Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, October 22, 1880, Image 2

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LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGENCER. FRIDAT OCTOBER 22. 1880.
Lancaster i-nteiltgencet.
FRIDAY EVENING. OCT. 22, 1880.
That Peer Parade.
The use of parades te parties is te show
their numbers and animation, te en
courage their followers and intimidate
their opponents. Therefore it is essen
tial te the party having them te take
care that they shall be as large and en
thusiastic as possible, for if they disap
point public expectation they de great
barm instead of geed . Ne doubt the Re
publican leaders in Lancaster county
appreciate this fundamental rule of po
litical management, and did all that
they could te make their demonstrations
yesterday a success; and that it was any
thing else was no fault of theirs. They
bad plenty of money te expend en it
and plenty of men te engage in it. Why
then was it a failure ? Wc assume that
none will dispute that it was a peer show.
The number of men taking part in it
was below the average and their enthu
siasm was very markedly small. The
delegations were few in numbers and in
considerable in size. The decorations
and banners were very ordinary. The
wagens were unsightly. The. spirit of
the moving line was somewhere down
about the freezing point.
Around the speaking stands but a few
hundred assembled : and the torchlight
precession in the evening was but half
the size of the previous demonstration
of the same kind by the party and was
about as quiet as a funeral precession.
" W'hv den"t they cheer V exclaimed an
ardent llcpublican lady by our side, as
she herself hurrahed for Garfield again
and again. But they would net cheer in
the line. They were net in the humor.
The Indiana tonic seemed te have lest
its effect and they were mere limp and
spiritless even than when Maine had just
struck them.
These were the impressions the great
Kcpuhlican demonstration made en us,
and if we observed it rightly a .signifi
cant deduction is warranted. It just as
surely presages, a Republican defeat, if
the feeling here is a test of the general
feeling, as though the handwriting was
read upon the wall. These who admit
that, after all the elaborate preparations
which were made te have a grand
Republican display, the display was
net there because the Republi
can voters were net inspired te turn
out. or when out were net moved
te any enthusiasm for their cause, must
concede that the demonstration failed of
its object, and lias tended te discourage
Republican hope of success by showing
lack of Republic: u w?al. In this contest,
closely waged between the parties, it is
all-important te observe which has the
greatest spirit and which is therefore cap
able of the greatest effort. "We would trem
ble for the Democratic cause if it could
net, even in this strongly Republican
county where we are outnumbered two
te one. secure a larger county mass meet
ing, and one which would show many
times the ardor and enthusiasm which
its opponents exhibited when they weie
called together. We have been went in
presidential ears te witness in this
county a great outpouring of its Repub
licans in celebration of the great day of
their campaign. The parade has always
been imposing. This time it has been
baiely mere than contemptible when
compared with its predecessors, and had
upon its opponents an exhilarating in
stead of depressing effect. It showed
clearly enough which was net the light
ing cock in this main.
Rightly Dene.
A dispatch from Richmond says that
the Democratic national committee has
recognized the regular Democratic ticket
in Virginia as the one which Democrats
desiring the success of the Democratic
ticket should vote for.
the national committee
neeesarv. Mahenc, the
This action by
was absolutely
leader and con-
treller of a faction supporting a second
electoral ticket claiming te be for Han
cock, refusing te enter into any arrange
ment with the regular Democratic or
ganization by which but one Democratic
electoral ticket should be voted for in
Virginia, it became certain that his tick
et was kept in the field for some ether
purpose than te secure the election of
Hancock and English. And when he
came te Pennsylvania and was found in
consultation with Republican leaders iu
Philadelphia, and then went te Harris
burg en his way back te Virginia, and
slopped there te confer with Simen Cam Cam
eeon, any possible doubt as te the felly
of trusting his intentions was removed,
and the national committee was imper
atively called upon te disarm him of his
power for evil, by proclaiming te the
people of Virginia its distrust of the Ma
bone electoral ticket and urging every
man who desires the election of the Dem
ocratic candidates te vote for the regular
ticket. General Mahenc should lie power
less for evil after this recommendation.
Surely the Democrats of Virginia are
wise enough te see that they must all
voteferom: electoral ticket if they would
carry the state ter their party; and since
they have been unable te agree upon one
ticket they will accept the decision of
the national committee as te the one
they should vote for. There can be veiy
few Democrats in the state who are in
terested with Mahenc in the schemes of
personal ambition or gain which he seeks
te subserve by keeping his electoral ticket
in the field with the certain result of de
feat for the Democratic ticket in the
state if he can command any consider
able Democratic following. Surely few
Democrats will b; se silly as te want te
draw the chestnuts out of the fire for
him and burn their own fingers in the
oerulien by giving the electoral vote of
Virginia te Cm field.
That Innocent Jewell.
The innocent Jewell has been badly
caught in his colonizing operations in
Flerida by the embarrassing return of
bis own despatches te the Democratic
committee. Flushed with the result of
similar manipulations in Indiana, Mr.
Jewell hastens te repeat them in ether
states. J)eubtless Flerida is net the only
one in .which the game has been started.
