rf rf.. .-- -!. r LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGENCER FRIDAY FEBRUARY 17 1882. EanrasteT -utclligrncct. FRIDAY EVENING, FEB. 17. 1882. The Number of Representatives. A great deal of energy is wasted in this world ever comparatively unimportant matters, and the Heuse of Representa tives illustrates the fact in the agitation it suffers in settling the exact number of representatives it shall consist of for the next decade. The numbers contended for vary from the present representation of two hundred and ninety-four te three hundred and twenty-six ; net a very wide range of numbers and certainly no very gross injury would b done te any body If anyone of the intermediate fig ures was selected. Still there are shades of difference and preference quite suffi cient te disturb the representatives' minds and te keep the question of the ratio undecided for two years and in two (.'engiesses. New at last by a mighty effort a resolu tion has been come te and '.'.'St is the number selected. It is probably as gee as any ether or it may be a triile better or worse. A grr-at many congressmen wanted te keep down the number, arguing that the busiuesi of the Heuse was new embarrassed by its size, lint a score or two mere or less in three hun dred representatives will net make much difference either way. The Heuse does seem te be tee large new for its orderly conduct, ami e.) it might as well be made a geed deal larger and mere fully execute the idea of it-; lepresentative character. It. is. a ques tion whether seven hundred or a thousand members would net be better than three hundred, which may belaid tD be either tee large or tee small a body If the desks were taken out of the hall, it would readily held three times the number el its present membership : and it would be safe te say thai the addi tional jnember.s would net cause se much noise and eonfusieii in the room as is directly and indirectly occasioned by furnishing each leprcaentative with a desk. The questi-mis between the value of a desk and the representative?, the s;iaiv of uhe-se seals it occupies Legislation for Railroads. Mr. lay Gould has had a great deal of experience in fixing up railroad matters te Suit himself' by the use- of legislation ; and se have th-- I'ennsylvauia railroad people. Beth hae been out of the bu-i-ness of late, but new reappear together in the New Jersey field, where a bill has jHslb.-cii pa-.ed te enable their friends who ar.- new in control of the New Jcr sey Central railroad te leniain there, notwithstanding II e wen and Jewett have obtained the majority of the .sleck. The device, used i an old one, being simph the conversion of bend.-; into stock. There is certainly no objection te permit ting stockheldei:. te pay their debts, al though it does net leek well for a l.egis" lature te be playing into the hands of men hoe present advantage it is te urge se apparently innocent a measure. If Mr. "euld, however, never proposes any worse legislation in his "litertst he will net be the object el much aniniad aniniad veiiiieii for his bad citizenship. The people who want te control the New Jersey Central or anj ether railroad in the interest of th'-ir schemes might fairly be required te purchase the whole read, bends as well as sleck, and net simply the majority of them. Ureal injustice is done under the p twer .conferred upon the majority i.f the stockholders and tie wrongs .iinered by the mimnity !;: longsereh e.illed for redress. Dritixc the first year of Kitca'.s ad ministration of the water works. ih" n n serveirs were kepi about Is inches higher than bafere, all wh:g many persons en higher grounds water who had int bffiiv had an opportunity te tiv i-. The -;ii'n iner (f lsbe was dtxeraai !i itt'.v than that of t!; year before, :i:d th'-r-- iv.i . largely increased use of water J.;r irei ' sprinkling ec! th-: previous year U skies these spsciai eceaai. inn ier an In firasni of water cou.-aiuiptien. there ..i-i-155 new connections mad in that ) :i . the largest uuiubi-r ever known in til;.: time. These fads will explain why theie had te be puuip.-l !uo,0eo in. .re gallen: daily than in the year before. That it should have cost the cit only .-1,-!s!i...i mere for coal f it liigla r tribute te the economy wf Deui-icratic adinini.-.tratien ; but even this increase is met fou.-fe'd by the largely increased receipts from water rents and the reduction of water works general" expenses. Wj: are glad te hear that the Esami r.ir calls it "plundering'' for any pub lie official te take double pay fordeing Ins regular work or te get pay for doing what is properly the work of some ether paid official. Whether the Examiner is right in saying Mr. lleyer, prison solid ter, has done this may lie called into question, but the practice is one that cannot be honored by however long ob servance. l'er years this and like piae tices have prevailed in Lancaster county and the Ixtelliehnvek has been exposing and denouncing them, while the Examiner has been defending them, or has kept silent or has ridiculed our criticism of it as " fuss '" and " gush." At last it is wakened te a proper appre ciation of these abuses and begins te call things by their right name.?. We hope it will net falter in the geed work. And new will it please tell us what it calls the " extras " which have been for years allowed the clerk of the cemmis sieners, the county solicitor and the ex traordinary ' extias " allowed the pre thonetary, the late register and clerk of quarter sessions by Commissioner-. Ceble and Bushong ? Tut: Republicans are indulging in some self-congratulation ever supposed Democratic defections and are inspiring their party with many such wild reports. Seme of them have been freely circu lating the story that W. C. Pyle is sup porting Stauffer and opposing MacGon MacGen igle. Like most of the campaign canards originating in a " facility for lying," there is net a word of truth in this story about Mr. Pyle. He is for MacGenigle first, last and all the time, as are the Democrats ':' the city aimed .