II: - HEBRASKAMDVERTISER rrUEll ITIT TECMDAT BT " GEO. -W. HILL & co,; RATESOF ADVERTISING. 0t si-iT9(te! Ht9er!::;T5t!frt:? ach aiiitional insertion iaiiaeii cardMix liass cil3icijtar Cat eolama one year. . - . : ', One half counjQ cue year Cat fitJrtM eoJuiasoc jtzt " . . Oaa eighth e&Iusiawis jr -! On olumniX month! 1 I t JO I j : (9 IS 13 () 21 Ci 13 CI 33 CI 21 C5 li t) :o cs 2t 15 t 19 C 6 C u Trtiser Block, Ualn S't Between Ut 2d. One balfcoiuan six jaoathi Oaa fourth column six month i One eighth eclama iii month One column three month Oae half column a tix cic&il One fourth co'.KTnnthree most. Ona eighth coluxn three contfcf aa TERMSl Announcins candidates for . AlltransieotaJvertLcnit EicjifcfUia ai- fubacriptioo, must inariably, be paid inAdranee ranee. . Yearly adTertisemezte qnarterlr jn ..nzse. ii ftf JiH. Rk and Carl rric-jcr, dona ia Book Work, and Plain and Fancy Jofc Work, LIBERTY AND UNION, ONE AND INSEPARABLE NOW AND FOREVER;". Id the bett (trie, and on abort notice. the best style on ehort notice areaonablv tenet VOL. IX. BROWNVILLE, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1865, NO. 28, f 1 6 2 -ma N m - 1 V v J 1 T : BUSINESS CARDS. JAMES MEOFOUD, CABINET - MAKER AND XJiiclertalier. Corner 2nd and Main Streets, BBO W NVI3jE, K". T. t. rreparcd to doall kind of work in bis line on lit notice and reasonable tcrme. 21-Pin BiflS'G HOUSE! ' BY 'FRED. AUGUST, JIAITX, BET. FIBST AND SECOND STS. 0vter., Cakes, Pies, CKiea. GinKer Bread, etc. 4c ' .iideRcripti'.nscouhtautly on band. GOOD XKALa served in the Lett style and onfbort notice. Also a Urge assortment of Jvlacco, Cigars, Xutl. Candies, Canned Fruit, Oysters, Sorp, Crackers, Raisens, Cur- -ranis, and a supply of G0 FECTIOSARIEg. II. C. TI1URMAN, laiHiiisiGii, BROWXriLLE, XEBRASKA. vol9-n2-Iy-rd C. W. WHEELER, CABINET-MAKER CARPENTER. Earing or UP pcmant.utly on 3Zixx Stroot, OnedooraU.v' .; l5r.lt ;t..r.r XJlotbing Store, ia prepared t d-.Jl kir.ds f vrcrk in hi line in the A Uri and btylc. 1'aiti. ubraUrniionegifen to ToracU. Tg-cU6uip'd RICHARD COLLINS, fflML S WOO. h!ti itttit t ran nT?TimTnm Address LroTniille or Pern, Net?. 18 tf ' 1 "SnTcHIS IKE BATES KI3r? I.OI IS WALDTFR, Irat'hld ) :t j ct.ii viy toperlorm nil work,par ta:DJti) to I u.-ini t. ll -oie hcJ citjn iiKint.itg.lay.insr.aud paper bang mg,wt hhvrt noli.--, and the uiott approved it?le. I'prjincajh. Give hiia arail. Shop on Mia Street, oas-t of Atkin&on'a Clotb iu Sture. BrownTili, April 7, ly. . B. C. HABE'S SKY LIGHT GALLERY - It tbe place to net your Picture. He 1 prepared to take aU kind of Picture lrje sueu x-uoiograpna, Melainotrnes. k. Be keep on band a 1rcM-select-t stock of Albnma and Photogarpb goodn. The new Gallery ta north aide of main Street ppo Joha A. Poun't Store. Persons will do well to call aoon, before getting work done eUewbere. Particular paltia taken with cl;ilJruu, also in copying omPictnrea. Dark-rel, black, green, or piaiaa are otf colore for chil lren drese. CHAS. G. DORSEY. ATTORNEY AT LAW CKOWNVILLE, NEBRASKA. April I4tb,lS64. nS2v8yly CHOICE LIQUOBS. Wholesale and Retail Evan "Worthing, OF THE Union aioon BROWNVILLE, Hal jut Receired the largest and beat ateck ok lienors ani c,g,rsever oCerel In thia market, ana iil tbemaa tow aa any Houb in tbe Territory. WUITXCT'S BLOCIi, Slain, Street, Prownville Jh.,'64 J. F. MORRIS Sncceaaor to R. Brown S. Co. 4otU resiectanlly announce to tbe CltUena of ': ruDTine &nd Tieiuity, that be baa pnrcnaaed tbe ; large and Well Selected Stock 2.- 3-, fuEDlCIUES; PAIIJTS, f OT R. ROWJT A Cf. J Be atlnrsa k ii. . ..-. ... , -U(j v fuui" pruci.i iji wm seep ma eery Uidng usually kett in ; ' Fust Class Drug Store, , li determine! net to be undersold for cat,h. AT VTl pS AKD ORDFES CaBKPCLLT FILLFO UlTNEr BLOCK- MAIN STEEEV . 