H THE ADVERTISER Published every Thursday morning THE ADVERTISER ADVERTISING KATES. I jnr CJIVJICJI & HAGKJSB, 1 BPACE. fas' 1.5 ll? I? 12 j ? ctiurek. Propnotors. 2 CJfer- Tfi f - jS.2 SO -i So j ! . - i - ' - 2-2 ? I office-No. 74 3IclMieroii's Block, up Stairs, Halt I nob.. 1.00IJL50 L50' 50 2 JO .X50 3.00? -1.C0 5.001 8.C0, B.O0'l,0C' co ia);i5oi?s.oo 3 8.00, ie.ct 13.00; o.oa OLOO One Inch. 3.. XS0 MOj 5.001 T.oohaoo hum! 15.00 5.00J 7.TO Two inches.. Three InchC3 Six Inches,. Twelve Inches. BltOWN VILLI-, AJiB"A3AA. lQ.WJliOO lfcC05.00 15,X) 1S.00I2R.00 HO.C0 Tonus, in Advance : Onecoluninll0. (.eoiaoiooi vwi3o.i4S.ooa-(wi 4 lcaoa Lecul advertisements atlpjalratesr One sqnaxc, (elht line of Acate space, or less.) first insertion flfliii each subseqnent Insertion, 0c jSSj-AH transcient advertisements mnst be paid for In advance. ' One'copy.onoyear.-. ... S3 00 -100 50 0tec . mo..".-.. One copy. tUrCC months "- ESTABLISHED 1856. BROWNTILLE, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JUKE 22, 1871. it r..1)ISG MATTER OX EVERY PAGE Oldest Paper in the State, VOL. 15 NO. 36. . OFHCIAIi PAPErv OF THE COUNTY, SOCIAL DIRECTORT. LODGES. ff..in Council No. 3, R. fc S. 31. irij ..it.Mi ivtinmimicauuun uiai. vttu.i ... "-1 M. '. -' . ..-. A . tv.,, in . .rti month. Immediately otter the Cbnpter MSk! J "" IiuKE, T. lo. L T. A. Cbeioii. J.ilI,- jiecoraer- .. ........I r'nmtitnndorvTvnlfilltTcm- ' Jj'&J Viiar No. :J.-Meets In Masonic Hall on the ,d Saturday nlRht In each rnonin. l !s. Km. C am. J.no..Dlakk. Recorder. R. W. Pub- 7TKrovuviHe Chnptcr No. 4. It. A. 31. Jy lH'uIar Communications Hrst Monday nicht -. . - !- .. . -r -l tr 1 ni.pi., 'I jiigitv. Jy -!V . r .x? llriu-l- iL K. JL X. J..bk.' -. ItAlT.ii' .cinnlia Valley Lodce No. 4 A. P. fc t ii. iteguiar uommunicaiioiis Lranuu . . . : ,.-i..t tilirlit In rnr-li mnntli. IjOOCC OI pjrjctJonever Saturday night. JonK Blakk, ' j, ji.r.i ..-..., --.j. Itrownvillo Ijodcc No. 5, I. O. O. F. I'jilar meetlnCT Tuesday evening ot each Ctk. J-bTKVKNVQN, N.G. iJ.O.CRQsa.Secy. CHURCHES. ?- lrc-l tcrinn Ch arch. -Servicer i each H33 Sul)batlintlit:n.in.,aiid7:3pp.in. Grayer Mrt'Ing Wednesday evenings, fcabbath fechool at io cl(ck p. m. J.'r. Bairi. Pastor. r2? sjih.'jjUi at HMO a. m.. and :M P-m. un- c.y Jniol at 2' . I), m. Prayer meeting xuursuuj excnlrg. J. W.'MAgTxy. Pastor. l-SVhrUV! C'hurcli EpNropal. -Corner fc.na bcV ai- -- ;- - ", ti'rst Sunday II .; ui.i"''"';"'"""'"-tr.iu t.. ' r .V h uc utn. fccain iree. G. It. DAVIS, Rector. . A.Aa "f .-. Vi nnrl A t. P&lI' streets. Services every Sabbath ex- .., t ra in encn iiiuinii, "....-., 1 'ickcfc '. m. Sunday School at 10 a. m. ivavcrMtingWeanesuayevning. x.a.a.wM0i, rr.rhrMian Charch, l.ondon.-DIvineser-Ii licjivcT Sabbath at II a. in., and In the i .ev-a-K. HIurj'N-Epixcopal Peru. Sen'Ice l-'Si ,, , , rv Miuday morning and evening. ' -- ' 3d at 3 o'clock p. in. liev. 1L C. Pai sun- Talbott. l'a- M. r.. (Hiurcb, London. Servlcesevcry other Sabbath. Rev. J. W. Mav.tix. Pastor. li VCXyi. n.C!mrrli, Pcru.-Servlces every Sab p37 tmt,. Hei.MAltTlN PitlTCUAgp. Pastor. 153PJI. K. Chnrch. Ncinnba City. Servfces every other Sabbath. R. Hcnoii. Pastor. CITY OPFICALS. KrtJ('jtjCoaneil. Meets the First Monday In K& eirh month. Mayor. F. A.Tisdel,Jr. Al draien, V. Lewis, F.E.Johnon,C.Neidhardt, 1 Plaster. Marshal, I). uapniDeii. H icker. Treasurer, J. W. Mlddleton, W T.lU'gtrs. Clerk. J. B Police Judge, MAILS. Wthcrn-Dally-vIarhclps: Departs at 8 a.m. A-t r at 12 p. in. -Autiu-rn-Dally via Phelps: Daparts at 8 a.m. Jr . at 3 p.m. .Northern ia rem .oMtiM-rn-Via Nemaha Tri-Weekly: Departs M aday, Wednesday and Saturday at 7 a.m. Ar t Ta'-K'dajsatfip.m. Wcttcrn-Vla Tecumseh to Beatrice Daily: l,!ar".t7a.iii. Arrives at b p.ni. Northern la Iindon lo Spring Creek eek 17 Dtjiarl-. Friday at 7a.ni. Arrives Saturday at i 1 'untlnvcstrrn Via Sherman to Table Rock n.k.v: Departs Monday at 7 a.m, Arrives Tues &. T at C p.m. 1 j-t Oilice 3Iurs from 7 a. m., to , ' p. m. Sun cu. s from 1" to 10', a. m. W. V. POLOCK, P. M. BUSINESS CARDS. ATTORNEYS. 11 i A inT fc NEWMAN, Attorneys and Coun i, : r at Ijiw. Urowiivllle. Neb. Oilice No. 70, Mi 1"j ron IJl(K-k, up stairs l?:;LXiU A ROGnilS. Attorneys and Counselors 1 at I w Will give diligent attention to any le- il ! i .:!es entrusted to their care. Oilice lit Court Untu'Uhis, Brownvllle, Neb. i'i UILI)N.AttorneyandCounselorat Law, a- 1 Krai Lstate Ascnt. Tocumseh, Johnson v.Ntb. TO'1S.t imOADY. Attorneys at Law and L . " itors .11 Chancery. Offlcc in District Court 'i, Urou nville. Neb. A T JL McLENNAN, Attorney a Law, Nebraska City. Neb. and Counselor T 4 HUMPHREY, Attorneys and Comelors l l a La.v. Pawnee Cltv. Pawnee Csunty. Neb. "V K (il.K, T. Attorneyat Law and Land Agent, - I: a rice, (. 'use County, Ncbriiska. PHYSICIANS. TfLNRY A. PAGE, (IjiteSurceon in U.S. Army) jx fi.ytcmn ana 5UKeln. .so. S9Maiu street. l.r n -i .ue. Nebraska. w..ii Ir J.Crane. OIIlcc over the Post Olfice, i-tt ( Y STEW VltT. M. D.. Physician and Sunceon, irl v ir -nvine, iseb. Ufilcei hours from 7 to 9 a.m. :an;lC'jto7Jt p. nu OflicehrlL a Lett's re. It" H.KIMJ;KI.IN.JLD..Physlc:anandPurgcon M . 'j the Ntlir.isita Eve and Ear Inlirmiry. . s.raa... -tnet. Brownville, Neb. Oilice hours Ir ia , .n. to C p. m. "IT '. T1ICRMAN. Pltyslcian and Surueon, No. r,A"''n trtet, I'.rownvillc.Neb. Oilice hours -r l C to 11 a.m. and lrom I to 4 p. m. fl" L. -J Titrws. Physician and Surgeon. OfTiee J a. ,n i nty Drug Store, No. 32 Main street, Brown i ', Nib. LAND AGENTS. P COO WELL. R.-al Estate and Tax Pitvinc -V. a eiit. Oilice in CocsaeU Block, corner First u:u v ar icatreeto. Will give nrouu attention to c sv- of R-al iMate and tiie l'ayinent of Taxes rr . i jdt the Nemaha Land District. 7tf "OI 'IARO V. HUGHES, Real Estate Acent and i 1V I.ir Pilhlti- nilirnln lrnntuiflirfl lnVlt'a I -r. tare store. Brownville, Neb. 'IlLTAM IL HOOVER, Real Estate and Tax img .geau Uiiice in iiLstnct Court Room, "--tfve r- mot attention to the sale of Real Es t i'i? 1jyci eat of Taxes throughout the Nemaha X--3 DLstnct. GRAIN DEALERS. MERCHANDISE. J IS McPHEIlSOS. Dealer la General Merch- -Ma.. i reet. Brownville. Neb. :r"", iwai m j-ti'neisoa jaiuea, .vo, oo 15-15J- 1? -- iIIN'- X ,t CO., Dmders in General Merch--- -, i o. t; Main street. Brownville, Neb. - UAM r. Dire. Dealer In General Merchan- t. X- t Jialn str.t. Brownville. Neb. Corn -. .v, iu.ituj .aiiu V.U1UIUIUIUU .Jiurtu- i"V -rl?. ''i0". Stoyes. Furniture. ttc.. alwavs on r w a t ttiQtiy I'roduce. NOTARIES. j .MJi'IGHT. Notary Public and Conveyancer, ..