PLAT7SM0UTH. NEBRASKA. THUUSDAY, .TTJNE30, I8TU. OLUIKB'H REISIO.V. . The Chairman of tbe Committee of Arrangements for the Reunion of the Soldiers in Nebraska, to bo held on the 4th of July next, at Lincoln, handed us the following "Programme" of the cere monies to be had on that occasion : PROGRAMME. Urn'ot Soldiers Reunion in KAraslJa, Lincoln, Nebraska. July 4th, 1870. Reception of Sldier at Depot by Stat and C,.7 Jf!:".- r. I h to Caoital. com- manded by Gen. e anded by tfen. ts. A. Strickland and assisted by the fol Inn I '. . i"i i by the following. auiitant Mar.tuiW : yoi. iiar- , il j. Geo. ft. feea- roK. Jim. . . -w --r- . ...u. L" l.' V.llantin in. Cant. E- ii. .nurpuy. waj. CapL W. A. Pollock. C-pt- K. E. Cunuin.. Cailed to order by Praiident of the rgangixa tion. . . . Invocation by the Chaplain. National anthem. ... j Reading of the Declaration of Independence, by Col. lavage, of Omaha. Music. . . Oration, by Gen. R. R. LiTinnton. Maic. Poem by Col. C. 3. Chaise. Musio. Election of officer! for ensuing year. Benediction by the Chaplain. Adjournment for Refreshment. Assembling at the Capitol in the evening. We have no doubt there will be a gala time, as this will be the first meeting of the trcop? here since they were mustered rut of the service of tbe country they helped to save. We understand the Railroad will convey thorn at very re duced rates. low enough to ernille any of theui to go who want to. Mr. Gilles pie requests that all State papers will publi&h the programme for the informa tion of the boys in bine. ncaocn iw a riu.vrixa office. Oan Printer Nhoet Another in Coun cil jitufra. About tix o'clock last Monday evening the Council Bluffs evening Times office was the scene of a terrible tragedy. The particulars as related by the Nonpareil, are as follows : Austin has for some time been an employee at the Times ofllce a gi)od printer, but addict ed to d rinking, and when under the influence of liquor quar relsome, and insolently overbearing and insulting in his language. Bell is also a printer and had been to work in the Times office in place of Austin, during the !ay. About fifteen minute- before eix o'clock Bell was iu the 2?mpireil office, and said to the compositors that h.3 had seme difficulty with Austin, and rhat there might be more of it signifi cantly adding that if Austin returned to the attack and gave him sufficient provo cation, he should "go for him." Bell returned to the office, and was again met by Austin, who renewed the war of words. Opprobioua epithets were passed, Bell standing upon the sidewalk and Austin staggering around in the office near the door. In reply to some remark addressed to the proprietor by Austin, Bell called Austin a liar, and the latter made a rush out of the door to ward Bell. He missed his aim and stag gered off the sidewalk. Recovering, he again started toward Bell, who drew his revolver and fired, the ball striking Aus tin over the right eye, passing entirely through the upper portion of the brain, and lodging against the cranium in the back part of the head. Austin fell upon the sidewalk, where he remained for some moments in a com atose state, the blood oozing from the wound. He wad subsequently taken into the rear room of Gray's office, where he revived sufficiently to converse with pome of his friends. Thence he was ta kea to the Washington House, and fi nally to the buildij? adjoining, where he now i. Here the wound was thoroughly probed, and the ball found as above stated, having traversed the skull for seven inches. Drs. Hart, Scott and Malcomb, with whom we conversed, agree in the opinion that his chances of recovery are as one to a thousand. At 12 o'clock last night his pulse was about SO, and his breathing not stentorious. Bell, after the fatal hot, remarked to the bystanders "I have finished Austin and myself, too." He then walked over to the office of Montgomery, Heed & fair.es, where he was soon after arrested by officer Jackson, and taken to the coun ty jail. luis deplorable affair iniDerilin? the lives of two men is the direct result of that never-to-be-sufficiently -deprecated, and utterly reprehensible practice of carrying deadly weapons. 'Letter From Ntbre k. I 'lattsmout v, Neb., June 9, 1870. Mr. Editor: 1 lattsmouth, the county seat or eapi- ii- "a:M county s situated on the Missouri rivrr, tw.j miles south of the unction or the riattc and Missouri, meifoy giving it direct water communi cation with St. Louis, St. Joseph, Kan Bu.jv.njr, jjeavenMronn, ine vast regions up the Missouri, and many other im portant points. The B. & M. Railroad of Nebraska parses through the city. Cars are run ning 25 or 30 miles out. The road will reach Lincoln, (the capital) 53 miles dis tant , Ly the first of J uly. We have con iucuons by railroad and water with all iio.nts, and are the terminus of five pro jected railroads. Nebraska City i 4o miles distant ; Omaha, 24 miles ; Co i eil Bluffs, 25 utile. Mattsniouth has every natural advautage; one of the best fanning countries in the State sur. rounds the city. There are at lea 3A)0 inhabitants, and fast increasing: live, go-ahead daily and weekly newspaper, the D'lil't I'latttmouth JJrrald, 11 D. Hathaway, editor and proprietor, and a more competent man for that business we could not find wast of the Mississippi. Masonia, I. O. O. F , I. O. G. T., k. V., and other benevolevo'ent orders are bly represented. There are two or three grist and saw mills, good hotel, ti ve churches, court-house, school-house-, the majority of which are ably con ducted; one. Banking House, ( Footle Hanna & Clark, Bankers, T. W. Evans Cashier, and Frank Kershaw, Asst. Cashier.) is also represented. The State is young, and ha but a short time been known; nevertheless, December '69 showed not far from 150,- 0 X) inhabitants wit Liu our limits. Some 1 lea of the rapidity With which the Stare is being settled may be gathered from a glance at the statistics of immigration, cops and trade. In the year 1868, not le.