! THE NEBRASKA HERALD i i Is PI BUSHED WISELY BT t il. D. HATHAWAY, , KIlTtjB AND PBorBICTOB. ' ? Office corner Main and Beoond itrect. iec- J CE! sa-ry. i TERMS : 0 per nnnnin If paid in advance, , $!. V) if not paid In advance. JIASOMC. Tl iTT?ycin Lodoe No. 0 A. V, A A. M. Ilt'iruliT niectiii-s at their hall on the first and third Monday fKMiiinfa of each month. Trans ient iiretherit invited to visit. 1 JOHN W. fcliANNoN, W. M. J. N. Wise, .-if. Mic-v Lvv.k l'. I- A. F. A. M. Regular rn.f'i'ics fi'ton I iin'l fourth Kridavg of each SUth Masonic lull. J. N. WISE, W. M. ttii. Wi nvK. Sec. kuuaska . ihj-tkk No. R. A. M. Regular v.nv'.:ltl"'' and fuiirth Tuesday eve- ' of each ia- .1 1 ii at 7i o'clock p. m. L K. T. DI KK. II. P. Easttpn str Ti:ci:i:kIiiim;b. Kcjrular meet- nu. of the r'tiiii'tly !""e held on Wednesday eve T.m?. on "r hetore the fall moon Of earn month. ;'Mi-fr M i-"'!!-1, their wie- sisters and ,'ijiuiirer- arc ii.vired to attend. I'nmarried la .i ',.,'mij-t i i e ov.-r eishfeen yrar of litre. I. II. WHEELER; I'utrob. M"S. A I'kk. Patron era. J. N. Wish, Recorder. I. O. ii. T. fn tvi: I!Nrn. X'.2 V. V. Leonard. W. C.T.: .1. V. Lewis. U. W. Il.Uliis Jerree. Lodice lirpu'v. Mw 'ts t Court House Hail every Tuesday evnin. Traveling Templar respect ing i-ivi? 'I. . . l.c i! !K- Pi K Lin(;E. No. 1. E. 15. t..-is. I. I.: V. K. H'hite. I. Meets at Court !(.,:-, il.il on lii" first and third gaturduy even- t i-h Til--ii1 li. ".-r.'t k i.on'.K No. 8. 0. J. 1'avin. V. '. .; Ai iii-M l'"i::n.in. W a. AieeUl -at Mt. j'1'i.- i'it e y tu.il y eveainir. .1 I-' : rt v ik 'a- !.:;;. No. II. ,i uhias Camhell, V. I - T.: r . M. o inir. jr., W. Wtn..l. licsser. I...!-" 1 -1 . 1 1 1 . Mil's every Wednesday even-T.-nvi 1- 1 tnpl.trs respectfully invited. Tc tr.K ' '.in l"i.B, No. 21. Amu rin"ith, ,V. C. W. tf.s C. II. Win.-low. 1..1 ir I'rf.niy. Me n every Saturday evening. r:-. 1'i-uipl.irs ara rctpeclluily invited to .in i-t n il h 1 1 -i. M iii1'!' . :. i ;;ii'.'. of tho Vestry 1st Tuesday evi-tii immtli. at the Rectory; Quartoly J mi. to. -;iy l.-t Mondays of May, A uKuat, I .Sovemijcr .n: i Ei-'iru.iry. II. St. iKO. VUUNJ. Hector. .5 V,';. I.. H'l L'.l. fierk. Wli.l.IT'i J'OTTIIXIJKli. .TThUM:V AT LAW. Plattimouth. Xeb H T. SJ. 3I.IMIIETT, A TiOltS iiV A 1" L W and .Solicitor in Chan 1 rv, l'l:ilts:iioii;'i. Nubix-ka. V:V AT LW, PlattMtuoutli. Neb. : j Vii- I.: i .i:. I ! ' I -.-I! I'.i-nl Estate, and puy taxeii for 1. ir .vol and unimproved liitidj Uune'J'iW. n ixwi:i,a. &. cii.i.njv, ATT'ltNi.'i S AT !.W and .Solicitors in t"i:nici-ry. Nebraska. Otlice over Wliii: .V I'.n li- . i nt Store. Inprl. II. s. ji:xi(js, ATT'iiiN KV AT LAW and tiencral Land Air it. Line: ii. N"br:i.sku. Will praotice in any I' the ( ' hi.-,. ..i ihe Stjiic. a.id will buy and sell lie il E::i.' . cmiiici-'-ioii, pay Taxei. exntiiino 'lii.i-.S .V . uovIiMf. Ir 3 W . THOMAS, II ii ins i M .:i 'ii!!y located at Weeping Wit "' t r r;'!i.. t, o il r- hi-" profenMun il nervier to the eiii.e;i- of '.i s coui:ly, Nebra-ska. jjanT'li'.Hf. : is 4.svs;sTO. 91. n., V:V-"lfl . aM SI K! EON tenders hU .. i r : ---,.'ii-.! -e- i the citizens of ('asseoun- Ile-j , .-.t Insist corner of Oak and Sixth :r-- -: " M i i rreet, opposite Court ; I! . i-i..-: o .i!'h. :.e!,r.i.-k:i. .j. r e: uti.is m. n. I'il VS'.i I W .N il srUtJKoN. Into a Pur on i t' i, ' el' i .10 .i;ny of the i'otomiie, i : ! t -.a ci !i. .i !.: !.a. Ollioewith Jr. R. K. , j i . i w : , ii. n . L i "i ' iv. t. opposite the Court - !-. I'm i'c r c corner of Ro k and - nil si i .-. i loots !!;! of l'. 1. (jitsit. i Br. Sr:i'n. EtOIlCItTN, t I'll".-!' 1 V.N .V i l'.'tEON Having located !: j iiiL.- '.'::' r ! Mil.,, will a; tend promptly c.ii:.-. Ijj:ii dir. an, I iiiLt. Hinr-jstfiiii'l. I - IV Ir.'Ll I.. II. liKSNLtT s. n. !iK.::i,t:i! &. to, l- 'l . t .;..! i l a x i'l . irs Agents, NotaruK i i'c . i ,, ,ii..J Lite iiisunnco Agents, l'larts- ; in.ia: ,. ; ' . ii-k.i. jeJ-itf ... i: i. i;. :.; . l: ; i . .1 l'" ,.r.et-r, corner of Main i :it. oiMiit.'i. etirasK a. i, i;-i in.- '',-c;t rt ..'.led ;:ii! ncv'ly furnished oilers li:-icl, - .it etoiiin ni.:ti.ii..s. lioutd by the day . . r v--- k. aifgl. CS,4TT!10UTiI .tlll.l. ' I K!.-'KL. IVoin ioI .r. II ivim recently been rei. ;:iv : and p'.a -e in thorough running order. IJ-..IIU n oi k i i i i e on siior' notice. j'Ki.ooil liush- - .: . lie t w.iiil"d inline liateiy, for wbi 'h tie ' 1. 1.....--1 ..rl, ,t p.ne will ne aid. aug2stl. .:. . niB, r. ' !,".;! Li:'-. A-- i b !'ii', Inlan landTrani-I..si:;"-,1. ..'T-ui. VV;!ita'rv risks at reason , r ,: . ,-, ; me.-t 'eliiiblo C- mpa ii ies in the i ii '. i S. , . i ,:',.. 'iv-isitu tho Court House, l'!..isnio i- i. .t :. Imay'ltf. "SiiS. J. F. fJOlIU, .i - a i. i ; a new supply of (Joods, , !l i.'s at i i ill a'oovo cost, and I5on ; - :, 1 -'I'ks and l.i -es, also colored i i, e-t .it iV.mi ?.Vn to i-l.W. -rt :.t 1 1 j ; an i U igirenhorn A" Cn.'s uiarrtf. iT'il t ' !',: i v ; ANJi JOINERS Will do all if w..,;. ,i; : ii- iiiii'.m short notice. Will take e i! , .s i ii-c ;:!:tl .-i;iall. Hu t furnish material v ,i.o, p on Mata street, oppo- . y. I.. Cni'.p h. 2 CV.WIINTEU ANi) JOINER, will do all 4 i i ii i'iic on short roticeand in the best I ' - c. ;s !cr oiiii iinj: .'iiadc on reasonn.- I ie t. ri i july-jM" f $20,000 Worth of Property a C.i::-!.-: i: if off iri, i.-.w ith timber adjoining, near sia.M-.ih. pi-ojici-ty in I'lattsmouth City, J.1 -, e:;- '. .i'olis. I tc. i . I' fun :u.r parlicuiar enquire of or address CiE. W. COI.VIX. :.;;.I.'t .oii.r.i.T:). riattsmouth. Neb. SEWING MACHINES F. P. TODD AGENT, PL.m sMOUUI . KBR.-1Sk1 A g-e. I ;i-- irtinei-.t of Machines on hand. I n u ke p i iir. ad. ':!. Needles. AO. .M ieiiir,. - ;,, r)il; ,v t1K month. Oilice u-h side Mainstreet. det'OTtf , PlUCt: & LAMBING T. i . e o;...;ic J a s!i"t en Sixth street. South of .M n:!. 'i re t!:: y are prepared to dv all work in til,' ll'a i, .;ni; hiug line ou short notice and in : the b. st style, .-dmciinr. Repair::!:, and nil r -i :'..-oi custom worn done promptly. ;augtt' PIANOS, .f O llfi V- TI UIAi It E O IV S ! i I n::i A.-cnf for the best Muieal Instruments ' ' i-!". I' r-i.n-i wis!::n to buy Piano. Cabinet, ? y. '!. ! ! :::i:i or l'orf::(ile Organs, or Melodeons e-i.i pun has,, li.rou-'ii my Agency u a liberal i : rn;s us i'i, v can ironithe iiiiin faei urers thein J -ill'". .U lustr'.UMcnis tuliy warrantetl. . li ilt;. J. N. WISE. C c:l. I). L I !t(JO &, CO., i Wholesale and retail dealer, in I WINES AND LIQUORS A!.o a very cboioe selection of ToniCCO CIGARS, '4 1 " -reit. se.-ond door ea.st of the Seymour i ''i:e. Nebraska City. Neb. i ,,''r'' i reecivii! a new Stok of Genuine Mld - 'iirb-in .Erect from Rourbon county, Ky.. Bit ' re. e:c. mylMw. tjHralt Si, Comfort anX cunomr i- j Three reasons for boardins with -: t r'!''Oi(i-, W-OoLVIN. f ok sTitErT, PLATT'jtnrTn, ypB. t .Two blocks north wr-.t of brick Schixd Hong,. Heh ia RATH IIOI'SE. free to patron: his ,'..o.i - are well vcjiuUled, and hi prire,T rea- 'cb'' Liul:.