Y ' - fill 1 THE MESSENGER ' f . l "" a" TO ADVERTISERS: 1 k Published in Three Editions: ! THE MESSENGER has Urge : The DAILY MESSENGER, - 'li ¬ WEEKLY MESSENGER Circulation (has any othw New- paper In the Stats... T, THE BEST v ADVERTISING MEDIUM '2' lrth South, j fe V g 3.,. I AND i The TRANSCRIPT-MESSENGER atGoldstofO, ftC. a i ! TIi r'ce are Ait reti v I i f US II I! hr I "' V Y.Y, Y i ESTABIilSHED 1867 TELEGRAPHIC SUMMARY Er. "W" ;.:- ru J urn Ins' ! tO jh rf rtl'' on on Head, of Andalu in a quirrel i. The committde he Alabama Home bf deci'led adversity Kive the bri Lave joined the on received of eevdial between . Chilian ;,!) tr 4 Lave U 1 f UCfHj vania su'iday con-j poui c on trie 1 the Force bills and caLu. ' on him 1Lc!j' tJ hia pjrty oretiig. It waa 111 Ala., with Dr. i - I Com mo a Itepreeenta-j the prop- Iliilroad Com- t U esid 12,000 rebel a. Re- bloody en- op3 and the -A resolution w Jd introduced in J filature Cameron's ie fro rce "bills and -The only eon o nih fci.d the time of his father's funeral will rt'ii'l tinotfi hii"ariival in Washington 11 be buried in Roik Creek W&fhinKton! City. to -ret my t rv n'''ir Lr.nb. 31. I divorce pI cf live aul Hoveu year.; The died yesterday. 4 For forging rs fw9 men in New nteijced to' imprisonment for terms Hlinoia Legis- Senator with- The House WILMINGTON, N. C.. SATURDAY. JANUARY 31. 1891; PRICE FIVE CENTS. THE INTEREST BILL. THE ALLIANCE MEMEERS CAUCUS ON THE MEASURE. TR03I WASHINGTON CITY. THE BUSINESS OUTLOOK. 16 i t AJL'jqiq ojujs theil . The ceme- Charles Brad- York were on latnre I taken fifty ballots for a-;t the change; of a single votd Coinage committee's investigating the subject tif fne coinage or Biiver. me rresiaem ana D1otrt of the'membera of the Caoinet and heads of turcaurt in tbej Treasury department met the rtmaiiH of thej late' Secretary of the Treas , ftt tKft 1 not and aJcomDanied- the body to tiife S-crdtaj-y'sl residence.- The Washington "tir" thiiiks Congressman McKinley will sue" pful S.'oretaryi Windom. T IIoiwj of ileprescntatives but 'l''Cf f idn case nexi Tuesday Senator Hoar is 'sore. I! cot urviy No mor at the th Connecticut vote on the 1'ISTOL-GKAPIIS. is e m voi. lviuuuru n. DUiruc cau e long. Alas! ey for Fairs witn the Bayonet oat of the Soutn. s for Peace but Million,': for Bulldozers and' Oppressors They Determine to Limit the Rate to 6 Per Cent Bank Men Oppose the Hill The Death of lie v. It. H. Phillips A Noted Koelneer 111 A Pensioner'. Eacamp-ment-The Morrill Fund Received. I Messenger Bureau, ) Raleigh. N. C, Jan 30. The Farmers' Alliance members of the Legislature had a long caucus last night at which ! the matter of rate of terest was alscussea. mere were manysJeeejiand, suggestions. It was decided tinallytoTimkejthe rate 6 per cent., this being a reductio per cent. One of the leading Alliance men tells me to-day that the Alliance will stand by the caucus action. There has been a general movement forfc re duction of the interest rate, both by the county and State Alliances and the action taken last night will give the order general satisfaction. The bank men will oppose the reduction. It is safe to say that the bill will become a law. Mr. J. J. Thomas has been elected President of the Raleigh cotton mills, succeeding Mr, Julius Lewis. Charles Busbee, who last week was married at Washington returned here last evening with his charming Arrival of Secretary Windom' Remains 'His Only Son Absent on a j Tour of the South The Secretary's Successor. ! Washington, Jan. SO. All the morning a stream of carriages were ar riving at the family residence of the late Secretary Windom on ! Massachu setts avenue bearing friends who came to manifest their love and: sympathy for the sorely stricken family. The only son, William D. Windom, is now travelling in the South, and al though telegrams have been sent to all points where they could in j any likeli hood reach him, no response has yet been received. Yesterday, it is be lieved, he was in Baton Rouge, La. The time of tne funeral will depend upon the arrival of this son, but it is rooabie that it will take place Mon day, with private services at the fam ily residence and with public services at the Church of the Covenant, of which Mr. Windom was a member, i Assistant Secretary Nettleton, i who hps been on a visit to Oberlin, Ohio, left there yesterday for Washington and is expected to reach here this afternoon. As he is the Senior Assist ant Secretpry in point of service, he will probably be designated to