-.ill. out exception. Tliey Gnaw a File. We can easily excuse the disinclination of our esteemed Republican contempora ries te meet the real issues of the present city campaign. Neither of them has yet ventured te explain hew it is that while Stauffer's administration in four years, piled 100.000 increase upon the bended city debt, and left floating obligations of $.",0,000, Mayer MacGenigle's admin istration in four years paid that $:S0,000 of lleating debts, and decreased the interest-bearing debt ever $15,000, besides " making such valuable and costly ; mu.it-nt improvements as the laying of three squares and Centre square with Deligian blocks, macadamizing of many squares, paying street damages, erection of a new Worthington pump, thorough and perm -incut repairs of the eastern re servoir, laying of new mains and many ether improvements in the water works department." This difference of about $215,000 in favor of the city, effected by Mayer MacGenigle's honest, efficient and economical administration is te them a stumbling block. They can neither get around it nor ever it, nor can they remove it. (Juite naturally then they seek te evade the real issue, and.after the manner of ancient hypocrites, strain at a gnat and swallow a camel. They refuse te concede anything of ci edit te an ad ministration which en an average was worth te the taxpayersitiii,0oe per year mere than Stauffer's, but are much exer cised and troubled at the report of the superintendent of the water works that h required $l,-ls!.i!i worth mere of coal than Sunt. Ilalbach te pump by steam i'j2,T-le.0.".T mere gallons of water into the reservoir. This conundrum, which affects our contemporaries se seriously, seems te carry its answer en its face, for obviously if 402,740,037 mere gallons of water were pumped up, it is net trange that Sl.-tS9.0ii mere of coal would be re quired, especially when it is remembered that the coal used by Ilalbach was fur nished te the city by contract al $2.21 per ten. while that used by Kilcli cost en an average $:t.05 a difference for which, of course, Kitch was in no de gree responsible, but which will go very far te explain the increase in the total price of coal used, and te illustrate the '.' much rluUjili' MTriVc ill tin .LdtCr work? ,'iulir Kitch than ITeWarlt. The .Vu- Era seems te admit that the reported service was cheaper, but dis credits the report of it and intimates that net se many gallons were pumped into the reservoirs as ate reported for lssn. Concerning this we need only ray that the means employed by Kitch te compute the amount of water pumped J into :h- basins are exactly the.-j by which ilalbach made his measuienients It has been some eight month; since Supt kitch. in his report te councils said : The average a.y consumption of water during icy term was 2,903,700 gallons. Our population is 25,8-10, making ear per capita consumption 110 gallons. This is exceeded by but one city in the United States that wc have statistics of Pitts burgh, hi New Yerk, Philadelphia, Chi cago, Cincinnati, Bosten, St. Leuis ami a dozen ether large cities, it is but. 05 gal lons per capita, en an average. In 21 large feicign cities it is but 25 gallons par capita. Providence, II. I., with four times the populntienof Lancaster, uses bat little meie than we de. and the small pur can ita consumption is accounted for by the meter system el'ehargcs. That report was published at the time if was made and its accuracy wa.s never before questioned. That this amount of water was used cannot be gainsaid. 1 1 is computed by the revolutions of the Hirkc-nbiiu wheels and the automatic register of Ihe Worthington engine. The people no doubt consumed it freely hec.uu.sr- they had an abundant supply. The superintendent hasnocen- trel ever their consumption of i!. I: is ! his business te keep the reservoirs full, I and if. te de this, he had te pump ucaily J '.) per cent, mera per day than Ilalbach, j the people are grateful for ha ing had I tlii.s abundant .supply at an increased cost of only $l,4y.i.'.ts for coal, especially j when in ether detaih of running the i w:iter works, as is shown below, much j larger .-a ings than this were effected. ! In undertaking te explain this increase of water supply and consumption, the .V. " '.'i-ii would have been measurably aided by this item, found, tee, in Water Superintendent Kitch's report fr 18S0 : During the year 152 2-inch fen tiles and 1-inch ferrule have been inserted, and one 1-inch connection, being a greater number of new rente! s in one vear than we ever had. And, corresponding witii this increase cf consumers, we find that the receipts from water rents under Kitch were Sl.