LANCASTER DALLY INTELLIGENCER TUESDAY, JANUARY 9. 1883 ?Laiicastcr Intelligencer. TUESDAY EVENINQ, JAN 0. 18e3. Concerning "Scrub Women." It is reported from Harrisburg that the new chief clerk of the Heuse, Mr. Meek, Jias appointed but six pages, though he is authorized by law te name fifteen, and that he has reduced the num ber of scrub women en the pay roll from one hundred and fifteen te sixty-five, thereby challenging the Democratic caucus te supplement his proposed re forms with such action as will lop off enough superfluous offices te save the state $10,000 and the Democratic Heuse some credit. 1 t may be doubted whether the reduced number of pages is sufficient for the wants of the Heuse, but if the new chief clerk proposes te appoint the smaller number, and te only add ethers when their services become indispensi ble, he has done wisely. That the con tingent lunds of both Heuse- have been lavishly spent, if net stolen, under pretense of employing women te clean the legislative halls and com- mittee rooms, can be easily demonstrat ed. Fer the session of 1ST0 the only recent one of which we have at hand Hie figures in detail Chief Clerk Shurlock reported te have paid out of iiis contin gent fund $3,195 te 112 women, in vari ous amounts, for cleaning the Heuse of Representatives hall and committee rooms. As the session lasted 1-0 days or 128 exclusive of Sundays this amount would have paid, at the compensation allowed, the ser vices of 50 women for work every night of the session, including Fridays and Saturdays when there was seldom any session held. Besides this seven Heuse janitors weie paid for the session, at the rate of $G per day each a total, in eluding their mileage ,of $G,G4S 2e. New, an ordinal y court-house as large as that in this city is managed by :i single jani tor at $00j a year, and he has little enough te de. Te say that seven janitors are required for the Hei.se of Represen tatives alone with its hall, three or four committee rooms, basement, cloak and wash luems and oil women beside-, e.-ery night in the week, whether a bes bes sien is holding or net, is te admit that of the money thus alleged te be spent much is stolen. Twe janitors can easily de all the work for which under Republican dis pensation fceven were paid, and twenty women, even between Gaud 7:30p.m., can easily keep the Heuse chamber clean. The sixty-live proposed te be put en the list could be divided into three gangs, each having two nights work per weak. -Mere than this will only be in the way of each ether ; and an observa tion made the ether evening while this processor cleaning was in progress showed that fifteen women swept the chamber in a half-hour. In view of these well known facts Democratic officials are bound te keep down the expenses and the number of employees and the Heuse caucus should support and supplement their efforts. Moreover we trust some resolution will be introduced into the Heuse requiring all employees te be at Hnrrishurg and lender the services for which they draw pay, or in their failure te de se that no warrants 1j allowed them. In times past many of the suber.li liale places have been filled by substitutes hired at from S3 te $1.5n per day while their principals get $0. There must be a vnuine house cleaning. Rivalry of Corporations. A Philadelphia correspondent el the iVui; IJra, for whose disinter"s'.ediiP.s it vouches, writes te excite public appre hension of the evils threatened bj the advance of the Vanderbilt pew.-r and capital into th" coal and railroad inter ests of the stat', and predicts an abrm iiig condition of things because ' a Man hattan railroad king has set nis feet in the heart of Pennsylvania, and is buying up lands, preparing te ship and sell coal, intending te crush down and crowd mit all opposition and sell coal at s'icii prices ni he pleases." Tie reliability and disialeredtedu-Hs of this orreqe:ideut may be gauged by the fact that, in attempting te de scrib the condition of things which lias stimulated the construction of new rati reads te thePcnnsylvania bituminous coal fields, he sas: "The great Pennsylvania railroad has extended its line into that region, has furnished cars as rapidly as possible, has ceufined itself te the legiti mate functions of carrier, doing juslice te all Our own Pennsylvania rail road can provide all transportation facil ities necessary." Taesa statements are notoriously at variance with the truth. Had the Pennsylvania railroad company, with the great advantages it alieady possessed, in the way of constructed lines, bjeu able and willing te " provide all transportation facilities necessary" in the recjatly developed coal lield, " doing justice te all " the new line would never have bjen built. Frem the rivalry of great corporations the public has far less te fear than from the undis puted supremacy of one. Every con sumer of coal in this county gets his fuel cheaper by reason of the fact that Lancaster Iras two rival railroad s stems bringing it te our market. The Penn sylvania, railroad company, with a mo nopoly of advantages in the Clearfield rcgieivabused them ; and with a monep ely of the line from the east te the west ern part of the state has maltreated local shippers. Ilence the necessity for a rival system. The public will welcome it, fully conscious that in the competition of the capitalists lies the protection of the people. m-1 m "First Assistant Postmaster (i:x erai. Fraxk IIatten is a thrifty per son who proposes te mingle the dispen sation of country peslmasterchips -with the publication of a Republican news paper in Washington. Accordingly every Republican member of tin Heuse has received a package of le'- ters, partly printed from a Iithe graphic plate, and partly written, te gether with a request from Mr. Halten that the members addressed should sign their names te the enclosed le'trs and return them te him te be sent irem the office of tire HqtuMlcan or the postellice department, te the postmasters te whom they were addressed, in behalf of his newspaper enterprise. As