Newspaper Page Text
TEE WEEKLY TELEGRAPH: MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 11. 1893.
CULLOM STANDS
FOR A REPEAL.
His Argument Was Strong but From a
Purely Republican Partisan
Standpoint
PEFFER S-QUESTION TO GORDON
Wanted to Know Why the Georgia
•m-iihtor Hurt Not Deserted the Demo
cratic Party Became He Gave Ilia
Support to Alliance .Meaiures*
Washington, Sept. 4.-—The house Joint
resolution to make the 18th of Sep
tember, 1893, a holiday within the Dis
trict of Columbia, the !00*h annlver
sary of the laying of the cornerstone
of the capltol of the United States, was
laid before the senate md passed.
Among the various petitions present
ed for and against the repeal of the
Sherman act was one by Senator liar
ris who described it as “the stereotyped,
printed, Wall street forma of petition."
Mr. Gallinger of Pennsylvania Intro
duced a bill supplementary to the pen
sion net of June 17. 1890. and asked
that it be read in full, and that ho
be heard briefly in explanation of it.
The bill was read. Its mist important
provision Is that, except in cases of
established fraud .no. pension shall be
suspended or withheld until after u
notice of ninety days is given to the
pensioner, after a full and Impartial
examination.
Snoator Gallinger’s remarks
addressed particularly lo teat feature
of the blfl, and at the close of his re
marks the bill was referred to the
committee on pensions.
Senator Butler offered an amendment
to the bill repealing the dherman net
and had Jt referred to the finance com
mittee. It provides for the repeal of
the 10 per cent, tax on state bank
circulation, provided that such circu
lation bo secured by coin or approved
state municipal bonds
Uuiilnrt * Holiday.
At 12:50 Senator Allen, PopulK*. ol
Nebrasaa, offered the following resolu
tion:
"Whereas, It is duo t .at congress
take cogntzanco of the labor organi
rations and the industrial interests of
the nation by observing mis day, com
inonly calico Labor Day; therefore,
“Resolved. As' a tu-tik **f respect for
the labor organizations and industrial
Interests of the nation, the senate de
now adjourn.
n*! it was. but he would not object to
the Gorman amendment. He sn- uld
vote for the repinl bill drom the llnance
committee. He did not"bolleve that the
Sherman act waa in a gr«»at degree re*
Hponsild for the existing financial con
dition. but he was for Its repeal be-
ojuse it was but a temporary expedient
and the government could net afford
to buy silver and coin it,.o rissue paper
upon it. when the dollar represented
less than 60 cents wortli of silver. Such
a performance long continued would
embaraas any government. He was
not a monometalllst and few men de
manded the ostracism of silver or of
gold. But the close commercial rela
tions which existed bet weens nations
made an International agreement de
sirable, if not absolutely necessary. So
ho favored the free use of silver upon
an agreed ratio. Gold bad no money
function which silver did not possess.
B>th metals were tlhe creation o fnat-
ure, w hile money was the crentfo-n of
the law. All that was krjpwn of the
science of money was the result of
experiment and experience, and tt was
not certain that what today appeared
to be a well defined principle would
long remain so. The people wanted sil
ver and so did he. But. first of ail. they
wanted to have all of the circulating
medium of equal value without regard
to material.
the 5 cent silver coins. He said that
the administration had come to con
gress demanding a particular act, the
repeal of the Sherman law. It had sug
gested no policy which admitted the
usual compromise in legislative pro
ceedings. The administration had de
manded the pen uni or nothing,
and the people whom he represented
had accepted the challenge. They pro-
)Oftod to give no quarter as the admin-
stration proposed to give none, a
/ery large majority of farmers in the
South were members of the Farmers
Alliance, and one of the cardinal doc
trines of the Alliance was the free
and unlimited coinage of silver at tne
old ratio. The Alliancfc had supporwa
no candidate for any office who was
not in sympathy with, their yi- ws and
who did not so express hlmv'lf. Among
the public men who had done so was
.. r*„Aa.. n t (' r\rAiin 1 WhO
Thf Fixed Ratio.
