fV V f I ' -j 1! ?2f attempts to haul down the American Fla shoot him on the spot.''' Joiint A. Dix, VOL. I PLATTSMOUrll. X. T.s AVEDAKSDAV, DEC. G, ISU5. ISO 3.3. THE HERALD ,L-i.s-lJAV i J ry . 1 1 ft f N WlUiviNll.NiO, II. I). IIATHAWAT, r.iTO?. a::d proprietor. v- 2."0 per ai::;uro, invariably s ' . i t! enlist mr. 1. .: li:. ir ':ia 1'i " k . i f l i i j t .v .-It ! r,- -i-J ; l' . . K. R LIVINfiSTCX II. D Pi'. 1 ' t.. tin 'i l.tt f ! i r . f : WILLI T"J T". " r T T" ATTOIiNKY AT LAtt, -r.ATi i n - - SKr.ii.s-;.. A'i''I"OIi.M:V A'i LAW f.clicitcr m Chancer". I'LAT'i ' ' 15, - - Nl.i. MSKA. J CCEl II (; SCIILATEH. 7AIClJ MAKER and JLWELEU, in, f n . i : 1. 1. COl'i- N O T A R Y PUB L C ; (()NVKVAN'C!!-:i. , .,; ; , . . , rv ! -y ;-r ! -,vj ;.!:! . ).ra- ". .S H iiGTC i'v; D C- ill- v I l I . rc-N. NOTAIIY l'l lilAlC DEE Tire r-.iicl Life Ins, Ag't, A.-, .i f ' - .1 I. . . I ' .1 ill'. O. W. CP.CW, t.. V ' .-'.. PFiCp. r.'RS. L. COLDING, I ':; i-:'ir.r. ii ... i -i rCESALE! 7-'"i:y deIr.t'.!o l'U?!ness r.n.l rc-i- I.oT? IK n.ATTSMOb'TH. Ten tl.oii 1 ncr cf rrairie and tim lor I.A !) iN'Co'S CDl'NTY. f"n.j t) iu.( c.i'i purcka-.Tf. . ii. i 1 .i i.f ::. - : 3 l ii a-,-. ; PUMPS i PUMPS 1 .' .s : j.-..,! t--. ! r:..--, i' 1 i'... ..i: .,-i: -;i':.. ...'.!.' : ANY DESCRIPTION i ' : i N --r fl.MV ' ('., I I ii '' J II lit k:i:,!-. it '.' Ill T. CUM MI '.'S. FOB SALl. i:i?!tt or 'IVn TlioroiiIi- fit i il &III( 1 iiail ' nIEIUNO RAMS T". -.- w, re b' ' '-y .1. s. Wi!k-r, Wy. :i. nii Cons.ty. - I t'V h'i iriito'.s I'M . el-l iK-k V '' " " li'' ' - tr 1 t y rs. ('i.e. i Vf!''..nl J. I.- ' ft .1 ! .i i f liri.' r ..f 1. : .....1 ', M'-'l ' Mjlllt ir " ',)., I llrfi'.-I." I,-.. .l..,n. -J I T ti.-i.. (.f - jl ii f hi y-ar'a giowh. 1 ,i f.nth.'-r l-.-illl. :! n i ini!:.ii f '. y. tfs:. v-rv,-. Hi ! '.VtA? Ford KLEiSEU kWISE, t Dealers in ! BOOKS & STATIONERY,! WINDOW SHADES, -Confectioneries, " Toys. CcnS Oil ,ai23ps. j( S t Ji...-' JlI j f ;.u J li iVc Liw uc Land it "-1 a-.-ivti.:- til '.I -Wi (.'.li.V.Yi .r.i-, i lotus, jea.ys. w!.fr)i r':!vi r'-ivM f-n Cuinx i-aioa, r.nj are j S'i'i'.ircJ to is 'lia'fu: WOCL CR. CASH, v- '-v ! vji:..S'. ;'-;' li.ii.ll-ii , i'lautuijiit!:, :f GOODS KEW STORE! Howe & Thatclier, iVvHOLESALE AND KETAIL illM' V-'ff?, i i-l -A LI -U FANCY GOCDS, Boots and Shoes, I 4 V i IN. i I ard v;a rc , Que c n s wa re STAlT.i: AND I'ANX'Y GROCERIES, OUTFITTING GOODS,&G Tur.v mil tOT BE UMDEHSOLO C.ill before purchasing, and J-lxaminc Goods and I'riccs. i If yoti do not buy, you will I j Oct Ostea! I EJEMEMBHR I THE PLACE, i tae?s'23l streets j i OPPOSITE TOST OFFCE, j I PLATTSMOUTH, T. T, j July 1 , 15n5. tf j F. M. DOEEINGTOH j REAL ESTATE rr,T7r f-Cf-S""" 5 ! PI.A TTSMOl'TH, A'., I 'SMOl rata t . i lYulV',; ALriu-y. Tiil-.s luvcs- I !U:l:eii. Iti f-r-I'V ; "in iji' ti to "'"-l. . IMls.ly. J;i,!..,- i J J ..ill r:t l ity, !'riil, : Mn.i.r itu:.at!!c. !'.-. im.Mer i Tiwi'iili. Khii.is; II n J. il. llurb.n.k, I ; i'. S. A , l-iMTOTiw 1 it- A-.--.-cr N,-! ra-k:i, KhIi? Oiv, X. li : H.n:. T. .M j X i.fj'i it;, I"'.itt:ii' iitIi. Nel. , t, H It. I.ivn --to.i, i lat Co! X'biK l.i Vet. Y.'la.. l'UiUnnuMi . NM'.; c1 nilian Ai.v; i, l':.wiii'c 111 I'.roitUvax-. N-w Trai-y. .Mani 6- Co . (Jiii-apo, liii.; K. li UMi. f:- i li.-i.-i-. N. V.. I'lf. llcuiy Aiiiiip'alo. ' H.irif..ra I'mversiiy," N. V. c'2 FOE SALE. 1G0 .Icres of Good Land, Well watered, situated" 1 2 r.iilei west Iron Ptati. iii 'uili. a fund tbance Jor a Kauche. Terms x a- aoiiaDie. Ariev ti j r. jr. Konnisc.ros. K.-al Kstate Agent. f.'f Oflce ovr b;ck i I!ut:?!y i;.re. uc2 O:. nit: V i :(.:, ) Never wui I in to j-leasant a fraine ' 3 j of ininJ ez Iitt ti'irLt. All wuz peace with me, for after beiug LuiTeted about t'je wcrld for three skcre years, r.i last til seeintJ lo me as tl.o forchun, tired uv perafckootiu a uufortj'iiit bein, had in ken me iL.to favcr. I had a solemn promise from tin: Dimekratic State ('entrnl Connnitty in the great State of Noo Gersey, lliatas soon ez our candi dait fcr Governor was duly elected, I ihooJ hev the position uv Durekeeper to the Ilrjso of the LorJ, (uich in this Stait int;in3 the Ciij'i'.ol, ar.d with is certainly Lcticr i!:an daclicn in the tent3 of vikd rrro.