5-v ?v -3-''-"-'.--'- v-f-'N. "Jf any man attcmjtts to haul doicn tha American Jagy shoot him on the spot" John A. Dix. VOL. I PLATTSMOUTII. N. TV, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 18, 18G5. NO28. i. J THE HERALD - ' ' IS rriLKJlEI EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING, BY H. D- HATHAWAY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. ffOr.'tca !i tri' t, 1 1 site Auii.ion, Io. Sfcf & Co.'ft. Terms: $2.50 per annum, invariably ii. advance. Jktilfs of A dccrlhhi" nf liaare (sp.-n-e f f ti n lire) cue insertion, Each ul-'-'i'i-"it i i j -1-r 1 1 n J'ioff.--ii;.il : iM' u t fx' tt-'linj rix lines jb quarter c- .iri.u uric , ' i-.nuura S' Ill.'IilhS " fir- o mouths Cm half Cilu'-41'! tfftlvc l:. il:tln six month. 44 liife LU-'UtliS 44 i;,, '. :!' $1 .'.0 l.io III III) i'.Yi l.YI-0 I.I H 4't.lM i-T.i)' 1 1 . 1 M I fvl n'l !.'.. I " Aii trtisii.;ii a !v;".i ein.-r-lu iil'lit he )a:d It ia Htf- We srf r'4 psrl to .1 all k i'. of '! Work t'. -nirt uui;t'. an! ia i '!:it wil give wu- t:l,oll. gusiucss givectonu H. It LIVINGSTON, M. D. Physician and SuTgeon, Mil'' '1 ft t I ' ', I ' t'. :, Nt WILLITT POTTEXGER ATTO ! i Xi: V AT I . A V , rLATT.S.V'L-MI - - SKliKASKA. 1 71- JlAlttlt SYtvL attoi:ni:v at law AS1 Solicitor in Chancery. rLATTSM' l'TII, - - NF.HR.1SKA. j: l 4 I i ... foil VVA3HINGTCN D c F.'M- DORRINGTCN, Si" it Ai EM : rLATTSMorill, - - M-.rHASKA, In ; rej.. re I ' -Vre--. l0' l' : 4 - ' t-- ttt mr.i niia Aoi.i I'., i-il ( r nrf c!;nni lief -re 4 i '. 4 : .i ' I . ii.iMiii I'fpi'ini.T.it. i n-. lit. in. it., ..i:l liiittiy I. tritls " kot i iro'ie' it.-, a i.-i i'l proportion t ' f tlie claim. I". M. lti!.UKOTU ;5. NOTARY PUBLI AND COW I'A'ANCF.P' R.a. !.-: it ; i-A , . t.., : an i. T..x I'.tvrr f..r l i j air : : ini.-i.J.ii.-o. A.-. t-i.t. Li.-;.-i i j i..-- care wii N-Vraf- . J.. V , A p -1 1 -'oil., tf 12. V32B:B:jaS:s-i, NOTAHY T'UIiLIC . AM. C 0 1 r , V ! S S ! O r I E R 0 F D E E D S lire and Life Ins, Ag't, A(,b? f -r , .;:-:.. -i "f cla.ttM airiiiti't ,ovrt.metit, f.,r Sn ,! . t. ti t ir i lutt s iiD'l niinor lie:-. A-i-nt Ui 'l,e I -i' 'i t ', j t.t4; of l.:itj'l airl t ity proper ty. Le-fins f i.io.eeii:-. 1'ayi.niit of T4. iu all laiMof Nt !-ra atitt We'eru low a. AttemU to i l.ll.-i:.- t T I J4V I'lr .t 1 i:t-i.i u.. to : 1 1 t o a if.nei ttl l.aua , Itliututce, ( . ti. n Aneu. y. l i Ivj.ire- n.en in Nebraska. .. V , M..y l.". 1 PLATTE VALLEY O. VV. CRCVV, - - - PROP- I 3i n-cjj ir'-1 tn fiiri:i-li a'l who mav'faor me .-.iiti.-;r piii i -nac, Woii loottv. iim i" me.ii. or k-.-J! v fii v-tk. U. W.CUOW. J4a:--i.. ,..th, Arr': J'l MRS. L. GOLDING- IT, ACT HAL MID-AVIFE, Ii pi i.rr:- J s . t . s TuJ ' y J :i.xi i-i I.- f. viiv. t th I -!' v ia I t .l . ii. a i U .r t t.il year in Sr. is. in-: 1 1 j j f ni.iiit iitly !.catrl in this ci:j. 1: I. :.. .i ii.e i. au-w est jail ot tv'A u. Jaj i:, tf rosErn schlatee. WAT C 3? III AKER and JEWELER, T.v ai. i titr, rLATTSMOUTII, - - NKCRASKA. A t J r w , r t .ID ht'ul. A.lwric com- OR SALE ! Thirtv Jo?ir:kLle business and resi- ;Lt)TS IN rLATTSMOUTII. Ten tL'.- i4! I acres of rrairie and tim tcr r.ANi) IN CASS COUNTY. Terms tj suit cush purclnt'crs. D. II. V. llf H.F.K. June 5, Bi3 I!e t:-tntfl Akent. t'oiirt M'Ue, l'laiitinouth. NATIONAL MILLS, DENVER. C. T., WHITTEMOSE& CO-, Proprietors, I'.i.t a ! lir. ! of-rain at l':i;!ie-t market rates. The at-.fu:;. n or the wii -at Knoiers of Net'ra-ka is call-d 10 the .upeil ir facilities nffirded them hy these imlis la eoovartiinr ii.l.j easfi the h-at ini'-ni ed for the Cc.isra.ia caark-1. Ixug. 5, m Probate Notice. iERKlTi'RY OF NKBUAS-KA, Cuun-y t. t'i. Us T,':raar.t t-i an order nr the Probate Cou-t of s id co rity. n id- on the Tib dy nf Ancn.t A V. 1"o5. "- ' hereby IM en that all claims airainat the n t eof Wiey Jones, Lit-o C coui.tr, deceased, tUirl beoa fiie tu the office cfsaid Cou.t' on or before the Sc'i day f February, A. D. IrC(3, d which d.iy gai'l Court will be in session to hear ad r)etrm;t. en all such Cairns. G'.v;a uodrr mv hand and the feal of said Court ls. thUIllidaT o'Aagust.A. 1. 