ti i r
i tie
tho Bonn tor from Oeorgin (Gordon) who
had written a letter to 'ho Alliance ex
pressing his sympathy with it ana ms
approval of Its doctrines. ,
Senator Potter rend Senator Gordon s
letter statins he Indorsed "without re-
serve and with unabated emphasis tne
police of the Alliance for on increase
of the circulating medium, andthaj
his sympathies were “deeply enlisted
In all the high purposes sought to be
accomplished by the firmness of the
Alliance." Senator Fetter declared that
a repeal of the Sherman act vw'hout
a provision for free comaBe would de-
Mr. Cullom entered upon an argu
ment to dnmonstrato the unsoundness
of tho proposition that a fixed ratio had
not been maintained between* gold and
bilvr-i, ,tmi, tvltlmUtiiH. 1*6 fiaid that th'
Unitod States muRt. adopt a policy
which would do Justice to all classes
and all sections of the country. Unl-
veriul bankrupt***- be as fatal to
the creditor classs ns to the debtor
class. He sympathized with the peo
ple of the silver states, but It was ne
cessary tn have in mind the Interests
of all the people, and to secure free
coinage, if at all. upon jin cduring
basis.
Turning bis attention to other causes
than the Sherman for the present de
pression, Senator Cullom said that he
doubted if the credit of the United
States was as good today as it was a
year ago. In. i»yj a party came into pos
session of all branches of the govern
ment pledged to repeal th? protective
tariff under which the country had been
developed and to overturn t.he national
bank system which had furnished the
best money the people had ever had and
were replace it by a state bank mhney at a
discount everywhere except in the
neighborhood of its lusue. What won
der 'that doubt and want of confidence
seized upon the people, which resulted
in the almost complete paralysis of bu
siness and the hiding away of money
and an extra, s-esion. He hoped that
he was mistaken, but he believed thai
too would not again have good times
if tho pledges of the democratic party
wero to be observed. Senator Vance
toad argued the conditional rep a! meant
a united party; the inference was that
unconditional repeal meant a divided
party. That would be a calamity the
country could easily bear.
In conclusion Senator Cullom com-
pared the financial planks of both par-
stmyVh"twmoM^li.icar r .^.aml
that tlio idea of thc abandonmont of
ailvor money was rejected bj all tne
people.
Tl>« Alliance Fell From Grace.
Senator Gordon said In relation to bill
letter* I endorse now all that I saia,
then, but I do not endorse the farmers
alliance since it fell tromgnw-
"That relieves ror. said Senator Per
for, of some embarrassment. It •*
the farmers- alliance that 5 '? 9
from grace; it is th? democratic party.
The people whom he represented had
"spurned the imperial decree, and he
gave warning that they HS*'
rebrllion against It. He would bid god
speed to the revolution that was coming
and would drive those people from pow-
er and restore the government of the
United States to the people to whom it
s-UnM " Tt was. .he said, free coinage
at the present ratio which* tho people
FIGURES OF
COTTON CROP.
How the Different States Showed Up
in the Production of the Crop
Just Marketed.
GEORGIA'S LARGE DECREASE
Crop for the State bnt Little Over Eight
Hundred Thousand Bales—Increase
in tho Southern Manufacture
'T'l •
j. ncic is no
i
k rN place like hon
W "What lD do you propose," Senator I the year ending August 31. showing a
Palmer asked. ........ | decrease of 300,000 from last season
-To restore'the old law of IS to 1." I This Blll lt ls B aitl. constitutes the
commercial crop, or the — moved
people stand, where the farmers are by railroads, etc., and not the growah
We have been there all the time" , which some excellent authorities claim
"Will that produce What you dreire. wgB 100 000 ba r e , less. The commercial
Sen ^ " ™ before." crop by .fates, in thousands of bales,
Wili it now." I as compared with last year, U divided
Yes, It will now. Lot us try and I ag f 0 uows: •
sPf," I 1892-93.
