t '! I LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGENCER THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 188. ilancastcc titelltgencec. THURSDAY EVEN'O. MAEOH 31, 1881. Tfie Puppet Shew. Mr. Garfield's pleasant notion of mak ing things harmonious in his party by dealing out the offices te the partisans of all its factions does net seem te be work ing well. It is an old idea, which presi dents are very iipt te try their hands at and get their lingers burned for their pains. In fact, presidents who have a discordant party te harmonize are pretty sure te find themselves - unequal te the job however they go about it; like anything red het, it Is very uncomfortable te handle. Seme men, when they get into positions of power, try te increase the number of their partisans by bribing their enemies ; that was Mr. Buchanan's weakness. It never paid well. Others pick out the colorless fence men for re ward, in the Hayes style ; and that didn't pay. Mr. Garfield selects the champions of all the factions and gets all the savagest of the beasts into his company. We de net see that this is going te be a success. They won't lie down together in peace, nor consider that the bones have been fairly divided. Mr. Conkling and his friends have about made up their minds that what has been thrown te them te keep them quiet is net enough ; and Mr. Garfield finds himself in the arms of Blaine before his admin istratien is a month old. The New Yerk Herald furnishes "him with a kitchen cabinet, composed of four of his old cronies, and makes Blaine's word the law te him, through them. The sketch is vigorously drawn and it is net difficult te believe that it is pretty true te life. Garfield is naturally peculiarly susceptible te such influences as are ascribed te mm. Being very social in disposition, leth te offend, lacking in pesitiveness of con viction and independence of judg ment, these who are near him and con genial te him will sway him. He is the man for a kitchen cabinet. If it is equal te the occasion, it may make its jack jump in a way te excite the admiration of his party and confound his fees. Ne abler mover of the puppets than Blaine eeuld be found. But the dangi r with him all the time will be that he will move them for Blaine and net for Gar field. But why the latter should put such confidence in his secretary of state as te yield him the guidance of his administra tion can only be explained by the weak ness of Garfield's character, which makes it necessary for him te have a strong man te leau upon, even though it be one who will be most likely te with draw his support in a critical moment and let his victim fall into the mud. .Mr. Garfield certainly is net made of the vigorous stuff needed for a president of such a discordant party as the Republi can new is, te save it for himself. The chances are that it is past saving, and it is just sure that he is. lie is net of the stuff that the world's rulers are made of ; and the only service he can de his party is ns Blaine's catspaw. That is his role ; and lie is dropping into it as naturally as a duck takes te water. He car.net help himself: he was born se. Tun financial indications for the ap proaching day of general settlements and real estate transfers in Lancaster county, betoken an easy condition of the money market. Gradually first-class real estate securities throughout this com munity have been reduced te a five per cent, rate of interest, and in many cases, no doubt, geed leans are made at four. In the banks there is abundance of money and parties holding well secured mortgages or judgments are very loath te transfer them or te accept payment even if they have te submit te reduced interest. Although the tobacco crop was delayed in moving, the sales have baen very extensive of late and at geed prices, and growers de net seem te have been pinched or distressed'te find a mar ket and money. Te the cultivation of this staple and the remarkable remuner ation of their labors, our farmers ewe a great deal of their prosperity in the past ten years. While many of them have been greatly relieved financially from this source of income, the aggregate value of real estate and permanent taxable property in the county has been in creased by the application of this rev enue te improvements in farm lands and buildings. SeiiEBODT in the Independent , discuss ing the tobacco problem, pleads elo quently against its culture, partly en the ground that it is a " besom of de struction" which renders the lauds sub ject te it "eyesores, odious barrens, looking as though blasted -by some ge nius of evil." The impression here con veyed is a very general one, enforced by the experience of Virginia and Maryland tobacco farmers, whose neglectful sys tem and net the mere raising of tobacco thus desolated their lands. Here in Lan caster county, where wiser modes prevail and farmers prudently restore the sejJ, tobacco culture has net by any means depressed the lands, and the best contin centin ing farms in this section are these whereon tobacco has been most exten sively and continuously raised. The peculiarities of the Russian so cialists are that they are largely drawn from the higher ranks of life and the ed ucated classes; that they avow their pur poses with .singular frankness and even proclaim their identity, with an almost fanatical zeal for martyrdom ; and the freqency with which women appear as leaders in the cause of social and peliti cal anarchy,. It must be peculiar .social i conditions that give rise te these singu larities, and is likely that the recent events transpiring in that county will make it the focus of an intelligent in vestigation which the Russian character and modes have net yet received. We can understand the appllca tien