l LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGENCER SATURDAY, NOVEMBER G 1880. Lancaster intelligencer. SATURDAY EVENING, NOV. G, 1B80. After the Baltic. Xew that the agony of the political campaign is ever, will sober, thoughtful people nay ,will the excitable and enthu siastic leaders of practical politics calm ly and profitably consider the vast amount of humbug and clap-trap there is in the present popular style of cam paign and devise and resolve upon some means of terminating it ? "We need net leek bf-yond the horizon of our own com munity te illustrate the subject suffi ciently te justify the demand for reform. The banners, the flags, the Uniforms, the parades, and the wild excitement night after night what did they cost and what were tiiey worth ? The " poll committees" en election day, four feur lifths or whom were enrolled solely te keep the votes or make the votes what did they cost and what were they worth ? Hew many thousands of dollars have been spent in this ciiy. hew many hundreds of thousands in this state, -and hew many millions in the country, during this campaign, te keep up this delirious excitement, this popular de moralization and debauchery ! What liave we left for it but the charred sticks of spent fireworks ! The campaign is ever, the voting is done, people are settling down te their ordinary pursuits, but it has left behind it momentous questions which may prop erly engage fnesidc discussion. The dry ret of our political system is creep ing through every community. Its poison is being diffused through our so cial life. The reform is casj. Will the better men of a!! parlies unite te effect it ? i reference te the table of complete ttleclien returns, which we print, it will be seen that the total vote polled in this ceuntv for presidential electors was "50, :U, by far the largest ever polled and in dicating the. most strenuous efforts by both parties te cast their utmost strength, each of the leading organizations show ing an increased vote of nearly 1-per cent, ever thai polled for president, in 187'i. The combined Temperance and Greenback vole is searceh one-third of one per cent, of the whole. Our private additions make the Republican majority S,0!s-2 less than that obtained by the footings of the clerks. Fer district attorney it will be seen that the lejal vote polled is only il.s,.",12, or l..v:: less than the vote for presiden tial elect eis, indicating that there are thai number of Republicans in thecoun theceun ty who were willing te ' cut" Davis, ami yet who could net rise te the height of voting for his opponent. The -!('.!! votes by which .lames Black, esq., for district attorney led the Temperance electors, may b -.et down in the same category. Thee make " 1-1 Republican votes hat protested only half way against Davis. Had they tee been cast for MeMullen. his mitmrit would have been reduced te 1.1M. These figures prove very plainly that only the fact of its being a presidential year saved Davis from defeat. Had it been otherwise tiiau a campaign in which the politicians feared the effect en the general canvass the cutting would have been deeper and mere effective and -Mr. MeM alien would have been elected. TiiK majority ler Garlicld in New Yerk is no! nearly .se large in proportion as was the majority for Tilden in Louisi ana four years age. The allegations of fraud in Louisiana four years age were net. nearly se specilie nor se well sub stantiated a- the evidences of fraud in Xew 'fork new. The Republicans then had one heu-.e of Congress te witness the counting of I he vole. The Demo crats new have both houses of Congress te count the vote, te reject such states as they see til. and te declare such result as they may find the circumstances of the ea.-' te warrant under constitutional forms and according te Republican pre cedents. If Mr. I'ainum should come te Philadelphia and select Wm. Mc Mullm and Samuel Josephs te go ever te New Yerk te supervise the count of the voles, te make affidavits for Demo cratic witnesses, as Garfield made them for Republican witnesses in Xew Or leans, and in general te frame tiie Demo cratic case, we have no doubt they could get up a much better one for Hancock than" Garfield did for Tilden. If Congress should then constitute Messrs. McMuHiii and Josephs a high commission te adju dicate their case, in all human probabil ity they would decide the presidential contest in favor of Hancock. llew would the Republicans like te have corn measured te them in their own bushel ? Hew would Mr. Garfield like te be heist with his memorable petard of 1S70 77 ? A w kitki: m the Pittsburgh Pest re calls, in a circumstantial narrative, the exciting events of four years age, when, at about this dan-, a cabal of Pennsyl vania politicians roosting in Philadel phia planned the means by which Iraud was then made triumphant in the pres idential election, and the way paved for the election new of the man who leek the most conspicuous part in that con spiracy against constitutional liberty. There is no longer any doubt that what was done in Flerida and Louisiana in lS7Gwasthe conception of the peculiar school of politicians who buzzed around Grant at that time. We have even been furnished with satisfactory evidence that Grant's dispatch about no man worthy the office of president taking it it' count ed in was a " blind ' written by Den Cameren himself. Tin; -Sen' Yerk 'Jii.Kx in 1870 in augurated 1 evolution" by holding te the claim that Haves was elected when he was net. The Republican leaders en gaged in 4i seditious feeling" te make fraud triumphant and counted states Republican that had '' honestly and ir revocably" gene Democratic. Xew that their ex is gored hew differently thev talk ! The convening of the national Demo cratic committee te consider the frauds in Xew Yerk gives the Republicans quite a spasm. The ghost of 1S70 rises up te confront them. Jh:. "Whaktex Bauer's- paper in Philadelphia, whose