Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, May 10, 1884, Image 2

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    JCiANCASTER AJLLY INTELLIGENCER SATURDAY" MAY 10,1884.9
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0 ATTJKDAT BVKMIWO, MAY 10, 1B84.
reer Badness Management.
The atatement of yeuDg UlyBsea Grant
about the affairs of tbe Arm of which he
was a member exhibits a degree of con
fiding rellance by the Grant fnmily upon
Its managing associate, Ward, which Is
amazing even te n countryman. Green
ness Is supposed te prevail in the coun
try, and peeple who de business in New
Yerk city are reported te be reasonably
sound ; but It scorns that it only takes
ene smart partner te a New Yerk Arm,
and that the avernge shrewdness in the
oencern Is net up te the avorage deemed
requisite for the respectable conduct of a
small business in the country. The
square truth seems te be that New Yerk
is the place where the lambs and wolves
congrcgate and He down together in close
partnerships. The bleating of the lamb
Ulysses, Jr., is pitiful in the true story
that he tells, se that we cannot smlle at
It. astounding as it seems te be that n
man who has been general of our armies
and president of our country, Bheuld
have been se devoid of nil business
sonse, or the sound advice of friends
with business sense, as te com
mit himself and his family nnd nil
their fortunes te the unrestrained care
of a man who solicited them into associ
ation with them. It is net se strange
that young men like Ulysses, who is
new but thirty-one, ami his brothers
should have been taken in by the fair fair
premising scamp, but that Gen. Grant,
with all his friends about him, should
have led them Inte the shambles, is
surprising beyond expression.
Ward wanted the Grant partnership
because of the Grant name nnd Influ
ence, and this much the Grants certainly
knew. That was the chief capital the
general put in the business, and with It I
Ward roped in tue minions 01 raureau
and ether magnates who seem te have
been lus customers. The general cannot
- avoid the heavy responsibility that
attaches te him for lerdirg his reputa
tion te be thus trodden en without see
ing that only fair trading was done.
The article of the agreement of the
partnership were that Ward should de
all the business. The Grants werec.y
used ornamentally, save when they wcis
sent out te get in the cash of their
coos . .. nnd auuts, their wives and
wiv-'a (atherE.thelr friends and ucqualu
tancc3. They did a big busiiu.es among
tliese people and put iu every dollar they
had themselves or could rake up en
their individual amount. They thought
they were makiutr piles of money.
Ward told them se. Yeung Ulysses
thought he was worth $1,700,000. Won
der will never cease, that men in busi
ness could be sj rashly cenilding, simpie
nnd iguerant. They had never heard, it
Baeins, even of the familiar precept
which ferdidsthe putting of all their
eggs Inte one basket ; and that a basket
that hung en another's arm. Well, the
family has our sympathy. Perhaps the
government had better put them In the
army. Evidently they will net else
where be sure of their bread nnd butter,
except, perhapj, Jesse, who is net mar
ricd yet and has that chance of specula
tien open te him. The old Ulysses it is
proposed te put en the retired list as a
general with tin inceme of $20,000 or se ;
hut as he gets seme $15,000 per aunum
from the $250,000 salted down for him,
we iucllne te think that the general
hlmfelf has enough.
greatly enhnnccd, nnd voters nnd com
mitteemen should be especially dill
gent this year te have every name prop prep
erly registered.
Knight
THE GRANTSEUINED.
T1IK al'ATKMBnr OK KHTNO UL.VSSF.lt.
Pmjmkd Knight Deemed
Doemod Ktilght.
Tun Marine bank failure again brings
uppermost tbe Inquiry, "De bank directors
direct."
Thk " Soudan," whleh figures se con cen con
pleuoasly In Eastern news is the " dish"
el the Hible, rouderod " Ethiopia" by the
Soptuegint nnd Vulgate
In Rccoher'a chnreh there id no ritual.
There is no Christian symbol. Thcre Is
bare, chilly tukodness as if the Lord's
heuse had been stripped, Rare wall,
celllngs, windows weed work almost
rude in its plainness, net a concession te
grace, beauty, art or religious association
and suggestion.
Tim Cathella missionary hospitals iu
China are doing a great work for humani
ty In protecting nntive fomale infants from
slaughter. With llcredian ctuelty the
social oedo thcre icrinits tbe slaughter of
girl babies ami the unnatural wethers
remorselessly sacrifice thorn. The Catho Cathe Catho
ie hospitals have already protected seme
8,000 of them from such a fate.
Titnv order these things better in Vtr
glula. Under n law reeeutly passed by that
state a jury iu Richmond found Carter M.
Leuthau, school superintendent of Clarke
county, guilty of violating the law enacted
by the last legislature prohibiting school
superintendents from active participation
in politic. The dofeudaut was lined fifty
dollars, and the court declared his plac; .s
school superintendent vacant.
riirn
" Hut we knew, ter lie has tnught u
He. tbe Master, whom we noner,
That ttie in in Men s lair nre runny,
In lilt Father's house eternal.
That, ler tuec who loved anil served lllin.
In tha cettaxa or the palace
Iu the midst et ilutles lowly.
Far trem breutbel human pr.ilsc.-t.
In the flerci llzht which Illumines
1 hose who en ttiulr throne of ure.itnc4
Hear tue Kttze of many tuyrltiis,
All la well, ler tliuy nre w Ith him
Net enu bud tint Mull net bloom
Inte tlonrer et rarest beauty
Net enu seed that snail net rlpen
Inte liumlrul tout et lurven."
Thk cause of public morality h.is re
ceived an awful inc' set in the town of
rk Rarnum s cireu3 was tuere en
Fndiy and in view of it the school beard
cle3cd the schools that day Tbe lnn
mlriinian pick out the two tremb'rs of
the beard, " enemies of inuocci-eo," w! .
flredthls disgraceful ' bomb of tuitptiy "
i. i. u - . ..- ,i .--.
1"V " CtUip 01 lnuOwOllCO uJu wllu
uates that the " heads of education " lent
thomsclves te the " work et the tlevil '
and " sewed the seeds of everlasting de
structien " bocauie they get froe tickets
te the show. The pulpU of Yerk are np
pealed te te turn en the hese nud ave the
town Irem lire and brimstone.
An Issue Tlmt W Uln.