-s thnn 5,0:JU families cro-sed the river at various points ; more than l,(MM.(i0 ceres were put under cultivation ; th-u a:ii.-i of aftii'r.i.'iiual irap!eui&ii were j to tiu liters unl hurKir"! of thou J and.- of bushel of wheat and corn were rainea. In the year I860 more new ter I ritory was brok-u nj than all that had been nut in cultivation telori5 that tiate; not le s than 10,000,000 bushels qt jrratn were rai.-ed ; thou.-ands of families net tled here, and an almost fabulous num ber of agricultural implements were im ported and sold. Several colonies from Europe have been located within the borders of this State, and myriads of acres bought up by persons who propo-e to remove to this country at the owning of another fcason. We know of several instance where mechanics have arrived in this State with scarcely enough uiemstobuya night'slo Jgin for thein-ielves and fami lies, and in three or tour years, have workjd themselves into possession of real estate, that to-day is worth several thousand dollars. Days could be spent showing the ad vantages of riattmouth and Nebra.-ka, but let the home-seeker come and sec for himself. Time will tell. Frank. We find the above letter iu the Cecil Whig, published at Klkton, Maryland, first-class newspaper, and one that seems to take an interest in publishing reliable western news. We thank the writer for his compliments to the Her ald and its e ditor. If more of our citi zens would write letters of this character to energetic publishers of newspapers in the east, it would soon tell to the ad vantage of our growing State, as well as to the advantage of those who are brought hither in consequence A TblefGet tausht and GeMaCew- A couple of suspicious looking char acters weie noticed hanging arowu the putiic places of our city on Monday la.-t, and a close watch was kept over their Uioveuients. They ha i no dinner any where, but loaied around loose. In the af:ernoon one of theui was detected in the act of stealing a pair of pants. No officer happened to be o.i hand, and a posse of men took the tui.'eraoie feilow down into the woods below the city, and administered a round number of laches on his back wi.h a whip. He was then put aero.-s the river, and advised to keep scarce in thrs vicinity, which be said he would do with the utmost saii.-faction. The whole affair was so quietly con dm -ted that it attracted no attention, and nobody except the actors knew anything of it, by some of whom it was told next day. Bi'iiicuriile Drnmcrnt. Cburrli and Kcliool House Robbery We leai ned a few days since of a se-. ries of misdeeds so vmainous that they seem beyond belief iu this age of en lightenment Wiihin the pac three or four month-1, some villain without the fear of Lord or law before his eyes, has repeatedly broken into the M. E. Church, at Fairview, aud the school house by that name in fairview Preempt, and have stolen books of ail kinds carried off the children's copy books, ink, pen holders, and. but last week, the school house was entered and things scattered around in wild con'usion, aui books, etc., and the wed and water buckets sto.en. Tbe Church has lost thus about one- half of a fifty dollar Sunday School Li brary. What Use the thief could ha.e for the bulk of what lias beeu stolen is beyond our power to imagine, and e doubt if the itio-t hardened would com mit these crimes if they knew it to beau offen-e for which the perpetrators, if discovered, could be put iu penitentiary. e hope he will be apprehended and convicted. The public generally is inte rested in the punishment of so despiea able a villain lirownville Advertiser. jool Mature. There are few of us who have a proper sense of the duty of cheerfulness. We are willing to be gay aud happy, and to let the world know that we are o, when we have a special reason tor ic ; but it is hard work wearing a show ot happiness, when the substance is lac ing, an l it is but few who are wiiiing to make the sus tained effort that the task demands, mid yet it is easy to cultivate a habitual spirit of cheerfulness that, not only will make others who come in contact with us happy, but will pi event ou.-elves troiu bciug miserable. There is piency of evil lit tbe world in the shape of pain, bereave ment, disappointment, lusiucenty and poverty, to make p-ople wretched, ii'j they desire to be -o : me geat difficulty and duty is to be cheerful in sniie of these adverse agencies. It seemb hard, but it is possible. W'e owe it to our selves, and we owe it more to our friends to cherish genial good nature that lias a sympathetic eye, a giowing, bright face, and a warm, responsive heart to greet the world with. It is oue of the mot effective of all means of doing good. It may seem strange, but it.is certainly true, that some jjersons would rather be un happy than not at least they would rather appear to be wreteded than the contrary. 