Drifting into a discussion of the New 640,000
York newspapers, he declared that the 1 Arkansas •“•JjJO
insolence of .the metropolitan press was Flor jdn <5,000
to him intolerable and that the people of Georgia 530,000
the West had no patience with it. He I Louisiana...., <<5.000
recalled a prediction which he bad made Mississippi *‘“•*99
two years ago that, the two old parties North Carolina 325.000
would be brought together under the south Carollnh BeO.WO
•j™* holding that they were much alike
with res poet to the maintenance of -the
value of money in circulation. He
showed that the Sh~rman law had
closed the mines and that under Its fur
ther operation the United States would
buy only foreign silv r. Tho people
aia,SLJP, n « l „ m *'ne.v, but that -they
did want a dollar Intrinsically- worth
8 ;»d Cullom: "The business
u »«> Pa**
Senator \ oorhees opposed the peso- **!* for the repeal of the stiver not
lutiun and aald: "I am In favor of all I*®*. b, *< multitudes of laborers are
the jubilees and holidays for labor. I Tiding for work. If there i* any
was born In the ranks of labor, i - 1 Hit".-.*. l “‘- 1 -.
1 think that the best' tribute we . H
pay labor la to go on with the business 1 cl0u<l8 that darken tit* situ-
of the aenat* as rapidly as possible to ™'7' ov ? the dimculties and start
Its conclusion. I know of no ether tn- L„LSTH°Ju C ' >m, 7 erc ® whi ' ;h are now
1n which we can contribute to the In- “JJ. ,h * railroad tracks, in the
terrats of tabor tn the present situation f«c tort's and mines,
of affair,." Iet us do It at onoe! At once
The resolution was rejected, yens S,
nays II. The senators voting for the
,i. me senators voting for the
E-S'utlon were Senators Allen, Irby, ,
Peffer, Pettigrew, Power, Bboup, Vance
ana vest.
Senator Allen also offered a raolutlon,
w *» referred to the finance com-
*t once! At once.
Cok* for Silver.
srSUiL'”’ fn k ' of T * X88 ' A ' 8 ’ -ho next
speaker. Ills speech war bared mo tv
on the president's message thin on the
repeal of the bill. HedSukS the
0 i lW — ne .Y!!T *>*en content until
New Orleans, Sept <.—The New Or
leans Cotton Exchange report on the
cotton crop of last year waa given out
in full today. In addition to the lead
ing figures telegraphed last Thursday
night .the report aaya that taken upon
ihe average tor Uie eutii'e year,
on returns from the Southern ports
and the largest interior feeders of over
land routea, the value of the past com
mercial crop has been ubout $42.50 per
bale, against $37.50 for 1891-92, a gain
of $5 per bale, and the total vifiue of
the crop $284,750,000, against $338,812,000,
a deficit of $64,062,000. Figures arc given
showing that the actual growth of the
p a ,t year was 6,450,000 bales and that
tho commercial crop of 6,700,000 included
250,000 bales of old cotton. The Texas
or? P i. n..t at 2.108.523 bales, made up
of actual deliveries from the state for
■when Pearline
used in it. Th
is no place ah
home wh (
Pearline can’t
used. Pearl
takes the hard w
and drudgery out o
t • , ,. keeping a home cle
It is next to having the washing and cleaning done for
and well done at that. It washes everything that can
washed. It cleans paint, marble, carpets, hangings—in
everything cleanable.. It is a luxury in the bath. It j s
phatically without harm to person or things. With Pear)
you have rest; it rests with you to have Pcarline.
Vniir is probably invaded by peddlers, who claim the stuff it,,,.
I OUT Pearline, ‘‘the same as* Pearline, or "as good as" Pearlrii '
tt FALSE—Pearline has no equal, and is never peddled .
ilome ays JAMES PYLE, N*
lveri
TestVot
Were if
S
rEWART'l
Uguoim
(^pl.ted
puffer C
** Ca»torim Is so well adapted to children tlAt
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
111 So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Cast oria cures Coliq, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
XlilL «ccp, m*d promotes
gestlon.
Without injurious medication.
"The use of 'Castorla is so universal and
its merits bo well known that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
intelligent families who do not keep Castorla
within cozy reach."
Cx&los Mjluttx, D. D.,
New York City.
"i" ■erer&l yean I have recomngj
your -Cutoria,- and shall always contias,
do eo as lt baa Invariably produced bcoe
Eowtx F. Pasdix, m. D„
125th Street and 7th Are., Sow Yotk 0
Tire Cxxtacr Comp ATT, 77 Hchiut FTntrr, Xrw You fin
280,000
Total crop... 6,700,000
8oulh.ru Consumption.
9,035,000
l<T)dcrsftlp of Grover Cleveland, and an- . Ten nessee , ;;
nounced Mint the prediction hod already Texas 2,100,000 z.te
-be-n fulfilled. "They are there now,” he J
•aid.
