s. -? .i t '- - -.--.( V,' ?' '-V k- -V,ii. tw ", '' Lancaster daily intelligences Thursday, jely 29;i88e. i. Vl - fi - Lancaster Intelligencer. THUBSDAY EVENING. JUiT 29, 1880. SckBix. Mr. Schurz's speech at Indianapolis lias been praised by the Republican newspapers asa" masterly effort," a " key note," and various ether things, tee numerous te mention. It was in reality a very geed presentation of the Republican case, in polished phrases, carefully liammered out in the closet, by a civil service reformer, who, accord ing te his own theories, was stealing the public time in which te de it. But it contained nothing new,and offered net a single argument of legitimate force, lie savs truly and this is one of the great features of the speech that there are elements in the Democratic party which de net entirely agree with each ether.. Rut these differences relate chiefly te financial questions, and are net likely te disturb the harmony of a party whose sound deliverence in national convention was made without a single dissent. Mr. Schurz, however, admits that the Republican party is in very nearly the same condition in re gard te the same questions, and we can all remember the day, net distant when Jehn Sherman himself was push ing the Ohie idea, howling with Carey ami Allen in the Greenback wilderness, while Tilden, Bayard, and even Thur inau were bravely upholding the metallic standard. Mr. .Schurz also presents a variety of excellent reasons why a mere professional soldier with no aptitude for civil affairs should net be elevated te the presidency, and he even had the extraordinary har dihood te mention Gen. Hancock as fall ing under this description. New, we cheerfully admit that General Hancock is a soldier a soldier se unlike Schurz that we really de net wonder much at the failure of the one te comprehend the true character of tiie ether. If Han cock's success in the Held is a reason why he should net be elected te the presi dency Schurz's brilliant failures render him pre-eminently fit. Tlie here of Get tysburg should by all means be thrust aside for the turn-tail of Chancellors ville. It must have been en that famous field thai. Schurz, paddling along in the mud amid the general rout of the Eleventh corps, while Hancock with his steady columns covered their flight, made up his generous mind that the man who steed between him and the en emy was tee geed a soldier ever te be en trusted with the presidency. Rut after all Mr. Schurz should endeavor te under stand that General Hancock is net pre sented for the suffrages of the people be cause he is a great soldier, but because he lias shown himself a great patriot, with thehighestqualitiesef a civil ruler dis played under circumstances that tested his application of the relations of civil and military power. Rut Mr. Schurz's most serious objec tion te the success of the Democratic party is that they would actually turn the Republicans out of eflice; which would be, se te speak, a wholesale viola tion of these beautiful civil service rules which were gotten up by Mr. Evarts and himself at the request of R. R. Hayes. This cogent argument will answer te keep the Republicans in power a thous and years hence just as well as it does new. If anybody doubts that he ad vanced it with the most imperturbable gravity let him get the speech and read it for himself. He will find that en this point at least Schurz is in dead earnest. He considers any proposal te turn Re publicans out and put Democrats in asa perfectly diabolical outrage. In anyone but himself the ambition for eflice is an offense net te be tolerated. He was, it may be remembered, at the Fifth avenue conference, for Tilden and reform in 1S75, but it required only the premise of a seat in the cabinet te wheel him around te Hayes and reform of another kind. The tongue of a Hessian, like the sword of a Hessian, is at the service of the high est bidder. If this gallant soldier of for tune, who fought briefly en both sides in 187(5, and remained with the party which furnished the best pay and the snuggest quarters, is following liis usual practice in this campaign, he received at least 200 for his speech at Indianapolis de nouncing the candidacy of the man who held the enemy from his back at Chan, cellersville. Tun Democracy of Xew Yerk city inaugurated the campaign for them selves and the whole country last evening with a splendid meeting, distinguished by the immense attendance, the vigor of the sieeclies and great popular enthusi asm. Owing te some technicality with which right-thinking Democrats can have little sympathy, Tammany declined te participate, but will ratify it in its own way, and the rivalry of the two organiza tions is expected only te swell the total vote for the candidates whose election they are both striving for. Mr. Tilden presided last evening, as was right and proper, and his presence and speech give that prominence te the fraud issue which it deserves in this campaign, especially since Garfield was one of the judicial commission ers who decided for the wrong after he has solemnly sworn te adjudge honestly and impartially. His defeat and the overthrew of his party will be as Mr. Tilden says " retributive justice," and unless their crime is "condemned by the people signally condemned it will sub vert the elective- system of government of which we are se proud, and substitute in its place the rule of a dynasty of office holders holding en against the will of the people." After Mr. Tilden 's remarks upon tak ing the chair, Mr. Randall made the lead ing speech of the evening, a position which was assigned him, no doubt, by reason of his high official position, his leadership in the economies and reforms of a Democratic Heuse which have made Democratic success possible, and because of his position as the next leading candidate at Cincinnati, when the