Nebraska herald. (Plattsmouth, N.T. [Neb.]) 1865-1882, October 04, 1865, Image 1

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"7 man attempts to haul down the American Mag, shoot him on the spot." Jonx A. Dix.
VOL. I
PLATTSMOUTII. N. T., AYE D IV 15 S DAY, OCT. 1, 1SG3. ,
xNO 26.
3
15 frAvvjfi ,
r I KB :i M 11 Vta V I f Kfl ill &
r vv
1 t i tL&Z.rxfAX Xii.i.mJLi
THE HERALD
Vi fVLLl.-iIKO LYE.'IV
WEDNESDAY MORNING,
IT. D- HATHAWAY,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
jj-ii;T-c nu Main $tre'-t, opposite Arnison, to
VrV 0. C" s.
Terms: 2.50 per annum, invariably
in S'ivwc1.
Jin les of .'I li : r I is i tig.
0- fp::i' pp of ten Knf-) 0'if insertion,
ier, uvj-l-(')-rit iTi-frM-n
Piof-isi iikI rf.4 ct -re.'uimr "is i'.ties
OliC olir'cr r-t.iliuc or I-;-, p-T iinirtin
r.i .i.tbs
" 1 1 r- months
On-t.a'f c -,'u"M oocili'
- s'x tnon'l.s
" " t . sc n.-u;l:
Oae "o'. jrr.n : ths
1 .5"
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4:. 1 1
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VI tra-:- :.t a-lv. r
a.tv.u..
C- Vv'r art- p i a
o't -ii". t 'i ' . -. .
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lit ! paid
r in
1 t i
U .1 r
ki-l- of J"-" W-.ri
tc V. i i .'iV f HI"-
K. r. LIVINGSTON, Iil. D
Physician and Surgeon
..-.' u ii'
I
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ct, c;po-
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Cjs si:.' N v:- - . 1 ' : " ..-' 1 "
an- u . - ' l i--t s -. I'l -l'
vILLITT POTTEKGES. i
ATTOIINKV AT LAW,:
I'l.ATT.SMdL i !I - - N.:5iUA-A.
'1 T3- .11.1 SIQM-TT.
ATTOUMIV AT LAW
Solicitor in Chancery.
PIAT'-M T I'll, - - NT'-ImMSKA.
'.VASHIMGTCrj D C
t
F. M. DORRINGTOM,
; At' -..'':
ri.rrsi
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A R. Y P U D L I C
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NOTAK
C C M Wi 3 G i C I E n CFDECIDG
Fire o.ni Life 13, xij i,
A, e..
f . r .
I I--S I ! . ;
f i IV- i ii
ty, I. i : - ' 1-
i . n o : N. ' .
i I.n l - - ! it
TT t' vit: i; a
t J-UW.-ra ., .
I'l ilt-UI ''I'll. .
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,.-,4 L.u:u, i.
t t.r -
.1 1-u- ii '-. i.
PLATTE VAIiLSY
tm n s n . ?-" ia
G.W.CROW, - - PROP.
t am p-'t a. I to furnish .-.'! who rr.ny favor me
with t!i-:r p. t iiiii , With l'Mling, ini;Ie nirar or
to.i.i i.t the iierk. U. W. fll-tW.
1' tiifi.i utii, A;i! I-1. yl
MRS
L. GOLDING,
I K Al'TH AI.
MIDLIFE,"
ii.ti pr-ti ru rrt !m;ii y i t ' v ; 1 .11 t s ri r .
t r.rl.Fprt -iy . 1U t'f.i'.tli. A j II.
Mr.-. :! trie ha- ln.iii i'! ly It vau'l in lliii .
K jt l-n in tbcu.-nli-v.cjtprtii ci : '.vu.
J 1 y 1 tf
JOSErn SCnLATER.
"WATCSMAKER and JEWELEP.,
til MX M KI.ET,
I'LATTSMt VTH, - - NF.RRA.SKA.
A p '"'1 :i-.-'"t!ilrni ..f VV a! e.. C.'i'i- . Ten".
J, w'ry. War.-, I'.me ' i 's Vi.'Pn anil Vt-
cilui 1 1 i Liin-' t: ii;'-s n h'i'i'i. A:lvo:k c.tii
Cll te l to l is r ,rt; 1 1 bc u ar'a-:te-!.
April 10, l-t j.
Thirty desiraLle business nnJ resi
dhnco J-OTS IN ri.ATT.MOUTIL
Tn thousinJ aercs of prairie and tim
ber LAND IN CASS COUNTY.
