Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, August 15, 1881, Image 2

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LANCASTER DAILY 1NTELUGENCER IMONDAY, AUGUST 15, 1881.,
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"MONDAY gVKNIKO, AUG. 15, 18L
The President's Ca4ItlMu
The reports from Washington disclose
another very unfavorable view of the
president's condition, and, coming se
seen after a series of reassurances from
the physicians will, serve te create anew
popular distrust of their bulletins. Fer
weeks it has been noticeable that these
bulletins only give one kind of news.
Apart from the record of the pulse beats,
respiration and temperature, which the
medical reporters could net well color,
they are of no value whatever and only
serve te mislead the public. One day
after the ether we have had the same
story of improvement, cheerfulness,
growing strength and increasing appe
tite, until, if they had all been true, the
public would have a right te expect the
president te be ready te take up his bed
and walk. All the while there liave been
eutgivings contradicting nil of these
bulletined reports. It has been known
that nobeby could see the president ex
cept his'docters, and Mr. Blaine's pre
mulgatien of his signature te an official
document the ether day had very much
the appearance of having been a device
te divert public attention from the con
sideration of the constitutional inability
of the executive te perform the duties
of his office. Fer, if Mr. Garfield was
able te consider and discharge these du
ties, there was no need te confine him te
one subscription of his name; and, if
he was net, it was a patty device te
force him te write his name te one un
important paper and parade it before the
country as an evidence that the presi
dent was net in the condition in which
the constitution made his duties devolve
upon Mr. Arthur whom Mr. Blaine, it
may be assumed, does net desire te have
these duties shouldered upon. Mr. Ar
thur, te his credit be it said, has shown
no unseenhy desire te assume them. He
may well shrink from the responsibility
until it is forced upon him. But that is
net a consideration for Mr. Blaine nor
the physicians te judge of. Tiieir course,
in studiously misrepresenting their
patient's condition, can only awaken
a terrible feeling of resentment
against them should it result in
his deatli after this long continu
ance of hopeful assurances. Already
there arc professional muttcrings against
their mismanagement of the case, as
well as forcible criticisms of the political
aspects of its treatment. Beth would
be intensified by any resulting fatality;
the fact that there is danger of this
ran no longer be disputed.
accessary Reorganization.
The l'ettsville Chronicle, one of the
most intelligent and independent Demo
cratic newspapers of the state, edited by
Wm. Kennedy, esq., speaks strongly of
the necessity for a system of rules te
govern the Democratic organization of
this state and declares, net without rea
son, that .the lack of them up'te this
time is simply a disgrace te the intelli
gence and integrity of the party organi ergani organi
tien. Their failure has certainly led te a
slip-shed way of doing things, and a suc
cession of irregularities that are always
damaging and often disgraceful te the
party. The trouble is that, in the ab
sence of such rules, the tilings which
they should govern are either left te the
chances of the moment, or are decided
accordingly as they affect the personal
or factional interests of these who con
trol their determination. Besides the gen
eral inefficiency of the state committee,
and the lack of order iu the organization
of conventions, the Chronicle points out
that:
" Ne regular system is provided for the
selection of delegates te our state conven
tions. In one county they are selected by
the county committee as a whole ; in au au
etber by the county committee cut up in
sections ; in another by the county con
ventions ; and in another as the local lead
ers for the time being may deem best for
the promotion of their personal interests.
This loose manner of representation is in
itself an invitation te fraud ; and enables
the representatives of the different fac
tions te secure their ends by a resort te
questionable and dishonest methods.
There has net been a Democratic state
convention for teu years in which there has
net been a wrangle ever the admission of
contesting delegations from Philadelphia,
all of which has arisen from the lack of a
system of rules which should determine en
their very face which is the .regular dele
gation. There is no geed icasen why a
rule should net be adopted, prescribing in
definite terms the manner of electing dele
gates te the state convention, just as
every county organization provides for the
manner et electing delegates te the coun
ty convention."
The Chronicle favors making the coun
ty chairmen members of the state com
mittee, and that appears te be -the pre
vailing idea. It would be well for it,
and ether faithful exponents of the bet
ter element of the party te further indi
cate what direction the proposed reor
ganization of the party should take. We
agree with it that the committee should
net undertake tee much. It isnet likely
that it will. But what the committee
needs are sensible suggestions as te the
best mode of reform, rather than argu
ments te show the need of reform or
who is responsible for the present cendi
tien of disorganization.
'
Twe weeks from next Wednesday is
the time fixed by the Democratic county
committee for holding the district con
ventions te cheese delegates te the state
convention and a general county
convention te name a county ticket.
The time is net far distant, but the in
terval is long enough te consider and
determine upon all that is te be done.
On Saturday of next week the Deme,
cratic voters of the several-districts will
meet te elect delegates te the convention
who will " settle it." The candidates
for county offices seem te be as well
satisfied te have their agony seen ever.
m
The Republicans would de well te
pitch en Gen. Chalmers, of Mississippi,
te head the ticket of opposition there te
the Democracy. He has been abused by
the Republicans se roundly and fiercely,
that they could new support him in the
Seuth and sing his praises in their
Northern stalwart newspapers with as
much fervor as they used te damn -Ma-hone
and new bless the repudiation
leader of the rag, tag and bob-tail oppo
sition te the state credit party of the
Old Dominion.
The upper house of the English Par
liament will net assent te Gladstone's
land reform bill. Reform moves slowly
through aristocratic bodies. " Te the
commons" has ever been the appeal of
advanced thought and liberal move
ments. MINOR TOPICS.
