TEH PUBLIC LEDGER. WASHINGTON NEWS. WHAT IS GOING ON AT THh NATIONAL CAPITAL. (Comments of What Is Transpiring in Consaeis and the Various Depart ment f the Government-Personal and Otherwise. THIRD PARTY PLATFORM. The third party men in Con gress are air ady preparing for the p tny in the next campaign Indeed, -ferry Jimpon and hi partv men are preparing- the platform a I read v It is sal Presi dent Po k. of the iliance, is with them, but 1 'n oriel Polk himsel is saVin? n liiui to the pubic ritrlir uoa , th. uh he miht be i conference with th se third pan. people. The platform,- Jerry and th other Hockle-s ones are preparing it, will declare that the govern ment should issue its money direct to he people at a low rate of interest upon good security. The p:atform, however, will noi sta e the nature of this security, leaving it to land, cotton, grain or any h big that the borrower migh? want to p t up as collateral. They believe shoul 1 lhey name the cojlatera;, it wou d injury their p u tv, and for that reason they will go oo further than to declare iu fa vor of the government loan in sr direct to the people. T'-e tariff pank of the party radical aepariure. it i : 1 - 1 1 1 L I - will rlf. re roi a line-- uuiy uuuu imnnrrnfl luxnries all the neces saries of life to be admitted free. To recompense the treasury for the loss of revenue the platform will declare f jr an income tax. Thtw euect to nut this through and launch the third party upon the sea of politics with its banner to the breezes and guns loaded for actual war at the St Louis convention iu February. Of course they are likewise con sidering the question of candid ates. President L. L. Polk, of the Alliance, is the man they want and have agreed upon for the vice presidential nomination. They want Senator Sta iford, the millionaire Californian, to take the presidential nomination, and if he will agree beforehand to accep , it will in all probability be tendered him Otherwise General Weaver, of Iowa, will perhaps be the man selected. Should Stanford accept and make the race with he third party he would almost certainly capture sever.il western states from the Republicans and make Demo cratic success a certainly. FREE COINAGE. There is undoubtedly a growing sentiment in the House in favor of some mutual understanding by which a fight over the silver ques tion may be avoided, but it has not taken any tangible form as yet. Whatever is done will not be done in antogonism to the silver men, but will be with their consent and chiefly be their action. If free coinage agitation is avoided in this Congress it will not be upon the argument that silver coinage is an evil to be shunned, but upon the- grounds that there is another work to be done ju-t now which will require abut all the attention of the Democratic party until it is dis posed of, and tuat the silver ques tion should wait to come up in the order of its importance. In other words, they want to finish sawing their wood before they begin splitting-it At this time thi is merely a sentiment, the extent of which has not been measured, and no definite policy has been formed. It can be stated on the highest authority that the President has determined that persons app iut ed bv the administration upon the recommendation of Senators or Representatives who when used their offices for their own purposes in hostility to the administration, shall not be permi ted to remain in the service of the goverment. In :dludi"g to this matter the Pr sident remarked to a member of his Cabinet that he had compli ed in almost every instance with the wishes of Senator Quay and others and ?hat in return for tnis consideration he has found that these persons have been and are using their :i'ins to briug ?he adniinisfv-dion into disfavor with the people for their own political ends. Veni, Vidi, Vici ! This is true of Hall's Hair Renewer, for it is the greatest con queror of gray or faded luir, making it Jook the sae even color of youth. Election of President and Vice-President bv the People. Mr. Williams, of North Caro lina, introduced the following joint resolution on January 18th in Congress, providing for elec tion of President and Vice-President by a direct v te of the people : Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of th United Statesof America iu Con gress assembled (two thirds of each House concurring therein), That the following amendment to the Constitution of the United States be proposed to the legis Utures of the several S atos, which heu ratified bv thr e