7 I 1 I r- I I LUt il Jill News and UB SERVER VOL. XXVII. RALEIGH. N. C. FRIDAY MORNING JULY 30; 1886. NO. 64 CP Absolutely Pure. Thla powder never varies. A marvel of . Urlty, strength ' and wholesonsene'HU More ' eonomical than ordinary "kinds ard cannot b Id la competition with tie multitude of low cat, abort weight, alum or phosphate powder -'Old oiiIt In cane Roitai. Baximq I'i,wd ' ., 108 Wall Street, Mew York. dold by W C, A B Stronach, George T o-h and J R Ferrail Co. OH! MY BACK Every strata er told attack, taat weak lark ; aaa nearly prostrates jroa. TV fWfl IN ' llUil III 11 11 -- THE P3 BESTTDIIIC f BtreaftkeB. the Alaaclew, 8te41oa the Nerve, Farfchee the Ble4. Olree New Tlcer. Dm. J. Ia. Mma. Tairfiald. Imrm. Mia: - Brows'. Iras Bitten Um beat Iraa mndiciiM I hava know, in my SO jwi1 prmotioe. I hava found it ml hi all dahiliUttn- iibMiteilMrMbMif no. ua H itwjj la i I nj own family. H MS, W. V. Baowx. MT Maia Bt.. Oorfnfton. K4 aajra: "I ia ooanplataly broken down in health and tnmblad with paina in my back. Brown'. Ima Brttam ajMcalyiaatorad to haaMh. Oaaeme he. aberaTtaa. Mark ted w mm id red Hael eawfapper. Take ether. Madacnlrb awwi oiuudu va, Jtairixeiuc i pur STORE We have, the pleasure to announce a new departure; the location of an agent In iNeW I j & ! a'ork, tor the purchtae and selection of our . ' i ' 6 I i took, ia order to enable ua to quote lower pricee thaa other houses which buy on long time and ask big prices in these days of panic nd hard time. Our agents are instructed to watch eery failure, to look after every bouse on the verge o( bankruptcy and with- cash lit hand t to buy in the lump, or in lets, every class of merchandise that we can get at 1 thaa value, so that we can mark ia plain fig ures on our bergaini prices thathaveObt been named or quoted in this market or any ether. Thus we are fighting against the old, rotten credit ay .fern; tor money, for reputation and for the people. This is the music and tb are the prices that crowd our store, while other merchants sleep on their counters, mourning the day ot disaster and . ruin, await ing all who buy cn long time; who pay big price, and sell at figure, which no people Can Afford to pay. - Our stock will be replenished, this week with some Job lots of Umbrellas; hosiery- of all descriptions; great bargains in Paper and Envelopes of all description! ladies' ad gen- tltmta'i Shoes: full asborment , ot Table Oil : , Cloths. ; NEWS OBSERVATIONS. . The Marquis of Salisbury, who is again prime minister, ia in poor health, writes Edmund Yates. Fred Grant says he has reduced hi debts to $500,QQ0. Few honest young men can manage to owe so much. -A pistol-carrying.threatening crank has become an adjunct of Qen. Logan's presidential booming scheme. Anything for notoriety, you know. Gen. Wolscley.himself of Irish birth with English sympathies, will bo sent to Ireland as commander of the Brtti&h forces in that troubled isle. The Del Rio Dot is edited by a young lady. She remarks: "Wan Sropwses ; but it sometimes takes a great eal of encouragement to get him to do so." ; They are trying now to persuade the President into a visit to the Adiron daeks. "Everything will be laid at his feet if he will only come," say the hotel men. According to returned Alaskan tourists the fifth are so plentiful up there that the salmon have to get out on the banks of the; river to allow the steam boats to pass. The eldest daughter of the Prince of Wales was considered the worse dressed girl present at a late London assembly ; and this because ; she was really "dressed." Mr. George Gould's friends laugh at the report by cable that he has made Miss Edith Kingdom, of Daly's oom pany, his wife. "My son is not mar ried," suys Mr Jay Gould. The young man has been falliug in love with pretty actresses since he was 15. i It is a strange coincidence that Lin coln and Jeff Davis should have been born in continuum Kentucky counties, and that Jeff Davis, when a young lieu tenant in the army, administered the oath of allegiance, for the first time, to young Abe Lincoln, bound for the Black Hawk war. The New York court of appeals has adjourned till October without render ing any decision in the Jaehne case. This is to be greatly regretted, 3 a de- cision one way or the other