solid vote of his Pennsylvania friends for Hancok made the latter's nomination certain. His speech was earnest, forci ble and statesmanlike, and we prefer te delay its publication iu full until to morrow, rather than detract from its merits by making the abridgment which its length would render necessary in printing it te-day. The letters of Seymour, McClellan, Watterson, and scores of distinguished Democrats throughout the country, and the speeches of Gen. Ewing. Randelph, Tucker, Senators Jenes and Jonas, and ether men high in the party councils, made the occasion a signally successful opening of the campaign. New for its real work. TriB English government, which blew Sepeys te pieces from the mouths of cannon in India,has found like the acute Frenchman who went out te hunt tiger that the amusements of Asia arc net altogether one-sided. Very fragmentary information reaches Londen of the re ported annihilation of Gen. Rurrews's British brigade by Ayoob Khan's Afghan army. The survivors who bring the news straggle in in details which indi cate that the reported massacre may have been only a rout, and Gen. Prim rose, who telegraphs that " we are going into the citadel, " may have sought safe ty before he was accurately informed of the fate of his fellow soldiers. It would be an awful thing, te bj sure, if two or three thousand Christian English soldiers had been murdered by the un believing Afghans whose territory is in vaded, and we see no reason te be lievesuch a calamity has ecciwml. Rut if, as appears likely, the British cause has received a serious check iu Central Asia, we trust it will remain checked long enough for Christendom te pause and seriously reflect for what England with mere territory than shi" can rule mere debt than she can pay, and mere soldiers than she can feed, is trying te tend her conquering arms among a peo ple like the Afghans. MINOR TOPICS. Tun Richmond State has the utmost confidence that the regular Democratic electoral ticket iu Virginia can be elected easily, in spite of all thai Mahone may de. Tun Detroit Free lrest declares that " only ene heuse in a hundred in Chicago is numbered se that they can be read at night." " Ne wonder there are se many divorce suits in Chicago," suggests the Washington Star. Tnn list of nanceck converts which we print has some substance in it. By the way, suppose some of our local Republi can contemporaries give us the names of the Democrats here who are going for Garfield. Put up or shut up. Wn are pained te learn that our unobtru sive friend, Dr. Compten, having made application te both the new political firms organized in this county, for admission te them as special partner, was net admitted into cither. This was a serious oversight, as Dr. C. could furnish a reasonable amount of capital and invaluable experi ence that would have niade Jiitti a useful member. UOSK A3U Ci.TEKVII.LAl:. "On, caterpillar," said a re- One lovely summer day, " Tour constant eating drives me wild : I wiiih you'd go away. I really cannot see what ue Teu and your kind can be ; Yeu naught but mischief de. and :uv Unpleasant things te see." A moment after that saute re-e Smiled en a butterlly That stepped te show Ids rainbow ed whips Ah be was passing by. Oh, lfbhe only could have knew n The pretty, dainty rose lie was a caterpillar, tee, Arrayed lu splendid clothe.-. ! Harp cr's Yeung Pceph: PERSONAL. The Rev. PniLLirs Brooks, of Bosten, preached in the private chapel of Windser Castle bofero Queen Victeria during morn ing service of July 11. Fourth street, Si. Leuis, is an histericaj locality made se by the fact that the wed dings of Grant and Hancock which oc curred within its precincts. Themas Hughes, author of "Tem Brown at Rugby," is expected at Newport, R. I., next month as the guest of Franklin W. Smith, of Bosten. Mrs. Hayes is seen going te Fremont te put her remodeled house iu order for fu ture residence. Her son, Webb Hayes? will, it is said, become a merchant in Te' lede next spring. Dr. William Fawkes Lee, son of Chas. B. Lee, West Chester, aged 23, died yes. terday after a protracted illness. He was a-young man of unusual premise, having just been graduated as doctor of medicine and a bright prospect of life seemed before him. He had rare skill as an engraver of medical subjects, and he had willingly leaned his skill te assist his professors in illustrating their work, but this weik added te his studies overstrained his phys ical powers and when sickness came he was unable te combat. The reports sent te America of the suicide of Mrs. Annie Wetmeke, the di vorced wife of a citizen of New Yerk, at the residence of the divorced English wife of the Lord Albert Pelham Clinten, in Paris, are very freely and indignantly de nied by her friends there. Especially im probable are the stories of Anglc&y break ing her heart by breaking his premise te marry her, since under the deciec di voic ing Mrs. Wetmere from her husband it was legally impossible for her te contract or fulfill any engagement of marriage whatever. An Atrocious Murder. In Chatham, Tiega county, Mrs. Floyd Whitney and- her mother-in-law became involved in "an angry dispute ever some trifling matter relating te domestic affairs. The women became very angry and after indulging in het words were en the point of clinching ene another and coining te blows. A. M. Stafferd was present and stepped in between the two women te sep arate them and quiet the disturbance. Mrs. Whitney told her husband that Staf Staf eord had struck her. He armed himself with a club and followed Stafferd home. He found him Bitting in a deer and went up te him and struck bim a terrible blew en the head with the club, knocking his brains out and killing him almost instant ly. Whitney, the murderers is only about thirty years or age. ihe murdered man is a brother-in-law of Mrs. Whitney. w Terrible