1 Im disposition of thu tuntl question 1
made in OensreiS se as te remand it te I
the background for the present and
subordinate the economic issues te these
of administrative reform In the pending
campaign will iin(im3enablv meet the
approbation of the masses of the Demo
cratic party, especially in the doubtful
states. Even had Mr. Morrison and
these who controlled the organization
of the Ileusf acted with greater
discretion and exhibited mete wisdom of
statesmanship it is doubtful if their
policy of igneilng the great (jueslieus
upon which the Democracy must come
Inte power would have satisfied their
party. Hut since they botched their own
plan of making a winning Ismie for the
Democracy they must be content
new te let the broader questions,
upon which the party is thoroughly
united, be bieunht te the Irent.
It is eyer twenty years of Republican
misrule that has created the popular de
maud for that genuine and deep reach
ing civil service reform which censis's
in turning the rascals out and supplant
ing thorn with honest men. The better
class of Republicans admit this. Upen
that Issue they are divided into two lies
tile ramps. The Democrats are solid en
it. Let that be the llrst object of the
coming light.
Mr. ltuidtill, as chairman of the
appropriations committee, has It In his
power, If properly supported by his party
te de much iu strengthening this issue
Mr. Springer, In charge of the most
important investigating committee et
the Heuse, with a rich mine te v. rk,
has also great oppeitunity ; but he must
press Iii3 work v. ith moie vim tiiau new
characterizes it. The rottenness of the
department of Justice .il the inner
" liTsTtery'pf the Star lira ) operations is a
Btery tjfpen which the presidential light
can be wen.
Dlhine the I'ontiae war in the tumraer
ei 1704 (July 20), Euech Drewn, a worthy
Christian school master and ten of his
scholars, two girls and eight boys, were
ruthlessly slaughtered and scalped in a
little school house, about three reilcH
north of Oreciicastle, iu Anttim township,
Frankiiu county, Pa. Rev. Cyrus Cerf,
Reformed pastor in Greencastle new, who
bes great aptitude for historical research
aud wonderful cnercy in carryiug out
memorial prejictn, proves t. rahe
through the common, select aud publie
schools of Franklin county $2,000 te erect,
ever the grae of tliese martyrs te Chrir
tian education, a neble aud euduring
mouumeut ou the historic ground hallowed
by their Weed and neuV.cring remains.
tniillclt lidlMire 1'laccil In tlin ItuilneM
pHRaclty e( Wnnl The Mrant Fntnlly
Only figure neurit,
Ulysses S. Grant, jr., makes the follow
ing statomeut concerning the elTect of the
rcrent failure ou the Grant family :
"The Grant family has lest its ontire
fortune ; the ruin is complete Net only
have I and tny father and two brothers
put every cent we possessed lute the llrni,
but we invested large sumi which we bor
rowed from our lrlends, supposing that
overythlug was going nieng splendidly aud
that we wero nniasslug n great fortuue. 1
tlrst put the $17,C00 yearly Income en my
wife'M fertune lute the conceru aud thou I
put the principal in witli it. My father
in law loses 300,000 which I borrowed
from him.
" I knew very little about the atfalrs of
the establishment. In fact, the articles of
agreement of the linn provided that Mr.
Werd Bheuld draw all the checks and
transact all the buiiuess, Mr. Ward iu
sisted that the business management
should be left solely te him. I had the
greatest coulidenco in him aud I consider
him te be a very nble man. When he
tlrst proposed the partnership te me I
knew that he was making plenty of
meney, and I said : " Oh, you don't want
te attach yourself te a slew coaeh llkn
me.' He proposed the thiug n ceuple of
times befere 1 agreed.
" ldid net, uer did my father or broth
ers have the faintest idea that anything
was wrong. Up te the time of the failure
1 bMieved that I was worth 1,700, 000. I
held the bmk'a notes for upward of 31,
000,000. Why, I have Old my friends of
our fertuun within a few days, little
dreaming of the real state of aflalrs. Then
came the crai'.i My father came down te
the oulce en the day of the failure, and as
be walked across the tloer toward me, I
said : " Father, everything is burstcdaud
wc cannot get a ceut out of the oon eon oen
cern." That was the very first lutlniatlen
tha' he had that thore was the slightest
trouble. My brother Fied had borrowed
largely from his friends, nud my brother
Jesss put some borrowed mouey iutj the
11 rm ou the day previous te the failure.
" Sj contident were we nil that Graut
&, Ward were makiug piles of money that
we invested everything we could get. I
only drew out money against my own
account, but I kept puttiug in almost as
much, aud tae only real funds which I
retailed were about sufficient for our liv
ing expenses Neuo of us liked te keep a
dollar out ct the ilrtn that was net abso
lutely needed, because we thought that
we wero losing when we kept meney that
might be earning a very heavy profit.
Saveral times recently wheu I went te
friends aud asked thorn for leans en the
proraise of enormous interest they declar
ed that such a transictien would Je
usurieui. I neer asked for these loins
again.
l e show you hew little I knew about
theada-rd of the firm, I said when the
Marine bauk failed that it would simply
jroveet us for a time from giviug certain
checks KoeC-n our family had any
idea that the lirm had eiTuriirn its an-
ceuutd. When I secured loins upon the
bends which had becu given as collateral
for leans from our tlrm I did net knew
that the bends wero being rehypethecated.
Of course it is quite apparent that the
immense profits credited te members of
the lirm were fictitious The whele
matter will be cleared up, I suppose, in
th courts."
MEN AND THINGS.
Itiaasource of nevcr ceasing wouder
who soleetod "sueh a oelor" for the
oxterlor painting of St, Jehn's (free) 1.
E. church and why.
MrH. Olever was sueh a consummate
aetress that oneo when the property man
forget the tieodle aud thread with which
Mm had te hew en the stace she " went
through the motions " se perfectly ns te
dccolve noters nud audience.
The base ball business has been evor-
done, manifestly; net only hore but every
where. The public cannot stand se many
games and paid cliibi. Twe games a
woek iu Lauoaster, for Instance, would
draw geed paying crowds. Enough is
Biiluolent, ovenof a geed thiug.
Reth the candidates ler electors from
the Ninth congressional district, II. M.
North, Democrat, and J. V. Wlckersham,
Republican, nre National baukditeoters ;
but the idea that this position makes
electors inollglble, is far fetched and does
net meet with much iccogmtlen from
clear headed lawyers,
I saw a famous railroad president ene
of the most omlueut nien in lits walk of
life who is naid a salary of 323,000 a car,
and cams it tee take a querulous f 'iir
months old babe front a tired wemtn, an
utter strauger te bun, en the railway car
the ethor ovening, and uurse the little otie
as tonderly aud gently ns a wennti could.