act as Secretary of Treasury for a period of ten days, which is the limit of a desig nation of this kind. ! The intermeat will be made at Rock Creek cemetery near the Soldiers' Home and the President accompanied R. G. DUNN & CO'S REVIEW AND SUM MARY OF TRADE. LATEST FOREIGN NEWS. Charles Bradlauxh Dead-The Chilian Rebellion Government Troops Join the Rebels Sanguinary Battles. j London, Jan. 30. Charles Brad laugrb, member-Parliament for North ampton, who has been critically ill for sometime; past, died at 6 o'clock this morning. His end was quiet and peace ful. He was insensible when he died and seemed to suffer no pain. The im mediate cause of his death was urae mia. : The funeral will take place on Tuesday. There will be no funeral procession, no show of mourning and no religious services. 1 Buenos Ayres, Jan. 30. There is a panicky feeling in the Pedulas, and that means a volume of business larger there is much anxiety expressed a9 to r other year at this season. I the position of Provincial Mortgage Business Unprecedented in Vol ume Tr?tde Larger Than Ever Before at this Season Dry Goods Trade Satisfactory Fair Trade at the South Kffect of Secretary Win- idom' Death on the Money Market. NEW YORK, Jan. 30 R. G. Dun & Co.'s weekly review of trade savs: Bus iness" conttnuesYunprecedented in vol ume ana. satisfactory in character. Measured by the Clearinsr House re turns trade exceeds that of a year ago by about zt per cent, in amount, and THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. THE DISCUSSION ON THE INTEREST BILL IN THE SENATE. committees than in any The tone in commercial circles throughout the country is hopeful and the money markets are now compara tively easy. At nearly all points uncertainty regarding the monetary future causes some hesitation, especi ally as to new undertakings, but there is. underneatn. an abounding confi dence thatm some way the fertile ger -ius of the people and measureless re sources oi tne country will meet every difficulty. : So strong is this feeling bank. The Government has notified the bank that it must depend : upon its own resources to pay coupons so far a9 its receipts allow, and has ordered it to . give bonds with one per cent a mortizacan for the ballance. j i London, Jan. 30. Advices ' received in this city from Buenos Ayres state that 15.000 insurgents are massed at Quellotte, a provinee of Valparaiso, fifty miles from Santiago, and it is re ported that they are contemplating an The nomination of James H. Young, y Mrs; Gimmick and the Postmaster colored, to be collector of the port of General drove out to the cemetery this not one cent The very best; analysis the infamous t orce bill o made byJsenator Vance. The Brother yet made of Radicals was - Senator Gorman has been managing the tizbj against the Force bill on the Democratic side. He is adroit. "Winston Foy is a weekly Sentinel of L handsome and well illcd paper clean, newsy and able. alveston Aacs thinks that bonle never have a sober second The first one they bring i forth kills them as ddad as a dead .nomnir The 'Some p thoughti needed inuvera was !Toct never a w to "rebuke iscr or a more folly than the roniie prornif And it5;.' ii.i v;.? nevt' tnoilt'V He will The paid it: 'W.v r.irrv a ent to withhold itioney and pat ft'om thy Chicago Fair. It i-s to bb ;i eiTecti now ileiliuijy whd wrote "Look- kwjird or .some such title, for 1 I v re;iu it,;r to i:i V w. Voun anient father professi A ! lint) dim imed Henry Jackson, employed nd the Treasury Department heavily quoted here at $16,75 and unsold stocks tyl?iVflr" Seaboard Air-Line was instantly ;drapea in m0Urning. 1 i I of pig iron are now said to be 400,000 de.r and lightning with a heavy rain- are all busy now preparatory to e as needed. have now to loo! ia.lehdaa 7 that Hoar's F6 bayonet,! is it ree. bill won't !i!titutoill dp possible: feertV" SOutherri found io bj the! son rtf an hen ho entered I'he South will regret '.tero the Ulud -dc eracy n. More was e iust, and it ma lent. trioua President Her neart is (iuhtqr is with her We hopb her life -will bd I'rofessor Wood row Wiilson is writing a Tolumo j for the: series known as Kpochgin American History." His theme viill bo the United States from o some of the daily paper, forward. nuts pithily that it very incon- eminent the theatrical jepected of him ce him nervous i i . r to hear of the Wilmington, wa3 expected by the ne- gro politicians nere, wno were wen ac quainted with the strong backing he had. It was said that but