was needed for the guidance of the prosecuting offi cers in their action on similar indict ments ,p ending in other cases. At the session of the councils of Erie, Pa., Monday night the mayor resigned because the councils were about to pass several bills over his veto which gave away rights of immense importance to the city. It was accepted, . and ballot ing for a successor resulted in the choice of Mr. Misener, chairman of the demo cratic county committee. At the final session of the House commerce committee it was agreed, at the suggestion of Mr. Beagan, that the inter-btate commerce bill should be withdrawn, on the ground that there would not be time: enough during the remainder of the session to give it the amount of discusaiou its importance demands. The discovery of rich mineral de posits of gold, silver, lead and copper in A-biugton, Mtu-sv , has waked up the Bleepy old commonwealth to a high de gree of excitement But how utterlv foreign it must be to the refined and cultured sentiment of Boston to have a mining camp, with all its incidents of rougb, rudo and, lawless me, witnio twenty miles of Beacon street ! - Senator Beck says: "The plain, un learned people of the country know that the dcstiuction of silver means doubling tho value of gold and taking from them half the value of all they labor to produce. They never consented to the passage of any law which pro duced such results. The law which passed the English parliament in 1824 could no more bt passed now, when suffrage is so widely extended, than it could be in the Uongrees of the: United States now when the motives and pur poses of its advocates are understood " ! After fifty years of litigation the city of New Orleans has just appointed a committee of its council to see what if any compromise can be made with the heirs of Mrs. Myra Llark Gains, lnere is now a judgment against the city for $1,900,000, from which an appeal has been taken to the, United states supreme court. The Picayune says the city bas spent in court and attorney's fees in this CONGRESSIONAL. THE HOUSE ATiF-MPTN TO GET AT THE I9TEK STATE COUHEKCE ItllX. The Bepublioana Filibuster and th ing; In none. Washincn, July 29. Sknati. Mr. Hoar asked leave to report from tho committee on library a preamble and resolution for the appointment of a oommittee of five Senators (the pre siding officer to be one) to consider, formulate and report at the next session of Congress a plan for properly cele brating at the capital of the republic the centennial anniversary (in 1889) of the adoption of the contitution and the four hundredth anniversary (in 189 of the discovery of America by Christ phcr Colnmbus two historical events fraught with great patriotic interest. Mr. Hale objected, and the resolution went over until tomorrow. Mr. Beck, from the committee on finance, reported back the House bill for the inspection of tobacco, cigars and snuff. Calendar .- The Senate at 11 30 proceeded to the that the House believed .that it was con ducing to the public welfare and not bringing any cmbarrassnicnt on the ad ministration. He did not see any pur pose in the Senate amendment (which did not make any practical change in the resolution,) except the purpose to say to the country that the democratic House of Representatives was not to be trust ed and and that the republicans in the Senate had to amend and change it in order to take away what is vicious in Jhe resolution. Not believing that there was any vice in it,but believing that under the existing circumstances the resolution was fair and just to the administration, ho should vote for it just as it come from, the House. He admitted that the secretary of the treasury had held money in the treasury beyond what was need ed, but he attributed that to a combina tion of men in New York and eJsewhere who did not desire to have bonds called in and endeavored to make the secretary believe that there would be a financial panic unless money was held in the treasury. He believed these men had alarmed the President and the secretary of the treasury and much of the "lock ing up" was because of that apprehen sion. After a oolkMjuy with 5lr. Mc Phersofl, on the subject of j'ae &inkiug fund (which Mr. Beck thought should be Btopped and which the Senator from New Jersey