fc5.vV??r - , . .- . - w .-. -u-r..a. w . i- . .. . .. .,, - - ..-,- -. - L ' .... rm WHl'ifli;;..., ,llJwwai . - . ,-'- - V .'tii.' rtyj - "i . ff-iiTT'Ji tMinfiT tMi nJ Vr LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGENCER, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1880. ' ir 7 r1T ""' air,wwi'MaMajMjiiJiujjBuiMaMUeijitipiT u , -.,. . 1. . - : L! . ,. '-..'' r f 1 . k . . S ' ' III1Mm11 IT ii i .' i i-i ..- 1,.- . t -nil ' ' ' . , Lancaster ntelltgencet. SATURDAY EVENING, FEB. 14, 1880. Its Significance. The .Examiner's chief concern for Mr. Bering's election, it admits, is lest Mr. MacGenigle's election should be consid ered a partisan Democratic victory. We assure it that its own course lias prevent ed any such misconstruction of the mayor's re-election. And we premise net te de any such violence te the truth of history as te brand as" recreant Repub Ucans the respectable element of its party who propose te vote for Mr. MacGenigle. simply because they knew he is and will continue te be a better mayor than Mr. Bering could be if lie tried. It has only lieen a little ever ayear since the Exami ner itself, editorially, in commending Mayer 3IacGenigle's resolute efforts te prevent wasteful expenditures of the city money said : " We express but the sentiment of all right-minded, consider ate, tax-paying citizens, of both parties, when we extend te Mayer MacGenigle thanks for having called the attention of councils and the public in general te the illegal and extravagant acts of the street committee or rather the ring which has been running it and the tool (railed the street commissioner." We did net claim this outburst of indignation by the Examiner against its own party friends as a partisan victory. It was simply the expression of what hundreds of right minded Republicans thought and still think, and they then resolved with the Examiner that "WE SHALL SUSTAIN THE MAYOR in his efforts te compel an observance, at all events, of the forms of law.'' We have long held te and fre quently expressed the view that in muni cipal affairs, in which partisan questions scarcely ever have any business, voters should take a common sense, prac tical view of the situation and elect men who, judged by their qualifications and their record, can most reasonably Ihj ex pected te promote a geed municipal gov ernment. That is why and the only reason why we expect Mr. MacGenigle te be re elected by the hearty support of the solid Democracy and the co-operation of liberal-minded Republicans. The Intelligencer has failed te sound its note of warnimr against the "use of money" in elections. Has it net been able te learn what is going en:' Speak new, or hereafter held your peace. We have heard for several days of the expected use of money in the coining election. We have been treated by Re publican politicians with beasts of hew much they have and hew they propose te spend it, and in what quantities they ex pect te purchase weak Democrats. We have heard of some of the Bull Ring no vitiates shaking geed sized checks under the noses of MacGenigle men and trying te bully where they could net buy. We have the same opinion regarding this sort of business that we have always had and have frequently expressed, inviting the Examiner and its political friends te join with us in arousing a popular move ment te terminate the whole system of corruption, direct and indirect, at pri mary and general elections thus far without eliciting any sympathy or re sponse. We are ready te join hands with anyone who will cooperate in this laudable purpose te reform an abuse which has been en the increase ever since the demoralizing system of primary elec tions was introduced by the Republican party. The Examiner has net yet seen its way clear te support any reform movement, because it knows its party is responsible for and largely profits from the present system, which it can better afford and toward which it is mere dis iwsed. Seme of the Republican bulldezeis who went around bullying people into signing the Bering paper get a flea in their ear and quit suddenly. Others suc ceeded in constraining some, who have already reported te the Ixtelligenx'ek the humiliating circumstances under which they reluctantly subscribed ; and, altogether, when the list is finally pub lished, it will be quite as remarkable for the names it lacks as for these it bears. Net having altogether succeeded, this desperate device has been supplemented with threats that Republicans voting for MacGenigle are te have their tickets in spected and their names are te be put en a " black list," and themselves " spot ted" for the future. The law en this subject is very severe, and our Republi can friends who propose te vote for Mr. MacGenigle may rely en it net only that the privacy of their ballets will be respected and enforced by Democratic election officers, but that any undue in quiry into them, or disclosure regarding them, will be promptly prosecuted as it deserves. Chris Magee, who is Cameren's Pittsburgh agent, has been talking very freely te a reporter and telling him that when the Pennsylvania delegation gets te Chicago it will have a different man for chairman from Mr. McPherson, who who was at its head in 1876. " The unit rule will be maintained there. Ne mat ter hew many kickers there may be in the delegation, and there will be but one or two, if any, every time there is a vote taken the fifty-eight votes of Pennsylva nia will be cast solidly one way or the ether, just as the majority of the delega tion may decide in caucus." The ap pointment of a few Blaine delegates was only a sep. Den Cameren is chairman of the national committee; he will pick out the temporary chairman and pack the hall with clacquers. The unit busi ness will be