Tri-Weekly Telegraph (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 19, 1867 Page: 2 of 8
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• Sprit
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■ 1, ■
we
This hoe beta done jmmtij }
know these frets.
To counteract tbess perniciou* in
iuenaes as inlariaas to the nejro a>
to the «Wts* «« 7 inoeourse exists
for as to ptripfr Silence, iudiffier
ence, Inaction on onr pore will not be
It amtk course will end
oar discomfiture end in (he triumph
of the Radicals. We matt bring
everything lutfhroad daylight
We mastdepftv* eil bushwhacking,
jaj hawking Radicals of ell pretext
for concealment and secret misrepre-
sents thin, by giving then e foir, foil
deoent pablio bearing. Let eneh any
oa the stamp. without hindrance or
insult. Let a« answer them with
ikfr reply; the Conservatives
oan ran them off the field with arga
meat) by appeala to reason, justice,
the interest of all, block oa well oa
white, and by appeal* to the instinct
ire feeling*nod attachment*, in wbicb
the negro participatea to a degree aa
well oa the white Southern man. The
negroes will see on which aide liea
right, andjtoaqy of them wilt enjoy
heartily tTO triumph of victory. If
the Badieals lend black speakers to
address the negroes, it is still, mure
important to avoid any malicious in-
terference with them. It would be a
poor compliment to the Caucasian in
- tellect, if in inch a contest the white
man shall not be auccesaful. An im-
portant object is to bring every word
and every counsel and trick to the
light; to destroy seojet machinations
by removing utterly all shadow of
pretext for secr||y.
The *beial relationehave been dis-
located* old feelings hive been perver-
tedf but the natorsl sympathies and
pride of the negro are with the peor
m,
>ng whom he fM born and
>). and irhqse intermits are still
identified tftth* his
sili
During
majority of Ch* je-
Confederates •, if.
they again
good old
ed in
Fore the war.
^od old State of
" ' jod old gen
W the ownership
ran enric
3t&; tl
1 knot of 1
fO«Tln'n CuTIOX CtJLTHrlToa-for
ohopp n* out citton. Inrented by 1
Halatttyille. TtXxa. Will parlors it
ho* haodn and two plowi. Quo h*
t«n sere* a <l«y. For .'ale ijfc.Ip
Ijt tb« State uf TgF
jJmjti... . . ,,m t
At a meeting of tl
the Texas and New
held in Ne* Qrieatis[<
the following officerj
moualy 6lectWl H
der and Ckcrj
leansj T. ^
IWJP1 11
glad the negroes are free, and
nia* the truth that their f reedor
blessing to the whites."
. Now let oar Texas land-bo^
who own thou tan da of unpiot
acres, pattern after ear g«
friend.. Tboy will do as well ;j
will at the same tlm* enrich |
themselves and the St
have, cut the Gordian
nation—in other wordAliey wt
learned "bo * to do it/
In the conclusion of his let
says:
"♦•When you return to your fa
heath, come and stop a month |
us, and when you retqrn to
wild Texas, you strait
yoa a barrel of peach a quarte^
century old."
Blesa his old heart! May he
thousand years yet, an examp]|
practical good sense to his neigl
We, (be writer.of this,
accept bis invitation.- In a
while we will be off, and whl
are gone, many times shall the
ers of the Tslboraph hear fn
The more intimate onr com
with the older States, the better
the more facilities the people
looking to that end, the better,
this reason, we are happy to
the Mississippi Central, New Ol
Jackson and Great Northern,!
Memphis and Chjfrfeston, East!
neesee, Virgiuia wad East Tent
and the Illinois Central, have <
tablislied ^n agency in this 1
the person of Mr. W. E. Gi
who is now prepared to sell te
tickets from this poiut to the 3
eru, Western and Eastern clt
Mr. Gregory can" be founds
office of the G. H- & H. R. R.
ny, and at the Hutchins Hons
farther information we direct I
lie to hint; tythe advestii
of these Jfoutes on the last ps
daj's issue. 4,
TCLtCRAPHIC.
DEFERRED DISPATCHES.
Washington. April 15.—Iu the
8npreme Court to-day Chief Justice
Chase delivered So opinion in the case
of the State of Mississippi and Gen.