1 h.y are never so we'd satis fied as when miserable. They are cold shadows that shatter the feeble bars of soul sunshine accorded to us here, into tremulous aud affrighted fragments, and throw a di-ma. silence around them wher ever they go. Kind words and gentle looks cost nothing ; and yet they are often more grateful to the poor aud op pressed than purses of gold. The Grttve. It burie- every error, covers every de fect, extinguishes every resentment. From its' peaceful bo.-om spring none but tender recollections, c can look down upon the grave of an enemy and not, fl-el a compunctious throe that he should have warred with the poor handful of earth that ies mouldering before him? The best thing a man can take with him to the grave is character. The sexton of Trinity Church, New York, and his assistants, have received instructions to lock all 'he doors of tht edifice on Sundays immediately before the commencement of the sermon, and to keep them so until the service is en eluded. The regulation went into effect last Sunday and produced much dissatis faction among those who attempted to leave U-fore the conclusion of tbe seri ces- The sexton was deaf to their en treaties and held them prisoner until the end. Only one succeeded in securing his release through a middle door by tbieat eniiig a suit for false imprisonment I have, savs Stephen Girard, always considered advertising, liberally and long to be a great medium of successful busi ness and prelude to wealth. And have made it an invariable rule, ton, to adver tise the dullest time:-, a3 well as the busi est, long experience having tiught me that money thus spent is well laidou, as by keeping my business eoniuiu.diy bu fore the public, it has secured me many sales that I otherwise would have lost Stop telling your iunoecut, confiding, trembling children about gho ts aud hob goblins. You are throw iig a sorrow upon their hearts that will cling there through life. How nnny mo: hers there are wn- quiet ttuir child e-i bv paying, " I h t ug a-ioos w:i! come nil 1 tale .xou 0!T;" "Co in-, old nijfer, come nl--xV.l. will you huh tain, right, this min-uieif' .... ChlBrM lbor In Aw jEiurlanrt. The introduction into an Eastern fac tory, in the very heart of New England, of seventy-five Chinese laborers, takes the country somewhat by surprise. The treatment New England will accord to thse men will soon be known. It re mains to be feen whether th-y are to b met by the same in.-!ise prejudice that clogs their footsteps iu t'alit'o-.nia and shuts them out from all social intercourse and privilege- The staid and dillivent Yankee will not hastily place himself in a hostile attitude before these strangers. But if he sees in the success of his firt venture the prelude to a vat influx of cheap foreign labor, which is to cheapen that of the American workshop and fac torj. he will arouse a storm that cannot be easily allayed. But in this connection it must be remen)lered that many of the workmen of the New England lactones are foreign born.' When the Union Pacific Railroad was first completed, the question of Chinese labor was widely atitated and earnestly discussed. An intelligent Christian sen timent everywhere demanded room and place for the stranger. But it cannot be defied that there was uneasiness, deep and profound, among the day laborers and in the workshops of the country. There is a problem before the country in connection with this question of labor, that ha excited much thoughtful solici tude among statesmen and political econ omists. 'I he inquiry is often heard, will labor in this country soon, if ever, return to the prices prevalent before the war? The ready response in the mind cf many is in the affirmative ; and many o hers have believed that the resumption of specie payments will be the prelude to this result. Vet it is worthy of consid eration he; her this shadow, gathering darkness to the fnind of the laborer, does not receive a deeper shade iu view of the recent Chinese raid upon Ma ehusetts the admission d' the coolies inti a Yankee woikshop? (Jm iha Re publican. Interesting to It. IU eal-llad.' In January, 1S65, Mr. T. E. Roberts, while traveling on the Toledo & Wabash railroad, was iu a car which was thrown off the track, and sustained injuries for which he sued the company for damages. After hearing all the testimony, in which it was stated by the defendant that Mr. Robers was at the time traveling on a free pass, Judge Brady, of the Supreme Court, charging the Jury, said that as be understood the lav iu his State, ( N. Y.) as laid don by the Court of Appeals, the defendants in this ca-e would not be liaule for any ordm.ny acts of negligence on the part of their agents, provided at the time of the accident, the plaintiff was traveling on a free pass, oy the terms of which it appea.ed that the company had given notice that they would not be responsible lor damages. The J u Ige said that it had not yet been decided that, with a free pass, .railroad companies could not be made reso;isibie iu jases of gross negligence. In this case he did not think any gross