f 7 ' . . M ' / ' ' /If/ 2 THE OMAHA "DAILY BlUlOjSATlfKPA V , 7 A3UTA.TIY " 16 , 1807. of the aggregate wealth of tlio ' . " * ' ftlaelppl states niul territories Li J20.000- 000,000. The marvaloiM strides made In the ilctvcl * opmcnt of llio transmUftUftlppI region nro chiefly duo to the construction of rallroadii. In 1800 thcro were only 2.100 miles of rail road weal of the Mlsl lppl nnd only 20V4 mllMvcat of the MlMourl. In 1880 the rail road mileage west of the Mississippi was G2.CI2 rnllco. In 1890 It had reached 79.703 miles nnd hcforc the close of the present year It willexceed SO.OOO miles. That the population or this section has kept pace \\lth the material growth Is evi denced by the fact that In 1S79 the popula tion wcat of the Mississippi was C,495,1C7 , and by 1S90 It had roachcd 15.170,215 a growth of 250 per cent In twenty years. At the close of 1890 tlio estimated population of the country west of thu Mississippi was 20,128.200. The basis for this estimate Is the \oto In the two last presidential elec tions. In 1S92 the total vote for president was 3,18Df,7SS. and In ISDfi the total vote for president .was 3,053,780. As a factor In the educational exhibit In the exposition of lf > 98 the states wcat of the Mississippi will bo able to furnish n striking object lesson. They hnvo 121 unlvorslllts and colleges and the number of school hou'ss exceeds 02,000. The school popula tion exceeds 5,700.000. West of the Mississippi have been founded some of the moat Important population and commerce centers In the United States. At the mouth of the Mississippi wo have New Orleans , the commercial emporium of the gulf states. In the center Is St. Loula , most prosnorous of American cities , reaching out clear to the City Of Mexico and Gulf of Cali fornia with Its Jobbing trade and manu facturing enterprise * ) . Up near the head waters of the Mississippi are St. I'aul and Minneapolis , the greatest milling and lumber centers In America. At the Gulf of Mexico lies Gnlvcston nnd near the Ulo Grande Is San Antonio , bo'lh with n growing inter national trade. In the heart of the corn belt are Kansas City , St. Jcacph. Omaha , Slonx City , DCS Molncs , Topcka. Lincoln and Council Bluffs. On the crest of the llocklea Is miner , the Paris of America , ami south of the Colorado capital are Colorado Springs , I'ueblo. Albuquerque nnd Santa Ke. lieyond the Wnhsatch range Salt Lake City , the famous capital of Utah , challenges attention and points the way to the golden shores of the I'aciflc , of which San Kranrlsco Is the commercial metropolis , with Los Angeles holding n profitable monopoly on the semitropical - tropical fruit trade , which has assumed enormous proportions. Then comes Portland , where flows the Oregon , nnd Tacoma and Seattle contesting the supremacy of the vast commerce of Pugct sound. Other Important and growing commercial centers have been established in the mountain states. Notable among these are Boise City. Spokane , Ilutte. Helena , Ogdcn , Laraiulu , Cheyenne and Dead- wood. A fair Index of the Intelligence and pro gressive spirit of any country or section Is Its newspapers. Measured by that standard the tranamlsslsslppl states are the peer of any portion of the United States or the world. In point of character nnd enterprise the great newspapcis wcat of the Mississippi will compare favorably with these of the most populous and progressive states. Thirty years ago the number of newspapers pub lished In the whole United States wra ICES than 5,000. Now the number west of the Mississippi aggregates pearly 0,000 and those papers are illstrbutcd | through,22,060 post- offices. A more' detailed'review of the resources and pyodUQlYO ( .enterprise , of the transmits- stsslppl slate's is herewith presented under separate heads for each state and territory , together with an outline of what each nifiy present at the great Inteetato ; and Inter national Imposition of 1S9S. MJIIHASKA I'KKSS CI > .MMi.Vr. Schuyler Herald : A liberal appropriation for the Traicmlsslsslppl Exposition can cou- fldcntly be c\pccted nt the hands of the Ne braska