PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. THURSDAY, SEPT. 1SG3 COKKESPOXDEXCE. Wt are I.Miro-j i reJclrio crrpooder.-e front all parti of the SUte, relative to the material inter e.ta oftaecouitry, toetta.er with m;h other mat ttr as contributor! may deetn of interest. Republican Ticket. Fjr VreaiJei-t, ULYSSES S. GRAXT. Far Vice ProaMerit. SCIXUYLEK CO EFAX. BEPUBLICAN STATE TICKET- T M MaKQfkrr. of Cas. LOUIS Li.OKiK. H-:hrJoo. J r. WARS of I HtaWrrf OVo-rs JOUX TAKrB, of Paug-as- DAVID BCTLER, of Pawnee. "''tMAS pTkEXAKD. of Washington. Treasurer JAmrSWEET, of Otoo. AaJitor of Sta'e JOilS U1LLESIIS, of emahi. DU rlV,fltUurr. B- HKTT. of Setn.b.. 21 SJ J. C. tlis, or iw' E F .KY. o I-d-. Republican County Con vention. Vta meeting of the Repub'.icaa Central C" tee for Cass Cour.tr. 4 in ibis eitj ,na ur a ai 15thlsCS.puraa.ut to published ea. I it t 'decided I- hold . County Convention. In , th- c,,y of t-latUmouth, for the purpo-e of placing in now I V. tion a Scket to be supported .t the ensuing Octo ber elect! n, on Wednesday, September 16A 18CS st two o'clock p. m. cf .aid day; and it was alo re commended that the Republican Tole-.of the eral precincts assemble t the usnal place, oi holding elec tions id their re,pective precints on Saturday, September 5th 1S63 at three o'clock p. m , and select delegates to rapre sent them in tne County Oouventtoo. I he repre-en-taiionof the ririoni precinct waa apportioned 'p"aUsuio.ith. 9; Oreanolia 2; Kock Bluff.. 3: 1.1 be'tr 8; Ml Pleasant. 4; ro.-a 8; Weepin ater, 4- Eight liler re. 3; Louisville. 8, bouth Bend, I Ba'lt creek, 2; Kln l, ; t'Va Creci, I. u.ir.n ,n ,11 II Delegates U was recomroea 1 d th-it the repreasn- r .. ri,ni i,na;ie copinoain the 7th dni ....eir.! LFlStriC lw:4o. w- one del- r..r ..Mr. ft!) Keuublican vote or iractiunai majority of 5-. taking tie October election of 150. a. the rate and that the Cs Oouny Ponven ion be rtquted to aelect tne deleeate Irora -a'd eoon y to said District ConTcntioa. wh ich will be held iiame diately after the doaromeiit of the eouiuy cuuren- ti0n' n O. UAT1IAWAT, Ch'a.. OiL(5MTirrT, sec'y. REPUBLICAN MEETINGS GES. JOHN M. THAYER. V. S Senator for Xe-bra-ka. will address the people at the following ioi and place . Browuvi le. Thursday. Sept. 31. la the Breams. Arago, Friday, Sept. 4th, lpm Knlo, r'ridiy. Sept. 4th, ii th. evening. Fail. City. Saturday, Sept. 6:h. in the er-nmj. gaiem. Mondiy. i'ept 7tli, in ihe eveniaS Table R-ck, Tue-day, "ept. Sth. 1 p m. Pawnee Citr, Tne-iy. Jpt 811, in theeveaml. Tecamaeh. Wedne-dy, Sept O.h, in the ee nai. Beatrice. Thursday, pept 10th. in the ernlns. SwanCiiy, KriJ.y. "em. 11J, iu th-erenio. Camden, datanUr, S-pt. 12'.h, i" the ercniii.'. NebrakCltr. Monday, ,-ep!. 14 h in theeieoing. Mount Pleasant, Tue-dy, Sept. 15'h. 1 p ra. Weeping rt'ater, Tucaday, Sept, 15:h, in the even log Lincoln, Wednesday. Srp lth. Milford. Thu'sday. Sept 17th. 1 p. m. Bewanl. Tnnra'tay. Sept 17th, in the evening. Ashland, Friday, Sept. 13t.1, in t eveaina. Piattamonth. atO'dar. S-pt 19'h 1 P " Grand Island. Tu-sday, Sept 2i4 in the erer ing. Columbu. We.luely, -et. 231 ia the ceii-g Norti Bend, Thursdiy. Sept. -4th, 1 p. m. Fremont, Thursday, b-pt 21th" in tie evening. Sailing's GroTe, Satmdiy, Stpt. 26th, altemoon and evening. Gor. But er, and perhaps other speaker, will te with Gen. Thayer t raoit ol the abjve appointments Local committees will please gir.- thepioper notices and nuke all necf-wary arrangement-. Other appoiatnaenta wiil ba announced in due time By order, Rep. Stt Central Conm-nr b. H. D. HATHAWAY. Ch'u. GREAT MASS MEETING ! Republicans Rally ! SATURDAY SEPT. 19 Hi AT PLATTSMOUTH I There will be a Grand Republican Mass-Meeting ia this city on the 19ih inst. JMakc your preparation to be on hand, and bring all your neighbors. The Speakers for the occasion will be announced hereafter. utPUDurio.' What do repudiation advocates sup pose would be the effect if this govern ment should attempt lo pay off toieign bond-holders in greenbacks ? Do il.ey suppose the imposition would be quiet ly submitted to ? The people of Ger many ever the friends of freedom took large quantities of our bonds for which they cave us their po!d. Dj you suppose they would relish the kind of honesty that would pay them back in depreciated greenbacks? T.ll(" IJO.VDS As our copperhead friends have