Evening Star Newspaper, August 29, 1891, Page 8

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$ THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1891--SIXTEEN PAGES. going into Mexico City from Puebla you heart and life were so pare and right before | daughters, I remain, now and henceforth, your | Written for the Eventne Star. When T folded and returned the big parcel of pass the pyramids of the Sun and the Moon, SALM ON P CH God that I might aot hurt our great cause!" | affectionate child, Sexe Lina A HISTORIC MANSION. parchments and papers and turned from the an which were places of worship when Montezuma, . «| “It may not be generally kuown, but it is| “Nashville, April 1, 1851.’ crent-looking doot of Birmingham Manor | lived, and which today are great mounds of never: true, that Me. Reward entertained TRE DEATH OF HER MOTHER. Am Interesting Visit to Montpelier House, | {T! # little w= if Lhad been visiting in smother earth. one one hundred and ie nd the other great admiration and @ most sincere regard for Uston Sevan Horan, ace. Butalightine at the terraces of Mont- more than two hundred feet high. About these . " Gen. Geo. B. McClellan, or ‘George,’ us Mr. ret a= Vane. . pelick was to vee the past and present Jostiing vTanaide tn olden times there were other pyre: Some Interesting Reminiscences of{ Livccis awa familiarly awd aitecdonstets to ee cae = TF 90, 1858. . - each other in dehighttul fashion, mids, and if wai it a holy city exi 7 . . him. Onee when speaking of the general Mr. ‘armen Krtcure: ONE OF GEOROE WasHINGTON's RESTING PLACES — ANOTHER Maw Lom. chvel heen kn tenes, pest, Thess ee city of the Great Financial Minister. gun told me he considered him one of the | | Lhave received your very kind and friendly | 4 cuntovs OLD stwai:n sloUSE—Tue sPACTOUS| fore reeeutle sweat eee mrt & boure .000 about the eity of Cholu! it was a ogt forbearing, veli-controjied and patient | letter, and I assure you that the question you 3 sort of Mecca for the Aztecs. Within a few ea om fore spy bp conaty shame 4 oe ped pe pmipey tn oe eg iene py conan INTERIOR oo AINS OF ers near Bladensburg which is @ few years oldor aie of Seestoane there is another famous rain, A BOOK BY HIS ASSISTANT, | membered o single occasion upon which he | creature as before, Lanswer that I am poorer!| *EARS—DRL AMONO OLD RECORDS—SOME | than Montpelier. On its tall chimney, rising ‘and in every part of this countey there «re un- ‘ANT. liked displayed an implacable feeliug of resentment. | I would have to have written youafew| UTERESTING Documexrs. high over the roof, stand out cleat én wrought known fields to be discovered for the ethnolo- was after his rapture with Mr. Stanton j lines with the same merry heart as formerly, ren the Acuros The grounds about it gist and student as well as for the business man and his retirement from the command of the | but the sad loss of my dear mother IS OFTEN. SALD WE HAVE NO OLD i noi to be compared with these of Mont and the capitalist, Some Extracts From It and From Mr. Chase's | Army of the Potomac. ‘The rebel invaders were | bas put gladness out of my power. dammas dus‘ Riebechede yeh eee edthtn oration cence, have a wild beanty of their THE FUTURE SEAPORT OF MEXICO. Own Little Diariee—The Story of the Eman- | Pouring north and the battle which is known | You will therefore excuse my being very brief | of th ites ol mylt fin I write thie letter at Tampico. which is bound | cipation Proclamation—Ho to us by the name of ‘Antiotam’ was | on the present occasion, and take the will for | Of three miles are the old homes of Snowden chat he te “9 a yw HeMissedthe| 15 be fought. There wae ® panic in| the Tam sorry that Icanuot avail my- | Hall, Birmingham Manor and Moutpelier ot of the Pieaeutowvers < Great eeaportof the Mexicu of the fu- | Presidency. Washington, and after” much ‘consider- | self of your kind invitation to Virginia, my | Houso, all originally owned by Iiichard wows oaght it wien be fret an ture. This place has one of the finost harbors Ation it was determined to invite Gen. | desire at prosont being the strictest retiremont. | don, whose father Led he upehcnsr a tiara. (sor the origina battler in the world, and were it not for the barin front SS eecaags MeClel'an to again head our forces. Mr. Sew- | Keceive my best wishes tor the soon coming | sion under Olivet Cromwell and came to Mary rtalned Datos of it you could anchor ali the navies of Enrope ‘Written for the Evening Star. ard was selected to convey to him the desire | New Year, and never doubt of the regard an maa = eo r3 fanboy m daring the rev- im the mouth of the Panuco river. This bar is] WAR. MAUNSELL B. FIELD, WHO WAS | Sd urge its acceptance. ‘To his surpriso and | constancy So oti : foom gives distinction to th to Le removed by meuns of jetties, and Col, 2) Kamien or ar intro ooh der | @#aPpointwent he at first found “George Your faithful daughter, These houses have been standing nearly Of noble pr with a baronial Corthell, the man who was the jJirst lientenant of eretary of the treasury under | inexorable. He jelt that Mr. Stanton had Sexxy Lisp. | yeors, which means that tivo to six generations mtel. a x wide, jofty win James B. Eads in making the jettiesof the Mis- | Mt- Chase, published in London, in 1874, | treated him with too much injustice to permit | To Tyoxas Ritcute, esq. of men and wornen have occupied them, left | $s, sll looking out upon a gracious expanse of bill and valley, at impart to the that sense of fcedom and aspiration eit only in the gremt apaces vf Tn sight of these window « narched by im I8i2, ne nu tp the Patuxent raver and landed sume mice below — <a A Proper Reply sissippi, isin chargeof this work. It inagrenter | Ost interesting book, “Mcmorics of Many | him to accepi the offer cousistently with his 4 TRIRUTE To WER NUSRAND. apes " upld wrk a wan ite making of the Missing | Mon,” andia it 4nd someef theimade trek | oun ult rerpect. For. loug time he woul’ | ‘The next letter, writton just before her de- | inet isinione period naa wee feradgy weer tties, and it is to "7 7 . The} " t recede trom re! |, au ‘i i ” = “ faestates oe es ee istorie days when the life of | Arter repented urging by dis, Seward that he | PArturefor Europe, is on small note paper with | Montyolice, « short disisnce from Vichane. kad rau for 7.200 foct right out into the wea, | ‘He country bung in the balance. He tells | was induced to undertake to fight that one bat- | very elaborate monogram embracing her new ton on the Baltimore and Ohio rond, as rich in They are 1,000 feet wide ai the top and are walls | fom his persoual knowledge of the financial | tle, it being, however, distinctly understood | name, historic incident and ion. Ib wana tav- of stome and wicker mats, which will become, | struggles, which were no less important than | that there sould be ne personal reconciliation fizw Yous, May 38, 1968. | orito resting place of Washington in his by the drifting in of the sand. solid aud perma- | thoso on the battlefields. Soon after Mr. Chase | between himself and the Secretary of War.” | My Dean Faruen Eircure: ag plane + dgrebeatlpres ‘ i in Washi | is from Mt. V lis, being situ nent. When they have bec consolidated a We who were present in Washington at that) It was kind, very kind, of not to have | from ernon to Annupolis, being they will be inclosed ins tas of hear? com Pereqeyonpinl des the Treasury hesentfor Mr. | time can remember the demoralized diny | forgotten me, and Thave not f gotten you! I | near the Annapolis road. The room im whi One day not long ago a youth of Washington crete. and they will be us strong as science can | Ci the assistant treasurer of the United | driven back upon this city after the secon: im ¥- | have very little time to spare, wo I only can say | he slept is still remembered and a granddaugh- | we nt to New York city to scek inis fortune. Ine wake them. The Panuco river is ove of the | Stites at New York, tocome to Washington and | tle cf Bull Run. 1s was that mass of tugitives | a few words, but those will be very sincere. 