A three line advertisement in a Wash
ington evening paper for a lady te de
copying for $3 a week, is said te have
brought 213 applications.
The Washington Republic needs te
leek out lest the supersensitive New Era,
Philadelphia Evening Telegraph and Chren-icU-Eerald
get after it for itshorrible at
tack en the president's physicians. Such
a depth of partisan malignity as it exhibits
has net been paralleled save by the Intel
ligencer, and en that occasion these jour
nals showed signs of the rabies.
During his recent visit te Canada Gen.
Sherman is quoted as saying te aGederich
reporter, " I have always wanted te see
the Canadian peninsula annexed that is,
that part of Canada from Montreal te
Georgian Bay westward te the lakes. It
would make a splendid state. It is the
only part of Canada I would like us te
get ; they could keep the rest."
The St. James Gazette, in reviewing the
poems of Oscar Wilde, the efacular lyrist
of the aesthetes, concludes that their
author has made up his mind te never
knew the delightful repese of an own do
mestic hearth graced with the piescnce
and cesy in the affection of wife and girls
and boys. Fer a man who. has printed
such as some of his rhymes would be
ashamed te have his boys and girls knew
It.
The Londen literary critics think our
Mr. Steadman holds the balance most
nearly even of these who have under
taken a moral analysis of Pee and quote
approvingly this passage from his estimate
of that strangely misunderstood and mis
represented genius : " He loved his bhare
of pain, and was an instance of the fact
that man is the one being that takes de
light in the tragedy of its own existence,
and for whom joy is deepest when it
springs from wee. Wandering among the
graves of these he had cherished, invek
ing the 6pectral midnight skies, believing
himself te be the Orestes of his race, in
all this he was fulfilling his nature."
The Washington correspondent of the
Sun charges that Blaine was beginning te
be much worried at the discussion iu the
press of the question of "inability te dis
charge the powers and duties " of the
presidential office ; tliat he get Garfield
through an artifice of the doctors, te sjgn
a wan-ant of extradition merely te give
him a pretext for declaring that this " ina
bility" did net exist ; and that when that
paper was returned te Mr. Blaine with the
signature of the sick man for it must be
borne iu mind no member of the cabinet
has conferred with the president at any
time during his long illness he was in
high spirits and exclaimed, " I can new
take my vacation." He had succeeded in
getting a long-desired holiday, and also a
certificate from his own hand that the
president was net wholly disabled.
Dit. Bliss is catching it all around. The
Philadelphia Times reiterates the substan
tial truth of the opinions which it ascribed
te Dr. Agnew and which were a virtual
condemnation of Bliss ; Dr. Hammend has
opened a broadside fire upon him ; investi
gation shows his original diagnosis te have
been incorrect and he himself new admits
that Guiteau's bullet never struck the
president's liver ; everybody is ridiculing
his bulletin announcements that Mr. Gar
field slept " sweetly " and "took nouiisb neuiisb
ment," and demanding that this baby talk
cease; "Yeung Dr. Bliss," who moves
around the sick room whence cabinet
officers are excluded, appears te be a den
tist with no mere business there than a
chiropodist ; and new Ramsdell writes that
a suspicion is afloat iu Washington that
Dr. Bliss hurries from the sick chamber te
a broker shop and carries en his stock
dealings in accordance with his knowledge
of his patient's condition.
PKRbONAL.
Rev. Samuel Deerbrew, of Upper
East Tennessee, has married 2,154 couples
since 1849, receiving therefer about
$9,000 in fees. The lowest fee he took in
was five cents iu coppers.
Although Governer Bagley, of Michi
gan left an estate valued at $000,000, he
directed that the family monument te be
erected en4is burial let should cost no
mere than $500.
Sarah Bernhardt has been in Londen
in Brighten, in Birmingham, in Liver
pool, in Manchester, in Glasgow, and
in ether important towns, but iu no towns
have her receipts equalled these in Dublin.
Jehn Cochrane, senator of the Third
district Pa., died yesterday at Spring
Lake. N. Y. Deceased was forty-one
years old, a lawyer, and for nine years a
member of select council from the Fifth
ward, Philadelphia. He married the eldest
daughter of Lewis C Cassidy two years
age.
The pretty little name of the Spanish
pretender, Den Caules, is simply Charles
Marie de les Doleres Jean Isidore Jeseph
Franceis Quirin Antoine Michael Gabriel
Raphael, Duke of Madrid. He is a tall,
handsome and agile man, frank with pee
ple whom he likes, and the possessor of
beautiful hands and pearly nails.
The subject upon which Judge Black
had been asked te write an article in con
troversy with Ingersoll happened one day
te be alluded te in the presence of his ad
mirable wife, who said that she did net
knew what the judge would de with it, but
she felt perfectly sure that "if he could only
turn it into a law case, he would certainly
win. "
The secret of Colonel Ingersoll's
strong held en a certain class of the pub
lic is out. "Bring me some fried onions,"
said the colonel at a Leng Branch hotel
the ether day. "Hew many?" inquired
the startled attendant. "A bushel of
them," was the. reply, and the attendant
went meekly away and gave the order te
the cook.
The Cleveland beard of trade has pre
sented a geld medal te Jehn Miller, a
modest here of that city, a diver by occu
pation, who has saved from drowning at
least seventy-five persons. Mr. Miller
formerly led a dissipated life, but since bis
reformation, four years age, he has wen
the respect and admiration of thousands
by his sturdy morality, unselfishnrss and
dauntless courage.
