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I s TO OF II. If iUTf DEVOTED SCIENCE, AGRICULTURE, COMMERCE, POLITICS, GENERAL INTELLIGENCE AND THE INTERESTS NEBRASKA. VOL. Nebraska duuettiscr. rrtLIJH EVEKT THCtSDAT BT & LANGDON, &. Muir's Building, (Corner of Mala ad First Streets.) IJ N T. - - fMJ .4 i the end of months, M 3,co - Cab of 1 J or m f will be farciihel at S1.S0 per ubub. prorided the caa accompanies the order, But 6'vliCT" iM- - F.ATES OF ADVERTISING: -- are f U I'; ne insertion, Each add.tiaaal iBserticn, Use square, cne nv.'-.- o. dree mottLs, " s;l inoa:tis, a one year, tene Cards of six Lcei or less, cne year, VotCoiaBin one year, Tjae-aa- lf CBmn, neyeir, - fourth " eirtUi " CoiBtBtt, tlX BJOBthS, half Column, fix moctLt, IVurh " fc - " VrV. " Wtrnn three niont&j, kalf Column, three m;ntbi, foanV - ;Sth m m u J1.C0 o.:o 4.03 6.09 i:,co 5.00 CO.OO 55.00 20.00 16,00 20.00 10.00 8.00 20.00 13.00 10.00 6.00 aBBoswieg- - ranlidate for oSce (i adTacee,) 5.00 Caia tB ad ran-- e wi'.l bereqcireJ ff-- r all adertie- - fetaU eirejt where artnal rejpor.Mbility ii known. Tea per eett f ar each chaaje wiU bea4ied to the 1W1 rate. Kb adreniement wir beeotuidered by the year, taleat ipeeified on the njacBenpt, or preTiously arwed apoa between the parties. AderU.nieBU n- -t nsarksl on theory for a !&4 BBBtber of inrti ns, will be eonUBued nntil rered octand cbarp-- d aoordirp'y Araieru.ens?nt fro!B ?trar.rortranient pr-ann- a La ( nlA in adranr. Tbe priri of yearly wi,i oe eonan-- i ndjed.y to their own"bttiBe:and all adrertie-Btt- u Dot thereto, to be paid for ex- tra. Tear'y airert'ieri tare the priTDce of ehaBjiBg Iheir a4rertien3f cti qnarterly. A'J leaded charged doable the Vtc rate. Adrervaemsr.t? on the iBid exelttsirely wul be taved extra. BOOK AND rAIJCT PRINTING! 2 o o o 1 r I n . -- . . i . to o o Baring added to tie Adrert'.JCf 02?e Card and J Prwawi.New Type of the latest f?y!e, liiki of ir.era7f'r, Enyelopes, Ae.; we art bow prepared to exernse Job Work of every tio ia a etyle a?urpmed by aey other oEee the I sited Mate. Partiralar at urn lion will be pren to order from i.ftaw ia haria; tbeia prorortly attended to. Tae Prorrieinrs harin' had an extensiTe exr-riaar- a, wUl pire their persoaal attention to this araaca f banners and Kope, in their eniearor to rinii, bota in the excellence of their work, and naaoaaUe charges to reeeire a share of the public pUrmaja. BUSINESS 3IISS MARY TURNER, AIID DRESS MAKER. Xaia Street, cae door abore C arsons Bank. BROWN VI LLE, N. T. Lonruit and Trimmings alvays on hand. C. W. and Trxr-- r 22?. rzLZV. l-- z rrrxs 22. T. U. C. JOHNSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, SOUCITOR IN CHANCERY Real Kstatc Acnt, EEO'SVN VILLE, N. T. TIoB.Wm.JessBp, Montrose, Fa. - - - B. Bentiv, Joha C. JiiUer. Chicago, Til. W. t. MeAUister, - - -- Charles - " " F. Fowler, ' R. W. Furnas, Browuvilte, X. T. n r ike. " Kay 7. 155. I. T. & Co., WgDUUU 19 BET AIL DEaLEKS IX DRY GROCERIES Hardware, tovosi. Country Produce, N. T. J. HART & SON SADDLE & HARUESS OrefW. Eolt County, Missouri. V ioiirtaa t'toi hand all dejcrir tiou of Harness, Saddle, Bridles. Ac, A. S. E. EveryBrticieiBOBrshopismaBufactBred T rselresiaad warranted to fire satif fac tioa. JACOB S.1FFORD, and Counsellor, at Law. CE5ESAL rcSLKA'CE AND LAND AGENT. And Notary Public 3TEBEASKA CITY, ST. T. TTTTLL attead prossptly to all buioe en trailed te kis care, ia Jiebraska Territory a&d West-r- e lwa, rlclS-l- y E. S. ATTORNEY AT LAW, A 1CHI1, SICnilD05 CO. !T. T. - Tli practice is tie ereral Cjcrt of the id Judicial JiTct, and attend ta:l matters cotiaecsd with the rta. WM McLla. ,E1 . Netraka City, win mum ia tbe prucst U sr pxftaBt SuU. la, 'tvu-- u n CITY OF BEOWNVILLE, NEMAHA COUNTY, N. THURSDAY, APRIL iLEa. OATS HEM AH A LAMD AGE! IT, SITIITYOR & XOTARY F17BL1C, WV.l select Usdi, inTet:rte titles pay Uses, Ac., ;UiCT in Kansas or brsk ; bur, teil, and enter lands oa cimmisunn; tnet in town prooenf , buy or ell tbe udk. and will i"irt Bae on hauS correct flats of tuwat,lri, counties. fcwiaf all lawU sub- ject to entry, and where den red will ruraiah paruea Lit-i- ar in tne stale with tLe ume. Beinf the oldest settler In the county wilt la all cases be able to five full and reliable informatu. A. L. Coate, either at BrownriUeor Xeraaha City. Kera..ka territory. r-f- L. McGARY, 4TTQRDEY AT W, AND SOLICITOR I.Y CH.l.YCERY. Browimlle, Nebraska. TTi'.l practice ia tne Cor'.t ofKebra&ka,an4 Korth M Ki&aoBri. EEFEREXCES. MefT. Crow, JfcCreary &. Co.; Ilm. JimmM. Hofhs, Hub. Jfco K. Stieply, Bon. JametCraic, Bun. Siloa WaudsuB. J wire A. A. Bra t'ord, S. F. Nockoll. Kf--q , Ct. Vnit, Mo. Do De St. Ho. Do Xebraska K. Do T. H. M. ATKINSON, and Land lAXN" STREET, N. T., Ti I! attend promptly to the selection and loca- tion el Government lands in the Xemaha lanl dis- trict: surveying town sites, and subdividing lands; drafting plats, and all other banners of a Gener- al Surveyor. He wi'.l locate warrants on time for distant dealers: file declaratory statetenients of in- tention to pre-em- pt ; make out papers; and always on hand to look cut claims fur actual set- tlers. EEFEI! TO W.TV. Fancer. M. D, ew Tork City, Sewal A Withiagton, Boston. Mws. Rev. T. W. IT .we, l'aUckala Ohio, Col.W. E. Atkinson. emerge H.Nixrn. Kesis'.er Land Of5ee. Brown ville, LnV,ban;h A Carson, Bankers, Brownville, N. T. K. W. Furnas, " J. B.B.THOMPSON Real Etfat & General Collecting Agents, B SOWN VILLE, 2T. T- - A?ents for Iowa Ins. Co., Oskaloosa, ALL busiie ensrseJ to our care will meet with prompt anemiun and warranted correct. Paper prepar- ed for persona wit-tufi- to pre-eD- pt, Declaratory state- ment maoe out, etc., e'e. J3Omce on First street, north of I. T. "Wlrte k SEFERKENCES : J. W. Grimes, Iowa T. L. Price do Hit-sour- i JtUf'.iB A Kiie do do O. 5. kavreitCo., G'.enwood. Inwa G. Cuuncjl B.uff, Iowa Apri! 8. n.' v2n41-l- y A. D. KIRK, Attorncr at Land .tsreat and Notary Public. .irchtr, Richardson Co., .V. T. WIU practice in the Courts of Xebrafka,assitei by Harding and Bennett, Nebraska City. W. P. ATTORNEY AT LAW. LOT AND LAND AGENT, Archer, Richarason lonmy, y. 1. HaBDIG. O. C. KIJtBOrGH . F. TOOMEB. & CO,, ILATS, CAPS k STRAW GOODS, Xo 49 Main street, bet. Olire ana irme, ST. LOUIS, MO. rarticulsr attention paid to manufactnriag our Cnert Mole Hats. REAL ESTATE AGENCY. bEOKGE CLATE3. w- - LEE. Clayoa cite Loo. Real Estate and General Agency, OMAHA CITY. K. T. REFER TO James Wricht. Broker, XewTcrk, Wm. A. Woodward. Esq. Hon. K. Wood, Ex-Go- t. of Ohio, CleTeland, Wicks. Otic and Brownell,Bai.kers, " AlcottA Ilorton, ' Col. Robert Carey bell, St. Lonts, James Kidrwar. E?q. " " Crawforn and ackett, Chicago. Omaha CitT.Anc.30.1555. t1b13-1- j r. BKSXETT, 8. MORTON, H.H.BaKPISG BEN NET, MORTON ATTORNEYS HARDING, LAW, Xtbraska City, .V. T., hnd GltnvooJ, Ia ILL ia all the C Iowa. I'artk &, arts of Land W artants.and ol debts. practice Western eouectica r.EFEHEN TT Twi Ca. Detixit. Morton, " f Jartepk, City, city Co.I AT Nebraska and cbtainir- -, locating JnlinsD. CE: Michigan; Got. Joel A. Mattesn, Springnc'd, III Got. J. W. Grimes, Iowa City, Iowa; B. P. FiErel. St. Louis.Mo.: Hon. Daniel O. P. A. Sedr-wich- 'A Walker. Chicago. LI: Green, Weare A Benton, Council EluCs.Io JEFTEXSGS T. CASi.PT, J MaKTlS Council Blu?s,Icwa. EIPEX.l wrilTS. V JityXT) J a s. . TE?T. J AS. J CASSADV, TEST, RIDEN & CO., (Successors to Biden 4 White.) LAND AGENTS. SEBKASKA CITT, 5. T. made arrangement by which we will accurate copies of all the Townships embraced in the Eastera portion cf Nebraska, we are now prepared to o2r our services to the Scvatters of .Ytbraska Territory." In rcling Declaratory Statements of Inten- tion to Pre-em- pt. Securing Pre-emptio- Locating Land Warrant- - AND ENTERING LAND. Land TTarrant Bought and Sold. LAND ON TIME. Particular attention paid te Boying and Selling Property on commission: Also, to making Collections and forwarding remittances to ary part of the Union. Blanks of all kinds alwars on hand. REFERENCES. Hon. A. A.Bradford, Nebraska City. 8. F. Nuckolls, Mesa. Dolman A West, St. Jope, VJ- - A. Keller. Washington City Tbnma Lumpkin, " 23,155. t!-- b JAMES W. GIBSON, BLACKSMITH Second Street,between Main Nebraska, f 29,11858. Miscellaneons. Congress Tliirtj Tears Ago. 