tjjr me YOL.TJMB XI. LENOIR, IT. C, WEDNESDAT, NOVEMBER 28, 1886. NUMBER 10. Wallace Bros., STATESV1LLE. N. C. Whole salE Dealers Geneial Merchandise. -tot- Largest Warehouse and best facili ties for han dling Dried Fruit. Ber- ries, etc.. in the State. RESPECTFULLY "Wallace Bros. August 2:th, 1884. SPRING FEVER At this season nearly every one needs to one km sort of toaia. IliUN enters into aim nut every phy sician's preecriptioa for thoes who need building ap. U-J u u 0E5TT0.11C. is the only Iron medicine that is not injuriene. , t Knrichee that Bla4. In-rfareravtea the , : yatesa, Iietrea Appetite, AM Diestlen ' It does not blacken or injqra the teeth, cause head sche or prodooe constipation kAt Iron mttticinm do Dr. O. H. BurxxrT, a leading physician of - Springfield, 0 says: . -Brown's Iron Bitten is Uwroofblyjtopd medi cine. Ins H in my practice, and find tt action excels all other forms of iron. In weskness. or s low condition of the system. Brown's Iron Bitters is usually a poajpTe nwrasaity. It is sQ that is claimed for Jt."- Gennine has trade mark and rrosasd red Uses en) wrapper. Take other. Made only by BRWH CHEMICAL CO., BALTIMORE, If 0. . LaDTXS Uawd Book nsefn and attractive, con taining list of prizes for recipes, information about coins, etc., riren away by ail dealer in medicine, of nailed (o aoy address oo receipt of So. stamp. , , CLINTON A. CILLEY, I Attomeyilt-Law, W Practioe in An Tho Courts. INKLINGS FROM IDAHO. "Oregon Boots"-'Hell Broth" of the Ed Biands Bill ThB Festivs -Cowboy Tb8 Oanceof Death Wonderful ; Springs Boise City Two Postscripts. Writing and Riding on the Or egon Shout Line R. R., Nov. G. - To the Editor of TJie Lenoir Topic: In running over to Boise City yes terday, I noticed that two ot our fellow passengers had on what; they call out here "Oregon Boots.' These are heavy steel shackles or manacles placed on prisoners to prevent their escape. They weigh each about 18 pounds, and a man with one of these on each foot makes a poor attempt to escape. There is no getting them off by the, prisoner himself) as they are of hardened steel, fire-proof both lock and boot and the sheriff just puts the thing onto a fellow's leg, and with the key in his (the sheriff's) own pocket, the prisoner is given the freedom of his surroun dings. It is no use to try to escape, unless .your friends seige you and put you into a wagon and "get the drop" on the officer in charge. They are so arranged that the wearer can't run even if he jumps a car; or a stage; hence when the convict gets on his f0regon Boots" he may safe ly calculate that the doors of the penitentiary "the Pen" they call it out here, are the next thing that will close on him. I want to tellyou something about Idaho crimes and Idaho criminals. I am on a freight car "caboose," writing with such material as a freight conductor can give me, and as I write "on the run" can't prom ise elegance' of chirography much less elegance of diction.- The courts in the7 Mormon counties are in full blast, and polygamists are now being sentenced to "the Pen" by the doz en. Your eastern papers I presume keep you posted as to these proceed ings somewhat in a general way onl y. Out here, we have the matters in full deta.l- . I can't dwell on them. When a Mormon is convicted of liv ing with more than one wife under the operations of what is known as "Edmunds' Law" he usually gets a fine of $100 to $300, and from 10 days to G months in "the Pen"- ac cording to the fellow's purse, and according to the status of his repen tance and promise of future acqui escence in the law. At a recent court, last week, at -Blackfoot, four bigamists were sent up one day's proceedings. The sheriff is allowed his per diem and mileage en route. So he buys a wagon and ; team, and puts the fellows in charge of the same, with orders to proceed, ; across the country to , Boise ' City where the State Penitentiary is located. Of course the prisoners go without guard and they are as sure to turn up at the right place and at the right time as if the sheriff or his deputy were with them. The. men will serve their accorded terms in the Pen and return to their homes, where they are received by their brethren as"martyrs for the church." One very rich Mormon was Hp for triaL He had paid his attorney $500 to "fix" him p. K. j Ho plead guilty of course, and the judge, being a humane and good man, let the fel low off with a fine of $300 and . 