Hail Storm. A hail storm near Steven's pond, Wis., en Monday covered the ground te a depth of several inches with hail stones of unu sual size, three efthe largest "weighing a pound." Shingles were tern from reefs, hay, grain, hop vines, and ether vegetation were totally destroyed, and fowls, prairie chickens and sheep were killed. The less is estimated at 975,000, STATS ITEMS. Our total yearly experts of petroleum run up te $40,000,000. J. H. Brown, was appointed register of Cambria county by Governer Heyt yesterday. Patrick Bulger, a miner, was killed in the Hartferd colliery, near Wilkesbarre, by the fall of top coal. Adjutant General Latta orders the dis haiulmcnt of a National guard company in Eiieaud ene in Lawrence county, en the ground of inefficiency. Daniel Dietrich formerly from near Pottsville has been found en the Gila river, Arizona, with five pistol shots through his chest ; cold blooded murder. Governer Heyt appointed Hen. Charles L. Iiailey, a trustee of the state lunatic hospital te fill the vacancy in the beard caused by the death of Win. Caldcr, esq. Herman Hcuman, of Little Falls, N. Y., while walking with a lady was seriously cut about the face with a knife in the hands of Asa Creft, who was crazy with drink. The Western nail association met yes teulay in Pittsburgh, and unanimously resolved net te sell nails at less than $3. The card Kite has heretofore been $3,25, but sales have been made 15 te 25 cents less. William Painter, of Franklin, was in stantly killed by being caught in the ropes and wound round the shaft of a bull wheel. He was horribly mangled, no was engaged in pulling the tubing at the time. Edward Davis was assisting him and was seriously injured. The Grand View garden house en Du- quesuc Heights, Pittsburgh, was destroyed by lire last night. It was a popular sum mer resort for beer-drinkers. Frem the garden a magnificent view of the city and surrounding country for miles could be had. Hence it was the mere visited. The lire caught in a small passage-way from the upsetting of a lamp, and everything was swept away. lu the Delaware county contest for state senator ever live thousand votes were call ed out by the extraordinary contest against Senater Cooper. He carried nearly the entire popular vote, and already ever ene hundred tint of a total of one hundred and thirty-two delegates are known te be elect ed in' his interest. He will probably be reneminated unanimously in the conven tion, his competitor, William B. Broomall, having pledged himself and friends te sup port the nominee. LATEST NEWS BY MAIL. The American pajtcr makers are in coun cil iu Saratoga. The Massachusetts state Republican will convene Sept. 5, in Worcester. Eddie, son of Cernell Brown, of Flush ing, L. I., was drowned by falling into a cistern, yesterday afternoon. Baseball: At Springfield Cincinnati 4, Nationals 3. The manager of the Roches ter club is missing. Se is a sum of money $100 belonging te the club. The census of Minnesota is new complete. The total population of the state is 780, 0T2, an increase of 340,300 since 1870, or a little mere than 77 per cent. Elisha Celeman was shot dead by Enen Cress, in a quarrel in Emmanuel county, Ga., en Tuesday. Cress's father was wounded by Celeman before the latter was shot. Near Wilmington yesterday the express train struck and killed a trackman, named William Gallagher. He was about thirty five years of age, unmarried, and almost a stranger. Three boys, aged about 12 years each, went crabbing en Staten Island Sound and have net been -heard from since. It is feared that the beat was capsized by a squall and the boys drowned. The body of a well dressed man, with the name " G. T. Silsby" marked upon his linen, in old English text was found floating in the i ivcr at Bayennc, N. J., yesterday. Eight huckster, who were en a spree in Wilmington, pounced upon a tramp and threw him upon the railroad track, where he remained insensible. The engineer en au approaching train saw the man just in time te save him. A railroad car from Cincinnati, leaded with sulphuric acid, was opened at Reck land, III., last night and the dead body of an unknown man was found in it. 1 he 'car had been five days en the track going from Cincinnati. Menree Robinson, awaiting execution in the jail at Greenville, Ohie, attempted suicide yesterday. He cut his threat and aims with a broken knife blade and bled profusely, but did net become uncon scious. At the West Virginia Democratic state convention yesterday among the prominent strangers present was General Weaver, presidential nominee of the Greenback party. The resolutions reported endorse the platform and principles of the national convention. Cel. J. B. Jacksen, of Park ersburg, was nominated for governor. In Quincy, 111., yesterday, a lire broke out at neon in E. C. Pfanschmidt's plau ing mill in a manufacturing district, and at 1:15 p.m. the mill was burned down and Garner's governor works, Bennett & Duffy's old foundry, Harris fc Becber's tobacco works and ether smaller concerns were burning. Pfanschmidt's less is $20, 000, uninsured, and the total less 100,000. Insurance, 825,000. In Patrick county, Va., Pink Dehart met Ames Woelvinc en the read en horse back, witii Mrs. Dehart behind him. An altercation ensued between the men, end ing by Dehait's sheeting Woelvine with a revolver through the forehead and neck, killing him instantly. Dehart then pre cceded te Patrick court house and surren dered himself te the officers of the law. Improper relations between Woelvine and Dehait's wife have been heretofore sus pected by Dehart. Mistaking Ills Wife for a Deg. Ephraim Miller, of Hampton, Pa., has a great terror of dogs. Recently he and his wife were returning home from a neigh ber's after spending the evening there. The night was very dark. Miller stepped te put up the bars of a fence