? '""""""",'''''",,'n'',3'! . -i-j-ii"MSBB " ' m THE ADVERTISEEJ THE ADYERTISEPv . . a. - ft -tjtt. '" ' -ar HaW r - Ji " I HHWI" flf : ' M - ! , . . . W . - m mmMt 3 --- r- - " X - ' ' . QBH an s. -w.r3KBitomnBii. :. cttZLiLiiv-?, FAIR5BOTEER & HACKER, Publisher and Proprietors. -3 , Published EveryThursdayTflbrning AT BRCWKYIKLE. NEBRASKA. T2R.3IS, IX ADVANCE : Dm eopr. on year Oik copy. bc mwittw- .S2 OO . 1 00 50 Ocr copy, three montna OF- 2o paper sent from the offlce natllpaid Ur. EEaDIXG 3IATTER ON ETERTPAGE T jl.. ba-Ts: 1i now proprietor of the ItyillUuLlfiillJiUL aaU is prepared to accomodate the pablic with GOOD, FRESH, SWEET IM BUTF, Twtroac oVelted. RwHmbsr the place the old Pa& shop, Mata-rf., JZrowni'iUv. - .Vcirs77. HAVE "S"OTJSBSI Having i urchased the X. JH I? EL j9l 3ST mini mi I wie anmMNKte thwt I o prepared to d j a ft rat etntm ItTrrbusltt. 7os liogeva. PSTL. FRASEE, "Peace and Quiet w' i s"-fcs5 Innn snH RillisrH Hall ! UU1UVA1 bCAAw. JI4Wl Wa aam... THE BEsT F I! fp?!r? m fifiUWi Iufi .' Main St., opposite Shermaa House, Brovrriville, - - ?ebrasli.a. 2STABI,ISHEI IN 1S5S. .L JESTA.TE XX NEBRASKA. W: iiliam 1. s3.oov"er. DoeBasenmea1EstaieBa5,a6S sl,s Ijands on Commission, examines Titles, makes Ieeds, Mortgages, and all Instru ments pertaining to the transfer of Keel Es tate. Has a Complete A"bstract of Titles to all Real Estate la Nemaha County. T T f fl I wih to inform my raea3 that I harercccnt 1 of-aed a jtrictly ,jCJE3XI?SIAiS'C3E: Billiard Farixxr la Ae Hall JMaiag the Sfcermaa Hoese, where any one wishing to play a oekt game of tiltiards, Pool, oi Checkers VT3 nae everything clean ana cendactsa in rood style. If yon want to drink a nice -i m-Tv T" "" "NTT A 1 TT! or smoke a good call on MAJOR J. J. WARD. Josspli Selmtz, SEALEB IX Cloclis, Waiches, Jewelry r-w Keep5 constantly ob baadalarseaaawl VV asrsortl stock of senmae artici in his tine -rRap&iric(r of Ctocts, "Watches and Jewelry ri "jon. on short notice, at reasonable rates. JLJ.h WOEBT WAERAXTED. Also sole ajeat In this .oca.lty for the sal" of IiAZABXTS &-IORSIS, CKLEEEATED PEKrECTED SPECTACLES & HE GLASSES Xo. S ialn Street, BRCVWSrVILLE, KEBRASKA. 'rSAHZ HSLSCE3., lAGGN &RLACKSMiTH?ROP OKE BOOR WEST OF OOCET HOUSE. W.GOX SLAHING, Repairing, FloWK, and all -ano done in the best maBaerandooahort aouee td. Givehimaeall. SaMHioclioii cnaran W-ly. JACOB MAHOHN, MERCHANT TAILOR, himI 4aaleriB FiB8&Kk,Vrei!.ra, Seetekaad Fancy Cloths, Testiat, Btc, Etc. aownville, IVobrahlia. rnilF pi PTITT A H lli H M HI Hrn ii P I 8 11 2 llsi-i i 1 is I 8 liii LFUiii Iliiii 1 1 D FEED SIM . rnnnip ,UHUL0 OLDEST EBA X3 IS Jar Hi rl B 71 3Ifwf IE ? lg -y. g I 1 B S B - Vwk 'Wx HI ' " jpl WkJ HL y ft B IwLjfm I, JM WWblSL HL flPftf 8- 1L SU Iwlmy Rj P JUS flk 1L y a - "" I SSTABX.ISHED 185 S. Oldest Paper in tie State . Paid-up Capital, $i0,G00 500,000 AutJiortzecl (S IS TRBPABED TO XRA3fSACT A Seneral Banking Business - HUT xsn SEIi OOIE & GUmENGY DEAPTS cm al! the principal cities of the United States and jBnrope MONEY LOANED On approve security only. Tim e Draft dheonnt ed. and special accommodation granted to dpcwtt rh. DeaKrs in GO"EEXXEST BOXDS, STATE, COUNTY & CITY SECURITIES DEPOSITS Heived payable on Aoaaad. and IT-EHEST al wnM umc certteatesc''tP6K. DrRBCTOBS. HTBi.T.Iea. B. 3f. Bailor, X.A Jiaadly. 3rank X. Jobaaoe, I.atber Haadley WM.?rahiwr. - - 301IXL. CAHSOX, A."DAVEJ.Oaiifcier. PresWefit. T. CXcKAUOHTOX. Aast.Casbier. J". IT; BAUEE, 2 aanfitarer and Bealer in. ,PQ H Blaoiiots, SrasStesPlj- rTets, &c. JtjT"Tt3liln(t ) on iort aotc. Tfce-ee i aratea vacaom cm Bfacjciac. ror presenriag Dar aess, Beta, Shoes, e always on hand. 64 3Iain St., Brownrille, Xeb. BROW.TILLE Ferry and Tranfer. OQASl-A-lNrY. Havintr a fi class Steam Ferry, and owning and controUn the Transfer line from RROlVXYIaVLiE TO PHELPS, we are preparad to reader entire satisfaction la t traasfcr ef Freight aad Paaseaeers. AVe run a regahir liae oi to all traiac. Al orders left at the Transfer Com? paay'soaee wlUrecetve prompt attention. J. Boisfield, Gen. Supt. Meat Market, SODT& BBO. JBUjlCHEBS, nSLOTTXYTLJJC, KEBP.ASHA. Good, Sx-reet, Presn Meat Always on hand, and satisfaction guar antiedto all costomers. ertaiie Keeps afnllllneof Ornamented and Plain. Also Shrouds for men. ladies and Infants. All orders left trlth 3Iike Felthouser will txeceive prompt attention. J63- Bodies i'rejiaryed d Srn balmed. -3G JLnin Street UROraTILLE'EC. 1 1 i in i i i r i iiiii -- AUTHOEIZED Br THE U. S. G0TEK5HE5T. r FS Rm iUI idlDdlia OF I , S? ft ' 5 A S3 is?"3!, IICD l : " -c-r----rjwrJ i i -f Bmtefw ii i I jC- Ui-TF.