l-'-WCp'"!. maasssasau, ' rTTIll LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGEt('i:i. THURSDAY OCTOBER 21. 1880., Lancaster Intelligencer. TKDESDAY EVENING. .OCT. 21, 1880. Axv person who "' " shall, with the intent te influence or intimidate fnicli elector te give his vote for any par ticular candidate or candidates at such election, give, offer or premise te give uuch elector any eflice, place, appoint ment or employment, or threaten such elector with dismissal or discharge from any eflice, place, appointment or employ ment, public or private, then held by Jiim, in case of his refusal te vote for any particular candidate or candidates at such election, the person se offending Shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, en conviction, be sentenced te pay a fine 3iet exceeding five hundred dollars and undergo an imprisonment net exceeding two years. The law of Pennsylvania. A Man te Be Rejected. The Philadelphia Time publishes a long list of cases in which Themas J. J)avis, Republican candidate for district attorney in this county, is charged with having appropriated te his own use moneys collected in his professional ca pacity. The statement of these cases the Tunc says it has from a Republican of this county and it vouches for the truth of the particulars given, which are sus tained in large measure by the records of our courts. As te the correctness of this statement in all its details we cannot certify. Very many cases of dereliction run reported and of .some of them we knew nothing. "With the facts in ethers the public here lias long been mere or less familiar: and there can be no question of the substantial truth of the allega tion made that Mr. Davis has repeatedly misappropriated moneys professionally received. It does net matter much whether every item of offense that is charged against him is absolutely true and justly colored. Theie is a large enough balance of fact te condemn him. We have net taken held ourselves of the.se allegations against Mr. Davis for .several reasons. We have felt that the duty of digging up this dirty mass of matter against a lawyer who was en dorsed by the bench and bar of Lancas ter, notwithstanding his malpractice was perfectly well known te all the mem bers, did net devolve peculiarly upon us. Mr. Davis has net only been held in the embrace of a court which claimed te be se careful of its honor as te disbar us for simply charging that it was led by polit ical prejudice te permit tile attorneys at its bar te abuse its processes, but he has b?en made the candidate for public pros ecutor by lite Republic"" P"'15 which has se heavy a majority in Lancaster county aste render it entirely hopeless that a Democratic newspaper could per suade a majority of the voters te reject Mr. Davis at the polls, it matters net what have been his offenses. Our expe rience is that the Republican voters will swallow anything labeled Republican, however putrescent, in preference te aiivihing Democratic, however pure. We knew that we would vainly expose Mr. Davis's rettenness: our charges would be represented te b malignant partisan falsehoods. Ner had we any disposition te pull the chestnuts out of the lire for :;m:fi weak-kneed Republicans as recognized Davis's unfitness for the place for which he is his party's candi date, but feared te oppose him because he is that candidate. It ought net te b? hard te persuade the Republicans of Lancaster county that a man who gambles away hisclient's moneys i.-, net the man te be district al al terue;.. Vet it is certain that this per suasion, if it shall accomplish anything, must come from Republican lips. If there arc enough Republican leaders in the county with decency and courage te teh their people te vote against the party candidate, I hey may save their parly the opprobrium of his election. The candi date of the Democratic party is capable and leputabie. The quest ion for the Re. publicans of the county te decide is which they will have. Fer the credit of the county and of their parly they ought te reject Davis. They have the whole re sponsibility. Nene of the shame of the elevation te office of se unlit a man as Davis is shown te be can, of course, rest outside the Republican party. Mr. Garfield has declared in a let ter of last January that employers "have a right te buy labor where they can gel it the cheapest;" which is true; but he was net prepared te say that Chinese immigration which was te provide this cheap labor should be prohibited until " our great manufacturing and cirperale interests are considered in the matter of labor. This was written in a Ic'.tr tejthe Employers Union at Lynn, Massachusetts, which was endeavoring te have workmen's strikes made a crim inal offence ; and until they had things fixed te their satisfaction Mr. Garfield was net prepared te declare against Chi nese cheap labor. These utterances upon the part of a presidential can didate seeking labor votes will net be at all healthy for him : and it is net sur prising that we have a telegram from Mr. Garfield s home denying his author ship of them. Ife is entitled te a sus pension of opinion until he produces evi dence that he is falsely charged. This will be needed, for the original letter in bis own handwriting is said te lie in the pos.M'.sieii of a New Yerk journal. Tin: Republican demonstration te-day must have brcn a disappointment te its project ei.-i. .since it did net come up te the great parades of the past. This county, with its enormous Republican vole, is al way.