And thought :
The lrnvet aie the leiuluii"t.
'1 lip levliiK' an- thu il iiln-
The iVctf Kra has indicated that 1'ref.
Gelst's candidacy for county superintend
ent was net aided by the manner in which
his claims were preseuted by Counseller
Case. Rut, if anything could help him.
Geist's cause gained by a contrast of Cve,
who only seconded his nomination, with
Aaren II. Summy who made it. A mere
obnoxious man than A. II. S. te clnmplcm
even n geed cause, it would be hard te
llnd. Aud yet it is loudly whispered that
he aims te go te the statu senate and te
makehls brother, the present commission
er, county trcasutcr !
The amount of markctiug taken out of
Lancaster wcekly by non-residents is
semething amazing. A score of l'hiladei-
Ehians send or bring their buckets and
askets hore ouce or twice a week. They
find meats aud vegetables, pmiltry and
dairy products, eggs aud tlewers, hotter,
fresher and cheaper by at least 33 per
cent, here than iu the city. Rut they
stiffen local prices, and Lancaster heuse
keepers complain bitterly of the forestall
ing, at the private market houses, for
which there is no legal romedy.
II. T. E:kert, who is a candidate for
the Demoeratio nomination te the Legia
lature up in Northumberland county,
fraukly announces that his friends are net
urging him te be a candidate. lie says
he became such unsolicited, he is running
his own boom, is of nge aud speaks for
hlmself and his Democracy is " all wool,
a yard wide and of fast color." Anether
candidate urges that he i " ene year
yeunger thau Senater I'ayne, whom the
Ohie Democrats have sent "te Washington
for six years."
THE GOETHEANS.
Tllf.llt rOUTY-NINTH ANNlVHltMAUY-
whleh the nudloneo dispersed with nene
but favornble comments en the otetilng's
outertnlntnoiit,
AHO.-Ml Till: .HANY DKNU JIINATIONS.
In the Reformed synod in ISiltimore the
ether day, the feat nre of the nruiiescd
new rules for the parliamentary regulation
of general synod pievidiug for closing the
meetings with the creed, Ljrd's Ihayer,
aud the apostolic benediction pronounced
by the presidcut, met with the opposition
of Rev. F. W. Kremor, D.D., who argued
that individml prayer was often very de de
slrnble and efficacious. The rules were,
however, adopted unanimously. TLe
svtied nlse considered the propiietv of a
cliuich day fur c mracmeratiug the Rofer
matieu. A motion te observe the 31st of
Ootebor, which Is already Luther's day,
was htrengly opposed by several, and Dr.
Remberger made a learned aildress show
lug U at the reformation day of thu Un
formed chinch should be llxed iu refer
euce te Zningli, who, as he said, was
preaching and practicing (,'hiiet only,
while Luther was still piaying te the
saints. The resolution was eventual y
teferred te committee.
Tin example which has been tot in
Ssranten of punishing election efllcers
for neglect of duty should prove salu
tary. They were prosecuted for receiv
ing votes without requiring proof of
qualification or consulting the registry of
voters. Their aentence was for neglect
of duty, and the minimum penalty was
Imposed, n line of llfty dollars and costs
of prosecution. The supreme court has
decided that that prevision of the law
requiring voters who are net en
the registry te qualify and te produce
a witness for a voucher, and directing
the election efllcera te deposit these
vouchers with the ballet Is mandatory. If
it la neglected the voter is disfranchised ;
even though his ballet gets In, it can be
thrown out mid the negligent oill eill
cere can be convicted. Under these
circumstances the iieceislty and
dvrtuage of a complete registry are
MeNCtrnK D. CANWAY,baving geno trav
ellng 'reutid the world, report tint he
wu.) me3t impressed by the Sabbauriantum
of the Sandwich islands, and the Hpjotacle
preaonted at RenarcH and ether gieat
Indian cities of religion geno rotten, He
blamej the Renten missionary wuh es
tablishing in Honolulu "the Sabbath as a
dre.nl demon befere whose glanoe all mirth
aud Inuoeont pleasures llud far away."
This, he thiults, however, will pass nway
ai the RIue lawd did in New England.
Rutlu India, whom Bacred and religious
mystlelum be had read with such passion
ata avidity, among thousands of bewe.'.
worshippers he feuud " uet ene imu, nt
even ene woman, who scorned te outertalu
th'j shadow of aconception of auy thing Ideal
or spiritual, or lollgleus, or even mythe
logical, In their ancient creed j net ene
glimmer of the great theuhu of their
peets aud sages lightoued their darkened
totnples. Te all of thorn the great falae
gods whleh they worshlpped, a hulk
of roughly carved weed orsteno, nppearcd
te be the authoutie presentment et soma
terrible demen or mvisible pewer who
would treat thorn orueliy if they did net
give lifm nema melted butter. Of religion
in a eplritual sonse there is none, The
whele life is dominated from Sunday mid
night te Sunday midnight in overy detail
by the usnges and customs of n mlnute
and iron corcmenial, Rut if you wish for
religion you will net ilud it In RrahmlnlHm,
only in seme rock hewn oave or rulned
tomple, whero seme oxlled RurmeHe Rud
hlit bows in sllent prayer thore only you
find tbe proaenoo of Qed."
EtTOENr. J. WoenwAitD, the ralsslng
trecsurer of Philadelphia I'reBbytery beard
of education, has roturued te his home,
Ilia mind appeared te be wandering, nnd
his physiclau ban ordered that no oue Blmll
be allowed te aee him.
What U OeIdc en in tic llrrat Church
urlit A .Menth ul Numerous lie-
ll;len CeufereiicB.
On the last day of December, 1834, it
will be 300 years siuce Jehn WychlTe died.
On the 21st day of May is te be celebrated
the denunciation of his doctrines, which
took place seme forty-two years after his
death, in obedience te the council of Con
stance Concerning the reperi. that a new syna
gogue is te be erected for the better
convenience of up town Hebrews in Phila
delphia, the Jticuh Metstngtr thus
cemments: "Is this te ha encouraged I
Let us build places of worship as they are
needed. Theso we have already are uet
everwell supported ; why build mero ?"