around his yard. Mrs. M. walked en toward the house She were a white apron. When her hus band started te fellow her he saw what he supposed te be a big white deg running along ahead of him. He shouted te his wife te leek out for the deg. She became frightened, and turned and ran toward her husband. He could only see her white apron, which he had taken for a deg. As this came rapidly toward him he supposed the deg was about te attack him. He drew his revolver and fired. He killed his wife. A lg Haul. The robbers of the Savings bank at Mid- dletewn, Conn., took, in addition te the $8,500 iii cash, already reported, ever $20, 000 in "geed bends," and $40,000 in Seuth Carolina bends, which are net con sidered of much value. The cash be longed te the bank, the bends te indi viduals. Couldn't Ilury Him. William Thompson, being drunk, fell off a perch and broke his neck, at Bergen Point, N. J., en Monday night. His widow notified the police, saying that she sup ported the family by washing, while Thompson spent his time in saloons, and she had net money enough te bury him. Preparing for Contempt. Philadelphia Times. The difficulty about the Republican nomination for district attorney in Lancas ter seems likely te get into the courts. Then there will be something te talk about. FOB HANOOOK WHY REPUBLICANS SO DtCLABE. A Variety of KeaMes for Beacblus the Small Concleiloa. A colonel in the United States army, who has been a Republican, wrote a letter te Gen. Hancock of date July 3, 18S0, from which this extract is made : " I would recall te you a scene of the war. At Warrenton, in 1862, the brigade commanders and some of the regimental commanders called upon veu te make known te you the great dissatisfaction of the troops at McCIellan's being relieved, l was the spokesman. After stating the situation you rese and said : " 'Otentleraen. we serve a country ; we serve no man.' "reeling that veu are new the same patriot you then were, should this nation be placed in your keeping for a time no man need fear for the result." In Earnest. Walter F. Halleck, a major in the army stationed en the Pacific coast writes: "Frem my knowledge of General Hancock I think of him as the poet describes the true man and soldier : 'The bravest are the tenderest, The loving arc the daring.' " I propeso te work en this coast and wherever I can be most useful iu the cam paign for the success of Hancock and Eng lish. General Hancock will lie elected, take his scat and lie the president of the whole United States net a section of it. He will receive a large majority of the votes of all true soldiers these who have sense enough te realize that the war is ever and desire te bring about that friend ly feeling between the sections se necessa ry in order te have a united country in fact as well as in name. Hancock clubs are organizing rapidly all ever this coast and I certainly believe the Pacific states will all be carried by him. I will be cast before the election anil home in time te vote the Democratic ticket this year." One of the " Old tiuard." Jehn T. Leng, the most intimate friend of Grant in the West, and a leading St Leuis Republican, in an interview with si correspondent has said : " I shall vote for General Hancock, and believe he will be elected. I thing he has the qualifications te make a geed president. He will have the geed sense te surround himself with the right kind of advisers. One principal reason why lam against Garfield is that he has already shown his intention te be associated with at least two men for whom the ucpubhean party has the least pessi ble use Schurz and Sherman. Almest the first thing Garfield did after his nomination was te take a long carriage-ride with Schurz, a man devoid of all political prin ciple. The real cause of Schurz's hostility te Grant is this : When Schurz was sena ter he asked Grant for 105 appointments in twelve months, from foreign missions down. He get eighty-three, but made himself the enemy of Grant because he didn't get everything he asked for. I have never heard Grant discuss Hancock save as a general, and in that respect he al ways speke well of him. I am a Republi can still. 1 have been in correspondence with many political and personal friends respecting the political situation, and I shall vote for nanceck." A North Carolina Republican. The Raleigh Daily News has had an in terview with Mr. W. A Guthrie, a premi nent lawyer of Fayetteville and one of the most prominent and influential el the younger Republicans of North Carolina, whom his party had been ready te nomi nate for governor or for Congress. He says he will vote for and support Han cock. Further he says: "I believe new the Southern Democrats are heartily sick of sectional strife and mean in geed faith te yield a hearty obedience te the national authority ; and the election of Hancock by the co-operation of the national Deme cratic party will be conclusive proof that the Seuth is new as loyal as the North. I don't believe that any man could he found se stupid as te doubt Hancock s loyalty, and I am sure that the Union in his hands would be safe. I think there is special necessity just new of having sectionalism abolished and the 'bloody shirt' elimin ated from our politics. The development et our material resources and the pros perity of the country can never be pro moted by sectional strife. Se long as the North believes we arc disloyal, whether it be true or net, we can't expect capital ists te come here and help us te rebuild our waste places, i noticed a day or two age in the News that a Rhede Island youth was actually afraid te come te Ra leigh, the capital of our state, te attend Judge Streng's law school, because his friends at home were apprehensive of his personal safety. I believe that General Hancock is a man of pure private charac ter! and I knew he was a gallant soldier We need