brought up early and decided against the anti-Cameren people. It is frank in their opponents te give them such timely notice of the pregramme. We cannot agree with the Ilarrisburg Patriot, that there need be any haste about the calling of the Democratic state convention. In this county it has been the well approved custom te net provide for a county convention until there is a call for the state convention ; and, in our judgment, the proper time for the state committee te meet te call a state conven tion is immediately after the national for the national convention. The call or the state cemimttee JLe meet te call the slate convention should neither be hastened nor withheld in any factional or personal interest. tm m The Xcid Era wants te knew why Mayer MacGenigle " lias failed te en force the important ordinance prohibit ing the erection of wooden buildings within certain limits of the city," and thinks "one of the editors of the Ixtel Ixtel t.ieknx'EK is ina position te threw light unen this (iiiestien. especially as te one of the buildings illegal ly erected in the heart of the city." It took a case, raised by Mayer MacGon MacGen igle te test the validity of the wooden building ordiiiaiice.frein June te the next April te get through Judge Patterson's court and reach a decision. By this time some three or four wooden buildings of no considerable size had been erected and in use for months, and no special complaint being ledged against them they have been allowed te stand, but as three of them were put up by prominent Republican politicians, and the fourth by a beneficial society, the mayor will hardly be accused of a sinister purpose in net hav ing ordered their destruction. Bejend this neither of the editors of the Ixtel Ixtel lieexceu has any knowledge of any vi olation of the law, and if the Xnc Era can remind them of any it is respectfully called en te rise and enlighten us. I J. W. Johxsex, esq., writes te the New Yerk Tribune inquiring of the paper founded by Herace Greeley whether it thinks a party can survive such leader ship as that of B. Frank Eshlemun, J. Hay Brown, Thes. B. Cochran, J. A. Iliestand. and ether local Republicans who manipulated affairs se that Lancas ter county's voice was heard for Grant in the state convention, when four-fifths of its Republicans, he says, are for Blaine. It will new be in order for the ether fel lows te write te the New Yerk Times and ask it what better chance its party here would have for survival under Jehnsen's leadership. PERSONAL. Mrs. William 31. Twkkd died in Paris yesterday. Leading citizens of Terente will petition Miss Nkilsen te revisit that city befeie leaving for Europe. Comptroller Jehn Kkli.y fell from a horse car vestcrdav morning and had his shoulder dislocated. The daughter of cx-Secrctary McCil McCil i.ecii is reported te he the best amateur banjo player in New Yerk. She has made it fashionable for young ladies te play the banjo. Mr. Clayten MiMiciiakl, editor of the Xerth America)), who is visiting in Bosten, was tendered a private reception last even iug which was attended by about two hun dred and fifty of the leading citizens of Bosten. The Duchess of KpiNnrnr.u, who has passed through Paris this week from Can nes, had a muff made entirely of the blue feathers of the jay. The muffs new should match the dresses. Seme are of satin, with a bouquet of natural flowers ; ethers of plush and velvet, trimmed with lace. Ills Kckulute Effert. Frem tlie LuiKiutur E.xiiiuiner anil Kxprciv, Aug. 1:1, 1878. We express but the sentiment of all right-minded, considerate, tax-paying citi zens, of both parties, when we extend te Mayer MacGenigle thanks for having call ed the attention of councils and the public in general te tlic illegal and extravagant acts of the street committee or rather the ring which has been running it and the tool called the street commissioner. We hope the mayor will net step at ' protest ing " and calling the attention of councils te their extravagance and illegal proceed ings, but will, if necessary, proceed by in junction te restrain them, and also held the ringleaders individually liable when they shall run the city in debt. It is no torious that there has been in this depart ment at least kecklessness and extrava gance ii' net couklttien, and se far as we arc concerned WE SHALL SUSTAIN THE MAYOR in his efforts te compel an observance, at all events, of the forms of law, and we hope he will net hesitate when occasion requires te call the attention of councils and the public te the short comings of these in authority. STATE ITEMS. An engine en the Pittsburgh and Southern railroad, between Washington and Pittsburgh, jumped the track at Espey's en Thursday night, and engineer Harper was fatally scalded. It is rumored that the Philadelphia and Reading coal and iron company has leased the Pennsylvania iron works, at Danville, and wili seen assume charge of them. These works give employment Je 2,000 men. A squirrel chased by boys, a few days age, near Rochedale station, en the Lehigh Valley railroad, teqk refuge under a pile of stones. In digging out the animal traces of silver ere were discovered, and the shaft is te be sunk there. The candidates for the pestmastcrship of Broekvillc, Jeffersen county, were se numerous that they agreed te decide it by ballet. Mr. Jehn Scott received the high est number of votes, and his name has been sent te the Senate by the president. The freshman class of Lafayette college went te Bethlehem en Wednesday evening te partake of their annual dinner. They were escorted te the depot by a band, the music of which was drowned by slop-horns in the hands of sophomores. The seniors also followed after, and howled themselves hearse. The offence charged against the freshman was