- - x - Mam street, second floor, Brownville, i- t v5cntfortliel'iuitable aud American Ton - ?surance companies. JUSTICES. Y MOimx, probate Xude and Justice of the J e 's2' OI!ice Court House Building, Browa- COUNTY SURVEYOR. TrUCS til LiiEUT. County Sur-eyor. Pos-tot; L ev;. t iiftoii, Nemaha County, Nebraska. stoilice SADDLERY, J I Kit. y R, Karnes. Bridles, Collars, Etc, Na ;aa'b.rect,BrowavilIe.Neb. Mendingdone . i.-r. v.lsfrj.-tinn Cisaranleed. HLACHSr-IITHS. t. A-g.th the times. T. s-t.9- 0IB0. Blacksmiths and Horss i-' a- .i"1 strict, between Main and Atlantic. t'Wtf'.?' Work done to order and tetisfce- BRIDGE BUILDING. A M;V noBISON. Boot and Shoe Maker, No. Ivonu' s,ret, Brownville, Nb. Has constant .1 JLi . a Ktri- assortment orGenfs, Ladv's, i r: and Children's Boots and Shoes. Custom C "o v w:th neatness and dispatch. Repairing t 12"' " notice. HARDWARE. Sy-KMlEUGERr BUOS.. Dealers In Hard l iTv,it?vcsTI,lware. Carpenter Tools. Black vr' a.rWHngs, Etc, No. U Main street, Brown '.eb. D- tr1? & Srtl&TS. Hardware Mercliams, No. f". street. BrovnvHle, Neb. Dealers In . -unjn;, uc. TAILORING. L" J-UBOLD.- Merchant Tailor, No. 02 Plfcal?'j c1' brownville. Neb. Has on hand a lilM ?K, 0T Goods, and w III make them np in lais. "J'esi on short notice and reasonable SALOONS. J i?.?-?n".'iPnDAnD .t co..pMi.im(ioiiws!i. bat Winiw ?ln feet. Brownville, Neo. The IvioS? HVUPSTER, Alkambra Billiard Sa tc,t WtLVV H'J? t3!111 i! rect- Brownville. Neb. The 2iiana Liquors constanUy on hand. i -.. i.uuni Kept oa nana. ggSTAURANTJg. ? AEHAarx-Oeo. n&u?UertyfPi v. w-:i. v ta y.t. Krr-liJ, Ni Ni, r- -uaoats. uru7-c-Forwt:-. i;t i WOSTIIING, Forwarding and Commls- ft" " 3Ierc1.int, and Dealer In all kindsof Grain - I ojitry I'roduce. (Julee and Wareroom, No. 'OUnk.trtt, Brownville. Neb. J 1J:i.EAv'?:S'. General Blacksmith, Main street. of tr",J-i V"2'"' J" 1'repared to do all khuls t . ttl:, iron, on Kbcf ?otlr nm! Mf tv-!o In -. -. .'-"- -- - J'vw fcu C .Vi ,IE',LHn, Bridge P.Btlderand Contractor, l'a V?. a v'Il.Jxeb. Sole agent for R. W. Smith's ki u'-o-;- "Bridge The strongest and best wooden r1 - h m use. u500TS AND SHOES. BrSHJESS CARDS. HOTELS. SJIKKMAN HOUSE. C. 5L Kauffman. Proprie tor. No. 4G Main street. Jlrownvllle, Nebraska. TloroughIy remodeled and refurnished, reed sta ble In connection with the house. Stages for all points west and omnlbnvses for all trains. Uf EYNOLDS nOUSE, J. N. Iteynolds, Proprietor. Newly rumlshcd throughout; thoroughly remod eled from cellar to attic Tlrst Class Sample Itoom on Hrst floor. Most convenient House to tile busi ness part of the city. Livery accommodations con venient. Stages for all ioints leave this House daily, making close connections with all Railroad trains. '? os. 88 ,t00 Main Street, opposite ruaiumcc l MEKTCAN nOUSE, I D. Bobison. Proprietor. J Front street, between Main and College. Good Feed and Livery Stable In connection with this House. DRUGGISTS. - r-CREERY fe NlCKEMi, Dealers In Hrugi, jL htatlonerj-. Etc., No. 32 Main street, Brown ville. Neb. Full aviortment of Drugs, Paints, Oils, Books, Statioiiary, etc on hand, and sold at whole sale or retail. J. W. APPIiEGrATE, HUli! Brownville, IVcbrasUa. WILL DO ALL KINDS OF BUILDING. TRE pare Plans, Draw Designs, and Furwl'th Spec fTcations. Satisfaction guaranteed. Job Work of every description at short notice. Shop on First Street, between Main and Atlantic. 26-tf JACOB n. 3EKKX.EY. sticirAEi. fiWiTzrn. BEEELEY & SWITZER, Wagon & CarriageMakers BLACKSMITHS. COLLEGE STREET, BROWNVILLE, - NEB. CUSTOM WOItK TN.ONE ON SHORT NOTICE, AND IN A STYLE AJ nnd mannerwhlch will guarauteesatisfaction. Mr. Berkely does the Wood Work, and Mr. Switzer the Blacksmithiug and the Iron Work, aud profess es to be a superior hand at HORSE SHOEING. flSTGive us a call. 2G-3m GEO. S. PHILLIPS, Livery,Feed,& ExchangeStables BroTcnvillo, Neliraaka. J. BLAKE, EIIIJT All Operations Per formed In the best manner. Ofpxck: Over CltyDrug Store, iroMt room. wsgxmsammm 8 GEO. DAUGHERTY, PROPRIETOR, BANK EESTAURANTl BKEiBE3BaBBIKSIISX3XZX3SaCKaaBBzf 8 No. 37 Main St. BROWNVILLE, NEB. John L. Carson, Banker, JiliO WXVILLE, NEBRASKA. Exchance bought and sold on all the princlpa cities. Also dealer In Gold and SIlTer Coin, fioM Dnst, and Gorern xtient Bunds. Deposits received, payable at sight. Interest pah' on time deposits by special agreement. Taxes for non-residents. All kinds U. S, Bonds wanted. THE SHERMAN HOUSE. 4.0 Inln-s,, Broivnviile. CM. KAUFFJIAW, Proprietor IX C0NXECTI0X lVlTII TIEE HOUSE. This House has been remodeled and refurnished throughout, and atrords the best accommodations In the city to the local nnd traveling public It Is cen trally located. Stages for the West, and Omnibusss Tor all trains, go from the Sherman House. Fair Grst class, charges moderate. l"-tfi Ix-. C. IT. TIIXB.XJ'X', GermanPhysician & Obstetrician OFFICE IN Tin.TRMANS DRUG STORE, llrovruville, Nebriwlta. POSSESSING an Electro-Magnetic Battery, he will be fully able to attend to all Nervous and other diseases. Will be in Brownville from the 1st to the 5lh, and from the loth to the l"th of every month. atf W. B. WRIGHT, Wholesale and Retail Dealer la OLD KENTUCKY Pure Wines, Bitters, &c, G3 3IAIS STREET, BROWNVILLE, XEBEASKA. JOHN tJOTJSITX3EIL(r, Bricklayer and Plasterer, Brownvillo, NeLrasfeo. Is prepaid to take contracts lo bis llnu, la city or country. All work dojtsin the best of btj'le. Also, wlllbutid Cisterns, and warrant them perfect. Soy Clocks, Vatches, Jewelry JOSEPI-I SFTUTZ, No. 59 Main Street, Bro-pmvilla. Keeps constantly on hacd a largcand well a&sorted slo;U of genuine articles in his line t Repairing of Clocks, Watches and Jewelry 'done on short notice, at reasonable rates. ALL WORK WARRANTED. FRANZ HELMER, fAG0H &LACiCSM!THHQP ONE DOOR WEST OF COURT HOUSE. WAGON MAKING, Repairing, Plows, nnd all work done in the best manner and on short notice. Satisfaction guaran anteed. Give lilmacall. Sl-ly. onx q. a. siimr. r. ir. wiixx AND COMMISSIOH- HOUSE OF SMITH & WILCOX. Dealers In all kinds of Grain, for which they pay the highest market price In Cash. 3-Oftice at Store of F. E. Johnson & Co. H-r.ni "Waldter & Lennnoii, . House, Sign and Carriage PUITEBS No. 56 Mala St. EEOWXVIZLE. Mixed Paints FOR