Tha Protestant churches of New Yetk
have thirt'-cn Chinese schools, with an
average attendance of JeO. Iu the nine
schools of Brooklyn thcre are 2 10 scholars,
with an average attendance of Wj.
la the Canten of Geneva, Dr. Uesse. an
arcl.v jlegist, has (Uncovered by excava
tien, the remains of a Christian chapel,
which he supposes te belong te thosevouth
or eighth century, the earliest period of
Christianity in that canton. Christianity is
elder thau Calvamnm, even in Calvin's
own home, a fact which some f jrjjet.
It is noticeable that three of the most
important btauding committees of thu M.
V. geucral c inference are presided ever by
laymen the Reek Concern, Goneral Clin Clin
eon R. Fisk ; Chureh Extension, by Ames
Munitle ; and Minday-rioheol and Tracts,
R 0. Gillett. Heu. Oliver Heyt was
urged te herve ou another committce as
chairman, hut he declined.
An tnten sting account has hcen re
ccived from the Rev. C. F. Warren, et
Osaka, of a meeting in that city in con
nection with the Luther commemoration.
More than 000 Japanese were present,
ineluding a large number of medical men,
lawjen and officials occupying high pesi.
tiens under the government. A Japanese
gpt.tkur gave a short account of the great
icformer'H life, nnd Mr. Warren an ad
drci"8 en the result of his (Luther's) work.
"Fancy," Mr. Warren writes, " iu this
tar oirernor of the earth, a company of
Japmche ChristhiLH, net oue of whom teu
j ears age was a Christlau, jeiulng te cele
bratn the 400th anniversary of Luther's
birthday."
A lluty aienth
May is crowded with impertaut ocelesl.
nstieil assemblages. The general confer
ence of the Mothedint Episcopal ehurch is
new in session : the general oenfcreuco of
the Methodist Protestant church mceta in
Raltimore May 10 ; the goneral oenferenco
of the African Methodist Episcopal church
L new in session in RaHimore ; the general
oenterouco of the Afriean Methmll.st Kpls Kpls
cepil Zion ehurch in New Yerk ; the
general synod of the Rofernicd (German)
The corameu report from the country is
that the rains of tbe past week have done
much geed. The surface of the earth
needed moisture The wheat uover was
of better color nor tbe prospects mero
gratifying ; old clever Holds leek spotted
and have been winter killed, the rain has
helped them, but the grass crop will be
light ; eate has come up well ; the corn Is
uet half planted; the young tobacco plants
are coming along, the beds, especially of
Havana, were never se numerous ; the
bloom of the npple trees was of reraarkn.
bio premise, particularly as it occurred
" in the full of thi moon," but the rain
has seriously damaged the prospects ;
peaches generally are winter killed and
unpromising ; the pears promie lair'y -ind
cherries leek well.
church iu Raltimore ; the Soutlieru Ran
Ust convention in Raltimore ; the general
assembly of the Presbyterian ehurch meets
iu Saratoga May 15 ; the Southern Presby
tciaii church assembly in Vieksbnrg,
Mlsi., May 15 ; the Cumberland Presbv.
terlan assembly in MoKecbport, Pa., May
15 j the Uultcd Presbyterian goneral
assembly in St. Leuis May 28 ; the goneral
eldership of the Chureh of Ged in Wees
ter, Ohie, en May 23 ; next month the
coneral synod of the Reformed f Dutch)
church meets In Grand Rapids, Mich.,
June 4 ; and the Prosbyterian nlllance
holds im third goneral council in Relfast,
Ireland, beglnnlug June 21.
Mttlienlu Union.
The various mothedlst branehes in New
Zealand have taken steps towards a union.
Last year a committee was appointed te
meet and draw up a basis of union, The
statistics prepared nud published by that
committed gave the following figures:
Churches - Wcsleyan, 411; Primltlve
Mothedlst, Ce ; United Mothedlst !W ;
Rible Christian, U. Adhoreuts Wesleyan
yi),511 i Primltlve Mothedlst, 2,000 : Rible
Christian, U73. Ministers Wesleyan, 88 :
Primltlve Mothedlst, 18. Uulted Motho Metho Mothe
dlst, 12 ; Rible Christian. 2. The commit,
tee has found no difficulty in gettlng en
harmoniously se far, and thcre is new a
fnir prospect for uuien. It is propesod In
the oveut of union taking plaoe te drop
the iiauie " Wosleyau."
railroad from the Cumberland Yalley ever
the Seuth Mountain te Gettysburg, whence
an extension of it is te be inn right out te
Round Tep, across the wide plain of the
battloileld where Pickett's meu charged
and melted away before the ram of death,
past the Peach Orchard and into the very
" Devil's Den." Waterloo is no greater
battlefield in military science or in lusterv
than Gettysburg, and yet it is net accessi
ble te tourists except by twenty miles
travel ever rough wagon read With all
its present memorials and met u meets and
its well kept csmetery, the interest of the
Gettysburg field will be enhanced when
the men and regiments who fought thcre
will have compietely marked nearly every
spot of nete with eome memorial of the
incideut which distinguished it Matsa
chusctts, for example, is about te erect
twenty-flve -Btencs, costing from $500 te
41,000 oaeh, te designate the location of its
regiments In that most mouierablo en
gagement of the war.
Driven far into the ground and with
only the breoeli of it protruding, in front
of Cel. II. J. Stahle's Compiler efllcc, en
the main street of Gettysburg, is the
stump et a cannon, which lias a history.
In the days of Federal mipremacy in
Adams county, the commissioners
wouldn't allow the court house bell te be
rung in oelobration of American victories
evor the Rritlsh during the war of 1811.
The patriotic JifTersenlan Democratic
Republicans bought this four peuud guu
te jubllate nnd loyally protected it through
the cheer and dlsapnointment of forty
yenrs of vioterics and defeats. In 1S51,
when Adams county, thieugh the Kuew
Nothing oxcltement, was rested from
the opposition and placed in the Domo Demo Dome
cratlo column, where it has siuce
remained, Bometiiaes, albeit, "by the
skin of the tceth" the gun waH eharged
se heavily that it burst ; a new brans
canuen was proeurcd aud has beeu care
fully kept, with net such lrcquent
occasions for use, and the old barker was
planted iu memory of its geed services,
where it is te be eoeu te day.