A concentration of negrees from the
... " I
.-ieutnern states line Aiewin wnicuuieir i
help may carry the Republican ticket is a '
very obvious suggestion te a Republican
committee which is "net restrained
by any consideration from using the
most available means for success and
which has all the money it needs te con
duct its operations. Evidently, how
ever, the work should have been put in
stronger hands than Mr. Jewell's. lie
answers the requirements in having the
needed elasticity of conscience, but he
has been guilty of a blunder which
his party will consider te be a geed deal
worse than his crime, when he made it
possible that his damaging telegrams
should se speedily get into Chairman
Barnura's hands. His work being thus
discovered, it will be easy enough te
make it innocuous. Neither Flerida nor
any ether Southern state is likely
te let in any foreign Republi
can population for voting purposes :
and this amiable effort of that dear
Jewell te deprive the Democratic party
of the odium of possessing a solid Seuth
will fail. Is it net amiable in them te
be se anxious te remove from us this
shame? Hew anxious our Republican
friends are te Imj their Democratic
brethren's keeper ! They lay te us as a
great offense this solid Seuth, and would
se dearly like te take it from us ; but
they had better let us alone with our
idols and leek out for the electoral votes
further North. They have their hands
full there.
MINOR TOPICS.
Wur.itr. were the "business men '
night:'
last
Clear ca&e of false pretense the sale
of huckster stands by the Republican mass
meeting management.
Den your uniforms, boys,
te-morrow night.
for the parade
Womkixemkx who believe in a free bal bal
eot and no intimidation, bulldozing nor
bribing of laboring men, will turnout to
morrow night.
Tin: gentlemen advertised te speak for
the Democracy iu the court house te-night
arc eloquent and effective campaigners.
Give them a hearing.
Tin: iron-workers will be in line t6-moi-rew
night in their working clothes te
prove that workingmen understand the
issues as well as "business men."
The cigar-makers, who de net sympa
thize with the importation of Chinese
makers by Mr. Gai field's friends will be
in line te-morrow night.
Y.i.: mystery of that Republicanjuiajerity
in lndiana'disappearr. like magic in the sun
light that has just fallen upon Chairman
Jewell's scheme for colonizing Flerida.
Hex. GilueiitDeLa Matyij was buried
very deeply, the ellicial vote for congress'
mau in his district being Peelle, Repub
lican, 17,010 ; Ryfield, Democrat. lK.SOfi;
De La Matyr. Grecnbaeker, 2, 115.
Sri'EiMMExnr.NT "Wai.kei:, of the cen
sus bureau, will make a complete report of
the enumeration of population te Congress
at its nest session. A report te Congress
in the session next following the enumera
tion has never before been nude.
The Democratic national committee has
recegnized the Fuutlcrwing of the party
iu Virginia. Gen. Muheuu says he is net
surprised, but had expected it all along.
The national committee's action will give
great relief te the public and mutj tend te
strengthen the tegular organization iu
Virginia.
The Congregational association of New
Yerk yesterday, at Penghkccpsie, adopted
an address te the national council, which
meets at St. Leuis, suggesting such amend
ments te the constitution as ma)' be neces
sary te transform the body into the nature
of a conference of the churches, iu order
te remove the danger of .separation and
division.
llex. OuEsTKsA.Ci.Evr.LAXD.ii.address
iiiga Democratic meeting at Jersey City,
X. J., Tuesday evening, said that if any
manufacturing concern that possessed an
element of success was closed after Han
cock's election, he would open the estab
lishment the next morning, and continue
with a full force of laborers at. their old
wages. Mr. Cleveland has in his employ
fully 1,000 hands, and they arc being paid
the same wages as during the war.
PERSONAL.
"Walt Whitman will shortly give in one
of the Londen magazines his estimate of
the leading English poets of the nineteenth
centuary.
Mr. Rebert E. IIexxeh, sn of Mr.
Rebert Benner, of the Ledger, was mar
ried in St. Bartholemew's church, New
Yerk, yesterday, te Miss Griffith, daugh
ter of Mr." Edward Griffith.
Mr. Themas Uueiies, M. P., arrived iu
Philadelphia yesterday, and is the guest of
Mr. Geerge "W. Childs. He lectured last
evening at the Academy of Music en
"TheCroekcdest Stick in all the Pile
Ourselves."
At the funeral of Okkexiiach the
Church of the Madeleine was filled te ever
flowing, and crowds thronged the neigh
boring streets. Selections from nis last
work "Centes d'Heffman," which he
did net live te see produced, were sung.
Miss Clarv Louise Kellec.g brings
away from Vienna a souvenir of the pleas
ant impression she made upon the audi
ences of the Grand opera. An unknown
admirer sent te her hotel, anonymously,
a bird of beautiful plumage in a cage of
geld.
A QUEKK CASK.
A Man Chokes His Sister-in-law le Death.
Last night Geerge A. 'Wheeler went te
the police station, San Francisee, and con
fessed that he had murdered his sister-in-law,
Delia J. Tillson, in a lodging house
at Ne. 23 Kearney street, and packed her
body in a trunk. His statement was at
once verified. The circumstances of the
case are remarkable. The deceased had
been living with her sister, and Wheeler
and the latter had subjected her te his de
sires, his wife being cognizant of the fact
but concealing it te avoid scandal. Latter
ly a man by the name of Geerge W. Peck
ham, who became acquainted with the
family some time age at Cisco, Placer
county, sought te marry Delia. This cre
ated jealousy en the part of "Wheeler who
jvebviuajr, vfjuiu mjmim na-j DAbtiiu iuuu
.An.,M?fn. W,llth a!1a m t. .'.fli,.. SV. Mn
Jap, choked her te death. Wheeler and
his family formerly lived iu New Yerk.
Rise and Explain.
Fer the Ixtelligescee.