Terms to suit cash pur chairs.
D. IT Wiiih.kr.
I--- il f s: it- Aent,
C'T.-t M nse, I'lafiiiouth.
J'tne 5, m3
NATIONAL MILLS,
DENVER. C.T.,
WHITTEMORE & CO , Proprietors,
Buy ail linds cf srain at hi?.eFt market rate. The
at-.utlon of the Hh-nt cr..w.-s ot Nt-J'raska is ca'J-d
tr. the fcv.pcrior tacilni' S nffjide.l iliem by thee mills
ia coaveitir.it into iash tho ua: inf nit J fir the
C. loraiio nja.k't. att?. 5, rr3
Probato Notice-
TERRIT'tRY OK NKI'KASKA, J
County of Can.
ss.
T'lrsiiaQt to an ord.r of the Pr.'hite Court cf'aid
"'tnty , Dta.le on the 7th d iy of Atiu-t A I). 165.
eitu e is her, by g. cn that a'.l claim- against the es-
ti'toi Wiv J "ii-, K'- O' 0 ia- county, dici-'a"' d, j
r st heoti file ta th-. tff.ce cf ;a:l Cja.t on or teforu
fAe Sth dat cf FtrbrU'irv, A. I). 1SC0, I
J J ' :
'O'rhich d iy ssirt Court wii! be in eerica to heir j
ju otermine on ail ucn claims.
C.w.n ntiiA. rr v ..n. una th. .aI rf ai.tcl Cn'ltt i
i- J this 7lh day uf'Aurust, A. l. lvsj-
J W. vfAic-UALI..
.J 7 w ircucaje JEJg
"A Comnlete Pictorial Historv of!
the Times.
"Thfi best, cheapest, and mo?t success
ful Family Taper in the Union."
Harper's Weekly,
SPLENDIDLY ILLUSTRATED.
Critical nr tices of the Pr-s.
The Ve-t family newspaper ia the United State.
Art Ijmdn Adwrtier.
'I U m )ii l n. wspaper of our country complete in
all the departments of an American Family I'aper,
llariT'. W.-eUly has eirned for itelf a ritflit to Its
li:, " J'ICRSAI. UF C'lVILUlTIO .." X. y Eve
nt n' 'nut.
I bis paper furnish'' the bit iUiintrutiovm. Our
for: i'c hirinians will em ich t lietaseivrH out of 11 a r-
per'a Weekly l-ioif after writer. ini printer, and
put.U-hr v are ti.rii"! to d'i.!. A" ". i'.nmiteligt.
A i.'i--s;ty id ewry I.. w liolj .ut J run.
It i- at cue a Iru'lnux r "lit. cut an I hiKtuiicl to-
ni.li-t t tlie nati. n I".i'inlJ; hlfi HrtJit.
'i h" l't of it c!:i's in Aineriri. Bix'nn Trarnltr
SufrTription. S SO.!.
T!." pi!;:is'iera l.ave prr.'. rUu a iy t:m of uniling
! y h '.'Ii t n - v cm supply the M .; tisr. am) kkk
: I.v iToiiitit.y to tiiose mho prfr to rei-eive their pe-
1 ill- direi-lly f "in tlie iBee of put.licatinn.
i l'"S'ir.a-trs anil ot he- d.'iirou of fzettiu up clubs
J will bi; rupiiie wit!i a haoiiamne jiciorial uLuw-l'iil
i Harper's WVkxiv 01. e vr, ... $t.
ah t x:a ii.'py of eittier th- Weekly or M.-iftiiziue
will l"' Pisppii'ii nlii t..r very clob 'f t'ivf Sub-K-ribrrj
ai ii earn, in one remittance; or tlx copioa
fjr
I u-k ii'idi'i''- ran l-e nyip'ie 1 at .my tiino.
i ; e iiu. ual vulumi-s of HAtir-KR's H iklit, in ria
.'I .:ii f iri.iirt.- will be iseut by i-xit-'i.. i'''e f rx
-". '"r ?'t euli. A cnin;,'"t. ?er. cm prisi i.(r
1'ii.t Vuh.iiiei-. sent on rtceipl ol c.h at tbe rate ot
C t per volume, freight at xpens.' of purrlia. r
AilJnsi II A It rLK & l!KiTtl Ell.
Kranklin iVquaru, .N . V-
STATEMENT
OF THE
American Insurance
COMPANY,
OF
FREE i ORT, ILLINOIS.