Andrew Jacksen was president Judse
of the superior as well as the ehancery
court of Jonosbero, Teun., about tbe close
of the last century. In theso days a horse
thief was lashed at the whipping pest, had
hincars nailed te the pillory nnd had the
letter 11 branded ou ene cheek nnd T en
the ethor. A man was ence eharged in
Jacksen's bailiwick with having out off
the ears of his infant child, because he
suspcoted its mother's iufldellty. The
villain lied te the weeds and the sherill
reported his inability te capture him, as
he was desperate and armed, Judge
Jacksen adjourned court, directed the
sheriff te summon him, the judge, as n
momber of his pesse, nrraed hlmself with
a rllle, went out te the swamps, brought
iu the scoundrel and when lie bad plead
guilty, Jnolcsen sentenced him te be placed
In the pillory, have both ears nailed te the
pillory, stand thore two hours, then te be
takeu out, te bnve both ears out oft, oleso
te the head, rcoelve SO hshe.s well laid en
his bare back nnd be branded with a het
iron in the palm of his right hand, with
thu latter V. " Villain." That was the
kind of a judge Jaoksen made,aud iu theso
itule days sueh nuaiitles ns he displayed en
the boneh made him n great popular
favorite.
The fashion runs te jelnqulls, nareissus
aud the old fashion Easter garden (lowers.
1 leek te see a revival of the dahlia, four
o'cleoks, lady slippers and bollyheoks,
BttfDAD,
A Dtllzhtlnl Occilen nx rnllen ltent
llenae l.nit Kvenlnt Orntleiii. I'netry,
Mmla nnii Flimtra.
The forty-ninth anulversary of the
Goetheau literary soeioty of Franklin nud
Marshall college was colebratod in Fulton
opera heuse last evening iu the prcsoneo
of a fashlouable nnd cultured audience.
Jupiter Pluvlus frowned en the occasion
by n plentiful Rhewer nn hour bofero the
oxeroises began, but tills did net detcr the
assembling of a geed sized nudloneo. The
tleral decorations of the stnge were very
handsome. FestoetiH of sinllax hung
across the freut aud two large uruB lilted
with rare exotics were placed en clther
side of the speaker during the delivery of
his address , while suspended above his
head was n beautiful basket of tlewers,
surmounted by a haudsome ileral lyre. Te
the rear In loters formed of gas jets hung
the Goetheau legetid " Genesthe Plies,"
while n perfect Ileral bank containing
ferns, cacti, nnd rare tropical plants
blended in tasteful profusion, made a
pretty background te the scene.
After the cellege orchestra had rendered
in excellent form the overture " Undine,"
by Hescb, Mr. Edwin Twitmyer, president
et the society, Introduced Rev. CharleH L.
Fry, who pronounced an otteetlve prayer,
at the conclusion of whleh the orchestra
reudered .mother choice gem "Solitude,"
Moreadcnto. The tlrst speaker of the
eveuing was then introduced.
Salutatory" The Ministry of the
Reautiful," C. R. Schneider, Rewinans
ville, Pa. The orator briefly and felleit
eusly welcomed the nudionce, nfter which
he touched with singular apprepriatucss en
the love of the beautiful ns it is implanted
iu man. The world is full of beauty, the
heavens bIiew it forth iu endless variety.
Rut the love of the beautiful is ehielly
felt iu its lutluouce for geed en the human
heart. Nature in her beauty rellects the
beantv of the Creater, olevatiug the soul
aud ministcnug te the formation of better
ideals. The lutluouce of the beautiful iu
literature nnd musle were gracefully
alluded te, after which the young orator
paid a glowing tribute te the beautiful in
character. This latter, m truth, affords a
foretasto of the beauty that is everhst
lug.
Music WaltiCB, " Reggar Student,"
Rewmau.
Oratieu " cstniinster Abbey, I), h.
Esehbach, Limestonevillo, Pa After ,
brief but terse introduction embracing
the history nnd slguitlcance of the grand
old English abbey, the speaker addressed
hlmself te tbe task of showing the effect
of a vact architectural pile of this kind,
tilled as it is with a wealth of historical
memories, en the human heart. There all
the passions that moved tl.e great actors iu
the drama of life nre at rest. Frieud and
feo he down together. The "peet's cor
ner" was gracefully referred te, and the
placing of Longfellow's bust among the
great versifiers of days geno by was re
gaidcd as a tnbute te a great poet iu hon
oring whom, America nnd England did
themselves honor. The speaker concluded
with the deduction that all things earthly
must have an eud, as this grand old abbey
would seme day be a howling ruin.
Music Galep, "Le Petit Faust," Ress
Oration "The Modern Tcndeuey te Ex
pansien," K iruoyie ine spirit ei tue
present age as seen around us, is uet a
rigid contention of what may he, but a
studious inquiry as te what is. Specula Specula
tien hai given way te invoutieu, aud the
latter is always pursued iu the spirit of
utilitarianism. The distiucfen of caste is
rapidly disappearing, and everywhere Is
visible a tendency towards diffusion. Sci
eneo is no longer a i-ecret te the few, but a
been te the many. The laborer is bogm begm
uiug te use intelligence iu assisting him iu
his dally toil. Science, uet centent with
investigating physical natnre, is deeply
penetrating the realms of meutal cenjee
ture. The tendeucy of expansion in lit
crature is noticeablo in the mauner iu
which the great novelists and poets have
beaten out a new path iu the study of levely
humau character. The speaker hoped that
all uatieus would eventually unite iu one
common brotherhood, as the result of the
expansion of international comity.
Music Redewa, "Wild Rird," Resa.
Eulogy "Edgar Allan Poe," F. C.
Cook, Hasorstewu, Md. In the history of
American literaturc, no poet has exercised
rcater intluouce than Ldgar Allan fee.
COLUMBIA NEWS.
UUU IIICIIUi.AU UOllltKHl'OmHSNUh
1'lCKdONAL,.
Wm. II. VANnr.urmr sails for Eurepe
te day en atrip from reorcatleu,
PniNerss Aunt's "memoirs" wero
glven te the publie en Friday. 1 he de
mand for the book is net large.
Mil. Run ui3 Ml cM.r. ban been deslg deslg
unted, nccerdiug te the Rerliu Tiujtblitt
as the successor te Mr. Saigent at the
court of Rerliu.
Jehn F. Smyth, a well known Stalwart
jiolitlelau of Albany, New Yerk, who had
been fur seme yenrs ongnged In thu stock
brokcrage busluess, has made an assign
meiit.
