" any man attempts to haul iloicn the 1merican Flag, shoot him on the spot. VOL. 1. PLATTJSMOUTII, N KB It ASK A, TiiruDAY, DECEMBER i4, I(8. iNO. as. THE HERALD Is. F I'LL I rill I'D W EEK Ii Y , i 1. D. 1 1 ATI I A WAY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. VJOSic, cTtier Miia str-et and Levee, ' lory. Terms: 2.50 per annum. Ilatrs of . Idrcrtisimr c i 1 l.t i" f r l.-n lin1) Tjt insert im , l li.' U-n I ltlSt:rti"U - - rr. f--s-i u il c.tr i a-'t excedinc f-:x H yir- j-ul-rtjlJiiiU oriels p.-r annum ' six i:i..r::ln " - tLr a ju ri t ha 0 i" ha'.f t')!u'aa two! ve momln si x months 'dvrotitl 1 .'.0 l.no l't t" :i.',.o.i n ! fir-. (i.) H.i.imi mi Ii... in. 60. IK; .'J three cviut'is ') ia " - a i--lv- i:vnths- ' three :ii'nth All -r.i i-i-:it i lver:i dUi-j;it.s mail be 4 v. :.re j r. jiart-J to .! all kin.U of vo l rt n"t ictr, an I i n a 'y lc ' !ia! w u I f h n . w.-ri WILLITT POTTENGEn. ATTORNEY AT LAW, PL.ATTSMOUTII - - NEBRASKA. ATTORNEY AT LAW Solicitor ia Chancery. rLATrsMOl'TH, .VI.7JMSKA . V VOOVTAl, TToK?-r.Y .'-s: rxst:r.ji: at law. I'llllt-JlUMll Jl,St'l t it,;i 1,-iy .ml U.il KstaV, aud tax- f r 1 ii'iii r-i I tils 1 m;irv--i nt i i-tov- 1 l.iu '.s iQ 1 1-j- f r sa.e, J34i .i.jt ii ii ! tf I. R. K LIVINGSTON, 21. D Plrysician and .Surgeon- .- I- - :- ,r - rn 9t- il . l-i-.r- .'?!-' . ...: -.'1 M i.n t ' I i::-Mnu.:t, I.e. rt .i. t p. t o ur: li.ust , Platte Valley House V.:,. B. Mi k:-;:, I'r -prictor. 'orner iif .M tin an Fo ir' Strati, j 2l:ills.:mu(ii ir o . !- H ' l-e h iv.iv I. - I . . rT-r t: c. lay : r- ti - r - - 1 isi-l. .1 E5. JlttXaSUX, ATTORNEY AT LAV AMI C cnerrJ Land Agent, . ! ,k. u ; '. .. .rt i u an r f r m V ur t.--..:r.v -hi iitl hat-j-jii ---. - t'li in. ii i-.-i.-v-; n v ! - ' i i H L 1 Uni.3l-Jl: . MVX.V1.1.L. SAM. M it A I'M. 1 VTTORN'K YS A T LAV', a- : Solicitors in Chiuccry. pi. i t rs.fr ivtu. - s::ui:a vam 4l:'ac-.- . v-r L.ck, U :tt.-ry C j'i Iri: st..rc. a y. 1 josepii CIILATER. j WATC jTjIAKES and JEWELER, ! Miin Street, . t, vT'-ril V rl1: s!U . t 1..A1. i.m.-i i, - - '-""V'-. j - , .. s..4..r;ini-nt i.f VI as :!. .! - tol 1 IV ns I.Wf.ry. s.w-r Wir, Kin- ... Ti 1 us ana Vi ...iu Tn.m-i.-i-- .ua-h'., ,.n ti.-ii. A.; wo: toui moo 1 1" -I- crc will be wr;d -tc !. Piattsmouth SWSills. C. HEISKL, Proprietor. H.it- r. r.-nttv h-vn r-i ir--a iel r! in tiir--,iiiuiDi; Oraer. C'lstim work !. iks oc sti.rt 100,000 Kii1ic1m of Wheat U'jl'cI nuiiii-.l a'eiy, f.jr whi h.tiie iioirkc t-ri.- wi'l e .aui. ;n.(z-- :f J. N. WISE, General Lif A'-i i', Fire, avd ''rails it INSURANCE AGENT Will t.iVn ri.'ksat rtf-ino'iihlf rt"s in the in j-t r'li.tM co .itnip la tti 1'iiit- 1 staf . e 9-. lie a t the tj.i )k btore, I'la Mr i.uth, SVI.ran " " nmy-2Mtl lillinery A: Irt!itll:kiIli,:, IT JIM A. M. DK-PAI M H-. R. P. K fcN ."IDT Opposite the City It t rij, ' E r-uM r.-.-e.-t f 'il !y antumnct? t.i to La u. if l: ir--on -mtti nn-1 v if ir.ity . ttiat 'it !: .v,-j isi r-c-iv-.-.l I .trirr an.i fiii"-!"! ....... J , i I- c .n-;s;ia,r "f Fl..wri, UiMi iiis, vlvi. 'ire-- ' . . ... . .1 . .... f rr. ..(! Iril llU.na. AC.. C. V K will s.-i, i lie v i.i i'." p. -.o:iuibici'y. Wecan rc.mmutc aii our o i , mtoin -r m l niiiiy i.c iitic- a :.l 'avur '.3 wit h a , -all. All kiarls of work in our liu- .! ne t OrJ-r. Pi-.Vcfataflcticn ?;veii or michirgei-. nvs'.f HEALTH, G0.MF0R r, AND ECONOMY 3 RVASO.XS FOR UOXRDl.XG with kc. w. rcoi.vi, n K SI'KEET, T to bio -ks n irtl w -1 ri TrM0UTU k s !... .:-lI. u'-. f 1: , rj... UK irn h KATir ll-Jl'SK.tr- ti r r-.-.iu ar.- well venti la and h! i 'r( . T iJu.,..i-i fjapi. i. liAJUiu a: . , . Wliol- sale aa.l Ketail Lcal?rs in Wines and Liquors, A.