The Texas State Gazette. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 51, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 7, 1867 Page: 1 of 4
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y ..-^£íí;3íjí
—.
IN. OF LIFE
we are
red, we are oce Recollections of Ca Jet Life
t loirod^cc & SPW ,
be
If it be REfeEt GFSERAia ¿S BOYS ¿T WEST POINT.
' ...jji ----
for "An Old Dragoon" is writing a
ÉÉ| sketches for a j
remiiusceaees I
of cadet life
W«est Point Mil j rioua
The following tire ex-
tracta
"SIDNEY johnston.
The iirrit yadetl eveV heard
Of
gn?e oau^K)t^eoar to tim^ beautiful land,
oar soak by "the <wle from its «rdena
-ate tknu'd | **-••- IPi" " . v>' % . ¡
When, we famt in the deserte of this;
Ana we jx^tiuies have. lioged tor its holy
Wb« e torn with temptations
¡Hid woed^
not the State And we've drank froia, tbe tide oí tbe river
-■- -fdebta. .. ttat.M*- ..
íoffcfe. ;f¡|fe
i,Texas.
of claims to
—i—
r"T
V<m~i
And our
A. PHI'S & CO., Auction aad Com-
Mflter's-corner, Coagre
Texas.
sales Sttnrday. fecial
W<
ing, a fell supply of
iY GOODS AND GROCERIES,
■ cash, or in exchange
* *1 R. W
& - >*a
MM
RRALL
business as)
LAND AGEN T,'
—in the city of— .
AUSTIN TEXAS
i ESS in fill part of the State, through
rntsacd special partners, and
the departments at
•-'it
.sold and located.—*
REFERENCES:
aft •
Dr. J. S. Coj%.
Houston Texas.
Gaheeton "
Marshall "
Dalltui a*
tícthnmWe "
San Antonio "
NewOrleana, La.
But, itwill be
nation. Does t'
element iato
m~ ,, ,
Maine* iswaid it ngt . .
¡Texas to trade freely with Canada, aud series of interesting
; if with Canada, with Enrope ? What Richmond
?is it that pats a stop to the benefits of
Free-Trade? Is it distance ? No; for
| Texas finds that Massachusetts can
„ í furnish it with many goods at-ft lower j ¡pi
traveler ié«iisstW-prjCÍ, ftanit'Can make them-for itself. | M „ ^
j., la it then the policy of Texas, ¿fit were the word of command *aa Sidney
permitted it, to exclude Massachusetts ; Johnston, and the impression his ap-
góódafpíf it be not good policy, ¡ssíiS pea ranee made on me is as clear and
is it any more its policy to exclude distinct now as it was then. His stal-
European goods? When Texas was j wart form and well developed muscles
an independent State, it laid duties un j gave him an ujppe^rance of great
goods coming from the United States,; strength, while his gentle manners and
as the United States did on goods com- benevolent countenance indicated a
ing from Texas. When Texas became ;inan of thefeuderest affections. Hard
a member of tbe Union, it shared the'to arouse to anger, lie was ever ready
of the Union. According j to espónde the caqpe of the oppressed.
a bad thing in one case,
other. Yet, in this respect
CWent.J jgflg
ACK ELEPHANT.
m
> custom
of the king
than it1
months ago. In
the Freedmen's
w;
pliant,
■tit to the prince whom he ú> «pite oft}*? threats &f Jhe B
site
oían
iican
Jeepcm i about to
give lis
mmm,
m
pitan
the royal white ele- organs, the gnli" lietvvecn tfe
•us, pampered and luxe- j man «md tlj^ black man, alreydy
support which in rofjui-^and deep, will widen and a<
more than tiie revenues! Legislation will §tod its efforts imprae-* J oly
^roviftce. The Hepub- tieable when it eijsays the control of with
threatened with a airai-; domestic aa well as pnl4k* affairs ; and seemed to
in the shape of the ne- though, by a spirit of vengeance, it , one Thonu.
is leaders begm to aus-,may impoverish the master, it can not with two childre f?
