Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, March 18, 1882, Image 2

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    LANCAS'lJKli JMlJ:y JNTElJJGENCElt.SATUtDAY MARCH IS IS&2
kamastcr fntelltfiencer.
BATUBDAY ZVEN'O, MAECH 18, 182.
The Star Reute Cases.
The circumstances of Special Counsel
W. A. Cook's withdrawal from the star
route cases are net apt te leave a pleas
ant impression "upon the ceuntry:
"With geed or Insufficient reason he
says :
Since the death of President Garfield I
have noticed the gradual freezing out pro
cess of all the original agencies in these
canes, and when Mr. Gibsen was squeezed
out by the change of safe combination aud
request for his keys, I felt then that it
would net be long before I was retired
from .the cases. Cel. Gibseu was a
thorough, earnest and efficient coadjutor,
and I felt in his less that of a valuable
aid. In fact, I have received no encour
agement, nor have I been sent for or given
the confidence of President Arthur or his
cabinet.
lie cemplaius that his detectives have
been removed and ethers imported from
Philadelphia te take their places ; that
indictments were prepared and sent in
without his knowledge, and he deems it
strange that the government counsel
Geerge Bliss, should have bought the
the organ of the stfar route thieves and
retained their defenders as his editors.
The new administration and its attorney
general, in whom, at least, the people
have confidence, are nut te be blamed for
wanting and selecting their own assist
ants in causesef which the responsibility
must new rest with them. But the manly
aud proper thing te have done would have
been te plainly and publicly say se.- While
Cook and Gibsen Mere retained, there
should have been frank and confidential
treatment of them and due respect had
for their preparation of these cases. If
ethers were intended te supplant them,
it should have been carried out at once.
The " freezing out process'' is net an
honorable one, and peihaps MacVeagh
wisely forestalled it in his own case. The
administration must handle the star
route cases delicately te avoid the sus
picion that it does net want te-sec them
miscarry. The ceuntry1 remembers that
these accused men used their plunder te
carry the last presidential election, and
that Arthur was the chief spokesman at
the banquet which unblushingly honored
Dersey for his villainy in Indiana.
mi m
Extortionate Freight Rates.
Edv Intelligknckh. In an article iu
the columns of your paper of the 15th
inst.. 1 see the following question, viz. :
What is the tonnage per mile en Presi
dent Roberts' read for the ('5) miles from
Columbia te Marietta ?."'
I'll answer that question, aud sorrow
fully, tee. that it is about 25c. per ten per
mile en freight for the line of the Heading
vt Columbia It. It. and connections.
The stockheldersoftheP.lt. It. have
but ene ticket presented te them, aud if
they vote at all they must vote for Presi
dent Roberts, who evidently mistakes his
calling.
Messrs. Editors : Who is this Gee. II.
Roberts, who talks ene way aud acts the
ether '.' As a ' developer " he isn't much.
Lusnuii Meuciiant.
Marietta, V.u, March 16, 1882.
The above letter is a prompt and direct
answer te an interrogatory propounded
in these columns the ether day. it
seems that the Pennsylvania railroad
company takes advantage of its me
nopely of a line between Columbia and
Marietta, en which it has very heavy
freieht natrens, te charge a inpst exter
tienate Kite of freight for such traffic as
gees ever the Reading v t elumbia rail
road. It is such ahn3e of opportunities
as this that naturally excites hostility
te railway corporations, and identifies
them with monopolies. The rate for
these three miles of read is of course
based en no sense of fairness and no
standard of ordinary expense and profit.
It is simply a piling en of everything the
case will stand. There happens te be a
very lengand steep hill between C olum elum
bia aud Marietta, which is a barrier te
wacen transportation, or of course the
P. It. R. freight, rate could net be main
tained at its present exorbitant figure,
but it shows the disposition of the com
pany te take advantage of these who arc
at its mercy
. . .-
What a particularly pure and honest
man this pure and honest Jehn Sherman
must be ! The stationery for his presi
dential campaign was stolen from the
government ; and the sugar and lemons;
likewise the gas fixtures for the com
mittee rooms, flowers aud perfumery,
His private carriages were mended at
the government expense, his house re
paired, his library furnished with book
shelves and his stable with horse troughs!
And all of this Mr. Sherman never dis dis
cevered.until it was exposed for the ben
efit of the public. He never dreamed
such things were going en, and he wants
te say ' 'emphatically and without equive
catien, that no man ever worked for me
while I was secretary of the treasury,
who was en the rolls of the treasury de
partment during office hours, but what
he was either paM for it by Mr. Pitney
but of my pwn pocket or at least
I supposed he was." Supposing his
disclaimer te be true, there arc cer
tain things tindenied and undeniable,
that are as much te Sherman's discredit
as this abuse of his confidence and of the
public treasury by his wicked friends.
Jehn Sherman " worked" the secretary
ship of the treasury for all it was worth te
secure his nomination te the presidency.
He appointed men te federal positions te
help his cause, and removed these who
hindered it. He had special agents of
the treasury,-employed at G or $8 a day
by the government, running all ever the
country, working up his.boem, and they
were at Chicago buyiug negre votes for
him. Itis net much wonder his friends
at the Washington end of the line deem
ed it no harm te engage in their petty
peculations for the benefit of their chief.
Quite naturally the editor of the Lan
caster Inquirer finds no " profit in hold
ing any controversy with the Ixtelli
gencek." Jusfc as naturally the Inquirer
fails te make any answer te the follow
ing query propounded te it for two suc
cessive weeks by the Intelligencer :
And as the Inquirer sets up for a censer
of editorial ethics and wants te knew if a
lie is ever justifiable it may as well answer
at the outset of the discussion, why it has
denied that when its editor ran for Con
gress he gave Levi Sensenig his note for
92,000, te be paid if elected the note,
pending his defeat, being held by a mu
tual friend.
eerrymaieri.