4B&0VJiYiLLE, NEBRASKA. U--ly aTtw-iB B by Bbseriber, livinf on tbe Rampel sTy Farm, joear Jern, Feb. W ISC5, one imTib vrW,dlrk Ui, tbout 18 b"dnigh, har d hOZ. " oa,llod ''! round. Urns ia hie feet,' m . " "frw ,Wt yra old. " H . J. n. .BFRN8. : TIIE.STOSY OF A flUNTER. About fifty years ago, I moved into the western part of New York, which was then nearly a wilderness, no set tlements having been made excepting in a few places on, the borders of the lake. I arrived iq the spring of the year, and commenced clearing the farm I now oc cupy. By the fall, Thad built a good log house and temporary stables for my cat tle had put into the ground ten acres of wheat, and looked forward to the en suing year for the reward of. my labors. My wife ac(J child (for I was married) were all my famil neighbors thore were none nearer than five or six miles, so that visiting or amusements were out of the question. You may therefore suppose that on the approach of a loDg northern winter I had ample time to gratify my love of hunting, for which I have always had a great fondness. Winter had set in early, ana all my, cares were confined to keeping a suffi. cient stock of wood on, hand for fuel which you may imagine was not difficult when the trees stood at my (Jor and taking care of the few cattle I was then owner of. Jt was one day, I think in the fore part ef IJecember, when having finished my morning's work, I took down my gun, the same that now stands in ihe bar, and told my wife that J would, on my return, please her with the sight of a fat deer. Deer are, even now, yery plenty in this part of the country, but then they were mucji more sp, so that there wag little merit or difficulty in achieving what Ifrad promtsed. J took, my departure about a north west course from my cabin, which led direct into the forest. The snow was about a fool deep, and the wind blowing; hard from the north, it drifted , much in the openings; yet this I thought was in my favor, as the noise made by the wind among the trees prevented the game from hearing my approach in ''still hun ting.' But I was mistaken in my cal culations, for I had travelled five or six miles from home, and had not got a shot at a single deer.though I had seen num bers of them, but they were always on the run and at too great a distance, and all the tracks I saw showed that they had scarcely walked during that day. I was then a young hunter, but I .have since learnt that this animal is always on. the move, and, generally runs throughout windy days, probably from the appre hension of Uger from wolves, which follow its scent through the snow. At length I arrived at a large cedar swamp, on the edge of which I was struck by the appearance of a large stub, twenty-five feet high, with its bark off. From its scratched surface", I had no doubt it was climed by racoons or mar lens, which probably had a den in it, as, from its appearjjnce.I judged it was hol low. The stub, at its base, might have been seven or eight feet through, but eight or ten feet higher up its size was much dimished, so bat I could grasp suf ficiently to assend it, and ascertain what was within. My gun ajid great" coat were deposited in a secure place, and, being an expert climber, I soon gained the top. As I anticipated, I found the stub was hollow, the aparture being about two and a half feet in diameter. The day. you will observe.Vvas dark and cloudy, and, looking down the hollow, I fancied I could see the bottom at no great distance; but having nothing to put in to ascertain its depth, I conclu ded I would try to touch the bottom with ray feet. I therefore placed myself in the hole, lowered myself gradually, ex pecting ?rery moment my feet would come in contact with some animal at the fool of the hollow; bat feeliDg nothing I unthinkingly continued letting myself down, until my head and hands and my vhole person were completely within the centre" of the stub. ' . At this moment, a sudden and strange fear came over me, I knew not for what cause, for Tarn not naturally timid, It seemed to aTect me with a sense of suf focation, such as is experienced in dreams under the nightmare. Render ed'desperate by my feelings, I made a violent attempt to extricate myself, when the edges .of .the wood to which I was holding .pn, treacherously gave way, and precipitated me to the bou.om of the hole, which I found extended to the lev el with th'e ground. 