--) a v -ry rL.iVe SuU-rtion "f Tobacco and Cigars, K.n r.f-t. .v.,ti,1 .1 .,r -ait of Seymour HVuse Arsju-t r-iivini h now stock -f Genuine Did k yt Gmnitt old inly.Ky.. tfiltT, u.yie w jut u:wi rro o HuaTb-B r ft .OTi:S OX MIUlA-liA.'' j We make ihe following extract from an article written, under the above ti ! tie, by Maj. II. T. Brooks, of the Ru- rul JVtw Yorker, and published in his ! paper of Nov. iiSib, lb6fc. Major Brooks visited Nebraska and delivered ' an address before the State Fair lust ! fall. Being a resident of another State, and being a man well kno wn to i the farmers of the United State, his statements and opinions are entitled to great consideration. Hert ia what he I says: The soil of Central and E-istrn Ne . Iraaka is unsurpassed and unsurpasa bie. Clay, sand, vegetable mold, and all essential elements, are so harmoni ously blended as to produce a soil light, friable, free from lumps and stories, d:irk colored, aily woiked, ' anJ emineiitly productive. The finera garden mold in the State cf New York i is not a whit better thui the average of Nebraska soil. I advise my friends, MlIwangT it Uirry, of the Mt Hope Lurerif?, io mijiort a dir load of it to i jrmv tbeir mot delicate p!nni in. ; Take iiu precau'.iocs send your order 'to any i'Jllilas!e, and t-1 ! him J to diy ttie (irst din be com" to and s.erid it aionsj. 1 wi!l guarantee the .jurtiity. I'robabiy any Congressman v.i i.ld frank it'I'tibiic Documents" if i yu wili si-ti l Lis w ocoai'onally a b tijot-i of your line fl av. rs. Some of tho r:ve-r tot:oms have a ; andy and purou sul voil, generally i the f-tibsoil is ilay, but not too retentive ; uc. mi'isture. ilurd rains do not sob- j i-'Ll Nebraska farm rs to vexatious de- 'ay-; they can J.t-hfiir their i soon s out wi'boot t)v'S I mud, and start i 1 1 -i r ; lowing without ihe furrows lil ing w rti wati-'r, itf'-. r ba r(J j an' s in other '. tii. ii ot Hie west, i ' '!:-) el s -Verai N-.-w Vui kers i:i wee Us tfie start l.iT th. I sjn:g i crop a v, tv matert'it . ant-ig" whre lift a:; ! th- seasons are short at the u;:.---t. 'Ihe thief product of NeV-ra-kn is ; r ; :r,e rajj, one ut and uncared f . i ! Ii. lions of acre ton to three tor, pf-r acr ar.i! thai if alt utai C'.'jil ili N W Y l k meadow wi.i do. are givmg back u the wiods, ; ar,n Us-! i w : ' ' a 1 1 ou iiie but.'juti t.vat iiobooy , I'1 . ; N, ar ihe -vliouri nw-r com of .tie southern variety lea. is the cultivated , crc-s, averaging f -riy to htty bu.hels ; acre, and ro. It.g elg.-il or tetl leet j biob. The (lrst crop, t i.in ej iii sod, i- treuutn:iy fight The iirst Lrtaking , 1- u.u'.t t.iteo Kicl.es u-ep. J( out uhen hp j? C()fj SPnslLle a,,( Wheat, tao great ( r-p of human l:te, I v.al.u,ce l. if suggestion were fol the m-iai s.ib.-t.tn.e mat men are n.aJe j ,ow.j nine,y per cent, of the trash r- "'y :ii-rensabie thing, is jjst ; i wn.i .leuiasKa vas i.vru auu suivw , e l lor nro'iucing. its e.iuiaie, ire i ip.njtiy too ury tur oui-r crops, oruigs whvat to great pe i Itction. A mi'ier of large experience assures me that the liner varieties deienoate in ma ny ' 'he States. Culm ibrasKa preserve t'ltir vecvliar excellences. By a judi c-mus, use of farubzers and by plowing in g, as, , r some green crop, 1 think Nebraska may maintain us present position nsthe head of all wheal grow I ' ..." insr sections. Jts amaze uicld is great er per acre than any other State oj this f'ul0n. ' Nebia-i.a is scarce cf rain water, a bad thii.i. for grass. p -.i-oes and am. ... I but as :i w.- a go..d crop of wheat, ai d excellent we.ulier lor tarin wcik, the incoiiveniei ce is endurable. ExceptTrg a bolder along tier water courses. Nebraska is treeless: .-he , . . , 11,1., i.o, 1 1 officer 'n thn Fenian army, now in ,-eds Umber. Good luck to her she: . . . T ... i- .. f , 1 i command ot the L n'tel States troops .11 grow it. Cuttings of cot.onwood, . . ' F . c 1 1 1 'at Augusta, Ua., is very nopu ar with eds ot soft maple planed in June,: , r. ' , , 1 ' r lit can .!,.-!, os rlr,1 .Kree or fr!,h? C.l.Zens of that VICinMy 1 . . - L .