the congress men are mainly dependent en him for official favors and patronage, he no doubt fancied there could be no refusal of h:3 demand, which, all in all, i3 about the most impudent that has yet been made by Republican offices. Mahone's cheek must pale by the side of this Iowa speilsman. A repekt comes from liarnsuurg that there are anticipations of the ar rival and sojourn there of a Vanderbilt railroad lobby and a Gould telegraph lobby. This will be an excellent year for lobbyists at Harrisburg te get them selves into the penitentiary. Delv.vlv must go. Tun sudden corner. rise in corn is due te a " Feil ence '' the " scrub women at Harrisburg will be expected te scrub. By mistake the outside pages of today's Intelligencer are dated Tuesday, .Tau. 10, instead cf Jan. 9 It has Just bscu discovered that the clerk of the supreme court at Washing ton nsts as much from his fees annually as the salaries of such presidents as Wash ingten, Jeffersen and Jacksen ameuutcd te. Reform is necessary. Tire cautroller in Milwaukee seems te have a level as well as a stubborn head. Last year the city departments were duly notified that the appropriations wcre ex hausted but they kept ou steadily sit"1' ing money and contrasting debts t . met out of this year's appropriations. The controller sensibly objects te this kiud of housekeeping and refuse ta allow tin.' grab. Tin: Tobacco Leaf, iu its auun.il trade review, notes that 18S2 opened with an estimated bteck of seed leaf en hand, in cluding the crop of 1SS1 and all preceding growths, of 331,478 cases. There wcre consumed and exported in the last twelve months, 237,533 cases, leaving a surplus en hand of 03,923. Nearly or quite all estimates are resolvable into the conclu sion that 200,000 cases will cover the pro duction of seed leaf in 1SS2, allewauce being made for increased acreage and di minution of weight aud size by reason of protracted dreuth. 1SS3 will apparently be cemmenced with 37.533 cases less than the year 1S2, which circumstance, from every point el view, affords a geed pros pres pect. The entire quantity of Sumatra tobacco received at the pert of New Yerk last year was 1,031,41G pound!!. Tin: accomplished idiot who corresponds with the New Yerk Tribune from Bosten writes te that paper as fellows : Butler's discovery that Massachusetts' illiteracy is greater than that of a majority of the state; is a geed specimen et the slander and roerbacks with which this extraordinary state paper abounds. By reckoning in the illiteracy of his ewu im mediate aud peculiar supporters, the fiesh Irish immigrants and the Canadian French in the mill towns (" the Chinese of New England,") General Butler has managed te put Massachusetts below Iowa with her German aud Swedish immigration in peiut of illiteracy. The fraud has been prompt ly exposed, but the governor has for tire moment get the laugh upon his state. This was probably all he wanted. It would be interesting te have the Tribune man tell where the " fraud " is in Butler's calculation, aud wiry he should net count all the people of Massachusetts in hi.s enumeration of its illiteracy. Tun Philadelphia American is in error when, in speaking of the action of the Heuse at Harrisburit it says : "The Dem ecrats declined te make a move toward retrenchment and reform, and instead of dispensing with numerous officials, as had been assured by the chaiiwan of their stale committee, Mr. Hcnsel amongst ethers it was perfectly practicable te de, they held en te the holes and filled them with pegs. Indeed, we de net tee that there was the sign of a new order of things iu any of the Heuse's pieeedure ; perhaps it may be different when the new governor gets seated. " Although Republican Houses have for years past invariably filled seme sixty places at the very out eut sat of the session the Democrats have thus far only filled a dozen, and are consider in hew many of the ethers can be dis pensed with, with fair piosrvetsof lopping oil" half a hcrc at least. i en a long tune it lias been disputed .-- .. - that the New Yerk Tribune was making money, and the lack of any dividends de clareu upon its stock was cited as proof that its business management and heavy investment in a big building were unprofitable. Yesterday the association met and declared a dividend of 23 percent. Frem the registry of stock it appeared that Whitelaw Reid held 73 shares in his own name and 43 mere iu the name of his wife, while his brother-in-law ewned 20 shares mere, the family thus owning altogether 143 out of the 200 shares. The remainder are held in small lets, and in nearly half the cases by estates. The report 6tated that, "with the exception of a lean of $100,000, the new building had been en tirely paid for out of the profits of the current business." Though coming tee late for the relief of seme el the "estates " owning Tribune stock the new.' and the dividend will be welcome. It leeks as though it had been held back se as te de preciate the stock and let the Reid family gobble it up. i-rczsn te IJcatn. Henry Buck aud a few neighbors, the latter part of last week, went te Broad Bread head's creek, near the Delaware water gap te hook fish through the ice. A ten-year-old son of Mr. Buck desired te accompany the p3rty, but was refused. After the party started, the lad, thinly clad, followed them, and after running five miles caught up, unobserved, te the wagon in which Mr. Buck and the ethers were driving. He seated himself en the rear axle until the wagon had gene three miles further, wheu he was discovered half frozen. The party administered whisky and took the lad with lhcm te the river. They made a bed of brush and put the boy in a blanket and covered him with an overcoat. Then they left him and wcrrt fishing. When they returned the boy was numb aud unconscious. Tbc child was taken home, but he died the next day. G. Mourns DecGnTT, senior meniber of the firm of Doughty & Kapella, shipbuild-' ers, en Petty's Island, died of dropsy en Saturday. He was 04 years of age. POLITICAL POINTS. THE JIOCSK