for Young's nomination the break between the white and black Republicans, already wide, would become far, wider. News was received here last night of the death of Rev. B.; H. Phillips at Reidsville. i I The weather has become quite spring like. The buds on some trees and shrubs are quite large, : The effect of the presence jof an electric light upon plants in this respect is very noticea ble Y M Rev. Dr. Tupper, president of the large institution fori negroes here, known as Sluw University, tells me it is overcrowded, there being over 425 students. j j V Early this morning a negro brake- man named on the killed here. He was on a train on the Raleigh and Augusta Air-Line, and in the darkness, while attempting to step from a flat car on to the tender lost his footing and fell. The fingers of One hand were cut off, yet: strange to say there was not another injury, not even a bruise. He was killed j instantly, however, the injuries being probably internal. Y i i Mr. Albert Johnson, one of Raleigh's oldest citizens, who as engineer brought the first train on the Raleigh and Gas ton railway, is very ill here and his death is expected at any hour. For over half a century he hks been with the Raleigh and Gaston company and is one of the ! oldest living railway en gineers. Maj. Vass, the treasurer of the same road and who, like Mr. John soni has been continuously in its ser vice for overjhalf a century, is the old est railway treasurer in the world. The pensioners are ! considering a plan for an encampment next summer, at or near some place in the mountain section which will offer them induce ments and advantages. They expect to be able to; gather in lage numbers at such a reunion. j j The Legislature will elect next week twenty University trustees to fill the places of those whose terms expire this year; three to fill vacancies beiDg caused by death; four to fill vacancies caused by resignations, and one to nil a vacancy caused by removal. The Lxecutive committee of the State Board of Agriculture has been in ses sion here, arranging for the analyses of fertilizers, the tagging of the bags, etc. The revenue this year will be about $11,000 or $12,000. The State Treasurer has received afternoon for the purpose of selecting a suitable lot for the burial. I Washington, Jan. 30. The effect o the death of Secretary Windom ! is clearly visible in all the Departments of the Government this morniog. While the Treasury Department was the only building actually closed, busi ness was practically suspended in all the Executive Departments. that it is often hard to realize that the adyance into the capital. The insur pressure and axiety of November and gents threaten to bombard every port December: lasted- until within thirty on the coast unless their demands are days. But there are some grounds for granted by the Government. President caution sun. ; - t- i Balmaceda's ' forces have recaptured The dry goods trade is, On the whole, Iquique. The insurgents have been very sausiactory ior tne season ana, forced to withdraw from Lapena, where while buying is conservative both in after a desperate enaement. 5.000 cottons ana wooiens ana prices are low Government troops compelled the in- enougn w embarrass some orancnes oi surgents to retreat to Lomarile. Eroduction, trade is clearly on a more ealthy basis as well as larger in vol ume than it was a year ago. The trade in boots and shoes and leather is somewhat retarded by mon etary uncertainties. The embarrassment in iron and steel manufacture and trade is now clearly perceived to be the result of the marked. The President is very deeply grieved shrinkage in demands for consumption oyer the loss of his friend and this morning gave instructions to inform callers that he would see no one on bus iness todav. Gen. i Soauldinsr. who is acting Secretary i of the Treasury, called on the President this morning and immediately on his return to the Treasury Department issued an order closing the Department for the dayJ The flags on all ! the Executive De partments were placed at half mast Bar iron Is very dull; the demand for plates is very much smaller than was expected and for sheets is irregular and unsatisfactory, while structural iron Is dull and lower. There is very little doing in rails at prices now nomin ally asked and there is much pressure to sell pig iron, Virginia competing in Pennsylvania I markets and Southern No. 2 being offered at $14.60 against $15.25 for Lehieh. No. 1 Northern is Paris, Jan. 30, The Gaulois of this citv to-day says that 12,000 Chilian Government troops, despatched from Valparaiso against the insurgents have revolted and joined the rebel forces. Buenos Ayres, Jan. 30. According to Chilian advices received here des perate and sanguinary battles have been fought in the provinces of Chili between the rebel forces and Govern- ment troops. Manv were killed on both sides, tut the reports are conflict- passed its third reading. Senator Bellamy Makes a Strong Speech In Opposition to the Blll-The Free Ferry Bill Passes the Senate Numerous Bills Introduced In Both Uouses-Many Bills Pass Third Reading. SENATE. Raleigh, Jan. 30.