much to say about "equel taxation of al species of property according to valu ation, including government bonus, it may be well to enquire a little about this matter. It has been three limes decided by the Supreme Court of the United Stales that government securi ties cannot be taxed. What about the honesty of men who advucaie such tax ation in the face of ihe:e decisions and the express contract that they t-liall nut be taxed ? Are they honest, and are they to be trusted ? The men who took these bunds at a tune when the war for the Union must fail unless they were taken, took them under contract that they should not be taxed and paid more for them than would have been paid without such contract or, in other words, they paid the tax at the time of the purchase ; and yet men are found who would dishonor the government and cheat the men who saved the nation by furnishing the means to procure the munitions of war and their reason for so doing ia simply because the money thus furnished did save the government from bein overthrown. 1 REPUBLICAN GALV OF FROM 7 000 TO 1O000!! State Senate Unanimously Re lican ! DEMOCRATIC ROOSTER U'OK 1S6S! HOW ARE YOU RE-ACTWX Mu.ntpiuer, Vt., Sept 1. The annual election held in this State to day, resulted in the success of the Republican St.- te ticket by a largely increased majority over Iat year ; ihz election of three Congressmen by heavy mpjoriiie ; the choice of the State Senate unanimously Republican, and t! e House nearly so. The returns from one third cf the State indicate a Republican majority of 27.000 for Governor. Good jutlffes et it evea as high as 30,000. The Republican majority last year, on Gov ernor, was 20 184 Ed IIebald The voie is the heaviest ever known in the State since IS 10. CPIJBLIt:i. CLl'CS Have been organized in neatly every precinct in this county, and every. hine bids fair f jr a rousing majority for Grant and Ct If.ix ami the Republican State ticket. Republicans, relax not an effort, but keep pouring the truth into the ears of such of our polnical opponents as are willing to receive it. li is a time when no man should neg lect his duty. 'Ihe welfare of iha coun try demands that every patriot be up and doing. II CADE It What wculd you think of a man whose note you held at 6 per cent, interest who would come to you on pay day and offer you as payment his duebill, with out interest payable at his pleasure. You would think he was rather a menu mi n, wjuld you not ? S-jpp.ise he owed you for mmy h:.t hi :i at a time he was "flt broke," an 1 uia.-l h ive money or faii ? That would make h in till meaner, would it not ? Well, th it 13 just the wiy it is with this govern m-nt. If tNe Democrat c pirty could carry out their programme, liio mn who hold her bond, issued at a time when she was compelled to have money or fail, would be aked to take as pay ment the duebill of ihe government.to be paid when the Democratic party wa ready to do so. Should such a course be pursued, how much money do you suppose the United States could rai.-e the next time sue wanted to borrow Just about the saoe amount you would let ihe man have who had endeavored to cheat you out of the money you hail loaned him to ave him from bankrupt cy. Will jvu be n party to a swindle of ihis kind by voting for the meu who declare in favor of such policy on the part of this government ? tTxes It is astonishing bow men of intelli geuce can be wheeled with the lugaboo at out taxes raised by democratic speak ers. They tell you that you are tax ridden and oppresed, and many men appear to believe it If they told you ttiat your farm yielded fifty bushels of wheat to the acre when you only got fifteen, wculd you believe it? Now, we pretend to say that not one man in every hundred in Nebraska pays one cent of direct tax to the Government. You have your ordinary State and coun ty taxes to pay, as you would have un der auy circumstances. Bui how many meD of Cass Cour.ty pay a Government tax ? We only know one or two Dem ocrats who do to, and they pay but a trifle?. The fact is, that under the Re publican system of taxation only those who have' an income, iu excess of ex penses, of over Sl.000. pay any income tax to the Government al all. What would it be under the programme laid down in the democ ratic platform. That document would "tax all ropeny alike, according to valuation," ih't is. the man who