editor is one of Garfield's closest friends, announces that the succession in 1884 is by no means premised, much less secured, te Grant, and that the candidate of 18S0 is likely te le thecandidate of 1SH4. This is likely. All the mere se ir Garfield gave Conkling, Cameren and Legan rea son te expect otherwise. It is a way these Ohie ieeple have. After Cameren helped te steal the presidency for Hayes he was despitefully snubbed, and new if Garfield get! in he may be disposed te set up en his own account for his own succession. Secretary Evarts, early en "Wed nesday morning, telegraphed te Gen. Longstreet, late of the C. S. A. and new minister from a Republican administra tion te Turkey, that Hancock was beat en. The World slyly intimates that this was mere grateful news than Longstreet had after Gettysburg's third day. PERSONAL. The DeJIcfentc papers note the piescnce in that town of Mrs. S. II. Revxei.us and Mrs. P. E. Gmnexs. of this county. Soi.ex Romxsex, the well-known agri cultural writer and formerly the farmer- : editor of the Weekly Tribune, died recent ly in Flerida where he had gene te see what he knew about farming. "They say," Jen:; M. Sti:i;uax, of this county, elector-elect, is net qualified te serve in the electoral college, being a national bank director and technically a federal official. The Merccrsburg Jinmuil announces the suspension (possibly only temporarily) of Merccrsburg college, ever which the Rev. E. E. Higher, D. I)., presides. Debts," says the Journal, "and .their accompany ing troubles have occasioned this. This institution has been in an unfortunate condition, financially, for some time past." The daughter of Senater Dux C'ameuex and the son of Senater Wiij.i am A. "Wal lace are te be married in a few days. They are net te he married te each ether, however. Cameren's daughter is te be come the wife or Jndge Umllcy's son and young Wallace is te wed Miss Ycakley, a niece of the editor of the Clearfield ?- piliilicilli. At the residence of Hen. Jeseph II. Xisslcy. at Middletown, en Thursday evening, there assembled a fashionable company te witness the solemnization of the marriage contract between William M. Lauman, esj., of the well-known firm of Keiulig, Firicker & L:-umau, lumber merchants, and Miss Lillie Xis-slcv, second daughter of Hen. Jeseph il. Xissley. Ov. i-n P. PmieKr.it, of Lancaster, was one of the groomsmen. At Feit "Wayne, Indiana, en Thursday evening, Mr. James Ilvu-u.i' WrcK r.itsiiAM, general manager of the Inquirer printing establishment, in this city, was married te Miss Jessie Wil liams Heugh. The services were per formed in the First Piesbyterian church, at seven o'clock p. m. and from eight, te eleven a reception was held al the i evi dence of the bride's mother, Mrs. Sarah D. Heugh. Among the Laneasterians pre sent were the groom's father, J. P. Wick crsham, his mother and sister. Jeseph E. Bewman, of the Kxn miner. David W. Pat terson, jr., an:l "Will Hendersen. MINOR TOPICS. Wiikx in a civil case a Scotch jury of twelve stay eat three hours a majority of nine may bring in a verdict. The hay window new trouble- the Phil adelphia cenucilnien. Tf it must he taken in some of them will be largely reduced in avordupeis. "RiNXixe after pulpit novelty," says the Herald mid I'rexhyter. "is spiritually unhealthy. Every one should,, when it is possible, eat his victuals at his own tabic and worship at his own church. Moreover, spiritual as well as temporal feed should betaken regular! v. The Society of Arts is putting tablets up in Louden en houses once occupied by famous men. It has already marked four teen houses, including the residences of Jehnsen, Faraday, Garrick, Xelsen, Dry den, Reynolds and Ryren, and ordered six mere tablets ler the erection of which it has obtained permission. Charles Dick ens's name is down en the list. Du. Rew r."s Chicago Field for the cur rent week devotes six of its wide columns tJ a full account of the recent field trials i l this county and the discouraging cir cumstances under which they were held. It is especially severe en Win. Reehin. of Quarryville, who, it says, shot the hints off the ground he had premised te pro tect, and the Field declares he will be ex pelled from the state association. A Loxnex dealer in second-hand ser mons has sent circulars te many clergy men in this country soliciting their pat ronage, lie offers sermons "lithographed in a bold, round hand," se that thefjc who happened te see them would suppose that they were manuscript, for 2.1 cents eaeh, or 820 a hundred. He has a list of cheaper sermons in print, at 10 cents apiece, war ranted orthodox ; and ethers a little mere expensive which have "a pleasantness, yet an awful solemnity about them." The Reading Xenfs has entered upon ts second volume and announces that the success that has crowned its entrance into that prolific field of journalism has hcen unexpectedly gratifyiiigand unprecedented in local newspaper annals. As the daily or gan of the staunch Democracy of Berks county, the Xeits enjoys a wide field of usefulness, and that our handsome and enterprising contemporary has been equal te the occassien is proven alike by il own prosperity and the increased Democratic vote of that stronghold of the untcrrified. The Sjned of Ohie of the Reformed church in the United States convened in Columbiana, O., en the 19th or October. There were about eighty ministers and ciders present. The largest portion of the membership of this synod lies in Ohie. Its numerical strength is about 2.1,000 members. Heidelberg college and theo logical seminary, located at Tiffin, O., arc under the care of this synod. The college recently received a bequest of $10,000 to wards the establish nit of a Hivliug prefes sership from Miss Sarah A. Hivling, of' Xenia, O., who died last August. The Rebert Raikes Centennial Sunday- school fund of the American Baptist pub lication society has reached $7,000. It is proposed that special