LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGENCER SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1880. Lancaster -EntelUgencet. SATURDAY BVENING, DEC. 11, 1880. The New l'erk Democracy. The Democrats of New Yerk city, after having defeated the party in the nation, are finishing up their work by taking the city from Democratic control. If it suits them we de net knew that, we need care te complain. We would be a great deal better off if we had net, during the past five years, given any consideiatien at all te the great Democratic majority in New Yerk city. In view of its maguitude the feeling in the party at large has been that it needed te be conciliated ; and we came sorely te grief in the effort. By some Jehn Kelly is blamed for the Han cock disaster, while ethers attribute the result te Mr. Tilden The Republicans in November were permitted te carry a very heavily increased vote for their electors and te come very nigh te electing their mayor. The Republicans yester day were deliberately given six out of the eleven appointments made by Mayer Coeier of Mr. Tilden s wing of the De mocracy. That the coiibiiiatieu enteiei into by Mayer Cooper and a portion of the Dem ocratic aldermen with their Republican associates, which had this result of put ting the Republican party in power, was altogether base and indefensible will net be denied by any Democrat. The sole object was te defeat Jehn Kelly and Tammany hall ; but te de it a Republi can alliance was accepted and the Re publican party was strengthened. The many Democrats in the nation who have been induced te believe that Tammany hail defeated General Han cock, because they thought that Tam many hall controlled the politics of the Democratic city thai caused the disas ter, will see most excellent reason in these disreputable proceedings te revise their opinion and te believe that the Democratic element new showing in this base alliance with the Republicans, may have been the Judas in November. Certainly they can be in no doubt as te who new is responsible for the weakening of the Democracy and the strengthening of the Republican party of New Yerk city. One of the anti-Tammany uldernit'ii, who was net ready te let his opposition te that or ganization carry him into the arms of the Republicans, and who refused te join the base coalition, thus spoke in the Iteard of aldermen when the dirty work was beimr done. Alderman Ilaughten said : 44 Mi:. Pki:mient : It is new two years since I was elected a member of this beard. I have 'tried te sustain the policy and the nominees of Mayer Cooper. It lias been pretty tough weik sometimes, but T did the bc.-t I could. Cooper seemed te give mere patronage te the Republicans than te the Democratic paity, of which he pro fessed te be a member. While I will re peat that I honestly sustained Mr. Cooper in bin political policy during all this time, and thought him a man of honor and in tegrity, I must say te-day that I cannot entertain that opinion any longer. The nominations we are asked te vote for te day will se intrench the Republicans that there is only one result te be looked for. Yeu will make this a Republican ring city like that el Philadelphia. If it is a victory te-day for my anti-Tammany Democratic colleagues, tliey will find it is net a victory in a sheit while from new. It is all right for the Republican end of the string. Be careful. I charge Mayer Cooper .with ac tually cnlciing into a corrupt bargain, for wc have the evidence here te-day." That places the matter distinctly be fore the Democracy of the country for their judgment, and there can be but one opinion upon it. These who have blamed Kelly must agree with these who have condemned Tilden for the lack of harmony in the Democratic party in New Yerk and the selfishness and treach ery that have cost us all se dear. While It may be safe te say that neither side is blamelesr., the responsibility for the present trouble is plainly fixed, audit rests upon the anti-Tammany Demo crats, if indeed they can be called Dem ocrats. Meanwhile the Republicans enjoy the chestnuts. It is the biggest feast they have had. though they have been very lucky through Democratic dissensions in getting a portion of the city offices every year. They have geed cause for exulta tion ever the successful result of a ceali. thin which profits them much, and costs them nothing. Skxatei: Bayakii, in a speech net long age, said that Senater Conkling, Collector Arthur, District Attorney Neah Davis, .Secretary of the Treasury Beut well, and Jayne, the informer, had been present at the New Yerk custom house when the senior partner of Phelps, Dedge & Ce., who was president of the Chamber of Commerce, a mem ber of the Union League, an exalted church member, and a giver of Sj,0(H te President Grant had been compelled te pay out $270,000 en account of his frauds en the revenue, and that the money had been divided between the assembled inquisitors. Te-dnv Conkling, Boutwell, Davis and Arthur appear with a letter in the Philadelphia and s-ay that iJie statement true. Of eeunw evmene will joint Press is net await Mr. Bayard's answer before 'believing them ; and it is safe te say that his word will net. le outweighed by that of thfi four. Possibly there is some misappre hension as te what Senater Bayard staled: and these people are entitled te the benefit of that supposition for the present. What a stinging rebuke the Rev. Dr. Leenard Woolsey Bacen gives te the un easy spirits agitating life senaterships for ex-presidents and ex-vice presidents ! Hew completely he diews that a man who has been exalted in this free repub lic can, with the serenest dignity, resume a private place in society without any derogation of himself or the office he has held ! What an exemplification of the splendid republican simplicity of our free institutions that no citizen worthy te held high place under them need