SALE. GILIIjSrG GRAINING, SMAXTING, FROSTING, KALSOMINING, ETa 28-ly S T O "V -E S! ALL SIZES AND rTTEBNS, I mm m mw stqbag, mmm, THE ADVERTISER. OROWNTILLE. NEB., THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 22, 1S71. ANECDOTES OFPUBnC MEN. BY COL. ,T. W. FORNEY. No. XXI. From thj Philadelphia Press. Called to "Washington on official business, I find myself this warm and breezy morning ot the 30th of May seated at the open window -of my old room at the Mills House, once more looking over into the sacred grounds of-Arlington, where twenty thousand Union soldiers sleep their last sleen. and silently yet sternly sentinel the capitol they saved. And this is Dec oration Day ! The departments are closed in honor of the dead heroes. From Main to Mexico, wherever the grave of a Union man is to be found, it will be visited hy some Union man or woman. Such graves as theso are pilgrim shrines, Shrines to no code or creed confined; The Delphian vales, the Palastlnes xne Jieecas 01 me minci. The fervor with which Decoration Day is venerated -proves the undying love of our people for their country." The sentiment ia a conviction, that grows with every hour, aud ripens to be renewed in freshness and vigor. Decoration Day, is therefore, another Independence Day ; precisely as the abolition of human slavery in 1803 gave force to the abolition of British surveillance iu 177G. But it was more thau this. It was the intellectual distnthralment of four millions of black and thirty millions of whites. It revolutionized the wicked work of ages of misrule. It wrought in less than nine years the destruction of the evils of almost as rnairy centuries. Where were we all on the 30th of May eighteen hundred and sixty-one? As I ask the question, Robert E. Lee's Arlington house shines out white from the dark green foliage of the southern side of the Potomac, and Beems to answer : "Ten years ago this day my owner had just tendered an unstained sword, with a troubled heart, to his country's foe. Ten years ago Abraham Lincoln, Stephen A. Douglaa, Stonewall Jackson, James Buchanan, Edward D. Baker, Howell Cobb, John B. Floyd, Lewis Cass, Owen Lovejoy, were living; they have since gone before the Great Judge, and have answered all their mortal decils. Ten years ago the thousands of slain around me, nnd 'three hundred thousand more,' were active and intelligent men, useful fathers, husbands, sons and brothers. But these dad have left behind les sons and warnings that will not die." "Ah, gentlemen," said Fredrick Douglas, the really great leader of the colored race of America, yesterday afternoon, "who shall tell thestory of these last ten years ! I cannot. To me all is cuangea ; ana wnat an un utterable, indescribable change! From slavery to libert, from ostri cism to equality, from ignorance to self-respect, from sin to schools, from the lash to the light, from the bludg eon lo the ballot, from a country bound in chains to a nation robed in glory, from a capitol that seemed to be rooted to despotism to a great city, free and wholesome and beneficent. Find your orator to tell us of these marvels. I have no speech to de scribe, though my heart cherishes them all." "Blessed be this night," said an other of the same race on another oc casion. "Five times have I been sold into slavery in Washington three times on I ho block, and twice with the ball and cain on my feet; and now I am free, and all my chil dren and their children's children." And what could John M. Langs ton, the law .professor of the Howard University, say? The son of a gen tleman of Virginia by his own slave, he lives to represent the intellect of his father and his accepted offspring, and to honor and bless his mother. But on this sacred day other mem ories are revived. I recall, as I write, the face, the form, the character aud history of James Jackson, of Kentuc ky, who sleeps with the blessed Un ioh martyrs. The readers of these hasty anecdotes will perhaps recol lect my reference to him on the night of my Mazeppo. speech, on Missouri avenue, after I had been elected Clerk of the House of Representatives, in December of 1859. Jackson was af terward a Whig Representative iu the Thirty-seventh Congress from Kentucky, and when elected was about forty. He was chosen as a pro slavery man, with intense attach ment to Henry Clay, John T. Crit tenden, and the old leaders of that school of politics, but also with in tense attachment to the Union. I never met him until I met him as a Representative iu the great Congress preceding the rebellion. His genial nature, his extremely handsome face and athletic form, his eloquence,' of speech and magnetism of manner, at tracted me ; and yet, although some what differing in" politics He as the ideal of the old Whig party in its best days, aud I as the ideal of the better days of the Democracy we coalesced in ardent devotion to the TTninn. "ITo was airainst mo for Clerk, vet he was triad I was elected" not because he cared for me, but because he desired to rebuke the Ad ministration of Mr. Buchanan, whose course on the Kansas question he djd not hesitate to denounce as unuttera bly bad- On this decoration day, as I look out upon Arlington Heights and hear the trims thundering over the graves of those who perished that their country might Hve,.I think of hand some Jackson, and of an incident re lated to me bj one of his devoted: Kentucky friends, now ftolding a high and honorable position under General Grant's administration. Jackson left his seat iu the House to offer his life to the Republic. In do ing this he felt that he was separated, from many near and dear friends in I Kentucky, all of whom, equally de voted to the Union, were also devo ted to slavery. He had served sever al months in the war when slavery was abolished in the District of Col umbia. His old associates, believing they could swerve him from his fidel ity to hia country, conceived that emancipation would greatly disap point him, and one of their number wrote him a letter, stating now that the Yankees had shown that this was simply aa Abolition war, he ought to leave the "Federal" array and come over to his old friends, in which case a better position awaited him. This letter, owing to circumstances unnec essary to relate here, fell into the hands of his brave wife, a Kentucky women. She was so indignant at the atmpk tp debauch her husband that she tore it up, but immediately after, believing