1S5. J U'.MAIHALL, ttf. T wi r.tfc: Ji-f. ft u. c-iTiier of THOMAS C. CRENSHAW, ACTCRSR or AUB BllUI ! Saddles and Harness, BRIDLES, COLLARS, CVRRIE Combs, Spurs, Lashes, Whip, J-c. ill in Street, NEBRASKA CITY, - - N. T. "A Complete Pictori al History o the Times." "The best, cheapest, and most success ful Family Paper in the Union." H arper's Weekly, S PLKN DIDLY I ILLUSTRATED . CriMcal notices of the Press. The bc-t f.imilv newspaper iu the United States. lli.! moii.-! ii w.aier of our country complete in ali Hie. t-p.irtini(t! of au American Kannly HHiier, Hurp.-r'r Weey e.iruo-1 lr itself aright to in ti Ik," K Jill KXAL UK ClVlLUArlu...'' A'. J' A'fc IIIU'J t'llKi. Tins paper furuii-Ii'-s the brst illiiftfiitintin. Our future Ii imo ian unl eDiich tlieiav.t out of Har per" Weekly IoUk after wi iters, un l printeia. and puhhalie s are tiirneit t du-t. .V 1". f.vanjielixt. A nnvss-tjr in tvery li"a. h.M IS on Tunis. It i at f.nce a leilinir p'Iitic;il ami historical an-uali-t '( the na'ion. -I'J.Httih ffJiin I'rexji. Tii- beat i-fiU class iu A utenca. H-wlon Traceltr SnIcriiilioii. SHOi. Tli-- piilniliers liave crlected a sy-itcm of inailluir ! lii li tlii-y can Mippiy the -Mi'iAlK anil Vki:k i.v promptly to thoje wh.i prefer to receive their pe rl' iti- al .iirei tly from the liice ! pill.l Ir.itlon. lVtma-tertj .,f., others d-!iron of 2''ttinit up clnL. Uiil I.- -.tipplier! with a hau'lsoine J ictonal show-till u applicatiun. UAnrtii's VTkf.ki-t oi,e yr, - St. An '-xt'a copy of either llirf Weekly or Marantic li: he i-upplleii i;ralM for every cluli of Five Sub-fcril.-'a at i 1 4 ach, in one ruinittauce; or kix copies lor t:''. H ick nuinti can be J'ipplie.l at any time. I Tt e lUiiua! volnm'-s of IIaUpck's Wkkllt, iu nea ' clolh I iriiimi'. Will lie to-lit liv .vnnvi fn-. nt .f I en-e, fur ft) e,icli. A couipl4 te n-, comprisiuf; Kvht Voluuie, neiit on receipt of ca-Ii at tlie rate ot St fin er volume, freight at expene of pnrfliaser Ad-lrcM HAKl'ti: i UKOTHErt. r'ranklin tUare, V- WM. S. AVE ST Will l j at the Vo-t OTica in riattsmnnth. at one o'cliK-k every day, except duridajt, for the.purfoM f receiving ordei kfor ood lieih OSAGE ORA.NGE SEED ! Whirb will be delivered in PU'tMnouth about tha l.tof Jhi. nary. W;G Earb pnrchaer will be far athi J wiiu printed directio9 in lull f..r irerininat- hr.U'- vt M S. WK.-T i. aii toiliri'inrt ord 'r. fr Apple tree? and ln'arf Apple", P'ar-tr-e. a'ld Dwarf Tear,, y'.inre. readiei, l lmni, Aj.ri...n, Nectarines, C'her ri.. tirapet, C'Si-b4'rrie. turrint., Ki.ickben ie, Willi hlaikl rue., Ilapben ies, Mrawherriei aud rcr ytii.21 ; Irou L.g Aj.ples tu Little li;rie. ALSO: OrnaniPnt.il Tnva. Kvergn-pn. I:nsn of all colors. Hoik -rekl- . Lilac, 'll.iwi.i.ln. Flow-r-ni' Aluionrf anil all varieties of iur-ery plants dePiiablc in the latitude f Piat'Miioutri, wb:c will be ready for ne- I.v-iy on tlie Ii of Apul. I-tcs. ap2j Osage Orange Seed ! FRESH FROM TEXAS. One of our firm H now in Tf-xaa, giving hi per-f-inr,l httetiiion ti the GATHERINC AND CURING OF THE SEED, and we will Warrant them Fresh and Sound. We txil the fel here teady to All order IN DECEMBER. OV EH MANN", MASS k CG. WI- S. WEST, AGENT riiATTSMOt'TH, X. T. sep'JS WILLIAM. S. THATCHER, XJ"Warratit.s a cure or no pav.