-2? :IE11ABIA HElALDo i - ; VOL. 5. "Ordinance. ; 1 A.v Obdisasck (TiatitinK certain privileKc?. and leasing the Levee Grounds of the City to the 1'lattnraoiuh Loeknd Levee Cotapnny. Section J." JJt it urduLit l Lt Hit Mi;"r ami Cilir t'vuncil of the 1'ity of J'uttnuoulli. That the IiimJs of this, city known ug the levee ground.", lyinx on the east side of this city a nil on the we.-Urn bank ol the .Missouri river, and exteniiir.ii alonir the biir.k of the Missouri river the entire length of the easiern iidcd' this city, together wilh all alluvial furuiuiious ac cretions, s;iiei-Itirs stud i! a :i-1 - wlm-ii bav-b"eu, now are. or may be hereafter formed on the Mi. houri river aii'i otiposite the limits of said city, be and the same ure In re',y .-i'uiaeil, Jvased and quit-ri;iinjc'l lor the term of nini ty-nioe earn Iroin the d.ite hereof to the corporation known as "The I'l.ittsmouth J-oek and Levee Com pany." which -iii.l corporation tiled their articles of incorporation in the ClerkV otlice oft he county of Cass. in the."-: Jteof Nt!ir-ka. at S:loo'clK'ka the Hth day of July. A. L. ISoy. and ns appurte nances to the said lauds ; the right to protect, extend and improve the said levee grounds and ail accretions tnereto; the right to elect and maintain dork, piem. wharves, store mid ware houses, elevators, or liny other constructions which the Hireetors of the said corporation inay deeiu nece--ary to do and truiisut-t a general dock, warehouse, elevator and lev ? luisiness; and the riht to charjre kui-Ii rales of whitrfiiire, drayaire. and do kiige. liitniitiK fee-, dry-dock-iiiie mid rents and charge for uso oT elevator, as the liirectors o! the said corporation limy ilecni reasonable: i'roriilnl ir.. That the rates charzed by thef li'Ii irpoml ion slia.l he re.isona ble rates; and. as far ns .lplicub'e. the average an-! general r it.-s charged at the levees the cities on he .Missouri river hetween the city of Su Joseph mid Sioux City: An-l proriilxl farther. That the said corporation shall pay into the City Treasury annually, between the first and third Wednesdays of the month of Augu-t in each year, the sum of fifty dollars. Svr. 2. xho Mayor, and E. li. .Murphy and F. S. White, members of the City Council, or any two of them, are hereby authorized to execute and deliver to the I'latt.-iiiouth Hock and Levee Company a lease of the aid levee grounds, and all the alluvial formations, accretions, sand-bars and islands, which have been, now arc, or may be formed on the Missouri river opposite the city of I'latts mouth. in accordance with the provis ions of the first section of this ordinance: and the Haid l:ie shall be scaled, vith the seal of the Keeonler's Court of the city of i'lattsmouth 'such seal now he in? used as the corporate seal of said city I by the Mayor, who is authorized here specially to seal said lease: and the Mayor and F. S. White and E. li. Murphy, members of the City Council, or any two of them, are authorized to deliver the posses-ion of the said levee grounds und the accretions hereinbefore spifi fied to the l'lattsiiiouth !o:k and Levee Com pany : ProriiiH. The majority of the Hireetors of said Company shall within fen days after the passage of this ordinance accept in writing under their bands the provisions of this ordi nance. Approved August ;id. 1 ;.. l. II. WHEELER, Mayor. Attest: Wm. L. Wells. Recorder. augliw2 Martin Farrar a non-resident of the State of Nc-ba.-ka: Will take notice that the Ruriington Mis--sourt River Railroad Company in Nebraska has located its road through and upon the following real estate imnnl by him. situate in ('ass county. State of Ncbrn.-ka. ntnl city of I'lnttsmouth. to wit : Lot one in block one hundred seventy-one, as is designated upon tile recorded and publish ed plats of the city of Pinttsmoiith : and thesnid .Martin Earrar is further notified that said Rail road Company desires to take, hold and appro priate said real estate for the use of its road ; and if the said Martin Farrar shall not within thirty days alter the publication of this notice for four weeks, lo-wit : on or before the 4th dav of October. A. lb 11(1, apply to the Probate Judge of said counly to have the damages assessed by six disinterested freeholders, selected by said Probate J udtre. as provided in chapter twenty five of the P.cvi.sed Statutes of the State of Ne braska, and amendments thereto, said Company will proceed to have the damages assessed as therein provided by law. Hated 4thday of August. A. I. lS'.i. Iiurlingtou .V: Missouri Kiver Railroad Company in Nebraska. l'.y T. M. MAUQl KIT. aug 'wL . lis Attorney. lYofice The unknown owners fsnppnsed to be the heirs of J. Pardee1, nuii-scsideiiU of the State of Nebraska : Will take notice that the Ruriington .V Mis souri River Railroad Company in .Nebraska has located its road .iiroiiuli and upon the following real estate own -d I y iheui. situate in Sminilers ounty. State of Nehra-ka. to v.it: The south east iuiirtcr of seel ion two. township twelve, range nine; ami the sain owners i wbue names in e unknown' are further notilicd that said Railroad Company de iir s to tuke. hold and appropriate so ir.ajeh ot said real estate as may ho necessary fonhc construction and convenient n-c ot its road; and if thesnid owners who. e names arc uiiknowiij jihi'.ll not within i hir.y days lu'ierthe pubiieat ion of t his notice for lour v. t ks. to-wir : on or beiorr-tn; d -.y 1 O -io'e r. v. n. ISi.m. apply to trie Probate Judge of said county to have i !ie uiimnrvs isc.-sc 1 by six .iisintens'.cd frceholder-i. seUe..d tiys.dd Proi.iiie Jode. s provided ::i chapter tw cof -live of tile Ki'.ired Statutes of the St.i'e of Nebraska, and ainend-mvnt.-- thereto, said C ,i:p:iny will proceed to have the damages assessed as therein providid by law. Pared 4th day of August a. !. 1S.:9. U jrliiigton ,v Mi.s-our: Hiver Ka'lroad Coneany in .eiir:u-K:u isy I. M. JIAHIJI r. 1 1. augt"nv4. its Attorney. r'oticc Norton H'.rden, a non-resident of the State of Nebraska ; Will take notice that the Burlington Ar Mis souri River Railroad Company in Nebraska has located its road through and upon tho following real estate owned by hnn. situate in Saunders county. State of Nebraska, to-wit: Northeast Tiiarter i' l of section eleven '31. township twelvellji range nine '!: mid thesnid Norton Harden is further notified that said Railroad Company desires to take, hold and appropriate so much of said real estate as may be necessary lor the construction ami convenient use of its mad: 'and if the sail Norton Harden shall not within thirty days after the publication of this noi ice for four weeks, to wit: on or before the 4th day of October. A. I. lSii't, apply to the Probate Judge of said county to have ihe damages asses.