V, tirata Bright, Tfr-i Ji nt. and Ch .'s L. Curri
er, S'-eret ii y, of t ie Am"rinu In-nrnnca Cititp .ny,
Kr- eii'ir t , 1 llftioift, beieby ret lily that sai-t C"inp.i-
. oi a t:tp:tti .'f ai irn.-t one tiunar u
i:...mi; i'Uii.T.,i...iiii':ii'y itaon iml cmte winli
! ..t .-l. vmiu, !;..!. at i'a-t Ave time, the amount of!
rant capital, ami not ei-i'iimbcrf i to mure than one
I f i ii. of fcu.d e.is.'i valuation.
ii iK.tji i:r:gt.
C ili a I.. C - KKIKE.
PTiTI. ( T IX..H 1
f tepheii-j" Conuty. f '
I P-nr.4.;y arparl befoi tne, Crk of tat Co'iuty
Point "f t pie ns.u couniy. Hi ram D.i',-ht ai..l .lia'n
L. ( jt fi' r, i i in" known as tlie IV. 1 o ut and Stcre-
i iry of the Inierioan Innuraiice Coniiwny, who ueinE
nr.: (Iu)v NK'.'in :irr. ir.l i iil. to luv ..'v.ml Iv iIhi.c
ri'il s .y'i'.iat the a buy.? eettifimte !ul.scn0t"J to by j
ll.fl.l r-vlirt'lllnlv in lrm in -iiLkLiii Nmi lu fn-1 .4 ;
r!bUI.' .huJSr0&5ed .l y lb lrauscend-nl, real
tf JUt;-,. 1 ii. lM. It. II. tl'M.tl.LiJD,
C.'e.-k of Co . c" tun. St,i'h-ui..n d.
Iy A. VV. I;rtv.w-.TLh, nej-uty.
! CERTIFICATE CF AUTHORITY,
I T'. ex;. ne i n lh. :jl-lt.' Jtouaiy, 1 ;.!.
' . 'i;7j'.' ! jftrr-ttwn i. ;.' of 'ft r. Auditor, I
i . I'li'ui. i, N' Ih'.isk i, jhig. 17:li, l.-o. f
! V.'H!k:.s, ,' W. Wil-.ii. .fs;tant GrMer.u
j . iui i-t!..' .ti i-'rii-an Iii'ur.iuce Ci.lupsiiy , l itr !
j at I r..":-.rt, i.i .staie ..f liii.ioia, has u., J hi tins
j . - .t .-..i v of tf.o act .-'I mr -rp iiaii' ll of s-ai 1 Otti
i p .ny, .in I a t'i!"inerit unil.-r oath. fchiv.jn irs ci
I ii ti ..i. : - r-.j'i.r.'.l I.v lie I Oil l t"rt.til cect!..n of X
j !-i r( e'i T- 'nl'.rv uf N'c'.r.isk.t. entit'eil "An vlet
i in . ;.'ti oi t" i it-u. ju.-e ouitii," i ppiuvoii t b-
1 i i I . :i, I s- , ;
Ih-nf. k. I:- i: known by th-e pres-nts, Th.it In
pr r.-u n. e "i t.:.' 'ii is i J 1, VV ili laia K. H.--
vi'f. .1 ulitor r ( 'f: Tf-riti.ty of X.-br:ik i. 'o h'-r. hy
oi 'iiy t int ai.l .4nerioin I iisuranii' f.'uiiip.iiiy has
f'..tl ...it'.oriiy to t ... n s;ici Lu-i.i. ss of luurain e in
:!.e 'I'.-i rito.y of NV'-rask.. llnep the l.uw.s of this
Ifir.loiy. until the o I i-t i! iy f Janu ti y. A. D. 1 Moo
I:i i mie-s w;,.'renf 1 hive iiil.-i-ri :.-! my
D r nr' a ii-l eaus. ,1 t bo ea I of the A ud l to? n
f L. s. oui. e to be ailixeil, lait. llih dav of .-luirust,
A.. V- 1Cj.
V. E. H.s-HVLY.
Te.Ti'oriaUuiiitor.
CHaVS E PARCEL, Ag't,
I'LJlTSMOl XII, xta.
nug ':0 w t
SEMINARY
FOR TRK rDlCATIOS OF
YOUNG LADIES.