that of putting en airs. Hen. Findley Patterson,a representative in the state Legislature from Washington county, died at Burgettstown, en Thurs day morning. He was born en the 15th of May, 1808, at Patterson's mills, Washing ton county. In 1837 he was elected county commissioner of Armstrong county, and in 1839 was a senator from the Armstrong district. He was also a member of the Heuse of Representatives from Armstrong county in 1843 and 1846, being speaker of the Heuse. , Ed. Martin's Candidate Backs Out. Hen. E. B. Washburne authorizes the Inter-Ocean te announce that he is net, and under no circumstances will be, a can didate for the presidency. Alse, that the friend who wrote that he was a candidate for governor of Illinois was mere zealous than wise. m In This a Shet at Conkling? In Rhede Island the Heuse of Represen tatives has passed a bill prohibiting pigeon sheeting for sport or as a test of marksmanship. Longevity In Berks County. Rending Tinjes and Dispatch. Life is tee short te read the Congressional Iiecprd every day. MINOR TOPICS. A conkidike Methodist has written a poem en Gen. Grant's alleged remark in Jerusalem : ' ' Ne ; no ovation for me in this city, wheremy Saviour was crucified." Hew much that docs sound like Gen. Grant. Rkv. Dn. Dasiiiell, senior correspond, ing secretary of the missionary society of the M. E. church, whose health is in se precarious a condition, has been made the recipient of $16,000 as a testimony of the geed will of a number of his friends. " When I was a boy," said a very long winded preacher te his friend, "I used te talk in my sleep." " And new," said his friend, "you sleep in your talk." But somehow that didn't seem te he just ex. actly the point the preacher was going te make. Jehn Hunt sang the following at a prayer meeting in Iowa, and went te jail six months as a reward : " Away down Seuth A nigger In the water Was standing in a mill pond Lenger than he eughter." Dan Rice met Mr. Meedy in Chicago, Saturday, and going up te the evangelist said : " Loek a here, Meed, I wash' con verted. Better let. up en that, pard. Don't cold deck me en the first deal. I'm gein ' te run a six-pole triple-tent show next year, and if I hear of you tellin' folks I ain't converted I'll sue you for slander. I will ; I hope te never see the back of my neck if I den' I." One of the verses of James Russell Lewell's "Pieus Editor's Creed," from the "Biglow Papers," reads as fellows : I du believe 'tis wise an' geed Te send out furrin mission. That is en sartin understood An' orthydex conditions I mean nine thousand dells periiii:i. Nine thousand mere ler eutllt. An' me tu recommend a man The place would Jest about lit. When the genial Leweil penned the stanza, ever thirty years since, he doubtless had little idea of ever filling a "furrin mis sion" at a salary nearly double the figure mentioned. Rev. Alexander Keith, the distin guished author aud traveler, whose death is announced by cable, was born at Keit- hall, N. B., in 1791. Frem 1816 te 1843 he was a minister te the established church of Scotland at St. Cyrus, Kincard ineshire, afterwards of the Free church, but for many years he was unable te at tend te his ministerial duties. Of his many religious works may be mentioned his " Evidence of the Truth of the Chris tian Religion, and Poetical Interpretation of the Prophecies, " translated into many languages. In company with the Rev. Dr. Black, the Rev. A. Benar, and the Rev. Rebert McCheync, constituting a deputation from the church of Scotland te Palestine and ether Eastern countries, he visited some of the scenes of scripture prophecy te make researches respecting the actual condition of the Jews. A nar rative of this mission was published under the title of " A Narrative of the Mission te the Jews. " The Philadelphia Evening Teleyraph de livers itself en foreign missions thus : Bishop Coxe, of Western New Yerk, has addressed a strongly-worded circular te the laity of the Protestant Episcopal church, urging mere liberal contributions for for. cign missions. The bishop thinks that there is tee much sham about the foreign missions contributions ; that they arc beg- trarlv showings : that the meat body of churchmen are unrepresented in them, and se forth and se en. All of which, may bc will have some effect in stimulating con" tributiens te foreign missions, aud may be it won't. We arc afraid that Bishop Coxe wrete and issued this circularwitheut any thing like due inquiry into the reason why of the falling off in the matter of contribu tions te foreign missions. If he had made such inquiry he would probably have dis. covered that the average layman does net think powerful much of the average mis sionary, or of the quality of the average missionary's work in foreign parts ; and, moreover, that he is particularly well-satisfied that he can de better with such money as he may have it in his heart te give for the promotion of missionary work by bestowing it for the regeneration of near-at-home heathen than he can by giv ing it for the conversion of people who al ready have very geed religions, which they are in the habit of living up te in better style than the average Christian is of living up te his." Speaking Geed only of the dead is a practice that doubtless needs te be reform ed, for it is net at all conducive te morality te make a saint of a sinner in a funeral oration. But en the ether hand, the rule having been all eneway se long, changes should be made moderately. Such a change for example, as was given lately by Bishop Tayler, of the Mermen church, ever the eeffm of an ex-saint of that denomination carries reform forward tee violently. " Once a saint, he departed from the church," remarked the bishop ever this ill-starred young man's remains, "he