'I. cannot wholly ac count for it, but probably trom the treci position in which my body was necessa rily kept in so narrow a tube, and my landicg on a bed cf mess, driefl leavei, and other substances, I sustained little or no injury from so great a fall, nor were my clothes tut little deranged in my descent, notwithstanding the straitness of ihe passage, owing to the smoothness of the surface, from long use by the an imals ascending and descending to and from their den for a den I found it to be. ' After my fright, I had time to exam ine the interior all was dark, and put ting out my hands to feel my way, they came in contact with the cold nose of some beast, and then with the fur, which I immediately knew was that of a grown cub of young bear. Continuing to ex amine, I ascertained that there were three or four of those animals, which, ar oused by the noiae made in my descent, came round and smelt of me, uttering a moaning noise, taking me at first no doubt for their (lam; but, after a little examination, snuffling and snorting as if alarmtd, they quietly Retook themselves tqi their couches on the moss, and left me to my own troubled and gloomy re flections. I knew tiey were too young to do me any injury, but with that knowl edge came the dreadful pertainty that the mother, whose premises. I had so heedlessly invaded, was quite a different personage, and that my life would date but a short period after she arrived, as arive she certainly would, before many hours could pass over my head. The interior of the ,den became more visible after my eyes were accustomed to the darkness, and aided by a little light from the top, I discovered that the 4en was circular, and -on the ground was six feet in diameter, its circumference diminishing at the height of . seven or i?ht feet to a diameter of less than three, owing to the singular formation of the trunk, as I have before remarked. t - 4 - . . ft . All my attempts to react) the narrow part of the hollow, in the hopes of work ing my way out, as a chimneysweep might have done, if that had been prac ticable, were fruitless. My esape in this way was therefore impossible. To cut through the trunk a hole sufficient to let my body put, with a small pocket knife, the only one I had, would have been the work of weeks, and even months, as from the examinations I had made of Wh the exterion and interior, I knew that it'coould not be less than a foot thick. The knife was the only weapon I possessed, and one hug of my tremendous adversary woi'ld deprive me of tht power to use even so contemptible an impliment; and even I succeeded in killing the bear which was not' to be expected my case was equally hopeless for I should then only exchange a sud den death for one, if possible, even more horrid, a lingering one ofvfamine and thirstfor my tracts in the snow I knew were long sfnee covered by the drjf ts.and there was no possibility of my friends finding me, by searching in a wilderness of many miles in circuit. My situation was indeed hopeless and desperate. I thought of my cheerful home, my wife seated by the fire with our child in her arms, or prepairing our evening meal, looking out anxiously from time to time expecting my return for the shades of evening were fast ap proaching. These and many more such things rushed thro1 my mind, and which way soever they were turned, you may suppose they were teeming with- horror. At one time I had nearly determined to wreak ry feelings upon the cubs, by destroying them, but the wanton and useless cruelty of the act as they could be of no service to me then prevented me. Yes, I would be merciful. 'Oh! you know not how merciful one is, when he feels he would willingly himself be an object of mercy from others. Twonourshad probably passed, and to me two of tjje longest I ever experi enced, when suddenly the -little .light which had illumined the gloom of the den from above was gone. I looked up, and could no longer ' see the sky. ' My ears, which at that moment were pecu liarly sensitive, were assailed with a low growling noise, such as a bear makes on discovering an enemy nd preparing for an attack. At once I was aware tnat my fate was at band, as this the mother descending to her cubs, having, by her accute onrans of smelling, discovered thatkher den had been entered by some enemy. From the time I had ascertain ed ray true situation," I had