Mu 11. 11. Riiunkmvn and wife,
fermerly of this eity, late of Clnoltinatl.ure
at the Stevens heuse, proposing te spend
a few mouths among Lancaster county
friends.
Stu Lr.rr.i. Giuitin has published his
impressions with regard te the United
States. The author Indulges in a caustic
attack upon American political society
nud objects te America's tltle of a Great
Republic.
IUt.rii Walde Emkusen was discribed
iu a letter written by Jehn Quincy Adams
in IS 10 as a beh of " myenced loved frlend
William Emersen, and a classmate of my
lameuted son Geerge, who after fulling iu
the everyday avocations of n Unitarian
preacher and schoolmaster, n tarts a new
doetrluo of transcendentalism, declares all
the old revelation superauuatcd and worn
out, and announces the approach et new
revelation aud prophets. Garrison and the
non resistant abolitionists, Rrownsen nud
tbe Marat Democrats, phrenology and
animal plausible magnetism, nil oeuio in
furiilsliinir each seme nlauslble tascality as
incredieut ler the bubbling cauldron of
religion and elitics."
AMI I II KK lahuamkii viuteuv.
llie urk nine Krtillj llefcrttetl liy tlin Heme
Clnu-dnmr Klrdwhrre.
The Laucaster club visited Yerk yester
day nnd dofeated the team of that place
by the score of 18 te 0. Fer the Yerk
elub, Roussey's pitching was very ineffec
tive, a total of IS lilts being made by the
visitors, while P. Smith's dehcry for the
Laucasters proved nn utitielvabln riddle for
thu Yorkers. Seme dissntisfaotieii was
expressed at severe! of the umpire's dcei
hien.s. Reth teams wote about equal in
their fleldiug. Thu same alubs play again
iu Yerk this aflorueon. Appended is the
score of yesterday's game :
LAscASrru. v.n. n In re. a u.
Iloitent, c t i I 1 l e 0
Hllivml :i ' i 3 u s 2
l'urhcr, st ! t .1 3 1
Helluiiil, 3I ! - i 1 i
r.Mniui, r a i . u
I. Smith, 1 I & 1 i 1 O 0
Until, lb i e . ll u 1
WuUull rt i 2 1 1 e e
Utclur.lsen, c ft -' - ti e 1
limine TrauiitctBil nt the Mnjr ninailng el
ttie llernugli Oiiuiicll Heant linn-
Venliifta Iu 1'emi,
The tegular monthly meating of oeutioll
was held last night, all thu members being
present but Mr. PiHtjti. The mlnute of
the list regular meeting of April 13 read
and npproved.
The lluance com in It tee ropettod 407,000
in tun treasurer's uemis, principally the
proceeds of the Rile of the 4 per oetit.
oetids. The old hIxji have net yet been
redeemed.
The ordinance prohibiting leitlug en
oernors nnd nt ethor plaoes was pissad.
Oflljer.s Wittlek and Fllbart wero voted
a salary of 110 par month oaeh, with their
regular perquistlics of their oaustableshlp,
for Bpeaial polleo lurviess, they te ba
under the orders of the chief burgess.
An ordlnaneo was presented, calling Ter
the opening of new Seoend street from
liridge street te the linn of alley G. and of
this alley from Thhd Btrect down te
Secend. Ne tax collector was appolnte.l
owing te a tle vete , the Democrats sup
porting W. G. Duttenhofl'er, whose bid for
the collection of taxes was 1.75 per oeut.
of all taxes collected, aud the Republicans
voting for S. A. Roeklus, whose bid was 4
per cent. A collector will lie appointed nt
a special niiuttugtobe held next Thursday
ovening. A number of bills were paid nud
council adjourned.
Uunilenoe I I tern.
Second drawing of Yergly watch elub
te-night. Ne change iu Columbia trains
by new R &, O. time tvble C. O. Kiiutl
inau, Decoration Day orator ; union me
morial huvIces at oera house at 7:15 p
in. Chas. Ememi liai launched n sail
beat. Usual ohureh serviccn te-morrow ,
St. Paul's P. E. ohureh sorvieas oeuduoted
by Rev. A. K. Tertat, Gettysburg ; mar mar
ilage of Jehn Swart, nud Miss Kate Shll
low ou June 27. Miss Lillin Clark nud II.
A. Reouett are visiting iu Philadelphia
Meeting of Columbia base elub te night;
ActivcH, of Wrlghtsvllle, play Quicksteps,
of Columbia, this afternoon. Gen. Welsh
pest, U. A. H., will held meetiuga overy
Tuesday coning in May.
River is rising and shad prospects im
proving. New passjngcr shed ereated at
White Heuso station ou thu P. R. It.
David Hinkle, of the American house had
Ills watch stolen from hi in while at liar
tmm'scireiiH in Yerk yesterday. Trees
were breken down aud signs tern away by
yesterday's Bterm. Mrs. Adam Downs, of
Chestnut Hill, had e.m of hei legs broken
yesterday by a fall at her house. Officer
Wittick this nieriuug arrested Frank W.
Jehnsen, of Goulenil!e, for stealing n
watch belonging t Shaeffer Meixell, of
that place Jehns u c infossed the theft,
aud Is new iu the Luievster county jail
Total u 13 is -21 iu s
tOKK
mm, iu i oiie
smith, iu 6 i Olie
riurce.ss. i) 1 ii "2 u
T. Mchee. It I 1 I S a 1
Keussey, n 4 II O 3 8 I
J.McKoe, 3b 3 0 u 1 ii 1
Kttlnttur, c I t 1 lull
t'ltzsluin.eni, e.... 3 2 1 1 1
Mene!.-!, rf....l 0 I 0 1 0
Total 31 IS S 27 IU 5
nxixin 1 2 .1 3 a 7 S 9
Lancaster
erlt ...
.. u 0 3
.. .201
81MUAHV
3-13
e- u
a c
Hu boyhood and cellege life were reviewed
by the orator, aud it was dcuied that he
had evor been oxpelled from cellege. Ilia
hfe at West Point and hia wanderings
thereafter wero then graphically depleted.
His Droductiens were at this peried be
coming known, nud bis caustic pen was
feared by his manyonemies. The "Haven"
the spoaker thought, had ereated an
opeoh in American literature, aud oue of
iu chief attractions is the similitude that
it bere iu its sad Eequel te the lile of the
unfortnuate poet. Until 1875 no stene
was evor raised te his memory. Iu the
rcerit of conception nnd form Poe's poetry
is trully classical, in the expansion mat
the future will bring te our literature, this
greatest of American poets must he
awarded his due meed of praise in ceutrib
uting towards bringing it nbeut.
