Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, January 29, 1883, Image 2

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    XiAtfOASTEB DAILY INTELLIGENCER MONDAY, JANUARY 29. 1883.
?iancaster Irntelligenrst.
MONDAY EVENING, JAN. 29. 1883.
Net Very Ingenuous.
The national Heuse efltepresentatives
was disturbed en Saturday by the state
ment of Representative McKinley that
the Southern planters, who loudly ob-
. j i . m . zrc enffnn iiea lrmrrlit
jecieu tome u&iiu. u -"' -(,-
their ties for three or four cents a pound 01
and sold them te the Yankee cotton
spinners for ten or eleven cents. .Mr.
McKinley thought that while they en
joyed this profitable speculation it would
be advisable for them net te complain
of the hardship of a high duty en cotton
ties te protect their Northern manufac
turers. JJut Representative Aiken and
ethers flatly denied that the planters get
anything for the iron ties with which
their cotton nates are ueu. a mk
land manuiacturers in the Heuse were
called upon by Mr. McKinley te cor
roborate his statement, and they de
clared that the cotton was paid for
by the Xcw England mills at the
gross weight of the bales, without any
deduction for ties and bagging. Mr.
Aiken said it was net se done in Eng
land, where it was customary te deduct
the weight of the wrappings in paying
for the cotton ; and he insisted that
neither did the American manufactuier
pay for them. Manifestly if Mr. Aiken
is right about the English practice, it is
improbable that the Yankee manufac
turer, who is reputed te be quite as sharp
at a trade as anybody, suffers himself te
be beguiled into paying eleven cents for
what costs but four cents. Yet the
statement of his congressional repre
sentatives that he seemingly does
tiiis must be accepted as true.
But doubtless it isenly in teeming. If
he pays eleven cents a pound for cotton,
bale and all, lie may be assumed te take
the weight of the comparatively worth
less bagging and lies into the amount in
fixing the price of the cotton. Cotten
sells at close figures, and an eighth of a
cent often appears in the quotations. A
manufacturer who buys :i four bundled
pound bale for eleven cents, perhaps cal
culates that lie is paying say eleven and
:i quarter cents for the cotton. Knewing
that he gets some twenty-three pen mis
of bagging and ties, which is of little
value te him ; while the Knglish manu
facturer, who lakes off the tare and pays
only for the net weight of the cotton,
would pay the eleven and a quarter cents
per pound for the bale. Se that Mr. Mc
Kinley and the Northern Representatives
who charged the Southern planlcis with
gouging the. Northern manufacturers
were net very ingenuous in their state
ments, which were true only in their let
ter and net at all in their spirit. It dees
net take much acumen te make, this dis
covery, and it is net very creditable te
the geed sense of Mr. McKinley and
these who billed with him that they
.should think that their deceit fulness
would net be discovered.
Time Te Clese Tiicm.
The Pottsville JlViUs' Jnunnil, a
lending Republican journal of its Motion,
will net be accused of any partisan or
unpatriotic purposes in its? opposition
te a continuance of the orphans sol
diers' schools alter the year l.ss.3,
at which tinm it is eentemplab d
by the existing law that they shall
be closed. They have served a laudable
purpose in their operatien: ami, for I ne
most pait, in curving out their plan
they have b en a gieat credit teli.n
sylvnnia. te her school system and i iht-r
gratitude toward her soldiers. lint bv
18S3 the war will have been closed
twenty years. There can bf no inm ileef
these schools who was net horn four
years after the close of lite war and
whose orphanage is therefore due very
lemetQly te it. The bounty of eni'sta
in this matter has been exceptional, and.
though it has been abused, no right
minded citien is disposed te take ex
ception te what lias been done nor te
what is contemplated by the lav
as it new stands. Hut when it 's
proposed te extend the time for closing
these schools te 1S00, and tespand $1,
,300,000 meie upon them, there is ground
for suspicion that piivate and net public
interests are te be served by ti is
measure. The superintend nl of publie
instruction and of t lies1 schools reports
that by that time theie will be en Un
rolls of these schools, without nnj
further admissions and net countingdis ceuntingdis
charges en order 1,770 children, ami ask)
what i3 te be done about it. Upen li. s
ground, tee, the Grand Arint of the
Republic aeks for the extension of their
timeef closing. Rut this great numbtr
of inmates at this period only proves
the laxity of the law of admission? r
the looseness of its admiiiisti.itien. If
these seventeen hundred childien Khali
for two years mere enjoy pi ivileges fur
beyond these of the. ether children of the
state they will have had all the ad van
tage thut them. It would probably be a
geed thing if thrf state could clothe, feed
and educate all the peer and orphan
children within its limits, but until it
undertakes te de this it should make no
further disci iminatien in lit half of
these of soldiers who died four jea::;
after the close of the war.
Xet Troubled With. Mixle.tj.
Mr. Swank, conductor of the Iren end
Skcl Bulletin, the iron manufacture s'
organ, calls upon the latter te put aside
all modesty and hasten te Congress with
their prayers for protection. It is quite
a new idea te suggest that the iron man
ufacturers have ever been restrained by
a feeling of modesty from urging this
prayer in season and out of season We
de nor. think that modesty in making
their wishes known has e( r been one of
their failings. Mr. Swank, at any rale,
has never shown any. It was he who
primed pig iron Kelly a year or two age
with the wonderful statistics te show that
the. Bessemer steel manufacturers were
net making tee much money when they
were selling their rails at the then ruling
price of sixty dollars a Ien, but which
they new produce at forty and still have
a profit left. The iron people aie net
unduly modest, but they arc a deserving
set of men, te a certain extent. We
want their mills te run and knew they
cannot run them satisfactorily while the
duty en iron is unsettled. What they
need is te have it fixed at once se that
they and their customers will knew -what
they are about.
Congkessienai, funerals, the public
expense attendingthem and the orgies
of committees which accompany them,
have become a subject of general scandal.
The last published report of the clerk of
the Heuse shows a shameful waste
menev en these occasions
and the purchase at the government
expense of a class of articles which indi
cate that the funeral, se far as the visit
ing statesmen contributed te it, was a
spree. Jehn G. Thompson drew and
snent for incidentals en the Garfield
congressional funeral train $8,24-3.41 ;
the expanses of the funeral of the late
Hen. J. Q. Smith amounted te only
5261.0-3 ; of the late Hen. M. V. O'Con
nor te $710, but.this is accounted for by
the fact that no congressional com
mittee accompanied the remains home.