suffer by honorable retirement therefrem back te the rank of citizen equal te president in all that makes an Ameri can citizen. When any one shall have filled IhtA; hijjii trusts with shame te himself and discredit te his country : when he shall have consorted With pufc lic thieves and shall have been the tool of plunderers ; when his administration was a cess-peel of corruption for such an one the private station maybe a posi tion of unrest. But in the exaltation of such an one anew there is no geed te the government and no honor te the people. Kcglna Dal CIn. The eloquent story of Regina Dal Cin which we print en our first page te-day is as useful as it is interesting. It is true. Leng before she came te this country the fame of this wonderful Italian woman was established in her own hand and throughout the continent. Many Amer icans had visited her and tested her skill with satisfactory results-, and of all the witness borne te her sincerity and al most inspired surgical skill none is mere intelligent and authoritative than that of our own townswoman upon whose recommendation we print the narrative, te the perusal and study of which we in vite every reader's attention. The story of this peasant woman's life and labors, her persecution and triumph, is mere in teresting than any fiction we wet of. She is a marvel of original genius well direct ed, of obstacles overcome and of merit finally recognized and fitly rewarded. But she is most useful in illustrating the perversity of medical science if medi cine is a science in refusing te hear te new discoveries or te need fresh inspira tions unless they come in the " regular"' way. There is a great deal of "pow "pew vow"and humbug in medicine; much of it among their regular practitioners and net a little among the pride of the schools. It takes great vigilance in the profession te keep the public from being victimized by quacks. In their zeal te protect Hieir patients from being dosed and drugged, and butchered in an " irregular" way, the " regulars" may be excused for the exercise of a little countervailing humbug, and their phi lanthropy may sometimes pardon their stupidity. But for a profession that calls itself liberal and which pretends te aim at the relief of men's suffering, its t reat ment of these who have claimed te have new insights' into the healing art has been sinzularlv discreditable te itself and well calculated te make people cred uleus of the quacks and distrustful et the regulars. The story of Regina Dal Cin's persecutions is the story of Jenner and Harvey; and who knows hew much mere valuable discoveries have been hidden by the rebuff which their dis coveries met from the schools. The gre;;te.it charlatanry in any human science is that which assumes te a knowledge of all that is knowable in its branch, and which fails te recognize that a beginning of all knowledge is the ap preciation of hew much there is te learn. Thk editor of the Lancaster Jnquirir is determined te have a clear track for Congress. He recommends Hen. A. Ilerr Smith te Mr. Garfield for secretary of the treasury -and B. F. Eshltman, esq., for the ether cabinet position te which Lancaster county is entitled. MINOR TOPICS. Nine per cent, of the Yale college grad uates during the past ten years have be, come clergymen. At a recent hcatheu festival in India, the offerings te the idol were valued at $1,000,000. Pull up, Christians. Russian translations of Banyan's Pil grim's Progress" aud " Hely War," are te be published shortly, with illustrations of an English edition. In Louisville, Ivy., the Northern and the Southern Presbyteriaus joined en Thanks giving Day, for the first time since the war, in union services, which were pleas ant and edifying. Tiik Baptht Weellff lemaiks with con siderable subtlety that the brethren who have been able te at tend political meetings, gaze at torchlight precessions and de con siderablc shouting besides, cannot consist ently plead the risks of night air as au ex cuse for absence from prayer meetings. Tub first peal of bslU ever hung in Hug land was put up at Croyland Abby A. D." 9C0. Many years age it was estimated that there were 2,262 peals of bells in Eng land. The cathedral of Antwerp, cele brated for its magnificent spire, has a peal of 90 bells en which the most elaborate music is played every half hour. The Episcopalians of St. Leuis clubbed together lately, hired a theatre for a week, paid the manager the salary of the players, selecting, of course, a moral play, stirred up their friends te patronize the play, aud at the close turned ever the profits te the local charity for the sake of which this new departure was made. Tub elder Dr. Hedge, when writing te Dr. Breadmau a letter of thanks for a kind tribute, said': "Every man knows that in his own heart, whatever ethers may say of him, that he is ' a peer shetc.' " Again he writes : "Jeb must have been in a desperate state of inind when he scraped his boils with potsherd, for I cannot touch mine with a feather." Tub church was warm, the minister was dull, and everybody fell asleep except the halfwitted man, Jamie Fleming. "My brethren," shouted the indignant pastei, "you should tike the example of that foei there. He keeps awake." " Ay, ay, minister," shouted Jamie; "but if I hadn't been a feel I would hive been asleep, like the ithers." Brethren, read this and be wise : Min ister (te Rory). " Why weren't you at tlip kirk en Sunday ? " Rory. "I wis at Mr Dunlop's kirk." Minister. "I don't like your running about tae btrange kirks in that way. Net that I object tan ycr hear ing Mr. Dunlop ; but I'm shine e widna like yer shecp straying away into strange pastures." Rory. "I widnacaica gwiir sir, if it was batter grcss." The vacancy in the local Moravian pul pit occasioned some lime since by the res ignation and removal te Bethlehem of Rev. C. B. Skultz, the former pastor, is seen te be filled