Tri-Weekly State Gazette. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 121, Ed. 1 Monday, November 7, 1870 Page: 2 of 4
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'* é'
m
dilK
u
¡7,--' 18Í0.
MlWli
CUBE
their predio-
I bwiuM they
had underrated the «berry and per ever-
ance which ho had brought to the under-
taking, as ««11 as tho literary ability of
the South by whlob it Lai been «attained.
The history of this enterprise has, at least,
demonstrated two things: first, that the
Tft CON
Kdtttnce on t
Jk J
HI
$P
Uf" &F 1808.
ice. pat-riot-
lS. I**
the franjidon
I of th*i | w« oí aevw .
i f liberty. 3^
ShMkebfro in the States to
the citiaens of the Stau .
" ÜM Military u> the
p«bll#d :U «***
,
i and protection for nat-
t «ltd ütatiee horn eitímm , at bow*
_ of every «patriae of
j to its nsl Vstw.
n administering tho Gov-
m fro*
Nfe
•f aormpt
A runt * d
on settled by the
and never to be
¥ arana from New
Yeek bu üaiv««cn foundered on the 2nd
Florid . Hiere were
passengers on board
mm4j rmdmit of Gulveetoa.
« Tb* "Journal OJSaaTof U lot. «J
that «fe* Government baa decided to a >
m
„ ,jgtrf rtrnmum corps rekaaed by the
MttMBdM of MeU, have appeared in the
vicinity of Thionviiln.
There was a taJl Cabinet
Washington on Oh*
Tba wtanmiding olBoat- at New Or
|«|UM haa bean ordered to usa troopa if
n«H ry to ajjfcrco tho Fedaial jeiaction
J#H§ 'vttfNlí ¿Oil f. • V/.)*}•: ;■ ,ii.'
Three important caaes are net for tha
Dcwamhctr teroi of the Supreme Court
Tfe# fret involve* the Constitutionality
of the cotton tax law, and will be argued
by Judges Curtis and Evarta «gainst the
Qoromment. The second has reference
to tho Constitutionality of the confisca-
tion acts; the third is from Kentucky and
¡avo! ves the dwi right# bill,
Now Orleans 4th: cotton active and
firm; good ordwa*y 15$ to 15*; low
middling 1*} to \5j¡„ middling 16 to
18 J.
New York 6th; cotton upland# w|;
.jqp^ML^.1,4 111 HBB
A*thowl ijp.
Since tho termination of tho late
bloody struggle between the two oppos-
ing sections of this continent, nothing
has been more surprising to us than the
pertinacity with which wo of the South
have been clinging to the wishy-washy,
libellous, catch-penny literature of our
would be masters of the North, abusing
all the while the aoure# from which it
«manatee. Southern men seem deter-
mined to fehut their eyes to the fact that
Southern brain .«ad intellect ia of as
high an order f* any that exists in
higher latitudes. All around us, in every
day liftí,'wi bam convincing evidence of it.
'Tía true, wo lack that Yankee smartness
down East, they call cutoness,
butwbich is nearer «kin to rascality than
anything Olae, and it is to be hoped we
may always lack ^ but the productions
of Southern minds since &e war, have
demonstrated that tho South is capable
áng a literature sounder, purer,
and of a much higher oidor, than that
which circulates among the masses
North, i&pi! would that we coald aay
that U was even half as woH sustained 1
"Tirtus laudator et cAget." While wo
praise our gifted countrymen, they
starve!
A moat melaneholy commentary on
Sófora appreciation of Southern brains
may bo fouud in the October number
of t&o Southern .Review, a Quarterly
whlch^iottld be found upon the table of
«very Sotoíherti gentleman in the land,
for! it has <no equal in this country-^rino
!•; and this high praise
baa boon beatowed by the ¡English them-
salvia. The editor is One of the moat
learned ntos and pwfonnd th^kers and
philosophers of tho Age--Dr, Albert
Tatlok BuikM*. -'¡He-will be remem-
.of e-'piUl and uetcw aw not disposed
to extend to such a ,ieriodtcal the sympa-
thy, support and ^aaUirial aid whieis it de-
sew®. Uww, ah hough a ganaron press
««A a yeiKilVMS p«topl«, have lavished on
each aad every isuue u( the Rtvimj *•' the
praise thai ft deserved, if not more than
all, yet ta a pecuniary point of view, has it
languished In every fibre, and limped in
Haeveey member. If, as we have o(V?n
«aid to ©BwelyeB, we only had a machine
to con veri golden opinions into green-
bacfrs. bow splendid U all rasnocu would
be the success of th« S*utMm KeiUw."