Se influential a Republican journal as
the New Yerk Timts caa. de itself and
its party no discredit, and may de some
geed,by raising its voice against the ger
rymander ,f or which the season is at hand
in the new apportionment of states into
congressional districts. In Massachu
setts, where Gerry himself first.gave the
name te this infamous practice, the .Re
publicans are scheming te erase every
Democratic district in the state, though
in order te de it,. they have te parcel out
the Democratic city of Bosten among
four country districts. In Virginia
the Mahenittes threaten te carve up the
state se as te get nearly all the congress
men. The Times truthfully says, " each
state should be divided into districts as
compact and symmetrical as practicable
and containing as nearly as practicable
an equal number of inhabitants ;" and
we have always maintained that a map
of boundaries and the census tables
should be the only guides in making an
apportionment. Xe parly would lese
much in the country at large by a fair
deal, but each claims that its generosity
in one state would be taken advantage of
by the opposition in auether. These am
days, however, when fair dealing in pol
itics is apt te meet the commendation of
fair men and it would be well for some
parly iu some state te try the experiment
of a decent apportionment. While there
is hope of this we would be sorry te see
the suggestion of the 2Ynirsadej)ted,tIiat
national authority be extended te the
" abolition of the district system and the
election or members of Congress by.gen
eral ticket under a method of voting
Which would secure a proportionate mi
nority representation." The reasonable
tendency is toward district representa
tion, even te the proposed choice of
presidential electors by districts.
It is very unfortunate for much-needed
public information en atepic of present
popular interest, that a man who occti eccti
piessuch a favorable position te furnish
it as the governor of Utah can give no
better statement of the crisis "' in that
territory than is furnished by Gov. Mur
ray's article en this subject in the last
number of the Xerth Anicrb-ari Itcviac.
Although assuming te be an exposition
of the present " crisis," much of it is
very trite narrative ; all of it is written
iu peer style and with tee manifest a
bias te carry much weight with it,
and i-i the cllert Avhich it makes
te convey te outsiders a well defined idea
of the situation in Utah it is a failure.
Te assert that the Mormons arc an igner
ant majority of the population, aud yet
deprive the wealthier and mere educated
minority of any share of political control,
is only te say that there is in Utah a
condition of affairs which prevails in
many ether parts of the country. It has
often been shown that Mermen reports
of the conditions of things in the terri
tory are atrocious lies; tee often the
statements of the Gentiles are equally
highly colored. What the country wants
is some truthful information about
Utah.
Semk intelligent Massachusetts gentle
man, student of the scriptures, recently
setNcd it when he declared, with reference
te the revision of 1881 : " If the version of
St. James was geed enough for St. Paul,
it is geed cneiurh for me."
Mit. II. K. Pepper's Carlisle Valley
Sentinel thinks the latter part of June
would neither be a very early nor a very
late Demeciatic state convention, and
ought te meet the views of all. "Later
than this would bring us into August or
September, which would net give suffi
cient time or the complete organization
of the state. "With proper nominations,
and united and harmonious effort, the
piespect for success is most assuring."
Semi: alleged American idiot, who has
traveled through Egypt, makesjfrce adver
tisement of his (or her) vandalism. He
(or she) apparently carried a paint pet and
brush all tlireugh Egypt aud Nubia, and
Upen every monument, temple or curiosity
of nete he (or she) painted in large letters
varying from six inches te two feet, this
' J. T., New Yerk, 1870." On a sculp-
lured wall, or a frescoed cciliug, or en the
arm of a statue, or en seme massive
column it made no difference where
any place was geed .enough for "P. T."
An interesting historical work is ap
pealing in The Moravian, published at
Bethlehem, Pa., namely, "a History of
the Uuitas Fratrum" the church founded
in Moravia aud Bohemia by followers of
Jehn Huss, four hundred and twenty-five
years age. The work is written by Bishop
Edmund de Schwintz, after a careful
htudy aud comparison of all the extant
sources, very few of which are in the Eng
lish language. It is perfectly safe te assert
that this is the first opportunity te read,
in the English language,, a thorough and
correct account of the church of the refor
mers before the Lutheran Reformation.
What the New Yeik World states of
the condition of the law in that common
wealth and the necessity for its codifica
tion may with mere or less propriety he
applied te this and ether states :
A periodical ".house-cleaning" of
statutes and cases is absolutely necessary
te get rid of rubbish and te reduce the law
te a comprehensible and systematic form.
This necessity grows mere evident every
year in New Yerk, since every year the
Legislature, with what has been described
as 4f the natural fecundity of low organ
isms," adds te the enormous stock of stat
utes en hand. When the highest court
declares, as the court eT appeals has de
clared of the statutes relating te this city,
that it does net knew what the law is, tfce
time is plainly ripe for acede.
Tue Rev. Newman Hall, in considering
hew te get people te chureh he concludes
that they de net come concludes:' "Let
us use appropriate methods, net bound
slavishly te old or -conventional usages ;
net fearing novel plans, when old ones are
effete ; sceking by all means te save some
and going after theso who will net ceme
after us. If we should Ieave the nicety
and nine sheep in the fold, in order te
find the one gene astray, still mere let us
leave the empty seats, te go after these for
whom they are prepared. Instead of re
maining inside our churches, lamenting
that se many keep outside let us go te
these eutside and compel them te
come in. And, with all this, let '
us remember we are Yellow-workers 'with
Ged' and leek up te him for help."
At the labor meeting iu Philadelphia
the ether evening Jehn Swinton, of New
Yerk, impressively said in his speech :
Te you, man of Pennsylvania, all power
is given ever all things within your domin
ion, and you can fashion everything here
according te your judgment of the proper
nature of things. Yours is the land of the
state, if ye de hut knew it ; yours, are its
mines of coal and iron, if ye de hut take
them ; yours are all its swelling resources
as seen as ye assert your right te tbem;
yours are its institutions, yours its laws
and Legislature, if ye will but lay held of
them. The world belongs te its builders,
and theirs is the less if they permit the
plunderers te seize it or the gamblers te
cheat them out of it.