&l t) IK? i v.v vfca 53 i'SiyiK - I ! S 8 R 3 I 3 IjJ w S A ! - , - , . )jr POLLY PEMSEOKE'S BABY. 'Dear me,' eaid Polly Pembroke, 'what a noise and confusion ! I am qnite sore I should go crazy if I lived in the city.' Polly Pembroke was a farmer's daughter, who had come down to 2sew York to buy the material or the first silk dresa she had ever owned a real deep blue, to be trimmed with velvet of a darker shade. And Polly's golden head was dizzy with the thunder of omnibus wheels, and the rattle and rush of elevated railways, and the succession of brill iant things in the shop windows and Polly sat holding "onto her parcels in the great echoing depot, and wonder ing why everybody was in such a hurry- For the express train was just go ing out, and Polly and Miss Jones, the village dressmaker, who had come with her to help select the important dress, were obliged to wait fifteen minutes for the way-train, which con descended to stop at Whip-poor-Will Glen, where Polly lived. She was a pretty little primrose of a maiden.fwith large wistful brown eyes lovely yellow hair, and cheeks as pink as a daisy, while Miss Jones, who sat beside her, was straight and stiff, and upright, and wrinkled, as became a single woman of sixty." And jest as Polly was wondering if there was no end to the stream of hu manity flowing through the wide open depot gate, a tall, handsome gentle man, with a dark complexion and deep Spanish eyes, came in with a lit tle babe in his arms. Stewardess,' he said to a respecta ble looking quadroon, with a scarlet silk handkerchief twisted picturesque ly around her head, who was dusting the window sash, 'I am going out on the Chicago express, and I have for gotten a message which must be tele graphed to my place of business at once: will you be good enough to take this child a minute, until " But the stewardess hastily drew back. 'Xo, sab, ef you please, said she, 'I've heard o' many cases where 'spect able women was left wid strange chil dren on their hands jest dis-a-way !' Instinctively, Polly Pembroke stretched out her arms. Let me take the baby, sir,' said she coloring all over with pretty eager ness. 'I'll hold it for you.. Children are always good with me.' TheBtrancex-dofTeiiJiia hat courte ously. 'I am infinitely obliged to you,' said he; 'and I'll trouble you no long er than I can help.' 'Polly, Polly ! are you raving mad ?' whispered Miss Jones, pulling the sleeve of the girl's dress. But Polly paid no heed to her. 'Suppose that gentleman shouldn't come back?' cried Miss Jones elevat ing both hands. 'He will,' said Polly, gently rocking the little miteon her knee. 'Oh, look, Miss Jones! Isn't it pretty ? I declare it's laughing!' Pretty ?' groaned Miss Jones, roll ing her whitey-blue eyes skyward, 'Polly Pembroke, I do believe you've taken leave of your senses! There's the bell the gates ore closed !' 'What of it?' said Polly. 'The Chicago express is gone !' 'Well,' said Polly, 'and what of that ?' 'Child, don't you comprehend? Your fine gentleman was going in the Chicago express,' cried Miss Jones. 'I suppose he has missed the train,' said Polly, quietly. '2sot he !' sniffed Miss Jones. 'He has" slunk quietly in by another way, and is laughing in his sleeve at you and your folly this very moment.' 'Nonsense !' said Polly. But she looked a little disturbed, nevertheless, and glanced rather an x iously at the door through which the tall gentleman with the Spanish eyes had disappeared. 'Come,' said Mis3 Jone3, jumping briskly up, and gathering her paroles in her hand, 'there's the bell for our train.' 'But I can't go and leave the child,' cried Polly. 'Humph !' snorted Miss Jones. 'Are you going to stay here all night with it?' But what shall I do?' eaid Polly, beginning to be a little bewildered and frightened. 'Perhaps, Miss Jones, we had better wait until the next train.5 'And not get home until nine o'clock at night? croaked Miss Jones. 'I don't see what else we can do,' said Polly. But the trains came and went, and still no one appeared to claim the baby- Miss Jones grew desperate. 