-ed by six disinterest ed freeholders, selected by said' Probate Judge. a.s provide,! in chapter twenty-live of the lie vised Statutes of the State of Nebraska, and amendments thereto, said Company will proceed to have the damages, assessed as therein provid ed by law. O.ited 4th day of Ausriit. A. n. I:p. Ruriington .v. Missouri River Railroad Company in Nebraska. Ry T. M. M ALOE El f, ' ougriw4. Its Attorney. Notice The unknown owner supposed to be T. J. Jo seph ), a non-resi lent ol i he State of Nebrti-ka: Will take noiicu tu it too Burlington Jr Mis souri River Kaiiro .d l oiui-.iny in .Nebraska has located its road tnroiiKh and upon the following real ests i e owned l.y hi:n, si.uate in Siiundcrs county. State of Ntx.raskit. to-wit: Sou'hwest quarter ('i' of s,f!ion eUven ill-, township twelve (l-i. range nine : and the sji id owner (whose nnine is unknown is further tioiincd that said Railroad Coinpniiy desires to tak-. hold and appropriate so much cf said real estate as may be necessary for the construction and convenient use of its road : and if the said owner iwliosc name is unknown) shall not within thirty days after the publication of this notice for four weeks, to-wit : on or before the -Irh dav i.f Octo ber. A. I. ISoil. apply to the Probate' Judge of saul eounty to have tue damuges assesses! by six disinterested freeholders, selected by said Probate Judge, as provided in chapter twentv tive ,f the Revised Statutes of the State of Ne braska, and aincnilinentsthercto, said Company wdi proceed to have the damages assessed as therein provided by law. Hated 4th dav of August, a. p. Isotb Ruriington A Missouri River Railroad Company in Nebraska. Ry T M. MAKyl'E'IT. augow4. Its Attorney. itice William J. Ford, of the State of Maryland, will take notice that Robert R. Livingston, of the county of Cass, in the State of Nebraska, did on the .d day l" July. a. i. 1S.i. file bis pe tition in the District Court of the lid Judicial District of the State of Nebraska, in and lor Cass county, against the said William .1. Ford, defendant, setting forth that on the 14t!i day of December, 107. defendant was indebted to him in the sum of One Hundred and Thirty-six and oO-ll') Hollars for medicines and for medical ser vice and atiendanee furnished and bestowed by plainniT for defendant at his request: and pray ing judgment for said amount with interest from December 14th. lSoT. : and defendant is further notified that plaintiil'did on thciM day of July. A. D. lso'., cause an order of attachment to b issued from the otlice of the Clerk of said Court, and did cause the follow ing real estate belong ing to defendant to be attached, to-wit: Lots seveu (7) and eight 8 in block eighty -seven 7i. as thesnuic is designated upon the recorded plat of the city of Platismouth, in Cas county. Suite of Neoraska. And the said William J. Ford is notified that he is required to nop-car tnd answer said peti tion on or belore ihe third Moa lavui'tcr the 2d day of September, a. c.ls.C. Dated August HdlsoO. Robert r. Livingston. By T. M. MaRqi-ett. hi? Att'v. ' m w i Estr.iy Notice ' .TAKEN UP ON MY PLACE. NEAR Plattsmonth, two white Sows, weighing gbout ?!0 pounds each, with holes in their ears. The owner is requested to call, prove property, pay charges and take them away. ju;y:w5 II. II. PETTIT. TAKEN up by the snbscriber. in South Bend precinct. Jnly .d. lSbf. One Iron Crey Mare, supposed to be three or four years oid. three white feet, branded "O. G." on near hind hip, when taken up had on a leather head stall, and was shod all round. hlsyJi GEORGE D. JIATTLS0X: Horace lii-eely In the Itiol. Only ' a liunIrel umsket. h:ul beon brought into the building during tin night; but the-; by a happy m.-e h;id btn ujaguilied in tho estimation of the mob into at h'a.st five hundred. They kejit the raseals at bay duiint. tin; ni,'ht, but were totally insufiir.ent i'ir th-i regu lar defense of the building. With even a hundred brave men behind them they ould no more have with.-tocl that itifu riated crew of live iIkhi-.-hhI than a fea ther ean withstand a whirlwind. Thi.s was fully appreciated by the d. Liid-.-rs, and it was determined that if the build ing Ktand over night, to load it up to the muzzle in the morning. Aocoiilingly, by the following noon, it was a perfect ar senal. The first floor wu ta.rieaded with bales tif printing paper and provid ;d with a steam hose that would have badly 'Veorehed' any intruder; and the second storv had at one of the windows i u small cannon loaded with irrape and eanistur, at the oMu-r piles ot hand gren ades ready to li.' hurled unon the rioters. The third story was ejual!5' well armed and in the larger editorial room were a dozen forty pound hells. with fu-t:.s shortened so they would explode on striking the pavement. These, with a brace or more of muskets L-t every win dow, and a hundred and fifty de;crniiucd men. all under eomniandofanexjM rieneed arinJ iffieer, eonijileted the armuineut of the building. The arsenal Mr. (ireely entered about noon on the second day of the tint, and, making his way to the editorial rooms, he looked curiously at the warlike prep arations. ''What are these?"' he inquired in sjieetiiig the shells, which were ranged in an irregular semi-circle near one of the front windows. '"Halls of fire and brimstone fir those red ragauiufiins. down there on the side walks." ''Uut I wanted no arms brought into the building." "Yes, we know, but Col. Adsinis now has command of the Tribune and we propose to see this danee out if it la.-ts till doomsday. " Without any further rcmi'iks Mr. lireeley went to his work.: and all the day was knee deep in editorials an l ex changes. Meanwhile a noisy moh was in posses sion of Printing House Square, and who ever entered or left the building was greeted with yells and curses. and threats of even rougher treatment. Siili a throng of friends came pouring in and out oil day, and these visitors so imped ed Mr. (ireeley's work that it va S o'clock at night before he had finished his last leader. Am it grow toward dark, one friend afler another wont to hhu ur ging him to leave for Louie and, repre senting the great danger of remaining after sunset. To all his answer was, 'I am not rmite through; I will go in a few minutes. ' At last General liusteed cav.ie in from the . trect reporting that the crowd, now greatly auguinettU:d. were clamoring wildly for "otild Gray ley. " 'It is abso lute madness lor you to stay longer" s lid he, but the answer still was, "I im not ijuite through; 1 wjll ito in a lew ruinates." Eight o'clock came n lat, and then Colonel Adams and ano'her eeiit'einan sent out forac!o-e carriage to Ie brutrht to tin; i-ide dour, and then goinj; to Mr. (ireeley, aot o-tel him so.-nowhat as fol lows: "Mr. Grecly, a ean'iaci will b hero in-tatiilv. We w.Tiit vo;i to leave ihe olT.ee." "I :sni not quite ready : T v i!l few n:i!!ict)ts," wa again ibe 'i'j':- "We itist i.n you going now. Ired and tiff v of us are risking- go in a t reply. A h '.!- :tr lives tu. have in defending vour buildup. in i v no right to add to our danger." ! aro-e ! At tiii' tne pliuosophe: :is, 1,, oWIV - I I wii h a peculiar mile -.