a man as president of unimpeach able private character te inspire confidence at home, and a soldier of national reputa tien te command the respect of foreign na tions. General Garfield may be a pure and upright man, but I am afraid there is some truth in what has been said about his con nection with the DeGelyer pavement. Credit Mebilierand legislation of a disrep utable kind, nanceck has none of that sort of thing te answer for. As for Gen. Garfield's military record, I never heard much of that until since his nomination, and his friends say he retired from the army before the war ended and was con tent te exchange the epaulets for a seat in Congress. I have always been a Giant man. Though I voted for him twice, I never held any office under his administration nor asked him for any. I don't aspire te any politi cal office new, and what I desire above all things te sec is a reunited country with all political tricksters and machine politicians put in the background." Anether Hancock Republican. Gee. Wiikcs'H Letter te William 51. Hall, I'ari-s July 18, 1880. Garfield pleased me because his name rese upon the collapse of a horrid spectre which had frightened the ceuntty te its very marrow. ; but nanceck fills the bill an honest soldier who knows nothing but his duty, and will be sure te leave the peo ple, unhampered by " policies," te their own free will. That is the true theory of the presidential institution. I have been hankering te vote the Dem ocratic ticket for ever ten years past, be cause it is a fixed principle with me that no party whatever is fit te wield the gov ernment, its army, and its purse consecu tively for ever ten years ; certainly net for twenty. Parties, like certain dishes, need te be turned ever once in a while te suit the public palate, nay, the public health, and heaven knows our gorged and loath ing country needs a change at present. But the management of the Democratic party has been se incompetent for the last ten years, se confounded with cusscdness in its leaderships, that I felt forced, in spite of my principle, te adhere te the mere respectable rogueries of the Puritan Republicans. Hancock, however, fills the bill. He is "a bold soldier boy, " with a clean name ; and though since Andrew Jacksen the mil itary idea has net been a Democratic fancy it is net for the Republicans te come out of their hotbed of sabres te reproach us with it new. They surely cannot clamor with success about the Mrs. Surratt per formance of Hancock's bounden duty. That necessary tragedy has been sufficient ly discounted by applauding stalwarts; has always proved te be one of the most telling appeals te Republican patriotism during the last four presidential cam paigns : and I am much mistaken in mvi. timate of human nature if the same pain ful incident, with an honest but sorrowful I soldier as its central figure, does' net again powerfully influence the unpelitical por tion of the American people. I knew Hancock, and I like him. He is a man of sound ability, and will wear well; and though, as you knew, I never fancied West Point much, I must bear it this im portant testimony : Throughout the war, en both sides, net one of the regular brand was known te steal. It was net alwaysse with the amateur experts of the volunteer service. There arc two illustrative con trasts that new pass across my mind : The first, a volunteer psalm-singing speculator, whom I need net mention ; the ether, that grand old Confederate here, Jehn B. Mag ruder. whem'I recollect as once painted by a chance correspondent efthe Londen Times riding at the head of his legions ever the flowering sward of Texas, looking like one of the paladins of old, and as I will add with millions of money had he been se minded springing te his hand from the clever at his horse's hoofs. I well remember hew he stayed Mc Clellan, and 40,000 of the flower of our Northern youth under that leader, for nearly a month at Yorktown, with but 9,000 men, leaving behind him iu the abandoned walls net a wagon, net a side of bacon, nor a man. Right well also de I bear in mind, when he found -his retreat discovered and dis puted by these instinctive soldiers, Hoeker, Hcint.lemau and Kearney, he had stomach te give battle te the three en the read at Williamsburg, and te pass through the toils that environed him, by the lire of his sword, with the glory of a new Mercau. What has Grant done that was better than that? Indeed, Magruder was a grand old soldier, hut he died without means enough te bury him a funeral that became a here who knew hew te make war but did net knew hew te make money. New,Grant was a different kind of here a soldier, doubtless, but net se much of ene as his blind worshipers would have us think a silent, crafty, money-making man, with always an empire te windward and keenly comprehending that the first step el" the founder of a dynasty is te make himself and family rich, aye te the utter most generation. Our friend Ulysses be gan his climb te power logically, by tak ing presents, absorbing strengths in stocks and heu-cs, and every form of property, and by distributing l'ei tunes te his rela tives, from the Cerbius te the Dents, his last and most clever coup in that way being the recent side stroke of two or three mil lions in California for the family fund, in the way of marriage through the ceckey and aspiring young Prince Fred. Indeed, from the day of accession of Ulysses te what is practically the throne efthe United States (with its mere than regal patron age), he has never, se far as my observa tion gees, refused a rich man's invitation te dinner nor sat at a peer man's table. If it were my desire te wound him, I would refer te sumptuous bnaids which he has carelessly allowed himself te patronize that were net entirely weithy even of his own humble stait in life. Presently, when he recovers from the