-, able te pour out a great mass of people, and when they de net come the spirit is eeitainly wanting. The display te-daj would have been creditable te a county with smaller re sources of men and money, but for the great county of Lancaster it did net de clare any great weight of Republican en thusiasm. Fer a candidate' whom his party only knew te his discredit they did all that could he expected of them. If they had had lilaine or Grant the demonstration te-day would have been a great affair ; for both of these men have hesls m" admirers in the Old Guard, net withstanding their sins. Fer Garfield the real feeling is little belter than con--tempt and the show te-day showed it. -MINOR TOPICS. "Anybody can see a canal beat and a mule." Vide Chairman Cessna's long cared specimen in te-day's parade, evident ly designed te catch the fancy of the labor ing men who according te that Republi can chieftain, " vote through their eyes."' "Ik we can thwart the infernal villiauy of the south this time we may possibly end it forever," says that pious organ, the Philadelphia Bulletin, meaning that the "infernal villiany" of voting the Demo cratic ticket is what cannot be endured by the Republican party. Aptly enough, Schuyler Colfax comes te the fore as a candidate for United States senator from Indiana. The dishonored ex vice president evidently regards the recent Republican success in that state as a vin dication of his own and Garfield's un savory Credit Mebilier record. Novem ber will reverse the verdict. The vote at the Soldiers' Heme at Day ton, Ohie, shows hew the wounded veter ans feel en political questions. "We give the official canvass en congressman : McMahon. Dem 1,G0S Schultr., Rep 1,310 Democratic majority 3S2 The influence of the officers' of the in stitution was exerted against the Demo cratic ticket, but the veterans steed firm in their political faith. Tin: Sixth Virginia district will reward the herculean efforts te prevent the re-election of Hen. Jehn Randelph Tucker te the Forty-seventh Congress, that have just been exposed, by returning that eloquent and able representative te the seat he new honors backed up by the largest majority which he has yet been complimented by an appreciative constituency. The scheme te defeat this distinguished son of the Old Dominion was being quietly engineered by the Mahenc crowd, and was being liberally aided by Pennsylvania money, in spite of the fact that Mr. Tucker's effective labors en the ways and means committee .have been uniformly devoted te a tariff for rev enue and the consequent protection te home industries implied in that phrase. The country will net be deprived of Mr Tucker's liquid eloquence and conscien tious labors by the schemes of contriving politicians like Mahenc and his demagogue Republican allies. Somkexi: discovered a U.ig lacking the exact number of stars tleating from a staff in a Virginia village. It was decor ated with the names of Hancock and Eng lish. and though its colors were the red, white aim blue, frenzied. Republican fanatics pointed at the emblem as the hated rebel rag. It is admitted that the field wears mere than the traditional eleven stars and in no way does the ensign resemble the stars and bars of the Confederacy. The simple fact is that it hadn't quite enough stars upon it te leprcsent every .state in the Union, and all the descriptions that have come te our notice appear te indicate that the Hag was a rather clumsy home made piece of work. Since, however, our i Republican friends have become se par- ' ticular about the number of stars proper I te be placed upon the American Hag, we pleasantly advise the authorities of the Fifth ward Garfield ehib in 'this city te L carefully examine Ik handsome buutinz they have hung before their hcadquai tcis in the First want. The most rigid canvass of the map of the United States fails te ic- veal forty state:;, and that is the number i of stars their otherwise patriotic emblem wears. The curious looking object en the banner in front of the Yeung Men's Re publican club room, en East Kingsticet, evidently designed te represent the Amer ican s'.icld, though the lower portion of the device is missing entirely, has seven stars upon 1 he field, but se far from im puting any treasonable motives te the dear young men in thus defacing the national emblem, we charitably presume that they took this means of publicly signifying the probable number of states they hope te carry for Garfield. PERSONAL. Mrs. Lvi)i Maui.v Ciiimi, the well known authoress, died yesterday at Way land, Mass., aged seventy-eight. Jesi;i'ii K. Emmkt, the comedian, was . arrested in Albany en Tuesday for assault. I and battery en his wife, who alleged te ! Justice Chile that he threatened te kill I her and also himself, and also threatened te burn his new barn, lie was a frightful spectacle from mud, his clothing and face being covered with it. He was sent te jail. What Dersey's l.ieiilciiauls Hid in Indiana. Chicago Special. . One of Senater Doisey's lieutenants has returned from Indiana. He is jubilant: his words fiew rapidly and he is confident that the sun l ises in every state in the Union upon his party. A New Yerk World correspondent interviewed this over joyed gentleman. "Are the Republicans through with In diana?" asked the reporter. " Well, tlicy ought te be. e whipped you fellows bad enough te cripple life, and there isn't much mere fei you ler for us te de down there. Yeu Democrats under estimated us. We had railroads. We had the spotters. We held the hand. When we came across a man who we thought was a Democrat and possibly a repeater we had him run into a police station and locked up en a charge of carrying con cealed weapons. Aet being able te catch him attempting te repeat, it was the only charge we could prefer against him. I remember one case where some ircn- tlcmcu from Kentucky came ever. We had a very clerical looking individual who had the air of a Democrat about him and he went te the depot te welcome them. He satisfied the gentlemen that he was a mem ber of the Democratic committee and shook hands all around and said lie regret ted that the city was se crowded that they would all have te occupy one room for the night. He then conducted them te their room, which turned out te be a cell in the station house. We run in ' nigger ' Daw Daw eon, of whom there has been se much said, iu a similar manner. lie had net been detected as a rejeatcr, bnt we knew he carried a pistol. Yeu see we had some of the slickest detectives from Baltimore. New Yerk and Chicago, besides the United States marshall. Our