Ord and others, oa the motion for
leave to file a bill restraining them
from the execation of the reconstruc-
tion act. The court dissented Irom
the argument of the Counsel, that the
President is required merely to per-
form a ministerial act, and held that
the terms ministerial and executive
are by no means equivalent iu import.
A miuiaterial duty, the performance
of which may Tu proper case* be re-
quired of the bead o( a department
by judicial process, - is oue in which
nothing is lel'tgp flisctetion. On the
other hanu *t|*is the *£utv of the
Preaident^to^See that the laws are
faitn fully fxecnted, aud^piong these
lawa is<|kb Hconatructio'ii act.
An attempt on the part of the Judi-
cial department to enjoin the perfor-
mance of theee duties by the Presi-
dent might justly be characterized, in
the language of Chief Justice Mar-
shall, as an absurd executive extrava-
gance.
Congress is the legislative depart-
ment of the government, the Presi-
dent the executive department. Nei-
ther can be restrained in its action
by the Judicial-|department, though
the acts of both when performed are
"n proper ceses subject lo its cogni-
nce.
The court proceeded to show the
impropriety of such interference by
considering the probable consequen-
ces, and concluded as follows:
"It has been suggested that the bill
coutaius a prayer that if the relief
sought for cannot be obtained against
Andrew Johnson as President, it may
begrauted against hint as acitizcu of
Teuuessee ; byt it is plain that relief
against the execution ofau act of Con-
gress by Andrew Johnson is relief
against its execution \ y tlje Presi-
dent. A bill praying an fwjuuetion
against the execution at an act of
Cougress by the iuciraibeut uf the
Presidential office, canptit be received,
whether it describes^Bn as Presi-
dent, or simply fcs of a State.
e motion fur lcat9|^Ble the bill is
therefore denied.
In the case of the State of Georgia
inst certain officers, the Attorney
meral makes no objection to the
icy of the bill, and we will hereto-
_ Leave to file the bill.
Judge Sharkey said the objection
~ e bill ne attempted to file, seem-
to be that it was au effort to en-*
the President. The bill was not
and he cuuld reform it to suit
| views of the court, and present
in. Cnief Justice CfiA*e replied,
to tile the bill is refused—
nnther bill U presented, it will
dered."
(>y. "I understandable Court
'* licatiou
fbe exereiae of his soveieign rights
and apoo Ua own respoaa^bility.
Chableston, S. C , April 15.-Gen.
Bickks1 order published this morning,
atayiug execution iu civil suits fur
twelve mouth*, gives general satis-
faction.
* The Sontli Carolinian, a newspaper
published at Columbia, has beeu pur-
chased by Nash and other colored
men, and will be conducted as a Con-
servative negro,
London, April 15.—Spain has yiel-
ded to the deniaud made by the
British government iu the case ot
the steamer 'I ornado.
The Brazilian mail steamer which
arrived here this murniug, briugs the
additional intelligence that the Em-
peror of Braxil. in order to reinforce
his army on the River Paraguay, had
eaU«4 Nattonwl Guard of the But-
jiire into active service. Thiscaused
much discouteut among the people,
aud provoked some opposition to the
continuance of war with Paraguay.
Vienna, April 13.—Dispatches
have beeu received here stating that
Omar Pasha, with ships of war and a
large number ol troops, has left Tur-
key fur the purpose uf joiuiug the
muvement tu suppress the insurrec-
tion iu Crete.
Lubon, April 13 —The mail steam-
er Rio Janeiro arrived here to-day.
When she leftRiu a rumor was preva-
lent that the mediation proffered by
the United States Government had
been ttuuiiuiirily rejected by Para-
guay.
Liverpool, April 15, P. M.—Cot-
tou active, closed firm. Authorized
quotations—Middliug Uplands J 2d;
Middling Orleans, 12 l-4d. Sales
15,000 bales.
London, April 15, P. M,—Consols
closed!k)3'4; Five-tweuties 74.
New Yokk, April 14.—Fifteen
ocean aleatiiera sailed from this port
yesterday with passengers, mails aud
freight, of which seven were for Eu-
rope, the rest fur Cuba aud Southern
ports.
Complete rout ot the Imperialists
in Mexico attaiu continued. Several
roads for escape are still open to
Maximilian aud the people of Quere
taroaid him liberally with supplies.