opened ray knife, and hjld it ready in ray hand for te encounter, come wh,en it would. I now braced myself for a death grapple with my terrible antagonist, feverishly awaiting her descent. Peari always descend in the same manner they ascend trees, that is, their heads are always upward, -con sequently her mo'-t assailable, or rather her least formidable part, was opposed to me. A thought as quick as lightning' rushed through my mind, that escape was possi ble, and that the bearfurnish the means. No time copld be afforded, nor,wrs nec essary for deliberation. Just as she. had reached that part where the hollow wi dened, and by a'jump I could reach her I made a desperate spring, and cugJu hold firmly with both hands of the fur which covered her extremities, giving at the sanje lime a spream, which in this close den sounded a thousand times loud er than any human voice in the open air. The bear and she was a powerful one taken by surprise, and - unable to get at me and freightened too at e hide ous and appalling noise I made, scram bled for life up the hollow. But my weight, I found, was no small impedi ment to her; for when about half way up, I perceived sh began to lag, and notwithstanding my continued screaming at length came a dead stand, apparently not having strength to proceed. Know ing my life depended on her going on, I instaqtly let go witfr $e hand in which I held the knife, driving it into her fiesh, and redoubling the noise I had already made. The-pain and her fears gave her new strength, and by another effort she brought me once more to the light of day, at the top of the-stub; nor did she stop there to receive ray thanks for the benefit she had, conferred on me, but hastily descend to the ground, and made all speed for the swamp. I sat for some time on the stub out of breath, and har dly crediting the reality of . my miracu lous escape, fter giving thanks to that Providence which had so wonder fully preserved rae, I descended to the ground, found my coat and gun, where I had left thera,and reached, home. after a fatiguing walk through the woods, about none o'clock in .hs evening. Hodendobblers Little dame. Almost e?erybody has hear4 of Ifod endobbler.' surnamed 'Simon.' The veriest wag in Phrjatendorn. is the fellow possessing an undue porportion of Satan, which he himself 'casts out' at intervals to the utter discomfiture of his victims. In fact, he is embodiment of fun and deviltry. Being withal a ventriloquist of extraordinary power, he creates a deal of sport down 'at the Front,' where he fcas been engaged for some time in 'cook ing' up the war reports for a certain New York daily. Little cares Simon for the position of the party he intends to guy. High or low, rich or poor, he practices upon all ; the greater the number of stripes upon tbe sleeves of the officer, the more he delights in 'badgering' him His latest victim was Captain Biff, commanding the gunboat VV at tached to the Northern Atlantic Block ading Squadron. At the time of which I write orders were received from the Admiral to make a fecounoissance of "a. certain river, and if possible to dislodge a nest of 'gry backs' who had planted a battery upon the banks, and Simon, in search of 'chipa' accompanied the expe dition. The captain, being of Teutonic origin, is naturally fond of Gambrinos' favorite vanity, and sometimes by an excess pf the creamy beverage. get3 in that condj ti5n denominated breezy.' When in this morcl his 'sweet Qerr man accent' is peculiarly rich, and his round, chubby face glistens all over with good humor, except when he is crossed, which does dot often occur. It was thus on a certain evening late in the autumn of- 18j54,- that we slowly steamed along. The lastglimmering rays of the day go wre merrily dan cing on the surface of tbe rippled stream, and officers and men were all on deck, qujetly contemplating the beauty of the scene. Captain C.,of all that group, was the only one who appeared insensible to the lovely panorama -that greeted the sight. His eyes alone gave that vacant stare always observable in a maudlin state.and Simon, 'spotting' the situation of the un suspecting skipper, at once commenced his 'little game,' as he terms it. With a face as long as . the moral lasy, he gazed out upon the waters, and pres ently a voice, apparently' from the shore was wafted towards the vessel. 