-5-11.22 mere than under Ilalbach or three times as much a-; the incieased c-est of coal. Our contemporaries inquire why there was se much greater u.e of the Wor thington engine under Kitch and re latively less use of the water pumps. They could have found a ready answer in the report of Water Superintendent Kitch for 1RS0. On page 05 of the city reports they could have seen that during September, October and November one Birkenbine pump could net be operated at all, being under necessary repairs; and that all during the months .f June, July, August and September the water was very low and little power could be obtained for the water pumps. During hir. entire administration Water Super intendent Kitch has run the water pumps, whenever practicable, te their full capacity. lie could have no possible interest in doing any thing else. Brr, besides an increase of water rents te the amount of three-fold the increased cost of coal consumed, and besides an increased average supply of DOo.eoo gal lens of water per day, there arc ether i points of comparison which are greatly te the advantage of the present adminis tration of the water works. Notwith standing the much higher price of coal, Supt. Kitch pumped water by steam power at a cost te the city of $7.74 per million gallons, while the same service under Ilalbach cost $8.GS; the pumping by water power under Kitch only cost 83.57 per million gallons, while under Ilalbach the same service cost. $3.70, a very material saving te the city i under Kitch. ' The results of these econ- j emiesare plainly seen in the expendi- . , - .. ... , , ,, , ' , V. , r ,r xuese i under the last year of Ilalbach, exclu-' sive of repairs te the eastern reservoir, amounted te $G,S10.53, while the expen ditures for water works general, under Kitch, exclusive of permanent and unu sual repairs te the eastern reservoir, were enlyS4,7S7.41 a difference of $2,023.12 in favor of the Demecrartic administra tion. These figures may explain why the old jobbers and tinkers want te again get their work in at the water works. Our Republican contemporaries may net be able te understand these figures. Rut the taxpayers can. . - As the A'cif Era has " lest all faith in the multiplication table," we will net expect it te tell us why, if a Democratic administration can pump water by steam at a cost te the city of only S7.74 per mil mil mil lion'gallens, when coal is $3.00 a ten, a Republican administration expends S8.G0 per million gallons for the same service, when coal is only $2.24 per ten. The double rule of three will work out the answer in favor of Democratic economy " by a large majority." Ax extract that we republish from Mayer MacGenigle's last annual mes sagewhich has been befeie the public for months and has never been gainsaid puts the responsibility for an increase of the city tax just where it belong's, upon a profligate Republican street committee. Should our citizens be se short-sighted as te let such men as ran that committee again get control of city affairs they may expect mere floating debts anil mere increase of tax. , The Examiner commends liie econo my of pumping water into the reservoir by water power. It is right, and Supt. Kitch has used the water pumps when ever practicable, and he has pumped with them at a cost te the city of $3.57 per million gallons pumped, while the same service under Ilalbach cost $3.70 per million gallons. Tin: president en Wednesday evening nave a state dinner te the diplomatic corps. It was notable in being the first state dinner of the administration ; the first in the refurnished, repainted and re papered executive mansion ; the first in four yens te the foreign legations, for whom, during the last three years of his presidency, Mr. Hayes gave an annual dinner party in placs et a dinner ; and the most elegant in certain of its appointments known in many years at the mansion. As Mn. M.wGoniei.f.'s iidiiiinhtrntieH fat jht'nl ejf' $15,000 of tin, city debt, and therefore decreased the tai burden 40 cents en every $100 cahiatien, and an W. D. Staujf'er's aditiinstratien increased the debt 200,000t? therefore increased the tux burden $1.75 en i wry $100 caluatien, there fort v. ;.( eicncr of property in this city iche ixinfacorefhiw taxes, and ecery tenant in facer of line rents, should gice te Jehn T. Mite Oeniijle hi. cote for mayor en Tuesday nO.it. Tin: Carlisle Volunteer, Deiu., points out that a noticeable feature of our nom inations for governor is the way they have been concentrated in certain districts of limited number and limited area. Pour counties adjoining Centre have had the candidate six times in the last forty-four year."-; and .-sis counties, of which Schuyl kill is the centre, have had the candidate eight times within the last thirty eight )ears. The balance of the state has had the candidate only euca in these forty-four years. Tiik colored citizens of llarrisburgas seaibled in mass meeting en Wednesday night te discuss the ri.eent refusal of the niayei of the city, a Republican, te give their race representation en the police force. Speeches were made byProfesser W. Heward Day, Majer Simpsen and etheis, alter which a series of resolutions were reported and unanimously adopted. The insolatiens recite that wheieas colored patrolmen have been appointed by Demo cratic mayors in Philadelyhia, Pittsburgh and Williamspei t, the refusal te appoint them in Hanisburg is detrimental te the be.st interests of the party and the out eut out gewth of a prejudice which the mayor and the pasty cannot tee seen remove, and that the colored people will pursue what they deem the best course for their own respect and protection until what they think right and just is accorded thctu. 