Dallas Herald. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 3, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 28, 1872 Page: 1 of 4
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f
0p( til
Horace Speaks.
CoLruars, Onto, Sept. 2 — for
ace Greeley -arrived here “
o’clock this morning - aReE
crowd of persons gathere
depot when the - train a re
John G. Thompson introdue
Greeley, who was revive “:
ebeers, and spoke about 1
utes. He said, in substar % “
more than seven years has
ed since the close of the *
it seemed no more than re
i that its attendant pro-erip :
evils should cease; that 1 was
v
inPre,
meji*t*
if KiW
& Never,
tons 1.1
VOL XX, NO. 3.
* ANOC 012
- 3 — ----- e = -------------------- ------ ----- --—- * T.—
DALLAS, DALLAS COUNTY, TEXAS, SEPTEMBER 28, 1872.
I ALLAS HIERA LD.
i ASTON CAME a THoMAS,EARFET J08SKLYN
A HOOSIER ABROAD.
onAthma in zxcnawor, ..... .. - met. colony
BExFakCrispauesrs. witbeing rorlen up near Richmond, In-
U - , disna, io veitle in Texas. Julian’s Radi-
cal, published lu that place, has given
fr a time to time an account of the meet-
PonT
4,47
Editor.
1 3 EP ingehe a: J the discussions had in re-
014 A TEOVARE,
n , v s r ax ,
li on to this nterprise, at which one Dr.
r. W. Tay 1 , figured no little. At last,
after math icliberation and a great deal
pt. king, it seems that the said
-1 to start in behalf of the
. ,.. sheu o. par a n preliminary tour of dis-
1ey ne 59 wait, Co*erj and investigation. Whether be
was his friends from his sup-
sed super vt fitness for this purpose, we,
Dat certain s 1 test,
sarryil in Texas, he has favored
s-in sveranayueniy,, Julian’s Radical with two
* -- " "1*1 * leie. The * ist, written from Sherman,
21 1. -.--.-_________... “escaped cu = ice—the second, purport-
‘ C-JORDAN & CC
. "AN.
Iso ULALERSIN EICA OR
Dnina, tin..
ing i - ha 1 written “on the wing be-
and Dallas, Grayson coun-
, ing before us sa it appears
: in Juliqu’s Radical, of
Sept, 1872
"e this letter over carefully
es, and with each reading
sore convinced of the un
s. the agentsent out by our
Montrose to His Mistress.
a sauus ananan, xanucis or Roxta st.
My dear and only love, 1 pray.
That little world of thee
Be gover ned by beethor sway e
But purest mounreby:
For it confusion have s part.
Which virtnoussals abhor.
I’ll call a synod in my heart, ...
co: And never lovethee more.
As Alexander I will reign,
AndI wili reign alone;
My thoughts did ever more disdain
A rival on my throne.
lie either fears his fate too much,
or his deserts are small.
Who dares not put it tothe touch.
To gain or lose it all
But 1 win reign and govern still.
And al ways give the law, .
And have each subject at my will.
And all to eland in awe
But ‘gainst my batteries it 1 and
Tion storm or tel me sore.
As if thou set me Ka = bind.
I’ll never love thee more.
And in the empire of thy heart,
w here I should solely be,
Ifothers do pretend a part.
Or dare to share with me i
Or committees ifthou erect.
Or go on such a score.
I’ll smiling mock st thy neglect.
And never love thee more.
But it no Artless action stain
Thy love aniconstant wonl,
I’ll make thee famous by my pen.
And glorious by my sword *
I’ll serve thee in such noble ways
As ne’er was known before ,
I’ll deck and crown thy head with LAya
And love the mere and more.
For the Dallas meini.