-ery keepers, on lick, ez I do,) !ir.d a. jodishus exhibi tion uv tliis promise had prokoored for me Lu.iimitc facilities for borrerin. On Wednesday nite I was a sittin in my room eujoyin the pleasin reflection that in a few djys I hood Le placed r.Love warit, and Leyond the contingen cies uv fortune. Vood! oh Wood! that j I hid diedtheu ai there, before that J drenm uv bliss was rudly broken. A I wicked boy came runnin with a paper wich Le had Lrot from the ne.xt town, wliere there lives a man who takes one. lie flung it throo the window lo me and past on. I opened it er.'ei !y ai.d glanced at the hed hues ! "Noo GIehset .j.OCO RrrrsLinx!" One long and piercing sl.reek wi.z heard through that I.ousr, and when the inmates came into the room thev found me inanyinate cu the iloor. The fatal j paper by near me, expiainin the cause I uv ihu cat;tro he. The kind hearted i landiord, afttr fetlin uv my pockets and I i' il i i'ir ; n ih'it lhA rm'i iit thpninf wood not pay the arrearages uv board, held a hurried cons-u!ttuion wi.h his wife as to the propr.ety uv bnugin me to. he iniisiiu that :t wuz the crJy chance , - .. ,, . . ,, . ,., .... ill ; in n iiul ua uhl v tuu itiriMiii y j that if I was brung to, I d go on run j nin u-: the bill I igger and bigger, and ! never rav at la?t. WLiie thev were arguin the matur, pro a-.d con, I haP-jare I peui'd to -it a good smell of his breath, ! wich roaortd me to eenferjusness to ! wimst. without further asj-htaue.-. V.'iien in troulie ir.v noetic tv.e r."uz i finds veu in song. Did ever p.et who j dt-lited in tombs and dark rolim streams, i m.J consumption, and blighted hopes, j 5; and decay, and sieh themes, ever hev inch a pick uv subjects as 1 hov at this time? Thefol'erin may be a cousola ! tion to the few Dimokrats uv the North, ; who have gone so far into cepperhead i ism that they can't change their base. ! A Wale. j In the morning we go forth rejoiciri m our strength in thd evenin we are Lustid and wilt ! Man bom cf woman (and most men !are) is cf few days, and ihern ii so ' f,.:i .,f ir.,,,).!., iT.-.t I., d-irlv .vnrtK : i. U i 1 ' L tntb ii J c.Aij. ij iv while bein born at all. In October I waded in woe knee deep ! and now the waters cf cfllickshun are j about my chili. I lock to the Ensl and Messychusetts rclls in Ablishun. To the West I turn my eye?, and j Wisconsin and Mir.nesoty and Iilenoy : ai-sers Ab'i-hun. Southward I turn my in'plorin gaze, ' and Maryland sends greeting Ab-ii.-hun. In Xoo York we had etn, for lo! we run a sc jer, who fought valiantly, aud we put him cn a platform which stunk with lhc nigger yea, the savor there ef was louder than the Ablishun plat form itself. But behold! the people jier and flout, und say "the platform stinketh loud j enough, but the smell thereof is jo the SI-ieu 01 nx f -virinin n is oi tne rotten materiel of which it is compoi-ed, and the corrupshon they hev placed on it" ' Noo York g,.es Ablishun. j Siocum l.el.l hiss"lf up and st-J "come j and buy." And our folks bought him anJ las tribe, but he gitteth not his price. Noo Gersey Ablishun! ! Job's cattle was slain ly murrain and j hollar horn, and sich, and not livin near Noo York, the llesh thereof he could not sell. j But Job bed suthin left still he cood j sell the LiJes aud taller! Lazarus hed tores but he had dorgs to lick them. Noo Gersey was the hide and taller ( of the Dimocrisy, and lo, that is gone, j What littltj is left of the D.'inocrisy j is all sore, but where is the dorg so low : as to lick it? Noo Gersey was our ewe lamb lo! the strong hand cf AblUhunitin has taken it. Nod Gersey was the Arryrat on wich our ark rested behold the dark waves of Ablishunism sweep over it. Darkness falls over m, like a pall the thadders of woe tnconipasseth me. Down my furrowed checks rolleth the tears of anguish, varytu in size from a large pe?i lo a small ta:er. Noo Gersey will vote for the Con Mooshnel Amendment, and lu, the nig ger will possess the land. I see horrid vision.