Music Waltz "Senntag'fl Kinder,"
Hlxner.
Oration "The Iutluonce of Public Opin
ion in Our Country," W. H. Rriuteu,
Lancaster, Pa. Man's lulluoneo evor man
iH ene of the greatest of pewers. The
ceurse of nations is largely influonced by
publie opinion. Ry the publie opinion
that is formed by tbointerchaugoof men's
ideas, aoelety Is meulded. Our ablest men
place as tnlieh reliance ou publie opinion
as en their own. It is wrong te decry this
great mentor, and he does ill who attempts
te bolittle it. Hemes fall was attributed
te the claim that tyranny had at length
oenquorod publie opinion. This latter
keeps the government official careful of
his aats and has a bonefloial lniluonce iu
holding monopolies in cheek. The speak speak spoak
or declared that all medern legislation
was acalnst monopolists, and that te a
preper publie opinion wns due the dis dis
tructien of the oenviot labor syatem.
Though occasionally iu errer its tondency
is nearly always towards geed. It should
be the duty of each te oentributo te the
formatleu of a true publie opinion bofero
whleh tribunal nil canses of mement may
recolve their fitting adjudication.
MubIe Mareh " Ivy of Spring,"
Goipel.
Peom " The Lsgend of Ine de Coas Ceas Coas
tre," J. P. Meyor, Union Deposit, Pa.
This was a spirited rendition In the heroie
measure of a touehlng Spanish story. The
author shows himself the possessor or ue
mean poetioal ability and if improvemont
comes with inoreaatng yeara, he may Ilke
Ryren, wake up seme day nnd find hlmself
famous. ,, 4 ,,
MuhIe Ovorlure " Cuovaller Rroten,"
Ilermann,
Goethoan Oration" the Pagan Philos
opher," J. R Appel, Lake Mahopae, N.
Y. The idea of a suprome bsing in seme
form or anethr Is inseparably linked te
man. He Is sonslble of his inferiority,
and feels the need of nsnporler belng
te whleh te eliug. Pagaulamhi chief prep
mi Mm illvinencHs of nature, nnd it was
lust as mueh of a reality te its follewors
as Christianity Is te us te-tiny. The first
rude thinker saw Ged euly In Ids works.
The natural world was overythlug, the
supernatural was as yet undeveloped. The
world te-day Is far abeve the condition of
tnuudnne affairs when the first philosephor
began te study nature's book, but while
man llves he must study te Improve daily
his oemprohouslon or things supernal.
MiiBlo-Galep, " Linden," Zikeff.
Dr. Apple thou proneunood the bonodlo benodlo bonedlo
tion, the orehestra played an inspiring
mareh, ' Loglen," by Rewmau, after
Karnul runj Lancaster, 3. Lett en loses
erlt. s, Unciuu r, 7; Twe biue lilt
rttzslminnns, lllluiul, Helland. 1'. Smith. I.
Smith Three hum lilt Wnltt. llnses en
called tnlls Yerk. 5 , Lancaster, 2, liases en
bulnK struck utth bull l er.r, 2 i Liincn-ttur, I.
Struck nut tin ilnu-iny, 3. en Snittli, 2.
l'assud bills t'llsltniiien, 1 ; Illetiir Isen, '.
DntiblepUys-Sinlth und Htilinmnns,
Tlmoet Bame 1 hour an. 1 tt mltiutr.,
Linplru M. l.awler
(Ininea Linen Iicre.
Pniladelph a : Pail.ilalphi.1 4, t-'hicage
7 ; Athletic 5, Raltimore 1 ; Renten :
Bosten 0, Cleveland 2 : New Yerk New
Yerk 5, Detroit 0 ; Providenao : Pi jvi jvi
deuce !1, Ruirali 1 ; Pittsburg : Al
leghctiy 8. Rroeklyn 2 j Cincin
nati : Cincinnati 0, Teledo 1 , Wash
ington . Metropolitan 7, Washlugteu
2 , Liuisvil e - L misville 2, Indianapolis
8 ; St Ljuis (-ii -i innings; : St. Leuis
it, Cjlutnbus 2, ; C ,'Oige : Koysteno 2,
Chicago Union 0 : Ciuc.t niti . Cincinnati
Union 7, Raltimore Union I ; Allcntewti :
Trenten 10, Allentown 2 ; It i.vimi; : Do De
mestic '6, Active 10 : Raltimore : Virginia
II, Monumental 2 ; Wilmington : Wilming
ton 10, Ilamsburg 2 ; Hanover, N. H ;
Dartmouth U, Rrewti 5 ; Chambersburg :
Charabcrsburg 0, ChcBter 5.
Ilttts Hull.
The Ironside.i play the Aotives of Mai
ayunk.a rattling amateur nine, en Monday
and the Trenten ou Tuesday.
The Ironsides club is playing the Quick
step of Philadelphia te-day iu this city.
The home battery is Parsons and Derby,
and soveral of the heavy hltters are oil
duty.
The secretary of the Union association
has written te Mnuager Dlffcnderffer,
Informing him that Harris will uet be
allowed te play with the Alteena In any
games iu the future. It was asoertaiued
by the efllcers of the Uuieu that Harris
had signed with the Lancaster club, and
received their advauoe money, which he
refueed te return.
OtillL'Altl.
UtiHth et Itnv .1. . Mitchell's Mether,
Mrs. Elizabeth Mitchell, mother of Rev.
J. Y. Mttohell, I). D.. of this city, died at
her tesldonce, Ne. 1315 North Second
street, Philadelphia, en Friday ovening
the Oth Inst., need 81 yeara. Mrs. Mitchell
was a native of thu North of Irelaud. She
married James Mitehull a manufacturer
of oetton and woolen goods, who seen
nfter their marriage came te this oeuntry
and settled In Philadelphia where Mr.
Mitchell oentlnuod In business until 1857
when he retlred. Ilodied a few years age.