At this point of the speech there were 1
not more titan a d02en senators left tn relating to cotton con-
th- .dumber and amour tbqr- were The returns relating to v
many Indication* of weariness. Senator sumption In the South are of a most
peffer showed no sign of lt. however, satisfactory description. The financial
and mteht have cone on Indefinitely but I aortmre in other »ec-
aft r a whispered colloquy with Senator H“* u .“T— "■ k.o lttite
I Van Winkle Gin & Machinery (
an r a Wjuspcren coiimiuy mJWI*™ i . .. . ,. nn ntrv. exerted but little
Cockrell, the Senator agreed to let Ihe JjjJP* ®* *5? thomilis In the cotton belt
senate adjourn on condition that he '""urece on the m n. in in , Dd
•houid have half an hour tomorrow be- uP«><he beginning m Ncw ^
for- Senator Stewart take* the floor. The
senate thereupon, at 6:45 p. tn., ad
journed until tomorrow at nodat.
PAN-AMEAICAN DOCTOFS.
Th.Rig Congr.KA Will ho in Urnunllfl.d
even then not eo much as
m' reply to tlvo direct Inquires tent
to^every mill n surprisingly tow" num
ber stated 4hst they hjd^experienced
no ill effects. It Is true a general aenae
Of uneaslnss prevalledamongrntll^wn-
ers and there were crowing complaint*
of i’tcr\\islng difficulty of daspc-ing
°f roJSsFeare were cxprc-pselalso of COTTON SEED
~*SlMe danger ahead to result from OII(>
ST continued flnanclaletrlngency .but MILL MACHIN
miner of fact ^ojMUjnjJKy | ERY
COJIPLETH.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
MANUFACTURE IIS.
>
*• "W icwrwq IU ino IinauCP com- I thr. »««*, L eli vvmoni until
rmttw, callinr on tho 8f»cr*tary of the t{[? 2255SL?, 1873, by wb,c h half of
i?, for nation on the follow- }? f2S£ tr ?if ^J on J5 f wa , & stamped out
iuir pointa: Whether Iho treasury de- I double tne purchasing
has at any time redeemed KTA° t if < ’ r h,lf - was undon.-
•ny portion of the silver or coin cer- 1 8n J; reversed. And now, and he. wo nre
tlficntes in ailver coin as provided by cnlle d upon to perform the last art
the act of July 14. 1890; if ao, when, fr0, i? !, h " "^lute hooks all
and what amounts have been thus re- reoognlll .n of ailver as ntuney. Trflnv
^r.T H, i. wh8 I In coinage value "' y.rr hulllon, degraded as it has been,
of the silver bullion purchased and sub- wl " hu > r In the markets of the world
discretion of the 88 jnuoh °r more of cotton and wheat
Ulf treasury, remains un- did hv 1173. Itefore It-was demoa-
S®. £ia wh) [_ *a UCb » llv, -r bullion f<* 8 *d. thua showing conclusively that
has not been coined and paid hut in It Is not silver which his fallen In
a wl i h th ® Provision* of the value, but 1t la gold which ha* risen
f ny P, 8 .^ 0 * ,h8 POP-'r OM under the Influence o flrgtstatlnn'
redajmed tn gold by the traaa- H, said he. In the pnwtres* of hli
nrr department since March, 1898, waa speech, this bill passes the free men
P J 1 n"~I ’? “ny,. 1 " 80 - Of America will hove bowed their necks
^Ky{™Pomdf.? 1 o C f r sSmh°D. y , nk '‘, of Eur ”'“" domination
Washington, Sept. 4.—The efcrt Tan-
American Medicnl Congress will as-
aemble tomorrow morning at 10 „ m .L.A“~iitV,e affected
o’clock in Altaush’s opera honxe. Dr. of cotton toad bjjj out nuie • uuMrusri
William repper of Philadelphia, the JjSiL^VcjVaafer or more rapidly 1 FERTILIZER
president, avlU calt tt to order and ^w^g basU than ^tton^mlUlng m MACHINERY
etl by Ib-r. Paret, consumed 440.000 bale.: CYPRESS
tM. ye?r. in the fee* of imtosjrebl* TANKS.