AT UABKISBLltO. Sleek Starts Seme Kcferrng Will the Heue Fellow ? Seme tioed Advice Ter It lreceeUrns of Congress llarrisljurg Dispatch te trie Ti:n:. Chief Clerk Meek has caught the reform infection. He has made his selection ei pages and scrubwerneu and the effect is great disappointment among the various applicants. Theuumber of paces employed at several past sections has ber-n fifteen, but Meek has chosen only six, iu the be lief that they wi'i be adequate te the ac commodation of the officers and members of the Heuse. The number of scrub women has been reduced from 115 te G5. By this stroke of reform Meek will reduce the expenses of the Heuse about $2,500 in a session of one hundred days. If the Democratic Heuse caucus should ratify the action of the committee en reduction of offices the total reduction of expenses, including that projected by Meek, will be about $10,000. Democratic Opportunity. Pett-vitlc Standard, Deni. With some pcople prosperity is a mere searching test of the true elements of char actor than adversity is. The same thing is true of political partie3 Sometimes the surest way te kill a political party is te put it in power. Te day the main rcliance of the Republican party is en Democratic blunders. It remains te be seen whether this expectation is well grounded, or whether the Republican leaders will be disappointed in their balief that the Dem eeratic party will speedily demonstrate iu iueapicity te successfully overn a gicat country. In the orgamz.Uien of the Legist iture the Democrats, at the very ou'.-et, will be e i ri'-r '. ! a j vsmeii of practical reform, e:i which t'l-y will hj compelled te show their hands The uuin br-ref -ib rdii.atenlliclu's'iMiillv appoint I e i te dance attendance te 'lie Legislature. ought te he cut down te at least ene half its ordinary proportion. Under Republican rule this has become a shameful abuse. Tiie Senate has -IS officers te attend te the wants of fifty members, nnd iu the Heuso the proportion is almost as large. . Every session of the Legislature mcu have been named for many of these subordinate positions, who have never even visited Harrisburg except te draw their pay ; or who have farmed their positions out te substitutes, who were glad te take the contract for little or nothing, aud then let the work take care of itself. Still ethers com te Harrisburg te pass the winter, leafing around the hotel?, and bravely drawing their pay, in utter disregard of the duties they are supposed te perform. The Democrats in the Legislature must grapple with this form of public robbery, with tire epeuing of the session. It is a question which admits of neither compro mise nor postponement:. It will be a dif ficult question te handle satisfactorily, for it is safe te suppose that each member has two or three iucheate statesmen en his Hands who insist that thay shall be pro pre vidtd for at the public expense. A law should he passed at ence limiting the number of ompleyrs iu either Heuse. Tne position of resident clerk should be made a permanent ene and the appoint ment of all the officials who have in charge the care of the oapitel building and the comfort and convenieuce of the members should be ves ted exclusively in him. It would certain! y be a great relief te mom bars of the Legislature if the regular scramble ei" n.i-... -is and folders could be avoided ; and while a few aspiring states men may go home vowing vengeance be cm. se they have net been permitted te feed at the public crib, yet every Demo cratic representative will se strengthen hrmsclf with his constituents by such a policy that he can afford te disregard the giewls of the soreheads. I'rccccHllii-s lu l'eth Heus-rt-i Ve-itcril.iy. Iu the United States Senate Monday Mr. Merrill presented a petition from the Philadelphia beard of trade complaining that the report of the tariff commission prepped a lower rate of duty upon sugar than upon mol issc, and asking Congress te irevidc otherwise Mr. McDill, from the Comniit'.ce en public lands, reported a bill te previde for the determination of controversies about titles te land derived from the United States. The bdl te pre vent the use of the oapitel for ether than legitimate purposes was reported and passed. The bdl te afford relief te Con gress and the departments in investiga ing claims was discussed, Mr. Brown, of Gee-gin, speaking at length iu support of the bill. At two o'clock the prasidanrial succession bill caure up in e.djr, and Mr. Beck spoke rn advoe'.cy of its parage. Messis. After further d:scus.-.ieu by Dawes, Sherman, Blair, Jenes of Flerida, Ingalls, Edmunds and Hear, pending a motion of Mr. Edmunds te recommit th bill, the Senate adjourned. In the Heuse, a number cf bills were introduced under the call of states, among them the following : By Jlr. Andersen, of Kansas, "te create the postal t-jlagrapli of tire United States ;" by Mr. Rubrustm, of New Yerk, te i educe leUer postage te ene cent, aud by Mr. Fisher, et Pa., te limit the coinage of stand rrtl silver dollars te the requirements of the people. Mr Muriel), of Mame, risiug te a question of .......Vft-j . 5 pnvrlegc, etlcrcu a resolution ler the ap J peintment of a special committee te hives litigate the charge inade ou the fleer that Jehn Bailey, chief clerk of the Heuse, was acting m the interest of the Washrugteu gaslight company, aud iullueuciug con gressional action. After sorne debate the resolution was adopted. A bill was re ported and referred appropriating $30,000 for participation in the Hamburg exhibi tion, in July next. Tue shipping bill was taken irp aud debated by Messrs. Reagan, Dingley, McLanc. Candler, Gueuther, Caunen and Murch. The bill then went evor until te-day, aud the Heuso ad jeurncd. Tragedies or Dally I Alt. James Rowland, a wealthy and promin ent citizen of San Francisce, was drewued in the bay en Saturday night. At Cheney, Washington territory, en Sunday night, a Chinaman, accused of murder and robbery, was taken from jail aud lyched by a mob of eighty men. Andrew Jacksen, colored, charged