Uklssels. AprU 14.—It is reported
that a proposition is now under con-
sideration tu make tue Duchy of Lux-
embourg neutral, iu urder to avoid
war between France and Germauy.
Athens, April 14.—The Cretau Na-
tiunal Assetuoly has issued a procla-
mation, declaring iu fitvur uf religious
toieratiou aud equal pulitical rights.
8l r« SigMU Darlag llvrrof,
From the S tio- l lalrlligraorr.
A correspondent, who reminds us
of the serious injury done to the crops
by storms which sweep over a wide
surface, makes what we cannot but
regijrd as an extremely valuable sug-
gestion. We give the material por-
tion of his communication. It seems
to us.that, considering the number of*
rears that the telegiaph has been itf
operation, it is not very credible toj
the pn^f tickU science
thujb'
n« CfelMrn Oh hallj I
Mk la Their Uedo.
*>■'
Kruu the Udveuua Democrat, April J.J
Upou Tuesday night, last week, the
dwelling UoUae ul Micliuel liiuzer, a
blacksiiiitn living at butlield Center,
was burned to ine ground, and iu it
five cluidreu. The calamity is oneot
neart-reudiug detail, and has thrown
the parent* luto the moat desparing
griel, aa well as filled the cominuni^r
w itb prolouud aoiruy. The toilownig
are tne paiiiculars that have reached
us:
The dwelling occupied by Mr.
Bliuer was a lather small two stoiy
buuse. ine lower apartments were
occupi.d as silting ruuiu, kitchen aud
pautiy, the upyfr rooms being occu-
pied oy tiie family tor bed rooms. The
laniily ot Mr. Mlitzer consisted of
himself, wile, six children aud an ap-
prentice. Tne eldest ot the children
was a girl about twelve years old, the
)ouugest au infant ot a lew months.
A litue buy twelve years old wus at
Mrs. bliuer's paieuts, tbe other
cbildreu being at bome ou tne fate-
ful uigbt. Mr. aud Mis, iiliizer, with
tbe buoe, occupied oue room, the four
children aud tna apprentice sleeping
iu auotber. About 11 o'clock Mis.
Iiliizer arose, lighted a caudle, aud
descended tu tne pamry lor some
milk tor the bade, winch she gave it,
aud tbeu replaced it iu the cradle it
occupied by liie bedside
Later iu Hie ui^nt—about 12 o'clock
as is supposed—ine apprentice was
awakened by the eldest girl, who
aroused him by shakiug him. The
girl did not speak, as me room was
uiled with smoke tu tbe point of suf-
locatiou, aud tbe apprentice found
himseil so uearly suffocated that b«
could not speak, lie rushed at once
lo Hie loom ot Mr. tlluzcr, aud
aroused nun bv shakibg him. Mr. IS.
awaked nis wlie, aud lushed down
stairs, followed by her, neither tor the
uiouieut ihiuking of the babe. In
throwing open u door a draft was
creUed, and the wbole premises
spraug iulo a blaze, Tne apprentice
returned to tbe other chamber, but
the smoke aud heat bad so increased
that he at once sought to descend, but
found that impossible, aud spiaug
from the wiudow of the room to the
grouud. After gemug outside, Mr.
lilitzer made several Irautic attempts
to re euter the house to rescue his
childreu, out tailed in each effort.
The house soon tell, burying iu the
debris the remains ut the five chil-
dren. It is supposed that the chil-
dreu were s' ttocated to death with
the smoke before Che fiames could
reaoh them. Tbe girl who a wakened
the apprentice, it is thought, sank
dowu upou tbe floor, dying at that
bedside, at once, as her re mains were
fouud in a position indicatiug such a
fact. The presence of miud ot the
little creature,,whichienablec
awaken the auPynuticiSiyithc
sived the life <n liefc pars
(JIms was at thbvilieWTth^
mm ^ '
mm %
J ^'r.^
ijii I >**' 4 •
|lf; %
- %
<rvfl
' 'i
prr
Bstitu(ion
i with the
I" J,
!•<-
bdl-
. .. ,.... .. ; K
th« governing re-
i d warning
tbe
ooastitatiua
I: shall contain
i Or
nld
^sn
ers who were gay and speut
! and sons who were fond of a
and had, kfmN|f, a decided
relish for good old pWMlb and honey,
yet he managed every year that relied
over his head to hide away a good
r glittering gold against a rainy
day. This eld gent)«man lived near
.tide-wate^ atfd it oame to pass, du-
ring the ptogms of |he war, that a
Yankee "■army wlth banners" paid
him a visit. Whtfn they departed,
Oil hi# slayes, inolu
and any, departed
old gentleman's sllvi
daughters' rich silk
elry also d
merousstoolUpf h
and 'Ostes
'ol. A.