left the faith, he died a drunkard ; he has gene te hell, and there is where he deserved te go." This cheerful message of condolence te the young man's friends was naturally received with deep feeling ; the ex-saint's mother and sister were borne fainting from the tabernacle, and there was no doubt a conviction upon divers of the brethren that the bishop's notions of the reform of what is, after all, a long-established and very re spectable custom were of a rather tee rad ical and sweeping sort. We have se long been telling geed-natured fibs en such oc casions that the departure towards the truth must net be of a wrenching kind. Bishop Tayler has allowed his zeal te out run his discretion ; he would net relish the idea of such impartiality of statements at his own obsequies. Can't Think it Fessible. Mnj. Griest's Inquirer. We hear the opinion expressed in several quarters that our county commit tee will net issue a call for the primary meetings te be held in May, but will defer it until after the Republican national con vention in June in order te prevent the vote for instructions, provided for at the late meeting of the committee, from going into effect. We cannot and will net believe that the committee, or even a single member of it, will be willing te take such an absurd course. Tne last Saturday m May has been the time fixed for our nrimarv meet- I ing for several years past ; it has given general satisfaction, and there is no valid reason for a change. If any change is made it should be fixed a week earlier than usual ; se that our delegates may have a little time te study their instructions be fore they embark for Chicago. We have no doubt, however, that they will be suffi ciently explicit. WESTERN' AUIUCUL.TUKE. Dakota Wheat Fields. Of the four hundred million bushels of wheat produced in the United States, by far the largest portion is sewn in the fall, and is called winter grain. The varieties are conditioned by soil and climate, the latitude of Milwaukee marking in general the netthern boundary of winter wheat. The area suited for the production of wheat sewn in the spring hitherto has been of limited extent, but there is an undevel oped section of the country se wide aud far-reaching that it may be regarded as the great summer wheat field of the future. Its capabilities are se vast, and its insurance of production se certain, that the millions of the old world may think of it as a land that will supply them with bread. A traveler making the tour of the St. Lawrence and its connecting chain of jakes, landing at Duluth, and journeying west ever the Northern Pacific railroad two hundred miles, beyond the forest re gion of the Upper Mississippi, will find himself en the eastern edge of this bread land of the future the valley of the Red river, a stream flowing northward te Lake Winnipeg, and thence te Hudsen bay. In August, 1809, the writer of this ar ticle rode ever this hunting ground of the Sioux, where through by-gene ages they chased the buffalo and fought the Chippc was. The valley of the Red river was a vast expanse. Ne hill, no gentle undula tion, nothing but the fringes of trees along the streams bounded the sight. It was a reach of prairie unbroken by the plough. Our own voices, or the son; of meadow- lark, plover, and curlew, and ether fowl, alone broke the solemn and oppressive stillness of the solitude. At Georgetown the Hudsen bay company had reared a house, and two or three settlers had set up their cabins upon the banks of the river. We encountered a man whose birth-place was in Virginia, who had been a frontier man in Ohiei Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin vidette of civilization. " Have you any neighbors ?" we asked. " Oh yes ; three families have just set tled about twelve miles from here. They arc getting pretty thick, and I shall have te move en, I reckon." They have been getting thicker since, and the locomotive is speeding its way across the valley, en te the Missouri, and beyond te the Yellowstone ; it is flying down the valley te Winnipeg, and seen it will thunder along the Saskatchewan, far away in the distant Northland. Farm houses dot the landscape : towns have sprung up ; the traveler beholds piles of lumber, long lines of farm wagons, ploughs, seeders, harrows, reapers, threshers and firm engines at every railroad station. Marvelous the change ; in 1809 a furrow less plain; in 1879, a harvest of eight mil lion bushels of grain erelong te he eighty million ! Harvesting en u Large Dakota l"ann. Ride ever these fertile fields of Dakota, and beheld the working of this latest tri umph of American genius. Yeu are in a sea of wheat. On the farms managed by Oliver Dalryinple are 13,000 acres in one field. There are ether farmers who culti vate from 100 te 0,000 acres. The railroad train rolls through an ocean of grain. Plea sant the music of the rippling waves as the west winds sweep ever the expanse. We encounter a squadron of war chariots, net such as once swept ever the Delta of the Nile in pursuit of an army of fugitive Is raelites, net such as the warriors of Reme were went te drive, with glittering knives projecting from the axles te mew a swath through the ranks of an enemy, te drench the ground with bleed,to cut down the human race, as if men where noxious weeds, but chariots of peace, doing the work of human hands for the sustenance of men. There arc twenty-five of them in this one brigade of the grand army of 115, under the marshalship of this Dakota farmer. A superintendent upon a superb horse, like a brigadier directing his forces, rides along the line, accompanied by his staff of two en horseback. They arc fully armed and equipped, net with swords, but the implements of peace wrenches, hammers, chisels. They arc