work was made easier from the fact that our party was Democrats were net nessiblv" 'is von iv' ' 8Sttt iiTfc i ncscssary te contend against such rascal- jt ? " JL- . ... .. . ' This faithful Hniifeitfinh Klitr-il fmtliei. I railuiul lieutenant slated further 4lit Unrcnw Vlltlfl linu nn If. T(-.t- it. TAn. t .Tersev and Arthmand Cernell wmil.l tab. ! Mw nf 1T.MV Vnrlr TTe Ktnn.1f,.,fl.,. O.n! . nf ertv nvi T.wi;,., a m.LI for the Republicans, BRAVE TfOKllS. from Veteran Democrat Who Knows A beat Indiana. Letter Frem Hen. Benjamin Palton, Common Pleas Judge In Allegheny Ceuuty Thlrty Years Age. mrKsvir.T.n, defiance ue., ., October 18, 1SS0. l'e the Demecrattc State Centred Committee of Pennsylta'nia : Our Democratic friends in Pennsylvania and elsewhere at the East need net be at all alarmed or discouraged about the re sult of the late election in Indiana. I live close te the Indiana line, and knew what is going en in that state. Our friends there are net in the least discenraged. It is true they have been disappointed. But they are new thoroughly aroused. They are chafed partly by a consciousness of their own mistakes, and partly by the gross misrepresentations and corrupt means by which their opponents carried the election. The average majority of the Republicans did net exceed 3,000. This our friends will wipe out in November with a large margin te spare. Frem the Ohie river te Lake Michigan they are animated by one determination, and that is te profit by their own mistakes, te recover lest ground, and te redeem the state. And, mark my words, they will de it. The object of-the constitutional amend ments was te abolish the October election, and they were carried by a large majority of the votes cast. The action of the su preme court, by which the amendments were, en technical grounds, nullified, was a mistake. It left Indiana an October state. This enabled the Republican party of the whole Union te concentrate their vast resources of men and money in In diana, and they expended net less than a million of dollars te carry the state. This game cannot be repeated in November. There will then be a clear field and a fair fight, and truth and justice will prevail. In Ohie, with state pride and ether pew erf ul appliances te back the Republican party, the result was about the same as it was last year, when Fester was elected governor. Why should the result have been se wildly different in Indiana ? The reason is various. There were extraordi nary aud corrupt means taken ; and these measures cannot be repeated at the presi dential election. Our friends in Indiana relied with tee much confidence upon their strength and piestigc, as developed at former elections. Then their organization was very defec tive, while that of their opponents was perfect and complete. Seeing this, our friends have gene te work and made their organization thorough and searching. They will have a committee of reliable men for every square in every town and city, and for every inhabited square mile. They will scour the lists te find illegal voters in the rural districts of the state. They will personally visit and reason with every doubtful voter, and every man of Democratic antecedents. They will thus in a quiet, bnt effective way, remove all false impressions, aud explode the mons trous falsehoods by which these impres sions were created. Indiana is still a Democratic state ; aud, the result in No vember will prove it. Loek out for the victorious result of the- most searching and effective still hunt that ever occurred in our political history. Theso Grecnbackers, amounting te sev eral thousand, who steed up for the in tegrity of their own organization, their own party ticket, while the rest deserted them, are justly indignant. They feel that i they have been sold out, duped and cheat- en. lhey are swearing vengeance. They have come te the conclusion that they can but obtain it by acting with the Democrats in November, and voting for Hancock. Under any circumstances ilan- ! cock is stronger in Indiana by several thousand voles than the state ticket was. As a native of Pennsylvania, 1 leek l'er- ) ward with almost painful interest te the J result in that state. 1 am all the time asking myself the question, will she tamely submit te the continued rule of the vam pires, whose motto is "addition, division and silence ," wiie have brought disgrace upon her character, and have subjected her te the scorn and contempt of honorable men'.' Or is there still enough of slate pride left among her citizens te stand up for one of the noblest of her own sons, the here whose courage and patriotism saved her in the hour of her tribulation and trial, and whose principles, as publicly proved, are all in accordance with the interests el her people ? As te my predictions in regard te In diaua, I may possibly deceive myself. Rut. my old friends in Pennsylvania knew I would net willingly deceive ethers. Yours truly, Brcx.i. Pattm.n. flat licit! en the l.auer Problem. Thcfollewiiig was published in Ti-uli ! Wednesday morning. The letter is aathen-1 tic. It is in General Garfield's handwrit ing. Denial is worse than useless. It should have the widest circulation among .,. ijitvvf ;, lu iiiiiuiiiiue iiiu I lJII IIIJIIIJ.III .,11 nl'icL'iit! ..i? 5f iiiiiiin(?1re fl... l?s,.itlil!...... ' hollewncss aud hypocrisy en the question' through their chief. (Signed) Wim.iam II. Bakni : Personal and Confidential. IIecsk ok Rkpukskntativks. Washington-. D. C, Jan. 23d, 1SS0. Dear Sir : Yours in relation te the Chinese problem came duly te hand. I take it that the question of employees is only a question of private and corporate economy, and individuals or companies have the right te buy labor where they can get it cheapest. We have a treaty with the Chinese gov ernment, which should be religiously kept until its previsions are abrogated by the action of the general government, and 1 am net prepared te say that it. should be abrogated until our great manufacturing interests are conserved m the matter labor. Very truly yours. el j .1. A. Gaukiki.e. II. L. Meney, Employers' Union, Lynn, Mass. The original letter of which the fore going is a true copy, is in Truth's posses sien. It was mailed at Washington by the Republican candidate for president te Henry L. Meray, a prominent member of the Employers' Union, Lyun,Massehusctts. At his death, which recently occurred, it. was found among his effects. The envelope enclosing it, the original of which is also in TrutJCs possession, is marked!'