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1880—TWEN PAGES. then, is the profit? All the time the p: THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: -SUNDAY, APRIL 1 furnish them the money to build the line | Wher our refusal to acknowledge a failure does not | your path, likewise mai re- | our refusal £0 Hee cotuer branches of tho | Znd'tfavel moce sect Tyee Oke OF tray Christian Association aredoing # noble | ware the rude tind from the see Zeqil3 be grazi grassy it im quest of new homes, cheap rich uil 2 TEXAS. = Soil loses Tine oratubssekre cy plains. The lands, mild and salubrigus climate, and otter * San Antonlo to laatuilo, The pretext ere] aeue eed ot imele funds, Rap on es ta | changes association areding a noble | Ware ‘ ‘comes black; like our Illinois prairies. Itis | natural advantages for. ini ne. a gO pl ehalt o! Even could the few hundreds which they claim work, ands an very ou at nolovmient Bureau bas wi it 1s Zour ite pieces ot ee ve ast, On " TMS PRECIOUS JOB to havo gninod be relied upon, will that make up | and nine moods 14 Cpispensary has cost the | Gue you must remove tin oes alluvial and waxy, .and mosquitoes make | living easily and acquiring wealth a : 1 these points I shall pass no opinion at pres- | is military. necessity." Arguments are | for the infernal injustice? Is money all there 45 | gnly cook $362.84 and the ro tgad coven months | Oe nd aug Temmorg the other. = ae 7 their appearance in humbersand ferocity that 2 An Eastern Wooded Region Larger | ent, not having had time or opportunity to ‘ : e | Ieehis world for men to be lutiuenced by? 1 months m issii gexin Soe eon rod is treaty cnhiy the quesion sufficiently, . When J pass made setting Jorth, that fe a ae le od se. fair dealing an obsolete quality in the * Board | $558.70, and the good done Jo nose eee ae enor, | pallosopher that, “there was a Magenta than the State of Missis- . ers In defensive compare way down the | up through Northern ‘Texas via Dallas and | fmburse the expense of building the road_in | of Baucution "7 ls if only the thought how they | 1 ca ayes ‘of $4,000, has, from its greatest | of this, at first sight eather ity cee? meane sippi. broad plain frum Houston to Galveston, sixty 3s erin aly achat ay, and soe wwome fermen n few years. But this is utterly false. The oa thom? bis Wise peer admirer, only ro is for what it tas not done, g colored brother of” tho ‘one. in erton, Tee 5 rom: ~~ Goverment freighting from San Antonio is | “Have theso tenants no righta? ‘Three lawyers | and some feeble hopa that It as SOE hag: | Camp ine ina grand combinution eile miles; and the attack and defense only coase St sr we h it-water bay and its sandy | what they think of Texasas an agricultural | quite light, os the y post at that point | were on the committee, who went for this meas- | able to do something n wary’ of Hiores “tite lel between thoseeities seemed | country Zor Western farmers, all things eon | {3 y Fe Hane, as tho miliary Best Aceumpants | We meu oF wrong ‘And ‘one of thom, who | edt. in-rogurd, farino roferonces requited tor | hornblends, and feldspar over in Mi fhe ‘ and how that part of ‘Texas-com- | Thelieve, of colored infantry. ‘The War De- | would som to have been the counsel of the suc. | adinission, mis rtwo nights in the city are | stone on ouch ue in Wistousia “ints banter pearshe recites to the bewlldereq “She ap aradise of Cotton-Growing Pro- | asrich ‘as our prairies, but it was only culti- | sidered, : aE ay ; itches. Of ¢ ares with the lands arid productions of. IMi- | Fartment has a score of military posts seat- | cesaful bidder, assures his client that he will put | crs staying fol une OF 10 Tae ras on their ad * prey}: yatéedin patches. Of the million or imore of | P: A " z ducing a Million Bales aeres in View from Houston to Galveston, | nols and adjacent States. Tamviold by many | tered up and down the Ito Grande Valloy, | Bim tn posses ea ta ec nor nis -pto- | mission, whetuor the Superintendent or the Ad- | owners, “Gentlemen, this is crustey PETG. Last “Year searcely a thousand is under crop. | Ovar al! | Persons tm ; : from El Paso to Brownsville, some 800 miles. | Fong echeagues ean make black white, Nor | mitting’ Board? But to conctude, Tnm sorry | and syenito granit, suchas was used Some . the rest roam herds of long-horned coattle, » THE VERY'GARDEN OF aed said The; ane Teached by numerous miliary can they alloresefrom their record the atain amie my. sugnestion sn regard ie a pe pat, putra's Beedl le and the pyramids apf Cleo —l ny 0} |-. | roads, rat an Ant Ki el "ey les" is 1 ich in vs hs mules, and colts,—but not: as many lies north of Austin, the Capital, in the ter1 lating out from which ‘thoir act puts on it while they live, | Incurables ie, so, ‘unfavorebly Treced iu get | comturiess’ Een tote beat the wae? : ‘ Z as the plains seem susceptible of supportin; “between the Colorado and Brazos, and | the ribs of afan. A Goyermnent railroad to | unless thoy retrace thelr stops. How much s0- German Colonists, and the Many Good | by anymeans “the station villages are sual fory between ne ean of 100 miles wide by | Laredo would supply only one post, and that | called Christian charaotor ‘and ni ch standing in | ting such a home: and shonld Mrs, I aesire to | wind concenled under is it ana, bag ct and the ie th T propose to spend a few days | a small one. The yiver is not navigable palenthronto ct Assigned to such qualities will | enomy,” Lshall be most happy to accommodate | again,” and granit i ouriatied 120 earth wi rg farm-houses far between. 180 in len Things They Have Accom- ‘ | population doesn’t appear much to | in the midst of this garden-spot of the Lone-| within 200 miles of Laredo, and therefore a thappy te mnank Mrs. H. | vGrds'an sr m , lished. exceed a family to the square mile | Star State, and see what linpressions it pro- | devot, could not be established there, as the be considered wien enough iecngwn Sa eer or ay otrerd and ludylike letter, and you, | not like truth, but like fnnumonaty PES tet, p = in this, one of the oldest parts of Texas; | duces on me, for I profess to have a pretty | supplies from that point would have to be great a misfortune itis tothe community when | Mr. Editor, for your forbearanco, lies in clouds of peoullariy Pee ly multiplied : but, for that matter, all portions of Texas | pood eye for good land. It is represented to | wagoned up and down the Rio Grande, over | & certain clnss got into office. Their rise in the | * JpuN F. TREGAY, No. GL West Adams. | dust to afitict the property-awner, Cue futting 5 xt are thinly inhabited as compared with our | fe sufi ciently, wooded, with. a rich soil, | worse roads and for greater distances than } world makes them giddy. They would make to and accepted the (at ginative talee stoned Their Demonstration that White Men | Northern States. ‘The emigrants coming to | plenty of pure running water, and possessing | from the focal point at San Antonio, where | Gverythmng nicer, Nothing is good enough. But Acute Mania. and porphyry quarry-owsers, wranit i Texas scatter out.in every, direction,—the | 4 salubrious climate and fine scenery. We | the surplus army-supplies are kept in store. | men‘mistake thelr calling sometimes. Somo of To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. Permit me, in brief, to considéra tew of South Can Work Their Own chief intent appearing to be, to shall see. ’ 3.M. | Every military post in the Rio Grande De- | the actors in this outrage may, ufter all, not find Aco April 18.—Tho use of narcotics for | O%HOF-statemenis. fie says a Tourctact ht Farms. GET AS FAR APART AS POSSIBLE; ‘ partment can bo : thomselyes ao famous. ¥.