The Capital Question.
course she has laid out. Let her Baker, of water, but which, during the
Hutching and others muake her the chief most of the year, are dry, with
Kailroad city of the South. Let them
stretch out the iron ties and draw to her I
depots the products of Texas and the
wealth of the territories. In‘the way
of this destiny, her epidemics stand but
little—commerce stagnates in the sum-
mer. Let Houston be content and not
ravenous. Rather should her energy and
intelligence work for the retention of the
Capital at Austin, and encourage the eiti-
zens of the seat of government in every
laudable effort to improve and beautify
the “City of H ills,” so that in thedead heat
of July and Angust,Houstobiaus can flock
to the bills of Travis for health and recre-
ation, and be proud of the Capital of their
State, and feel that part of its beauty and
attractions are due the railroad city of
the State. ?‘ K.
. , now no good reason whyt
W HOLE NU MBER 991. ican people should hate or
er or should proscribe one me ot.
Some said there was a P File
people who should snot ve 4
count of their participati
H He denied that any %* and
The Coming Men.
beds of white clay nearly as hard, To wat hers by themick the war Ho dens..........
ma-e-trarell-d road Fall. When long and aar" i To mamere proseritea, Ceeanso si
wet theeare the to us, Texans, the long night of the opposition say this: -E
impassable in many placet one radical misrule seems as ir it were lew; w e say no, sir. ] €
we passed over on the 10th Mas lahe nding. But the dawn ex ques thousands of this class an I
miles wide, and, by connection: wiul.....aling to a: even to to — best citizens in Arkans
Thank God! for the dawn. /
In less than a year onr. people from the South and said 1 . . :
will be looking around for the principal reason the recons *"
1 S -21:---1.--110 ‘
thousands of this class and ng the
-...sros,.
AN3 ali
VINs
sherh
the 5sa
en-s. His trip from Sherman
, altogether too hasty to
1 I out anything reliable of
The Houston Telegraph in a late issue
says that the citizens of Houston have
guaranteed that the removal of the Capi-
tal to that place shall cost the people of
Texas not one dime.
We will just assume that this is correct.
r. Ai--1=0
A.en
#. C.aStnAs - € “‘ 3
u1 nsspors cmrs
feeID HOUSE,
nd
TASAS
iot
S & al-Ii HFNNY. Pa its.
tar +-
, riant tacsaceamint
innts.
3.-
tivkat toxrarAACK*
lient ed
- = 673,1
ent: rux*=> aNu aunvea
been n in met s * sow,
Eisnor.
, pa , vais Sa, Dhatta.
D) C C3
on
Progress of the Texas Pacific Rail-
road—The Country Through Which
It Passes-Description of the East-
ern End.
RALsToN, New MEXICO, August
ough which he flew “on
ere he dined and where
pre he washed his face and
st, he seems to have made
s to from what part of the
tainers came from, and
en they hal.
given him by three sever-
from Indiana, Kentucky
ith regard to this section
and productiveness were’
-able, but the Doctor, him-
ave seen nothing inviting
his fastidious judgment,
o after the dry weather had
me time, and complains
lata shml at. water for fifteen miles
i this sie
« as
Lavi turoa;
auvisig
A .
and that the guaranty is valid and will
be complied with, or could be enforced,
should the Capital be remevad to Hous-
ton. Under this state of facts, then why
should the people vote for Houston. I
can see no reason why they should, but I
can see several why they, should not so
21, 1872 —This is dated in camp,
near the deserted town of Ralston,
New Mexico. This place is situa-
ted at the north end of the Pyra-
mid range of mountains, and was
built in consequence of a supposed
extensive deposit of siiver ore. Af-
ter some forty houses had been
constructed,” and wells dug in the
ravines, where the slate rocks bar-
red back the water, for the use of
the owners, and after further pros-
pecting had been done with no
very encouraging success, -
the discovery of Silver City, in the
Burro range came, and quickly as
a herd of deer startled by the hunt-
er, all are gone to the richer field.
