e^ Jf ;j^ODirc2»^ ^^ ^i^iTXD RESOURCES OF ARKANSAS. 1 •)(■*** ******** * ■^•* * * * * COMPILED BY ^♦' ID - IL/C c lES -^ IB , •♦^^^- BY DIRECTION OF HON. SIMON P. HUGHES, GOVERNOR OF ARKANSAS. S • ■ C , ^ 1885. X^y-- -^^ ?A^mw a. G^MLl^L ?R\HT\\AG COVJ\?kHN . i% ,, _„„ IX) 7^ l-ITTl.E R(KK. AKK. f^' ^■' g2J^i^GiSMl3M^MM3ISISMSIS-SMSJ3MISISIf?J2Ji2ji!iI3^^ ARKANSAS: ARKA, 52,198 SQUARE IVIILKS, GOVERNOR, SIMON P. HUGHES. CAPITAL, LITTLE RDCK. OFFICIAL CENSUS, 1880-TOTIL, 802,525, Total. I Male. ! Female. ^ulation 802,525 416,279 ' 386,246 Native. 1 F're'gn. ] White. I Color'd. 792,175 ! 10,350 ' 591,531 210,666 POPULATION IN 1885, - 1,000,000. A .nsas was settled by the French in the year 1670, and was purchased by the United States from the French govern- ment in 1803. It was organized into a territory March 2nd, 1 8 19, and admitted into the Union as a State by act of Congress June 15th, 1836. According to official census reports in 1820 it had a population of 14,255, in 1830 of 30,388, in 1840 of 97,554, in 1850 of 209,897, in i860 of 435,450, in 1870 of 481,471. GENERAL DESCRIPTION. Arkansas is one of the Southwestern States of the United States of North America, situated between the parallels of 33 and 36 degrees of north latitude, and between the meridians of 89 and 95 degrees west from Greenwich. It is bounded on the north by the State of Missouri, on parallel of 36 deg. 30 min. ; east by the Mississippi river and State of Missouri ; south by the States of Louisiana and Texas, and west by the Indian territory and State of Texas. Besides the Mississippi river, which forms almost its entire eastern boundary, the State is traversed by many other navig- able streams, the principal of which are the Arkansas, White, Ouachita, St. Francis, Black, Bartholomew, Little Red, and many others, furnishing thousands of miles of. water-ways for the transportation of the products of the State, perpetually in- suring against excessive freight charges. TOPOGRAPHY. The lands of the State may be 4ivided into three grand divisions — the mountainous, the rolling or hilly, and the level. The mountainous comprises about one-fourth or about 8,000,000 acres ; the rolling or hilly one-half, or about 16,000,000 acres, and the level one-fourth, or about 8,000,000 acres. The mountainous lands are situate in the western and northern parts of the State. The mountains north of the Arkan- sas river are to be found in the counties of Crawford, Washing- ton, Franklin, Madison, Johnson, Newton, Pope, Searcy, Van Buren, Cleburne, Carroll, Boone, Marion, Baxter, Izard, Fulton, Independence, Stone, Sharp and Randolph. These mountains are spurs of the Ozark, extending from the line of Missouri in Randolph county in a southwesterly direction to the Indian Territory, and rarely attain the height of 1,400 feet. There is a very marked difference in the character of the timber, soil and formation, between the north and south side of this range of mountains. On the south side the formation is sandstone, slate and mica schists, and the soil is either a grayish yellow, a cold gray-colored clay, or a gray sandy loam. The timber is com- posed of red, white, post and black oaks, with patches of beech, hickory, occasionally sugar maple, and large tracts covered with magnificent pines. Upon the north side, the formation (3) is generally limestone ; the soil to the crest of the mountain is exceedmgly fertile, as is evidenced by the growth of the timber, which comprises the paw-paw, wild cherry, walnut, black locust, Spanish oak, hackberry, red and white elm, and such other timbers as are found nowhere except upon the most fertile lands. It is upon the northern slope of this mountain range, and the spurs and table-lands making off from it, that the apple reaches its greatest perfection and is freest from disease or noxious insects. Along this range, reaching more than lOO miles, are numerous beautiful and fertile valleys and many tracts of table- lands yet the property of the general government and subject to homestead entry. For health, the growth of the apple, peach, pear, wheat, oats, corn, and the cultivated grasses, these lands, are unsurpassed, and, as a fact of peculiar importance, upon the crest of this range of hills the fruit crop is unfailing, having never been killed by frost. In the western part of the State, south of the Arkansas river, is also found a portion of the mountainous area. These mountains reach an altitude rarely exceeding 1,500 feet above the sea level; are not con- nected in a continuous chain, but are found in detached groups, with wide and fertile valleys intervening. These mountainous lands are situated in the counties of Scott, Logan, Montgomery, Perry, Pulaski, Polk, Garland, Pike and Howard. The princi- pal forest growth is the yellow pine, of which vast bodies of the best quality extend through this section of the State. The soil is either yellowish or gray sandy loam or gray clay. The for- mation is generally sandstone, slate, mica schist, granite, and in Pike and Howard counties a cretaceous limestone, and immense deposits of gypsum, with large tracts of stiff black and red lands. This section is peculiarly adapted to the growth of the grape, peach, plum, strawberries, raspberries, and in many parts the apple and pear succeed well. Of field crops, corn, cotton, wheat, oats and rye succeed well. Clover, timothy and herd's grass also grow satisfactory crops. It is also well adapted to raising stock. In this section the United States owns thousands of acres of desirable lands, which are subject to homestead entry. (4) LEVEL LANDS. The level lands, comprising 'one-fourth