legislature. That y.111 bo iv practical way of standing up lor Nebraska. Dorchester Star : The board of directors of the TransmlcBlsslppI Expedition lias bfcn beloeU'd , chiefs of the various bureaus ha\o been appointed , and the work of pushing forward the enterprise will nt once begin. Ulalr Pilot : The Tranamlssteslppl Kx- position booked to open In Omaha in June , 18'JS , should be the pride of every Nebraska citizen , and every Nebraakan should take prl-lo In promoting the objects of the ex position ; Ogalalla Noua : Rvrry newspaper In Ne braska should lend all possible aid In sup port of the Transmlsslrslppl and Interna tional i\posltlon. : It will bo second only to the World's ( air of any similar exposition over held. Gretna itcporter : Now for a Transmlails- slppl i\-po ltlon. A long pul | , a strong pull , and a pull all together will make ft the nioatcst tliavf ever held In America outside of Chicago In 1893. Put jour shoulder fo the wheel. Lincoln Now licpumic : The Transmlscls- elppl r\pcsltlon : Is nbly stirtcd with a board of strong , energetic men who will make It a success , i\crybody lead a helping hand. Drop polltlCK nnd push for reaulta which will help the noi ihv. ist. Nc-biYHka City Press : The state leglala- turo will convene In tegular session next Monday. The Hrst thing the legislature should do after organization should be to make a splendid appropriation for the Trans. Exposition. North Platte Tribune : If the Incoming legislature decs the proper thing It will lend encouragement to the beet sugar In dustry and appropriate n reasonable sum for the TransmlEslssippi Exposition. Doth mean much to this commonwealth. Atkinson Graphic : The flist bill Intro duced In the legislature should bo ono in aid of the TraiiEmlr Isslppl Exposition which Is to bo hold In Omsha In 1S9S. This Is not only a Nebraska affair , but a na tional and international one. A liberal ap propriation should bo made. Dcllwood Gazette ; The TransmlsslEslppl Imposition to be held in our metropolis , Juno to November. 1SUS , promise to be a grand thing for Nebraska nnd all the elates near her. No pains should bo spared on the part of llio citizen , ! of our fair state to make the big show a phenomenal auccctu. Monroe Hepublican : Omaha's Transmlssls- clppl Imposition should bo gl\en a liberal appropriation by the legislature. Money put into an enterprise of this kind is not thrown away , but will in tlmo bring n big return In thu bhapo of now enterprises nnd a fur ther development of the u'sources of the Htnto. Emerson Enterprise : The TransmlsslE- Elppl nnd International Exposition which will be held In Omaha next year will bo u grand show and ircat ; thing for Nebranka. Mibucrlptluns amounting to about J50U- 000 have already been secured and the na tional government will contribute $20i.000 more. The state legislature hould make liberal appropriations nnd all the people of the state nsslit In making It a bucccea. llanner County News : Ono of the. . duties of the next Nebraska legislature should be 10 appropriate a suitable amount for the Trans- mleslsslppi Imposition In 1SU8. Congrcfcn has .promised not less than $200,000 for a gouni- mont exhibit , prhate subscriptions to the amount of some $100,000 have been secured to the capital stock of the association ; now let Nebraska come forward with a liberal ap- proprlatlon. We must do thU If wo hope to I secure the co-operation of the tranawlMla- lilppl tttJtCg. North Nebraska Haglo : The Traii&mUiU- sippl and International Exposition to bo held j ' at Omaha , beginning In June and ending In i i November In the jear 1SD8 , la already being punned by Its promoters. Subscriptions amounting to over JIOO.OOO to Us capital I slock have already been secured nnd cnngioss but pledged not Iras than 5200,000 for a government exhibit. Nebraska will lake great prldo In thin enterprise and nothing will ha left undone by Nebraskaus to make It a complete success. Two and n half centuries ago Vltus ncrlng , n tune. led an exploring expedition sent out by the Imperial government of Hussla to find , If possible , new lands east of Siberia , the