VL ' "7" any mrra attempts to haul down the American Flag, shoot him on the spot." VOL. 4. PLATTSMOUTII, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1868. ISO. 13. 2, I r THE HERALD 13 PUBLISHED WE EKLY, U D. HATHAWAY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. r-OKCe corner Main street and Levee, second jr. Terms. $2.50 per annum. Hates of JldcerUsing ie square (space often lines) on Insertion, Kftct sube-uent insertion - rcfei-1nal Cards out exceeding six 11 O M-quarter colamn or les, per innora six months m three months Dir hair column twel veinontbs " six months three months O is eolaran twelve months six months - three months - " ail tmniut advertisements mast he p advance. 3f We are prepared to do all kinds of tt short notice, and in a style that will faction. fl.30 1.00 10 00 35.00 8U.P0 19.10 0.00 5.no 2o.iH) 10.00 60.00 .00 or In Work sails- WILLITT P0TTENQEE. ATTORNEY AT LAW, PLATTSMOUTII - - NEBRASKA. T. ill UIAIWiUETT. ATTORNEY AT LAW Stlieitor in Chancery. PT.XTTSMOUTII. NEBRASKA R. R. LIVINGSTON, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Tenders hi professional services to the citixens o .ay-Krsili-nre sooth-east eorner ofOak and Sixth struts; Ot&ce on Main street, opposite t,ourt uonse, Hatlsmonth, Xebf.aka. Platte Valley House Ilu. B. M l'rpii y, Proprietor f Miin and Fourth Streets - - -j Flatlsmouili, Neb. ti.uu.. harinir b-en re fitted and newly far nl.h--do3. rs Ursl-ciasi wcouuiuuuu.i Ibe dy or wi-ek. Hoard r-y aug'is a. MAX WILL. SAM. M. CHAPMAN Maxwell & Chapman, ATTORNEYS AT LAW AND Solicitors in Chancery. 9i ATTRvarTlt. - - - XEURASKA Offlc over Black, Battery k Co'a Drug Store, aprl CLARKE, & ATTOUKEY5 ERWTN, AT Li A XV And Solicitors in Chancery, XAlX ST., OPPOSITE THE COLKl-UULZt. PLATTSMOUTII, NEB. CLARK', IE rOBKST roHTKR, WM. . W. FBWIS. r?T- REJ.L ESTATE AUEXCT.-. jauU wtr JOSEPH SCIILATEIl, WATCHMAKER and JEWELER, mai.1 Street, PLATTSMOUTII, - - NEBRASKA . . ... . J ..I.I T r .. . .J turlmMlt Of Hi COei HI "'u " J.welry. Silver ware, r auc ola Triinmings alwjvs on hand, suiited to his care will be warranted April 10. ltuS. ViMins and V i A!Iork com O. m. laisrf, Xufe Sup t In din AJairt. CaLHlil'S 4 CaoXTOS, Attorney t at Luu IRISH. CALHOUN &CR0XT0N- The above named gentlemen have associated themselves In business for the V??'?' las- and collecting all claima against the Oener! Ooverameat.or against any tribe or Indians, and are nrrpared to proi-ecut such claims, either before Ceagreis.or air or the Department of Government or bwfore the Court of Claims, . . Ha. Ibi.h will devote his personal attention to .i U'n.hlnirtnn. .....tv.i,t.iki :riv corner af Main and f.lih streets. National Claim Agency. WASHINGTON. D- C- F. M- DORRINGTON. Pl-B AGENT: rTSMOUTU, - - NEBRASKA, . saitiMn ia nnwDi auu ii . HaiuMtwfnre Pa- e-red. recharges a.. JqtqS ... m -mot orthe claim. . M. DORnMtJ ru.i. ."... in nrnnnrtinn to April 10. '6 J. N. WISE. tieneral Life. Accident f Fire, Inland and Transit INSURANCE AGENT Will take rlkal reasonable rat in the most reliabl o iipanle In the United states. i-nmr, t the book store. Pla ureuth, Nebras mayildtf jaillinery & Dressmaking at MISS A. M. BRsrais A M tit. R. T. KaKKCT Opposite the City Bakery. 1 17 K would respectfully snnounce to the Ladies of Platwraouth and vicinity, that n,'J"s, rec ived a large and well selected stock or Winter OockIs, consisting of Flowers, R.hbons, Jetvsts, dress trimmings, Ac., c. win -"-i-- ever sol 1 ia this city. We can accommodate all our old customers and as many new one as wi.l favor us with a call. All kinds or work in our line done to order. Perfect satasraction given or no charges mjStf II. S. JEXMXCS, ATTORNEY AT LAW AKD-- General Land Agent, Lincoln. - Xebrasha. Will practice id any of the Courts of the State, and will buy and sell Beal Es.ate on commission, pay Taxes, examine Titles, Ac. nov28'61tr REED, BEARDSLEY & CO, Real Estate Agents , WEEriXO WATER, XEERSKA. Li ads bought, managed and sold. Valuable Tim her Land ror sale. Taxes paid for Non-residents CtHevtfous t rctntitlT tt. drd ta. nir:l K 73??. - DWELLINGS at all price. Any persons wishing to purchase Farm-property, crt Residences in town will find lb em for itl Hal prices. By DOKRI&QTON, mrT. Rral E-ttAt Aoent. G K. Mc C AIi-LUM, Manor cturer of and dealer in Saddles and Harness, Of every description, wholesale