stupefaction efthe recent staggering blew at Chicago, he will slowly uncoil and stretch out again for profit. But te return te the presidential ques tion. I was always of the opinion, after what had happened iu 187C, that Tilden was the logical and proper candidate for Cincinnati, and still believe he would have been elected first, because the people throughout the land were yearning for a change. e have seen that mysterious public sense lately work in England. But beyend the impulse of this slew and steady revolution against the Republican party, and transcending the force of all ether causes put together came iu the nick of time the audacious attempt of a set of political highwaymen at Chicago te plant their knees upon the public breast and throttle it of its vpicc, in order that they might establish a permanent government for their political master and themselves. They were mad with spoil and drunk with arrogance and power, and did net knew te what a :icat extent they were unmasking themselves till it was tee late. Was ever such a sight ? The leader, with his private wire, most blind and mad of all, had waded te his late from a prima ry declaration that he would accept a nom inatien only it unanimously pressed upon him, and, after a six days light, died with his jaw upon the bit at ;!0C ! That was the moment at which the ceuntiy took fire, or. te use our American phrase, "get mad."' At the same moment a panic seized the braves who had been forbidding honest men te speak. The siege of libcity was raised by the lifting of Garfield's banner. The desperadoes en deavored te make the best of their discom fiture ; but they had gene tee far. The people new had taken the bit, and the in sults these Republican dictators had put upon their respected representatives in the convention burned every honest cheek iu the land. Frem that moment the election of any Democratic candidate who might he named at Cincinnati was certain." But the best man was chosen, and 1 re joice in his selection. 1 de net predict anything, but I believe Gen. Hancock will be invited te the White Heuse, in large part by the very same patriotic men who sent honest Abraham Lincoln there for two terms. I shall take great pleasure in casting my vote for him as a man without stain and equal te the presidential station Fer that purpose I will be found at the polls iu New Yerk at the election in next November. .13 ere Ilcturns. In his Pi egress this week Cel. Ferney publishes letters from 1). R. Goodlee, of Washington, 1). C; Richard McAllister, a I'cunsyivaiiiau at tiie capital; W. W. Whitmer, of Des Moines, Iowa, and An sclm Birdsall, of Binghamton, N. Y., all Republicans, saying that they have en listed under the Democratic banner for the Hancock fight. An Old Soldier. T. Cadwalader, wrote from the recor der's eflice in Daylcstewn te Majer J. B. Roberts of Newtown, Buck county, urging him te get up a Republican soldier club. In his reply Maj. Roberst said : "Yeu will find, I think, this fall, thousands of old veterans in the Republican paity giving their hurrahs and votes te Gen. Hancock. Yeu say should the Democratic party be suceesful with their candidate, a Union soldier, yen fear it. will be placing the boys in gray, instead of the boys in blue, in power. Captain, were you ever in the army of the Potomac'.' Who was the most dreaded Confederate officer, noted for lying iu ambush and sheeting down in cold bleed the boys in blue ? Was it net Colonel Mesby'.' Yes; and today he is being rewarded by the Republican chief magistrate as American consul at Heng Keng, in China. Gen. Lengstrcet, another rebel officer, is filling the mission of min ister te Turkey, and hosts of ethers I could mention. But the war is ever, and has been for fifteen long years, and I propose te drop the matter and fall in with enough mere of the boys in blue te place them at the head of our government that superb and fearless Union soldier, General Winlield bcett Hancock, born a Pcnnsylvanian and the pride efthe state." Oilier Notable Vcccsslens. lien. Samuel II. Tlionipnen, of Mt. Mor Mer ris, 111., formerly a .staunch Republican, has declared himself for Hancock and English. Captain N. W. Wheeler, prominent as a merchant in Portland, O., has declared for Hancock. As he has always been a lead ing Republican his change of party affilia tions has created quite a breeze iu the Radi cal ranks. The Hancock Legien of Shamokin was organized with 70 members, about ten per cent of whom were ex-Republicans. Charles N. Pee, ex-register of voters of New Haven, Conn., a prominent citizen and hitherto a leading Republican, has come out for Hansek and English. Mr. Pee served four-years and a half in the Union army, and feels atheme in the Han cock column. ! A correspondent of the national Demo cratic cemmittee writes from Montgomery, Alabama . " Our colored Hancock and English club en its third meeting last night numbered 610. The colored voters arc a unit for the cause." A Herse Disease. Horses in many of the stables of Bosten and its vicinity are suffering from a fatal distemper, which is attributed te "the rainy and irregular weather." The ani mal's threat becomes inflamed se that in a short time he is unable te swallow, and in a day or two the muscles of the body are paralyzed and death ensues. Ne cure has been found for the disease, which, however, it is believed will net become epidemic. LOCAL INTELLIGENCE. TOBACCO AND IT CULTURE. A Valuable Manual for tee Farmer. We have received a copy of a 28-page pamphlet published by G. W. Haverstick, of New Providence, this county, titled "Tobacco and its Culture," being a com plete treatise en the culture aud manage ment of tobacco from the seed te the case. The author, who has had twenty-two years' experience in tobacco culture, lays down very clear rules for the government of the f&ewcr, commencing with