¥. Fra Se Ea all formas of nerrous | ‘rages see SGetice then das. of alld ate and they havo generally succeeded to feet CURE Grae econ ration. fer eee, Quiurae AND; CHEATS A New Bankrupt Law. and mental excitement’ has como down tous | except the one that “ broken stone feat et hearts’ content: ‘Washington is called the Editorial Correspondence of icago a SUPPLIED : i che eaaF aIcERA CntetaS arian Hone iedinteal tinea: #hon to the’ quostion, Hmo-certiied, muterial ‘f9 send fouaaet 5 y | SAN Antonto,’Lex., April 13, 1880.—The | 4; the di ;, tonio b - °F ‘4 Magnitude of Texas, and Its Capabilities | city of magnificent distances, and Texas may SAN ANTONIO, oy April 18, r rom the depot at San Antonio by wagon: Dunugue, Tn, April 13,—Parties “returning | “Why does opium produce sleep?” tho answer, | vaca that rond: ng tt hay with better reason be called the State of | Texans aro fondly calling theirs ‘the Em- | trains than they could possibly be from from Washington aie arr iutlcentes are at | “Because it contains the sleepy principle,” em- cert fied that Tond snaking has "never retoit Deficiency of Rainfall at magnificent distances. Everytiody wants » Tts i tothe | Laredo. Before Congress puts its foot into i | pire State.” Its magnitude entitles it to toe | are eee eon tees nd Hl ew i 08 bodiod all that was known of the effects of this | for an improvement of ¥ elbow-room, and every one has it. There is aes . this speculator’s trap, and spends a few mill- | work thero which will secure the retnactment i some sort. And the West. : appellation. They are also in the habit of | joe Ur public trousire for the emolument of | of the Bankrupt law at the present session of | drug by oven tha best informed disciples of | Improrculent hus hecn made in fhe aso ote no jamming in this State, and it‘has not yet is ¥ A bed! deemed necessary to lay out and Set | comparing its vast area with the principal | 4 Credit-Mobilier,ring (if honorable members | Congress. Must we have that system of legal- | Esculaplus. In tho present advanced state of | Oither rime or the public will hegre apart “breathing-places” for overcrowded | nations of Europe. Thus: Texas 274,958 | have any idea Shae such an institution is), | ized robbery again inforce? Those who demand | medical science, however, amoment’sconsidert- | ventor a tew years’ assurance of rude the ine such a law. of course, have some personal endg | tion of its more immediate exciting effects upon | can be a more palpable absurdity thanto ett The Extensive Railway System of the State | humanity. uare miles, Austrian Empire with Bosnia | they would do well to examine a military y aa 1 - map of this department, of the army, ‘They | to gain. Of course Registers in Bankruptcy, | the brain, and{tsspectal stimulation of certainof | that you can improve a broad flat stone = i i king a hasty look at the chief sea- ? 212,001 -A Baid upon the National pane Ped Tt poi fo San Antonio | 298 square ‘alles. German Empire 7 would do well to ask Gen. Shermait’s opin- | United States Marshals, Clerks of United States | +,, mental faculties, a3 the imagination, ought | foundation purposes upan the soft, trench Treasurys i i oceeded tied the Sunset | Suare miles, French Republic, 204,191 square | jon of the project asa military measure, to | Courts, are all frantic for it, ‘The Bankrupt law | +> convince the rational practitioner that opium | 8nd frequently alluvial pratrie soil ot 9 miter : Ye, Bouston, On rns aioe 2 SUNS | ae eee a ned Normay 201.5% Spainand | 107 0f the project as a military mensure, to | Vasaiarvest for thom, Added to these ure | tO gonvined the rational hrscHtoaee Pepe oe the | by bronking te nto emul pieces and aetees the Rio certain’ newspapers, whose ndvertising was | apdits alkaloids should! be | them over the soft road-bed, or by Road, because it rans due west some 250 ft h rat miles. The country nearly all the way isan | Portugal 212,000,—showing that Texas is Grande, and 200 miles below it; and, | largely of the notices which that law | tHermpentics of fev Potassium bromide in these | cementing the pleces toxether agamn by ay A GLANCE AT EASTERN TEXAS. A : it heh ‘ tion, let open plain, with strips and patches of timber | larger than any country of Europe except he has not investigated the question, let | required. “What. evidence is there of © | Sort of pluster or concrete? Editorial Sonverrenseace af aw ou e ee0. Euter- | slong the water-courses. The soll seems rich | Russia, and almost as large as Sweden and | thelr Military Connnitiee summon Gen. Ord, | any public. demand for such a law? | cases is well known, but surely we have & si | Sy, may be safely assumed that, in the ma San Antonto, Tex., April 12, 1890.—Ent d productive, and is better cultivated than A who is commanding this department, and | Who has contributed the funds to carry this | Pe iy. Besser 26 | Success in stone-making and fi ce for 1 and productive, an ; Norway together. Compared with the States 4 i real which the resinold—gelsemin—is the active realy adjusting Ing Texas at the singularly-named Town of any part of Texas I have yet visited. Cot- forway toget hear what he has to say on the subject, be- | measure through Congress? Its repeal hud made juctple. Alcoholic preparations, to contain it, | the particles of stone, the Great Contractor "Texarkana (abbreviated compound for Texas | ton gives way to corn, oats, wheat, and bar- | and Territories of the United States, fore they vote money out of the National | the surroundings of our Federal Courts, once aeee ee inade trom tbe Green root, and such | Many Worlds and the Creator of the tlegsion —Arkansas—Louisiana), at its northeast cor- | ley. Fruit-trees are seen on many farms. IT LAYS OVER ALL OF THEM, ‘Treasury to build this “military railroad.” | More cleun and pure. Its reGnactment will To, | only are relfable. Its control is over the whole | quarries will mover be celipsed by ben T proceeded southwest byrail, along | The houses are geilerally comforta- | the three largest of which are California | | Why should Congress take public money So neo area. fLaucnorse of creditors | Drain and cord, Dut, notably, over the intellect. | Cf the Paving. cemttactors rho may down the Northern & International Railway, | ble fa cBppeneanes snd. ing sat thelr with 158,000 square miles, Dakota 151,000, and | 1 gepetrnet this road: when the Internation- gnd debtors alike. | There is great, complaint ual centres. Tt isserviceable in all degrees Of | Pspondent. would induce tho “Beller hat + ern in architecture,—show! + while Illinois, which is xe- x rom all the Federal Court-Houses that business 7 iiaht by nie ten- | breaking broad, compact slabs of nat to the handsome Village of Palestine, about | Cconpants came from beyond Mason and |, Montana 144,000; while » PROPOSE TO BUTLD IT THEMSELVES, is low. ‘Thoto are no old-fashioned cost bills to | OUSsRess, depending upon slight hypermmic ten- | ¢ At aturral stony o a n 3 5 3 ie of mania apotu. | into small pieces, and then endeavoring tp and there halted for rest after the xon’s Ii retty soon we came to vil-| garded as & first-class State, spreads lier a collect. ‘The business of United States Marshals |: §!00 to the most violent attac : in, pack, and hold them t ee 260 les, a ere eee Ghneato. From | Roce at “yrinisiauaple Teutonic names | broad prairfes over only 55,414 square miles, | tale the aismacsemireammers. They are | toting compared with tho, good old’ days | 220°U6%% may eaiely he inerensed both im laa join; pac, and hold them together teat the crossing of the Red River, some twenty | such as Weimar, Schulenburg,, Weolaer or only orie-fifth of the area of the great | not asking Congress for any subsidy, but in- See eae Tuna this matter, Make” it hot for | and frequency, yet this is not saying that it is gan makes more aarule foundation than'the ete.; and the German names on the signs of | «pmpire State.” But it is not size alone | tend to build it with their own money. Their | those who, representing the West, vote for thls Tehunar conve ana < felend of the weer eng reasoning he would make a solid wort went miles northeast of Texarkana, to Palestine, n Bea at : tn Central Eastern Texas, the road passes shops in towns oF Ae pe Perey that makes a State great. The little Com- | purpose in extending their line via San An- | measure. = + | case of delirium tromens, cautiously put but a | by cutting the bourds into chips, and then gix ni coguomen s! h tis, which 1a | tono to Laredo is to reach a large commercial i} jug them together. He also objectsto through a ASTRING OF GERMAN COLONIES. monwealth of Massacl spa 2 ae act ec of | Hattie with two or threa Mexican States, Drainage and Pure Water. for drops of the tincture to 2 Benseteal effect: | tight foundation of fingstones Deeause ry PRETIY DENSELY WOODED COUNTRY, From the Brazos River to San Antonio, a | be clipped off any of the angles or corners Of | ‘They expect to carry out, goods to the Rio To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. eo ke Lappy results could “Hob, be ex- | DOt bermit the street-drainage to flow intatke composed of yellow pine, réd and black oaks, | distance of perhaps 150 miles, German farm- | ‘Texas without being missed, has a quarter of | Grande, and bring back the products of the | New Yorx, April 14.—If it be admitted that | pected ordinarily, the patient, in this | earth below. Tclaim that the proper placetor the best way to secure perfect drainage and | case, being of ‘rare mental organization. Hipne ee ube guetta that to rani a un ins, and some other inferior varieties of | ers and villagers are strung along the road. | a million greater population than this huge | country. They anticipate enough freighting a els, The superior tillage of the land, the variety | State, and possesses twice the realized or and “travel to Justify the expenditure for | pure water for Chicago is to create a current | In less impressionable cases give the maximum ee ee Tadaiticn tie ndermipe sa trees. The forest was all out in leaf, and build = a a tit ry, carefully noting of erops, the quantity of frult-trees, the | ty ate wealth, and produces six times as | DUilding the road: and they hope to extend | from the lake through the river by a conduit to | dose, and repent lf Bacsords Cotter passivity, | reservoir of filth from which noxious Mhuninated by the dogwood bushes in full | number of horses, cattle, and sheep, the gen- sexe sale and exchange each year. | eiueto the City ot Mexico in the near | tho Desptaines Hiver below Joliet, as urged Dy Gorell eines tery ire ee ee arise to pollute the air and breed pestilence a4 di iplopia. Tho mind will now be found calm and disense. The Commissioner of Health, Osear(, bloom. The country was quite level, ‘and | eral thrift and prosperity, all attest the pres- future. Congress has nothing to do in the | through Tar TrrBone, I would 5 it a modi- muclrof it covered by water from the recent | ence of a Teutonic as distinguished from a | Massachusetts employs enormous water and premises, except to mind its own legitimate aektiee any alan a a alveds MERE rational.—a far more favorable condition than | De Wolf, M- D., concludes a letter by saying: «j Southern population. These people are not | steam power in the production of com- | business, keep out’ of this job, and let the | “yo. . conduit be! constructed from the head | nxtcotism. The late Dr. Hollemback, of Phila- {the tlagstone foundation, delphia, has reported a case which only yielded | S¥stem of pavement.” Yourcor dent: f delight and cust heavy rains, No hills, or rising ground, or m e itor . They ride railroad people construct the road to Laredo clad either in butternu' gray. They modities, while Texas depends mainly on Peop! of the Fast Fork of the South Branch to the | to about eight grains of the resinold, given as | however, to find his est deligh irementofa rocks, orstones wereseen all day, from beyond | Toye on q : + Fs ‘wagons, and less on mules, than the 4 with their own. money, and operate it on the Rea Riverto the stopping-place at night. | "natives tothe’ manor born.” ‘They plow | manand mule power. But, on the other | pusiness principles ut peraty. MG nearest accessible point to the Desplitncs,” | follows: On tho elghth day. all othor treatment | Soluce in the assertion ‘The soil of this whole section is as red as | deeper and manure better. They have barns | hand, Texans have the space, the land, the Provably moar ae Se Malic Intended to reach | Baving failed, and the ent having rvs roused ay bay le srpeet with exhaust ral Of the acceatig vermilion, showing that it is- impregnated | for their crops. They are more given to | soil,on which to grow and expand almost VOICE OF THE PEOPLE: the level below Joliet. ‘There construct 8 ie neighborhood eu ns wl a an 1 Hemmental theeanal’” in-reply would aon th bs Het with a heavy solution of oxidized iron, Red | etain, grass, and root crops than to cotton, | indifinitly. The resources of Texas have reservoir of moderate capacity, tho bottom of | Cxhibitions)” Dr. H. daterminctio prescribed | of one quarry near Chicago where the depot River is well named, for redder banks or aud fo shor-horn than, to long-horm cattle. scarcely been touched. The capabilities of Lahalorde Batortions: See eT ee oe oe ne eee four grains to bo given in one-half grain doses | of Hiagstones avornging three inches in thick . eir 3 = : i 4 0 ness i deep. Now, redder earth can probably nowhere be found. | much of it the barbed wire strung on posts, | the State to support an increasing population To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune, are now at the Fullerton avenue conduit, and | Overy two hours. The next morning he ordered | in, scg9 superficial square feet, and eshte, From inquiry and observation I find that Eney, gat more wheaten and lass corn prea is something enormous, Yet I Cmicago, April 17—Tenanta, seo. to it that | Pump’ front fhe meservale into: who Dedelaines tis proscription. ‘At this stage the pitient Swag fer Cet aS vohes thick, a ™ i an the natives; more fruit and vegetables, DO NOT RATE It AS HIGH lenses. d atill x madman; his efforts at raving. appeare! Sin ic ‘37, all of Eastern Texas is covered with forests | han i-0 Mo oked bacon and jerked beef. They isos. do not require you to pay for plumbing | work at comparatively trifling cost, as there | St much longer intervals, but he wis not able to | exch layer would net 40,000 square feet ng ofthe kind described,—the prevailing tree d ;2Je¥ | as many do with whom I talk. Itseems to | and for cleaning seworage-pipes. “Those re- | would be no rock excavation, nor would the * | would muke a total of 2,850,000 ‘squ: Deine pine of which there are several varie: | aS about four tines as much for thelr nt | So a jit wild to claim that ‘Tekes ean feed | quirements the greedy landlords have but of | depth be reat, Te would answer a vety good | ue" pulse was now abeut sixty per minuto, | enough flan In one aero to Tare about fa ey mee : ar a i 1 leases. If wo subm: oe een miles of ordinary streets. There is nowy ties, but the yellow is: the only one esteemed | worn-out “cotton plantations.” They have and support ia comfort.a population equal to | extortion: S, 600n will We have t0 pi ay cir taxes | yeur another conduit may be constructed from. Ordoredianctuer Tour grains, ok: _zelsemin, one Hheging accesible oy Chien 0 ay Ser stret o of mucli value for any purpose, The others, | built _ schoolhouses, and — send eir | the present inhabitants of the entire Union. | and insurance. ‘TENANT. the North Branch into the same reservoir, when th tiene ow faict and. rational; Sf cutinto lumber for building or fencing, children: to them; and | are not | ‘Texas has a million and a half of people.