Tri-Weekly State Gazette. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 147, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 20, 1872 Page: 1 of 4
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Wis 5taff«awett*.
püBI.iaHJMJÍ*VB«T
WedBexd*y and Friday
— t—
JOHN W. ELLIOTT,
Mltor aad Propri tor-
cí IBl «1A5*
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^W«W J ■><! Wmkíj oomWaed, 85 per ot. dis
IHMSKTS (jüiKTKRr.T IM iirriM a
tICí.—-All )<omwiiaioatioiu should be ad-
4ta "Kditor -t 8t t« Otttotte."
JOUH O. KI.UOTT.
iLuie Klfctlon in
m
Prance.
European files just to hand
i w to an explanation of the late
election*. Seven «ente in the
...nfalv were vacant. Of course alt
i parties did their boat to win. Th«
¡«partía' , the Legitimists, the
oiitt, the Republicans were all
|üm field. Money wns treely spent,
I whatever the cause, and whether
lit or wrong, the republicans have
i oat victorious. Six of the seven
tuients have returned to tbe
ably republican deputies. Tbe
td' Aumale did his beet for his
hut his friends were defeated,
i Count de Chambord piteonsly
1; but not a single legitimist
i tbe shadow oí a chance. The
rtilts fought well, but ecaroely
I *s« given in favor tbe Empire,
tof the latest conflict President
Jiws hai come forth victorious, lie
feoisred himself iu lavor of tho
«public, and, looking at these latest
¡tare , we must admit that the pres*
t administration is suti-lactory to
i tnlk of the French people. Ki-
el! • and President Thiers are
rtta present tbe two most foteut
i in France. The one is the man
[thftliour; the other is the man of
ifontre. Contrasted with the pow-
1 whiob these men wield legitimacy
p'i Orleanism and Bonapartism are
The situation- may change in
hour; but it is not possible to refuse
| admit that tbe French people, in
ft)' and coautry, are of the opinion
i the Republic is quite as good as
) Empire, and perhaps better than
l Kingdom. According to our latest
is the President does not intend to
i any immediate changes. This
i think is well. Radical changes, no
Natter to what direction made, might
siuj about rovoiution; and as revo-
ltón ii the one thing which France
fishes toja void, President Thiers will
> well to allow the ship of state to
&*l o without troubling the waters
rdwturbing the sails. Considering
«rjpsst experience, her many efforts
\hír frequent failures, France has
| [sir right to be the first well-estab-
Republic on a grand scale !n
All (rue Americans wish
ocosm to the present republican ex*
'""'nsnt iu Old France; and M,
biers has done so welt that he ought
be remembered in history as tbe
of his Ooootry.—N. Y.
*mmm«f.miii i'|i p i i
Tae loss of two hundred million
£oll*r ' worth of property by tho Boston
> must seriously ambaras the great
weial Centén of the United States,
Meed it does not precipitate a fi-
i*l crisis upon the country.
' k *e already taken placa, but
1ÍM the pressors seems to have been
no without producing a decided
sis in the stock market. ■
The detiruoUon of Pearl Street,
F<>«t was exolualrely usod by whole-
*'« boot ud shoe and leather deal-
i «est materially eabanta the vahe
goods. It i* thought that
1 American manufacture of woolen
> will also be largely appreciated.
>« there is bo Hp *® evil
•«Be resulting good, the
'«wool may become en
our Taxes producers be grea
m
Fot the Gazette. $ 0
Tlae Echo oí the Sou
SfPfl IPPR
M Mi
UtpF
w _
116, N'
VHl fJ* XtU
The Ulllsis
rebuke administered by tbe
New York Herald to a eity oo&tem
rnry, wilj apply to two of ,tbe
tiXsp newspapers, lately reiKhot sup
pwtwe of QKSKLxy:
An Englishman called to tbe im-
Ua. J. U. Fo*
Att7 4
Awrttt/'TMUfc
Th&mpgon Sr
portant position of editing a New
York daily, the Times, once oan-
WX
X.A
0fl4ofáw to
LAND A
w ■* ■-!Í ' '?*'«O'h #'¿1.5
DVFFJV It THOMPlSQj*"
A""
Si;.'