of tiie knock-down argument i by Representative Kneass te Sen-' ater Geerge Handy Smith. Enpass has a suave manner while Smith is coarse and brutal in his address, and his as sault en Kneass in the Republican cau cus a month age well merited emphatic resentment long before it was repeated. The Harrisburg newspapers denounce Palmer's opinion with a. zeal that enti tles them te the thanks of the bearding beuses. The Independent, we note, however, serves the people of the state in its editorial columns and the Harris burg shopkeepers in its local. The story about the Beer leader com ing from Fayette county, this state, "is a geed story, but it has been se lately that it was told about King Cetewaye, that it is a little " tee fresh." MINOB TOPICS. The Heuse of Representatives of 3Ias- sachusetts has defeated, by a vote of 122 te 76, the bill te give municipal suffrage te women. Ox its death bed, the Cerry Daily Prett exclaimed: "Yeu might as well fry te drive a railroad spike tfith a tack ham mer, as te run a nenparicl newspaper in a smali pica town." R. S. Mexamix's Printers' Circular opens its sixteenth year with pardonable pride in the fifteen volumes that are closed, of a useful and exceptionally bright class journal. The leaders of Russian society in Paris have decided upon observing three months deep mourning, during which they will see no company. The ladies are te wear coarse black stuff dresses with very long square trains and long thick veils. Mb. Wiiartex Barker's American, a weekly Philadelphia publication of Inde pendent Republican proclivities, rounds out its sixth month with premise of per manency which its high character as a political, literary and scientific review amply justifies. TnE Clearfield Republicen notes that ex. Governer Hart ran ft has drawn $4,000 out of the United States treasury as postmas ter of Philadelphia, and Auditor General Bedell's report shows that he drew $2,000 out efvthe state treasury as major general of the National Guard of Pennsylvania offices that are incompatible during the s.iine year. Refund ! Mr. Mapes's bill te prohibit rebates and drawbacks in railroad tariffs, and in fact te regulate the whole railroad ques tion, which is commonly known as the " Anti-discrimination bill," yesterday passed a second reading in the Heuse at Harrirburg. The btll has been drawn te serve the purposes of the oil-producing in terest, which has a quancl of many years' standing with the railroad companies te settle. PERSONAL. Kit Carsex, jr., is icpefted te have died at Chattanooga, Tenn., en the 8th in stant, of small-pox. Gov. Celqtitt, of Georgia, pardoned nearly 50 convicts upeu the occasion of his late visit for personal inspection te the prisons of the state. Rev. Dr. J. E. Evax3 and wife, of Reme, Ga., celebrated their golden wedding ou the22d inst. The bride's" dress was. silk, the buttons being geld dollars Lord Beacessfield is se wcil advauccd in years that serious results naturally may be expected from his .subjection te scvcie simultaneous attacks of asthma and gout. Ex-Senater Pomerev, of Kansas, is at present in North Carolina, managing a geld mine with success. He has also in vented a machine for extracting geld from quartz rock. Picsident Garfield has received a tele gram from General Lew Wallace declin ing the appointment as Charge d' Affaires at Paraguay and Uruguay. The president will in a few days send another name te Senate. Senater Brewx, of Georgia, is a man of blonde complexion and thin and positive face. He is erect aud dignified ; white hair fringes his head, and a white curtain of beard hangs from his chin in a straight and precise fashion. His voice is clear and his enunciation distinct. Jeseph Abrams, an old member of the Philadelphia bar, died yesterday. Mr. Abrams was born in Montgomery county. Ha studied for the ministry and occupied the pulpit of a Presbyterian church for about one year when his health failed him. He then began the study of law in the office of Rebert Aruudle, was admit ted te the bar in 18S9, and enjoyed a large civil practice until about four or five years age, when his failing health obliged him te give up all practice. SENATORIAL. FISTICUFFS. A Knock-Down Argument Between Repre sentative Knetu and Senater Smith. Harrisburg Dispatch te the Timet. Senater Geerge Handy Smith and Rep resentative Christian Kueassget into a se rious difficulty at the Lochiel house about 2 o'clock yesterday morning and finally came te blows with disastrous results te the senator. The quarrel grew out of a difficulty between the two men at the time of the withdrawal of Oliver from the sena fight and the substitution of G.-n. Beaver. Kueass questioned the methods taken te force Beaver en the Republicans as a candidate for senator and Senater Smith denounced him as "a marplot" in the face of the regular caucus in the state library. Kneaastoek no notice of the offensive tiunt of Smith at that time pre ferring that the matter should drop where it was. Last night the two met in the room of a friend, and in the presence of a number of the acquaintances of the sena tor. Smith again offensively alluded te Kneass's attitude toward the stalwart ele ment of the Republican party. Kneass declined te have his conduct criticised by the senator, and resented the interference se emphatically that Smith became en raged and struck at him. Kneass struck back and a short but decisive fight en sued, in which the senator was se sever!y punished that he has net been able te leave his room since. Kacass was in his scat in the Heuse as usual. Mr. Kneass visited Senater Smith in his room yesterday and peace is restored. The Iowa Fasting UirL Miss (lattie Ducll was living at seven o'clock p. m., the close of her thirty-sixth day without feed The