According te " the thirty first annual
report of the Lancaster county prison for
the year 1881, published by order of the
prison inspectors," the profits of the man
ufacturing department in that institution
last year were $5G2.SG. This is small
enough, everybody will admit, en a stock
and capital of $24,011.13, and considering
that no acceuut is made of the maintenance
of the convict laborers. The cigar and
tobacco departmeut shows a profit of
$002.81, though under the present system
bf giving out the labor by contract the
prison is already realizing ever $100 a
mouth clear profit and no losses risked by
rotten tobacco.
In Philadelphia the ether day, an elec
tion officer was tried for refusing te re
ceive the vote of ene of that class who de
net take enough interest in qualifying
themselvcs te vote te pay their own tax.
The election officer was acquitted and the
complainant was mulcted iu the costs. It
appeared that ths voter was challenged for
non-payment of poll tax. He produced
the neccssaiy papers, but declined te take
the necessary oath that he had paid the
tax himself. In his opinion, Judge Allisen
condemned the practice of purchasing tax
leccipts by the bundle and dealing them
out gratis te voters as wholly illegal, be
cause it was net a payment of the tax by a
voter or by a person authorized te make
paymcut for another. Other courts have
held, however, chat the possession of the
receipt is prima facie evidence that the
holder has paid his tax. Judge Allisen is
unquestionably right, however, that the
lawtsays the voter must swear that he has
paid his tax himself or by an agent with
express authority.
In ene of his' editorial dispatches from
Washington, Cel. McClure points out the
startling fact that the actual legitimate
expenditures of last year vcie net $250,
000,000. Tliij year the national revenues
will feet up fully $100,000,000, leaving a
margin of ever $150,000,000 te tempt the
cupidity of the jobbers and dcmoralize a
Congress that is mere than half willing at
the start te be demoralized. The reduc
tion of the debt and interest lias been se
rapid lately that the lawful requirements
of the sinking fund have fallen from $74,
000,000 in 1SS1 te $59,000,000 hi 18S2, and
must fall te $14,000,000 in 188:j. The refusal
of the Heuse under these circumstances
te abolish the interna! revonue system and
the odious stamp taxes indicates that the
lobby aud the jobbers are te be left a big
surplus te weik en. The immense over ever
plus of revenues is also likely te point th
opportunity for a reduction of the tariff,
and may help the schemes of the free
traders. It is impossible te apply the sur
plus even te the payment of the national
debt. Our present taxes would mere than
pay our cntire debt at par, principal and
interest iu twolve years, but only about
one-thud of it can be redeemed at par
within the next quarter of a century.
PERSONAL.
A costly stained glass window, iu mem
ory of President Garfield, has been
placed iti the St. .Tames Episcopal church,
Leng Branch.
Ex-Governer Edwin D. Mehgan, of
Ncwferk, has given $e0,000 te Williams
college, Mass., for the erection of a new
dormitory.
Neuemiau Milliard, a classmate of
President Garfield, and at one lime judge
of the Bergen ceunty.N. J., common picas,
died in Patersen en Thursday night.
. Roscei: CeNKi.iNG'has been engaged te
make the picscntatien bofero the United
States supreme cenrt of the case of Charles
F. King, the notorious murderer, of St.
Leuis. The matter will ceme up at the
October .term of the court, aud involves
the questieu whether the law under which
King was tried and convicted is net ex
pest facto.
The badness of Herace Greeley's hand
writing used te cause sad trouble te his
friends and publishers. It seems, how
ever, that Dean Stanley was equally un
lucky. Mr. J. L. Chester says : " On ene
occasion I had an important appointment
with him in his study, but was utterly un
able te decipher the hieroglyphics' which
he intended te represent the particular
hour of the clay. Being engaged in his
neighborhood early iu the morning, I sent
a messenger te the deanery, te ask for the
precise hour, and particularly requested
a vcibal answer ; but tli3 Dean was in
corrigible aud returned my nete with
something scrawled at the bottom
what, it was impessible te tell."
HUrifKKEKS IJY TIlK FLOODS.
83,00.0 IVeple In Seven .State Reported
Destitute.
A communication te the IIouse from
the secretary of war, estimates the num
ber of the persons made destitute by the
overflow of the Mississippi river and its
tributaries at .85,000, as fellows : Mis
souri 2,200, Illinois 2,000, Kentucky 800,
Tennessee 5,000, Mississippi 30,000, Ar
kansas 20,000, Louisiana 25,000,and states
that 713,000 rations have been distributed.
The communication further states that
the appropriation already made is suffici- -I
cut te purcuase 800,000 rations of a sub
stantial kind, and estimates that the sup
ply will be exhausted in Arkansas, Miss
issippi and Louisiana about the 21st. Ne
estimate can be made of the time during
wiiicn the necessity ler Congressional aid
will centinne. Ne further demands are
expected from Illinois and Kentucky, but
from Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas
and Missouri. The department has infor
mation that the necessity for subsistence
will continue' for a period variously esti
mated at from thirty te sixty days. The
department has no information from
Louisiana, but it is thought that it may
be placed in the same category as Mississippi.
THE TRAIL OF BLOOD.
MCRDKB, SUICIDE A1CD CASUALTY.
The Recerd el Beceat Ttgtl Bess
Sliecklne Cilmes ana Sorrowful Mis Mis
eortunesOther News Matters.
Edward Quinu, a bartender, at Mooie Meoie Moeie
head, Minn., was shot - and killed .en
Thursday, during a fight with 31. J. Whe
lan. Perky Deyle, another victim of the re
cent boiler explosion at Lynn, Mass.,
died yesterday.
The dwelling of Alfred Willis, at Cardiff
iu the northern portion of Peterborough
county, Out., was burned en Monday. His
three children aged 11 years. 7 years, and
18 mouths, perished in the flames.