surgeons in waiting, with nuts and screws, or whatever may be needed. This brigade of horse artillery sweeps by in echelon in close order, reaper following reaper. There is a sound of wheels. The grain disappears an instant and then re appears ; iron arms clasp it, held it a mo ment in their embrace, wind it with wire, then toss it disdainfully at your feet. Yeu hear in the rattling.ef the wheels the mech anism saying te itself, "See hew easy I can de it !" An army of "shockers"' fellow the reap ers, setting up the bunnies te ripen before threshing. The reaping must ordinarily all be done in fifteen days, else the grain becomes tee ripe. The first fields harvest ed, therefore, are cut before the ripening is complete. Each reaper averages about fifteen acres per day and is drawn by three horses or mules. The reaping ended, threshing begins. Again memory gees back te early years, te the pounding out of the grain upon the threshing-fleer with the flail the slew tedious work of the winter days. Peets no mere will rehearse the music of the flail. The picture for February in the old Farmer's Almanac is obsolete. September is the month for threshing, the thresher doing its 000 or 700 bushels per day, driven by a steam engine of sixteen-hersc power. Remorse less that sharp-teethed devourer, swallow ing its feed as fast as two men can cut the wire bands, requiring six teams te supply its demands ! and what a cataract of grain pours from its spout, faster than two men can bag it ! The latest triumph of invention in this direction is a straw-burning engine, utiliz ing the stalks of the grain for fuel. The cost of raising wheat per bushel is from thirty-five te forty cents ; the aver age yield, from twenty te twenty-live bushels per acre. The nearness of these lands te Lake Superior, and the rates es tablished by the railroad fifteen cents per bushel from any point between Bismarck and Duluth give the Dakota farmers a wide margin of profit. Since the first furrow was turned in the Red River valley in 1870, there has been no failure of crops from drought, excessive rains, blight, mildew, rust, or ether influ ence of climatolegy. The clinchbug has net mauc its appearance ; tne grasshoppers alone have troubled the farmers, but they Phave disappeared and the fields are smiling with bounty. With geed tilth, the farmer may countupen a net return of from eight te ten" dollars per acre per annum. The employment of capital has accomplished a beneficent end by demonstrating that the region, instead of being incapa ble of settlement, is one of the fair est sections of the continent. Ner is it a wonder that the land-offices are besieged by emigrants making entries, or that the surveyors find the lands " squatted " upon befere they can survey them ; that hotels are crowded ; that en every hand there is activity. During the months of May, June, and July, 1879, the sales of govern ment land were nearly 700,000 acres, and the entries for the year will probably aggregate 1,500,000, taken in homestead, pre-emption, and tree claims. There are ether millions of acres, as fair and fertile, yet te be occupied. C. C. Coffin, in Har- peP Magazine for March LANCASTER COUNTY'S CHOICE. A IU.AIXE BeOM stakteb. J. W. Jehnsen's Opinion of B. F. Eshleman. The New Yerk Tribune of te-day says that immediately after the disputed and indecisive result of the Ilarrisburg con vention, the Tribune determined te ascer tain what the real choice of Pennsylvania for the presidency was. Tlic trouble with ordinary canvasses is that there is no cer tainty that the men whose opinions are asked are really representative men. Te avoid this it was resolved te get an expres sien direct from the men whom the Re publicans in each locality had put upon their local committees. Under the Cameren domination it was presumed that these would naturally be mainly Cameren men. Nevertheless they are necessarily the active, representative Republicans of their r jsr.es tive localities ; and it was clear that their choice would be that of the working party organization ; while their number (em bracing committeemen in every township in every county in the state) made it reasonably certain that the response would give a fair key te the general spontaneous sentiment of the state and preclude the possibility of a mere clique utterance There are about 2,000 of these committee men throughout the state. An ellicial list of them was secured, and te each one the following circular was sent : Office of the New Yekk Triuune, ) New Yerk, Feb. 10, 1880. j Dear Sir : Will you please give us for the Tribune en the inclesed postal card your first and second choice for president of the United States? Your name will net be used if you make a request te that effect en the card. Your answer by return mail will much oblige. Yours truly, Tue TninuNE, New Yerk. The men te whom this circular was sent are, of course, the active working Republi cans of Pennsylvania, and each one of them must knew accurately the political sentiment of the community in which he lives. Up te yesterday afternoon 207 re plies had been received, of which the fol lowing is a summary : Fer Blaine 210 Fer Grant 40 Fer Sherman 3 Fer Washburne 3 Fer Conkling 2 Fer Cameren 1 Fer Edmunds 1 Fer Garfield 1 Fer Lancaster the Tribune publishes the following from J. W. Jehnsen, esq. : Lancaster : First, Blaine ; second, Conk ling or Washburne. It is net extravagant te say that Lancaster city and county, if permitted te speak, would declare in favor of Blaine by a vote of at least four te one airainst the field. And this sentiment has J been intensified by the recent action of our county committee. Its chairman was an accidental delegate four years age as alternate te Colonel Dickey who died where he basely betrayed