pulse was ninety four and the respiration twenty-three. She lias failed rapidly in the past twenty four hours. She slept six hours last night, and dozed new and then during the day. She has changed greatly since iastrnVlit. j heavy blue circles appearing about the eyes and tne Hands becoming a purple color. She l ccegnized these present in her room, and duriug the latter part of the afternoon took considerable interest in the conversation of these present, and by signs signified that they should speak louder that she might hear. She has had neiie of her sinking spells, but has de clined se much that her death is hourly expected. IN THE FAB NORTHWP6T. Seme Thrilling Experiences la Deer flanting Frem Private Letters of a Yeung Army Officer. Fest Colville, W. T.. Feb. 22, 1881. I have at last succeeded in putting in a day's hunting. Taking advantage of a pack mule returning te our hunting camp after bringing in a lead of venison, Dr. M and I rent out a buffalo robe and blankets ; and finishing up our work by 12 o'clock en Saturday we mounted our heises in full fighting .trip moccasins, fur caps and gloves and buckskin-lined coats, with our bread " bear-paw " snow shoes dangling from our saddles. After three hours' slew riding along the trail made by the pack mules, when the snow almost touched our feet (.the horses step ping accurately into the deep holes made by their asinine predecessors), we ar rived at the "hunting ledge;" and a mere picturesque one it would be hard te find, buried as it was deep in a forest of cedar surmounted by high, rocky, weeded palisades. A space about .twenty feet square had been cleared of snow, which all around lay five or six feet deep. One side of this suew wall was broken by the fronts of two small tents buried almost te the, ridge poles, but looking snug and comfortable with their deen beddinz of branches and blankets. A bright fire burned directly in front of each tent deer, and the high weed piles between the two. testified te the necessity of net stinting the supply of fuel, while the numerous pans and kettles about one of the flames and the odeis arising therefrem convinced us that though our table was hewn from solid snow its delights were net te be despised. In fact, iuaveryfewmimitcsOur horses were secured with the mules and champ ing their evening feed, and we ourselves still mere agreeably occupied reclining en bough-cushioned snow seats about the walls of our enclosure, sipping het coffee and hastily firing up with venison steak, for we proposed te use even the little re maining daylight in hunting. An hour's snow-shoeing brought us te fresh tracks, and separating we new went at the work with a keen rivalry for the first bleed. Be fore long a clatter of falling rocks almost ever my head called my attention te four handseme black-tailed deer just van ishing ever the rocky wall, along the base of which I was moving. Up went my carbine sights te seven hun dred yards, but.they were tee quick for me. I, however, determined te fellow them, as they appeared net te be alarmed, ana i went ac me steep sinning suew bank with a will. The climbing was very uaru, anu ine wear ana tear ei kicking a hole through the crust with the point of my moccasin (which projects through the netting of the snow shoe) began te tell upeu my tees accustomed te the rigid hoot-sole. It seen get steeper, however, aud I had te depend en my elbows te held my ground, but just imagine my feelings at discovering while in this predicament, that a large leg only 150 yards ahead had been transformed into three raaguificent deer, who were watching my painful maneeuvres with evident curiosity. The idea of any deer being such feels as te stand like that almost took my breath away, or rather would have done se had my climbing left me any te lese. But I seen found that the deer were net se badly off as it appeared, and indeed the laugh came very near being en their side, for whenever I attempted te rise enough te sheet ever the snow my footing would give way, and after two or three igne minions though involuntary retreats of this kind, I again dug my elbows into the snow, and, regaining my lest ground, moved ou te a leg where I expected te get a held; but the crust here was steeper, and finally in desperation 1 sprang up iu full view en the leg itself, fired a vicious shot at the enemy, which was new en the full jump, and, losing my balance, rolled in confusion twenty or thirty yards down ward before I could secure an anchorage with the butt of my carbine and bring myself up with a round turn. Regaining my equilibrium I found mere or less te my surprise that my shot had told en one of the "deer, and succeeded in sending six or seven mero shots after the ether two be fore they were out of range, though with out perceptible effect. Thinking eyer the affair I have felt very much flattered te re member that Idid uet experience the "buck fever " aud that the first shot I ever fired at a deer killed. I suppose the explana tien is that I was tee much occupied in keeping my footing te have any time left for nervousness. A signal shot from the doctor new ap prised me that he had heard the fusiladc, an 1 answering with a whenp te convince him that 1 had net been eaten by a grizzly or a panther, I baptised my hunting-knife and rejoined him when followed a three mile tramp te the camp, which the deep suew and dark ness rendered long and memorable, for mere than half of the time was spent in stumbling in the darkness, floundering head-first in the deep snow and getting up in deeper disgust. The warm supper aud snug beds, how ever, straightened us out, and we were limber and fresh for a morning hunt the next day. This time the doctor was iu luck kill ing three while I saw " nary a hair." Twilight