'Gen. Sam Houston is said to be only member of the present CongTess, who was also a member thirty-fir- e years ago, when Edward Ererett formed one of the three hundred constituting; that body." There are some slight inaccuracies in that statement (say the --A", O. Pitxrpint) although not material. The Congress, in which Geneml Houston and Mr. Everett were members together, was that of 1825 -'- 27, more than thirty years ago, but not thiny-fir- e ; and the whole number of members was 231, and net 300. It is of that Congress that Gen. Houston was the only member who is a member of this Congress. But he is far from being the only surviving member, and there is at least one member of this Congress tvho was in Congress long previous to 1S25. Mr. Crittenden, the venerable Senator from Kentucky, was in the Senate in 1S17, more than forty years ago. Hous- ton left Congress in 1827, and did not come back till 1S46, having only been out of Congress, for the most part out I of the Union, brought back, if all accounts of his ante-annexati- coquetry with England be true, rather agaicst his wilL That Congress contained a great many men who have since acquired great rep utations, and occupied the highest posi- tions in the country. Four of its mem- bers, Van Buren, Harrison, Polk, and Buchanan, have since been elected Presi- dent. Two Richard M. Johnson and Wm. R. Kicrr have been elected Vice-- Presidents. The presiding officer of the senate was John C. Calhoun, then in the zenith of his popularity and the highest vigor of his intellect. The eccentric Ran dolph occupied the seat which, at the close of the term, was filled by John Ty- ler, afterwards President. Daniel Web ster was in the House, and Hush L. White in the Senate men whom large masses of devoted friends uuavailingly strove to elect to the Presidency. Benton, then a giant among orators and statesmen was in the Senate; so was Hayne, of South Carolina, who died so young, and so deep ly lamented ; Forsyth, who never had a superior as a debater in the Senate, after wards Secretary of State and minister to Spam; Louis McLane, who successively became becretaxy of State and of the Treasury, and minister to England; Levi Woodbury, afterwards Secretary of the Navy, of the Treasury, and Justice of the supreme Court of the United States In the House, besides McDuffie and Hamilton, and Philip P. Barbour men wno nave lett great reputations uncon neciea wi;n putnc stations mere were Edward Livingston of Louisiana, Secre tary of State and minister to France; W L. Kives, or lrgmia, also minister to France; Andrew Stevenson, of Virrinia .. v - 1 1 . T minister to rngianu; ana, moucrli we name mm last, not tne least conspicuous there, Mr. Everett himself, whose name had already become widely known for ripe scolarship, and who became, succes w - - , . tail, uuui tut; of State It was a remarkable body which inclu- ded these men, Very few of the mem- bers survive, and of the whole list, Pres- ident Buchanan is the only one nsw in public life, excepting General Houston. Mr. Bjchanan was, however, a man of mark then. Gen. Houston was only known for some eccentricities, which soon after made him notorious, if not famous; and his titles to distinction, what- ever they are, tvere earned on another field than in the councils or service of the United States. In looking over the list of members of this Congress, -- as published in .Yiles' Register of December, 1825, we notice a curious circumstance. The list contains the full names of every member cf the House of but one. There a new member from Tennes- - laiar attention paid u see, whose chistian name could not be D. Peter Jaae acd N. T. the not but was found out by the compiler; and so he put him down thus : Polk. Twenty years afterwards, this obscure gentleman, of whose identity there was so much ques tion in 1925, was elected President of the United Stales. Rewarded. We clip the following story from the Bucyrus (Ohio) Journal. Of course we do not know who this modern Jacob mav be: We picked up a Pittsburch paper the other day, and saw therein the marriage of a couple that formerly resided in this lace. There are many marnases in other towns of people who have once liv- ed in Bucyrus, and we do not pretend to law B - record them at all, but m mis instance there is an incident of too uncommon a nature to be passed over. It is as Twelve years ago the bride was a young lady of twenty; the daughter of a wealthy merchant in asnington, renn. In her father's employ was a young man named Robert , who, the youn? lady being bewitchingly beautiful, as in duty bound, feu desperately in love with her. She reciprocated the attachment an! they were betrothed. the young lady's father entered his protest against this pleasant arrangement, and according- ly the young people put off the happy day indefinitely. About a year afterwards she received a most tempting proposal, which, urged by her father, she accepted and, to the eternal despair of poor Robert, bridegroom ! elapsed when a kick from a ride us horse killed him. Robert consoled the widow, and determined at the expiration of a year or so to marry her. He had too much respect for her to press his suit im- mediately, and did not for fifteen months, when he proposed. To his horror she informed him that she was already enga- ged, and that in three months more her second marriage was to be consummated. Two years passed. In the meantime the widow and her husband moved to Syra- cuse, N. Y., and Robert pciiessed by some strange hallucination followed them. That season the cholera swept that city, and among its victims was the second hus band. Robert allowed a year to pass, and was on the point of urging his claims, when he received an invitation to her wedding. She was to be married to her : husband's partner. Robert remon strated. The lady assured him that her present step was rot one of love, but purely of necessity. The partnership affairs of her late lamented were in such state that settlement was impossible, and to save immense losses she had deter mined upjn marrying the surviving part- ner. She assured him alio that her sen timents towards him were unchanged, and that should she ever become a widow again, she would give him the preference She was married and in a short time re moved with her third husband to Detroit, Mich. But a fatality seemed to pursue ner. Herself anl nusbana were on board of a steamer that was wrecked near Buffalo some years since. The hus band perished and she escaped only through the superhuman eiertions of a friend who happened to be on board. The friend was ycunsr, unmarried, and his gallantry inspired such sentiments in the breast of the widow, that she married him before Robert had time to claim her When he learned the state of affairs, he was somewhat indignant, but she toll him the circumstances and managed to satisfy him with the promise that if she ever be came widowed again, she would most po sitively marry him. The lady with her fourth husband settled on a farm near Bacyrus, while Robert removed to Mans- field that he might be near her. In the course of a year, they removed to Pitts burgh, where the husband went into raer cantile business on Liberty street resid m?, however, m Alleghany city. Robert followed them, and finding employment determined to watch the chances closely, One day he was passing the store of Mr. , when he saw a terrible commotion Rushing in he saw Mr. , a mangled corpse upon the floor. A cast of rice which was being hoisted had fallen and killed him instantly. He inquired if any one had been sent to acquaint, his wife of the accident. Yes the first clerk had just started. Looking once more at pocr Mr. , to make sure that he was per- fectly dead, Robert started for Allegheny as fast as his legs could carry him. The first clerk was only a trifle ahead of him, and Robert knowing the importance of being in time, from past experience, and fearing that the clerk had designs upon the widow, ran like an Indian. Side by ft A fk Vv M n .mtil Vn wmiA V r A wVw 4 t- - 1 i ic uicy ury icatucu ged to stop to make change, while Robert who paid toll by the year, passed without delay, He reached the house, told the heart-rendin- g news and obtained a solemn pledge from the widow before the clerk arrived. This time she was true to her promise, and after a year had passed they were married. As all her husbands died wealthy. Robert is very comfortably fixed. His history shows what perseverance will accompli A Thief Claiming to be Honorable. On the nieht of the 17lh ult.,the office of the Mill of Andrew Lincoln in Pen-fiel- d, was burglariously entered, the desk broken upon and robbed cf