and retail. No. 130X Main street, between 5tn ana bin streets, Nebrassa CUj. JelS IVOTICE. JAMES O NEIL Is my authorised Agent for the collection or all accounts ana the underaigned ror 1 medical services: bis receipt will be valid for the payment of any monies on said accounts. AUgnot if, too. tt. a. L11AU31U.1 ni.v. BOARD AND LODGING, By O. W. COLVIN, OAK 8TKEET, - PLATTSMOCTO Two blocks northwest ol Brick chool-uouse. Private rooms rnrnlsed If desired. Sither day board or with lodging s at reasonable rate. tanSdtr. Win- II. Lemkc, MERCHANT TAILOR, ONE DOOR WEST OF NEW BAKERY, Plattsmoutn, Nebraska. Sc27 1865 tf II- G- Worth. ngton Attorney and Counselor AT LAW. Office In Ka'bach's Block, corner of Douglas and 15tb streets, Omaha, Nebraska. angl Farnham Souse, HARNEY STREET, OlOCLlXZ - TXTolo. J. C. MOBY, Proprietor. WOOLWORTII fc CO , BOOKSELLERS, STATIONERS, Binders cScFaperdealers. SAlJfT JOSEPH, JlO., oc256ra 3J1. J?: TODD, SEWING MACHINE AG'T PLATTSMOUTII, jSEBRASLA. A gn,d assortment or msehlnes and machine And- ing kept on hand. EJ-Offlee at Stadelmann's Clothinc Store. Dec. 4 '67 Machines repaii ed on short notice Plattsmouth Mills. C. IIEISKL, Proprietor. Have rt cpntl y l'"en repaired and placed in thor ough running order. Custom work done on short notice. 100,000 Bushels of Wheat Wanted immediately, for price will be paid. rhichbe .highest rrarke augva ti SHANNON'S "Ptoofl CJfllp nnf. T ivprv ICVU, OaiC dilU All VCijr STABLE. AINST., 1'LATTSHOUTII. I am prepared to acxmmodate the public wtt Horses, Carriages and Buggies, Also, a nice liearse, On short notice and reasonable terms. A Hack will rua to steamboat landing, and to all paits or the city when desired. inri: J n.BUsnaun Weeping Water Mills. Farmers, no where you can cet the best Flour and the most of it. 85 P,nX X X FLOUR and 13 lb of BRAS given in exchange for good Wheat. We are also doing grist work; and, with onr I creastd facilities, feel aasnred that we can give the oel and the most Hour of any mill In tne stale. Satisfaction Guaranteed PRODUCE BOVGHT AND SOLD. HIGHEST MARKET TRICE PAID. REED & CLINTON. March 26th, 1S63. Wm. Stadeliuann 8c Co , One door west of Donelan's Drug-store, Dealers in Ready-made Clothing, GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, HATS, CATS. BOOTS. SHOES, TRVSKS, V A USES, and a general stock of OUTFITTING GOODS For the Plains; also, a large lot of RUBBER CLOTIJLVG. REVOLV ERS A'OTIOJYS. We bought low and will sell cheap for cash. Cal. and exatniueour stock before you buy any where elsel Jyl '66 Wm. r-TAiELUA A CO W. D. GAGE W. R. DAVIS. CENTRAL STOUE; Dry-Goods, Groceries, Provisions, BOOTS and SHOES. Main Street, two doors above Fourth, Where the public may find THE BEST OF GOODS and prices as low as can be fr.nnd in the city. We return f hanks for the liberal patronage we have received, and hope to merit its continuance. ort .w,- . PaCiiDJrrs. THE PEULETOX ESCOHT. The latest Bulletin on Uniform and oth er Constitutional Pleasures - Astound ing Wall street and the" Bloated Bond' Holders." From the Cincinnati Commercial, June 14. There is daily drumming in Demo cratic quarters for recruits for the Pen tlleton escort, and frequeDt and exhaus tive deliberations and discussions, and sessions lasting deep into the night, lo determine what the escort is to do here and what is to be done when it arrives in New York. For several weeks pro tracted consultations have been bad with tailors, drapers, upholsters, man- iua-iuakers, milliners and s r mstresses, to seule the overpowering question of a proper uniform. It has at last been determined, if we are not misinformed, that mctley shall be the only wear pantaloon, one leg of Confederate gray and the other ot ederal blue, with an Enquirer greenback conspicuously pasted upon that portion of the gar ment which covers and conceals the centre of gravity in the human animal. Short jackets of the same material, the colors reversed, liberally decked out with silver braid and studded with the regulation buttons of the U. S. A. and the C. S. A., complete the general cos tume. Brogans, butternut stockings. green neck ties, black slouch hats, or namented wi h tail-feathers of the em blemaiic- rooster, stout hickory walking sucks with the bark on, oil-clo'h carpei baes, and a boiled rag for change, are en regie. This costume was not adopted with out