that he had better see it, womanlike, gathered the fragments and sent the missive foward to her husband. He received it in the com pany of friends, laughed heartily at it, and referred to the Confederate who had written it as a capital good fellow, but as one who had wholly misunderstood his character. Among those who heard of the letter was the well known Brigadier General Wil liam Nelson, subsequently killed by General Jefferson C. Davis in a per sonal rencontre at the Gait House, in Louisville, on the 26th of September, 1802. Nelson remarked, after the let ter to Jackson had been read, that the writer seemed to know Ins man. or he never would have written it. This observation was reported to Jackson by some convenient friend, who be longed to tho school of men who al ways report unpleasant remarks, and resulted in a challenge from Jackson to Nelson. Nothing prevented a mor tal meeting hut the intervention of the venerable John J. Crittenden, the friend of both, who came from Louisville to the camp and stepped be tween the young Hotspurs. But they never spoke until after one of the sub sequent battles, in which Nelson dis played almost superhuman bravery. Jackson's cavalry regiment could not be called into the fight, and ho lay chafing at a distance from the field. But when he came into camp aud found that praise of hia adversary was in the mouth of every soldier, he rushed up to him and threw his arms around his neck- and said : "I can never be the enemy of a man vUio has fought so bravely for the old flag." Thev both died in 1802 Jackson at the head of his regiment in the battle of Perryvillc, and Nelson, as I have said, by the hands of Jefferson C. Da vis, a bravo and noble soldier, now in New York, whom Nelson had grossly insulted. Jackson and Nelson were both men of strong convictions. They were men of stqrm and tempest, but of noble hearts. They loved Clay, Crittenden, Breckonrldge, Preston and Prentice of the Louisville Journ al. To go into the Union cause against all their social prejudices and friends was a great struggle, but go they did. Tliey died young, but they had lived a long experience. Nelson was a commander in the na vy, and died a 'Brevet Major General in the army. Jackson had just got into Congress when the war broke out, and died before he finished his Congressional career. They are both iu Heaven. THE DOLLINGER SCHISM. The excommunication of Dr. Dol linger is creating no small stir iu the religious circles of Europe. The lime has passed by when spiritual despot ism was supreme, and priestly fulmi nations possessed transcedent power. The venerable head of the Romish Church has, in his old age, become engaged in a controversy which can not but weaken his spiritual power, almost as effectually as his temporal authority has been lessened. It brings him not only in collision with the clericle dignitaries, but also with the jealous prerogatives of the Catho lic Monarchs of Europe, who as far less subservient than they once were. We see it stated that, though the Bavarian Ambassador at Rome, the Pope threatened to excommunicato the King of Bavaria for his friendly course towards Dr. Dollinger since his repudiation of the dogma of infall ibility, but that on the following day Cardinal Antonelli called upon the Ambassador and withdrew, in the name of the Pope, the threat and ap ologized therefor. Throughout the Catholic countries of Europe, espec pecially in the feeling of dissatisfac tion is strong. In Munich, an ad dress, approving of Dr. Dollinger's views, is being signed by the students and it is to be forwarded to the other universities of Germany, and to Switzerland. Eighty Catholic Par ishes have also signified their assent to his opinion, 1VEST OF THE MISSOURI., Detailed Description of Some of the Principle Counties In tlio Interior of Nebrnslia. Ed. Plalismouth Herald: Having just, returned, as you know, from quite an extensive trip through our State, I desire to publish some facts in regard to the various portions of the State, from which can be deduced some idea of the agricultural resourc es of Nebraska. I havo lived some three years in the State, and although I do a fair amount of reading I have never found anything from which I could learn definitely of the quality of land, &c, in the counties west of us. I now propose to take the coun ties in detail and give you facts as I observed in'passing through each, and to commence I will, omitting Cass and Lancaster, come to SALINE COUNTY. This county 13 situated between ranges one and four, east of the sixth principal meridian, and its south line is twenty-four miles from the Kansas and Nebraska State line. Its princi pal towns are Crete, De Witt, Pleas ant Hill, and Swan City. It is wa tered by the Little Blue River, Tur key Creek and Forks and Swan Creeks, all of which are quite heavily timbered. The general surface of the country is a gently rolling prai rie ; the soil is good, being a dark sandy loam with a subsoil of clay of a quality which holds moisture so well that even should no rain fall for a long period, vegetation would not be apt to die out. Just now they are having a struggle over the location of tne county seat, and I believe thej have an election every three weeks about it. The last I heard was that Pleasant Hill was ahead, but I am told that the Cretans cried fraud and I suppose another election will come off shortly. Passing through Saline county, we came to FIL1IORE COUNTY. There are not so many streams run ning theough this 'county. The north part of Turkey Creek being the principal one, and in the north-west corner School Creek, both being well timbered. The prairie is good and will make beautiful farms. There is plenty of Government land in Fill more county subject to Homestead and Pre-emption. After leaving School Creek, where we camped for dinner, we came, in the afternoon, into CXAT COUNTY, The locution of the B. & M. R. R. through the north tier of townships in this county has attracted a good many settlers. I think by the census of 1870 the population of this county was 35. It is now over 200; and con stantly increasing, though both tim ber and water are scarce. AD.UL3 COUNTY Came next on our line. This coun ty is very much broken, it being the head of the Little Blue, and west fork of Big Blue ; and near the center of the county a colony of people from Michigan have started a town. Ow ing to the extreme reticence of the