Thanksgiving and Christmas gifts sheuldjbe made by these formerly Sunday-school scholars, for the establishment of a permanent fund, the interest te be annually used in each state, according te the amounts contributed. It has been proposed that ,00D at lea&t should be secured in Pennsylvania, se that the missionaries of the general association might be enabled toerganizo new Sunday schools and aid needy schools already in existence. The Vermont Congregationalists re cently had a memorial presented te the Legislature of that state requesting the passage of a law prohibiting the desecra tion of the Sabbath and the disturbance of church congregations by the running of railroad trains en Sunday. The constitu tion of Vermont recognizes the Christian Sabbath in the third article of the Bill of Rights, which declares that every sect or denomination of Christians ought te ob serve the Sabbath or Lord's day." The statutes of Vermont from an early day hare forbidden travel and secular labor en Sunday, with the customary exceptions of works of necessity or charity. The defeat of Mr. Chittenden in the Brooklyn congressional district, and the election of Rev. J. Hyatt Smith, his Green back Democratic competitor, is described as one of the ludicrous surprises of the cam paign. Tlie district is strongly Republican, and the EcminPest says : " Mr. Smith's candidacy was supposed te be a huge prac tical joke. Se far as wc have been able te ascertain, the platform of the Rev. J. nyatt Smith consists of a single plank: the prevention of the manufacture of hats in the state prisons of Xew Yerk. The support of Uiis measure and the publica tion of a Baptist open communion' novel comprise, we believe, all of the secular activities of Mr. Smith." Giieex MerxT, the well-known Balti more cemetery, was once the country scat of Jehn Oliver, a prosperous merchant of Baltimore, an Englishman by birth, whose heiress was a daughter, a beautiful girl of twenty. She had a lever suitable in years and station, of whom her father disap proved, as he had ether views for Ills only child. They met clandestinely, and the father gave orders te his keepers te sheet any one found in the grounds after night. Disguised in man's clothing she attempted te keep an appointment with her lever, and was shot dead by a watcher. The Oliver vault is in the grounds which wcie deeded te the city for a cemetery by Oli ver after his death. A iunil Suggestion. Fer tilt" 1 NTia.LKiExcKi:. Why will net some honest ami frank "business man" carry in the Republican parade this evening a banner bearing the following : ' We Republicans el Lancaster city aie celebrating our defeat in this city after much fuss and brag, aud also celebrating an event which has never happened before in American history, viz. : The election te the high offices of president and vice president, of two men against whom there is still en file in the records of the national Heuse and Senate grave and serious charge.:, proofs and verdicts of gross wrong-doing while in office ; charges, in vestigations and reports made by Repub licans, viz. : The Poland and Glever com mittees reports and "secretary Sherman's written charges against Arthur, and in the case of the Poland committee con firmed by the unanimous vote of the Heuse. X. Was Daniel Webster u Unitarian? Cincinnati Commercial. Mr. Jeseph Cook having written that Daniel "Webster was net a Unitarian, a rather lively discussion lias arisen en that interesting point, and Dr. S. K. Lithrep writes te the Rev. "W. C. "Wcndte, of Cin cinnati en the subject. He says: "As Mr. Cook knows everything, 1 suppose he knows this, else he would net venture te make such a bold, strong, positive, unqualified statement. I counted myself aineug the acquaintances and friends of Mr. Webster for mere than thirty years ; for mere than twenty of these years I w.s quite intimate with him, and from twelve te fifteen of them I numbered him among the pew owners, worshipers and communi cants of the church in Brattle square, of which 1 was pastor, and was regarded by him as his minister, and during these yeais I had various religious conversations with him upon themes which I have already in dicated. I had, therefore, some opportu nity te knew something of the character and tendency or leaning of Mr. Webster's religious thoughts. Yet I de net think I should be willing, in Mr. Cook's positive, absolute, unqualified way, cither te assert or deny that Mr. Webster was a Unitarian But I de maintain aud should always be ready te declare it in the strongest possible italics, that Mr. Webster was bread, large, liberal, comprehensive in his religious as in his political opinions and convictions ; there was nothing bigeted small, narrow, scclarian. and certainly nothing distinctly Calvini.stic or orthodox about him. Sam McDeimlit-". A Baltimore correspondent of the De troit 7'Vte Press, speaking of the "towered home ' of McDonald, the owner of Flera Temple in her palmy days, near that city, gees en te say : " McDonald has entered into his inheritance in Ged's acre, and his widow is married te a French count. A childless mother enjoys his etioimeus wealth. Never had a boy such oppertu nities ter a useful lite as bam AlcDenalu, who died net long since in Indiana, snatched from a gallows through the clemency of Pinkncy "White, governor of Maryland, who had been his guardian aud father's friend. The stories related of this young bleed's sports rival everything iu the cxhaustlcss catalogue of prodigality. On one occasion, while driving into town, he overtook a drove of pigs, some twenty-five or thirty in number. He. bought them of the owner, and hiring as many carriages he put a pig and been companion in eaeh and drove home. Sur rounding the house they wrung the por per por kers' tails, and all yelled in concert. The grand finale was te let the pigs loose in the drawing-room aud call all the dogs in the place aud have a .regular chase. The