- personal, ' as caret nil v as t lie letter itself is marked " personal and coir fidential." urllcM'fl Einuarrassmciil. l'iltshurgli I.catler, IJcp. i The Leader does net "assume'' as the j Commercial Oazclle falsely alleges, that . "Wen. tiarhcld accepted 829 of dividends ; en Credit Mebilier stock from Oakcs Ames." What we said was that the figures l 329 "represented a transaction in the life of the Republican caudidatc that he docs I net glory in ;" as they most assuredly de. ; It is simply net true as the Gazette alleges, I that " the testimony before the Poland cuuiuiitiuc ueiiiiucLciy ueiuensiraicu me falsity of Oakes Ames assertions" Had it done se the Poland committee could never have reported that "Garfield did receive the stock ;" as they did. The fact is the testimony "completely demon strated " nothing except an irreconcilable contradicted between the witnesses, which aHewed T frie!Sls of .Geuc,i,1 G-?l(1' ?;"?!i"mfilvc,f Smn1t 0"rsclv?s. ,l K1 him the benefit of the doubt and te eon- Gfllni t1llf ; 10 Inid natal linnnMldn An...l Zr..;.' .7 . ..uuuMulu iccum and .!..-, Diiuuicui WUUIWC12U LIIU KUSIHCIOUS utv circumstances. The fact remains, hew 0Ver tU:lt . n rfleld's OWI1 Sfalte ment 10 case, he dallied with the stock, thought of buying it, borrowed money from the man who had it te sell, which should count "en the stock " if he should conclude te buy it, and this consti tutes though net a dishonest transaction, nevertheless a "transaction net at all creditable te him." and one which "he doesn't glory in,' just as the Leader said. vt e arc ler uarneid assuredly, out we will net prevaricate or garble the records for him even under the penalty of being sneered at by an organ as a "professed Republican paper." AX IMPORTANT" FMJPPEK. A Prominent Hepubllcan Ciarlteld, Journal Deserts And Ilnlsts the Name of Hancock aud English, the Clorlens Leaders of the Democracy. The Gcrmantewn Commercial, which has heretofore supported Garfield and Ar thur, in this week's issue takes down the names of these candidates aud substitutes these of Hancock and English. The edi tor explains his course as fellows : "When en the morning of the 12th of May, ISfii, Gen. Hancock hurled his eager forces en Jehnsen's division of Early's corps, the surprise could net have been relatively greater than will be the an neunccmcut we make in this issue of the Commercial, that henceforth its col umns will be devoted te the maintenance of the principles enunciated by the Dem ocratic party at Cincinnati, aud imperson ated in these glorious leaders, Hancock and English. " We have net reached this conclusion without long and calm consideration, cal culating the odds that are against us in this . Republican stronghold. But after the most patient thought and thorough ex amination, we have concluded that the welfare of our country, economy in our public expenditures, the interests of labor and capital, the growth of our manufactur ing establishments, and, consequently, the steady empleymnnt of our people in fact, all our natienaljState and local concerns, can best be subserved and protected by the election of General Winficld Scott Han cock and the defeat of James Abraham Garfield. "In arriving al this conclusion, we have been materially, almost altogether, assisted by thfc Republican party's own comments, through their newspapers, and their con ventions, and by committees of investiga tion, in arriving at the point that Garfield and Arthur arc entirely unfitted for the place te which they have been nominated. It is hardly necessary that we should enumerate the clearly proven charges that rest en Republican authority as against their own nominees. The world knows of them the world believes them and yet we' arc expected te remain Mil the rank sweat of their cuscamed bed,' and dally with the proved dishonor of their candi dates. We prefer te get out from between the unclean sheets. We prefer te be lieve that the congressional committce of Congress, composed of Mr. Garfield's own friends, told the truth when they found him guilty as a bribe-taker and a well-paid lobbyist of pavement jobs in the District of Columbia; we prefer te believe that President Hayes and Secretary Sherman were just as truthful when they denounced Arthur for his mal-administra-lien of the New Yerk custom house, aud dismissed him therefrem in disgrace. Since the foundation of the government, no two such disreputable candidates, stamped with dishonor and venality, , were ever presented for the suffrages of i the American people, and surely it cannot be possible that the people will ever pcr I mit these hitherto pure aud exalted sta I I ions te be dishonored by their election. In gratefully saluting General Hancock, , and extending te him and the principles he represents our humble yet earnest snp- pert, we feel that we arc in Ihe company . of thousands of hitherto devoted Republi cans, scattered ail ever tins land he se bravely sljed his bleed te save. In grat itude for his great and meritorious services, acknowledged by a Republican Con gress, and consecrated by the yearn ings of millions of hearts who want te sec him president, we arc for his elec tion with all and mere than all .the ar dor which we have hitherto unwittingly bestowed en Garfield. Great as Hancock is as a soldier, he has shown himself still greater in the exercise of civil functions. j Clothed with the iron power of a military governor, he did net see "banditti" in peace able citizens, bnt preferred te see in them citizens loyal te the government he had de fended lie gave the civi! power domin ance in times of peace, and held as sacred the great charter of civil liberty. He never puts pen te paper without illustrating the virtues that made Washington "first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen." Who can say the same of Garfield?" ti:.Tii en Tin: deep. The Leas ir I liu Alpena en Lake Michigan. The excitement and suspense in Chicago iiean which for three days have been hourly in in aner j creasing respecting the fate of the Alpena, changed te proieund sorrow en the part of these whose friends were known or be lieved te be en heard, when yesterday's news net only failed te report her safety, but announced the certainty of her de struction. The offices of Goedrich have been filled with mourn ful faces. It is net deemed possi ble that any one can have been saved from the wreck. 