LANCASTER DAlY jNTKLUGEKCER THUBSDAT, MARCH 24 1881 ?Uncastet intelligencer. THDB8DAT EVEN'O. lfABCH 24, 1881. AerrABS Leaders. The Republican leaders are in a very nervous state. There is trouble for them all around. The discordant elements of the party are in accord for the present under jtbe cohesive power of the public plunder, but,as it is distributed,the noble army of soreheads will be sure te wail, and swear like that in Flanders. And the party is net in a position te stand much of a racket within its lines. It needs all the strength of its united forces te withstand the aggressive enemy outside, who has it new very much at a disadvantage. An administration which starts out fearing te call Congress together for the very necessary purpose of substituting three per cent bends for the five and six per cents that are pay able, is evidently net in very strong fight ing trim. It is a confession of fear and necessarily therefore of weakness. Mr. Blaine believes in boldly meeting the issue and forcing the fighting. His less sagacious colleagues would postpone the day of peril, as weak men always incline te de. In the Senate, Senater Voorhees has made a motion te smoke out the reluct ant patriots who want te distribute the officer, as of the party holding power, but who de net want te declare their policy, which it is equally the duty of the party in power te communicate te the ceuutry. Mr. "Voorhees offered a resolution declaring that the hostile at titude assumed by the national banks te the refunding of the national debt at a lower rate of interest, and their recent attempt te dictate the legislation of Congress, are contrary te the best inter ests of the people and calculated te ex cite their alarm for the future. That resolution should have been acceptable te the Republican senators as giving them an opportunity te express their dis approbation of the conduct of the nation al banks In the refunding matter. That eenduct has been se generally reprehend ed that it seems very unwise in Republi can senators te hesitate te express their condemnation of it ; especially as the Republican paity has been charged with being the thick and thin advocate of the national banks, te whose material aid in the elect ion it was indebted for success. But Mr. Voorhees's resolution was net welcome te the Republican side, which sought te drive it off by raising the point of order that nothing was in order at an executive session but the distribution of the offices. Senater Sherman was tee wise te take such un tenable ground, but he trusted that "the geed judgment of the senator from In diana would conclude that it was net advisible te open a discussion se bread as this resolution would give rise te. If se geed-by te any shortening of the session." The "geed judgment "of the senator from Indiana has put the Republican senators in a difficulty from which their geed judgment did net suffice te relieve them. Tiie opposition which they have snewn te the resolution is pregnant of meaning. The declaration that it would give rise te a long discussion and a long fififtu ion suews t,iat l,iev de nefc affrae te the sen Mment of lll resolution and pro pose te e)OSC, il ;viUl all their might. They have dilesedJ"st what we want te knew andharcI),ac,edtheirlartyin position, net only ? defenders of the national banks, but eveu as defenders Of their " hostile altitude te the re funding of the national debt t a lower rate of interest," whicli is all that senator Voorhees' resolution condemned, except " their recent at tempt te dictate the legislation of Con gress." As there is no question th.'it they did attempt such dictation te defeat the refunding scheme, it is clear that the Republican senators in resisting the adoption of a resolution declaring such conduct te be " contrary te the best in terests of the people and calculated te excite their alarm for the future," have assumed the responsibility of defending the action of the national banks which has been se generally condemned by the people. We wish them a safe deliverance hi their undertaking. It seems a suicidal one, but it is their affair. They weuM have been wiser te let the resolution pass, acknowledging the error of their pet banks, admitting the necessity of providing against its future occurrence, while protesting that the national bank system properly guarded was valuable te the country. It may be that it is. We confess that after the recent experience we cannot see that it is. It seems te have failed just in the point where its value te the country was believed te ex ist. The Philadelphia Telegraph, while admitting the wrong done the ceuutry by the banks in their recent action, and the necessity for legislation te correct it, still pretests its belief in the value of the system. We should be glad te hear from it upon what its faith rests. Such legislation as is needful te deprive the banks of the power te de the evil they have done can hardly be had but by cutting off their heads. Majer Jenx M. Pomekey, of the Chambersburg Repository, who was in the Pennsylvania Heuse of Representa tives in 1846-7, the only one of its pres ent members who was there then, has been telling his readers and the public generally about what was then and is net new, and of what, is new and was net then. We suspect, however, that our genial friend of the press and state Assembly forgets te tell a great deal that he might te make the contrast mere vivid. Occasionally newhe finds himself in the company and helping the plans of the roosters, se that possibly it would net be safe for him te venture farther than the mild statement that the " char acter and qualifications of the members were, upon the whole, better then than they are new." a m Mn. James Cellins, of the beard of j ceuntv auditors, sensible te the fact that ! as a member of the beard he is held in j a degree responsible by the-public for its j shortcomings and inefficiency, desires it te t understood that he has earnestly sought te