negli gence had been shown. Carriers of pas sengers are uoi in-uiel in any event. The jury, af;er an alienee of two hours, r nd- icd a verdict for the plain tiff of $6, (KJO, to wh ehthu Court, on motion ad Jed an al.owaiice, by way of costs, of five per cent. The statement from Washington made a few days ago that the two colored can didates for the Military Academy a West Point had been rejected by the Board of Examiners one on account of physical defects, and the other for lack of educational qualifications is not cor rect. Howard, the Missisippian, has passed the physical examination, but will probably fail in the mental one." Ihe doctor- have found that Smith, the South Carolina boy, has a defective, eye sight. That, however, does not declare him rejected, for wheie a "plebe" is found suffering from some ailment which is not organic, and which may be cured he is put on ' probation' for a year. In other words, he remains at the academy for a whole year, during which time ev cry effort is made to cure whatever physical defect he may have. If he does not improve by the end of twelve mouths he is then rejected. A Savannah uian was recently bitten by a rattlesnake in the right fore arm about two inches from the wrist Tne venom of this snake mut have been strong, as tiia reptile was tweuty-tsvo years old, according to his ratde. Im mediately U on being bitten, the man was taken in hand 1 13 pattie.4 who hadtxpe;' ence iu the treatment o! snake bites, and they applied tobacco poultices to the bite, pht.d bun frcey with culorotbrm and ar dent spirits. This after the virus had rapidiy spread up the arm and insensi bility had intervened. Yet this treai. nicut saved the man's life. Orders have been received at the Springfield (Mass.) Armory tor making 3,iXX cadet ritles, which are designed for distribution to military schools through out the country under the conditions of a recent act 01 Congress. A very good joke is told of a gentle man in Cambidge, Md., who is a very worthy citisn. who had a farm a short distance out 111 tne countrv, which he leased to a tenant, the landlord to get two-fifths of the crops. When the crop was saved, the tenant saddled 111s horse aud took the laudl tni's share to him tied up in a handkerchief, who, upon seeing the bundle, asked what was (here. "Your shareol wheat," said the tenant Ljnd lord My whutf tenant lour sha.e of the wheat. Landlord Take it baek ! take it back ! And next year, if yououiy have five grains, bring them in a wagon j but never come again on ho- scbacu. There is not a single member of a sin gle church, male or female, young or old, rich or poor, but should be engaged in personal efforts for the conversion of souls. . Our army inay as rationally leave the battle to be fought by the officers alone as the Church leave the conversion of the world to the ministers of the Gos pel. Indeed, it is a fundamental error to consider it a mere n.ini.-terial worlc. The New York Exjness says : ''The types are compelled to make many awk ward mistakes, but none more awkward th in that which made us say that Olive Loan had "married her uncle,"when we had written 'sprained her anicle. ' For tunately it did no: get out before the pub c," It is related that the Rev. Dr. Samuel West, of New Bedford, onw reduced a refractory choir in the following way: It having oeen rumored that they would not sing a note on the next Sabbath, he com menced morning worship by giving out the hymn, "Come ye that love the Lord." After reading it through, he looked up very eiuphut'u-ully at the choir, and siud : "You wi:l begin at the second ver-c : "Let teose retime to iiiir. 110 ever knew our Uvi." An old bachelor says that we are safe from ever having a woman for President becau -e not one of the sex would ever confess to being over thirty five, which is the age pix'sciibed by the Constitution a- the youngest point at which any man is eligible to tha' office. Never hold anybody by the button r by the han-1, in irdr to le h-:od out ; s'.n-, if-M?oM are 1 mi willing t h-ryMi, you hnd ' much better hold your tongue than theui. i A female society in Iowa prnpo-en to in- I timidate men to discontinue the haL t -1 waxing moustaches. The next commencement ff the Uni versity of Michigan will be its quarter centennial, and tbe boys are deter mined to have a big time over it and out of it. It is advertised that "an old fashioned gill" can be had at all the respectable book stores, price $1.50. Unmarried men should invest A lady once said to her "sister, "I won der, my dear, you have never made a match. I think you want the brim stone." To which she replied: "No, not the brini-tonj only the Spntk." There are two' eventful periods in the life of a woman one, when she wonders whom she will have, and the other when she wonders who will have her. In Queen Victoria's crown there are 1,363 brilliant diamonds, 1,273 ro-e d:a monds, and 147 table diamonds, 1 large ruby, 19 sapphires, 11 emeralds, 4 small rubies and 277 pearls a total of 2, 1 86 precious stones. Rhode Island has inaugurated the clam bake season of 1870. J An ex-devil to a country printing office was questioned as to the duties of a "printer's devil." He replied: "To bring in clean water, to carry out dirty water, to steal wood, lie, anJ numerous other articles." A Richmond paper, calling