-•y have got a blácjf ele- save the servant. Before capital veas- a Pittsborgher. On the
is Vastly more expensive es to be capital it will have revenged doubtless in anticipation of
ed for. And it may itsetf on refractory labor. By tbe time in a ¿ttiag?m«m r ti
irom the anxious tone in f ti «usployee is a coadition to bal- Fourth," she
ublican journals speak; at ce the grudge between himseif and ; Thomas Monroe Lj-ons., ?an Le
ter, that they Inhere that the employer, not oiilV the issues but rising to the magn%ude oí the
the part will be forfuñate, indeed, if
PÍÜ '
be if !
wbicl
of the
tread fc'te blue heavens at
( t,
i wiiire the ransomed ¡.ave trod,
tíiniles from b«l psaqee of
1 thro' changes and
; pleasures uaebangingly
it tbe glorv that
ihetomb, - ..
From the ererereen mountains of life.
iS PREE-TRA DE AN EXPERIMENT?
• . ; ra.; . .
The following is from an article in
tbe Bdinbnrg review, written at the
arrive time of the Anti-Corn Law agitation in
sis "ft can never be heki an experiment
' i to leave Qr restore things to their natu- _ .
ral couree ; while it is decidedly the semi-confedej-acy, com
uat^ire- of an éxperiment to place obsta- ~
cles in the way of that natural course,
«wsa-íi af*dto tamper by artificial arrange-
ments with the free agency of mankind.
After a moment's reflection nobody can
denjr that Free-Trade is the normal cou-
dition of mankind, and the restriction,
which is the proper name for protec-
tion, whenever introduced, and by
ver means supported, was, and
-Ü must continue tó be m experiment
"The distinction, which wc have
poihted out, will not be deemed unim-
portant by those who have experienced
~ ~ influence -so orfen exei>
SHOP,
Í - u-i.
\ to do aü lÍBd«erepairiag on and of their
[JSH'S OLD STÁJÍ
men's minds. The advantages of au
artificial system of restrictions and en-
couragemente would obtain an undue
advatttage if they could succeed in re-
moving from themselves, and in fixing
upon those who would restore things
to their natural course, the charge (for
such it undoubtedly is) of having re-
aorted fóflthííl purge** to theory and
experiments. The advocates of this
? ,« ww 8te<itty .¡nr..
efforts made by the
individual membra, of a nation in fur-
of its prosperity, are wont to
talk.of themselves as practical men,
ference was there' in the relation of in-
dividual to individual? What element
was it that made Free-Trade proper in
one case, improper in the other ? Sup-
pose that Texas again became an inde-
pendent State, would it then be her
policy to_ return to the "Protective sys-
tem?" " M*f\
"Protectionists," however, will ssy
that they have no doubt that perfect
freedom of trade among a nation is
good for the nation. Let us take, then,
a yet more complete example of the
practical working of Free-Trade, as
afforded by the Zollverein or Customs
Union of the German Uniou States.—
Here we have seen Free-Trade* exist-
ing between the different" states of a
serai-confederacy, composed of people
, of the same blood and iangnage. Free-
Trade has worked well in this instance.
Then, again, taking the case where
two nations, thoroughly independent
of each other, have made trial of Free-
Trade, we find that France and England
are,mutually enriching each other, by
! their various treaties taking the chains
off commerce. • -r j
To speak then of Free-trade as being
some philosophic dream, or as some-
thing to come in with "tiré'Millenium,''
is to show a reckless and senseless ig-
norance of what is passing under one's
eyes. "Freedom of the Seas," says
good in the j cadets and his associates in after li%.
>ct, what dif- On one of the* fairest pages of history
epithet in misdirecting our own great Channing; "freedom of
*•—- - _ — ® l nf aafinilc* ímít
harbors ; "an intercourse of nations free
as the winds; this is no(-a dream of })hi-
laalhrojnsls. We are tending loward it,
and lMy.s luíste nit." ,
To the Editor of the Tribune:
Sik:—Your special Washington cor-
must be written the deeds of the gai-
lant soldiers aud true patriot;
" T.EO.NHÍA3 POLK.
" Leónidas Polk, tall ami strait
an arrow, was the orderly sergeant oi
.my company. Scrupulously strict.in
the discharge of hi« duties, retiring in
his manners, and a devout member;
even then, of the Episcopal Church, he
invariably commanded tbe respect ol
tis all. . , . i- ;¿ .