by Rev. J. Max Hark, pastor of the Second Moravian church of rhilaucipnia, wue is te ue installed in charge of the deck in this city about the first of January. The Meravians of Lan caster have Jeng had a warm side for Mr. Hark, and the success of their efforts te secure his appointment is at this time es pecially gratifying. A call extended a few years age te this able young preacher was for reasons deemed sufficient by the powers that be net confirmed, but the present re newal of the call, has, as the trustees of the congregation have been informed by Bishop de Schweinitz received the sanc tion of the Provincial Elders' conference. Mr. Hark is an accomplished pulpit orator, whose intellectual power combined with his known energy and popular manners will be certain te enure te the benefit of the Moravian congregation here. PERSONAL. Jenny Lind is fifty-nine years old. Lord Beaconsfield was four years in writing " Endymion." Mr. Andrew D. White is visiting Paris. Jereme Bonaparte is about te publish a newspaper under the probable title of " Le Napeleon.'''' Dem Pedre, Emperor of Brazil, has translated a number of Whittier's poems into the Portuguese language. Wendell Phillips celebrated his sixty ninth birthday en Monday, November 29th, The Prince of Wale! recently entered upon his fortieth year. His mother is new iu her sixty-second year and has reigned forty-three years. Mr. P. T. Barnum. the gret showman, is sick in New Yerk, but, though very weak, is net considered in immediate dan ger. A. Bhensen Alcott began te keep a diary when he was twelve years old, aud haskcpt it up ever since. He learned te write by practicing with chalk en his mother's kitchen fleer. Geu. Miles is reported te have said that Sitting Bull is one of the best specimcus of a crafty aud unrelenting savage he has ever met ; a man who is cunning rather than diplomatic. Prof. W. A. M. DiLi.r.u, the well-known organist of New Yerk, a frequent visitor te this city and son of the late Rev. Dr. Diller, who perished en the Seawauhaka. iias died suddenly of apoplexy iu Elniira, whither he removed only two weeks age. Chas. E. Lelanu, of the Delavau Heuse in Albany, N. Y., has been notified that the subscriptions te build the "American Palace Hetel," iu Londen, have been se cured. He will take charge of the hotel when it is completed in 1882. "Mr. Tilden takes great interest in farming at Grcystoue. The faim consists of sixty-seven acres, well situated and cultivated. The barns and stables aic commodious. This fall Mr. Tilden has gathered ever 2,000 bushels of apples from his trees, and has planted eOO pear and peach trees. He has also recetitly pur chased a team of large farm horses iu the West. They weigh fully 2,800 pounds. Mr. Tilden is very enthusiastic about Greystene and its agricultural products. He does net seem te think of anything but his farming. He very seldom reads a paper. Sometimes he does net leek at one for weeks." Se says his young man. STATE ITEM3. The Clarien Democrat is forty yeais old, hut leeks as young and vigorous as ever. Three mcmbeis of a Harrisburg firm have been drawn as jurors te serve at the same week of court. " A Friend of the Newsboys" has coa ts United 82,000 te the Philadelphia News boys' Aid society. Philadelphia can have a double celebra tion in 1882 : the 200th auniversary cf the landing of Penn and the 150th of the birth of Washington. The Norristown hospital commissioners, by leaving 173,000 worth of their work for the state te finish hereafter, have re turned $10,000 te the state treasury. The Democrats of the Sixth senatorial district in Philadelphia have endorsed Dr. S. Clark Frisby, independent colored can didate against A. Wilsen Norris. Mrs. Auna M. McCartney, a daughter of Alderman Rese, of Altoeua. was terribly burned en Thursday by her clothes taking fire at the kitchen stove. A traveling printer, who, for want of employment at his trade, weut te work en a Columbia county farm, came in one day te ask his employee if a hen should be set solid. Officer Victer, of the Seventeenth dis trict, Philadelphia while conducting a prisonecr te the station house fell dead at Twelfth and Bainbridge streets. Heart disease, it is believed, was the cause. Iu 1751, Reading which was then a ham let and had but a couple of huudred in habitants, was known as "Schwabc Shtct tle," en account of the majority of citizens being Swabians or " Schwepes." It then belonged te Philadelphia county. The register of wills admitted te pre bate yesterday in Philadelphia, the con tested will of James Burden, an engineer en the steamboat Jehn A. Warner, who left his estate, amounting te about $40, 000, te Captain Tyler, a friend, and Annie E. Harris, colored, stewardess en the War ner. Rev. J. Feareu Brown, member of the Central Pennsylvania conference, has died in Leck Haven of cancer of the liver, aged 49 years. He entered the ministry in 1859 with Revs. M. L. Smith, of the Martins burg charge. W. A. Heuck, of Leck Haven, and E. J. Gray, president of Dick Dick ineon seminary. All the anthracite coal mining interests have agreed te a suspension of mining the last three days of each week, commencing the 19th instant and continuing through December and January and if necessary February. It is stated that this suspen sion is necessary in order te "stiffen the backbone of the coal market" and get bet ter prices. Mrs. Jennie Witz, the Johnstown woman who eloped with David S. Sweney, a painter, of Huntingdon, and was married in Ilanisburg by an alderman, was releas ed from the Dauphin ceuuty jail yesterday, and left with her husband for Johnstown, en the mail train west, in the afternoon. Her infatuated lever, Sweney. is still inr- jail, aud what disposition will be made of him was net known last evening. Obituary Notes. The widow of Gen. E. V. S. umuer died in Charlottesville, Virginia en Thursday, The wau the mother of two sons in the