10 days in the county prison, which latter was arranged at the best hotel in town ! So the stovy goes. Was it Tennyson. I haven't got my authorities here that said "Every door is barred with gold, and opens too to golden keys." and that "the jingling of the guinea always helps" &c ? But I need not repeat the rest. One of the fellows in our stage yesterday was sentenced to 15 years hard labor for some of his deviltry. The judge put in his words ' some what ruthlessly, when the convict rose and said ironically, 'can't you make it more lee-ne-ant, judge say hanging, for instance ?" "I wish I could,? said the judge in reply. - There was a cowboy tried for murder at this term of the court. The cowbeys are always in some kind of deviltry here though many of them are gentlemen and scholars that do not participate in actual crimes. Last night my companion in a stage ride was a young English gentlemen, a graduate of Eaton and, Oxford. You would not have suspected such, looking at his broad brim cowboy, hat with leather band, and the wide leathern girdle about his waist. There is no telling a man here by his looks; only the gamblers and the "soiled doves" are said to be the best dressed people that you meet. 'V . One of theiamusements and duly recognized "sports" of the cowboys out here is in what is called. "The Cowboy Dance." This is an indul gence that involves two things the bottle and a six shooter; the last is loaded, but the other.has been emp tied of its whiskey into the fellow's stomach. And if somebody don't look sharp, the revolver is next emp tied into some other person, jt JIThe cowboy tried for his J life '-at the Blackfoot court had killed his friend and comrade m,a dance. They were both drinking and could not wait for an innocent- vietim; if ru dance," says one "and you hold." The fellow danced' till n was growing tired, but he knew there was no relief till the caprice of the man who held the loaded re volver upon him was fully glutted. He began to beg, saying his legs were tired. "This arm .! is tired, too," says the villain, who was point ing the six shooter, his finger on the trigger, and "I am going to change to the other hand." He chauged the pistol to his left hand, and in the act of doing so, the thing went off and put a ball through the dan cer's heart. - .! .."' Of course we eastern folks would say this is murder. The court or rather the jury held that in this instance there was no malice or ill will; it was all in cowboy fun, and so the fellow "went up" for 10 years in the Pen, instead of being hung - as it should have been. ' Only a few nights ago a cowboy in the same town rode right up iu the front of a freight train and shot a hole into the head light of the en gine, put out the light and made the engineer stop his train. The engineer knew what was "up" and so he came to a halt. He got out of dancing, however. But the young devil in spurs and pistol determined to have "the dance" by some one. The first man showing himself was tho village blacksmith."-The cowboy leveled on him with his pistol cock ed and shouted "dance." The man danced good-humoredly forhe kuew it --was no use for him who had no railroad kings behind him to protest. He, too, soon grew tired, for the fellow kept urg ing him to dance faster. At last he told him he must quit. . "Hold on," he says, "strip off your clothing and: dance a little in the street." j The poor blacksmith had to obey this diabolical behest, even '-at the expense of the revolting indecency, it involved. And., so far, the young scamp has gone unpunished for ei ther of the crimes mentioned. ' There are out in this country the forms and ceremonies of law and order and of good society also. But public sentiment either upholds or condones crimes here that in tin east would meet with swift and se vere punishment. It occurs to me that there is more effort and more money expended here in the arrest and conviction of horse thieves than any other class of criminals. When a genuine horse thief is caught it is very seldom that the order of a count of "twelve good and true men" is stood upon. A rope and a limb, or an extemporized scaffold and there is short shrift, before his honor, Judge Lynch. : Withal, Idaho has numerous at tractions. But, like its ! neighbor, Nevada, it-is simply, geologically speaking, an immense basin, the bed of an extinct sea, where, in the pre diluvial period, great , volcanoes spread lava, liasalt, alkali and ashes over magnificent plains. Dig down here nearly anywhere and you .find