dent; Col. #t
Orleans, Vice Presffl
Adams, Secretary at
■ • <
A telegram"ti1 the*
Washington, April 15,
President nominated G
ron, Uqited States Mai
[l&nS^a
ister of Land Offi
and Edwin Q. Collier
Ageut at New Orleans.
-^4—
Thiers lias attained a fresh
. , , larlty in France :by his late oppoa
!® J??*!1-^°',e8*|-speech. Siuce he obtained his
ness $300,000 copies of his pll
graphs have been sold in Paris.
M ,
i restraint, fear, qr tb«iik\
as provided
be reqai- hcapB of gtttterin
i that the I against a rainy daj
not(v
with
is oot
k wbo stole silver spoons and car
Hid off negroes, mules and asses
do TOlm
them; and tbe
ipoons.and his
essea^nd jetw-
Ana his nu-
mules, cows
[fame way. His
1, provided
.were, however,
still remained
gentleman. It
time, that the
and the land
Lord it Robiuson, Baltimore, d
ers in Cedar Ware, Wooden W,
Brooms, Brushes, Cord<tge, Mate!
Demij|ohns, Wine Bottles, etc., h
their card in to-day's Telegrapi
Chas. Dickens, the . great novel
is about to pay a visit to this co
try.
•etQftTv**
<fto nltra
. opposed to our
rite|)|istingacts.
iji^,4aeare-reeoo-
es must be indae-
■ vote, thiy must be
A i 6t to
•iMr
, f •■L"1"
rnotasto^v
troubled with .
Bismarck's share ofthe plunder
■Aa*,.,.A. ,— —:— i the late wa^Nrith Austria amounts
But then thts good old gentleman §350,000.
found UiU*lf 1Q'possession of a rain-
ed estate, without laborers to drive
or < animals to pall the plow. His
lipids hsd Sunk in valne until they
tfcspe, considered not Worth having.
kow, wliat did oar good old Mend
do t He walked not ths porticoes of
his stately mansion cursing the Yah.
Jkjta .thd sighing over milk that was
kpilt. This good old Nlrth Carolina
went to work r he employ
Ioitu i CorroK Ocltitato*.—For acraptut
«ba ta« oat Mtt« i. IdtmUJ br a r-Dtltmas-
H lt«tUTltl«,Tf*\ . Wilt p*rfonn th* labor of I
ho* hand* and tjro plow*. On* hand «U1 cuIUt
Ua aorta a dar- for «al« br Irrla« Wl tllama, agi
tor th* Stat* o I Tcxaa, 8 tuthwlak Sulldlac, Strai
W*lf*itoa.
;]■' >*■<■ i. ■ .
Trade with Texas—We callpai
ticular attention to the advertisemei
of A. Sessums & Co., Galvestoi
Texas. Dr. J. C. Massie, of this ftra
v. ^ v •- •• • -y' ; jt—„ . and President of the National Ban
surveyors with log and ehaln, and of Texas, is now in Baltimore mal
pioneer in this great enterprise. W(tl
any kind of effort on the part of on
merchants, seconded as ttey will b
at the other And of the< lino by sucl
a well known and responsible house
aa A. Sessums & Co., the euterpriw
ought to prove a complete aneeesa.
little oo4t«ges apon 6Very farm. He
thonwwtot^totheKoethand hunted
up good, indnstriown *nnllHrs. mostlr
" • ■ ■ ■ • • " — ■ > iii
foiteignerst ood upon every fltftn he
MtUdi OWI of Ihese fsmtiies. Unto
s^ine ko sold, hat auto ho rented
p^/share of the orap. He also
started a store oe tbe premises, and
eno of his handsome sons is counter-
'bk g|gyn, VAttia at,
tot "*i
awr it sw litiudiha.