severe dissensions and internal broils, there being as much diversity of sentiment about it as there w.Il be in the convention about the platform At first sight it may appear a trifle in congruous in its composition, but a mo ments rejection will convince any one of its appropriateness, as the highest result of the application to the art of tailoring of the great conservative principle of compromise. We cannot affirm with satisfactory positiveness u.at the escort will ultimately appear in this costume, as the party is now not of one mind on any subiect for more than forty-eight hours, and this incerli . havr it ofTfrt linrin lh es lU0.e may Dave 113 eiiet.1 upon 1UC es cort. Ibe uniform in wnicb a public appearance will be made cannot, there fore, be absolutely determined more man two days in advance ot tne time the escort takes the train for New York Why it is called an escort passes the the imagination lo conceive. It is un derstood that Mr. Pendleton con'em plates remaining in his pleasant retire uient at Ulitton, like a sensitle man that he is; during the hot JuSy days. and will there calmly await intelligence of the result or the creat Democratic Per6pirat,on on lhe 4lh of July- theory ihat the escort was orpaui The ized to attend the martyrs of Gov. Bdker's ty ranical administration, who are now languishing in the Lawrenceturg bas- tile, and to parade ihem up and down Broadway and present them to the con vention, will have to be abando ed, as the term of. their confinement will not have expired till some days after the convention has elapsed. We thall leave hose who cannot understand the mean ing o: an escort witnout something to be escorted to speculate on the subject without any suggestions of our own It is expected that the escort will cre ate a tremendous sensation in the great metropolis. Headed by our local poll ticians, each provided with the ancient trumpets of the old volunteer fire de panment, and emulating the heralds of chivalric joust and tournaments, it is not improbable that thev will excite as great an uproar as did the escaped an imaU from Barnum's Museum, when that structure was in flames. The astonished Democrats of Wall street and Broad street who live by specula tine in the bonds and other securities of ibe United Slates, will hear with astounded ears the chorus of a ihous nf voices, chanting the praises of Pendleton and greenbacks. As rank after rank files past, the bondholders will read, wiih distended eyes, upon the surplus of each pantaloon, ibo fate that awaits ihe bloated aristocrats who live upon the coupons of the Govern ment bonds, and demand interest and principal in gold. It will be a stern admonition to the Belmonts.tbe Woods, and the Hoffman's to conquer their prejudices for gold, and cheerfully sub rait to Pendleton and the redemption of their bonds in legal tender. The Charlottsville (Va.) Chronicle quotes the World's statement of Judge Chase's opinions, and says: "If these are Chase's opinions, we hope he will not be nominated, and not elected, if he is nominated. If he wants South ern support, his opinion on these points ought to well understood." A Trenton paper, reporting the fol lowing conversation on the street, gives in a nut shell the animus of the oppo sition to Grant: Republican Do you think many Democrats will o'.e for Gen Grant? Democrat No. Repub lican WThv? Democrat Because he hurt himself when be captured Lee Republican Oh! ah ! 1 see. Nintv three inches of snow fell in Maine duriDg th past winter GUN. GRANT AND THE OLD Daring the year 1565, an old sol diers named Lemuel Owens, was dis charged from the Arsenal in this city, owing to some very abrupt reply he bad given to a self appointed committee who were sounding him upon his poli tics. As Owens had served twenty six years in ibe regular army, and had wound up his term of service of the Peninsula, under McClellan, he would allow no man to question his right to vote and boasted, too, that he has serv ed in the Fourth iufan'.ry, under Grant when the renowned chieftain was but a lieutenant. He told the committee he would go and see Gen Gram himself about the matter. They jokingly replied, "Dr. so, old fellow, he'll make it all right." General Grant was lemporarially liv ing on Twentieth and Fourth streets, in this city and the veteran trudged up with bis story to the General s house. He stepped up, raug the bell, and went into the entry hall When the servant appeared, and saw an old, sunburned, poorly dresed man, ie v.ry promptly asked, "What do you want!" "I want to see Gen. Grant, was the calm reply. The General s engaged and cannot be seen. Have you got a card?" Just at this moment a little girls ap peared, and old Owens said to her. Sis, run up otairs and tell your papa an old Fourth infantry man wants lo see him." A message soon came down for the old soldier to come in, when he was ushered into the presence of Gen. Grant. He shook him by ihe hand. and said, General dtn't you know mt?' 