Sm”birira l *nn 0 ?nrt- t °-**‘ S84.000 bale*. The bf „t system for elevating cotton nnd distributing earao direct
or 56 per cent. Tho spindles now In I jinny gold medals have been awarded to us. Writ, for catalogue
operation are 2.171.147. against 0,»8.; wbat you WANT. We cau save you money.
prayer will be offered
Episcopal bishop of Maryland, l’res
Went Cleveland will welcome the del
egate*. Hon. W. J. lloss, chairman or
the Ixxmt of district comnilasloucra.
will extend a weiemne to the city and
Dr. Pepper will make the address of
welcome on behalf of the physician* of
WIND MIL
PUMPS, I
COTTON GIN
FEE
ICONDENSE
AND
FItE
t nss.li
ikull »i
r Of 0(1
tutor
I finish*
yei
I -
ll« to 1
raator
[orpoolt
U his
the United Sates. To those addresses I-SS an inert*.«* of M- 000 - equalling
response* will be made by several of I . j 0 f the emir* Southern
the delegate* from Central and South consumption for 1889-90. and over 17
America. The meeting tomorrow par cent, of the pr*»m year i con-
morning i* the only general session' of sumption. Georgia fo.lowa et«»piy
the congress provided for on the pro- 1 ?<. 0<)# , I b8 '";, t r r 'AJ^jj.ooo or I
gramme. At 8 oVlocktaJhe afternoon | *g*°£*? ^ B&JFffYlS |
bales ahead of last year. ■
J< ot8 ; Offered a free coinnge amendment
to the repeal bill, and It waa referred
to the finance committee.
Cullont for It.peat.
A 1 11 p. m. Senator Cullom, Republi
can, of Illinois addressed the senate in
affairs. The Rothschilds mid theTtank
of England, with their connections
dictate the flnnnclnl policies of Europe,
*od if »he single gold standard Is e»-
tnbUshed I. America, then Rothschild
atid the Bank of England, with their
favor of the bill to repeal the pun-tin*- Np w Toth associates, wilt become Ihe
mg clause of th* Sherman act. In the arbitrators of American finance and
course of 8cnator-Cullom-s speech, he < hP dictator* of our fi-.nncinl pollei.
waa asked by Senator Mitchell whether beoauae they control ihe gold which
If the repeal bill wns passed and there 1 w * Will be compelled to have,
was no funher legislation on the aub- Coke having drifted on to the efforts
J 8 **- •nother silver dollar cnukl be of New York bunkers to Influence
" (ll8 ” , , 1 . *r 1 “ , sr CuHom admitteil that financial legislation, he was Interrupted
It could not be, and ndded that that by 8*n*tor Vance of North Carolina
To* a h fn'i* 8e 1P„ l ° th * b ,,<a * e Of the who said h* had received a letterthl-i
tit. nd. A "I— Ml. Th* repenT bill, he I morning bearing on th” point? and
nnd every day thereafter during the
time the delegate* will be together
they will assemble In twentymo *cp-
nr.i-te sections nnd listen to paper* nd
discussions devoted to the seici-.tl *pe-
cldltUa of the profession covered by
the selections hi detail. The congress
promiaes to be a pronounced sue
of .tho first order. At 5:«) this nftcr-
noon C8.1 delegate* had register.-I
twelve to fiftetut hundred an- exp.-
They represent the Important coun
tries of the three Americas. Every
llland Allison bill. . „„. t
said, had no suggestion as to what the
standard should be—whether gold or
*llver. H* assumed, however, that the
party in power in the senate and coun
try could take such action with rcf<r'.
cnee to the silver on hand na would ioe
wise and proper.
Senator Aldrich, Republican, of Rhode
Island, remarkrd that the repeal of the-
purchasing clause of the act of 1890
did not repeal the provision* of the ant
with Coke’s permission he would read
It to the senate. It wa* a letter re
ceived by I. II. Foust of Salisbury, N
C„ and from E. D. Rhmpnrd ft Co.,
banker*, of No. 3 Broad street. New
York. The letter decline, the offer of
a loan, and adds: "The senators from
your country ore ti.it looked upon at
promotors of the general welfare. If
their stand represents tne views of
which authorize the coinage of the bull- y ?. u . r ^ people on financial matters.