— | ~ miliiasae hyentie Roulevata both branches will be measurably purified, and, pulsentone ty per minute, with ability to | size, ana to flatten ‘out a hundred other lesssab- ; De ‘ tax the’ rich -to educate he 5 ‘ ossibly by allowing the flow through the canal to St stantial- paving schemes. Furtherm warp and twist, make poor firewood, and rot | fe"chidren of tho poor, even if they are | BO“ more,—and the Union has 48 millions, or | ” “7, tne Eaitor af The Chicago Tribune. Bouninterrupted during the winter, and using | Slg9p for the rst Simo tn ten Wye, sted in hy- | pricoof tha liazstones at the quarry wil bea quickly. AM of Texas east of the Trinity | Féthing but “niggers” ~ and they generally | more than thirty times as many as Texas. It} “ceioxgo, April 1S—I.see and hear nothing | (20 Pumps during the summer. there would be | arophobie, one cure having been reported from | Slightly in excess: ot wooden plank of thesaze iver is a Yyote the Republican ticket; and in these | takes over 900 millions of bushels.of wheat * n0 pressing necessity for extending the conduit | itguso by Dr. John Scudder, a prominent Eclectic | thickness: Permit me, in conclusion, to ay : the Repu flckets aud in these | takes over $00 millions of bushels of NpeaE | about the’ improvements which wo were told | todoliet for some timo to come, though the | Srarecccr of Gunelanatis IEEE ECICCEIG se ehis pavement i peculiarly. Chere, ; A FOREST COUNTRY, Tespests they differ widely from thelr native | fo white-bread, the people of the United | just tail woro to bo made in order to convert | Work of extension ean go onas circumstances | "S'S" cereine to this latter easel fad the | ment the supply of material being. comedes and much of that between the Brazos and the | pelghbors._ Fuamine ee ae OO ae | eet itd iaillions of, bustiels of oats, to say Michigan avenue>into a boulevard driveway, | SMH OOeetS: . srotect involves some conela- | Tomcdy Was combined with lobelia and assa- | and Pructiealy inexhaustible, It was akois Trinity is also covered with trees. The | natives ig hizhwines wade by moonshine—if | nothing of the rye, barley, buckwheat, and | OP lagination had pictured the stroct in frons | oationg and detalis which I need not mention, | *@tda. UaGur blocks: since hea it hes heen iedeoce, wooded portion of Texas—that is, the block | possible; but I am glad to learn that - otatues, which aggregate 350 millions more. | 9fUz TGsdence with @ road-bed as smooth as. | Surf think thereare no insurmountable difficul- . Seathureata nad subiested’ to the oevmen ey of country continuously covered by forests— | rare 18 GRADUALLY BEING suusrtrureD | Then it would real wir ten times the “number | not to have these desirable improvements? tlesin the way. ds M. HlANNanS, | TBO overthne e ar meeconns eldand the | vin ‘ho ‘most excellent results 230 end at a ESIDENT. = ; i smoothness and compactness. is somewhat larger than the State of Missis- _____ For ALCOIOL is'sald there t= | thirty times as many horses, and hogs, and : = Home for incurables—A Practical Sug- To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. In fact, to any ae ne thoroughly examin sippi, and bears a pretty close resemblance | by the native population. It is said there is | mules as are found .in the State. Now, A-Bishy Story. - gestion. Crreaco, April 14.—The success of the Liberal | the subject it seems as {f Nature had deine thereto. in the character of the soll and | now one-third less whisky consumed per | ‘Texas “has. never raised enough wheat of To the Eilttor of Tue Chicago Tribune, __ To the Editor of The Chicago, Tribune, party in England and its principal leader, the | these vast deposits of stratified rock (pilelapa cap! h x 5 corn’ in aay yeat to supply the wants of | ° Carcaco, April 18'—The Bishop of Niagara in | (A1CaGo, April 17.—I have noticed with gredt | Rt. Hon. W.E. Gladstone, M. P., and the defeat | 1avcrs like boords and planks in a lumber climate, in its water-courses, in its natural 3 S$ productions, a5 well as in its forests. ‘Those | (emand for beer has inthensely increased | the people of the United States fora fort- | a lecture at Hamiliga, Can. last weck on * Up- | interest the account of the movoment in regard | of the old Protectionist and Tory party, with | earth upon our pruinie coils and cltysiness ‘who have passed up_and down through | ascribed to the beer trains from Milwaukee | Mekt—perhaps not wheat enqugh for 2 | per Canada us it was fifty years ago and asitis | toa Homo for Incurables, as it appeared inyour | its Conservative leader, who, as Mr, Disracli. in | that good roadways, boulevards. andstreetare Western Tennessee and Mississippi, and | and St. Louis, which carry down tens of | Sock Sunt hes been sroen ia? Ke Union. | now,” remarked di'Yollows: “ Another ‘ineldent | excellent paper. I feel very deeply on the sub- | the House of Commons, first sprang into moto- | ments could be constructed at a minimund noted the “ Jay of the land,” the general’ flat- | thousands of barrels of the best of the’ brew- | ‘Texas, but alarge partof the flour consumed | !7 connection with:tho Falls (Ningura), namely: | Ject, Having been President of St. Luke's Hos- | riety by his desperate attack upon Sir Robert | Cost and labor with a masimum of dura ‘Texas, the fact that thirty-two years ago they weredry | pital from fts very beginning: no one better | Peel, the Prime Minister at the time of the re- Laces Rea a, i kept cool with ice; and which is served ness of the country, the sandy, loamy, friable are, kept areas ‘ in the State has still to be imported from the tye oa 2 : @ public in'all parts of | North, Last y H B for one whole day « knows the press a of n pl here the in- al of the obnoxious C * a a d % year millions of bushels of - nows the pressing need of a pluce where the in- | peal of the obnoxious Corn laws in 1816. Mr. red soll, so easily washed and torn into gul- | ‘Texas traversed by railroads. A whole | corn were also itported on accoiunt of the | ine aiy informatie abet It? A oiseeee | curable can be received and cared for. For ob; | Disraeli then placed himsclt before the aristoc- LAWRENCE VANE. lies by rains, ¢an form a very fair idea of all | freight-train load a day of the beers of ‘those 4 7 : s Eastern Texas from the Indian Territory to | cities is consnmed in-Texas, and retailed at a general drounnt Bich: destroyer! the graith saute fe vouckedton} ie pee eae Piped Ther ey bosptals een ele Tagy sud landlord, sporty as, chete advocate and ‘We were two children by the sounding si e in hickel z glass in all parts of the Lone-Star s ssary to'-p for. 1 hem. They would soon fillup the wards and | the defender of their assumed privileges, ata | {and Lawrence Vane— the Gulf, between the Savime River on the State. (L presume that plenty of Chica corn from the Western States; but bast sea- bs : destroy theirusefulness. But very ofi: thecases | time when Ireland was famishing for food and | Two happy children in the long ago; east and fifty miles beyond the Trinity Tex: £0 | son was undoubtedly an exceptionally dry - “ Dangor in the Streets.?? are most pitinble, and my beart has ..cen been And the ay 3 of youth come bacigtowa ; : beer comes to Texas under the name of Mil. 5 the Ministry were endeavoring to open the ports any’ yo ‘To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. sorely tried by being obliged to refuse them. | £0 inet corn. could come into the country with- | With the roar of that restless on_ the west.. There is none too much of | wankee beer.): The’Southerners, many of oe y - It is a well-established fact that west of | : Caroaao, April 1s!