'Ihe Gen. replied that he had seen so niacy -people of late that it was hard for him lo remember them all. Owens told him he had served under him, and thai had been discharged from his work, and that he bad lost his eldest son from disease in the war. and his family had nothing to depend upon but his labor. Grant patiently listened to the old soldier's story, and. picking up his pen, wrote a few lines to the effect that Owens should have work as long as he wanted it. The old man was not long in reach- ing his termer neiu or laoor, armea with the formidable order, and when he presented it with the signatore of the Commander-in-Chief attached, it created much surprise, and ihe veteran soldier was graciously acknowledged as entitled, thenceforth to a respectful coneiJeraiion. Can G'ltase or any oilier Dian Hi vide the Colored Tote. Mr. Harris, the eleijuent North Carolina Negro orator, said on this point in his Faneuil Hall speech: "Now we are told that if the Demo cratic party nominate certain candidates there is rear among some tbiu they will divide the colored vote. Now, my friends, let me assure you, in 'he name of 71,000 colored voter in North Carolina, and I think I can also assure you in the name of 700,006 loyal black voters in the South no candidate that the Domocrats might reach down and bring up laughter; uo candidate thai the democrats might reach up and drag down; no man who breathes the free atmosphere cf heaven who would accept the nomination at the hands of the Democratic parly, no such man could obtain the support of the black people of the South. fLoud applause. 1 As I have said before, on another oc casion, if the Democratic party were to nominate an angel we would not vote for him, in that the very fact of his ac cepting a nomination from the Demo cratic party would be evidence of his being a fallen angel. Laughter. And, in my humble opinion, he would have fallen very low when he shall first rest upon a Copperhead platform, Renewed laughter.J Josli Dilliugs-isms. It strains a man's philosophee the wusl kind tew laff when he gits beat. Awl ov us komplain ov the shortness of life, yet we awl wesie more time than we use. Don'i mistake arroganse for wisdom: menny people hev thought tha wus wise when iha wus onla windy. The principal difference between a neces-ary and a luxury is the price. Whenever the eoul is in grief it is taking root, and when il is in smiles it is taking wing. Give the devil his due, but be careful there ain't much due him. After a man has rode fast onst he never wants to go slow agaiu. It won't do tu stir up a man when he is thinkirg enny more than it will a pan of milk when the kream is ris ing. It is easy enuff to raise the devil but he's a hard crop to reap. We ar told that a contented men iz happy, and we might have been told at the same time that a fly if it had wings. mud turtle could Several hundred tons of iron for the Central Pacific Rail Road east of the mountains, is transported daily over the Central Rail Road of New Jersey lo New York, whence it is shipped to Sen Francijco via Cape florr. DtiFRANCIIISED WHITES. The Copperhead press have for months reprebenied that immerse num bers of white men were disfranchised in the South, some of them asserting thai in several States a majority of that class were deuied the right of voting. According to figures recently sent to Congress by Gen. Grant, we are told that in Virginia the whole number of whites registered is 120,111, and the whole number who failed to register, judging from the tax list and other data, is 17,343, making the total white male population of voting age 136,451. There is nothing to show with certain ty ihe number disfranchised, but il must fall considerably short of the number failing to