-fSpF.nAi itk The senate met at 11 o'ciock, Lieuten ant Governor Holt presiding; praver by ReV. Dr. Nash, of the city; the journal was read and approved. lie pons irom several were submitted. The following bills were lntm.li,,i- To amend the charter of the Atlantic and Western Railroad company; To amend the Cole relative to unauthor ized land grants; To allow the city of Wilmington to establish a svstem of sewerage; To amend the charter of the Salem Water-supply company; To apply taxes collected in Pender county to the TIT 1 1 ! . 1 ... J " wumingwn, unsiow and East Carolina Railroad company. lhe bill to erect free ferries the Cape Fear and Brunswick rivers at Wilmington passed its third reading. xiie Duiro incorporate the town of Aiden in Pitt county passed its third reading. The bill to appoint trustees fop th Leaksville Accademy and for other purposes passed its second reading. xne oui io autnonze the Board of Education of Hay ward county to pay school claims passed its third readine. j. no um ior me reiiei oi the Superior court of Robeson county was laid on the table. The bill for the relief of the clerk of the Superior court of Moore county (re- 1 J X U J ...-in . .JX licviug mm in responsionuy ior loss oi certain papers destroyed by fire) pas sed its third reading. The bill to allow the clerk of the Su perior court oi Pamlico county to ab sent himself for a few days in the week in g as to which side proved victorious. There seems to be . but little action taken on either side at Santiago De Ohili, the capital. Laurlnburg Notes. A touch of summer (Weather to-day. Last night was quite warm, this morn- to-day noon thun- in ckness of, Mrs. Davis, widow of $15,000 of the Morrill fund, for.agricul of the Con- involved. Her in New York. long spared. to the present time the number of series ited ii something hard By the way, how being pub- to remember. my arm round jour y guess; -peaks: !. ' in Ec'ir can object io Aud ib d reason you'll readil i "i an tdjtor, and I always insist -'u cs uioerty or tne press.! She replies: i m a Banister's daughter, believing in texts. , iuu xouik ail tne newspapers bad: fltui l d ntake you remnrH vmir arm. were it not ua w rre rr amrifT the waist mares elan." Exchange. tural colleges. This has to be I divided equally between the whites and blacks. The Legislature will soon pass a bill making an appropriation for such a college for the negroes. The Morrill lund cannot be expended for buildings, or indeed for anything save the ex penses of maintenance of the college. The Ladies Memorial Association here has taken prompt! action to sup port the bill in aid of the Soldiers Home. There need be no fear that the bill will fail to pass. There is no op positiOQ to it. Dr. fontirm l!e lyrhph. UieCOV rand mph, ' trace Virchow's Berlin, seems to experiments with He reports that he has bred tubercle bacilli in the blood patients treated with Koch mostly phthisical, but without pf miliary tuberdulosis." Th ter Iur b. v. : . . t'hicago Times re klls as one 4 wh ers to the bit 6se tongue has rly denounced the South, de nain;g bayonets at the noils and the . ujecUon of thel rights of all citizens 40 the klomination of And yet this bri Uefaraer has admirers kVrangA to say. : No Mandatory Powers. Montgomery, Ala.j Jan. 30. The House committee on Common Carriers, after weeks of careful and patient in vestigation, I voted unanimously last night to make an averse report on the bill to give mandatory; powers to the Alabama btate Railroad Commissioner. The railroad companies have taken great interest in defeating the bill and haye brought before j the committee their ablest counsel, managers and agents. j 1 Forgers Sentenced to Imprisonment. New York, Jan. 30. William H. Butner and Willaim D. Hughes, con victed of forging divorce papers, were sentenced in the court of General Ses sions this forenoon by