-U'-I : "But w hy order a oarriagre? I could elVC gon ju-t as well in a street out." " ou couldn't have vol t;a ean Look down there and see the kind of crowd that -urroundr-: the building." lie looked down and snw whrt might Lave made a man of iron nerve turn pallid. The infernal regions had been unroofed, and the devils were there shouting, : ud hooting, and howling, an I g naning on the pavement. Such another crew never got together on this or any other planet: and as he looked they shouted, "Come out. ye old hay then, come out; and we'll raieh ye a naygur's as good as an Irishman." ""'Well, they are a bar 1 looking set," he said, turning around and drawing on his coat, preparatory to leaving ; "where could those fellows have eome from ?" He was smuggled into a carriage, the door was clo.-ed, and in half an heur he was miles away, in safety. As a 1 know, the riot lasted two davx longer. During these two days the Trlb 'e office and it- editor were in almost hourly danger ; but Mr. Greeley came and went as usual, attended to the duties of his position, as if mly quiet were reigning over the blood-deluged city ; and all this while seme of the great dailies were posting him as a poltroon, and even a venerable archbishop had the bad taste to politely brand him as morally and jihysiealiy a coward. t hatever may be the . facts touching Mr. Greeley's moral and physical cour age, he showed upon this occasion an in tellectual courage that constitutes in very deed a hero. Pttvlnrtr Monthly. Bishop Simpson is thus sketched by T. Jj. Cyler. in the New York nhprn tbiit: "While Mr. Buiishon is the most celebrated' and 'perhaps the most polish ed of living Methodist preachers, Simp son has the superior power over the emotions. With an average Methodist audience, the Bishop would call out ten 'Aniens', to I'unshon's one. But with the pen Punshon is his master. Simpson looks like an ordinary farmer, as you meet him in the streits; yet he grows handsome when liisl-ieiv l-m.l'osi ac'iiL in spiration; in figure he is gaunt and hi ' nuios iie anour loose. like IT. liuth rie's, Lincoln's and old Harry Clay's, Tn the great work of saving the nation in hor hour of agony. Simpson had a lace as signally clear as Sherman's or St runon's or Summer's or George Stuart's. He led the Methodi-t corps; hut then they had a man in almost ery regiment. ' She-idan. at the l-eainnir.g of bis I career had a sharp strugg le wih poverty, j : One of his resources was to wrire fugitive t I articals for the journal.! of the dav. in j i w hich be was helped bv his vift. Manv ' ' year.' afte betook to politics, he observed fo a mend: "11 1 had f-tuck to the law, I hclive that I would have done as much as Tom Krskine, but I have no time for it, for Mrs. Sheridan and myself had to use all our time in writing lor our daily stock of legs and shoulders of mutton." One of his friends, to whom he ron- i fessed this, wittilvrenlied.'! se exant.lv i how it was, Sheridan, you were at that time engaged in a loii.t-stock concern." Three swallows of iirpior pet- day will swallov eighty acae? hA :rt ? yett. PLA1TSM0UTH, NEBRASKA, JI ittnkeii Jt'ulonsy. It is not often that ieople are mistak en on a mere question of identity, but sometimes such things will occur. A very amusing incident arising from this cau-e occurred recently. A lady, about entering a street car, saw, as she suppo-ed, her husband tak ing tender leave of another woman on a street corner nearby. Having heard re !eated rumors of Lis gallantries, she de termined to settle the matter definitely. With a rather hasty judgment, she raj idiy regained the street and approached the lady, who, standing on the corner, was still looking after the gentleman, wh had gone in the store. "You seem to be very well acquainted with that gentleman!" was, her sudden and unexpected salutation. "Madam!' was the surprised rejoind er, accomiKUiied l3' a look which clearly denoted her suspicions of her question er's sanity. "I say you appear to be acquainted with that gentleman!" "Well, yes somewhat." "How long have you kuown him?" "A number of years, lie's mv hus band." "What do you mean? greatly excited. "dust what I saw band." cried the lady, Ile a my hus- The lady darted into the store.and the next moment reappeared with the unfor tunate benedict. "William, that lady says you are her husband." One irlauee, however, was suiTioient; the lady saw her mistake, and crying with vexation and shame, frankly con fessed hor mistake. Ray I.ni:l. V A leading Xew York journal says tin ' "Within sight of Trinity Fteep'e, thore lives not less than one hundred thousand families in houses or parts of houses that they do not own, paying the better por tion of their income weekly, monthly, quarterly to their landlords or their agents ; prospering when times are good and going behind when they are dull; sometimes Mush, and then ariin hard un: some prudent and frugal ; others reck less and prodigsd ; two-thirds of theui likely to die as they have lived, and be carried out in their coffins from other men's houses ; ceasing to pay rent only when they cease to live. To these, one and all. we say : You should try to own land, if not this year, next ; if not in or near the city, then in the wide, free country. Buy land!" We reiterate the exhortation to every homeless person, "buy land." There is not much danger of your getting enough to violate the principles of Land Reform, but you may get enough to make a home stead, and save your rental. No man is truly a freeman w ho has not some spot of ground over which, he can exerc ise ex clusive dominion. Merchants, bnv land. I'vorylxidy buy land. lo so. and there won't be so much left for spectators, and you will share the rise in value 1 e-.-' ies realizing the luxury rf owning the roof that shelters your family. ("',v. Tr.nift. Two Huriclrril Miles in Four Uours. The announcement of an express train that shall run i'.'o:n Liverpool to Loudon in lour hours is a remarkable event. The distance is .o) miles, and in er'.-r to mike the Hi'; mil! s per h'.tir'it v i'l be neee sary to make it a ihrough train that is. to a! tow no yin betw-en tho two places. The, neee.-sity of stepping lr water is obviate ! by a long water trriugh at the nde of the track, from which water i-; taken while the train is in !.': i; m. by 't:iig down a seo::r which shall vac' the surface of the cough, and the velocity of the train will carrv the water into tin tank. The largest tenders yet made hold only about two thousand gallons of water: but that would la.