The original of Dickens's fat boy was
named Budden, and he lived in Roches
ter, and when a boy he was exactly .the
Jee described by Dickens. After. Pick
wick had gotten into circulation some
body called Budden's attention te the
character. This woke him np. He be
came a very active, energetic man, and
was afterward made mayor of Rochester
and later was elected te Parliament.
The Philadelphia Times declares that
"Clara Belle," who writes the gessippy and
suggestive letters about women, is none
ether than the immeasurable liar, Eli
Perkins, "who under his own band and
seal cannot cct admittance into any reput
able journal in the country. It is credit
able te the whole race of woman that
Clara Belle could only be made out of
Eli Perkins."
When the present pope was a cardinal
and legate at Brussels, he was one day
writing in his study, and a house painter,
who was employed in painting the ex
terior of the legation, slid down a rope
and looked at his eminence. The cardinal
turned round and the man slipped down
the rope quickly, muttering, " What an
ugly mug for a cardinal !" His eminence
started from his chair and went toward
the deer, determined te have the rude
fellow discharged ; but as he went past a
mirror he looked at himself, and, confess
ing that his " mug " was ugly, smiled,
and resumed his seat, continuing te write
as if nothing had happened.
LATEST NEWS BY MAIL.
The Bolivian convention has decided te
continue the war against Chili.
A fire occurred at Sofia en Friday night,
which destroyed upwards of thirty houses.
A strange epidemic is prostrating the
horses in LaSalle, III. Four hundred ani
mals are affected.
Dennis Dencen, of Little Falls, N. Y.,
while moving a steam drill, was instantly
killed by the drill falling en him aud crush
ing his skull.
The Prague thcatie was totally destroyed
by fiie. It was only insured for 400.000
florins, which is but a small portion of its
value.
Charles Kelb, aged nineteen, was
stabbed by a murderous colored man in
Baltimore aud died. Kelb was pursuing a
negre boy who had thrown an apple at
mm, when the fatal attack was made.
Jehn Savage, a railroad contractor up
about Newburgh, N. Y., found a lichvein
of iron ere en his mountain lands, and has
become se crazy ever it that he had te be
taken te the asylum in irons.
Parties from the Rosebud agency stale
that Spotted Tail was killed for seducing
another Indian's squaw, and they saythat
this was his one hundred and fiftieth of
fense. Iu southern Illinois the corn will be an
utter failure, net averaging a bushel te
the acre. The wheat is the poorest crop
for 20 years, falling 50 per cent below last
year's crop,
At Fert Smith, three white men and
three Indians are lying in jail under sen
tence of death, te be executed en the 3th
of September. The Indians are locked up
together and the white men have a cell te
tlicmselves.
The Lake Eiic vineyards will produce a
very small wine crop this year, net mero
thau one-third the natural yield. This
failure is attributed te the cold winter,
late spring, sudden heat in May and dry
summer.
Rudelph Kehr, an Austrian, 35 years of
age, shot himself fatally through the body
at his New Yerk bearding house, over
come with shame at detection in carrying
off tobacco from his employees te be niade
into cigars at home.
A band of cow boys recently attacked a
caravan from Senera en the way te Ari
zona, killed four of the party aud carried
off $5,000 and the pack of animals. The
civil authorities in Arizona seem power
less, and the Mexicans held the Americans
responsible for the outrage.
An old building, four stories high, situ
ated in the most frequented part of Vienna,
next te the Grabcii, suddenly fell shortly
before neon Saturday. The greater part
of the heuse was occupied by offices and
fashionable shops. Twenty lives were lest
and thirty persons were seriously injured.
A gorgeously dressed woman, calling
herself Mrs. Georgiana P. Kensett, of Bal
timore, with two children at bearding
school en the Hudsen, has been arrested
for getting goods and running up accounts
in New Yerk en the names of female
friends who had credit at the stores which
she victimized.
Jeseph Kevins, aged 20, while fixing
electric-light wires iu the Ceneker, N. J.,
fertilizing works, was caught in the shaft
ing and whirled rapidly arenud. He was
almost eviscerated. One arm was tern
from its socket and both legs were broken.
He died iu a few hours, leaving a wife and
child.
The q?w comet is yet hurrying toward
the earth and sun, but en account of the
strong moonlight it escapes the eye of the
casual observer. Any kind of a spyglass,
however, readily shows it, with its short,
straight, tail, and is likely te beceme a
conspicuous evening object low down in
the northwest this week. It may yet be a
great spectacle iu the heavens.
m m
STATE ITEMfa.
Saturday's storm was very severe in
Chambersburg, the M. E. church being
badly demolished. In West Philadelphia
many houses were unroofed.
Jay Coeke has just found out and sent
te a private asylum, with orders that she
be made comfortable, one Sarah Marshall,
who lest her money and reason in the
panic te which his failure gave the start.
A Williamsperter named D. II. Trexler
was found deadhanging te the deer of his
bedroom by his wife, at Market street,
near Canal. He was a man of 48, and had
been a useful citizen until financial losses
deranged him.
Hugh Matt, aged 20, and Geerge Grubb,
aged 50, well known people of Chester,
were drowned by the capsizing of a pleas
ure yacht off Red Bank, N. J., of which
they formed part of the crew, the rest of
whom a tug beat picked up.
In Williamsport Eli Dixen, employed
in Bastian's saw mill, had his right arm
cut with a circular saw while pushing a
leg through. He lest a great amount of
bleed before surgical aid was obtained
and died, leaving a wife and five chil
dren. Near Titusville the boiler in Isaiah Mil
ler's lumber mill burst and probably fatal
ly scalded Eugene F. Miller, a lad aged
15 years, who had been left in charge.