1 lad a raft been made it could hardly have lived live minutes amid the fierce beating of the waves, and none pro bably, will ever tell the story of the wreck. Vcssclmcn believe she struck a rock some where oil" the east shore and went te pieces some distance from the beech. Theie is much complaint of the laxity of the com pany in having no list of passengers. The list sent from Grand Haven is, of course, only partial. The crew was thirtv strong It is stated that when the vessel Ic'ft Musk egen she had seventy passengers and at Grand Haven she took five, mostly women. Mr. Goedrich, however, thinks the pas sengers did net exceed twenty-five or per haps twenty in number. Portions of the wreck continue te lleat into Helland, Mich., the harbor, but no bodies have drifted in. A beat of the Al pena was found near Saugatuck. Rumer says a Mr. Lyens, of Ycnturia, found a bottle containing a list of the passengers and crew of the Alpena, but the story lacks confirmation. The body identified last night as that of Mrs. Bradley, of Santa ' I Fe, is new believed te be that of an un- Kiiewn woman. Dispatches te the Goedrich line state that another body was washed ashore near Helland, Michigan, but was carried out te sea by the undertow before it could be se cured. The agents fully identify the wrecka; is being from the Aleena. Ne ntclligencc has been received of the schooner American which was out iu the storm. - TEA AND COFFEE. iiurficlil ami the Turin. On the 7th of July. 1SC8, General Gar field delivered a speech iu the Heuse of Representatives, at Washington, in com mittee of the whole, in which he indorsed the tariff system of Great Britain, as fol fel lows : " Mr. Garfield : I desire te call the at tention of the committee te two or three points wMch have a bearing en this subject, and te give the reason why I hope we will net reduce the duty either en tea or coffee. Iu the first place it is the genius of our whole system, and the experience of the government has approved it, that the best way of raising revenue is te impose duties en the fewest possible articles. Twenty five years age in England there were mere than 1,200 different articles en which dnty was imposed, and new they have been se reduced that upon five articles mere than half the revenue of this country is col lected. In England, in 18C5, $334,000,000 of revenue were raised, and of that sum $189,000,000 were derived from five arti cles, namely : fermented, malt and spiritu ous liquors, and tea, coffee and tobacco, and sugar in their various forms. " I say that these five articles afforded the government of Great Britain $189,000, 000 of its revenue, the total of which was $354,000,000. Thus almost two-thirds of the revenues were raised from five articles, and two of the five were coffee and tea. Twenty-two millions five hundred thous and dollars were raised in Great Britain in the year I860 en tea alone, and the con sumption of that article is steadily increas ing in that country. It is new twe.and seventh-tenth pounds per capita of the pop ulation, whereas in this country the con sumption, though increasing, has reached only one pound per capita. I say then that we have no article which the experience of all financial nations shows can better bear the duty without reducing the consump tion than tea. - "Furthermore, this is one of the few ar ticles en which we can levy a duty without duplication of taxation and without di rcctly involving ether interests. It is a sim ple and plain question of revenues. There isnoethcrarticle into which it enters as an clement." Congressional Glebe, Part IV., 1st Session, :597t Congress, pp. :1G57 3C38. Fer this speech Mr. Garfield was made a member of the Cebden club, which is new circulating free trade tracts through out the United States. LATEST NEWS BY MAIL. Jeb Smith and Samuel Lenug, victims of the explosion at Webb's mill, White house station, Ya., died yesterday. Ames McKenna, who was scalded, is in a danger ous condition. Dan Yerhecs, the Tall Sycamore of the Wabash, was among the speakers at a monster Democratic meeting in Clearfield town yesterday. Gen. J. A. Stccdinau, of Ohie, Senater Wallace, cx-Gev. Curtin and ether eminent meu were present. There being some doubt whether all the ships intended for participation in the naval review at Fortress Menree can be put in complete readiness, by the 0th in stant, the secretary of the navy has de cided te defer the review te some time hereafter te be fixed by him. The country residence of Charles Baker, four miles out of Baltimore, was burned en Tuesday night. Seme valuable pic tures and a few pieces of furniture alone were saved. The less is about 30,000, en which there is an insurance of $13,000 in the Equitable of Baltimore. A telegram from Mechanicsville, N. .)