larks mounted en the furniture, holding their sides with laughter at such rare fun. Whe Sam reached his majority there was feasting, bonfires, and rejoicing, as if a young earl had taken possscssien of his earldom." He Has a Kiglit te Crew. riitsiMir-h l'est. The only rooster we have seen out of his cage lately raised his clarion notes in the Lancaster Ixteli.uirxcer ever the result iu that city. Oil AleildflV tllO new PllHailplnll'ii lirtmrt for incurables, at "Woodland avenue aud i Forty-eighth street, is te be dedicated, SOME INSIDE HISTORY OF KVKXTs IX A CEUTAIX HCGK PLOT OF VOBK YEARS AC.O. Seme Ket-ollectieu of tbc Birth of the "Visiting .Statesmen" Band ami the Ir-iiiiT of '76. riltburg!i l'e-r. Four years age this week the American people were passing through a terrible strain. The excitement was fearful and ominous. Republicans, as a general thing, had ceacecded the election of Til den, the state of Oregon was in doubt, the plot by which Louisiana and Flerida were stolen were still in embryo, a lew stalwart Republicans still claimed that Hayes was elected, ethers of the office holders who did net claim a victory held their breath and waited for a nod from the leaders te begin te steal electoral votes but as vet the greatest fraud of tlie cen tury was still in the loins of time. At that time the writer was in rlnlaciel phia acting as Centennial exposition corres pondent, and reporter en a city daily and what fellows came under his personal ob servatien. The seat of government hail been virtu arly changed from Washington te the Quaker city for the time being. Within a square of the Schuylkill, en the corner of Chestnut street, stands a queer-looking dwelling. It is costly and elegant as te material, but in appearance it is squat ami ugly. In the interior of this residence there ate many elegant and very expensive articles of furniture and bric-a-brac and some almost priceless relics and memen toes. In the furniture and drapery eiyiic house there is a predominance of two colors, blue and red. In the character of the relics and mementoes there is a pre dominance of two elements, these of titled persons and these of men and women cmi dent in literature. This is the famous residence of Geerge W. Ghilds, the man who is regarded by the Xew Yerk Sun as being the most talented writer of the century, of four line couplets en the dead. Fer a week in that month of November, four years age, Mr. Childs's house was the actual executive mansion. Here it was that Grant, had Ids residence during his visit te the exposition and here he scented the lace curtains in the parlor windows with the fragrant odor of cigar smoke. Here also at. the same time cold and digni fied Hamilton Fish, secretary of state, was enjoying Mr. Child's cuisine. Here it was that active, red headed, ambitious Den Cameren, secretary of war, spent his even ings. I fere Adnlph Berie, Grant's ex secretary n! the navy (a geed matured, pompous little man) came te listen, with patient car, te the talk of abler men and aii! them as far as he could. Here also came handsome and conceited Jee Haw ley, of Connecticut, president of the ex position seeiety. Bleeding, .scheming Ol iver P. Morten, was here tee. and se was Richard McCermi'.'k, of Arizona, a jelly, gentlemanly fellow, at that time secretary of the Republican na tional committee ; Yeung Ulysses Grant, who flirted with half a dozen girls, was engaged te a girl in Pennsylvania and one in Cincinnati at the same time, and who was married a day or two age te Miss Chaffee, was with his pry at the house of Cliilds. Coining and going daily te that house en the corner were numbers of poli ticians of all stripes and standings. They had business that week with their mas ters. Between the 1th and the 8th of the month the Republican lead ers giew frightened. Tilden had carried Louisiana and Flerida and the pieblcm was, hew te get the status away from him. Grant, was importuned te interfere but for some cause he reiuseii at tir.M te ! se Cameren grew angry with him and told liim he would defeat the party which had twice elected him pic.-idcut. On the 8th of November Cameren went, te Washing ton. Next day a messenger arrived from the capital, lie drove up te the house en the corner late at night and hurriedly entered. A sheit time afterward the gas was lighted in the loom in the second story which was occupied by Grant and young "Ly?sus came te the window and pulled the blinds together. Who the man was the writer dues net knew, hut he bore a message from Cameren and ids confed erates, asking that troops should he sent te the Southern states which were te be manipulated. Still Grant refused. A telegram stating that Grant would net move in the matter was sent te Cameren by Beb Maekcy. who wrote it in his fa vorite resort at a well-known saloon and restaurant en Ninth street, where Cameren's agent went after his interview with Grant. Camereu hastened back next day,and with him came anotheref Grant's cabinat, Secer Robeson, secretary of the navy. They arrived in. the afternoon. Giant was at the exposition. He had been looking at the display made bj the gov ernment in company with Berie. After supper there was a cabinet, council in Childs's library. It last long that council that meant se much te the American people, but it ended by (2 rant yielding te the prayers of the sehemcrs. At this council there cunc up for Cue first time a matter that afterward became one of the must famous features of that famous plot the advisability of" sending various prominent Republicans of the shrewdest political type te Louisiana ami Fleiida as "visiting statesmen" te see the votes stolen by the returning beards. The plot in the main was arranged that night (Ne vcmber Dth), and one or two of the states men who were te go Seuth were notified. Sherman and Ivassen were among them, but all the details were net put in shape until the following morning. Shortly after two o'clock in the