regular army, and of four daughters, all married te army efflccis. S. Prigg Campbell, stock broker of Richmond, Virginia, and formerly busi ness manager of the Richmond Enquirer, died yesterday, aged 34 years. He was born in Wheeliug, West Virginia, and served during the war in the Confederate army. Oliver F. Winchester, hc:ul of the AVin chester repeating arms company, died yes terday in New Haven, Connecticut, aged 71 years. He was lieutenant coverner of Connecticut in 1800, and was founder of the Winchester conservatory at Yale. A STINGING RE3UKE. Concerning the Dignity or a lletired Pub lic Ofllcer. Leenard Woolsey Bacen, in New Yerk Inde pendent. On the foregoing subject, which has oc cupied the ingenious solicitude of se many eminent contributors te the Independent, it would net bs becoming in me te venture with mere expressions of my own opinion. But, having been personal witness of a very emineut example, exactly bearing en the question under consideration, I am bold te believe that a statement of it may be as well worth pondering as the arguments and opinions even of the most illustrious of your correspondents. The church which it is my privilege te serve iu the gospel has been most sensly bereaved, within a few months, by the death of beloved aud venerated members, and notably by the death of La Fayette S. Fester, who for the twelve most moment eus years of American history was a senator of the United States, and for a part of the time was president of the Senate, and after the death of President Lincoln and the accession of Mr. Jehnsen te tile presidency, succeeded te the chair of vice president. Until the expiration of hi3 senatorial term he fulfilled the duties of this high position with a dignity, a fine courtesy and a commanding ability which I have often heard spoken of by public men, but never spoken of except with ad miration. Tlie greatness of his public ser vices during these memorable years is net at all te be measured by his official station or his public acts. Few men were mere resorted te for private personal counsel by Abraham Lincoln as. one after another, or many at a time, the awful questions of the war emerged than the upright, clear headed, learned senator from Connecticut , aud in the hardly less stormy days of re construction, when great measures were pending, there was no place- where men whose single anxiety was te de the best thing for the whole ceuutry were mere apt te find each ether in private conference than at Senater Fester's apartment. His was a senatorial career te which Connecti cut citizens leek back with a sense of relief and honorable pride from the double shame which of recent years we have been compelled te bear. Frem the second position iu the repub lic Mr.- Fester returned, in the ripe strength of his manhood, te his home iu Norwich and te the absolute level of pri vate citizenship. Ne doubt that which is alleged concerning the retiring presidents is true in this case that his private busi ness had suffered by his twelve years de votion te public affairs. Certainly this was true, that the compensations with which some men manage te balance this drawback were wholly absent m his ease. There had been no salary grab in his time, and, if there had been a whisky ring, that made some senators rich without visible disgrace, he was net in it. He eainc back te his fellow-citizens, as he went from amongst them, with " clean hands and a pure heart," and re sumed practice as a lawyer. Something had been lest, no doubt, by the long disuse of his profession something of fa cility in practice, something of the "run of business." But mero had been gained in solidity of mind, in breadth of charac ter, in a reputation wide as the continent ; se that, if there would have been difficulty in his taking at once just the same place he had left, there was no difficulty at all in his taking a place higher and mere honor able. I de net say and wenld net care te say mere lucrative. These that best knew Mr. Fester aud the needs of the public service grudged that his large aud unselfish wisdom, ripened by an experience se long and exceptional, should be lest te the national councils ; but it did net occur te them certainly it did net te him that there was need of any ether way of getting a desirable man into the Senate besides that of electing him te it. He thought it no dishonor, either te himself or te the station he had filled, te serve as a member of the lower house of the Connecticut Legislature and te accept the spsakcr'n chair of that imposing body. Fer a few years, until retired by law, at the age of seventy, he was judge of the superior court of Connecticut, but retired at once from the bench te the bar, of which he was the ornament and pride. It was iu these later years only that I have known him well. That courtly, but most genial gentleman, the recollections of whose life were a thrilling chapter of unwritten history, the wit and wisdom of whose table-talk gave added charms te his generous hospitality was, in point of civil station, only a diligent and honorable at-terney-at-law. One ether he held. He was teacher of a Bible class in the Sunday school of the Park church. This will, doubtless, seem undignified te some of your correspondents ; but there are few figures in my memory that I recall with mere reverence than that vigorous form, scarcely beginning te droop under the burden of years, and that "geed gray head that all men knew," standing before his class in animated discourse ou a chap ter of the Werd of Ged, or in words of singular grace and reverent beauty load lead ing the prayers of our Thursday evening meeting. I have only one letter of Senater Fester's and I am net sure that it will seem te the public of sufficient importance te trans cribe ; but it is a cherished possession with me. It reads thus : Sunday Noen, Oct. 27th, 1878. Rev. and Dear Sir : I put in my pocket