a wallet, con taining a number of papers, and between four and five dollars in cash. The notes amounted to some four or five thousand dollars, and Mr. Lincoln was anxious to ol tain them, although they might be o no use to any other person. Yesterday a package came to ihe ad dress of Mr. Lincoln, at Penfield Post Office, containing a part of these notes and a letter from the thief, of which the which the following is a verbatim copy March 2d, 1S5& Injured Sir I take the first opportunity wright- - ing to you and sending you your papers which are of no value to me ; Having been at work on the Canal at Fairport until the 12th inst, with poor pay I determined to Quit- - Seeing the Shape of affairs in your house I thot I Might make a htwl. had Some trouble to get in but when there I had more in getting in the desk. I took out the chink with the help of your chisel which I thank you for very much. Your Dog made such a noise that I could not examine the contence cf the wallet. I took the coat because I thought it would be handy in my travels. This Mr. Lin- coln is what we call honoT amcng thieves. I would advise you to get rid of that dog before I come again, then I will not take any valuless papers. Fde keep my mill windows locked tho if I wer you. no more until next July. OSE OFIHE,TOW55E5DCA5C. An article in an exchange paper, an nouncing the decease of a person, says "His remains were committed to that bourne whence no traveler returns, atten ded by his friends." was married. But atas for the happy I He who is about to marry should con- - Scarcely three moans had j siderhow it is with his neighbor. The Red Petticoat. ' A mess Song Tune, Ytnttt DoodU. Yankee Doodle has they aay. A tact for imitation ) Sre how eagerl;- - he takes To foreign innovation. We make a wonderful ado Abont oar independence, And yet to fore: fa shrines of taste We dance a strict attendance. v A laglaa overcoat we wear - 2to folly conld be bigger ' - A Htirt cpon a pole would est About as'neat a Cgiie. ' ' Etgenie hoop, the Imperial form. The Tankee Ladies follow; Attd ia immensity of spread They whip the Empress hollow. The latest novelty that comes "Was born across tht channel; The little Queen, to please the ScotU Has kilted the re4 flannel. And presto ! to our happy shore The wondrous tidings passes . And Broadway's pave Is checkered o'er frith bonnieHieland lasses. Once in a way why can't e have A truly Tankee notion ? Nor such profound allegiance pay To fashions 'cross the ocean f 'What could be finer now than this, (and mark ye too bow dashing !) A petticoat red, white and blue, With aiiver stars al 1 flashing ? Then hang the Tankee colors out (And Scottish skirts confound 'em,) Our girls shall take tbe world by storm, With the stars and stripes around 'em. Fatal Rencontre. One of the bloodiest and most desperate encounters ever recorded, even in the annals of Kentucky, took place in Spring' field, Washington county, between Ben. Palmer and . Mack Booker. The for mer was instantly killed, and the latter is not expected to survive his wounds. There had been some ill feeling between the two arising from the election of Boo- ker to the command of a company that had been raised in that county to go to Ltah. The particulars of the desperate afl ray are these: The parties met in the bar room of a tavern in Springfield, and an altercation instantly ensued, one or the other first using his fists. Each then drew a revolver and fired four shots apiece in rapid succession, three of Palmer's hit- ting Booker one in the left hand, a sec- ond in his leg, a third in the left breast. The first shot fired by Booker struck Pal- mer in the groin, penetrating the blad der a mortal wound. He was also wounded in the leg. After exhausting ma uuiitru l'iiiui all his strength 01 thinking himself mortally wounded, seiz ed the other with his left hand the coat collar, and throwing away his pistol, drew a bowie knife and stabbed the un fortunate Palmer nine times in the breast and body. The latter fell dead in his tracks, his body streaming blood at every pore. Booker may possibly survive his wounds, it is thought the shot in the breast will prove fatal. Booker is the son of JudrePaul Book er, tor many years Lnstnct Judge in the State. Palmer is the son of the Hon. R. C. Palmer, or from Wash-ingtc- n county, and a grand son of the late Ben. Hardin, of Beardstown. Louisville Courier, 5th. A Greek lawyer recently moved, in the Supreme Court at Alliens, for the rever sal of the sentence agiinst Socrates. This coin? back a little more than tveenfy-tw- o centuries. The Chicago Press, of the we tice, has this item: runners ana tricks played, support and magnificent in vor in - ill papers steaas." rl T - Ay Ay Ay Ay AllT, NEWS, FUKNAS rrciioryHoailey RQWXVII.LE. F.BeyeBrirpa.iiB-i'- ". JOB jlFT a2eoMrei,Ernie,"r CARDS UILUIIER WHEELER, ArcMtect Builder. Urownrlllo, Whyte GOODS, Qaeensware, rurnlturo, BROWXVILLE, Attorney &n"fiteri;,lSS6. DUNDY, T., DANIEL Surveyor Agent, BROWNVILLE, D.N.ci Law, LOAN, HARDING, KIMBOUGH Mortcn.Toledo.Ohio; SarrT.Be!levue,Sebraka: HAyLNG ENTERED BEOWNVILLE, Representatives, Perseyerance Unfortunately, Farm and Garden. From the Country "Cot any Ashes ?w What to do with inem. "Got any ashes?" asked an gatherer of the dust, calling out from the "Yes, a hundred bushels or so," an swered the farmer. Down iumped the ''ash-man- ," and was about to open the gate when he was told "Hold on!" "Hold on ! .why, I want a lead of your ashes." But they are fortaU my friend ; WW 11 w we snail need ail we nave lor use ai home." Wondering what one min or woman, rather could want a hundred bushels of ashes, the "pedler" went grumbling on. Farmer, let him go ! If you got "any ashes," keep them, and use them at home as a manure for your farm. Let us give you some authorities in regard to their value. Ashes have been employed as a ferti lizer of the soil from a very early age. Cato, a Roman writer upon agriculture, recommended the use of wood-ashe- s as a manure, and the ancient Jews, Rcman3, and Britons, burned over their stubbles preparatory to another crop. In modern times they continued to be employed, but not as largely as their value com mand, were it better understood and ap- preciated by the farmer. Ashes are said by Browne, to "render clayey soils mellow, and to give consisten- cy to those which are light, rather suiting moist than dry soils, but it is necessary that the former should be well drained." "From four to six bushels per acre," ac- cording to Johnston, -- 'may be applied to thin, almost sterile soils, with good ef- fect, quantities would be too ex- hausting, unless the soil be naturally rich in vegetable matter, or mixed from year to year with a sufficient quantity barn- yard manure." Ashes are employed in Great Britain a3 a manure for root crops, and are used for this purpose in connection with bone dust, and drilled in with the seed. Ac- cording to Johnston as much as fifteen bushels of each are app-ie- d to an acre, and often with success. Turnips, carrots, and potatoes, seem equally ben efitted by ashes. "They may be used with advantage almost every class of crops," says Browne, "but especially for grass, gram, and Indian corn, though k: ri ui.i v:, :.w accoruintr to oprensrei, -- tne unnieumie si-ui- a, laiiuci 1.13 wnui , e. e i. , a-a- inst Booker, who, ?ent aes 13 IDOsJ Ppuoie by though is 16th, no profit, wou.d great for upon leguminous such as clover, peas, beans, &.c." Upon red clover, "the effect be certain if previously mixed with one-four- th their of gypsum. The use of ashes as a manure for corn is becoming quite reneral in this section of the country they are applied as a hill-dressi- nT immediatelv after the first hoeing, at the rate of two table-spoonfu- ls per hill, or about two per acre. They are found useful, applied at the same time, to potatoes, to beans, and to almost every hoed crop. We have used them in these ways and upon grass land, to the benefit of the crops and the perma- nent amelioration of the soil, and have no doubt but that it will be far more profit able to any farmer to 'use them at home, than to sell them for the pittance gener- ally offered 8 to 10 cents bushel "in trade equal to perhaps one-ha- lf that amount, nett cash. A. tbe Country Gentleman. Profits of Apple Culture. Loomi5, of Byron, Genesee N The Illinois Central Railroad Company Y., says that a tree of the Baldwin apple. yesterday received the largest passengers standing on the ground