-t only about one-third of the distance. It may be found desirable to i'se smaller tenders, fas one of these, with its load of water, would weigh over 'S2 tons.) and have more troughs. The en gines will have to be large and powerful and most carefully made, as they cannot be lubricated, nor ean the heated bear ings be examined as often a-s is the case in ordinary trips. We had hoped this week to give our leaders some definite information as to the conui.eneeiuent of work on the road we-t from Brownviile. It now seems that the capitalists who were expected to take hold of the matter are now stum bling over the report of Chief Engineer Mo'ilton of the North Missouri and Trunk Bailvnads. The said Engineer pi'ssoil up along the west bank of the Missouri Kiver last winter on horseback, and from observations then taken reports the survey of the Trunk Railroad, and adds that the only arable lands in Ne braska are within fifty miles of the river, and consequently the State Lands which are all west td' this line, are comparative ly worthless, being within that, hug bear of years ago known as the Great Ameri can Icscrt. The capitalists aforesaid will first sen 1 a man to inspect the State Itinds before they proceed further. We hope he will come without delay, as the more they see of our country the more anxious they will be to invest their means in Nebras ka. -liroirnville AJccrtifr. Florence is described in a recent letter as a slow place. The legend says t hat Florence was built upon a field of lilies, by refugees from persecution, about fit teen hundred years before the Christian era. The letter in question says the poppy is a fitter exponent of the present state. For a spell of sleep is upon her politics, her religion, her industry, her modern art. The driver lies asleen unon his load: the huckster nods npon a bench i nutMue his shop in the drowsy morning. The writer has seen a bare-foot boy en joying his siesia stretched upon the pave ment of a crowded thoroughfare, and an other throw down his cap lor a pillow in the public street, with that careless grace w hich liolongs to the Italian people, as his sole preparation for sintilar slum ber. The Orientals travel with bar gold, coin and jewels to pay their way in for eign lands, banking being very little of an Eastern institution: therefore it is not so very wrnderful to hvir that the Viceroy of Ivrynt, to meet his. expenditures in Englant came furnished with twelve boxes of oak, l.eund with brass, each liox being eighteen inches long, nine inches high, and twelve in width, and containing gold and notes. One hundred and twelve Chinese tomm arrived in California by the last steamer. "Some of them have feet as big a.s any other women's," says a San Franciieo pajter. A lady at Newport his a ring cut ot solid diamond, said to bo tho only one in THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 1SC9. A Butter Story. In 18.13 a family by the name of Van Sickler moved into the townol'Towan da, l'a., and took up as a residence a place formerly occupied as a hotel. On the preruiser was a deep well, originally dug by, or for, Mr. Bean, the hotel kei'K?r. At the time of building or stoning up the well, a stone shelf was in serted by order of the landlord about ten feet down, for the purpose of depositing in a cool j lace, butter, beef and such other articles as might be considered necessary to its preservation. The new comers on the place the Van ticklers soon detected, or thought they did, the presence of decaying wood in the water, and it was decided to have the well cleared ouL Accordingly two old patri ots were detailed for that sendee, fheir combined efforts, after a few hours labor resulted in their fishing up a butter fir kin tightly sealed but black with a::e, and its old staves nearly rotten through. Mr. Mean, the old landlord, long since retired from business, and then residing a short distance from the place, was sent for and came down, white-haired anl venerable, bearing on his cane. After looking at it a moment, the old man said he could explain the whole matter. The tub had been let down on the stone shelf long years ago when he kept the hotel. As near as he could remember, it was over thirty years ago. The tub had dis appeared in the night and it was stup Hosed that it had been stolen. The well had never been cleaned out before,to his knowledge. The tub was now opened in the presence of the little crowd that had gathered. The lid was removed, the white linen cloth taken up. and there was the butter, yellow as gold. and. as proved on tasting, sweet as if made but yesterday, although thirty-one years had elapsed since it first went to the bottom of tho well, where it was now found, like Truth, unimpaired by its long resi dence. The old man claimed the prize and carried it off rejoicing. Witnesses are still living who were present at the time, who v. ill, with ourinfornr.int.makc affidavit to the truth in every particular of this true butter story. In those days butter was only worth from six to twelve cents per pound; now see the difference sixty to eighty cents, and the best at that. Ax When General Jackson was President. Jiuutiy O'Neil. thei-orter, was a marked character. He had bis foibles which were offensive to the fastidiousness of Col. Bonelson, and caused bis dismissal on an average, about once a week. But on an appeal to the higher court, the verdict was invariably reversed by the good nature of the old General. Once, however, Jimmy was guilty of some fla grant offense, and was summoned before the highest tribunal at once. The Gen eral after stating, the details of the mis deed, observed : "Jimmy, I have borne with you f r years in spite of all complaints, but in this act you have gone beyond my power of endurance." "And do you believe the story ?"' asked Jimmy. "Certc-i n';.'" answered the General. "I have iu.-t heard it from two Sena tors." r :i: .,..,i:,.i t: t v.. i . jiii' i -.Miiiinv, ii a ;h lieVi ..' M :ui taat TWENTY Senators said about vou, its little I 'A t.'iiiiiv you at to be President." "O. pshaw! Jimmy, concluded the President, "clear out an 1 go on dury, but be more careful hereafter." Jimmy remained with his kindhearted patron, not only to the close of his Pres idential term, but accompanied hunt the Hermitage, and was with him to the d iv of his death. Raeiielorx Attention. The attention of bachelors is invited to the following "wail :" "There are some sad sights in this world ; a city sacked and burnt a battle field after a great slaughter a London in the midst of a great plague a ship burning at sea a family pining in star vation a jug of molasses wrecked upon the lvtvement. All bad, it is true. "But to us, the .saddest sight, of all i an old bachelor wearing toward the end of his journey of life, his great duties un done. Miserable creature ! just look at him ; his shirt buttons off his stockings out at toes not a son or daughter, nor a relative to drop a tear, close his eyes in death, or to leave his money to nobody in fact to care for him shunned by saint and sinner." In the beautiful drama of Ion ; the in stinct of immorality, so eloquent uttered by the deatlv--devoted Greek, finds a deep response in every thoughtful soul. When about to yield his young existence us a sacrifice to fate, his " beloved Clem anthe asked if they shall not meet again, to which he replies: "I have asked that dreadful question of the hills that look eternal of the clear streams that How forever of the stars among who-e fields of azure my raised spirit hath walked in glory. All were dumb. But while I gaze upon the living face, I feel that there is something in the love that mantles through its beauty that cannot wholly perish. We shall meet again, Clemanthe." A Stockton (Cal. ) paper mentions, as going to show the fertility of the San Joaquin valley, that eight hundred and seventeen tons of wheat left that town on a