object of which was the extension of the lira Us of trade. The first settlement wd < founded by Russians at Kadlak In 1781. In 1SG7 the United States government purchased Alaska for $7,200,000 In gold. The area of Alaska Is of Imperial dimensions North nnd south It extends between Dlxon Entrance nnd Point Harrow for 1.200 miles. The district equals In area one-sixth of the United States , having an urea of fi'U.OOO vquaie miles. The lower part consists of a strip of mainland about thirty miles wide and SOOmllcs long , made up chlelly of rough and broken country , composed of numerous Irregular ranges of steep , lofty nnd snowy moun tains , among whose curving creels runs Urn International boundary , Tlio climate of southern Alaska Is moderated by the Influence of the ocean. The mean temperature of Sltka Is CI degrees In summer and 31 In winter , Ti-ere Is little or no agriculture , but n few vegetables nrc grown. In the grcnt forests of southeastern Alaska the prevailing trco Is the Sltka spruce , resembling the silver fir of California , sometimes teaching n height of 230 feet. These forests cover many thousands of square miles. The most westerly point of the United States Is the Island of Attu , WO ratios from the nearest Alaskan vll- lafe. Yukon rher Is of unknown length , probably 2,000 miles. The traders have navi gated It for 1,300 miles. The short but Intensely hot summers of the upper Yukon country produce millions of acres of rich grasses , nnd barley has ripened nl Fort Yukon , Insldo the Arctic circle. The Alaskan mountains are northerly extensions of the Cas cades nnd Hocklcs , nnd culminate In the mnjcsllo St. Ellas Alps , the greatest moun tains north of Mexico. The district contains ton ncttve volcanoes. Thp glaciers of the St. Ellas region are of amazing dimensions , sometimes reaching t\Venty miles In width. The Mulr Glacier , where It meets the sea , Is three miles' long and J130 feet high , n vast pearly and ultramarine wall of Ice , with a background of mountains ris ing 13,000 foot. It has been said that the gold mines oi Alaska will produce enough ! treasure to pay the natlpnal debt. Throe rich deposits w'ero discovered In'1877 at Silver Hpy , near Sltka , . where valuable quartz mine" have been worked , and other 'auriferous out crops are already located on the Unga Islands , nt Unlnshka nnd elsewhere. In 1SS5 Joseph Juneau , n Trench-Canadian minor , prospected through the region which now bcara hla name , nnd found free gold in great quantities In the mountnln-glrt Silver nowVaafn. Over $1,000,000 In dust hmi alnco been wathcd out of these placers. Within n league occur the gold-bearing quartz beds of Chief creek , whosp pioduct Is shipped , to Seattle for refining. Two miles from Juneau is Douglaa Island , where John Treadwcll established the works of the Alaska Mining and Mllllm ; company. It Is said that ? fiOO,000 In gold bricks Is sent thcnco In S-nn Prnnetaen vearlv. although the ere Is of low crado. yielding * but $7 to the ton. The qnaitz is ccally quarried from the hillside and reduced by one of the largest mills In the world. There are largo deposits of silver-bearing lead at Sheep's creek and between Norton sound and Herlng strait. Copper la fonml abundantly on Kadi ik nnd nt Copper river. Illsmuth , cinnabar , silver , marble , slate , petroleum and keolln nro found. Llgnltlc coal Is mined on the Shunnagln islands and appears at Coal bay and Cook'fl Inlet. The fisheries are or enormous value. There are fifty San FranclPco and Now Bed ford whaling vessel In the Arctic ocean , getting $1,500,000 a year in Ivory , bone and oil. The salmon pack has risen to 30,000,000 pound cans yearly , besides 15,000 bar rels. Prince of Wales Island , Cook's Inlet , Hrlstol Hay and Kadlak each has a score of largo silmon canneries. The rivers have unlimited supplies of salmon. Over 350.