this morning what seemed te me sufficient for my contribu tion te the cause of foreign missions ; but after hearing your sermon I felt ashamed it was se small. I dropped it into thc basket, but a sense of shame at its meagre -ncss haunts me still. It's a feeling I can't harbor, and, by way of relief, I send yen the enclosed. Should it please Ged that the gift be a blessing te ethers, I hope te te be duly grateful. I have the delightful consciousness that it is, at least a blessing te me. With much respect and regard. Your friend and parishioner, L. F. S. Fester. I have been in the habit, these two years that I have been neighbor te Mr.Foster,ef looking upon his diligent, fruitful, and honerablo old age as presenting the very type aud ideal of a worthy close te the career of a great statesman aud public offi cial iu a republic such as ours. I have been glad that such an example should be before the eyes of my sons ; and, when visitors from the Old World have come te see me, I have taken pride iu pointing te the late acting vice-president of the United States, taking the medest place and work en an equality with all the rest of us, as a noble and characteristic exam ple of what is best in American republi canism. I find new, from the reading of letters from your distinguished contributors, that this has been all a mistiko'en my part. I learn, te my surprise, that these later years of my beloved and venerated friend were net " dignified," that two things were lacking which are essential te the dignity "of a man in his position. First that he should be in the habit of draw ing a let of unearned money every year from the pablic treasury se that he could five without honest and useful work ; second, that some expedient should be contrived by which he could get into Congress wi.heut being elected. It is a painful revelation this which your collcge presidents and ether great Dens have mad! te us as te what constitutes dignity. I could wish that they had even left us under our old illusion. Norwich, Conn., Nev. 23th, 1SS0. Henry Williams, his wife and child have died since Sunday en a farm near Bryan. Texas, from eating poisoned beef. Four ethers arc sick from the same cause. THE WALES DISASTER. FOUR MES KKSCUED. They are Taken front the Lewer Pit Their Description or the Disaster, Late iyesterday, at the scene of the Rhondda valley colliery disaster in Wales, the rescuing party began operations Eighty-six men imprisoned in the upper pit are beyond question dead. Four men have been rescued from the lower pit. One of these states that after hearing a deadened report of the explosion at half past one a. m., he and his mate noticed a heavy depression iu the atmosphere. Shortly afterward tens of rubbish fell about them. They kept in stalls, taking all possible precautions. After some hours of anxious suspense they heard the voices of the rescuing party aud were able te convcrse a little with them. They climbed ever the fallen rubbish- te where the cage was and were hauled up unin jured. He himself, however, wa3 par tially insensible. He asserts that there are ether men still alive in the lower pit. Later. The exploring party seen discovered six teen corpse at the Penygraig mine. The search was impeded by after-damp and debris. Seven corpses were brought up within twelve hours after the explosion. One account states the explosion occurred at forty minutes past one o'clock in the morning. The damage was se great that the explorers were notable te descend into the mines for some hours. One shaft was choked. Twenty-two bodies have been re covered se far. and thirty-four mero have been seen in the Penygraig pit. Mining lINusler: In Seuth Wales. Seuth Wales, iu which the Rhondda valley disaster recorded above occurred, is getting a fatal pre-eminence in colliery disasters. Scarcely two years ' have elapsed since the terrible explosion at Abercarne, in which 3G5 out of the C87 people m the mine were killed. This dis aster, one of the most terrible en record, occurred en September 11, 1878, at Abercarne, near Newport, in Monmeuthshire. The scene 8f this explosion, however, was sonic distance te the cast of the Rhondda valley. The explosion in the same vicinity referred te iu the despatches occurred en January 13, 1879, at the Dinas colliery, near Penty pridd, in Glamerganshire, and 58 lives were lest. A much mero serious disaster than cither' occurred in the same vicinity ou July 15, 185G, when 114 lives were lest by an explosion iu the Cymmer colliery. The inquest iu that case showed that the plainest precautions had 'been dis regarded, for a lighted candle had been placed before a heading which was sup posed te be dangerous, for the purpose of testing the extent of the danger. Am even mere fatal accident than this was the explosion at Fcrndalc, Seuth Wales, November 8, 1SC7, when 1G7 out of men and boys perished ; and en June en 170 10, 1869, the same pit blew up, killing 60 out of 120 workers. The Rhondda valley, where three disastrous explosions havenew occurred, is densely populated, and the excitemeut en these occasions is terrible te witness. TilEWGATUEU- 111 I3ect en Land and Sea. Great freshets, causing serious damage are reported in British Columbia. They were followed an inccssaut rainfall of forty hours, and carried off all the snow and ice from the river valleys. The body of James Macen,aged 59 years, was found frozen stiff in the weeds, near Fremley, New Jersey, yesterday morning. Au area of high pressure moved down from theerth te the lower Lake region during Thursday night bringing with it very cold weather. The temperature of Parry bound, Ontario, yesterday morning was 2d degrees below zero. At iJiuiingten, Vermont, the temperature was 2 degrees below zero. At Davenport, Iowa, it was 1 degree above zero. At LaCressc, Wis consin, and Iudianopelis, Indiana, it was at zero The temperature generally rose throughout the