BT SAMS BOIIC)
For manjUears I
But eoce inftrttSiiT «tood
The stream ioved, so wildly sweet,
"Where oft had strsyed my nhildlsh feet;
And near me stood the dear old home,
M y father's borne !n youth's bright biew l
Alas ! I etood there all lofte-~
My Mends ere nestb tbe cUuroh-yardstoW
I sa*v each eld familiar scene;
The dark beech-wood, the playgrouud green
Whore yet the old gripe- vine did spring
Whose brsitofa wm on-je our mtk swing,
And then I said: '-My playmates dear,
Companions of lifs's tender year,
Where are they úow r Then s jft and low
An echo sigbei, "Where are the* now V
"Welcome," 1 said, "oid echo dear,.,
Tb? spirit voice, at least, Is hur«,
And I remember thy reply
To laughing toa« in yew gone by ;
Yet, will no voice but thine nuw greet
The txila beck with love-tones swoet ?
And hsve they pssiodawsy t" Thé ¡«y
Of echo sang WThey passed sway."
"Oh, Bcho!" then I said with sighs,
"There was one girl with soft blue eyes,
And fair, pale face, *nd hair of gold,
Who used to meet me here of old ;
Oh, tell me, if that dear one's lot
Was bitter tike my own, or not;
1 cannot think she died Í" then sighed
Tbe JSofeo's lonely voioc,—"She died."
.. msm-ymi*
■Then Boho spirit," murmurud I,
Oh make me now a true reply-
Bay when this weary life is psat,
I'll meet my boyhood's love at last;
It is too bitter thus to trace
Remembrance of that lost one's face,
And knoW 'twill smile no moro," Tbe shore
Caught Echo's voice:—-" 'Twill smile no
more."
Against a giant oak-tree's .bark
I leaned my brow with sorrow dark,
And brooded for awhile—ell stlfl—
Beside the geetly murmuring rill.;
I thought upon the loved—the dead !
Then with a deep-drawn sigh, 1 said: —
•Too dear to l*«l I" And Buho oast
The sad words back i "Too dear to last."
1 murmured: "Boho! after years
Of grief and wov, of might «tit war —
Is there one friend may yet remain,
To take mo to bis heart again ?
There's sliver sprinkled in my bair 1
My brow, my heart are soared with care!
Am I forgot by all ?" My nail
Brought itoho's back ¡--"Forgot by all-"
Ah, Boho I" then I sigbod, "1 know
That true are ail thy words of wos ;
So, from this scene, once more for e'er,
I'll go, since none are left me here ;
And in the world's < M way forget
These tender thoughts, this vain regret,
And wend my way alone"—a moan
From Boho came.—"Alone, alone!"
Then Echo, since of all bereft,
Thou only of mr friends are left,
I fain would know where'er I roam,
Where thou dont make thy viewless home.
It almo<t seems thou Sad unseen.
That thou wouldst say "My home's
within—"
I broke from slumber's soft control,
But Echo sleeps within my «oul.
AO tin, Texas.
I
Metetw** Itwta.
Kentucky squirrels are emigrating
to Indiana. Tbey are going .to see
(Hoosier) who' hire.—£¡x.
Henderson wants water-work and
proposes to hypothecate a portion of
the $360,000 railroad «took held by
tbe city to raise the necessary funds.
The Brownsville and Olatéow Junc-
tion Railroad Company has been re-
organised and will make application
to the County Court of Edmuodson to
submit the question of subscribing
$100,000 to tbe capital stock of the
uompany to tbe people of that county.
This road will open the richest and
best coal and iron fields in Kentucky.
There is every prospect that the ap-
An old feud between Samuel Jones
and George H. Corry, two Louie-
ianians li ing near Bayou Sara, led
to the death ot both. Jone# caose4
tbe murder of Ourry, by bis («> ones )
brother-in-law, <* Cotton, wbo wai
hid In tbe ambneli. Joneé, walking
by Currv's side, Httlng bis gon above
hís own bead and beginning a loud
prayer,
tiou.
«gat
gun from bis hands and kilted Jones.
- muí ni' ii| lituana-
Viiginla—"old" Virginia, that never
-wja oew olatmod for Grant. But
that the Grant com
"ooncede"
6«o
if not
MBMVM
. ■ "
'ivK^yMKK' •!