Ion on band for tho redemption of trens- 1 w 80 very difficult foe vru to eecurs
ury note*. *my KrtOmm.station from capitalists
Senator Cullom expressed hi* obllga- ,n ,hl " «Ntl°fi until there Is a decided
tlon to th* senator from Rhode Island change.
for th* suggestion. The repeal bill did At the cln*e of Senator Coke’s speech
not deal with that question at all ao ,he ■enate went Into executive session,
that the whole subject stood as It was Th, ‘ door* were reopened at 4 p. m.,
before any effort waa made to repeal and the senate proceeded with the con-
thr act of July, 1890, because it simply I sklernlton of th* house bill to repeal
applied to the purchases of ailver bull- < ho purchasing clause of the Sherman
Ion nnd stopped there. I act.
Senator Cullom began by saying that I Tho amendment offered by Senator
the questions which now engross the Peffer on the tint of September was
attention of congress nnd the rountrr called up by thesninteand read. Itcon-
•urpasa in importance any which have -S"*- of nine sections, fixing a standard
been tho subject of congressional action f °r both gold ami silver coin. After
since the abolition of slavery. Com- ** w ** ta-ad Senator Peffer intimated
merce la stagnant, bank* and rummer- I bis willingness to withhold his speech
clal houses are falling, factories anil ! un,il tomorrow. Senator Yoorhees
mine* are closing, and within Ihe last asked the senator from Kansas whether
six months perhaps 1,0*0,000 wage earn- t>referred not to go on today, and
era have been thrown out of employ. | »« Senator Peffer professed indifference
meui. Unfnnunaieiy there waa ~— 1 — i- .
OW at till, time last year. In the list
"of state* South u--d*t» »> 88
forged ahend. reaching njfrir WUNt
VAN WINKLE GIN AND MACHINERY COMPANY.
ATLANTA, G
I :lv, I ,
ESTABLISHED 1876*
SMITH
HAL]
I d*mor
pt«l U
t bill v
EMIN KILLED AND EATEN.
An African BIlMtanarr Th*re Can |
t Be So Further Doubt.
Lrndon. Prot. 4.—Th® rt®v. Mr. iwmnn,
a million*it, who haa Juat ^
itHti on the east shore of JT*”*** 1 *}'
yliii. says that it to Impossible to doubt
tl ^rhe'mMrrirm(nrerenUal reports reach;
wl tne trom four tnSpJluient j;ure*».''
aald Mr. Swann, "and all agwd aa tff
the details. Arab* everywhere tn Africa
delegate In the section Is a specialist are rejoicing over hi* death.'
In his calling. The foreigner* were
appointed by their respective p
moms. The Invitation* for the
gre-re n-ert* Issued in the name o:
DEALERS IN
ENGINES, BOILE
COTTON PRESSES, BELTiJi:]
AND GENERAL LINE OF Willi
ADDRESS
SMITH & HALL,
the
pr.-sident o( the United State
A special nnd novel feature
congress iri.ll be the presence
delegate* named by the gore
the state* of the union. They are hero
solely to attend the section In liygier
and tiuarantlne or public health
%gS3S>£ th. report* "trelval by
idencs'of "se^dbln "AU^-hV tK
of th® Manyrmar. in th® ••gefjlgrt of
Ftat®. A_party of Arabs op-
Em r
th® Conxo -—- -
reached and asked Emin.
••Whcr® ar® you Rolni?T .
“To the coaat," waa Emin a reply. Tht
leader of the Arabe. who was armed with
a acimetor, then stepped up to Eimn and
nh:
FIRST-CLASS
CHARLESTON READY FOR BUSINESS.
are Bmln Paaha, who killed the
Arabs at Victoria Nyaasa." Wthcot
awaiting an answer be struck off Emin a
head with the scion-tar. Smta a body
vaa thrown to the Manycmaa. who at*
BOILERS
[OH I
agreement of opintnn imotig the,people
'a* tA'the canm- of th* distress or the
repwtly. No such peculiarly mixed state
of affairs was ever known in oor his
tory. All elasae* were without confi
dence and were appealing to coneres*
for speedy relief. He did not believe
that the appeal* to lay aside sectional
ism and politic, were needed. If he did
he ahould deplore the decadence of na
tional spirit. If the national bank bill
bill were enacted it would result In an
increase of our circulating medium with
as good money as the world affords,
lt wa* recommended by the secretary
of the treasury, yet before a vote could
lie had upon tt it was necessary to dis
cuss all over again the whole national
hanking system In the same old strain
and with the same old arguments that
had tie.1t heard over and over again
since tt was established twenty-five
years ago. Why not give the country
the relief it demanded and aflrTWfijals,
when the people had emerged from
their preesnt distressed eondiliod. take
up and sto od the bank note act.