The boiler was an old one and had recent
ly been repaired, but was tested at 120
pounds, cold water pressure. At the time
of the explosion, it is claimed that the
gauge band indicated only ninety pounds.
At 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon a man
deliberately dropped himself from the
Market street bridge ever the Schuylkill
in rniladelpbia, and the harbor police
grappiea irem two smau Deats ever the
river bed until 7 o'clock and then succeeded
in recovering the corpse near Sansom
street wharf, indicating that the tide had
been moving with great rapidity.
L03S OF
tAWK 121 STZAM VESSELS.
The
Disasters teta Cftyef Term
Cruz and
the City tfibMa.
HAlp ,
It is 'ascertained that tnfciag the fiscal
year of 1880-1881 there were 268 lives lest
of passengers and crews upon merchant
steam vessels of the United States from
explosions, fires, collisions, snags and
shipwrecks, accidental drowning, and
miscellaneous causes. Among these lest
by shipwreck are included the victims of
the disasters of the City of Vera Cruz and
the City of Alpena 128 persons. Beth
of these steamers are said te have been
staunch and strong andjfully supplied with
the life-saving appliances required by law,
The gales in which they were lest are said
te have been the heaviest ever known in
the different localities where they occurred,
and Gen. Dumont expresses the opinion
that no human foresight could have pre
vented their less. Only ten persons were
saved from the City of Vera Cruz, they
having been washed ashore en pieces of
wreckage, and en the City of Alpena all
were lest Compared with the previous
year, there has been an increase in the
number of lives lest of 83 persons. This
covers an increase of 13G lest by wrecks,
21 by explosions, and 5 .by accidental
drowning, making a total increase of 1C2.
There has been a decrease, however, of 41
lives lese by fire, 3G by collision, and 2 by
ether causes. Many of the cases reported
as accidental drowning are thought te
have been suicides. Duridg the year it is
estimated that there have been upward of
a quarter of a million of passengers carried.
at
Senater Howe te Ills Neighbor. "
Ex-Senater Timethy O. Howe was sum
moned from the monetary conference at.
Paris by the illness of his wife She has
since died at Green Bay, in Wisconsin, and
ex-Senater Howe has published in the
local journal this curious and old-fashioned
letter te his friends and neighbors :
Te my Neighbers: I wanted te say
something te you while we steed together
by the grave of my wife. But then I had
net the power of speech. Even new I
have no words which can fitly roll you
what I feel. Still, I must de the best I
can te thank you for your great goodness.
Se much as this I can say: Iu the direst
distress which could befall me, and when
I could net in my own home pay the last
rites te ene with whom I had. lived for
nearly forty years, veu threw wide open
all your houses and all your hearts. The
dearest friends could net have done mere
nor dena that mere tenderly. Yeu literally
covered her pathway te the grave with
flowers. If she is conscious of this day
she knows new that she was beloved as
she herself loved. If she is net se con
scious I will tell her of it in that "sweet
by and by." T. O. Howe.
Electric Lights at Niagara.
The new sixteen electric lights, each
of 2,000 candle power, were in position en
Saturday night, with a clear atmosphere,
a cool northwest breeze and a full moon.
Combined with the electric lights of the
Prospect Park company, they illuminate
the falls most grandly. The large num
ber of visitors are very much pleased with
the view, the younger ones chasing here
and there like children, delighted at every
turn of the revolving lights, while the
elder ones take it mere calmly and gaze
long and steadily at the illuminated
waters. The American falls leek mero
beautiful than ever. The dark shadows
from the Prospect Park lights have been
overcome and illuminated from these en
the Canada shore. The lights reach with
striking brilliancy Table Reck Point and
three-fourths the way across the Horse
shoe falls. The deep green waters, tinged
with the white foam as it comes tumbling
ever the Horseshoe, sheeting up great
volumes of struggling spray, with 10,000
candle-power lights reflecting upon it,
form a scene tee grand te be described.
Cease the Gnsb.
Witslilngten Republic.
Cannet the president's physicians be in
duced te change the formula of their bul
letins ? The public is getting sick at hav
ing te read every morning that the presi
dent sleflt " sweetly." as though he were
a baby. If he sleeps well, why net say
sp? "Sweetly" repeated forty or fifty
times is sickening and it doesn't mean
anything. One ether point. Iho presto
deut is always represented as "taking
nourishment." If the presidential, why
net say se? "Taking nourishment" is
another babyish expression. Mr. Garfield
is a creat big honest fellow, with the brain
and the heart of a giant. If he had his
sav in the matter he would call eating
eating, and he would net say half a hun
dred times that he had slept " sweetly."
The Turf.
Hindoe and Checkmate made Saturday
noteworthy en the turf. Hindoe wen the
champion stakes at Leng Branch, in his
own unapproachable style. At oaratego
Checkmate, with 131 pounds, defeated a
geed held in geed time a remarkable per
fermance. It was formerly thought that
Checkmate could net carry heavy weight,
and could net win a long race. He has
shown this year that he can de both in a
way that no horse of his years in Amerita
can approach. Glenmere and Hindoe are
his only rivals, ana uienmere is a year
younger, and Hindoe tour years.
Family Discipline.
Chas. Brynton, aged 32, a river driver
and mill hand of Sace, Me., followed his
wife te her mother's, and en her refusal
te return ana live witu mm, urea a re
volver at and missed her. She sprang from
the second-story window te the ground un
hurt. Her sister, Mrs. Waterheusc, en
tered the room, and was twice fired at by
Boynton, one ball passing through the
palm of her hand, the ether entering her
breast, and she will die. He then shot
himself through the pit of the stomach
and expired instantly.