-! On the Camden and Amboy, nigger brakesmen and at the polls, niggers! Where shall we find refuge? In the North? Lo it is barred agin us by Abli-huniiin. In the South? In their eyes th-? Northern copperheads findeth no favor. In Mexico? There is war there, and we might be drafted. Who will deliver us? Who will pluck us from the pit into which we have fallen? Where I shel go the Lord only noes, my impreshun is, South Ivf.rliny will be my future home. Wade Hampton, i3 elee'ed Governor, certin, and in that noble Stait one mat perhaps preserve enough of the old Democratic States Rites leaven to leaven '.lie whole lump, ''I'm nCo't I'm afljte Oa the dark rolliii sea.'' Ar:d into what harbor fate will drive my weather-beaten bark, the under sited cannot trecly say. Noo Gersey farewell! The wond may stand a year or too, but I doubt it. Mournfully and sadly. PlIKOLi:UJi V. N.SliY, L r La' Pisir.u' lIlG Church uv J Ioo Di-pensashun. , -t TIIK SCAKli: B. CiXADA. Our ueighbors "over the border" are excetdmgry exercised about ihe Feni ans They see all setts of trouble, and J reRll' lightened .hat they juM ! ow ,nake etuselve rid.cuIeMf. For ! months the Canada papers made fua of ! l'ie rt'niaus and Vtnved lhal ll,p5 Cou!d ! acco.oplish nothing here, or in Ireland, j nA et llie,n; at lla! 'noment, in a state o: alarm, nihly amusing to the American, who, as ltyal men, watched the feeling expressed towards themselves during the war for the pre servation of the Union. The prospects of a rebellion in C.ir.ada and Ireland are not entirely agreeable to cur IJrit-i.-li friptul TIipv stood )V. clamed i , c t in- ii Lands for Lee and Davis, and bade them God speedy, and prayed lustily that they might prove successful in de stroying the unity of the Republic. j No'v lhat a reject is. or is said to be, I luiuer consiuerauon. wnicu i.as ior us object the liberation of the Emerald Isle and the overthrow of British rule in lhat fair land, men who were so anx ious to witness the destruction of cur own Government grow pale at what is perhaps an imaginary danger, and quake with an exceeding great fear. v enli'- "conscience does ma.e cowards j of us a'"" The sympathy which the ; Canadians extended to the rebellion they would now feel gratified to have returned by the United St.v.e ?. Teople in trouble ger.erpl'y w.ir.t this balm to wounded feelirg-; when the Cana dians were tender;! g ihoir kind offices, and shedding iheir eroeu-uiie tears for Davis and Company, they I t'le thought that the day was so i;tar when they themselves would require su-.-h sympa thetic demonstrations en the p:irt of tlieir neighbors' HWz. Chrou'uh John Campbell, Sr., lately died in Cecil countv, Maryland, at the age j of bS years. He had been blind for some years, and so deaf that he had to be spoken to through a trumpet. The Gazette says: "During the four years: against the country which built, armed of bloody strife from which we Lave j and subsisted" her. If we could have just emerged, he lived through them all j but know n where to find her, her ca wiihout even a knowledge of there be j reer would have been a short one. But ing war in the land. 'Ihe manner cfl the world is very wide, and most of it conversing being so irksome, and for j other reasons, his relatives never in- j formed him of the fct-" j fyrhe negro mechanics iu Culum-i Lia, Ga.. are on a strike for higher wages, demanding 55 per day. This1 cruiser may elude pursuers and pursue does not look as though, being free, for months a career of devastation they intended to cheapen the price of! Happily, the Shenandoah's is at last labor, to the injury cf white laborer, 'ended. .V. Y. Tribune. L,.