saw us riding into the fort, our horses well leaded with hams, and ready te go at the duties of the next day (Mon day) with a renewed vigor due te our bracing open-air Sunday experience. I enclose part of a letter just received from at Fert Lapwai, which you will see gives another phase of deer hunting and came very near having a tragic side. My friend sayp, speaking of a hunt ing party : 'I came very near making a vacancy in the regiment by that? hunt. My adven tures were thrilling and ray escape nar row, in .unci, l get caught out about four miles from camp at dark, with snow waist-deep and a pair of broken snow shoes.. Had gene out with Indians in the mountain early in the morning, and in the excitement of following some deer, I had wandered farther than I knew, and entirely separated from the rest. I killed two of the deer I was after, and was three hours dragging one of them from t'.ie top of the ridge te the river. Whea'I reached it, it was dark and one of my snow shoes broke, leaving me perfectly helpless. The river flews through a deep canon ; there was no trail, and I found, after floundering en for several hours, that I was still ever two miles from camp and could net go a step farther ou account of cold, hunger and exhaustion. I had fallen into the river twice iu the darkness, my clothes were freezing te my body, and I thought my time hail come and lay down in the snow, net much caring whether it bad or net. I tried te make a tire once and afterwards te discharge my carbine, but there was nothing but wet weed ;" the water had frozen te solid ice ou the breech of my gun, aad my hands were tee numb te get it out, se I gave it all up. But I fear the gods de net sufficiently love me fur me te die young ; a search party of Indians had volunteered te go out after me about 7 or 8 o'clock, and by the greatest geed luck these fellows stumbled upon me just after I had given in. I heard them firing and hallooing a short distance down the river and just had sense and strength enough left te shout back. Hew they found me I hardly remember ; I Jj new, though, that I was wrapped iu blankets, before a geed fire, had whisky and feed supplied copious ly, and about daylight took up the march for home. " I had te held a pew-wow next day, and shake in congratulation the hands of about forty Indians several times apiece. It was the closest shave I ever had or want again. The day after I was all right, and took the field with ren.-wed ardor. The hunt was successful. Wc killed altogether sixty deer, four falling by my own bloody hand." Fred. Who is "W. W. D."? Editors Intelligencer : In a general way we are net excessively curious ; wc de net sigh for the unattainable; nor de we worry about the unknewnable ; but for many a year have we longed te knew one particular thiug something about the personality of "W. W. D.," Sterling correspondent of the Examine); something about the mental atmosphere he breathes, mere about the intellectual loed he eats and altogether as much about 7ums he tells us of Sterling eggs, hens anil raspbeny bushes. We once asked the Examiner for infor mation concerning the Unknown, but our inquiries received only editorial silence. With a heart bowed down with curiosity we new appeal te you for information. Will your honergrant us a morsel of news about this literary phenomenon of Ster ling? We knew that " W. W. D." wears red flannel for " he himself hath said it." We knew from his writings that he is practical and somewhat material. Judg ing from his last letter, we fear he is eccen trie if net cynical. He informs us among ether things that " Mrs. Eliza Kilgour emigrated Je this state from Cumberland county. Pa., in 1835. Her husband died many years age. It was a pleasant occa sion. Several of her old neighbors, her children and pastor, participated in the rejoicing. Numerous letters were received from absent friends." In this there &ccms te be a jelly cynicism expressed about death and human affec tion. Generally, the death of a husband is net n "pleasant occasion," aiidcertaiuly it is unusual for adeath of this nature te be made a matter of such public rejeieing. that " old neighbors, children and pastor" participate te say nothing of " numerous letters, received from absent friends," centainiiig congratulations. Frem the extract quoted wc should judge that " W. W. D." is cruel, cynica and contemptuous. But this judgment we must reverse, for iu the very same let ter in which he speaks of a husband's death as "a pleasant occasion," he sym pathetica! weeps ever a pigeon. Hear him : "Seven of our gunners indulged en Fri day in a game of pigeon sheeting. This is simply barbarous. The idea of taking innocent life, and calling it sport ! All such business ought te be punished by heavy fines." With a touch of poetical feeling he ends his letter with the simple state meut "blue birds and robins about." Here then, joined te a cold sarcasm en human affection are tears for pigeons and sweet mentienings of the early robin. Out of all views we must generalize one. "W. W. D." must be a genius and moreover a genius that wears "red flannel." Ne one but a genius can indulge in such literary vagaries, and epistolary eccentricities as he, and yet per petually charm us with the originality of his sentiments and Hie charms of a style almost tee epigrammatic. Ilenc.i our wish te knew him. Give, eh ! give a gaping world all the information you have. Yorick. TIIK LEAF. -Tobacco In the Cumberland Valley. Correspondence ei the Intelligencer. Mechanicsbcre, March 31. One of your rural itemizcrs took a trip up the Cumberland valley as far as this borough by rail ; then several miles into the country te the southwest, through a thriving limestone district. A few notes in reference