single day of last week for San Fnineisco. The grain crop in the San Joaquin Valley is turning out much bet ter than was expected. A larger breadth of wheat wa-t sown than ever before, and as many who put it in had leaed land at high rates, or bought on credit, payable on selling their crop, much anxiety was caused by the light rains, and occasional appearance of rust. There seems to be no loneer reason to dread that a fair av erage yield will not be realized, while msny instances are reported of large fiic Ids going forty bushels to the acre. -V Unman Library Rat. A gentleman, who was appointed to value the extensive library of a deceased literary gentleman, found that the most rare and costly books in the collection were defective from having one or more leaves torn out. Shocked at their van dalism, he asked a servant, who had lived with the gentleman many years, if he knew how it happened. After some hesitation, the servant refilled: "Win to le sure, sir, I now and then tore a leaf out when 1 wanted waste paper, but I never went twice to the same book, so I thought it couldn't be of much con sequence." An exhibition in Hamilton, Ontario, came to a sudden close the other day. A fifteen foot snake got out of hi cage. He happened to be lively. He imparted the faculty to all who. were in the vicin ity. There are over two thousand visitors at the Virginia Springs, mostly northern and western people. They spend over IlrellHiieoiiH. Three thousand five hundred papers are published iu the L'nited States. The Lest clerk in the Internal Bevenue of 'Ice at -Washington is a deaf mute. He never gossips. Sheridan defined an Irishman as a ma chine for converting potatoes into human nature. Prentice says man w;is the chief eon sileration at the creation. Woman was on'y a "side issue." A new tonic has been discovered. It is extracted from sausages, and called "sulphate of canine." Bo make yourselves at home ladies," said a ludy one day t her visitors, "I'm at home myself, and I wish you all were." Wheelbarrows have come down to us through six centuries, and have hardly experienced an improvement since the lir.-t invention. Pittsburg makes a joke of it -elf by complaing that soot and smoke of a cer tain railroad injure the flowers in the gardens of that city. The domains of Brighaiu Young are recommended to bathers wdio cannot swim, because the water on Salt Lake is so denst that a man cannot sink. Professor Blot is lecturing in New Haven, and the boarders in that city propose to prvsent the landladies of the several lwiarding houses with free tickets to the full course. Emma Farristall, a Nevada gymnast, is coming eastward. It is said she makes a table of herself, and holds an anvil on her brea-t long enough for a horseshoe to be made thereon. A man whose wife is a woman's rightser, has orelored a gravestone, on which is engraved, "Let us have poce." He says he don't care much whether it is erected over her or over him. The late Henry Keetleft to his wife and daughter S2,0i.M),0tHl worth of stock of the Northwestern Railroad, with in structions not to sell it, as it would pay better than any investment. A beautiful specimen of marble, much superior to Italian, has been received at the Land office from a new quarry dis coveredrecenlly on the Fort Leavenworth reservation, A sagacious horse got tired of waiting fir the ferry-boat to push off from the Rock I -land shore, and pulled the bell with his teeth, starling it off ten minutes before its time. Many rich silver andoopporveins have been discovered recently in the Rattle Mountain District, in Nevada. These mines average forty per cent copper, and in some instances from to $20 per ton in silver. The Rochester Century Plant has been visited by persons from 2S different states, an l also from several foreign coun tries, as shown by the register of vi.ister which has been kept .since the 1st of J;iee. The Minisiiers to England and France receive S17..!.H a year each ; the Minis- l t.irs to lliis-ia, Austria. Spain and Mex ico, iSlL'.'Mit) each ; the Ministers to llay ti and Liberia, ."ST.",!)'!; the " Ministers resi l.o.t in Sweden, Belgium, Guataina l;i. Bogota, Bolivia, and Nicaragua, Tie; Union Pacific Railroad bridge across the Missouri river at Omaha will be the largest one yet projected over the .Missouri river. It will consist of 11 spans of L'."0 feet each, ami is estimated to co.-t. when commoted, nearly two mill ions ol" dollars. A little girl named Katie Pitt has re ceived a premium iu Platte county, Mo., for committing to memory lo,(i,"7 verses of th" Riblo. At last accounts she was .-till alive, although it mav be doubted ; whether she can survive the 14.00(th verse. A citizen of Philadelphia who used a solution of carbonic acid a.s a wash to neutralize the offensive odor arising from a cancer, discovered that the latter wr.s entirely removed by the application. The solution consisted of one-fourth of an ounce of acid diluted in a quart of water. The Cincinnati Tutus says the people of La Crosse complain of the frequency of lobberies and other outrages in that vicinity. A community which can for years withstand the daily puhlicut ion of such a sheet as the La Crosse Driiwcrnt. should not complain at any ordinary out rage. Degroat is putting an immense bronze casting of scenes in tin; life of Commo dore Vanderbilt over the entrance, of the llu l-on River freight depot in St. John's Park. It will co-t SsoqKM, and is the large-t casting in the world. The foun dation alone co-ts Sti,t)00 A man in Hamburg. Pa., bought a wagon-load of hoards about thirty years ago, and failing to get the prie-e he asked, determined not to loose money on them. Accordingly they are still for sab; in his yard, having never lieen removed from the wagon, but team and boards are mostly rotten wood. A new fog trumpet has lately been erected on Thacker's Island, of? Glou cester, which is operated by ait Ericsson caloric engine, rotates through an arc of Isn degrees, and gives a blast of seven seconds duration at intervals of forty three seconds. Pittsburg claims to have five hundred and ninety-five furnaces, which work r.p one thousand tons of iron kr day. and the largest factory of plumbers ami gas fitters material in the country. It also tioasts of one establishment which makes all kinds of nails, from the smallest tacks to the largest spikes, and which has one machine that turns out 3,o00 shoe brads er minute. A jury of a justice's court in a rural district of California decided that the State law prohibiting persons from car rying concealed weapons is u.ieonstution al, liocause the Constitution of the Uni ted States says that "the right of the people to keep and hear arms shall not lie infringed ;" and the county judge Mi-tuned the descision. There is a man in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, who, while working as a machin ist. Las mastered the French, German and Italian tongues, made himself par ticularly acquainted with Hebrew, and obtained a thorough knowledge of botany and geology. He continues to work on from djy to day at the navy