tr "'A f Commoner iThe Pi EV .1 F WILLIAH J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. Vol. 3. No. 2. Lincoln, Nebraska, Jan. 30, 1903. Whole No. 106. a&a&l iy.(5j tkp.&i Our Sister Republicflexico ift.Go The Land of the Aztecs Have you ever visited the land o the Aztecs? If not you have' a treat In store' for you. And r . , "- . even those who have been there before find themselves unable to resist the temptation to return occasionally to enjoy again the fasmnatinff beauty of the scen ery and note' the progress which the young re public to the south of us is making. Having spent the holidays in Mexico I feel that the reader will pardon me for devoting a few columns to the subject-even more, he will expect it. Nowhere in the world can the touris find so much variety in so limited a territory and no country offers to the American so much of interest and of education at so spall an expense The Aztec ruins alone would repay a visit ihey furnish conclusive proof of a civilization far in advance of that reached by the Indians farther north. Relics are being dug up constantly. Wo brought back to confound the re-publicans-an Aztec god with gold and-SiLy.er.prna ments; showing that both metals were appreciated by the native Americans before the republican party was organized. There is about sixteen times as much silver as gold on the idol. While in the hot country near Tierra Blancha we dug into a mound and found numerous pieces of- .crockery and parts of figures. The Santa Fe railroad makes connections at Milano, Tex., with the International, and that road passing through Austin and San Antonio connects with the Mexican National at La redo. The Mexican National is , mniTi line to Mon terey the most American' of the Mexican cities, Bituatod'only 168 miles from the Rio Grande. Sal tlllo the capital of Coahuila, one of the richest of the mining states, San Luis Potosi, one of the largest cities of the republic, Toluca, the progres sive capital of the state of Mexico the state out of which the federal district was carved these are the main cities on this line between Monterey and the City of Mexico. The trip from the border to the capital traverses every variety of country from plain to valley and mountain. Among the principal large cities near the City of Mexico may be named Guadalajara, in the west central por tion, one of the prettiest cities to be found any where; Aguas Callietes, named for the hot springs there; Guanajuato, which is noted for hav ing one of the oldest silver mines, one of the handsomest theatres and the largest collection of mummies to be -found on the continent, . and Cuernavaca, just south of the City of Mexico, al ways of interest to , tourists because of the pri vate residence of Cortez, and now becoming fam ous as a' health resort. Popocatapetl, one of tho tallest peaks on this hemisphere, is seen to ad vantage from the Cuernavaca road. - - The ride from the City of Mexico' to. Vera How On May Get There r3dl The Old and the New Cruz over the Mexican railroad begins at an elevation of 7,348 feet. The ride up to Esperanza, 700 feet above, is through the valley of Mexi co, where the main crops are wheat and corn. From tho car window one can draw a contrast between the old methods and the new, for some still use horses to tramp out the wheat, while a few employ tho American-made threshing machines. Here, too, the old plow closely resembling the crooked stick and drawn by oxen is fighting against tho inno vation of the modern plow. In this great valley the maguey plant is also a conspicuous feature. Tho various fields are of ten separated by rows of the maguey, and where the fields are small tho picture presented Is an exceedingly attractive one. Tho maguey fur nishes a variety of products mescal, a kind of alcoholic drink used in the lower altitudes, is made from,the roots of this-plant, while pulque, the life-blood of the plant, the great drink of tho plateau, is 'drawn'f rom it at its maturity. -Pulque looks like milk when diluted with water, and, when fresh, smells like yeast. It is carried in pig skins, and carloads of it find their way into the City of Mexico every, morning. It will produce a genuine case of intoxication, and the habit when once formed is as hard to cure as the whisky habit On New Year's day wo visited a hacienda in the suburbs of the City of Mexico owned by General John B. Frisby, an American, who went to Mexico several years ago and who is now identi fied with many large business enterprises. Our at tention was called to a dog there which had ac quired a taste for pulque. He goes to the field twice a day and finds some maguey plant from which pulque is being extracted (the period of extraction covers several weeks) and gets his dram, and then he" staggers back with red eyes and sleeps off-the effect of the liquor. He has ceased to be of value as a shepherd dog, but he is still useful as a horrible example. A part of the Frisby ranch has been con verted into a dairy very successfully conducted by a man from Missouri who has imported into tho country a large number of Jersey, Holstein and Brown Swiss "cows. The dairy is a model of cleanliness and has proved profitable to its own ers. But I digress. After leaving Esperanza tho descent to Vera Cruz on the Gulf, 112 miles dis tant, Is begun. During tho first seventeen miles of this trip the descent to Maltrata is about 2,500 feet and tho scenery beautiful beyond description. From Maltrata to Orizaba tho distance is only .thirteen miles, but the descent is something over 1,500 feet From Orizaba tho descent Is a little more gradual, the fall of 1,300 feet being distri buted over sixteen miles. At. Cordova one sees tropical' vegetation in-all its luxuriance-granges Scenery - Beyond Compare pine-apples, bananas, coffee, all at ono time, and in the distanco the snow-clad summit of Orizaba which rises nearly 17,370 feet above the level o tho ocean. From Cordova a now line called tho Vera Cruz and Pacific, or as it is sometimes known, tho Mason line, is just being completed to the isthmus. A branch from Tierra Blanca to Vera Cruz makes this a trans-continental lino, and tho improve ment of the harbor at Vera Cruz will probably give it a considerable portion of tho business across the isthmus. It also opens up fertile su gar, rice and grazing lands In southern Mexico. West of the village of Tierra Blanca, just across tho Amapa river, in tho state of Oaxaca, wo visited a rubber tree plantation. It was pro jected by Alfred .Bishop Mason, a Chicago busi ness man, but the work of development has fallen to his nephews, Raymond Willis and James Trow bridge, tho former a graduate of tho Boston Polytechnic and tho latter of Yale. These young men began about thrco years ago the clearing of about four hundred 'acres of tropical forest," so dense that it was difficult to secure any accurata idea of tho lay of tho 'land. They now have about 300,000 rubber trees growing, tho oldest two and a half years old. It will bo four or fivo years before tho plantation begins to yield a re turn, but there Is at this time every promise of " success. If the experiment realizes tho hopes of tho young men they will deserve the reward that they will secure, for they will not only make a fortune out of mother earth, but they will show others what can be accomplished In tho develojp ment of this industry and thus become public benefactors. This well illustrates the difference be tween wealth created by tho establishment of some new industry and wealth absorbed by trad ing or speculation. For two years Willis and Trowbridge lived in a hut thatched with palm leaves, but last spring they began tho erection of a commodious stone house, with wide and airy porches, and to this newly completed resi dence tho former has re cently brought his bride, a Wellesley graduate, to preside over this new center of American civilization. Near Hacienda Yale, "as this new plantation Is called, Is a low wooded mountain range where, as I was assured by Mr. Julio Tardos, who has cattle ranch near, parrots, monkeys and even tig ers can be found in their native haunts. But thii I can only report from hearsay, for I did not have time to hunt parrots or monkeys and was not disposed to infringe upon the patent of those who jlnd relief from the cares of state In the pursuit of the larger and more ferocious wild animals. Tho history of Mexico reads like a noveL "Prescott's description of its conquest by Cortez could hardly be credited but for the confirmation - which one -finds on every hand. Tho toilsome Where Wild Gams Abounds 1 1 ij - ttafcli if'..'- rrtiTMrflrMnffl