' iMllltovetad
as I
One of the cironsses of Paris gi
* staghnnt every n^ht. Alive
With immense antlers ia panned
nftgr huntsmen and hnntswomen
t - ■ ■■ •
iHn wae shot
at
5tS#1
on tibe 7th in
T | steW.
ourt, subsequent
ia was ordered to be iss
Inst Gen. Pope, commaudiug in
rgia according to the rule of the
Irt. The process is to be served ou
lefendauts sixty days before the
iru of the process, aud iu this case
-j^^—Jiot be until in December.
^Washington, April 15— All the
'^Unties in Maryland have been
heard from ezeepting one, on the
Jote fur a.conveutiou to form a new
constUption, aud the majority in fa
'Vor oftlie convention is estimated at
'10,000. 11 will assemble at Annapo-
lis ou the second Wednesday in May.
New York, April 15.—Gen. MoV
que>a, of Colombia, has carried out
his long threatened attack upon the
Congress of the Republic, aud sixty-
eight of its members h ve t>ecu ar-
rested. including the ex President
Murillo.
Au army entirely devoted to Moa-l
queia has overthrown the constitu-
tional Italian government of Magua-
lena, and established a new one en
tirely devoted to the dictator.
Cotton active, market strong—sales
3,200 bales at 29c. for middling up-
lands. FIbur quiet aud unchanged.
Wheat and corn actlye but unchanged
prices. Sales of 123,000 bushels
mixed Western at $1 29 to 1 30. Pork
heavy, new mess $20 08 to $20 75
Lard heavyi (Naval stores ttrm.
Spirits turpentine 79 to 80. Fre.ghts
firm, money easy, 5 to 6 per cent on
call loans and 9 to 10 on government
and stock collateral. Gold 134| to
184|. Exchange dull, 109}. Govern-
ments i lower. Tbe Government is
buying 7 30's freely and selling new
fives.
The bank statement shows that
loans have decreased $4.367,849; spe-
cie Increased $717,416; circulation
decreased $72,526; deposits de-
creased $1,035,000; legal tenders in-
creased $1,180,740; Total stock of
gtain in warehouses on the 15th—
wheat, 1,423,484bushels; corn, 1,437,-
407 bushelk '
Arrived steamer Monterey from
New Orleans.
Arrived, steamer Allemani from
Southnmptdl, April 3d. Tbe North
German Gssette says Luxembourg
will by no means compensate for the
sacrifices whicb would be entailed by
;«ar. Even' if victorious, France
weald only more evoke a former and
toow happily extinguished enmity.
France should well consider the
question on all sidee before she at-
Mksneopledefending their national
ntegvity.
War weald aloe certainly place in
>ili
ten a OCMu commences n any
part Of the country, and Is travelling
iu a certaiu direction, or is spreading
iu many directions, the first telegraph
station over which it passes should
send the news instantly to all t'.e.tel-
egrapli stations at county seats, hun-
dreds of miles in advance, in the di-
rection that the sturm is travelling.
At each of those county seats a can-
non might be kept ready, and %s soon
as the news is' received of an ap
preaching storm, it is to L-sfired three
times, at intervals of two minutes if
it is a hurricane, at intervals of five
minutes if the storm is travelling rap-
idly, and at intervals of ten minutes
if it is travelling slowly.
A* a cannou can be heard distinct-
ly from fifteen io twenty miles iu all
direi-tious. by firing one at each coun-
ty seat the farmers for hundreds of
Ulik-s over the whole country would
ba farued iu time to get their grain
or hay under cover* or in a situation
to shut out the rain? Ann this warn-
ing would not only be useful in time
of harvest, but also in seeding time,
and in main- other situations too nu
merou8 to meiitiou, not only to farm-
ers but to the public generally.
If this plan should meet with gene-
ral approval, it may be set into ope-
ration immediately. Arrangements
may be made between the county of-
ficials and a telegraph company, or
some telegraph company may make
arrangements by circular with the
county officials in all the States. If
the newspapers would then publish
tbe storm-signals, which should be
posted in every bouse over the whole
country, the plan would be complete,
and in a couple of mouths the storm-
guns would commence to roar, giving
warning of approaching stonus and
hurricanes, over vast extents of couu-
try, hundreds and even thousand? of
miles in advance of the actual thun-
der of the storm.