Mr and Mrs Shtrloi k bc to inform the tnhab
;t:inn f t l'latt-niouth aH its v iciuit tlut they htive
pitied a eniuar-for the crducjti'U of yuuag la-
Ta cuw of instruction inclti'W triLriih. as
ht ia tir-t v t- M-h ioU ia turopr; Krenrh, M u
it iano Forle, Ouitii au-1 siiifing) Fudcj Wi-rk,
Miifiio will 1 e t.iught us r separate 6tud iX re-
d .
T'. i idh (in advance) car be known hy applying at
tlir re--iiice littfiy occupied by .Mr. Fellows
tut.ed. and m m iy of iiiumc for tale.
littIUlllti. ?fpt. IS, nji.
Music ! Music !
RAYMOND, MI.FR f CO.,
rttiLnts i
Piano rortosjMelocleoiis, Music and
Husical M'dse,
COUNCIL BLUFFS - - - IOWA.
(At the stand formerly uc d as the Post OIEee )
Orders by mViI for Muie. Book, or anything per
taining tj Music, promptly attended to
fSO: ders for tiiDinpor repairing Piano Fortes
and Mfli.sJenns in l'lattsiuouih and vicinity wiil bc
atti ud d to at our earliest conr'-i'lence.
KAYiiOXD, MINER It CO.
An. S, ls65 tf
Chancery Sale
Vix stadtir. Martin Stadler, William
v in'". L. W. Maik, a firm doinit
business in the nanieof tadier, Biotb
er & Co. Complainants,
V.
Ln her R. I? xv, l'hebe rtoxler, Da-
id Ti- i-ce a-id Mnp'.ciah Day Co.,
Ptfcadant.
5-Ia Chancery.
In pursnaaee and ty virtue of a decretal order to
me directed from tfle olbce of tbe C lerk of tlie I'is-
Nebraska Territory, made in the fcbore cause ami I
Lear ng date on tin. 11th day of AnrUls6A. th I
tnct H urt. Sit Jinlicial UiMrict ju and Ir Cass to
Arrii tena cf Jid Court, a, the si)scriber. Master in np'pJ iQ r!j I Ou!d at once OntPr npr
Chaucery for aid Ceurl. will sell at public vendue; Pel,eu lo UJ 1 nuUlU " once t nter per
for can o the highest and bet bidder, ia front of
the Court Uoose iu i'iatt.-uiouth Mebiatka, on
Saturday, Oc'rber 7:h, 1S65,
at 10 o'clock A. AT., the following described, real es
tate, to wiu
l.ot nnmber twelve 12 In block noirter on ft,
south of the.p'ibtie r.nare In tbe town of Kock B.ujj
In Cass eouniy Xebiaska Territory,
T.is-eiher with a!I the b nemcnts and appertenan-
res thereon or thereto teloupinfr. To lie sold as tiie
Pr"P"'' of defen.lunts in the above can., to
Katis fy sai l decree, ttia amount of which ia 16o7.4i
and ill tereit from date of . aaid decree, toftthor wiOi
a;l cost.
p:Mimoath, 5cnt, StbrlSoS.- '- - I -i '
F. 41. DOREINSTOX.
L . ' Maa-eriO Cbincvj.
f H". rorr5CE, Sel fcr Csunp'i. .
EETTER FROM SEN. CRIMES.
The Otiumwa Couriir publiihes the
fdilowing letter to lloa. E. II. Stiles of
Wapello county. Iowa:
I-cr.LiNGTi.-i, Sept. 1-1, 186-S.
My Dlar tfin; I am astonished
to learn, as I do by: your ttt r of the
12th inst., that any one ha asserted or
believed for one moment that I do not
fully, freely, and as enthusiastically as
I am capable of doing it, support the
entire Republican ticket in the coming
canvass. You say the report i that
I am indifferent to the result "on ac
count uf the uncalled for and unwise
action of the Union Conreution on the
suffrage question." I certainly did re
gard that action as uncalled for and
impolitic, and had I been a member of
that convention I would have opposed
the introduction into the platform of any
new is.-ue upon any new subject, how
ever just I might believe the principle
to be. I would have opposed it because
I believe that there Las been no time
during the la.t four years when it was
more necessary that the Union party
of the nation should present an unbrok
en front and stand as a unit, than at the
present moment, and I would have done
nothing, consented to nothing that would
have a tendency to repel a single voter
from a support of the Union party,
which is a support of the Union itself.