attention to some improved s. otted pigs bred thre says: "Our maxim shonid be to en courage our own people in preference to all others." The Postmaster General has arranged with the Cunnard and Iriinan lin-is to convey mails hereafter four times weekly. The Boston Pcsr believes that had An drew Johnson left hi post for trouting excursions, he wou'd have been im peached on the sole giound of the im morality of anc'ing, and a special com mittee would have been raised to inter cept the lines he dropped, to discover if there was not treason at their ends. The railway comprnies of the country are reported to be watching with some intere-t the experiment of the en p'oy ment of Chinese labor by the Union Pi cihe Railroad; and the success of that company will b the signal for the intro duction of "John" to the employ of the railroads all over the country. At a collection made at a charity fair held in , a lady offered the plate to a rich man well known for his stinginess. "I have nothing," was his curt reply. "Then take something, sir," she an swered ; "you know I am begging for the poor." C. A. Davis, Berkley, Mass.. makes nest eggs from real ones as follows : "A sufficiently large opening is made to allow the shell to be emptied of its contents. Master of Pans is thn mixed with water to the consistency of cream, and the shells filled with the mix ture, which hardens in a short time. The result is a nest egg. perfect in shape ami color, and still serviceable if the shell gets broken off." The theory that the image of the last object looked upon is retained upon the retina of the eye of a deal animal has been recently tested in Germany. The eyes of thirty different animals killed for the purpose were subjected for examin ation, but in no ea-e was there any evi dence discovered to support the theory. Rod Cloud remarked to Secretary Cox: I want to sit as I sit where the sun sets, but it is evident trom the posture he immediately assumed that he wanted to sit where the hen sets. There is a tide in the affairs of men which taken at its fl,od leads 011 to for tune. A Massachusetts man. who for some months sold a putent medicine, has just in the nick of time turned under taker. A Chinaman and a Jew had occasion to dispute on some matter of trade So help inir gracious 1" said the Jew, "I have not seen so great a ra-hkal a-h vnt vou ih : lo which tha Lhiuaui:n re joined with such trenchent force a to close the co loqny : Oh ! you nogood-ee man! you kill American man s Jo h! A Texas man, who ha heard that he is the rightlul heir to any nntnler of million noun Is and the title of Duke m Germany, announces that he cares noth ing about the title, as he would not give uo the title of an A 1 erican citizen and the pride- of leing a Txau for ail the Dukedoms in Germany ; but he is going after the money. The question of a pingle capital in New Hampshire mn-t be settled before many yean, and if Hartford keeps open its generous offer of a site and $50-:), 000 for a building, its ambition Ituay j'et be gratified. The students of the Agricultural Col lege ot lipxington, Kv.. have received from the Secretary of War a new mili tary outfit Onoe upon a time, durin? a debate in the United States House of Representa tives, on a bill for inTcaing he number of hospitals, one of theeastern members arose and observed: "Mr. Speaker My opinion is that the ginerality of man kind in gineral, are disposed to take ad vantage of the g r.erality of mankind, in gineral." "Sit down, sit down." whis pered a colleague who sat near him ; j-nu are coming out at the same hole you went in at." At the annual meeting of the State Di-ptal Society in Bo ton on Thursda - a doctor explained a cae of his where he had extracted an ulcerated tooth, denned it of ul emus matter and restored it to the jaw. where it is n w in use. a per fectly sound too'h. The patient was present and verified the account. Men, if they ain't too lazy, liv some times till they are 80. and destroy the time a good deal as follows : the fut 30 yenrs they spend throwing stuns at a mark ; the second 30 they spend exam ining the mark tew see whare the stuns hit, and the remainder is divided ;n cus s'ng the 8tun-throwingbizzitiessand nus sin the rumatiz. This setting down and folding our arms and wai in for something to turn u:, iz ju-t about as rich a speculation sz going ut inro a 400 acre lot, setting down on a shrp stone with a pail between our knees, and waiting for a eow to back up and be milked. Jsh liiO'uigs. The Loss of Life, says: "More quar rels arise between brothers, between Ms ters, between hired girls, between chool girls, between clerks in stores, between apprentices, berween hired men, between husbands and wives, owing to electrical changes through which their systems go by lodging together, night after night, under the same bed clothes, than by any other di-turbing cau.-e. There is nothing that wiil so derange the nervous system of a pcr?on who is eliminative in nervous force as to lie all night in bed with a person who is absorbent in nerv ou j force. . J.-d lo. the cnpitnl of Jpsn. i.