Recorder Smyth Hughes to five years imprisonment and Butner j to seven j years at hard labor. Y I Washington, Jan. 30. The Presi dent and members of his cabinet as sembled at the Baltimore and Ohio railroad station this afternoon at 4:15 o'clock for the purpose of receiving the remains of i Secretary Windom, whom they last saw alive on Tuesday at the regular meeting of j the cabinet. I The remains were brought in a special car attached to the regular train leaving Jersey cjity at 11:30 o'clock and arriv ing in Washington at 4:30 o'clock.' It arrived promptly on time ! and was re ceived by a most distinguished assem blage, including nearly all the leading public officials in I Washington. All the bureaus, divisions and branches of a i rr T-v a a tne Treasury uepartmenx were repre sented by their principal officials and many Clerks and subordinate em ployees. These all assembled at the Treasury Department at 4 o'clock and proceeded to the railroad station in a body. The Presidential party con sisted of the President, Vice President, Secretary and Mrs. Blaine, Secretary Proctor, Postmaster General Wana maker, Secretary Noble, Secretary Rusk, Gen. Schofield and Solicitor General Taft. The casket containing the remains were I removed from the car and placed on a stand prepared for it. It was then taken in charge by eight members of Company B of the Treasury National Guards, in uniform, under Lieutenant Moore and borne to the hearse. Carriages were provided for all and the cortege, headed by two mounted policemen, moved slowly to the Secretary's residence.! Washington, Jan. 30. The silver hearings were continued by the House Coinage committee to-day. Director Leach of the mint was questioned by j members of the committee. The ef fect of the passage of the free coinage bill, he thought, would be that foreign nations haying stocks of silver on hand would ship it here, but before these shipments could arrive the alarm would be so great that gold would be with drawn from the Treasury and hoarded by banks, ! so that the Government would have no gold: with which to pay for silver. The effect of i free coinage would be a contraction of the currency; but how long this would last he could not tell. j ! I Edward Atkinson was then given a hearing. He said that credit expend ed not upon the quantity of money but the quality. In the business of 1 the world credit was a factor to an extent twenty or thirty times as great as that of actual money, j He declared that free silver coinage would stop credit, which would stop business, as business had already been restricted very large ly by fear of such legislation. tons more than a year ago. The accounts from Southern cities indicate only j a fair trade, with im provement at Atlanta and slight im provement at Jacksonville, but with in creasing receipts and lower prices for cotton at New Orleans. ; The startling death of Secretary Windom caused a sudden fall in the price of bar ! silver from 47i to 46 in London, is stated ;in dispatches, but no change whatever in the financial policy of the1 Government is likely to result, thotigh it may easily happen that his successor, however able, may not possess the fertility5 of resources which Mr. Windom has shown in meet ing emergencies. The operations of the Treasury during, the past! week have in no way effected the 'money market, which is well supplied. Spec ulation, accordingly, is more active and wheat has advanced 2 cents, corn 2i cents, oats i and coffee 15 cents per 100 pounds, but cotton is l-16c lower andpil 25c lower. Failures for the week are 278; for the corresponding week of last year the figures were 246. Several bills amending the Code important particulars were passed. . The bill to authorize an uniform system of cansellation of countv scriDt when paid, said system to be inaugura ted by i ine totato Treasurer was laid on the table. The bill to incorporate' the Waco via Trust company passed its third read ing, r The hour of twelve having arrived, the special order was taken up being the bill introduced by Senator Wil liams,1 of Pitt, to amend the Code of North Carolina in regard to interest. The bill makes the legal rate of in terest; in the State, 6 per cent, with no fall. Our farmer friends handling fertilizers making another big (t) cotton crop We "town folks" hope their expecta tions may be realized. Mr. A. D. McCall and daughter who were so badly burned last Sunday power to go beyond that amount, even morninff are ffettiner on as well as by agreement. could be expected. ! Senator Bellamy, of New Hanover, Mr. Sidney J. Jones captured the took the floor in opposition to the bill. driver, two mules, wagon and about 100 I x ne om creates tne most intense In gallons "blockade" whiskey vesterdav terest. During the discussion the lob near here. The owner of the goods J bies and galleries were filled with spec- succeeded m makiuer his escape.