The Doctor truly says a literary life
is at boat a very hard one, but particus
larly so in Baltimore, if brains hare to
be stimulated u<d developoJ, and phy-
sical wanta supplied by home support
London, «ays he, boasU of no loss than
14$ Quarterlies! Baltimore should bare,
according to its population, 14—it has
bat otto, and it nearly starves that ono,
while it pays for mom copies of ffcar-
jvr*f a purely seetíonal sheet,
with no literary pretensions, every year,
tkan the Revino stilt m ihe whole South.
It is a most lamentable evidence of
Southern indifference to its best inter-
ects. Blkoso* ooom6 to the conclusion
that Samcbl Johnson himself would
have starved in Baltimore, with all his
learning. M Ho wrote speeches in ob-
scure garrets for members of Parliament
in London; and so with the powers of
his pen, earned a mean subsistence. But
what would he have done in Baltimore?"
* It ia certain^ continua Dr. Bikd-
zo*, (" to descend from great things to
small,) that our life in Baltimore has been
a terrible servitude, ffothing but an un-
conquerable zeal in the causo of the
South, and of the truth, would have
sustained us under the heavy pressure of
its doubts, its difficulties, its tri&l^|ma*'
its vexations of spirit. The anxieties
and darkness, and trouble of mind, by
hlch it has been overcast, are known
to but ono heart on earth. The dread-
ful fooling, too, that all was staked on
the eontinuanco of health, was con'inu-
ally present to us, and sat like a night-
mare on all the hopes, and aspirations,
and affections, of our inmost soul. It
health had only given way, we should
have sunk into the gloom of despon-
dency, if not into the grave, without on«
ray of hope from the world. Is it pos-
sible 1 Aye, and it is not only possible,
it is the thing which we have seen with
oür own «yes and felt with our own
heart.
Wo should, most assuredly have sunk
undor the preaaore of these things, but
for tho help, countenance and support
of two brave women, whom it would
have been our highest pride and pleasure
to havo been able to support by our
labors. These two women, by teaching
a school for young ladies, have contri-
buted far more largely thau ourselves to
the support of our family, while we, al-
most gratuitously have labored in the
great canse of the South. Yet despite
all this, we are now bitterly reproached
because we did not continue in pre-
ci^oly the samo line of unrequited labor
for tho South, while our daughters wore
laboring for us. Wo certainly hope to
be pardoned, hereafter at least, if not
here, for so great an offence."
Such are some of the trials oi a
Southern author, a distinguished one at
that How then must it be with the
hutabler"thinkers and writers ? Our
readers will be glad to learn, howevor,
, V' ' 4 • ' ' 1
that Dr. Budbok and his heroic daugh-
ters havo gotten into smooth waters
onde more, aAl the Mtviete, under the
impulse df a financial breeze of pros-
perity, supplied by two generous men
with true Southern hearts and instincts,
has trimmed its sails for a wider and
more extended cruise than before.