contended sLould be con thir t waj h wai J"'.' consideration of t he J louse joint reso lution to apply the surplus in the treas ury to the payment of the public debt, Mr. Blair giving notice that at the first tinued,) Mr. Beck tuclared that the joint It 1 .V ill - .. " opportunity he would can up tne vetoed resolution, so for from beiLg reflection pension bills according to their order on the calendar. Mr. Allison, who had reported back the resolution from the committee on fiuatce, opened the debate. He spoke of the importance of the subject and how it opened the whole tiuancial question of the government, but hoped that at this late staare of the sossiori: tho discussion would be closely confined to the distinct poiuts involved. These were two; first, relating to the currency, and npxt relating to the management of the current business of the government.. It had been a mooted question, w hot her or not up tothi3 time there had been a distinct setting apart of a spocitic bum for the purpose of maintuinrog the re demption of United States notes. lie did'not himself believe that there as any specific legislation on the; statute book requiring any speciho ' sum of t.i i .i i . . lti money, altho gn ne tnougntit could dc fairly stated that there was in the trcan- 11 ! ury a reserve, wnicn witnout iurincr legislation was the point to be main tained under the statutes of J875 and 1882. He asserted his own belief that there had been by those two acts a' de votion or dictation of $100,000,000 to be held in the treasury for the purpose of maintaining at par in coin all paper money issued by the government. The House joint resolution (known as the Morrison resolution) proposed in abso lute terms to set apart the dictate;! and donate glCO.000.000 for the specific purpose of redeeming United States notes and for no other purpose whatever. If that joint resolution should pass, with out the dotting of an i or the recroBsiitg of a t, it would stand in the pathway of the secretary of the treasury in managing the current business If the secretary should undertake to use any portion of that $100,000,000 for current obliga tions, he would violate a distinct and clear provision of the law Therefore it was that the committee on finance had thought it wise to reservej a further working fund of $20,000,000. If the joint resolution h.ad been in forco a few years ago when the arrears jof pensions act was passed, that act could not have on the administration or an embarrass ment to tho treasury department, was everything which a wise administration would want, because it turned the re sponsibility upon Congress, whose agent the secretary of the treasury was. Mr. McPherson (member of the finance committee) said he had intended to address the Senate at length on the subject, but owing to the shortness of the session and the fullness and clear ness of Mr. Allison's stati niimt, he would forego that intention, fie de clared, however, tfcat it there was oiic thir t for which the republican party entitled to all commendation, it 'or its faithful v firdianship of the fiu lie and tne maintenance oi tnc puD. ic credit It seemed, however, as it the democratic majority in Congress had begun to fear that the small rem nant of the public debt furnished them the only chance left to show that they too had a financial policy, and in their eager haste they wanted to demonstrate it. They proposed tip deal with the surplus in the treasury in such a man ner as must needs trench on the reserve, or to pay the & per cent bonds in silver dollars. To both these propositions the democratic President and tho democratic secretary of the treasury were unalter ably opposed. The democratic majority would be (though not so intended) to contract the national bank circulation to the amount ef $100,000,000. Mr. Teller advocated the resolution as it came from the House. In the eourse of his remarks Mr. Teller referred to the conspiracy of capital against labor all over the world to mako money dearer to the borrower. Mr. George asked Mr. Teller if he had any feasible plan by which he could moke those who have money put it into circulation. Mr. Teller replied that he had not. Mr. Jones, of Nevada, interposed the remark that he had such a plan and he spoke for two hours, laying down