Messrs. Editors : As the great expos
itor of the tariff question, C. S. Kauffnian,
esq., is te held forth in our town en Sat
urday next, and as he has invited the
workingmen te come and bear kiui, I
would like te knew if lie will explain :
First If we have such geed and flour
ishing times hew it happens that he pays
his laborers at his stone quarries but
ninety cents a day, while bis neighbors pay
one dollar.
Second If it be true that these men or
a part of them, are paid off in orders upon
stores, whether he does net make a snug
percentage off their earnings, and if se,
hew he can justify such skinning.
Third Hew, if he be a friend te the
werkinginan, as he professes te be, he can
reconcile the fact with having his work
men bulldozed and intimidated, thus reduc
ing them te thestate of negre slaves. Com
mon report makes the latter charge. If
false let the great gesticulator deny it.
Columbia, Oet. 21, 1880. 11.
m
THE MAN UK U1S DOUBLE?
Ail Extraordinary Case of Denbtlul Identify
Hcpndiated by Ills Wire Identified
by Brether unl Sister.
The case of the Youngs, as curious iu
many respects as the famous Tichborne
case," was taken up in the surrogate's court,
New Yerk, Wednesday. The man claiming
te be Thcephilus Yeung, whose identity .is
the point new in dispute, is net a claimant,
but appears in aid of his brother, iu oppo
sition te a suit brought by his wife, the
legal status of which rests upon the alle
gation that Thcephilus Yeung is dead.
The case grows out of an inheritance te a
share in which Theephilus Yeung was en
titled. The distribution of the prepcity,
which is situated in Xew Yerk, was de
layed by a lawsuit, which was attended te
by Henry Yeung, the elder brother of
Thcephilus, and who was the executer of
the estate in litigation. Thcephilus re
ceived advantages en his claim from his
brother, amounting iu all te $2,200, and in
1870, at the time when the last sum was
paid him en this account and when the
prospect of a decision in their favor seemed
very uncertain, he together with his wife
made ever te Harry "Yeung all his rights
in the estate in consideration of the amount
already received. The suit resulted in
fover of the Youngs, se that Harry Yeung
made ft geed bargin when he bought out
his brother's interest. Thcephilus Yeung
appears te have done nothing mere
in the matter, however, and no
action was taken it until after
his death was reported iu Bosten, in Feb
ruary, 1870. He had disappeared, and a
body in the morgue was identified as his.
In October, 1877, his widow obtained let
ters of administration from Surrogate Cal
v in, and immediately sued Henry Yeung
for the share of Theephilus iu the estate,
claiming that the sale of his interest was
invalid. Henry Yeung replied by an ac
tion for the revocation of the letters of ad
ministration, en the ground that his
brother was net dead. He obtained an
injunction staying her suits against him
until the case before the surrogate should
be settled.
A geed deal of evidence in the case, in
the shape of affidavits and of testimony
taken before a commissioner, iu Bosten,
has heretofore been submitted, and a re
sume of it was published in August last.
It is very ceutlicting. n the one side
were produced witnesses who positively
indentified the body found as that of Theo Thee
philus Yeung, and witnesses came forward
for the ether side who declare that they
had seen and, in some case, talked with
Theephilus Yeung since the date of his
alleged death. In the meantime a man
claiming te be Theephilus Yeung
himself turned up, and has since
been living quietly in New Yerk
shunning public observation. Mrs.
Thcephilus Yeung once made application
for his arrest as an imposter, but nothing
was done iu the matter. If an imposter,
he had never attempted te impose en her,
for he refused te go near her. They met
for the first time yesterday before Mr.
Edward F. Underbill, who was appointed
by Surrogate Calvin le take testimony in
the case. A man about forty years of age,
of medium height, with light eyes and a
sandy moustache, came into the court in
company with Henry Yeung. He said
that he was Thcephilus Yeung. Referee
Underbill asked Mrs. Yeung whether thi.;
man was her husband. She looked at him
for a moment and then said, in a loud
tone, " That is net my husband."
Henry Yeung was then put en the wit
ness stand. He identified the man who
called himself Thcephilus Yeung as his
brother and as the husband of Mary J. C.
Yeung. Early in August, he said he re
ceived a letter from his brother asking him
te meet him en August 9 in the lav.- office
of E. G. Drake. He met hi.s brother en
the appointed day and saw him often from
that time te August 24. He identified his
brother by a peculiarity in the format i m
of one of bis finger nails and of his lower
teeth. Sephia Yeung, sister of Thcephilus':
also identified as her brother the man who
called himself Thcephilus Yenng.Tlie bear
ring was continued.
EKATERXAL FUELING
At the Military Fcte In Atlanta, Georgia.
Yesterday the citizens of Atlanta gave
the visiting military an old-fashioned 'bar
becue at the encampment. All the mili
tary and a number of invited guests were
present and highly enjoyed the substantial
banquet. The Detroit Light Infantry band
furnished fine music, playing " Dixie, '
"Yankee Deedle' and the "Star Spangled
Banner" amid the wildest enthusiasm.
Captain Burke, of the Gate City Guards,
was called en and made an eloquent
speech, concluding with the toast, "The
stars and stripes, the constitution, law and
order and geed government,' which was
greeted with gicat applause. A number
of speeches were made which were brim full
of fraternal feeling and patriotic sentiment.
Politics was eschewed during the barbacuc.
The Southern militarypropesed threeclicers
for the North, and the Northern military
gave three cheers for the Seuth. They were
given with fervent unanimity. The blue
and the gray pledged themselves te feiget
the past and unite as brethren te build up
a common country. It was an era of jelly
geed fellowship and will result in geed te
both sections of the country.
RAILROAD ACCIDENT.