morning. Secretary Cameren left the Childs residenca. He stepped out en the pavement with a r.mile en his face, jumped into a carriage which was waiting and drove te his rooms at the Continental hotel, where he had a short talk with Beb Maekcy in the ro re tuuda before he went te bed. As has been said, the plot was completed in full en the morning of the 10th. It was done in the private office of Jee HawJey. This efiiee was in the western wing of the com missioners' building beside the department of public comfei t. 1 Iawlcy had two offices, a public one and a private one, which was in tlie corner el the building and here it was that, everything was settled. The wri ter happened te have business with Gen. Ilawley, and he went into the outer office. The deer opening into the private office was open. Ne one was in the first room and the writer was about te enter the ether when lie saw a party of men grouped around a desk at which President Grant was sitting. Cameren, Fish, Guilds, Mc Cormick, Robeson, Ilawley and young Grant, were there, and if the writer re members rightly, Senater Morten was there tee. Grant, had a sheet of paper in his hand which he read and laid down saying, "I am net sure- it is the best thing te de, but it is done new and that ends if." Just then a clerk entered, accompanied by Jeseph Gilbert who was acting as agent for the associated press. They passed into the inner oiiiee without paying any atten tion te tlie writer. After an introduction Grant handed Gilbert the sheet of paper which he had been reading a few minutes before and said, " Mr. G ilberl here is an order which I have sent te Gen. Sherman directing him te send United States troops into Louisiana and Fierida. Yeu will please send it by the associated press." A few words of conversation followed which the writer did net hear and then Gilbeit left and the ofiiccdeor was closed. "Dick" McCormick a few minutes later come out and when asked by the writer why the troops were ordered te these states he said that Grant h;.d been as sured that it was necessary te preserve order and that he did net intend te allow flip llnnnllltran ftln!e1ctnlin "lmlMn-nl lie then gave the writer a list of the "vis iting statesmen," who were te go Seuth, and this was the first official information which was given te the prcss.en the mat ter. Among ether uames en this list was that et Garfield, who McCormick said was a congressman from Ohie, ami a verv ca pable man, tee." The list of names and the substance of Graut's order were sent te Mr. Tilden in New Yerk fifteen minutes after they were made known, te warn the Democrats of the impending trouble. "What followed arc matters of our crimi nal history. Generals Imager's and Auger's troops and the statesmen gobbled up the two states, Hayes went into office, every body who took a haud in the ieb was re warded, even down te Garfield. PBNNS YL.VA I A . Presidential .llafertties by Cem.:; 'mil.,. In,,. ' Han- Gar- inaj. j """' j maj. ma). Adams .llSt ! fiir. Allegheny i,41. liif.irt Avnistreni; ' ' tw 7:".rt Heaver ' t.inu i;oe J'tUutOi-il r.i2 rr N'i .' Iterks T,.v.i:: 7;:u Jihtir. S19 lit) Itr.ulfenl ; :V01) ::i0 Hucks :il m llutlur. si:: .'.'.! Cambria i,-X.l : ijii Cameren ' ,yr Carben :iiS na Centre !W M Chester. :l,ui -2771 Clarien 1,107 ! It e; Cleartlehl i.ftf ;....is-r. Clinten i.lfcV ! 7.VV Columbia , 2,:JiV iii'.j Crawford ' ...' sw I3l." Cumberland j 'Jill i lnji Dauphin j I -.'.ei'.i tsoe Delaware "J,J34 1 "iji". Elk 7'Jit j 7ii Erie ! 2.5 l.v I "2I0t Eavctte i.-'ir.! !....i::.! Ferest I I 71' 1 45 Franklin -277' 1 115 Fulton ; sffii; ! :;:i.i! (Jrcene "... l,7i:i i '2.7u lliintinjrden 511 71S Indiana "2,Sis! .1 "2157 Jetlernen im I KH) Juniata its : :;7i Lancaster. 7,7S'"; Ste'S Lackawanna ..' . ' 50ii Lawrence ; UK.V "ii:0.) Lebanon i : i,r2t ltoe Lehigh I "2,!71j '....2!7r Luzerne i :(, 17.11 1 1517 Lycoming l,:!i:' 15UI McKean 1071 527 Mercer 02I1 j ten Millliu 171 : 1 520 Menree -2..10I eati Montgomery... 'Iffi ' 1 10 Menteur...!.... 592 .VJ7 Northampton ... :!.0 :v.'2j XerthiunlH'ird.! IOC) ; 0c?.V 1'erry iai ....--! ' iie Philadelphia ..., ll.lC.i. I... "20727 Pike s!' : 7a',' Petter ail i :. Sehnvlkill ' ,7S; . 2171! Snvder I ' ;:-.. I .rn Somerset ; I, IIS ' u.li Sullivan :;77i -tw! Susquehanna ire: ! 015 TiORii ' :s,lK! ....2-20 Union I (W5 ! 7.V2 Venango ' ' e7t ' 'HM) Warren 7.4! j 10-'.i Washington 4-:;' .... 3H Wayne yic I "2".i'.i! Westmoreland.,' i.'jwl ; cee! Wyoming ::ir 10! Yerk .'.l a.57l 1 S'-Wi' TIIi: ELECTIONS. State Keturns and Congressional DUtiiets. The Xew Yerk state majority upon the lowest estimate of the Democratic organs is 14,000, and upon the highest br Repub licans 28,000. The truth prebaulv U that it will be about 18,000. Senater Conkling, Governer Cernell and General Grant were iu conference yester day, and the gossips have it that they arc fixing up a cabinet for Garfield. The Tammany Democracy have issued an address te their brethren throughout the country lamenting the defeat, or Gen eral Hancock as a great national calamity and attributing it te fraud, the coloniza tion of repeaters, and the intimidation of laboring men. In support of tiii; they ask that the vote of Xew Yerk city he scrutin ized and compared with the vote of l"!7fi, when the Democrats cist ll-2.."i:0 ballets and the Republicans ."i8..'ii;i. In 18S0 the Democrats cast 12:5,102 and the Republi- can M,"t, snowing a liepntdteau increase of 2:,1Im and a Democratic incieaf-e of 10,573. Later returns make the vole of Califor nia practically a tie This change is due less te any turn iu the reports of precincts than te a revision of tnc tabulated r-tate-ments. These differ considerably and I there arc evidences of loose work suilieient I te discredit all estimates. ' "Wntrifle fitl irii'n ITeninV .kl.i.ttf CO'l .. ' jerity. Returns from seventv-six out of the ninety-four counties in, Tennessee, give Hawkins, Ren., for governor, 82,101 : Wright, Dcin., 07,041; Wilsen, -10,811. The counties te be heard from gave I laves a majority of 2,000 ever Tilden i;t 1870. j The Legislature, as far as heard fiein, will ' stand as follews: Senate Republicans.' 