PjSfeg. "ROBERT S. LEE. '/
" Robert E. Lee held the two ofBces
in the corps usually filled by the best
soldiers of the class—sergeant-major
and Adjutant. He ¿¡discharged tiie
duties of these offices with zeal and
fidelity. His personal appearance sur-
passed in manly beauty that of any
otliér cadet in the corps. Though
firm in his position, and perfectly erect,
he had none of the stiffness so often
assumed by men who affect to be
very strict in their ideas of what is
military. His limbs, beautiful and
symmetrical" looked as though he ¿ad
come frbm a turning lathe; his step
was" as elastic as if he spurned the
ground upon which he trod. He was
noted among his classmates as a great
student, ana as having passed through
the trying ordeal of a military school
without a single demerit mark. (I gen-
erally got ene hundred and fifty dol-
lars ¿year.) During Bob Lee's stay
at West Point, I am satisfied that he
never swore an oath, tasted a drop of
ardent spirits, nor used ' the weed in
any shape or form/ The same vjrtues
of abstinance may be attributed to
Caries Mason; but I think ' Charlie,
- ••
the Crescent
¡ made on the perplexity
oriiiern Republicans with refer-
tó the poKey of seeuring the
South to tbeir party by weans of the
are confirmed by : every
newsi
North,
desired
States,
com]
and-
and; the
event is"
them so
imperil 1
tion. T
shall
■I
hazard of
that Sheridan had made out an order
for the arrest and trial before a milita-
ascendancy in that sec-
then, is their dilemma:
the present plan
whole South, at the
large losses at the
North, or shall they forego the former
advantage that they may*avoid the lat-
ter danger ? This danger, though as
yet undefined . in extent, is none the
ess alarming. With regard to eveiy
contingency of accomplished recon-
struction tté Northern mind is mi-
settled and Hable to extreme fluctua-
tion. It Is One thing to presume that
the masses of the Northern people de-
sire, as they doubtless do, to see the
excluded. States reconstructed in the
interest of the Republican party. It
is another thing,; aud this is daily be-
coming more plain, to suppose the
same masses eapáblc of contemplating
without concern the probability of
those States, and all the great interests
involved in their material recuperation,
being subjected to the mercies of a
negro domination. Can the Republi-
can leaders afford to defy tin? natural
repugnance <iB|he general Northern
respondent of jWter ielegmpBs ® fol- t" M
low : "It is said on good anftority T "
in Lee's class, and intellectually had
no superior at the Point. How well Í
9 Of Gen,.
to order ató by diat of reiteration, have, to a
" notice great extent suéceoded in impressing
on tbe world this ^notion, than which
'timtwé j nothmg can in fact be more at variance
" it is the advocates for
of commerce who are eminent-
ly nraetical. Sauce all they propose is
to fdlow out the simple rale of leaving
one to do his best fer securing
onder tiie
that by so doing, he will
aiice thegeneraiiHteieRt of
; whale the advocates
Rosseau, fpr ilnpeding reconstraction.
The law gives him that power. Roseau
and Steadman suddenly left New Or-
leans, and the arrest was thus pre-
vented/'
"That Gen. Sheridan made out an
order for tae arrest of Gen. Steadman
and myself,may be true; búil neither
know nor do I believe it to be true.—
mmmm
opf7
their vain attempts to
tor I
are
jCof
each
branch of wMcff fe the growth of iheo-
retical conceptions, and by the number
and complexity of which all freedom of
action is ultimately destroyed."
I have something which another
in hie wants, he has something which I want;
we agree-to mutually satisfy one an-
and our respective
bands. This is Free-
Trade. The "principle remains the
same whether the act be performed by
two nations; and,
^ lat :is -called the
commerce of nations, is only the buy'
and selling-between individuals
those nations. Thia transaction f<
of human
II
mm
it can léteB a better sys-
tem than the natural one, yet until
"Protection" has proved that it is en-
i titled to supersede Fiee-Tfcade, it is
t a tiieory, in tiie ^«Protectionist"
Whist rjítícalous
f ^xTOTWHOBISIS .
o# Free-Trade as being some-
that Gen. Steadm^a and Rosseau sud-
denly left New Orlenos to ayoid ar-
rest, is simply a malicious if not a ma-
lignant invention, and its author is a
very credulous and simple person, or
else a very artful or reekiess fabricate;-.
As your correspondent shield himself
or ^ behind the words, "it is said, on good
aatíiar%/í' ;he ¡a nupposed to be no
furthw re^xwasible itt the premises
of the lungs or the digestion
If a man should
a monomaniac, and
y to ob-
our
truths were
t wiH not
<feto
dieted, 1 am rather forced into the an-
noyance of this reply. Let me tell you,.