-. said to be th lrge-f an ! imst pi.uu ; city in the world, having a mil ion Jw?!!ing and five mibions pu?:ion. Many of its street? are twenty-two. English miles long. An "Wgrint gold moun' -set o! f.il-e , - h w v 1 he prize in a ralUe at a ladies fair in Toledo. The British public are beginning to give up all hope th-it the famous Afri can explorer, Dr. Livingstone, i. aiuon the living. It is .. long time since any tidings have been heard , of him, and these have been quite vague and un-at isfactory. Unless detained by long siek n-ss, or as a prisoner to some savagt trde, he is probably dead. A British relief expedition has been started fron Zanzibar to make a seaieh for him. an--find him, living or dead. This search will also settle the important question. Livingstone in his last letter thought hf bad solved the point of the highest sources of the river Nile. The return of the expedition will be waited for with great interest. A book in two par's, entitled "The Way to Glory aud the Road to destruc tion, is shortly to be published, the first part is descriptive of a visit to New lork, and the second, a trip to Chicago. We recently heard a strong minded lady say, that she would risk her hojie o heaven on the question ot suffrage beirg granted to woman throughout the United States in less than three years. Wonder what the prospects of the inhabitants ot the other place are . While a lot of workmen were excavating a foundation for a freight depot in Sa vannah, la -t Saturday, they came acro-s a lot of bones, two one dollar silver ueces, and five pam b quarters, bear ing date from 1754 to 1776. Girls would do well when they are married to burn up all their o.d love let ters. A gentleman found a letter a I dressed to his wife, by some former ad mirer, alter he had been married to her two year-, and was so provoked at the torn, of the letter that he immediately made apohcitiou tor a divorce. Daniel Me Farlaiid applied to Jame- Fisk. Jr., for a free pa-s over the E.ie road. Fisk was somewhat puzzled to under-tand what Mr. McFarland s claim to a free puss were, unless they were to be found in the developments of the late mu.der trial, and respectfully de c.ined to extend the desired gratuity ; one ot the orheers ot the road suggest ing, as the interview closed, that assas sination was a new ground for claiming tbe honor ot a railroad pass. fjh'imlerxs Journal gives this illustra tion of the power ot Ind a rubber to deaden sound: "We once visited a fac toiy where rome forty or fifty copper smiths were at work iu a shop above oti- heads; but. what was remarkable, scarce ly a sound of their noisy hammers couit: be heard. On going up stairs we saw the explanation. ' .Each leg of even bench rest d 011 a cu-hion made of In Ik. rubber cuttings. This completely dead ened the sound." There are illegitimate calling". Thas of a gambler is no better than that of the "gentlnnian of the road." Tht gambler is, under the most favorable cir cuiu: lances, a very suspicious and doubt ful character. No business man pos . sessed ot capital, would be willing to go surity for him. for any considerable sum, or length of time. A calling, in orde: to be legitimate, must be useful to soci ety. And of .-uch. there are enough to give profitable employment to even idler in Christendom. True labor builds up and em iches communitiesand nations. Idleness and illegitimate avocations im poverish and degrade. Thoreau says: "It is a curious fact that if a man is lost in the woods, an l continues walking, he will invariably go round in a circle, con tantly veering to the left hand. It is because the right side of every human being (except in the case of left-handed people) is more de veloped than the left. Consequently th muscles on that side are strongest, and ten ! gradually to throw the body round, unless the aim is directed to some pa. ticular point. Rev. Mr. Deniotest is under trial by the General Synod of the Reformed Church, at Newaik, N. J., on a charge of "preaching dry and uninteresting ser mons." The Ohio State Penitentiary ha a prisoner called the '"irrepressible horse thief," who has spent seventeen years in prison. The only prisoner in t'-e Nantucket jail notifies the authorities thit if they don't fix up that jail .-o that the sheep can't get in to bother him. he will be bloved if he will stay in there. "I can't speak in public ; never done such a thing iu all my life," said a chap the other night at a public meeting, who had been called upon to hold forth : ''but if anybody in the crowd wiil speak for me, 1 11 hold his hat!" The largest nugget ever found in Gipp's Land, says the Times, wasdepos ited in the Hank of Victoria, early in February. The nugget weighed 43 ozs, 3 dwts., and was pure gold of good qual ity. The finder was a man named Thorn ton. who was on a "hatting" tour; and the locality of the find was Blink Bonny creek, near Maximilian creek, Freestone. The discovery was quite accidental, as Thornton had no expectation of finding gold wh're the nugget turned up, and only struck his pick into the ground to ascertain the nature ot the sod. The Fond du Lac (Wis.) Common' tce-i'th describes a welding which it ed itor attended at O-hkosh. It says : "Duiingthe ceremony, the bride and bridegroom took each other about the waist and swapped gum !" The attendance at the Ritualist churches in New York is caid to be on the decrea-e. The London Jic-ih Chronicle urges the concurrence of the Jews in the re vision of the Bible. Dr. Cunmiings' favorite description of the I'ope is "thnt