'Polly Pembroke,' said she, 'I've no patience with you for getting us into this scrape. What do you suppose is to be the end of it all ?' Polly rose quietly up. 'I am going to take the child home with us,' said she. Polly!' 'I am ! reiterated the girl. 'Poor little helpless innocent ! what else can we do?' 'Let it be sent to the House of Itef- uge or the Poor House, or some such place!' screamed Miss Jones. 'With those eyes-?' said Polly, look ing down into the tender, pleading orbs. 'Never! It will be all right.I am quite sure, Miss Jones. All this is only a mistake. Stewardess,' to the .suspicious quadroon, who had taken care to keep at a safe distance all ihe'"'waile, 'here's "my address. BBOWVILLE, KEBEASKA, THUESDAT, MARCH 13, 1879. Give it to the- gentleman when he comes backr' Yes,' said the woman, pursing up her lips. 'But it's my private 'pinion as nobody won't never see hide nor hair of him again.' So Polly Pembroke brought home, not onlv a new blue silk dress-, but a dark-eyed baby into the bargain. 'Child,' said Deacon Pembroke, 'I can't blame you for doing a charita ble action, but I'm afraid you have taken a terrible charge upon your self.' 'Don't fret, father don't fret ! said Mrs. Pembroke, who was a cheery lit tle body, with an invincible habit of looking on the sunny side of every thing. 'It seems a nice, healthy child enough, and I dare say it'll soon be called for. Besides, don't the Good Book say that 'Whoever give3 one of the Lord's little ones even a cup of cold water,' in His name, shall not be without a reward ?' And so the days passed by, and the weeks, and even Polly Pembroke, the most trusting of mortals, began to think that she had been the victim of a conspiracy, and that she was des tined to bear the whole responsibility of this little nameless life. 'Mother,' said she, wistfully, 'I may keep her, mayn't I if I'll give up go ing to visit Cousin Sue, in Boston, and not ask father for a new cloak this winter? And we'll takesummer boarders next season, and I'M raise poultry, and she shall be no expense to you, mother, indeed !' Well. well, child.' said Mrs. Pem broke, with a moisture in her kind eyes, 'have your own way.' 'You'd a deal better send it to one of the public institutions,' said Miss Jones, severely. Our little Uosebud ?' said Polly, showering Eoft kisses on its velvet cheeks. 'Oh, never, never, Miss Jones!' 'You was a big fool to begin with, and I don't see but what you mean to be a fool all the way through,' said Miss Jones. She had come to bring Miss Pem broke's fall hat home a venerable leghorn, trimmed with drab satin bows and when she was gone, Polly chanced to pick up the New York daily paper which had been wrapped around it. Mother.'cried she, springing breath lessly to her feet, 'just listen to this advertisement ;' If the young lady who took charge of an infant in the Depot, on the afternoon of Saturday, July 30, 1S75, will send her address to Messrs. Kno bel & Ledger, No. Broadway, she will confer an inestimable favor.' 'Mother,' cried Polly, 'what does it mean ?' 'It means you,' said Mrs. Pembroke. 'Shall I answer it?' Eaid Polly. 'Of course,' said Mrs, Pembroke. 'But suppose they want to take Rosebud away from me ?' faltered Polly. 'My dear, we must accept our fate as Providence metes it out to us,' said the old lady. 'So Polly wrote her little note, and, by the next train the tall gentleman with the Spanish eyes arrived at Whip-poor-will Glen. 'Do you think me a heartless wretch?' he said to Polly, with his voice choked with emotion. 'ButI am not. When I went out of the depot that day, my foot slipped in crossing the street, and I fell under a horse's feet. They car ried me insensible to the hospital, and I lay there for weeks in a delirium of brain fever, caused by my Injuries. The moment I returned to conscious ness I made every inquiry, but could hear nothing of you.' I gave my address to the Steward ess,' Polly said. But the stewardess had gone away. A Strang woman occupied her posi tion who remembered nothing of tho circumstances, and for a while I act ually believed that my motherless lit tle treasure was lost to me forever. How-can I ever thank you, Miss Pem broke, for all that you have been, to my little Isaura ?' So the tiny Rosebud was carried away ; buther father brought her back several times to see the adopted moth er Tvhom she loved devotedly. Polly,' said he, one day, 'Isatrra is happier with you than she is any where else.' Is she?' said Polly. For by this time they had become great friends, and she had lost all her awe of the stately gentleman. And it's a singular coincidence,' he added, with a smile, 'that I am al so.' At this Polly colored radiantly. What was the end of all this? Can not any one guess? 