-tS 0Oc at the .torn of llutrt ii Thatcher, PLATTSMOUTH, - - NEBRASKA Pept, 12. "C5. Kew Periodical JJtore! A. K- WHITE &TcO. A full anscrtmeut of SCHOOL HOOKS 4- STA TIOXEIt Y Always on hard. ' Latest Eastern Papers and Periodicals rtceittd daily. fAl ord'-rs promptly filled. NEBRASKA CITY - . N. T. Big Apple-Trees --AND L 1T TL E A PPL E- TR E E S, To mil janelasers, AMD AH (Vf-iraMe kinds of Fmit, Flowers, Orsniental Trees, .sbriibt ery, Kverureetis. &c , will be ready for deiiverir.k.' in Plattinoutn as aly as the 1st or April Im'io, urders received ty UM.S. W'tiT. tfept 1 tf AUCTION SALE! -or D KY-&O ODS I will sell aa assorted lot of Dry-Gooil, consisting of Cl iths, Calicoes, 14 lanes, Brraes, Mosmtiiriiies. Uil Print and Unl! Band Window Shatl' S. Ked F.an nl. inciuditirf nearly everyihins kept ia a retail store. CouimcDCins- this uav ami continue nut'l all is sohl. F. S. WU1TE, Auctioneer. Flati.innnUi, Sept. 2d. l(-tV. OSAGE OHANGE SEED, For Sale by Wm. S. WEST. Music ! Music ? RAYMOyD, MiyER tf- CO., t BALERS IU Piano Fortes, Melodeons, Music and Musical M'dse, COUNCIL BLUFFS - - - IOWA (At the stand formerly used as the Post OSce.) Orders by mall for Music. Books, or anything per taining tii Music, promptly attended to (JT Orders for tuning or repairing Piano Fortes and Meln'ieons in Piatt .mouth and vicinity wui be atitnded to at car ciiet convenience. EATXOND, 511 EE & CO. Aog.8.1St3-t THE AM)ERSOVILLE 'POST-OFFICE. Ho blatikiit round bis wasted limbu, Under the rainy ky lie Elept) While pointing his envenomed ahafU, Around him, Death, the archer, crept, He dreamed nf hunget, and held out Hit had t clutch u little bread That a wiiite astfel with a torch Among the living a"d the dead Seemed bearing, smiling as he went ; Ike vitiiou waked him, us he pi d The pot. t-boy, fallowed by a crowd Of famUhki prisoners, who crie l For letter, letters from their fi lends ; Crawling upon bis hands and kueea, lie heais hi own name called, and lo '. A letter from his wife he a rt ! Oa-piu; for breath, hefchrieked aluud, And l-)-t in natuie's Wiu ecliune, Talteti g a ia id the suppliant crowd, Calif lit it, ami premed it to his lips. A guaid wb followed, red and wroth, And flouri.-liinn a rusiy brand, Ileviied turn with a taunting oath, And snatched the letter front hi hand-1; Fir.t pay the po.itige, whining vrreUh ! " leapi,ir Lad UiaJe the prisoner brave. Then frive ne back my money, air ! I am a capt.vo not a Klave ! You tock my muuey aud my clothes ; Tak? my lifo too but let me know DuW Mary ani the children are, Aud I will bless you ere I go." The very in onliht through his hands, Aa b-i stood aiippllcatin', ahotie. And his sharp feature shaped themselves Into a prayer, and t-uch a touu Of anguish there was in bis cry For w f ami children, that the gourd Thinking upon his own passed ty, .rlod left him swooning on the sward. Beyond the "dead line'' f-11 his head The eager sentinel ilnw his mark. And wi.h a t'ta-h the Lull t sped Into his brain, and all was dark. Hut when tby turned his livid c.leek Up toward toe light, the pale Hps smiled, Kisi-ir. K a pistuie fair and mo k That held iu either hand a child. From the Saturday Tretis. .1KTE.1IUS tVAKW-SIIS ALIO-, lUOt:iCMlIV. Nrw Yokk, xeah Firxa Ave- ) oo Hutll, Org. 31ct. Da. Sir Yrs, into which you ask me to send you sum lend in incidents iu my life, to you can write my Biogrofry for the papers, cum dooly 10 Land. 1 Lav no Joubt that a article onto my life, graimnauically jerked and propperly punklcoatid, would be au auJuion to the chois Iiteratoor of the ilr '1 o the yoota of Aineriky it would be vallylle ns thowing how high piu nykle of fame u man tan reach who CJinmenst Lis career wi;h a small can vas tent and a pea-green ox, which he rubbed it off while scratchin hisself agin the center pole, causing in llah way, N. J., a disciiminatin mob to say humbugs would go down in them vil lage. Th? ox resoomed agricultooral pursoots shortly afterwards. I next tried my hand at givin blind man concerts, appeerin as the poor blind-man my?e!f. But the infamous cuss who I hired lo lead me round towns in tlie day time, to excite sympathy drank freely of spirituous licker unbe knownst to trie, one day, and while under them inflooance he led me into a canal. I had to either tear the green bandige from my eyes, or be drowned I tho'i Fd re.