the selec tien and sprouting of the seed, and gemg en through the whole process of preparing the seed bed, sewing the seed, managing the plants, destroying the worms, topping, cutting, hanging, stripping and casing te- tobaece. The following extract is seasonable and give an idea of the scope and character of the work. Topping Tobacre. On thin land where the plnnt docs net have a vigorous growth, top it at lrem six te eight leaves, but in ordinary land, where the plants leek thriving, you can it your tobacco has net been planted tee late, ina turc from eight te ten leaves ; ind in very strong rich land, from twelve te feurtcc-u geed leaves en the stock, but in no case should it exceed that number as you will learn, I hope, before we close, by following up the method given m this work before we get te the case. I would prefer te top just after a ram, but it is peer policy te wait ler a rain until your tobacco sheets, before topping. The plant which you think, at first sight, will mature ten leaves, top te eight, and the ene you think will bear twelve top te ten, aud se en, but iu no case let mere than fourteen leaves, besides the three lower ones, en any one stock, and the sooner the topping is done after the stock has attained the re quired number of leaves, the better able will it be te drive te maturity. Anether very important point in topping tobacco is this : de net run ever your patch, but when your tobacco is ready for topping, take it clean as you go aud top each stock en its own merits according te the advice given. Tep each stalk for itself regardless of the next one, as for various causes they inav net be of the same size. If the stock be small, top it at any rate. it will give bigger and better leaves, if net se many of them, and they all have the same time te mature in, and will ripen mere evenly. This is far better than te have the small stocks two weeks later, which would give you censid crable trouble when you come te cut your tobacco. It your tobacco be all topped at one time it is sure te ripen, and it is better te have leaves en one size than stocks. Anether advantage : Your tobacco when topped at one time, or nearly se, will ripen and euro much mere unilermly in color, a -:j q'iC grower will see seen af ter lopping, especially in a wet scaseu, the sheets or suckers appear, which must also be attended te : however, de net give yourself any trouble about them until the first six suckers appear which will lie en top et the stalk then they should be broken off very care fully, se as net te injure the plant. Suck ers de net retard the growth of the plant materially until they become large. Yeu will find that each and every leaf will send out a sucker, which must be broken eli in time before getting tee large. The stalks begin te threw out suckers at the top or where the bud stem was lirst broken en, and continue te go down the stalk until they get te the lower leaves which deter mines the time when the stock is ripe Yeu can with safety cut when the lower leaves send out suckers from two te live inches long, and the leaves thicken up and become brittle. There is mere injury in letting your tobacco become tee ripe than by cutting tee green. Yeu must, however, guard against both ex tremes as neither is geed. Equally minute and explicit rules are giving for cutting and harvesting the crop, and many ether useful hints are given in the pampclet, that cannot fail te be of great advantage te the amateur to bacco growers, in whose interest the little work is mere especially Avritten. TI1K CAMPAIGN. Tlie Democrat Agree en a Uniform. At a general meeting of the conference committees of all the Hancock clubs held last evening, the following style of uniform was unanimously recommended for adop tion by the clubs of the city for the com ing campaign : Cap Style, navy ; plain white oil-cloth. Siiiht Dark blue canton flannel, with light blue shield, containing number of ward en breast, in white muslin net less than G inches iu length. Buttens white. Tie White, knit. Belt White oil-cloth with "Hancock and English" printed en back. Touch Glebe, 0-inch wick with 4-feet pole. Frem the large number of samples shown the committees the above was adopted for recommendation te the ward clubs, by whom it will be considered and reported back te the general conference committee. The uniform is tasteful, unique and cheap. Paving North Queen Street. A letter received by the chairman of the street committee niis morning from Cun ningham & McNichol, states that the last ship lead of Belgian block for paving North Queen street, has arrived at Phila delphia, and will be immediately forward ed te this city. A large proportion of the blocks have already arrived in Lancaster and been unleaded at the crossing of the Harrisburg turnpike. The work of dig ging up the street preparatory te laying the new pavement will probably be com menced en Monday next. The Presbyterian Organ. Samuel Belder, the organ builder of Reading, is rebuilding the large Buffing Buffing ten organ in the Presbyterian church, this cjty. He is adding five new steps, greatly increasing the power of the bass, putting in new valves, new bellows and rcveicing the many reeds and pipes in the compli cated instrument. The work will be fin ished in three or four weeks and the build er and ether competent judges think that when it is completed, the instrument will be ene of the very finest in Lancaster. TEXT AKD TABERNACLE. Bellgten la the LaadlaTiile Greve. Special Correspondence et the IxrxLuencrR. Wednesday Evening, August 28. The children's meeting is one of the most important services of the camp, and is usually attractive and largely attended. The singing is geed and the addresses are generally deeply interesting. The first of these children's services was held at 1 p. m., led by Prof Ellenberger, Prof. Sweeny at the