volcauic remains. Today I have been running along the lino of the Oregon Short Line R. R., where it is built near the banks of the great Snake river the Indian Shosh-aa-na. (Shoshone). Nearly, every cut is through a lava bed, with its white scam of overlying or intermingling alkali the volcanic ash. In one place, there is a long stretch of roa( bed through a sand hill near the river bank. The strata here shows that once counter currents beat over the country, and the sand forma tions, partially petrified into solid sheets, show wave marks indicating one period, while above ' or below may be another wave mark exactly the reverse, showing still other pe riods. The most remarkable of all the natural. phenomena on this railroad the Oregon Short Line are found at Soda Springs, just west of the Wyoming border, and where the great Bear river was arrested in its northward flow toward the Colum bia and made to turn suddenly and pour its sullen waters into the Dead . Sea of Utah. Here, as I say, at Soda Springs are some intensely in teresting and wondrous phenomena. There are numerous fine; springs of natural soda water. There is one about. 100 yards from the depot, and from whicn, you see, as you look out from the cars, the volumes of . soda water spouting up into the air geyser like and falling back, to run over the rim of a crater upon the sumtnit of a high mound, built up by the deposits of solid matter pnee contained in the waters as they rolled away .in all directions. Now, the waters are collected into one channel, and by means of a pipe or trough, are turned into the adjacent bath house. These baths, it is said, are an infalliblue cure in all cases of rheumatic afflictions, that is, where "cures" are possible. There is one spring with water that is 90 per cent of pure soda. This water, when drank, cures all diseases re sulting from ("curable") dyspepsia. This spring is also possessed pi most remarkable powers otherwise . ; If a bird flies near its waters the noxious I fas kills it at once, and the bird falls, into the vortex or on the ' bank immediately i by. You submerge birds, eggs, any kind of flesh or vegetable matter into these waters, ; and let it remain a week or 10 days, and it is a perfect petrifaction. I have seen some of the most beauti ful specimens of; petrified matter from these waters. v-: ' A v f The outflow from these; springs lias in the process t)f 'ages Covered the whole valley around witha layer of calcareous and metamorphic for mation.; You can take a rail or pole and with it punch a hole right through this thin crust all over whole acres of the valley. Just be low is a bottomless, abyss, and yet people live right upon the top of this brittle crust. There is quite a town and city there, and where con gregate the lame and the halt, and dyspeptic hordes from various parts of he world. Some English fami lies from London have been there all the past summer. The carbonic acid gas that escapes from these springs is very deadly in its effects. I have alluded, to the fact that birds are instantly killed when they attempt to pass over the "90 per cent spring," as it is called. Some time during, the summer, a drunk man from, the town reeled and fell by the spring, his face over tha waters. He was dead before he could be pulled away ! Nevertheless the waters possess very efficacious properties when drank from a vessel away from the crater where the gas escapes. Among other named springs there is one called "the Steamboat Spring." The waters come up with a puff, ' puff, puff the noise like the escape of (steam from a boat's boiler. jl may add that on arrival of the passing trains at Soda Springs, you see half a dozen or 60 of little girls in! tidy frocks, with pitchers and buckets, ready to sell the thirsty passengers all tho soda water he wants for a nickel. You take it "straight," that is, without sweet ning, unless you carry your "syrup" with yeu ! Some folks give the lit tle ladies the nickel just for the pleasure of having a word with the bright-faeed carriers of water so anxious' to cool the thirst of weary Eilgrims across the lonely desert ere. Woman always has some charm, or joy, or blessing, that may be;obutnie(i for love or money. But this is honi twit, &c. But see what a letter I have spun out, most of which has been written as von see with the car upon whicn I am seated, going 20 miles an hour. I want to tell you some day in a future letter about my trip to Boise (Boy-sa, as it is called out here,) the beautiful capital of this Territory, sitting under the morn ing shadows of bleak and grassy mountains, at her foot an immense sage plain 50 miles across yet" her streets lined with stately Lorn bardies and cotton woods that grow by swift river and irrigating ditch, and where you see a single school house of brick and sandstone wallscosting fifty-four thousand dollars, and where you hear tho babble of five hundred and eighty-five daily schol ars as they go through "recitation" to nine new-fangled teachers, and where you may see alsoj the most wonderful equestrian 'i statue 'on earth. 