'I'm: Exa, turner has either been misin formed or states what it knows is net true when it says ' that iu Laucaster the Dem ocrats assess the mayor's Democratic po licemen annually $40, for the election (corruption) fund." Ne such assessment or any ether assessment has ever beeu made upon the police under Maye$ Mac Mac eonigle, nor upon any ether Democratic officeholder or candidate for any city office, within the past six or eight years at least. Every Democratic officer, like every ethor Democratic citizen, is aud has been at en tire liberty te subscribe voluntarily just whatever he sees fit te the Democratic campaign fund ; and of this right te give inore or less, or nothing at all, the police men have availed themselves, without auy mere uniformity in their subscriptions than in these of ether Democrats. Whether they have seen fit te contribute liberally or sparingly or te net contribute at all, they have neither beeu coaxed, threatened, nor influenced by any consideration except tUcir own inclination. Fer of all parties interested in the campaign Mayer Mac Mac eonigle has neither known nor inquired, nor will he knew what any person who ewes his appointment te him has con tributed te the campaign fund. Unlike a very great many persons elected te office in this county he will be able te take Irs oath of office without committing perjury, and te discharge its duties unhampered by pledges, premises or obligations of any kind conflicting with the public interests. A Heavy Oalr. A heavy gale at Helena, Arkansas, yes terday morning, drove waves several feet high ever the embankment iu front of Commercial Rew. Between 12 and 1 o'clock the fire alarm bells sounded and the stores wcre closed, merchants and ether--: hastening te the scene of threaten ed disaster. The gale seen subsided and by 2 o'clock the river was calm. At that hour, however, two breaks occurred in the levee at the upper end of Williamson Place, two miles below- the city. The breaks aggregated 300 yards in length and the water poured through at a rapid rate. It was LePcd tue flood could kept out of tLuCit? by Ci.lesin the, Midiand railroad embankment, and a large force of men were set at work doing se by the city authorities. TO-DAYS TOPICS. THE EVENTS OP A DAY. CRIMINAL AK1) CALAMITOUS. The Drift of State Legislation. The Senate of Wisconsin yesterday passed a bill restoring capital punishment. At a meeting of the New Jersey beard of education in Trenten, yesterday, Ellis F. Apgar was re-elected superintendent of public affairs. The New Brunswick legislature was opened yesterday. The lieutenant gover nor in his speech said the provincial gov ernment intended te stait a breeding larm for the improvement of stock. The Mutual Union telegraph company yesterday filed a certificate in the office of the secretary of state, at Albauv, increas ing its capital $10,000,000. A " mass constitutional prohibition con vention," is session at Minneapolis, ad journed yesterday, after agreeiug te a resolution urging the state of Minnesota te adept a constitutional amendment pre hibiting the manufacture, importation or sale of intoxicating liquors as a beverage. The population of British Columbia, ac cording te the last census is 49,459, of which 4,320 are Chinese and 20,500 In dians. Mr. Pepe, the Canadian minister of agriculture, stated in the Dominion Parliament yesterday that labt year "2,154 people had gene from Ontario into Man itoba and the Northwest, 2,739 from the United states, and 4,334 from ether coun tries." Trade and Commerce. The ship General Kuex sailed yesterday from Norfolk, Virginia, with 8,580 bales of cotton. A telegram from Poughkeepsie, report ing the centinuauce of the thaw and another rain storm last night, says the ice harvest en the Hudsen is practically ended, with about half a crop housed. Telegraphic connection was being estab lished yesterday between Madisen, In diana, and Milten, Carrel ten and Frank fort, in Kentucky, as well as intermediate points en the Kentucky river. The Ohie river at Madisen is spanned by a wire stretching from bluff te bluff four hun dred feet above the level of the river. Governer Cameren, of Virginia, arrived in Norfolk yesterday afternoon and or dered a company of militia te the mouth of the Rappahannock river, where a con flict is threatened between the oyster fleets ami the citizens, who allege that the oyster gatherers are trcspassiuirupen their private rights. Fire ami IfutulilleH. Jamea Gere, 13 years of ae, was drowned in the Oswego canal, near Syra cuse, en Wednesday evening, while trying te save a companion. Jeseph Fex, aged 05 years, was killed by a train in Trenten, New Jersey, yester day. William Warner was killed yesterday in Providence by a train backing in the tail tail read yard where he was employed. A fire in Robinson, Kansas, yestcaday morning, destroyed twelve stores, two hotels, the pest office, Masonic and Odd Fellows' halls aud two dwellings. Less 70,000. The wholesale confectionery and notion store of Ekrman Cewe, in Louisville, was burned yesterday morning. Less 00,009. Seventeen cases of smallpox and five deaths from the disease were reported in Richmond, Virginia, last week. Ellen Slevin died yesterday morning in the New Yerk dispensary while under the influence of ether, administered te her by the surgeons previous te performing an operation en her arm. Philip Shafer, setter-tip of stationary engines for the Perter manufacturing company in Syracuse, had his left leg caught in the main shaft iu the company's factory yesterday morning. The limb was wound four times around the shaft and tern from his body, but it is thought he will recover. Siilcliles unit Murilerri. Henry Strausberger, a stranger, com mitted suicide in Heading yesterday by sheeting himself with a pistol. Iudi genee is supposed te have been the cause. Twe bodies, showing evidence of mur der, were found iu the Rie Grande river near Laredo, Texas en Wednesday. One of them had a rope around the ueck. Iu the Lenahan murder case at Sieu:-: J City, Iowa, the coroner's jury yesterday reuuerea a verdict tnat ticualian " came te his death from a shot from a revolver in the hands of Maggie Lenahan, aud that her mother and sister Anuie aud Herbert Birch are accessories." Maggie Lenahan and her mother confessed the crime, the motive being Lcnahan's re fusal te allow ene of his daughters te mairy Birch. A WHEELING SCANDAL, lien. A. W. Campbell's Seasons Fer .Suing Ifer A Divorce. 