te the tobacco culture may prove of interest te the many readers of the Intelligencer. Three years age tobacco raising was in its infancy. In August, '78, en a trip from here te Shophardstewn, wc remem ber of seeing only one or two patches, and no sheds. Since then a number of houses uave ueeu erected, among tiicm some that will held as much as five and six acres. While the Bheds arc yet inferior te these re cently erected iu Lancaster county, they answer the requirements te a geed ex tent. They are partly under cellar, and in the ones erozted last summer in the man ner of ventilation there is much- improve ment. They have tobacco ladders, fashion ed after the latest improved, but, all in al, the facilities for handling the crop in Lancaster are superior. Half of the crop of 1880 is sold, mostly te Lancaster firms, and at paying prices ranging from 24, 6 and 3 down. The crop is almost fiee from the ravages of the flea beetle, of a desirable color and a geed quality. Among the buyers who were here theie was ene who happened te get his name en the "black list." He engaged in a little game of bulldozing, in which he succeeded te the amount of 7 cents te the pound. The farmer is the loser, but the buyer, who happened te be an influential man, will receive a very cold reception should he come here again. Seed has already been, sewn and the area te be planted will be much increased. . Chester County Tobacco. Lecal Sews. A. S. Herr, of Pocopson, who raised a fine crop of tobacco last season, has dis posed of 59 cases containing 40 pounds each te Julius Levy, Kennett Square ; 29 acres te Bemberger & Ce., and 13 cases te Zeek & Bitner, Lancaster, and has 9 cases yet te dispose of. Mr. Herr tells us that he raised four acres of tobacco last year, from which he gathered 790 pound of wrappers, 1032 pounds of seconds, and 932 pounds of fillers, aud that the crop-has yielded him mere than 40 acres of corn he had planted and at about the same expense. IS JOUnEKT AN AMERICAN ? Facts Which Gote Shew that the Beer Coin wander is an American. The following special despatch from Pittsburgh indicates that General Joubert, the distinguished cemmauder of the Beers in their war with the British, is net only an American but a native of :he Keystone state, aud served in the late war of the re bellion : " About 41 years age," says the correspondent, "Jacob Joubert and his wife Barbara emigrated from Helland aud settled in Brownsville, Fayette county, fa. A tew months aiterwarusthey remov ed te Uniontown. same county, where they lived two years, Jacob werkinjr at his trade, that of meulding bricks by hand. Sometimes he did odd jobs fee Mr. Daniel Sturgeon, a resident of Uniontown, then United Stat-s senator from Pennsyl vania. Iu the spt ing of 1841 Barbara gave birth te a son, which the fend parents christened Daniel Sturgeon Joubert. Senater Sturgeon purchased for the infant a stylish new dress of nice material. " In censcqueuce, Jacob and Barbara were the proudest aud happiest of Dutch couples, and ncicr grew tired of in forming their neighbors, in wretchedly broken English, the honorable senator had condescended te clothe their newly born infant. In 1843 they changed their resilience te Conuellsville, game county, where, by patient aud untiring in dustiy, characteristic of theirnatlen, they accumulated sumo menev. About 1850. or .probably later, both parents died suddenly et cholera, leaving their only child, little Daniel. The young fellow was properly cared for by a kind neighbor, and his parents' money, amounting te about $700, placed en interest. In 1855 his benefac tor emigrated te the West, intending te take the orphan along. Arriving at Pitts burgh the boy ran away and returned te Cenuellsville. Fer an assault and battery ou one Jehnsen, ou April 11, 1855, he was arrested and ledged iu Uuioutewn jail. Senater Sturgeon employed counsel, and at the trial the prisoner was acquitted. Yeung Joubert stepped out of the court room determined te leave the scene of his disgrace forever. Making his way te New Yerk he took ship te Helland, the land of his ancestors, paying for his pas pas sage by working ou the steamer. At Amsterdam he made the acquaintenance of Adam Joubert, his father's brother, captain of a ship in the Seuth Africau and East Indian trade. With his uncle he made several voyages te the Beer country in Africa. In 18G2, hearing of the Ameri can war, he returned te New Yerk. Enlist ing in the United States navy he served with distinction under Admiral Dupent and ethers, and lestau eye at the bom bardment of Charleston, for which dis ability he new receives a pension from our government. He is next heard of as cap tain of a negre company iu the Army of the I'otemac. 11 e served directly under (jcneral Wetzell, and his man marched with Wetzell's ether colored troops who. after Lee's surrender took nossessien of Richmond. After his discharge he visited Uniontown under an assumed namel The one-eyed young captain, still wear ing his full uniform, revealed himself, however, te Hen. Daniel Sturgeon, thcu ever eighty years of age. The venerable senator was the means of his obtaining the 3700 placed en interest years before and its accumulations. Alter a thousand thauks te his namesake he sailed for Helland, and from there te the country of the Beers in Seuth Africa. Becoming a resident and a a citizen of the Dutch Republic, he was in 18 te elected VVoeIg or Representative te their Congress from the province or de partment of Oyaitgi. When the late war broke ' out between the Beers and the British, Daniel Sturgeon Joubert was promoted from ene military office te another till he is new the commander-in-chief of all the Beer armies." It should here be said that there is mere than one reason for