For a sound, clear, unanswerable De-
mocratic exposition of the principles of
s#lf government and the American Con-
stítution, as well aa of the great political
and social questions of the day, the in-
telligent student need look no furthe
t
FTexai IteW
Ítnes ocftnty |air i$ post-
I tho flth. ^
tiered'tiytiiaay isAMfataot-Ohm- than th* Review. Iifr.besides, tho or
tiiry of'War during the Confederacy,
and"WAS Slut through the blockade to
Eui-one oil « diplomatic mission. Bo-
foró tjtt'.wlr ho was widely known m
' i *&«niaUdana of
tíús country, istd filled the Chair of
)í ithematícá in the University of Vir-
jñ .ia. the wau Is* bja boin bend-
ifl the Ottorgles ' his «rtíí and body
ofrW* Soui/iH-
tkpak
igan of Southern intellect, brains, poli,
ties, feelings and literature. Its contri-
butors are, nearly all, the first minds in
tho South. There are no dub rates—
the work atañas bn its oVn merits. To
kid its the attempt to thus establish a
literature of . our owit, Which .We Of the
Htoutit may refer to with prido ard aftec-
tíon. Gol. Jotm O. Jiintfi has con-
sented to; receive and forward ill mbacHp-
tiotfis for tho Review. The reputation
of {fee Review and Its distSnginsbéd edt«
tófiiaso groat thst it U reprinted in
a recognitloá of rafth't which nb
ovrml!
Journal
. V>'('
as
mes
ponoa until the
A good many ot our Eastern ex-
changes aro urging a division ot
the St te^Sg.y|£ 1 j ^I j Jk
Indian depratlations aro still the
rday is a paragraph
tion to tli« case of the State vo. Jam ta
McGuioa, City Marshall, upon a charge
of felso imprisonment, io which tl^ejury
foiling to agree, were discharged^ The
paragraph in quMtlon seoins to have ordor «f tlié tlaj- 1n Pafker ooun-
r, * ... ., . . . .. „« fit*-.
boon written with the design of gvvjng
to the case a parly cast, and, as' m
think, with bad taste, and reprohpnsiW#
iaapcrtinonco, introduces ths names of
•«Mvral legal gentlemen, aa Demócrata,
who are aSleged to have in aome way
meddled in the trial of thú oaae, to aid
ia bringing about .a conviction. Wo
are authorised by ove of tho counssl,
who mainly conducted the*defensa, to
say, that hp saw no such interference,
and that if ho had, would not have felt
authorized to censure tho aarno. From
th* tone of the Journal article, it might
bo inferred that the Democracy Were
engaged in getting up ,tne prosecution
against tho City Marshall, and -,thst.
prominent Damcratic msmbem of the
bar wore so anxious to procure i'tatt-
victiou, right or wrong, as to have im-
properly interfered and meddled. to that
end. This is altogotlier a foUe impres-
sion ot the matter. We are orsdibly in*
formed and believe, thst the prosecution
was wholly gotten up by the only Radi-
cal member of the bar in attendance on
tho Court, who may or may not bear the
City Marshall soma ill will for having
a week or so since arrested himfpir . a
breach of one of tho city ordinances, at
a late hour of the night. But whether
this was the cause of the institution pf
tho prosecution against the Matehall/ by:
tho Radical District Attorney, we do nqt
venture to determine. But the prosecu-
tion was qot gotten up by any Demo-
crat, cr by the ¡worthy gentleman, as ho
testified, whom the Marshall is charged
with having falsely imprikined.'" The
Marshall was defended by Democratic
lawyers exclusively—but not on account
of his politics. ' There was, we venture
to say, no politics in the matter, manger
the JournaTs attempt vo create that im-
pression. As a citizen, we hope the of-
ficers of the law may do their whole du-
ty and enforce the laws of the State and'
the city, and that they will i>e supported
by public sentiment in so doing, and ^1-
bo, that they will bo held to a strict ac-v
count for either falling short, or going
beyond the true measure of their duty.
Tho Loss of tho Varona.
The Galveston Civilian of the 4th
inst. contains the following telegram:
Lakis City, Fla,,'Nov. 3,
To thk ©akvastioy Omcii 'u 1
Have just heard the stonmer Varona
foundered off Jupiter. All hands lost but
second mate and four men.
LAKE CITY OFFICE!.
Another dispatch from the snmeofflqe
gives the following particulars: l'Tlre
Valruna was seen in the evening of the
19th of October by the steamer DeSotó
(which arrived at New Orleans, three
days later,) between Jupiter and Capo
Florida.* 'lha morning of th« 21st th«
storm was at its highest, and it is sup
posed the Varuna foundered at that
time. The following ia a list of her pass-
engers as telegraphed by the agent at
New York: >:• a ■ r . ;j/--
F. Hitchcock and lady; G-. Ruttkey; J. L.
Brlggs; AMen Lewis; J. Blum; Blum;
". Cohni
o.