of the entire area of the State, may be divided into five regions, which materially differ from each other in soil, forest growth and in fertility. These divisions will be designated as the alluvial, swamp, prairie, second bottoms and black lands. The alluvial lands are found along all the numerous water-courses of the State, especially along the Mississippi, White, Arkansas and Red rivers, and Bayou Bartholomew, in many places, the alluvial bottoms are miles in width. These are among the most productive lands in the world — cultivated for forty years in the same crop without the application of fertilizers, they continue to yield remunerative crops. The soil differs greatly. Near the stream it is generally a gray sandy loam, back from the stream it is either a red or black stiff land, commonly called buckshot, from the peculiar form it takes when broken. The alluvial lands, where uncleared, are covered with a heavy forest growth com- posed of Cottonwood, sweetgum, bluckgum, varieties of elm, large grape vines, burr oak, white oak, box alder, ash and white hickory, with heavy undergrowth of cane and paw-paw on the sandy loam. The swamp lands are generally situated between the allu- vial lands and the second bottoms, but are found generally dif- fused in small bodies throughout the State, when it is generally designated slash land, too low for cultivation, except for grasses ; the water stands upon them during the winter and spring, but are dry in the summer and fall. These lands could be reclaimed by ditching, and would then be among the best in the State, but as there are so many square miles of equally as good lands unoccupied, needing no draining, it is useless to expect any effort to be made in the near future to reclaim these swamp lands ; they are only valuable now for their timber along the bayous and ponds. In these swamps are to be found vast brakes of valuable cypress timber. The prairie lands are principally located in the counties of Prairie, Lonoke and Arkansas, though small prairies are to be found in many other counties of the State. The soil of the (s) prairies is generally of a grayish yellow or a cold gray color, with sub-soil of tenacious clay, but there are exceptions to this. In the Grand Prairie, in Arkansas county, there is a large sec- tion of the prairie composed of dark gray sand. This prairie, in the the three counties referred to, is rolling — like great waves in the sea, each wave being half mile across. A very large part of this prairie is unoccupied, being used for the pas- turing of cattle and horses, for which it is admirably adapted, and for making hay. Thousands of tons of hay are annually cut from this prairie, part of which is used in the State and a large amount shipped abroad, and finds ready sale. Oats, timothy and herd's grass grow well on this prairie, as do the peach, pear and plum. Fruit culture is successfully prosecuted in many parts, but the principal pursuit is raising cattle. A German settlement has begun the business of dairying, with flattering prospects. The second bottoms extend from the swamps to the hills, and are principally located in the eastern counties of the State. The soil, for the most part, is a light gray color, sometimes of a yellowish cast, resting upon a sub-soil of yellowish or mulatto- colored clay. These lands are very productive and durable. Owing to its level surface and peculiar texture, it does not become denuded of its soil. This class of land is heavily timbered with white, red, black, Spanish, post and other varieties of oak, blackgum, sweetgum, hickory, dogwood, red-bud, red and white elm, ash, etc. It is well adapted to the growth of corn, cotton, oats, clover, timothy, red-top, millet, peaches, strawberries, grapes, pears and plums. black" LANDS. The black lands of Arkansas contain a large percentage of lime, are very similar to the black lands of Illinois and Texas, and are among the most productive of the lands of the State, producing heavy crops of corn, cotton, wheat, oats, and the cultivated varieties of grass. These lands are to be found in many parts of the State, principally in the counties of Hemp- stead. Little River, Sevier, Nevada, Clark, Searcy, Stone, Izard and Independence. (6) HILLY, OR ROLLING LANDS. This class of lands constitutes about one-half of the entire area of the State, and are located more or less in every county, but the main portion lies to the south and east of the two moun- tain ranges of the State ; and they are characterized by a great diversity of climate, forest growth and fertility of soil. Those located to the south of the Arkansas river are generally covered with a magnificent growth of yellow pine, interspersed with black, red, white and post oak, hickory, and in the southern counties with beech, hazel, ironwood and ash. The soil is generally of a light gray color, very loose, sandy, occasionally gravelly, easily cultivated and very productive. This land pro- duces large crops of corn, cotton, oats, rye, sweet and Irish potatoes, peaches, strawberries, plums, grapes and pears. It is especially adapted to growth of the scuppernong grape, which grows luxuriantly and bears profusely, furnishing a never- failing crop with no attention except to furnish a support to its ever-extending growth. The hilly, or rolling section to the north of the Arkansas river and to the south of the Boston mountain, has for its forest growth all the varieties of the oak common to the State, sweet and black gum, dogwood, walnut, elm, hickory, red-bud, maple, etc., with occasional tracts of pine forests. The soil, for the most part, is of a mulatto, or gray