Ralston is deserted. Will it ever
Sherman, and a scarcity
s rairie country. How he
. in county without seeing
mire, we cannot ueiler-
admits that Mr. Hoffman
sent term and some ine
stock, fine orchards, Tve
e will give his own words
geity, for they will slew
be man and what relis-
about him when “on the
Dallas about sundown-
ets about ankle deep in
y and dirty. In fact I do
of this great city, and we
g for Corsicana at one
We retired early to bed,
sroused by the ery of fire,
found a most terrific fire
north side of the public
a tight buildings were swept
in half an hear, when the
yed. ileard no cause as-
with others, thirty miles long; and
if the valley of the plazas were all
to be counted as one, it would form
a letter Y on each side of the EXT: I right men wal the diacefof pub was a failure, was becaus
amid range, and between the But | and honor now usurped property were proscribed
ro on the east and Stein’s peak# TAL : DPN usurped --- -1.11 -
range on the west, in which not * tutede
less than a hundred miles of land we have n spuesar nions O in direct property, srr. Greeley:
is covered by plazas, ing attention to this question now. The time had fully come
WATER IN ABUNDANCE “It has already been the subject of should say to these thons
might be found in shallow wells comment and suggestion in several were against us, come for
dug in or near these deposits of journals in different parts of the Help us, free as we are,
water. With these sources of was State; and this time at least welthe waste places of our
shall not subject ourselves to the This is what we underset,
charge of urging a suggestion in construction. L beers J 1
behalf of the claims of this section scribed, and RoNe under
Some ask: "Do Fol W:
vote for rebels for office
you are asked to all.
vote for whom they plea
shall a man be a rebel •
years ago returned to his a
took the oath, and has s.
a good citizen, and done
to build up the country
it as an error to proscrib84
rebels. Mr. Greeley con nd .
ten. Sigel seven years a 19 wISi,
from the South and said i it Toy
It is holarnt allowed to vote, while the zu
_rant classes could vol a’ r 50 Y
ter the railrond and cattle herds
will be supplied with all that is
needed for them. These plazas
have outlets to the north into the
Gila river, when there is a large
supply of water, and of consequence
they are free from saline deposits,
like those which have no such out-
too late: ,
. It will be remembered that a
month or two before the assemb-
ling of the Corsicana Convention,
the Sentinel announced the name
lets. We have seen few signs of of Col. John S. Ford as a proper
alkali since leaving the valley of candidate for Congress from the
the Rio Grande, and all the wells State at Large. Tho suggestion,
and springs, even water in pools, as far as it reached, was generally
as sweet and good to drink for man
and beast :
CROSSING THE LINE.
news of On the morning of the 20th of
August, we passed through a Pass
in the Stein s peak range by an As-
cent and descent of less than sixty
accepted as a good one. But it
came too late. When the Conven-
tion met, although Col. Ford had
more friends in that body than any
other candidate, with one except-
tion, they were without organiza-
tion. His candidacy had not he-
come sufficiently known. Ho was
saying-let there be no Pro
but let us all, white or bh
» .
to build up our country.
Mr. Greeley was obliged to bring
his remarks to an abruj
sion on account of the n misli
by preparations for depar she
crowd called for moro, .
Greeley made his appe eA
the end of a car, but Jus then s
locomotive was hitched on the car
which was pulled some di
the track to allow anotlier
attached. After all was 9 ye-
Walker, of Virginia, was ".
and said :.. ,
Fellow-Citizens--I an
meet you this bright S
morning. I am glad to:
me so many intelligent, 1
ters, who will, I doubt
their suffrages for Mr.
[Cheers.] The Old Dom
n the past a leat
feet to the mile, and thus overcome
one of the great-obstructions other
surveyors have met with. The
passage gave us another thing new.
In the pass grew the maguey or. t
pulque plant. This is one of the merely for the purpose of present-
tribe of the century plants, and ing to our readers one that comes
was in bloom, sending up from its .
erown of strong, stiff leaves a stem gion of northeastern Texas, which
not nominated.