1 This statue is the work of a young German who was snowed up, or snowed in, in the mountains nearby some four or five years ago. He had nothing with him in the way of tools except an ordinary pocket knife and a small hatchet that he carried in his belt. With these twb he has cut and carved out of wood, the most perfect equestrian statue of George Washington that is in existence. It is life size rather heroic, perhaps and it has every essential element of cut and contour to make it a per fect work of art. It was presented to the Capital City, and is now the sbh? monument of the higher arts that ornaments the public grounds about the swiftly growing capital, 'inlhis gem of Desert cities. But this as it relates to the letter about Boise City is perhaps like the . i ' ' " I storv Of Billy Gory." I must bid you good night, for the shades of dusk have come, and the brakeman is lighting lamps. j j Pooatello, Idaho, Nov. 8. J P. S. I have another P. S. which I must incorporate with the above. (There has just passed on to the penitentiary, through the place from which I mail this letter, the last of the prisoners "sent up" from the Blackfoot U. S. Dist. Court. There were 19 in all in addition to those that had previously gone forward from this Court. ; I was standing at the door of the hotel where I stop, as the men came out from supper, going into the car standing just by. I therefore had a good opportunity to see them all and to study, their faces. There were two of the men that were the objects of more than ordinary inter est and curiosity to the great crowd gathered around. These two were the cowboy convicted of the killing referred to in my letter, and a young gentleman of high social business position in the country and who was sent up a year for resisting a Federal officer in his effort to arrest another man a friend and neighbor both Mormons. The gentleman I refer to, en route to the Pen., is a fine looking, , ; good-faced man ; , and he had concealed his friend in a cellar beneath his house, and refused to let the officer in pursuit search the premises. For this the judge Jndge Hayes, the new appointee sent him on for a year in the penitentiary. In common with a large crowd of the .man's friends, "I felt sorry for the poor fellow and not only for him but for various others. , A large crowd of friends had gathered to bid the men good bye; and it reminded me of war times, with the great bundles of clothing and-appurtenances for the winter and the farewell to loved ones not to be seen again in years perhaps never. Many of the convicts were old men sent away from their wives and little ones gone to tho felon's pen for the coin mission of what they believed was a religious right. But this Democrat ic Administration is putting its foot down on polygamy and that feature of Mormoni8m is certainly doomed. You can rest assured of that facti And though we grieve for these de luded individuals in their suffering the penalty of violated law, we can but rejoice that a great curse is go ing from among us. Like many other great evils, it has to be wiped out in tears and sufferings. Of fences must come; but woe to them, upon whom the retribution falls. The young man I referred to (the cowboy murderer) is but a beardless boy. He looks as though he had been well raised but igone astray. He had what would have been a fine face under culture and restraint. It is said he is exceedingly thankful that he escaped the gallows; and it is to be hoped he has learned a les son which will make j him a better man when he emergef rom the pris on walls. But such men rarely rise above the ignominy which attaches to the felon. This boy entered the cars with his cigarette, amid the hand shaking and good byes of a score and more of comrades. The poor fellows the con victs I mean know me not; but there is One above who does know that tho crimes of these