1'itt.tbnrj; Dispatch te the Press. Hen. A. W. Campbell, editor of the Wheeling Intelligencer, who become prom inent in the Chicago convention because he would net vete for Cenkhng's resolution te support the nominee of the convention, has commenced proceedings at Wheeling for a divorce from his wife. One night last week, he had arranged te leave Wheel ing en a train departing about 10 p. in. He missed the train, wherenpen he re turned te the editorial room of his paper and worked until three o'clock in the morning, when he started home. It seems that Mis. Camp bell, under the impression that her husband had left the city, was entertaining a gentleman who had no business there while the head of the household was absent. Mr. Campbell had hardly get the deer of his dwelling unlocked aud opened when a man rushed past him out of the house with nothing en but his undergarments and carrying his clothes en his arm. Mr. Campbell chased the man into a livery stable two blocks away. Here he had some difficulty in prosecuting his search, as he was opposed by a colored hostler who was friendly te the fugitive, but finally discovered the man crouched down in a dark corner of a stall ; drawing him out iute the light, Mr. Campbell, who is a man of powerful physique, jerked him te his feet te get a leek at his face. On recegnizinghim, he 3aid : " Oh, its you, is it, that's all I want te knew," and walked away. Mr. Campbell went te a hotel and spent the remainder of the night. The next day he begau a suit for a divorce from his wife en the ground of adultery. The man whom he had seen down iu the livery stable was Geerge K. Wheat, the leadimr merchant of Wheeling and one of the wealthiest men of the city. Mrs. Camp bell is yeuu2, very beautiful and hiuhlv educated. Mr. Campbell married her about four years age, when she was a teacher in the female seminary at Wheeling. She is Campbell's second wife ; her maiden name was was Mary Hallewell. Mr. Wheat is married and has several grown up children, among whom are four ac complished daughters. The event is the talk of Wheeling, but owing te the prom ineuce of the parties concerned the papers of that city have refrained from mention ing it. KlDRCafnlval. The carnival fooleries iu New Orleans j began last night with the eighth annual j lajjceuii ui wc ivui(;uka ui jiuuiiui. l no precession and tableaux illustrated the Hindoe epic poem of Ramayana, by Valmiki. iff ACADEMY BURNED. UYATT'S MILITARY CULLEOGAT CHES TKK TOTALLY DtSTliUK.O. A tire lireakd Out in the Laboratory iJc iJc treyius the Fine ItuiliUng autl in volving a Less et S30O.00C Fartlally Covered by Insurance. The city of Chester, in Delaware county, has suffered a great less in the destruction by fire, last evening, of the well-known, large and conspicuous Millitary Academy, situated en an eminence about one mile northeast of the depot and nsar the outer hounds of the city. The building was four stories in height, including a high basement. It was very soundly built of stone and was 2:50 feet long by 50 feet wide. The centre front of the building was elevated and formed an additional story, and in this part of the structure wherein was the laboratory, the lire oc curred. Frem this story access is open te the left en either side. The origin of the fire in the laboratory is net known, as that department was vacant at the time. The cadets finished their afternoon drill shortly after five o'clock, and upon retiring te their rooms smoke was discer ered en the upper fleer, and flames were Sieu breaking through the ceiling from the left, se it was evident that the lire had been burning iu the lefc for perhaps an hour befere is was discovered, and had in the meantime spread through the left iu both directions. The alarm was given, and the tiroextiuguishers of the academy brought into requisition, but this flames had attained tee much headway te make them available, and the alarm was sent out te the fire department. It was a con siderable lenirth of time before any of the apparatus arrived, owing te the bad con dition of the streets leading te the burning building. By this time the whole upper story of the vast building was one sheet of tlame. and all efforts te save it were aban 'done;!, and attention turned te getting out its contents. The cadets weic kept under strict dis cipline and by their aid nearly everything was removed from the building befeie the tire reached it. Of course, iu the hasty removal necessary under the circum stances, much of the furniture was con siderably damaged. The goods were all placed en the grounds surrounding the academy, and the heavy rain which com menced falling shortly after damaged much of the finer furniture and beds be yond repair. The fire department, when it did get te work, had te draw its water freat a pond one hundred and fifty yards distant, but by its exertions the drill house, a one-story stone building, about two hundred and fifty feet long, situated just north of the academy, was saved. The cadets, 142 in number, escaped all injury iu any way, hut. many of them lest articles of clothing in the confusion. They were all returned te their homes in the evening trains. The flames in the course of half an hour after they were discovered enveloped the whole building and lit up the country for miles around. At 10 o'clock last night the bare walls of the building, sinoke begrimed and black ened, were all standing, and the debris, including a large quantity of coal in the cellar and the window frames, burning briskly. At about the above heui the large portico commanding the main cu cu trauce te the building was one mass of flames, and was allowed te burn, as no further damage could occur from it. The structure was known as the I'enu sylvania military academy, and was, since its construction, in charge of Colonel Hyatt, by whose name the academy was mere popularly known. The corner stone was laid in Juue, 1807, and the whole building was completed and occupied the following year. It was very successful from its .