prevent the trifling and delay Tvhjch have characterized the present session and which will bring whatever report results from it into discredit. He declares that unless his colleagues con duct themselves and their office better he will appeal te the court for a remedy or resign, as he has tee much reputation at stake te let it be supposed that he would be a party te such a circus as has been running at the court house simply te prolong the session for which the auditors get a per diem allowance. The curious fact is elsewhere fully ex plained that the state of Alabama, which would be entitled te eight members of Congress in an apportionment based en a total representation of 299 members would be reduced te seven en the in creased apportionment of 300 members. It is notable that the representation of Arkansas, Colerado, Connecticut, Dela ware, New Jersey, Nevada, Oregon, and Rhede Island must remain the same as new, whether the total membership of the Heuse be fixed at 293, 325 or at any figure between these two. On the ether hand, Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont must decrease their representa tion, even if the total number be in creased te as many as 325 ; while Ar kansas, California, Iowa,' Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, Seuth Carolina, Texas and West Vir ginia will increase their number of rep resentatives, even if there be no increase in the total number. MINOR TOPICS. "Mahone's PAnTT" endorses him, of course. They are of a kind. Bicycling gains in favor in New Eeg land, and at a coming parade in Bosten common ever six hundred machines will be in line. TnE revised Bible is premised in Slay or June at ten cents per copy. Toe cheap te become fashionable, the Philadelphia Evening Wews thinks. iHE urapnic contains a spirited car toon of Blaine, who with uplifted right arm and clenched fist, the ether embracing a large hog, proclaims a spirited foreign policy en the perk question, together with his letter tfe Noyes, our minister te Fiance. The West Chester Daily Republican plunges into the question of the speaker ship of the next Heuse, and begs that, for consistency's sake, its party will net elect such a free trader as Kassen. But when was its party consistent ? Gas Trustees McMaxes and Smith, of Philadelphia, swear that they knew of no irregularities in the management of the gas trust. "That's what's the matter." Blind and deaf men aits net the sort for these positions. The Philadelphia Evening Telegraph is very suspicious that the nominations for New Yerk offices te please Conkling in volves a trade by which Stanley Matthews' nomination is te be confirmed. It leeks that way. It is noted as a curious fact that of the 1,377,404 shares of Pennsylvania railroad stock held, there weie 924,058 shares net voted at the late election. The 452, 74G shares represented are the largest number, with but one exception, ever voted iu the history of the company. The Pittsburgh Times is evidently un acquainted with the Honorable Jeseph Souder, or it would net devote a half column editorial te proving that he is a brutal ignoramus who should net have been elected four times te the Legislature from Philadelphia. He's the kind of a representative Philadelphia delights te honor. Ag.vixst Mahone's rebel brigadier for sergeant at-arms of the Senate, the Dem ocrats propose te nominate a Uuien officer ; and new mention Gen. Averill and will support him. A prominent Democratic i.vmater says that some of the members have prepared speeches en the subject and wish" te see whether the Republicans will vote a gainst a brilliant Union soldier and in fave of an ox-Cenfedcrato. TnE word "rotgut" is net an Ameri canism, but was used by Addison a hun dred years before the American drink se called was put upon the market in certain parts of this republic. In England the word was applied te bad beer or wine, but iu this country it is used te point out a kind of whisky, one drop of which would poison a healthy stomach if fired at it from the distance of 730 yards, Dolly Delly mount laws te govern. The delay in the appointment of a mar shal for the District of Columbia, te suc ceed Fred Douglass, is costing the United States government nearly $1,000 a day. The court is unable te proceed with the trial of causes en the calendar. The mem bers of the jury report every morning and are'discharged, as process issues in the name of the marshal and his commission having expired there is no authority te summon witnesses. The court also meets and adjourns for the same reason. PERSONAL.. Mlle. Sara Bernhardt, her sister and the'principal members of her troupe have taken passage in the steamship of the French line which sails from New Yerk en May 4. Senater David Datis is reported te have recently written te friends in Bloom Bleom Bloem ington, 111., that he will serve out his term in the Senate, which ends in 1883, and then return te Bloomington. The French minister and Mme. Out- ret will spend the coming 6ummcr in Europe, traveling for the benefit of her health. They expect te retnrnte Wash, ingten, which will greatly please all of their acquaintances. Victer Huge caught cold a few weeks age and his physicians seized the occasion te examine him -thoroughly. The man of medicine was surprised at the result " I found," he said, " the frame of a man of 45 years." Mr. Alma Tadema gave a brilliant little masked ball -a short time age at which Mr. Julian Hawthorne was one of the most conspicuous figures. He appeared as Lord Beacensficld in an admirably ar- ranged model mask and whig. Mr. Victer Arthur Wellington j Droimexd, who has eeen ler some time secretary of the British legation in Wash ington, will go te England for the sum mer, and will probably be appointed full minister te some government after his va cation. In the suit of Genevieve Ward, against Theodere Mess and Lester Wal lack, te restrain them from producing the play of " Ferget Me Net " at Wallack's theatre, the court grants a permanent in