-1 .l Wik..r in I Im foil rrr Alt' ivriffi cur. , i- 0 . t . prisinif rapidity. V ery many farmers ery many hive planted sm.ili groves near their dwellings, but they don't begin to real ize the vast importance o! the limber question. One fourth oj all JVebraska should forthwith It planted to forest trees. There is some mistake m the making up of any coun;ry without trees it nsieds mending ; 1 ut I am not sure but it is easier to supply forests where you want them than to remove them from where you don I want them. 1 taw on - I TI , . t, John J . Pacyter s farm, near Platts mauih. fifty, thousand black walnuts, a year old, growing rine'y ; he exr-ec ed to plant ns many me re this tall. 1 ire , wtr a ' York markets ! No crop will pay her i as well. By plowing two-thirds of her surface, and planting the other third to trees, she wi.I grow more gram and grass than by cultivati.-ig ihe whole. frees are eanh's great regulators ; breaking the tcrce of ausure winds, ! m ikir.g the dry air salubrious, distill . . . L--- ing ent;e s.iowers, keeping me rivu Jets aiive throughout summer's beat, transforniing the parched deserts into .. ...:.. ... in 1 1. H1C U.lLLtlCU utJtii.- iii.w , frm.tul ,ree- I fifiOii vvnfpr ia mmonllt' nLiiinerl digging a lair depth and stock are watered w ithout, much ditlicuity at ihe streams and tloos. What mo-it concerns my readers to know, A'ebraska has yrt millions of acres of excellent land subject to entry vn(ltr (g h.'nustead ,' or by pre emidion I ti.,, 1 'I doubt whether any other State or Territory has as much good .and tbai can be so cheaply obtained. 1 have never seen anywhere a population more orderly and intelligent. The State is settling very fast, and land is rising. Improved farms, in good lo cations, i:au be bought for from ten dob lrrs to twenty-five dollars per acre. Netraska is a new State. Thirty towns have sprung up on her Missoun border; Fremont and other places of large expectation growing to the I'a cifio railroad ; Lincoln, her extempore capiial with eight hu.idred inhabitants, is selling city lots on the wide prairie; Eastern Nebraska has many cultivated farms, and a few adventurous settlers are scattered through the interior; but in the roam the Sttate is one vast uq mown meadow. It has very hitlc Wiistc laud, no marshes too wet and Jew hills too sleep to plow. Bordering most of her si reams are rugged blulis.or banks, rising thirty, fifty or one hundred feet high ; and taking all ihe shapes matter is capable of assuming. From these, siretiLing away in the distance, are the gras-cnvered prairies, gently un dulating like the swell of a mighty oceau, ,nd presenting in their varied outlines landscapes cf surpassing beau ty and niagndiceuce. This is Ne braska, ii t. a. A correspondent of the Chronicle, writing from Lincoln, says: Speaking of D-mocrais, though pol itics are "played out" for the present, reminds me of a li tle ticry, which I m:it tell or perish miserably. Within the limits tf Lincoln resides an indi vidual who keeps a saloon, and who last Spring wa-. i onm.au d cn the Democratic ticket, for a ci'y cilice. Now .many took beer at his place, who v. ere not enrolled iti the ranks of De- i muiracy. Just tetore ihe noiinz.ation, J ih:s ;ridiiidu:;l met a man whom be had I - r. c. in I. i3 r.i - , , . .. I . ...... I ' , f rill llill.t f i ma I I I,. . . iz oi tj f io i:ave a fiu'triiiiir ud tu;rb. We (ioti tell every hudy, hut ccme up. We n.iiil ffive Vm h . Wre grim t "el op a ticket ihu'il beat Ym ail' ' "B it." said the i.ian atco-ted, "I don't at'cnd t It a t kind of a can. n.-." (jo to h 1 you d R-tdical! You was in IliV jlsfrt H r: ii-iulT and I tlijuln )iii was a Democrat.' y0;!r,,T xvri;ers S1re w,.nt to take exc.!(.R:erit fr inspiration. A a a tig- exci'emetit merited eirculanc-n ot the blo:id dovsn'i I ,cel,ly incrt.ase lhc ,,uah.y or i .er of ,llt. hr.,,n Th- worst things lha, wf,f ev,.r commi'ted to paper I ,vopj ,Jlo n,r.r,r,r rr.ir.i.m fvnln. i li..n The rfi witv for n ii:in who I i , i.,. i0,i ,c , ,r,. .,,i which the world is uriforunateiy ca! u ,Q e,l(jljre w0lJI,l be unknown. T i , .,,o,i j The Sedaha (Mo) Times gives an i account of a terrible murder in Henry i county. J. G' Clark and John W. , Fat'erson were traveling together in a wagou. hne the tormer was asleep Patterson klihd him with a hatchet and robbed him of over biOO in money and valuables. He was ar rested and confessed his rruilt. I f I I l " I A uosion narter nas a razor wnicn ! was purchased at West Point when j Benedict Arnold was in cc.mmand of 'hat post two silver dollars bei g the ; amount paiJ lor if It ha now t.e n j m constant u-e nearly 1UU years, and ! still has a keen edge fJeneral T. V. Sweeney, lately an In evi- 1 Purina . f . , I . I . ! 