- 000 gallons of herring , whale and dog flsh oil are made yearly at Kllllsnoo , and C.000,000 pounds of cod are caught yearly. The yearly fur yield of Alaska has i cached 100,000 fur seals , 5,000 sea otters , 10,000 beavers , 12,000 foxes , 20,000 martens , and 15,000 others. The government has reccl\cd from the seal Islands a sum eciunl to that which wan pild for the terri tory. In 1SOO the government granted th'e ' right of taking fur seals to the North American Commercial company for the twenty years up to 1910 , for a yearly rental of $00.000 nnd $7.C2'/i ' for each I'calskln , besides $2 revenue taxes. Over-1,000,000 seals visit the I'ribllolf Isles every slimmer. This Is the most Important sealing station In the world. Nearly 200,000 fur seals are killed yearly In nil partn of the globe , two- thirds of which come from the American and Kucslan islands of Derlng sea. Since 18G7 the fur skins shipped from Alaska hnvo brought $53,000.000 ; other furs $16,000- 000 ; canned salmon , $8,000,000 ; cod fish , $3,000.000 , and gold , $1,000,000. Educational affairs are under the direction of the United States commissioner of education. Local Echools , supported by ccngrcsvs , nro established In each settlement. In addition , there are' twelve boarding schools , supported by the government. The Kplrcopallani , Catholics , Lutherans , Congrcgatlonallsts and 1'rcsbytcrlans all main tain schools. The Industrial boarding school at Sltka has 170 pupils and teaches shoemaking - making , carpentering , hlacktsmlthlug jwd ; o ther trade * . It is the foremost civilizing agency In Alaska , alid serves as a House of refuge and dcfcnre for miUr.ented native youths. The Greek" iluirclt' hi 'Alnaki has a body of conservative iiricsj's [ supported from yhe Imperial synod , This aaclcoit church supports seventeen parochial schools In Alaska. The Jcmills have founded'schools and missions on the Yukon-ami Catholic liMtltutlons exist at Juneau and elsewhere. The Presbyterian Hoard 'of Home Mis sions and the Chinch Missionary society of England each support two br more schools and several mUpIons. t The population of Alarka , given by the census of 1800 , was 31,705 ; of these 23,274 are native Indians. The real and personal property la estimated at $3,000,000. There are 320 towns and villages In the territory and seventeen poitofflces. The largest city , Jimeau , has a population of 1,253 ; Sltka , 1,100 ; Karluk , 1,123. 1) i The ancient history of Arizona Is no Ices Interesting than is the modern. The cliff houses of Itio do Chelly and the canyons of the Colorado still present their problems to antiquarians , some of whom believe the early Ari/onltns to ha\o been of the Pueblo stock , while others trace them to the Aztecs. There are fortrcssco and cliff dwelllnpi , mliif's and terraces , great systems of canals , which unquestionably belong to the partly clvllUed people who dwelt In Arizona six or eight centuries ago. Historians say that 300,000 persons then occupied the Salt Hlvcr valley alone. Late In the sixteenth cen tury lesult and Franciscan missionaries did gieat works In this heathen land .niul founded icany towns , but the civilization which aro.se in their train vanished before the forays of the Apache warriors , who reduced Arizona to savagery. In 1S47 Gen eral S. W. Kearney marched his command through the Glla valley nnd flrbt brought this country to the notice of Americans. The territory was not set apart from Now Mexico until 1SC3. Between 1801 and 1S7G the Indiana massacred more than 1,000 whiles in Arizona , but soon after the era of savagery and Isolation came to an end. la 1SS2-3 Che Ap.iches again took the warpath , but General Crook held them In check. Another foray dccurral In 1SS5-0 , when Geronlino killed fifty persons before General Miles could capture the red warriors In the mountains of Sonora , yet cyen In 1891 a number of Arlzoulans were killed by the Indians. Since the removal 'of-many of the hostile Apaches and the Incoming of the railroads Arizona has grow'h.rapidly. The area of Arizona Is 113,000 square miles. The agriculture of Arizona depfnda upon or- tlflelal Irrigation , by whoso aid crops of wheat and alfalfa are raised , .a3wcil as fruits and vegetables of almost every variety. Modern Irrigation In Ailromt" began' In 18 7 , with the construction of the Salt Iliver Valley canal. There were then no railroads within a thousand miles of Arizona. Other great canals have been constructed , and In 1889 the four principal canals were consolidated , thus constituting the moat complete syatem of Irrigation In the United States. Within ten yrara upward of $1,000.000 lus been o.