men, and their consequences, have brought not only sorrow to my heart, but a flood of tears to my eyes, as the scenes burn upon my memory in the prayers of this bless ed Sabbath evening. But what about the tears of others, dearer to these men than tho strangerHnthis land ? i ' M. WASHIWGTOH LETTEB. j Washington, Nov. 13. To the Editor of the Lenoir Topic: As the members of the Forty Ninth Congress assemble in the city, it is interesting to note upon the faces of Republicans an expression of discouragement. They feel that the Democrats have come to reign a long time. They have ceased talk ing about candidates for 1888. Be fore the elections there was so much said on the subject here that one might have thought that the coun try was on. the eve of another Presi dential election. jr You hear nothing more now about a war in the Senate. Republican Senators are in a measure subdued, while the talk of the Democratic Senators is conservative and loyal. The defeat of Mahone causes the Republicans to regard the Senatorial contest in Ohio with great anxie ty. Their majority in the Senate is getting beautifully slim. In case a tie occurrs as it dii a few years ago, Vice President Hendricks cannot be caught sitting, on the fence some times, as was , Uncle David Davis. Mr. Hendricks' vote jean always be counted in advance. The forecast of the position to bo taken by members of the new Con gress on the silver question, recently published, is not regarded as likely to prove true after Congress has met" and received the President's message and the report of Secretary Manning. The President and the: Secretary are not likely to occupy d ifferent ground from. that taken by Mr. Cleveland last spring. It, is thought he will appeal reasonably to both Houses of Congress to support . his views and try them in practice.! Though you may not hear a great deal about it, changes in the offices have been going on here since tho fourth of March, i They go on grad ually, but any one going into the Departments after an absence of nine months would find but few. familiar faces at the desks of the higher offi cials. Jn the Treasury, for instance, both of the assistant Secretaries are Democrats. The Solicitor of the Treasury is a Democrat, as is also the Commissioner of Internal Reve nue, the Treasurer, and the Register of the Treasury. A Democrat ; has succeeded the "old commissioner of Customs, and the new director of the mint is a Democrat. The first and second Controllers are Demo crats ; all six of the auditors are Democrats; a Democratic Appoint ment clerk files away applications; a Democrat signs the report of a Bu reau of Statistics, and there i are many changes lower! down the line. The new appointees j have been good men, possessing qualifications that suited them for their duties. ; . s ' There are few men in the service of the Government who work harder than the head of the Treasury. And as one of his subordinate officers said,' "The worst of it is, he expects everybody else to work." The same officer continued ; "Manning is a great big fellow, full of blood and as strong as a horse, He can sit up all night at his desk and be as fresh as a daisy next morning, but we can't stand it." : Mr. Manning has no re spect for 'old-time methods, or offi cial hours. One day he asked for a certain report to be made out. A chief of the division told him that he would begin the work next morn ing, as it was then three " o'clock in the afternoon. ' The Secretary look ed at him for a moment and calmly said, "I must have the" report in the morning," and he got it. It is cer tain much more activity is display ed now than ever before in the dis charge of business jat the Treasury. The Secretary's energetic touch is felt in every branch of it. The President is working atjhis first message to Congress, securely shielded from the distracting annoy ances of, place-hunters. He .finds time, however, to come down in .the East Room at a certain hour, three times a week, and shake hands with several hundred callers. Som a musing and (characteristic incidents occur at these public receptions. Guests are hot all willing to pass Mr. Cleveland with the conventional "How do you do." "Many of them are intent on exchanging a few words for memory's sake. At his last handshaking "a young girl said to him, "I was a prohibitionist, that is why I did not vote for you." "Well, I forgive you," said the President with a smile His laat caller was an old lady who said, "It is