When it came te the burying of lien.
Thes. Allen, M. C, of Missouri, the
congressional committee fairly rioted in
opportunity. $3-30 for coffin and trim
mings. S829 for sleeping cars and trans
portation, and an abundant supply of
scarfs, gloves and hat bands are among
the least unjustifiable of the items ; but
they are materially swelled by liberal
allowances for Apolinaris waters
hams, turkevs and spring chickens,
hotel bills, strawberries at -30 cents a
box, and, most striking of all, " for one
hat lest from car by messenger, $3 oil.'"
It was easy te swell such a bill te nearly
$2,000 te give a member of Congress " a
first-class funeral."
Wi: agiee wi' lithe Harrisburg Ttlc
graph that1' while governors, secretaries,
judges, senators and representatives al
low themselves te rest under obli
gations te the railroad companies the
seventeenth article will never be en
forced ;" and therefore I ail as a
practical measure well calculated te
abate the abuse the avowed puipese
of the Tclejraph " le interrogate per
sonally each one of the officers of the
state government, the judges of the the
eomas and the members of the General
Assembly, concerning both their practice
and opinions en this head." This is a
proper step as well for the protection of
these who give heed te the constitution
en this point as for the exposure of
these who de net. Seme conscientious
ellicials who decline passes have in times
past suffered unjustly from the general
lepreach attaching le the custom of
stale ellicials accepting them, and it is
fair that they should be relieved. The
Tdnjraph will no doubt meet with some
rebuffs m ils enterprise, but in most
ca.- it will find these who de net take
passis prompt te se avow.
Tiii;y are making slieit work of tlie
spot rows in Australia, wheieanefiici.il
i-'peit states t'u-tc have been destroyed at
tat- government's direction and exprnse
27,31.3 birds and 187,212 eggs, and the
W'lik is still going en.
M t.ien Ei.woep Gimust, the blae'c-r-iith
editor of the Lancaster Inquirer, sceirs
the sentimental nonsmse of Secretary
Mussel, of the Massachusetts Agrieulttnal
s tcii ty, who pronounces horse shoeing
usule.-.J!. The Inquirer bids the advocates
of this idea "'try it" en the paved si i. -els
of the cities for six mouths'.
Sotir. enterprising laudleul, at an o e o
pmseofonly $8 per room, has furnished
his hotel thtoughent with alarm gengr,
placed in a cuplmrd in every loom, which,
in case of lire can hj made te seu. id a
lead alainr. while a stout mauilla lire
proof l epe provides the awakened quests
with nsiMiis e! escape. Theio seems te be
a geed deal of horse sense as we I! as
economy about thcs3 arrangements.
Who shall Fay that corpeiatii.us have
no souls, when it is learned that the Stan
dard oil company, a giant and ciushiug
monopoly, has been ihe largest subseuber
for the relief of dwellers in the llvi-brf
limine and Ncck.tr valleys, whose ; nu'e.s
i'.y has been it-perted'' Germany beiti.jthe
Sa;:d.iid'.s best customer, the act of the
co.pei.Uion in sending $1,090 te succor the
.-'tin". : lug is le be regaidcd as a graceful
acknowledgment of their obligation le the
people el the Fatherland, but is rr'i'.e the
less te hi commended as a dee.l of no'de
chaiity.
Mujfnnus of Cotigrei-.s and of Lc:sl.:
tnrcr. who a;e dispjscl te " expunge "
actual but ir.ipkjisi'tt prejejdius from
thr receid are remiii'lud of Daniel Web
stir's ati'uinent ou another I'ame': ; "ex
punuiiig res dutien," nearly fifty ye.us
age, ie the Saiui'e of the United S'atcn :
" Eicit II m-ie s i ill lc-p a je.iru i! of its
pu cecdings."' That is in the oenstiluti in
of Pennsylvania, as it is in that of the fed
eral government. "But," said Webstc,
"a journal expunged i. net a journal
kept; "anil, therefore, they violate the
ceustitutijti when they Het out the rec ml
of anything really done.
The man who wiites the Gwendelen
Mehafl'y romances for the Chicago Tribune
has mat tied Fanny Driscell, the favoiite
poetess of western journalism. The result
is that the Tribune publishes the first pest
nuptial effort of her muss as fellows :
TWO.
i.
Far c.j) Hie pure wlitle lieihlsel wedkimIui.kI,
bhii itoeI in -.tarry lilit .seieneuuil :tlm ;
A lily en iter bre.i-t, and in lier eyes
A :ee, su'i'i'l peace ; in huh and bloom ami
lialm,
lier pallnvaj s-relehed utie-;s 1 no lendli'-.-.
lay
"O Leve," she "iniied, ' yen led my It et tit. a
way!"
ii.
Lew deu n in lillter dusl:, in stuiles ni,;ht.
- uem:u with :i red r.i in lier liatf
Told the vim moments oil in bilti-rnes
llazt-d wilhthe depths el liet-evvn despair!
Ateiif,' In r pathway -hone no be icon i:iv
' love," -he eried, " ymi led tiiy tci-'l this
way!"
Tun gloomy predictions of thi impend,
ing extinction of Ameiican fercHts, and
the consequent scarcity of timber, are met
by the assurance that the Australian i.i
pidly stewing tree called the blue gum
tree (Eucalylus glebulus) is leadily a-eli
mated in any lectlity where the lump.ra
ture does net fall below seven degree-,
below zero, and that it may he depended
upon as a substitute for the alow.grewing
ttees that at present furnish our supply of
timber should the dreaded contingency
occur that would make pine costly and
consign oak and hemlock te the category '
of curiosities. The blue gum is said te
grew se fast that in ten years it forms
forests which with ether trees would re
quire a century's growth. There are trees
in Australia fifty years old that are mere
than 22-3 feet high and twenty feet in di
ameter. The weed is hard, tenacious and
durable, and is suitable for ships, bridges,
rail way ties ana all ether purpesb where
great strength and solidity are required.
It takes a high polish, which brings out
beautiful veins in the weed.