Mr. Editor, that Gen. Sheridan knew
perfectly well, and from my own lips,
tbe day and the hour of my departure
from New Orleans; so he had full op-
portunity to enforce an arrest if, indeed,
he designed one.
Perhaps it is well enough to $||g|P
fact within my knowledge, that Gen.
Steadman, who was to have left New
Orleans with me, was detained in that
city for several days after my depar-
ture by the serious illness of a nephew.
I have not heard that any effort was
made to arrest him. It is not the habit
of either Gen, Steadman or myself to
>art suddenly. Yours, very respect-
y- > " T „ p.
cLovrll H. Rosseau.
Uluding to Gen. Thomas's sickness,
the Tribune says there is yet a chance
for Rosseau.
It is stated that letters have been re-
ceived here by prominent politicians
from members of Congress, which state
that the only remedy left to secure re-
construction is the impeachment of the
President. A partisan correspo
says these betters are significant, from
the fact that several of them
members who, at the
ment as he stood at the blade-board,
demonstrating some intricate and beau-
tiful mathamatica! problem. Mason
early left the army, and has since sought
and gained that distinction in civil
life which his talents and pure charac-
ter entitled him to. He was for
long time commissioner of the
office, ehosen for his scientific attain-
ments, and filled with ability for several
years, a place on the supreme. bench
of Iowa. - fe? . fe i -„-r -
"JOE JOBVSTOJi. -
E. Johnston had a great
deal of the military spirifUhat peiv
vaded tbe corps, and which was infused
by Major Worth. He was not remark
able for his ^studious * habits, and
belonged to a fast set, of which I was
myself an active member. Few of that
cet escaped arrest, confinement and
sourt martial. Joé Johnston was one
of those genial spirits that gave zest
to a cadet's life. Full of ambition and
| desire to excel, he was yet ever
ady to join a scouting party to Batteár-
mifk Falls, the residence of the immor-
tal Benny Havens. His appearance
was very military, and when under
arms no man looked more the soldier.
He was very expert in the manual ot
arms, and carried his musked so per-
pendicular that it leaned a little too
much to the front Though we recog-
nized his talents then, we little dreamed
he had the military genius he has since
displayed as a commander.
" JOHN B. KACRCRER.
" My old friend and classmate, John
B. Magruder, was perhaps the most
elegant and distingue cadet at the
Academy, in that day, and I do not
believe that West Point has oyer had
his equal. He was a first-rate soldier,
of fine appearance, and very strict-
when on duty as " officer of the d¡
never failing to report the sligt
violation of regulations, even though
the delinquent was his most intimate
friend and room-mate. This trait in
his character I have reason to know
from personal experience. John was
for the corps the "arbiter of things1
m elegant, the glass of feshioi "
commenced wftii
on the. 1st. ult., and was
on the 5th.
Ha^j says ^ poxoter
bas just amved from Capt. Ames who
had asevere witb
and was repulsed, ofter charging twice
ai!kiBedaod 2# wc
that man tead on the field.
, The fall
Tennessee,
followed by v/u wic -ja... |ore for deefsive measun
The next election that will be hela will of presideQt Johnson."
be in Vermont, on the 3d of Septem- OI fes u
ber. California will follow on Septem-
ber 4th, and Maine on September 9th.
approaching presiden
t being- bánkrapted
exclusive;" |i|
i r _ the if^uéa butírising to^
tbe very fundamental conditions of sfon, in a pootícál way, a
things will bé altered. The black man such nnpo<>tieHl articled as pistols
can not be lifted above the white as cirwhides, reliev«l himself iu - indicti
ong as the habits, prejudices and
«rftiie jíresei^ geae!iativ>neu5
dures, without a struggle in whicli
both may suffer, but whose end must
needs leave the weaker in a worse
state than the stronger. The negro
has every thing to lose and nothing to
Hi - gain in such a contest.
il which arrives from the We regret this conflict exceedingly.
We shrink from revolution as we shriuk
uthern from violence of every kind. Revolu-
risk of tton is the sure fore-runner of wrong.