I believe every v:te withdrawn at this
time from thy support of the Union
ticket, withdraws just that much moral
support from the Administration, and
,i, ., ,,., : ;,, , , . - ,l
that PUpport IS JtUt 33 UeCcSSiry tO the
Goveni-.nent in the present crisis as it
was i.rK--.s;iry to support our nriiiies in
the field.
The very fact thru in my view the
convention. erred by introducing a local
issue into the canvass when the minds
of the people U T6 VeTV' properly eD-
1
natienai issues pressing upon uiein, so ;
far from begetting "indirierence" would j
give m; much greater anxiety as to the j
result of the election, mid would call
f.rth a corresponding exertion did not
1 know that the p.opi.j ot Uwa thor- ,
ouhiy unders'.nnd the questions before
them, and cannot be diverted from their
support of the Government by any side
issues live this o: negro suffrage in this
Stali;. .....
There is not an irittllijent man in
the Sine who does not comprehend all
of the subjects legitimatt-ly embraced
in this tanva-s.
The Union party seeks simply to
fulfill in good fjtiih their obligations as
sumed during tin war, and to secure
the couitry as the fruit of four years
struggle permanent unity, peace and
prosperity.
We-all know that the Democratic
parly desire and intend to coalesce with
the returned rebels from the South. By
that means, if they can succeed in dis
tracting the supporters of the Govern
ment and secure a few Northern States,
they hope to obtain control of the Gov
ernment, and then will follow the as
sumption of the rebel debt, the restora
tion of slavery under a less odious
name, and the return of the leaders of
the rebellion to power. It was to this
end that the farce was enacted a few
weeks ago at Des Moines cf nominat
ing a Soldiers' ticket by the Democratic
party.
But of this folly it is hardly worth
while to speak. I have neither seen
or beard of a man who is like'y to be
deceived by i:. It is only calculated to
make the actors in it ridiculous, and its
only final result will be to add one dis
appointed man to the Democratic party.
No, my dear sir, there never was a
time in the history of the Government
when it was incumbent upon every good
citizen to support the Union ticket, what,
ever mas' be his intentions on the sub
ject of -universal sutTrage, than now;
and if I believed that there was the
slightest doult about the result, though
I am admonished by my physician thai
lean no longer safely speak' out of
. t !. 1 l .
Ju0rS shoUitl genera;.', be COlTi-
sonally into the canvass, and use what
strength I have to urge upon the people
the importance' of the contest. But
there is no need of it. The people
will not be deceived or misled on this
subject. The jugglery at Des Moices
when Colonel Benton received the nom-
ina'.ion of the men who daring the last
four T5arVljave thrown every possibles
impediment 10 the way of the Union
cause, was too transparent to deceive
any one. Your obedient servant,
JAMES W. GRIMES.
THE STEAMBOAT Utli.MlItS.
Wm. Murphy, one of the persons
accused of conspiring to burn steam
boats on the western rivers, has been
brought to trial before a military com
mission in St. Louis. The following
extract we take from the proceedings
of the 21st inst.:
The accused was then arraigned and
pleaded not gtiilty to the several charges
and specifications:
The accused then requested the Com
mission to order the Judge Advocate to
give subpoenas commanding the attend
ance of Jefferson Davis, late President
cf the so-called Confederates States of
America; James A. Seddon, late Sec
retary cf War, C. S. A.; James L.
Trenholm, late Secretary of Treasury,
C. S. A., and Stephen R. Mallory, late
Secretary of the Navy, C. S. A., as
witnesses for the defense.
The Judge Advocate declined to
summon the above named witnesses un
til it could be shown that they were
material witnesses.
Defendant then filed an affidavit, of
which the following is the substance:
" Defendant also states that he is
charged with conspiracy to burn and
destroy steamboats and oilier property
belonging to or in the service of the
United States, with intent to aid' the
rebellion against the United States, and
in the specification to said charge the
names of parties are set forth with
whom the conspiracy 13 alleged to have
been made. Defendant states that he
can prove Ly the testimony of said
Davis, Mailory, SodJon and Trenholm
that the parties named in said specifica-
. jitions did not conspire as alleged to
I ...
L.UIH
nd destroy boats and other prop-
erty, but that the burning and ces.ruc
tion stt forlll was a ,nilitary measure
of lhe rebel rjovernment at Richmond,
Vat conceived and ordered, by said
(Jovemment, and curried out, so far a
it was carriea QM, by persons in th;
...in.arv anj naVal service of said Gov-
eminent. He furtlu-r states that by
the testimony of said Davis, Trenholm,
Mallory and Seddon he can prove that
the late rebel Government is alone re
sponsible for the conception and execu
tion cf the military measure of turning
and destroying boats and other proper
ty, and that he, the said defendant, was
not one of the persons ordered or em
ployed by them to "burn and destroy
steamboats aod other properly belong
ing to or in the service of the United
States," as set forth in the charge. And
he is instructed by his counsel and ver
ily believes that said Davis, Seddon,
Trenholm and Mallory are- material
witnesses in his case."