The Knights of St. Jehn comprise an
organization who appear te thick mere of
their beer and the tripping measures of
the round dance than they de of priestly
prohibition, though what additional effect
the threat of pains and penalties may have
in reducing them te a humbler spirit re
mains te be seen. The Knights, who are
a German Catholic society, have been went
te iudulge iu festive pleasures where the
foaming beer mug and the sensuous waltz
have been conspicuous. Seme mouths
age the diocesan synod of Wheeling, West
Virginia, where the doughty knights arc
located, published an order forbidding
-rennd" dancing and the sal3 of beer at
entertainments given by Catholic societies
within the syuedical jurisdiction. St.
Jehn's Knights heaid the elder, and
went ou inviting their friends hither and
yen, and providing them regularly with
malt refreshment and the opportunity for
lllttuii;uv.u m iu. uuiulu jl iuu gnuv.,
and the "polka,"' the "ruazeurka" and
the "racquet," and the various ether
features of Tcpsicherean amusement famil
iar te young folks who regard the cotillion
of their fathers as eutirely tee old-fashioned.
Hut while the Knights and their
followers were di inking beer te their
hearts' content and tripping the light
fantastic most energetically, the bishop
was fulminating a bomb which was hurled
among the Knights yesterday, in the
shape of a h-tlcr that was read in the
churches of the Wheeling diocese
comminuting all Catholics te quit the re
bellious society before the 1st of March,
upon pain of excommunication. Here's a
pselty kettle of fish, but the chances aie
that the prelate's severe discipline will
have its due effect and the busy spigot
and squeaking fiddle find their eccupa
fn.n geitL iu and around the West Vir
ginia capital.
PERSONAL..
For.enn is said te he slated for the su
preme bench le succeed Judge Bradley.
Si:XAT0n Pi.t'Mi; many years age was a
feieinan hi the office of a little newspaper
in Xen'n, O., of which Mr. Whitelaw Reio
was the editor.
Tremm Cauuei.t., of Baltimeie, gieat
grand seu of Chailes Carrell, of Carrell
ten, and a leading citizen of Maryland,
died of apoplexy en Sunday.
Themas Td. 15ew::n o-:e of the bonanza
kings, un- ie long teim, and ex lieuten
ant Governer Taber, another bonanza
king, for the shot t teim, are the outcome
tif ihe senatorial &tui;g!u hi Celt rade.
.lenx Gii.niiKT, Iho number of the Min
nie Palmer cemiwny who was se fearfully
injured in the Milwaukee hotel fire, it is
new thought- will leeover, though the base
el his skull was fractured lie de.es net
et knew of the death of his wife.
Wu.cett, he qtttil ealer, is rapidly
:e,:aiiiin: his ( rmer jioed condition. Yes
teidny he ate his twenty-second brace
without apparent trouble in nine minute.
His backets arc confident that he will per
form the task, and bets of 100 te .30 aie
made in his favor.
Ivixr: Jein., of Aby.niuii, has lest ins
throne, though he letnins his kingdom.
A hand of rascally Bedeuns have stolen a
hi and new threnn made te order for the
king, tegardlcFS of expense, by au English
ill ni at Ad'-n, and intrusted te a caravan
for safe conveyance and delivery.
MissAijnv Or.ivr.n has almost com.
pin ted her fourth year in the pulpit of the
Willeugbby Avenue Methodist church in
Brooklyn, and dispite all opposition she
lias s s succssfull;, main;i'J 1 he financial
as well as Ihe spiritual affairs of her con cen con
gr.wafien that I'm m m1L,rs are loath te
let her go.
llr.xuv T. Mone te, ib wili-knewn
battiCLr and bieker, e.. New Yerk, died
en Siturtlay afternoon iu a e.irriAge while
returning fiem Wall street te his home.
The cause of death was apoplexy. Mr.
aleigan was 38 years old and retired from
business a year ei two aue. He entered
Wall .street ;s a boy in 1837 and when he
lelired had a fortune of about $l,.300,000
GiJbT.vvn Deur, was a lever of music.
His voice was a rich baritone, and he
piajrd n the piano, llute, guitar aud
vielia. He v.e.t te the theatre of tee,
especially en fii t nights, aud was a
regular attendant at the opera. When he
jet.'d upon his celibacy he said, icferriiig
te his mother and his art : ' What
would yen have ? I am already twice mar
lied. Must a man be. a Turk te prove
that he is of a d nnestic turn ?"
Pisixci: Fnr-DnnicK Ch titr.izs, of Prus
sia, who was 8-J years old when he died,
had for -i.lylpur tears smoked from
eighteen te twenty-four slreug cigars
daily. Neveithuicss he left a fortune of
twi-nty teven million minks, apportioned
as fellows : 12,000.000 te his seu Prince
Frederick Charles 0,000,000 te each of
his two dau.-hiers ; 1.000,000 te the Order
el St Jehn of .bu-a!em, of which order
the late prinee was jjrand master, te be
employed iu founding a home for couva ceuva
!e;ce:!t , and fh. million maiks remaining
t Iks at Ih". di-'i'-.:sal of the Emperor Wi!
ltam.
A 31eimv-siIi.j J.i-jierM uejtli.
An old woman named Sarah A. Smith,
who for yeais has lived en Blackwell's
island, died in the New Yeik chaiity hos
pital en Tuesday, ajjed seventy years.
She spent the last forty-live years going
from one institute te another, werkiiii; as
a servant, as long in each as the officers
would let her, and going away only te re
turn again. Although, perfectly content
te remain a pauper iu life she saved up
money eiieut-h te pay fei a decent burial,
a-id only divulged the secret when en her
death bed. About SeOO was found sewed
up iu tier dress Since 187.3 the old woman
li.id net left the island for an hour, and
often boasted that she lemembcred when
the stones for the penkeuiary were being
qirinied.
Arrested ler Ah.liittlen.
Jacob Res'nthal, the member of the 22d
regiment who, duiiug the encampment of
the rc-rinmnr at Peekskill, last summer,
abducted Miss Cera L;mr, has been ar
rested. Since that time Rosenthal has
been in Kansas City pad Louisville, Ky.