register. Yet assum mg that every man registered who could do so under the laws, less than twelve per cent are disfranchised. If only seventy five per cent of these who did not register are disfranchised, or 12, 258, then less than nine per cent of the whole are disfranchised. This is probably very near the exact figure. In North Carolina'the number of whiles of voting age is about 126,200, of whom 11 6S6 are disfranchised, or a little more than nine per cent. In South Carolina ihe figures are : Whole num ber of whites, 67,876 ; disfranchised, 8,244 or a little more than fourteen per cent. Georcia : Whole number of whites, 114.833; disfranchised 10, 000, or a little more than nine per cent. The reports from ihe other rebel States do not show the number disfranchised We are told thai in Florida but few are disfranchised, and nearly all were registered and have voted. Il is alto gether probable that the proportion dis franchised in the other States is not greater than in '.he four Stales above named. The average in those Stales is but a triileover ten percent. That is. one in ten of the white men of the Southern States are disfrunchued on account of their participation in rebel lion. Tiibune. As strength or availability is the only test or evidence of fitness which the Democrats require, we would sgge Dr. Wiuship of Masachustti, and Mike McCoole of Missouri. as a strong ticket. Aud as a candidate's politics is a matter of perfect indinerence.pro vided he can "beat Grant, we are not sure but Zack. Chandler and Jim Ash ley would make a good run. Wiih a view of uniting intemperance and tern perance men, Dick Yates aud Sam Cary would be a strong combination bo would Andrew Johnson and John B Gough. Henry Ward Beecher aul Bricham Young would not be a bad ticket, and we submit, finally, for con sideration, a combination ticket upon winch men and women or all parties might unite a ticket composed of such names as Wendell rhilupa and Brick: Pomeroy.Ben.VVade and Vinnie Ream the poet Longfellow and John Morris sey, or R. P. L. Baber and Anna Dick inson. Ohio State Journal. Four years ago, after Geo. B McOlellau had been nominated as the Democratic candidate for President against Abraham Lincoln, the De mocracy were exultant, defiant and ap parentlv united, and more than one Republican allowed himself to de spond. General McClellan had advantages that can enure to no rebel Democrat in the present campaign He had a party in the army, and in heriied all ihe old tricks of the party leaders who had selected him. Be sides, Abmhum Lincoln had many strong adversaries in the Republican ranks. But when the final conflict came the people settled the question by a majority which, overwhelming as it was. will be exceeded by that thrown for Grant and Colfax in Novemt er. A Democratic paper says: "The De mocracy are laboring aud will continue to labor, to make the people thorough ly acquainted with both the principles and policy of its party7' We think the people understand both the principles and the policy of the Democratic party. There is a great dearth of principles in it, and its policy is to rule or ruin; and the people thoroughly understand iht fact that its rule is ruin to free in stitutions and to the national honor and credit. ' Andrew Johnson predicts that uni versal suffrage will create an exter minating war of races. Well, in Oc tober. 1865, he predicted ihat "the negro will vote with his late master, whom he does not hate, rather than with the non-slaveholding white, whom he does hate." A very pretiy antithe sis ,but as unsound as Andrew Johnson himself. The experience ut.der the reconstruction laws falsifies it in every nnrticular and shows thai ne is no more lo be trusted in the role of pro phel than in the role of President Gen. McClellan, it is announced on ine strength of a private letter, will re turn from Europe in August, and will not be a candidate for President this time. He prefers Gen. Hancock, but will support the nominee of Tammany Hall. One account says he will lake the slump for ihe Tammany ticket, but we think that must be an error. He takes the back track when he takes any WILL, NOT SATISFY. The Petersburg Index has recently promulgated its ultimatum, by a flam- ng announcement of what "will not sat isfy" rebel? in the pending Presiden tial election. Here is the way it lays the lash upon the