junction against the production of the play by Wallack and Mess. And new Hen. Stanley Matthews is announced as being at the head of a Cin cinnati society for the promotion of civil service reform. This is the same Stanley Matthews, we suppose, by whose manage ment the men who ceuuted the electoral votes of Louisiana and Flerida for Hayes were appointed, despite their infamous characters, te some of the best offices under the government. Pittiburgh Lead er, Sep. Mr. Beecheii has sold hit house at 124 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, te Mr. Ludevic Bennett. The beuse overlooks the bay and has a yard in the rear which overlooks the reef of some Furman street factories. Beecher has lived in the house for many years. The house was mort gaged some years age for $10,000 and sub sequently for $5,000, the last-named sum being raised for the benefit of Theodere Tilton when the scandal which afterwards came te light was being smothered. Jehn T. Crew, managing editor of the Baltimore Sun, died very suddenly last evening of apoplexy, in the sixtieth year of his age. Mr. Crew was in his office in the afternoon attending te bis editorial duties, but complaining of general indisl position. A little after 5 o'clock, as he was about leaving the office for dinner, he was stricken with apoplexy and became speechless. He was a native of Maryland, bad been connected with the Sun since 1848, and managing editor since 1865. In his personal and editorial life he was rec ognized in the community as a gentleman guided by a keen sense of honor and jus tice. ISL'RNKD IN A THEATRE. The Operrt Heuse at Nice Destroyed and jnnny Laves Lese A fire iu the Italian opera house, Nice, broke out at the commencement of the opera last evening. Fourteen persons, who were suffocated, have been taken out and their bodies placed in the church op posite the theatre. It is feared that a hundred men and women perished in the flames. Nice is a seaport town of France, sit uated en a narrow plain between the Alps and the Mediterranean. It was ceded with Savey te France by Italy, bv the treaty of March 24, 1860. It is chiefly noted as a watering place and, resort for English invalids, who frequent it in large numbers, as many as 5,000 or 6,000 Brit ish visitors being found there in the win ter, besides many Russians, Poles, Ger mans and Americans. It is quite prob able that many of these visitors were vic tims of the fire in the opera house. The little opera house was built mainly by the clubs of the winter watering place. It was opened by the French company of the "Italiens" of Paris in 1897, but was only devoted te opera at intervals, as the gaming and social festivities of Nice de net encourage evening exhibitions of a dramatic or operatic sort. The building, which was difficult of access and badly provided with ingress and egress, offered from the first an inviting scope for the dis aster which has befallen it, particularly as the fire department of France is ludicrous ly incompetent te deal with a conflagra tion mere extensive than a hen-coop or barn. As, however, all building is rigorously confined te stone, brick or as phalt, fires are rare ; but when they de get uudcr way there is no stepping them. The opera house was a cheap affair and the destruction of life is probably due te the flimsy and inflammable nature of the interior decorations. THE MISSING REPORTER. He Turns Up With an Explanation and a Curious Story. Henry J. Roberts, the marine reporter for the New Yerk associated press, who had -been reported as missing from City Island, at the eastern entrance of Hell Gate has called at the Sun office. He says that while the Piletage bill new in the Senate is pending he does net want it known where he is. He left City Island hurriedly two weeks age last Thursday, with only the suit of clothes he had en, because the inhabitants are se thoroughly in sympa thy with the pilots that he was net likely te find protection there. He avers that en the Saturday in February after he had given testimony before the Assembly com mittee, which was obnoxious te the pilots, he found fifteen pilots awaiting his arrival at City Island. One of them, he says, had a rope te hang him with ; another ad vocated the application te him of a coat of tar and feathers. Fists were shaken under bis nose and threats were uttered te make him leave the island. On the follow ing day a stone thrown by unknown hand broke his stiff Derby hat. He found his beat stove in and a note in disguised writing pinned te it warning him that- if he did net leek out he would get hurt worse than the beat. He h?A received abuse and annoyance ever since he had re turned from Albany. This continued until the Thursday after his beat was damaged, when he concluded that, as the time approached for the bill which had passed the Assembly te come up in the Senate, it was no longer safe for him te stay en the island. You've Get Me." The burglar, Pat Ebert, arrived in Rella, Me., about a month age from Kansas, ostensibly looking for a location te open a saloon. Taking up his lodging in a board beard ing house near the national bank of Rella, his suspicious conduct attracted the atten tion of the officers of the bank, who called te their aid Hank Dcvin, the city marshal. Upen investigation it was discovered that the burglar had gained access te a vacant building adjoining the bank and for three nights bad been unmolested in his desper ate effort te tunnel te the vault. On the fourth night, just as he bad made an en trance te the vault, Marshal - Devin and his posse, at a signal given by the cashier, who was secreted in the banks surrounded the building and attempted bis capture alive, but Ebert, who preferred death te arrest, with a dagger in his hand made a desperate effort te escape and was shot down in his tracks. He lived one hour after being shot, but would reveal nothing. The only words he uttered were : ' You've get me, boy." A Brave Family. Charles Fester's-house, three miles from Lexington. 