He returned ever a m.ttth age, and by ad
vertisements and ether devices has sought
te ici.cw Lis acquaintance with Miss
Lent. lie wjs taken te Peekskill.
A Craw su.pt Frem ttie .Mast.
The .steamer repot r-d wreekrd near
Swansea wa-. the Agnr--, Jack, hound from
Sardinia, with lead. The witnesses of the
disaster, who were uuabfe te render any
a's'stancc. saw the ctew, numbering twelve
men, swept one bv e-ic from the mast.
Tues'.camci w.ssem of the reach of rockets
and unapproachable by beats. All bauds
perbh-'.-l, including the captain, who, it is
uouevee, snipped ler the purpose of swim-
miug ashore,
OVER THE SEA.
RESIGNATION OF FRENCH MINISTHY.
Constructing a New Cabinet Anarchy
Threatened in ine Tewnw jfrlome
and Foreign News.
The French ministers met at the Elysee
yesterday morning and tendered their res
ignations. President Grevy considered
the subject for several hours, when he
accepted the resignation of the ministers.
He then summoned MM. Falliercs and
Jules Ferry for the purpose of conferring
with them in regard te the formation of a
new ministry. At a cabinet council the
ministers decided te accept the compre
mise between the government and the
committee of the chamber of depu
ties en the question of excluding
pretenders, based upon M. Fabre's
proposal, which is a reproduction of
the government bill with the additional
clause prohibiting pretenders froei cser
cising the elective function. Admiial
Jaureguiberry then resigned. General
Billet, minister of war, announced that he
should oppeso the measure, but consented
te remain in offrce provisionally, in order
te avoid a ministerial crisis. M. Fabre
read the report of the cemmittee en the
question. M. Bourgeois (Benapartist)
protested, and moved the previous ques
tion. M. Cunee d'Ornane (Benapartist)
also protested. The previeus question
was rejected by a vete of 9D te 440. Debate
en the vote was frxed for Monday.
M. Duclcrc subsequently declined te
accept M. Fabre's compromise, and in
sisted upon the retention of the govern
ment's proposals in their original form.
He communicated his decision last night
te President Grevy and Ministers Falliercs
and Deves. The resignation of the en
tire ministry followed.
A telegraph from Lyens reports that
the town is iu a State of ferment. It is
rumored that the anarchists intend te
storm the prison of St. Paul where Prince
Krapetkine is confined. Troops and pe
lice arc stationed iu the neighborhood of
the prison, and ether precautieus have
been taken te prevent the anarchists from
carrying out such a design.
TIMS V.ML,tkUdlJAKUi: CAVlMM.
Men Without KnmlitCh te itigiifct the Sl'.ne-
The situation at Wilkesbarre leniain.s
the same. The residents who can find
tenements continue te leave the dangerous
quarter, but hundreds of families still re
main. Arrangements were made for the
children who attend the school, new liable
te tumble down at any moment, te ;e te
another school, the hours of study beinr
changed le accommodate both sets of
pupils and teacheis. The stiictest vigil
auce is maintained by the squads of self
appointed watchers, who keep a careful
lookout for approaching daugcr. Ar
rangements are making by volunteer
miners te pierce the abandoned collieries
aud le ascertain for themselves, if possi
ble, what is likely te happen.
A scene occulted Saturday morning
when the leaders in the movement were
calling for men te go below. Ilundiedsef
women and children steed about. Wnen
the chief sakl that at least ten volunteers
were required, there was net a miner
present who did net leap forward cageriy
at the call. Then the wives and mothers
present raised their piteous cries iu dis
ceniagcment of the acceptance of such a
dangerous mission by "their hush mils or
sons Atiungth etie big brawny fellow
stepped out and exclaimed : "Only these
who have no wives, mothers, sweethearts,
or .sl.slets aie wanted, and he ethers shall
go down. Are there any Mich liore?"
Fully forty hrivc fellows' came forward
and said that they were se conditioned.
The volunteers weie made up of these
Gieat mental distress still prevails, and
will until the situation is thoroughly
known. The Delaware and Hudsen com
pany have net made a ineva in the direc
tion of an examination.
Heme St.ertllnjc s'tifrlil-.
Mrs. Graei Wellman, wife of Jehn II.
Wcllmau, the Denver lawyer, who com
mitted suicide near Pueblo sctvral weeks
age, ami whetc body was foued last
Friday frightfully dibliguied by magpies
has tlnee times attempted te destiey hei
self within the past two days.
Belle Heffman, Id years of age, dhd in
Cleveland en Saturday morning, from the
effects of poison taken with ruicidal intone.
She wrnt te Clet eland from Fremont,
several weeks age. in search of employ
ment, but could find nene ; hence" the
suicide
Geerge Celeman, alias Jehn Stewart,
arrested in New Yerk, hst Tuesday, for
passing a forged cheek en a Texts bank,
committed suicide en Saturday aftci neon
at police headquarters. He stabbed him
self in the neck miking a wound of which
he died in a few horns.
Charle E. Vinten, formerly clerk in the
Massas-soil house, at Springfield, Massa
chusetts, the Riggs house, in Washing
ingten, and the Continental hotel, Phila
delphia, committed suicide in Spiinglield,
Sunthiy, by blowing out his brains. He
was 40 years of age, and reputed te ha
wealthy. The deed is attiibu'.ct te inaii
ity.
Terrible Trae:!i n.
A French aeronaut was killed in Mud t id
by the collision of his balloon with a
housetop.
A farmer named Murphy was killed 1-j
lightning iu Ilunlsville, Georgii, en Fii
day night
Matthew Curwia died e,t Sunday hi
Leng Island City, New Yeik, fiem the
effects of a clubbing giving by a policeman
len dajs bcfeie.
Lewis Carter, colored, split his wife's
skull with an axe en Saturday niht,
making a wound of which she died yester
day meiiiing. The murderer escaped.
A skiff was swamped by a steamer near
Shieevepert, Leir.siaua, and Alexander
Morten and his wife, and Titos. Edwards,
all colored, weie drowned.
The frozen body of Maggie Robinson, a
young woman, was found, en Saturday,
under the snow, near Ti -etewn, nan it. si:c
miles from Keypeir, Nev.- Jeisey. Twe
bottles of liquor lay beside the bed t.
Dead ou llil Wedillug .Night.