Blum; Stephei
Oppenheimer; ísnbard;
en South wick; A.
amiltpn;
tins;
F. D. Johnson and lady; P. M. Jenk
Ghfta. Amce; James Quln; W. BÚke
Burley nd lady; H. A:) Rowland and la.
dy¡ Mrs. Von Harteu; Mr9, B. Lvojisand
family, 6 in all; George W. Seave; James
Leddy; James Hand. A few stoorage
passengers, names unknown.
Of these the following were residente
of Galveston. Stbphen Southwick; F-
hxtchc0ck*and lady; J. L Bbjggs, the
three Messrs. Blum's, A. Cohk, A. X.
Hamilton, F. D. Johnson and wife,'
Mrs. jLroNs, Mrs. Annus Von Hajrtin
Almin Lbwis. The columns of the
Civilian are draped in'mourning, and in
its comment it says: " • 11 '' *
"We feel the utter poverty of any lan-
guage wo can call Into use to express the
sense of sorrow and of gloom that' tbfs
event has cast over our wholo communis
ty. Noi only do the surviving relation*
oí the victims weep, but the whole city is
awe-struck and in silent and inexpressible
sorrow. The event will long cart 'its
shadow on the history of the oitf, and b¿
mentioned aa one among the many and
Visitations which it has suffered."
The State 'Treasury.
It is 8cmi-officially stated that
tho State Treasury has collapsed,
and will bo compelled to suspend
ppcration8 for the timo being. Wo
will have nome thing to say concern-
ing the Baperlndaoing cause at an
ifrrty day. .1. Txu. :,*f
. ,y...y fileetlous,
Tho Louisiana oleotion commen-
ces to-day. Members of Oongrcai,
Stat^l Treasnror, State Anditbr, ind
variou parish officii; are to b«
ohoaon. Warmouth has isínctí a
proclamation, « that evory cifi^an
irro^potito M pétj&ma+e
«mw «1 m i í w
mW:
m
|Thi Sherman Courier adv.ses
plantéis t#> bold on to their cot-
ton. - *>tM> i?ÍWd<lí |pw
The amount of damage done by
tbb recent flood Do tbe San Marcos
and Blanco is estimated at ohe
hundred thousand dollars. ¡
Tho Indiano visited Blanco }a t
week; and carried off twenty-throe
head of cattle.
The Bishop of the Catholic Dio-
cese of West Tosas was was in
Galveston on tho 4th ir.stl
The San Antonlb Ézprets declares
the pecan crop in that section a to-
tal failure. ¿i r 1 k ■ 1
Captains Falcon anil Biberstein's
companies of the Bangor foroós
havegono to the front.
Corn, says the éonjsalea Enquirer,
since tho overflow bus risen from
fifty cents, to; Msvénty.five cents
per bushel', and there Is a íáir pros-
pect of its commanding a dollar
before Christmas. , ,
Sjoborg was discharged on tho
¿th, btit, was immediately re arres-
ted upon' a wanant i'jfiued by
judge IlaynoH upon an! nffidavit
made by Mr. Nugant ab bo pasoed
through Galvostoto in scaroh of hie
children. uj|'„ ",1 ■! ;*'J " :
Large quantities of sugar oano
will be planted in tiio vicinity of
San Antonio next sOfeson. 1 : )
The mule market of San Antonio
is overstocked.
Tho Waxftbntchio lair was a uo
CQHH. . *• fiiiw J'r'fy'hci.Wéft! '
, \ 1 ■! 1 , '-"'..'fn, * . « i't
The South.
No returpB from the Massouri
election .^ fiíí : • < -.«i1': ■ «Hi v<> / ^
Art independent negro candidate
is running in Gréorgía fbr Congress.
1'bo tribute of respect, paid by
the city oí Memphis; to tho memory
of General Lee was the most mag-
nífíecrtt affáii (if the kind tho New
World ever haw.