Xhree Cars of the Facillc Express Wrecked
ana tnc express Messenger Killed.
The Pacific express west jumped the
track at Cenemaugb, Pa., yesterday and
forced two express cars, one baggage and
one passenger car from the track. Express
Messenger Charles McCleskey, of Pitts
burgh, was caught between the iron safe
and the car and crushed te death. Twe
passengers were slightly injured by jump
ing from the car window. The express car
caught fire from the stove and was totally
ceusumed, but the body of McCleskey
was extricated and all the express goods
were saved. The train was delayed about
three hours.
DEMOCRATIC UUSIXE.SS MEX.
Five Thousand of Them Attend the Meet
ing In Wall, Street, New Yerk.
Five thousand persons attended the
Democratic meeting of business mcu in
Wall street yesterday afternoon. Among
the speakers were ex-Lieutenant Governer
Deisheimer, Abram S. Hewitt, S. S. Cox
and ethers. A letter from August Bel
mont en the business interests involved in
the approaching contest was read. Great
enthusiasm prevailed.
IiATEST NEWS BY MAIL.
The Medical society of Vugiuia adjeurne
yesterday te-meet in Windhester next year.
The recetpts from internal revenue yes
terday were $414,399.15, and from customs,
$365,464.42.
Warren Longmore. acquitted en the)
charge of murdering Freeman Wright, is
new under arrest at Pembroke, Me., and
is te be tried again.
Capt. E. B. Robinson, probably one of
the best-known printers iu the United
States, died yesterday at Washington, D.
C, in the 7Gth year of his age.
The trial of Cleophus Raincy for the
murder of Jehn Farmer en the leth of
July last, was commenced in the hustings
court at Petersburg, Va., yesterday,
J. H Estabrook's livery stable at Den
ver, Cel., together with sixty head of
horses and ether contents, was burned yes
terday. Less $65,000. Insurance, $3,000.
The convention of Tennessee Baptists
met in annual session at Knoxville, yester
day, with a large number of ministers
present from all parts of the state.
General Bcuct, chief of ordnance, U. S.
A., will recommend te the secretary of
war in his annual report, the organization
and equipment of a national militia.
The examination of the accounts of J.
II. Woodward, the defaulting city collect
or of Bosten, shows that an additional
amount of $6,000 has been embezzled,
making an aggregate of $88,000.
One William Sheridan has been arrested
at New Yerk and held for further develop
meats, as he auswers the description given
of several confidence men who recently
drugged and robbed an Englishman of
$5,000, besides valuable papers.
On Wednesday Justice Cress, iu the
court of Quccn'sBcncb, ordered the liber
ation of Zinck, alias Brooks, the Columbus
(Ohie) forger, ea the ground of the insuf
ficiency of the evidence te warrant extra
dition te the United States and defects iu
the warrant of commitment.
Dudley Perter, of Tennessee, charged
with accidentally sheeting Mr. Doty at
Poughkccpsie, N. Y and who is en bail
te await action of the grand jury, was
again arrested en Wcduesday for another
assault en William Ostrom, and put under
bends te await the action of the grand
jury en the second charge.
Isaac Clements, 71 years old, a respect
ed citizen of Warcham, Mass., was as
saulted in his house en Wednesday night
by a burglar, who made his escape, and
the old man received such a severe wound
in the temple from a coal oil lamp thrown
at him that doubts arc entertained of his
recovery. A young man who attempted a
year age te rob Mr. Clements is suspected
as the guilty party.
The Carriage Builders' association, iu
session at Chicago, yesterday adopted res
olutions for the establishment of a school
of technology at New Yerk, especially de
voted te the art of carriage building. The
trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of
Art of New Yerk have expressed a willing
ness te add a branch te the museum devoted
te that object if a fund of $1,000 per
year for three years were guaranteed.
The annual subscription footed up $1,100,
On Wednesday night a large body of men
called at a house in Palmyra, Me., and de
manded that the occupants should leave
town. They refused, and some person in
the house tired two shots into the crowd,
killing Redney Lord, aged 25 years, in
stantly, and severely wounding two ethers
The occupants of the house are said te be
of a very disreputable character, and the
object of the expedition was te rid the
town of them. Twe men concerned in the
sheeting arc under arrest.
i'n ri:i;i:iriEi democracy.
.Mere Thau 23,000 Men Marching.
' Lllllc Mar's " Keulne; Kecpntinn ill UK
Aatlve City.
The Democrats of Philadelphia made
their last great marching effort of the
campaign last night, and it was the great
est effort of the kind ever made by the
party in that city. The demonstration
had two great features that were te a
certain extent distinct. One was the pa
rade of ever twenty-three thousand uni
formed and torch-bearing mcu en Bread
street, and the ether was a reception
of General Geerge B. McClellan by the
Hancock Veterans, connected with a mon
ster meeting which first filled Horticultu
ral hall and then Bread street in front of
that building. " Little Mac " himself pre
siding ever the inside meeting. His na
tive city had en previous occasions of the
kind given him unmistakable evidence of
popular favor, but last night's welcome
exceeded them all. The connecting link
between the parade and the great meeting
was a review of the countermarching lines
by the general from the front of the ball,
and that was the point when the cuthusi
asm of the eveuing was at its highest.
There was nothing worth speaking of te
mar cithcV parade or meeting, and the en
tire demonstration was at least as credit
able te the participants andte the city as
either of the two ether great turnouts re
cently made.
Ringing speeches were made by Generals
McClellan, Sickles, Pearson, the latter un
til recently chairman of the Allegheny
Republican committee, and ethers.
r.LAL'K, KAYAJCD AND WALLACE.