-tore my eyesight, In wriiiu about these things, Mr. Ed itor, kinder smooth 'em over. Speak of 'em as eccentricities of gen'us. My next venmr wood have bin a success if I hadn't tried to do too much. I got up a series of wax figgers, and among others, one of Socrates. I tho't a wax fiiisrer of Old Sock would be poplar with editated people, but unfor tuniily I put a brown linen duster and an U. S. Army regulasion cap on him; which pepl with classycle eddycatious said it was a farce. This enterprise was unfortn t in other respecks. At certain town, I advertised a wax figger of the Hon'ble Amos Perkins, who was a railroad president, and a great person in them parts. But it appeared I had shown the same figger for a Pi rut named GiLbs, in that town the pre vious season, which created a intense toomitlt, aud the audience remarked "shame onto me," and other statements of the same similarness. I tried to mollify 'em. I lolJ 'em that any fam ily possessin children, might have rny she tiger to play with half a day, and I wouldn't charge 'em a cent, but alars it was of no avai'. I was forced to leave, and I infer from a artikle in 7Vj vldveriisrr of that town, in which the editor says, "Altho' time has silvered this man's hed with its frostg, he still brazenly wallows in infamy. Siiil are his snakes stuffed, and bis wax works unreliable. We are glad that he has concluded never to revisit our town, although incredible as it may appear, the fellow did contemplate doing so la tt summer; when, still true ta the ) craven instincts of his black heart, he wrote the hireling knaves of the obscure journal across the street to know what they would charge him for 400 small bills, to be done on yellow paper! We shall recur to this matter again." I say, I infer from this article that a prejudiss still exists agin me in that town. I will not speak of my once bein in straitened circumstances in a sertin town, and of my endeavorin' to accoo mulate welth by leltin myself lo Sab bath school picnics, to sing ballads adapt ed to the understandins of liule children, accompanyin my.-elf on a clarione't which I forgot where I was one day, singin in&tid of ' Oh, how pleasant to be a little child," Rip snap set 'em up again, llight in the middle of a threeut pie. which mistake added to the fact that I couldn't play onto the clarionett, except making it howl dismal, broke up the pic-nic, and childred said in voices choked in sobs and emotions, where was their home, and where was their pa? and I said, be quiet dear children, I am your pa, which made a joung woman with two twins by her side say very angrily, "Good heavens forbid you should ever be the pa of any of these innocent ones, unless it is much desira ble for them to expire igmynyusly upon to a murderer's gallus!" I say I will not speak of this. Lei it be Bernd into Oblivyun. In your article Mr. Edditer, please tell them what sort of a man I am. If you see fit to criticise my Show, 6peak your mind freely. I do not ob ject to criticism. Tell the public in a candid and graceful article that my Show abounds in moral and startlin curiosities, any one of whom is wuth dubble the price of admisshon. I have ihus far spoke of myself ex clooaively as a exhibiter. I