'Hallo! Captain Bijf.! what the devil are you doing up here V - t-Vat ish dat ?' asked the captain, tur ning to the executive officer. Some one hailing you from the shore, sir ! replied the Lieutenant. 'Vat ish dat vot you vant ? sung out the Captain. ' None pf your business 1 Vhat ish your (hie) nsme ! 'Oh, you know me well j my name is Slocura !' (Solto voice)-Shlogum ! Shlogum ! I don't know you Shlogum !' 'You lie, you old 'scampi you once cheated me in a horse trade !' (Sotto voice) 'Vhat ish it he means? I never sold Shlogum a (hie) a horse.- i-ay you Shlogum ! you're a liar ash hell 1 I never sold you von (hie) horse, nor von Shakass, nor von noding. I don't know you, nor I don't vant to (hie) know you ' 'None of your nonsence, old sweitzer kase ! you've drank, many a glass of beer at my expence,' and you know it !' Go to ter tuyfel, Shlogum? I never drinks (hie) beer mit yo. I tell you I don't know, you unt I dinks you don't know me!' 'why, you old pot-bellied, lagar soak ed, limburger-lined leather-headed son of a sea-cook, I know you well. You're drunk as blazes now, and de d d to you!' At this juncture the officer of the day stepped up and thus accosted the now ex asperated s kipper : , 'Shall I send a boat ashore, sir, with a file of marines, to catch that impuden scoundrel?' Never mind, Lefdenant, I dinks J (flic) let Jiira go to h 11, der tevelish stufflefunk knows me, after alj, py dam!' With this the Captain staggered into the cabin giving vent to some of the most jaw-breaking oathes ever found ia Qer man vocabulary, and his mutterings were indistinctly heard for some time after, a a . . a snore, loud and sonorous, proclaimed that he had entered the land of dreams, and was perhaps continuing his dialogue with that archfiend," 'Shlogum.' The shades of evening had closed arouna us star atter star peeped out from above, sparkling and twinkling at 1 m frlodendobbler' as though they too had enjoyed his 'little game," whilst Simon, apparently as unconscious or passing events as a stewed clam, retired quietly to the ward-room and absobutely smiled! hi did. Fhxla. Trans. The following specimen f a spread eagle lawyer's eloquence needs uo com ment : ''Gentlemen of the jury the Sprip tures saith, 'Thou shalt not kill;' Now, if you hang my client, you transgress the command as suck as grease, ana as j i-t . plump as a goose egg in a loafer's face. Gentlemen, murder js murder, whether committed by twelve jurymen or an hum ble individual like my client having killed a man; but is tnat anv leason whv vou houlddoso? No such thin?. Gentle- men; you may bring the prisoner in guilty; the hangman may do his duty ; but that will not exonerate you. No such thing. In it at case you will be murders. Who among you is prepared for brand of Cain to be stamped upon his brow to-day Who, freemen who in this land of liberty and light ? Gen tlemen, I will pledge my word not one of you has a bowje-knife or a pistol in his pocket. No, gentlemen, your pock ets are odoriferous with the perfumes of cigar-cases and tobacco. You can smoke the tobacco of rectitude in the pipe of a peaceful conscience ; but hang my un fortunate client, and the scaly alligators of remorse will gallop through the in ternal principal animal viscera,until the spinal vertebrae, of your anatomical construction-is turned into a railroad for the grim and gory goblins of despair. Gentlemen, beware ' of committing ? -Beware, I say," of medling with the eternal prerogative ! Gentlemen, I ad jure you, by the manumitted ghosts of temporal society, to do no murder. I adjure you by the name of woman, the mainspring, of the ticking-piece- of Time's theoretical transmigration, to do no murder ! I adjure you, for the -love you have for the esculent and coadi mental gusto of our car've pumkin, to do no murder ! I adjure you, by the stars et in the flying ensign of your emanci pated country I adjure you by the Amer ican eagle, that whipped the aniversal game-cock of creationnd nsw sits roos ting on the magnetic telegraph of