We make these remarks, not
with the view, his time, of making
any sugges ion of our own, but
revive? We have for two days
rambled over the hills and rocks
in which the precious motal was
supposed to exist. First we found
a dyke of quartz rock with seams
in which copper oxide was seen,
and small traces of chloride of sil-
ver. This rock was a perpendicu-
lar backbone to the entire range
against which the other strata of
vote.
1. The State has already near $200,000
in public buildings and grounds in and
near Austin. This amount must, by the
rules of political economy, be charged to
the cost of removing the Capital, for
should the Capitol be removed from Aus-
tin, it will be in the end a dead loss to
the State. Has or can Houston guarantee ,
to make good this loss also. Let the Tele- .rock rest,
graph answer direct, and not beg the
question by denying that the State will
lose this amount by the removal of the
Capital. To say that Colleges, Umiversi-
ties, etc., can be established to nceupy the
present government buildings, is all very
pretty, but it is the merest elap trap. Ev-
ery one knows that there are no such in.
stitutions in Tears able to pay an ade-
quate price for such buildings, and the
result is that if they were occupied they
would be as donations from the State. * 3
2. Unfortunately for Houston, it is so
situated that “King Peat" has often, in
the past, and will again in the future, es.
tablish within its limits his Capital for
months at a time, and where he reigns
Death holds such mad revels, and the air
so reeks with the fumes of the pestilence
that no Texan from the interior. would
dare visit the Capitel of his State. For
should he do so, there are nine chances to
one that, within twenty-four hours from
his entrance, the Death-cart would be
rumbling along with his livid corpse to-
wards the Potters guild. The statement,
unblushingly made, that the Railroad will
render Austin subject to the sway of
“King Pest,” is entirely gratuitous, and
refuted by positive facts. During the
terrible summer of 1867, when the yel-
low fever eccurged so mercilessly the
coast counties, numbers fled to Austin
with their wives and little ones from the
pestilence. All who thus come, with their
system untainted with the virus, passed a
healthful and invigorating summer. Oth-
ers, not so fortunate, brought the poison
with them, sickened in Austin and died
and did not cause a single case among its
citizens or visitors. The fact is thus estab.
LARGE QUANTITIES OF MILVER
will yet be found in this range, of
the various varieties of ore. We
found some as rich specimens of
argentine (silver lead ore) as we
ever saw—specimens that were
worth a dollar a pound, and which
could be melted as readily as com
mon lead ore. Veins a foot wide,
solid mineral of this rich ore, shows
itself on the surface of the ground;
and ore has been traced a distance
of a hundred yards, when it is lost
under the high peak of Pyramid,
and thus parallel to the strike of
the range. A similar vein of the
same kind of ore is found at a dis-
tance of six miles at Ralston. If
this be one and the same vein, and
there is. reason to suppose it is,
then these houses have not been
built in vain, and the Pyramid
range shall becomeone of the most
noted of silver producing points in
the country. But the ores must
be carried to some more distant
from the great and prosperous re-
we find in a late number of the Gal-
of fifteen feet high, surmounted by we find in a late number of the Gal-
crowns of flowers, on from eight to vestion News. We need, hardly
fifteen branches, and another on say that it has our cordial and
the top. The mountain mahogany | hearty endorsements and that the
hero appears for the first time. ticket suggested is one that will
Small pieces of this, near the roots, | unite the west with the north and
present the most beautiful speci-least, as with hooks of steel in its
mens of wood for small cabinet support. Here is the suggestion;
ware. The tree is short, like all pass it around: 1 U
the trees of this region, but we The Sherman Courier proposes
saw some a foot in diameter of Hon. J. W. Throckmorton (the
| impediment) and Col. Jolin S.Ford
(Old Rip) as the ticket for Govern-
or and Lieutenant Governor when
say that it has our cordial and
me 60
their
sound wood.
ruE VALLEY or THE SAN sros.
which we next enter is a fine grass
valley, between Stein’s and Chir-
ricahua (hatchet) range. The San
Simon or Sanz, is the result of the ,
springs and rains that fall upon know of no men
and rise in these mountains. Somo-
the times arrives. A strong ticket.