'P'rhaps if I'd taken the baby home and made a fuss over it, the rich gen tleman would have married me !' said Miss Jones, when she was cutting the white silk for the wedding dress. 'I thought Polly Pembroke was a fool then, but I've seen cause to change my mind since.' A story is told of a New Haven col ored preacher, who when his church was out of communion wine recently rcalled on a dealer to est more, nnrl nn being asked what kind be wanted, replied that "some ob de ladies ob de congregation had expressed a ference for gin." pre- An English nobleman, who is in the habit of speaking to soldiers in an affable manner, was much amused lately when a guardsman said to him, in a hearty and genial way: "I like yon, my lord. There's nothinjr of the gentleman about you,". SPSEOH BY GEN, SHIELDS. In hc U. S. Senate on the Resolution Granting Pensions to the Tetcrans of the 3Iexicaa War. The Vice-President. The Senator from Indiana, by unanimous consent, calls up for consideration a resolution which will be read. The Secretary read the following resolution submitted by Mr. Toorhees on the 10th of April, 1S7S: Resolved, That the Committee on Pensions be instructed to report a bill to this body making provisions for placing the name? of the surviving soiaiera or tne Mexican war, and of the widows of those who are deceas ed, upon the pension-roll of the Uni ted States, Mr. Shields. Mr. President, I thank theSenate for giving me an opportu nity to speak a few words in this place in favor of my old comrades of cheMexican war. My words shall be very brief indeed. They will be nothing more than an earnest appeal to this body to pass the resolution just read, and when the bill returns to tiie Senate that the resolution calls for, to pass that bill also, and then, i in ny opinion, this body will have done generous justice to the soldiers of tbe Mexican war. The soldiers of the last war have been treated by Congress with justice, and, in my opinion, with very com mendable liberty. The soldiers of the Mexican war have not been so treated. Those soldiers served their country, and have received nothing in the way of generosity at the hands of the Congress of the United StateB. I wonder not at seeing the services of yonng soldiers handsomely rewarded; but the wonder is at seeing the servi ces of old soldiers almost forgotten. They complain that Congress has neg lected to listen to their appeals. In my opinion, sir, after all, Congress is not so much In fault. I think the fault principally lies upon the Bureau of Pensions. That bureau, by some proeess of calculation utterly unintel ligible to ordinary intellects, or at least to &n intellect like my own, has reported to Congress a larger army of Mezban veterans alive to-day than ever stood on Mexican. soil with arms in tbfiir bands at one time during the whole period of the Mexican war. No wonder Congress ha3 hesitated to make provision, after such a report as that." The only wonder is that any intelligent Congress could place im plicit confidence in such areport. For my part, I do not place impliolfc con fidence in bureau estimates. I have seen too many of them to place great r el once on them. -It is said that the farcousDr. Johnson, when asked if he believed in the existence of ghosts, said, "Gho3tsI do not believe in, be came I have seen too many of them." Lacgbter. So. Mr. President, I S3y in regard to bureau estimates. There have been many attempts to ob-ain returns of the survivora of the Mexican war from every State in this Unao, and the returns which have beet, obtained by the associations con cerned are as, accurate as any returns can in all probability be in such a cas; and what are these returns? Tbfit in the whole Union at this day then are not eleven thousand Mexi can veterans alive. I need no report from any bureau to enlighten my min( on a point like this. I eanndt-call the death-roll of the American Army that served in Mexi co ; "bufc, sir, I can, and if the Senate permits me I will, call the death-roll of all the general officers that served in