?5j "Soldiers, duriog the war. the
Copperheads laughed at your wounds;
they sneered at your scars; they mocked
the corpses of your comrades; they
prophesied your defeat, they hoped for
your disgrace; they prayed for your
overthrow and death; they despised the
! cause for which you were battling; they
were the allies of your murderers.
'Now you have reached home cov
ered with glory; 3ou are welcomed by
the true people of the North; yorj are
radiant with success, and the very men
of whom I have been speaking, crowd
around you and say thty are your
friends. Beware of them all ! They
do not want to help you; they want you
to help them "Speech of Col. R. G.
Ingersoil at Peoria, Illinois, to the S6th
Illinois Regiment at their anniversary
meeting.
J5sg" A certain green customer, who
wa3 a stranger lo mirrors, stepped into
the cabin cf one of our ocean steamers,
stopping- in front of a large pier glass
which he took for a door, said :
"I say, mister, when does this here
boat start?"
Getting no reply from the dumb re
flection before him, he again repeated:
'I say, mister, when does this here
boat start?"
Incensed at ,the silent figure, he
broke out:
"Go to thunder, you darned sassafras
colored, shock-headed, bull calf; you
don't look as if you knew much, any
how." jg?SS A new -use for Confederate
money has been found. A lady in
Texas stuffed a mattrass with five hun -
"dred thousand dollar wprth of it. j.
DLrAltTIC.T OF THE 3I1S
SOURI. General Pope has made a general
reorganization of the Department of
the Missouri. The following changes
will be interesting tq Northwestern
readers;
The district of the Pineries is abol
ished. The district of Wisconsin, to include
the State of Wisconsin; headquarters
at Milwaukee; Major General Pleas
anton, United States volunteers, to
command.
The district of Minnesota to include
the State of Minnesota and that portion
of Dacotah lying east of a line drawn
from the hea 1 of Pembina river to the
western extremity of the Devil's lake,
thence to the head of the James river,
thence following the course of the
James river southerly to the forty fourth
parallel of latitude, thence east along
that parallel to the Big Sioux river,
thence along the. line of that river to
the northern boundary of lhe State of
Iowa; Brigadier and Brevet Major
General J. M. Corse, United States
volunteers, to command.
The district of Utah, to include the
Territory cf Utah ; headquarters at
Salt Lake City; Brigadier General P.
E. Conner to command.
The district of Iowa, to include the
State of Iowa, except the counties of
Buncombe, Sioux, Plymouth, Osceola,
Woodbury, : Inson, Emmet, Kossuth.,
Winnebago, Worth, Mitchell, Howard,
Winnesheik, and Alamakee; headquar
ters at Clinton, Iowa.
The district of Dacotah, to include
the counties of Buncombe, Sioux, Ply
mouth, Osceola. Iuon, Emmet, Kos
suth, Winnebago, Worth, Mitchell,
Howard, Winnesheik, Woodbury and
Alamakee, in Iowa, and the Territory
of Dacotah, except that portion includ
ed ia the districts of Minnesota and
Nebraska; headquarters at Sioux City;
Brigadier and Brevet Major General
A. S. Sully, United States volunteers,
to command.
The district of Nebraska, to include
the Territcries of Nebraska and Mon
tana, and that portion of Dacotah lying
west of the western boundary of the
fira named Territory; headquarters at
Laramie; Brigadier and Brevet Major
General 1 Wheaton, United States
volunteers, to command. ,
EtS" The "DiocTatic" Committee
of Connecticut has issued an address
to the ''party" in that State, calling up
on them to defeat the amendment strik
ing out llu! word "white" from the Con
stitution i-nd admitting blacks to the
suffrage. The reason given is "that
while meu must rule Connecticut." As
the blacks are about one in ninety of
the population, the inference that if the
ninety-firtt black man has a ballot he
will rule the ninety white men is vastly
complimentary to the negro. If the
claim that one negro can rule ninety
white men, if given equal rights, is not
negro worship, we should be glad to
learn whr.t is.
a
EST The community, it is said, will
shortly be supplied with a new fraction
al currency, printed on "memprane"
paper a new invention in the paper
line -the successful imitation of which
will baffli? the skill of the oldest coun
terfeit. It will be well nigh impossi
ble lo produce the paper outside the
Treasury Department at Washington,
and front its texture and finish lhe least
expert in money wiil be able to distin
guish the genuine note. Not the least
among the many excellencies of tha
new currency is the fact that it will
wash.
m m m
gtS-i A young orator having written
a speech which he intended to deliver
on a certain occasion, gave it to a friend
to read, and desired his opinion of it.