organ. Addresses were made by Revs. J. Lindcmuth and J. Mills. The at tendance was large for the first meeting. The weather has been delightfully pleas ant and makes the sojourn in the weeds enjoyable. At 3 p. m. Rev. E. Potts, of Salem, Pa., held forth. Text, Genesis, xxxv., 1 : " And Ged said unto Jacob, arise and go up unto Bethel te dwell there," &c. Man's forgetfulness of Ged isone of the evidences of human depravity. Points : 1. Ged's kindndss unto Jacob. He becomes an cxile alone in the wilderness. Ged draws near te him and manifests His presence te him, and befriends him. 2. His obli gations of gratitude te Ged for His kindness. Jacob acknowledged the claims of Ged, and paid his vows unto Him ; Jacob had his Bethel and se have we ; Ged meets with his people ; nis previdence watches ever them and blesses them. The preach er is modest and retiring and speke with much plainness and sincerity.- He dealt heavy blows at ministers who seem te be fearful in preaching the truth. Last year he shrank from preaching himself ; this year he determined te be mere bold and faithful. The sermon was short aud well received and was followed by an exhortation from Rev. S. 11. C. Smith, of Lancaster, and an earnest prayer-meeting followed. The spirit of the meeting is gradually rising, in a few days it will doubtless reach Heed-tide. Several ministers ar rived in the afternoon train, among them Rev. A. L. Heed, from Harrisburg, and Rev. R. McKay, from Tiega, Philadel phia. There was no service at C p. in. Prof. Sweeny gave a delightful concert of music at the public stand te the enjoyment of the people. At 7$ p. m. Rev. Win. Aspril, of Mt. Jey, preached en Jeremiah vi., 16 : " Staud ye in the way and see and ask for the old path." These words were addressed te the Jewish nation. They had beceme cor rupted. The prophet exhorts them te re turn te their obedience te Ged. The text is applicable te us, pointing out the way we should take. The lan guage is figurative and points out the way of life. Twe things noticed. 1. The wag recommended. 2. The premise annexed. Religion is represented in the scriptures as a way. It is the way of repentance ; of faith ; of holiness. It is a way distin guished for its antiquity and excellency ; it is the old path and the geed way. The premise of the text was urged by way of application. The sermon was plain aud readily understood. . The preacher is vet a young man and premises well for the future. The sermon was followed by a short and earnest exhortation from Rev. II. Wheeler and a prayer-meeting continued te the close of the meeting. The congregations during the day were moderate. By the close of the week a large influx is expected. The evening air felt quite cool and thick coats and shawls were called into requisition. Thick blankets will feel comfortable te the sleepers at night. Jehn Maxton and Jacob BIctz from Col umbia and S. Miller from Lancaster have been appointed gate keepers. ITiurtday Noen. On rising this morn ing everybody you met reminded you of what everybody knew, that the air is coel: these who had plenty of covering slept well, while ethers who were net se fortu nate shivered with the cold. It is never safc te risk coming te carapmcctings with out plenty of thick clothes and covering. The morning is splendid, and premises well ; the air is balmy, and we feel like snuffing it in freely. There is nothing mere free than air ; corporations de net control it, it belongs te the peer as well as the rich. The prayer-meeting at Ca. m. was led by Rev. Brady in the tabernacle. The prayer aud experience meeting at 8J a. m. was led by Rev. J. Lindcmuth at the stand. The spirit of the meeting was geed. Rev. A. L. Heed, of Harrisburg occu pied the stand at 10 a. m. Prayer was offered, by Rev. H. Wheeler, of Colum bia. The preacher took his text from Remans i., 1G : " Fer I am net ashamed of the gospel of Christ," Jbc. This is no new text, it is old and familiar, but it is always geed and in place. The gospel is precious ; we may net always appreciate its prcc prcc ieusness. Its power te save, te renew and te comfort has been fully demonstrated. The theory dis cussed was the superiority of the gospel. This was shown iu its erigiu. It is the gospel of Christ, and as such it is above all human systems. It directs men in all the relations and duties of life. It teaches men moral honesty. It enjoins equity, sobriety and virtue. It is a power the power of Ged the power of Ged unto salvation. The gospel acts as a sweet lullaby te rock some people te sleep. The Saviour said, "What, could ye net watch with me one hour." Hew encouraging te the preacher te speak te sleepy hearers. The sermon was somewhat lengthy, and it gave but lit tle time for exhortation and prayer. Rev. S. II. C. Smith closed the meeting. PICNICS. St. Antheny's anil St. Catharine's atQearry- vllle Zion Lutheran atMcCall'a terry PrivatePicnics at What Glea. The excursion train for Quarryvillc this morning consisted of six cars, and had aboard a large number of the congregation of St. Antheny's church this city, who, iu connection with the congregation of St. Catharine's of Drumerc, are te-day hold ing a picnic at Hcss's weeds near Quarry villc The excursion train left the King street depot at 8:10. and was followed at 9:45 by the regular train, which also had aboard a number of the picnic party. The whole number of tickets sold was about 300. The cougrcgatieu and Sunday school of Zion Lutheran church, this city, are to day picnicking at McCall's Ferry. They went there by rail via Columbia and Pert Deposit railroad. The number of tickets sold was 256. Yesterday a very pleasant private picnic, consisting of about twenty-five couples of young people, was held at What Glen. Te-day another private picnic is being held there under the management of Messrs. . R. D. Stewart and Harry Carpenter. I f