The people of Georgia aro Ter-
byfikd, in Mississippi, they Revkl
in the accomplishment of their
Ames, while tho rtcgroos propose to
stop planting cotton, since they
have been so successful in ruising
AfcfcCORNi ■ dtiw .tii-Ji I-.. ' 'M i U|
' A ne^ro candidate fór Congress
frjhn the Séf^ia, (Ala.,) district has
declared himself in, favor of repudi-
ating tho. national debt. Ho is run-
ning on th© fUdibai tiokti.
tho health pf Mr. Davis is much
improved by; "his trip to Europo.
The cattle disease is raging in
the vicinity of Knojiville, Tenn4 . a
;' BvtpocK of droorgia goes a little
á ^3SL'c is chaí^^í
with having issued bonds to the
amount of 1,¿50.,000, of which he
hits paid over to tho Treasnror only
200,000. It is alsq charged that he
used the: liihográpj¿iic signature of
tho Treasurer without hi* knowl-
edge or 'consent, i' ' 4 Jia^r,
Tho Courier-Journal snys:
Tbe cotton cr'op of 1S70 is now estimated
at about 8,500,000 bales. The largest
crop eVer raised tbe United States was
4,669,7701 bales, in 1660. I 1865, the &M>
season after the war, the production: w*^
193,987 bales. Last year's crop was
about a;2ia),0d0 bales'. It will be sedfi
froha these nguras that, In point of j,re-
duction of the great «tapia, the United
States has practically rognitied the position
U held before, the war..,, ,^ ,, , > ,
Solma, Ala., has a'.publio'libra-
.rffséttbr-Milfili h aMn& . \V K
The |;roat difficnlty heretofore
Sa8 boen in utilizing tho Ratnie,
wjiiob is said .to flpimrisb in Louis-
iana; aove luxuriantly and vigor-
ously than in tbé country it wai
brought from. But an ingenious
gentloman, Mr. ^hos. p. MuRPiiy,
of NewDriea ?,said,to have in^
vented a machino whioii can, in one
day, turn out five hrtndred pounds
bf White ffBer from the natural stalk
as white and silky as Sea Island
cotton, «id witii a staple of aay de-
sired length. A obmpany has been
farmed for planting and manufactur-
ing the artidHi, «md this invention
Will be naed'.1' *«« bi
m# Wn ' foi tnanclaughtor have
b«on foond W the Grand Jury of
Hinds Co^,lfí^.f^rí®a|''0pL E. M
Yebojir ÍQF killing CoL CmWM, and
Sksbr Who killed .tho City Marshall
of Jackkrtt. ■ :,':i *i* W(1
Pi'* '* ? ¿¡(jgwujáij ''u^J
i l.
rr*l
M
6*-4
nde
■ ..
lee will
MM
Tfco fMlowing
explwn iaolf^
Austin, Oct. 8d, 1870,
Major A. H/ Longley and Ool. Victor
W. Thompson, SLc;,v.v
Gent*Being aware that certain differ-
HDue* exist between you which are likely
to result in a line of conduct on the part
of both which your triends would deplore,
wo take the liberty as mutual friends to
ask you to submit the mutter of difl'erouoe
to two friends, ohoaen by yourselves re-
psctivoly, who. as guardians of your
respective honors, may use such aquitahle
means for adjustment as may seem just
and honorable to both.
Please indioato your action on the sub-
ject of this note to us.
It M. LANE,
N.G. SHELLEY.
In accordance with the desire express-
ed by the gentlemen who framed the
above note, the matters of difference
between Mr. Tiiompson and Maj. Lo*o-
lby were referred to a board of honor
for adjustment: said board consisted of
Hon. John Hancock and Hon. Gbobob
F. Moork, chosen on the part of Maj.
Lonolbt, and Maj. A. M. Jackson and
S. G. Snked, Esq., chosen on the part
of Mr. Thompson.
The following settlement of the differ-
ences was agreed upon by the said bo*rd
of honor and submitted to Messrs. Lawb
and Shbllet, to be communicated to
Mr.. Thompson and Maj. Lonolbt :
AunTiN, Texas, Oct. 10th, 1870.