was born in the Stale of Maine of parents. As a infant I attracted a great deal or attention, lue naiem .uu.u stand over my cradle for hours, and say "How bright that little face looks! How much it nose!'' The young ladies would carry me around in their arms. sayinl was muzzer's bezzy darlin and a sweety 'eety ntle ting. It was nice, though I wasn't old enufF to properly appreciate it. Fin a healthy old darlin now. I have allers sustained a good moral character. I was never a railroad di rector in my life. Although in my early life I did not invariably confine myself to truth in umall bill, I have been gradually grow iog respectabler and respectabler every year. I luv my children and never mistake another man's wife for my own. I'm not a member of any ineetin house; but firmly believe in meetiu houses, and shouldn't feel safe to take a dose of laudnum and lay down in the street of a village that hadn't any with a thousand dollars in rny vest pocket. My temperament is bilious, altho" don't owe a dollar in the world. I am a early riser, but my wife is a a Presbyterian. I may add that I am also baldheaded. I keep two cows. I live in Baldwinsville, Indian'. My next door naber is old Steve Billins. 11 tell j-ou a little story about Old Steve that will make you larf. He jined the Church last Spring, and the ministe said, "you must go home now, Brother Billins, and erect a family aliar in your own house, whereupon the egregus old ass went home and buill a reg'lar pulpit in his settin room. He had the jinders in his house over four days I am 56 (56) years of age. Time with its relentless scythe is ever busy. The old sexton gathers them in, he gath ers them in! I keep a pig this year. I don't think of anything more, Mr. Ediier. If you should give my portrait in connection with my Biogrofry, please have me engraved in a languishin' atti tood, leanin' on a marble pillar, leavin my back hair as it is now. Trooly yours, Artimcs Wabd. J?Sf" A Copperhead paper casts a slur upon Gen. Sherman for drawing his sword against, "his ancient friends' Bragg and Beauregard. We presume, according to this reasoner, it was all right for Bragg and Beauregard to draw their swords against the Union, a friend that educated, fed, protected and supported them. ROMANCE OX THE RAIL.. A pretty little bit of romance devel oped itself in one of the Slate street cars in Chicago lately, as related by the Republican of that city: Among the passengers was a pale, quiet, little woman, plainly dressed and very pretty withal. Presently a one egged soldier labored into the car on his crutches. The seats were crowded and the soldier had to stand. The young woman got up, pulled the blue sleeve, and pointed to the seat she had acated. For the first time, as he turn ed, she had a full view of his face, and neither o them paid any more atten tion to the empty seat. They stared at each other a minute, and then, in spite of the awkward motion of the car, em braced and kissed each other wiih hys terical fervor. At first, the passengers were somewhat astonished at so public a'demonstration, but all of them soon oined in congratulating the delighted couple upon learning that the two per sons thus suddenly brought together were man and wife, long separated by the vicissitudes of war. The soldier had been desperately wounded in Tennessee and taken pris- a- v i I oner, lie was supposed to nave neen killed, and before he was restored to freedom and able to write, his wife, or widow, as 6he supposed herself, remov ed to Chicago, and so his letters never reached her. The poor fellow, ns soon as he could travel, set out for home, with a desponding heart, to learn why is letters had never been answered He reached Chicago on Friday, on lis way