nni poiui, eettaiur Vtmrhm antd
h* thought tt right to continue longer
in session today. A motion to adjourn
was thereupon made by Senator Jones
of Nevnda. and the / yeas and nays on
that motion were demanded by Senator
Hale. The motion to adjourn was re
jected; yeas OO. giays 31, as follows:
Yeas: Alien. Bute, Berry. Blackburn.
Butler. Call, Car. Coke. Dan:<4, Dubois,
Irby. Jones of Arkansas, Jones of Ne
vada, Mitchell of Oregon, Paacoe, Pugh.
Roach, Hhbup, Teller and White of
California—20.
Nays: Aldrich, Allison, Caffery. Cul-
The F.ITort* of the Storm II
Wiped Out.
Charleston, Sept. 4. — Charleston
wishes to announce to the world that
■he la ready for business again. A suf
ficient. number of wharves have been
repaired to accommodate all shir
p -rt and all the road* nre run
trains on regular schedules. Telegraph
communication ho* been restored to
all parts of the country, th* electric
lighting and telephone
working without a break and the street*
have been, ctaared of all the wreck
of the storm. The city health otn
say that the community Is remarkably
free from sickness and the streets and
exchanges have assumed the usual'ap
pearance of the heavy fall months. Ev
erybody Is at work. There are no un
employed here except those who wHI
not w-rrk. Merchants speak cheerfully
o tine situation snd prospects, and re
covery from the paralysis of the storm
ha* been quits «* quick and Uwnough
as the destruction of the storm.
Dispatches today from Beaufort an
nounce the arrival of the first
Iam of provisions, and say how
wl Q» hungry wen* at Chariest
C^nenmMy. The committee have anotbe
train load of provisions ready f ^ /
Subsequently the Mancmaa murdered
Emin's military fotlowera and *V» them.
Mr. Swann aaya these details have been
m often repeated .that In Ujlfi jnobotly |
GET OUR PRICES.
Atlas and Erl* engines and tot
•tacks, stand pipes and
shafting! pulleys, gearing, t.r 8
era, etc.
Complete cotton, saw. grist,
tlllzcr mill outfiU; alao Its,
mill and shingle outfit*.
Building, bridge, factory.
railroad casting*: ratlroed,
Uu- and factory aupptlee.
Belting, packing, tnlector*.
rauc. files, oilers, etc. *-»'
work ISO bands.
rnmȣ*J
«1
has the sllghteat doubt
OMBARD
Iron Works & Supply]
ACGVSTt m
AboYflf Pisa. D®po4>
KILLED BY A CABLE CAR.
lorn. Davis, Dolph, Faulkner, Freye,
Gallinger. Wilson, Oorman, Gray. Hale.
What lie Waul.
Ha
of the till
lloer Hunt..u Lindsay. McPhernn,
Mandersnn. Milli. Palmer. Peffer. Per
kins, Pructnr, Smith, Htockbridge^ Tur-
. Vilas, Voorhee., Washburn
anti White of Isiuisiana—21.
IVfrril .4fMeNilm.nl.
Washington, D. C., 8ept. 4.—One of
the oldest residents of Waahlngton.
, Mr. Robert U Whartbn. 83 years of
s.-rvlces are I win struck by a cable car yester-
“ * *" day afternoon and killed. The mem
ories of long past administrations ere
recalled by his death. Wharton origi
nally came to Waahlngton from Nash
ville. Tenn.. In 1813. He was born and
reared near the Hermitage, president
Jackson's famous Termeserie home, and
was appointed 'clerk tn the general
post office by President Jackson. He re
mained tn that service many yean.'
saving Ms money and Invested In real
estate here, which eventually made
him a very wealthy man.