\pei dcd In iirlgatlon canals In ArUona. The area that can bo Irrigated by the water in sight In the canals In operation cannot bo Icso than 250,000 actcs. The Salt Hlvcr valley presents ono of the most favorable nrcaw In the United States for the production of semi-tropical fruits , ouch cs oranges , lemons , grapes , Jigs , apricots , etc. There arc thousands of acres of growing crops that rival In luxuriance those found In the famed valley of the Nile. Nearly everything In the way of grains , vegetables and fruits grown In the temperate and semi-tropical zones nourish. Wheat and barley are of an exceedingly fine quality. The pilnclpal foingo plant Ii alfalfa. Vcgct.ablco grow with wonderful rapidity. Many varletlca are produced the year round. All kinds of bcrrlra llourlsli. Apricot trees bear from thirty to 300 pounds each. The almond crop la large and piofltable. Maricopa county , it Is estimated , contains about 1,000 ncres of mnble land. The heavier neil of the lower-lying land has been deemed es pecially suited to the of ccrcala while that growth , contiguous to the foothills is pro- feried for both citroiia and deciduous rooto. The annual yield of wheat and barley Is large. large.The The grain yield averages 14,000 pounds of wheat and 18,000 pounds of barley to the acre. The total shipment of fruits aggregate about 8,000,000 pounds annually. Of other products than fruits the exports consist of 100 carloads uf wool , thirty carload - load * of honey , upwards of 1,000 rai loads of alfalfa hay , and thirty carloads of alfalfa seed. The tenllory has 1,000,000 head of cattle. The mineral resources o ! ArUona are enormous , and her leading industries nro In mining and smelting , ci-uahlng and milling the ores. The modern output of the mines has p.ii/jcd / $80,000,000 , and their product In the days of Spanish * control was very great , llio export of silver has reached $5.000,000 annually. The silver veins of Tombstone are largo and easily woiked , an A ha\o produced $33,000,000 worth of treasure since thslr discovery , In 1S78. Arizona's exports nf copper have reached $1,000,000 n year. The copper deposits at Clifton are among the i Idlest In the world. Pine Canyon Is thu center of a group of rich mines , some of the ere of which assays $101 to the ton. The vast Elzo nnd extent to the Coehltt leads make this district ono of the most remaik- able over discovered. In no other mining camp has such n great quantity of pay ere been e.vposcd by mere prospect nnd nnsci > nmont work. Some of the ere la very high grade. The average will run above $40 to the ton. The placer mining around Proecott has reached onormoua proportions. Yaiouu | estimates of the value of the product of the placer * of Yavapal since the discovery of Weaver and nich Hill fix the amount at $ JO,000.000. The placer yield of the vklnlty of Prescott Is computed at $100,000,000 annually , 1C not more. The Congress mine , In which ere ls In sight which It will take ten years to mine , product's from $50.000 to $05,000 a month , From the Jersey Lily mlnu ore running as high as $1,000 per ton , and never less than $200 , has been pro duced. The Little JciNlo mine 1ms produced , up to date , nearly half a million dollars. Tlu'cu mines are within fifty miles of Prescott. The most icmarkable geological forma- tlou In the weild It that constituting tlio Avlxona onyx near Prescott. Delicate colorings and bandings , Intermingling lute the most fanciful markings and figures , make the stone one of remarkable beauty. The quantity Is Inexhaustible. The Vanderbllt group of onyx mines comprises 210 acres , The greater part of the onyx on the&o claims Is of a beautiful wiilto color , banded with seams of amber , brown nnd old-gold. There Is cx- nulslto green onyx In all shades nnd colors. On Sycamore creek lithograph stone