., says : Werk was stepped yesterday at Elder's mill, the lower Heur mill and Piatt's mills at the lower falls because of the insufficient supply of water consequent upon the dreuth. One hundred hands are thrown out of employment. A verdict was reached iu New Yerk in the case of Charles Dean, who sued Mrs. Theresa P. Bell, the wife of a California millionaire, for $3,000. Dean is the man who went te Europe with Mrs. Bell as her traveling companion. The jury found a verdict of $1,200 for the plaintiff. On Tuesday night Nyhart's mill, near Marysville, was burned. The residence of Messrs. Nyharr, and all the outbuildings, also took lire from the mill aud, together with the mill and all its machinery aud contents, were entirely destroyed. The entire less is estimated at $10,000, which is partially covered by insurance. Con Con sigeors of grain will also lese about $1,000, upon which there is no insurance. The fire is supposed te have originated from a het journal in the second story. STATE ITEMS. Henry Hiinmclwrighr, of Sehujlkill Haven, who was run ever 011 the Reading railroad, near Spring Mill station, en Tuesday, has died. F. A. Palmer, residing at llelmeat sta tion, employed as a watchman en the Phil adclphia & Reading railroad, fell from a train while coupling ears and was run ever and instantly killed. The .body was taken te his residence. After deliberating for a day and a night, E. S. Watsen, T. P. Rynder, of Altoeua, and one or two ethers nominated Samuel Calvin, of Ilellidaysburg. for supreme judg en the Greenback ticket, in place of F. P. Dewccs, resigned. The members of the state committee were slew in responding te the call of Chairman Watsen, and the grave duty of making the nomination de velved upon the gentlemen named above. Hen. James Mosgrove, Democratic can didate for Congress in the Twenty-fifth district, was assaulted at Foxburg yester day by his opponent, General Harry White. It appears the latter made an assertion which Mosgrove told him was net true and that he had the unhappy faculty of frequently making assertions of the same kind. This stirred the general's ire and he retaliated by striking 3Iusgrevc. By standers interfered, but net before Mr. Mosgrove get in a well-directed blew in return. LOCAL INTELLIGENCE. ISig liablilt. Yesterday Messrs. Henry Wolf, William Balz, Martin Seiple and' Charles Beck shouldered their guns and took the war path in search of the festive rabbit, of which they succeeded in bagging fifty five in addition te a quantity of ether game, the execution being done in the neighborhood of QuaryviHc. The sports men returned last evening iu high feather ever their geed luck, and 'Mr. Wolf exhib ited with special pride the boss bunny of the let shot by himself. It was an enor mous specimen of jack rabbit, measuring twenty-four inches from the tip of his nose te tip of tail, and with cars that for size can only be adequately described as "im mense." It was evidently a descendant of the pair of large German hares imported a year age by 3Ir. William Roehm, late of the Schiller house, this city, but new of Quarryvillc, and the extensive progeny of which Mr. Roehm recently set at liberty. Mr. Wolf describes his prize as a Hancock rabbit. Nuti:rali.iliun l'ajiei. The naturalization papers of following person, all made citizens in due time te vote at the coming election, arc at the lNTEi,i.ir.xi'Kii eflice and should be called for and lifted by the persons entitled te them : I'uiif 11 Kki.lki:, AUOI'ST KltCEOEU, ClIKISTIAX llAKTTI.KU. I'i:ir.ii STH-vrii. Aliened I'clonieus Assault anil Ha It try. The wife of Jehn Bell, of Seuth Duke street, who was hurt in some way in Cen tre Square, en Friday, and who is new lying in a dangerous condition, has brought suit against Bernard Brccht, by whom she alleges her husband was injured. Breclit gave bail in the sum of $1,000 for a hear ing. Died or ills Injunee. Isaac Ruttcr, the boy who had his leg badly crushed while a ttempting te get 011 a freight, train at Kinzer's station, en Tues day of last week, died of his injuries this morning at half past 3 o'clock, at his fa ther's residence en East Vine street. Went te Yurk. This morning at. 11 o'clock ever 200 voters belonging te the different wards of this city and the Hancock clubs, left for Yerk te be present at the great Democratic meeetiug, which is being held there today. MEETING AT MIDWAY. The Democracy el the East Ead Aroused. The Democratic meeting atM. B. Wcid Icr's hotel, Midway, en the New Helland turnpike, last night was one of the most spirited, earnest and largely attended of the campaign. Mr. Weidler and the Lea cock Democracy khad been very active in their preparations for it and success crown ed their efforts. Early in the evening the masses began te assemble and delegations te come in from Ephrata, New Helland, and all the surrounding county. The Ephrata and New Helland clubs presented an especially fine appearance, while the arrival of some of the few bnt brave and lej-al Democrats of the Lampeters, with the Mt. Sidney band, created great enthu siasm. Mr. Weidler's hotel was beautifully decorated with flags and Chinese lanterns, and the scene around the place of meeting bespoke tne liveliest interest in the cam paign. The clubs and ether terchmen paraded up and down the turnpike, and when the meeting was organized J. Frank Reed, esq., en taking the chair, made a brief and stirring speech, which evoked applause. He was followed by G. W. Barten, of Philadelphia; B.- F. Davis and Jehn A. Ceyle, esqs., of this city. The glce club from Lancaster also added largely te the interest of the occasion by their humorous and patriotic ballads, and when the meeting adjourned far into the night these attending felt that they had been at ene of the liveliest and most au spicious Democratic rallies of the cam paign. 111c loiiewiug is the complete erganiza tien of the meeting : President J. F. Reed. Yicc Presidents Eli Baten, S. G. Lch mcr, Elias Bard, J. F. Helten, Mark Con Cen nell, Pierce Lesher, Gee. Sigel, James Martin, Dr. Isaac C. Weidler, Henry Bar Bar eon, Henry llestetter, Adam Swope, Gee. Bear, Wm. Cramer. Gee. Yeust, Levi Razer. Wm. Staire, Peter Heller, Martin B. Weidler, Edwin Dillcr, Dr. Yundt, Isaac Hull, Wm. Grimley, Wm.Elhnaker, Isaac K. Mcarig, Barten Winters. Secretaries. C. A. Landis, Milten Weidler, Jacob Dnnwoedy, Franklin Har pel, Gee. Dillcr, Jacob llaldeman, Jehn Grubc, Samuel Decker, Israel Mearig, Gee. Mcarig, Graybill Killian, Jacksen Cunning ham, Frank Weidler, Washington Sim mons, Michael Gress, Hiram Boek. There were present 1,500 people and three bands of music. THE HANCOCK VETERANS. 