- - i lators. I am told that since the dry ticket Senator Bellamy took the ground prevailed in our county that these that the passage of the bill would work "blockade runners" quite numerous. We 'Congress. V Washington, Jan. 30. Senate The Senate met at 11 o'clock. Alter prayer by the Chaplain the journal of yesterday was read and Senator Mor rill rose and in a voice tremulous with emotion, said: "In consequence of the recent calam ity which has visited us in the sudden decease of a former eminent member of this body and a distinguished officer of the Government,: the Secretary of the Treasury; I move that the Senate 1 do now adjourn." The mo lion waa agreed to and the Sonate adjourned till to-morrow at 11 o clock a. m. j - The Vote to be Taken Tuesday. ' Hartford, Conn., Jan. 30. Further debate on the committee's report oq the canvass of votes for State officers was continued to-day in the House. The House took I a recess till 10:30 o'clock a. m. next Tuesday, and at 1 o'clock taken. on that day a jvote will be A Fatal Quarrel. Birmingham. Ala., Jan. party necessity, liant hater and in the South 30. An Aqe-Herald special says: Dr. W. J. Head was shot and killed yesterday at Andalusia, Ala., by Dr. Cicero Jones. Jones Rurrendered himself to the au thorities. The shooting was the result temperance, urging Tarboro Southerner: Tuesday evening about b o'clock the .chimney of i the dwelling of Geo. Gainor, of Bethel, Pitt county, caught fire and the flames were soon communicated to the roof, and the entire dwelling wrs destroyed. recently Rev. G. P. Hebbard, Rec tor of Calvary Church, and Rev. D. Hern don Tuttle, pastor of the Metho dist church, have preached sermons on total abstainence of a quarrel. from intoxicating drink. all be captured. The two burned engines sent from Raleigh to the shops here for repairs will soon be ready for the road again. Mr. W. D. James will soon have his double story iron front store finished. This with the McKay block of five stores on East Main street gives that street quite an imposing appearance. If this article should be read by any one thinking of buying anew home, my friend, let me advise you to see Laurin bur er before you go further. Blessed as we are with such fine farming lands, good water and all the elements neces sary to good health, this is the country you are looking for. Just come out and see us and be convinced. Laurinburg has twenty general mer chandise, stores 3 drug stores, two mil linery stores, one furniture store, three blacksmith and wood working shops, two as good hotelsas there are on the line of the Carolina Central. The railroad shop's are located here and the money paid the employes spent at home. We have four churches for whites and several for the colored peo ple and no bar-iooms, in fact it is 1 A are j becoming j. irreparable injury to our people, I es- trust they may pecially at this time, when we were - . m V ak m just emerging irom a depressed condi tion and ectering upbn an era of un bounded prosperity. He cited instances in the government of Great Britain and other countries to show that they enjoyed the greatest prosperity at tho times there was no restriction upon the worth of money. He cited the cases of Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, Louisiana and other States to show that these States allowed interest at 7, 8 and even 10 per cent., and their pros perity is known to be phenomenal. He said the tendency of the passage of the billirould be to close up the savings banks of the State which had and are still doing so much to aid - our people of moderate means in the way of sav ng their earnings. The speech of Mr. Bellamy was I13- tened to with marked attention. Senator Aycock moved to amend so that the bill should not go into effect until November 15th, 1892, and made a speech in favor of the bill. The journal having been approved f ?aJnf 1 f J? 8(311 liquors of aDy Mr. McKinley rose and offered the fol lowing resolution: Resolved That the House of Repre sentatives has heard with profound sor row of the death of Hon. Wm. Windom, Secretary of the Treasury, who for ten years