—Allow me space to calt at- | {Vale St Luke's Hospital cannot give up.its | + ayine the duties imposed by the Corn laws. Tremember the face of my comrade bold, heavily-timbered land in Texas, for west | themat least, seem gratified atthis chnnge of i + inl: é oe the forest eit Ue aunt cepaase of open } drinks, as Seo seo Ie-Will dispense with the | the 100thdegree of longtitude there is | tention to the dangerous practice of throwing ces Ee an Gan ah cansem our ak exenot cree Having failed to become a leader of the Liberals | Wis gare, deep eyes of bi b 5 Q tse Sf the revolver'as s mode of areument in ‘X DEFICIENCY OF RAINFALL orange and bananh peel on the sidewalks, which | the churge of the work. A house can be pro- | when Cobden, Bright, and Gladstone, the great | yfi/S dare deep eyes of bine. | cured near or adjoining the Hospital. ‘The | Liberal leaders and the advocates of advanced | Tpaesiws nay ot conslet gold, and undulating plains, hundreds of miles iu saaprtnidhs E ri 2 3 2 5 Pace roportion as the Substitution is effected. to mature crops two ‘seasons out:of three, | Iam sorry t is carri toa great t Bate 3 rry to say ig carried on toa great extent | COG “Matron, ‘Resident Physician, Chap- | ideas, were guiding tho destinies of the party extent, where trees are almost as scarce as on this part of Texasis 3+ ae and Texas is no exception to this rule. The | in this city, and is-atike perilous to llfe and limb, iain, and Board of Directors will’ answer, | and forcing Parliament to recognize the voice «And the honest heart’so true. the prairies of Illinois, Jowa;’and the great | - yarGELY POPULATED WITH GERMANS. dry-plains region extends fully as far east in | es i] . ai W 2 5 S | ae 13 s pecially to eldorlyand rear-sighted people. If " 4 plains beyond the Missouri River; and every | ‘this was Sehleicher's district in Conaress, | Zexasas in Kansas, Nebraska, or, Dakota. | a by-law were passed making iran ofence pun- | persona interesteain tale movement, will gunr= | Cepoustog ths cause OF the indignant Tories: ana | 1 See sain, in the strangest dream, tree that can be spared from the timpersee- | Tris R7doseefelehers, dlstrgt in Conmress; | Now, fully 100,000 square miles of Texas lie | ishable by fine (as is the case in England) for | Eateo me tho plain equipmencot a small house, | sice then has been conspicttous through his o aiis curve of thut.rack-bound bay, 5 ; a west of that line of longtitude. Tere, in San | these Inzy and seltish fruit-caters to throw their | Say, bf fi ‘a wil i a He P., | The fshing-Boats upon the shore, tious of Texas will bé needed-in the future | east of San Antonio, and: up and down the at of ine of longti tere nes 0 lazy. and soldsh -fenit-caters to th say enough for ten pationts, and will use their ut- | position to the progress of Liberal ideus and the | pr Bie tha ttae ee ou for brick-burning, building, f and fuel, | Colorado Valley, and the Germans are the | AUtonlo, on the %/¢ degree of lonatitude, | eer ee acing ic, {it would doubtless deter | most endeavors to provide $30 2 year for the | advancement of the great principles of individ- | “1% the tight Be OE scan: rr burning, building, fencing, and fuel. | Colorado, Valley: andherwor’ inthis ety or | were is agreat scarcity: of rainfall at the | them from, doing so.” Tho police are surely. not | support, of ench bed, I focl sure the administra | ual and national Independence, which belong in In the Light of the dying day. : ; ‘THE FUEL QUESTION. time graifi-crops need Ay ub that they might do their best | tion of St. Luke's will cheerfully undertake the | justice toecach gencration of the enlightened | 7 see the lighthouse across the send, 2: 3, and fifty years’ g about 24,000 inhabitants, fully 8,000, or one- that crops cannot be | t° abate this nuisapce. Yours respectfully, supervision and managoment of the Home. | nineteenth century. To Lord John Russell, | ~ ‘the foans-crpsts of the bars. The locomotives of Texas are fed with : experience has shown that ct 4 ‘wood, most of the time: and they eat up the thbed, are. sepa, harper ate Hg produced without irrigation fifty miles west | ~ Pro oxo Pustico. Thore us s been no discussion of the subject, nue Who first proclaimed the distress of Ircland in | rogether we saw the sun go down: ‘trees on tens of thousands of acres every | of the population. The Mexicans, or “ Greas- orl oth dase the 5 hal ie of eats Nes ens Sot Flodr Warming. public know bow St. Luke's 13 managed. f necd through fres tages be Mista. te Cobden anal Bqgother we children; hand in. band, j ; ers,” number 6,000, ora fourth; ahd they live | re ae, See te ee ciaking ane “Mo the Eaitorsf The Chicago Tribune, hot discuss that point. Tho samo caro and at- | Bright, and last to Sir Robert Peel, a later cou alk homeward beneath the stars. year. All the stationary steam power in the | = : y be in idleness, squalor, and filth. ‘Their. super- ie tention would be given to the new work, and I | vertto free trade through the influence of Lord | yy; : i ‘West of the 99th de- | , CHICAGO, April 1Z—Referring to my articto im | TMT would be moro. chenply and eostisely | John Russell und’ wher was: the ‘Minigver whe reury.am T of these friends of mine State is supported on wood fuel, and the | stition is in: exact corres; i year with another. spondence with their i i Tne Ti vB Of 2 Mi i townspeople and fi urn noth ji gree there is a strip 100 miles long, extend- ‘RIBUNE of tho 24th of March last, and to | done than by any new organization. Thi: = r 3 Lape farmers burn nothing else, | ignorance, and both are dense. ‘The negroes | [T'¢-om the mouth of the Kio Grande to the | 31t. B. R. Hawley'sadvertisement which was tho | osinnn may meet with uo favor, but itis frank- | overcame the Protectonists, Is duo tho subse: | 4, Cblld,onee more with Lawrence Vans; because it is ch r than coal, which has to t along vastly better than the. Mexicans, | Faian ‘Terri * ‘s Li iustri an Territory, some 500 miles north and | subject of that communication, I desire tosay | ly made, and with the conviction that it will | quent increase of the c ct be imported from the North for a great dis” Because, thoy ate far more indusirious and | south, on which farming operations can be | that between Mtr. Hawley and myself there fs no. | Prove tie best plan, Crissox Locee, | ar °Bnplend and. the additions Mbeekes ot | And shout along in our play. tance. Some beds of coal have been found | “Th'trayeling through Texas, one can guess, | C2!tiedon, but with uncertain results,—one | misunderstanding.as regards this system of Fresident of St. Luke's Hospital, | tained by the people through their incessant | 1. tons of the wondrous foreign shores far up the Brazos River, but it haslittle orno | without much chance of missing, from the | x42 & fair or small crop, the next n failure. | heating, ete. He alaims to have made certain he” o 7 labors. That lie bey youittne toms ie ie roof if i The portions of it watered by the Colorado 4 The Women’s Boarding-House. ‘o Disrnell, or Lord Beaconsfield, however, is 2 g rock roof to support it, but Instead is covered | style of the farming and the looks of theim-| and its branches is the best both for stock. | provements in the details of the system which To the Editor of The Chicago Trib due the complications that have arisen and the | Of a sunny isle in the Southern sca, with clay, which must be stripped off to re- | provements, whether the occupants came | 2ndits branches, is the best bath for stock- | ho thinks Ihave not used. If so, these are all ~ noinstsas ruinous consequences that have attended En- | Where wind of the tempest never roars, move the deposit of coal. However, future | from beyond the Mississippl, the Ohio, or the raising and grain-growing. All beyond the hig own, and we may both use and develop the pestis Bases emeetd pee Oe SOUnEED giand’s