owns a farm w orth 82 000 and is only able to make his money affairs come out even and give his children proper surport and educa.ion, has to pay the same tax on that S2.000 woith of property as the man who makes a clear profit of that amount during the yedr. Under tne Republican plan of taxation no hing that the farmer raises is taxed, and very little that he pur chases nothing except luxuries. Not solitary article which is a reeessity to tne poor man is taxed. Under the Deni ocratic plan, everything must be taxed alike, even the nourishment that goes into your children's mouths must pay the same taf as the perfumed cigar or bowl of punch with which the nabob regales himself. Examine the record and see if we are net correct. HOW JIAM' Of the men of the North who vote the Demccra-.ic 'Tirol are ready .o ciy. with Wade Hampton, that ihe cause for which Stonewall Jackson fell is not dead, but will Again revive in some form." It matters not how many of them are will nsr to "revive" that cause, every one cf them who votes for Frank Blair sives his absent, either directly or indirecty. to such revival, u.d why? Because the leaders of the party called Democratic ar pledged to such south erners a Hampton. Foret, Vance.and other prominent advocates of that "cause," to assist in the revival and help make it a success. Let men look carefully before they make the leap that lands this Government in the midst of another war. "RADICAL. HlLirE' In his speech in this city Mr. Popple ton said that ' Radical malice would accomplish what bayonets had failed to do" He was endeavoring to show that the ex-rebels were being persecu ted beyond endurance, and that "Radi cal Malice" was the cause of it. The proposition ihat the Republican party have exhibited malice toward these ex rebels is, at'first sight, so supremely ridiculous that one is inclined to Inush at the man who advances the idea, instead of treating it as a propsi'ion likely to be of any effect. Yet, when we con sider what trifles sometimes turn th scale, and whpn we see men who ough to be intelligent give credence to such argument, we are inclined to a-k men to carefully and candidly examine into ,he truthfulness of such statements J'it stop and ask yourself whether, in the history of the worl J, a set of men who rebelled against their government and were whipped, were let off as len iently as the men who fought this na lion for four long years, casing a del of billions of dollars, and tne untimely death of hundreds of thou-ands of brave men. as it or was it not a crime to make open war on this government Answer this question to yo"r own sat isfaciion, and then proceed by aski:; yourself whether, if it was ;i crime any less restriction? (we will not cll it pun iihment, for it is not,) could be throw around the leaders of that rebellion with safety to the nation, than those prpoed by the Republican party. I any other country on the face of th earin ttie leaders wouu nave ceen sliot and ihe balance treated as the worst of criminals. Bat what did this govern ment ask of them, and what was thei reply ? It was asked that those w had perjured themselves in addition to their treason be deprived of ihe right to held cftice. This proposition wa not. certainly, conceived in malice' toward those men, for what Siatt? in the Union does not punih perjury more severely than ihat. And yet ihisproj osition was met with scorn by ha men whom Mr. Poppleton claims are the victims of "Radical Malice." What we ask, could this Government uo to protect herself that Mr. Poppleton wol not call -'malice." In the fir.-l offer t these rebels they were left perfectly free to regulate ihe franchise as bes ?uited them, and it was only asked tha proven perjurers be kept cut of ofiice, and yet that is called '"malice" toward the perjurer. Will Mr. Poppleton tell in his next speech, whether it was copperhead "malice" which, in Ohio. ty a strict piny vote, di.-f renchi;ed th maimed and crippled Union soldi -rs ot thitt Siate? We suppose he will de iena mai action, ana ciann mat tne Democratic Legislature of Ohio dis franchised the disabled Union soldier.