Messrs. fí. G, Shelley and K. N. fcane,
Austin,
gentlemen-.—We have considered the
matters of difference between Col. Victor
W. Thompson and Maj. A. H. Longley,
referred to us by them for adjustment
through your lotter of the 6th in#t.
In the consideration we have given tbe
matters of difference between the parties,
wo have confined oursolves to an examin-
ation of tlie corrospondence botwoen them
with which we havo been furnishod by
you. We find that this correspondence
originated from tho exceptions taken by
Col, Thompson tr. an article in the Daily
Republican. This article Maj. Longley
insists is retaliatory in its character and
justified by an editorial which appeared in
the 3Vt- Weekly Qaxettc prior to tno edito-
rial of Maj. Longley, and that said article
in th'j Republican was in reply to the edi-
torial of tho Qaxette. Wo are of opinion
that tho article iri tho Republican, to which
«Col. Thompson excepts, mu.'t be regarded
Hs personally offensive to him : but in de-
termiuing tho matter submitted to us, it
rauct be considered in connection with the
editorial in tho OasetU to which it is a
reply. >Vhile tho editorial in tho Qauettt
may ifot exceed ih« license frequently in.
dulgod in by ardent partisan papers, yet it
seems to us, in Unor and matter, not en-
tirely ftdo from objection, and may be sus-
ceptible of a construction which Maj.
Longley may have justly considered
offeu«ive.
It may be difficult to define the precise
limita of justifiable retaliation, yet th«
article in the Ouzetia does not seem to us
properly auaceptiblo of at) interpretation
so offen.-ive to Msj. Lonsley as to entirely
justify his article in the Republican in
pwply to It. 1 ¡.j ' ' "
Our conclusion, therefore, isi
That Maj. Longley should withdraw in
mu;h of said article in the Rspub/icen as
has been objected to by Col. Tho.npsnn as
Sersonally offensive ¡ and that Col.
'hompson should alio withdraw so much
of the article in tho Oazcti« to which it is
a response, as may bo susceptible of an
interpretation pewonally offensive to Maj.
Longley, and that these withdrawals be
published in tho columns of both the Re-
publican and Qateite, in connection with
such explanatory mutter a* tho respective
parties may doom nycossary.
(Signed,)
Respectfully,
8. G. 8ÑRED.
JOHN HANCOCK,
GEORGE if. MOORE,
A. M. JACKSON.
In accordance with the torras of the
award of the Board of Honof to which
were referrod, certain differences arisen
between myself and Maj. Lonoly,
growing out of certain editorials in tbe
Syatb Gazrttb and Austin Republican,
I hereby withdraw so much of an arti-
cle that appeared in the Statb Gazkttb
of Sept. 28 th, 1870, as in ay be suscepti-
ble of an interpretation personally offen-
sive to Maj. Longly.
Victoa V. Thompson.
Very Low.
FeaNKi's paper, tho Washington
Chronicle, cftlls for tho immediate
removal of the Custom House of
ficer at Savannah who lowered the
U. S. flag on hearing ot the death
of Gop. Lek. One thing is certain,
the Administration can't Jp^er it-
self It baa touched th* -fcottom.
J* E W jtDrXMTiSEJ9EJrTS.
McJ
Connor. That* Gov. í
orgnr..-+J3oi 4y G^ovw t&nterprm,
1% !Houatoa 47«io* atoo
cbBF'
Selah,
it
hv8
city restaurant,
Pecan St., Austin, Teta .
.HE undersigned respectfully informs
tho public that he has bought Mr Cra-
mer's Restaurant, Pecan street, and so-
licits the patronago of bis ¿ustomers, and
tho public generally.
Boarders taken at modest* prices,
f irst class board and meals at all hours.
.JOHN MASSE.
Ttfov; 7th, 1870.-t-w6t.