backs of its submit- siva .Northern associates: It will not saiufy Democracy to se cure control of the government merely to leniently execute unconstitutional Radical measures. It will not satisfy Democracy to come into posession of, and perpetuate a Union pinned together by radical bay onets. It will not satisfy democracy to ad minister Radical theories, to put anew Sinbad upon the Southern neck, and to win the privilege of experiencing all the consequences of a host of uncorrect ed Radical mistakes. It will not satisfy Democracy to in herit negro suffrage from the dead Radicals and to control a black man's vote in that hall in which Douglas de clared this was a white man's govern- ernmenl, formed by white men, for white men and their children forever. It will not satisfy Democracy to hold the offices of the country while the South writhes under the heel of a de posed tyrant, and is ruled by a radical enthroned negro olligarcby No! No! No! A thousand times No! We will gain peace by reaction, which shall remove the leprosy from ihe af flicted South. We must undo all that has been wrongly done. We must go back to the very day and moment when the Cons' itution was disregarded, and begin anew to build up a Union of aw, of love, of peace and of rertna- neuce, with the great Charter lor us corner stone. If such be not the purpose, avowed and resolute, with which Democracy shall enter the fields it ought to and will be beaten, and we shall have neither reaction nor peace. .- A WoNDtaruL Walking Stick. Henry Clay Dean, the famous Copper head, orator of Iowa, was in the city yesterday, with his big augerheaded walking suck. This suck was a hick ory sapling, around which a vine had iwtned itself like a serpent, giving it the shape of an auger the proper em blem of a bore. During Mr. Dean s visit to the east, the slick further devel oped its nature by presenting a brazen erpent standing on the head or tno cane, coned like a cork screw, with flaming eyes, open mouth, and protrud ing tongue. The snake is of solid copper, and is the best representation of a copperhead we have ever seen, except Dean himself. The rod of Aaron devoured the other serpents, but the stick of the great Iowan vomits forth n Copperhead of genuine metal. .Mo. Democrat 16A. President Johnson says that he does not heed the taunts and jeers cast on his callinc as a tailor and asserts as a reason that "that occupation never dis graced a man who did not disgrace his i raft." If this assertion means any thing, it means that if a man disgraces his craft, his occupation (or profession or trade) disgraces him. The sen tence is far more ambiguous than any other one by the same high authority. "Treason must be made odious and traitors must be punished and impov erished." In the case of Andrew Johnson, the tailor has disgraced his craft; though il never disgraced him; his treason has been made odious, and the traitor ought to be punished and impoveiished. The Washington correspondent cf the Albany Argus says that the Ohio friends of Mr Pendleton will assent to the p. ssage of the two-thirds rule in the New York Convention, and that if they fail, under the operation of the rule, to nominate their candidate, they will use their power under the rule to veto the nomination of Chief-Justice Chase. A numbtr of gentlemen formerly counted among the Democracy, at San Francisco including Peter Donahue, acted as officers of the Grant and Col fax ratification meeting in that city. A hundred guns were fired at Shasta, in honor of the nomination of Grant and Colfax. A man by ihe name of Brume, rose from his sleep in Dubuque one night last week and while in the same state stepped out of a third story window, falling to the pavement. His injury is supposed to be fatal. The Put in Bay correspondent of the Sandusky Register says that the woods on the island are alive with locusts that are still coming up through ihe ground in great numbers. They seem quite harmless, however. Bishop John Sharp, the Mormon, with over 50 men, started from Salt Lake City, May 30, to commence work on the Union Pacific Rail Road, under President Young's contract. The Chicago Journal aulboritively denies the statement which is going ihe rounds of the newspapers, that Schuyler Colfax is going to marry one of Iowa's fairest daughter. MISCELLANEOUS. Sea birds are caid to drink from tht