Dallas Herald.
Shall we work to that end ? We
more thoroughly
identified with Texas, and that too,
through a long series of years. The
“impediment” and “Old Rip” is a
been n the past a Icat
Union. Where she led, t -
followed. Even in the —
the Confederacy was noil
Virginia cast her lot with
Confederacy could not h
six months without the
minion, and when she sui
on the plains of Appom
rebellion was over. In
times it is a running stream, and
then it is lost for miles, and again . .-
breaks out. Where we are camped ticket that would sweep the State
there is no real channel, but above like a whirlwind. Sherman Couri-
and below it runs. Water may be Cr. L I
1809 Virginia inangure
grand Liberal movemen
soil, and. since all has :
within her borders, you
hear there of riots, Ku R
bank defalcations, but on/S
government and pence,
has pride in this great w.
she appeals to you, her €
Ohio, to come to her sUpA
help her redeem this
[Lond cheers.]..
Mr. Greeley then scater
at a window of his car, al • -
hands with a lt who desipe
found in wells’ in all this valley,
because it is underlaid by slate.
The range to the west is said to be
rich in gold bearing quartz.
nur THE APACHE is THERE.
No prospecting has been done
in them, because of these Indians.
They are the worst of all the In-
dian tribes. They have no game
or fish, and will not plant. They
must therefore steal and kill to get
cattle, horses and mules, all of
which share the same fate—are eat-
en. The central cores of the mez-
The Fish that would A-Fishin g go.
The Lophius is sometimes five or
six feet in length, with an enor-
mous head in proportion to the
rest of its body, and with sacks
like bag-nets attached to its gill-
covers, in which it slows its vie-
tims; and what acavernous mouth I _ _
Surely a fish so repulsive, and with | -: *
a capneity so vast and apparently **.
omnivorous, would frighten from nubl
its neighborhood all other fish, andOer Fan IGA RLt
would, if its powers of locomotion aeco
were in accordance with its size,be taguesounty.in which
1 A 1 i erte k one in ian,
the terror of the seas to fish sinal I1
ler than itself; but Providence ly escaped with his own
knoweth how to temper-its gifts, have heard from the India
and the Loplius is but an indiffer COT eTon c FOR STIF TO
ent swimmer, and is too clumsy to H : it g, 1
support a predatory existence by Tat TEA, , .
the teetness of its motions. How - was miglity good Indian.
then, is this huge capacity satisfi-to reisto Pi ride horse,
ed ? Mark those two elongated toE 0
mountains; there is grass on them tentacles, which spring from the .rut wour in
and in the valley; springs exist creature’s nose, and how they ta- .
and wells can be dug. Commerce per away like veritable fishing- itno1 PE
point to be worked, since there is
no fuel yet discovered near here
with which to smelt or work the
Now it i y distressing that Dr. Toy-
g" did not think much of
which he supposes to be in
fe- b-a, ont Hu i
and a sat IaTW Kous
ion in ser live wia,
1 this gryatt
Grapsox < ; but how he contrived to
see a Y it or think at all, arriving
3 d leaving at 1 o’clock that
even idst of a terrific fire, is a
,na he frightened by being
suddenly by, the fire and
i m k ahhp steal been effected ever since,
write such stuff and make
- -lxhoazinitit.
. mour u %.
14141 AND
sTAC A
SCALES
g at a place which he bad
of seeing "judging eor-
mon the brains of a goose,
startle leiet ine bis Indiana friends to
‘ be in mat lition 1 But we are grati-
Idagiet last found a place to suit
kifurther:
Are. 1
TEE TEXAS AND PACIFIC RAILWAY.