high-banded intervention in. the nfairs | Aud that shall be our ome. we i nits a y ine. ie Sout rmer turns his attention | “ vs our own way. iscorrect in princi- a v4 nication from “ Mrs. | of nearly every tio the lobe. ‘T'h: pect tee coe nM nie patonre gl oa vexelunively tpcotion growing and | 19 OF TITLE VALUE, on AGRICULTURAL Ble, and, if judiciously used, 1s destined to be | 7. A. Till” in regard tosomestatements made | has charueterized a Goverkment rom toe He crowns me Queen of that Kingtom fa . logic: han ;. the Northerners, to cattle and | PURPOSES, u. és e by mein your issue of April4 respecting tho | first, and has been carried out at the sacrifice of ar e: survey, and its mineral resourcesare butlittle | grain,—wheat, corn, and oats, where the land | By reason of the lack of rainfall; butstill ube ‘OF heating and'y eaHiation. P.Raspann, | ‘ doarding-house” of the Woman's Christian home interests and the welfaro of the people. ses salient ably ae sar stance rar known. In thecentraland northern portions | Suits them; and the Germans to wheat, oats, | there isssald to be herbage enough for the => ofS Association; in which she charges me with un- | Trelumt out ee soepe apany of lundiordism in | "snd treasures of allie and gold. 5 of Texas, the rapid fall of the streams will ye, and barley, in preference to corn, until | support of many cattle and sheep in this Planetary Conjunctions. truthfulness, malice, and irresponsibility. I | the people of Shae Geunteye he peeeee ee ag trea ey become better acquainted with its great | drought-smitten 100,000 square milesof ‘Texas. To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. had no intention whatever to use .the | cess of the Liberal party shows that the people's | ¥M, peace is breaking! | © Bewresce van furnish large amounts of water-power for value. The: i * y also grow more potatoes and After subtracting all those portions of 113.—W ve e 7 mullling and general manutacturing pur. | SaeCreae abies naes aNy ea oes AS | ayes Tos dey Sor erunRtOwINE’ itheutioe | DESMO‘NES, La April12—We frequently see | spaco so kindly afforded mo to say | Setiend bye honda arrose ad aenEeE | Ships have {ia the soneien lands: poses, and this water-power will have to | use the hoe more. ‘They all set out | rigation, there still remains sufficient good dati lous; pieces floating around the | anything untrue, and my responsibility is | of the right to overturn a Government hostile | But I'd give them all for thee again, i auswer as a substitute for coal; but it is | orchards and grow _fruits,—peaches | tillable fand to maintain Texas’ claim to be | ReWSPApers to tho effect that, in consequence of | not questioned by those with whom Iam ac. | to their Interests. Ayuin and again, under tho | And to rest my hand in thine! said thereis plenty of coal in the Indian | being the most ~ prolific and surest | the Empire Agricultural State of the future. the pesition or conjunctions of the plancts dur- | quainte. “I said, and repeat, that financially | championship of Mr. Gladstone and other pow- Territory, north of Tex hich the raik, | {uiterop ‘produced in ‘Texas, although ap- | ‘There still remain 169,000 square miles which ing the next few months, disasters, plugues, | this Home {s.a failuro, baving cost tho Woman’s | Stful Liberal leaders, thoy have. come to tho | The sen breaks loud on that sandy shore Reritory, noith of Texas, which the rail- | ples, plums, and pearsdo well in thenorthern | will compare favorably with the fertility and | Short crops, and various other things may be | Christinn Association $4,000.90 in two years and fronk and ‘demanded’ a recogaition of thee |, Where other children DAs san daw 1s hen wanted in | parts of the State. But the Germans productiveness of IHinois, Iowa, and Mis- | expected. Linquire of Tae TrrouNe whether | four months, and accommodating, according to | Ministry havo obtained it. ay Be B change “OF Ire the sound of tay'voice 1 hear 0, Bute the future, as wood becomes scarce and dear, | HAVE NOT SETTLED IN NX xas, | Souri, taken toguther; and the area is about | there is anything in this. Docs the past record boarding-! 8 which will not be for many years to come. : ‘The original colonies immigrated, hither be- | Equal to those three great States. The rest of | Of theso conjunctions warrant the expectation a this ing neues revel ea DE mu TE tOUE will! have its effect on dur Prockdential sleet i | Fearne doe a ae: TON 7 fore the railroads n ‘Texas nay be regarded as similar in charac- | tbat disastrous disturbances aro occasioned by | Months, an average of cleven persons per week, |'and those party leaders wh Distinguished | ‘The di : a THE GREAT COTTON REGION fore the rallroadseame down fromthe North, | fort the dry plans of Colerado and. tie | Hse conjunctions? Jou Powsns.” | and, during tho next two sears, nineteen per- | by thole comsensa ee ey eee ea custinguished | The days aro weary and fall of pain— pf Texas embraces the whole of this timber hey lands dat Galv jeston the chet seaportot western parts of Kansas and Nebraska, over | - (Sevoral monthssince Tax Trrnone published | £0ns per week. Imaintain that it is u failure in | pust to the interests of the ‘aristocratic elements, | My soul went down with the sinking ship~ country whieh I have been describing, and | Te34s Haan oF Nidagot Totes co aiippet whieh cattle will roan, and more or lessgrain | 29 artiele on the -subject, which contained a thse ee ngt eocuplod to its capacity only as a tho Fold speculators of ‘Wall street and the | My Jove lies drowned in the stormy mals 5 8 portion o: 2 prairie cou! Y t Py and vegetables can be produced by irrigation. | mathematical de trati t thi = ‘ansit hotel; that it is not self-: reat corporations of the country, and o| 2 ith thee! FELEX 5 bo! BS ntry. to the west | From that port the German colonists pushed Be 2 y irrigation lemonstration that the Phenom | ee eetcd and ox teated co be eer ne, as it | Seat least indifferent, to the equally inportase : : of it, or all those portions of Texas lying | out west beyond. the cotton timber-land, out | ,,Lh@ brosperity of Texas dates from the | enareforred to are’ powerless to produce any fi iv interests of the massos, w east of the Brazos River, together with a | into the rich, open.Valley of the Colorado, | C#struction of Such effects as are claimed. The idea that purpose and isin micesure & sees netnal field and his Government, bo overthrown bythe | Sach an Improvement on sepa strip along the Gulf cast extending south- | Where they soon made good farms and flour THE TRUNK LINES OF RAILWAY plagetary positions cause epidemics, short crops, | arts, and in any other way in which it is divertea | SPiritof the people, the enlightenment of the | Amenities of the Parliamentary West to the Nueces. ‘This area, covering | ling settlements. ‘The centre of their colo- | through her territory, which made the In- | ete. fs not warranted by the results of modéra | frou the purpose for which it was ofganized. 1 | Ac and tuo, iiberal sentiment of the century. tion In England and Wales. Z| nies is at New Braunfels, midway between | terior and northern portions accessible to | scientific investigation.) said that the deficit of the boarding-house was | 4S the west wind sweeps over the land and can- |* ‘Liverpool Mercury. oe perliaps'70,000square miles, takenas a whole, | San Antonio and Austin, the Stave Capital, | comiperce and immigiation. | Provious to the pald by “charitable contributions.” "Mrs, Ht. | mot be controlled by the power of man, so tne | _ Tosd Dalkclth nddressed two mest te ve nt i i i @ < "3, e complete refu' int le having the ot el othiun, one at . e of is as well adapted to cotton-growing as Illinois | These Teutonic colonies number in the ag- | building of those roads the farmers were un- Lord John Manners. be the record onthe $1,836 * ation of tis he. hand will make itself ‘manifest and carey. ue bridge. At the Close of the former meeting? asa whole istocorn. As large a per cent of | ®ate 75,000 to 100,000 souls, and are exer- able to penetrate the country from the sea- * To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. Now what was the carnival fu fore it y ver Wi! i : e : i t , ‘ ind, if it was nota | fore it. They will, discover who are the men | dog-cart came in contact with the the arable’ land will produce 2 bale of cot- ching great influence Ia Texas, Thousands const ob te aay gable water-colirses, eats Curcaco, April 14.