doubting the correctness or this story. All accounts from Becrland have described Joubert as an elderly man, about 55 years old. His lineage has been trace 1 back te the Puri tans wheme edict of Nantes drove from France, and Sir Battle Frere has publicly stated that Joubert is a representative liecr, as distinguished from iiek and Jorissen. who are both Hollanders. Becrlanil Beauties. Such even of the belles as have had their manners polished and their minds en larged by travel in Natal and a visit te the "city" (namely. Maritzburg) seem te fling aside the embarrassing trappings of civilization when they return te the paren tal reef. Net that I would be undorstoed te hint that the Beer maidens could be guilty of such ah impropriety in its most literal sense ; far from it. Beneath the orange trees aud blue gums of the paren tial residence the lovely ladies continue te bloom in all the brilliant hues of the most glaring red and yellow cotton dresses which Manchester can produce. By the side of a bevy of young Beeresses a tulip bed is dingy indeed, and even red and yel low poppies would have eueugh te de te held their own against the masses of color with which these coy damsel 3 love te decor ate themselves. Nene of your neutral tints or paltry touches of color here and there for your genuine Dutch Beeress ; but the brightest scarlet or orange will serve her turn, and a geed solid mass of it, tee. A fine stout calico dress of a strong pink or blue, with a bonnet in the complementary hues of green and orange, form one of these neat and l.armonieus toilettes which make a party of Beer girls a vision of startling splendor te the sober Britisher. This style of dress has the advantage, moreover, of enabling the wearer te be visible almestas far as the flash of the heliograph, until she is actually if one may use the expression hull down the horizon. It is fortunate for the ladies that, considering the net very chastened character of their taste in dres, nature has endowed them with a brilliancy and purity of complexion which net even the forcible coloring of their rai ment can avail te kill. The pure red and white of their round cheeks, and dazzling fairness of their threats, surpass even the famed complexion of England, and are only retained by the strictest care On the part of their buxom owners. The thickest of veils and the most r.un-Iike of forehead and chin-bands are worn whenever there is the slightest chance of exposure te the outer air ; and as for the sun, he is never allowed te imprint even the most fugitive kiss en the blooming cheeks of the belles of Beerland. On the occasions of the pe riodical visits te the towns te attend the " Nacht mahl," or sacrament of their church, the groups of veiled beauties peer ing from the wagons give the Beerthe aspect-of a Turk traveling with his harem. Ner by all accounts was the engaging nai vete of these heuris calulated te inspire ought save terror te the British breast. A Needle Which: vmatrateil a Lady's Feet Werk Itself Vat or Her Child. The Louisville Cmmer-Jeurnul says : A most extraordinary natural accident, and en fecthediscusttOH of physicians, came te light a few days age, in which a needle taken into the loot of a lady nine years age worked out of the thigh of her third child, a baby of one. year. The lady in question is the wife of Mr. Harry Isaacs, the cigarmaker, who lives en Market street near Wenzel. At the time of the accident Mrs. Isaacs was unmarried aud was then Miss Pauline Coblens. The needle was encountered in a carpet pene trating her feet the full length. A physi cian was called, in immediately, but.the needle could net be found, although it was known te be in the feet.) She suffered great pain, and for four months was unable te leave her bed. 'During that period three physicians made frequent attempt te ex tract the needle, and the knife was used extensively, however, without success. Mis Coblens was quite, fleshy before the accident, but fell, off greatly from her Jeng confinement. At length she was 'able te get about with the aid of crutches, but she continued te suffer from the needle. The pain decreased gradually from the time she was able te get about and she regained her former fleshiness. Finally she felt the needle only at period when there was a change in the weather. The movement of the needle seemed te be upwards, and the point was net stationary but moved with ' the needle. About five years age she was married te Mr. Harry Isaacs. Three children are the fruit of that union, the youngest of which is a boy named Arthur, who is about a year old. The pain which troubled the mother left her even before the birth of her child, and the total disappearance of the pain she was went te feel was a subject of remark and pleasure te her. On Monday a week age her baby, who had since its birth manifested a' kindly disposition, was very restless and cried unceasingly all night. The cause of the child's ailment was uet discovered the following morning, when in giving it a bath the mother discovered something black protruding through the skin of the child's thigh. She caught held of it, and was frighted when she found the thing of resisting substance. She, however, used a little force, and seen extracted the dark object. Imagine her surprise when she found it was a needle, black aud carreded. The eye broke off in her hand while examiuiug it. The recollection of the needle, which her much- pain, came vividly before the mother, and she felt keenly for the child. The remembrance of her relief from the pain also forced itself upon the mother, and the connection of the two served as a clue as te hew the needle came te get in the child's thigh. The mother says it would be almost im possible for the child te have taken