Frank Pfeiffer, an oyster packer and a
noted sporting man, of Norfolk, Va.. shot
himself through the right temple with a
pistol while in bed yesterday morning,
killing himself instantly. Meney trouble
is the rumored cause.
At East Cambridge, Mass., in the case
of Henry Ferrin, of Webnrn, charged
with manslaughter iu killing Matilda
Raymond, agcfl 70 years, at Woburn, en
the 19th of last November, by beating
her with a club, the jury yesterday dis
agced. Jehn Rceser, a brake man en the Leba
non Valley railroad, was ruu ever and
fatally injured by a freight train at "Read
me last evening.
William Breckiuridge, 20 years old. In
the employ of the Trey laundry, at New
Yerk, yesterday went upon the reef of the
eugiue house te niake some repairs, while
the engine was in motion, when he was
caught iu the belting aud had both feet
tern off at the ankles. He lived only half
an hour afterward.
Crew Deg was arraigned in the United
States court yesterday at Deadwood, D.T.,
for the murder of the Sioux Cuief Spotted
Tail iu August last. He entered a plea of
net guilty, aud also that he was tried for
the same offence in accordauce with the
laws of the Sioux Indians. The entire
day was consumed in procuring a jury.
Brooks Holcombe, a colored convict sen
tenced at the Laurens court te the Seuth
Carolina penitentiary for one year for bur
glary, escaped from Pringle's phosphate
works, en the Ashley river, last Thursday,
and yesterday a passenger train en the
Seuth Carolina railroad .ran ever him near
Fert Motte, cutting his head oft and other
wise mutilating U im. His shackles wcre
still en.
MYSTERIOUS DEATH.
A Yeung Lady Finds the Corpse or Her
Mether In the Weeds.
Near Doturksville, a farming village of
the Blue mountains, a young daughter of
Samuel Kintzler started te go te the Dun
ker church, a few miles distant from her
home, whither her mother had gene early
iu the morning. The young lady, while
passing through a thickly settled portion
of the weeds en a narrow path, beheld
whas she thought te be a human, form.
Toe frightened te make an examination
"she quickly retraced her steps hemeward,
and meeting a neighbor returned te the
spot. The grief of the young girl, when
she discovered the lifeless body lying in
the path was that of h'u- mother, was be bo be
yend control. It is believed Mrs. Kintzler
was returning home from her visit, when
she was scizad with paralysis and fell
dead by the roadside, as there were no
marks of violence en her person or any in
dications that de.ith was caused in any
ether manner.
Slioeilni; Affray In Colerado.
At Gopher station, en the Kansas Pa
cific railroad, a section foreman, named
Themas Pitman, his brother and Jehn Eb
bcrts wcre shot by two emigrants named
Themas Woetin aud James McCelIum.
On the day previous the soctienmou and
the immigrants had seme trouble, and
while the seclienmcu wcie at breakfast
the next morning, the two emigrants en
tered, eidcrcd the men te held up their
hands, and, the order net being obeyed,
immediately opened fire. One of tha Pit
mans was wounded in the shoulder and
the ether iu the thigh, while Ebberts was
shot iu the face. Woeteu was shot in the
.shoulder by one of the Pitmaus. After
the sheeting the immigrants robbed the
wounded section num and escaped.
a Rascally Mayer.
Moie of the rascallitics of the decamped
mayor of Adrian, Mich., J. S, Navin, are
coming te liht. Twe mortgages one
for $ 1,000 and the ether for $1,000 en
which the agent for the mortgagce at
tempted te cellcet the interest yesterday,
proved te have been forged by Navin', who
pretended te act as agent for the parties,
and thus succeeded iu the swindle.
A Clese Call.
Governer Blackburn, yesterday at Lex
ington, Ky respited Ike Turner jus.t
twenty minutes bofero he was te have been
hanged.
Depriving 1,000,000 People et llomeH.
Hcrr Rulf, of Mcmcl, Prussia, writes te
the JeieisJi World, sayintr that the decisions
of the St. Petersburg commission en the
Jewish question in favor of compelling the
Jews te quit rural districts, etc., although
Ostensibly turned at the preveniien of pros
ecutions, will have the immediate effect of
depriving 1,000,000 peeple of homes and
rendering their life nftbearable.
Miner MUcelluny.
One of the buildings of the Oneida com
inanity, en the canal at Niagara Falls. N.
Y., took fire from the boiler yesterday and
was destroyed. Less, $10,000.
Frederick Sheerer, employed by Jacob
Wirth, a lager beer bottler at Bosten, has
been missing since Monday, with between
$3000and $4000 collected from Wirth's cus cus
temcis. The meteorological department of Mex
ice reports slight shocks of earth epiake in
different parts of of the country. One of
soveral seconds' duration occurred in the
city of Mexico en Thursday morning.
The council of state of North Carolina
yesterday, at Raleigh, by aneveu vote, de
clined te take action with reference te call
ing an extra session of the Legislature,
and as the governor can make the call
only en their advice the Legislature will
net be convened.
O. M. Stene & Ce., cotton merchants,
cotton gin manufacturers and guano
dealers at Augusta, Me., yesterday made
assignment for the benefit of their credi
tors. Their liabilities are about $40,000 ;
nominal assets, 680,000. Among the as
sets is a gin manufactory valued at $30,000.
They have preferred creditors te the
amount of about $20,000.
Nuisances.
" A common scold is a public nuisance
and may be indicted and punished by
the ducking process or being doused in
water." (12 Sergt M. 220). Respect
fully referred te Mr. Warfel's reverend
editor.
Common scolds and common barraters
are both nuisances and may be punished
as such." (13 Pick net picayune 302;
juia 4iJ3.j nespecuuiiy reierrcd te Uem.
Hiestand's Democratic editor.
" A swine-yard in a city is per te a nui
sance." iWhart. Or. L. 205). Respcct-
iuny reierrca te tue neg ring.