of his brother, of the season in the shape of a brace of produced list year twelve barrels (besides elephants, shipped at Cairo. The lllus-Jfo- ur or five bushels cf windfals,) that inous strangers kept tneir trunk constant- - sold iTZXo harm, ihe year s ly before their eyes, as they landed at the product of this tree consequently depot, having doubtless heard of the hotel quite equal to an acre of wheat in the they have co., for per was 82 net A. Preble, of Lincoln "county, Maine, All suicides are childish, but here is mr.L- - th frlWinr estimate, whirh will the most youthful we have heard of : l r,0,rif mrrctirT'an tmrd nn!c morions. James B. Darvin, a boy only nine years LiWinrr frr nmp rariptip in nrirW or age, commmea suicide in Virginia a One hundred trees planted on an acre of .uaJ 3 "".'w uioiutr mreai. iand wiU cost on an average 825. The eutu to correct mm. 1 1, t,,u w t,. ; f lt, while the trpes are rominT intn hparinT The Hartford Courier has added an- - About eTnen.le.1 in Are nnrl lnbor nouncements of birth to those of mam. ih rrma ti-r- . f iha I VtV'J tUntU ilVUl AA UVBf ages and deaths in its column. After will brimr them intn a V.pnrinrr state - giving a birth in Waterbury, &,c, jt also When an acre of trees is in itsprime, " add this announcement: u-i- ll arpraw drnkcVai, ,.m In Prospect, March Is:, a daughter to vided the land is kern rich nA We ,md Gecre L. Sic per, the trees well To those who are not aware cf the fact 66 cents per busheL The .mrr.l:, r.r,lp that there is a town called Prospect, near are valuable for all kinds of stock, partic-Hartfor- d, the above must have a funny ularly winter store hegs. Sweet apples look. are worth about as much as nntatne The Arrrirnlfririct or, . a or Bashford, of Wisconsin, Upntleman within our lrnnwlfX states that he was offered S150.000 to smaU orchard on the Hudson river, of less approve of the first bill reported for dis-- seren acres produces from morning me lanus gramru oy congress goOO to 8700 worth of apples annually, in aid of the Railroads of that State. Th; U net one ver of nlemir nnrl h. - -- j -.- w- r- - er or two of famine, is a regular. A line of the foreign news is, that "the steady, average yield. All this is secur- - factdties of the King of Prussia are de- - ed by the simplest process, viz : good ma- chining As the old King never najement. had any faculties to spare, he must be S. B. Parson, in hU rerent address be- - get-in- g in a bad way. fore the New Haven Horticultural So states a miles of Hon. Rufus Choate, of Massachusetts, his residence, there is an of is one of those who uncompromisingly about 20 acres, producing: about 82,000 a Douglas Walker. You will remember his appeal fa of Mr. Buchanan in 1S56. Aram; the novelties advertised the w ! are "single ana married oea- - Gentleman. itinerant road-sid- e. not of larger of plants, more weight bushels per From ftas American w but daily. ciety, that "within few orchard year, the vegetables between the trees paying the cost of cultivation." Hill Pennel cf Dirby, Pa.', sold in 1S56, 8225 worth of early apples frcm half an acre. Richard J. Hand of Men-do- n, N. Y., sold in 1S35, 8410 worth of Roxbury Russet and Northern Spy apples NO. 44. from one acre of orchard. HughJIatch of Camden, N. J., obtained from four trees of the Tewsbury Blush, 110 bushels of apples, or 35 bushels from each tree. Examples almost beyond number rnay be given, where single trees have yielded from So to S10 u year in fruit, and miny instances wheTe S'20 or S30 have been obtained. An acre cf such trees would be equal to any of the preceding instances. ' If one tree of the Rhode Island Green- ing will afford 40 bushels of fruit,, at a quarter of a tkllir per bushel, which has . often occurred, 40 such trees cn an icre would yield a crop worih S4C0. Bat tak- ing one quarter of this amount as a low average for all seasons, and with imper- fect cultivation, 8100 would still be equal to the interest cf 81,500 per acre. New, this estimate is based upon the price of good winter apples for the past 30 year in our most productive districts. Let a similar circulation be made with fruits rarer and of a more delicious character. Apricots and the finer varieties of the plum are often sold for three tosix dol- lars per bushel, the best early peaches from one to four dollars, andpearsfrom hardy and productive trees for an equal amount. Of the three former kinds, two to five bushels, with a good management is a frequent crop, and on large trees, five times this quantity. An acquain- tance received SS for a crop grown on two fine young cherry trees, and 8- -4 from tour young peach trees of only b years years old from the bud. The farmer. then, who sets out twenty acres of good orchards, and takes care of them, may expect at no very remote period of hi life to receive from one to two thousand dollars a year, which is quite a "good in- come, and the farm can be worked as well as if the trees were not planted on it. An orchard is a capital which pays yearly dividends that are better to be counted upon than our American railway stocks, which a person holding cne day may count his thousands of shares, and the next day' find them all vanished, as Aladdin's did, in fairy tale, in a single night. He can then sleep without anxie- ty as the goldenshower comes from above and drop at his feet, and as the reasons roll, so his rewards increase. Hints Tor the Season. Borders you know want spading. It turns under weeds and rubbish, loosens the soil generally, andTthus gives the root3 a chance to ramify and seek fresh food. Without this annual spading (or forking,) besides depriving the shrubs and flowers of much benefit, will cause you no end of trouble to keep down the tiresome weeds. In such a case you will find to your sorrow, that "all weeds grow apace," and are difficult of eradication. On the contrary, spade or fork over the soil, leaving it moderately rough at first; level down with a rake as soon as the ve- getation begins to put forth, and just draw your hoe occasionally through dur ing summer, and the weeds do not get the first chance to grow. Do you want to increase the stock of your flowering shrubs and plants ? If so it must be done at the same time. Those little shocts or suckers round about the old Lilacs, Snowball trees, and other shrubs. are precisely the pieces required, and are doing injury to the old plants. Take them up with a spade, and set in your garden in rows two feet apart or so, and six inches in the rows; or if that docs net suit, just plant them here and there in among the other shrubery. Seme kinds do not sucker or but little; a few of these may be tried as cutting?, put them ino sandy soil, preparing them about six or nine inches in length, cutting the bottom under a joint; in fact quite similar to the way you would set gooseberry cr currant cuttings. Supposing- - they would not root this way kindly, you will have to layer the old plant, which consists in nothing more than taking down a shoot near to the ground, and burying with a little soil; it will require an oblique cut to form a "tongue" to root freely. If you want to try your hand in raising new kinds, you must next year save seed from any pro- mising flower, sow it, and the result may be "something new." Do not forget to occasionally divide old large stumps cf perennial flowers. In doing so however give them a fair chance that is, do not take your spade and just chop off its sides, leaving it precisely in its original position, barring the outside either give it fresh soil altogether, or re- move it to a fresh spot. This will infuse new vigor into iL The borders may be full of bulbs, and if so, do not tread upon them, or cut then through; rather wait for their appeara.wi above ground. Every thing of this scrt should have sticks stuck in to mark tho spot. If there is any irregular growth about the shrubs, take a knife and jrar.i such back, but let not your knife fcrra the graceful into the hideous. See that the plcwboy washes ihe breasts of the horses wiih cold water every night after work, and it is not a lA plan to slip off the collar at coca ar.d rlean it, at the same time wash the 1. re a si cf the horse, remembering to dry it before putting on the collar again, else better leave it alone until night-- New teach t?? boys to clean and put up their tools wh-- i u they are through work. Tbe boys a rA the tools will li;t longer for it. Siding is an act of faith. to Ificg its reward. It is