LOCAL INTELLIGENCE.
democratic county committee.
Lancaster, Wednesday, August 31, Fixed for
tne county vonTenuen.
There was a very full attendance of the
Democratic county cemmittes at the meet
ing held at Shober s hotel this morning.
Lancaster, August 31, was fixed for
the meeting of the district conventions te
nominate delegates te the state cenven
tien and a general convention te name a
county ticket. On the vote te fix Aug.
31st the ballet steed 20 ayes te 1G nays.
the latter representing these who favored
a later date, the candidates generally
favoring the earlier time.
It was resolved that in every district the
hour and place of holding the primary
meetings, en Saturday, August 27, should
be left te the discretion of the district
committeeman, te be announced by him at
least one week before the time of holding
them, by handbills posted iu five public
places in the district.
It was also agreed, at the suggestion of
the chairman of the county committee,
that hereafter the county committee elect
three secretaries, one from each legisla
tive district, who snau can te order their
respective district conventions, the chair
man te organize the county convention.
Owing te vacancies occasioned by re
movals of county committeemen Geerge
W. Zecher is substituted for the Sixth
ward, this city, and Geerge N. Worst for
Salisbury township.
Adjourned
He Whipped Her.
Ed. Jacksen, colored, 'distinguished him
self en Saturday night by whipping the
wife of Matthew ' M. Diggs, en North
street. He was arrested by Officer Bler-
ringer, and before Alderman Barr he will
have te answer the charges of assault and
battery and drunken and disorderly conduct.
JOHN 8. GABLE'S JTCfKRAL.
Immense) CoaeeTCMoacaetB -Impr ttv
Service:
The funeral of Jehn S. Gable took place
Ststerday, from the residence Ne. 210
erth Queen street At 2 o'clock hun
dreds of friends gathered at the residence
and viewed the remains. Among these
present were a large number of clergymen
of the church of which Mr. Gable was a
prominent member. Rev. Seilhamer, pas
tor of the Union Bethel, of which Mr.
Gable was an elder, Rev. A. X. Shoemaker,
of Chicago ; Rev. C. Price, Harrisburg;
Rev. J. S. Esterline, Columbia ; Rev. D.
A. L. Laverty," Harrisburg ; Rev. J. S.
Weishample, Lancaster ; Rev. D. S.
Shupp. Middletown ; Rev. B. F. Beck,
Harrisburg ; Rev. Jehn Tucker, Lancas
ter ; Rev. Abraham Leng, Bainbridge ;
Rev. Jehn ewenkr. Lancaster ; ftev. btone btene
shifer, Rev. D. W. "Gerhard, Lancaster,
and perhaps some ether clergymen, were
present.
The services at the house consisted of
brief addresses by Revs. Steneshifer and
Shupp, after which the funeral cortege,
consisting of the hearse and about twenty
five carriages filled with mourners, and a
large concourse en feet, including the
Friendship fire company in a body, moved
up North Queen street te Walnut, along
Walnut te Duke, down Duke te Orange
and down Orange te the church.
Arrived at the church the coffin was
taken from the hearse and placed in front
of the altar, and then Rev. Seilhamer de
livered the funeral sermon, an eloquent
tribute te the memory et the deceased,and
filled with words of wisdom for the living.
Kev. A. X. Shoemaker, of Chicago, fol
lowed with an address en the life and char
acter of Mr. Gable, prefacing his remarks
with a statement that Mr. Gable had some
years age made a reques, that he should
de se. He said that Mr. Gable was one of
these positive Christians, who, like Abra
ham Lincoln, looked te principle rather than
policy as a guide te histien. Although
unlettered and uneducated in the schools,
be was a man of great practical intelli
gence and general information. He was
net an active politician, but had clear
views en all great questions of local, state
or national importance. He belonged te
the order of heroes, who are always found
in the front when duty calls them there,
but who lcave the miner details te ethers.
He was a man of fine business capacity ;
did net meddle or worry about small
matters, but was wholesale iu all
his movements and operations Though
liberal in his religious views he
was radical in his religious life,
and struggled te keep the truths of
religion pure and simple before the eyes
and understanding of the people. His re
ligious hobby was the great missionary
work, in which cause he never tired labor
ing, in behalf of which he was a liberal
contributor. In the church, he was a geed
counseller and adviser, but it is doubtful
whether his merits were as highly appre
ciated while he lived as they should have
been.
At the clese of Dr. Shoemaker's address
Rev. C. Price and Rev. D. A. L. Laverty
made some pertinent remarks, and after
an invocation the coffin was removed te
the .hearse, the funeral cortege re-formed
and moved te the Lancaster cemetery,
where the closing religious services, includ
ing a dirge by the choir, took place, and
the body was lowered te its resting place.
The Friendship engine house was hung
in black yesterday from its tower te the
foundations ; and while the funeral pro pre
cession moved the Empire bell was tolled.
THE AUGUST COURT.
The Cases Which are Uelng Disposed of.
This morning the regular August term
of quarter sessions court began, with
Judge Patterson presiding. On the list
for trial there are 152 cases.
Jehn R. Diffenbach, of the Second ward,
this city, was chosen foreman of the grand
jury. After the jury had been sworn,
Judge Patterson delivered his charge in
structing them in their various duties. In
the charge the court stated that they had
been informed that constables and police
men are often instrumental in having
parties bring suits, and if the grand jury
found any trifling cases in which officers
bad induced parties te make complaints,
they should ignore the bills, and put the
costs en the officer.
The constables were next called and
they made their usual quarterly returns.
A number of reads were reported te be in
bad condition.
Ne cases were attached this morning.