—In an editoral paragraph | charitable contribution?—organized, advertised, | that represent them—the American Gludstones |,Veying bis Lordship. One of the wwbeels of ton G0 pounds) Yo te acre Wit B00 ea oe ee a ae | cr de Tone Atsaneaia itad eas ase | MS mortag you ellade to an exprocion of | AuiGreated os 2. spare ans i ele for | Se ae eRe Basan eee ae ec an: vad ie vation as 0! ino} rows ’l + 4 “ - S Ys ane certain! , ie . ie noble was pel : ‘$iuty bushels of corn. when well. worked; and general Husbandry. ‘They are teaching | from St, Louls through Arkansas, entering Lord John Mauners, but do not quote correctly. | was the means of anew lenseoflife totheHome, | _,Nelther Tilden hor Grant represent to-day the | Sand at the close of the Gorebridge meets, : e maxim, Not to put | Texas at the Texarkana gate, and connecting wr the old’ anti-corn law agitation (which | for Mrs. H. says the entire amount was swal: | 208s of the people of the Nation, and the elcc- |~ 7 Alanhester Bramineh 4 assault ‘of a very aggravated chin but one-half to two-thirds of a bale may be | air their eggs into one basket,’*—not to plant |‘with the International’ that extended to | Culmlnated in 18:8 by the repeal of those ob- | lowed up, Mrs, H. asserts that the entire “ carni- | #on of either will bring about a conservative “sete val fund “was eaten up by the "boarding-house.” | GOVernment devoted to the interests of one class | WaS committed on Wednesluy ero ey st. regarded as the general average crop, in the = 5 s ah alltheiriand to cotton, but to cultivate a-va- | Houston and Galveston, some 500 miles from | 70xlous laws), a party of young men, chiciy y Sornetaere may bp coneidored bushels of | Tety of productions, and to rotate te crops | north to south,—and this line was supple: | belonging to the nobility, came tuto existence, | MS. H. turther says: “Whether this enemy isa | 8S Heeran aristozratioal Government ns could | Kirkwall, on Mr, John Peuder, who Melly corn per acre may be considered an average | from grain to grass and roots, with | mented by the "Texas Central. . . rejected bonrder or a friend of one, we have no | be formed, and 9 class-rule as obnoxious to | S¢ated the Wick Burghs in Parliament, Jield in Iilinois. “I hear planters talk of it | fallow “plowing ‘and Heavy “mnaturing; | and south he Texas Central, running north seit Loed John Manners, scion of the house of | ineuns uf knowing.” Will irs. i pious say that | fee Amerléan clizens ns that of Lord Heacons- | Present the only candidate before ta no! an unusual or remarkable or * 7p; . ; was acknowledged head. ey | atthe time she wrote that article she bad not id's has been to a majority of Engl: .. | Constituency. On leaving his hotel a ing to breed improved stock; -to grow sheep | 400 miles, and connecting with the Ine ex- | styled themselves ‘tho “ Young England” party. | received’ ‘my name nnd nddress in’ futl | TRE spirit of Hberty that grew so Tapidiy in | surrounded his carriage, and he a pos 700 to junds of cotton to be produced re Ke ii 4 5, Po’ and poultry; to make butter and have plenty | tending across the Indian Territory and up | Just about this time Lord John published a | 170m the , Superintendent oe tie Employ. Se ee re Toe Buwiand, from: Germany, tor Lape rere cases was io BS ier wi re erature 0} J 4 £4 i on an acre in the Red River Valley or along 4 i ‘ i? y 1 enii S cae of milk in’ tne family,—luxuries the natives | through Kansas, and thence east to St, Low 2 % ment Bureau? fhe Trinity, or Sabine, or Nueces Mivers but | have never enjoyed, and know little about, | and Chicago,—and these two nortivand. | Sul Xglame of poems for private circulation, | misstatcmenta, but with forgetfulness; but, for | ese nations both in tho pastand the present | vor, and he stepped in, but before BP y dae ee ee ee nee Pitorn por | laving neglected these branches of farming | south lines were crossed byhalf-a-dozen | “Let trade and commerce, laws and learning, her satisfaction. want to say that the only per- | Cutituries. and continues to feed and encourage | Secretary or any triend could £000 tier. aere grown on our prairie, ~ for t “| _overlasting’ - cotton, corn-bread, and east and-west lines, the interior of ‘Texas die, ‘ bonstan nae eee Home of whom Tcan | here its vigorous offspring. crowulead oftwith tho carriareat fut follow 8 2f Eavclige Caregen Wisheavily-timberea, | smoKed bacon.” ” =) | Deenme, accessible, and getatable to | Buby us back our old nobilty ss uawieg | inteudene, Thnve nor te nouve 1 basen —— _ BA Uanton. | pede they could. On arriving at the APT, ‘fiat, stoneless, red-clay country, it is difficult thing: hans have. demons: and “crops could be then taker t¢ Leese ata | DY Punch, and, the ridicule being refleted and re- ed with any rejected boarders. Mrs. H. suys that ‘Pavements. an attempt was made to run the carriOF ach fora Northern man to believe that he is in 2 that, xaS, et ata | noated by other pupers, itbecameso well known | | 2eY,are, all self-sustaining or fitting to be- To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. phe gens Ae res got off tho road on hed a ut fortunately the pole becal 5 cost that leftsomething tothe grower. ‘Tt ve = . RY Y + | WHITE MEN CAN WORK THEIR OWN FARMS, | [0 - grower. Texas | throughout the | and bre: come.” This is certainly a very indefinit answer YX Gf the cottonarvnine ceutton at Americas | and do not need to depend upon negro labor | Wii! hve, by the end of this year, thar if uldinately steaneled. tho party ofsegien | 0,07 charge, Something lke n witness, on | quo Hien fast contaiaed or pen eee cere | {uOcarTiaKe. ahd, tho fore whe Fes . Pf fhe cotton-srowing section of America: | FO2 oCin and out the crops. ‘They haveshown | FULLY 4,000 a0Les or rarLWay IN orena: | Iteauthor was the originaror and dtular chiet. . | PElnie pressed to state how large the stone ins contained a. peculiarly personal | it was brewehe fo © stand. The Bias iso FE Se ro guestoneDly pe eke Last | that it 1s not necessary for white men to loaf . TION. ‘The matter is of very ttle moment anyhow, | at tho prisoner throw, replied. that it was as and vindictive communication which challenges | 2S broken and driven into the fs Bence eh fear, 180 fully a million balesof the down, | fm'gne sade while’ the blacks labor in the | Roads, in a year Gr tivo more, witl penetrate | buy You may have need tousethe couplet again: | inde yg ask “tue ‘Caristlan poopie of" the ig’ te | trove. he atenee aoe ae Tee oo Fa eee ane re ervessing, the cron wouds® of Eastern ‘Texas, and. w! fields, but that it is perfectly safe for a proud | every section of the State that really needs | the ben ve you | contribute to educate welltto-do fi > | Ranstee tore aetick was directed agninst the | pealed to them tection from suet septs f the gromers raileonls cud merchasts | Caucasian to take lis paws out of his trou- | them, or can furnish business enough to | ovents in iit of my, recollection of words nd | daughters in music or tho fine arte! Aira aise | @xstone-foundation pavement, especially when | Uuet After’ the pole id been ROt Cle, ot something over50 