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Is

TO OF

II.

If

iUTfDEVOTED SCIENCE, AGRICULTURE, COMMERCE, POLITICS, GENERAL INTELLIGENCE AND THE INTERESTS NEBRASKA.

VOL.

Nebraska duuettiscr.rrtLIJH EVEKT THCtSDAT BT

& LANGDON,&. Muir's Building,

(Corner of Mala ad First Streets.)

IJ N T.

- - fMJ.4 i the end of months,

M 3,co -

Cab of 1 J or m f will be farciihel at S1.S0 per

ubub. prorided the caa accompanies the order,But 6'vliCT" iM- -

F.ATES OF ADVERTISING:-- are f U I'; ne insertion,

Each add.tiaaal iBserticn,Use square, cne nv.'-.- o.

dree mottLs," s;l inoa:tis,

a one year,tene Cards of six Lcei or less, cne year,VotCoiaBin one year,Tjae-aa- lf CBmn, neyeir,- fourth "

eirtUi" CoiBtBtt, tlX BJOBthS,

half Column, fix moctLt,IVurh "

fc - "VrV." Wtrnn three niont&j,

kalf Column, three m;ntbi,foanV -;Sth m m u

J1.C0o.:o

4.036.09

i:,co5.00

CO.OO

55.0020.0016,00

20.0010.00

8.0020.0013.0010.006.00

aBBoswieg- - ranlidate for oSce (i adTacee,) 5.00

Caia tB ad ran-- e wi'.l bereqcireJ ff-- r all adertie- -

fetaU eirejt where artnal rejpor.Mbility ii known.Tea per eett far each chaaje wiU bea4ied to the

1W1 rate.Kb adreniement wir beeotuidered by the year,

taleat ipeeified on the njacBenpt, or preTiouslyarwed apoa between the parties.

AderU.nieBU n- -t nsarksl on theory for a!&4 BBBtber of inrti ns, will be eonUBued nntilrered octand cbarp-- d aoordirp'yAraieru.ens?nt fro!B ?trar.rortranient pr-ann- a

La ( nlA in adranr.Tbe priri of yearly wi,i oe eonan-- indjed.y to their own"bttiBe:and all adrertie-Btt- u

Dot thereto, to be paid for ex-

tra.Tear'y airert'ieri tare the priTDce of ehaBjiBg

Iheir a4rertien3f cti qnarterly.A'J leaded charged doable the

Vtc rate.Adrervaemsr.t? on the iBid exelttsirely wul be

taved extra.

BOOK AND rAIJCTPRINTING!

2ooo

1 r I

n

. -- . . i

.

to

o

o

Baring added to tie Adrert'.JCf 02?e Card andJ Prwawi.New Type of the latest f?y!e, liiki of

ir.era7f'r, Enyelopes, Ae.; weart bow prepared to exernse Job Work of every tio

ia a etyle a?urpmed by aey other oEeethe I sited Mate.Partiralar at urn lion will be pren to order fromi.ftaw ia haria; tbeia prorortly attended to.Tae Prorrieinrs harin' had an extensiTe exr-riaar- a,

wUl pire their persoaal attention to thisaraaca f banners and Kope, in their eniearor torinii, bota in the excellence of their work, andnaaoaaUe charges to reeeire a share of the publicpUrmaja.

BUSINESS3IISS MARY TURNER,

AIID DRESS MAKER.Xaia Street, cae door abore Carsons Bank.

BROWN VI LLE, N. T.Lonruit and Trimmings alvays on hand.

C. W.and

Trxr-- r 22?. rzLZV. l--z rrrxs 22.T.

U. C. JOHNSON,ATTORNEY AT LAW,

SOUCITOR IN CHANCERY

Real Kstatc Acnt,EEO'SVN VILLE, N. T.

TIoB.Wm.JessBp, Montrose, Fa.- - -B. Bentiv,Joha C. JiiUer. Chicago, Til.

W. t. MeAUister, - - --

Charles - " "F. Fowler,' R. W. Furnas, Browuvilte, X. T.

n r ike. "Kay 7. 155.

I. T. & Co.,WgDUUU 19 BET AIL DEaLEKS IX

DRY GROCERIESHardware,

tovosi.Country Produce,

N. T.

J. HART & SON

SADDLE & HARUESS

OrefW. Eolt County, Missouri.V ioiirtaa t'toi hand all dejcrir tiou of Harness,

Saddle, Bridles. Ac, A.S. E. EveryBrticieiBOBrshopismaBufactBred

T rselresiaad warranted to fire satif fac tioa.

JACOB S.1FFORD,

and Counsellor, at Law.CE5ESAL rcSLKA'CE AND LAND AGENT.

And Notary Public3TEBEASKA CITY, ST. T.

TTTTLL attead prossptly to all buioe en trailedte kis care, ia Jiebraska Territory a&d West-r- e

lwa,rlclS-l- y

E. S.ATTORNEY AT LAW,

A 1CHI1, SICnilD05 CO. !T. T.- Tli practice is tie ereral Cjcrt of the id JudicialJiTct, and attend ta:l matters cotiaecsd with therta. WM McLla. ,E1 . Netraka City,win mum ia tbe prucst U sr pxftaBt SuU.

la, 'tvu-- u

n

CITY OF BEOWNVILLE, NEMAHA COUNTY, N. THURSDAY, APRIL

iLEa. OATSHEM AH A LAMD AGE! IT,

SITIITYOR & XOTARY F17BL1C,WV.l select Usdi, inTet:rte titles pay Uses, Ac.,

;UiCT in Kansas or brsk ; bur, teil, and enterlands oa cimmisunn; tnet in town prooenf , buy orell tbe udk. and will i"irt Bae on hauS correct

flats of tuwat,lri, counties. fcwiaf all lawU sub-ject to entry, and where den red will ruraiah paruea Lit-i- ar

in tne stale with tLe ume.Beinf the oldest settler In the county wilt la all

cases be able to five full and reliable informatu.A. L. Coate, either at BrownriUeor Xeraaha

City. Kera..ka territory. r-f-

L. McGARY,4TTQRDEY AT W,

ANDSOLICITOR I.Y CH.l.YCERY.

Browimlle, Nebraska.TTi'.l practice ia tne Cor'.t ofKebra&ka,an4 KorthM Ki&aoBri.

EEFEREXCES.MefT. Crow, JfcCreary &. Co.;

Ilm. JimmM. Hofhs,Hub. Jfco K. Stieply,Bon. JametCraic,Bun. Siloa WaudsuB.J wire A. A. Bra t'ord,S. F. Nockoll. Kf--q ,

Ct. Vnit, Mo.DoDe

St. Ho.Do

Xebraska K.Do

T.

H. M. ATKINSON,and Land

lAXN" STREET,N. T.,

Ti I ! attend promptly to the selection and loca-

tion el Government lands in the Xemaha lanl dis-

trict: surveying town sites, and subdividing lands;drafting plats, and all other banners of a Gener-al Surveyor. He wi'.l locate warrants on time fordistant dealers: file declaratory statetenients of in-

tention to pre-em- pt ; make out papers;and always on hand to look cut claims fur actual set-

tlers.EEFEI! TO

W.TV. Fancer. M. D, ew Tork City,Sewal A Withiagton, Boston. Mws.Rev. T. W. IT .we, l'aUckala Ohio,Col.W. E. Atkinson.emerge H.Nixrn. Kesis'.er Land Of5ee. Brown ville,LnV,ban;h A Carson, Bankers, Brownville, N. T.K. W. Furnas, "

J. B.B.THOMPSONReal Etfat & General Collecting Agents,

B SOWN VILLE, 2T. T- -

A?ents for Iowa Ins. Co., Oskaloosa,ALL busiie ensrseJ to our care will meet with

prompt anemiun and warranted correct. Paper prepar-

ed for persona wit-tufi- to pre-eD- pt, Declaratory state-ment maoe out, etc., e'e.J3Omce on First street, north of I. T. "Wlrte k

SEFERKENCES :

J. W. Grimes, IowaT. L. Price do Hit-sour- i

JtUf'.iB A Kiie do doO. 5. kavreitCo., G'.enwood. InwaG. Cuuncjl B.uff, Iowa

Apri! 8. n.' v2n41-l- y

A. D. KIRK,Attorncr at

Land .tsreat and Notary Public..irchtr, Richardson Co., .V. T.

WIU practice in the Courts of Xebrafka,assiteiby Harding and Bennett, Nebraska City.

W. P.ATTORNEY AT LAW.

LOT AND LAND AGENT,Archer, Richarason lonmy, y. 1.

HaBDIG. O. C. KIJtBOrGH . F. TOOMEB.

& CO,,

ILATS, CAPS k STRAW GOODS,Xo 49 Main street, bet. Olire ana irme,

ST. LOUIS, MO.rarticulsr attention paid to manufactnriag our

Cnert Mole Hats.

REAL ESTATE AGENCY.bEOKGE CLATE3. w- - LEE.

Clayoa cite Loo.Real Estate and General Agency,

OMAHA CITY. K. T.REFER TO

James Wricht. Broker, XewTcrk,Wm. A. Woodward. Esq.Hon. K. Wood, Ex-Go- t. of Ohio, CleTeland,Wicks. Otic and Brownell,Bai.kers, "AlcottA Ilorton, 'Col. Robert Carey bell, St. Lonts,James Kidrwar. E?q. " "

Crawforn and ackett, Chicago.Omaha CitT.Anc.30.1555. t1b13-1- j

r. BKSXETT, 8. MORTON, H.H.BaKPISG

BEN NET, MORTONATTORNEYS

HARDING,LAW,

Xtbraska City, .V. T., hnd GltnvooJ, IaILL ia all the C

Iowa. I'artk

&,

arts of

Land W artants.and oldebts.

practiceWestern

eouectica

r.EFEHENTT Twi Ca. Detixit.