The friend, after some time, told the
author Le had read it over three times,
the first time it seemed very good, the
second ''ndifTerent, and the third quite
insipid. "That will do," said the au
thor, very coolly, "for I have only to
iepeat it once."
JPST An Irishman got out of the cars
at a railway station for refreshment
but unfortunately the bell rang, and the
train left before he had finished his re
past. "Hould on," cried Pat, as he
ran like- a madman after the car,
'.'hould on, ya murtherin ould stame in-
lin,, ycu've got a passenger aboard
mats iwi uenina: .- ... , ..
A SHOUT AXSWER.
When Gov. Stone, of Iowa, learned
that Brevet Brigadier General Thomas
Hart Benton, jr., had accepted the nom
ination for Governor, he sent the Gen
eral the following dispatch :
"September 1st, l56o.
'Hon. II. C. Ilenderssn, Marsballtown:
"Please say to Col. T. II. Benton,
Democratic candidate for Governor,
that I shall be gratified to have him
meet me at Boonsboro to-morrow, at
Toledo 5th, Vinton G.h, Waterloo 7th
inst., and other appointments, for joint
discussion of the issues of the day upon
equal terms.
"W. M. STONE,
"Union candidate for Governor.''
The reply was as follows:
"Marshalltown, Sept, 2, 1S65.
"Gov. W. M. Stone, Boonsboro:
"I am not the Democratic candidate
for Governor.
Titos. H. Benton, Jr."
This is sufficiently explicit and lacon
ic. As he denies tha soft impeachment,
the question now arises. Whose candi
date is he ?
2F A correspondent of the Maine
Democrat says that the father of Jelf.
Davis was barn ia Maine and went
South when he had nearly arrived at
manhood. He was not afterward heard
from until Jeff. Davis visited Maine
some years ago, when he stated in con
versation with a friend, lhat his father
was born in Buxton, and had arrived
in Mississippi a poor boy. The writer
says Davis' parents were not married
The following advertisement
appears in one of the London journals:
"Dogs and cats to board. Families
going out of town can have their dogs
carefully attended to at the private
apartment of the Dags' Home, Hollings
worth Street, Liverpool Road, IIollo
waVi N. A scale of terms furnished
on receipt of a stamped envelope ad
dressed the Superintendent as above!"
EST It is said that the executioner
had much ditliculty in hanging Dr
Pritchard, because of his long hair and
complete beard. The Doctor' case
was the reverse of that of Absalom
whose long hair made his hanging
easy. But then, Absalom wasn't hang
ed by the neck, and might even have
been cut down and saved if Genera
Joab hadn't cut him up by sending
three dans through him. That was
the way in which secessionists were
treated in good old Bible times and
says the Boston Traveler, it wasn't a
bad way except for the sufferers.
"Vel, lasht night vash de varst ash
never vas. I tought to go down de hil
to mine house, but no sooner did I valk
de faster did I stand sthill, for de dark
ness vas so tick I cood not stir in my
poots, and de rain, dunder and blixen
in more'n tree minits my skin vas vet
troo to mine clothes. liut arter von
little vile stopped quitin to rain somedig
so I keep feelin mineself all de vay
long, and ven I comes to mine own
house to valk in, vat you tink ? It be
long to somebody else."
JCST A Brigadier General in full
uniform was stopped iu the street, in
Cincinnati, by an old lady who wanted
to know why he had not had the dirt
removed from the street in front of her
house. She mistook him for a police
man. jyIn a cemetery in Sharon, Conn.,
is a family lot in which are seven
graves arranged in a circle. Six of
them commemorate six deceased wives
of D S , while the seventh and
more stately slab, bears the simple but
affecting inscription, "Our Husband."
A philosophical cibman in
Mobile, thus speaks of the section over
which his wheels make their tracks :
''If you run over a j'oungster down
here in this here ward," said he, "the
'the folks don't say nothin' kase they
have got more children than whiles for
'em but you jist run over a goat, or a
kid, or a sow, or a pig, and blest if a
mob ain't arter you in two miniu!"