his constituents. As a sequel te the betrayal of 1876, he re fused te call the committee together te order a primary election under the rules of our party in the county, until it was tee late te held such election it time for our late state convention. And en the pretext of want of time the committee packed for such purposes proceeded te elect eight delegates te the convention, six of whom voted directly against what they must have known were the senti ments of their constituents. Can a part continue te live and thus studiously ignore the well-known will of the people'.' J. W. Jehnsen KOBEKT XV. MACKEY'S l'APEKS. A .Suit Over Meney that was Advanced te Establish a Gambling Heuse. Francis T. Walten, proprietor of the St, James hotel, New Yerk, sued Philip Daly te recover $8,000, the aggregate amount of four notes made by defendant te Jehn Gledding, and by him endorsed and deliv ered te Rebert W. Mackcy, the Pennsyl vania politician, who died Jan. 18, 10 t'J. These notes were found among Mackcy's papers after his death, and were as signed te the plaintiff. The defense was that the defendant and Mackcy were partners in various specu lations, that the notes in suit were memorandum notes between them, and had all been paid before Mackcy's death ; also, that Mackcy owed a large sum te the defendant for moneys advanced in build ing a club bourse in Philadelphia. Upen the trial Thursday, before Judge Van Bruut, in supreme court, circuit, Jehn W. McGinl&y, called for the defendant, testi fied that he kept Mr. Mackcy's books ; that the third note for $3,000 was given in place of the first two notes for the same amount, and that these notes were never surrendered. Most of the notes, he added, were for money te open "a house for "speculative purposes" in this city. "What de you mean by 'speculative purposes?'" asked ex-Recorder James W. Smith, counsel for the defendant. "Well," said the witness, "it was a gambling house ; you can make no mere or less of it." Mr. W. A. Beach objected te the testi mony en the ground that no such defense was set up in the answer. Ex-Recorder Smith then moved te amend his answer, te which Mr. Beach objected, as he was taken by surprise. " There is a genuine tiger here," inter posed Mr. Smith, "and I ask te amend the answer that the facts may be ehewn." "But you can't tight the 'tiger' en this pleading," said Judge Van Brunt, and he denied the motion te amend. The case is still en trial. LATEST NEWS BY MAIL. The alumni of Bowdoin college held their fifth annual meeting at Banger en Thursday evening. Chief Justice Appleton presiding. The paintings contributed te the New Yerk artists' fund society were sold at auction en Thursday night and last night and brought 617,953. Within the past four days 111 cases of measles have been reported te the Brook lyn beard of health. There were only two deaths, however. Majer James Thompson, of Newport, Ky., died at Cincinnati yesterday. He was en the retired list of the regular army for a number of years. The Virginia state grange of the patrons of husbandry has re-elected Dr. "James M. Blanten as master for two years, and will meet in February, 1881, at Farmville. Willard Freeman, of Newtown, while attempting te beard a train at Centre- villc, !N. J., lell-bcncath the cars and was mstautly killed. A train en the Dayton aud Southeastern railroad fell through the first bridge west of Chillieethe, instantly killed William Ceuncrs, the engineer, and Frank Knccht, the fireman. The body of Jehn Bender, aged 00, a wealthy J resident of Brooklyn, who has been missing since December 17, was found in the East river en Thursday even ing. The New England alumni of Yale col lege met at Bosten, en Thursday, and Judge Jehn F. Putnam, of the class of 1837, was elected president. It was voted te have mere frequent reunions here after. The starving people ; tenth day of the Herald's Irish famine fund; a nameless giver of $5,000; American sympathy awakened and active ; mickle and muckle coming in ; heavy contributions at long and short range ; slaying the hunger monster. Mrs. Brown, the wife of the man found murdered in Indianapolis, en Friday,yester day made a confession that Jeseph Wade, her paramour, committed the crime. He said love drove him te the deed and that he would take care of her during life. Wade is in jail and denies that there is any truth in Mrs. Brown's confession. Terrible If True. Philadelphia Commonwealth. When Den get back te the Senate after he had killed Blaine the second time, at the last convention at Ilarrisburg and the great dinner was ever, te which refer ence is made in this issue, a caucus was held in Den's back room of the third termers, te carry en the canvass. As the men in council were discussing hew te nominate Grant by trick, cash and fraud, one said, " The third term cry is al nonsense ; nobody new cares a damn fur old Washington, he is new of no account he can't carry a county delegate." " Hush," said another, "don't even talk that way in our caucus." Just then an apparition appeared com ing into the room and frightened the cau cus out of its wits. The men became sober in an instant. This apparition was Wash ington giving up his sword te Congress and pointing te his farewell address. The men flew from the room in amaze ment. Se ended that caucus. LOCAL INTELLIGENCE. HUMPTY DUMPTY. Teny Denler's Pantomime Troupe. Last night Teny Denier's company made their second appearance in this city this season. The audience was very large, every seat and the standing room being taken in the parquet circle and gallery, while the parquet was well-filled. The show was similar te the one given before, ami if any thing was better. Ueerge ll. Adams, as clown, of course pleased everybody, and there is no man better able te