1 n faiv r. I fT K 1 fT f lllUt' v.. ........ .. ..... 9 "O" J ! gave his command a complimentary ' supper. A Cha:tanooga paper states that a French gentlemen, named Bryan', has purchased land on Miisiojary Ridge, with the intention of establishing there a colony of French wine growers. The site is said to be admirably a-'ap ted to the purpose. The New York Franco-American says that the Emperor being sick and arathetn in these days the real ruler j 0f France is M P.nard, who is more tyranical than Louis, himself, would ever expect to be. The Polk county (Wis.) Press states that Jeremiah Mudget. ot Farmington recently killed a hog which weighed, dresed, nine hundred pounds. The head severed from the body, weighed ninety lbs. An English court has seperated a boy ,f fifieen fiom his wife, and sent ..:l.. '. .L. ... . I 1 , ni:n into tne country to learn a trace before he can be allowed to live with lipr ffi h:i.l iTinrriAiil ' r.nr.-.i t.. v ..... ...... i... ...- it....... The Bosto'i Latin School is the old- ! est iistitati mi for learning in the United States It establishment was almost coeval with the settlement of Boston. , - i The Louisville Courier say drunk- j enness among women seems to be in- ' creasing in that ci'y. K.oiii tiju Tul ilu B.u'lc. XASIJY Vr. Yasly Suggests a Haven of Rest for ihe Distressed Souls who are in Danger of losing Ihdr places. Washington. Nov. IS, 1SGS. We hed a ineetin in Washington last nite, to consider things. Ther are many things lo cons der jist now, and it wuz deemed proper to consider em. It waz a ledge uv sorrow. Ther wuz faint gin. inns uv hope onto the counte nances uv a few uv those present, tut nuthin uv certinty nutbiu uv ashoo rance. Sekretary Randall remarkt that so far ez he wjs concerned, he hed made up his mind. He shood not lake otlis under the incumin Adminis trashun. He mite yeeld in uther mat ters, (for he was uv a yeeldin riBchur.) but on this he wus inflexible McCluloch and Browning wus also determined, hut Seward hed uther ljees He chirped in that the oldest mau cood.'A tell wat sixty days wood bring forth. 'Wat shell we do" askl a Postmas ter from Ohio. T sejest to President Johnson," sed Rar.dall, that he apply for the Span ish throne. He wood be acceptible to the Spanish people, fer he hes all his life biu puttiu the Burbon down!' Randall hes uo longer any fear uv the President. ' CJeiitlemen,'" remarkt I, "I heva ijee, with, ef acted onto, will pull us otil uv our sea uv trublles.' Speek!" exclaimed they all with one breth; spetk!" " My ijee is Cuba. Cub?-, the gem uv the Antilles the brite.-t jewel in the crown uv Spain. Let Sekretary Seward, who lies a talent for reel es tate, buy it now, before the new Ciov eminent hes its internal revenoo s stem establish!, und while it is hard up for money. Let Cuba be tbe Bo uny Bay uv this country. Lei it be bot by Se ward, and then lot ihe President go to work' to wunsi a (ill.u uliice lur its i.ov-er- ment. while he still hes tho power uv appintment. lie n.ut nt wait to hev em hold eleckshun., for we anuz succeed better in gmiu l;i by j-ppm'.-ment than by eleclo! uns. Vat a Hv- Pn I coo -j ... L. i..r" u.-! 