- of that State out of pure love for them Which is the greatest crime. Mr. Pop plet.m, being a crippled Union soldier or a perjured rebel soldier ? - THERO.UIOF RATTLE. TM mere. -ire many very many men who are supporting the cause of modi-rn Democracy who nre as honest and true lo the government as we could ask men to be, but they are miled as to the real issue before the people. They are blinded by the sophistry of words, and do not dive down deep in:o ih hearts of me.i. We tell them, without fear of successful contradiction, that the real issue is whether this government shall be administered as a free Repub lic, and the late war shall be consider ed as a victory of loyalty and right over treason and wrong, or whether we shall have a "caste" government, wherein the poor man shall be trodden under ihe heel of ihe self-styled aristocrat auu iue .'ate war xor our national ure - - e . i le oe considered and maae a '-failure so far as the vindication of our national life nnd power are concerned. Let men but read rend carefully and hon estly the saying of prominent South erners the meu who to day control and shape the course of thi Democrat ic party for that pany can do nothing without the aid of these southern aris tocrats, and they only consent to take hold as leaders, not as followers and see if they cannot discover the current leading directly to ihe goal of anarchy. Gen. Cuilrn A. B title t. ii - '.tii roar inj at a SeyiT.uur and B air meeting in loldle.nnd was introduced to the meet ing by John Foryihe, of ihe Mjbile Register, who commended hiiu as fol lows: "Gen. C. A. Battle richly did his part in the fields of the S. uth, when a holy libation of blood and valor was poured out to the coiiimo i renown At Seven Pines, at Chancnilorsviile, Winchester. Gettysburg, Fi-her's Hil'.and on scores of fields, he led his brave Aiabamian where glory was to be won, and his gray coat and flashing s word were ever found nearest the lit thing of the guns. Oar worthy President, Col Herndon, himself bearing the scars of the mighty conflictwill introduce to you oue of ill lieroe.i of thi gigantic war." In ihe course of his speech, General Battle addressed bis fellow soldiers of tne late C. S. A. as follows: "Comrades! I rohers ! year after year you bore the Confederate flag through fire and tempest, am. upon more than two hundred battle fields covered it with victory. Your imper ishabl i elories are intrenched in the impregnable fortress of the past and no power can dun their effulgence. Haie, malignity, and lyrauny. are im potent lo tran-t'orm patriots into traitors and heroes into slaves. You, my com ruds, and you alone, can obliterate ihe glorious record. Will you du it, or shall it remain a perpetual heritage to your children ? What though your flag went down bnilied in woman's con-e-rraiuig tears and baptized in the best blood ot ihs nation ? This is still your oauve land. You all did love her once, not without cause. Her mountains are as grand, her valleys areas fertile as ever; her daughters are as fair, her matrons ure a virtuous. Is she less dear to you because she 1 as opened her maternal bosom ai d received to her embiace ihe noblest and bravest other sons ? 1h she ihe less your mother be cause she has been insulted and wronged ? Oh, she is dearer a thous at.d limes dearer than she was in her -trength and her glory. H r fortitude in the midst of her desolation has at tracted the admirction of the world; and now the creat Democratic party cf the Union throws over her a banner inscribed wiih the principles of consti tutional liberty for which she fought, and I am here to night to ask you to come up me anar, ana in us nain pledge to her our lives. our fonunes and our sacred honor. The Democratic party offers the most honorable terms It endorses principle? for wh.ch you battled not becau-e it va the princi ples upou which th Confederacy was founded but the Confederacy adopted them because they were promulgated by the fathers of American Indepen deuce, and were vindicated by the war of the Revolution. Under them the American colonies advancedto a mighty empire, and in their observance i the last hop for American contitution il liberty. Not only does it declare in favor of that Con-titution so dar to you, but it most - olem u!y . decla res that all those acts of Reconstruction, so to tally destructive of your rights, and so repugnant lo every honorable feeiing, are unconstitutional, null and void. The honorable gentleman who will follow me to night may, perhaps, tell you something of the circumstances that attended the adoption of that plat form. He may tell you how conflicting sentiments were reconciled and har mony secured. How every heart bounded wnh manly impulses when Wade Hampton portrayed the condi tion of South Carolina, and then asked the incorpcratiori mio ihe platform of the declaration that the Reconstruction acts were unconstitutional, null, and o:d. 