'laa Presentation Organization of Alere Companies New Equipments. Last evening a beautiful- American flag was presented by the ladies of the Eighth ward te Company C, Hancock 'Veterans. Detachments of Companies A, B, C, and D met at hc-jd-quartcrs, Centre square, and marched in a body te the residence of ex-High Constable Samuel Ilubcr, where the presentation took place. Mr. Iluber's residence was brilliantly illuminated, and deceratcd with flags, streamers and Chinese lanterns, as were most of the houses en Derwart and Maner streets, through which the veterans marched before the presentation. Around at Mr. llubct's the veterans were drawn up in liue and Elim G. Snyder, Demo cratic candidate for Assembly, iu the name of the ladies of the Eighth ward, presented the flag, taking occasion, in doing se, te pay a high compliment te the patriotism and valor of the veterans, who forsaking the comforts of home had braved the dan gers of the battlefield te upheld the integ rity of the Union, and who under the lead of Hancock aud his brave associates had accomplished their mission. The flag was received in behalf of the veterans by Lieut. Cel. Geerge F. Springer, who, in a brief but appropriate speech, premised that the flag should be upheld and cherished by himself and comrades with the same devo tion with which they had cherished it en the field. After cheers for Hancock, the Union, the ladies, aud the Old Eighth waid, the veterans returned te their headquarter and were dismissed. There will be a special meeting of the Veterans at their headquarters en Friday night, te assign te the several companies these Veterans net yet assigned. The at tendance of every unassigncd Veteran is urgently requested. Theso of the Veterans who have net yet been equipped can receive their equip ments by calling at the headquarters in Centre square. MT. JO NEWS. News from the NertlnvenT. Our Ilvulur Correspondence. Recently Dr. M. F. Harry, in company with Miss L. Smoker, of Mount Jey, went driving and while the doctor stepped te visit a patient, leaving Miss Smoker in the carriage, the horse, which was unhitched, started off en the run. Miss Smoker at tempted te jump from the buggy, but be ing unable te clear it, she clung with one arm around the front axle and the ether one around the step. In this perilous po sition she was dragged a distance of two hundred yards, and, strange te say, escaped without a scratch. The team sustained no damage. The Democrats of Mount Jey propose holding a political meeting and torchlight parade next Wednesday evening. Ar rangements will be made te make the af fair a success. Just cast of the borough diphtheria pre vails te an alarming extent ; big inroads have been made in the attendance of the public schools. The tobacco farmers arc waiting en damp weather, when tobacco stripping will be commenced. The Rebin Heed riding club, numbering four ladies and gentlemen, were in town last evening. They dined at the Red Lien. It was announced that the " Buckeye Blacksmith," Jehn Bear, would speak te the Republicans en Thursday evening. A detachment of the Garfield and Arthur club, headed by the cornet band, was at the train te meet him. Owing te sonic bad arrangement he did net arrive and the boys were disappointed. On Wednesday evening a German aired about fifty years, who was intoxicated, fell in the bar-room of the La Pierre house and fractured his skull. This morning his condition is critical. With boyish enthusiasm the Garfield and Arthur club received their equip ments, but new that they have been used several times it has died. Ne mere than a corporal's guard will be out te attend the convention te day. Between five aud six hundred excursion tickets were sold for Lancaster at Mount Jey this morning. Court of Quarter Hciuii. The whole of yesterday was taken up with the argument in the case of cem'th vs. William Spanglcr, Dawsen Spanglcr and William Madlcn, who were charged with violating a sepulchre. This morning the jury returned a verdict of net guilty. The only cases ready for trial this morn ing were these in which the defendants were absent. Attachments were placed in the hands of the sheriff and court adjourn ed until te-morrow evening. Cut In the Head. About 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon as workmen were engaged putting up frame work for the decoration of the front of J. R. Reyer's confectionery store, one of them accidentally let fall a hatchet which struck upon the head a commercial agent named Charles Hill, of Philadelphia, who was passing at the time, the hatchet cut ting through his hat and making a fearful gash in his head, rendering him for a time unconscious. He was able te retnra te Philadelphia this morning. HOTSHOT AT TOM DAVIS. TUB KfcrUltLICAN CANDIDATE l'revcn UnUt Ter District Attorney. Philadelphia Time?. In 187C certain tavern keepers employed Themas J. Davis te procure their licenses from the county treasurer's office, for which they paid him the license fee of 30 each, aggregating $300. He lifted the licenses, giving the clerk his own check iu payment, requesting that it should net be presented at bank for a few days, as his bank account was short, although his clients had paid him the money for this specific purpose. The check was never paid and frequent demands for the money, were met by various excuses. The treas urer wrote te the innkeepers, who replied that they had paid Davis. The sum of $150 was eventually collected en a note given by Davis te a third party and in dorsed by a friend, and transferred by the third party te the treasurer ; but net un til the note had been renewed, a second renewal refused and the inderscr sued. The balance dun the treasurer is still un paid and the inderscr has a contingent in terest in Davis's election. In this case the clients get value for their money, but it was a species el sharp practice en official confidence in professional integrity which carries its own moral. Hew a Peer tllrl Lest