de se than he is. In the second part of the entertain ment he did his wonderful stilt act and the audience were se much delighted that they called him back three times. C. F. Adams, William Eunice and Mabel Stanten lent valuable aid as panta loon, harlequin and columbine, respective ly. Specialties were given in the second part of the show by almost the same ac tors who were here before. E. C. Dun bar, the Milanese piper, who joined the troupe since they were here, is a strong at traction. He plays very well en the pipes and is a fine sinjrer. He dresses well and makes a geed appearance en the stage. The act of the Davenport Brethers was the same as before, and they arc a remark ably clever pair. Their sparring match was quite lively and some hard hitting was done. Little Rose bud sang several new songs in her charming style. The ether features were the Irish songs and witticisms of Geerge W. Hunter, a very funny Irish comedian, the skipping rope dance of Mabel Stanten, jig by Allie Smith, harp playing by S. W. Howe, and the musical act of Ripley and Rccd. The performance as a whole could net have been better, and everybody was sent home in an excellent humor. The troupe go from here te Baltimore, after which they visit Brooklyn, N. Y., for a week, and will then visit Bosten and ether large cities in the East. Mr. Denier will visit Lancaster with his troupe again next season. ALLEGED DISCU19I1NAT10N. Columbia anil Pert Deposit ltailreail. Mr. Vandiver has introduced a bill into the Maryland legislature te amend the charter of the Columbia and Pert Deposit railroad. It is alleged by the petitioners for the bill that the railroad company dis criminates unfairly and unjustly against citizens of the state of Maryland, netwith. standing the state appropriated $00,000 towards the construction of the read. By the charter the maximum rate which may be charged for freight is three cents a ten per mile, whereas a rate nearly three times that amount, is asked it isallegcd, for freight shipped by citizens of Hartferd county in the direction of Baltimore. Fer instance, nearly nine cents a ten per mile is charged for freight from Conowingo te Pert De posit, when such freight is te be there re shipped en ether reads, while the price al lowed by the charter is charged for freight sent from Conowingo te Baltimore, byway of Yerk, Pa. Besides, they say, the Columbia and Peit Deposit railroad makes up connections at its southern terminus with trains for Balti more and Philadelphia, the effort being ap parently made te compel passengers for Baltimore te take the circuitous teiite by way of Yerk rather than the shorter and direct one by way of Pert Deposit and Perryville. COURT. Licenses and Current Business. This morning court met at 9 o'clock for the purpose of transacting current busi ness and disposing of license cases. Cenrad Weimcr was an applicant for a license te keep a hotel at Fourth and Wal nut streets, in the borough of Columbia. This is an old stand which was refused a license because the former owner ran a va riety show in connection with it. The court held the case under advisement. Abram Roop is the proprietor of the hotel at Andrews' bridge, and there is a remon strance against the granting of a license te him. It is alleged that he sold liquor en Sunday, te intemperate persons and te miners, all of which is denied by Mr. Roop. The license of the Cooper house was transferred from Abraham Iliestand te Charles Tripple and G. A. Smith. Current Business. Jehn Hathaway and William Peiffer, in solvent debtors, were discharged. The commissioners appointed by the court te inspect the bridge recently con structed across the Big Chiques creek at Moeio's mill report that it is made ac cording te specifications and of geed mate rial. The Tobacco Market. A great deal of baled tobacco has been received at the city warehouses every day this week. This morning lines of wagons were unloading at most of them, but the rush was net se great as during some pre ceding Saturdays. Buyers continue te take held all that is offered at reasonable prices, and it is estimated there is net mere than from 5,000 te 7,000 cases re maining unsold. About 800 cases of the crop of 1878 was sold during the week en private terms. Drank and Disorderly. Rebert 31. Wilsen arrested fox drunken and disorderly conduct, was committed by Alderman Barr, te the county jail for 20 1 days. MR.' BEJrZIlOOVKK'S MiM.KKSVILLK ORATION. A Review of it by the New Yerk "Sun." In noticing Hen. F. E. Beltzhoevei's recent oration at the Nermal society anni versary, published hi full in the Intelli gence!:, the New Yerk Sun says : Mr. Beltzhoevcr. a representative in Congress from Pennsylvania, has been making a speech in favor of "intelligence" as a qualification for the ballet. We de net agree with Mr., Beltzhoover, and inas much as his deliverance is strong, and was addressed te an audience of students, whose influence in the community can scarcely be estimated, it seems only pru dent te notice some of its most obvious errors. Mr. Beltzhoover says the line must he drawn somewhere, and he wauts it drawn at " intelligence. " But at what degree of intelligence? lie will be satisfied with reading, writing, and ciphering. But some one else may demand a higher stand ard, and the logic which sustains the one will sustain the ether. If the lower standard gives geed government, the higher will give better, and se en, until the same reasoning brings us te the conclusion that the best government is the absolute rule of the most learned citizen. If we begin by putting the wholly un lettered under the heel of these who can read and write, why net put the latter un der a still better educated elass, until by refining all the dress of ignorance from the governing