will make no state ment concerning the affair, it is gener ally believed that they are now employ ing new men to take the place of the strikers and that a movement of freight wilj be attempted tonight. Should this prove true, the Knights of Labor will undoubtedly offer resistance. Hew Yrk. Ctta Ftnrm. Nsw YoRK,March 10. . L.' Greene & Co.'s reportyon cotton jfutures says : It has been a "making niarket all day, dui witn a generally easier temaency, finally closing- 7 a8 under last ievening and barely steady. The j "bulls" are disappointed over the failure of. the re sponse from buyers of actual i cotton , both at home and abroad,! and While in -some cases making good (fforts to com bat the weakening tendency, there was a great deal of "long" cotton unloaded. Advices of large receipt! expected at Bombay duriug the coming week were, something of a shadow upon tbe posi tion. fl Killed on Arcouat -f Lameuit- Nxw Obxeaxs, March 10. In a hall way adjoining the United States court in the custom-house today J. K. Brown and M. A. Grace quarrelled, f Pistols were at once drawn and I ihe firing be gan, urace was killed, thrown received four bullets and was removed to a hospital. Tbe cause oft. the difficulty was a suit in which Grape was proctor for the plaintiff. jj ' - - , Hanged by m Mob. Shoals, Ino., March 10. The noto rious Archers, who bavCj been confined in the county jail for several weekspaat, under charges of murder expiated iheir horrible crime at the hands of a deter mined mob, at 12:30 this! morning. DlstixumUhed and scientific public men in Awerica eadorse Bed Star Cough Cure. An eclipse of the sun 3annotrbe un derstood without first seein the sun. 1 'i HUKSroKD'M ACID PJJOSPif ATE Ii Dcknlitjr Frein tiverwertt. Dr. O. W. Collitw, Tiptoh, lad.,' aavi: "I used It in nervous debility breutrht oa by overwork In warm weather, with good re suits.' The happiest man in Washington is his constitu- the statesman who makes ents believe that he ha no influence with the administration. scorint EitULsioar oF pcke Cad Liver Oil, with Hrpophewpbltee. AiTectteia atneV averofa- In Pulmonary lone Diseatee. Dr. Ira M. Lang, New York, Says: I have prescribed Scott's EmulsOn and used it in my family and am greatly pleased with it. Have ; found! it "very serviceable in scrofulous diseases and pulmonary affections." j 4 ' The oard&mon seedj eater , deceives no one j Jlis breath speaks by ithe card. i. i win Eire it: Bnnu. fecal da. Onto. po, rieni-iiry. Bona, Frcrt-bitew, tiackacbe. Uuinrr. Bor Throat. Kcialica. WvuikU, Headache, Toothache SpraJna, eto. Price Z&cU. a. botUa. gold to all draeglata. CauOon-Tha gea M fatvetivi'fla eitrmi it Co, Sole Proprietors, limit iaJUjaora, tUL, O. B. I3SZ DR. BULL'S CO0GH SYRDP For the cure of Coughs Colds, Roarse cesa, Croup, Asthma, Eronrhitis, Whooping CoBjh, Incipient Con sumption, and for the relief of con--snmptive persons in drznced stagea of the Disease. For Sale by D Drug Cists. Price, 25 cents. I FOR SALE. THE CAPS FJCAB TOBACCO WOKK8. This property will bo Sold at a very low figure to close an eatateJ and co&ftiU of lot uuxisa feet, corner Sixth and Uaraett streets minis cur aajoininfftnexrarka of tbe W. & W. and W. a A. ratlfoads. BulIdinK pe eially designed for the business and the mo esaary machinery in working onfcr.for the manufacture of tobacco, viz : 1 fifteen II. F. boiler, t tn H. P. engine! 1 Ilydrmolle power pump, 1 Hydraulic band pomp, 4 ahapn re tainers, 6 finishing retainers, 4 iiwn fioishlng mills, fiseu iron baek sbapea, different sizes, 10 box screws, Ac, & , &c, Ae. The real es tate and Machinery will dispoeed of Mparately if desired. For particular apply to - EDW AftD KIDDEENfc SOW, meb7 dSt. 1 lmleTrmir quick Jr Cum an other knows rera-f IE edy: Rheumatism, Jinrateia.i PKjjlV SvelUaga, Suit Sock. BnSSl JfJT -Nv Bnnu, fcealda, Cum, aaibr fSSJSTST IMIF0. Ptoartny. Bore. Frort-bttef ire A ,1: 1 i -LX",;. : fii' -if- i I 4 $1