1 | ter of the former nnnne cue te tee mine and this has prodnced as high as| biggest rivers in Mexico; it is about 1,200 fect | consult with him in regard to a fina: MeClellan was asked to organize, and | have found a real treasure in ia the | by her relatives) of the time when such hosp: cy ‘i ag 1.680 a ‘This maine state has coal | wide, and has for miles from this point an av- | for the country. Mr. Ciseo sei ; MEXICAN BACKW OODS Be which C.P. Huntington's Mesieun road | erage depth of 83 feet. Its waters How into the | son eee Mr. Ciseo sai " Lan with them he fought that battle after} noblest heart I ever met with, and the best | tality. was hs hy re “Ve are going | WiMB t izing that chaos. x | tality was dispensed theta hundre how tape and a new railroad will shortly be | wen ut the rato of 200,000 euig feet oceg | & have a long, bloody and costly war, and the | f¢ was then the oder cake to Kink, aa itwas | niet Lever had. He is, next to God, all to | wus thought a requisite nmmber & eee bailt, Tam told, him through this state te | and they go at such a rate that when confined | PY povsible policy i me; for indeed he is merous and | in the linen cl ~ The that of iong bonds | said, to tako command of the army and declare | gitted “as ‘only. few. arc, “although bo | vation scning tentle os . Yio ther rick | in such # narrow ehaunel they wil carry the | and strong taxation.” “Now, sir, are you not | himself dictator. Henares page one perros goes in his quiet, modest way without | rounded by terrace gardens ths All About the Unknown Regions of | nisi: pants | fand bar far out into the sea, and vosscls of the | aware that we shall toon have 75,000 men in the | lim it wus disregarded and ho yielded up, the | any show about himself. lost my moth z : d have lately been discovered bere, There i | largest tonnage will haven safe land-locked har- | field?” Mr, Chase shared in the mistaken im- | Command after the buttie hud been won, you know (Lhope you received my answer upon | where th Our Neighboring Republic. A RUINED ciTy briefly aud with respect ai atata Lig desk covered with tr fetters and taking Alter lisicuing to wuat ay. he gi ed ot him over his apectacies und tore a email corner of oiscay “Take that, he sn thing you k 88} cared for by the ladies of many bor here at ‘Yampico. ‘Tho barber at | pression of other officials that the | National Iuteliigencer of that date urged the ap- | your kind letter, in which you expressed your | lilacs, lillice of the cenen hens, Yorn Cruz is not good one. | over in wixty days. “As to strong taxation, the | Poittment of McCleitan to the command of the | sympathy for } The city is very —unheulthy ard | people of this country will not sta army, and ono of the gentlemen connected | J gota friend in her place that is just like «| and beanty perpetual the Tape eet ef the war fo get to it. Tampico | there is nonced forit.”” Mr. Cisco was a demo- | With) the editorial department of the Nation! | mother. We leave this country tomorrow and | project from the. f taps the center of the country. It has a new | crat and adhered to his expres#ed opinions, giv- | /*etligence”, and who now occupies a very Hight | Lam longing for European air—this you must | its picturesque beauty, for y railroad now being built irom Monterey through | ing his reasons. Mr. Cluce eyed him curi position hore, told me he or Mr. Beaten, forgive me, I cannot nelp it! Lam sorry that | clowing in colors of golil and pink, the rich state of Tamulipas to it, and another | as if meditating whether he could be soon Mr. Lincoln on the subject, and Mr. Lin- | vou did not like the daguerreotype; it was the | Cling lovingly to the jacher of thes in the hour of afllietion), and other blossom: dit, and RICH MINING REGIONS. nd write upon it nt the indignity, | r : : ¢ took the scrap of paper rond will be projected south through one of the | sionisi in dixguise. “Phe next mornieg,” says | CM said to him: “Yon don t love George any | best I had at the time. Liant trees stand ail about, ro awe pon ft, at richest peckoae Mast ‘to Mexico City. Within | Mr. Field, Cesttion mae renewed. | BOFe than Ido, but 1c: unot do it, Lamso| And now furewcel, my dear sir. May God | be woodland ervors, where ure tayht be 5 ai wise & few months the Meaican Central have opened | Mr: Chase said be was sere aoete hep ; | dependent upon Congress. protect you yours and guide you safely | sconced to dream away the low ou cantut by their line trom San Luis Potosi to it, aud this | Mr. Cisco's views, but that he could not ‘go i HIOM REGARD FOR ME. CHASE. through this life to a better world, where I hope | young daughter of the presen! ow 4 therenpe Jed Larbor will make San Luis Potosi the commer-| for strong taxation.” “Without it,” replied | ‘There is so much of interest in this book of | 0 meet you again! # seat constructed in one of the nob that th 4 cial center of Mexico. It will open up the gr cultural interior of the Panuco river, whic said tq comprise the fineat lands of the country Mr. Cisco, “we | shall into a suspension of specie p Mi man did not hment. ly drift = it , Yours most traly, with stepe by whieh whe ascended to Ar. Viel T wonder it vas not republbod ap Never,” said Chase, “so long as ere. He was ina position to know © in- | To Taowas Rrrcute, RQ. her could be secure from intrusion. Roki ae and will materially change all parts of Mexico. | retary of the Treesury.”” Mr. Cive oa een mernans of the Page mpeg: ona as ane Tied Se WINS aise ore ‘ux INTERIOR. - : m1 to is views and believed that taxation would | of great public peril. His opinion of Mr. «1 ntat Mrs. Inside thie mix id locks, | How a Literar pam um id to ti twin in the state which SORE SEE METANE TO TANEIOO. 