111., burned, and Mr. and Mrs. Fester were turned out in the severest storm of this terrible winter. They pro tected themselves seven hours with bed clothing until daylight before finding shelter. They were just coming down with small-pox and would net subject their neighbors te the danger of the scourge, breasting the storm with great heroism till the reached the hense of Gee. Kemp, some eight miles away, in a lum ber wagon, Mr. Kemp's family being already down witn smaii-pex, and be being Fester's father-in-law as well. Eliza Freim's will has been admitted te probate in Philadelphia. The estate is worth $100,000,nnd the heirs are contesting the will, THIS ALUIABU PARADOX. Hew a State's Representation ta Reanced by an Increase et Members in the Hense. Among the tables and statistics submit ted te Congress by Supt. of Census Walker, in connection with the census of 1881 and its bearing en the congressional reapportionment, appeared the curious fact that en a basis of 299 members Ala bama would be entitled te one mere mem ber than en a basis of three hundred. In explanation of this paradox the superin tendent of census says : In increasing the number of representa tives, as shown in the table sent you, the number of inhabitants required te a repre sentative is diminished at each such in crease or members by between live and six hundred. New, iu dividing by the number se reduced, the population of a state having a comparatively small popu lation, the influence upon its unrepre sented fraction is very much less necessar ily, than in the case of a state having a large population. Thus, for example, if we assumed for ceuvenience that the num ber of inhabitants required for a represen tative were 160,000, a state having 4,801, 000 inhabitants would receive thirty repre sentatives, with an unrepresented fraction of 1,000 ; while a state having a popula tion of 161.000 inhabitants would receive one representative, with au equal unrepre sented fraction. If, however, the number of inhabitants te a representative were reduced te 159, 000. the fraction of the first Mate would rise te 31,000, while that of the second Btate would be only increased te 2,000. In ether words, the effect upon the unrepre sented fraction would be thirty times as great in the former as in the latter case. New, in the instances especially referred te, it happens that, with 299 representa tives, three states have fractions very closely approaching each ether, namely, Alabama with 106,983, Illinois with 106, 681, and Texas with 106,530. The num ber of inhabitants te a representative en this basis is 165,116. When the number of representatives is increased te 300, the number of inhabitants required te repre sentative sinks te 164,565, the net reduc tion being 551. This, which I may call a gain for the present purpose, te the states cepcerned, has te be multiplied in the case of Alabama only by 7 (the num ber of representatives assigned that state en an even division), while iu the case of Texas it is multiplied by 9, and iu the case of Illinqis by no less than 18. The result is that, when we come te take 300 as the number of representa tives, the unrepresented fractions of each of these states must of course increase, but that of Alabama increases least of all. 106,982 plus (7 x 551)110,839 106.530 plus (6. x 551)111,489 106,681 plus (18x 551)116,599 Alabama's fraction become 110,839, while that of Illinois becomes 116,599, and that of Texas 111.489. Consequently, iu the assignment of ad ditional representatives upon fractions, according te the total number of 300, Illi nois and Texas receive an additional representative each, while Alabama loses that which she gained at 299. At 301, however, 6he regains what was thus lest, her fraction rising te 114,668, which is sufficient te entitle her te the representa tive, whose addition te the previous number makes the Heuse ceusist of 301, instead of 300 members. ? GOLDEN ROLLS. What Can be Seen In a Pittsburgh Factory. Pittsburgh Pest. There are mauy people in Pittsburgh as well as in ether cities throughout the country who imagine that if they should by accident cat oleomargarine instead of butter they would die at once as though they had partaken of an equal quantity of prussic acid or arsenic. This feeling like any ether general prejudice is based mere upon tradition and custom than upon any real objection. It is true that some of the manufactured butter is very injurious, but that is no reason why all kinds of the article should be condemned. Nothing would se surely and se rapidly remove this feeling as a visit te the oleomargarine fac tory en Water street, near Ferry. The writer had just as much prejudice against elemargarine in general as anyone before he made a tour through the Pittsburgh factory a few days age. The idea that butter could be made of fat originated with a French scientist. He had been deputed by the government te devise .some sort of bread that would be better than the hard-tack that was then in use. The scientist succeeded admirably, and then' the government desired him te get up something te spread en his bread which would be cheaper than butter. He made experiments, but it was net utitil the siege of Paris that he devoted himself entirely te the work. Then he dis covered in the fat of a "fresh" cow the true butter globule He extracted it and churned it, and found it made butt er. Cows were scarce, but bullocks were plenty. This led him te make further ex periments and he found that bullocks' fat made even better butter than that of cows. His butter was tasteless and te re move this fault he ground up cow's ren nets and mixed them through his butter thus giving it the taste of pepsic acid that is needed. Since that time some Ameri cans have made this sort of butter entire ly from fat, but the manager of the present manufactory in this city has made some important changes in the process. In his factory the butter is made of sixty per cent, of Alderney