refreshing to see and shake the hand of a Dem ocratic President, but" with empha sis, "you want a wife." The Presi dent said he knew it, and with) her good advice ringing in his ears, went upstairs to work. Lettsr from Old Hal Boone, N. C, Nov. 17. To the Editor of Tlie Lenoir Topic: ? After somedelay I thought I would scribble a few more lines and give a few brief items from the county and perhaps other localities. ; Our people are very busy now gathering corn. Corn shucking and pumpkin pielare now in order, with an occasional fat possum. Plenty of fat beef on hand. Hogs are get ting fat on chestnuts and acorns. Corn is a good crop this year, j Ev erything pleinty except wheat and money. I . i AVe have dismissed the idea that we will have much sale for our fat cattle this fall and consequently are disap pointed in raising : the usual'money crop to supply our wants, and the report is that cabbage is dull about your city. , j Now, the Republicans say tb the Democrats, yhere are the good times we were to have when G rover iook seat as President of these United States of America? The Democrats say, wait until we have turned all the rascals out, which Grover in tends to do immediately if .not soon er. Republ cans say the cause of: hard times is that the Democratic party has got; into power. Mr. 4-iacre of Ohio made speeches in this iwise and told his people that when Gro ver was elected it ruined the coun try. It seems that a majority of Ohioans believed what this man said. He tried it on the New Yorkers but they said, go back to Ohio;? wej will hear you at a more convenient sea son. Col. Fellows over there in N. Y. said to the people in answer to the Ohio statesman that he was but "a 4 acre lot'f and not to hear him. Well Mr. Republican how did N.-Y-. go, any way ? It endorsed Gj)rver and elected Hill j by ten thousand ; have you heard from the old Domin ion Y For she had the same opin ion. Lee for GoYjernor, over 20,000 majority against l Mr. Wise. I And what does the colored friend jsay ? Niggers are voting the Democratic ticket it Virginia What will be come of the country? Revenue Democrats, no sale for property; no money; New York and Virginia gone Democratic, Iowa almost gone, Con necticut agoing, Maryland gone Oh! how sad. It is even hinted that John Sherman will not be returned to the U. S. Senate from OhioJ His "bloody shirt" speeches nearly made the State Democratic, only lacked 3 or 4 of having a Democratic Legis lature. Just think of it, my friends, and behold what manner of evil await the G. O. P. Where is the forty acres and the mule ? Gone glimmering; sad and so solemn. Where, oh! where are the mugwump friends and allies ? ' Are they) ablo to stand ?. ... No, they have fallen also. New York is clean Democratic now and from hence forth, and the; mug wumps are left with no eye to pity nor no party to save them." j G rover Cleveland is the President but so far he is only executing tho laws passed by the Republicans as he is sworn to do. No legislation has been made j since he became President and we are still under tho old laws and no others. Wait and see what Congress will do, and ob serve the block game the Republican Senate will throw in the way! of re form and prosperity that the Demo crats will try to carry out ais they have promised the people to do, and then judge ye jbetween them. I look for better times. : ' j : I am always interested to read the excellent pieces of M. V. M. "over the Rockies," hope he will continue to. enlighten the readers of The Topic about tbat interesting part of, the country. . M. V. M. is a Demo crat, "dyed in the wool." He has fought many battles for Democracv. It seems now befitting for him to be appointed by; a Democratic Admin istration to a responsible position in the public r service. I am truly his friend,' but I am. very uneasy. He says he is now in a very cold part of the country. Then what about those pipe-stem legs of his ? . He has the bone, but the flesh "is weak, those legs and arms .of his can't: survive such a climate.. ! Then I move that he be removed to a more salubrious clime ' at once.. Think of a, man whose legs are the size of chair posts out in that cold bleak climate try ing to run uncle Sam's government. Let him be removed at once. Come South, young man ; come South. May his shadow grow larger. In Ashe county, on north Fork, two peddlers were fired upon by two men who aimed to rob the peddlers. One of the peddlers got badly shot. They have the j