his theories upon political economy but giving no answer to Mr. George's ques tion. Ho did, however, assert his be lief that the shrinking volume of money had inflicted more evil, more suffering, more penalties, on the American people than they had ever suffered from war, pestilence and famine. What people wanted .was money; not gold, or silver, but dollars that would liquidate debt and keep red flag of the sheriff away from the window. If the secretary of the treas ury would exercise the discretion given him by the silver bill of 1878, and coin up to the maximum of four millions a month, no) evidenoes of contraction would be felt. Mr. Jones yielded for a motion to go into secret session, which tho Senate did at 5.45 o'clock, after agreeing to a conference on tho Northern Pacific land" bill. At 6.05 the doors were reopened aud the Senate adjourned. HOUSK. The House went into committee of the whole (Mr. Hatch in the chair) upon the Senate amendments to the general deficiency bill. There was no opposition made to the recommend aciona of the oommittee on appropriations as to concurrence or )n-concurrcnce in the amendments, and th ;ir consideration consisted chiefly in ili'jir reading. The House subsequent ly ratified the action of the committee of the whole and a conference was ordered; Messrs. Burns, Lcfevre and McComas being appointed as the' conferees. Mr. Thomas, of Wisconsin, called up the veto message on the bill granting a pension to Mary Anderson. Mr. Rea gan, with the intention of calling up the inter-State commerce bill made it a question of consideration and the House by a vote of 112, nays 117, refused to consider the veto n essage. Mr. Sawyer, of New York, then calledjhe-vetoed pension case of An drew J. Wilson, but the House also re fused yeas 99, nays 121, ,to consider it. But the track was not clear for the inter-State commerce bill, Mr. Burrows WASHINGTON. A LOT OF SEWN OX NATIONAL MAT TEKS. Tb. Kw Solicitor Uvntral lontrwi slouul Hemst. Washington, July 29. The Presi dent today nominated Geo. A. Jcnks, of Pennsylvania, to te so'icitor gen eral. Should the Pm sid sat decide neither to sign nor to veto the oleomargarino bill, the friends of the measure will seek to postdone the adjournment until Tuesday, on which day it will become a law without presidential approval. The conferees on the river and harbor bill talk less hopefully today of their prospects for agreement, but the issues are well defined and the differences may be reconciled any moment, whenever ono side or the other decides to recede. It is not probable that a failure to agree upon the measure will postpone ad journment. The worst of the remaining problems to be solved aro embodied in the u -dry civil bill and the difficulty with these consists rather in their number than their character. There was a call for a conference upon tho measure this morning, but a quorum did not appear at the appointed time and nothing was done. The unwillingness of the President to sign any bill until he has had time to study its provisions has given iisc to an apprehension that Congress will be kept in session to afford this oppor tunity some days after the ap propriation bills are passed. There is, however, believed to be little ground for this apprehension, for al though official copies of the acts of Con gress are not sent to the President until all differences havo been reconciled in conference and the results ratified bv the two houses, yet all but controverted points are open to inspection, and may be examined in the printed bills before the conferees are appointed, while the progress made upon controverted points is daily set forth ia the Congressional Record. The President may. therefore as his predecessors have done, keep up with the current proceedings, and be ready with his approval or veto almost as soon as completed measures can be examined and enrolled. mi j ii xne inaicauons continue iavorame for an adjournment of Congress without day by next Monday. H suited at lbrloU. OP A silver dollars Cworth ; seventy-three o -nta) at the rate of two and a half mil lions a month. If the House reso lutions were passed, then the country Would bo at once on silver basis. It woul i le u notice to the treasury that it could n- lunger maintain a parity between