Col. Wolcott with his able assist-
ants, Messrs. Thomas and Durham,
have reached the one hundred and
eighty-third mile from El Paso,
Texas, on their preliminary line;
and with many remarkably long
tangents, and no grade above fifty
feet to the mile, the greatest eleva-
tion is but forty-eight hundred feet
above sea level. The waters from
lished that yellow fever cannot exist in
the pure mountainous air of Austin.
8. Austin was selected as the proper lo-
cality for the State Capital, because of its
marvellous healthfulness; because it is
near the geographical centre of the State ; I
because of its beautiful situation, and be-
cause of its abundance of pure water.
These causes all exist in as full force to-
day as they did in 1830, and neither
one of them can truthfully be said to be-
long to Houston.
4. It follows then that should the good
people of Texas see proper to remove the
seat of government from Austin to House
ton, they must prepare themselves to have
no Capital for four months in the year, or
they must compel Houston to guarantee
the building of two sets of public build-
ings. One set to be erected amid the ma-
larial bogs of Buffalo Bayou, and the other
set to be built on wheels, like Pullman’s
palace care, so that they can be run up to
Dallas or Austin whenever “King Pest"
demands the former set to establish his
government in it.
Butwe deny that Houston has or will
guarantee that the removal of the Capital
where we now are, flow to the Gi-
la and thence to the Gulf of Cali-
tornia, consequently we have pass-
ed the summit between the Rio
Grande and the Colorado of the
west. This road, if laid on the
ral and maguey are substituted for
bread, and the pods of the mesquite
bean, and acorns of the dwarf live
oak ground together and wet with
the large, wingless grasshopper
and then baked, make their pound-
cake. Not very palatable to tastes
polite, but very luscious to the In-
dian mouth.
There is gold and silver in these
end in the valley; springs
return to the reser
Corsicana about day light.
* - 111 town we have found, and
KINS A ALF, und is very pretty. Plenty
et a u E rs in every direction, and
NT jt, h - € tirely changed. Here we
1 suny ohta, Learsajen, be dark colored or sandy soil
Taxes i shct is wa S be fine for all the fruits,
, .1 -e-oiabls sn. farm crops, except wheat. -
• : - :
S-dp the test This is the first country I have seen I
Sealupiling to wen o "egun-ns e=-t-----e-
as , =th. binek wasy land being too sticky to shall cost the people nothing. The Telel
qum. Fro =, : ler living on it endural le."*-
.Per many What a judge of soil and
SIMON predustksl If the friends he has left be-
.....ee-nia-ari Lmarais use all of his sort, we advise the
rstug a emigrate to the eastern portion
BS TSARCE erilina, where sand and pine
A? iful, and where there is no
r Ra Eibile Square, 1. % enough to be “sticky,” when it
.BK/I-I ee we think they might find
ice.s 2.
,1*,>n
BANI k
2 2
PLfem
Tin#nz
graph says so. Now who will guarantee
the Telegraph ? The radical city govern:
ment of Houston may say so, but who will
go security for the eity government? Be
fore brother Webb launched into this
Capital ques ion, and could arise from
his’prayers and piously assert that Hous-
ion was as healtby as any town in Texas,
he kept a statement of the indebtedness of
Houston standing in his paper as an evi-
dence of the financial ruin overhanging
the city, and of the fact that the debt was
too large to be paid without bankrupting
the city. Now, however, the keen old fox
has not one word to say about the debt ef
tised I life “exara s." .
*** : But wahiere the proper explanation
Taylor , curious conduct is to be
elowing concluding pars :22n0/0222772
praphi p conderful letter: -------------
Waxa-r r Col. Lippard’s residence,
it dhee we-in a few minutes. After a
hale rest F * I write you Again."
- Base . We sake (his Col. Lippard to be the Im.