Northwest, though net high enough te get anywhere near the freezing point. The cold wave descended the valley of the Hudsen last night, the temperature falling te zero at Poughkecp Peughkecp sic. At Leng Branch, New Jersey, the temperature was below zero bfere suurisc yesterday. The Shrewsbury and ether rivers are closed by ice six inches thick. After four days' blockade by snow, a train left Tracy, Minn., for the East en Wednesday evening with three hundred and eighty passengers. At hall past two o'clock en Thursday morning, near New Uliu, the axle tender broke, and all but one of the cars were thrown from the track and upset in the snow. Several of the ears were wrecked aud a baggage car was par tially destroyed by fire. Nine of the pas sengers were seriously injured, but all suffered greatly from the cold, the temper ature being 20 degrees below zero. They were transferred te New Uhn as seen as possible. It is feared that the schooner Mara, of Machias, Maine, has been lest. Nothing has been heard of her since the 22d of No vember, when she left Portsmouth, New Hampshire, for Cape Ann. The steam ship Ontario, at Portland, Maine, reports that, en the 8th hist., she passed a bark, waterlogged and abandoned, with the name, as near as could be made out, of "Ella. On the 9th, seventj'-twe miles west of Cape Sable, she passed au un known vessel, apparently a schooner of 200 tens, bottom upwards. 'J !:.5 barken tine Christabel, at St. Jehns. Newfound laud, from Leghorn, lest e:.j man over board, and had another seriously injured, in a hurricane en the night of October 22d. The British bark Nuneaton, with a cargo of deal?, was wrecked in St. Geerge's Bay, Newfoundland, en t'.ie 22d ult., and it is believed all hands weie drowned ex cept the mate. LATESr NEWS BY MAIL. Car tain Timethy Desey, a noted Fenian leader, has died iu Lawrence, .Mass., of rheumatism of the heart r The grand jury at Grecnsburg, Ind., has indicted the superintendent of education of Decatur county, all the township ap praisers of the county, except two, and several county officers for exacting fees net allowed by law. A tow of five canal beats, bound for Havre de Grace and the Susquehanna, canal, met heavy ice at the mouth of the Sassafras river, Chesapeake bay, and three of the beats, the Sallic, Constance and Sephia, and Pennsylvania canal company Ne. 201 were cut through and sunk. While Jeseph Skullien, a stage hand at the Fifth Avenue theatre, New Yerk, was imitating lightning flashes by throwing small hand fnls et" magnesium upon a spirit flame, a boxful of the powder ex ploded tearing away three fingers of his riirht hand and Incemtincr his hand in a frightful manner. The explosion was no ticed only by a few persons in the theatre and did net cause any excitement or inter ruption of the play. A Tcrrilile laic. Mary E. Hollingsworth, a young girl who five months age was turned from Tier home in White Mills, Pa., and who was found in a bagnio in New Yerk, told a ter lible story in court. She alleges that she had been taken by a man called French Liswis te the house of Annie Hauritz alias Harrison, who paid him five dollersTor her. She had been kept a prisoner in this house for five months. Annie Hauritz wa arrested en a warrant issued by Justice Bixby aud committed te await the action of the grand jury. The girl is in the house of detention as a witness. LOCAL INTELLIGENCE. STfcRN UERG-FBITCH-1VILHEM J. The Great Trie at Fulton Opera Beat Last Evening. Manager Mishlers ceuntenance were a somewhat rueful expression as he steed at the deer of Fulton opera house last evening and detached the coupons from the tickets of the slowly-arriving people as they passed iu. Our citizens in general and professed levers of music in particu lar have, during the present season, been strangely delinquent in their patronage of the first-class entertainments of this char acter, and te attribute the scant atten dance at the Sterubcrg-Fritch-Wilhemj concert last evening te any ether cause than a manifest wautef appreciation upon the part of the people would be directly in the face of au almost similar experience only two weeks back, when that gifted organization, the Mendelssohn Quintet were called upon te face the same trying ordeal of a "beggarly array of empty benches." The audience last even ing was a slight improvement upon the lat ter occasion, however. The parquet-circle was mero than half filled, a few living forms redeemed the desolation of the par quet, and a score or two of people were in the gallery. The first number en the pregramme was Liszt's Cencertstueck by Ceustantin Stern berg, the young Russian pianist, which was in every detail a magnificent perform ance. 31. Sternberg's method of execu tion is at ence brilliant and accurate. He combines with a perfect mastery of the technique of his instrument, the secret of diffusing through his work a spirit which carries the sense of the auditor along with it aud excites the most profound ad miration. The manifold beauties of this intricate work of the great composer were developed iu all their detail, and the per former retired amid a burst of apprecia tive applause. Miss Fritch, who came next en the pregramme, achieved au in stantaneeus success. I lie selection was Balfe's pretty composition, "Sweetheait," and Miss Flitch's rendition of the song aroused au enthusiastic storm of favor that was net surpassed when subsequently the great violinist himself appeared. The lady has a soprano voice that combines with its bell-like sweetness and purity, a volume of power and width of range that at ence convey the impression of unsounded pos sibilities, bhe renders the high notes without effort and in perfect tunc, while her gradual descent te the lower register does net show a flaw in the tex ture. 3Iiss Fritch joins te these virtues a clear enunciation of the words and sings with marked spirit and animation. The