between the two coins and the public would have to take care of itself. Ho was astonished that any Senator favoring thr c .tinued coinage ot the silver dollar tolerated such a scheme as this joint resolution. Their safety as bimetallisms was found in other directions. For these rcisons he should oppo&e the House resolution, and it was only with many misgivings that he would vote for the Senate amendment Mr. Plumb (also a mem ber of the finance ooniinittce) advocated tho resolution as it camo from the House. The discussion was interrup ted and a conference was ordered on the deficiency bill. Messrs. Allison, Hale and Beck were appointed con ferees The discussion of the "surplus resolution was resumed, and Mr. Vest addressed the Seuate in favor of the joint resolution as it camo from the House. There was nothing political in the question, he said. The Senator from Kansas ( Mr. Plumb) was a most were in full play, the pension law could emphatic republican and ho (Vest) was not be carried out. xnereioro it was that the committee on ' finance believed 6I0EGI IfOOfiB PAYS Till PINiLTY OKKAT CRIM1. Charlotte, N C, July 2i9. George in Congress proposed to rob the treasury placing obstructions in the wav in the i Moore, colored, was hanged in jail in this of its gold reserve by continuing to com shape of two other vetoed pension bills 1 city this morning, in expiation of the i which been executed by the secretary of j the treasury. Congress might again (and he believed that justice and fairness re q lired it to do so) provide additional legislation respecting pensions. ;i The Senate had at the present session passed a bill which would confessedly increase the annual pension expenditures by $12,000,000 or $15,000,000. That bill was now pending in the llouse, and would (he boped) i become a law before the close of the session. If it did, and if the House resolutions it wise to have this' seventy millions as a pliable, flexible fund, that could be drawn upon at times when the treasury was depleted. In the course of his speecn ne reierreu to senator jpec& s speech, delivered last December, and said that the democratic administration quite as pronounced a democrat, but yet their views were entirely in unison on this subject. There had been a glamour thrown over it under the idea that business principles which applied to the government differed from those applied to ordinal y business. That was simply a monstrous absurditv. a rclio of barbarism The cse far more than it could have been had om into power by criticising ad- Bame principles applied to the govcrn- GRKAT BARGAINS IN GENTtE- . MEN'S SHIRTS, ! . ; .i At 78 cent, worth!; Knit Underahirts at S3 eenu, 'worth 60c. We in ite an early and repeated visit and in- spection. Our stock will be replenished every few days. nieetiullv sul mitted to the cash trad only .y ' i ' T JLNEY PUR8ELL k CO., 't t o. 10 Eut llutin StiMt, compromised for many years ago, and our contemporary is not sure that even at this late day a compromise will not be better than further litigation. The law vers will not think so. - The House greatly improved tne river and harbor bill by striking out the Hennepin canal amendment added by the Senate, and, warming to its good rork, struck out- besides the Portage lake and Sturgeon bay jobs. The friends of the Hennepin canal scheme are verv angry over the action of the llouse. lbeir conception ot the theory on which a river and harbor bill should be constructed is revealed in versely thehoanoial policy ot its pre decessor and sayiog that more money was held in the treasury than was neces sary to carry on the ordinary operations of the government and to maintain pat er .1 .4. .1 , I J I money at par; that from tne itn ot March till the 29th of December the democratic administration (instead of f laying the surplus on tne - pub ic debt) had accumulated more than $60,000,000 in the treasury over and above the proper reserve, and mcnt as to individuals. rut what, he asked, would be thought of a business man who would keep $100,000 idle in his vault while he had $100,000 of 8 per cent notes outstanding. Every mer cantile exchange in the country would denounce him' as a lunatio. He quoted from the London Economist to show how small proportionately were the govern ment revenues