They Give Yerk Adam and Cumberland u
Grand Hliaklng Up.
The Democrats of Yerk, Cumberland
and Adams counties held a grand mass
meeting in Yerk yesterday, which exceed
ed both in size and enthusiasm any politi
cal demonstration ever held within the
county borders. Clubs and organizations
from tlie. surrounding country and towns,
numbering upwards of three thousand
men, were in line. Marshaled by Levi
Maisbthcy made a parade through the
main thoroughfares of the town, presenting
a fine appearance. The streets were se
filled with citizens and visitors that in
many quarters it was with difficulty the
ime was cnae.eu te pass. Along the route
were many handsome decorations and the
line was vociferously cheered as it passed,
while the enthusiasm of the men was un
bounded. The meeting was held in Centre square,
and was organized by the unanimous elec
tion of Judge Jere Black, as chairman, who
introduced Senater Bayard, of Delaware,
the first speaker, in the following lan
guage :
"I introduce te you a gentleman whose
name is a household word in all this coun ceun
tiy from Maine te Texas, from the Atlan
tic te the Pacific. I claim for him your
utmost attention, and net ene word will
drop from hi lips you ought net te re
member. If he were te die te-day his
name would go down te posterity pure and
untarnished.'"
Mr. Bayard was received with the wild
est enthusiasm and appluse and addressed
the audience upon the issues of the cam
paign for an hour and a hal f. He referred
principally te the tariff and mercantile in
terests et the l nien and the hopes of the
Democracy in November. R. M. Gibsen.
of Pittsburgh, followed with a short speech
when the meeting adjourned until 7. p. m.
In the evening Seuater Wallace and E.
K. Apgar, of Albany, addressed large au
diences in the court house. The main fea
ture of the demonstration was the torch
light precession. The houses along the
route were brilliantly illuminated and dec
orated, and at midnight the excitement of
the day has net subsided.
.Mr. Samuel Calvin declines te be the
Greenback-Laber nominee for sapreme
judge, vice F. P. Dcwces, resigned. He
was net nominated, as heretofore report
ed, but the position was tendered by the
statcGreenback committee.
CAUGHT.
MR.
JEWELLS LATEST
SCHEME.
COLONIZING
Hew the Republicans l'ropesed te Carry
Flerida and Bew the Game lias Just
Come te Light.
The Democratic national committee has
issued the following :
Te the Public: When this campaign
opened the national Democratic committee
contracted with the American Union and
the Western Union telegraph companies
for special rates for their business and ar
ranged with said companies that all tele
grams sent or received by the committee
should be returned at the end of each week
te the cashier of the committee,
as vouchers for the bills rendered.
Telegrams se sent or received by
our cemmittee have been returned
under this agreement weekly and paid for
according te the contract. On Wednesday
morning, October 20, the Western Union
telegraph company returned te the com
mittee vouchers as usual for the second
week in October. Upen these being ex
amined by our cashier te verify the
amount the following telegrams were
found in the package se sent us as vouch
ers, evidently being a mistake en the part
of the official having the same in charge at
the office of the Western Union telegraph
company. The telegrams were written
upon V cstcrn I nien blanks and arc as
fellows :
Rush, Oct. 21, 1SS0.
Te Hen. C'tus. J. Xeyes, care J. Jenkins,
jr., Jacksonville, Ha.:
I telegraphed yesterday. I will provide,
as requested, two hundred each for Cal len
der and yourself as compensation. ( 17
paid.)
Signature, Maiishai.t. Jr.wRi.i..
' Rush. Oct. 12, 1S80.
F. W. Wicker, Collector, Keu Went, Flu.:
" City of Dallas " took 150 ; " City of
Texas," 100 ; " Colerado, 100 for Key
West. Men en deck instructed te say
nothing about it. (26 paid.)
Signature, Marshall Jkwki.l.
The numerals "150" and "100" in this
last telegram mean se many men. These
telegrams, or rather the one addressed te
F. W. AVickcr, United Stales collector at
the port'ef Key West, Fla., tells its own
story. The sun had net gene down in
the state of Indiana, where one of the
greatest frands ever perpetrated ou a free
government and a free ballet was about
te be consummated, when the chairman of
the national Republican committee and an
official of the United States government
were preparing te repeat in the state of
Flerida the infamy then about te be con
suramatcd iu Indiana. The committee
were advised previous te the receipt of
these telegrams that the state of Flerida
was about te be overrun by the repeaters
of our large cities. Ihc telegrams el Jlr,
Jewell only confirm what the committee
well knew te be the fact. The above tele
grams are in the possession of thocemmir-
tee. lliey arc written in copying ink,
have been copied in a letter-press book,
and bear the telegraph receiver's checks
and marks, and this committee defies any
one te assert that they are net genuine
The telegrams arc new being lithographed
and will be given te the public iu a day
or two. Wsi. H. Barnch,
Chairman National Democratic Commit
tec.
New Yerk, October 21, 1880.
In Connecticut.
The Xerwalk Heur, an independent
Republican paper, which has considerable
influence in Fairfield county, comes out
for Hancock. It savs Garfield's own ex
planatien of the DeGelyer $5,000 bribe
business is agaist him. The editor had
waited, before deciding his course, in
hopes that some better explanation than
General Hawley's or any ether than has
yet been attempted, would be made for
Garfield ; but he found all the attempted
explanations, about the $5,000 being a
"fee,' and all that humbug, were all
against Gai field and that the latter, in
trying te explain his conduct, had by his
own explanation condemned himself. The
Heur says Hancock needs no "certificates
of charactciy'but that Garfield has as many
as a quack medicine, or a tee often dis
charged servant girl.