shooting parties in jail at Jefferson!. Names of parties and full particulars not known to me. 1 j' The road hand3 on Middle Fork are getting along pretty well. This is a new road from Boone to Blowing Rock and when done will be the finest road in the county, but if cab bage don't get a higher price we will not need it so much. A rumor has! come to mo while writing that the late Wm. Bingham, a brother to Maj. II. Bingham, who died 11 years ago, was killed by somo drunken men. ! It was known at tho time of his death Uhat some myste rious facts were connected with his death. Owing to onc of .the partys statementsJa few days ago that he (Wm. Bingham) was murdered, has caused some excitiment on Cove Creek where the Mr. Bingham lived and died. Parties now say his head x say was broken by a lick with a deadly instrument. There is now a general ''talk of taking up the corpse for tho examination of the head. I know nothing about the fact. The matter has just come to light and what will , be done or madie of it I cannot pre dict. J j ' Prof. SpainhDur just from Ashe county reports that a young man by the name of McMillan was drowned a few days ago in New River. I , Old Hal. A Wonderful Spring. Glade Spring, Va., Nov. 13. To the Editor oj" Tlte Lenoir Topic: I have just returned from a trip to your State in Ashe county, where I met with you r paper, whicn pieas- ed me. 1 call it a live paper. I have heard much of tho mountain scenery, trout streams, &c. Also of the vast mineral wealth still unde veloped, and other mineral interests which have beeh partially developed, but the half ha3 not been tolid, nor have I the ability to tell it. jOn the trip I passed i from Taylorsville, by way of Mr. David Worth's, who hos- Sitably entertained me, thence down Tew river and up Buffalo to Jeffer son. Thence over the hills down Linville creek,1 around a mountain of the same name, on to the springs Bethesda Healing Springs, which is truly a wonderful water. But of this Ij will not speak, as I am an interested party, only to tell you that I have purchased the prop erty, about '0 acres of land includ- iug the springs!, and am now trying to form a stock company with a cap ital of $50,000 which amount will bo sufficient to improve it well. Iain confident of success, as at this time accommodations for 100 persons arc needed there. 1 The waters have al ready ; a wide j reputation in Vir ginia, which will grow as the water becomes better: known. Some cures are (as expressed by one who used it) wonderful and mysterious. I would like very much for parties in yoar county and Aehe and all over the State to take stock in it. We thiuk it isdestined to become -a great piacc, of resort. All; it lacks is . improve ment. . I am a paralytic si iu el ; years - (55 years old) and iin.i-!j. i. attend business properly; theivfoiel would like forsome enereLic go ahead young man, whocau comuiand capital, to take hold at on -e and push things. If I do not get a stoc k company or partner or partners, my intention is to improve :ttl I ran with my limited means and have uc- - commpdation i ready by June ;u .t for a few visitors. I have already commenced shipping the water which ships well.; I am notable at present to supply th . demand but; will increase my facilities for .-hipping as fast as I can. In a iVw: e.irs no doubt there will Ikj a railroad at or near the spring. That alone a al . increase the Talne 4 fold of this! property. My reasons for expecting a rail road are. the vast mineral resources, 1 to say nothing of the valuable tim-f ber, of this pait of N, Carolina and Johnson county, Tenu., which i think will find an outlet down New river by railroad to connect with what is nowcalled the Cripple Creek road, up New river in irg.nia, or with a narrow gaugt? road from Danville, which is alreadypu6hing -. its way to New river. ; . WThat Ashe county uow needs is a good wagon road from Jefferson to the Virginia line in Grayson county. -I have been told there is a road con templated and . a charter for it al ready granted, which will come near . Bethesda Springs. This road, if. built, will add greatly to the valuo ; of the springs and to the traffic of ' the county generally. . - 1 ' Senator Ransom 1 am told recent-' ly paid a visit to Bethesda and ex-. pressed himself much pleased with'. 'j the water. I only. wish it were more: generally known ' among prominent . , men and-capitalists. The, water will s sustain its reputation. i H. V. Thompson. il i ! i 'j n n