abroad, giviug them as 831,000,000 in England, $29,000,000 in trance and jii.wu.uuu inuermany. were upon the calendar. To brush these aside required two roll- ealJ3nd. then all the availablo timber on the calendar hiving been exhausted, Mr. lJurrowd had rcoourse to the vetoed bills still remaining in the committee, i l . ". a a . ana Dy motions to discharge the com mittee from their further consideration again completely blocked the way. As there arc at least fifty of these bills in the committee, there is enough'material on hand to effectually prevent the fur ther progress of the inter-State oommexoe bill if the opponents of that measure de- - ire to follow that line of policy. The dem ocrats were profuse in their charges of ulibustenng charges which were de nied by the republicans, who asserted that they were honest in their desire to secure action on pension cases. The advocates of the bill finally at tempted to reach an agreement, and on motion suggested that the vetoed pen sion cases on the calendar pe taken up, considered and voted upon, and that then the inter-State commerce bill should be considered. Mr. Reagan assented to the sugges tion, but called attention to tho oourse pursued py the republicans yesterday and today for the purpose of preventing action on j tho inter-otate oommeroe bill. Everytime that he called up the bill, which the country had been demanding for fourteen years, the gentlemen on the other side called up privileged pension cases, solely for the purpose of prevent ing its consideration. Mr. ileed : I deny that statement in to to. In has no foundation in actual tact. that Mr. Reed deceiving the of crime outraging repeatedly the person of his own daughter. On the scaffold he made a brief speeeh, protesting that he was innocent of the crime. The drop fell at 10.55 and twenty minutes later he was pronounced dead. His neck was not broken by the fail. Th. New British Cabinet. Londox, July 29 The following ap pointments are officially announced: Sec retary for foreign anairs, H.arl of Iddesleigh; chief secretary for Ireland, Sir Michael Hicks-Beach; chancellor of the exchequer, Lord Randolph Churchill, who, by virtue of his appointment, becomes the recognized leader of the conservative party in the house of com mons; secretary of war, Rt. Hon W. H. Smith; first lord of the ad miralty, George Hamilton; lord high chancellor, Baron Hatsburg; secretary for India, Right Hon. Frederick Arthur Stanley; prime minister and first lord of the treasury, Marquis of Salisbury; lord lieutenant of Ireland, Marquis of Londonderry; lord president of oounoil Viscount Cranbrook; president of the board of trade, the Rt. Hon. Edward Stanhope; first commissioner ef works. Rt. Hon. 'David Plunkett; postmaster general. Lord John Manners; loru chancellor of Ireland, Lord Ashbourne A Iwcldl SmmII... A CONTXMPT CASB AT ASHKVTLL1, AGAINST THI CITIZEN. Special Disratcb to the News and Ob-crvci . AfQiviLLi, July 29. The editor of the Citizen answered tho rule for contempt today. The hear ing commenced at 4 o'clock and. is now proceeding. The respondent is repre sented by Messrs. McLoud & Moore, M. E. Carter, J. M. Gudgcr, F. A. Sondley and Johnstone Jones. Tho rule is represented by the solicitor ar.d Messrs. 11. U. Carter, A. T. Davidson, J. II. Merrimdn, W. W . Jones', V. S. Lusk, W. U. Malono and J. S. Adams. Several arguments have been delivered.. 1 he respondents deny the jurisdiotun of the court and claim that the obnox ious remarks were made in the exercise of the liberty of the press, protected by the constitution and tho law. The mat- tor assumes considerable proportions and excites muoh public interest. Av.rjr aaa Bo.tr BOTH KKNOMLNATZD IN THS TBNTU JUDI CIAL DISTRICT. lec!ul lut patch to ttie News and Obaervrr. ; Moro anton, July 29. The democratic convention of - the tenth judicial district was held here to day. A. C. Avery was renominated for judge, by acclamation. W. H. Bower, Isq , was renominated for solicitor, on the first ballot. The convention unanimously endorsed judge Avery as an associate justioe of the supreme court. Th ST.lh Judicial District. MCNKILL NOMINATED iOR SOLICITOR. Special to the Nkws and Observer. Fayxttsvilli, July 29. The democratic convention of the sev enth judicial district was held