millions of dollars. Taken sers-pocket, to tay aside his revolver or shot- } J re ae bein ied them. 2 : ‘Gzo. BUCKLEY. a i that “arule was enacted but recently re- | Covered with o wearing surface of cedar blocks, | Vehicle an. attempt was aguin made rt ean, to dispense with whisky, to take hold veston is the sea-outlet of Texas, and a —= guiving “that, no person be admitted over | aud evidently emanated from some disappoint- |. With it, but this tho better-dispat’, Tas of a plow-! . Pel together, the cotton-growing area of Texas do; 7 25 yer = = handle, or a hoe, or an ax, and zen railroads centre there. The other out- The West Side School Leases. "6 years of age.” I am glad to find | ed contractor who fecl: crowd prevented, and ois ae fhe winnie’ South the. sient actually work in the sun. They: have Uein- | Jets are Vexarkana and’ Denison, leaaing 2b the Editor of The Chicago Tribune, within feo monte asa Pet mo sugges | the fact that tho property-owiers of Wes fo continue tae ewdon Batty Neos extraontt fon lands of the whole South. | Tg amount | Onstrated that there is no danger of sun- | north,—the former to St. Louls, and the Jut- | Cxrcago, April f—Iam gid that some one | tat you cpulinucia the good worker sagiest | Washington street boulevard, at, th est | xt carain 1nd Mighty Maren 30, an extaoTy OF cotton Mae Ifthe price should rulekigh; | stroke or other evil consequence fron. so do- | ter to Chiengo, ‘Lo these must be added, | hastalked' out about tho great injustice per- | and refuse to convert the Homeintoa St reform | peldon the night of tho Tth inet, os tee wine | nary disturbanee occurred. sr. Reeds is, the produet would be doubled oF quadrupled | ing; and, that he only road to comfort and fist, the new line, nearly completed, front | petrated by the Board of Education. ‘That a | #nsit hotel, ora place for a certuin “class” | End Opera- House fitter entee hearse erat | Hight procession was, driven, back, BF Us ol in a very few seasons. Not one available | Wea intelly ~ | point connecting with ty all mer | body made up of men tken from our midst convulesce. dirs. H. being a young worker | tion of the different pay ra- {and purty fights took placc_in w! 03 venty re s in this field, is certainly ve 3 pavements, recommended | st y ly used: Several PeSOM sg acre In twenty has yet crown a pound of the | Work. Iie States eons, With nearly all the roads in | should eagerly work to deprive thirty of ‘peered Yory enthusiastic, also | by an almost unanimous vote that sald bo ones were freely used. peted a0 oe x, ; 5 iting by this visible 3 and, second, the Southern Pacific gerly PI irty of their | very verdantin her oificiul duties, or she wi 7 ve - boule- | their hends broken, and ‘were kn\ so seule Be etry eee and eee pre, proditing | ees isitle running enst to Shreveport, Pe an Intende follow: cltigens of thelr property £ one af those ug aula ra her defense. She would ene en duistone foureietoe ea eee and kicked. Banners, were tors feet jurrenuins covered with the virein forest. | Yankee example in Northern ‘Texas. ‘They | ipsiclon 0 VICKSDUTE, and West across ste | eee ee en tee ee land: | cause, and got from them the fundamont | to eae er ees, cmpbutically Sat down upon | general, stn Reed was unable to obtains put remains oth of the cotton region of | aze doing more work with their own hands } ‘exas to El Paso, This line | lord respectablo. In Ireland the -tenant is | principl "i ¢ fundamontal | the, porphyry-syenite and granit “top-dress- | furin tromvot ice Roy fo £0 O's: relearn 4 ean ia still undeveloped, and millioas upon than ever before, ‘he labor of ‘Texas is no Bote Worth wessteegre ry rapidly now from eb en he faite to pays ore the robbery is fave ae ‘itrous "times outeibated ashe Se oudehte tote quarry owners Your core | sug. front of the ko our lage night sale 3 mi!'t ns of acres of the finest cotton lands | longer cl ly perform yy negroes. isa Saab copay 4 ecause he pays. tenants sup- Yomun’s Christian Association. Also have at | deave ood en- | the streets were entirely in the bant for seven years—from the time of the panic | posed the long practice in such cases gave them | diferent times dono Jobs of carpenter work ut | trectnore sing ee ane (eoed Publle, by | cited mob, but that the people were greta iu the world are held in reserve for the fut- | common expression among the natives that | intita few months ago. Ls s #4 tb ‘ 3 the Dispensary connected with it o * a bad been ge! ay tie uso uf mankind. ““XIGGER LABOR IS PLAYED OUT.”— Before this. tines . | the right to expect the usual decent treatment | way: ary with it, and it -has al- | Publico.” But, us has freque: 4 dispersing. The fighting ba: oaren # i have spoken of the poueral appearance | meaning that it is not depended upon as | tional Railway Gone weer, fie) titenie: Of having the first offer. If, in the history of tte iL Sony ON Cae oe manner stylod pitherto, he discloses his Ablmue at the Godlee see BameE oe pepious fad Eee af the country from the Hed River to Pales- | formers. “A good anany of the blacks are | Palestine—intend to have their line, now ex- | ean be fount Tent noeeeh ws hen as reas | PawLsN Ahis department of work, SF | ‘iruues of @ erushea rentarey Trouuming the | OT Eondon Terraph.. ejection £1 - A . H. Bay: ie finan credit of the “eternally en- iter the result of the ns riot tine, in the centre of the cottoncountry. From | “exodusting”” to Te id nobody | tended to Austin, the State CG: i y is the North, and nobody ‘apital, built to | in tho Board, acting for himself, would do what | boarding-houso is much improved. Ge. suppor | SHEL ;Porpbyty. syenite, or sranit.”” My | made known last night (Sard BD ceo Oe :thue south to near Houston, 215 miles, the | molests them or seems to care. The general | Laredo, on the Rio Grande. The ¥ it ¥ f a be part be- | they have don 4 ,, " friend, if y ry. B 2 Tan co es covered with Bmbers Spun: wish is, that Western farmers should take | tween Austin and San Antonio, eighty miles, | “big Deel of thee ey snathe $F Bint statement wiby did she not give the fig- | ‘top faresdings” 3b Cerbally ongutna, ARO | ing occurred te este the ia vatives candle) ‘dre mil sof the distanee is down the THn-| their piaos as land-owners, “The ‘Texans are | willbe finished, this ‘summer, ahd the re- | out Bolt evil business. "ft la feeud from be- | hres trmaches of work: thy uaePe wen OF tho | cnn you crush it, as you say you do, into littlo | Ariane and waruly erowd of severe Ny at aver Valley. j that 3 i end, J ibs e 5 dtr wt $ it. yor aay. miles before reaching Hous- deal ou Ot thrastad Streams of siuierants ‘and har coveted Potts bry ead males, wcaione suet wore h Fewrih honor and in- ing “and yet the defeltin ‘the boarding bewss ment, “Cquerete, ‘on compet” then eeeeker Led Tons AACE ta fo nce Ther ete Ts ton, the country p Kansas, which they esteem as very inferior | And this reminds me’ of a - scheme cient to desire justice. The accepted | for’ that year was $1,344.74, and house | again? Do you use a supernatural cement : eree fight ensued. Paving * oc : . ves our 70 Pramues | sellon of eotnthy to Northern ‘Texas for | before, Congress. Introdueed. by ‘certain bid 8 sf ,plind. hose, who made it fadwho | 1780 20 thorelaeeridiniy Toor forimprovencee, | yee rmaLy, enaurt ng a be, Ereiut? Huiore | alsted, and a leroe etront of iho. lire 4 it and herds of cattle | farmers and § east of | spec! ve ask! iovernment | one 4 at moral Courage to avis . 4 # voulevards with | pletely wrecked. A force 0! 5 alternating with forests, Y t , year hence, as ns been done before; and | that we have failed in an undertaking, Eut.| Wore “eho, Tab ae ittle pieces of grunity be- Pree eome so the spot and ebarged the so y 2 Fe cago sfz-ton truck as it crosses | eral persons were seriously in}