Time's illustrious transmigration, to do no mur der ! And lastly gentlemen, if yon ev er expect free dogs not to"Vark at you if you ever expect to wear boots made of the Rocky Mountain buffalo and, to Him up all, if yon ever expect to be arty- thing but a set of sneaking, loafing, ras cally, cut 'throated, braided, small ends of humanity, whittled down Jo indis tinctibly, acquit my client, and save your country.' The prisoner was acquitted. Speech tj Preeldent LJncota. "Washington, March 17. A rebel flag, captured at Fort An derson by the 140th Indiana vpluntpers, was to-day presented to Governor Morton, of that State, in front of the National Hotel. A large crowed of people were in attendance. Governor Morton madea brief speech in which he congratulated his auditors on the speedy end of the rebellion, and concluded by introducing President Lin coln, whose purity and patriotism, he said, were, confessed fcy aU, even among the most virulent agitators. Applause.) His administration will be recognized as the most important eppch of history. It struck the death-blow to slavery ap plause, andtbuilt up the Republic with a power it had never before possessed. If Jie 4one nothing more than to put his name to the Emancipation Proclamation thatct alone would have made his name immoatai. Applause. The President addressed the assem blage substantially as follows : Fellow-citizens, it will be but a few words I shall undertake to say. I was born in Kentucky, raised in Indiana,and live in Illinois, and I am pow here, where it is my duty to be, to care equal ly for the good people of all The States. I am glad to see an Indiana regiment on this day able (a present this captured flag to the Governor of the Sfate of In diana. I am not disposed, in saying this, to make a distinction between States, for all have done equally well. There are but few views or aspects of this great war upon which I have not said or written something, whereby my own views might be made known. There is ene, the recent attempt cf our "erring brethren," as they are some times called, to employ tbe negro to fight for them. . J have neither written nor made a speech upon that subject, because that was their business, and not mine ; and if they had a wish upon the subject I had hot the power to introduce it or make it effective. sThe great question With them was, whether the pegro being put in the ar my will fight for them? I do not know, and therefore cannot decide. They ought to know better than we, and do know. J have in my lifetime heard a great many arguments why the negro ought to be a slave, but if they fight for those who would keep them in slavery, it will be a better argument than any I haye yet beard. - He who will fight for that ought to be a slave. They have concluded at last to take one out of fonr of the slaves and put them in the army, and that one out of four who will fight to keep the pters in slav ery, ought to be a slave himself unless he is killed in a fight. While I have often said that all men ought to be free, yet I would allow those colored persons to be slaves who want to be; and next to them, those white men who argue in favor of making other people slaves. I am in favor of giving an opportunity to such white men to try it on fir themselves, i - I will lay one thing with regard to the negro being employed to fight for them that I do know. I know that he cannot fight ant stay at home and make bread too, and as one is aboa; as impor tant as the other to them, I don't care which they do. I am rather ia favor of having them try them as soldiers. They lack one vote of doing that, and I wish I could send my vote over the river, so that I jnight cast it in favor of allowing the negro to fight. $at they could not fight and work both. .We must now see' th bottom pf the enemy's resources. They will stand out as long as they can, and if the negro will fight for them, they must allow himto fight. They have drawn; upon their last resources, and we can now see the bottom. I am glad to see the end so near at hand. I have said now more than I intended to, and wi 11 therefore bid you good-bye. The President then retired, while the crowd below saluted him with