with atfempting te feloniously assault a young woman, was taken from jail at Heudcrseu, Texas, en Sunday night, and hanged. Ex Collector Calvin A. Gilbert, aged G7 years, of Syracuse, New Yerk, was strick en with paralysis en Sunday afternoon, while sitting near. the stove at his home. His wife found him " with his arm resting en the stove badly burned and dead " A freight engine en the New Yerk Cen tral railroad ran into the caboeso of a freight train at Niagara Falls, N. Y., yes terday, killing Daniel Rehbins, a brake man, of Tewanda, and injuring Frank La meut, the conductor. The caboose was burned. At Williamstown, Massachusetts, a re spectable farmer, named Donahue, has personally applied te the authorities for his committal te a lunatic asylum "en acceuut of au irresistible desire te kill someone." Seme years asje Donahue re ceived a blew en the head, from the effects of which he never recovered. Seme Disastrous fire. The two upper stories and reef of Tele graph block rn Detroit, was burned out Monday evening by a lira which started at -the feet of the elevator. The nibt telegraph operators in the Western Union office, 53 in number, had their cscape by tne stairway cut ou, out an were rescued by the fire ladders. M. S. Corbett, night chief operator, was severely burned is the fire. The house and barn of Henry C. Hew- ard, in Easten, Maice, were burned ou Sunday. Edwin J. Heward, supposing bis sister in the house, rushed back te save her and was fatally burned. An incendiary fire in the suburbs of Macen, Ga , en Sunday night, destroyed $23,000 worth of property. A tire in Minneapolis, Monday morning burned out three stores. Less, $23,090. THR J.O.VT STKA3IEK. Little te be biived el trie CUy u: Draescla or Her Carge The less of the steamship City of Brus sels is complete, only portions of the masts appearing above the water mark where the disaster occurred. The rescued pas sengers and crew reached Liverpool and most of the former are new quartered at the Railway hotel. Many of them are suf fering from the shock aud also from ex posure, as they had no time te save any thing from the sinking steamer, and many were clad in the lightest of clethiug. De what he could the captain of the Kirby Hall could give little assistance beyond shciter, and the passengers wcre almost in iu danger of starvation until a pilot-beat appeared with previsions. The rescuing steamer, en acceuut of the low tide, was obliged te remain eutside the bar until alter 7 o'clock, when all were landed at Woedsido aud subsequently transferred across the Mersey te Liverpool. Te the coolness aud presence of mind of Capt. Land aud his officers, aud the ex cellent discipline of the crew, is ascribed by the passengers the small less of life. As one of the seamen said te a corres pondent, " It was the coolest thing you ever saw nr thrs world.' A passonger, Mr. Skinner, states that he observed only one instance of confusieu, aud that was when a cowardly pilot jumped, despite all erdi'is, into the first beat launched. This se :ir ieii tin- captain that he called upon the crew te pull him out. All the proceedings were conducted se smoothly that net until five beats had been le.vcrcd did the passongers realize the ex tent of their peril. An instance of this is given by another passenger Mr. Siegel. lie was awakened by the crash and arose, but hearing nothing further he returned te his berth. He was seen aroused again by the call La "man the beats." He was saved in the beat commanded by the purser, which contained 30 persons. But for the thick fog it is believed all could have been saved, unless, as bolievcd by seme persons, some of the crew who took refuge in the rigging wcre struck and ren dered insensible by parts et the ship's tackle as she sank. O.ie man was found dead clinging te the rigging. The fog wa3 se dense that it was dangerous for the beats te move about quickly Capt. Land was ene of the first picked up, although he, with Chief Engineer Tedd, was the last te loave the rigging. When rescued, the captain was in the act of passing a life buoy te a drowning comrade. A boy named Hamilton was rescued, hall drowned, clinging te the mizzen cress trees. The two Italian steeragc passen gers who were drowned seem te have lest therr presence of mind and jumped over board without awaiting te see what could be done for their safety. The persons lest Mr. Cenner the quartermaster, Mr. Cor coran, the steward, Yeung, second officer, Weeds, Carpenter, Quina, lamp cleaner, Malcolm, fireman, Smith, able seaman, McLced, able seaman. The purser of the City of Brussels says that the fog was 30 deuse that the order te step the engines was given half an hour before the collision occurred ; the Messr3. Inman say the machinery had been stationary 4t minntcs. The steamer, however, according te the Kirby Hall's captain, although tire cngiucs were net running, was moving ou with the tide with such impetus that the crash could net be averted, although steam was put en in the attempt te cscape the danger. The captain of the Kit by Hall also says that he re versed his engines as seen as he heard the whistles of the City of Brussels. He also states that his vessel was hardly moving at the time of the collision with the City of Bru-sels, and was feeling her way te an anchorage. Tbe whistle was blown continuously, and a strict lookout was kept en beard the Krrby Hall. By the collision the main compartment of the City of Brussels was cut into and the bulkhead was shifted, thus accounting for the speedy sinking of the vessel. t m LANUTUV AND UKKHAKT. The Jerr-vy I-lJj'ii Artmlrt-r Defends Mil At At tentleuH te Her. The arrival in Ciiicage of Frederick Geb hard has excited mere than usual interest in Mrs. Langtry, and stories of all kinds have been set afloat regarding the two. Mrs. Langtry occupies rooms 3, 5 aud 7 at the Grand Pacific, and Mr. Gebhart occu pies rooms 133, 133 aud 137 at the same hotel. Although Mr. Gcuhard arrived in Chicago at eleven a. in., en Friday, Mr. F. A. Schwab, Mrs. Langtry's busiuess man ager, says