milk and forty per cent, of oleomargarine. The milk used costs much mere than that ordinarily used in butter factories that use milk alone, and it makes one's mouth water as one leeks at its delicious yellow richness. The com pany which manufactures this butter is composed of a number of the butchers of the two cities and the managers of the works. Nearly all of the large butchers in the cities are interested in the enterprise, and they reserve the finest of the cattle fat that they handle, for the factory. The fat is very clean and pure and is carefully and repeatedly washed and cleaned before it is used. The process of boiling the fat and extracting the butter oil or oleomargarine has already been described in exlense and we will net repeat it. Standing beside the men who were mak ing the butter up into cute little rolls and inviting patters the writer called te mind a visit made once te an " Orange county " creamery the butter which he saw there was no finer te leek at than that which was made in the Pittsburgh factory. Along the Hudsen river at Milten, at Tarrytown, and at dozens of small towns in Dutchess county, New Yerk, there are famous butter makers from whose churns comes "Dutchess county gilt edged butter" which sells te Delmbnice and ethers all the year round at a dollar a pound. We have tried this butter at the places where it is made. We can recall the visions of het biscuit covered with it. The butter of the Pitts burgh factory has the same taste and the same leek as that of the New Yerk farm era, As a proof of its excellence we can say that it sells in the New Yerk market (the finest grades of course) at sixty and seventy cents a pound. Many families in the city have thought of late that their butter was better than usual. Perhaps if the beads of families were consulted, they could a tale unfold 61 oleomargarine. Manager Abbey says the receipts of the Bernhardt entertainment at Titusville were mere than $1,500 smaller than at any ether performance given by her since she came te this country. . STATE ITEMS. The Philadelphia & Darby railroad is te be sold by the sheriff, en April 3. As car 34, of the Thirteenth and Fif teenth street railway, was passing down Thirteenth street, near Buttonwood, in a dark part of the thoroughfare, last night, Jeseph Reizer, 57 years eldj residing at New Market and Laurel streets, attempted te run across the street iu front of the horses. He fell and was killed. Gee. Williams and Jehn Roberts, two young men claiming te hail from New Yerk, were committed te prison in default of bail charged with stealing the team of Dr. William Corsen from in front of his office in Norristown last Friday evening. They were arrested iu Trenten while in the act of selling the stolen team. They arc net implicated iu the Clugsteu murder at Valley Ferge. Sarah Gerraley, 13 years old, residing at Nineteenth aud Dickinsen streets. Phila delphia, died yesterday at the Pennsylva nia hospital from the effects of either a blew or a fall. When the girl was first ad mitted te the hospital, en March 10, she said the wound had been inflicted by her father several days before,but subsequent ly she retracted this aud said it was from a fall upon the ice. At Nelsen Station, Mercer co., the ether day, a middle-aged man get off a train and rau te the weeds near by. He was watched aud was seen te strip himself of every stitch of clothing and dash madly through the weeds, several men pursued the stranger and when they had at last found him he was dying. Briers had tern his flesh ami rocks bruised his body. His name could net be learned, nor is there any clue te lib former home. n m m LATEST NEWS BY MAIL. A bomb with a lighted fuse attached was placed outside the Royal theatre, Madrid, but it was discovered by the po lice before it could explode. The police have discovered a secret store of 1,600 rifles outside the barriers of the city and are investigating the matter. Cornelius Vanderblt and Augustus Schell, trustees for the bondholders of the Teledo & Canada Southern & Detroit rail road, have begun suit for the foreclosure of a mortgage of 81,500,000 en the ground that the interest has net been paid since July, 1873. The court has also been asked te appoint a temporary receiver. Jehn Rawlings, otherwise known as "Stokley's Infant," went te Washington te get en the Capitel police force. After some difficulty he gained au audience with Senater Cameren and l:rid his case before him. He was afterwards asked what luck. " Ob, he told me te come around again iu four or live mouths. New what kind of a way is that te treat a fellow coming way down here'?" He was se disgusted he left for Philadelphia the same day. LOCAL INTELLIGENCE. UMIbUTS TEMPLAR. The Lancaster Cemmaudcry Going te serunlen. ine annual meeting et the grand com cem mandery of Knights Templar of Pennsyl vania, which is te be held in bcranteu, commencing May 31, will be the most brilliant and greatest Masonic event that has ever occurred in that portion of the state, reparations, under the manage ment of Mr. James Ruthveu, arc already in progress. The following cemmauderies, according te the Republican, that will participate, have already reported aud have been as signed quarters : St. Al ban's cemmaudcry, 60 inen. St Jehn's cemniandery, 75 men. Philadelphia cemniandery, 125 men. Corinthian Chasseurs, 75 men, mounted, with baud. These cemmauderies are irem Philadelphia, aud will step at the Wyom ing heu.se. Kensington cemmaudcry, of Philadel phia, 100 men, with band. Taucred cemniandery, 100 men, will be quartered at the Valley house. Lancaster cemmaudcry, GO men and band, Scrauten house. Allcntewn cemmaudcry, 00 men, St. Charles. Norristown cemniandery, 40 men, Lu zerne house. Reading cenunamlery, 50 men, Hcer mans house, Hyde Park. Easteu cemniandery, Van Hern's and Susquehanna house. On Juune 1 will occur the dress parade, and en the 2d the street parade, which, in addition te the cemmauderies mentioned, will be participated in byCeeur