A Louisville editor says that
his rival's "figure resembles a hunch
backed monkey with the colic; and his
political course as tangled as a hang
man's knot." '
The Litest name invented for a
circus is the "fiqueseurriculum." .
AX I.MrORTAIVT CORRECTION.
A verbal error, which has appeared
in some of the newspapers, has been
deemed of sufficient importance for
official correction. The Secretary of
State says the section in which it occurs
is as follows :
And be it further enacted, That all
persons now by law entitled to a less
pension than heretofore specified, who
shall have lost one foot and one hand
in the military service of the United
States, and in the line of his their
duty, shali be entitled to twenty dollars
per month.
This section, the Secretary says, is
printed in the pamphlet edition of the
laws of the last session of Congress
precisely according to the original roll,
with the exception thai the word "his"
is underscord, t. e., put in italics, and
the word ' their" placed in brackets, the
reason for which is obvious. The error
is that newspapers have printed the
word "or" instead of the word "and
between the words "foot" and "hand."
The Acting Commissioner of Pensions
says without this correction the busi
ness of the buseau will be uselessly in
creased without benefit to any one.
IKS"" "One cf our worthy State Sen
i I Ml T -V " 1
ators, says tne isasnvnie iispatcn,
"was attacked by the sidewalk of Cher
ry street last night, and driven to a
door-j tep, where he sat until a late hour.
wailing for the pavement to recover its
equilibrium."
PST It is related lhat a rebel officer
captured in battle, asked wonderingly,
"Where is this Kansas that sends so
many soldiers into the field? What
part of the map is it on? I never heard
of it till the war commenced."
EST" I'1 pleading for damages for
breach of promise in New York, a
woman said she might have married
three other men while losing time with
her faithless one. The court was much
impressed with the statement.
fiS" A correspondent of the Brook
lyn (N. Y.) Times sends the following
cure for cholera to that paper: Pour
half a pint of boiling water on a table
spoonful of salt, and a teaspoonful of
cayenne pepper; stir it well ; take it at
one draught, after straining.
5fA capital , story is told of tha
French novelist, Alexandre Dumas. At
the Theater Ilistorique a rich tradesman
one of the shareholders of the theater
solicited the honor of an introduction
to him. On the favor being granted ho
thus addressed Dumas: You're a mulat
to, aro you not?" "Olyes," said the
novelist, wondering what would cotno
next. "Then of courao your father was
a negro?" "Of course, he was," replied
Dumas, winking at those present. "Then
your granfathcr, (hesitating,) your
grandfather " "Was an ape," inter
rupted DumiS. ' "Bah!" "There Is no
'bah' in the matter" continued Dumas,
"my family begins where yours ends;"
and he turned hisback upon him amidst
roars of laughter from the bystanders.
Valla.vdiguam for Senator. Tho
Cleveland Leader states that a part of
the Democratic programe of that Stateis
yet kept scrupulously secret, but never
theless fully resolved on by those "in tha
ring," is nothing less than the carrying
of the next Legislature and the election
of Clement L. Vallandigham as the next
U. S. Senator of Ohio. The Democracy
do not, of course, expect to carry the
State on the general ticket, nor will they
attempt it; but they will lend every effort,
by colonizing votes, by trading votes, by
spending special labor on every district
that can be possibly carried by a Demo
crat, to obtain control of the next Legis
lature and all to the end that they may
get Vallandigham, the dirtiest dog among
all the traitors and political scoundrels
of the country, into the U. S. Senate.
That is an ambition entirely worthy of
the Democratic party.
57"By a whaling vessel which arrived
at New London trom the Arctic Ocean,
advices wero receive! from Capt. C. II.
Hall, explorer, who left the United States
jn 18G4. Hall's letters wera expressed
150 mile9 across tha ice on 6leds to reach
open sea. He has obtained valuble in
formation regarding tha Franklin expedi
tion. Hall expects to spend most of bis
time in Kinjj Williams Land and on
Boothie Felox Peninsula, and desired
vessel to be sent in spring to bring him
homo. - j
A'min who bruta'.ly assaulted his
wife was1 brought before Justice Cole, of
Albany, lately, and had a good deal to 8y
about getting jostice. "Justice!'; repli
ed Colo,, "you can't get that here, this
C3rt his ro pcTrD: to hang you."
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