-, migration Agent, appointed by Gov. Davis,
a - andwe suppose the “we” were the said
. 4t Coned and Doctor, who came along “on
23 the *ng together, in haste to get to some
Tu un fed par lands, which the Colonel
. [.: seme -u le u, and that he has cleverly
asr,anT Me ambuggel he unwary Hoosier.‘
: she the same CAL. Lipperd
see since. war, heated a mob of infu-
rista an s until dispersed by the
—t on -----.: shear, aldad y the military ? We should
eueriisiF, *
0= . 4oe-------------------=
e ......- =ee *-*
dzjemznqres
1 1 ets a ing. For % ArdiuA : r‘ TL.l all,: Herald of the 24th ull., is the
i beads py of that paper that we have
-P [era la a lise, time. The Herald is one of
1-issiei -probaDC neable. ore in the state. Glad to note
twwisln - Ten year imp-tr sent, gentlemen, and hope to
get bettersdurselves soon. A litlecom-
--------------petidtereirs one up—Tyler Reporter.—:
us 4 - me. 0 * Stobga 1 C3 E AS
‘ Dattas -
espy Aui
2225
preliminary line, and all know that
such lines can be improved, will and the European races demand rods. To the end of them is at-
reach an elevation of but little
more than one-half that of the Un-
ion Pacific road. Security of trav.
el at all seasons of the year is thus
secured. And St. Louis is so situ-
ated, with its lines of railroads
reaching toward Texas, that she
more than any other city can rar-
ticipate in the commerce that
must pass over this line.
CATTLE RANGES.
will .die from the effects
. possession of these mountains, hills
and valleys; the railroad with its
cars of freight and passengers will
pass over this shortest and best
route across the continent, and the
Apache must leave the land he
does not use. The tread of civili-
The lands of Texas and the In-
dian Territory, on which the large
herds of cattle have been reared,
will much of them be turned to
grain-growing. Other and larger
berds will be required to feed the
millions of people that look to the
West for beef, mutton, hides and
wool. On our route we have pass-
ed over lands covered with grass,
where snows do not lie and seldom
fall, on which two millions of cows
could feed without other care than
herding and watering, and where
they could thrive and fatten for
the markets of the world. The
opening of this railway will create
a way between these lands and the
markets, and the demand will fill
the lands with the flocks and herds.
In the vicinity of St. Louis the cat-
tie will meet the corn of Missouri
wound. The Indians
brought to Fort Sill two gi
tacked, by a line or a slender fila-
ment, a small, glittering morsel of: n :
, , . P.: respectively filleen and nis
membrane. This is the bait. The’,r t .
books are set in the mouth of the family the I
fisherman down below. But how the children were murder
. * .1 7.ker county the past sumte
is the animal to induce fish tomf A. 1
venture within goach of these form | Chharon and ore 1 Na
idable hooks? Now, mark this per- in the
2 . feet feat of angling. How does the TIst bring in the
way. The Indian is fated to pass. Thames fisherman attract the gud-SL. The s A
away as surely as the manuals of geons? They are shy; he must theltimpethe merci bet.
times.J.G: KNAPP. draw them to him, and he does it .ian -
----- —:------by stirring the mud upon the that Gen.
bottom. “In that cloud of mud is one day’s march of the Kio
1 with his entire force. We
zation crushes and grinds to pow-
der all the “Los” that stand in the
MODERATION. — A . respectable, food,” say the gudgeon. Then the
still opposed to Greeley, and de- angler Plies hisrodanddonit
eline to vote for him. They have so the Lophius proceeds: and he.
a perfect right so to do, and no man
should condemn them for it.
The action of the Baltimore Con-
the Lophias proceeds; and he.
General has learned the 1 i
vention left individual Democrats
to their own free will. They can
. e . deres a lesson that they w
too, stirs up the mud with his fins former The
awa 421 nanbrin not anle 4A HAF ‘ P
tous for peace now in er 1
they may have a quiet t them
winter. and be ready for ui 4 .
and tail. This serves not only to
of the city’s’indebtedness has gone.te “pi.