thither, when the generous uiiDulse oi a lunu lime woman to a maimed soldier, brought her back, a loving husband, and threw him into the a open arms oi a wire wno naa long e tilt. mourned him as among that innumer able host who have lain down their lives for the salvation of their country." The extent of the Pardon Business promises a coloisal feature for the next census, if reconstruction is to depend on figures. Let it be stated, along with other manufactures, how many patriots have been fashioned to hand, and have gone forth with the Govern ment's stamp on them; what kind of loy alists have been made by the operation and what assortment is constantly on hand. To illustrate the amount of business passing through the Pardon Bureau, a Washington dispatch relates that "a large rack 12 feet high and 8 feet wide has been erected," and ihis same rack all poor ex-Rebels mustun dergo. It is divided into "longitudina sections, running the whole length" a stretch of forgiveness fearful to con template "each section containing the applications from each State" in process of passing through the great pardon paper-mill, "Virgiuia takes the lead her pile being over ten feet high, and containing 3,000 applications. Alabama follows wiihii pile of 1,500, upon which the dust is accumulating; ' and so on till we have a load which only the cam el-back of the pardoning power can bear. There is no end lo the good which may be effected by a judicious system of pardons certainly there is no likelihood of being an end to the pardons. So far there are 10,000 ap plications, all of which the Government well versed in making out the muster rolls of armies, profess i'a entire ability te lake care of. Pardons enough lo reconstruct the Union seem lobe already assumed, judging by the vigorous vote with which Alabama has abolished the admission cf negro testimony in Courts of Justice. The fault of ihe Pardon! Bureau is lhat it does too much aud too liule. Like the old Boman water-clock its minute mercies drip drop by drop; but if the whole Rebellion can be par doned in this Pickwickian way, let us expect no deluge hereafter. Pardon ing, as it is now managed, may be an easy task; but it would be hard work if the Government had to do it over again, especially as the "piles" of Virginia, Alabama and Georgia are even now twenty feet high, so that the great body of pardon applications from the whole South cannot be much lower than Bun ker Hill Monument. JV. Y. Tribune. gyMr. Henry S. Foote has been per mitted to return to his home at Nashville, Term., on condition that he does not mo lest the policy of the Government regard log reconstruction. EXTIUOIIIHXAKY MEMOUIE8 Morphy and other eminent chess- players have recently given instances of their extraordinary memories- Dr. Wallis tells us that he could by mere J effbrt of memory perform arithmetical calculations, as multiplication, division, J extraction of roots, &c, up to forty places. Zerah Jolburn, George Bid- er, and Jedediah Buxton were also! wonderful mental arithmeticians. The ast one once mentally calculated how much a farthing doubled 140 times would come to. and the answer wus set own from his lips in 39 places of i pounds and an odd 2s. CI; mid being sked once how many barleycorns would reach eight miles, answered in one and a half minutes, 1,520,640. Sir Walter ScOtt had a marvelously reten- . I iiv memnrv: so had Macaulav. who it 1 ' I is said, could repeat from memory the whole of Paradise Lost. In the stirring days of Athenian political greatness, men could be found who could repeat the Iliad and the Odyssey, and we have read of a man in Naples who could ( repeat the whole of Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered, and noi only recite it