up the needle without her finding it out, as the child would have made it known iu piteous cries, as he did when the needle worked out. m IjATEST NEWS BY MAIL. A Mrs. Clcary, of Mansion Station, ! Wilkin county. Minn., died en Tuesday from tne effects of injuries inflicted by her brother, Jehn Ward, in a quarrel. He has been arrested. Themas Merrow, an Englishman, 45 years of age, a farm hand iu the employ of Henry Ramsen at Queen, committed suicide en Tuesday evening by banging himself in his employer's barn. He had been in Ransom's employ only five days. Mary Seneff wasdrewned at Black Band. Ohie, a year age. Every night her form rises slowly out of the water, clad in white, floats upward out of sight. Several person having a reputation for veracity say se, and the community is frightened Alvin Houghten's block, iu Athel, Mass., the lower fleer of which is eccu pied by R. T. Shumway, dry goods, and the upper stories by families and the law oflice of G. W. Hear, was damaged by an incendiary fire yesterday morning te the cxtcnt.ef $5,000. The most tremendous tornado known for many years passed ever Danville, Va., en Tuesday night. It bore down ebstruc tiens in its path with resistless fury. A number of houses were blown down and many trees were uprooted and fences lev eled. The full extent of the damage in the surrounding country has net yet been ascertained. An Atchison, Tepcka & Santa Fe pas senger train was bearded by robbers near Albuquerque and rebbed.after a desperate fight, in which three or four passengers, the conductor, engineer and express mes senger were shot. - The conductor aud ex press messenger are said te have been killed. This report is current in express circles, but the railroad officials claim te knew nothing about it. STATES ITEMS. Irvin Trout, fifteen years old, an em em peoye of the Glasgow iron works, in Potts grove township, Montgomery county, was crushed .between car bumpers yesterday and died half an hour afterward. The oil en the surface of Tuna creek, from a leaking tank in the lower part ei" Bradford, was set en lire by a live coal from a locomotive en the Eric railway. The railway bridge and J. W. Kce's wheel factory were destroyed. Less en "the bridge $3,000, and en the factory $5,000. All the WilJiamspert saw mills have been put in first-class condition for work, and a big season of cutting is looked for. Seme of the mills will start this week. Men in, the lumber business estimate the stock for the season's cutting at 325,000, 000 feet, 250,000 000 feet of this being pine and the remainder hemlock. The most miserable beings in Pennsyl vania are certain recently arrived Hungari ans, who are new living from hand te mouth at day labor in the various coal districts. A few days age two of them who have been working near Easten dug up a calf that had been buried because it had died of disease and made meals of it. The beard of state charities has recom mended the removal of four insane con victs from the eastern penitentiary,among whom whom is Blasius Pisterius, te an asylum for the insane. It has also recem mended that the Legislature make prbvis ion for two hundred insane convicts at the new asylum at Danville. Ralph Gibbens, 38 years old, a mining boss at Centralia, Columbia county, died at the Pennsylvania hospital en Tuesday nignt from injuries which he claimed were inflicted, with homicidal intent, by a band of coal miners, te whom he had refused, employment. They waylaid him one night in August, as nearly as He could re collect, and after beating him threw him down the shaft of the coal pit. James M. Snyder, 50 years old, of the well-known firm of J. M. Snyder & Ce., wheelwrights, at 133 Carpenter street, Philadelphia, sprang out of the second story window of his home, 012 Wharten street, at one o'clock yesterday morning, while laboring under delirium tremens. He fractured his left thigh and received ether injuries, which terminated fatally. At Dry Hellew Breaker, during dinner hour, a boy named Slattcry, aged fourteen years, who was engaged as a slate picker, became entangled in the machinery belt ing and his head and body were terribly mangled, the pieces flying in all directions. His brains were gathered up in a cloth and with his body placed in a sheet and conveyed te his late home, at Tuscarora. He was the son of Judce Jehn Slattery, of Mellie Maguire fame, who freed himself by turning state witness. The band of burglars who have been operating in Montgomery, Ala., was effec tively broken up by the capture of the leader, who had been passing under the name of Sutten, and claimed te be a gam bler, but who real name is Chastine. He admitted that he was an escaped convict from Missouri. He attempted te escape when he was shot at by Officers Martin ami Jenes, who had bean iu charge. Beth shots took effect in his back, and he died. Nothing could be get out of him concern ing his cenfederates. Disaster en ijiml anil Water. "A cyclone iu Randelph county. Alabama, en Wednesday night, demolished the house of Jehn Embrey, killing him and his wife and two clii'divn. Three lives are known te have been lest in the inundation of the Platte Valley, in Nebraska, and it is feared the number will be.inci eased when all the districts arc heard from. The less ou property aud stock is estimated at several hundred thousand dollars. It is feared at Pierre, Dakota, that the crew of the steamer Far West, which was in the ice twenty miles below that place, have been lest. iAu incendiary tire in Leadville, Color Coler ado, 'destroyed Cuwcll's saloon aud Mc Daniel's theatre, and damaged an adjoin ing bui I id ing, causing a total less of about $23,000. A sleep weut ashore at Couey Island, at the height of the storm yesterday. Twe men were seen lashed te the