was a member of this body and for twelve years, a memoer oi tne ben ate. '' Resolved, That a committee of nine Representatives .be appointed by the Speaker to join such committee as may be appointed by the Senate to attend the funeral of the late Secretary otthe Treasury on behalf of Congress ancl to take such other action asmay be proper in honor of the memory of the deceased and as an appreciation of Congress of his public services ' YY ' Mr. Dannell I second the motion made by the honorable gentleman from Ohio. I have tho honor , to represent the district which for ten years was represented so ably by the honorable Secretary of the Treasury whose death we deplore and who was for twenty-two years representative In this branch and in the Senate of the State of Minnesota. The resolutions were unanimously adopted. Mr. McKinley As a further mark of respect I move the House do now ad journ. The motion was agreed to. The Speaker appointed the following committee to attend the funeral. Messrs. McKinley, Mill3, Dunnell, Holman, O'Neill, of Pennsylvania: Forney, Vandever, Blount and Snider, The smallest church In the State, perhaps, iajin Bertie county. It is only six feet wide and ten feet deep. It is a colored church and was large kind in the county. The grippe is still abroad in the land. Capt. D. K. F. Everett is off this week with it while Mr. John M. Pat terson pulls the bell cord and manipu lates the way-bills for. him on the local freight. - Judging from the new buildings go ing up in our town it looks like we are on a quiet little boom. Mr. G. W. Goodwyn is erecting a large eight room dwelling on the lot j lately pur chased from Mr. Cronly. Mr. Galla gher will soon erect a three room cot tage for rent and we hear of others soon to be built. enough at first to tioa. hold the congrega- After Senator Cameron's Scalp. TTarrtsrttrg. Pa.. Jan. 30- A reaot lutions was offered to-day in the House condemning Senator Cameron' course on the silver question and the Election bill and calling lupon him ; to aunere olnaAT to his tiartv and party principles or else resign from the United States Senate. Immediately alter tne reaa- r,rr nt thft rpsolutlon a motion was marl ft nn d seconded to lay it upon the table. The Speaker, however, dacidei that. rs. the resolution hald not been TfnA a second time, it waa not yet be fore the House. On the question of roAdinc the resolution a second time the navs were so decidedly in the ma jority.that Representative Thompson, who had offered it, allowed it to drop. . i m Telegraphic Sparks, In ioint assembly yesterday two ao ditional ballots for United States Sena tor were taken without change in the Illinois Legislature. The strikers nave resumed work on all Scotch railroads with the exception of the Caledoni&B road. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. The House was opened with prayer by Rev. Dr. L. Branson of the city. The following petitions were intro duced: By Mr. Patterson, To prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquors within two miles of Trinity church, Caldwell county; Mr. Biddix, From Ladles of the town of Marion; Mr. Francks, From Onslow county Alliance in regard to the debt of eaid county; Mr. Cowan, To , incorporate a high school. The following bills and resolutions were introduced: By Mr. Prltchard, In regard to public printing; Mr. Hop kins, To improve the labor system in North Carolina; Mr. Reed, In regard to raising revenue; Mr. Nash, For re lief ot R. B. Tucker in Stanly countv; Mr. Robertson, To incorporate a col ored (church in Yancy county; Mr. Lowe, To amend the charter of the Durham Waterworks company; Mr. Dewey, To provide for the pay ment of interest on bonds of ML Airy township; Mr. Long, To prohibit the sale of liquor within two miles of Beth sada church, in Columbus county; Mr. Hickman, To allow Brunswick county to levy a special tax; Mr. Bond, To amend the charter of the town of Eden ton; Mr. Bass, To change the name of Toisnot to Elm City; Mr. Lineback, To prohibit the sale of liquors near certain churches in Forsyth county; Mr. Sut ton, To incorporate the Fayetteville Land and Improvement company; .Mr. Beard, To prohibit the sale of liquor near certain churches; Mr. Alexander, Resolution that the House hereafter during the session meet at 10 o'clock a. m. on Saturday and 3 o'clock p. m. on Monday, adopted. The bill to amend the charter of the town! of Salisbury, passed Its third reading.' . The bill to amend Sec. 1,590 of- the rConUnmed on fowth page. X