most intelligent looking man I saw there, I ws unable to glean any fates in regard to Adams county which I can give you, and- to speak from what I saw there would be so unfavorable to that county that I re frain from abusing it and ' pass on to KEARNEY COUNTY. This county, after vou set bevond the sand ridges that border the Piatte River, is most beautiful. It has. no running streams in it of any conse quence; but the prairie 13 so level that when rains fall the water finds the lowest-places aud forms small lakes, which" aro seldom or never dry, affording plenty of water for stock. All along in this county we saw plenty of Antelope, and from ob servation I know they are not found in any country where they caunofc obtain water. Passing on through Kearney, county we struck the . RCPU11L1CAN VALLEY. We traveled up this valley for about sixty ingles west of the western boundary of Franklin county. There are a good many bodies of Cotton wood timber on the Republican Riv er, which wili make good house logs and can be sawed into boards which will be used for building purposes. In passing up the river the distance I have named, I should say that from the north side a creek runs in at an average of every live miles, some of them quite large and all well timber ed. The sqil, both on the bottom and and the up land, is good and suitable for all kinds of farming; and as a stock-raising country I think it is un surpassed this side the Rocky Moun tains. Judge Cook, Mr. Painter, aud several other gentlemen, have laid out a town and county next west of Franklin county. They have named the county Harlan, and the name of the town Alma City. A few miles above we find Republican City, which is a stockade, built for protec tion against Indians. Here we found Mr. F. A. Beiyon, a very intelligent gentleman and whom every settler who goes to the Republican valley in that locality should consult, as lie is thoroughly posted. Some 24 miles above here the county and town of Arapahoe was located, after which we returned to Kearey City, when, cut ting loose from the train, I crossed the Platte River and found myself on the line of tho U. P. R. R. atKearney Station, which, is in BUFFALO COUNTY. From what I heard about it, I had imbibed the 'nation that the upper Platte valley was a vast saud plain ; but I was mistaken, and my surprise was great to see isucli fine, magnifi cent bottoms, upon which is now grass plenty large enough to make hay. This co.yn.ty is well watered by the Platte, and branches of the Loup and Wooti Rivers, the latter being, I think, one ofthefineststreams I have seen in Nebraska. It is in this coun ty the junction of the B. & M. R. 11. with the U. P. R. R. will be made, and if so, I predict for it a very lively growth. Passing along down Wood river, 1 was (leiigiuea witn me oeau tiful aspect of the country. On one side was the Platte, its oceassioiialJy visible, flashing brightly in the dis tance ; on the other, the small bluffs gently rising from the plain which was dotted all over with dwellings. ITeie you have no difficulty in find ing the railroad sections, 11s all, or nearly all, the Government laud is taken up while the Railroad land is vacant, but it will not be so long. The usual price which the U. P. R. R. asks for their land, and the very liberal terms which they give pur chasers, will insure a speedy sale of all their lands in that locality; end I do not see why people do not buy these lands more rapidly than they do. Go where you will and the set tlers will sa3r, "well, we'll have a rail road in a few years." But here they have one at their doors, and one of the best railroads in the world ; and a man can buy a quarter section of land, move on to it and make his home nnd pay for it, and in less than five j-ears his farm will be worth $5, 000. These are my impressions. We next come to HALL COUNTY. This is also situated on the Platte river, and is quite well watered and and timbered, though I noticed near Grand Island the soil was sandy. They expect the Midland Pacific Railroad to go through this county and up on tho Loup Fork country. I found at Grand Island some very clever and intelligent people, among whom wa3 Mis. Eberhard, the edi tress of the Platte Valley Independ ent, whom, as the Irishman said I found to be a most "gentlemanly lady," and from whom I obtained a good deal of information in regard to the country. She tells me that the Loup Fork is a splendid country and is rapidly filling up. I also met Messrs. Handy & Thummel, in the real estate and law business, and who are ready and willing to give to stran gers all the information in their pos session in regard to the country. Leaving Grand Island I crossed the Platte river on a bridge, or a lot of bridges, as the river here has a half dozen channels. The bridge had re cently been finished, and is a free bridge, built by Hall county, and owes its existence to the energy of the people of Grand Island, and I have no doubt it will prove a paying investment for the county and the town. Again on the south side of Platte, we come into HAMILTON COUNTY. This county is watered by the Platte river, Lincoln creek, Beaver creek, aud the head of the North fork of the Big Blue river. I think this to be one of the finest counties I have been in on this trip. The soil is black and rich, the vegetation is abundant, and where there is the least appearan.ee of a creek I found good timber growing. Elder Stafford bos a fine farm at what is called Staf ford's grove, sixteen miles east of Grand Island. Coming further on we next strike YORK COUNTY. It is almost exactly like Hamilton, except that the people cannot stay at home and see the Platte river. A town is started called York Center. This town was commenced by some gentleman in Lincoln, who expected the JB. & M. K. K. would run tnrougn fhprA hut fh in crof nr noil nnr. flifTprpii t ly from what was expected, apd so . v. v , , fc .. mi ... w a. .... w. w . - ' . that town contaius to-day two houses and a large number of stakes which mark streets, squares, alleys and blocks. York county is a rich coun- I ty, and I would say here; that in all the counties I havo named, there is plenty of vacant land, aud people who desire to settle in either of them will find people ever ready and will ing to extend to them all the aid and assistance mcy aesi re in minting up good iocntions. We came next to EEWARD COUNTY. which is so well known that I