7 : Democrats, 0 ; Repudiation Democrats 4 ; districts in doubt, 8. Heuse Repub licans, 28 : Democrats. 10 ; Repudiation Democrats, 10 ; districts in doubt, 21 a Republican gain of 10. The majority for (iarli"!d in ! i.v.i i-. es timated at 80,000. The estimated majority iu Illinois for the Republican candidate is .10,000. rerd, Greenback-Republican, has OS majority for Congress iu the Ninth Mi- seuri district. The official count shev.s the vole of the slate of Delaware e he as fellows : Dem ocratic, 15,183; Republican, M,1.10 : Dem ocratic majority, 1,033. The latest returns from the Sixth Mis souri district indicate the election of Hazeltinc, Gbk.-Rep., ever Waddcll, Hem., by about .100 majority. This is the fourth Democratic less iu the state. Garfield's majority in Minuesein is lo, le, 000. The Legislature stands : Senate Republicans, CI ; Democrats, 10 : Heuse Republicans. 8.1; Democrats. 1.1: Inde pendents and Greenbcckcrs, 10. The majority for Hancock in Maryland is 17,-M8, a reduction of .1,000 from the majority given te Tilden four years age. The only Republican congressman i.-i Lnier, lreai the bixtli district A dispatch from Galesburg, III., sa.s sufficient returns have been received te de cide the election of Lewis, Republican, ever Lee, Democrat, in the Aiuth congtes cengtes sinual district, by .100 majerilv. The congressmen from Virginia sum : First district, Geerge T. Garrison, Dcm.: Second, J. F. Dezcuderf, Rep.; Thud, Geerge I). Wise, Dcm.: Fourth. Jeseph Jergcnsen, Rep.: Fifth, Geoige C. Cabell. Dem.; Sixth, J. Ran. Tucker, Dcm.: Seventh, Jehn Paul, Readjuster-Dcm.: Eighth, J. S. IJasbiiur. Dcm.: Ninth, cither Trigg or Ftilkersen, both Demo crats. Total Republicans, 2 ; Deme crats, 7 ; a Republican gain of one. A Tomb l.urst Open by u Tree. , A young German countess was a noted ' unbeliever and especially opposed te the ! doctrine of the resurrection. She j died when about thirty years of age, and before her death gave orders that her grave should be covered with a .solid slab of granite; that around it should b Placed seuarc blocks of stone, and that the corners should fastened te each ether and ' te the granite slab bv heavv iron cla inns Upen the covering ' this inscription was . nhir-nii '"Tlin llilrinl ttlnfn ntirelineml . r.ll eternity must never be opened.' All ! that human power could de te prevent: anv change in that was done, but a little seed sprouted, and the tiny sheet found its way between the side stone and the upper slab and gicw there slowly but steadily forcing it:, way until the iron clamps were tern asunder and the granite lid was raised and is new resting upon the trunk of the tree. which is large and nourishing. The 'mr ll.iv-nt, nil TvltlMl is Ti'lnrl ennmmtcl.- ,.. ibdibviiu t tuiuir .1", ; heavv stones, the occupant ,v .., v.. ,, viiuiumu.,... , e occupant having in his : lifetime nlanncd this scheme te defv the I ..K...nt: nnM-MH .C -l.. ltiMiiiwuuu uunu ui vruiia people ef Hanover, reganl it with almost i l',,W1' ui" - t rowing mm iiewn. run. a kiiie ei supcrsimen ami spcai: m lowest ""' '"-' . : - . ,7 .,,, tones of the wicked countess. A sinylar kv.vcs and one ei Ins arms te a .jell v. I be ;..:,.i;f.,, ,,.., .rti-nn mcnit;nr. - .i. .. fir.-,!, intimation tnal the men u the engine I.l I t!IIV.l!,flI , 1. C, HEIIM If OffiiC BARSUM'S LATEST SENSATION. IS SEiV YOIIKTOIJE ."OUSTED OUT .' Sii:ii!i'.ii;: Jill:!-; Vrent l.eai!ius "N'eUfiiaiier!.-, Ken- Tork Cerr; siier.der.f-e efti:c PhllailelpLla Ledger. There is something important going en anieug the Democratic leaders which .pro .pre mises te create a sensation. The state ex ecutive committee profess te be cognizant of illegal voting in this city and llroeklyn te an "extent which, they affirm, will In validate the electoral vote for Gen. Gar field and give the state te his eppenen1-, but they will furnish no details at piescut, except te cad attention te some extraor dinary Republican results in particular district In due time, they say, it will all be made apparent. Your correspon dent heard some intimations of this kind at headquarters en the morning after the election, but did net attach sufficient im im peitance te them te give them publicity. The action of the executive committee in announcing through the morn ing journals that in ceitain localities "a vote has been cast largely in excess of the legal vote." and that " the unaccountable increase in the Republican vote in Xew Yerk and Kings enmities is plain evidence of fraud," skewr; that in their judgment, at least, there is something behind theic intimations. What it all means we shall seen see. 3Icanwhile, you will observe the committee " request all "citizens of this state, in eaeii aval every locality, who favor the light of the people te popular government, and who believe a very fair vote and an honest count essential te the perpetuation of our institutions, te aid by al! means in their power the ascertainment of this result." The city Republican jeui. nals de nut affect ignorance as te what this proceeding mean. and they iai.se a warning accordingly. The 'J'i'iliSi'C sas : " Mr. iJarnum will de well te step right where he is. The bu.