&!i;c sai.k or IA3IACii:i ;oous. The exfcuiors of the Democratic party, deeenstd, will offer at public ven due, on and after this date the tales to continue until the entire stock is clos ed out the tlfects, political and per sonal, of the following parties, to-v.it, namely: 1. "The Time-honored Democracy." "The IJourbon Democracy." 3. "The H iskins Democracy." 4. "The Demo( racy of New Jersey." Sealed proposals will be received for the Democracy of Kentucky. The largest npsortmpnt of "tiine honert'd principles" will be sold in lots to suit purchasers. It ii.cludts: One set resolutions that coercion is uacontiiution?il. (Uadly damaged.) One srt resolutions that th rebellion can't be put djwn vi ct armis. (Play ed out last Fpring. One set resolutions lo compromise with treason. ( Worm-eaten. ) One set resolutions that "this is an Abohiion war." (Useless to the heirs and assigns.) One set resolutions that the war is a failure. (Purchaser will be paid to take it away.) One-half set resolutions of thanks to the crmy and navy (Convenien to! j Iiave in lhc' Ii;,use ) There will also be disposed of, on ertr)3 made Known on day ot sa;e, the following principles, good as new.hav- j ing been but Utile ued: One resolution approving the policy of reconstruction. (Impaired by con ditions.) One renobition endorsing Andrew Johnson n a patriot and statesman. (Value subject to future events.) One resolution that ihe Democratic party is, and always has been, in favor of the Unian, one and indivisible. (Not suitable for a Southern market.) Onu resolution concerning Slate sov ereignty. (Thi is a valuable self-ad-jtistiny article, capable of expansion or i WK"IU,UI' ,u u,r c """" J ' . I it. n lnni.iiin -. C Virt ftlt'nilP 'S Une resolution against negro sui frage. (To revert to the heir and assigns, provided the negro is found hereafter to vote their ticket.) One resolution to tax United Slates bonds. ( Buncombe. ) One resolution that the soldiers are bully boys. (Valuable for local pur poses only.) The attention of persons about emi grating lo Mexico and other cheerful foreign parts, i3 especially directed to a miscellaneous lot of principles which the executors are authorised to warrant ! to fit anv form of Government, whether 3 i based on the. divine right of negro driv ing and miscegenat'on, cr admitting a visible admixture of negro blood to the ballot. N. IL- Sale positive, and without I rof.-rpnrp I r t!in mpptinfr r.f foncrrftss. as the executors must make room for a fresh supply of principle?, ordered for the use and benefit of the heirs and assigns of the Democratic party, de. cea.-ed, from their former market the reconstructed Stales. tVt. Com. THE SHEA.Z)OAH. unueicome apparition of this ; uneasy ghia in British waters is not to ! be added to the catalogue of Juhn Bull's many and grot ioi:s i Tenses against the rights of this cur. try. John would rather have pail three tunes her cost than see her steuu.iti.r up the Mersey. Curses, like chickens, come home to roet," says a very ol i saw, and here is a fresh i'!u.-traT n of its truth. The Sh- nandu.ih is '..!;. to !.o should be; t;:n; we ire. uur G'lvi rtm.ent will ueith- er Ciunn ncr acet jk .i : But it tiies cur patience to note the suggestion in a Britisli j urna! that our ; Government lias left the corsair to pur- I sue her desolating career unchecked in order to swell our claim for damages covered by salt water; and by the time Ve had hiarfl of her in one ocean, she was sure to be in another, far, far away. The British know by sore ex- perience in the War of 1512 Low a a stoxj; IMLI.S riso.n tiik STiY WITH CIIAIEACTCISS exg::aved trx it. Mr. James Lumley, an old Rocky Mountain trapper, who has been step ping at the Everett House for several days, makes a most remarkable state ment lo us, and one which, if authenti cated, will produce the greatest excite ment in the scientific world. Mr, Lumlt-y states that about the middle of