--.tart and at the time of its do-atriiet-ien wa-s in full operation. The building and furniture cost about $100, 000. The insurance en the building is $00,003 ami en the apparatus, furniture machineiy between $15,000 and $20,000. Colonel Hyatt, states that i!ie academy will be rebuilt at once, and in the mean time ether quarters will be obtained in order te continue the business of the insti tution. -WK CALL IT I'LUXDKltlXt;.- Tlie lCxauilner .KcMilves te be a Kefermer. r.xuininer. Wc give air. Beyer the full benefit of his explanation, aud all it shows is that as a " reformer " appointed by a beard that laid great claims te reforming old aud ex travagaut methods, he dropped into this familiar rut of taking all he can get. We dissent from the position that his $100 is "only a general retaining fee " paid for attending the meetings of the inspecteiF. We believe he has no business te act au clerk te take the inventory and charge ex tra for it. That should be the work of the beard and the clerk aud keeper. He has no business te receive extra pay for draw ing the annual report or preparing the treasurer's account, or for filiug it. The business of the solicitor is. te attend te all the legal business of the prison for the salary paid him, and the clerk's business is te de the clerking, and net have the solicitor de it, and pay him extra for it. 11 this is a practice that has grown iu the prison, it should be reformed, aud Mr. Beyer, who went in en the reform wave, should have practiced it, instead of which he went around grabbing all he could get, and new justifies his yet ting, by saying that the men he and his ,; reform " associates declared were public plunderers received the same. But lie does reduce the amount that went into his pocket from $190.GS te $170.08 which is a proper credit. But Mr. Beyer is ercdited with having received for costs paid en ap ap peals $14.15, which may be independent of what lie claims te have paid te the pro pre pro thenotary. But te show that Mr. Beyer m his strug gle te be continued solicitor was net that " reform" should picvail at the prison, but that thrift should fellow, we have an other geed sized bonanza te open through which he grabbed $141, HI iu the way of "commissions," for the sending out of bills te the customers of the priseu. Mr. Beyer scut out bills amounting te $I,4i:j 82, which should all have baen collected by the piisun clerk. Mr. Beyer presented bills te such well-known citizens as Jehn R. Bitner, Milten Ileidelbangh, Dr. Jehn L. Atlee, Levi Scnscnig. Jehn K. Reed, Dana Graham, S. II. Reynolds, Ilaydcn Tshudy, Themas A. Wiley, Hcise Sz Kauffman, and te such corporations as the Lancaster county poor peer house aud the Childrens' home, and charged ten per cent, and the postage- for collection. The idea of placing the bit's ei .sucu parties in me nanus el me "solicitor'-' could only be for the purpose of jiuttintr money into Mr. Beyer's pocket. It sounds like a farce te pay Mr. Beyer $10.:i5 te ' collect" a bill from Jehn R. Bitner, or $10.95 from Levi Sensefiig, or $12.15 iiem the Lancaster county poor peer house, or $10.9:1 from the Cliildi en's hena-. This may be called " reform, "' but v.e call it plundering, and it is no exeusc that ether "solicitors" did it. Ameir; the Universities. Seven students have been expelled from Willisten seminary at East Hampton, Massachusetts, for insubordination. Most of the senior class are rebellious, but the tiouble in the ether classes is believed te be "substantially ever." Parkham Adams, aged 14 years, a stu dent of the University of Tennessee, is dying in Knoxville from the effects of .smekiug 49 cigarettes ami inhaling the smoke " en a wager." Services were held yesterday in Harvard college en the body of Ke Kun Hua, late professor of Chinese. There wcre present j the faenltv nf t-lm enllne-e and a larsrc mini- I rf 0 a - ber of students, the eldest son of deceased and Mr. Queng, "a mandarin from Hart Hart eord." Pofesser Everett, Dean of the Divinity school, conducted the services. He read "selections from the works of Confucius and from the New Testament," after which there was a chant by the choir. Must Oivo llali. Judge Snell, in the police cenit at Wash ington, yesterday, decided that Cabell, Dicksen and Minnix, charged with con spiring te defraud the government, must give bends in $1,000 each te appear before the grand jury. PKRSONAL. Hen. Simen Ca.mek.en has invited a number of Philadelphi.ins te accompany him te Flerida. The wife of Governer I.one, nf Massa chusetts, died yesterday in Bosten. She had been an invalid for a long time. The secretary of war yesterday directed General Ri'cker te go at ence te Wash ington and assume his duties as quarter master general of the army. The president yesterday nominated Wu.