iler Patrimony. Frances E. Hess, a miner daughter of Jehn M. Hess, had inherited a sum of mo ney from her grandfather's estate, which was in the bauds of Christian Geed, her guardian. Geed filed an account iu 1S7K, showing the share of Miss Hess in his hands te be about $1,900. Before the ward became of age Geed died and Casper Hiller became his executer. In 1878 Hess get his daughter's consent te use some of this money. He accordingly applied te Themas J. Davis, who get Rebert A. Ev ans te advance the money and take a trans fer of the legacy from Miss Hess, who was thou of age, Hess premising te give her from time te time what money she wanted. Davis drew the whole sum and paid Jehn M. Hess at various times about $700 and Frances Hess at different times $'J0. The balance he appropriated te his own use. He new claims that he borrowed the mo ney from Miss IIcss's father aud refuses te pay it ever te her. This claim is still in the hands of an attorney. It is a peculiarly hard ease, as the young lady, in conse quence of the wrong done hcr.is obliged te earn her living, notwithstanding she is iu impaired health. One Transaction wlih-li Ought te End Ii. In the spring of 1878 Jacob Stott pur chased from Silas Wright his lease, good will and fixtures et the "Grape hotel." The agreement was written and ready te be signed and a day appointed for the parties te meet and consummate the transfer by payment of the money and signing the papers. Before the time ap pointed Themas J. Davis called en Mr. Stott and represented that the money ought te paid ever at once or Wright would back out, and induced Stott te place the money (upward el'$l,000) in his hands te pay ever te Wright. Ne sooner had Davis received the money than he took the train for New Ycrk and went te a gambling house iu that city and lest every dollar of the money. When he was threatened with cxposure,ene of his clients, Eli Eshlcmau, advanced him part of the money, and a prominent member of the bar, at whose office the money was te have been paid, at Davis's urgent solicitation te save bun from exposure and ruin, went te New Yerk and succeeded iu persuading the keeper of the gambling house te give him back the amount still lacking, which was about $700. I have related this dis graceful proceeding in as mild a form as the naked facts will permit. If all the de tails were given it would be still mere damaging. s - A Cane That is 1'laiu t'.neuli. Samuel Bruckhart employed Themas .1. Davis te collect some money. Davis col lected $1,200, which he failed te pay ever te Mr. Bruckhart en' demand, and finally, te save exposure and disgrace, he agreed that if Mr. B. would lend him $300 in ad dition te his claim he would secure the $l,fi00by giving his wife's mortgage en her separate real estate. This mortgage is recorded in the recorder's eflice of Lan caster county, in Mortgage Boek Ne. 32, page 564. On the 3d of April, 1879, the assignee of Christian Binkley and wife paid te Themas J. Davis, as attorney for Herr is Brenner, nut the balance et 133.84 has never been paid te Herr & Brenner and i new in the hands of a lawyer for collection. On the (Mi of Febrnary, 1880, the audi tor's report in the assigned estate of Diller and Greff was presented and confirmed nisi. Themas J. Davis appeared before the auditors for Jehn W. Kaby and pre sented his claim against said cstatcamouut cstatcameuut ing te $."517.71, en which a dividend was declared or $00.93, and paid te Themas J. Davis. This claim is also in the hands of an attorney for collection. Commission and Expenses Ketalnetl. Jeseph Armstrong was the assignee of the assigned estate of William Hccps : account presented and confirmed nisiMarch 15, 1880. Purchase money of real estate was iid te The.". J. Davis, hi which were included accountant's commissions and ex penses of settling assigned estate, which commissions and some of the expenses have been demanded of him by these en titled te them, but have net been paid, un less very recently. In the case of Heir & Brenner vs. Jehn Kendig (mechanics' lien for $179) Thes. J. Davis entered satisfaction 011 the lien about a year age. Herr, the surviving partner, says he was never authorized te de se, and he did net knew satisfaction had been entered until a few days age. This claim has been placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, along with their ether claim in the Binkley estate. Alaking I'rolessienal Dishonor l'ay Tribute te Political Promotion. The last case I shall present under the head of legal disqualification is a striking illustration of the methods of our local "bosses" in procuring a nomination against the honest Republican voters. Iu this case they actually made the pro fessional turpitude of their candidate pay tribute te his political advancement. Jehn K. Rehrcr, a respectable citizen of the Sporting Hill election district, had ;. claim for $150 te collect, which lie placed in the hands of Themas J. Davis, te whom he had been introduced by a friend and neighbor who is prominent in con trolling the politics of his district. Davis collected the money, but failed te pay it ever en demand. Mr. Rohrer's friend, considering himself under a seit of moral obligation te help him secure his money, accepted a preposition from the Davis "bosses" that they would endorse his note for the amount, 011 condition that the vote of the district, be given te Davis instead of Adam J. Eberly, one of the opposing can didates, who was considered naturally strong in that district, it being in the vi cinity of his old home. The result was that Davis received 47 votes and Eberly 0, and the note was paid after the primary. Killing Accident. About neon Jacob S. Peacock, who had been iu the parade, was riding a horse along East King street. When near the Exchange hotel the animal slipped and fell en the Belgian blocks. Mr. Peacock was thrown off but net injured. The horse was badly bruised. uwauiuui ijiii.i.), niMUJKiaeiieii 01 JUUg ment Ne. 3, of October term, 1878, and costs. The costs ($13.21) have been paid. &Vjf-., -l T . & -4..l