JAPANESES
piLjg
& CURE
A W*w and Cnmplets Traetawnt, eawMtef of
— • , ^ otxtawot sad two
•r-dUintr Cm for Pllaa
. IiBMkaaa
THE
ONLY TRUE
if avarf aataroawJ
with th« knif* or tajoettona of ctrbollt ■
•bleb
Mhhf aad —Uom > ptraiMWOt earo, nd oft—
iiiUny in dc&thp oniiinaarr* Why o.icu-h
o terrible rtiseoa®? Wf gu.irantnu 6
xoa to cur® nnycae®. Vou only imy f-,r
BtitmntTad. fl a boi. • for |& Bast bj null* l
UuanntaM Uaoed bj oor *c«cts.
CONSTIPATION ££ PI -- SSSSL
ii n i • «i» tinpineitLiverveiiets
hub srsat T i vrrR*«nrt RTOII kt.fi KKOITLATOB aid
ULOODPUHinEU. fimill, rulM and pUvin* -
■ - Mf.irchLilren-.o*®. COM
KID.NK
inlrr, bullu
blood.'
dteorUrr.b.
Uee, eepeelaUy adapted
Goaaoxmfi km*I only t-7
NO HELP COULD REACH THEM.
I Cllll.tr
Fla
oi Cp by
OOODWYN ft SSIALL DRUG CO.
Sol* agents. Cherry street, corner Cot
ton avenue. Macon. Go.
I
Wi® rontrib*
uted by th* people of Charleston.
Heston, O.T state* that* ht.lt
of iwo pkyik
th®lr treat rut ut until k® wm n/,i ■
•round. 1 her pruoouncM
lompilV.n ana mrnrnhle.
>ee.** V ti.. u «na inrnramr. lie wu |«r
toWTlir. Km*’* New DhrorerrforCoi
U»)n» L« and Colds* and il that Ui
I ®<>4 ®W* to walk icmw tb«olreei i
th#» floor | mtltMC- lie found, brforoLet i l uted
I fiia am* ii I- I • ** wilt, tkal b® wu rnurh bettor; h® «on
m--t|i II- -aid that tt was copied ver- t t Ja Vl! to ,“** •< » r “* I* today --1
lre.ta.sn rw.ee. t h re Saw fin Ha of If,.. U- If lOt Un *») *lhrr»»t, UK
July 13. 1837 wh-n the x*V> between I ilSC*
i ■ *1*1 nnd .Iver wa* changed, except tuition. ^
London, Sept. 4.—A family named
Wall were burned to detth this morn
ing In their shop In Hammersmith, a
suburb of London. Th* father, a wid
ower. lived with four children on Ihe
third floor of the building. In which
he cirried on hi* trade. The fir* brok.
out early on the lint floor. Before the
fire brigade could be summoned the
Brat Iwo stories were ablaze . Wall and
hi* children were at Ihe front windows,
appealing to th# crowd In the street
for help. Three minutes before the
firemen came all five- felt hock suffo
cated. Their bodies ore still In the
I CURE FITS!
WhstiiMyc
for a lima ud f bn bt® th*ai ni«ni ipin. I
ndkftlcv*. I tuto nodo th«d-aMooof IlTl, EP1>
LEFSY or FALLLTG S1CKXESA • lifodo®* *»dr. Il
rumrt mj randy U owo iho worH cooor.
ctbon bus l»il«d i« oorMonafrroolaowrocoiriM w
nn, Fooditoee® for ® oBdoFr^o BoUkod
til iaftfhblorwiiff. Oiw FaprewMi] PadOftoi.
II. «. HOOT. BfeCre l«a Pearl Hi.. N. Y
L H UILO
“Fi i niT* tend ui3ctu»*•*
OsThARTES MEDIC" 1 f C0 " Sl 1
PARTNER WANTS
•that It omitted the provjatoa as to
Johnson's Oriental Soap Is the moat
Irltcat* facial soap foe ladles’ us* in
xlstsnc*. Sold by Ooodwyn ft Small,
t drugst:a.
Ordinary** Offlcp, Jonn County. Ha.,
Sopt. X 1M*.—Whereas Henry A. McKay,
aa admlnlatrator of *3tat* John Bird, nr
■aid couaty, darcMOl, applies for loivo
to sell all the r* *1 estate lielonging to said
daevaaod; Notice . la hereby Rfvm liiat
said order Vr sal® will bo granted ®n
first Monday In October next, unlesa nrr*
! local reason be shown to