CARD. ;
The undrnig ned would rospectfully in-
form the public that having engaged a
competent Jowelor ho is prcpu$3 to raaks
Jewelry to order. Also repairing and en-
graving. At the old stand- -Conirww Av-
«8U«. A. PR1NOK. 7
Ncv. 7th, 1870.—tw.Ira. , '
wrw ui a
eft i" Tevss To Uil
themselves of recetíVrt" ^
H«rl^ttwong m ¿3
,. ftod 80 acres Li . NijJ
well to en «ago the serri^^^l
Cordova & Hector ^ of
— —foil
yji
STANDARD SCAi
More than 250 Different Modíí
Ageat. also for the Best Alarm
Drawer.
FAIRBANKS 4 CO
252 Broadway. i.
Baltimore'
FAIRBANKS, ÍJB0WN 4,
118 Millc street, 1
1\J OTIC®.—The co-partneriiiB
1\ fore existing bef -^en Ben.
•í. Í'. Hurt, under tSe|rmn m.?i
rr ^frt' U di.8sohe<i. by Biutuai'i
J. 1 . 11art retiree from the muí
St oV^r'Ha'rt aíuF pUrchHWd J
BEN. WAl
J AM. P B
Austin, Oct. 26, 1870 t-wtf
TasliiouabU Drt«
WILL promptly and ssthlWw!
ecuto any work with wbieh,
be ontrustrd.
Tbe patronage of the
oar AtJ«
respectfullv solicited, at the Tummg
opposite W: AL Townsend'i
Austin.
Dfc
The standard reputation attftinsdV
unrivalled and infalllable Yeast Pi
during twelve years past, ii due te H
feet purity, healthfulm** tnd m.
Put up in cans, actual weight at
sentfvi and will keep for your*.
The quantity required fot wii
one-fourth In one-half loss tbk«
king Powders,
Sold by grocers throughouttte t
States.
DOOLEY & BI.
Mamifacturen and!
nov, 2 2mo . CO
sjyty-flvg first class umiuwu
THE OKI
Soathmi
mnvnc
fSB
ms«9(
makufacturkbs or
Grand, Square and Up
PIANO FORTE]
Baltimore, Marginal
These instruments have been bffavl
Public f< r neaily Thirty Yís«iW<<Í
their excel lenco alone attsised 1
purchased pre-eminence, which |
thom unequalled. Their
TOyB
combines great power, aweetne
singlas; quality, as well m grcstp??
Intonatit>n and Swoetncw througifl |
entlro scale. Their
■/ .■ TOUCH
Is pliar.t and elastic, nd oritlreiyfra'í
the stiffness found in so many i«*a
IN WOKKMANbHlP
they are uncqualed^using not
be*t seasoned mahrial, the Isn
employes in our business east
keep continually an im«nea« 'W*
ber, etc., en hand. .
All our Square I
New Improved Overttrung &s >w*
Agraffe Treble, (M__
'«r We would <^11 ip«A¡jR!j
our late improvemeri 1 ia ^
NOS AND SQUARE
tented Auqust 14, 18Ü&, w **
Piano nearer perftction than h« J
attained.
Every Piano fully wmrranUdj0' •
We have made arrangement «*
Sole Wholesale
brated PAttLOR OBwAK
DBON8, which we oflhr,
rejail. at lowest Factory PrW :
WM. KKAüSf
Baltimor
Sept 16-w 6m
fever año
OtiR preparation, fro® *
Oa. JDkitkrich, U a <
We have put up and sold hu
)fl aa#i
led to. j
Ion*.
B. MEIASKEV,
wholesale and ^retail
0BAV7,
m
ilA8 rooilved a
Stodt of General
4k> if tüiirtinn ot
trouble to sbolv
antea^.
ÉHÉI.M
tAvuA*n,
iarge and w«H
di
u is
ties of this
followed the
competition. waU ^
OUR DIAUHHOSA
■Tin any instance fa
we ar« aware of.
nUR UNIBWI
new
Ta
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Thompson, Victor W. Tri-Weekly State Gazette. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 121, Ed. 1 Monday, November 7, 1870, newspaper, November 7, 1870; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth180878/m1/2/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Texas+-+Travis+County%22: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.