5 = : Per aoe AE ns manorial mansion the solid locks, jerary Man's Danchters Pulled This ne tbe given | Mrersgeess tor cent of pure tin aud with the | The most pictaresque ride in Mexico is on og payer tala ginting, that | Case wat enhanced by the intimate associa | 70" ites sl tetiyel se with pendant brass ring, the haud cary ng and Out of a Dime to the tole of the Mex- serios of vuceessful experiments, that hand-to- | 4% oficial and private, which existed, and he Find as ho net er in 1850" Sr Field says that | wood decorations show how everything Now York ‘Iribane. fean republic. The mouth policy which carried us along eo far | ‘I parted from bim with a higher appre- | sho hunded him the proceeds of her first con- | colonial tinics was built to pesiat dceas ‘y man who bad been t. secttre employment in th eps ator —s PLAYING AT SERVANTS, thors they are undsaday. T! from a railruad, 4s out about | the Tampico railroad, running from San Luis mines are about 160} Potosi to Tampico. Its scenery is far grander t the tin is so pure : media sbeeaag? than that found on the Mexican N 1 from | without a fuancial disaster.” ciation of Lis magnifieent mind and character | cert in New York (#11.000), to be given in char-| mos? beautiful feature of the. bes recipicut of not a little attention during a bri country contains states | they ave liable to come infty comretition | Yoru Crus to the capital and T deubt whedier = ae ck a yas than Tentertained when I only knew bim as | ity, leaving to bim and other citizens the dis- | grand hall and noble stairway. Cy0 stay in London received not Jon depres which have nover been | with the mines from Dakota and Cornwall. there ure us fine views anywhere on the Ameri-| Qn the Ot of Ace 51, Mr. Chase visited | O8¢ of the leaders of the land.” Another ex- | tribution of it. Joux F. Corus. | of this antechamber, in which perchance Gen. | trom one of his English friends anmenncine bus explored. Tt bas vast | SOUTHERN MEXICO. can coutinent. I took the trip yesterday and I in the 9th of August, 1961, Mr. Chase visited | tract and 1 close the book with reluctane Washington may occasionally have placed hi . + English frien uncing bi Tegions which have not The chief development of Mexico during the had the advantage of being one of been trodden by the foot | near future will in all probability be in the | tourists to go over the road. ————_ see _____ = Now York and mevthe leading bank oflicers | --1 uappened once to be with the Secretary whon | HE ROMANCE OF BOOK COLLECTING. | sword. are hanging quietly twoswords, crossed, | ®Fival in Am ‘ou will find | and capitalists of that city and Boston and Phil-| the President, without knocking and. unan- that with their own a and proposing himseif for a , the master of the | Visit of afew hours, inch ing One night. Al- > | : nothing about the conntry in the guide books. | adel; ‘The much discussion at the | nounced, as was his habit, entered the room. | 4m Obscure Volume Suddenly Admitted | house, followed Gen. Grant throuzi the +tr- | thongh delighted nv the prospect of mel a = the ae ga hogs careranebeseetcy panied ~ the pre bryan! = foe basen! The history of Mexico tells you nothing con | begining, and Sin Chase. Deing pushed to the | His rusty blac hat was ‘on the back of his Among High-Priced Thackerayana. =| ring campaign and stubborn fighting that ag net iow we Americans have no’ ry. Vast areas of Innd are now be man whom he much admi . Le — wa t cermmng it and the books descriptive of the coun- | wail, said he wanted fifty millions ia seven- | head,* and he wore, as was his custom, | From the London Atbenmum. guded with the surrender of Vickrburg. Not | o ests auhaa et paged cai 4 slightest conception of it. Look at the size of | up by foreism capitaimts and I find Americans | try know it uot. It has been unexplored suve | thirty treasury notes, with the opiion of the {an old gray shawl across his shoulders. | "pre secene discovery which has added a new | {#1 off hangs a painting of a historic suip, the | S“UY I Waacare cram the country! If you will take all the Atlantic | Viviis Ment every were, 1g eid of coffer | by the railroad, and the ride wa ike biasing | subscribers to tako fifty mnillions mere, aud | To the best of my recollection this occurred in | (97 rather an old) book to the list of those with | hedaa scented orca eee ep reed | Se naconmmaos tion. his visitor, aw tir mod ¥ _— . ow them into | Plnting is a favorite one and all along the west | one's way through the wilderness at the rate of | again the further sam of fifty tillions—one | the spring of 1864. I said good morning to Mr. had an eventful curcer. It was the one sent hold boasted of only one servant, aud ates frame Haine to Fleridnand cov thee fete | coast in the states of Colima, Michonean and | twenty miles an hour in a Sret-classcer 1] nee scen eee millionsin all, The next day | Lincoln, and then, as was the established eti- | Which the name of Thackeray is associated | by the United States go ent to bring | he wished to ask afew friends to meet the « serazy quilt your patchwork will not cover | Qaxuca itis said that the fincst of coffee can | went to bed at night in the Pullman sleeper at | a meeting was called at the American Exchange | quette when the President called, withdrew | strikingly illustrates the vicissitudes of things | Louis Kossuth from his exile in Turkey, tinguished author at dinner. Hiseldest daug! mach more tian half of Mexico. Tt is oue-| beraised. 1 pamed through thousands of acres | San Luis Fotos! aud awoke at the little station | Banking’ Howse, at wich, Sr, Charo. aud Sf | om tho ofice.” Ae Mr. ‘Tmcoln in| his infre-| bibliogecpldsel ava supplies the latest contri- | he was received on board at Point Nagara, im | ¢ 000) Me i eee eae a fifth of the size of the United States, incluting | Of offre land as yet undeveloped in the trip T| of Cardinus, where we ate u good breakfast | Ciseo were present. A protracted discussion | quent vinit to the Secretary ually remained bution to the “History of the Romance of Book | the Dardanelles, near the spot where, 1cander vtclling Aiuska, and some of its great states, whose in- | 0K vom Mexico City down through Orizaba | with about fifty Indian men and women gazing | took place ard there was'vome & long time, J suposed I had my freedom for rea swum across to Hero,uud Lord Byron im- : e the guests and & | and Cordova, and [found coffee grow'ng wild in | in at the window: ioe ti i ij at least half aa hour, and proceeded to attend | Collecting. itated the feat. ‘This frigate was also the fig | unrantce eatixfaction. Ihe shy re- Dubitante are Indians, are xe our best | iy teip from fan Laie Potost to Tampico. zoe iealapas ee ike satetiag bik betel soversi” gece, «|| 9 the aconmulation’ct exiose eoick aeaiien (0 tke story wow-geing me rounds of journal- | ship of Commodore Perry in the Japan expedse | Clune ; faith in ate weanan- territories. ‘Take the vast mineral region of | which I tonk yesterday. I met at Jalapa a New wore pretty givls im all stages of dress | Tesolution was aopted to accept sub- | mein my own room. Hut I was mistaken, In | ism ia briefly this: An almost unknown and ton and then commatiled Uy Stiney Lee, hind did ue be was bid.ten, invited baif « dozen Sonora. It is as big as Kansos and and it has a | Orleans coffee merchant, Mr. Westfeid, who | There Pretty girls mm all stages of ntially the terms proposed’ by _ the | less than five minutes I was summoned to re- | forgotten book of travels—excollent in iteclf, | PTother of Gen. Nobt. E. Lee. In 1863 rhe nt- | ¢ pine epactes Se Ris GS semntiy brome elimate and soil very much like that of Lo ik ctically controls the coffec export of Mexico. | and undress and of all varieties of color, from eeretary. After the adjourumentof the mect- | turn to the Secret Mr. Shuckers, bis | 14 donbt—has suddenly emerged