respectable but delu ded old gentleman." The lands adjoining the Suez Canal have been ordered sold by the . Viceroy of Fg.vpt, to the estimated value ol 4, OOO.oYk) sterling, the proceeds to be di vided betwer 11 the Viceroy and the ca nal company. In Idaho refinemement is so little known that young ladies clean their teeth with corn-cobs. Twenty one thousand emigrants, mainiy Irih, left Liveqool during the month of 3. ay, for America, and nine tenths thereof going to the port of New York. . Ico made by the artificial process in San Antonio, Texas, sells at two cents a pound, and to stockholders at a cent and a half. An Iri-hman. eating his first green corn, handed the cob to the waiter, and asked, "Will ye's plaze put some more banes on me stick." The Queen of Prussia had the other day a stroke of ajHp!exj Her physi cians have informed her that her days are numbered. There are 150 a.ssist-tnt mar-hal em ployed in taking the cen Usof New York city. The Yale "ophs" lately stole all the freshmen's new "stovepipe" hats. Two young ladies belonging to influen tial families iu Hartford, are under aurgi-c-J trvHtm-nt for cramped and distorted feet, cnu-ed by wearing the prevailing tyle of high heeied boots. The uuide at N'agra Fails f-ays that women show ino. e nerve and firmnwss thin Mien iu vi-iting the. "Cave of the Winds." GREAT kUSII! LARGE CROWDS ! ! Everybody, and more too, are roinr to D. SCHNASSE & CO, - To buy their 'Stirling; ctiaca. Sum mer GOocl AT .N 'EW YORK 'STORE- - The largest and most complete STOCK OF ORES f GOODS Are now on exhibition at the New York Store, at greatly reduced prices. We call particular attention to our new ntylea of UltESS-tJOODs PRINTS, LELAINS, i.lNliH MS. BROWN SHEETING. HLEAi-HED COTTONS, BAL-VlORAL-s. CARPETS CLARK'S EV IHRE'D. COTTON YA S UOOIS AND SHOES of all kinds and prices to suit our numerous customers. large stock of UROP RIES. HARDWARE. QI EKNSW ARK, WOODEN-WARE. ;L',s5'vark, YANKEE NOTIONS, HATS Nl) CAPS. W hnv n rir- -f .t-k f. ih roVbrn'er! GAPDM CITY f5l fPPrP PL-5W STUBBLE iff BRFAKINJ . PLOWS and all uLu- OIKTivAJORS. P-S. SEEOERS. Hv ravfs. &.C i 'lattsmouth. I ebruary, 10th, 1870. tf. D. SCHNASSE & CO. DEALERS IX Clothing. Gents' BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S CLOTHING, Hats & Caps, Boots 8c Shoes, BLANKETS, RUBBER GOODS, TRUNKS, VALISES, ETC Alum Street, Second Du ir East of Court House Plattsmouth, Neb. BRANCH HOUSE : Broadway, Council Bluffs, Iowa. If You CHOICE Call JVtcrc You Can Si ltd Illrom !2000!bs Shoulders, I . . OOlbs Sugai Cured Hams, I8000;bs Sides Wl ichhewill S I'LL at Reasonable figure. Also on Irnd a I'ull.nd Wei Selected Stock of lKY (OUD, aid Gi.O CL'jUIS, Which he oifers to the public AT COST- d5"'! hose k nowing themselvt's indebted to me will please Call and Settle the ame. JOsUIMI MI Kit pril'.thdaw3m- - Rock Bluffs B. & EU3. (R One door west of PLATTSMOUTH, II A ni0LlSilLE A LARGE Dry Goods, Groceries, Oothine, FURNISHING GOODs, HATS, CAPS, BOOTS, SHOES and Provisions. HIGHEST MARKET PRICE PAID FOll ALL Kinds of Country Produce. t3o!i:i JFitzgerald. Plattsmouth, Nebraska, August 5th, 1869. BUY YOUR LUMBBB OF D. W,. LEWIS CO., Wholesale and Retail Dealers in PINE LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES, SASH, DOORS, &C. Til opposite the Bonner Stnbles. and directly in the rear nf the Court TToue- H repectfu!y invite all partie propiiiff to bai'-i or consume lumber, to call and examine our stock. rituB.vitL.kt JLfe li, lb70. tnayl&it F. D. LEHNHOFF. TH Furnis hing Go cds, Want BACOW, On R, ST the Herald Office. - NEBRASKA. 3 AT MSB EETML STOCK OF ORE U"nnier' Pil remedy h never fitile l r"T sven in one ca.ie, to euro tin- very wurst en- , ' Biin'l Iteming or llle.i pili-d Ibor e n hr . Miltcted hiul l immciluit-l rv II on their dr u " mil irrt VV'.ir er'i" Pile T-me.ty. Iti-'.Ji prea-ly for the 1'ileM. uuil in nu: lecromniei,.,.. I to cure any rhT ili-f.i.'e. Ii iu, cur-t n . ., rue o over thirty year n. u .;n. Tri,.,, ( .. ' Dollar. Kor g.ile by (lrupi.t. i-v-.,j wborc. Warner' LP Toir.'! U prepare-' r Hro-ly lor 1'y-nenties n n. I t!i uft. riiiic u mthituiil CoMivem it t - :i .-iij'it stiinii! . ,i ' oniriiii.l n oplefi'ii'l aipi.ir; it tn-ui;:' '. .he "toniuch an-1 re.-it'r- ! 'In- ilig'-Mivc "--" n th-ir heul'Uy rtnte. Vv'i .1.. mm-vo'u an I peptic peronH h.'il I artier lyMi. , iiinic. lor .!! bydr..,.it... riceOnu ix. 1 .1 WnrnerVCoiik'h IJiiIshui W lim ing, ind ezpeetor itiujr. 1 (;. i xir.i. r.iinary p..V. possesses in inline Witti ly ruli-iving, an'i ovf illy euriiifc. ilt; im-t ..liviiui'o om.-oh ,',f 'Jolils, Sore 'Ihrout. Jiiom iiitiM, J 11tlucr17.fi i arrli. hiiarxciie, .-ttiii..i u.nl l'uniuiiii'tM.u iluiost incredible. o rui.; in tho rc'ie ;er ain iw etleetn in all ihe ul.ove ese . tfeetion of the tlirn.it mid Iuiik. that lln u - r )l uhyfieian nre daily pre -. r i!.inj it, 1 ,' uIm11 Hy lh it is tlu iuot healing nn l ertoraliiifc medicine known. Ono lin.-e ijiw' iQordR reiit-f, and in iii.tt c:iii i ng I . feels a eure. Sold ly il rttsiri in, in lartr- 1 . ., Price One liolliir. Ii i yeur own t'i 11 t it . till cough and uf.cr. The l!a'i..um will -me ' . . , w8ic fir ,in0 1IH The great Hlo..l Purifier un l Delieiou-i I'tH1 Aurmr's main i:w or W ine of I. if. ,,m.. roin any pui.-"'in:i-i 'i.