Aa Artlai'a Visit t* Jrfl. Davis.
quasi
'**• mhte
.f WJBW
jve. The Moniteur de la Loire
Biamarck^pointed out in digni-
I nest ion that domestic stability which
French government has striven to
The H
inguage UhT necessity that
nanyshoala take the just snscepti-
>ilities of France into account, and
dsn made several important deeiaru-
ions and admitted that Luxembourg
raa an Independent State which the
ting of Holland could dispnm of in
The Fortress Monroe correspond-
ent of the New York Sun, writing
April 6th. says:
Professor Thomas Chenoweth, of
Baltimore, an artist on his travels,
recently visited this port, and began
giving instructions in painting to
Jefferson Davis, Miss Howell, bis lis-
ter in-law and others. Mr. Cneno-
weth had many pleasant conversa-
tions with Davis. The latter said he
had no complaints to" make of what
appeared to be the strict measures of
the government to prevent his es-
cape, and that he entertained toward
all the officers of the fort none but
the most kindly feelings, as they had
ever been ready shd Willing to pro-
mote his comfort. He said he was
under many obligations to the citi-
sens of Baltimore. As to his trial
they expressed no opinion. He was
in tue hands of the government, and
patiently awaited the decision which
Weald either place him before the
courts of justice or release him.
'V
> *
a'
• t
the pantry wi ,h the candlerTTTTCohl
sciouoly set something on tire—pa-
pers upun theAhelves, perhaps, from
which the coutiagratiun ensued.
The charred retuaius ol the live vic-
tims of the merciless elesceut were
buried iu oue grave, oil Thursday,
the solemn cvremouies being attended
by a large coucOurse, aud the greatest
sympathy m indestedlbr the crushed
und distracted parents.
Rodxanians.— At a meeting of the
German Society for Science, Litera-
ture aud Art, Dr. A. Fels, gave some
interesting details ou Rouinau Liter-
ature. The oldest ltoumau docu-
ments, he said, date trum the tenth
ceutuiy. Ti.ev are old chr'ouicles,
preserved iu the libraries of the mon-
asteries. Charteis granted by Wal-
lachian and Moldaviau princes, aud
still extant, belong to the 13th cen-
tury ; and theie are also several eat ly
collections of laws in the Kouman
language, the oldest of which dates
irom the eud of the 12th and the be-
giuuing ot the lUth centuries; be-
sides ecclesiastical books of tiie same
age. Iu the 15th century, however,
the lauguage employed tor religious
aud literary purposes was the Slavo-
nic, aud, out of opposition to the Ro-
man Catholic Church, it oontiuued to
be used so until the middle of the 7th
century, (1643,) when George Racoc-
zy, Prince of Transylvania, re-intro-
duced the Rournan into the liturgy.
Shortly afterward, (1646,) a new code
was promulgated, by order of Basil-
ius, the Wolf, the preface of which,
writteu iu v.*rse by Eustrati,us is the
oldest piece of Roumau poetry.
Twenty-five years later, Dosotheus
published his Psalter in rhyme; its
language is powerful and sublime,
while Cantimir's style, in his Molda-
vian chronicles, is awkward. With
the exception of some woiksof Tran-
sylvauiau authors, the l&tb century
has remained without any literary
productions in the Rouinau language,
owing to the reign of the Phanariots
who only patronized Greek. But at
the iteginning of this century the na-
tional feeling was again aroused, and
several authors undertook to resuoci-
tate their native tongue.
We have seen it stated that the
Israelites will have a convention of
delegates in Paris'during the great
Exposition, to consider aud determine
some questions connected with their
rites and cereinouies. Among them
the expediency of renouncing the
prohibition against oertaia articles of
food, and the polygamous practices
prevailing among tbe Jews of Alge-
ria.
Californiais contributing thousands
for the relief of the destitute in the
South. The people in the Pacific
have large and generous hearts.
An elegant botel is to be bnilt npon
the site of the Old Capitol Prisou,
Washington.
' 1
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Gillespie, C. C. Tri-Weekly Telegraph (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 19, 1867, newspaper, April 19, 1867; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth236357/m1/2/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.