quarries are In operation. The coal fields of Arizona are larger than those of Pennsylvania , and lla pine forests greater than those of Michigan. The population of Arizona In 1890 was 59.c:0. TUe .estimated population In 1SPB Is 77.000. There are 11,320 school children. The rnllroffgijnllenso Is 1,357. , There ( ire 185 postofllccs. The annual manufactures amount to $ i.oooo.iS | * STATECAPITOU LITTLE. ROCK Aikansas waa oilglnally a portion of the province of Louisiana , purchased from til French In 1803. It reni.Uned n part of Louisiana Territory until 1SI2 , when the- pica cut ftnte of Louisiana was admitted to the union and the remaining portion was organ Izcd us Mtaouil Territory , which name It held until 1S19 .when Missouri became a et.U and Arkansas was erected into a tciiltory , bearing Its present name. It rem-ilnn under a territorial government until June , 1S3C , when p constitution wna formed an Arkansas became a state. Arkansas has an area of 53,810 square miles about the size of England. The census o 1S9C glvea Arkansas a population of 1,600,000. The total vote for president In 1S9 was HC.CC2. while the total vote nt the presidential election of 1S9C was 1I9.I3I. Ac cording to the census of 1890 , Arkinaas has n total assessed valuation of } 17i,737,7fi5 Tlio population In 18CO was 133.130 ; In 1S70 , 181,171 ; In 1880 , 802.523. The total mini bor of ncrcs In the stnte Is 33,500,000 ; nercs under cultivation , 6,000,000 ; the cstlmntei value of farms Is $74,006,000 ; the nnnual live atock product Is estimated at $2l,000.0'jO while the total value of farm products is estimated at $44,000,000 per annum. Theio are 19.000,000 acres of timber la.lda , 2.COO.OOO of coal land and 1,500,000 acres of hot ere land. The agricultural producta mo largely the same as those of Ohio , Indhni , 1111 nols nnd Kansas. Vast quintltlce of totton nro produced and marketed In Arkansas while as a fruit-producing state it lanks nmoiig the firat , having taken premiums ovc all competitors at the expositions of Kew Orleans , California , St. Louis and Chicago The staple products of Aikinsas are : Cotton , tobacco , wheat , corn , oats , b-jrley , lye sorghum , buckwheat , Irish po'ntow , awt'ct ' potatoes , hay , llxe stock and fruit. The rlanu facturctj are : Cotton seed ell , Hour and meals , lumber , leather , cotton and v/colon goods tobacco nnd cigars. Along the water courses are ever 0,000,000 acres of the finest corn land In the world During the last fifteen years Arkansas has earned the ramo of "Tho Land of Big R"d Applfs , " and cs such h known the world over , having been awaldtd the hlghrs premiums for the best apples at the New Orleans exposition of 1883 and nt the Colum bian exposition in 1893. The coal fields of Arkansas are very extensive , covitlus an estimated area of 2,317 square miles , and lu the valley of Arkarnas , , where coal mining is most largely prose cuted , the veins average a thickness of four foot. But a small portion of the coil deposit of Arkansas Ina been developeJ. The llgii Ite coal commence , ! a few miles south of Little Hock and extends Into Texai , comprising a larger arci , It is said , than any other coal field In the United States. Thuro are now In operation seventy-eight mines , and the output Is estimated at 1,250.000 tons per niinum. Iron deposits of inexhaustible quantity are found IP the hilly regions , covering a very wide area. Magnetic , hematite , llmaulte , carbonate and specular Iron ores abound In the county of Independence large deposits of mngancso are found , and during the past twelve jears va.it quantities of thb mineral have found n market north and cast This metal Is also found In other parts of the state. Zinc ore in great abundance Is found In many of the counties and has attracted largo capital. The ore from some of the in lues assays as high as 67 per cent metal The zinc Industry Is one of the mort profitable In northern Arkansas. Arkansas took llrst award at the Chicago Columbian exposition upon Its zinc ores. Among Us ex hibits there WBH one piece of ore weighing over 12,000 pounds. According to