loud and hearty cheers, the band at the same time playing a lively tune. . An assessor in Buffalo has received the following letter from the Commis sioner of Internal Revenue, whosa ru ling are applleabta to all itctiosi:: ' Treasury department Office cf In ternal Revenue Washington, March 8. . . Sir: Complaints have teen madd la this office as to the manner ia which ia come returns Lave been rr.aia in many collection districts in the United States, and concerning yours amcrg ethers.. It t in' tuc pvnet ml tne assessor, andjt is also his duty, to require all persons wha may have filed afi!davit3 that they were not in possession of SGCO income fcr 1SC2 and 16G3-where he supposes the state. ment to be fraudulent to appear before him and explain or rectify their retard or affidavits. ' . ' 'Jt is reasopable that persons whet family expenses were over 82,000 per year must have a taxable income, and yet it is known that persens who Iuto lived at a rate requiring an expenditure of from S2.000 to S5.C00, have made affidavits that their incomes did net amount to $600 per year in the years re ferred to. All such returns are pre sumptively erroneous, and in many in stances are probably fraudulent. "Other persons engaged in trade, of various kinds have assumed their income to have been some certain sum, without taking an inventory. Others have made greater deductions than is allowed by law, such as expenses cf labor and ma chinery and new buildings. Where such returns are made under circumstances which 6how that there was a deliberate intent. to mislead the assessor," cr evade the payment cf this proper tax, they ought to be re-assessed by the assessor. For though a mere mistaken return after it has been examined, and the tax pail may not be re-examined, any fraudulent return may be inquired iutoatany time. No man pan fcepefit by his ostq wrong, and no time can cure what h void or voidable by reason of frud. When a taxpayer corses forward and makes a voluntary amendment cf his former return, with the statement - that he made an improper return under an honest misapprehension of the law, and you are satisfied that he was not incited to this course by fears cf detection,' you can receive his return if you are fully satisfied of its corrections, without the addition of any penalty. B it when epea investigation you find a person clearly guilty of having purposely made short returns, you should, if the return was made sipce July, 1S62, assess the hun? dred per cent penajty for fraud, and la addition should report te case to the collector for such action as he deems fit. :. ' "Very respectfully, JOSEPH LEWIS, commiscner. "O. F. Pre.brey,r Esq., Aisesict Twelfth District, Buffalo, N. Y." ' : : " Hogarth's Picture of the Red Sea Hogarth " was once applied to by a miserly old nobleman, to paint en his staircase a representation of the 'des truction of Pharaoh's hosts in the Red Sea. Jn attempting to fix upon the price, JIcgarthbecame quite dissatisfied. The miser was unwilling to give more 'han one half the real value of the pic tures. At last Hogarth, out of all pa tience, agreed to his patron's terms. Within a day or two the picture wai ready. The nobleman was surprised at such expedition, and immediately called to examine it. The canvas was pai;te4 pv er red. Zounds!' said the purchaser, 'what have pou here ? 1 ordered a scene cf Red Sea.' ' The Red Sea you have,' said Hogarth still smarting to haye his talents under. valued. . But where are the Israelites ?' They are aU gone over.' 'And where are the Egyptians?' ' 'They are all drowned.' The miser's confussioa could only bi equalled by the haste with which hf paid his bill. ' The biter was tit. ,4What is'the future state, my littl girl ?'tasjced a'clergyman. f New Mexico,' was the reply. 'No, no! I meant what is the future condition .of young men and women V . 'Why,' replied the girl hesitatingly 'I suppose they are to gel married.'. . Lard is being adulterated -wiih wttsr and starch. The yield of maple s-j?ar and raanli - a 1 molasses in the Northern States ii 3II? 000,000 gallons annually. . . T The terms for raising new military organization ia Pennsylvania has been . extended to march 1 1.