Oil Friday night Mr. James Guthrie, a
prosperous young farmer, was married te
Miss llulda Mai tin, near Halifax, C. II ,
Va. A large company was picscnt. at the
wedding, which took place at the residence
ei the bride's father. Owing le bad
weather the guests remained at the man
sion all night. Next morning, when they
assembled at the breakfast tabic, it was
rcmaiked that the bride and f,roem weie
late iu coining. Suddenly shriek of a wo
man was heaid and the startled guests
rushed into the hall, wheie they met the
br ide of a night, w he cried : "My husband !
Oh, rrry husbaud!'- When she awoke the
young lady found her husbaud dead by
her side. She is almost a mnniac from
grief". His fuueial will fake place from the
heuc in which he was married, his four
groomsmen acting as pall Uaiers and tie
minister who raarrLd him porferminj,' the
funeral ccroraer'-y. "
i-us'tre l'rem l"ire.
The wholesale grocery store of Henry
Hemer &: Ce , in Chicago, war, damaged
by fue en Saturday niornunrie tire extimt
or about $2.3,000.
Peters' woolen fictery and Fnwid's
cotton factory, at Hrstings. Out., were
binned en Saturday. Les, .";0,000.
Afire in Fetsjth, G.eria, en Fridav
night, destroyed a building centaiiiiii" the
Masonic hall, Pye's grocery and Procter's
dry goods store ; also the adjt.ining gro
cery r-tore of Roberts & Sander.-'. Le-s
ijG.3,000.
A fire in Tniilevvilie. TdatsfipTinsptrs
early Sunday morning, destroyed the shoe
factory of Martin, Clapp & TraucL, and
three dwelling.-, adjoining. It is believed
the total less will exceed $100,000. The
factory employed 250 hands.
A Mlasleg Man Jfeand Murdered.
There is much excitement in the town
of Raynham, Mass., ever the finding of
the body of Adoniram Leenard in the
weeds near that place. The body wjs
frozen stiff. Beth feet were tied with
stout ropes te a small sapliug. Under
the corpse was found a twenty-two calibre
revolver, and en the left side of the coat
a small hole was burned. The body was
taken te Tauntem. A thorough icvesti icvesti
gatien as te the cause of death will be
made. Leenard, who had worked iu a
Fall river mill, was a man of geed charac
ter and had been missing since Novem
ber 1.
A Street Fight in Cincinnati.
In Cincinnati, at half-past twelve
o'clock Sunday morning four Kentuckians,
residents of Covington, had a sheeting
affray en the sidewalk, en the corner of
Race and Longworth streets. Jehn Greu
ner, a saloon keeper, was slightly
wounded, but the ball from his pistol took
effect in the left breast of Rebert Elliett,
a alass-blewer, indicting a probably
fatal wound. Elliett was taken te the
hospital. William McCarty, ene of the
combatants, received a llesh wound. Only
four shots were fired.
Caught lSy the Knew.
Twe miners named Lawlcr aud Owen
were caught in a snow slide and carried
several hundred yards down a mountain
side near Irwin, Colerado en Saturday.
Owen having a long pole, succeeded in
making a hole in the snow through which
he could breath until he was rescued.
Lawlcr peiished from suiToc.uien.
.M-IGI1BUKUOUU Ni:VS.
I'veuta Acresit the County Iino.
Reading has new raised $1,110 for the
aid of the German sufferers.
Jehn li. Printz, a Reading brick manu
facturer, has discovered that he can suc
cessfully burn bricks ana lime together.
Steclten has auethcr official gene wrong.
Constable Norris is beheved te be $130
short iu his accounts.
It is thought Mayer Rewe, of Reading,
will be reneminated for that office at the
Republican city convention.
Twe Norristown meu have entered into a
wager of $100 te make a spectacle of them
selves at water drinking, the one who
gives out first te pay the wager.
The eleven Odd Fellow ledges' commit
tees of Reading which have met jointly,
have perfected all arrangements for the
conferring of the degree of Rebekah upon
the wives et members of the order and
members themselves who have netieceivcd
it-
On one ballet Colonel Jehn McCearb
Wcthcrill, of Pottsville, was elected at
at Harrisburg Saturday by the line offi
cers of the Eighth regiment national
guard of Pennsylvania lieutenant colonel
te succeed the late Lieut. Cel. Wm It.
Russell.
The steward of the insane department
of the Berks county almshouse found
Gee. W. Beyle, 04 years of age, hanging
by the neck te a ratter Sunday mernrrrg.
He had been dead seme hours when
found . Beylo had been an inmate of the
almshouse ler seven years.
The Bessemer department at the Bald
win steel weiks during last week made
2,800 tens of ingots. Fiem the same
works a petition continuing the signatures
of ever 1,200 of the mcrr employed at the
works was transmitted te Congress, urg
ing prompt action en the tariff question.
Tim document was 2'J fett in length.
The jury irr the case of Dr. David R.
Ilcckcr, en trial at Harrisburg for murder
by malpractice, after being out all b .tur
day night and failing te agree, wa.dis
charged Sunday. The doctor will be
required te give bail for trial in Aprrl,
aud v.a.s ordered te present himself in
court today. Tire jury was evenly di
vided. A meeting of this loter-State baseball
association was held at Pottsville, Satur
day. It was decided that the guarantee
for schedule games should be $0e and ex
hibitien games half the gross receipts. It
was decided te have an umpire for each
club, and Jeseph Helland was named by
the Reading Actives, Themas A. Ivauc by
Iho Wilmington Quicksteps, Frank Burke
by the Camden Mcnitts, and Edgar A.
Griffiths by the Pottsville Atithr;eites.
TUli UKAMA.
llli:ie. .liiiansclitk ill " Slutlicr itini Seli."
Taking into account the unfavorable
state et the weather, the audience that
gathered at Fulton opera house Satin day
uighr. te gieet Madame Jauauschk was a
large one. The play which is et a class
that has generally wimi te be calltd
" emotional," was ' Mether and '6e-, '
au adaptation of Fredericka Bremer's
novel" Tim Neighbors." It is stieng in
many parts, dealing with parental ma
and an obstinate will, that au; arrajul
again.st each ether iu the diameter et the
proud and determined mother who scud,
teith her son withacurse because sin
believes him guilty of a crime, while If,
iu the saure spirit of stubborn self-v.il ,
refuses te give an explanation of his deed.