clouds. New York is flooded with bogus five ctnt nickel coin. Nine hundred and ninety-eight per sons are going through bankruptcy in Massachusetts. Each of the three States, PennsyN vania. New York and Alabama, has the same area, 46,000 square miles. There is a woman Chelsea, Mass., who has twelve children, all living and married, except the youngest, who is twenty-six years of age. Beauregard is breakfasted by the New York Democracy at Delmonico's, while Grant is denounced and ridiculed by their organs. The St. Louis Democrat says that "Brick" Pomeroy's recent speech in that city made Grant 100 votes, and wants "Brick" to come again. The Mayor cf Titusville, Penn , fined a party five dollars thw jther day for indulging in a free fight, and then lent him the money to pay the fine with. The steamer Daniel Drew recently ran from Yonkers to New York, a dis tance of fourteen and a half miles, in thirty four minutes and forty-five sec onds, the fastest time on record. Cincinnati is the abode of a boy of eight who is now in jail on two charges of grand petit larceny. He was al ready under bonds on another charge of having committed the former crime. The Montgomery Atail advises its associates to cease assailing Gen. Grant, lest this may injure the Democracy of the North. The Lynchburg Republic can says the same thing. The Secretary of the Michigan Re publican State Central Committee re ports thirty three Graat and Colfax clubi already formed in .that State, whose officers have reported to him. Th Columbus Journal says several of the Ohio delegates to the Democrat ic National Convention, notwithstand ing their instructions for Pendleton, are working openly for Chase. The Democrats of Columbus, Ohio at their recent convention, evinced their determination to "go the whole hog" iu support tUo 13 a m o r , y m it mors modern phases, by voting toendore the Visible Admixture act, which has been declared unconstitutional by the Su preme Court. A lady asked a minister if she might pay attention to dress and fashion with out being proud. "Madam," replied the minister, "whenever you see the tail of a fox out of a hole you may be eure the fox is there also." An old lady once said that her idea of a great man was, "a man who was keerful of his clothes, and didn't drink peerits; km read the Bible without spelling the words, and kin eat a cold dinner on wash-day to save the wo men folks the trouble of cooking." The La Croise Democrat is of the opinion that the Republicans will be beaten in the coming Presidential elec tion because "the people are preparing for a great devil hunt about that time they will smile, slay, and spare not." When this hunt comes on the editor of the Democrat had better bunt his hole. At a party the other evening while a lady was playing the piano with a peculiar touch, a gentleman remarked: "I'd give the world for her fingers." He was greatly taken back by her prompt reply, that he could have the whole hand for much lets than that. But then its leap year, you know. A person, late on Saturday after noon, hailed an Englishmen as he was skillfully essaying the wily fisherman's art, for trout, with, "Halloa, there! got anything?" "Got anything! of course not. I only came here last Wednes day!" was the reply as the patient angler once more cast his patent fly. Among the most industrious, thrifty and desirable European, immigrants coming to this country are the Swedes. They make excellent citizens. Seven teen thousand of them hare made ar rangements to immigrate to America this year. Seven hundred of the num ber arrived at" New York, last week, immediately came west; 1 A private letter to the Janesville (Wis.) Gazette slates that a fiendish and revolting murder was committed in the town of Patch Grove, Grant Co., Wis., on Monday night last. A girl by the name of Kate Jordan living in that town, naa ceen aiuancea to a young man named William Kidd. An exposition of Kidd's bad character in duced her to cast him off and refuse the alliance. On Monday night Kidd invited Miss Jordan to take a ride with him in a buggy. She consented. They left together and nothing was heard from either until the next day. when the body of Mies Ross was found in,some bushes a short distance from town, horribly mangled and ber throat. cut from ear to ear. Kidd has not yet 1 been found. fell I i v.. ! - it I 1 ; .' 1 .1 - ! I-'