yard bench, spending all his nights and noons in study, and hu-banding all his earnings to pur chase books, of which he ha-s now a large library. The Fourth District Court in San Francisco has granted a divorce to a youttg and lieautiful lady who was mar ried to Joseph J. Smith of Salt Lake City. The lady testified that Smith is a deacon in the Mormon Church, and that he has always treated Ler kindly, they having lived pleasantly together for sev eral years. Ilecer.tly however, Smith concluded to have a second wife to which Mrs. Smith objected, and so. when the deacon took home his. new bride, wife ! Nf: 1 rtjrrjd tfi hi'V mother. NO. -21. Curiosities of the Ocean Itottoin. Mr. Green, the famous diver, tells sin gular stories of his adventures, when making search iu the deep waters of the ocean. He gives some new tketeh'es of what he saw at the "Silver Banks," near Hayti: : "The banks of the coral on which my divings wore made are about forty miles in length, and about ten to twenty in breadth. On this bank of coral is pre sented to the diver one of the most beautiful . and sublime scenes the eye ever beheld. The water varies from ten to one hundred feet in depth, and is so clear that the diver can see from two to three hundred feet, when he is sub merged, with but little obstruction to the sight. ! The bottom of the ocean, in many places is as smooth as a marble floor; in others it is studded wiih coral columns, from ten to one hundred foot in bight, and from one to eighty feet in diameter. The tops of tho-e tnore lofty support a myriad of pyramidal pendants, each forming a myriad more; giving reality to the imaginary abode of some water nymph. In other places the pendants form arch after arch; and as the diver stands on the bottom of the wean, and gazes through these in the deep winding avenue, he finds that they fill him with as sacred an awe as if he were in some old cathedral which had long been bur ied beneath 'old oceans wave.' Here and thoro the coral extends even to the surface of the w ater, as if those loftier columns were towers Iklongiiig to those stately temples that are now in ruins. There were countless varieties of di minutive trees, shrubs and plants in every crevice of the coral where the water had deposited the least earth. ; They were all of a faint hue, owing to the pale light they received, although of every shade, and entirely different from the plants I am familiar with that grow upon dry land. One of them in particular at tracted iny attention. It resembled a sea-fan of immense size, of variegated colors', and the most brilliant hue. The fish which inhabited those "Silver Ranks," I found as different in kind as the scenery was varied. They were of all forms, colors and sizes from the symmetrical goby to the elohe-liko sun fish: from those, of the dullest hue to the changeable dolphin: from the spots of the leopard to tho hues ot the sunbeam; from the harmless minnow- to the vora cious shttrk." A Itelle out of Tune. Mary Clemmer Ames, describing "Things Gone By," at Washington, writes a-follows : The belle of the past administration comes back expecting without a doubt, to renew old conquests and to achieve new triumphs. The little girls whom she left in short frockf'she finds in places she filled. She wonders what ails the faces of her friends she left them smooth and young, she finds them lined and old and it does not ot; cur to her that they are making the same comments on her own. The man whom she refused in her imperious youth, be cause he was poor and posit ionjess. she finds rich and powerful, wit it a fair wife by his side, whom she cordially hates. The old door keepers at the capital, w ho used to swing back the doors of the di plomatic gallery so obsequiously at the very sight of Hon. 's daughter, are now among the things gone by. '1 he new ones, in the plain, middle-aged wo man, recognize no foimer belle. They challenge her ask her if she belongs to "a member's fami'y." The "open se same" has gone from her hands. She has no choice but to go to a side gallery, or to go home which, at pre.-ei:t, means the hotel. She still assumes "full dress," lifts a bare and bony neck above a girlish corsage of tulle, hangs the roses of June in her faded hair. But in vain. She is a queen without a throne. Her kingdom and her subjects are among the things gone by. To the can-less young gener ation about her she is "only an old maid, who was a belle once, mamma says." She leaves Washington in disappoint ment and disgust ; and she was a wise wonxan who said that she would "never come back again." A Caution to !Uerrhant. The New Orleans Ihlfn tells a good story of a sagacious country gentleman who came to that city some days ago with a bill on a highly respectable firm of the place. The bill was duly presented for acceptance, and a young member of the firm, a fashionable, showily dressed gentleman, who had cultivated a very dainty mustache, wrote with a gold pen his indorsement on the bill, giving his name in full, thus, J. Tomploton Tomp kins. The countryman looked at the signature, re.nl it slowly, glanced at the fashionable merchant, who was fantastic ally twirling his whiskers, and handing the bill over to him remarked : "Here strnger, cash this document." "What!" indignantly replied the mer chant, "discount my own paper, it is a positive insult." "Well, I can't help it," said tLe coun tryman, "if you can't, I must get some body else to do it." To prevent h; paper from getting on "Change, the merchant concluded to cash the bill, and paying over the money to the countryman, asked him quietly : "Why, my friend, do you offer me this gratuitous insult of requiring me to discount my own paper?" "I don't mean any harm, stringer, but I have jest got an idear into my skull, that when you see a merchant with that har on his upper lip. and who writes his middle name out m full, ami indorses bills with a go'd pen, yon may put them down as certain to bust in a week." Iteejralnie n ."eeret. The Newport Mtrcvry relates a capital story of Stuart, tho painter, which illus trates finely the power which a secret has to propagate itself, if once allowed a lit t'e airing, and to reach a few cars. Stuart had, as he supposed, discovered a s. cret art of coloring very valuable. He told it to a friend. His friend valued it very highly, and came a time after wards to a-k permission to communicate it, under oath cf eternal secrecy, to a friend of his who needed every possible aid to enable him to riso. "Let mn. sett," said Stuart, making a chalk mark on a board at hand ; "I know the art, and that isj " "fine." said his friend. "You know it," said Stuart, making another mark by the side, of the one al ready mads ; "and that is "Two," cried the other. "Well, you tell your friend, and that will be " making a third ni.rk "Thrpe onlv," said the other. "No," said Stuart, "it is one hun dred and eleven !" (111). The following points constitute the basis of the Union of the old and New School Presbyterian churches. 1st The Old and new Testament. 2d, Th? West minster catechism. .'Jd.Presbyterhn form of church government. 