cannot give any additional information about it only that the roads are so crooked through it that a man has to drive from two to three miles in. order to get one in the proper direction; and I think it would be well if the Commissioners' of Seward county would regulate the roads and not per mit every farmer to turn the road every time it suit3 his caprice. AN IBISECT TEAR. The present year bids fair to be one of the worst insect years ever exper ienced, xne Jttessiau uy lias commit- ed extensive depredations on wheat in Tennessee, Kentucky, and 'South- em Indiana; scores of complaints of chinch bugs conic from Illinois and lowu, and some from other sections; in still other places immense swarms of black caterpillars, and army worms (the true army worm that lives on grass and other vegetation on the ground) are doing great damage. But the worst of all is is the Rocky Moun tain potato bug; this pest, it appears, prevails much more extensively than ever before, at least so early in the season. They are also fast pushing their way east, having entered Ohio on the south line of March, and cross ing the Detroit river in swarms on the north. The Detroit Free Press says, "every chip, plauk, stave, bark, board and floating thing, large orsmall, in shore or channel, in stream or eddy, was filled with a crew of potato bugs, calm, contented, aud as much at home as if feasting on the jiotato." Most of them were taken by the wind across to the Canada shore; others "struck boldly and rapidly down the rapid enrrent, still eastward bound, via lake Erie to Bufi'alo." And it is said they will either disembark at Buflalo, or continue their course down the Erie canal. Now, leaving all pleasantries out of the question, it will not be at all strange if the potato bugs should make their appearance in the vicinity of Buffalo in tho course of tho season. Indeed, it would rather be surprising if they did not secure transportation on some of the passing propellers, and finally reach tho potato fields of Western ii(iY York. Meantime, says the Free Press, "the potato bug possesses the laud. Farmers do not nope to save the crop at all. From all parts of the State (of Michigan) the same cry comes up, and potatoes have greatly risen in price. Let the citi zens of New York pray shipwreck of the fleet on Lake Erie:" There seem to be but two remedies for tho pest ; one is picking ofl" the bugs, which, when they get so nu merous, is impracticable; and the other is Paris green. Tho Free Press says : "All sorts of remedies have been tried. Paris green seems to have the most reliance placed upon it. The druggists of Detroit have had their stock exhausted. One firm disposed of a ton in three days. Tel egraph orders have been transmitted to New York to forward with all speed a new supply." Thus it is seen that the present sea son lor some cause as a very early and in many sections dry spring, or perhaps some other phrase or phrases in the weather is very favorable for insect depredators, and that if no neavy storm?, lnendiv insects, or other preventives come to the farm er's relief, they are likely to do im mense damage during the season. V33jDEIj PHILLIPS AT BOSTON. Mr. Phillips being loudly and ira impntiently called for, said: Ladies and Gentlemen and Mr. Chairman : The extremes of the earth meet upon this platform to night. Here wc are, the fruit of two or three thousand years of civiliza tion. All that art and letters and re ligion could do for us we Jiayp inher ited. We harness the steain ;ve send lightning on errands; wc subjugate nature. More than that, wc have learned the omnipotence, the abso lute omnipotence of order. We know what patient, persevering effort, gen eration after generation, marrying the ages together, can accomplish. We are educated by a thousandjyears into the consciousness of the sacred ness of the law. These are very great powers. Now we stand side by side to-night with the rude tenents of the forest; men with few ideas, scanty traditions, rude arts. They come to us with only three elements of hu manity. One is the indestructable sense of right and justice, which we never found a race so demoralized that they did not possess it. In their case theso are added to an eloquence to assert their rights, and a courage to defend them, which places the In dian side by side with tiie Saxon and the Greek. No race ever outdid him. There is a class of men in our coun try that gather up the tradition of In dian violence, from Massachusetts Bay back to Colorado, and try to fire the heart with revenge. Why, fellow-citizens, if from Phillip Pokano ket down to Black Kettle" on the far prairies, the Indians had resisted us inch by inch for every acre of land that we stole from him, I should be ashamed of the soil that fed him and the sun that looked down upon him. What is to give our children courage? This same climate and this same sun. Is our race in the next thousand years to run into cowardice, into pigmy thoughts, into standing cowed and at bay? The Indian who taught us what this American continent can make of manhood has written that record in a resistance that neither the omnipotence of civilization nor the overwhelmning numbers of forty millions of people could ever reduce into yielding to us tamely. I thank him-" I am only proud- of my coun tr3T as a continent, because tbe race that preceded U3 was no race to yield up tamely their rights. I should be ashamed to be the successors of some of the races that go out in history. Why, you know, fellow-citizens, that the darkest page in human record is the contact between civilization and the aborigines. The contact of civil ization with barbarism is the scandal of history. The civilized man ap proaches his victim, demoralizes him with his vices, and then crushes him under his feet. And if we were to measure the justice or the merit of civilization by the fringe which comes in contaot with barbarism, as we ad vance we snouiu nave to cover our T .. a - - - faces aua put our nanus upon our t lips, for it i3 a record of infamy from the earliest stage which history has recorded down, to the present dav 1 and the only and the brightest spot I ia that section of our history is that the Englishman, with all his art, with all his wonderful superiority, with all tho omnipotence of his warlike I machinery, nnd his overwlielmnlng numDersnas never yec met tne In dian and frightened him anywhere. you say, these