Morton, " f

Jartepk,

City,

city

Co.I

AT

Nebraska and

cbtainir- -, locating

JnlinsD.

CE:Michigan;

Got. Joel A. Mattesn, Springnc'd, IIIGot. J. W. Grimes, Iowa City, Iowa;B. P. FiErel. St. Louis.Mo.:Hon. Daniel O.P. A.Sedr-wich- 'A Walker. Chicago. LI:Green, Weare A Benton, Council EluCs.Io

JEFTEXSGS T. CASi.PT, J MaKTlS

Council Blu?s,Icwa.

EIPEX.lwrilTS. V

JityXT)J a s. . TE?T. J AS.J

CASSADV, TEST, RIDEN & CO.,(Successors to Biden 4 White.)

LAND AGENTS.SEBKASKA CITT, 5. T.

made arrangement by which we willaccurate copies of all the Townships

embraced in the Eastera portion cf Nebraska, weare now prepared to o2r our services to the

Scvatters of .Ytbraska Territory."In rcling Declaratory Statements of Inten-

tion to Pre-em- pt. Securing Pre-emptio-

Locating Land Warrant- -

AND ENTERING LAND.Land TTarrant Bought and Sold.LAND ON TIME.

Particular attention paid te Boying and SellingProperty on commission: Also, to making Collectionsand forwarding remittances to ary part of the Union.

Blanks of all kinds alwars on hand.REFERENCES.

Hon. A. A.Bradford, Nebraska City.8. F. Nuckolls,Mesa. Dolman A West, St. Jope, VJ- -

A. Keller. Washington CityTbnma Lumpkin, "

23,155. t!-- b

JAMES W. GIBSON,

BLACKSMITHSecond Street,between Main Nebraska,

f29,11858.

Miscellaneons.

Congress Tliirtj Tears Ago.

'Gen. Sam Houston is said to beonly member of the present CongTess,who was also a member thirty-fir- e yearsago, when Edward Ererett formed oneof the three hundred constituting; thatbody."

There are some slight inaccuracies inthat statement (say the --A", O. Pitxrpint)although not material. The Congress, inwhich Geneml Houston and Mr. Everettwere members together, was that of 1825-'-27, more than thirty years ago, but notthiny-fir- e ; and the whole number ofmembers was 231, and net 300. It is ofthat Congress that Gen. Houston was theonly member who is a member of thisCongress. But he is far from being theonly surviving member, and there is atleast one member of this Congress tvhowas in Congress long previous to 1S25.Mr. Crittenden, the venerable Senatorfrom Kentucky, was in the Senate in1S17, more than forty years ago. Hous-ton left Congress in 1827, and did notcome back till 1S46, having only beenout of Congress, for the most part out

I of the Union, brought back, if all accountsof his ante-annexati- coquetry withEngland be true, rather agaicst his wilL

That Congress contained a great manymen who have since acquired great reputations, and occupied the highest posi-tions in the country. Four of its mem-bers, Van Buren, Harrison, Polk, andBuchanan, have since been elected Presi-dent. Two Richard M. Johnson andWm. R. Kicrr have been elected Vice--Presidents. The presiding officer of thesenate was John C. Calhoun, then in thezenith of his popularity and the highestvigor of his intellect. The eccentric Randolph occupied the seat which, at theclose of the term, was filled by John Ty-ler, afterwards President. Daniel Webster was in the House, and Hush L.White in the Senate men whom largemasses of devoted friends uuavailinglystrove to elect to the Presidency. Benton,then a giant among orators and statesmenwas in the Senate; so was Hayne, of SouthCarolina, who died so young, and so deeply lamented ; Forsyth, who never had asuperior as a debater in the Senate, afterwards Secretary of State and minister toSpam; Louis McLane, who successivelybecame becretaxy of State and of theTreasury, and minister to England; LeviWoodbury, afterwards Secretary of theNavy, of the Treasury, and Justice ofthe supreme Court of the United States

In the House, besides McDuffie andHamilton, and Philip P. Barbour menwno nave lett great reputations unconneciea wi;n putnc stations mere wereEdward Livingston of Louisiana, Secretary of State and minister to France; WL. Kives, or lrgmia, also minister toFrance; Andrew Stevenson, of Virrinia

.. v - 1 1 . T

minister to rngianu; ana, moucrli wename mm last, not tne least conspicuousthere, Mr. Everett himself, whose namehad already become widely known forripe scolarship, and who became, succes

w - - , . tail, uuui tut;

of StateIt was a remarkable body which inclu-

ded these men, Very few of the mem-

bers survive, and of the whole list, Pres-ident Buchanan is the only one nsw inpublic life, excepting General Houston.Mr. Bjchanan was, however, a man ofmark then. Gen. Houston was onlyknown for some eccentricities, whichsoon after made him notorious, if notfamous; and his titles to distinction, what-ever they are, tvere earned on anotherfield than in the councils or service of theUnited States.

In looking over the list of members ofthis Congress, --as published in .Yiles'Register of December, 1825, we notice acurious circumstance. The list containsthe full names of every member cf theHouse of but one.There a new member from Tennes--

laiar attention paid u see, whose chistian name could not be

D.

Peter

Jaae

acdN. T.

the

notbut

was

found out by the compiler; and so he puthim down thus : Polk. Twenty yearsafterwards, this obscure gentleman, ofwhose identity there was so much question in 1925, was elected President ofthe United Stales.

Rewarded.We clip the following story from the

Bucyrus (Ohio) Journal. Of course wedo not know who this modern Jacobmav be:

We picked up a Pittsburch paper theother day, and saw therein the marriageof a couple that formerly resided in this

lace. There are many marnases inother towns of people who have once liv-

ed in Bucyrus, and we do not pretend tolaw B -

record them at all, but m mis instancethere is an incident of too uncommon anature to be passed over. It is as

Twelve years ago the bride was ayoung lady of twenty; the daughter of awealthy merchant in asnington, renn.In her father's employ was a young mannamed Robert , who, the youn? ladybeing bewitchingly beautiful, as in dutybound, feu desperately in love with her.She reciprocated the attachment an! theywere betrothed. the younglady's father entered his protest againstthis pleasant arrangement, and according-ly the young people put off the happy dayindefinitely. About a year afterwardsshe received a most tempting proposal,which, urged by her father, she acceptedand, to the eternal despair of poor Robert,

bridegroom !

elapsed when a kick from a ride us horsekilled him. Robert consoled the widow,and determined at the expiration of ayear or so to marry her. He had toomuch respect for her to press his suit im-

mediately, and did not for fifteen months,when he proposed. To his horror sheinformed him that she was already enga-ged, and that in three months more hersecond marriage was to be consummated.Two years passed. In the meantime thewidow and her husband moved to Syra-cuse, N. Y., and Robert pciiessed bysome strange hallucination followed them.That season the cholera swept that city,and among its victims was the second husband. Robert allowed a year to pass, andwas on the point of urging his claims,when he received an invitation to herwedding. She was to be married to her

: husband's partner. Robert remonstrated. The lady assured him that herpresent step was rot one of love, butpurely of necessity. The partnershipaffairs of her late lamented were in such

state that settlement was impossible,and to save immense losses she had determined upjn marrying the surviving part-ner. She assured him alio that her sentiments towards him were unchanged, andthat should she ever become a widowagain, she would give him the preferenceShe was married and in a short time removed with her third husband to Detroit,Mich. But a fatality seemed to pursuener. Herself anl nusbana were onboard of a steamer that was wreckednear Buffalo some years since. The husband perished and she escaped onlythrough the superhuman eiertions of afriend who happened to be on board.The friend was ycunsr, unmarried, andhis gallantry inspired such sentiments inthe breast of the widow, that she marriedhim before Robert had time to claim herWhen he learned the state of affairs, hewas somewhat indignant, but she toll himthe circumstances and managed to satisfyhim with the promise that if she ever became widowed again, she would most positively marry him. The lady with herfourth husband settled on a farm nearBacyrus, while Robert removed to Mans-field that he might be near her. In thecourse of a year, they removed to Pittsburgh, where the husband went into raercantile business on Liberty street residm?, however, m Alleghany city. Robertfollowed them, and finding employmentdetermined to watch the chances closely,One day he was passing the store of Mr.