-incss public aiein no mood te tolerate seditious feeling. Xi human being in New Yerk doubts liiat the statu has honestly and irrevocably gene Republican." The Times, even mere pointedly, rem.irks : "The Republican electors have a maicritv in the statu of at least 2:i,00l, and "in all the Democratic arsenal of trickery aud fraud there i no method by which the Republican party can bj cheated out of the liuits of victory. The Democratic Congress which refuses te count the wlc of Xew Yerk for Garfield and Aithur will inaugurate revolution." lr ejinlfit. Truth, which .seems te be the organ of ;ha Democratic executive com mittee for the time being, declares that " Hancock ia elected,' ami closes with the following highly wrought appeal : " Let us net :mniii submit as we submit led in 187'. This fraud el ISeO is the greatest of all. Xii call en every IX-niecrat in the landtehplp. by voice aud action in the overthrew of this terrible wr..ir, and sei te ifc that General Wiufte'.d S. Hancock is next Juaich seated in the chair te which he has been hene.stlyjjaud rightfully e'ectefl."' .Jehn ht-lry s eveningergan, tiie hvtrc, iias the following, with the closing sen tence in italics : Facts are coming rapid ly te lijiht which go te prove that the Re publican tucccss is due te :. wholesale and corrupt use el money, te a systematic col onization of illegal voters, and te an un scrupulous u?e of machinery for interfer ing with the elections under the p-etense of supervising "them. These thice points demand immediate an.l thorough investi gation. If the Jtepulili'uui ininunjei'it ffttc pcrpelreted vtJcHwtic and erytuiir, frauds en Hie hollet tie.r in this unit ether sin It s. ind the fuels e'lin he proved, ti.cn .mi- t:l;e the eenscpiener of their rt'-t- Outside of paitv lines p:epie haul! knew what te make efall this. They aie ra'her dumbfounded. If there is an thing meie than another upon which Use com munity iiave been congratulating then.. M'kes since Tuesday, it is the fact of our e.-icapc from another contested election, and it is fervently te be hoped new that n-athing will happen te prove that these congratulations were premature. The Republican leaders con template the movement with derision. Gov. McCormick, en being interrogated about it this afternoon, saiil "he censid- is red the In whole matter unweithy of no Wall sheet, it was the subject I tice. ei mere or Jess reman:, our. ti nan no ei-u-it hiiiuenec en thcmaikctr.. STATE ITEMS. Ryan, aged .10, cemmiikd for in Philadelphia, died in her Cat ha: iium.i-:u mill. At the jf In--" ''erniiaidt tickets Philadelphia yctcrd:iy, the scalpers t."k 100 seats at .?'! each for the six nights. The official count elected l.'-mue! Ami-r- Dcinecrat, te the Legislature in the i Scrauteti district, by ( 'Gillespie-. Republican votes .- ver .lean U. David Paul, aged 00 years, employed by the Cram iron company, at Catasamitta, fell into the canal and was drowned. He leaves a wife and thice children"!' Cooper & I'ailey. tin i:g 'dissolved, IJaih'V circus people, hav paid .? 1.1,000 for Cooper's interest ami take;; the whole cir- eu.-. te hurepe. ihe iiaby elephant is growing tee rapidly te Its a curiosity. A colored boy named Harry Steele, aged about fourteen yeair. was instantly killed by a .shifting engine, a .shr.it. ili.star.ee above North stiect. Harri.sburg, .ester day. Ilaiiy I!. Hughes, aged IS yeais, was accidentally killed en tae raihead at. Pitts burgh last Wednesdav evening. Voting v Ilughrs and Luther Rhede, of Reading, had gene te Pittsniirgh leen in the j I'nitcd States army. j Mr. Lewis Thompson, senior member of I the firm of Thompson A' Ce., Philadelphia, and the honorary president of the society of St. Geerge, has died at his i evidence in : ilehnesbiirg, in the sixty-j-cventh year of i his age. A eau in occurred at Si.ba.-.tepwl. near Pittston. Several thousand dollars" weith ' of properly was desteyed and a number of . dwellings have been abandoned by the l fear-su-jeken inhabitants. The earth has j settled fix feet, and mining in the vicinity j has been suspended. 7fr. Heward Poland, a i'.ung artist. , formerly of Philadelphia, has died at his home iu Trenten. Mr. Poland was aheut twouty-ieur yens ei age. and ler some time has! been suffering from consumption, i se that tiie announcement of his death i was rcaiveK a surprine te his friends heic. The watchman at the ciigiiu:-aid of the j Xerlh Pennsylvania raihead depot, at 1 Rcrks and American street, Philadelphia, f"iind a lead man. nnpaientlv a tramp. iing acres.- the sails, just outside the en- gmc-heuse. Reth leg, wcie cut the tl'OUSCiS t.liil te pieCCs. It is efi" and be'icvi d the man went in the yard l sVep dciiaucii ami 'ay upon ine li.i.s. In Eric, Pa'tiek I.ir:e!, employed in the P. & K. yard, was me ever by a .switch engine aiul se he.rib'v mutilated that he di Mr. Fane::, who was in his sixtieth year, was somewhat -lirif : and te this fact, is attributed the herribls fate which be fell him. lie was walking along the track near the shop.-, when the engine ha k.:d . . ., brill of t IIO aCCIllClIt Will ll it was the grating noise upon tnc i. mi un.- ...' ccN mussed ever his legs rrtT.-i- unit unch Republican paper, thti " fl Philadelphia Xerlh American, thus salute-. him: "Mr. Jehn Cessna, chairman of the Kcpnehcan slate committee, who Is-mI about as much te de with the victories of Tuesday as the irrepressible small boy who hovers with shrill "iiorrey" en the cdc of every political mass meeting, has issued a lengthy manifesto, assuring the Repub licans of Pennsylvania that they have his personal congratulations, and reiterating some of the political arguments which have done geed service in the campaign, but for which space is a little tee valuable te permit of repetition after the battle is wen." LATEST "NEWS Wt HAIL. Xine valuable horses owned bv :. X. Walling, of Fairfield, X. J., were suffo cated by smeke occasioned by the lire in Mr. Waiting's barn n Thursday night, which was ext:ngnihed with otherwise slight less. . - At Madisen. Indiana. Geerge Glass wa.t shot dead by Geerge Watsenir Frederic!; Irene!:. Glass hurrahed for Jeff Davis, and m the ensuing altercation he shot atsen in the leg. and it is supnecd that atseu returned the fire, hilling bhn. While a colored man named James Yeung, living in a frame beuse Xe. l:'. Eighth street southeast. Wash ingten. D. C, was at chui-h with his wife the house caught lire at .; Yeung's two children, one seven years and the ether four years of age. whe'wese sleeping in the upper story, were burned te death. The body of a member of the senior cla in Cernell university named He'sey, whe:,c parents reside at. Hridgehampten. X. Y.. has hcen found in a field. Xcar by was :: revolver which he had purchased hi the morning, with which it is surmised h. committed Filicide, lie had been very de spondent for some time and had neglected both sport and study. Xe cause is a. signed for the aef-. Three months age Gi:siae Mulkr. an iron worker at the Uroekficld. X. J., fur nace, was bitten nn the wrist, by a deg which was kept about the furnace. On incMiay evening .wmier complained ' pauis :.i ins at r.i. especially about the V 11 fifl"!" 