;. '-V •MM : ■)'
I*;:. U'&tméMHm
uSSBSMml
, as tbe a%aal for the assassloan
Oíirry, «be through and
ducted by an American gontiemw,
bas, however, imported from England
tbe exploded notion, common year* «go
to bis country own, that the gab-lag of
Billingsgate watj the proper ideal on
wbiob to fon nd bis style- This man,
permeated with the Sngliab idea of
America, and whom we cannot speak
of as an Amorjoan citiwa, pom's forth
his vulgarity without stint as the
surest way to índ tavor with those be
is called on to" serve in the devious
Paths of partisan warfare. As we
only respect party in so far as it ap-
proaches to being the voice of tbe
people—tbe grand front of the nation
to its friends and its foes—we tors
trom this abnormal revival of a viru-
lous dead some thirty years with a
certainty that American manhood will
resent it. The public caree little for
the quarrels of newspaper editors. It
interests itself in obtaining the news
oi tbe world at the hands ot a dig*
nified and independent prose. Tbe
riNing power ol tbe great Republic
pieces a responsibility on the shoslden
of its press which tboy should not
lightly under-estimate, and one of the
first duties ot the latter «hould be to
bury fathom de«p tfte spectre of de.
grading personality which this Bn-
giish journal seeks to resurrect.
To put it bluntly, tbe Northern
Democrats are not a subjugated peo-
ple, like tbe South, and, witb an
abundance of able material in their
own party, tbe endorsement of a
liie-le«g Republican like Mr. Greeley
was hu extraordinary demand on "un-
sdbjugated'' human nature. We were
fully aware of this, aud knew that noth-
ing le^s than the utmost exertion of
all tbe powers of organisation wonld
poll our full Northern strength. There-
fore we were strenuous and unceas-
ing in our pleas for Democratic organ-
isation here and everywhere. We
knew that nothing less would eleot
Mr. Greeley. Tbe r«s lt proves it.
Bat aome ot our ¿ Liberai frieeds, aet
out to destroy Democracy aa well a*
Radicalism, Tbey openly advocated
and announced the death of the Dem-
ocracy. In attempting to destroy
two great parties at once, tbey have
undertaken too morh. Fighting Dem-
ocracy tar more bitterly than Radi-
calism, ihnt have apparently weak-
ened the Democracy more because
it was confessedly the weaker party,
and enemies in the camp atemore
dangerous than enemies in tbe field.
Tbe result i , Radicalism is re-estab-
li hed more firmly than ever, and the
strength of tbe Democracy—-the only
check to iU unbridled power—is
lessened. It appears to us that all
patriots who are not infatuated witb
the Radical furor, must see that the
Democracy it more needed now than
ever before, as a check ou the ruling
party, and that all food men, of what-
ever past predilection, must hold up
our hauda. •' •
It is easy eooogb now to say, and
perhaps natural to feel, that if the
Cincinnati Convention had cordially
Invited into it* councils the Democra-
cy which it expected to elect ita can-
didate, all this might have been dif-
ferent.^ But, we dismiss the biiter
"might have been." Our dttty is to
f'Rce the present, and gird ourselves
for the future.—Üoion and American.
The President's Views.
A Washington dispatch reporta the
fallowing as President Grant' svjews on
bis re-elootion: Hia1 first election he
oon&iders aa an honor pud lor his
ratlittry service, Ilia second, the na-
tion's approval of his political adminis-
tration, and a popaJw vindioaUon of
bis personal character.
¿ong before the Philadelphia Con-
vention he forosaw his saooets. Tbe
nomination by the Ooamionists gratified
blm,; inasmuch aa it narrowed tbe
contest to two oandidatee. Beside ,
the character of tbe opposition g*ve
him complete assnrancc of the resalt.
the Baltimore noatinetion, and he was
thereafter urged by political giants to
make various changes in hit Cabinet.
Many of bis friends had wondered at
bis Indifference, which was koowü to
,wübuK:iüs M* amnvj
x> auoa x
A 0 TU?
iff .V . ; '
*••*•••*•««« TSXJtS
'! lift
■>
I. -. . :i / 1
Keep, eeasiautlj on kaod a targe antl
carefully selected stock of
DRUG%
' PAINT8,
VAUNI8EHS,
OILS, Ac ^fcc.
PI
Hi
Is wnntantly receiving $ th* Uteit and
tnotl fashionable
PEHFÜMES,
COSMETICS\
Htimufthira. ASábini. Temieaweí .