The grand jury made a return just be
fore 'court adjourned. They found a true
bill against Harry Shaub, charging him
with fornication aud bastardy, and ignored
the bill charging him with rape.
The case of Samuel Tayler, of Bart
township, charged with desertion, was
dismissed, with county for costs. The
same disposition was made of the case in
which Isaac Heuck was charged with
assault and battery.
A nel. pros, was entered in the case of
Henry De Armen, charged with embez
zlement, en payment of costs.
Current Uusiness.
Jonathan Wright, esq., a member of the
Lehigh county bar, was admitted te prac
tice in our court en motion of B. F. Davis,
esq.
Henry M. Fraelich was appointed a
supervisor of West Hempfield township
te fill the vacancy caused by the death of
Abraham Heineman.
Magdalen Rappe, of this city, was
divorced from her husband Henry Rnppe.
The latter is new in jail serving out a sen
tence for incest.
A Colored Jurer.
Antheny Maxwell is a petit juror this
week. He is a colored coachman and is a
resident of the Seventh ward.
The Recter from Keine.
Rev. Rebert J. Nevin, D. D., of Reme,
preached in St. James P. E. church yester
day morning The theme of his sermon
was "Faith and Works," and it was a
thoughtful and impressive discourse, its
effect being heightened by the graceful de
livery and resonant voice of the preacher.
Early this morning Dr. Nevin left for a
visit te New Yerk te meet and consult
with8eme of the patrons of his church in
that city. By the same train Rev. Dr.
Knight left te rejoin his family a Say brook
Point, Conn., where they are spending the
heated term.
A Left Herse Found Dead.
On Thursday it was noticed in the In
telligencer that a horse had been stolen
from the stable of Elias Aument, residing
in Drumore township. A reward of fifty
dollars was offered for the ' horse, and a
horse detective association was sent after
the thief. On Friday the horse was found
lying dead in a tobacco house en Mr. Au
ment's premises. He had gotten out of the
stable aud gene into the shed where he
fell through a trap deer, breaking his
neck.
Uaseball,
The Active baseball club played a match
game with a picked nine en the Active's
grounds Saturday afternoon. On account
of the storm the game drew te a close
after six innings had been played. The
score then steed 26 te 27 in favor of the
Actives. The ground is very peer where
the game was played and that accounts
for the big scores which are made en it.
Imported Stock.
Yesterday morning a train of twenty
five cars passed ever the "Pennsylvania
railroad containing about eighty imported
stallions and a larger number of mares, all
of the finest quality and breeds. They
are destined for Chicago and for improv
ing the stock of the Western states. Each
car was decorated with English and ether
foreign flags.
KILLED IN KENTUCKY.
Death and Hartal of Mr. Fieles.
In Saturday's Intklligescer was pub
fished a brief statement of the death of
Mr. Fieles. His full name is Kansas M.
Fieles. He was 26 years 7 months and 26
days old. At the time of his death he was
a conductor en the Cincinnati & Southern
railway, and was accidentally killed at
Somerset, Ky., while at his pest of duty
en the 11th inst. He was termerly an
employee of the Pennsylvania railroad
company, and also a conductor for the
Pullman palace car company. His body
reached Lancaster at 3:45 Sunday morning,
was taken in charge by Rete Bres., under
takers, and conveyed te Leacock burying
ground, where the interment took place
Sunday. His parents, formerly of Lititz,
new reside in Baltimore, Md.
A correspondent furnishes us with the
following additional facts : " The death
of Mr. Kansas M. Fieles, a former resident
of this county, in Somerset, Ky., was at
tended with peculiarly distressing circum
stances. Frem the meagre details fur
nished by Assistant Superintendent Hunt,
of the Cincinnati Southern railroad, and
the certificate of the attending surgeon,
Dr. J. W. Parker, of Somerset, it appears
that he was injured by the train while in
discharge of his duties as conductor en that
read en Thursday afternoon, the 11th
instant, and died at 11:30 the same even
ing. " Mr. Fieles had for sem9 time been look
ing forward te a reunion with his parents
who reside in Baltimore, where he was te
meet his wife and child who have been
living with her relatives in Lawrence,
Mass. This happy prospect was suddenly
turned te bitieiest grief by the telegraphic
announcement en Friday morning of his
death.
"The widow and child, adaughter of two
years, accompanied by her sister-in-law,
Mrs. Jehn R. Truell, immediately came en
te Baltimore, whence the funeral party
consisting, in addition of his parents, two
brothers, a sister and a brother-in-law,
Mr. Edwin 31. Truell, from Washington,
D. C, came en Saturday, arriving here
that evening and stepping at the Keys'tene
house, where they were joined by ether
relatives and friends.
"The funeral services were held at Lea
cock church cemetery, nine miies from
this city, yesterday afternoon, the Rev. E.
W. Gaylerd, of Leaman Place, officiating,
and the remains were placed at rest in
that cemetery where eight ether children
of Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Fieles are buried.
" BIr. Fieles ha I been a railroad man for
some years aud at different times was in
the employ of the Pennsylvania railroad
company, and as conductor for the Pull
man palace car company. At the time of
his death he was struggling by his merits
te make himself a prominent official of the
new read he had connected himself with.
A telegram te his wife stating that he was
injured and desiring her presence was de
layed until after his death, se that she was
denied the consolation of sending him a
message in his last hours."
'COLORED CAMPMEETINUS.
Fine Weather Large Crowds and Geed
Order.
Yesterday seemed te be a big day for
the colored people of this county and
several campraeetings were held in differ
ent localities.