from ob- tempted to run the confederate batteries ond | eer bea om books ‘alitorn: Tt adjot —— tele] je — ~ —— —— adersey cream toa rich mahogany brown. | ing Mr. Chase sxid to Mr. Cisco: “Well, we have | Private secretary, entered the room at Port Hudson, but ran aground. After firing | ¢q@animity. De full of gold and silver. I met an American | comes from the west coa: hat there are there were girls with short skirts of red flannel | ti/ty millions, bat how about the next fit the ‘sume time that I did. The Pres. | curity and taken high and permanent place | 230 roun Totuer who had nd having one side almost torn | “We make only one stipulation, papa,” «n je something like a million | plantations in Ve a Cruz which pay a profit of ¢ banks will take them,” answered Mr. Cis i ident was gone, and there was lying | among the most cherished treasures of the | out she was set on tire to avoid « ‘The | the girl, “oud that is that Meta” (ibe th dollars in m the central part of Mexico, | from $40,000 to £50,000 a year. oe, pe rch ler “whove long | “Do you not see they havo stepped into the | Upon one Tend of Mr. Chase's eae | bibliophile. This remarkable transformation | P*inting shows her breasting a fierce storm in | daughter) “shell be the only one and he told me that Corre PLANTATIONS. black hair streamed down. their backs ‘cgntused mass of treasury notes, demand | nes come about in consequence of the dis-|™docean, which she outrode to end her brn epee got age 1 TUE GREAT MISIXG BEGIOW It takes about five years to make acoffee | others who had their locks pu: up in Greck y | Liven of ratne egy Notes and other representa: | covery of a document proving Thackeray's | CoUr# more gallantly. creed to cverytiing, and, absorbed in of the future was Sonora, and that the | plantation, but it is no bard matter and the | ‘0%, There were brigands with big hats and | lend you anothe: DAG ee i : 2 connection with the book in question, the title 1x Thy GRowxe. ie p | ebymoney had just been brought by Mr. Lin- | Of which is “Damascusand Palmyra: Journey | Itteeasy for faney to people thie ball with |! pauinia, Ontis Mate Seeking oc pote x “Never while I tol [Pele ce) rapt a an a betel Ee atte) to the East,” &c., by Charles G. Addison of the | illusive forms of the maidens of yore stepping |ax a pictur, in the trecbest of ‘Kin ond fy trRsscreeettar aa (née Vere Pract ni eet — le —— paged Velie nesta the ‘Treasury, was the confident ma poco gr SS a _ — Inner 4 mple, in two volumes, London: Beut- | siout ite polished floor ent rustling their sitken | onmoenced that she wes santy ts dioc kanes soniye mexenageseys see] peers ss ti they wl ma. ving tue gardens the road climbs | reply. . r : cage) ¥, 1833. ; indee emed station o onored gue ‘The Carmen mine was worked ten feet bi i Produce at the fifth year. | Gp into the mouniaiu Mt takes you iutou | On tho 0th of December, 1961, tho | counted it. Spinner, the treasurer, was | “Yt will be readily sdmitted that no one would a wean oy oe - : — vowed geinnstigd ee ee On xi 1430 and it | Bawanas are planted between the rows o! | rocky rogion interspersed with pt banks decided to suspend specie payment on | sent for. and when the general came up from | have thought of even looking for. much less of net hoon th yy oduced during this time $25,000,000. ‘The | bushes to shade them, and there is x profit | tivation It winds about iinet Monday, January 1, 1962. ‘They carried their | bis office, down stairs, he, Mr. Shuekers and | gnuing anything by Thackeray ia such « book, Sn a Habicanora gune bas already produced $31,- | from the banana orchards as weil as fromthe | up great hilly. and goes at revolution into ‘effect und the government | Myself proceeded to count the money. ‘The | ai this’ nos is therein it any allusion te alloc, Sccertot sama: howe tered 62.000 savl there ave other hues which ave | coffee. After your plantation ia in bearing | GP teat itle and goes at th p | simulisneously adopted the same course in re-| amount yroved to be na represented. just 608 | ator or veferency to luetratious,an ominion | @CuRntine, part of the qrowude. Its. pal | king that hin iaupbters had farning out grent quantities of ore. Sonora | each trce will produce trom ene to two pound. | grade. ‘The scenery is peculiarly Mexican, Se ee ee ea ee ee rod trot Oe een hte | imitinel of np Sittin siguilionnce: ap Rest that | "eae ween new eon aaane a toseven | picked up a rather nice-louking gitk Ihe Ban bat one railroad, a branch of the Atchiven, | and it costs about 7 cents a pound to pick it | tere you pass a field of volcanic rocks. Ad-| this period Mr. Field was deputy assistant | saved from his sulary in three years. ‘Thackeray did produce the illustrations—a fact | feet high, forming # #yiva: eatin aisle that | modest little guest room was most attractive Japeks and Hanta Fe wrstem, which runs from and got if to the market, | It wlls for 20 cents 4 | joining it is another of soil us black as your | treasurer at New York and remaiaed in that CHASE AND THE PRESIDENCY. Which now invests the book with its peculiar | yay named long: years ano “Lowers Lane. | with, trek. aminiin ate buncbes of trace teat the Suuthern Pacitic to Guaymas, on Un count on uat. in which two peons, in dirty white, are | position until the suramer of 1-63, when Mr.) While the movement to bring Mr. Chase for- | interest—seems never to have been known to ~ % of California. This territory has other miner- | pound profit every y a als besides guid and silver and is one of the orchards in bearing are hard to buy. i — ri ecreta reas- Within it the ground was entirely covered with | fairly luxurious with ample and comfortdhe crrtching the ground with wooden plone ee eat’ dctar, | Ward as a prosidential candidate was in agite- more arn 2 very few persons, of whom the | violets of the richest and most di Working arrangements and abundant drape: s- favorite prospecting fields along the west | bring from one to twoand three hundred dollars | “44 U°*! ‘is isa road over which a team o! y y Pp . Thackeray himse eeast. Just below it is the state of Sinalon, : n Seog ; - | tion a United States Senator, who actively par- : THE OLD SUMMER HOUSE. The neatdocking mad brought wean of bot oxen, with the yoke tied to their horns, is pull- | mined to scek repose and relaxation by with. . ly Pp and the publisher. With the death of these eye = so = big Pane preg there is « stretch of cactus, and ail around you | ittug Lurope, when Mc. Field became assistant | towering rage. Striking his fist upon my desk | altogether, and’ the book would thes, but fee ines. has one mine which | books, wax quite oblivious to ; = ; fierce bluck eyes and there were frowsy-headed | come the suspension of sp greater part of it had never been prospected. | plants are practically left to themselves. ‘They | (6 actos : somes ge hel atte reer Such mines as have been worked are not far! are started in sprouts, planted in rows nine | poy" end Sitis who hung about the tation and Galf | pound, at curiosity, be ite wall plotely | simplicity id how co * mar fu cringp Sen ee) pa pee pe sure the cocky bills, bare of « wil e | qectatary of the treusury. | tron tit tithe Mr. | he said to me that he considered