'And what of the candid ties who siand upon that platform ? flora tio Seymour stands at the head of American statesmen. Had he lived in the best days of Rome he would have been among the mo-t renowned of her benators. Had he been an actor in the earlier days of the Repullic. be would have been the compeer of Wash ington Anams, and Jefferson," &c, AS IKISII H A V VIHVOF THE KOM QU. ! I IO.V The Decatur Gazelle reports the fol owiug conversation that occurred be tween a prominent Democrat and an Irishman of thai city, recently. For convenience it designates the parties as Jack and Pal : Jack How do you like ihe Demo cratic platform ? Pat I can't underotand it ; would ye be after explaining it lo me all about fie bond question ? Jack Oh yes, with pleasure. You see the rich men own ali the bonds, and he poor men have to pay for the bonds. 1 at Ihe divil, ye say ; is that the vay ? Jack Yes; and now the Democrat ic party propose to pay off the bond with greenbacks, and thus everybody will be treated enuallv. Tat Is that in our platform ? Jack Not in so many words but that is what it means; and now, Pat, I want you to do all you can for our par- -brins' the buys out lo all the meet ing, and Pft Hould on, Jack ; will yer pay ing the bonds off in greenbacks make tie poor man as rich as the bondhold er ? Jack Not exactly ; the bondholder will have his greenbacks where we cau tax them Pat--Thin thre will be all green batUs, and money will be plenty, and we'll git guuid for our greenbacks, if we eUct reymour f Jack Not exactly ; ihere is not crCM J enough in ihe country. , Pai Thin we f.re not to have o!d ! al all How in the divil are ye going j .1 nri . s n:i r r. rr 11 -1 1 1 rtt n- i.i ntt i i a -ut - - . ..... - - ..... , iK j . .i.r r : the people for revenue, and famp-,cro , s- .e, ... 1..1 and as the greenbacks get worn by constant handling we w Ii priut new ones. Pat I see ; you propose to take the debi now carried by the rich bundliold er and divide it among these people, rich and po.r alike, by forcing the bondholder to spend his money -for property. Jack Exactly you are learning fast, and you see Pat Hould on -an idee strikes me If the. government debt is all in green backs, and thin circulation, how many cords of Vm will ii lake to buy a cord of wood ? Jack I cannot exictly say what they would be worth that will regulate itself. But. by the by, Pat, could you pay me ihat linle note you owe me? It was due) yesterday.and I need the mon ey very much Pat Yes, I know ihe note is due. and I'll pty ye according to the Dim-mecratn- platform. Jack What do you mean I Pat I mane I'll give you a fre.-h u te for the one ye have. Pat There's nothing about giving fresh notes in the Democratic platform Pat Yis. ye said we'd pay the bond off in greenbacks, and both of them are promises to pay of the fame gov ernment. Ye's give one promise "to pay for another one, and I'll give you a fresh promise lo pay for the one ynu have now. The note you have now says 10 per cent interest ; the new one will .-ay without interest, and no time set for its payment. Jack But this is an individual mat ter, and the other is a government mat ter. You honesliy owe me. and prom ised to pay me yesterday. Your propo sition is to cheat me ut of my money. Pat An' its chehtin' ye out of your money, is it? An' haven't I as good a right to chute ye as the government ha? to chate ihe widders an orphans whose moi-ev is all in government bonds ? I'll pay ye on th? Dimmecral ic platform ! ' . m . TIKE SlTLrATIO.V I.V L.OL IslAS A That geueral anarchy seems to be prevalent in the country is evidenced by a hundred levers on tile in ihe Gov ernor's otlice. Men are shot down in the roads ; at churches even, in the ac: of prayer, as was doi e iu the parish of Rapides not long ago. and murdered iu their houses, and iheir houses burn ed over them, as was done iu Franklin parish. And for what ? In many case tor no o her reason than thai they were black and loved the party which made them tree. It is useless lo talk of p rscnal difli culties as the cause cf manv murder ihai have been perpetrated throughout ihe country. The statement of Judge CrawfV rd, Colonel Wade H. Hough, ot Caldwe'l, Judge Wiley, of CarroJi.and a uozen other ciiiz t.s of rorth Louts laua, shows that over thirty men have been killed in the pari-h of Franklin recently. The Tensas Gazelle related the acts of many murders us given it by the fleeing negroes from that p-iri-h. In Morehouse parish letter show that many men have been killed. So in Mad iso i, Carroll, Ouachita, Te. r jo.ine Bemvii.e, Bssrer, Rapides, and St Landry. 