The annual meeting at "Rigby" near
Arcadia station, Fulton township was
held yesterday. The splendid weather
brought out a tremendous crowd of white
and colored people. Nearly the whole
lower end of the county turned out and
many were present from Yerk and Chester
counties and Maryland. This is the most
popular place for holding campmeetiugs
in the state, and the name " Rigby " is
familiar te every one. The meetings are
net gotten up' for speculations but for
worship and the number of negrees who
attend every year is very large. The ser
vices yesterday were quite interesting, and
a constable who went there te preserve
order states that there was net the slight
est disturbance.
The-camp meeting which began week
before last in Detwiler's weeds, Mt. Jey
township, was continued ever yesterday,
when the crowd was as large as it was at
Landisville, en the big day. A gentleman
who lives near the weeds and took account
of the crowd says that there was between
900 and 1,000 vehicles en the ground at
one time. Sermons were preached in the
p morning and evening by nev. W. it.
Norris, of this city, and in the afternoon
by Rev. J. R. Davis, of Springville.
The colored campmccting at What Glen
Park was well attended especially by white
people. The services were full of interest.
Jehn Francis, the well-known colored
divine, formerly of the Welsh mountains,
preached in the morning at ten o'clock en
the words " I will go in te the king and if
I perish let me perish."- In giving our re
porter an account of the campmeeting this
morning Jehn said that his subject was a
"big hess " (herse.) The reporter agreed
with him, and he was unable te see bow
Jehn mounted him without stirrups. In
the afternoon the first sermon was preached
by Rev. Wm. Keels, of this city. He
chose for his subject " The Four Kings "
and his disceurse was listened te with the
closest attention. At 4 o'clock Rev.
Adam Dennis, of the Welsh Mountains,
preached en " Adam, where art thou ?".
Rev. Oscar Jenes, of Harrisburg, preached
in the evening and his subject was " who
believe our reports" (se Jehn Francis
said).
NEIGHBORHOOD MEWS
Near and Acress the County Line.
Ne definite arrangements having been
made yet with Dr. Russell, the president
elect of Palatinate college, Dr. Wm. BI.
Reily will temporarily act as principal.
Themas Kershner, of Reading, was
seized with a fit, while in Bushong's paper
mill, Saturday, and fell upon the belting
which was running at lightning speed. He
was hurled against a box ten feet way, was
badly hurt internally, but had no bones
broken.
Heward Brinten, was conveyed te his
home in West Chester the ether day par
tially paralyzed. He is assistant engineer
en the steamer Indiana, and about 12
o'clock Tuesday night, when the vessel
was coming into pert, BIr. Brinten tripped
and fell, his head striking a gate with
much violence, the injury resulting in
partial paralysis.
A Lebanon county farmer has stilted
West te leek after his son, alleged te be
eue of two young men, sons of highly re
spectable farmers, residing in Lebanon
county, under arrest ana iedgea in some.
jail in Kansas, en a charge of misplacing
a switch en some railroad, causing the
wreck of a following passenger train and
wounding sixteen persons, two of whom
have since died. They had been put off a
train en the ground.
Unclaimed Letters.
The following is the list et letters re
maining unclaimed in the posteffice for the
weekending August 15:
Ladies' List Bliss Ella Arnt, Bliss Annie
L. Brenner, Bliss Hannah Jenes, Miss
Maria McGaiger, Mrs. Wm. H. BIcCleary,
Miss Jennie Blorrisen, Mrs. Sephia Paston,
Bliss Blary Perter, Miss Mary Reen, Bliss
Beckie E. Sharleck.
Gents' List YTm. Eyrich, Elswerth
Ervin, Lewis Gallagher, B. K. Harring
ton, Jehn A. Hess, Blartin A. Johnnes,
Sam'l G. Kemper, H. W. Kalp, Jehn
Lechner, Daniel S. Miller. Jehn BIcKel
well. S. N. Miller, S. B. Metzter, Themas
Newall. Wm. Rewe, Willis Rohrer, J. F.
Schneider.
Feast of Assumption.
T e-d ay, August 15, is a holy day in the
Catholic churches being a feUival in
honor of the ascent of the Virgin Blary
into heaven.
MARIETTA MATTERS.
What u Transpiring; Up the Klver.
Frank Curran, school director, removed
all the old desks from the town hall school
house and put in their places improved
patent desks.
Fred Sbeenbergcr sued Jee Schneider
for breaking a show case in his store. He
was arrested by two Lancaster police effi
cers and Capt. Levi Haldeman bailed him
for trial at court.
A fearful storm passed ever our town
en Saturday afternoon, tearing down trees
and scattering dust in every direction,
but very little rain fell.
CeL James Duffy has settled with the
Yerk Hail Insurance company,and received
for damages done te his tobacco by the
late hail storm, 81,800.
Jehn Shillew, jr., is seriously ill at his
father's residence. We sincerely hope
the young gentleman may speedily get
well.
Lawrence Knapp spent Saturday in Ma
rietta, the guest of Mr Christ. Hauer, of
the Cress-Keys hotel. Mr. Knapp has
purchased ene of the finest horses in Lan
caster county from Herace Klatfelter,
East Denegal township. He is a dapple
gray, for draft, very heavy.
Christian Hauer sold his wonderful
trained deg en private terms, te a gentle
man from Lancaster.
Mr. Henry Longenecker died en Satur
day evening. About a week age his leg
was amputated, but owing te his ad
vanced age and general prostration he was
unable te endure it.
Lieutenant Commander Husten, of the
United States navy, nephew of our es
teemed citizen, Dr. Jehn Hustdn, escorted
a number of Marietta's prettiest young
ladies ever te Mount Jey in a large beard
wagon. As they passed out of town they
blew horns. They visited the colored
campmeeting and had a delightful time.