1.111 f M'-lfftl f17 healed wound. lowed and before m:dhv.i aid con id !: Mimmeued spasms set in. The physician.-, pronounce the symptoms these of hvdm hvdm phebia. At last' accounts Mtsller was" ver violent ami was net expected te recover i.Xtl TALKS, I A. id liit r-i ti!i:e ii" i:wu:i ilca-iiii. i.t Mii .":at. j In an inter". icw with a reporter Hen. V. I !!. English talked lieely about the late j election and it result:. He think-; that ! India:::', held up reasonably we"! consider ji-.igtiie defeat ia October, and that the. ! haw net hail a majeiity hhice IS72, anil then less lean 1.200 for Hendricks for gov ernor. Perse.nally he iVels no chagrin at tlie result. While feeling the houei of a uiiamuu-U" nomination, the vice pic-Mileney, without, influence or pa trenagc, had no ciiarnis for him, and he feeh latliLi Jad that lie is left te a Hfe mere congenial and profitable. The De mocracy with n Democratic Senate, a close Heuse of Representatives and the presi dc-ucy decided by a small majority i: .i .single stale, will net die. The real cause of the Republic:'.:! success was the pre. pereu.s times and hu.-iiic.;s s.itisfaetinn. 'i'he country thought if. wise.tt ' let, wel' enough alone, and Jack el party erg:;ni.:i lien in Xew Yerk, tir: October election in Indiana and some ether thing-; may have had a little weigiff, but the mini thing was the geed times and Jhc disposition te let well enough a'enc. .Mr. Ihiglish i a wailed the corruption in parly p-iliti'-sse different from forty year ; age when he iir I entered politics. LOCAL INTELLIGENCE. s.i.-.iri;:. iv--;a.. 'I Iio trt:it sh t::i;itc:t. On hearing of the sudden death m Samuel Dean. Corener Mi.-hier visited th. family residence iu Strawberry stiect yes terday morning, t' "mipihe into the cir ctimstauccs anil te heiil an hupicst if ncce&sary. Tiie coroner inform:; m I hat the family objected te the holding of an hupiest unless the family physician, Dr. Warren, wcic present ami sir.ctiened it. Dr. Warren was out of town. The core ner then proposed te the family that tliey should name four colored men ami lie would name two white men te.-crveas : In jury, but this preposition war. also rejected by tlie family ( 'oteuei Mishler then tcld them he would give them until 2 o'clock p. in. tu ceusidcrius preposition, and that if it we ic net accepted by that, time he would select :; jury ami held tin; in fpiest, and if Dr. Waiscii did net return, lh: Compten should act as coroner's phy sician. About ' o'clock Corener Misliter again .pp-.-ar-.d :.t the ic-lnenci" of the de ceased and swesc ia the following juror te held the iifpiest. Heniy Leenard, Sauiiu I Powell, ,!..e- lli.-liue, Philip M. bmith, Taj ler Myer. and Ch:r; Martin. The coroner then demanded Mis. Dean and her dauphti r te I e sworn him testify te circumstance; attending Mr. Dean's death, lie sajs they at first refused te testily a, did also Kdw. llarr'.--, wh claimed te knew all abeu:. lie: matter. The eorenei then threatened te ; ive Harris arrested, and under this threat, hi. and the ethei.s testified that Mr. Dean was subject te heart lisca.se and that the circumstances attending his death were s.ilsiant:aily the same as published in .yes tcr.l; -.yV. I.VT'Cf i.igi:.' in. The jury iciideicii a veidict i 'death from di-case of the heait." A rtl:nri;i";tt I-'ec tliai. .nrpi-lscl a .'.ii.iisic.j- Rev. A. S. Lcinb.ich, Reading, received a r.t.te fieni Sinking Springs a few day-, ng", requesting him te be ready te marij a couple at hi.; ie.-:deiice en a certain day The clergyman was waiting en the day ap pointed, but the euple did net appear.aud he uppes'Ml they had changed their minds The next day, however, while he wa-. absent fiem home, and tiie ladies of his household v.eie busied with their domestic duties, the deer-bell wa.s :ung and en the steps f-te.id the couple from the I'eui.tiy. The girl was ipiite young, but the man was censidciabU- eldc. They said the rain had kept them at home en the day appointed, but thej de sired te b:j iiiairicd at e'ice. Tiiej- were invited in and .Mr. I.cinhach wa-i searched ftr at the i isteilicear.d elsewhere without f:icce-s. Anether minister from the country was mctlry the messenger and requested te perform the ccrcinenj-. lie went te Rev. Lciubach'.s house, two ladies of the family were ailed as witness's and the nuptial knot was tied. Alter receiving a hand.-eme marriage ceitiiieate, the couple took their leave, and at the moment of dc pai tore the groom put int the hand of the officiating clergyman something roiled up in white paper. They then depai t:d in sueii :ia?te as te excite :airprie. The package wa:- opera d and ri.IJ .slttr roll of ::tpjr wax removed, until at last the mar liage fee was found an eM-fa.hiiu.-cd cop per half-cent of the date of lr:'2- V7-.iiil!in:: " j !!-;-" The opening institute lecture will be :i the opera, beuse en .Monday e.-.vning iy lien. Gee.'R. Wc-ndling. of Chicago. The subject ticatcd will be Ingcr.-eili-,::! Frem a Secular Standpoint,' and a rc v'ewer commenting e l this production say.-; "This is no commonplace addicss by a commonplace orator. It will satisfy the most exacting of the professional men who may hear it, and cannot fail te help young men in their warfare with the peiiiicieusi popular errors of the day."