1 '"" v 1,1,1 reedm Ci ba up; and 1 tind that the i-!.nd pays the Ik. me (oveiiiment S2 OOO.OUU per annum. Ef ihe Span ih Government kin eu t J5,UuO 0l0 out uv em. we kin dul l ie it with our expi ri-nce. Thcr's ent-il' fer all uv u. (Jive Rand: 11 a place r.irrespon din with that he now holds; make Ben WYod SoopennlenJent i; v the Havana Lotteries; make Frat-.k P suiiim else, wa! it doa't matter, es he'ii take t-nny thing; make good places for Ross, Ful ler, Binkley.Mrs Cobb. Yallandyguin Brite. Mrs. Perry, John Quincy Ad am. Jr., Frank 1'eerce; Ciinral For- I rest, Jim Steedman, Rosso, Dooliitle ' LI I . . ... II" Ii Cowan, Dixon, Sekretary Welles, and j all uv tl at unnumbered throng uv hungry soles, who hev lived on pap so long that enny uther diet sours on iher j tumicks. And then "Bat spo-in Congress wen it inei-t-, refoozes to ratify the purchis bv makin ; a approprisliun?'' askt o (hmter "Refooze to mak the appropriashun! Refoose! Ha! Put afore Gmrai Grant ! the prospect uv never agin seein the Biare family put afore Congress and the Ainerikm people ihe hope uv never sef in agin the faces uv any uv the men I hev menshund, with the thou sandsuv uthers uv similar tastes, habits, and nesessities, and wat wood twenty or thirty millions, more or less, be to em? Nuthin! Congress wood vole it instintaneously, and the people wood all say "amen! Lor. how quick the bill wood go throo, and ho.v quickGrant wood sine it! "But sposin Congre.-s shood refooze, wai then? Jist es well. The Blares wood hev ther posishuns; and the Cu ban ofhshels, ef they are versed in Amerikin poliiikle histry, know, ef they know ennything, that when the Blares git into place, nothin but deth loosens em We wood hist the banner of Independence we wood paint onto the banner the inskripshen: "Offises for Aul, in a Country wher Likker is not Taxed!"' and in a week's time a Army uv Dimokrats. big enuff to cap cher Spain herself, wood be on them shores! And who cood stand afore em? Whisper 'Tost Offis' in ther ears and they'd wade knee deep in blood. Lord, how the Spanish soljerj wood g-o down afore em! Haw Frank Blare wood go for Lersundi! How all the trained cohorts uv Dimocrisy. wich hev bin ubstainin from offis for sonia ny years, wood risk iher all for a taste U7 ihe sweels uv posishen! "Oh! the delishusness uv ihe pros peck! Think uv a island with enurf niggers orto it to do our laber, and enulf white Cul ans who can't reed to vo'e for us! Why, ii wood recall reck elections uv th"m happy days afore the war, when the Dimocrisy wus thus rnn-titooted. I hunger and thim for rich- " 'Rote nwif ly rrn-rt ye wh"el or time, AnJ brinir tlie l.a i.y day.' VThen Ginral Graut cood hev peece! Then he wood only hev the Ablish- i iiist on his hands! Then the niegers uv the Uni'ed States mite hev suffrage, for it wood make no difference to us. We wood hev offises to live onto, and pure niggers to look down upon, and wat more coed wc want? The only diller-'iice wood tie, we wood hev to accustom our siomitks to Santa Cruz rum in place uv whisky, but thai we cood do. The elFect upon the bowels is the same it differs only in taste, and I am told that when both are new, ther ain't much difference in that.' The segestiou wus favorably receiv ed, and I hev no dout it will be acted upon. Ef it is - but why this "ef?" It must be dun it shell be. Petroleum V. Nasby, p m. ( Wich is Postmaster ) kkki-TolT: hois Parents, a woid to you. Do you fully realize the evil effects of allowing your boys 10 roam the streets at night? Do you not fear the consequences of allowing thtui to frequent beer and billiard saloons and associate wi h boys and men who have ulreadv fairly started upon ihe downward road. We have noticed with regret that many boys in our city -son of Christian pa rents, whose hearts wouid quiver with anguish should they see them in such a place are frequently to be seen at nioht playing billiards, "pigeonhole,'' and even cards, for the -'driuks." Boys who have scarcely seen a dozen summers, and old offenders steeled in crime and whisky, together stagger oui from some low hell hole where liquid damnutioii is dealt 01 t to all at five to fifteen cents a glass, and make night hideous with their drunken yells How do you like the picture. Those swag gerii g bullies who stand on the street corners arid indulge in obscene re marks and horrid oaths, began their career in the same way running the streets at night when they were boys. This can also be said of the criminals who fill our penitentiaries. Keep your hoys oif ihe street furnish ihem some ueful employment