Print the balance sheet again, General,
and right under it say that Houston guar-
antees that the State shall lose nothing by
the removal of the Capitol. But if Houston
w as serious in its propesals,and fi a ancially
able to comply with its guarantees, does
not every man know that such an under-
taking would be illegal and void ab initio,
being nothing more than a bet on an elec-
tion, or bribe to influence an election,
which ever town will suit best fastidious
ears. If the people do not know that such
a guarantee would be void, they can rest
assured that the citizens of Houston do.
Now does not every man know that Hous-
ton, tax-ridden and overwhelmed in debt
as she is, cannot and will not, should the
Capital be removed to that place, build
without charge to the State all the neces-
sary public buildings 1 Houston cannot
do it. Her citizens know it, and all such
beasts are but a change on the song of the
spider to the fly. As sure as the people of
Texas vote to remove the Capital, be it to
Houston or Waco, so sure, will they be
compelled to pay the expenses out of their
Peonte ofTexam are von willing teof the suPthee which we have. Yoo,,jen aakumpniyus
shoulder • debt, of 490 0N.r 5 Ay | ran has beun Vn: te butir 1 % 1 and redeatsis, Lender a logs . i
simply ja ‘** th’ FAAH ARN, 94% isteng the former, and void H,P s P " .
-1 The
stain* * Win ‘ A . -deh : mnerah of the - wee t - ut % Suite as. we 44
vote for Greeley or not vote at all ,
not one will vote for Grant. Let
radicals depend upon that. We
know what it cost us to surrender
to the pressure, and we have a re-
spect for those who remain true to
the old faith, while we deplore
their inability to see the situation
as we see it. No abuse, no vitu-
peration gentlemen; tolerance is
the word. We must pull together,
in our local affairs. — Brenham
and Illinois, and more eastern
roads will carry all to market.
“THIS COUNTRY HAS NO WATEB."
Not quite so fast, Mr. Objector,
running streams, from the nature
of the surface soil and rocks, are
rarely met with; but streams and
springs of water are found in most
of the mountains, which sink as
they reach the plains. The Rio—----------- --
Grande where we left it was a flow. In the German Empire a decree
ing river. The Rio Membres is al. has lately ben issued forbidding
so a strong mountain stream. Most officials to take part in the diree- L:
Times.
The island of Juan Fernandez
has been ceded to a German society,
and is now being settled by a colo-
ny from Faderland. .
In the German Empire a decree
Tg 1 sexy
‘%.
writ
hide him, but to attract the fish.
Then the angler plies his rod, and
the glittering bait waves to and I de. work in the sor-AnT
fro like a living insect glancing
through the turbid water. The
gudgeons or rather gobies, rush to-
ware it. “Beware! Beware!‘ But
when did gudgeon attend to warn-
ing yet r Suddenly, up rises the
cavernous Nemesis from the cloud
below, and “snap.” the gobies are
entombed in the bag-net thence to
be transferred to the Lophine’s
stomach, when there are enough of
them collected to form a satisfae-
tory mouthful —Popular Science
Monthly for September,
tum thinks a tew applic ,-
the Sheridan Remedy wil .0
ally cure them of the Te
— Gainesville Gazette. -
ANOTRER BoLr.—Suspi
existed for sometime pas
was not right in Tyler 1
and the Department has
the alert. For several d •
‘ se.
tective has been on the w 5: **
til evidence was satisfat
mail robberies were con.r. %
extensive here. Last nigl
An old lady who heard that a
young friend had lost a place by
misdemeanor, uncharitably observ-
ed that “there was allers a woman
at the bottom of it."
Marshal Purnell arrested Fore
and James Flynne, pos in "
and hold them for some
both escaped during the r - - ,
are now at large. We GET *
room for comment now, th
nd wei da. “de. a Tote.T
s that the Flyanes,
A bachelor says that if you band pointed postmasters for th -
iytelikesinet li’e Ven,
ad, het ivory bit of in. o-tile, -
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Josselyn, Robert. Dallas Herald. (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 3, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 28, 1872, newspaper, September 28, 1872; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1670910/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.