here to day. There was considerable wrang ling, and after many speeches and much discussion Frank McNeill was nominated for solicitor. ; Bonisco. X a 1 Mrs. A -went into the kitchen one morning and informed Ellen that Mr. Thompson, a neighbor and prominent resident, had committed suioide. Ellen looked at her; . with an expression of mingled astonishment and disgust, and said, "Oh-h-h, mum, has he? Wid who?" Harper's Monthly - CAAPTAIN'S rOSTtTNATB DI8COVERT. pt. Coleman, schr. Weymouth, plying be tween Atlantic City and N. Y., had been troubled with a cough so that he wu unable to .ieep, and was induced to try Dr. King's, New Discovery for consumption. It not only gave him instant relief, but allayed the ex- .treme soreness in his breast. 11 is children ' were similarly afl'ected and a single dose had the same happy etbet. Dr. King's New Dir- covery is now the standard remedy in the Coleman household and on board the sehooner Free Trial Bottles of this Standard Bemedv at id Drug Stores. Wall Pajir. Now is the time to apply wall paper to your walls. Decided ly the best wall decoration in the world. Properly applied it is both attractive and lasting. A well selected stock can be seen at Fred A. Watson's, manufac turer of picture' frames and window shades. All orders have prompt atten tion, specialty of mosquito eanopice; prices lower than over. Mr. Reagan remarked could not succeed in country . Mr. Ilisoock, of New York, asserted that thej republicans Wanted to get a vote on the pension cases ; after that he was willing to stay here a month in or der to c6nsider the inter-State commerco bill. (Incredulous laughter on the democratic side.). Mr. punn, of Arkansas, objected to the arrangement suggested by Mr. MatsonJ on failing to secure Biav lurk Coll on l'uturtn. -XT f t Lli 1 . U il iw iork, Juiy iy urcen co. c report on cotton lutures says : It was an ambiguous sort ot market, and no clear cuuceDtion ot tendencies cu'd ne . . i .. i:..'. :t- reacucu. jjv.'jllii y ' t ry miie, Ji uuv, really new bum;;.s e iiie m aud t. operations were t-.hu'j.-t wholly confined u getting out of August and puUiijg the deals forward - into later months The demand appeared to be fuller than the desire to sell, aud this raised prices a few points, but the close was dull. Liiveroooi was wituout much chaDge but silver on private advices was brokeii down to 42. E dward Fasnach, H Jeweler and Optician RALEIGH, N. C. Gold aud Silver Watches, A merican fand Importf d. Ileal and imitation Diamond Jew elry, is karat Wedding aud Engagement Rings, any size and weight Sterling Silver Ware for Bridal Presents. an aesur- that it was only the speech of the Sen- lQ conclusion he siid that the fight was ance that after the votes had been taken ator from Kentucky that put a atop to 0ne between gold and silver, between on pension bills nobody on the other that Dolicv and caused the first call for mA and Greenbacks, between men who aide would in anv manner onnose the 11 SnOUlU . A rTn l j i . mi o - - o , . .. -,.! . - , . r. . ,om,,v Kiu.uuv.vw m Donas to De issuea. xne wanted to make money uear ana scaroe mter-BEaie commerce Dili. Alter an- nouse, uo d.iu, uvvciiy uu auBuiubcij i ana nitrn auu uciwccu mcu uu uu- umer con can, now ever, lur. xuuu condemned tne administration. Ioeau't Tnk Kindly to the Uvi- uana. Bi&un, July 29. The su'tan of Somauli has expelled the members of the German east African society from his dominions. Optical Goods A SPECIALTY. Spectacles and Eye-glasses in Gold, Silver, iteel, Rubber and Shell Frames. Lenses, wbite and tinted, in endless vartios. Seals for Lodges, Corporations, etc. Also Badges and Medals for Schools and Societies Ul UUU VI ItUU BU L W uuo kli . d UUCI D WAV I . ... A 1 1 ... 1 1 . , ,1 . II I ... t i . o ' ... ainHninnM t.hA nnnnmal nminv nt t.hA I -nA mnnntr inn nnieoa t.nin TrniiniP I mithiiran hia nhiortinn and in tnnnr. at. 1 A. fit fortv member, who will vote vvm. ? j r tvwou uivuuj, ... ... i? . ... I ttmimatriitinii M riA Snnaffl lnmmi(fo I .. tniiniii1 nn pn 11 ltahl A nnrl tmr I Arna iwith tho forma nf fhA HTnumnnl against the bill now who would have V T ,rr , r V i "'1 :L Vr i V I e i -erw""?" . I An finartAA hart mrtninAri ann cn rt.nAK. I ,Ja nnnm result in A spprirmft.1 I rha HrtniA inn kr nit tat nrmainoratmn fhA Can&l I ; . . " . - B . . .1. 