Chase the —— | the spporiune appesrance. of the document bere sc Mg ere pe ace Gres 4 roe ap See oe ere _ ~ basen 8 produc 009,000 and which » you think of the barren mountains of the land | Pieid became very closely allied to the ad te i apis reierred ve continued to ite own - mean a wuld Give, an aye set os ripe yack som GS to aus a ton. | ia Sadek: “las cal ao poeta the soil grows | tration and relate uu raost important move- | (Using @ Very strong expletive) fool in the | aeacak to, cep quoted, written there by the belles a: amagined 1 would live, and what “a pretty ny ore that sields over 630.4 tou will pay by | richer you soon whirl around a horse-nhoe ts, giving details which had never been | world. He went on to tell me he and others bend and enter one of the most wonderfully le public, He became 2 frequent | had been unsuccessfully laboring with the Sec- | ascertain what the contemporary reviewers | o ~ Fouantic gorges of che world. Guest of the Secretary of State duriug| retary to induce him to imme a ‘cot | iad to say about Thackoray’s dlustrations. | pat’, {oreunately, his danghter, then enj aie aueeens Gin the veors of 1863-64. Tpon one occasion he |ton “permit’ to somebody precisely as | Did they discern gleams of humor in the | thus they have semamed antschet ‘One ‘This is the Tamosopo canon. I rode through | TemarKed to the Secretary that he supposed he | he would issue one to any reputable | “Dancing Dervish” or the “Sherbet” acd the Y girl his danghter as" Agentle kuock hurried his toilet “Din- her Is serve L. wir,” seid a sweet voice, and he followed the attr looking Abigail te tho little drawing roou, where his host introduced the ruciest of mining methods even in Mexico, and weauine a grent deal of ore which runs | Jess then 25 per ton. ‘There ix another mine | iw Sinaloa that has tarned out 200,000 tons of | Ore, and this ore hus averaged at least S60 a is i of other years. The present cecupa: It would be a subject of curious inquiry to | abuat to have the wally cleaned an. e e "3 fo the half dozen eles ae ud bane ; 0 Mul Nope a Wary OF at least a mcwotanda of | person, only the profits wero to be applied in| Bonbon Sellers?” Did they note the Tit | “Auze of the many written there I jotted down: | him to the haif dozen elew aaeuumup eae wu. This ix the Tejo mine. Its present ont- | iton the top of « box car and itis the most | everything Yet occurred at cabinet mectings | the interest of bis nomination, instead of going | marsimen gayety of treatment in the “Dancer gly ny eee proengt ae mation of delight escaped the lips of the eou- put is about twenty-four tons a day, and its | wonderful ride in this country. Starting | smce the incoming of the adiainistration. : : ‘ ‘ | into private pockets.” “That rei ‘ore will average at the present €125 a ton. | ‘There are great uuu ns now going | to Stualos, and I uncer t ther are eu- | ged tu lumber as wei mining. ‘The stxte | Ei of dpe woods and hundreds of tons axe i being cut monthly. It har some of the finest | y and ebony ins | at the Cafes,” or did they fan Seward suid | Mr. Lincoln suid. In 1968 Mr. Chase | “-\ueazin Calling to Prayers?” over a waterfall into a great gorge | months in the beginning he had fuithtully done | would have been nomin: and ride for thirty miles slong the edge of | #0: but that very» precipices, beside rushing rivers and through | tween some of his colleagues becan the wildest of forests, with the mountains above | barmonions and so much unworthy a, yy they heard the | Aud Joy isa cargo, so easily stored, eae | nt ed at the democratic | agata to look st the “Damuavene Lady" ot | In that place long cee ae crencrnns mos Comgieeity ‘Sovmeeh Sone le oie es 4 rutic | again to lo = c 2 " 0, 8 Ww c ter was completely covered wit . convention in New York if Mr. Seymour hiad | vow to distrust. the wily “Svrian Merchant?” | iJ” {ust Pisce long ago. ws well as evcrywhore | to: was couplescls Grow quantities of uns So jn- | declined the nomination, as it was understood | Most important of all, did they recognize the tragedies, concealed or open, went on, while | Woodland Blocks of sparkling so kering | he would do. and as he had repeatedly stuted be | portrait of ‘Titwarsh himself in the frontis- | the springs and flowers arose to refresh and | eid flasks of tisk wine in their hollowed- aud the earth thousands of fect below you, un- | tnd even quarreling was alged ia pou | would do. vur candidate Leunnot be,” head | piece to vol. LU, where he is seated in the | Charsk aed the skics shone to uplift and in-| out counters candles wevecned with rose ail ia au hour you find yourseif out of ike tem | iheve occasions that he discon tiaved making a | proclaimed from whe wage, and the nomination | Bazwar placidly ‘smoking and thinking, per- | SU" coloted shades gave a charming and sufficient pernte zone and down into the tropics, with | Fecord and destroyed the notes whieh Le hud | was given him usacompliment, with the distinct | chance, of the wonderful successen of Heuticy und Nght, ‘She attenetbe hasan, te dhe chante your eyes dancing and your head bu: ady taken. He saida tradsful sistefaeut of | understanding he would decline, and Mr. Chase | other man “Boz?” In all probability those a — ' “ - 01 a th “s ae tiegng Se coaaeabana ae these “occurences, if ever publisied, would | would have been nominated almost certainly. | discerning reviewers did nok notice the illus-| Whcnevening came in the old mansion and | °! White gowus, presided with pretty dignit, in an amphitheater of the richest grecn you shoot ou} vives as they cutcred the dining room at the COrrER HViLINO. persere, , Tem told that this mnnsed land can bought for a dollar per acre, and there is no | doubt but that a portion of it would be cold in big lots for much lew. ‘The coffee exp: ad “ : and two deft maids, dressed alike, with duiu: Mexico is «teacily imereasing aud the United panorama which you have bring disgrace upon the country, and they had | Hancock got up to 157 votes and the convention | trations at all. we sat beside the wood fire the fames shot up | freehnoss, served the wellcooked @inver. The | States consumes th In some plices the rocks were bare | better be buried in oblivi | Sijovrned. T'was with Gen. Hancock at the} Apropos of Thackeray's ancaymous illustra- | and showed the lettersand figures “I. ..1783." |eutcrtalument was altogether © deesded = that the Amer THE, STORY OF THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMA Metropolitan Hotel here when the telegram | (iow of books at this time may be mentoned his | he letters atood for Buchan e story of the emancipation proclamation, | MMe, Announcing the vote and adjournment, | series of drawings (now in the South Kensing- | Jato only meaut wlon thet tfos wan pat inns expressions of delight. ‘he next amorn tue smite ecar makes you Kaas ee Mr. Seward, pie eae, for I had returned in consequence of a telegram | ton Museum) tor Douglas Jerroid’s “Men of | the house was built much ex The lnteat | iug he took his departure, being driven te the think that you are at the entrance of Dante's | Ara ieiviay eerie Asti | aunounelng Mr. Allen’sindisposiilon. auc 1 felt | Character” (thrve volumes, 1888), which, by the | representative of the mame still lives at Dirt. | station by Mets, exatly aitived mm chevtede ona Inferno. And so you pass on until you find | o Mr. Liucola’s characteristics. Mouths be-| sure his opponents would during the night put | way, are intinitely better than the engvavings ingham Manor, und be granted the writer the | se! fits astomehineut would have bec yourself in foposts of orchids and your cars are | foro it was issued it was the subject of constaus | up someone tobeat him, and they did, ald waen | represent tham to be. In Addison's work te | privilege of locking tisagh a pile.of ecient | cnateould be here bekela te tome cha ten, saluted with the rough voices of the birds of the jon at the meetings of the cabinct. Day | Bet day the news came that Sue td | reproduction is probably « fair rendering of the | {ocuments, decds, letters,” bille of lading. ac- | lowed, who the deware maid eet vaste daueed tropics. You are now in the lowlands of the the most exrnest nnd acrimonious de- | Been uominated T telegraphed Mr. Snow to! original drawings, and, curiously enough, the | counts and social invitations, mort of tna |acommd the old gentleman wath their eae hh took place in relation to the propriety or | Fome on aud take charge of the Iniciigencer. 28 | work of Lithogtaphing these was done’ (by | Gated in England and all corroded and crumb. |berue alcit on the cud of broomstick ia he | impropriety of the Pre-ident issuing wich aproc- |Z would not support the nomination, Hise | Madely) ou the very same premises where the | jing. ‘The deeds ouly, belug on parchment, | toamph. .uis Votosi isperbaps | lamation. Althoagh unattontive listener to these | #legraphed Gen. Ewing to get the soldier's | copy of the book coutaining the proof of Thack- as the plantations | once weil startet, by spending a month or so in Mexico euch year one could attend to the gathering of his crop and draw duis profiteregu- ly. Snowden, but the | cial success, end the Fugitsiman was profue mre little attenti YUCATAN AND TARASCO, ‘The northenst hors of Mexico is one of the least explored parts of Mexico. Still. I have meta great many Americans in Mevieo who coast and the ait has grown hot. ‘his brat f the railroad cost 710,000,000 to butid and line from Tampico to San « are intact, though yellow as gold, and bear | “tou wicked bnesies,” said their father, try- ; : 3 cuentas ; conver to nominate Hancock, but | erdy’s eh, it w Sf by Mines. Gothahe, (ne | baw ited it «ud have expk sie most expensive railroud in M discussions of bus etaries, Mr. Lincoln did | Convention 1 : “ 4 ray’ share in it was sold by Mesere. & Y. | fastened to them With tapes sing: malls. IX THe NOT LAxPs. [aes Seen Menaes ee ie codes ee Puase G. Canvexten. | not take an active part in theta, nor wax it | THe wominativn of Gen, Frank Blair in some | Wilkinson & Hodge for £27 10s.; the price real | srals of bees wax Ineaved in paper soon are used by the poorest clases in briiding | Carolina and it is about four times ae big a 0+ — - knowa what his views were. * * * So bit. | measure gilded the pill we liad to swallow. | In | ized excoeding by eanctly £7 10s., the amount | Oy either side with the arm of their bats. “The capital of the state is Culixean. | Niussuchusetts. some of the ri 7 ter did the controversy grow that it resulted | September: sent by the President to Utica | received by ‘Thackeray on December 22, 1837, | of the siate of Maryland in relief. was too late todo tah : t feasuchitee wie of the richest WORLDLY DEVICES BARRED. a A to tender Mz. Seymour any aid the administra- | for drawing th ‘the d ‘ jroed ruuming | euil im the world. ‘a enall part of it is ee after a time not only in'& breach of personal | {0 lender Ms. Stsmour any aid the administra | for drawing the cightecn or (if the design on of of there de submit.” “But we wanted the whole thing to Shere are a number of Amerie | eyitivated. The whole country only 300,- | Especially Fish Poles, Bicycles and the | 2d to some extent even offici ho Ge Lag euakoat cant Tinie Lever cn, | the cover be counted) nineteen illustrations | strangely today wuca.wa have ecased to con. | be a success,” pleaded the quondam servants, Fess the capital, aud the> have, 1 un- | O00 peuple and the most of these are pure 3 tween certain of the cabinet otticers, but A statis eps reyben my elailows pee for it. idex monarchs ax next only to the Creator: | “and it was iinpossible to arrange it utber- erstaud, gven the place qritem boom. \ diane. “They dress different!y from the pe: —— ually even in a prolonged discontian: Eager opr tog oohi gay omen ts aa ‘harles the Li, absviute lord EXKNOWN KLDORADOS. of this pact “of Mexico, wear the whitest How mevy Americaus have heard of the | While co.ions and are notorieas!y clean. It is one of the richest | Whole © i: " + hers d proxy of the | Wire. . : Caraga: her nomination to be made. The National ; * . aad » From the Uhfeago Daily Tribune. cabinet meetings. This condition of | other uc e on DEBORKAW’S EROWN BAIR. rovinees of Muryland and Avalon, lord beron ‘Wel:, I forgive yon,” said their paren At the Dexplainos camp meeting grounds yes- | things usted until one day Mz. Seward received | Jelligencer reluctantly agreed to oupport the Ee Baltimore, Ac. ‘To all. porsoee to won |lauckiug in spite of himself. “But sui terday the seats in the big tent which shelters | 4% autograph letter from the Prosident re-| Heket until the October election in Penusylva- - i e A Curious Story From M; Love Lock | these shail come, greeting in our Lord God | shall never allow such a performance again.” ° | at wells 8,000,000 esuf this questing him to attend withous fail | Mi, end if he failed to carry the state we were nae everlasting.” *’ © * It closes by providing des ose. sine ico andl it is enid that its | Cory veur. dus-capical w a-place called Mera le were hot asa bake oven,and | {""iyecting of the cabinet which he | 10 tke his name from the head of the ticket and a Stick of Weod. payments to be made on the amost ttn] feasts wandh we « | & town of 50,000 people, lying twenty-five miles | Only the ¥eterucs were in attendance at all the | proposed to hold on the morrow. All the other pape php ed ema agra pai We did | From the Boston ‘Traveller. of the year, the Annunciation of Bicsved Virgin | wnat will the caine ween oe | froma the Gulf of Mexico and connected with | meetings during the day. The young folks | Socretarios received similar letters aud not one | Mtn 4h the eatue dime, wiliout wny concerted | Thirty.seven yours ago a Yankeo fishing skip- | and of Bt. slichael the archangel. “Given tne ‘Ie plague, perplex sud i with ust € coasizy come | ite american dollar, aad the banking of the | “TUSHE Nhe seclusion of the shady groves | or Let the ‘pusticular psp fat | thing. Id the ticket been ‘reversed we gould | per of Vinel Haven, Me, named Solomon Mar- | de" Our greuter seal st Ariuoe thie 100 day of | wi the frit fosive thm poate “a ithe sate eerecan dollar, and the banking of ‘the | to keep coo! by lying in hammocks aud on the owe they ‘were called’ together.” At the. apy | BAave carried Pennsylvania on Frank Blair's | shall was courting Deborah Sholes of Upper | j<hvced John Hart, €0n., keeper of our greater | Will sic invade, wis wplited wase. produced 455.00) ounces wf silver in a few | and yor bay drafts ou New York instead of on | &#8# Under, the trees, Some, bolder than the | pointed time Mr. Lincoln’ waited until they | ™ nme war record—“but the saddest | Port La Tour, N.S. While st her home he had | se-} in our province of Maryland.” paren weave Bi mene ppt ad Months aud ti is surrounded by great states | Mexico. ‘The iarge part of the interior of Yu-| rest went up the river toashady nook fora| were all assembled, haviag beon unasually 3 begged a lock of her beautiful golden-brown CURIOUS BILLS OF LADING. pag ote eet png ape —— a mee ow for — om jefe | Caen is dongle. “This is iuhabited by wild In- | quiet hour of fishing. Others rowed und a few —— to Co Pane ts! ee a STORIES OF re ae hair. During tho succeoding winter, which he | The bills of lading are interceting, the fab- Brother, aud 8 f beat. ba ben pensenialtue the Mexican Southern j ran 5 rg a. oF dite capital by | who believed that clewuliness is next to godli- a yaaa Mere that In ve ‘thi ag range Hegel! spent at hishome, he recived the news that the | rics mentioned having names unfamiliar to us “Will the dear Rauuts where manhood played ie P <i bs | threatening to come down and tuke it, but who dieing asked you the | and so closo the grave where lie buried the Indy of his heart had tarned fickle and Tailroad oud this will bring # vast guld-bearing | stick pretty weil to their own camp fires. ness went — opportunity of reading to you a proclamation litical hopes of wang young Indy of now. A sort of cloth is marked in one place AL euchre bold and Insky eevet-up— act into the market. The «tate ix the one in nndihistc eye ae ae oy As a result the camp was pretty wellde-| {um about to issue. Beiore procecding to | Politic pes of that pei was allowing another the honor of her eompauy | gray fearnaugh! nother as twenty vards of = where 50 oft aur semen eioapes— which President Diaz was born and it jethe | 7, 7NE AYINS OF as ck serted during the day, and last night the | reud it, however, I desire to say that not only | 1am indebted to Dr. Thomas Ritchie Stone | ¢o village merry makings. fearnothing.» “4 shall gt yd Be FY Palle i Lacie cee PEED | acai ate among the abst wed ern Part | ounger element was hotter than even the sun {40 I not invilo any discussion ubout the | for thocharming letters addressed to his grand In his despair ho and a friend named Colby, | tit, Welsh cotton and Russia drab” are fre- | Aud mast a frien iu wna plesiye Ris anatet Pailway if it is ever completed. hdhe nip ~enrataepr mugs amacmessesey 6 Py LOG Te map heya absence, | propriety oF | tmpropric! ote Metesmues | father, the venerated Thomas Ritchie, by Jenny | wig was afterward killed in tho war of the re.|queatitems. Ore bill for hoes, quorn irons | How shu th commtag mal Ket Wine COAL AXP THON. would. Xaratan waned the time-of thecunquest 1°29 tauting thay were giting marc attention | Ct tas am unwilling inten to | Tind, and, before repreducing thom, I find Mr hellion, toved a tis inch hole into a | 24 Rails puts down thirty nails at neurly $5, | At ali. If she's allowed tw segislate Uthas vast arens of gow! Lard, and Ldnow a | about the nrost thiekty populsted part of the | to the world than is consistent with the good |*@Y- My mind fe made Up. On the| Maunsell B. Ficld bas some very interesting’ | Pe! wang cyanea 1, | A foot note explains that owing to the scarcit Brotuer, the case towne qucer. Balt deown American cepitslints who expect to | Tot Sined cities which dats ban pene sok | old Methodist ides, cartailod thoir litle rvore- | COMTAEY, 28 20, ,mntore Ot that ‘may | Tetminiacences of his intercouree with this great be ag ey taper prey er rg ed cor aremtioned) a coeaap Cmbich war it | «speak, © friend! has the oma mphere. guake fortzues ont of 1 I fields which | “\'Y age vid a - ne Gays | ations iu asummary manner. Secretary J. F 2 o aE singer and admirable women. On her arrival es b | dhe solt-soap raltbuw sphere we kept Scar Gia tiiey lone’ Mimamaetd Sar @. tna Sn ae y other vast | Nauny promulgated the order lust night which | OCF to you.” Hie then drew irom bie pocket | {i'Key,"York sho sent a, moto requesting Mr. | P!Wg- The next summer he wont back to Nova | nails is unavoidable and these have ‘been sc-| Dusit nad varksanum subene we ee alga & manuscript, and to the smazement of some, | i Ne Scotinand married the fair Deborah, in triumph | lected to give antirfactso See See See hls ail one ssiembled, proceeded to road rhea ph rata parr ecnge yore od over hie rival, end, brought her to the states, “Anothos bill reads as follows: e ori th ancipation proclamation. e : A ~ | where he afterward died. He never 2 neat-bellied silver pint From this time forward all Geh polos and | ii od, for awhile nobody spoke, Some ver-| Hon from the Barings to. call and sce | Notesmary to reclaim tho bai, and there it re- aghecapaiee carted on ie chap procuds. 2 "BOF be tl" | ya} alterations were suggested, which Air. Lin | Ber: Mir, Jay was in Europe drawn be_ | Wsined for year after year, the tree waxing With the worla at lary Praxmfty v0 these coui ticks. ihe climate of ers all this wart of Meatce is very iineand the eap- | on tialet who would buy some of the agricultaral | 1 é thun an acre and whick stands a pisttgrm of stone ierty fect “high. palace is in the ruined eity of Palenque, Down to the precepia, uouch two trae, Weve preavhed to het for pare koutalitg?” trated on ihe exp grounds. ‘Brother, the worst + fear. Sut ihit ll k - a= “ most of it. The prospect | ' an proprictors will ine ated on ihe am cola accepted without a word of objection, and large and strong, and covering over with its Heudveioug thts route would make «iertane. | aud moar tits ie auother rained city, which war | uote tolecctedon tho growin Pe? “H| then the meeting broke up aud the ministers | (ween Mr. Harnum and herself, for up to that | yinito wood and Paper baek the token stnliihitmirmett, Veen beiian, ge padiie Landy wre worth, from a) to | named after Pierre Lorillard of New York, «io | Ai “hainmocks. tae cline susdes 00 idling noon ere Of ttre Lele sanancipation | Field drew the contract aud it was modified on ptt appar td eye adh en te tam Satguiione. 