Sale of Live Stock.
Samuel Hess & Sen., auctioneers, Beld
at public sale yesterday for Harry C.
Lintner, at Millersville, Lancaster county,
30 head of cows and heifers for $1,376, 13
head of young bulls for $4,680.50, 3G head
of shoats for $217.20, one sew with pigs
$33.50, G mules for $1,109, and 2 horses for
$313. Whole amount of sale $3,517.20.
LOCAL INTELLIGENCE.
;
CONCERT AT JMUMT JOX LAST MIGHT.
Delightful JLntertaluBMnt la- tbsFresjte-
rian Cnnrch A JTle .Pregramme
Well Beaeered.
Last evening the young ladies of the
Presbyterian congregation at Mount Jey
cave a concert in the church edifice which
was a' most successful and enjoyable affair.
The pregramme consisted entirely of vocal
and instrumental performances, selected
and arranged with admirable care, and
rendered with a skill and accuracy that
were as creditable te the performers as
they were pleasing te the hearers. A large
audience assembled in the church,
and the favor with which they regarded
the evening's eutcrtainmcut wasmani-.
fested in the frequent applause and the
evident indisposition of the people te. leave
even after the long and excellent pre?
gramme had been completed. A notable
feature of the evening was the singing of
the pastor and his wife, Rev. and Mrs.
Whitcomb, the former's rich and finely
strung tenor blending harmoniously with
the lady.s excellent soprano, and the Let
ter's soles all beiug rapturously applaud
ed ; she was made the recipient of several
elegant floral tributes. Although suffer
ing from a very severe cold, Mrs. Whit
comb wen the golden opinions of her
hearers. Miss Eastman's skillful perform
ances en the piano were also greatly ad
mired, and one of the neatest things en
the pregramme was the piano and organ
due by Misses Eastman and Breneman,
a selectien from "Eruani," very artisti
cally executed. A piano trio upon a single
piano by Misses Shelly, Breneman aud
Casscl was brilliant among the many gems
of the pregi amine, aud lichly deserved the
hearty encere tendered it. The pro pre
gramme is printed in full below, aud in the
uniformity of its met it and clever execu
tion of its several numbers has been rarely
surpassed by an amateur performance. Te
the indcfatigajble labors of Mr. and Mrs.
Whitcomb was due in large measure the
signal success of the affair, and it was the
general sentiment of the audience that the
entertainment wedld well bear repetition.
Among the audieuce were a number of
visitors from Lancaster who returned te
this city in the train leaving Mount Jey
shortly after middignt
THE VItOailAMML
Overture Leneiu Grand Murcli.. . .
..uafl.
Oichcstru.
Bird or the North Reet.
Mrs. Suinuir, Misses Shoekers, Eckenrode,
Shay and Chorus.
Duet riane and Organ Ernani Verdf.
Misses Eastman and Breneuiun.
Vecal Sole La Primavern.' Terry.
Mrs. Whitcomb.
Duct Flute and l'lane Der Krhe Saralan.
Miss Eastmnn and Dr. Ziegler.
Vecal Trie Ave Maria Owen.
Mr. and Mrs. Whitcomb and MU-i Kastmnn.
Duet Violin and Piane Kemunce Bach.
J. H. Heller ami 31i.-js Eastman.
Overture Callpli et ISegdad llelldluii.
Orchestra.
(julnlctand Chorus Stubat Mater Uesbltil.
Mrs. Whitcomb and Chorus.
Instrumental Trie Oberen Wcbcr.
MU-jCsShclly.'lireneinaii and Casscl.
Vecal Sole Svviss Senff Kckert.
Mrs. Whitcomb.
Flute, Cornet and Piane l.a Dernicre Rec
Miss Kastmnn, Dr. Ziegler and Heward
liberie.
Vec.il Quartet Sunshine Fellows the Bain.
Tadeil.
Mrs. Whitcomb, Misses Shoekors, Kcken Kcken
redc anil Shay.
Vecal Duct Geed Night Pclten.
Mr. and Mrs. Whitcomb.
NK1UUBOBBOUD NEWS.
Events Acress the County Line.
The Susquehanna and Tide Water
canals, announce that navigation en these
waters will be resumed en the twenty
second inst.
This week near Barneston. Chester
county, the house of S.imuel Lewis and
wife, both about 80 years of age, was en
tered by two masked men, who presented
pistols te the old couple's heads, bound
and gagged them and then proceeded te
ransack the house. They took with them
between $1,100 aud $1,200 in cash. Tha
robbers tore a tablecloth into strips, tied a
knot into the strip, which they forced into
their mouths, and-tied behind their heads.
Mrs. Lewis, as seen as they wcre gene,
worked her hands loose aud then cut Mr.
Lewis' bends. He then went te his near
est neighbor. The robbers have net been
captured.
In Readins there will be no mere fire
men's fairs. The city lathers have taken
away that privilege from the boys, but
have paid them for the deprivation et the
piivilege by granting a larger gratuity.
II. Streakland recently bought a let of
shoats in Chanceterd, and when they ar
rived in Wrightsville all their tails were
frozen off, which tha buyers did net like.
Iu conscqueucc, he had paper tails put en
aud sold them all te ene man. Here is a
chanee for a wholesale and retail joke.
Water cress is shipped from many neigh
boring counties te New Yerk at a fair
profit te these who gather it.
A party of Wilmington firemeu arriving
in Reading yesterday, were astonished te
find nobody at the depot te meet the m,
and subsequently it was devolepcd that
some practical joker" had extended them
an invitation iu the name of a Reading
company without the knowlcdge of the
fatter.
The Verdi concert company, of Yerk,
came ever te Maytown Thursday and gave
a musical entertainment for the First Luth
eran church there.
The Allen fire com piny, df Allen town,
has purchased a span of dark brown horses
raised iu Lebanon county. The weight
of the span is 2,800 pounds. 1 he price
paid was $j5.