tfrat Army In Mexico: Scott, Taybr, Wool, Worth, Twiggs, Kear ney, Quitman, Pillow, Pierce. Cush injy, Cadwnlader all gone; oil dead. T, tbe youncest of them all, am left to make this appeal to Congress to make it with heart and voice to do something j to do it speedily; to do it before they are all gone. Sir, if it is not done Bpeedily, if it Is deferred a few sessions longer, it will come too late; for then the action of Congress will not come to cheer living men, but will fall on silent graves. Sir. do not talk to me abont exag gerated estimates by the bureau. I can give figures of my own. One of the regiments of my brigade, a regi ment from the State of my friend near me, Mr. Butler, when it land ed in Mexico mustered eleven hun dred gallant boys. When the war was closed, when the city of Mexico was taken, that regiment mustered what? Two hundred and twenty three men. Only two hundred and twenty-three men of that gallant reg iment were left to carry the Palmetto flag back to the old State of South Carolina; and how many men of the two hundred and twenty-three are now left? Just eight. A delegate has come op from there to attend a meet ing in Baltimore, and he is here to day, and perhaps hears me now, and he tells me there ore only eight men of that whole regiment now left alive. Sir, you may go over the States, and I have been over many of them, and of the men I new in Mexico and who fought In the battles there, I cannot find one man living to-day out of every twenty or thirty. This illustrates the way Congress has been imposed upon. Sir, I need not talk of the history of the Mexican war in this Senate, x on are mus all familiar with it, although I t sav that there Is no history of that war that does even half justice. Neither need I talk of the army that conquered Mexico, but I can say in one word that no nation upon this globe need be ashamed of such an ar Irny. I say hero to-day; I say it be-j cause it is due to that army; I say it because It is due to the American character, that no government ever sent an army into a foreign country better, braver, nobler than the army America sent to Mexico. Why, sir, from the first shot fired on the Bio Grande to the last Ehot fired at the city of Mexico, that army never suf fered a single defeat, never lost a bat tle, never met a repulse, neversurren dered a detachment, never even suf fered an accidental disaster. Where can you find anything like that? But some men may say : "You had only Mexicans to fight?" Yes, very true, we had only Mexicans to fight, and we had plenty of them to fight. But ask the soldiers of France, and they are as bravo soldiers as can be found in Europe ; ask them their ex perience of these despised Mexicans, and they will tell you frankly that in all Europe there is no peasantry that are less afraid of death than these very Mexicans. I" ought perhaps to except the Irish and the Anglo-Saxons, and the Germans also ; but I tell you the Mexicans stand killing as well as any people on God's earth, and they had plenty of it -when we were there. Laughter. Sir, if this Government ever under takes to walk over Mexico again with the expectation of having the same result, they will find themselves much disappointed. I assure you that it is my opinion, withont saying one word against the American Army now, that if the soldiers of the Amer ican Army were just such soldiers as first starved and then killed tbe Cheyennes on a recent occasion, they will never get to the halls of the Mon tezumas, except a3 prisoners of war. That is my opinion. Sir, that little army that is now gone except a few broken remnants was as conspicuous for its humanity as for Its distinguished bravery. I un dertake to say here-to-day that Mexi can life, Mexican property, fumily re lations all over Mexico were a3 well protected during the American occu pation as they had ever been before or have been since. I say further, and I say it on tbe honor of a man, that no army ever invaded a foreign coun try that committed so few effenses as the army that operated in Mexico, and I am not sure but that the men committed fewer offenses than the same number of men living In civil life now in the United 3tates of Amer ica. If you ask me why, I will tell you. It was, first, discipline; and, second, not speaking of the com manding officers, who were the best America could furnish, (not