de Lien of Scrauten and the cemmauderies from AVilkesbarre, Pittston. Carbendalc and Great Bend. The battalion band, Bauer's band aud Bristel band have been encaged, while ether visiting cemmauderies will undoubt edly he accompanied by bands. Among the distinguished Masens who arc ex pected arc Governer Heyr, ex-Governer Hartranft and General Latta. This event is looked forward te by the Masonic fraternity with high anticipations and no doubt they will fully realize in the grandeur and magnitude of the affair their most sauguinc expectations. Certainly nothing en the part of the members of Ceenr (le Lien will be neglected in making it a grand success and worthy the great organization they represent. WHAT UbCA.UK OF HIM? A Pr,rbable Mystery Kxnlalned. llarrisburg Telegraph. On Friday evening a colored man ar rived from Chambersburg ever the Cum berland Valley read in charge of a car lead of horses, bound for Philadelphia. The car was taken through last night, the colored man accompanying it. This morning intelligence was received in llar risburg that somewhere between Cellins' s station aud Lancaster the colored drover disappeared from the train, and up te neon all search had failed te find him. The affair has a very mysteriens leek. Reicring te the above the Chambersburg Repository says : "The colored man refer red te above is Armstead Lee, of this place, who left en Friday morning with a drove of horses belonging te Mr. Wilsen. Armstead was wanted here te answer a charge of larceny and he was arrested at Middletown where he had been work ing. He came en and settled the case, after which he wished te return te Middletown and go te work, but did net have the money te purchase a ticket. He hired te Mr. Wilsen te go with the horses, but told some persons at the National hotel stable that he was go ing te jump off the train at Middletown. This he has undoubtedly done and if search was made there wc think he would be found." Suspended Operations. Jehn Grant, who has the contract fee removing the earth for widening the read bed of the Pennsylvania railroad at Ard Ard merc, has been obliged te suspend opera tions en account of quicksand, which ex tends -for a distance of at least 1,000 feet, into which jir. tyrant tells us, he ran an iron bar twelve feet down, sumc work again as seen as settles. ue win re the ground The Unlit Lamps. There were fifteen of the street gas lamps unlit last night; in the First, Second, Fourth wards each one ; in the Sixth ward two ; and in the Ninth ward ten. The Mayer's Court. His honor had only four customers this morning, one of whom was discharged and the ethers for disorderly ennduct were committed for 5 al 10 days respectively. " OUVRTTE.' TM Hew vaatfe Operm Law Nlgat. An audience of goodly numbers was present at Fulton opera house last evening te witness the production of Audran's new comic opera of "Olivette" by Ferd's company. The work is an adaptation from the French "Les Nectes d'Olwette," by MM. Cbivet and Duvir. The libretto is light but funny, aud the humor characteristically Frencby. It is of a purer and mere conventional school than Ofienbachian burlesque, and may be fairly claimed te be within the de main of legitimate cemit opera. The story is one of intrigue se far as the plot gees, and the humor hinges in large measure upon the duality of Captain De Jferimae, commanding the man-of-war Cormorant, whose dutiful nephew, Valentine, is obliged te resort te the strategy of disguis ing himself as his respected avuncular relative in order te gain the object of his desire, which is te marry Olivette, whose graces had likewise captivated the ''sad sea deg" himself. The outcome of this doubling-up business consists of the cus tomary odd blunders, misapprehension?, cress purposes, etc., leading up te some very funny situations. Audran's music is light and frolicsome, aud many of the airs possess the ear-catching characteristics that are likely te give them an extended popularity. The company that sang the work was one of the best Mr. Ferd has ever brought here, which is saying a geed deal, for te that gentleman our city ewes the privitege of many of its most delightful treats in the line of comic opera. Miss Blanche Chapman in the title role gave a capital impersonation of the heroine, entering with her customary enthusiasm into the spirit of fun that ani mates the composition. She is a sprightly little actress, and her voice shows no symptoms of losing the qualities that have made it se popular with patrons of comic opera. She sang all her numbers with no table expression, and her rendition of the "Seb Seng " evinced a keen appreciation of the humor of the deception she was practicing upon her venerable parent; while half a dozen of her ether soles are worthy of special commendation. Her voice is a pleasing soprano, of considerable flexi bility, of geed range,and of hearty volume. Miss Amy Gorden, a new face here, sang the part of the Countess Bathilde in a thor oughly artistic manuer. Her voice, a highly cultivated soprano, is especially strong in the upper register, and the lady's occasional dashes into the legcr lines pro duced tones of bell-like purity and sweet ness. Seme of the heartiest applause of the evening rewarded her efforts, and the duet in the second act by the Countess and Olivette was one of the best rendered numbers of the opera. Miss Gorden's first appearance before a Lancaster audience has provided her with a passport that is certain te secure her a cordial welcome should she ever again visit us. A word of praise is due the singing and acting of Miss May Stembler, the young lady furnishing a very attractive and piquant rendition of the part of Veleutine and singing a sole or two in capital, style. As De Merimae, the choleric old sea captain, Mr. Goe W. Denham was satisfactory, as he always is ; he brought out the humor of the part and sang his numbers in a manner that evoked the approbation of the audience. The tenor, Mr. Lang, acted and sang