fourths o? nu leg.l.jtire-s hab bee; n . md be a put of .'he onstitniion, namely : ARTICLE XVI. The second and bird division of articie second shall be stiucis out. All that part of the twelth anieudineiv of the Constitution from the beginning down to and including the words if such num ber be a majority of the whole number of electors appointed" to be struck out, and the following substituted : "Hereafter the Pres ideut and Vice-President of the United States shall be chosen b the people of the respective States in the following manner : The citizens of each State who shall bo qualified to vote lor members ol Jongress shall, on the first Tues day after the first Monday in November, in the year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, and on the same day in every four years thereafter, cast their votes by bal lot for candidate for President and Vice-President, one of whom at least shall not be an inhabitant of the State with himself; and proper returns of the votes so cast shall .be made under seal, within ten days, to the chief justice or to the presi iing judge of the highest judicial tribunal in the State. ''The right of fixing the places in the State where the election shall be held, and the manner of holding the same and ot canvass ing the votes and certifying the returns to the said chief justice or presiding judge, is reseived ex clusively to the legislatures of the States. '"The highest judicial tribunal of each State shall meet and be in session on the second Tuesday next following said election, ano he presiding judge ol said tabu nal stiall publicly open sai l re turns in the presence of the mem bers of the said tribunal, and th votes shall then be coun ed by the said tribuual. it shad be the duty of the members of said tribuna to cause three certificates of the num bers of votes so cast in said State for President and Vice President to be made and certified by a majority of the members of said tribunal and attested by the seal of said tribunal. "The certificates of the mem bers of said tribunal shall be dis posed of by them m the following manner : "First. They shall, by writing, under the hands of a maj ority of them, appoint a person so t ik charge of and deliver to the Pr-trident of the Senate, at the seat of Government, before the nst M-ma day in December nxt.4fert.1ir meeting, one of the certificates. "Second, lhey hhali ionn 1 forward, by the postotlice, to tne President of die Semite, at the seat 01 Government, one other ol the certificates. ''third. They shall forthwith caue the other of the cer i ate to be delivered to the ju Ige oi that district in which the tribuual shall assemble. Whenever a certificate of votes from any State shall not be re ceived by the President of the Senate on or be ore the day indi cated in the preceding section, h hall forthwith notify the sa d pre siding judge, who shall send special messenger to the district judge in whose cus-ody one cer tificate of the votes from that State has been lodged, and such judge shall for h ith transmit tna' certificate to the seat of Govern ment. "Congress shall be in session on the second Monday in Decem ber succeeding every election of President. The Senate and House of Representatives shall met in the Hall of the Hou-e of Kepres eutatives at one o'clock post medidian on that day; te Presi dent of the Senate shall be their presiding officer. Two tellers shall be previously appointed on the part of the Senate and two on the part of the House of Representa tives !The President of the Sen ate shall then open all the certin cates: and papers purporting to be certificates, of the electoral votes; the votes shall then be counted by the two Houses of Congress in the alphabetical order of ihe States. "The person having the greatest number of votes cast in all the States for President shall be President, if such number be . qual to a majority of the whole v te eriven; but 11 no person have such a majority, then a second election shall be held on the second Tuesday after the first Monday in the month of January hen next ensuing, betw en the persons having the two hisrhe.t urn bers for the office of Presi tent, which second election hal be conducted, the reUit certified, ind the votes counted in the same manner as in the first; and the person having the greatest num ber of votes for President shall be President. But if two or more persons shall have received the greatest and equal number of votes at the second election, the House of Representatives shall choose one of them