Includ ing myself of course-, but speaking of the rank and file.) they were eimple, honest, brave, manly, generous, and humane. It Is said there are about ten thousand of them still left, and I say here now, and I will thank any man to correct me if I am mistaken, that I do not think In all America you will find one of them in the pen itentiary. They would die before they would commit a crime. Some of them may die in the poor-house, but you may take my word for it no soldier of this nation who ever fought in the battles of Mexico will ever die the inmate of an American peniten tiary. If the Senate will bear with me, I will justify the truth of this assertion by a reference, a brief reference, to the campaign. - - In the fall of 1816 a Missouri regi ment nine hundred strong, under Colonei Doniphan, took its departure for Mexico. That regiment executed a march of some two thousand miles; deserts were crossed and arid plains ; they passed through the Jornada del Muerio, the journey of death, a3 it was called, passed the Bio Grande at EI Paso, found opposition of every kind before them, entered and cap tured the city of Chihuahua, and in all that march never committed a sin gle crime, and never met with a sin gle defeat. Ought men of that kind to be forgotten? Any government that forgets such men is not a govern ment to encourage national heroism of any kind. But the public are bet ter acquainted with what occurred on the Bio Grande. lean hardly find in history a spectacle more interesting and more romantic than mi old friend, Zachary Taylor, "old Bough and Beady," standing there at the head of three or four thousand men confronting a whole nation of ten millions. That campaign commenced at Polo Alto and commenced brill iantly, and it ended at Buena Yista, and you all know that it ended there in a blaze of glory. Sir, I reckon Buena Vista is one of those battles that will always stand foremost in history. Then look at the other campaign beginning at Vera Cruz under Win field Scott. The capture of the city is splendid as any military achieve ment. The Gibraltar of Mexico was taken by a little American armj, with a less loss of life on the part of the as sailants than was ever suffered in any assault. This was owing to the skill and consummate geniu3 of the com mander, the excellence of our engin eers, and the splendid management of American artillery at that time. Then there was Cerro Gordo. I have some reminiscenses of that and I shall not forget them. There was a natural fortress defended by the Mex icans. That natural position Is per haps the strongest in Mexico itself. The strength of that position was great in itself, besides the strength of the Mexican army defending it, and tbey were nearly double the strength of tbe American army assailing it. It YQL. 23 K0: 38. was as fine a position as it could be. And yet Cerro Gordo was carried with a small sacrifice of life, which to the military men of that day all over the world was a matter of astonishment. Sir, in my humble opinion Cerro Gor do ranks with and 13 only second to the battle of New Orleans under old Andrew Jackson. But I will not delay the Senate ; I will not abuse its courtesy. On the 10th day of August, 1S47, ten thou4 sand men crossed the mountains and entered the romantic valley of Mexi co. It wa3 an adventurous move ment. That army abandoned its com munications, its supplies, its very pos sibility of re-enforcement. That was its condition, and yet isolated as it was, small In numbers as it was, it fought tbe battle and gained the vic tory at Contreras, Churubusco, Moli no del Bey, Ohapultepeo, and on the 13th day of September, 1S47, It stood before the ramparts of Mexico ; and how many men stood before those ramparts, all told ? Six thousand six hundred men on the 13th day of Sep tember, 1S47, crossed those ramparts, captured the city, a city containing two hundred thousand inhabitants, and defended by thirty thousand dis ciplined soldiers. Give me any other instance of the kind in history. Why, sir, the army was hardly sufficient to police the city after they captured it. When I myself stand here and look back at that, it looks even to me more like fable than reality. I shall never forget the insignificant appearance we cut when we got into the great plaza of the City of Mexico. Happily, though, they thought we were only tbe advance guard of