that he did net meet Mrs. Lang try until four o'clock Saturday afternoon, at Haverly's. Saturday afternoon an unusually large house greeted her and she met a cordial reception. Mr. Gebhard furnished the following letter te the press : " Sir : Siuce my arrival in Chicago, I have been made the subject of newspaper articles, in which my habits, appearance and intentions have been referred te at a greater or less length. I should net heed theso articles if they concerned no ene but myself, as I am satisfied that the portion of the community whose geed opinion is worth having does net attach the slightest importance te stories containing a grain of truth te a ten of falsehood, and in seme iustanccs set afoot by persons who have formed their impressions of me through a keyhele, and intercept intercept e 1 errand boys te read the addresses of letters intrusted te the lads for delivery. Unfortuuately they reflect upon a lady whose friendship I am proud te possess, and who is as painfully sur prised as l am that in a country where chivalry aud independence are supposed te exist, every day should be marked by a new and cearse invasion into her private life. My attentions te Mrs. Langtry are such as any gentleman shenld, without comment, be privileged te pay te any lady. Mrs. Langtry is hore in the company of her husband's sister, dwelling in a public hotel, and the object of such scrutiny as nene but a person of irreproachable char acter would court. A little reflection would, I am sure, suggest te most people that many of the remarks made in rela tien te my acquaintance with Mrs. Lang try, a stranger iu a strange land, and en that acceuut the mere dependent upon congenial friends for a few hours' relaxa tien alter her duties te the public have been performed, are scarcely in consonance with justice, kindness or decency. Your obedient servant, Frederick Gediiard. TltAtiEDI IK A DAX.Ij KOOM The 1'rempter Stabbed te DeathSubsequent butclde el tbe Murderer. A ball was in progress in Bedford county, N. C, en Saturday night. While the dancers wcre in the midst of a quadrille Idclle Read stepped up te Scott Clayten, who had consented te call out the figures, and told him that he was net calling them right. Clayten considered her tone rather pert, and replied somewhat indignantly, although theso who were near by affirm that he did net ufe ungentleraanly language. Among Miss Read's admirers present was Arms tead Barksdale, and he chanced te ever hear Clayten's remaiks. The girl had hardly resumed her place among the dancers before Borksdale went up te Clay Clay eon and called him te account for his remarks. Het words passed, and then Burksdale drew a knife and stabbed Clayten, cutting a horrid gash from the right eye te the back of the neck, severing the jugular vein and causing death. Seme of the partisans of the two men took up the quarrel and a melee ensued, in which no one was fatally hurt. Barksdale es caped from the scene uuebscrved. Wed nesday morning early he went te a saw mill and borrowed a guu from an ac quaintance, saying he wished te sheet a rabbit. Instead of doing this he went te a neighboring house and shot himself in fhe bewels. He died at 5 o'clock. PERSONAL, Let M Meiuur.L, of Maine, was re ported iu a dyintr condition last night. Jehn W. May, chief justice of the mu nicipal court of Bosten, was reported dying of acute pneumonia last night. Hesut Bingham, president of the Mer chants' national bank of Savannah, died yesterday at the age of 71 years. Cai'T-Jeweu., of the U. S. steamer .Tuuiata, hound for the East India squad ron, is dangerously ill of typhoid fever. Matthew Fjiankux Whittier, only brother of Jehn G. Whittier, the poet, died en Sunday in East Bosten, at the age of 70 years. IIe was the author of the "Ethan Spike" letters. Mil. Gewe.v, it is reported, will with draw from the Rjading railroad manage ment as seen as he ge;s the concern out of the bauds of receivers ; he will resume his law practice, and Vauderbilt will select his successor, who may or may net be Rebert II. S.iyre. W.M. M. Evaiits was handsomely enter tained en Friday night with a dinner party by Teny Diexel, with whom he i3 associated as ene of the trustees of the Peabody educational fund. The compli ment was extended te Mr. Evarts in re turn ler 'lospitalities which Mr. Drexel received aem his guest while in New Yerk. jhadam:: LanusTiNi: JNilsmix was pre vented from singing iu concert at St. Leuis, en Saturday night, by a sub acute inll animation of the larnyx . Six thousand dollars worth of scats had been sold. She was prevented by the came cause from singing in St. Jeseph ou Thursday night, disappointing a $3,000 house in that city. She left St. Leuis en Saturday evening for the milder climate of New Orleans. Gex. Buti.ek was the leading guest at the Bosten diuner yesterday, commemor ative of Jacksen. There was a great deal of talk about the similarity in character of Jacksen aud Butler, which is interpreted as grooming of Butler for the presidential nomination. Butler himself spoke of Jackseu, attacked with virulence, bitter ness, injustice and personal vituporatren as enunciating this dectrine "which," said he, " in this day I adept for ene ; net that te the victors belong the spoils, but that the government belongs te its friends." Makshali. F. Polk, the defaulting state treasurer of Tennessee, arrested in San Antonie, Texas, was released ou a writ of habeas corpus en Sunday night. He claimed that his name was net Polk, but Tate. Telegrams were sent te the Tenue3see authorities " for full descrip tion and instructions," but no reply was received, hence the release. After his re lease a telegram was received irem the governor of Tennessee telling the detective te held the man, but it was ten late. Polk ( for several persons who saw the arrested mau are confident of his identity ) took the train for Laredo. JlAVIOWS MATTERS. 