-bl-i: F. Hi;nt te be United States attor ney and Gi:oi:ej: D. Bhuf.f. United States marshal for Maine. The president has formally accepted the resignation of W.ne Hunt as associate justice of the supreme court of the United States, aud will probably nominate his successor next week. Colonel A B. Mn.rsi.vM, longpiemiueut iu connection with Indian attain: iu Colo Cole rado, and a member of the Ute commis sion, died suddenly of apoplexy in Wash ington htbt night, at the age of 50 years. Jesui'U E. Siikkkiki.d, founder of the Sheffield scientific school, connected with Yale college, died yesterday morning in New Haveu. His contributions te the en dewment of the school, which was estab lished in 1847, have amouutedte $100,000. Madame Patti has such a cold that she may net be able te aing during the Cin cinnati festival at all. The levers of music there are disappointed sorely, but they are net cast down, and the festival is in pro gress. Iu leaving the depot at Chicago the diva thrust her head out of the car window te bid a friend geed-bye and con tinued te leek back until the depot was some distance behind. The draft affected her threat. In Detroit she was imprudent iu driving out. The story is that her livery bill there was $55. LOCAL INTELLIGENCE. TDK CITY TAX. Hew a i:eulUcaii Street Cnnsniui-H In- created it. Mayer .lucijonigle'a Annual .Mi.ii,i'j jn. Te these who de net watch closely the curreut of our municipal events it may seem .strange that while- the actual debt of the city is cut down $15,000 for the year, the taxation for city purposes has increased two mills, or from 70 te 00 cents en the $100 valuation. Fer the solution of this anomaly the reader must iccall the operations in the street department in the summer of 1879. It will be recollected that at that time there was work unneces sarily aud illegally undertaken, such as laying Belgian blocks in Centie Square, tearing up aud relaying crossings which would have seived geed purpose.! for years, ordering sewer traps which upon tiial had te be abandoned, and ether jobs equally unnecessary put through, asgregating en the 1st of June, 1830, nearly $18,000. On many of the bills making up this ainmiur, suit lias bpen brought and judgment recovered. The costs, interest aud principal of these bills new aggrcgate ever $HO.O0O. Befeie 1874 this excess iu expenditure could have been turned into funded debt, and the interest of the amount only added te the taxation. But the new constitution stepped all that, and where the aggrcgate of indebtedness has been reached allowed under the fun damental law, as with us, the amount in excess of the limit must he paid by direct taxation. This $20,000 of indebtedness, made by the street committee of two years age, must be thus paid ; honce the two mills additional city taxation for this year. It is te be hoped that this experi ence will have net have been in vain, that the several departments having the city's finances te disburse will step en the hither side of that which is illegal. I shall endeavor from time te time, as iu the past, te notify councils of the condi tion of the appropriations. The attention of councils was called by nu in special messages ever and ever again te the con ditieu of the appropriation for street pur poses and te the illegality of the work undertaken in the street department nearly two years age, the payment for which by taxation is se loudly complained of new, but the effective check could net be at tained until the court was appealed te and an injunction giautcd. Hew much that injunction was worth te the city may be approximately estimated by these familiar with the reckless extravagance which had already fastened upeu the city nearly $18,000 at the time the court cainc te the rescue. Accident en the Heading Kcllread. On the Reading & Columbia railroad, about four o'clock en Thursday afternoon, two freight trains, which closely fellow each ether, and drawn by engines "0.h- kesh " and " Ephratn," were geiiifj north. When the latter train ncarcd Keller's sid ing it was cut and the lear cars left te run en the siding themselves. At that mom ent the ether train, drawn by " Oshkosh, " came thundering along and, there being a dense fog, the engineer was unable te sen ahead and he ran into the shifting cars. About a dozen cars were wrecked and the en cine " C-dikesii " was badly damaged. The cowcatcher was broken te pieces and the bell, whistle and smokestack tein off. The engineer and fireman jumped from the engine and escaped. One brakeman received a slight injury. The passenger train due at Lititz at 4:35 p. m. did net arrive until 0 o'clock in the evening. The wreck was cleared during the night. Uel.:uruliii tlie Twenty Scrim. I.' Under the management of W. II. Ltv.-r-goed, teacher of the male secondary school, a public school celebration will be given by his school en Washington's Biithday, in the old high school building, corner of Chestnut aud Prince streets. Prof. Haas and Kevinski will conduct the singing. The exercises will consist of addresses, recitations, singing and violin aud flute soles by the pupils of the school. They will begine at lh o'clock. Invitations have been extended te directors, teachers, and parents. Police Cases. This morning the mayor seat one drunk te jail for ten days, aid discharged sev.eral Alderman 3IcConemy sent Louisa Meltz te jail for 30 days fjr being drunk and disorderly. BRAINED BY A. HANIAC. TERRIBLE CRIME THIS MORNINGf Y A MADWOMAN'S DREADFUL DEED Silt lit I.I,- UKK AGED .1IOTHKR-1N- U. .ilr-t. Alary Mancli, of 404 Kut Orange Street, splits Open the lleau et Her llusband'it Mether Particulars nf the Shocking AT- fair. A terrible tragedy was enacted at Ne. 404 East Orange street, near Plum, this morning, between 7 