-i.u- nupuritiei' bi 11 1 nepi.red tor thofe vrh-. nqir Mnuiil;e i . 11 1 lepiendid appetizer md ic, and lb lu , .hmtf in the world tor puriryi,, the blo.p-l ibe ii!ot.t iicas 1 nt lii.i iicii-i.. 11 article ., -i ' i, ere i t. the puolic, far i.perir t .n.ui, .rhi ky wine, uilier.- ,raii othcranino ii". aiore he.ii'.hy, an l cheaper. IJoih mnl" 11. ,t ,," uale. y utg or old, can take tin1 Win 1,1. ,. ii is. iu l.i-t. .- life p. -ocrver, ihose .i 'i.i ,- to enjoy k'.,d lienltli pful a free flu n- I: .. 'j 'pirilK. nill do well to take tli Wi ( Il in di.rerent from anything ever bet'i-re in u : It it Hold tiy di tieirit" : ui.-'i af ull re-" -v.uilc 00118. Price One iollnr, i'l i; urt Imitlc. JEiMtiCtift&Ofjtec Warn' r' F'limeninropuc i- tlie only n,tn V Known to e.e iliu V lntef. (it will euro 11 i ery -.; Where i- thetiiuily in which iliim.. portant luedicin-- i- not wanted ? Moiner- i;..: is the preiiteft iile.-Kir.tc ever itlered you 11 11 i u hnuid immediately proeuie it. It in u-Iyo . urc eure for rein tie Irrctrularities. and inay be .i ; peuded upou in every itthe where the inoi;t: ly tT-w has leen olisti ncted throi-n cold or dixeH.'e. l5old by drutrcipt". Price ( ine loli,ir. Or k u: Iiv mail on reeeipt of One Dollar nnd a Qjurur. UicB 619 .Slate Street. ChiciiKo, Ills. J. M. lliM iiMAN, Agent. pri2wly2amdly l'Utt,moutU, Iib. Weeping lVatcr iTIilN Farmerti, go where you can jet the bet Flonr. tnd the most ot it. 35 POUNDS OF XXX FLCUR AMD 1-2 roi:.us .f mi4 tiven in exchnee for rood w We are aIo "loitiK Kris , and, with nor increased taviliti. (eel a'Htired that we cm jir. Ike bet and uiont Fluur ol any in the irtutc. SATISFACTION t"ARANTLLl. Produce Bought and ScM BtOBEST MARKET tleert f'linton RAILROAD LANDS FO II 9S.1L.JE : The Burlington & Mo. Rier R. R. Co. in Nebraska .now orrr.K PRE-EMaoTI0N rights To their Landn in Ttfinre 6. 7. . J JO. I!, 13it l I . Ea-t of tl.o 0:h Priuciuil Meri'Uan, in No bra .ska. On Ten Years Credit! Only six per cent interest on the valuation i-i tequired for the firpt jn.'r; the h.une for t'ni second, and then, on and after the th'.-d yur, only one-ninth of the principal and de rc.'ifi.iii interest ! payable Hnnutilly. i wtNTY HtJi CE.Ml WILL BE DELUCTED From our Ten Years Credit price, at the oj)tin 01 the buyer, if he pay 11 in full, and ten portent, int' rent within one -ir from date 01 ,urrh;t and hin pre-emption " vuicut w ill bv allowed in Kuitlemeot. On these Generous Terms At low prioe. rnnging f'om ! to fc.T. P. 7, H10 111, st, ii:'.. avera'inir ab' SIGHT DOLLARS PEK ACKE, a.i per finality and local udvunliiKen. Innual productiostM will piy tor laml. Mldrkin I, and Anrplt Improve-in-ii l - .TZiirii ivituiii the limit of (lie Ten Inr 4 'red it O.reied. Facts to be Considered. itot acre K. H. La nus at 17 each, 11 1 SH.Toon ii) yearn credit ato percent., anl will com. in r.i.-y annual pay nienta. the total 8uin of. ) 81,822 W And lo acrec ot School Lan li, at S. the lowtst price, and frequently fid at auction for . IU and i'i d'.IIaru,.oii lu y earn, at lo per cent. ) interest, cosu j $2,2)0 (C Making a differen'.c in favor of Hail . road 1 nils ol . C fVi fiutfora fair eouiparixon tho average price at w hieh School La ioln have been nol i, aboul i I coinp.ir"il wit.h the averno price of our Pvhil ro"d lands. Take Jof example tlie averago price of fl0.53 per ace. at which the State School Lands have oeen sold, af per report ol Slate Auditor u Land Comuii-ioner of the Slate, tor tl. a fiscal year ending N' v. .'f'lh, '.. and 1 ') acres ct at liin price 111 ten year at ten per cent. Interest the otol rum of. thi.Wj W Deduct roro thin the t'lial timt of l'VJ acres of 0. 31. K. R. Linds. at cur a vtrae Lond Credit prnse of i'ny.i t per acre, on years crmi it at 0 per cent. nt ret vit And the ditferenee on a ouart'.r auc tion in tavor of r.ail-ojj Lhn in i. tl. 139 V Thi? eomparifon is not made to prove tl..v the School Land have been old too Ijiifb. but ' prove tht the law of this Slate nun J.een riititir '. by actual and numerous fri at auction, 0n r the minimum pritf Jixrd, viz : Sovon (loli i' er acre; and the average valuation of the ii. it M K. K. Lijnds is ratified by :he fame intoiligcnt and practical verdict. Hail road Landa have ato '.her a Ivanl .c-- in the fact, that a buyer can cho .e out of eiLf n etion.n in aTown.-hiji.inHtead of b'-ii,j .-ouhoci to only two School cccioijH. Our Long or Tea Vt-uo (."relit pric rsrire from 4 to 3. . 7, H. , 10. Il anJ -; l.il irs generally, and averago Hio.'&i per aer . Applieation tor land can fx- made to : Fl'LLEK. W I LLSIE A 11 A U IL A hla- I ' S. J. HOWELL, at Uecpii. Water. Cs.--. Co.. Ktbr.-ka. V. C. I'TLEY. at Kursery IMI. Otoe Co.. Neb. COVKLL. CALIIOLN K tKOXTON. at :'v traka City, eb. B.A-. M. II. K.CO.'S LAND OFFICE, at Liu coin, Neb. or at It. R. LAND OFFICE in PIattraoiith. iIX. S.liAKKIS. Land Comm lf loner B. 1 LOTS KOR SALI5 LOTS FOR SALK LOTS FOft S Llt INQUIRE OF , , L lilLLIM.S. Cisterns Built and Reck Vorfc. Done. - THEntjderfi(rncd if prepared to takncontrn: t. for buiblins: Cisterns and furniihiiiK ni"t ee?ftiry material, also to do any 1111 1 all kind- ot Kock worn, by contract, and furni-h all tLa'r ial'for n.iQie. I have a lew acrcrof choice laml f rrc?: er."' and ereral fine ints forxale or raainaiie lerto -4dtf .HSKPJi LEASLtV..