After the first act which is made vivid by
a thrilling curse scene and which leads up
te an exciting clim.lx, the unfolding of
the story develops the reconciliation
that after years of separation is finally
brought about between the elleuded and
suffering mother and her misguided but
humbled seu. The playwright, who we
believe is .Airs. Tuckey, did net r.vail her
self of all the oppei trinities that laj
withiu her reach iu weikuu out the stety
te its highest dramatic dovelepjiuent, as
after the earliest stage the piece limps
along rather lamely te the, desired e in
clusion which witnesses mother and
seu united and mutually penitent.
Janauschck's rendition of the role
of the loving yet iallextble mother
was a capital piece of work, but then we
are se accustemeil te finished acting when
we go te see this gifted artist, and se much
has aheady been published in acknowl
edgment of her rare histrionic powers,
that there docs net letuain anything te be
said but that she used theru with thorough
effect in all the passages iu which the
were called into play, and furnished re
newed evidence of the depth and versa
tility of her ait. Jauauschek is a student,
and the grasp ami iutalligeuce which she
manifests in her essaying of the rules she
has made famuli; never fail te biing her
up te that measure of worth that :ipp-al.
te the heads as well as te the hearts of
people whose applause : he has wen en two
continents.
The supporting company met all the ie
quircmeuts for a faithiul lcuditien of the
piece, especially worthy ofnetu Lung Mr.
Stuart's impersonation el Brune, the hot
headed and impetuous youth, and MNs
Virginia Bioeks, a pretty and eaptivatin.'
little lady, whose sprightly characteriza
tion of Ffitncisca lent a comedy liuge te
what was ethervis- a sembre pert of a
performance.
Arm mnken.
On Saturday afternoon Jacob D.W.ir'el,
of Intercourse, was driving out of the
yard of the Lancaster County heu-e v. lien
his boras suddenly turned and upset t lie
sleigh. He was thrown out and had ele
arm badly broken. After having his io ie
juries atte-.iied he was driven te Ids home
by Wm. Price.
'iaken te iSntrlsbur.
Tiiis meurug AIciike Foulk, the insane
man who was last, week held for a.ss tirlt
and battery before Alderman Br.rr was
taken te Harrisburg by Officers Swenk and
Creamer, ami rre will be placed in the
statu insane asylum.
THE TOBACCO MAEKET.
TJtAlIK 1 -SEKD LEAF ASD U4VANA.
for the WeeB Ending Saturday, January
27, TO A. 31. In ew Yerk Tne
Lecal Out'oeU.
V. S. Tobacco Journal.
Our market remains dreary and dull.
The only article for which there exists
anything like bona fide inquiry is Connec
ticut, the seceuds and lower grades of
which serve for binders, aud at from 12
te le cents are considered reasonable when
applied te geed cigars, especially these for
which Sumatra is used for wrappers. The
prices at which tine, dark Connecticut
wrappers are held (from 22 te 3e cents)
are au incentive te investors. The large
manufacturer is ue taker of this stock ;
the middle class is ; and as this class is
moderately busy, at least Connecticut
wrappers sell. But for every ether article
in the market net the shadow of an in
quiry existed during the week.
Helders of 'SI Pennsylvania conselo
themselves with that fact. It is neither
the price nor the quality of their stock
that is keeping buyers away from it just
new. The uncertainty of the tax question
is the main cause.
Iu the meantime the '32 tobaccos are
growing into prominence that is, they are
bcrug talked about a great deal; but pack
ers, dissatisfied and d-sceuraged by the
slew and, in the main unsatisfactory, pro
gress of 'Si crop arc riot in a humor te
take held of the '$2 crop. This feeling is
augmented by the knowledge of the gieat
stock of leaf en hand, the competition
with Sumatra tobacco and the prepara
tions for another crej) of no diminished
p.roper liens. Witi.ru a low months the
'S2 crop will be marketable, ami then our
market will offer te trie buyers the unusual
inducement of three crops, viz: 'SO, '81
aud 'S2.
Fer '82 Connecticut seconds a rush is
already being made. Last year the sec
onds weie bought up very rapidly, aud
late comers were compelled te take the
leavings. They evidently wish te be in
time new, and sales ae from 12 te 13
cants are reported from the country.
It ir. ludicrous in the extreme, te see
most of the press in tobacco growing dis
tricts trying te impart hope andconlidence
te their tobacco- handling readers. Some
held out a line spectacle et scores of te
baeee butcrs coming in leaded with
morey te pj-aaee upon the tobacco " as
soerr as soft weather sets irr." Others
premise, new that Sumatra will likely be
taxed heavily, that prices for all tobaccos
will advance with a bounce and a boom.
Net being se well versed in matters
appertaining te tobacco as errr friends of
the country press and having but a faint
knowledge of the market aud the industry
in general, we nope that in saying that all
their talk is moonshine, we shall rret be
judged tee harshly and be dealt with with
leniency and grace.
The snles of the week were :
Connecticut Crep '81, fiOO cases ; 12,
14. 18,
ind
cents.
Pennsylvania Crep 'SO, 230 cases, nt
10 te 12 cents.
Ohie Crep "30, 300
cases, at 4
te 7
;1H
ce.'.ts,
New Yerk -Crep 'SI,
1.30 cases
cent
Sumatra Market active. Sales
300
bales. Prices vary from $1 te 1.30.
Havana Maiker, moderately active.
Sales .300 hale?. Prices unchanged.
Hans Repert.
Sales of seed leaf tobacco reported by J.
S. Gins' Sen & Ce., tobacco brokers, Ne.
131 Water street, New Yerk, for the week
ending Jan. 29, 1883 :
1,000 cases 1SS0, Ohie, G&7 ; 200 cases
1SS1, Ohie, .3c ; 100 cacs 1881, New
En.-I.iiid, 12(i30 ; 180 cases 18S0, I'enn-t-yivnuij,
fi&l'l ; .33 cases 18S1, Pennsyl
vania, p. I. ; 100 ea-es sundries l(7tlS.
Total. 193 cases.
The rhiludelpiiui .".larket.
J.cai.