a re cent gcologlcainsurvey , the state has n distribution of 216 square miles of zinc ore , nnd overlying it and suroundlng It there arc 2,199 square miles of marble. Lead ort > is 'found ' In the mountainous FCC lions of the state. Copper , In the form of carbonate' ' hud Biilphuret , is one of the rich deposits of Arkansas. Among the other minerals are antimony , porcelain clay , extensive beds of gjpsum , chalk , green sand and bauxltb , ' from which aluminum and alum are manufactured. The deposits of marble lu Arkansas arc greater than those of nny other stale In the union. The marble Is similar In color to that of Tennessee marble , and thcro Is also pink , gray and white , all capable of high pollah. A very valuable quality of litho graphic Etoiio has been discovered. Nitre and paint earths are found In great quanti ties , yUiaitnrnTJnyShndcs of color. Large quantities of roofing slate are being quarried , and granUJT-ofyeuperler quality Is found within a few miles of Little Hock. Hone stone abou&Qs In Inexhaustible quantities. fhojlJij ) mineral resources of the state ate but little developed and nresent a grand oppottuoyy for profitable Jnvcatments. Petroleum and natural gas have been * foind | inl ' in > and Sebastian counties. There are also beds of soapstnno and stcelite. A large-p'ortforrbf the land of Arkansas is heavily timbered. There Is almost ov.ory variety c ( valuable and useful timber. Laigo tracts of valuable timber wore re cently puVrh sed By frfphlgan lumbermen. The northwestern part of the state , outside of thoriver bottom In'mU ) , ta a continuous forest claim. Great bodies of cypress cover the lo\vomsnmlstretch ! ! , along the eastern border of the state. The hard wood forests are hardly sliipassqd In variety and richness , and contain the finest oak , walnut , hick ory and ash timber. The pine forests are almost Intact. The amount of short-loafed plno stantllng in 'Arkansas U estimated at 40,0'0,000OCO feet , board measure. The avirjge cut of recent jears is estimated at 300.000.00U feet. The varieties going to market are chiefly pine , white , rsd and post cak , gum and ash. U Is estimated over 100,000,000 cars of lumber are shipped out of Arkansas annually. There are 3.5CO churches in Arkanssa , o\er one-half of which have been erected in the past ten years. The educational facilities afforded by Arkansas are excellent. The past ten years the perceint of growth has been very large. Thcro are 3.000 school houses ono to every 375 Inhabitants half of the number having been bu-llt within the last ten jears. The state has ono college or seminary for every 22,000 Inhabitants. A State university and three normal ( schools afford free education of a. high order. Two-filths of the sta'o tax and half of the county taxes support the public schools. There are 900 separate schools for colored people. Some of their schcol houses cost from $10,000 to $ CO,0)0. Col ored people have also several colleges , and the state supports a normal school for coljred teachers. Within the past thirteen years Alkansas has expended $10,200,000 In the free education of the youth of the state , and the average number of children ol school ago Is 285,159. The railroad mileage of Arkansas Is 2,424. There are 1,700 postoulces. Value of annual product of Arkansas manufactories Is $22,659,179. The number ol operatives Is 15,972. Yearly wages , $5,749,888. Farm products for 1895 : Corn , 50,359,338 bushels ; \aluc. $16,115,039. Wheat. 1,452,300 bushels ; value. $536,837 Oats , 8.306,186 bushels ; value , $2.658,076. Hye , 24,129 bushels ; value , $18,097. Potatoes 1,476,300 bushels ; value , $752,193. Hay , 211,396 tons ; value , $1,987,431. Cotton , 875,000 bales. Little Hock Is tlui largest city In the state , with an estimated population of 40,000. ] i | , California was first settled by the Spaniards nt Snn Diego , In 1769. Many jcars prior to tills Cortez discovered Lower California. When Mexico became Independent of Spain , In 1822 , California was divorced from Spanish rule and two years later she followed Mexico In the change to republican government and