September, he was engaged in trapping in the nountuins, about seventy live or a hundred miles above the great falls of the Upper Missouri, and in ihe neighborhood of what is known as Cudutte l':tss. Just after sunset, oho evening he hf-held a bright luminous body in the heaven, which was moving with great rnpidny in an ea?terly direction. It was plainly visi ble for at least five seconds, when it was suddenly separated into pirtieles, resembling, as Mr. Lumley describes it. the bursting of a sky-rocket in the air. A few minutes later he hoard a heavy explosion, which jirred th earth very perceptibly, and this was shortly after followed by a rushing sound, like a tornado sweeping through the fores:. A strong wind sprang up about the same time, but as suddenly subsided. The a peculiar ouor . r. ill -.v ! i oi a suipnurous cnaratter. These incidents would have made but a slight impression on the mind of Mr. Lumley, but for the fact that on the en suing day he discovered at a distance of about two miles from his camping place, that as far as he could see in either direction a path had been cut through the forest, several rods in width giant trees uprooted cr broken oil" near the ground the t-ps of hills shav f d off, and the earth plowed up in many places. Great and wide spread havoc was everywhere visible. Following up this track of desolation, he soon as certained the cause of it, in the shape of an immense s'.one that ha 1 been driven into the side cf a mountain. Hut now comes the most remarkar.de ! part of the story. An examination of this stone, or so much of it as was vis ible, showed that it had been divided into compartments, and that in various places it was carved with carious fiirro' glypn'cs. More than this, Mr. Lumley also discovered fragments of a sub stance resembling glass, and here end there dark stains as though caused by a liquid. He is confident that the hier oglyphics were the work of human hands, and that ihe stone itself, although but a fragment cf an immense body, must have been used forborne purpose by animated beings. Strange as this storynppears, Mr. Lumley relates ii with so mueh sincer ity that we are forced to accept it an true. It is evident that the s'.one which he discovered was a fragment of the meteor which was visible in this section in September last. It will be remem bered that it was seen in Leavenworth, in Galena, and ;n this city by Colonel Bonneville. At Leavenworth it was seen to separate in particles or explode. Astronomers have long held, that it is probable that the heavenly bodies are I inhabited even the co.nets and it j 'y be that the meteors are used as a j means of conveyance by the inhabitants ! of oilier planets, in exploring space, end it may be that hereafter same fu ture Columbus, from Mercury or Ura nus, may land on this planes by meani of a meteoric conveyance, and take full possession thereof as did the Spanhh navigators of the new world in 1-102, ! ion? as ine contest was uouwtui, tne and eventually drive whit is known as Gc" Mlon steadily omit the "human race." into a condition cf j ted 13 allow th stars and urines to float the most abject servitude. It has al- j overtheir grounds wavs been a favorite theory with many j sT'Lr. Holland's life of Abraham that there must be a race superior to us, and this may in some future lime be j demonstrated in the manner we have indicated. St. Louis Dem ., Oct. I91fi. 3T The stump of the famous tree t,J. "1,J marked by mi change of texture cut down by bullets at" Spottsylvania j bi' which they maybc n.tiastcd." Court IIcjTe, in May, 1SG1, has been s2P" The oldest newspaper in the appropriately moentcd and placed upon ; United States is the Now Hampshire the porch of ihe War Department as j Gazette and Wee kly Chronicle, which indisputable evidence of the generally , has jjs completed its one hundred and discredited story in reference to the j ninth yoar, wiih every promise of con incessant storm cf lead oa the Second j tinuii.g in hea'th a long time yt. Corps' front during the 2d of May. 65 A returned soldier pertinently The stump measures nearly two feet in I says that the Copperheads called them diameter, and is presented to the De-! a set of fooh for fighting against tho partment by Gen. Miles, who command- ' South, and now want to prove iheir as ed a division of the Second Corps dur- j st nion by getting them to vote the Cop in? ihe eventful Spottsylvanii days. j perh-a J ticket. lettek nto.i iisi:smc.T JO I IS so. Washington, Nov. 17, IFfio. 