for President, as is now prescribed by the Con titution. " 1 he person having the great est number of votes for Vice President at the first election shall be the Vice-President, if such number be equal to a majority of the whole number of votes given; and if no person have such majori ty, then a second election shall take place between the person having the two highest numbers on the same day that the second election is held for President; and the person having the highest number of votes for Vice Presi dent shall be the Vice-President But if two or more persons shall have received the greatest num ber of votes in the second elec tion, then the Senate shall choose one of them for Vice-President, s is now provided in the Consti tution. But when a second elec tion shall be necessary in the case o I Vice-President, and not nec s sary in the case of President, then the Senate shall choose a Vice President from the persons having the two highest numbers in the first election, as is prescribed in the Constitution." Strike out from the twelfth amendment the words "from the person having the highest num hers, not exceeding three, on the dst of those voted for as Presi dent." Strike out the words "eleeto -appointed" where they occur in the iwel-h amendment, and inser the words "votes cast a' tin lection." In discussing the importance the bill the ilmi g on St;i 8s.i 'Hon. A H. A Williams, iiej.r sen'ative in 'Jou ess from th Fifth district of this S ate iut . . duced a bill Monduv p ovid -for the e ection of Pjeshh nt - 1 4 Vice President by the direct voy f the people. This, ot curs. vilf require an amendment to th constituion. It is a m .iU -r even more imp stance th- n H: "lection f Senator- h h" vote of the p " 1e, n ! u: bring" the Peideut elos 1 t... tie peopl as the elnetion of S uator wou'd also brins- them clo e?- r.i neop e ir won'-o miw r with the pivo .i 1 idaie from ,1 - -1 -- tor.d vote is now snch aV tant factor in deciding- re-n Under the present electoral vs tern it is not th,j majority of vot r. wh elect the President nd V ce Presiden but the majori of e'ector, and this m ikes schenjinsr and trickery nossible w'dch wou d not be possible if the elector;d college were abolished and th people vo'ed direcHw If this ha been th-method in 18S-S Mr flnr rison with near'v 10 0 0 vofe 'ess than M Cleveland con d not h ve been President and few vot s in 11 nnf make a President epreseiltative Bankhead, of I 411 i c , i AJahama, chairman of the com-I mitree on public bnildinsrs and j -m -mat jM i-si -m Vn. 1 all " . - a. - -- I ujuuus, sa.y .ixn diiiss, ur new buildings and imnrovements to the amount of $27,000 000 were already before the committee. The Senate committee on priv- ilesres nd elections in reporting- ihat Senator Wilkinson (all, of Florida, has been lesraHy elected, to the Senate of the United States by the Legislature cf Florida and that he was entitled to a seat in that body, has declared that the Constitution Of the United States -eHfnio1t . IS Constitutional WAREHOUSE, &c. OUR DRUMMER! My it tie drummer comes to see 011 I his tim. with belter news h n e er. Pin es are s 1 1 b om- i g on all grades. Bre ks have een heavy this se-on and yet .rice!? hive advanced gradually instead ot going down as has been the case on other markets. Our ouyers do not try to beat down prices but they stand to the good larmers who patronize the Oxford market so lib-rlly. My busines i increasing every week, 01 which I thank the farmers wh nave treated me so kindly, and 1 ask all who have not tried me come and let me show them vvha I can do for them I respect al fair competitors but tear none I have had an experience oi five years in the warehouse business ind have made farmers interest my study. The streets have bei newly paved trom the new depot to mv warehouse door, so cumini in from that way you are no longer forced to split the mud. All I ask 1- a tn-d fr m ho who have not been to see in . Come on to the Oxford mark? md to the Johnson Warehous v here prices are good e d- Is 1 have firM saJe 01 .b.