5 cents acre. fai ; une a the funds whin : 3 : . lished mi now jershall farm, 9 ahs Stoo aot ‘Mowat mu ‘il Linda ot gouine | discovery. ‘Wishin 16? miter of Sterns mee [abose Maat be ken in. "Tey tat OE Be | ee ete tate a sud Mr, Barner nequlegced’ in are assaf | cut the tree for ‘Gre wood. In splitting tho | gisiu.'Stinnct Eerane, Pein im this disnied | S41 1-4 —yameee ‘This new railrond will, anc dees already, tap | ure hundveds of Tuine containing mageifieent | "thou the grounds. i the people were ripe for it and what he bad | nent she desired. Mr. Field was vecy macn | Wood the ax, happened to lay the tree open ex- | order and weil-oonitioned upos the rood sean | Past At pase aaeeeeties the mining recta of the state of Pueblo, | curvings, the remains of creat templor, of Tcl- | tract the ettestion or the nan heel dis: | ut firat looked upon as inopportune he had at | ® bher;he says “she wasn cola | actly ona tug, with a lock of beautitul | Friendship (or otlicr) now riding at anchor in | LasSaan ineutne deatentea bn Mibichs con‘ain both vilver sud gold, and one of | aces and of scalpturce, showing that the Toltece | (act the aflention of the people from the | ist regarded as expedient aud necessary. ea with her; he says ‘she wasacalm, son- | 3°47 it, ‘the’ outedide end of the plug |" ee oo Romer yd py the finest epreimers-of gold ever brought into | hed a tigit center enieet pout tan | Gorpel services inust be put aside, Anything |" T° tiie how Ar. Lincoln had de- | ble, consersative woman of high principles, | BlF behind by three inches of solid he Pha ge Nr fw Ty elec aa ibocthes, tne ont to ear Shc Best specammess of Bold eves brought into | had a high state of civilization: Aud ubout the | of thi wort will not be tolernted, cided on Mr, Stanton when Mr. Cameron waa | THF calculating than emotional.” “she do- | Wat covered by three, inches of soli wood, iy thts: sft shows to. an Americis busi-| City’ uf Mexico Haclf find many ruize |" The amens which wore given at the conclu. | “led on Mr; Stanton when Mr. Cameron was | tgied Aumbng. “I wan with her,” he says, Shoat a mocth ago. Jtwasauueget of soled | quae fa0N Joo ow little we know about | gion of this wore frou the old campers, The | "wed for the mission to Kussis. “At the | sehen a tolegram was shown to ber mention’ fold wbiss your nt. The American entered | Yaited “near PuLttee the” rity Patt oy! | Foun peupie were uot t.‘tued fo eho “so be subject afr. Lincoln and Mr. Stanton had not | #28 the enormous yum, that waa paid in Loston to wcontract with the mpm for the develop- Me it,” a — JO tlp ut the gapece | mct except upon the occasion, years before, | fH 8 Choice oF | : That f where it was found, and remain after the service to help ut the experi- ‘eae ware. ther employed ina law | ® 1 sho excleimed, referring to the pur- ‘see Ye oe deaseeahs Sor came ence meeting was greatly diminished. we ei ael wea der oenion ae ae cluser.” The letters "Dr. Stone was uve. when the Ludian told him thet be had mercifully snubbed his associate that the latter | fii) eat arene; te ca eke por} Torgutien the place. Lhis was of course a lie. ‘Written for The Eveuing Star. bee greats gon cde seater ‘most ngrecable at aod will, I am sure, DURANGO AXD OMIEUARTA. : Cussr’s Larrie praRy. tify the readers of ‘Tax Stam.’ The first is Durango und ‘Chihuchua are among the bet- eras Senet: An oxtract is given from one of the little | datod-at Nasbville, mailed atChatleston, ter xaown of the mineral regions of the Mex- OS Sena ene, diaries in which Mr. Chase was accustomed to | and sealed with wax with small seal with “J. en Ee ~~ oe Go beating up against the steeper side L.” in old ish: “Dear Sir (I would sa) dean, states, and they are bot being othed Of Appalachian ranges that divide jot down daily occurrences and sarpaeared Dear Father Ritchie): Pray do fotgive me for ‘Three ‘men were playing alleged with great protit. Ihe mine uperated by Boss ‘The intaud country from the seaboard; most, wrote, not having soonor answered the kind note — gry <n ‘biltined Seal at ee eee Teta te sy Ne at pont = Hergeilind Re ou ad Mien oalitele st ‘and others died young, not bueause seaees Reserstins Gee teed poomees. sects ene serene Benger hale Month. ani rt laws turned out $800.000,000 werward bring caime, Which, falling carrying pocket, much | and express to you for Poe ‘correspondence Palmer tec past. The eomoctste bes enatherdionrict | ee eee om tee of the writing fo wholly oc partly obliisraied, tho interest. aid kinduess you. thersia have,| were pects but beottse thay id not keep Gacy | One ot the betters specially attracted ny aston: {ellow-workers in the business ovhed ea and ‘ich bas yielded 960,000,000 of silver, aud | prremid of Cholula. This it had a base | Skirts of this tand, in suliry summertide, T have, however, been able to make ont tho | showu me; the friendly warnings and advices and their aj in good ordcr, | tion because of Inte I have read and talked so remarks about the game The game fromm ts nine wear the city of Chihuahua | core tham three times ns big ae tut of the | parail asoet and dripping warm an tout following, but aot without « great deal of aifi- | you gavo shall ever be highly valued by ame, | Bus tu theao later daye'we know thas the crest: | muchabout Lotteries, and Leopied it asfollows, | made ~ wach reduced more than $10,600,000 a year | great pyramid which stands fn the douort noes = culty: “1862. January 12." At church in the | and my greatest endeavor shall always ‘be to | ext post may be the ” and pass into old iecgup Roveaer wxene. could not stand many remarky It was weak for tainty yours. There are a number of | Cairo today. Each of its ajlen was over a| While we, all summer, have been overroofed morning. Good, plain sermon. Wished much | follow them that 1 may deserve sppro- age, hale and green, as peacefully es if be had 20, 1770, | and bolting. ‘When, = ‘many efforts and ag ye | cot strat evsew Sethiehes SEERA ner eeT Seen se Nera Steet tempemieieraia” kine een teething Rae 2 say "thes The eens Gonihe prow @Ad af "eaten: Swald’coust, the quintet would indulge te wild re. seme | be cmeven c Len e ; Kanms Cityase investing bare. The Candel | area af bare that an sere, nd fet wes wee | ie einen le anid vigut, we, ike went to see’ Onmeron by appoiutment (1° wellere ont wil nob lead | any Sell todo bourpesia” ond, eae ae Pe ge ny ee Sri mune i Durango Las ‘yielded about 00,- | doubteiy the biggest of the kind ever built Wy | “tee Atlegscuice meacecen paving nok ne | but being obliged to mest’ the Vresilent, | through that city, as we most Wkely wil nov ha | a2d Tee oar omreeol and ‘Vietor Hugo. Litton abe | butious were becoming Tastened on the wire by 2W).000 anisiere are m utube of okt mines | man. It was an old stracture when Cortes | “ywAi ane &e, at 1, could only excuse myself. | south of Daltimore again. Accept, however, at seventy was a.constant d neront credit | Tust. The play was Snot ‘wore which are being reclaimed in this district. ‘The | erme inte the eountr; i ol predictions of a covier wavel At Prosident's found Gens. McDowell, Frank- | my best and most sincere thanks foryour kind: |and the’ soul of every im which be lottery | with the best intentions im the world, but state of Contulln, which adjvine Texan om the —our SavaRy. | tin, Moigsand Seward and Blair. de- | 08s to invite me to visit Brandon ib order to| found himself. And Lord is ‘which cost | somelow the balls always rolied too far to one nerti: and wiich ia on the east by a cided against dividing forces and in favor of | spend a few days with your family, which | two, and is still, we are to teera, ‘the 19th | side or other. Finally, after « period of futile ieee tue <ihneetiiiewengaiieg de ‘No doubt Providence bad a good reason for fo adjourn Mill tomorrow and have’ ell, shen | ech Fae ee ian ‘good benltis | thts Ne eee ed, tale of sy opens | on Gat ome are Se 3 aa eee Eart of out b ige ora won temaer pln i did. Fray neg RE fen ke sotber arte ASS AN company is working bavo—great bearing on affairs. Ont thet my | (as I believe, fifteen in number, is it not?) Pome by ‘Guovz.” “Because there's so

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