4th? Psalmody. It i? understood that, final action will be I all" a by an --shl In Pirnrtih. RATES OF ADVERTISING. One square f space ten linen! one insertion, t 10 Kaco suliseyucnt insertion. I.' Profcssior.al curdf not exceeding ix line, lH.fM Ono-quarter column or lens, per annum. S.0 14 " six tnonthn, a.H " three months. 15.00 One-bnlf column twelvt mouth. fio.(K) " nix months. . Sft.trt " " three mouth?, 3.(W One column twelve month. ltm.io i iix months, Uw ' three months, 3.r.09 All transient advertisement Oru0t be paid for in advance. Clippings. Half an acre of cotton wns ptruckHrr lightning in Columbus, Ga., killing, it as "'dead as December." The total amount of the Rifts present ed to the Pope, on the occasion of the fifteenth anniversary of his entering tho priesthoood, is estimated 'mnt 20,000,000 i'ranes. The Knoxville Whuj says it is esti mated that the blackberry crop of Ten nessee, if properly harvested, would make loO.OOO barrels of wim, worth aLnit $S,00O,000. The Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad is now finished to Fort Podge and the Illinois Central operates it. The work on the road west of 1 ort Podge is being push ed with grave vigor. Jefferson Davis was at last account. making a tour through Scotland in the congenial society of Charles Maekay, ono of the most malignant enemies of the Union during the lato war of the re bellion. An American eagle parsed through JIorncHvilKt a day or two Bincc, and consigned to Horace Oreely. Ontho lox containing his eagleship was written the injunction: "Messenger, if you love jour country, feed this bird." A Chicago telegram of the 5th says on Friday next far over the Pacific Railroad from this city to San Francisco will bo one hundred and thirty dollars a reduc tion of thirty-thrco dolars. Emigrant fare is sixty dollars. Yankee Robinon's Circus Troupe drove into Rrookville, Pa., on a recent. Sabbath, and put up at; the hotels en gaged for them. On Monday they werft arrested and fined for breaking the fcab bath by traveling on that day. In the reign of Edward I, the price of a Bible, fairly written, was !po7. The hire of a laboring man was three-halfpence a day. To purchase a copy of the Bible would, therefore, take 4,tS0() days' earnings of such a man, or aliout thirteen years' a toil. A conservative old human miracle of Danville, Vt, in his eighty-fifth year, who never rode in a stage, or car, or at tended a circus, or lecture in his life,and never got drunk, recently walked tn Hanover, X. IL, a distance of 125 mile.". A lady gathering berries in a field in Central New ork was very much fright ened at-discovcring a corpse with its throat cut, She ran for assistance, ami when she returned found that it was only some rogue, who had stained his neck, with some berry juice. An effort is being made in one of the churches in Cherokee count', Ga., to exclude from the church all female mem bers who wear hoops, paniers, Grecian bcnuV, small hats, or use cosmetics. paint or other appliances to make an external show "for man's illusion given." The Newcastle (England). Jxtnuil siater mat a young woman has died in inac town lrorn a leprous disfa-c municated bv the chignon .!,., corn wore which is supposed to have contained some ol the hair Innun L to chignon makers from the cemeteries of the Kast. A. lady in Louisville was nyentlv nl led by a burglar who secreted huiisolf in her chamber until she retired. The box font-airiing her jewels and that con-, taurine- hor rouge wore alike and the thief took the wrong Imx. She looked pale on discovering hor loss, but her color came again.next daj. A meteor recently exploded near Eik horn, Wis., and deposited on the ground a mass resembling the oerbilar slag from an iron furnace. A ciioular space of sixty-loot in diameter was covered with this substance which presented the ap penrance of having fallen in a hot fluid mass .spattering round the scoring after it had struck. The amount of business transacted in the postofficc in N,cw York may bo lU'lgea bv the f"t that tr.t .;.i ... . 1 open lor the sale of stamps in sums los i I I I fill., mi lur rw, ... ....... . a. i ,. - ' .uv jt-ixnpi.t at- oacn of those windows average $1,000 per day The daily eonsuniption of stamps at the office must be in all about .0,(xx. Rev. Thomas S. Bnrnell and his wife, formerly of Northampton, Mass., who have been missionaries in India for the last twenty-one years, recently returned home to Northampton. They were 131 days in going to India when they first went out, and but thirty-eight in return ing, so great has been the improvement in traveling within the last two decades. An old French Countess, of the mo.-fc exquisite politness, was about to breathe her last, when she received a cail from an acquaintance ignorant of her mortal ill ness. The answer sent down from tho chamber of the departing suffertr was memorably unique:" The Countess do Rouen sends hor compliments to Madam de Calais, but begs to be excused as die is engaged in dying." A preacher who used notes had (he misfortune to deliver a discourse or rather, as the sequel will show, a'jiortion of a discourse in a breezy spot, of which rash act the consequence was that "third ly" was missing' The embarressd pastor repeated sevral times: "Thirdly, my breth ren Thirdly." This i lasted several minutes, till at last an excited old lady rose from her seat and exclaimed, "Thirdly went out of the win dow. The fir t marriage ever performed at Atlantic iitj Wyoming Territory celehratod last, month ft .. wa . . ' ....... - ' tt.- a lasu lonatile affair, nut tho tV'tli'ttoa fash- ing out all the usual accompaniments of a wedding in high life were not at hand. The wedding cards, the lest the market afforded, were a t?ujxrior article of play ing cards. The invitations were written on the ace of hearts, the name of the groom on the king and that of the bride ou the queen of the same .suit. Two New York ladies stopped their carriage on a crossing. One went into a store and the other remained in the carriage. Two gentlemen wishing to cross the street ordered the coachman to move on. The lady in the carriage told him not to stir. On this one of the gen tlemen opened the coach door, and with his boots and spurs stepped through the carriage. He was followed by his com panion to the extreme discomposure of the lady within as well as the lady with out. To complete the jest, a party of sailors coming up and relishing the joke, scrambled through the carriage. "Old granny Silfuse," a white lady residing in Brock's Gap, Borkiugham county, Va., now in her ninety fourth year, is one of the most active and indus trious women -in the county. She yet does the work of an ordinary young wo man ; indeed, does more, for the has been willing, old as she is, iu esses of necessity, to go into the harves-t field and assist in securing the crops. She can spin, knit, sew and do all the o:din ary work of one of the industrious wo men of the olden time, who thought it no discredit to earn her bread by tha :t:t cftrVkria' a: t, Bible- h-i"if-