1ViSic Interests the Village en tue mil. At the late meeting of the Maytown lyceum Miss Sieger was elected secretary, as the regular officer could net attend. The president delivered his inaugural. The question fixed for next meeting i- that " The Seuth should be paid for emanci pated slaves," te be debated en the affirm ative by Captain Haines and J. P. Albright, en the negative by W. G. Edwards and J. D. Luckey. Mr. Terry was chosen correspondent. Answers were given te the following re ferred questions : " Which ocean contains the mere salt, the Atlantic or the Pacific, and why ?" Answered by Messrs. Edwards and Terry. Why does water begin te frceze at the bottom?" Answered by Mr. Luckey. " If we had no atmosphere, would we have no laud?" A II. Al bright. "Dees it pay te keep Xmas holi days?" Answered by Miss Seager. The answering of Miss Eagle's question was deferied untrl next meeting. Debate was next iu order. Judges, Messrs. Terry, Graybill and Ramsey. Question " Re solved that the signs of the times indicate the downfall of the Rspublic." This was discussed in the affirmative by Messrs. Witiuer and Luckey ; en negative, Messrs. Albright and Herchelth. Judges decided in favor of the negative. This was fol lowed Dy a reading by Miss Heff'er, sub ject "Mark Twaiu visits Majra " This was followed by the reading of the paper by the editor, Jehn M. Eagle. Sentiment3 were discussed, and no further busiuess en hands the society adjourned. Tewu Trlile. James A. Hendersen and Ephram nofif nefif man have returned te Philadelphia whero they are attending the college of phar macy. A runaway herse was captured en Seuth River street, en Friday last. The buggy was capsized, and the men thrown out. Happily no one was hurt. On Sunday evening the 21st inst. there will bean election for Reformed church officers. Elders, ene te be elected, Abra ham Sleadt and Jacob Roathtruek ; deacons, Levi Rutherford, David Denisen; trustees, Henry Haines, Jehn Fletcher. The Memery or Ilev. Thompson. In the Duke street M. E. church, en Sunday, Paster Robinson announced the recent death of a former pastor of the church, Rev. Chas. Thompson, and sug gested the propriety of an appropriate expression of sentiment en this sad occa sion, whereupon J. B. Geed, esq., Dr. Wm. Compten aud Walter A. Haldy were iustructed te prepare such a memorial and have drawn up a preamble and resolutions reciting the sad event and testifying "that in expression of our feelings ; therefore in the death of Rev. Chas. I. Thompson the church has lest auable, zealeus aud faith ful gospel minister ; our own society, whom he for three" years se faithfully served as pastor, a friend whose name has beceme a household word ; his family, a kind and affectionate husband and father; and the country, a loyal and patriotic citizen. That we shall always cherish his memory with grateful and heartfelt affec tion, and while we sincercly sympathize with the bereaved family and offer our unfeigned condelenco te them, wc at the simc time rejoice together that we de rret mourn like thes3 who mourn without hope." a Bis Chicken Shew. The clarion note of the blithsome chan ticleer i3 heard in the neighborhood of Shoenberger's Excelsior hall. The poultry show opens en Thursday but the birds are beginning te arrive. There will be 1,200 entries, and, all in all, it will be the biggest poultry show en record. Gram: Fex Chase. There will be a grand fox chase from O. P. Brnbaker'r hotel, New Helland, en Thursday, Jan. 13, 1883. The large white tailed fox will lie let loeso at 1 o'clock p. m. There will also be a wild turkey dinner. Convocation et Marrlaburj;. The clergy of the convocation of Har risburg are in session at St. Jamas church, this city, and pnblic services (with ser mon) will be held en Tuesday, Wednes day and Thursday evenings. ISEAEL "ITS COGKEGAT10N Is TUE UEAKT OF KATlOS." Lfcturi-, by Kev. Saiu'J ai. Laskl. Delivered Dec. 0, 5G43, A. A!., llefure the Hebrew Congregation el Lancaster. My fiieuds ! ene of our most remarkable poets aud philosophers in his jjreat work called "The Source of Truth." gives plausible utterance - in the following words : " Israel among the nations is like the heart in the human body." With ether words : " Israel is the corner cerner cerner steno of all nations." By this theme we wilt try te coaviuce you of the truthfulness of this assertion, and hew far and in what respect Israel is the cerner-steno of all natieus. In science the heart is a muscle, a pumping apparatus, lu the popular usage of the term, however, it contains a treas ure of sentiments of love, affection, bore, courage, faith, etc. Therefore, if it w maintained that Israel is the heart of nations, the term was certainly used iu a figurative sense This, however, is no idle self glorification ; it is bacd upon the following facts : As the heart is located iu a dark and mysterious cavity, and speaks neverthe less iu clear and imprcEsive accents, se is Israel a nation which speaks au obscure and mysterious language, yet clear aud intelligible te the millions. Although we attach no value te misgivings and pre sentiments, and are well aware that the mysterious dispositions of the heart are of no value opposite the impressions of ex perience and reason; although we also :new well hew little the heart .ie s tell of what transpires eutside of us, and frequently Is joyous aud cheerful while our dearest and nearest friends suffer aud even die ; or hew efteu de wv feel s-ad and depressed without outward cause for such feeling ; and yet wemustmaintatu : '-And the wise heart is a mephct."' ? voice, though mvsterieus, :s important. Hurl te the family that listens less te voices fi-'ia without and mere te the whispeis of the heart. Hail te the man who listens less te : he voice of the world and mero intcDtly te the voice of the heart, which promotes justice, beuevo beueve lence and benignity. Hail also te him who pays less attention te forms and ob servances from without, and mero te the voice speaking from the recesses of his heart. Did net Israel, the lutirl cf nations, speak the same obscure aud mysterious language, aud yet se clear and lustrous ? Our great prophets have spoken iu mys terious