Reading has received a preposition from
the Maxim electric light company, of
fhiladelpnia, te furnish the city with
electric light and gas. The district propos
ed te i ight witn the electric light .-would
require about GO lights, each of 2,000
caudle power. Many el the business
men will also introduce into their stores.
KNCKIAS .MATRIMONIAL. TKOUlSI.KS.
The Court Orders Dim te Pay His WHO 810
Per TVcek.
riiilatlelphla Kecerd.
An attempt Was made in the desertion
court yesterday te reduce an order of- 810
per week made upon Charles H. Engel
for the support of his wife. Engle is
the man who has gained notoriety by
his ameur3 with Ida Baight, the refrac
tory Columbia girl, who snaps her finger
at the officers seeking her return te
this city upon a bailpiece. In her tes
timony yesterday Mrs. Engle says she
has bceu married three years, and that
last fall she was driven from her home by
her husband with only a few hours notice.
Mrs. Engel refused te return te her hus
band, alleging that she was treated like a
brute. She stated that she had been in
formed that Engel had lived at
their Parrish street hense with Miss
Baight, and that the ceuple had
stepped at a Harrisburg hotel as
man and wife. Engel's daughter.
by a termer wile, a young miss 15 years
old, testified that there was nothing im
proper in her father's rotations with Miss
Baight, but this was. -neutralizad hj the
introduction of a letter from Engel, in
which he hinted that he had been crim
inally intimate with Miss Baight. This
settled the case, and the application for, a
reduotienrof the order was refused.
rSherllT HaJes.f l
Yesterday Sheriff High sold en the
premises in Salisbury township, 53 acres
of land with two story leg weather-bearded
dwelling house, with f'rame kitchen aud
shed and ether outbuildings, and a large
bank b'arn, seized as the property of Mar
tha Pittman executrix and sole devisee of
Edward Pittman. deceased, te Wm. E,
Engle, for $2,375 subject te a mortgage of
91, w.
Court. j
Cetfrt will meet en Monday morning at
10 o'clock when the argument week will
begin.
mR DEAD S0LDIEKS.
LANCASTER'S .SL.CMHZKING HEXOSsV
y 7 f iS '
A Partial I.lst of Their Names soil Places
or iturlal Further Iatermatlen De
sired. Heme InterestlBc Data.
At a recent meeting of Geerge H.
Themas Pest 84, G. A. It., a committee
was appointed te procure a full and com
plete list of all deceased soldiers buried in
this city", together with their rank, the
company and regiment te which they were
attached, the date of their death, the name of
the cemetery in which they were interred,
the number of burial let and whether the
grave is marked or unmarked.
Thattlifi information desired may. be as
complete aspeisible the committee desire
the, friends aad relatives of deceased 'sol
diers te aid them in'the collection of the
necessary data, which may be sent te the
following named persons : James A.
Nimlew, Centre square ; Jehn Black, jr.,
corner Duke and Church ; Hiram McEl McEl
rey, corner Queen and Frederick ; Gee. H.
Kendig, corner, West King and Derwart ;
: H. HrBetz, .comer Chestnut and Mary; or
te any of the 'following -named members
of the coramittee : Jehn H. Metzler, H.
C. Weidlcr, Jacob Geiges, A. J. Bletcher.
Congress having made an appropriation
te pay the expense of marking all unmark
ed graves of Union soldiers, the committee
wish te get the list as accurate as possible,
that the gravesmay be promptly marked.
Belew we print an incomplete list of the
dead soldiers that was made several years
age. By the use of friends, the commit
tee hope te have it made mere perfect,
when a correct record, with all the data ob
tained, will be recorded in a book prepared
especially for the purpose by Pest 84 :
LANCASTER CEMETERV Marked.
B.
Hall, Samuel,
Hear. Abraham,
llricker, Evan.
Iturten, Alfred,
Beaner, Ilcnry,
Chlllus, Jaiut'b,
Cox. Geerge,
Cahier, Lewi? II.,
Dean, James,
Derwart, Philip,
Duchumn, Jehn,
EriHtnan, Samuel,
Erisman, James 11.,
Frccht, Jeseph,
Freelit. J am 03,
Frcmeyer, Jacob,
Ciermlcy. Cesmes C,
Garden, William,
Gunion, .James K.,
n reeks, Jeseph 8.,
Hewniun, William,
Belcy, Edward P.,
BItner. Alfred II.,
Hair, Henry C.
C.
I Curry. Jehn,
Cbamberltn, Jehn,
Cegiey, James W.
D.
I Downey, David,
I Derwart, Henry
K.
iKbcrruun, Jacob A.
r.
Franklert. Win.,
Friedentcln, Frank.
GeUley, Juceb,
Gast. Emanuel II.
II.
Jlibslnnan, Ilenryll.,
Harrison, Goerge,
Ilestetter. Ulraiii C,
Hughes, Etlwaul.
Hambright'Gee. W..
Hartman, Edward.
iiart, i.evi.
Hoever, Jehn A.,
Il'ipktnt, Jamc.
Jennings, James,
King. Rebert,
Keller, Jehn A.,
Keller, Henry,
Lutz, Juceb,
Lam sun, Jno. L.,
Lambcit. David,
J eli n, Henry C.
K.
Kiinper. Geerge.
Killlau, Henry M.
I Lyens, Levi,
ILeaman, Jacob.
M.
Morien, Wm. II..
Metzger. Edw. S.,
Martin, Samuel,
MoCemscy. BcDlamln
McGlfnn. Jeseph, -
Miller. Henry,
MllllChSOCKT, AUgUSlUS
McClaire. William,
Martin, Jacob. "
Miller, Jehn.
iucuiaugmrn, isenj.
N.
"Nugent, Charles.
O.
P.
Powell, Zvphanll.
Q. .
IQninn, James.
R.