con- secutively, but repeat any stanza in any given book, repeat those stanzas in ut- ter defiance of the sense either back-1 wards or forwards, or from the Sth to I the 1st line alternately. We have I heard of several persons (notably ihe ate blind Jamie of Stirling) who could repeal the whole of the Bible or any required verse of it. There are, be- s des, dozens of living persons with I nost marvellous memories, the chief of whom is perhaps Mr. FJihu Burritt, the Mezzofanli of the present day. PRES. JOII.SO AS A TAILOR An old tailor at Greenville, Tenn., who used to work with Andrew John son. says: "There was a vast difference be tween Andy and I when we worked on me same oencu. tumu 5i'ciio-u:u . and he could not; but he could 'flux me on a pair of breeches or on a fine coat, and could get a better price for his work than I. He never mads a gar ment that didn't fit, and never bad a job returned, lie was the best tailor I ever met. When Andy got married he hadn't ten dollars in the world, and his wife was as poor as Naomi's daugh ters. Her mother said to her before she was married (calling her byname) I can give you all the money there is in the house fifteen dollars to help vou about troiue to housekeeping; or 1 tatill lil'OlhamnnpUfini rriva t'AII A Wed. i J b J dine which will you prefer?' -Moth- er,' said she, I will lake, the wedding, and Andy atd 111 work for money- won't we?' appealing to her lover. He absented, and ihe consequence was the young couple bad not one cent with which to "set up' for themselves. Afier they were married she taught him to read, and the world knows the rest." A writer says, that "While the Southern men will not consent to negro suffrage, everything else ihe negro wan'.s will be accorded to him. This supposes, in the first place, that the Southerners have granted the negro everything else, that emancipation was their act and deed, that the negro is tree oy meir generosity, dui mai uav- . . i... i ing done so much these magnanimous people can do more. If the negroes had waited until the Southerners had rriven them their freedom, they would have died in Slavery. They were fr,l i ,ni.. nf Smith, und .hev will have their rights also. VV e may havo ir vA-taif Iittli Innrrer nut it ia ... a-., coming. rr3- T7., ik -V.,wl f.t,; a47 a-, cu iuo .u.tui uiiica vi laguiuu sometime! utive men uses. iauueu : i . u : - T4 aa crinoline has saved several women from rlmirninrr nnrl a mnntlrnns "tviif (rfn M' . , , , , , ., . i,i.nlltr cvarl a I .tf .Villi fmm r rn "bi ..... kt . , . mat tne auempieu murucr 01 a tauv iu - ...... J rans oy ner coaenman was irusiraiea by the immense quantity of false hair she wore, in compliance with the pre vailing fashion. The blows inflicted on her head were deadened by the capii lose padding. (JTbe mail service has thus far been re-established oa elevenjrailroad routes in Virginia, four in North Carolina, seven in Tennessee, eleven in South Carolina, eleven in Georgia, four in Mississippi, and oot is Louisiana. OLD SEEDS SPROUTING. The Chicago Joum al, iu speaking of the South Carolina Convention, brings up many old names. They have been "absent without, leave" from, the coun- cils of ihe nation for some five years. They buried themselves; but like Jocust seeds, ihe scalding they have received seems to have brought them out. Foul of the delegates have national rfputa lions James L. Orr who was a rebel Colonel and Senator; F. W. Pickens, who was rebel Governor; A If. Huger. Postmaster at Chai lesion : Samuel McGowau, who was a rebel Major- General. There appeared oa the rolie of the Convention names made eminent. by their owners in the past of . the pol- itics of ihe Palmetto commonwealth- TT I T rV "T" an t - xiammonu, iucuuiue, oimms