or amusement at hom and, cur word for it, you will never regret it. It is said that Congress will address itself at an early day to the considera tion of the enormous naturalization frauds by wh'ch the State of New York was stolen from the Republican party, and John A. Ciriswold swindled out o the Governor's chair. The time has c me for Congress, to take definite action on this surject I lie Constitu tion guaran es to ttse States n repub lican form of government New York is now controlled by a despotism worse than that which reigns over France. Judge Robertson of the WVstcbester di met has matured a plan for trans ferring naturalization to the Federal Court, and surrounding the act with proper safeguards for the purity of the ballot. Gen Schenck has also sketch ed out an act for the same end. Trib line. Gen. Bitler is preparing an elabo wh'ch he wi';' present financial questions. It rate speed in his view upon wiil tie delivered in the H. use at an early day. The General proposes 10 explain ihe various features of his plan winch he contends will, after due re flection, meet the wishes of ihe think ine men of the country. A ereat deal of interest is felt upon the subject. A proposition has been broached to tax every one of the five hundred ihous and applicants for office under Grant' administration, ten dollars, to be set apart for the erection of a home for the widows and orphans made by the late war, und that each applicant be re quired to file his fee and application together. The only difficulty would be in raising the money, that ninety nine out of every hundred would keep their greenbacks, and the new treasury would be nearly empty It don't cost even postage to bore th President elect. m A cartman's house on a hill in Cleve land is subjecied to an inexplicable shower ot brickbats. All the windows have been smashed in by missiles, the projectors of which cannot be discover ed, though two policemen have been detailed to protect ihe hou-e. The brickbats fly by day as well as night. Superstitious Clevelanders are gazing on the ' haunted mansion" from a dis tant coign of vantages. One day last week four rulfians.di? guised as negroes, entered the dwell ing of Bnj. R. Sercy, near Griffin, Georgia, shot him dead, and searched the house for plunder. They obtain ed iwo gold watches, and then choked the housekeeper to make her tell where their valuables were kept. From some alarm, they released her and de camped. The Mobile. Register says Southern planters are better off to-day than they were before the war. They are free from debt and receiving more for their cotton than ever before. Formerly they were always one crop in debt, and belonged to their factors. Nuw they have learned economy, and are iheir own masters. At a meeting of graduates of Har vard Collegp, in Boston, it was re solved to raise among the alumni of the several clasps, a fund or $500,000, 1 ihe interest of which is to be placed at lhft dis-pr sal of the College Corpora ti,,n Harvard though rich in funds , fr special objects, is greatly in need of money for general college purposes TIM Lit It CUL.TUI11I In an essay entitled "l imber Cul lure a Necessity," read at a meeting of the Northern Illinois Horticultural So ciety by E. C Schofield, of Elgin, 111., he said: Summon all the land holders of the country, and demonstrate to them the profits of timber culture; produce facts, and not theory; tell them that from one acre planted with Tyrolese Larch they may reap a harvest, at the end of six years, of hoop-poles, grape stakes and trellis materials, worth more than two hundred dollars, and at the close of another six years they may reap a harvest of fence-posts which will be comparatively imperishable, and worth more than nine hundred dollars. In testimony, I adduce my forest in Elgin, ivhich 'ten years ago, was a smooth prairie, and afterwards planted with plants, which then stood in the nurse ries of Scotland Let them measure both of pine and larch of more than iwo feet in circumference, and more thi n twenty feet in