Mr. Edward Butler, until recently the
editor of the New Haven Palladium, a
well known Republican daily paper, is
out for Hancock, and addressed a Han
cock meeting at Wallingford Saturday
night.
General E. M. Lee, new of Wyoming,
but who was a well known Republican
leader in Connecticut a few years age,
when he represented Guilferd repeatedly
in the Legislature and was a conspicuous
orator in that party, is out for Hancock,
and is making telling speeches for the
general in the West.
Mr. A. D. Smith, a Republican lawyer
of Hartferd, is out for Hancock, and
making effective speeches at Hancock
meetings.
A ISratccman's Deadly Grudge.
Moses Kane, a brakemau en the Phila
delphia & Erie railroad, new in jail at
Mcadville, is charged with deliberate mur
der in having caused a collision between
trains by which two lives were sacrificed,
his motive bcin r te revenge himself upon
the engineer of his train, with whom he
had a difficulty, but who escaped injury
after all. Kane was employed en a freight
train which was required te take a side
track five miles from Cerry te allow a fast
Baltimore oyster train te pass, but en the
occasion of the collision it was charged that
he purposely left the switch open, and tLe
oyster tram, going at the rate of twenty.
five miles an hour, crashed into the rear of
the freight, by which two mcu en the oy
ster train wcic killed.
Anether Man Who Isn't Afraid.
The Carlisle Valley Sentinel publishes
an endorsement of the letter of Colonel
McCormick, of Harrisburg, en the tariff,
by Carey W. Ahl, the largest iron manu
facturer in Cumberland valley. Mr. Ahl
earnestly advocates the election of Gener
al Hancock. He says : "I have read the
letter of Henry McCormick, as published
in the Philadelphia Times of the 19th inst.
I heartily concur with the views and opin
ions of Colonel McCormick as expressed in
the letter."
STATE ITEMS.
An unknown colored man jumped into
the Monengahcla river, near Pittsburgh,
en Wednesday night, and was drowned.
Tem Whitaker, of Pittsburgh, the edi
tor of the Gatliwj Gun, a disreputable
paper, has been sent te jail for eight years
for publishing it.
The house of Geerge P. Hamilton, esq.,
of Allegheny, was cracked by burglars,
who stele $500 weith of jewelry en Wed
nesday night.
m
Corener's Inqae.it.
This morning Corener Mishler empan
eled a jury and held an inquest en the re
mains of Isaac Riittcr, the little boy who
was injured at Kinzers station by the care
ou Tuesday of last week and who died
yesterday mcrning. The little boy
who was with young Ruttcr when the ac
cident occurred gave an account of it te
the jury. A verdict of death from injuries
received ou the railroad was rendcied.
Anetlicr Epizootic Remedy.
The following recipe of a mixture for the
cure of the epizootic is endorsed by gced
authority. Take one pound of gum assa
fcetida, mix it with' one gallon of boiling
water; stir the mixture constantly until
the assafietida is dissolved. Let the mix
ture cool ; strain and give one half pint
every three hours. This will relieve the
horse within twelve hours, and give him a
goeiappctite, '
LOCAL INTELLIGENCE.
TDK LOCAL CAMPAIGN.
The Meeting Te-night and Farade Te-morrow
Night.
The Republicans have had their parade
and attempts at meetings, and have done
their best. New it rests with the Democ
racy of the city te show what they can de
in the same line, with their local resources.
Although the opposition boasted that they
would have many, many thousands in
line they failed te come. Their parade last
night was a failure. The Democracy will
raake theirs of Saturday night a success.
It is for every man te show himself in line
that night who can carry a torch. .These
without equipments should apply te their
ward captains at once and they may be
supplied. Men who have uniforms and
cannot turn out should lean them te theso
who can.
Te-night there will be a Democratic
mass meeting in the court house. The
speakers who will be here arc Ezra D.
Parker, of Mifflintown, a leading lawyer
of central Pennsylvania, and one of the
most effective stump speakers in the state.
Edgar K. Apgar, esq,, of New Yerk, who
will also speak te-night, is one of the
brightest young men and ablest campaign
ers of the Empire state. Cbas. A. Lagen,
esq., of Philadelphia, seu of our former
townsman, Daniel A. Lagen, will be tLe
oilier speaker. He is a rising member of
the Philadelphia bar.
The meeting will begin at 7:45 p. m.
AT KIKKWOOU.
A I'ine Meeting Yesterday.
The Democratic meeting at Kirkwood
yesterday was held in an open field ucar
the village, and the concourse of people
was unexpectedly large even for the cen
tre Democratic Celcrain. Delega
tions came with music and flags, ban
ners and portraits of the candidates
from all the surrounding neighborhood.
The lower end of Lancaster county aud ad -ieinimr
parts of Chester turned out loyal
Democrats en masse, and when the meet
ing was organized there were net less thau
1,200 persons present. James G. McSpar
ran, esq., presided, and the meeting
was addressed by Geerge W. Barten, of
Philadelphia, and B. F. Davis, esq.,
of this city. The best qf order
prevailed during the day, the liveliest
party spirit was manifested, and from all
the signs of the occasion Celcrain and her
neighbors uiav be expected te de their
full Democratic duty en November 2.
Court of Quarter Sessions.
Friday Jlermng. Commonwealth vs.