audience refused te be satisfied with her simple bow of acknowledgment, and Miss Fritch accommodated the imperative de mand for " mere " by a geed-humored sailor ballad that enhanced the effect et her previous performance. The appearance of Wilhclmi was the signal for a burst of admiration which subsided with the first touch of his magic bow. The theme was 3re:ide!sshn's Second Concerto the andante aud finale and during its execu tion the audiencj sat in mute rapture. Wilhelmj's playing is a revelation. There is a marvelous beauty in every tone produced by his bow, and the poetry of sweet sound could hnu no higher ldcauza tien than in the performances ei this wen derail musician. Grasping the composer's conception he reproduces it with au accur acy born of the confidence he feels in the possibilities et las art. 1 here is a strength aud dash in the touch of his bow which de net conceal the perfect finish of every note. Hcrr Wilhclmj's second performance was Ferd Laub's Pelenaise de Concert, and in this composition no less than in the former did the artist make ins power felt; and when the audience insist ed en again hearing him, he played "Down upon the Suwance River" in a manner that was wonderfully sympathetic and marked by a genuine feeling that by some strange influence at once communi cated itself te the audience. 31. Stern berg's second performance comprised a fugue in G. miner by Rheinberger; a gavotte his own composition, Nightin gale (Russian song) transcribed Liszt ; and an impromptu by Rheinberger (The Hunt), all of which were marked by the same artistic beauty that distinguished his previous work. 31. Sternberg ac knowledged the hearty encore tendered him by a renewed performance. 3Iiss Fritch's rendition of "The Carnival of Ve- nice,"with variations, was a great treat and strengthened her in the geed graces of the audience, and the last number en the pro pre gramme was au "Ave 3Iaria" (Bach Gounod) in which 3Iiss Fritch, Ilerr Wil hclmi and M. Sternberg united their efforts and which constituted a fitting climax te such a grand entertainment. The accompaniments by 3Ir. 3Iax Vegrich were in keeping with the general character of the concert. Klcctiens at tlic College. At elections held this morning by the literary societies of Franklin and 3Iar shall college, the following gentlemen were elected as speakers for the coining anniversaries : The Diagnethian society selected for their orators : Salutatorian, R. P. Cobb, Lancaster, Pa. ; Annivcrsarian, F. E. Buchcr, Sunbury, Pa. ; Eulogist, W. J. Jehnsen, Lancaster, Pa. ; Orators, Lewis Rcitcr, Kittanning, Pa. ; A. P. Shirk, Lan caster, Pa.; 11. S. Bemberger, Booncs Beoncs Boencs boro, 31(1. ; O. R. Snyder, Dclment, Pa. The Gecthcans filled their pregramme with the following speakers: Gecthcan Orator, C. B. Heller, Danville, Pa. ; Peet, W. E. Hey, 3Iifilinsburg, Pa. ; First Ora tor, W. II. Bridenbaugh, 3Iartinsbnrg, Pa. ; Eulogist, A. D. Elliet, Yerk, Pa. ; Second Orator, E. L. Kemp, Berlin, Pa. ; Third Orator, 31erris Rebcr, Reading, Pa. ; Salutatorian, W. H. Ranch, Harris burg, Pa. Marietta News. The townspceplo are waiting te see what happens next te a three-year-old child of Edward Stahl, who swallowed a shawl piu three inches long with a glass head. Recently Mr. Isaiah .Miller had a large carriage cover stolen, and en Tuesday evening the houses of Messrs. William Child and Tebiars Stchmau were entered and 25 yards of carpet stolen from the former and about 10 yards from the latter house. The carpet was removed from the floors in both houses, and in the former a stove was lifted te get it. Dr. Henry S. Trout, the same evening, lest a strip of three yards of ingrain carpet which was used en his perch during the summer. The goods were found at the house of Samuel Day.a guiltless and guileless color ed man, where they had been left by Clara smith, a young colored girl who has skip ped the town. The Annual Stall Count. The annual count of mail matter, eiigi- nating at the postelnce, in this city, for the first seven days in December, 1880, is as fellows : Ne. letters in plain envelopes f(,2U7 Ne. letters in special request, stamped en veloped printed by 1. U.D 1,017 Ne.Iettcrs in ordinary stamped envelopes 'J)V Me. letters -with request or business cards net printed by I. O. D -M" Ne. of etlicial letters SOS Ne. of postal cards 4,10 Ne. ei newspapers te .subscribers 40,91'j Ne. of magizines and peredical.s te. sub scriber: 'J.5SJ Ne. et packages ei transient printed mat- Ne. of pieces of ineiclnindi-,e 2SI Total Ne. of pieces 72.231 Increase ever the first seven days in No vember 1S79 (when it was taken last year) of 21,192 pieces, divided as follews: Let tcrs 1,700 ; newspapers and pcredicals 18, 348 ; transient printed matter 1,084. COURT PROCEEDINGS. SKVTEXCE OP 1.EWW SOWERS FOB Ml'KUEK. He Gets 10 Ifeani for Killing Chriitlaa Her ney. Allen Ceble Sentenced Other Baaln Transacted. Court met at 10 o'clock this morning for the purpose of passing sentences and hearing current business. Immediately after the opening of court District Attorney Eshleman asked that sentenced be pronounced upon Lewis Sewers, who killed Christian Hershey at 3Ieunt Jey en June 26, 1879, and Who plead euilty te voluntary manslaughter. J. Hay Brown, esq., counsel for the prisoner, asked that be allowed te make a statement in regard te hew the affair oc curred. This was allowed by the court. The prisoner stated that en the day of the killing he had been te the brewery, where, he had several drinks ; en his way home he stepped iu at Brandt's mill, where some men were engaged putting in come boilers ; a heavy boiler was hanging op and a number of men were working under it ; while he was there Hersh ey came in ; he was drunk and wanted te take held of the lever; the prisoner was afraid that he would kill the men who were uuder the boiler and caught held of Hershey and pulled him around ; he fell out of the deer, and striking his head en the railroad track, received fatal injuries. He went te work the next morn ing, net thinking that Hershey was seri ously hurt. He was seen afterwards ar rested. The prisoner stated that after he was released upon bail he wcntte3Irs. Hershey and apologized te her ; he also offered te pay all the funeral expenses ; he told her lie would de all he could for her during his life ; 3Irs. Hershey afterwards told him that the Greffs were net agreed te this. The prisoner denied the truth of the state ment of the witness named Swords, who who swore that he had threatened te kill Hershey. After the statement of Sewers the court proceeded te pronounce the sentence. The court stated that they had heard the case under a writ of habeas corpus, after which they admitted him te bail, as they were satisfied that that no case of murder in the first degrce could be made, as no weapon was shown te have been used nor was there any premeditation apparent. The prisoner plead guilty te voluntary man slaughter at this court, and that plea was accepted. The term of imprisonment fixed by law for that and murder in the second degree, for the first offense, is the same. A number of witnesses were called te en lighten the court ; when the pica was en tered, the evidence was a little stronger than at the hearing. The court thought that this was a very heartless act, sefarfas the testimony in regard te the prisoner's conduct, before and after its com mission, showed. It showed . that he had intended te hurt Hershey. After deliberation and consideration the court thought that the sentence should be pretty severe. They, therefore, sen tenced the prisoner te pay a fine of 9100, with costs of prosecution, and te undergo au imprisonment in the Eastern peniten tiary for the period often years. The prisoner was given into the charge of the sheriff, and was taken te the prison. He will be removed thence te the peniten iary. Sentence et Ceble. Allen Ceble, of Elizabcthtewn, the young man who plead guilty te five charges of larceny from dillcrent parties, was sentenced te undergo au imprison ment of 9 months and 25 days, Opinions Delivered. An opinion iu the following case was delivered by Judge Livingston, Antheny Wade's, deceased, estate. Rule te show cause why the decree of confirmation of the guardian should net be opened, re viewed", reversed and set aside. Rule made absolute. The account was report ed back te the examiner te be reversed and restated, and te file a supplementary account. Judge Patterson delivered the following opinions : Jehn D. Wilsen deceased's estate. Rule te show cause why attachment should net issue against the executer for payment te the guardian of Rachel J. Wilsen of money due her under the will of the de ceased. Rule made absolute. Watsen planing mill company vs. James 15. aud Rebecca Hendersen. Rule te show cause why amendment te mechanics lien should net lie struck oil. Rule dis charged. KuItH fur New Trlul.1. Rules for new trials were granted in the following cases in common pleas court : Henry Weiss vs. Philip Bernard, Themas D. Kelly vs. Jas. Trimble & Ce., Eliza beth Brown, administratrix of Daniel Brown, dee'd, vs. Levi Scnsenig. In the case of C. C. Schnader, who was convicted of selling liquor te miners, at this week's court, the rule for a new trial was refused. Granted ,a License. Samuel Landers, of this city, was granted a peddler's license. Eatuis llense License Cirauted. An eating house license was granted te Frank Brua, of Strasburg. This case has been before the court since April and has been argued by both sides several time?. n;eztx 1VATEK vivtn Treublewlth Hydrants and Surrlcen Jtlalns Sonic Keinedics Suggested. Frem all parts of the city come com plaints of frozen and bursting hydrants and supply mains, and the festive.plumber and the city water official have their hands full, while net a few water-renters have their cellars full of water. Last night Superintendent Kitch and a number of his men were en duty all night closing up the leaks, and te day they arc still at it, while every plumber iu town is ever-run with orders. Following arc a few of the leaks reported. II. E. Slaymakcr, Duke aud Chestnut, service pipe burst, and cellar flooded ; Al. Fulmar's saloon, Centre Square, ditto; Alderman Spurrier's hydrant frozen ; Capt. Phil. Sprccher's ditto ; Jehn Brown. West King street, service pipe broken; Chas. Knapp's hydrant burst ; C. Hitler's, Plum street, ditto ; 3Ir. Cress, West King, near 3Iary, service pipe burst ; 3Ir. Hos Hes tctter, West Chestnut street, ditto. The reason given for nearly all these bursts is "bail plumbing." and the suffer eis want te knew whether there is no effectual preventive of the annually re curring annoyances from broken pipes. Probably all, or nearly all, of them could he avoided if the service pipes were of better quality, laid somewhat deeper in the ground se as te avoid the frost, and a little mere care taken by the plumber in making the joints and ether attach ments. Pipes above the ground should be enclosed iu wooden boxes and packed with saw-dust or cork shav ings, or better still with asbestos. Out-deer hydrants should be covered with straw or old carpet. A paper " toot" made out of old newspapers, and large enough te cover the entire hydrant and reach te the ground, will prevent a hy drant from freezing even when the mer cury is at zero. This is a preventive with in the reach of all. Seme people prevent their hydrants freezing by permitting them te run a little during very cold weather. This may de where the hydrant wastes into a sewer, but should never .be done where there is a surface drainage as it tends te clog the gutters ; besides it is n violation of law te allow the water te waste. Complaint is made that the school chil dren sometimes allow the hydrants at the public schools te flew for au hour or mere