11 ,! I. - I f . 1 1-11 ea in some reepecw mis oouuemnauon: i strufftric dciwucu me uuu iuu i veto meassLse on mo uui Kriuiuai? her- voted for it with the Hennepin appropriation in. lhe furore for stripes seems to in crease rather than diminish, and some of the latest novelties in this style, sent as many varied hues as Iris self. Most of the goods look rather pronounced and dashy by themselves, but combined with self-colored fabrics, produoe an effect which is neither vul gar nor conspicuous. Skirts and waist coats maae oi iancy striped . goods are worn under tunics nd open jackets of mono-chrome fabrics, and if well blend ed, agreeably relieve the monotony which a dress of one color often pro- duces, nevertheless, the taste of a large class of.ladiea lies in the direction of the utter style. still it also proposed to condemn that policy and it would stand condemned before the country whether the resolu tion should be amended or not. Mr. Beck said that the Senators on either side and the administration might as well dismiss all apprehensions rela tive to the motives and purposes of the West. That was the plain meaning ot the whole thing Mr Sherman addressed the Senate in favor of the joint resolution as amended by the oommittee on finance lie con sidered it not as a politioal, but as a business proposition. Mr. Sherman was surprised at Mr. Vest's statement in re- . . V I 3 Tt F . 1 T TTT 1 . pension to Anarew o. vvnson and re fused (yeas 105, nays 85) to pass the bill over the veto; the constitutional two- thirds not voting in the affirmative. The House at 5.10 took a recess until 8 o'clock, the evening session to be for the consideration of private bills. House of Representatives in the passage gard to the reserves of England, France lorhtn-a wpll 1C.1 I'o.monn and from tho latest num- of the joint resolution, and might as well assume that the House of Representa tives (constituted as it was, in friendly accord with tho executive branch of the government,) had not undertaken by the resolution either to censure, oon demn or embarrass the executive branch Darh.m'i Boom. There is more evidence of a build- mg boom for Durham than we have kou ivi ouuiti muo. xuere will he air and Germanv. and from tho latest num . . a l 1 ber of tho London liiconomiat ne snowea .u.. tv. .oaavwA in the bank of England waa euul to 39 per cent in coin, and brick itorcs, two prize houses, besides in the bank of France 40 per cent, being quite a number of dwellings.to be ereo- a larger percentage than was proposed I ted during the Bummer, that we know here. Mr. snennan saia tne eneot oi oi; ueaiu.es lucre are doubtless a large w n m K Km . 1 1 I n . w aiuuvu uiwie.- Auiuaxu AvOoroer, of the government. It wa- fair to pay j the revolution u it passed the House , Tb Bilia U'.or.d. TEX ACTION OF THS GRAND JURY IN THX ASHXVILLX DUEL CASE. Special Dispatch to the News axd Ohservee. A she villi, N. C, July 29. The grand jury has ignored the bills against Richmond Pearson, for sending. V "T 1 FT 1 ana o n. iiamuion, ior bearing a ohalleuge to a duel last April. Unm.rdB.r Voualnatwd. Lexington, Va., July 29. The dem ocratic convention of the tenth district met here today. After ten ballots James Uumgarduer, Jr., ot Augusta, was nominated for Congress. Randolph Tucker now represents the district. Ii you are anticipating buying a piano do not fail to oU on or write J L. Stone, at once, as ho has a large and i handsome stock on which be ia offering I ipeeiti Bgures, made to order. Mall orders promptly attended to. Goods sent on selection to any j art of the State. I3r Old Gold and Silver in small and lares. quantities taken ax cash. dly. ' PURITY! PlJKiTYM Is desirable in all thinifs but demanded In artic.es of food. Dont imp ir your health bv nslnir adultam. ted lard, even if it dots cost a Utile les. C ASS ARD' S Is for sale by the following leadioir rrocera aud recommended by them to be the best. Try it. W. II. Ellla. E. J. Hardin. W. R. ewsom & Co.. Wyatt & Co.. Grausman & R s; nthal, Jno. R. TerrelL J. R. KerraU A Co.. W. B. Mann Co. Norria & Newman, W. C. Upchureh. N. V. Penton. ai) CASSARD'SJJILD CURk'D HAMJ ana riRKAILFAST 61 KIPS, which are Una aurptuwed. - Note This list will be corrected weekly,