Jehn L. Detwiler, malicious mischief.
The prosecutor in the case was Levi Det
wiler. a brother of the defendant. He
claimed that the latter tore down a shanty
which he had erected en his fish battery,
in the Susquehanna river, near Turkey
Hill. The commonwealth proved that the
prosecutor purchased the island en which
this battery was erected, en June 11, 1871),
for $400, from Samuel Sprenglc. He paid
$100 in cash and gave Mr. Sprengle a note
for ij-sue ler the balance, which was ler
twelve months They showed that he re
ceived a deed and built a cabin en the
battery. After a short time this battery
was tern down by some one. In July,
1879, Sprengle met the prosecutor and ten
dered him back the note, but the latter
refused te receive it. Since that the prose
cnter offered te give Sprengle the value of
the note but lie refused te take it. On the
7th of last May the defendant, with several
ethers, went en the island and tore down
the cabin, the lumber of which was taken
te a rock in the river. On account of this
tearing down of the shanty the suit is
brought.
It was shown by Samuel Sprengle of
Wiudser township, Yerk county, that he
sold this island te the prosecutor and gave
him possession of it; he received for it
$100 in cash and a $300 note, with the un
derstanding that the deed should net be
given until security en the note should be
obtained ; a week after the sale the prose
cutor rescinded the contract and the wit
ness paid him back $100 and they agreed
that they should net call it a sale. On
June "0 witness sold the same island te
Jehn L. Detwiler and Win. P. Mundis for
$500, deeding it te them and giving them
possession of it, they then tore away the
cabin which had been erected.
Mr. Sprengle was corroborated by the
defendant aud Mr. Mundis, as te the lat
ter part of his evidence ; they were sub
ject te great annoyance by the prosecutor
who put up a cabin and claimed a right
te fish en the island. On the 7th of May
they removed the shanty and placed it en
a rock a short distance from the battery.
The prosecutor denied that he had re
scinded the contract, that he bad received
any of the money back that he had paid or
that be had given up possession of the
island te Sprengle.
The jury rendered a verdirfcofnet guilty,
with the prosecutor and defendant each te
pay hair the costs.
Cem'th vs. Mary Boekmycr and Ida
Wise, forcible entry. Mrs. Boekmycr in
May last lived in a house belonging te
Jehn Schcrff. She refused te pay any rent
and Mr. Scherff desired te dispossess her.
He obtained a writ of possession from
Alderman Wiley which was executed by
Constable Samuel Bewman. The officer,
with several ethers went te the house en
May 10, aud removed all the furniture
and household goods belonging te the dc-
lendant te the outside et the house which
was then locked. Mrs. Boekmyerwas net
at home when the officer came, but her
niece, Mrs. Wise, interfered with Scherff.
When Mrs. Bookmyer came home she
found the house locked and she broke open
a shutter of the house. In this way she
effected an entrance and she and the ether
defendant carried all the goods back
into the house. They had new locks put i
en the doers and shutters and arc new liv
. - T" I
ing in the house.
The defense was that when Mrs. Book Beok Boek
mycr came home she saw that her furni
ture was net all outside of the house. She
went in te bring the remainder out ; she
merely pushed the front deer open, but
did net break or force the shutters or the
deer.
After the evidence was in it was agreed
by counsel te take a verdict of net
guilty as there was no force or violence
used in returning the goods te the house,
and they had net all been removed by the
constable.
The cases of cem'th vs. Mcses Walling,
William P. Mundis, Jacob Dellinger and
Henry Leng, which grew out of the Det
wiler case, wcre nel pressed.
There wcre no mere cases for jury trials
and the jurors were discharged.
Felonious Assault.
Mis Kate Bender appeared before Al
derman Spurrier yesterday and made com
plaint against Jacob McDonnell of felon
ious assault and battery. She alleges that
he met her in the crowd in Centre Square
yesterday and stabbed her in the
breast with a knife, inflicting a slight
wound. McDonnell was arrested aud en
tercd bail for a hearing before Alderman
Spurrier to-nerrow evening.
Veil Frem a Train.
Jehn Ritter, of East Denegal, fell from
the excursion train which was rcturing
from this city, at'Mt. Jey last night. He
received several very ugly cuts. He
claims he was struck by a stone and
knocked from the car platform. The train
was running slew or the man would! bar
been killed.
FINIS.
THE KEFUBLICAN COUSTV
TION OVER.
CONVEX-
A Tame Affair The Mass Meetlne and
Torchlight Parade Dreary Fizzles
Country Politicians
Disgusted.
The great Republican convention, "the
old-fashioned county convention " as the
Republican managers were pleased te call
it,bas ceme and gene, and there is but one
opinion expressed in regard te it by all
honest men whether Republicans or Dem
ocrats, and that is, as compared with former
demonstrations of either party it was a
decided failure, net only by reason of the
comparatively few men in line iu both day
and night parades, but also en account e'f
the lack of enthusiasm among the men,
and Very peer representation of the me
chanical trades and manufactures, and
the slim display of fireworks.
Prominent county Republicans have
expressed te us net only their disappoint
ment at the unsatisfactory appearance of
the pageant, but their 'indignation and
disgust with its management. They say
the affair was get up for the glorification of
Frank Eshlcmau and Elias McMclIen. As
an inducement te secure a large attend
ance the managers premised te have here
ex-President Grant, United States Senater
Blaine, Governer Heyr, and ether big
guns, net one of &hem was in attendance,
and whose places were poorly supplied by
thc slobbering Buckeye Blacksmith, the
ranting Steckctt Mathews and the illegal-fce-grabbing
Attorney General Lear.