some tremen dous army. T recollect an old English miliiaire who was there, and after he looked at the little band he said, "Is this the army ?" "Yes." "Well," said he, "all I have to say is thi3, yon Americans are not only the bravest people I ever heard of, but the most audacious people on God's earth to come here with such an army as that!" Then, sir, think of the acquisitions that have been secured to this country by that war. They are not to be esti-. mated now, they are not calculable at this time. The future only can esti mate the value of the acquisitions re sulting from that war, a territory suf ficient to make an empire, certainly large enough for another Independent country, with unsurpassed mineral wealth, mines of gold and silver that have ohanged the .monetary condi tion of the world. Why, sir, the world was struck with astonishment a year or two ago at the idea that this our territory acquired from Mexico wa3 about to deluge the whole world with an inundation of silver. I wish to God the American Congress would turn a little stream of that flood in the direction of our Mexican war vet erans. I am very sure we could stand under the deluge. Now, sir, one advantage not to speak of the harvest of glory which we foolishly thought we had reaped at that time, but a harvest, as I say, of real, substantial advantage ia ad dition to the territory and mineral there, is this, and future ages will con sider it. and that is, the command of the great Pacific Ocean, the greatest ocean upon this globe, which, will re main in oar control "to the last syl lable of recorded time,' if America MtTSTt luut i-i" lwng. - Sir, the remnant of that army, the army which did so much to this coun try, speak as it were through me to day, hold up their hands in supplica tion to this body and this Congress and say, "Give U3 a little of that we helped to secure for our country; give us a small pittance before we leave the world ; give us a pittance to help us on the downwnrd path of life in our old age ; give us something to as sist us in our last days when we are marohing to that field from which no warrior ever haa yet returned victo rious, and never will. Sir, I thank the Senate for the kind attention which ha3 been bestowed on me and for the courtesy of permit ting me to make snob a speech as thn; and were it not that it might look like taking advantage of chat courte sy, I would move now that the reso lution be taken up and passed and sent to the committee, in order to have the bill reported speedily. "Gettin EddjEashnn." Jake was heard calling acro3 tbe fence to his neighbor's son, a colored youth who goes to school at the At lantic Colored Unlveraity, "Look hyar, boy, yon goes ter school, do n't yer ?" "Yes, sir," replied the boy, "Gittin eddykasbun, ain't yer ?" "Yea, sir." "Well.it do n't take two whole days to make an hour, do it?" " Wy.no!" exclaimed the boy. "You was gwine ter bring dat hatchit back In an hour, wern't yer?" "Yes, sir." "An' it's bin two days since yer borrowd it. Now, what good's ed dykashun gwine ter do you thick skulled niggera whenyergoterschool a whole year an' den can't tell how long it takes to fetoh back a hatchit?" There are a good many white peo ple whose education does not seem to teach them how to fulfil their prom ises. The Connecticut courts have ruled that In that State clears mav be le gally bought on Sunday, but cannot --Q"? ww VJJ MUUUtl J T.CSJLtXZX.- YAIRBItOTHER & II ACKEH , Publishers. Proprietors .- ADVERTISING ELITES. OaaiecJr.OBe year- Each sacc u udlng Iwch. per yean. . SM One inch, per month. Bach additional inch, per areata. TjtffttAilVArtkmaaftt..MjuMlMJ k.M. (MITm f oaparejl. or lesa)8rac!asertf &.!, eacbsabseqaatagertion.c. CSr An traaeatadTastteementeaMast he rW ferla advaaee. - OFFICIAL FAPEtf,0F T3IBCU5TI IS IT A G1I0ST? A 2TysicriDns Female TTlio-' Appears? and Disappears in an Unaccountable Hannor, SpecialrTeiograra to the toierscaat Elpaso, HI., Feb. 2Se WhUe work"- Ing alone, two miles east of Bero to day, near bridge No. 57, orrtbe Tole- do. Feorla and Warsaw railway, Tim- otby Donahne, a seotion foreman on that road, saw a woman standing on the bridge about thirty yards from, him. She was poorly and thinly clad, and had what appeared to be an-old handkerchief tied around her head, the top being bare; an old, faded cloak around her shoulders, and her dres3 