SeeJ Leaf Dcaleis irr cigar leaf are
new Sairly bu&y in ail grades, especially
v. r apper;;, which command attention from
(ri.-t class dealers. Fca:syivania 'SI leaf
is new coming t-i tiu front, aud from
ttli.it is new known of this ciep it is dc
setvi'i:, of cT.!iriatie'.i. Ilavanna seed
shows up seme elegant A Ne. 1 wrappers,
and till the bill nicely. Prices held
steady.
T.ikmI TuD-cce ."l3,..I;ct.
Last week quite a large squad of lebac
co buyers made their appearance iu this
city, anil rcpeit rapidly spread that they
had come ( n te cei.teft with each ether iu
the puichr.se of the crop of 1832, which
has bt.cn se lung awaiting purchasers. The
buyers made a run through the county,
and the m st of their number ctrne back
w itheut purchasing a pound. They say it
is held by the farmers at tee high a figure.
The price offered it; from 10 te le cents for
wrappers, ai which figures the whole crop
wntil I 'jc readily lifted, but until the
farmers can sec it in that light, the buyers
say they will net touch it. They have the
grcar pa'f of the 1881 crop en hand te
say nothing of large quantities of 1880, en
both of which they either lest money or
had sma'l margin of profit. A buyer who
deal, very ixtftisively told us the ether
day that if any one. werrid take off his
hands his packing of 1881 at first cost, he
would put a $20 greenback in every case,
as a gratuity te the purchaser.
There weie between 300 aud 400 cases
of the crops of '80 and "81 sold at private
rates .nthis city smee thf- last lepert.
Very few buyers from abroad are new
in L'lUC'isi.'r.
The eurrally expressed hope that Cen
gies would abolish the tobacco tax dur
ing its present session grows fainter and
fainter as the end of the session approach
es and until the liialter is definitely settled
or farmers -rg.ee te tike le.v prices the
present swnri u in trade wrll continue,
-m: !..:-
SCIKNTISTS.
Annual rtlCBltng anil l-'lectlnn of Uillcerx.
The Liniuean society met in their museum
en Saturday, January 27th, at 2 p. m., the
president, Prel. J. S. Stahr, rn the chair,
and 11 members present. After collection
of dues aud disposing with reading of
minute-, the following donations were made
te the society : A book entitled " Cor
respiadence of Dr. William Baldwin "
compiled by Wm. Darlington, M. D.
This is sear:e volume and was donated by
Miss Emma Musser. A package of mis mis
ccMaueeus pamphlets en be'any, etc.,
fiem the effects of the l.rte lamented Dr.
A. P. Garhcr, who wns a ni-mber of the
Linuiean. Nes. 23. vel. 22 of paterrt
office G'izcttc ; Lancaster Farmer, for
December, 1SS2 aud January 1883 ; pre
ceedings of academy of natural Fciencc of
Philadelphia, for October ibea ; circulars
Nes. 2 and 3 of bureau of education, and
3 ether circulars ou education, 20 enve
lopes ..ft craps', renre of them gathered
ever 20 years age.
Te the mrsrum weie added a small
velum - containing about ;30 varieties of
dried masse-, by the lcanred betan-st,
Henry Ernst Muhlenberg, and presented
te thi s pe:et;v by II. E Muhlenberg, M. D.,
et Laici'c ; also a b.-ttloef snow fleas
(Piadwa Mrca), by Dr. S. S. Rathven.
The Librarian presented a report show
ing tin cei.ditrnn of the library and also
the number of books-, pamphlets, etc., do de do
na'tltethc same during the year 1882.
The report of the treasurer was presented
and a statement made in lttiard te the li
nancia! condition of the Feciety. There
p. tt of the curators was then read, and
from it if. is seen that outing the year six
vertebrates, thrce hundred articulates,
twenty arclue ".logical specimens, five fos fes
sds and thrce miscellaneous articles were
;.f!(td te the museum. Te the library 80
'' e'-s-, 33ealjbues and 30 envelopes of
(.craps.
Several bills were handed in and ordered
te be paid. Oue for the proceedings of
academy of natural sciences of $.3 ; taxa
dermy bill of $9.S0, and one of four years'
subscription te the Farmer.
The following officers were then elected
te serve for the ensuing year :
President, Hen. J. V. Wickerskauz: Vice
President. Dr. T. R. Baker aud Dr. J. II.
Dubbs ; Recording Secretary. Dr. M. L.
Davis ; Assistant Secretary, S. M. Sencr,
esq. ; Corresponding Secretary, Dr. II. S.
Knight ; Treasurer, Dr. S. S. Rathven ;
Curators, Dr. S. S. Rathven, Prof. J. S.
Stahr, S. M. Sener, and C. A. Heinitsh ;
Librarian, Mrs. L. D. Zell.
It was then adopted that a eommittee(te
consist of the retiring president, secretary
and assistant secretary) be appointed te
te collate all the amendments which have
from time te time been made te the con
stitution aud by-laws, and report the
same te the society. On motion the eve
ning meetings were discontinued, and the
society then adjourned te meet en Satur
day, February 24tb. 1S83, at 2 o'clock
p. m.
IlHiieter junction Hint siiueliaiiim K. U.
On this line of new railroad from
Landisville te Chickies tracklayiug has
progressed as far as the Marietta aud
Lancaster turnpike near the brick tavern.
The work is beiug pursued as fast as pos
sible aud it will net be long before it
reaches Chickies village. An engineer
corps have been engaged the past week in
running a line from Chickies luruace Ne. 2
across the Pennsylvania railroad, and
theunh land between tire canal aud river
as far as Musser & Miller's saw mill.
They then started at a point ou the land
of the Chickies iron company, crossed the
Chickies creek at a point a little above the
Columbia A; Marietta turnpike bridge.then
through the land of tire McCormick
estate ruuuing about 100 feet west of
Becker & Rcinkeld's rolling mill, thence
through the farm of Mis. Cel. Myers,
leaving the Watts mansion about -130 feet,
te tire south, thence through the larm
lauds of Jacob Staid, Jehn W. Rich, Cel.
James Dully, 11. F. Uicstand, Mrs. Greve.
Jehn S. Miller, II. M. Engle, Daniel Engle,
Mrs. Cel. Figylrnesy. Jehn G. Engle, N.