height; count the number on ihe acre, and estimate the number of fence-posts that each tree will make; tell them at the end often years they may reap a third harvest by rutting one half of the residue, or six hundred and five trees, more than one and a half feet in diameter and forty feet in height. This timber may be used for ship-spars and fence-posts, building timber and railroad lies, worth fifteen hundred dollars. At the end of another ten years they may enter he forest again and gather a fourth crop, by removing three hundred and two trees, leaving an equal number grow ing Now, the trees have an average diameter of two feet and more, and are sixty feet iu height, each of which is worth at least ten dollars, or a total value of three thousand dollars. The amount of the proceeds already real ized in thirty years is five thousand six hundred dollars, or an average of more than one hundred and eighty six dol lars annually per acre The death of Thaddeus Stevens leaves the cha'rmanship of the Com mmeee on A pproprianons vacant. Mr. Washburn of Illinois, the next member on the Committee, will become chair man, and the Speaker will add another member to tbe Committee Mr. Wash burn will resign the chairwansbip of the Commerce Committee, and Mr. Eliot of Massachusetts will succeed him. It appear from 'fficial daia that ihere ha been received at the Treas ury, from November, 1?G.'. to July. 1SG7, 47 600. and in the fiscal year dosing with June, 1S6S, SIO. 00U. The receipts are from different un known persons, in various sums, from one cent and upwards. These amounts re all credited to the conscience fund. Hugh Craig, who attempted to kill his mother, in Philadelphia, on Wednes day, is deranged. He was a compos itor on the Daily jXews. and has lately been studying phonography closely, sitting up very late at nights, and this is believed to have unsettled his rea son. He said to his mother: '-Mother I am commanded by God to kill you." Ii appears that the British aduvrers and administrators of Anemus Ward have made a regular joke of the 15, 000 or S20.C0O he left. They have got through wnh their fun, and there is a balance of about &-6.000 for his widowed mother. Poor Artemus! that his friends should hav danced on his coffin and made hnn pay the fiddler! A cargo of coolies is reported to have airived recently at Calveston Texas. These unfortunate Chinese laborers, it is stated, were consigned as merchandise, with the ordinary bill of lading and were to be sold at auction io pay freight and charge. Two-thirds of the coolies were females. Some students at Harvard College a few nights ago alarmed ihe town by exploding a quantity of powder in an old reservoir in the college grounds. The report was heard all over to'vn and led to tbe impression that a serious disaster had occurred. One of the Judges of the Superior Court of Quebec informed the Bar last week, that no member of the legal pro fession would be allowed to adress the Bench unless he was babitted accord ing to the custom and usages of West minister Hall. Brick Pomerov's New York Demo crat is proving a bad investment and is rapidly going down h"II. It has to be fed with La Crosse pap The latter institution, too since election isgrowing lean. Brick and his blackguard pa pers will find their level yet. -- . A prodigal son, in Toronto, ran away with S15.000 worth of jewelry. His father, instead of killing the fat ted calf, had him caught and put in jail. The letter writers in Pans are hav ing Napoleon in bsd health Mgain. He has been about to die for the last fif teen years. UCLA1IO. OF UHOIWIA TO Tilt: l.MO. In the Senate on the Tthinst., a dis cussion arose over the application for the Georgia Senators, Senator Thayer, of Nebraska, objecting io the admis sion. Speeches were made by Sena tors Sherman, Drake and Wilson, and a communication from the Governor of Geoigia and a memorial of the colored people of the State had been read, when Gen. Thayer made the following terse remarks iu support of his position, after which, the whole matter was laid