1 he Democratic press may Uy lo cover over ihe facts, but there are the dead bodies appea'iug mutely to ihe nation they loved for protection foi those they leave behind. It may be thai ali these men are not killed for politiial leasons, but they have been killed and nobody has been punished for it. The Legislative Committee will eoon rt port, and ihe country will see whether Governor Warmoth has ever- s'.enned the mark in his assertion that one hundred and fifty men have been killed in the last month and a half. That a dangerous secret political or ganization exists in this State is known to every body, and a gent-ral feeling of alarm pervades the whole comrtuinny on account ot it. Its oht"Ci is fully known, and Governor Warmoth did bui his duty in informing ihe Pre-ident of it when a-king for means to pre vent the consummation of its hellish purposes TSIE DE.tlOt ItATIC tXI'CIil- A Correspondent informs us ihat n distinguished Democratic oratcr visited one of ihe towns in the interior, a few df.ys since, and in his speech asserted ihai "om p. rum of tho Government cf the United States in '01 became 'disrati-fied with the Unite 1 States and wished io try an experiment to see. "u-heti'r any portion of the United "States had any right t secede They 'tried the experiment and failed. f 1..- - .1 . v . . uui tui resjjonuent men aaas : ve would lik to know what this expert ment of Democrats has co.-t the Gov ernment. Did it increase a National debt, or not, aud who should pay for the little Democratic experiment. These are pertinent questions. Dem ocratic stumpers are continually harp ingonthe public debt. Their pany Drought on the war their party crea led the National debt. This little ex penment cost us hundreds of thousands of lives and billions of treasure, and yet we are told u was only an exnen ment. A Lemocratic experiment, "to "see if any portion t f the United States "had the right to secede," We-irn soldiers Ineud. 1 he late Iiishop .Meade, of Yirginii was generally, not piven to fun: but ne could relish humor, ana occasionally ' .. .... ' i , nimselt say a very wuty thing. A friend relates a mot once uttered by the bishop. He was lamenting the little attention paid in a certain portion of tne atate, ai the tune to .the subject of e.tucauon : ana a ided with n svmna l,,izl"? ok : ,--ur girl are poorly e,'"cated; out the bsys .will never find U out '. The Dubunn. .,, U'o.. pse themselves by ...ik . .1 f n 1 r - Mfuii iiitt ir rii nn ri 11 r.t'o I'rtti a. i r, .. . . cannot be elected. ion cou.u noi m n.-miu'.ed, Seymour I . ICa-IsTit ATIO.V. Omaha, August, 1SGS Mr Lditpr : The followin" rules and constructions of our registry law, the election law, and the elective fran chise have been the guide and action of one of the practical registrars of ihis count, and as much study and thought and intention of doing right has ben the object of your correspond ent as registrar, he boldly challenges any one to show or point out any errors that he may advance 1st Question by registrar to appli cant . Your name in full ? Ans. Richard Rae. 2d. Your age ? Ans. Thirty years. 3d The place if your birth ? Ans. Germany. 4th. How long fave you resided in Nebraska ? Ans. Two years. oth. How long have you resided in county ? Ans. One year and two months. C'.h. II nv long have you re?ided in this precinct ? Ans. One year nnd two months. 7th. What is ihe date of your papers? Ans Oct. 1st, A. D. 1SG0. Sth. What court, State, and county, did you get the papers from ? Ans. Supreme Court, Cook county, Illinois. The above answers should all be wrifen in the proper column in the bojk of registration. Should the upplicanl have his papers with him, the registrar con take the date tron them without asking the questions, and then the registrar mun endorse his name on the papers with dale. Should the applicant be without his papers by rea.