, when he saw a terrible commotionRushing in he saw Mr. , a mangledcorpse upon the floor. A cast of ricewhich was being hoisted had fallen andkilled him instantly. He inquired if anyone had been sent to acquaint, his wife ofthe accident. Yes the first clerk hadjust started. Looking once more at pocrMr. , to make sure that he was per-

fectly dead, Robert started for Alleghenyas fast as his legs could carry him. Thefirst clerk was only a trifle ahead of him,and Robert knowing the importance ofbeing in time, from past experience, andfearing that the clerk had designs uponthe widow, ran like an Indian. Side byft A fk Vv M n .mtil Vn wmiA V r A wVw

4 t-- 1 i ic uicy ury icatucu

ged to stop to make change, while Robertwho paid toll by the year, passed withoutdelay, He reached the house, told theheart-rendin- g news and obtained a solemnpledge from the widow before the clerkarrived. This time she was true to herpromise, and after a year had passed theywere married. As all her husbands diedwealthy. Robert is very comfortably fixed.His history shows what perseverance willaccompli

A Thief Claiming to be Honorable.On the nieht of the 17lh ult.,the office

of the Mill of Andrew Lincoln in Pen-fiel- d,

was burglariously entered, the deskbroken upon and robbed cf a wallet, containing a number of papers, and betweenfour and five dollars in cash. The notesamounted to some four or five thousanddollars, and Mr. Lincoln was anxious tool tain them, although they might be o

no use to any other person.Yesterday a package came to ihe ad

dress of Mr. Lincoln, at Penfield PostOffice, containing a part of these notesand a letter from the thief, of which thewhich the following is a verbatim copy

March 2d, 1S5&Injured Sir

I take the first opportunity wright- -

ing to you and sending you your paperswhich are of no value to me ; Having beenat work on the Canal at Fairport untilthe 12th inst, with poor pay I determinedto Quit-- Seeing the Shape of affairs inyour house I thot I Might make a htwl.had Some trouble to get in but when thereI had more in getting in the desk. Itook out the chink with the help of yourchisel which I thank you for very much.Your Dog made such a noise that I couldnot examine the contence cf the wallet. Itook the coat because I thought it wouldbe handy in my travels. This Mr. Lin-coln is what we call honoT amcng thieves.I would advise you to get rid of that dogbefore I come again, then I will not takeany valuless papers. Fde keep my millwindows locked tho if I wer you. no moreuntil next July.

OSE OFIHE,TOW55E5DCA5C.

An article in an exchange paper, announcing the decease of a person, says"His remains were committed to thatbourne whence no traveler returns, attended by his friends."

was married. But atas for the happy I He who is about to marry should con--

Scarcely three moans had j siderhow it is with his neighbor.

The Red Petticoat.' A mess Song Tune, Ytnttt DoodU.

Yankee Doodle has they aay.A tact for imitation )

Sre how eagerl;- - he takesTo foreign innovation.

We make a wonderful adoAbont oar independence,

And yet to fore: fa shrines of tasteWe dance a strict attendance.

vA laglaa overcoat we wear

- 2to folly conld be bigger' - A Htirt cpon a pole would est

About as'neat a Cgiie. ' '

Etgenie hoop, the Imperial form.The Tankee Ladies follow;

Attd ia immensity of spreadThey whip the Empress hollow.

The latest novelty that comes"Was born across tht channel;

The little Queen, to please the ScotUHas kilted the re4 flannel.

And presto ! to our happy shoreThe wondrous tidings passes .

And Broadway's pave Is checkered o'erfrith bonnieHieland lasses.

Once in a way why can't e haveA truly Tankee notion ?

Nor such profound allegiance payTo fashions 'cross the ocean f

'What could be finer now than this,(and mark ye too bow dashing !)

A petticoat red, white and blue,With aiiver stars al 1 flashing ?

Then hang the Tankee colors out(And Scottish skirts confound 'em,)

Our girls shall take tbe world by storm,With the stars and stripes around 'em.

Fatal Rencontre.One of the bloodiest and most desperate

encounters ever recorded, even in theannals of Kentucky, took place in Spring'field, Washington county, between Ben.Palmer and . Mack Booker. The former was instantly killed, and the latter isnot expected to survive his wounds.There had been some ill feeling betweenthe two arising from the election of Boo-

ker to the command of a company thathad been raised in that county to go toLtah.

The particulars of the desperate afl rayare these: The parties met in the barroom of a tavern in Springfield, and analtercation instantly ensued, one or theother first using his fists. Each then drewa revolver and fired four shots apiece inrapid succession, three of Palmer's hit-

ting Booker one in the left hand, a sec-

ond in his leg, a third in the left breast.The first shot fired by Booker struck Pal-

mer in the groin, penetrating the bladder a mortal wound. He was alsowounded in the leg. After exhaustingma uuiitru l'iiiuiall his strength 01

thinking himself mortally wounded, seized the other with his left hand thecoat collar, and throwing away his pistol,drew a bowie knife and stabbed the unfortunate Palmer nine times in the breastand body. The latter fell dead in histracks, his body streaming blood at everypore. Booker may possibly survive hiswounds, it is thought the shot inthe breast will prove fatal.

Booker is the son of JudrePaul Booker, tor many years Lnstnct Judge in theState. Palmer is the son of the Hon.R. C. Palmer, or from Wash-ingtc- n

county, and a grand son of the lateBen. Hardin, of Beardstown. LouisvilleCourier, 5th.

A Greek lawyer recently moved, in theSupreme Court at Alliens, for the reversal of the sentence agiinst Socrates.This coin? back a little more thantveenfy-tw- o centuries.

The Chicago Press, of the wetice, has this item:

runners ana tricks played,

support andmagnificent in

vor

in- illpapers

steaas."

rl

T -

Ay Ay Ay Ay

AllT, NEWS,

FUKNASrrciioryHoailey

RQWXVII.LE.

F.BeyeBrirpa.iiB-i'- ".

JOB

jlFT

a2eoMrei,Ernie,"r

CARDS

UILUIIER

WHEELER,

ArcMtect Builder.

Urownrlllo,

Whyte

GOODS,Qaeensware,

rurnlturo,BROWXVILLE,

Attorney

&n"fiteri;,lSS6.

DUNDY,

T.,

DANIEL

Surveyor Agent,

BROWNVILLE,

D.N.ci

Law,

LOAN,

HARDING, KIMBOUGH

Mortcn.Toledo.Ohio;SarrT.Be!levue,Sebraka:

HAyLNG

ENTERED

BEOWNVILLE,

Representatives,

Perseyerance

Unfortunately,

Farm and Garden.

From the Country

"Cot any Ashes ?w What to do withinem.

"Got any ashes?" asked angatherer of the dust, calling out from the

"Yes, a hundred bushels or so," answered the farmer.

Down iumped the ''ash-man- ," and wasabout to open the gate when he was told"Hold on!"

"Hold on ! .why, I want a lead of yourashes."

But they are fortaU my friend ;WW 11 w

we snail need ail we nave lor use aihome."

Wondering what one min or woman,rather could want a hundred bushelsof ashes, the "pedler" went grumbling on.

Farmer, let him go ! If you got "anyashes," keep them, and use them at homeas a manure for your farm. Let us giveyou some authorities in regard to theirvalue.

Ashes have been employed as a fertilizer of the soil from a very early age.Cato, a Roman writer upon agriculture,recommended the use of wood-ashe- s as amanure, and the ancient Jews, Rcman3,and Britons, burned over their stubblespreparatory to another crop. In moderntimes they continued to be employed, butnot as largely as their value command, were it better understood and ap-

preciated by the farmer.Ashes are said by Browne, to "render

clayey soils mellow, and to give consisten-cy to those which are light, rather suitingmoist than dry soils, but it is necessarythat the former should be well drained.""From four to six bushels per acre," ac-

cording to Johnston, -- 'may be applied tothin, almost sterile soils, with good ef-

fect, quantities would be too ex-

hausting, unless the soil be naturally richin vegetable matter, or mixed from yearto year with a sufficient quantity barn-yard manure."

Ashes are employed in Great Britaina3 a manure for root crops, and are usedfor this purpose in connection with bonedust, and drilled in with the seed. Ac-

cording to Johnston as much as fifteenbushels of each are app-ie- d to an acre,and often with success. Turnips,carrots, and potatoes, seem equally benefitted by ashes. "They may be usedwith advantage almost every class ofcrops," says Browne, "but especially forgrass, gram, and Indian corn, though

k: ri ui.i v:, :.w accoruintr to oprensrei, -- tne unnieumiesi-ui- a, laiiuci 1.13 wnui , e. e i. ,

a-a- inst Booker, who, ?ent aes 13 IDOsJ Ppuoieby

though

is

16th, no

profit,

wou.d

great

for

uponleguminous such as clover, peas,beans, &.c." Upon red clover, "the effectbe certain if previously mixed withone-four- th their of gypsum.