&t r last -ale prices shall besui factory. You will also find in Ux tord a clever set ol merchants win arry large stocks of all kinds .. ! go- ds which vou can bu at U i I -w sf price-1. R tp tnU r I do ; : : d utnm t - ; f.M e k o KeSp c uliy, wM I WILKINSON. Gf n VI1Y 13 TKE SS SHOE CEN"f LEflIifl TI'E BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MI3NEYP It la a seamless shoe, with no tacks or wax thread to hurt the feet; made of the best fine calf, stylish and easy, and because we make more shoes of thia grade than any other manufacturer, it equals .hand sewed shoes costing from $4.00 to $5.00. CC OO Genuine Eland-sewed the fine! t calf shoe ever offered for $5.00; equals French imported shoes which cost from $3.00 to $12.00. CJA 00 Hand-Mewed Welt Shoe, fine calf, stylish, comfortable and durable. The best shoe ever offered at this price ; same grade as custom-made shoes costing from $6.00 to $9.00. SO 50 Police Shoe; Farmers. Railroad Men and Letter Carriers all wear them ; fin 9 calf, seamless, smooth inside, heavy three soles, exten sion edge. One pair will wear a year. Stfj 50 fine calf; no better shoe ever offered at Cmm this price; one trial will convince those who want a shoe for comfort and service. Ui 25 and $2.00 Workingmans shoes have eiven them a trial will wear no other ma ke. iaa are very strong ana durable. Those who rtAife' S2.00 and $1.75 school hoes are on their merits, as the Increasing sales show. Dongola, very stylish; equal3 1'Tench best bawl km w 0 ixmgoia, very styiisn; t Imported shoes costing from $4.0i) to 6.i iported shoes costing rrom $4.(X) to 86.00. tadies' ti.SO, 82.00 and $1.75 shoe for Cantion. See that W. L.. Douglas name and price are stamped on the bottom of each shoe. cttake no substitute.uo Sifr E5. T. RHWLINS JOHN A. WILLIAMS -DEALER IN- -OXFORD, N. C- 4 HA???T.PH?v,7wT?J? oquUa number of frmi lisiblj.SowUd, all ilBtt and priees. Addrtss jjfo. A. WILLIAMS, Oxford, K. O. HARDWABE.c. Edwards & Winston, Oxford, K". C. ' at i i5A If ' 4.4. ARE STILL IN THE STRONG CURRENT for trade and are now offering at lowest possible prices the following goods which are flrst-clasg: Hardware. Stoves, Heating and Cooking, and all repairs for same kept on hand, iarge stock Axes , Grnb hoes, Picks, Ames' Shovels, Spades, Forka, Po tato Diggers, Rikes, Trace Chains, Log C&slnf, Cow Chains, Barb Wire Fencing, Ac. Tinware, Crockery, etc. Larce stock Tinware and L-mp Goods. Large stock Crockery from a 5 cent Glass to $60 Chin Set. Guns and Pistols. New lot Pietols, Breech Loading Gnns and Muzzle Loaders at Htonishingly low price. Big stock loaded and empty shell and wads; In fact, sporting eoods of all kind. Builders1 Material. Terra Cotta Piping Paints Oils. Glass. Ac. Buggies and Wagon Just received new stock Waeon. one asfl two horse. We warrant these wacron to izlve Ktin. faction and the prices are right. Nice stock o f uucgieB ana carts which nnt be sold at once a we have too large stock. Buggj and Wairon Material. Farming Iirt piemen b . Dixie Plows and Castings. Bos Plowi and Castings, Farmers Friend Plows and Castings, smith's Cutters, and in fact everything in th way of farming implements. Housekeepers' Goods. Sewing Machines. Roeers Knive and Fork Carving Sets. Ac. Ohoice line of srond .Ti?tahi for brinal presents. Largest Stock of U;bi:v t- v.'-r-.u...- j;w..:.:y iu the county; in fae? . ; v ; : -. h ... are line rumps f an snin Agents for iiaponfo Sportm nwi JtfJtii:- Powder. Just received car h.ad best iro t- M te. t l: and white Oil, and can uv?;5r n v e-ian ? fort es' wholesale prices. MtUX and LOCksmUblV;.; . v v-;: , COL: Si j r II i OXFOKiJ 1. b reu.ve- is the :1 nc ; r: fail corj. ol cSi-. :: : a)t-.v ;?xp-.; :ei.i.-d ir.ilmf : .y ii everv )"-uc:- 'Miss s-r 3 j vcl! hn'y'u Ac- it tbillUi Ttittv&f C Oi Aft-. V- j' J;'i 7;? i.ijj l.S, the forenoon ol every u y. m cd J-d plti-hj-v- itn-'l ciay pnpiiri. 1 Lt p.-l TOlt'x:-. -J U;tr u-g give lit ' t i i '. 1 -ii. 1 ro p . :-k .: Mill t - jau 6-im. -x. - . - .' S-MOv - , MET?"?., 4 4 -1 a , T. HIt'Kh. T. A.n. i HENDERSON, N. C. Will practice together m the Courts of Granviu Vance, Franklin, and WarreD Counties, and in hIJ uatters requiring their joint, atteution. W e hope by prompt, diligent, and fnithfnl atieu moij to business to deserve and receive a portio of the law business of this section. s. II. CA5NADT, M. I., OXFUKD. N. C Offers his professional services to the Di?i!e Oxford a-d surrounding country. Offlca over Hall's drug e-tove " KeBidecce at R. I. Devin'. yK. J. E. WYOHI, OENTAL SURGEON, OXFORD, N. C. Pure Nitrous Oxide Gas administered for !! paiLless extraction of teeth. Rooms in Hebndok Bank Buixjix. J 31. HAYS, M. OXFORD, N. C, Offers to the Public. hl Services m Pra. titioner of Medicine in All of Its Branches. J3r"Office in Herndon Block No. a. OSam hours from 0 until 10 x. gTRAYIIOIlN A WAnUCII, Attorneys-at-Law, .Will practlc in tht eourti tf Granvili. Pr on and Caswell eountr. OQet i'. Ool. ntmeri,i old law oflew.