City Republicans, who had been led te
believe that an immense multitude would
be in attendance.aud who made great prep
arations te entertain them, are even mere
disappointed and mere out of pocket than
their country cousins. They laid in hun
dreds of dollars worth of previsions,
bought from the managers permission te
erect lunch booths ou the poorhouse
grounds (where the mass meeting was
held) for the sale of their stock, and ow
ing te the slim attendance there some of
the hucksters did net sell enough stnli te
pay the rent of the booth, while they have
en hand large supplies of cooked feed
which is almost valueless. Keepers of res
taurants and bearding houses down town,
are also losers by providing tee largely ;
indeed the only persons who appear te have
reaped any particular advantage from the
convention arc the hotel keepers and beer
saloons. These were largely patronized, in
many cases te the disadvantage of the
patron.
The mass-meeting en the poeihoti.se
grounds was a tame and spiritless affair.
When it was ascertained that neither
Grant, nor Blaine, nor Heyt was present,
and that even "honest Jehn Strohm"' was
net te preside at the meeting, the boys
deserted in crowds and came into town,
leaving an audience for Attorney General
Lear and Gen. Koentz, neither aui-nt've
nor enthusiastic.
During the afternoon Jehn W. Bear,
the Buckeye Blacksmith, mounted the
court house steps and gathered around
him quite a crowd of men and boys, te
whom be rehearsed a number of anec
dotes, and tried te impress upon them the
danger they were in from the bloody
rabcls. The "Buckeye" has lest all hi.s
old-time vigor, but none of" his black
guardism. In the evening at 7 o'clock the clubs be
gan te assemble at their appointed places,
equipped and carrying torches, for the
great torchlight parade, which it was
expected would eclipse anything ever &ceu
in Lancaster. But again were the mana
gers deemed te disappointment. At half
past seven o'clock the bugle sounded
the advance, and one of the bands,
whether thoughtlessly or by design we
cannot say, struck up a funeral march
the Portuguese hymn aud te this slew
music the solemn precession moved oft' to
wards Woodward Hill cemetery ! The
line was exactly twenty minutes, includ
ing several stoppages, in passing a given
point. The display was net te be com
pared, cither iu number or appearance,
with the late Democratic parade in which
only the city clubs took part. It was a sad
disappointment te the managers, who
had flattered themselves they would have
net les3 than 5,000 men in line, whereas,
exclusive of boys and bands, there were net
mere than one-fourth that number, and
several hundred of these were from Yerk
and Dauphin counties. The city clubs
were miserably represented, some of them
net numbering mere than a dozen men.
The mounted men, cxcIiimve of mar
shals and aitls, numbered less than a
hundred men at the beginning of the
parade and bad dwindled te less than a
dozen before its close. The men iu line
had a fair opportunity of taking in the ex
act size of the parade during the counter
march en Seuth Queen street, when in
double column it was found te be less than
three squares in length, the head of col
umn passed the rear below Conestoga
street. Before the route was half
gene ever several of the country delega
tions fell out of line, leaving great
gaps iu the parade. The L-impcter dele
gations fell out en East King street, and
ether delegations left the line en l'rince
street. As the parade passed Pulton hall
and moved out West King street, there
were gaps in the line nearly a square in
length, and with these gaps unclosed, the
right and left of the precession in the
countermarch, passed each ether near Mill -berry
street, showing that at that time it
was only about two squares long in double
column or four squares long iu single col
umn. The Columbia delegation, numbering
ever 200 men. the finest delegation in line,
by the way, did net reach Lancaster in
time te join the parade when it started,but
fell in finally and added considerably te
the pageant by their fine marching and
fancy evolutions. The high school boys
also marched well, and performed several
evolutions creditably, but most of the
clubs marched with weak,unsteady,play-d-out
tread, the men appearing te be disgus-
,,i 'i Ji,;,,,, .i,.,!. -ii '? :
" lllliIOVL9 1TVI1 Ulllr "J It.
The only enthusiasm shown was by the
colored men, most of whom were noisy and
net a few drunk. There was net, however,
considering the occasion, an unusual amount
of disorderly conduct. The police only
"pulled"' about twenty-five drunken and
disorderly persons during the day, though
there were many mere that deserved le be
arrested.
Neither Mount Jey nor Warwick was
represented in the parade. The reason
given for their absence is that when the
Republicans of this city had a parade some
weeks age they turned out in force te
make the affair a success, but when pa
rades were held in Mount Jey and Li tit,
the city Republicans "went back en
them." They premised te send 700 men
te Lititz, whereas they only sent 1(57 ; and
they broke faith almost as badly with
their Mount Jey friends.
Rather an awkward incident occurred
in East King street, near Centre squaie,
just before the night parade started : A
man somewhat under the influence of
liquor commenced te " hurrah for Gener
eral Lengstrect, the here of Gettysburg,
who fought se gallantly against that old
copperhead Hauceck,'" and " hurrah for
the gallant Republican guerrilla, Colonel
Mesby." There was some inclination te
lynch the fellow, but as he persisted that
he was a geed Republican and was hur
rahing for Republican- officc-hellcrs, they
didn't knew what te de about it. Finalh
he was hustled out of the ranks, still hur
rahing for General Lengstrcet and Colonel
Mesby!
While the parade was passing a'cnjj
East King street near Middle a ruffian in
line threw coal oil all ever the marble steps
and marble base of Mr. Hclman's new
houses, staining them se badly that they
will probably hare te be replaced. The
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