The use of ashes as a manure for cornis becoming quite reneral in this sectionof the country they are applied as ahill-dressi- nT immediatelv after the firsthoeing, at the rate of two table-spoonfu- ls

per hill, or about two per acre.They are found useful, applied at thesame time, to potatoes, to beans, and toalmost every hoed crop. We have usedthem in these ways and upon grass land,to the benefit of the crops and the perma-nent amelioration of the soil, and have nodoubt but that it will be far more profitable to any farmer to 'use them at home,than to sell them for the pittance gener-ally offered 8 to 10 cents bushel "intrade equal to perhaps one-ha- lf thatamount, nett cash.

A.

tbe Country Gentleman.

Profits of Apple Culture.Loomi5, of Byron, Genesee N

The Illinois Central Railroad Company Y., says that a tree of the Baldwin apple.yesterday received the largest passengers standing on the ground of his brother,of the season in the shape of a brace of produced list year twelve barrels (besideselephants, shipped at Cairo. The lllus-Jfo- ur or five bushels cf windfals,) thatinous strangers kept tneir trunk constant- - sold iTZXo harm, ihe year sly before their eyes, as they landed at the product of this tree consequentlydepot, having doubtless heard of the hotel quite equal to an acre of wheat in

the they have

co.,

for perwas 82

net

A. Preble, of Lincoln "county, Maine,All suicides are childish, but here is mr.L-- th frlWinr estimate, whirh will

the most youthful we have heard of : l r,0,rif mrrctirT'an tmrd nn!c morions.James B. Darvin, a boy only nine years LiWinrr frr nmp rariptip in nrirWor age, commmea suicide in Virginia a One hundred trees planted on an acre of

.uaJ 3 "".'w uioiutr mreai. iand wiU cost on an average 825. Theeutu to correct mm. 1 1, t,,u w t,. ; f lt,

while the trpes are rominT intn hparinTThe Hartford Courier has added an- - About eTnen.le.1 in Are nnrl lnbor

nouncements of birth to those of mam. ih rrma ti-r-. f ihaI VtV'J tUntU ilVUl AA UVBf

ages and deaths in its column. After will brimr them intn a V.pnrinrr state -giving a birth in Waterbury, &,c, jt also When an acre of trees is in itsprime, "add this announcement: u-i-ll arpraw drnkcVai, ,.m

In Prospect, March Is:, a daughter to vided the land is kern rich nA We ,mdGecre L. Sic per, the trees well

To those who are not aware cf the fact 66 cents per busheL The .mrr.l:, r.r,lpthat there is a town called Prospect, near are valuable for all kinds of stock, partic-Hartfor- d,

the above must have a funny ularly winter store hegs. Sweet appleslook. are worth about as much as nntatne

The Arrrirnlfririct or, . aor Bashford, of Wisconsin, Upntleman within our lrnnwlfX

states that he was offered S150.000 to smaU orchard on the Hudson river, of lessapprove of the first bill reported for dis-- seren acres produces frommorning me lanus gramru oy congress goOO to 8700 worth of apples annually,in aid of the Railroads of that State. Th; U net one ver of nlemir nnrl h.- -- j -.- w-r- -

er or two of famine, is a regular.A line of the foreign news is, that "the steady, average yield. All this is secur- -

factdties of the King of Prussia are de- - ed by the simplest process, viz : good ma-chining As the old King never najement.had any faculties to spare, he must be S. B. Parson, in hU rerent address be- -get-in-

g in a bad way. fore the New Haven Horticultural Sostates a miles of

Hon. Rufus Choate, of Massachusetts, his residence, there is an ofis one of those who uncompromisingly about 20 acres, producing: about 82,000 a

Douglas Walker. You willremember his appeal fa

of Mr. Buchanan in 1S56.

Aram; the novelties advertised thew

! are "single ana married oea- -

Gentleman.

itinerant

road-sid- e.

not

of

larger

of

plants,

moreweight

bushels

per

From

ftas

American

w

but

daily.

ciety, that "within feworchard

year, the vegetables between the treespaying the cost of cultivation."

Hill Pennel cf Dirby, Pa.', sold in1S56, 8225 worth of early apples frcmhalf an acre. Richard J. Hand of Men-do- n,

N. Y., sold in 1S35, 8410 worth ofRoxbury Russet and Northern Spy apples

NO. 44.from one acre of orchard. HughJIatchof Camden, N. J., obtained from fourtrees of the Tewsbury Blush, 110 bushelsof apples, or 35 bushels from each tree.

Examples almost beyond number rnaybe given, where single trees have yieldedfrom So to S 10 u year in fruit, and minyinstances wheTe S'20 or S30 have beenobtained. An acre cf such trees wouldbe equal to any of the preceding instances. 'If one tree of the Rhode Island Green-ing will afford 40 bushels of fruit,, at aquarter of a tkllir per bushel, which has .

often occurred, 40 such trees cn an icrewould yield a crop worih S4C0. Bat tak-

ing one quarter of this amount as a lowaverage for all seasons, and with imper-fect cultivation, 8100 would still be equalto the interest cf 81,500 per acre. New,this estimate is based upon the price ofgood winter apples for the past 30 yearin our most productive districts. Let asimilar circulation be made with fruitsrarer and of a more delicious character.

Apricots and the finer varieties of theplum are often sold for three tosix dol-

lars per bushel, the best early peachesfrom one to four dollars, andpearsfromhardy and productive trees for an equalamount. Of the three former kinds, twoto five bushels, with a good managementis a frequent crop, and on large trees,five times this quantity. An acquain-tance received SS for a crop grown ontwo fine young cherry trees, and 8- -4 fromtour young peach trees of only b yearsyears old from the bud. The farmer.then, who sets out twenty acres of goodorchards, and takes care of them, mayexpect at no very remote period of hilife to receive from one to two thousanddollars a year, which is quite a "good in-

come, and the farm can be worked aswell as if the trees were not planted onit. An orchard is a capital which paysyearly dividends that are better to becounted upon than our American railwaystocks, which a person holding cne daymay count his thousands of shares, andthe next day' find them all vanished, asAladdin's did, in fairy tale, in a singlenight. He can then sleep without anxie-ty as the goldenshower comes from aboveand drop at his feet, and as the reasonsroll, so his rewards increase.

Hints Tor the Season.Borders you know want spading. It

turns under weeds and rubbish, loosensthe soil generally, andTthus gives theroot3 a chance to ramify and seek freshfood. Without this annual spading (orforking,) besides depriving the shrubsand flowers of much benefit, will causeyou no end of trouble to keep down thetiresome weeds. In such a case you willfind to your sorrow, that "all weeds growapace," and are difficult of eradication.On the contrary, spade or fork over thesoil, leaving it moderately rough at first;level down with a rake as soon as the ve-

getation begins to put forth, and justdraw your hoe occasionally through during summer, and the weeds do not get thefirst chance to grow.

Do you want to increase the stock ofyour flowering shrubs and plants ? If soit must be done at the same time. Thoselittle shocts or suckers round about the oldLilacs, Snowball trees, and other shrubs.are precisely the pieces required, and aredoing injury to the old plants. Take themup with a spade, and set in your gardenin rows two feet apart or so, and sixinches in the rows; or if that docs netsuit, just plant them here and there inamong the other shrubery. Seme kindsdo not sucker or but little; a few of thesemay be tried as cutting?, put them inosandy soil, preparing them about six ornine inches in length, cutting the bottomunder a joint; in fact quite similar to theway you would set gooseberry cr currantcuttings. Supposing- - they would not rootthis way kindly, you will have to layerthe old plant, which consists in nothingmore than taking down a shoot near tothe ground, and burying with a little soil;it will require an oblique cut to form a"tongue" to root freely. If you want totry your hand in raising new kinds, youmust next year save seed from any pro-mising flower, sow it, and the result maybe "something new."

Do not forget to occasionally divideold large stumps cf perennial flowers. Indoing so however give them a fair chancethat is, do not take your spade and justchop off its sides, leaving it precisely inits original position, barring the outsideeither give it fresh soil altogether, or re-move it to a fresh spot. This will infusenew vigor into iL

The borders may be full of bulbs, andif so, do not tread upon them, or cut thenthrough; rather wait for their appeara.wiabove ground. Every thing of this scrtshould have sticks stuck in to mark thospot.

If there is any irregular growth aboutthe shrubs, take a knife and jrar.i suchback, but let not your knife fcrra thegraceful into the hideous.

See that the plcwboy washes ihe breastsof the horses wiih cold water every nightafter work, and it is not a lA plan to slipoff the collar at coca ar.d rlean it, at thesame time wash the 1. re a si cf the horse,remembering to dry it before putting onthe collar again, else better leave it aloneuntil night--

New teach t?? boys to clean and put uptheir tools wh-- i u they are through work.Tbe boys a rA the tools will li;t longerfor it.

Siding is an act of faith.to Ificg its reward.

It is