representatives of three hundred thousand men, they can only appeal to onr pity. From Massachusetts Bay back to their own hunting grounds, every few miles is written down in imperishable record as the spot where the scanty, scatter ed tribe made a stand for justice and their own rights. Neither Greece, nor Germany, nor the French, nor the Scotch, can show u prouder rec ord. And. instead of searintr it over with infamy and illustrated epithets, the future will recognize it as a glo rious record of a race that novel- died away, but stood up manfully, man hy man, foot by foot, and fought it out for tho land God gave him, against the world, which seemed poured out over him, I love the ludlah, because there is something in the soil and cli mate that made him, that is fated In the thousand years that aro coming to mould ua, and I hope we shall al ways produce heroes as persistent as Philip and 3Iekavoku, the Philip Sld uey of tho prairie. Now one wort! more. Do yon know the history of a single aboriginal race, brought in contact with a great civil ized wave, that has ever behaved any better? Can you show me a finer record on anycoiitinenl? When the barbarians of India met Alexander of Macedon, and the Macedonian. King hurled in their faces the same re proach that the press of America does at the Indian, "You defend you -selves savagely I" the haughty chief replied, "Sir, if you knew how sweet freedom was, you would defend it' even with axes. !" That is what the Indian says tp us. No matter what be tho masacrc ; no matter what be the weapon ; .no matter what be the ruthlcssness with which I assert my righ against your uncounted millions. If you knew how sacred justice was, and how sweet liberty, you'd recog nize that I was right in defending it, even with these stern methods. But still there is another word to be suid. Every fair-minded man that approaches the Indians comes back with the Earae testimony. Every gentle heart, be it in the bosom of man or woman, every fair-minded man, be he soldier or citizen, comes back with the same record. Tho or dinary rulhan paints him black ; he has to in order to excuse himself. But ask Jessie Fremont, after her years of residence, with no man within reach but an Indian, in her lonely home, where the General left her week after week and month after month, and nothing but women under the roof! "They told me," said she, "to lock every door, to leave no article of prop erty outside my walls. I never drew a lock ; I never brought in an article from the lawn, ana I never had an unkind word, nor the triflingest arti cle stolen in that whole two yeas." You go from the women to the Epis copal Bishop of Minnesota, Bishop Whipple, twelve years at the head of that diocese, and within its girth the representatives of some of these tribes and their neighbors. I was his guest far a day. Suid he : "I have traveled on foot and iu the saddle over every square mile of my diocese. I know every Indian settleqient in it. I have watched them for d dozen years. Some of them will drink and some of them will steal, and they are of Our race, for they have the same vi ces ; but iu every difficulty that has occurred in this twelve years of my residence between the Indian and the Government, the Government has been at ways wrong and the Indian has been always right.?! But he was a Christian priest perhaps judged from a sentimental point of view. We will go out to St. Louis. We will open the door of that old rough fron tier soldier, Gen. Harney, graduated at West Point and sunt out to the frontier when 19 years old, living there 5Q years quljl to-day. General Harney, cradled in "experience with the Indian tribes, grown gray in their companionship, what does "he say ? I never yet; knew an Indian chief to break his word J TApplauscf Search me now Mr. Colyer, forgetting his own education, called our great men at Washington our chiefs search me now the catalogue of great chiefs from Maine to Florida, and find the man of 70 years that can lay his hand on his heart, and say, I never knew an American brave to break his word. Put into one scale the Cbrh-t'an, ith his education and his honor, his in stincts and his chivalry, and put into the other the savage, and then sum mon your witness of fifty loug a,nd weary years, and find me a man so green, from Bangor to Texas, that he has not found the larger number of American chiefs havo sadlv broken their words. Well, General Hamey goe3 on to say, "I have lived on this frontier ou years, and I have never yet known an instance in which war broke out between these tribes that the tribes were not in the right. Why, I can tell you that every one or tuese men witn us to-day is able to say of the United States, 'Its word is a he ; its treaty is a suare ; it3 flag a shame.' " Mr. Phillips narrated Gen eral Harney's experience in attempt ing to keep faith with the Indians, and referred to the last war with the Cheyennes, in which thegovernment spent nine million of dollars and some hundreds of lives in the killing of six Indians. Thatwa an expen sive way, it tney undertook to kill oh the 3o0,000 and their descendants. At that rate Boutwell would have to at tempt some new arithmetic to settle the national debt. Langhter.J He then presented in a telling manner the worse phases of the governmen tal relations with the Indian tribes, recalling the incident of two of the most atrocious massacres, and con trasting the whole pojicy of thp gov ernment and ihaof the Canadian do minions, which ninety years ago an ticipated General Grant by protecting the Indian, and have never had rrtuch of any trouble with him. We have spent a thousand millions in fighting mm anu nave never Deen just to mm. Mr. Phillips closed as follows : What I want of every one of you to-dav what I want of every editor in Mas sachusetts is that you should say to Grant; Forget republicanism, forget democracy. Deep do w n in the hearts of the people in a substratum, which no division of party can reach, there resides the indefeawible purpose of the New England people that the law shall bo as potent ou the prairies as it is in State street, that these ruffians of Arizona and these iaurderers of the 1 Apaches shall be hung justo3 certain ly a3 If they committed murder in the yard of tho State house, or upon the very steps of the capitol. Don?t fear that when you halve carried out that exact justice to the very shores of the Pacific that it will