Naunian, Cel. Gee.,
Outer, Jehn.
l'carsel, Wm. II.,
Pyle, Jehn,
e.uilcy, Kdw in.
Kryneld, Jlnj, Gen
Jehn F..
Reck, Henry.
Keed. Edgar C.
Keckalleld, Henry A.,
8.
Stetzel, Geerge.
HireAd, Jehn C..
bhcr'tz, Jehn,
iSwaltuwelder, Newton
Shay, Emanuel.
W.
I Wilhclm, Jehn II.,
Weigaml, Sum'l .
C EMETERY UnmatUetl.
B.
iBetr. William J.,
jBranner, Casper.
Walters. Francis
Wldte, Jehn S.,
LANCASTER
15am, William,
Brlsbln, N. B.,
Hest, Martin,
Cox, Geerge,
ICarney, Je'iii.
D.
'Demic, Henry
E.
lEekman, Henry.
V.
I Fergusen, Lewis.
G.
iGunien. James E.,
liable, Jac. F..
(Griibb, Jehn L
H.
Duchmau. Jacob S.,
Derwart, William,
Erli'iuiin. JiniK'i II.,
Frank, Aug. II.,
Gabl. Elliett.
GnriiiUty. Cesmes C
Garden, William,
UuntiiigLeu, Jehn,
Harrison. Geerge.
Herzeg, FmncN,
HarrUon.Jehn,
Hill, Jacob,
Hedricks, Jeseph,
Helman, William A.
Hart. Carpenter 31.,
Herbert, Hemy
.1.
IJencs, William.
K.
Jenes, Henry W.,
Keiieagv, Riu;
Ksiutz, Jehn,
Kurtz, Jehn,
liler.
King, David.
King, Geerge.
Kaulz, Henry.
I.erent, GGOrge.
Mess. Jehn A.,
McCIaln. Chas. B.,
MlHIchsaclc, Gee.,
Rlne, Henry,
Kete. Jehn,
Ripple, Geerge,
Riley.HcmyJ.,
Stringer. Augustus,
Spece, Frederick,
Tedd, Thetiuu.
31.
I Mar tin, Henry,
McUlinn, Antheny,
R.
Roenoy. Jehn,
Reynelds, Jaw. I..,
Reynolds, William.
S.
IShaub, Franklin,
iSwllkey, Jehn.
T.
V.
Vuncemp. Cornelius, Vendermith, I. 15.
W.
Weaver, Casper, I Williams, Thus.
Z Z
Zcclier, Lewi.
WOODWARD HILL CBMETERY. Marked.
A.
Adams, Jno. C.
a.
Itienner, F. L., 1st Lt.
Ce. A 1st Neb. Re
Be-fi'man, Jehn G..
Bensen, Jas. L., Capt.,
Bestlck, Lewis. Lieut.,
Barkis. Themas.
Bear, B. F., Capt.,
Burn, William,
Bednadge, L. C 79th
Penn'a. Regt..
Benier, William A.
serves,
Harbin, James, Ce. D
1st Penn'a. Resvrvcs.
Itlalr. Aniea,
Buckius, William, Ce.
E 70th P. V..
Berncr, C. W.,
C.
I Campbell. Jehn S.,
ICa'jsldy, Alex. 31.
dinger. Jacksen,
Curtis), Edward,
Diucfcenmlllcr, Edw.,fDanner, Samuel.
DilTenclerter, VVui., iDclzcif, Jeseph
Dysart, J. II.,
E.
Ebcruiun, Alberts., Ebcrmaa, Peter S.
G.
Gieiuer, 5., Ce. F. U. S.
Gable, William, Ce. K,
7Dlh Pa.,
G union, Robt., Ce. E,
U9th Pa.,
GInter, Jeshua W., Ce
A. 77th PI
Greiner.F.,Ce. E, Mill
Pa.
Geedman, Thad. S.,
co. k, 7it n ra.
II
Ilarman, J. A.,
Hainbrlfiht, S, 31., Ce.
A, 122a Pa..
HiiTcrsttck. EilTir.. Ce.
II. lWd Pn.,
Iluber, Jno. F., U. S.
v..
nager. II. W.,
Heed, Geerge,
Hepkins, Lewis A.,
Hurnian, William,
neinitsn, . .,
Flambright, Edw. If.,
Hevrer, Jehn A.
K
Kane, Lewis,
Kartnch. Edw.. Ce. I.,
sccv.,
Kissinger, Ilcnry.
Kuhn, Win. D., 3 uies.
L.
Lawrence, Thes. A.,
E, 88th.
Leenard, Geerge, Ce.
H. 20th P. C,
Lawcomer, J. L.
Ce. A. 7'Jtn,
Leman, Jehn E..
Lcman, David G., Ce.
M
Miller, H. P Ce. K,
MPler, KuustD.,
Muhlenberg, Cliai. P.,
5th V. S. Arsenal.
79tn,
Murphy, Calvin tu,
McDowell; Isaae A.,
P.
parten, William, Ce.lPyler, Frecl'k S., Cel.
H, 7&tb. I '
Q.
qnlgley, F. U.
R.
Snpley, C. D.,
IKete, W. F..CO. U. 77th.
ttiay. Ilcnry, Jr. Ce.
G.73th,
St. Jehn, David,
bpringer, David K Ce.
A. 4th U.S. V..
Sener, F. H., Ce. B,
79th,
Shank. AbramS-'
Shrelncr, Jehn P.,
8trlckler, J. M., Ce. E.
btackhensefP. J..
Shlndlej.p.,
wnk, Wm.a.,
Snyder, Adam.
Vernem, F. H.
vr.
Wendllz, Charles. iWalU. WUllam.
Waltz, Zaeharlah S., IWendftx. Albert.
Withers, Dr.,Ueerge. SWlll, Sen. F.
Z.
Ziegler, C. L.. Ce. K,
99th.
WOODWARD IIILL Unmarked.
Anne.
Burns, WUllam.