Cooneotieat, Netmaka. Indiana,
lewa. New York
Oook's cotot,
BEUBBN W. yOKD,
iffv'■ ¿-''"""i'<v ft"-'y**#^ r.' t
Mtnnm wm wejym «f c e « jtjntfimeer
mOÁPS AND
: w*
bat few, we* Ms knowledge of the fatjt
the campaign the Rtpnb*
«i jClatrtiniliftB kád é nkikfit
•' WwUI'M'IVJf *,®T 'f ff *
that during
ARTICLES FOR TOILET USE
Onlers trom cooutry merchants promptly
filiad at
A CLOSE MARGIN. ÜPO !|
NSW Y O UK PR 10 ES
wttEscRiP Tsojra
accurately and carefully
tn jfil**' : • >«
COMPOUNDED
reet t to hostaess let.
eral Ooarti « .
——í—: „i
W. ^.ífiavm. O. N, Ilor.MiHMwoaTia
MARTIN A HOLLISOSWOHTH,
ATTORSBTfl AT LAW,
aad
RIAL B8TATJS AGBHT8.
Sí «UBcas...,
wXv ■ *>>■ ■.( i.
Sat. P Jaukeon '
OnMMrf Á3*nt.
SIJaNDS A JA'
AMOM1T8 AT
ii'.'K,.ffi.., ) «-♦** - • , -
QWJSRALLAXI) A&WTay
kweot, e-e* v^aaea aVe A « e«e b*k< T**as.
t > ' \ v. jgl •. i t-.'j' 11\ '■■'•SMtiii- • • ■''
and
WlUpraettce to
Coarte,and «gake the
tag at titles to laaes
speciality. Commissioner
hr Louisiana, Ofttiita CT5r"
il,Kansas.
ia, South Ca^oKna,
AUHTI.Y, TKX4S
Is neta
At All
Marob 27.twtwlv
as
PECAN 8TRHBT DRUG STORE.
DR8. J. J. St
H. TOiBIJf
H
W.j ;
S
WHOLBU.L1 * Rwritt Pavooists
• í
BBALBR6 W DHUO0, OniHtZtUL , f*
■■■■■■iiiijHiiiBH ' ~ " 'fflvwt-ÍMíf
#. 3'. ;.
to the
managers
raxr ujwimxM, r.
• ?*.•• &$éíÍéi®Mmí ÉteiS
'P>' Í-'i' '*íWá
' .w < — ;
10LW, ii&v: TM&
PRCJJV 8TBMXT,
n mT
r.:
w,A,
w ñ
imm
auítwAw-
wm gi
hupi
PI or Ida,
i-v v •' iTttwurvyy m■■
JMBITJMT,
h iiímú
■-'K ■-
skMtwtf,
m ■ v* *
l.M tíi, .í,
w
eahaai.
< "V,
t1
'
Parties wishing accurate land surveys, !n
(Ms elty and vicinity, will
advantages of employing a
perWnoed surveyor,
strueted instruments. R
Fine street.
5 H. A. WAA.LJS ,
6l Coniisftllor *1 JUw
Heaipstead, Austin County, Teias.
Praotlcc iu Austin, Fort Bead and Grimes
! *!■!)"
®. € MtioKi,
"P ijtfih'fj
Att'y A Q
«vi jk,t i,jii«iwit-}':r«'-xi tínMük
in the nWrlct Courts of Travis aud ad^aln,
oooattee ' t fm:'> ,]
'ni nil t«en>ii'il<ii
J. H. CUNNINGHAM,
Att'y Mid
ÍT.V- ^ w Ü
'JBXA& B
£i¿ .fe ,i/.ilWtii
austin,
ssptlStwga
j. y. battailr A CC.,
•ft* '■ ..fei'f?
COTTOJS FACTORS
And whotssaie dealer
|M|f
*- w M w ^ f • •••■«•'st ww w m
' Mm All consimaiMte i
, ' * '
MmM
iiMKbwrlflbe -
J K... w. a
■
ifiSST"
ACORNE* * OOtJi
iiT • vv <1 y,*- ; KTO2,''
N8KLLOR AT
■ will piwtteé te i
State Courts.
' F.W.'
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• •í:Í«íP/
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Elliott, J. D. Tri-Weekly State Gazette. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 147, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 20, 1872, newspaper, November 20, 1872; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth181075/m1/1/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.