-oii ot leaving at home or lost the eame. the registrars duty is to only satisfy himself that the applicant is telling the truth. Should ihe registiar at this lime have doubt about the applicant, he should then swear him. (form of oa.h, Sec 3, Registry Law, and note the oath n ihe tironer columns ) Ii is the duty cf me registrar lo then ask such further uuestions as o ppertain to his right to vote at ihe coming election. And -ho u the registrar be still in doubt, be must hear such other evidence as the npp:i cant can offer, noting ihe witness name in his book. Shouid ihe registrar after all deride ihe applicant no voter, hi must write his reason of disqualifies tion : if he decide he is a voter, then wri e his name in the qualified column Every male citizen ot the United S'.ates, and he who has filed his decla ration of mtt mion to becumd such, and who has attained the age of twenty one years, and shall have been actua' resi dent ot ihis State for six months, of the county twenty days ; and of ihe precinct ten days next preceding the election, s a voter al till euclious m this state, excepting as per provisitn made by section fif:y tnree of the e.tc tion law All male pereens who can show the registrar ihat the above facts will exist ihe day preceding the election, is enti th d io registration. Ai.y foreign born malo Iiu comto to the United States betore twenty-cn years of age, and whose father files his declaratp u of u.ieotion to become a citizen before his children are twja ty one years old, makes such male thi.' drtn voters. Any foreign born male who has served in ihe United States army can show an honorable discharge, is a vo ter The two last clauses always provid log the applicant has resided in this Sta e six mou'.hs ntxl piecJirg the election- Ii will be the duty of ihe registrars to .ake copy of ihe September registra uon on another book thai will be redv for them in the hands of th d.ff ent county clerks in this State, and tlien ten days beiore sitting give the usual notice of place of sitting for three days (naming them in the notice) of the week preceding the presidential elec tion, for the purpose of miking such luriher registaation of legal voters as nay exist, and of correcting iheregi tratton already made. All per-ons voters at the October election nre qualified voters for the presidential election. In closing : I have tried to be frank and plain, and I hi pe all who read will be like unto me Truly yours JOHN 11 SAHLER. SlItPY ALL EtIGIlT. The Republicans of Beilevue held a arge and en hu-iasiic mas- meeting at the Court House in Eellevue, on Sat uiday. August, 22 Able and stirring addressps were made by Gov. Saunders. Hon. John I Kedicw and Jas IIxby E-q. A Li rant aud Lolfax club was orga . , ... nized by electing the fol'owing officers to act during the campaign lion. Her,ry T. Clarke. President Mephen D. 13 ngs and II. M. Ebev v ice rresiuems : llobert Hamilton E-q., Treasurer; W. C. McLean, Sec retary ; S. P. Martin, Assistant Secre tary Our country is thoroughly amused. and is determn ed 10 throw off the mis rules of modern Democracy, and place herself among her sister counties as n standard bearerof freedom and loyalty. and will sustain her character by g'v 'ng a glor.ous maionty for Grant and - - oifax at the next eledion . - - . . Yours, M. - Thu war is over." said a Seymour- ite the other day to a one armed soldier who was turning a hand organ in Un ion Park. "It may be over to you," said the brave boy in blue, lifting tin his sminp. "but it isn'i over by a good deal to me." Tha Copperhead vam oosed. The emaciated survivors of the Lib. and Andersonville priots,re asked xr ha iiArM...i. . . '". ciuuLrtiis to ro e wun u,e wretches whn ,erinrrl l - " -v - 6US starved them. The New York JdvtAha seys: "It is whispered in private citclcs ll.n: one cf the great leaders of Eemociacy 111 US III), me hjoi Ior niflfjy Vf BfS Of the young Democracy of New York a get.tleman eminent in hi profession and brilliant in fonal circles, will short ly declair ngninst Seymour and Blair, and in favor of Grant and Colfax.' The ball is rollu.g on." proba'i e iWrii i:. When as Wil lam WWdruff h . m,n ic ,tioa to the Pre bat- Cotirl of i n-s Cmity to b ip..j,,ir. dnnntotiator of tho estate ..f Mr. Ivh F lioyniati de.-e:n-.l, late mid I'ouiitt. th'.