weaken the Republican ranks or lose you a single vote. We assure you that the justice of the American people, the honor they give to their flagj tho respect that they pay to law is so perfect,' that it overrides tho lines of party, and will not only savo but lift highec the man who, risking office, tramp ling under foot party lines, forgetting all the greed of Indian rings, shall carry out the most perfect protection in the minutest particular to everjr atom of property, and tho most tii-, fling right of the smallest Indian tribe. Let our pride be, fellow-citizens, that there is not an enemy so, weak, that there is not an Indian tribe go small, there Is not a lonely cavern beyond the Rocky Mountains, so distant that tho American flag and the American arm cannot reach there, and make the law triumphant over, every force. Applatise. ' " 0 . ., AWFUL EAi-THQ,UAKE. Destruction-of tl Town of Bntlmnfrt In CUlna Nearly Three TliousaudT Prlfcsta, Soldiers and People XClire&r Washington, Juno 4. ' Our Minister in China, Governon, Lowe, has forwarded to the Secreta ry of State the following translation of a report of an earthquake in Ba thang, in Szchuen, made by tho Chi nee Governor-Deueral of the prov ince in which it occurred : I have ascertained that Bathang lies on a very elevated spot, beyond the borders of the province, aboud, 260 miles west from Litang, and more, than thirty post stations from tho dis trict town of Ta-tsien, on the high road to Tibet. . About 11 o'clock a. m., on tbelltl of April, 1S71, the earth trembled sq violently that the governmento!Uce3, temples, granaries, stouo and stored houses, and fortifications, with all the common dwellings and Temple of-Ting-Lin, were at once overthrown and ruined. The only exception was the hall in the temple grounds called Ta-Chao, which stood unharmed in. its isolation. A few of the troops and people escaped, but most of the in- mates were crushed and killed undec ' the falling timber and stone. Flames n'so suddenly burst out in four place-, which strong winds drove about un til the heavens were darkened with smoke, and their -roaring was min-. gled with the lamentations of'fhe dis tressed people. On thp IGth tho, flames wero beaten down, but the rumbling noises were still heard un der ground like distant thunder, qud the earth recked and rolled like a ship in a storinyat the mercy of the. waves. The multiplied miseries of the afflicted inhabitants were increas ed by a thousand fears, but in about ten days matters began to grow quiet; and the motion cease. The grain collector at Bathang says, that for several days before the earth quake the water had overflowed that dyke, but after it tho earth cracked in many places, and black, fetid wa ter spurted out in a furious manner. If one poked it tho npurting instant ly followed, just as ia tho caso with the salt -yells and firo wells, (in the, eastern part of the province,)' and this explains how it happened that fire followed the car.thquajie in Ba thang. As nearly ns is ascertained, there were destroyed two large temples, the ofFpcs of the Collector of Grain Tax, the local magistrate and the Colonel, the Ting-Lin Temple, and nearly sevep hundred futhpmsof wal around it, and three hundred and fifty-one rooms in all inside; six small er temples numbering two hundred and twenty-one rooms, besides 184U rooms and hpuses of the common people. The number qf' people sol diers and lamas killed by tho crash was 22S8, among whom wero the. lo cal magistrate and his second in of fice. The earthquake extended from Bn thaug eastward to Pang ch&h-muh, westward to Nan-tun, on tiie south to Lint-ah-shih, and on the north to the. salt wells of Aluntcz, acircnitof over 100 miles. It occurred simultaneous-: ly over the whole of this region. In. some places steep hills split and gunk into deep pits ; in others, hills on lev el spots became precipitous cliffs, aail the roads and highways were render ed impassable. ' ' The people were scattered liko au tumn leaves, and this calamity to tho people of Bathang and vicinity was really one of the most distressing and destructive that has happened. Th6 Governor General twice memoralized the Eiqpcror respecting it, who grant ed aid to relievo the misery, re-open the roads between the post-houses', and rcbnild or repair the offices and dwelling as they are needed. Many are now resuming their occupations, and the roads are everywhere passa ble. ' ' -- PERSONAL APPEARANCE OF TIIE SAVIOUR. We reproduce, for the benefit of those who may remember to- havo met with it in family newspapers many years ago, this most curious, if not unquestionably authentic, de scription of the appearance and man ner of our Saviour while on earth : a DEscnirnox of the. pehson op jedci ciiiuyr, as it was voxjsd ix ancibnt V.JL' V CHXJT3IXT11Y rCBI,!TJS LI8NTtri.CS, rKSIDk,-TOrjLlJKA TO THE SEKATEOP KOMK. There lives, at this time, in Judon, a man of singular character, wlioo uame ia Jesus Christ. The barba rians esteem him a prophet, but ItitJ followers adore him 3 the immediate offspring of the immortal God: He is endowed with such unparalleled virtue as to call back the dead from tbeir graves, and to Ileal every kind of di-ese with a word or touch- Hia person Is tall and elegantly shaped, his aspect amiable, reverend. His hair flows in those beautiful shadea which no united color can match, falling in graceful curls below Lis ears, agreeably crouching on his shoulders, and parted on tho crown, of his head like the head-dress of the sect of the Nazarites. Hid forehead is smooth and mouth is formed with exquisit symputhy; I1I3 beard ia thick, and suitable to the hair of his head, reaching a little below hischin, and parting in the middle like a fork; his eyes are bright, clear, and serene. He rebukes with majesty, counsels with mildness, and invites with tho most tender and persuasive language. His whole address, whether jn werd or deed, being elegant, grave, and strictly characteristic of so exalted a being. No man has seen him laugh ; but tho whole world behold him weeping frequently ; and so persua sive are his tears, none xran refrain from joining in sympathy with him., ae is very mooers.te, temperate nnti wise. In short, whatever this phe nomenon may turn out in the end, he seems at present a man, for ex cellent beauty and divine perfection, eyery way surpaiqingthe children of me Crop prospects were never fceer;- . n iM K .. i Vd