aside for a future day. He said: Neither the Senator from Ohio cor the Report of General Meade touches the real question at issue. It is not that ihe members of that Legislature look the oath prescribed by the State constitution. The point which I made in my former remarks was this: that everything was provisional until the fiual act of completion of ihe work of reconstruction. The election cf that Legislature was provisional: its meet ing and its organization were provis ional; and they were required to take ihe oath prescnbed by tbe reconstruc tion laws; They had nothing to do with any oath provided for in the State constitution; because the Slate consti tution had not been submitted to Con gress, had not been approved, and the act declaring Georgia restored to ihe Union had not been passed. I called for ihe reading of the communication frcm the Governor in order to bring out this point in support of the objection which 1 have made; and it is in these words, as set forth by the Governor of Georgia: "The fact, however, is that all the candidates for the General Assembly who had received the highest number of votes were, without regard to their eligibility under the law" There is the poii t "permitted to take seats in the provis ional legislative body, rnd to partici pate in the organization and the legis lation thereof, having first been simply invited to take the oath prescribed in the new constitution, which constitu tion hud not at that time become, and under the law could not then be. of force" The objection is that that Legislature was composed in part of men who had beon expressly disqualified and dis franchised, and who could not become members of the Legislature; and yet. notwithstanding that clear provision of the law, they were permitted to lake ihe.r seats in the Legislature, and to become legislators and help to elect these Senators. I propose now io in quire whether that act was legal; whether the reconstruction acts have been fully complied with. The honorable Senator from Ohio says ihat the Senators elect from Geor gia will be kept in suspense. Human life is in suspense in Georgia; civil order is in suspense in Georgia; loyalty is in suspense in Georgia; human lib erty is in suspense in Georgia. I pro pose, for one, now to inquire whether ibis state of things is to continue or not; whether there are governments there which can afford protection to human life or not; and if not, why not? There is no necessity for pressing this question now. A young mother heard foul words from the hps of her little son. At once she proceeded gravely to rinse out his mouth with soap. This remedy cured him for a while, but the unhappy little wight relapsed, and his mother applied camphor water in the same way. Chicago is moving in the matter of establishing a direct line of trade be tween that city and the West Indies via Mobile. The only gap in R. R. communication between Chicago and Mobile, is between Cairo, 111., and Co lumbus, Ky. Books, like friends, should be few and well chosen. Like friends, too, we should return to them again and again for, like true friends, they will never fail us, never cease to instruct us. Thurlow Weed, according to infor mation from New York, is in a deplor able physical condition, his physicians do net allow him to read newspapers or to converse on political subjects. His disease is softening of the brain. Prof. Newton, of Yale, says that a comet which travels at the rate of 2, 000.000 miles per day, has just whisk ed its tail in our faces and made us see stars Caleb Cusbing has been sent on a mission to Europe to purchase Cuba it is said. Seward wishes to finish up his real estate transactions with a big thing. A story is afloat in Paris and Lon don that Victoria means to abdicate af'er the confirmation of the new Cab inet. The Chicago Republican says it is reported quite a large ring ha been, formed to control the appointments to the Federal offices in that city. Figs are grown in Chilicothe, O., without difficulty, and are equal to any of the imported.