Mm. Mitohell was a woman of llue nttaln nttaln
menta and exalted oharacter. Eduoated
In the faith of the Proubyterlau ohureh she
waB a dovetcd Christian of the
old fashioned type She was a true
wife and Indulgent mether and a kind
friend. Her life wns omlnently a domeatio
ene ; her home was a kingdom, and thore
Bhe ruled by the law of leve. She had a
remarkable memory, ovenup te the eud of
her life belng nble te repeat from memory
all the Psalms aud the gespels. She dled
a happy deatb, as she had lived a Christian
life at poaeo with all the world, and In
the full aBsuranoe of passing into a better
ene.
The immediate causa of Mrs. Mltohell'H
death was catarrhal ptioumenln, whleh she
contracted about a woek age, an I from
whleh, owing te her advanced age, she
was unnble te rally. Her funeral will take
plaoe en Tuesday afternoon, 13;h Inst.
Intorment at Laurel Hill oemotory.
Ry reason of Mrs. Mitchell's daath thore
will be no sorvleo In the Prosbyterian
ohureh, this eity, te-morrow.
Tim Mireet l.atnpi.
The following oleetrlo lamps were re
potted by the pelice this morning : Limn
and Froderiek nnd Jehn and Locust, out
nil night ; Walnut and Shippen out slnoe
11 o'eiook ; Locust and Lime, Maner and
Love Lane, out from 2 o'eiook.
Twenty two gnsoliue lamps wero ent in
various parts of the eity, the most of thorn
having been put out by thu storm that
prevailed.
Kew Telephone voiineeilun.
J. Frank Raee, suoceswr te Montaer &
ReiBt, 231 and 233 West King street, and
Ellas Campbell's BOgar fiotery, 053 West
Orange slroet, have been conneotod with
tbe tolephono oxehanfo.
Tlll.t .WMiMMI'd ceuur
Application Bur I Icenae lleitr.t nuit Unci
tuna ttetervcit l'ew OrnntcU.
Court met this tneriilug at 10 o'eiook te
hear argument in applications for license,
which were net reached en last Satur
day.
Licenses wero granted te Jacob L
Erb, West Earl; Jaoeb G. Weugcr,
Ephrata ; T. II. Rani, Miinhelm township,
Stecer Rrcnemati, Maner ; Barbara
Spehlman, Eighth watd, city ; S. G.
Cooper, Ephrata. Th ue eases wero heard
last Saturday, aud the applicauts have
moved into the Lhusch for which the
llcenses are asktd.
Jeseph Morgan, Manheim township, was
refuted a license bcciuse he does uet live
in the hetel property.
The applications of Andrew Miller aud
Ephraltu Reuu igcr, East Cocalico, were
centintud, in o.der that further depesi
tieus may be taseu.
A license was granted te Michael Hei
(rich, te keep a restaurant iu West llemp
Held township, a brother of the applleant
who kept the saloon last year having made
affidavit that he did uet vinlate the law
Abraham Humer, Manbeim borough,
asked for a license te keep a rcstauraut
There was a rotuenstranco tiled against the
granting of a license te a man unmed
Raer, the original petitioner. It was
sworn te by oue woman who did net want
her name used when she leaned that Mr
Ilarner was tbe applicant. Held uu ler
advisement.
II, O. Myers asked for a lioenso te keep
a rcstauraut in Massasc it hall, Strasburg.
The b.Uoen was kept by Franklin Rrtia
last year and a remonstrance wan llled
agaiust the granting of the license te the
petltiouer en the greuudti that the restau
rant is unnecessary and the petitioner Is
nut a preper man te keep it, nud lurther
that the place has been the resort of dls
erderly persons. Mr. Mjetb also pre
sented a petition, signed by mnuy citizens
of Strasburg, asking that the llceuse be
granted boeauso it is necessary nnd the pe
titloner is iu every way ipi ilillud te keep it
After the conclusion et argutnent by the
oeunsol, the ceuit stated that thore was n
point iu thu case upon which neither
party had touched, under the law of 1891
the oeurt oeuld uet grant a lioenso te sell
liipier in a building where amusemcuU nte
held. Counsel asked the court reconsider
the matter and aeait.iln hew the build
ing is ceusti noted. The deolsieu was
roserved.
Heury Fisher applied for a llconse te
keep the Reading depot hotel iu the Ninth
ward, this eity. He came bofero the
oeurt nud stated that he had loased the
premises nud intends te keep thu hetel if a
licouse is granted. This is au old stand,
for which a lioenso was refused at the
January oeurt, because tin father of the
prosent applicant eiulit iut make the uej
essary affidavit.
I). W. Cunningham i k.d for n llconse
te keep a rcstnuianl in Fulton township nt
Haines station, ou the Columbia nnd Pert
Deposit railroad. There was no romeu
strauoe te the gianting of the lioenso and
the oeurt resetved their doeislon.
Henry Zartmau applied for a llcotice te
keep a rcstauraut nt the browery in the
vlllage of Lltltz A reuionstraueo ngahiHt
the lioenso was filed. The doeinlou was
roserved.
Current llniluetf.
A rule for a new trial In the oase of
Mary S. R. Bhenk, executrix, vs. Ames
Gretf, was dcnled,
A citation te flle an acaeuut was issued
te Jaoeb It. Wlndelph, asslgnoe of the
Operate Mutual life lusurauce company.
On motion of D. G. Eshehnan, esq., the
oeurt diroetod that the resolutions adopted
by the Uar association of the deatli of
Cel. S. II. Prlea be outercd upon thu
miuutcs of the court.
J. Hay Rrewn, esq., prosentod the patl
tien of Audrew EiohhelU, oenstablo of
the Fourth ward, thisclty, for a mandamus
te compel the county commissioners te
pay costs in a oase against Geergo Kirk,
whleh was heard and dismissed by Alder
man Spurrier. The amount invelved was
02 cenU, but it Is te be made a teat oase
in erder te nroertalu whother or net the
county will be linble for oeats in dismissed
cases. Au nlternatlve mandamus was
granted and the oase will be nrgued next
Saturday.
Court adjourncd.te Saturday, May 17,
at 10 a. m.
Uempliluta About Street Sweeplnj
That the streets should ba kept eleiui,
nil will admit, and that the herse pewer
Hweoper is the most oxpeditloug way of
doing the work Is also admitted ; but
thore appears te be juat cause of complaint
ou the part of merchants in Centre square
nudvieinity against the sweeping of the
streets during business hours. They say
their Hue goods are greatly injured by the
dust thus raised, aud think the sweeping
might bodeno nfter the stores aroelo-sad.
A word te the wise street aweepars is
suflloleut.