anu ms- holm. Twelve of the members of this .. , ( Convention for bringing back theSlato were members of the convention thai voted her out, including the Pre&idpnt. Seventy-five of ihe Columbia Couven- Hon were olhcers in ihf rebel army four of them Major-Generals. Some of ihe old political leaders are missing. The war has sadly thinned their riu'ni- oers- Ee2TA good farmer will never keep more lhan ten dogs to every five sheep. He will clean out his stables at least once every month. He will keen five or six sticks of wood cui up ahead more than what is necessary for immediate use. He w ill not go lo town and get .,n a spree oftener than ihree times a week, at least in harvest time lie will be ver' careful not lo-put up a rail on a line-fence unless his neighbor is there to help him. He will not injure his health by lying in hed after eight o'clock A. M., but will have his cows milked and breakfast over und his men at work as early a ten o'clock. Cuo Farmer. Sl'MXEU on Itie AMKXDJIE.M'. Mr. Sumner has written n lntf,r t me riew x ork i'oson'ii.c .utismui-on- al abolition amendment, contending that it lias been ratified by three-fourths of the States, and is. virtually a part of the Constitution. He quotes the Constitu tion provision requiring a proposed amendment to be ratified by the Le- lslaturws of three-fourths cf the several Slates, and holds thai only ihree-fourihs of the States "actually participating in the Government" are required, and in support of this view quotes Mr. Bishop, who discusser the subject in the third volume of his commentaries on criminal inn- i it,, ititt ttbr ...ifA r f vr.t. tn nntr ntlir mVloi-i iK.n . 1.. .... J . . T. u legal person would ever doubt that, when there are States with Legislatures and States without Legislature, and the Constitution submits a question to the determination of the Legislatures' of ihree-fourths of the several Slates, the meaning- is, three-fourths of the'Siates whkh have Legislatures, In fact, it does not require either legal wisdom or lecal acumen to see this, provided we look at the point disconnected from the peculiar subject of slavery." AjCliunce foy Zlarnuiii. The Siim Times, just received here, says: A giant.has appeared in Napore. 110 is seven teet four inches in Leiirht, and of an enormous amplituds of chest. As regards the lower estrpmiUne: ha i ... - ui porporaoned. havim Swindle shank When first he entered the city he was mobbed. An immemse crowd, consistin" of men women, and children, gathered &rund him and stoned him for an incar. ation of the Evil 0n- But, luckily.for L'm' bodj, having discovered ve headj announcerJ that he wa3 a G and I ,i . ' ..Hereupon me ticKie ana superstitious prostrated themselves before him, and n.rf,im11 V urnrsriinrtatl it'm nan it!.;.. 1 I 7 J ,f-.M.inagui.iJSi i tt'l,n c . , - -, , , I uen be was at KatnntAA. 11 th. f,. 1 warree womcn paiJ him di?ine honors ana literally auoied him. I au uui-ti i-uoTHEK, Artemua ward n.l ' .... j " ul I rr r .' . ' ? off the following paragraph Our tallndj-jvi iters put too muoirroher in thdr jhus we have, "Dear ' Mother, I've come home to die" "Moth- er, is the battle over?" "Mother, dear, O pray for me" ' Writs abetter to my mother," etc. The other night wo henrd an athletic Ethiopian minstrel dismally bleat, "Mother kiss me in my dreams,'' just as though she would do it until he washed the cork from his face. A moth, or is a good thing. Without mothers, in fact, life would be unpleasant. But why sing the maternal parent's merits eot er" eistently and in such shaky verse? Why not vary tha thing, and occasionally give us a father or two. If we must continu ally sing about our parents, let us, by all J means, give the "old man' a ckance. I :