- Coi rl Ii ii apnt.lrt'. ed Thursday the ITtli dty n .C.-;,te,i,b:r, l$r,H . the day to detcrn.ine the am. f.il ptrs.i It.tenMel will nppear en that day at the I'roha'e (B1. in tta car of II it:.-nioui h alia o-n k a m. MILI.lAM P C.AOS. AugunOS-h ISO?. Probate Ju.lg?. ELECTION NOTICE. Nutic is hereby Kiv o t at m. Tre-diT. Ih-D.i -tremh i'S of October next, at ti.a niil place i f noldini! e.ecti Ii In esrh Prer ns:.(o- as nejr a may be pructirab'o.) In Cai t'ooty, and State i,t Nsl.rsi -ka an e!ir;i.n will b Le l f. r Oue MemVr t I'oncr- f r X!rarka Ore Oo'e nor fir Nri raka Cne Si-cretary of state One An ii o - of St ite. one Mate t reasurer. One rist'i t Attorney f. r 21 Judicial D i!r .1 One Senator for C'ouoty On-Sei.ator ro-t'aa harpy, Saunders, ll itlrraf j Sewatd ('nuiitie . I'.mr Mi mlit:. of the llou e if Kepne n'.Otif.i Cass County. One ("I'Uuiy Commissioner foi the Sacen-I Putrid, (Rock Illutf j One Aesor for each Preeitc! Three Juilgi s ai.d tao Cicr-a f Kler .iou for taih 1'reitert. Oi;e Koad s'upervlor f.r csih r;,a, n Which el.ctleti will bo opene.l at niua (J) o'ctoeli in the niorninc. and will citini opea until in () o'cl"Ck in the nf lerr.ooii of the -am d r . hrit i r of th-; COINTV I'lMJIlS-IOMKi tilt. 7lh day of 5ep em-r A O lbOs it. API':'. LOCK Clerk. C County, N eln t ka Improved Farm ami Tim ber Tor ale The farm is ab ut 21 in. lei wt s! from riat'.m'.utl. 2 mi n wr-t . f Hoover's, on li e ta- Itoad I J aerts t.a-Leon in ruitiv .tkri -a loc lion.e nr'n If, an ! plenty i f stock a!ei; it is S w o,r re .'7. 'I IJ. K 11 l'lil ac-es; and connected wnh it it Is t 7 nil S . qr of S 'ir see -Jo, . roe T and K llnubfi) 90 and SO-I'tO etes mskfnjf -.'.'m and 0 loo m. Also It.e X w qrof X w jr of Sec 21, T 7I, if 41. In Mills county. I 'Ua, due e-.t liom I'ljil-niouiu and 1 mile fruru the rivvr. (b-.ivy tiuil-er ) F r urn: address. H t-ol.OMON. uiaj'Jstf. Givnvoid, lu. t o st saia: Tic S V tclt The N W V. PCI, Ih- U K of N K the X i: of S K l.- .ii I the S K i f S K, Sec 15. T 10 K"n" 1 1 . Cos County, N. t rJ-ka. .411 of the iib'iVe lan ls f tr e i i trans to soil ur ' t.asers. Terru oue-l nr:h cas'i the b.ila relnlhr.e eiiual aonti.il payments, intciot at 1') per cent, -sy at'le annnally. adjie-s W. H. IIKKPP. my7ir.3 t adia, 1I. t i-on Co., fhlo. AND WOOL- CARDING. IIo! for Salt t're k, w here y..u ran kill twol iida ittiot.e stone, pet yoai ira n I, round and W 'k1 Ckr.Io I a' th auie tim; lln nutliifrj tut brhia in -irrfec-t order. We rse the Patent MxUnr- r.!. which w re run l nr ji -!i i,t year to c!aMh their super lot iiy over the old k Ind', as a ' I h tid H.o t can testify. The superinriti rl Mr. S. Twis. as n Carder is ll knr. n. nnd 1,1- ser rices rr t il! i o - tained for the benefit ot the public. Wiih the t advantages we natter nur-eivet that w csii make n to the adv .re of all w ho wsut work In r-r I io to come this w-ay. I). I'KW. 1'roin trim . H'Jlo b. TWIs.s, -,,'. r. D. B. LI criechan, Dealer in HARDWARE, CUTLERY, IRON, STEEL and NAILS, ROCK ISLAND PLOWS. coil .v. ' hA S ri:n s; Cultivators, sulky and walking, Cook Stoves, A Large Varirty on Ilai.d. Spades, Shovel.?, I Iocs, Kates, ccc., ccc. A latfte sto-.k itDv on baud at stiiU sdean.-e oi. Eastern Trices. lOG Alain Sheet, J"hraUa City, (Opposite the Seym .ur Hons, ) RIGTT OP THE PAD LOCK. GEO. FICKLER &. CO. CORNER 2d if- MMX STREETS, rLATTSMOUTU, XERRASK A. veep constantly on Land the best cf All Kinds of .Heal, which they can furcUh their rat"iner at th lest of n.nts roa cash t July 2d. 1S6S 3m. Binpire Bakery ! 2d ST., OPPOSITE "SUV YORK KTOPK " PLATTSMOUTH, - . NED. Confectioneries, BREAD, PIES, CAKES, CUE USE, and SWEES CRACKERS. I K Fit K XI II EXTS ' kept on hand at all times. . IIUUERTY.. nlotf. Registrar's Notice. FOR I' LA TTSMOl'TI PRECIS CT To the Voters of sail Precinc': TViC undersigned Repirtrars, will lit at Iho flora ofOage Daris Id tho City of Plalhmoulh nn the 9rs Mondar, Tuesday, and Wednesday c.f September 1-Ctj. belnt the 7lh3 h n I 9 h dai of-iti) Mouth, io make a complete K tti,traton of Iha led roters of aaid precinct. All voler will apre ar on those days, for the pnrpose o binu kei. cord. to law WILLIAM D.GAGK 1 . . 6AMUKL Cll41'Mv t Rgitrara. Piatt-lu.uth Aug 20th 1SG5. n2n. Kr. J. S. -TIcAIJOW, BEZDEST I'llYSlClAy. WYOMING. . . NEBRASKA. OSfcnhia profealoaal servkei to ti pe.Lle . 't-o i5lrir!0i-i.jj'rJt!.r, (so,t'..