Berger, G.,Ce. K13J.
Brown. W. 1L. Ce. N
123.
Bensen, James E.
F.
Fiord, George.Co.K 75,'FUek, Jehn.
Flneireck, Daniel,
O.
I G undaksr, Jaoeb.
IL
lllildebrand. Adam,
IHsrr, A. F.
J.
Gunipl, Jetvn.
Hewer, Jehn ..
Hamilton, Gee. G ,
Jerdan, W.
KUlUvu, V. It..
Laird. Geerge.
Mishlrtr, Leman,
Paster, feter,
K.
iKltek,
L."
IMnrray, Andrew.
P.
IPelard, Gaertre.
R.
JKnskel. Emit F.
-Spring, Michael,
JSkearar, IL B.
Ress, W.J. ,
Riivrlim. WllUasa.
W.MW., JJ
ttAtv Wflllfftm
Whiteside, W. W.. Capt.
ZION CE3IETBRT Unmarked.
B.
Helder. Herman,
Hnrrett, &. G ,
Egle. Jehn.
Gretlnger, Robt..
Hcrtzeg, Jaoeb.
Keller, Jacob.
Montgomery, P.
Preler, Je"in,
Wagner. BathUer.
I Itinnun Jehn
iBentwltt, Qetlelb.
E.
lOreir, Abraham.
K.
M.
IPtuUhur, Oeo. W.
'Wellcr. Jacob.
Weber, Fred'k,
ZION CE1IETERT Siarktd.
II.
Hep kins. Lewis A., jHehn, Geerge.
Kuhnle, Jacob, ikiehl, Jaoeb.
M.
McCracken. Jehn. IM assman, J. II.
Ober, BsnJ. II.
ST. MART'S CEMETERT Unmarked.
B.
fircen, Jehn.
Daguc, James.
German, .
Kurnan, James.
Marlen, ,
D.
-O.
K.
M.
IMcConemy. Btephen.
Judge. .
Unknown 3. . ....
8T. MART'S CE31ETKRT Marked.
' C.
Carrell. F. P.. iCennelly, Bernard C.
Carran, Themas 31., I
DllUm, Goe. D.
J.
Judge, Themas.
M.
MoEvev, Jehn. iMcManas, Alex.
Maxwell. Jese-sl:. I
N.
Nuucnbcrger, Adam.
L.
Lichty, .
SHREINER-'S CEMETERY Unmarked.
A!
Albert,
Pralley, .
SIIREINEB'S CEMETERV Markea.
B.
Bradycamp, Levis.
Fralley, Gee. w.
Garbcr, .
J one". Jehn S.
Mertzall, Gee. W.
F.
G.
J.
M.
S.
Shufflobettom. Ge., iShrelner, Edw.
Hhewers, Sam'l W., I
Unknown and unmarked S.
EPISCOPAL BURIAL GROUND.
B.
Barten, Thes. B.
II.
naye-i, Charles.
Jeffries, Rebert.
MORAVIAN BURIAL GROUND.
Eberman. Geerge D.
ST. JOSEPH'S BUB1ALGROUND ImmrrrA!"
B.
Bender, Andrew.
IL
Hart, Math lac
PHffcr. Isadore.
EPISCOPAL BURIAL GROUNDJ(rrf.
B.
Bimman, Henry.
D.
Dclzclt, Jeseph.
F.
11.
F lehr, Michael,
H iwkwertn, James,
S.
Schmidt, Franc!.-. 3teasel, Jeseph.
RECAPITULATION.
L.'.HCASTXfc CimTXBT.
Slarked graves......
Unmarked graVM.. ...."..... ........
woeswaxd hiij. csTtnrrnT.
Marked graves... ..
Unmarked graves
I.?. MART'S CKUZTKIIT.
Marked grave ....................
Unmarked graven
sh.isjitiii's cmraaT.
Marked graves ......
Unmarked gra'S
xnscerAL bciuai. oaetmn.
Marked graves
Unmarked graves...
jreBATiAirsciuiL e neon n.
.87
. 6 140
. SO
. 29-109
. 10
. 11- 2-
.
. 6-14
. 3
, 0- .
. 1
Mnrkpri trravea...
I'nniiirkcd arravCS.
. 0- 1
ST. jessrtc's cacrrxxT.
Mnrkctl grsYM.
Unniurfcetl u rftTCs..
xxenl CKMRUT.
ft
X 9
, 1592
202
la-
Total marked graves:
Total unmarked graves
Total 329
psH CSJSIS,
This moraine Alderm- McConemy
sent two train-rider te jail for ten days
MAh. Thaw warn arrested at Mill creek,
by Officer Pyle and Gilbert.
This morning me major aw uumu
of drunk ; four were seat tp jail for flve
days each, and one for ten. One was
made pay the oeeU and a vag wae let run.
Among the dreaka watr eae aat-sed Jehn
r T U . hn.J Isiner OO haSt
King street, near Phm, at IS o'clock last
night, by OUeer M erriager . He ae very
drunk,aVid had been robbed of fc- hat,
-hn-Lnfl as 1. -nr-T. TMe morning he
appeared without a hat aad barefooted
before the.mayeT.
Ib Sears el I-sfcrmaUoe.
. t.tt unnatrr 'anuire. desir-
ea. eT-uainting himself with the duties
of his office, sera he applied uaseee
fullvatall the book store for copies of
lBitten -Disinised eases ;" 1 Spur
rier en "MSgiswawa- ,-- kouxeksiu keuxeksiu kouxeksiu
sen en " County for costs." The neopbyle
can probably get some inforaatiea re
t;nrr tha wtflrs. nt tb Vm named
authors by calling en the county cemmls-
sienera.
m
Lrg Kasjlsv
Michael Charles, residing in Fequea
township, yesterday shot a grey eagle en
his farm which measered 7 feet 8 inches
across the wiags. It is one of the largest
eagles ever shot in this part of the country.
-A.