Miss Bella SchafTner and Bliss Addie
Blusser have returned home after spending
a week at Stoverdafe campmeeting.
The ordination services in Zion's church
last evening wcre attended by a very
large congregation, Dr. E. V. Gerbart,
from Lancaster, Rev. Gerhard from Col
umbia, Rev. Pennebeckcr of E'izabeth E'izabeth
tewn, were present ; the altar was covered
with beautiful and fragrant flowers ; the
choir was led by Prof. Jehn Preston with
silver cornet. Rev. G. W.. Risscr. the
young gentleman who has accepted charge
and will minister te the spiritual wants of
the church, is a pleasant speaker and a
young man of mere than ordinary ability.
Russel Bacen, an old lame black man,
was sent te jail for swearing at some geed
little Sunday-school boys who called him a
nigger and teased him. Peer old "Russ"
was a Stalwart last fall and "drank from
the parae canteen "with the Republicans at
the raising of the wigwam. In every dish
of wigwam hash his spoon went in with
the rest of them ; he marked time in the
weary marches te Drytown and Hard
scrabble ; orators and office-seekers sought
his society and called him BIr. Bacen. But
when the old man was hustled off te
prison there was none te seek or te save.
Such is life : the election is ever.
ALL FOK LOVE.
Yeung Jehn Ainweg Sues ler 910,000
Damages.
St. Leuis dispatch te New Yerk World.
A suit for $10,000 damages filed te day
drags into notoriety the Hazeltines and
Paraiaeres, families of high social stand
ing. The suit is brought by Jehn Amweg,
a singer in the Ferd opera company, per
forming at Uhrig's Cave, the fashionable
summer night resort. Amwcg's story is
that being smiled upon from the parquet
by Bliss Nellie Hazeltine, known at home
and abroad as the hello of St. Leuis, and
whose name was linked with Samuel J.
Tilden's three or four years age, he en
tered upon a flirtation. He visited
Bliss Hazeltine at her aristocratic
home, received notes and photographs,
and then, by his own story, boasted of the
conquest. Early this week Bliss Hazel
tieo and her mother started for White Sul
phur springs. Amwcg's story reached the
ears of Will Hazeltine, a brother, and
Fred Paramore, the suitor of the belle.
They cerralcd (te use a Wcsterntsm) the
opera singer in an upper chamber, beat
him badly with fists, canes and whips, aud
forced from him an order en his. landlady
for the notes and pictures, aud then turned
him loose, all of which indignities be
makes public te day and asks damages.
The young men are out in cards admitting
the whipping, but declaring that Amwcg's
flirtation was .net withthe belle, but with
a pretty servant girl iu the family named
Nellie, who has had the last of the con
troversy by declaring she never saw Am
weg. The opera singer is of a geed Phila
delphia family, he claims, his father being
a lawyer and his brother inspector of
bridges en the Pennsylvania read. Para
more is a seu of the president of the Texas
& St. Leuis railroad, and is te receive
$100,000 from his father upon hismarriage
te Blis Hazeltine.
FATAL CASUALTY.
Kicked te Death by a Mare.
Daniel Stanfler, residing at Ne. 236
Harrisburg turnpike, near Water street,
met with a terrible death yesterday. About
5 o'clock he went te the stable en the rear
of his let te feed his mare. Climbing, into
the hay-mew abeve the stable, he stepped
upon a loose beard which tilted, and he
was precipitated into the stable and fell at
the mare's heels. The mare was blind, and
being frightened at Mr.Stauffer's fallkicked
and trampled him in a shocking manner,
no was febnd seen afterwards quite uncon
scious, and it was with difficulty that he
was removed from the stable, the fright
ened mare kicking at everything within
reach and inflicting severe injury upon
BIr. Stauffer even after he was discovered.
The unfortunate man was removed te his
heuse and a physician summoned, but
nothing could be done for him. He died
about 9 o'clock.
BIr. Staufler was an honest, hard work
ing man, who followed hauling for a
living. He was about 35 years of age and
lcavesa wife and four children.
A HAD MAN.
He Pulled HI Little Knlle and a Salt of
Clethe!i.
Charles Wolf is the namoef a man who
has been in this city for some time past,
and lately has been employed as a laborer
at Knapp's brewery. August Gollatz is a
cooper who also works for BIr. Knapp.
Yesterday Wolf went into his room, and
opening his chest stele therefrem an over
coat, pair of beets, dress coat, vest, and a
pair of pantaloons. He started for the
Pennsylvania depot with his plunder, and
attempted te leave town. At the 2:40
train this morning he was caught by Chief
of Police Deichler ftnd the goods were
found in his possession. When the officer
attempted te arrest him Wolf drew a dirk
knife with a blade ten inches long and
attempted te cut him. Bystanders inter
fered and the man was prevented from
carrying out bis intention. He was locked
up and this-morning Alderman A.. F.
Dennelly committed him for a hearing.
Visiting Eastern Friends.
Blisses Ella J. and Laura Eckenretb,
daughters of BIr. Benjamin Eckenretb,
new of Wooster, O., formerly of Spring
ville, this county, are visiting friends and
relatives in this city.
BIr. Themas F. BIcSparran, formerly of
Fulton township, but for the past fourteen
years resident of Blexice, Audrain county.
Me., is visiting friends and relations in
this county. He farms about 285 acres of
land, and reports his crop prospects splcu
did. He raises com principally, and pre
fers farming there te here, as the work is
se much mere easily done en that soil.
i
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