7b C. C. li'u.nj.lrcifs. Governor ekit, Jackicn, Jliss. : The troops will be withdrawn from MN.-ifsippi when, in the opinion of th Government, peace and order and the civii authority has been restored rr.d can be maintained without them. Evei y s.:cp will be taken while they are there, to enforce strict discipline and subord 'nation to the civil authorities. Ther- can be no ether cr greater assurar.ee given, than has here tofore been, cn the part of the Presi dent or government. There h no con cession required on the part cf the pen pie cf Mississipj i, or the Legislature, other than a loyal euinj liance with the laws and Con.-ti'.ution of the United State, and the adoption of such meas ures as will give protection to all freed men cr freemen, i:i person v.ivl proper ty, without regard to color as will en title thorn to resume all their constitu tional relations w iih th Federal Union. The people of Mi.-cissippi may feel well assured that there is no disposition to prove aibitrary on ihe part of the Government to dictate what action should he had; but, on the contrary, to simply and kindly advise a policy that is believed will result in restoring all the relations which should exist between the States comprising the Federal Union. It is hoped 'that they will ap preciate, mid fee I the suggestions here in mad.?, for they are offered in that spirit which should pervade ih bosoms of all those who desire pace and har mony, or1 a thorough restoration of the Union. There imtt be confidence be tween the G-:vi rnment and the Slates; and while the Government confides in the people, lliB poopla must have faith in the Government. This must be mu tual and reciprocal, or all that has been done wfl be thrown away. Amisew Johnson-. President of thp. U. S. SL'ICEIe:OE' IllOn'XI.O'S AX. The Nashville JJjuncr in reply to a correspondent making inquiry about the suicide cf Pryne, the p.n'agoni-t cf Drownlow, lays : We believe our cor respondent is correct in snymg that the suicide cf Pryne was uovor published, at least we never saw it in print, and got cur it, formation cn the subject ver bally. It is r.bout r s follows : At tha close cf the Ti yne-rowr.low debate, Rrownlow assort' d that Pryne would either kill himself cr end his life in a lunatic asylum. Pi yner plied that Rrowr.low was neither a prophet nor the son of n prrphr-t. and there tho matter ended. Two years ago Brown low visited Utica, New York, (we be lieve it was Uiic.i,) tho dwelling placs of Pryn?, and was invited by the citi zens to make a tpenh He rre-epted the invitation, and i It!' rts cf Pryne to break up the app-inment, mo t a large audience in the evenir.g. Re maining over a day, he was solicited to repeat his address, consented, and again tppeareJ before ihi crowded audience. Pryne came to the door, was refused admission, vorit awav in a rree'. ration i to his own Louio, whe re he cut his I throat from ear to car. Ths i.isiialtv was suppressed from puMicatru o:i ac count of the fr.tr.i'y of iha deceased. :d has never, therefore, beco; le a matter of great repute." Dl liols Lo valtv.- Tho war Ltin ended, the Smithsonian Institute Las hung out the United States fljtr. As Lincoln, just i;su: u, is c,euieatcd to An- L're'-V Johnson, ' w ith the prayer that j Listory, which wih associate their names j former-, may be able to find n where their administrations we no sea in re join.- ; t . ; . i i ir