finurcs, se that ou ene side they were looked upon as visionary enthusiasts, while en the ether the profeuudest truths were presumed in their words, and spider web of mysticism were based upon them. Iu ceurse of time, however, it was ascer tained that they speke of the me.it sublime ideals of man, th j hope and light of man kind. And our conception of Deity hew obscure aud yet hew clear ! He is the Ged whose traces arc clearly percop&ible everywhere, and still seen nowhere ; who is exalted above all existcuecs and -is still revealed in the smallest details thereof ; the Ged who lives and work and ii in all things and yet is the living, indivisible and all-wiseDeity. As the heart isthe fountain of life, "Fer from it geeth forth life," se is Israel among the nations the fountain of the purest and me-st ouneblrug religieu ; idea. In order te appreciate tire services of Israel it will net suffice te compare him with man in his present state ; wa must leek hack into the status of the nations of antiquity. We must compare what tlicjr were and what they are new. Wc must knew tlu contrasts in beliefs, conception's and manners, iu Israel's and the heathens. This prompts us te exclaim "I slspt, but my heart did wake " The nations slept, but the;r heart, Israel, did wake. Man was captivated by follies el idola try. He worshipped net only the cosmic phenomeua of nature, and the works of art, but even the animals, and degraded himself below the irrational crvatures. And hew were they worshipped ? Net, indeed, by sacrifices which de net olevate and cnnoble mind and heart, but by puri ty and chastity, human victims, innocent chiidrcu perished upon their altars. Alse then it was tnie iu Israel as the Midrash suggests: "My heart wa3 awake te worship the only Ged." Mau was oppressed by the three fold evil of despotism, slavery and caste, under the erroneous impression of diie necessity, in which change is impossible. But Isi:i:l the heart of nations was wide awake (L'geala) in his hope of " redemption."' And hew manifeldly did Israel incorporate the idea of freedom ? He appointed tue Passover feast as a meuumeut of redemption and liberty. IIe appointed the Sabbath a pro pre test airain-,1 slavery. He established pie ccpts and ebscrvauccs te liberate man from the slavery of passions aud vices. When mau was yet deeply submerged in rude and barbarous habits no benignity, no mercy Israel, the heart, was wide awake " te virtue and humauity." This higher life in Ged, liberty and vir vir tue as it emanated from Israel, courses new through the veins of civilized na tions ; revolutionized social relations ; raised aud pressed man onward ea the path of progress and enlightenment. Hew much of the great and go jd could he effected if only theso who honestly cling te Israel's cause would feel a iiure intense inspiration for it ? Ther.i is no doubt that their hearts are yet larire eueugh te accomplish the best intentions and most netable exertions of our best men. Newhere should peace and cunceid reign mere universally than iu Israel, who has ene Ged, ene altar of piety, ene law of truth, ene hepe, and one mission. Re form is net identical with destruction. The belief in ene Ge.l is net sufficient for Israelrit must be connected with the practical works of the priestly ' mission." The privilege of being beru of Jewish parents does net liberate man from the slavery of passions and vices. A m iu is net a Jew because he is born of Jewish parents. A man is a Jew if he beiieves ia tfib religion of Israel ; if his moral con duct and practical Charity are Jewish ; if he co operates with theso who support and sustain the institution which preserves aud promulgates Judaism ; and that is " the congregation " A man is a-Iew by his frce will and cheica and net by the ac cident of his birth. It is high time that wc understood that, and separate the grain from the chaff. We have decidedly tee many camp-followers that de us no geed, but a great deal of harm, and yet their false prophecies are of no avail, for truth will and must conquer. Net the utterance of a premise make'-. the principle valid, but the fact, the deed alone, and for that reason it is most bind ing en every member oflsrael te de his duty toward promulgating among ether natieus Jewish thoughts and Jewish prin ciples, and support and sustain our con gregation the institution which has and always will preserve Judaism, the true and old nursing mother of all religions. Ami if all, well te de Israelites, es pecially, de net assist in promulgating a congregation tue uoen auu heart of Israel's existence what have we te show te the world at large of Judaism, or Israel's charity, religion and benevo lence, if wc de net fundamental!' establish irr our midst, that institution which has bscn from time immemorial the beacon light the watchman of the seafaring man of all nations" Israel's holy congrega tion," " the heart of nations." We want all our brethrea.and sisters te share in the blessings of religion, a3 well as te further its interests, that we may no mero have te point te ear glorious past te jus ify our claims as a chosen poeplo, but be able te found them en our present ex alted state as well. Were it even that it should be established for this one purpose alone we ought te held it our sacred duty te use our best endeavors towards bring ing it about. And if succ3ss attend our endeavors aud I cannot for a mo ment doubt that it must ultimately result from them what a great satisfac tion would it afford te all of us, and hew greatly would we feel eunelves re warded ; and we would, tee, deserve for it net only the everlastinggratitude of tire entlre Jewish community, but of all our Christian brethren, tee. Let us tlreu unite for the uebla cause of religious edu cation Let all opposition te it cease new and forever and all will be well with us. And what ought te be the heart of Israel ? The ancient rabbis said " The holy One blessed be He. i3 the heart of Israel."The Thera should be Israel', whose first and last letters (Lev.) signify " heart." Thus we see hew truly Judah Halevi said : "Israel's congregation is the heart of nations." It is our duty te obey the injunction : " More than all that is te be guarded protect thy Jieart, for from it ceme the issues of life." And thus we may hope, with the blessing of the eternal, the Israelites et Lancaster, with their many neble women and nven, who are anxious of calling this congregation a re form congregation, will, of course, find it easy te watch ever the heart of nation , and at the same tirne will net fail of mak ing a deep aud lasting impression up m the hearts of their own children. Israelites ! take courage aud be linn, and you shall see the salvation of the Lord a truly Hebrew congregation " the heart of nations." Amen. DKU.llUKK DOlMiS. I'rngrcM of I'.tulH n t lie Lewer Knil. iicpiuar Ceirt'-i'iinii in.c. Weilc has been suspended for the winter at the tower being built at Chestnut Level church. It premises te bu a snliV, substan tial affair and will add r.e little beauty te the line old church. It will stand, also, as an evidence of the progressiveness of the congregation and its energetic pastor. We are having se nr my weddings that it is impossible net te miss chreiiichny; some of them at the tirae of occurring. Week befere last we missed te notice that of Mr. Wm. Hepkins and Miss Breeke. Last week united Mr. Wm. Ferre and Miss Mary McPhcrsen. Next ? A hog-pen is a thing that is nut :is siuci-p tible of imprevemeuts as a mewing m.i chine or many another thine, but we have ene here constructed upon ;m entirely and a somewhat purctical idea. The floor fleer is made of fence rails or poles, placed seme distarrce apart. Iu the autumn, should the farmer be undecided which of his hogs te kill and which te " keep ever," he only has te threw them into the pen, te settle the question. The best ours ledge, and the small peer ones fall through. Theso that remain are fattened and killed, and these that have beeu liddLd an I feuud wanting, secure a respite. The only serious objection te the plan is that all but the large ears of corn go through, also ; but the hogs auea learn riot te make two bites at a nubbin. Mr. Jeb. Hawk"old his tobacco te Shiik for 18, 0, and 3. Wa arc stripping with both hands. SElOUBOKHOuni KKUS. ' Kveurs Arresa the Ceuuly I.lue. Peter Devlin, a tunnel-head mau at the Piiemix iron company's blast furiiatv, while blinded by steam stepped into thu open lift well and fell about seventy f et and was instantly killed. Jehn A. Hitler, the alleged default' r of the defunct ilarrishuig City bank, wln fled in 1STG when the institution closed :ts doers, has returned te the city . 'IV, suits for false prelense weie bieuI.t against him by the depositors of tin bai k, and true bills were found in 187 at the Aprrl term ei court. Mr. Bigler stalls that he has voluntarily returned te stand trial upon these charges if the suits aie te be pushed. The following wcre vcnterday elected officers of the Reading & Columbia rail read company : President, G. A. Nichols. Directors, J. B. Lippincott, J. NHIutrh insen. Henry Lewi?, Frederick Liuer, li. V. Williamson, Themas Baiiiiig.ud:ni-, F. B. Gewen, William Latilun r ma I, Jeseph B. Alternus, Francis W. Uhrsf, Eckley B. Coxe, Philip Arndt. Secretary, Heward Haneick. Trea8Urer,.Iehu Welch. Trie lrirst Srrk (Ircncr. In answer te the inquiry. ' Who were the first silk culturists iir C'ite-ter county. Pa , "the Sunday Biipatch, of Phil tda'l phi.i, replies as fellows : " This is a question we cinnet answer. The cultiva tion of .-.ilk by raiding silkworms, etc., was a matter of interest in Pennsylvania as early as 1731 Iu 1703 it was announced in Londeu that ene hundred journeymen silk threwsters were engaged te ee te Pennsylvania and New Yerk. In 1770 a filature was set trp in this city. Elizabeth Taverner, from Chailcsten. S. C, sunn silk in Frent street, abeve Arch, in 17- In 1770 the Ameiican philosophic il society, addressing the Assembly at d asking for the protection of the silk manufacture, represented that oue woman in Chester county had ever thirty thou sand silkworms. But her name is net stated. Sixty four families in Pennsylva nia had already commenced te raie si k worms. Very probably seme of them were living iu Chester county. This ..t tempt te produce silk, like sevetal etlnis which originated about the s.inm time, was a failure. In 1773 the silk society gave a premium te James Miliheuse, of Che.-aei-oeuuty, for raising a large quautity of cocoons, in which enterprise he was si:r passed by Widow Stencr, of LancaMn, who produced seventy two thousand eiht hundred." linmallabre Letters Letters addressed as fellows arc held at the postefflce for want of stamps : "Mr. Gilch, 121 Popleton Street, Baltt mero." "Mrs. Amasiash Geed, Greene, Lie. Ce. Pa." "Mrs.Uee. C. Lemen, G13 13th street, Washington, D. C." "Clinten Wire Cleth Ce. Cliute , Mass." "Miss Katie Cellins, Yerk Furnace, Yerk co. Penna. Three of the abeve letters have a one cent stamp upon the envelope. It requues a three cent stamp te carry a sealed en velope. Hand OMcpr Kirctetl. At au election held en Friday evening, January 5th, for officers of the Lancaster City cornet baud, the following gentlernru were elected : Leader, Geerge Martin , Couducter, Ferdinand Weber ; President, Cliax. C. Deunclly ; Vice Presidanr, Cen rad Rclim ; Treasurer, Ames C. Cast ; Secretary, Henry IliucM, Trustees, Peti-i-Hahn, Geerge .Martin, jr., and FJerenca Rchm. After the adjournment there was a sct-'JU anil specchmaking and mirth prevailed u a late hour. Ileal tntate sale. Henry Shubert, auctioneer, sold at pub lic pale last evening at the Ceqier house, for J. II. Ceylc, eq. trustce te sell, a ene story brick dwelling, .situated en the west side of North Water street. Ne. 30. be longing te the estate of Patrck O'Keefe, te Martin DeutBcber, for $910. Kale or Hemes. Samuel IIcss & Sen, auctioneers, sold at public sale yesterday, for Daniel Legan, at his sale and exchange stables, this city, 10 head of Canada horses, at an average price of $236 per head.