the part of Valentine, his uncle's nephew and double, very artistically ; his imitation of the old mariner, iu appearance, gait and action, being notably clever. Mr. Chas. H. Drew's perform ance of the role of the Due des Jfs, plot ter and intriguer in chief, was (altogether admirable, and the remaining characters were filled creditably. Most of the chorus effects were excellent, among them being the "Marriage Bells," the." Whale and Torpedo," and half a score of ethers that might be properly mentioned The orches tra was painfully dehciont,cemprising as it did only a piano and two violins. Under the circumstances the singers are entitled te an even greater meed of praise for the creditable manner in which they acquitted themselves with se many of the instru mental parts conspicuously absent ; but Mr. Ferd will de but justice te the singers, te Audran's pretty music, and te the pub lie, by filling up his orchestra at once. The scenic effects 'were handsome, as wcre also the costumes, the latter in the final act affording the opportunity of a liberal display of shapely limbs, in the spe etaele of a score or mere of pretty and well proportioned young ladies attired in striped jerseys and flesh-colored tights. Tobacco Sales. Frederick Lechler, of Lancaster town ship, has sold four acres of tobacco te Jehn A. Heman, for 20, 8, 3 ; Christ B. Brubaker, sold 8 acres te same for 16, 6 and 3 : Philip Heuser, of New Providence, S acres te same for 15, 5, 3 ; Jehn Herr, of same place, te same, 1 acre for 14, 5, 3 ; Geerge H. Wcttig, of same place, 1 acre for 14, 5 3 ; Samuel Baxter, 4 acres 14, 6, 3 ; Albert Flick, Lancaster, acres for 14, 5. 3 ; Antheny Ireman, Lancaster, 1 acre, 8$, 8 ; F. SchIett,Lancastcr,l acre, 10 and 3. Mount Jey Star. Jehn M. Stauffer, of Saluuga, last week purchased the following tobacco in East Denegal : Levi N. Hestctter, let at 20 cents through ; Jonas . Hestettcr, 3i acres at 13 cents through ; Jen M. Keener 2 acres, farmed en land of Jonas . Hes tctter, at 9 cents rennd ; Ames-Winters, 1 aero farmed en land of Jonas . Hos Hes tetter, at 7 .cents through. The fellow ing sales nave been made in Mount Jey township ; Samuel Greff sold 1 acre at 14, 6 and 3 ; Martin Peck, 1 acre at 14 and 3, and another let at 11 aud 3 ; Jacob Risser, 1 acres at 5 and 2 ; Jehn Gipple. 1 acre at 10 and 3 ; Jehn Lindcmuth, 2J acres at 8 through ; Henry Meckley, 1 acre at 7 through, 1 at 8 through and 1 at 11 through ; Daniel Reth, 1 aero at 0 through ; Jeseph Barnhart, 1 acre at 12 and 3. Martin Hess of Elizabcthtewn, sold 2,140 pounds te "Greve &. Cellins, of Marietta, at 16, 5 and 3 ; Jehn Shields, of East Denegal, is quite a successful te bacce farmer, en Saturday he delivered his crop te Samuel Moere, receiving 28, 10 and 5. He has always succeeded in receiving big prices in the past. Among ether sales he sold te Shirk, of Lancaster, at one time his crop for 26 cents around ; te Jeseph Leatherman, at 28, 10 and 5 te Gcrshel at 22 around ; te Fatman at 30, 16 and 5. Eli Wegcmutb, of Elizabethtown, raised en two acres of land 4.625 pounds, sold it at 11 cents around te Greve & Cellins, of Marietta. Going te Maryland. West Chester Lecal News. Henry E. Slump, who has been engaged for the last three years in clearing off about 95 acres of woodland, near North brook, will leave in a few days for Mary laud, where he will work en a weed-leave recently purchased by him from the Ever Ever bartsef this borough. Mr. Shimp has ordered a thirty herse power engine for the purpose of running the saw mill. The tract he has purchased contains about 300 acres very heavily timbered. Mr. Shimp has rented the flour and feed mill en the premises he new occupies, in focepson, which will be turned ever en the first of April te his successor, who hails from Reading. Mr. Geerge Lebs, who has had charge of this mill, has net yet decided whether he will remain or net. During Mr Slump's business career, iu this county, he has acquired an enviable reputation as a business man of strict in tegrity, and will carry with him the best wishes of that community. His family will remove te Lancaster county, where he recently purchased property. William Sharpless of West Greve, will move te Lancaster county, en or about the 1st of April. "HONEST" JOHN STKOHM. Sketch of an Ez-Censremaii lreui Lancas ter County. W. 17. Ilenscl in Ferney's Progress. Jehn Streluu wen his sobriquet wheu it was net the cheap trick of the demagogue te wear it, nor the offering of the parasite te bestow it The people who knew him gave him the appellation they who were bis neighbe:s, his constituents, and who upheld the ladder en the rungs of which he steadily mounted from one public trust te another. He never shamed them, nor any place te which they called him. His advancement te the representation of this great county in the nation's highest popular representative body wr.s gradual ami merited, and it was without that self-seeking element which is the bane of our later day political promotion. He was measured by the Jeffersonian tests of capacity aud honesty and he met them. His retirement was as houeniblu as had been his promotion, aud if lis service as a rural justice of the peace for nearly a quarter of a century has net been as dis tinguished as his position of congressman contemporary with Lincoln, Douglas, Webster, Clay, Calhoun, Winthrop aud Jeffersen Davis he has brought te that office a faithfulness and honesty which might be a pattern for modern legislators and a standard for all officials. The township of Lane-aster county which is honored with the name of llebert Ful ton, who was born within its limits, has been cut off from Little Britain.aud it was in this part of the ceuuty that Jehn Streluu was born, en October 16, 1793. His grand father ame ftem Wurtcuiberg, and died en the voyage, leaving his widow and two small boys ami a daughter te settle in Strasbuig. this ceuuty. One of these boys, when he grew te manhood, married the daughter of Rev. Jehn lierr, of the Mcunouite church, aud the aunt of that Jehn lierr who became founder of tbe New Mennonites. The parties te this union were the parents of Jehn Strohm. In the original settlement et Lancaster county, the Scotch-Irish mostly took the southern pair, lying below the Mine hills. They saw in its lightly weeded area easy clearings, and a soil that could be worked with facility. The mere prudent and far sighted Germans knew that the soil which neurisheil heavy timber was the land for geed crops and would require less enrich ment. The Germans took the limestoue lands, which hud in themselves these ele ments of fertilization that the "lower ender.