body, we reach by the process of selection the single despot, who rules by reason of his superior learning. Government derives all its power from the consent of the governed. Among the governed arc these who cannot read or write. Shall they be political slaves be cause of their misfortune '.' They have a large a stake in the peace and order of the community as the ethers. They have life, liberty, family, property, character, te he protected. Has the reader and cipherer anything greater or mera sacred ".' Is a man who can read, write and cipher any mere likely te use his vote for the gen eral geed than the man who cannot. We defy Mr. Beltzhoover te prove that it is. The increase of corruption in English elec tions has kept pace with the increase of the means of popular education until the disfranchisement of whole boroughs has come te be considered a proper rem edy. The same may be said of this ceuntrv, except that our ancestors were purer and their children arc mere de generate than the English and it is a .striking fact that our educational facili ties are greater than theirs. Among eiir revolutionary ferefathere comparatively few possessed Mr. Beltzhoover's require ments ; but they established tin; best gov ernment en earth, and maintained it in its original purity and simplicity ;aud we ven ture te say that they would have looked with very little toleration upon a proposi preposi tion te change it te an aristocracy of so se called intelligence. Few of us can trace back their lineage very far without coining te unlettered ancestors, who voted with the fathers of the republic, and shouldered their fire-locks with the heroes of inde pendence. Iu England the learned bodies havt always been the last te yield te liberty and reform. The unversities were the strong holds of the Stuarts, and the Tery majori ties of Oxford have been a proverb. But the ether day a vote was taken among the students of Yale, and an enormous major ity of them were found te be in favor of overthrowing the precedent set by Wash ington, and making Grant president for a third term. What admirable custodians of our free institutions these educated gen tlemen would he ; yet, according te Mr. Beltzhoover's reasoning, we ought te com mit these institutions te their keeping ex clusively. Reading and writing form in reality a peer measure of intelligence, and still less of the virtues which make the geed citi zen. Let the qualifications remain as they arc. The uneducated man pays his taxes in time of peace, and in war takes his place in the ranks. He wants geed reads, geed schools for his children, justice impartially administered, and protection te his little property and enterprises, just as his mete fortunate neighbor docs ; and in the limit ed view of public affairs which both neec-s-sarily take, the one is certainly as honest and in most cases quite as capable a voter as the ether. We may in time have an aristocracy in this country, but it will net be founded en Mr. Beltzhoover's qualifica tions of reading, writing and arithmetic. His Kesnlute KRerts. Frem tin; Lancaster Examiner and Kxpr Anir. 13. 1S78. We express but the sentiment of all right-minded, considerate, tax-paying citi zens, of both parties, when we extend te 3Iayer 3IacGenigle thanks for having called the attention of councils and the public in general te the illegal and extravagant acts of the street committee or rather the ring which has been running it and tool called the street commissioner. We hope the mayor will net step at "protesting" and calling the attention of councils te their extravagance and illegal proceedings, but will, if necessary, proceed by injunc tion te restrain them, and also held the ringleaders individually liable when they shall run the city in debt. It is notorious that there has been in this department lit least recklessness and extravaeanci: if net corruption, and se far as we aie concerned WE SHALL SUSTAIN TH E 3IAYOR in his efforts te compel an ob servance, at all events, of the forms of law, and we hope he will net hesitate when occasion requires te call the attention of councils and the public te the shortcom ings of these in authority. VALKNTINKS. Ualf a Dezen of Them. Common Councilman William II. IIu ber received a valentine this morning in the shape of a bouncing baby. There i nothing especially remarkable in this, but it is remarkable that 3Ir. Hubcr himself,, two of his brothers, one sister and his fath er were all bem en St. Valentine's day. Here is the record : William Ilubcr'.s father was born St. Valentine's day, 1820, and is te-day 00 years old. His son William was born St. Valentine's day, 1844, and is therefore 30 years old te-day. His son Titus was born St. Valentine's day, 1848, and is 32 te-day. "His daughter 3Iary was bein St. Valentine's day, 1853, and this is her 27th birthday. - His son Jacob was bem SJ;. Valentine's day, 1855, and celebrates his 25th birthday ; and new ciinus along the little grandson, like a naked Cupid, te join in the family celebration. Can any ether family in the county show such a record ? We congratulate 3Ir. and Mrs. Hubcr en their great geed luck and suggest that they name the young emperor " Valentine VI." Culerc.l Ball. The colored folks had a graud fancy dress ball at Fulton hall last night which was attended net only by a large number of colored lads and lasses, but also by a great many white men, including promi nent Republican politicians. There was. some little quarreling, but nobody was. much hurt. Burled In Lancaster. The remains of Jehn S. Lundy, whose whese whose tcrrible death at Glen Lech was reported yesterday, were brought from Columbia en the 2 o'clock train this afternoon, and interred in the Lancaster cemetery. i fc. 5 8 & n- I K s? !1 !l til at Jl