reaohing only within six or eight inches of the ground, and ap parently in her stocking feet. Dona hue looked at her for fully five min utes from where he stood, and, think ing she was In distress and needed as sistance, and eeeing a freight train approaching only a short distance off, he dropped his tools and went toward' the woman to assist her off of tho bridge, but before proceeding half the distance, tbe woman had vanished land could nowhere be seen. This was on the open prairie, wliere there is-not an obstacle in the way where any one could secret themselves, and in clear, broad daylight. Donahue examined the brioge carefully, and the ap proaches on either side, but could find no traces of any one having been on or near it. The bridge is only about thirty feet long, and spans a narrow, shallow brook, only a few inches deep at this time of year, and there were no signs of any footsteps or of any one having been around or near the brook. Donahue tells a very straight story. He is a sober, steady, reliable man, and will make oath to his statement. Upon inqairy 1 find" that this same woman has been seen upon two former occasions by differ ent persons, once by a farmer about seven years ago, and two years later by a woman who was walking on tho track who lived near in a farm-house, each one telling substantially tho same story at the time of the occur rence. No one here can account for this strange phenomenon. As to what it is, and why this straage ap pearance is made, is a mystery that no one seems able to solve. The Sad End of a Bomancc. At Vassar College not mors than a dozen yeara ago was a youaggirl from, an interior town of Wisconsin. Of wealthy parents, herself handsome and unusually bright, about to-gradu-ste, after which she was to wad her heart's choice, her cap of happtoess seemed full to the brim.- Probably prompted by pare wickedness, an un natural brother set about breaking the engagement, and only too soon suc ceeded in his purpose. The sorrow stricken yoang girl retarned home, though on tbe eve of honors that had cost her several years' hard labor. Her lover left itome and friends for tbe far west, not to retertr. A short time after the girl's parents tHed, and the large estate was divided between the surviving children. Takiag ber share, nearly S100.COO, she tarsad her back on the home ef her cbzWirood, ame In Miltgatilcan. aad has elace lived a most isolated life, not adam- ting anybody to her confidence, re pulsing all attempts at friendship. Betiring deeper into seclaeion year by year, to-day but few dare face her stern presence. She seldom if ever writes or receives a letter, makes no calls and has so callers, and, in short, is as entirely alone as one can be in this busy world. With an immense income, and one that ie rapidly in creasing, she spende bt little money, and that for necessities. Barely is she seen in the streets, aad than as if she feared tbe toneh of the bosiliag pedestrian. The brother does sot Mve a hundred miles from Milwaukee. MUwGmkte Sentinel. . Purification of the Blood. Tbe various periodicals of tba day are becoming more and more atten tive to tbe sabfeet of beaitb, aad while many paragraphs appear vfbfofi are as opposed to health as to comraon. sense, yet now aad then, we are de lighted to Sad a paragraph which we can heartily indorse, and which com mends itself to the good sense of ev ery one. Of such a character is the following from the Wcdehman .- The most important meams of par ifying the blood whatever veadera of 'purifiers' may say are tha free use of pare air, a eleaii skin, a sound liver, active kidceys, exercise, and getting the system late its natural state. One may purify the blood more In a single day while breathiag pure air than by taking sersaparilla for a month. More of effete matter Is thrown off by exercise and perspira tion, In one day more than one-br of all taken Into the stomach, sli and liquid than by a year's dosing with some of the no? trusts of the groceries. A free use of fruits will stimulate the liver to filter out more waste or 'bile' than some sappose while good, plain and wholesome food will make good blood, the old and worn out materials pass off by the mean3 referred to, soon leaving tho body in a good state. Pure air and water for oloaneiag are cheaper tben ,the 'patent WtecHrSurfa and will o ."w.TATitEnonirz. effect far more