Ü " 5-
no rightai Tbe government may prop
up tbe negro with its Freed man 's
er to make sure of the
cy in the Southern
ve incurred the
frieanizing tbe
of tbose
ire prospect oí such an
ning to operate against
usly in the North as to. Bureau, but it will not make him hap-
mind to
ing from
fn the
ucy? Judg- iess
festatioBs of alarm
aré soar.
vmce
is his ruin. Labor regulates
itself, and there never was a contest of
long; duration betwixt capital and l«-
bor, in which capital failed to drive
labor to the wall. Of cotftse, the Gov-
ernment may try to overwhelm capital
with confiscation, but this will niisB its
mark. In the conflict and confusion
the negro will "go uuder," We are
sorry for this, for we are the negro's
friend. He-is least of all responsible
for this condition of things.^—Nfrshvilte
Banner.
jmpamon
" Truant wife with kn
UtmrmiBj the Winded
WMt.nf ¡jour
After other men.
You liad better be at hoíné,
with jwnr eotapanion stay
wae mTnii]
s i «i
Under
invites the
I ^
pjier. If he escapes the anger óf the ..
native Southern white, he is sure ft j ^r- ^Yan, an iamily bved
fall into the clutches of the spirit of patnarclmel way under a
cttuning and chicane, which prompts ¡ P^ er ™ay have unpoetically
opperations of his would-be friends. J ;or a frari^ hQüse' ,
The only policvfbr the negro was con- If
ciiliation. The Radical, or root-out | visws ofinxury, in which a
Btream. -.? >-.v
Think of thy hosband,"
The inexplicable imagery of Mr.
Rowan reminds us of Swinburne's oc-
casiona! flashes of bottoiriess profundi
t.v.
"Glittaingin the«uany heam,
Tmant, pause! Or ete the wave
May thy future blast when I would
m. - n; ^
The Tin- Mines of Missouri.—Sever-
al thousand acr^s of land have recent-
ly been entered in Madison and Iron
counties, upon which - the owners hope
to find tin lands, which have hereto-
fore been considered as almost worth
of their hilly,
character, and their remoteness from
river and railroad communication.
The St. Louis' parties have their
miners at work
to banish this contingency from among
the incidents that may attend the d¿
velopment of the reconstruction pro-
graming, devised by the Republican
majority of Congress ? Here is a diffi-
culty for which they have not yet been
able tojfecover &uy certain method
over. Tbey
mm I. tliemselves.by
ng in any degree the Congres-
sional programme, and they see peril
in pursuing this programme to the
utterance in spite of its teudency to
inaugurate negro rule in. ten of tiie
Southern States.
Among the indications that public
sentiment in the North threatens te
drift away from the Republican policy
of reconstruction, not tbe least
worthy is the recent course of tbe
York Herald, which has, in a series of
articles more than usually earnest and
grave in tone, depicted the dangers of
pushing forward the scheme of Repub-
licaniziag the South in such & way as
to make it liable te come under the.
control of the solid negro vote. In
:s the Herald, with all its shift-
ing about and -Swingings around,
aims with implacable steadiness to an-
ticipate public opinion, if possible ;
and, if net possible, to follow it with
the utmost promptness. Occasionally
the Herald has made si
. JBjP signal .mistakes
in both these respects ; but in general
it has divined the changing current of
public-oprnion with remarkable sagaci-
ty. In view of this indici&l c"
of that journal, the subjoined
in one of its articles referred to has a
ificance which politicians cannot
to despise " • *"
"There is no security, and there are
a thousand dangers, in the radical pro-
gramme, which now distinctly fore-
shadows tiie placing of the late „
erningwhites of the South under the
political coiftrol and subject to the
caprices and revenges of the black
race, relieved but yesterday from the
moral darkness, oppressions, wrongs
and disabilities of African slavery.
These dangers are so menacing that
they must be appreciated by thinking
Northern men. We hold, accordingly,
that the time at last has come for a
Northern reaction, Mid tbe time, there-
" ve measures ptt tbe |fáit
mills.
Now," said
like to know whether the
kiled or
"Tired she rests on yonder rose;
Soon ter eager chase will dose,
Friend, stretch forth thy I "
I". -T-:. , M . For she op 1
Tbe deserted minister
ménts this poém with
mainkiiutn ■'■ i n ■■ n i in a
ínatcnieRH proauctioii m prose"
"EXPLASAÍORX.