-," had te Mipply, iirst by quarrying ami haul.n.; limestone from Quarry ville te their farms aud thciu burn ing it, and aftervraids by hauling the lime itself bunted at Quairy ville. This village, new the termiiuis of the Reading railroad system in this section, lies ju-t at the feet of the Mine R-.dge en the south ; it marks the lowest drift of the limestone, aud is the head of that valley which, further east, broadens into the Chester Valley, and was the route through which ran a branch of the Underground Railway in ante helium days made netable by the event of "the Christiana riot." Jehn Stroh m's lather bought " Weed's Mill," near Peach liottem (new Fulton township), aud removed thither from Strasburg. lie. was one of the first Ger mans te settle se far down, lie sold it and removed back te the neighborhood in which Jehn Strohm new resides, when the subject of this sketch was twelve years old. Since their vast changes have taken place in both sections of Lancaster county, and their distinctive differences are grad ually becoming obliterated. But they were for many years notable, and it remains te-day very percept ible, thai; two widely different and strong ly marked elements of citizenship occupied different sections of this country .'and grew up side by side, improving aud developing with little manifestation of assimilation for many years. The family names, the social custom.-, the agricultural methods, and the religions of the two great divisions of this count v for many years marked their native differences. Even iu the lower end there were sharply deiincd lines drawn between the Scotch Irish Picsbytcrians and the Quakeis; while the upper cud Germans weie divided between the aggres sive Lutherans aud Reformed, who during the Revolution weie patriots, and peace loving sects, whose uuwarlikc dis position made as Royalists lutieu, and after its close. them te be regarded during the Reve- pcrecuutcd as Gradually these Teries differ- enecs have become less luaiked. Strongly distinguished types of them still remain, but intermarriages, ititcrcommcrce and the alienation of lauds, have softened down the old antagonism?. The- tendency is for the Germans te move southward, and these who go new, go tettay. The in creasing population of the towns, with which the county is new an thickly set, is mixed and mixing. Thery was no Uennau seh el, of course, nor any school in which German was taught in the extrcire lower ctd of the county when Jehn Strohm was a lad, and se his father, desirous that he should knew the language of his ancestors, in 1800 sent him te Quarryvillc, te beard with his uncle Witiner, and go te a German school in that neighborhood. The school houses weiu built by the neighbors then, and the teacher " bearded around." Jehn Strohm att uded school until he was six teen years of a 41;, latterly only going iu winter, and agisting his father en the farm in summer. He beganteaehing, when nineteen years of age, at the old 31 1. Helly school-house, a mile northeast of Quar ryvillc, and had thirty or forty scholars. Later, he taught school in Lampeter, aud iu 1821 went te fanning in thaC vicinity. His intelligence, uprightness of character, and active participation iu ail matters of public concern, made him a man of mark, and he was chosen te the Legislature 011 the Anti-3Taseuic ticket in 1S31. He went te Harrisburg en the first Tuesday of De cember and after one term of service was twice re-elected. Nowadays, when ilaseury, in all its later phages, flourishes se extensively in this community, and secret .lecicties many of them imitators of the Masens arc se strong here that the totality of their membership almost outnumbers the adult male population, it is haid te rcaiize that the wave of :inti-3Iascnij excitement ever reached the high-water mark in Lancaster county which the veracious local chronicler assigns te it. The declining Federalists eagerly embraced the prevailing popular fanaticism te revive their collapsed party. The rural population of this county, se largely composed of credulous German sects, was admirably calculated te be readily enlisted in behalf of the prescriptivo policy of the opposition, lheephilu:; renns sprightly paper and bleed-curdling lecturers fanned the papular feeling into almost a frenzy, ledges were closed, aud mem bers eveu disowned the order. The flood soeu spent its force, aud although anti Masonry reached the dignity of a state triumph in Ritucr's election as governor, it failed te become an effective principle in national politics. Jehn Strohm was net essentially an exponent of its doctrine nor a leader of the party which espoused it. His mind was net of that intense radical type which titled the leaders of such a crusade. Hut the rural population, which. as I h.iw suggested, was easily inclined te the doctrine, recognized him as a rep resentative citizen of integrity aud intelli gence, and the accidents of politics placed him en the anti-Masonic ticket. He in curred the least possible enmity from the ether side, without betraying the princi ples of his friends, or forfeiting their eon fidence. His taste for public affairs and hw effi cient service iu public position were great ly stimulated by the early aptitude which he had displayed and gratiiicd for acquir- IlHrrli'3 Biographical History, pp. r.l, i't