became a Mexican ter ritory. In 1816 Captain Fremont , United States army , and Kit Carson i cached Cali fornia overland on a scientific expedition and were driven Into Oregon by General Castio. Fremont , who claimed that ho was obeying Instructions received from the United Statelfgovernmont , headed a battalion of riflemen at Sutler's fort , advanced to SonomaUiUh had already been captured by the American Insurgents who had rebelled against the Mexican government , and spiked the ten guns of the San Fran cisco prcMdlof1 July 7 , 1810 , the American frigate Savannah captured Monterey and Commodore - modoro Sloat'proclaimed California to bo a part of the United States , and on July 8 raised the stars 'and ' stripes at Sail Francisco , After the cession of thin region to the United Stntts by' ' the treaty of 1848 the people assembled and framed a constitution , ex cluding slavery , and under this document California wan admitted as a state In 1850. It had already -won the name of El Dorado. January 24 , ISIS , a piece of native gold was found > y 'Marshall at Coloma. During 18-19 , 100,000 men from the cast crossed the plains o'r < nnlcd ! by the .Isthmus of Panama or Capo Horn to the land of gold. Ilo- tween 1850 ntld 1853 , $65,000,000 worth of gold was mined each jcar. The 0 > erland mall began to tun In 1858 nnd crossed from Placet vlllo to Atchlson , Kan. , In nineteen days. ' < - ' The proKreM1 of California since the war hns been marvelous. In 1886 the land boom began'lh oouthcrn California and hundreds of towns were laid out and built. Millions - lions of eastern capital and thousands of Immigrants came to the Pacific shores. California Is next In area to Texas , having 158,360 square mllca. U Is 770 miles long and from 150 to 330 mllrs wide. The coast line cqual.i the distance from Capo Cod to Charleston , S. C. over 1,000 miles. In the north are mountains and stupendous forests , The state la traveiwcd by the Sierra Nevada and the coast range , which Interlock - lock on the north and south , between which extremes they swing wide apart and en-j cloBO the great valley. The Ycaemlte valley la 3,950 feet high on the Sierra , hem med In by nearly vertical cliffs , and covcia 38,011 ncres. which congrcws granted to Cali fornia In 1861. to bo held as a state park. The great \alley has a level ground of150 milts long and forty miles wide , covering 18,000 aquuro miles. The vallojs of the coast range , Napa , Sonoma , Pctelnma and Huselan river on the north and many others on the HQiitli of Sun Francisco are full of rich pastoral beauty. Nowhere Is ono out of sight of high foqthlllB or mountain ranges , which nobly diversify the scenery. In the farther toutli hundreds of agricultural coluiilta have settled In the valleys within a few leagues of the HM. The oldt-at of the colonleu , founded by Oermaim In 1857 , baa 2,690,000 grape vines and 90,000 nhcpp , Many of the t&rmn of California are on a grand pcalo , The cereal , hay and root crops of California are valued at 170,000,000 annually. Millions of dollars have been Invested In Irrigation In the state. Southern California Is one of the gardens of the world and all thu valuable friilta and cnreals of the temperate zone and the troplcu alike are reaped. The California wheat la largely exported to England. / li - . : r = - * /.vVvi coinni mil AM ) I All YAM MKttlS. J blocks f i om the Them IMS. Cnino block ns Evpoil- w- ' lion licadquui tors C treot ems pass the * - * door to nnd fror depots. a RATES- $2 , $2.50 and $3 per day. Paxton & Davenport , Proprietors. Strictly first-class in all its appointments. J. E. Markel & Son , Prop. Cor. i and Douglas. The iVIercerCor. . 12fh and Howard Sis. v WINK TAYLOR , Manager. Cuisine unexcelled by any House of the same Rates. OU Rooms at $2.00 jor ) day. /50 / Rooms with Until at.50 jvjr day. Special Rates by thu Month. THE NEW MURRAY- j. More large sample rooms , \ More luxury and home co mfort Than any other house in 0 m ah Rates $2,50 to 34 Special rates by week or month on app ication , B , SIIXOWAY , 1'ro.st. and Algr. C. W. KIJK1) and WAI. ANDDBHSO.V CLliKKS.