Peck, Jehn Mu-sser, David M. Kycr aud
Anuie Greve, striking the ri.-cr near te
Bainbriilge at Aums Zieglers farm, and
theuce nearly par ihel with that read
through the farms ei Jehn Zigler, Henry
Kayler arrd Jacob S-.-.M, and then rtininn;;
south te tire rivur bank, and across the
Susquehanna, te a point a little below the
mouth'ef the Coderus creek. Next week
the engineers will proceed up the Coder in
to Yerk.
i.f.iiii;KKi:..zx covrniismierss.
Fer the Keller et sult'urers in liermauy.
The society " Liederkrarrr." has collect
ed $215,0.3 for the sufferers iu Germany,
aud will clese its charitable- work en next
Monday, when all the collectors will pleasu
hand in their books and moneys. T!u
whole amount will therr he handed te lib.
honor, the mayor te be forwarded te
Chas. II. Meyeis, esq., German consul
general at Philadelphia.
Of the above amount, new in the hands
of Treasurer Phil. Lcbzelter,coutribntier.'.
te the amount of $132 have been publicly
acknowledged herctolero in the daily pa
pers. The following have been thankfully
received since ; Liedcrkrarrz. $.30 ; col
lected by Mr. Henry Shorter, S.3..30 ; cel
lectcd by Mr. 11. Honegger among irie'jiTs
in the Lancaster watch lactery, $e ; cash
contributions, $3.7.3 ; S. S. Spencer, $2 ,
Cenrad Gast, Jacob Bewers, Chaw. Ren
gier, Gottlieb Geistle, Lawrence Fall:.
Altick and Sens and Philip Stunipf, each
$1 ; J. Vogelsang, O. E. Hestor, W. I.
Weaver, L. II. BaahIer,Grar,k Fritsch aim
S. T. Davis, e.ach .30 cents ; Jehn C.ch
ran, 40 cents ; J. F. Leng, N. Sciierd, S.
Rudy, J. P. Knight. D. Rese, Fr. Kitef,
Wm. ICeehler and Ike Lippold, each 2.3
cents.
I.1T1LE LUUAU.
IIcie uml Tlmre unit Everywhere.
This morning two drunks wero made
pay the costs at the station house, anil
two ethers were discharged.
Rcah F. Wilsen has recently been pro
moted from asnistant engineer, Pennsyl
vania railroad, te assistant supervisor, an3
stationed at Spruce Creek.
The Frame Bres., of this city, have ie
fused au offer of $1,3.30 for a three year
old colt, sired by Mr. Sutten's llamble
teniau stallion " Cel. Tem. Scott."
Wm. Henscl, sr., and wife, of East Or
ange street, have made au assignment fur
the benefit of their creditors te J. Fred.
Sener.
Yesterday afternoon Iviralfy's company
passed west through litis crtyerr Fast line.
They had a very geed sized elephant with
them, which they will use iu tha produc
tion of their pieces.
The remains of Rev. Dr. J I! Claxton.
whose death has been previously announc
ed, were taken te Philadelphia tiri.s morn
ing in the Harrisburg express train for
burial, accemprnitd by a utimler of
friends.
Unclalmcl I.cttcr.
List of unclaimed letters lemainit.g in Iho
posteffico at Lancaster for the weele end
ing Jan. 29, 1883 :
Ladies' List. Mrs. Annie Boyed. E'ia
E. Chambers, F. A. Duscnbcry. Jennie
Forrer, Ahce Harnisu, Ida M. Kleem.in,
Bella MarV.i, Mrs. Mary E. MeB.-ey,
Maggie A. Oliver, F. Rrtcine, SalPe E.
Shadmau, Annie M. Sheaffer, Lucy Sipe.
Emma Weaver.
Gents' L'tl. Jn. R. Bnthaker, Je--.
Cunrniings, Henry Casey, Chri.st Cem-.
Frank F. Oclfeger, Michael Derfus. Win.
II. Derrcg, Jno. M D-nnis, J 15. Kherlv,
Rev. J. Edwaids, Mr. Gulten, Dan'l E.
Hcrr, David Hummel, Isaac L. Lara, L.
I). Laudis, Luther Meyer, Wm. McGro McGre McGro
ger, .Tire lleffru", Elmer Myers, Mr.
Pipella, S. I Pat her Win. Reynolds, V.
M. Ecllti-an, A. A Ret, Jac. Shi enter,
Mr. Steigculds E. J. Themas. Chas.
Wellner, Martin Wendel, Wm. White.
Kallre.ul Accident.
Ou Sunday mernmg about 7:30 there
was a wreck of freight trains near Atgleii
tower. Toe train drawn by engine 227
had stepped at the tower for orders and a
flagman was sent back te signal the train
that followed ; but it was following mi
closely that a collision could net be avoid
ed. Engine 599 struck an empty pass-auger
car attacked te the rear of the train
ahead and crushed it te pieefs. A freight
car leaded with miscellaneous merchan
dise was also broken up and the merchan
dise scatteied in all directions. Engine
.399 was thrown from the track and is
abled. The read was blocked by the
wreck for about three hetiis. Ne one was
seriously hurt by the accident.
Charge .IcrahiHt a Policeman.
Geerge Peterman, residing en Neith
stiect, this meuritrg entered complaint ba ba ba
fore Alderman Alex. Dennelly against
Henry Elias. a policeman of the Seventh
ward, charging him with fornication with
his (Petermau's) wife. Elias and Mrs. P.
deny the charge, but a daughter of Mrs.
P., who get up this morning earlier than
usual, declares she caught the accused in
the act in a down stairs room at Peter
man's home. Elias waived a bearing and
entered bail te answer at court Constable
Geerge Cramer becoming his surety.
Thlt Morning Court.
This was the mernint? sex for tlm !..-..;..
ning of the -ecnnd week of common pleas "
t.eurr, me, at w e erecie ana a numb:- or
men who had been drawn n inmre ,..!
had net heard that they wrc netg needed
were uiscuurgeu.
Same current business w.i tr-m.re.,i
including the transfer of lire tavern license
of August Krnger, of Columbia, te Lewis
Parks, after which e.nurt-. ntl'mit-uni f..
Wednesday,