mast. LOCAL INTELLIGENCE. OU1TIT.1KY. The lte.uh 'r .I.iuir Ituuhunau Johnsten. We have felt it as an impulse of duty te give a stronger public expression of our sympathy with Mr. aud Mrs. Johnsten, than time and circumstances permitted at the moment wheu the sad news of their eldest miiu death first came te us. The deepgiicl el'all who knew the honored family, ( ami who in this community docs net knew thorn ?) is net easily por trayed in xe.ds. We, ourselves, have known them in their outgoings aud in comings, and can appreciate the awful less which they have suffered iu the death of a member who gave the premise of se much geed te them. But we can de no better than te publish the following, which it may he needless for us te say is t'rem the pen aud heart of Judge Black : I have just icturicd from the funeral of James Buchanau Johnsten, affected by a deeper sense of bereavement than any death outside of .my own immediate fam ily has caused me in many years. It is strange that we cannot get hardened te these calamities in the course of time or, at least. learn te accept some measure of consolation when our fiicnds are fatally stricken. But human philosophy, hew well se ever it may be strengthened by tiials, is powerless te save our equanimity in eases like this. The overwhelming grief of that beloved mother aud the awful break-down of the proud father's spirit cannot even he thought of without strong emotion. Besides that I had built much hope of my own upon the future of that bright and beautiful boy. He was gifted with uncommon talents se well cul tivated, and developing se rapidly, that even at the age of fourteen he was intel lectually a full grown man. With moral principles cle.u ly defined and quick per ceptions et the right his sense of justice and his love of truth would have given him b dignity of character uet surpassed by th.it of his illustrious uncle. But these visions el" a moment are faded for ever anil we can only sigh " for the touch of a vanished hand" and listen in vain for the 1011 'id of a voice that is still," J. S. B. XEIUHKDIUIOOO NEWS. Nar nml Arrens the County Lines. An escaped inmate of the Norristown insane, asylum was arrested iu Phccnix Phccnix ville en Tuesday, and of course the report spread that the murderer of Mr. Clugsten had bi( n caught again. A little gill named McCue, residing near West Chester, was burned nearly te death en Tuesday by her clothes taking lire from a kitchen stove. She rushed into the roil an I :i man who w.is passing in a buggy threw a blanket ever her and ex tinguished the flames. Sheiiff Frauketifield will sell at public sale en Aeiil 7, the right, title and interest of F. A. llewer, publisher of the Bryn Mawr Heme Nctcs. The paper is printed at Parksburg. Chester county, and Mr. I lower ilas 110 interest iu the material used iu printing it. On Monday last, Elizabeth, a sevcu year old child of Wilsen Whitaker,eoIered, Birmingham township, Chester county, met with a horrible death by being scalded. The child had been entrusted by the parent te place some weed or coal en the lite of the cook stove, aud while per forming the work, the tea-kettle was knocked elf, the contents running ever the face and body of the child, who died the following day. Clark, Reeves & Ce., of Phujnixvillc, are required by the Canadian government te pay a forfeit of $26,000 en the under under valuateon of entry in the customs of the iron vupertitiuetiirc of the Chandiere rail way hi id;;", for which they had the con tract at 81D1.000 from the Quebec govern ment. The firm had a ready paid $26,000 in duties, te which sum must he added a fine of a similar amount. Gcrmautewu has a free library of 10, 000 volumes, without a novel among them. " All the Inches we lvc here," said the librarian, "arc. solid." Byren is ex cluded, because " some of his pieces arc net altogether tasteful reading." Shak spcare is deb irred Itccausc " no plays are let in." The library is the property of the Orthodox Friends and the hooks in it represent the collection of filty or sixty years. rtiuT or AFKIL. Many Moving Seme Vnsiness Changes- Te-mono w will lie general "moving day" -among these who are in the habit of ".hanging their places of residences or bus iness ; and general "settling up day" with these who de business, en the credit system. Already many of the former class have changed their locality, and to day, notwithstanding the unfavorable weather, many ethersare moving. Among ether business changes wc note the following : II. L. Zahm, jeweler, late of North Queen street, has taken the store room Ne. 10, IXTKM.IGEXCER building, Seuth Queen street Edward Kreekel, saddler, has removed from the Iktellieexceu building te Ne. 5 East Kim; street. J. P. Kuiglft, has taken the Exchauge hotel. Christian street, the former proprie tor, C. F. Myers, retiring te private life. Win. F. Dunean. variety bterc, has re moved from E.ist King street te Millar's building, 20 North Queen. Henry Gerhart, merchant tailor, has taken the store Ne. 6 East King street, formerly occupied by Brimmer fc Bell. H. B. Knight, dentist, removes from Hewell' building. North Queen street te Ne. 331 Neith Queen street. Metier, 15 ml & lliuhman, hiva re moved fiem Ne. 38 te 43 West King street. Mr. V infman has removed the city shoe store fiern Neith Queen street te Recce's old stand, Ne. 2G East King street. Fire en the taenataln. The Welsh mountain along the line or the Waynesburg & Xew Helland railroad ur.iR ablaze for 'everal days, the fire hav ing commenced last Saturday at neon ft einsp 11 ks thrown out by a locomotive, ami spread ever several hundred acres of timber, entailing considerable less. It was extinguished by the rain storm which set in. ou Tuesday night aud continued during yesterday.