aud S o'clock. Mrs. Mary Masch, killed her mother-in-law. Mis. Elizabeth Masch by dealing her sev eral blows upon the head with a hatchet, crushing her skull iu several places and causing her death within a few minutes after the assault. At the hour named, Miss Marien, who lives with her sister, Mrs. Rese Dennelly, at 400 East Orange sticct, adjeiniug the residence of the Masch family, heard screams and a heavy thud, as if some one- had fallen. She told Mrs. Dennelly that she feared something was wrong next deer, and that she had hotter go ever and sec what was the inatler.Thiukiug that per haps the children were being punished and the noise was made by them, Mrs. Den nelly did net like te intrude, but making an excuse te get a bucket of water went into the yard. She found Masch's kitchen deer and windows closed, aud the diuiug room shutters bowed. Peeping iu through the shutters she saw something lying en the fleer, aud looking mere closely thought it was old Mrs. Masch, who being palsied, had fallen. At this instant young Mrs. Masch came rushing te the wiudew into which .Mrs. Dennelly was looking, and with clenched fists aud glaring eyes, shrieked aloud, " I've killed her ; I've killed her !" Tt-i-rilicd, Mrs. Dennelly replied, "Oh, Mrs. Masch, why did you de se".'" aud the answer she received was, " I killed her ; I killed her, because I want te be killed." Mrs. Dennelly fcatiug that Mrs. Masch, who appeared te be insane, would kill her children also, ran off and gave the alarm te several neighbors, urging them te go te the house and save the children. She then .scat her own boy te Best's heilci works where Mr. Masch was at work, telling him te hasten home as .something was wrong there. .Mr. Masch left his work aud hurried home. He found Up Up feont deer locked, hut. en knocking his wife admitted him, saying a slit: did se, ' I've killed mother." What the Husband and .-jeu .S;. . A horrible spectacle met tiie husband's gaze. His wife, wild aud disheveled, staring at him w.th the glare of a maniac, and his mother, covered with aud weltering iu her own bleed, lying upon the deer in the threes of death, the furniture of the room in which the dreadful dead was dene being spattered with bleed, while the in strument of death an ordinary hatchet -lay upon the fleer, both helve aud hatchet being smeared with the bleed el hi-i V mother. Upstairs his two little chil dren were shrieking with fright, having, apparently, ceme part way down stairs, and, seeing the bloody scene, ran back te their room. Within a few minutes a very laige crowd had gathered in aud about thvi premises. Physicians and priests wcte sent for, and were seen en baud, but the victim had died before their arrival. Mrs. Masch's body was placed upon a sottce in the room iu which she was killed, the children wre taken te Min. Dennelly's for safety, aud young Mrs. Masch was placed for a time under u'uanl upstaiis. The Corener Summoned. Corener Shiller being notified el tha ..." currence empaneled the following named jurors aud visited the scene : Win Roehm, Geerge Hunter, T, V. McHlligett, Geerge Lcamau, C. A. Gast and O. 1 Stencr. The Scene el thu Tmgedya The house in wcich the terrible .bed was enacted in a small twu-steiy brick, with a front and back room en the first fleer and a frame kitchen iu the rear. Thu front room is plainly but neatly furnished with a number of attractive pictuics hang ing en the wall anion tr them a fiue colored eugraving of thu Crucifixion. Thu back room in which tha homicide te.k p'acc, is furnished with ordinary dining room and kitchen furniture, including a caek stove, breakfast tabic, sink, settee, a few chairs aud a rag carpet. Frem this room stairways lead down te the eel la r and up te the seceu.l fleer. A deer leads out te the back kitchen, and a window .i i.. .., ....4. ..-.,.. 41. .l Ti .. : .1 -.. ' iuuib uul iijj-ju luc yaiu. it naa uiiu luia window that Mrs. Dennelly peered and made discovery of the homicide. After the coroner's jury hail viewed the body of the elder Mrs. Masch, and Iter slayer had been taken into custody, they adjourned te await the autopsy made b Drs. Compten and Welchaus. The Slad Murderess. Mrs. Masch was found by the jury iu an up-stairs room. She is about 30 years of age, tall, light-coraplexiencd, and rather geed-looking. She is the mother of two very pretty little girl., one of them about six and the ether between two and three years old. In about a month it is expected a third child will be burn te her. Her maimer this morning after the homicide, was wild and nervous, but net violent until an attempt was made te take her into custody. In conversation with some of the jurymen she repeatedly avowed the killing, saying that she had no ill-will te her victim, but being weary of life and having nothing te live ter, she had killed her methnr-in-law because she knew that then some one would kill her, aud she wanted te die. These statements weie made in a rambling disconnected way, showing very clearly that the woman is laboring uudur itisuu ity. When an officer approached te remove her te jail, she resisted furiously, defying the police and everybody else, and declaring she would never leave the room unless her children could accompany her wherever she went. She was humored in this whim, and under escort of Wm. Roehm, ene of the coroner's jury, accem- 4 panied by her two little girls, proceeded te the county jail without auy remarkable demonstration When locked up, however, her children being taken away from her, she again became a raviu maniac, and unless closely watched will 110 doubt de herself bodily harm, or mere likely take her