My wife, Charlotte T«
zed
and took a
"Ideelare,
• éj^onis:
The
that
Spectator
i in mmmm
The " tin fever" has assumed a con-
tagióuB for and everybody has the
" attack." Farms which could not
have been bought a week ago for $10
or $15 an acre, are now eagerly
snapped up at from $100 to $300 per
acre; and if - the investigation now
being made ¡«suits satisfactorily, some
_ we know of could not be pur-
chased for $1,000 per acre! The
Ironton RegiMer says :
áwall's glory has departed,
The Uhited States are no longer de-
pendant upon the old world for their
sincepans: for in Souther#? Missouri
there is tin enough to supply her
for a million of years. Our
■re ipriy wild about tin, One-
the- population Own tin mines, and
the other half are trying to own some.
Everybody bas ft piece of tin ore in
his pocket, and there is scarcely a
blacksmith shop in the country where
ladies and pans have not been coated
with it. Onr towns are full of janntly
dressed individuals, who have made
fortunes in the eastern oil regions and
other land speculations, are hear look-
ing after tin. Blow-pipes protrude
from pockets as frequently as * bowie '
in Arkansas. Farmers plow up
green-colored rock, and unhitch the
team, for they have found tin. Díbh,
cussious o& theological $nd political
¡ts all merged into tin. Everv-
u is tin. Men drink to tin. Men
dream of tin. There has been a tin
i social
is of a pale bJae color;
laughing eye" mentioned in
j has a "
"Said wife had no cause or prov
tion Ibr thus absconding, and I hen
caution tbe public agaiaei trusting or
harboring her on my account, as I will
pay no debts erf ber contracting.
"DESCfiUTION OF MY WfcfE.
"My wife is about five feet high,
has H^bt brown hair, right eye out,
tbeeti:
íséMi. H
a dimple on loft temple
near eye, pug nose, a scar across one
arm, is stooped-shouldered, Has short
thick feet, and easily maktiii the ac-
quaintance of strangers. X|¡|
"DESCSIPTIOif OF THOMAS MONROE LYONS.
"Said Lyons is a widower and has
two children. He pretends to be a
native of Pittsburg. Is supposed !
be aboTat forty-six years of 4ge. Has
dark hair. Whiskers on one side of
his face gray, and on the other gray
and dark brown mixed. >
"mvoRCE. r-.~
" Notice is hereby given to my wife,
Charlotte Temple Rowan, that I shall
apply at the next session of the .Circuit
Court of this county to be divorced
from her, and if she can- «how cause
why such divorce should not
ed, she will appea
in person or by attoi
her cause.
"Dated at Pulaski, Illinois,
4ay of July. A. D, 186$
Leeds or Bristol,
field. * ----
1 A London <
Gr
to
1 The:
Derby's
131
ftSlbitiOB t
iys ¡
m * " " ' ^
of Lord
IMl.
m
I '
collection of
had borne m
1881;,
IBIS
áSm
-More than once we
Sensationai..-
have beard rumors of treasure^ kiviag ^-ed, probably presents tWmostj
been buried in Fayette
degree of reliance can be placed in
them is for each to decide for himself.
About two years ago the rumor took
this shape, that in olden times there
resided somewhere in this county, near
a creek a man, who hermit-like shunned be crughed ;
the intercourse of his fellow men. He
was reported to be the possessor <
mense wealth, whether obtained under
tiie auspices of Lafifcte, or not, was no
said.; Suddenly onr hermit was killec
by the Indians, aud with him was
buried the secret of the place where
his money was deposited. To-day the
rumor assumes this form, -that under
AN LEP 13 S
KaiVn-c
Deluxe
A Dark Picttrk.—The New York
Evening Post says: "Our system of1
as at presen t ad minia-
te be found in the world. Unless it be
promptly and thoroughly reformed our
whole financial system witt
astrous and
en in
and both
which they cannot
private
BLACK AND
Whatever our opinion may be of the
. that an
intense and very . universal ft
negrotas well es to
,000,000
sonsin, m)
list
buried tbe
believe that
Majors
the scene with a
We are much
; v
to see
through the medium
n—and
Walker,
gentle-
ride;
make it
of tfee
I i
... '
wholesale robbers in and out of
Hundreds and
wmmm; . ¡ \
ter or conscience are s
enormous fortunes by robbingt
ernment of' the tnc
its debts;
the "connivance aad by
•w-
■
. ■ i
no
lyWtKfWimm
v
fli> i# 93 at- i
SNj
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Josselyn, Robert. The Texas State Gazette. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 51, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 7, 1867, newspaper, September 7, 1867; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth180441/m1/1/: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.