color, occasionally red, but with little if any sand, resting upon a sub-soil of tenacious clay, easily cultivated and very productive. That portion of the rolling, or hilly lands located in the counties of Clay, Green, Graighead, Poinsett, St. Francis, Lee and Phillips, known as Crawley's Ridge, has a soil and forest growth distinctive from any other portion of the State. Its principal forest growth is the yellow poplar, wliich there grows to an immense size. Along with the poplar are found the different varieties of the oak, gum, maple, hickory, walnut, sugar maple and dogwood. The soil is generally of a light yellowish or gray color, often gravelly, very friable and easily cultivated, producing abundant crops of cotton, corn, oats, wheat, clover, timothy, red-top, and all varieties of fruits com- mon to this latitude. Owing to the transportation facilities (7) afforded by the many railroad lines which traverse and cross this section, it is admirably adapted to the culture of early vegetables and fruits for Northern markets. The rolling, or hilly lands situated in the counties of Washington, Benton, Carroll, Madison, Boone, Baxter and Marion, which are north of the Boston mountain, owing to the healthfulness of the cli- mate, the abundance and purity of the water, and the fertility of the soil, are the most desirable to be found in any country. The timber is comparatively small and thinly growing, inter- spersed with large tracts of prairie, with occasional tracts of yellow pine. The soil is yellow or gray, in some parts red, much of it containing lime. Large crops of wheat, corn, rye, barley, oats, clover, timothy and tobacco are grown. Peaches, apples, pears, plums and berries grow here to perfection; in no part of the world do apples grow to greater perfection. MINERALS. COAL. The coal fields of Arkansas are very extensive, covering an estimated area of twelve thousand square miles, and in the valley of the Arkansas, where coal mining is most largely prosecuted, the beds average a thickness of four and one-half feet. The most valuable deposits of this mineral have been found in the counties of Sebastian, Scott, Logan, Franklin, Johnson, Pope and Yell. But a small portion of this vast coal deposit is being developed. The Ouita Coal Company are operating mines in the counties of Johnson, Franklin and Pope. Stiewell & Co. are also successfully operating mines in the county of Johnson. The product of these mines is constantly growing into favor, and demand for it increasing. Coal of a fine quality has been found in other parts of the State, notably in White county, where coal of a very superior quality has been found in various parts of the county, indicating that a vein of this mineral runs diagonally through the county. No effort has been made to develop it further than to use it in blacksmith shops in the southwest part of the county, where it crops out and is extracted without difficulty. (8) In reference to the quality of the coal found in the Arkan- sas Valley, Dr. David Dale Owen in his Geological Recon- noissance of Arkansas, says : " The character of this coal is worthy of special notice. The approximate chemical analysis here given shows it to be a semi-anthracite, rich in carbon, and containing a small proportion of ochre-colored ashes, with only 8.4 per cent, of volatile matter, including moisture expelled at 300 degrees of Fahrenheit's thermometer. Its specific gravity is 1.335- "The approximate analysis gives: ,. , ^., ^^ of Moisture 0.5 Volatile matters... 8.4 < ^r , .m 1 .■u^ ^^ ^ { Volatile combustible gases. . . 7.9 P , ^ f Fixed carbon 85.6 ^ ■ \ Ashes (ochre yellow) 6.0 1 00.0 1 00.0 " This coal contains a far higher percentage of fixed carbon than any western coal that has ever been analyzed in my labor- atory except some coals I received from Arkansas some years before the commencement of this survey." The experiments of Johnson, De La Beche, Playfair, Hays and Rogers on different ^oals, as well as experience in the East, go to prove that though the semi-anthracites may not be the best adapted for some purposes, they have far higher heat- ing and considerably more reducing powers than the best bitu- minous coals ; and besides, the semi-anthracites will evaporate in a given time from 15 to 20 per cent, more pounds of water than bituminous coals. Dr. Owen further states : " Now the analysis of the Spadra coal proves it to contain 25 to 30 per cent more fixed carbon in the coke than the best bituminous coal of Europe or America; and it even exceeds by 1.35 per cent that of the richest semi-anthracites of Pennsylvania. It has 3.83 percent more fixed carbon in the coke than the celebrated * Parker ' Vein of George Creek Valley in Maryland." Of the forty-three coals reported on by Johnson in his work on American coals, the semi-anthracite of Lyken's Valley ajiproachcs nearest in composition to the Spadra coal, as will (9) be seen by comparing the following approximate analysis of these two coals : Spadra. Lyken's Valley. Volatile combustible matter 7.9 ' 6.88 Fixed carbon 85.6 83.84 Ashes 6.0 9.25 The composition of the Spadra coal approaches so nearly to that of the Lyken's Valley coal of Pennsylvania that we may assume the practical properties observed by experiments on this coal by Johnson to be very nearly the same as those that would be found in the Spadra coal if subjected to the same tests. I therefore subjoin some of the most important char- acters representing the efficiency of that coal compared with Pittsburgh coal, one of the best known and most generally use- ful of our western bituminous coals : While one part of Pittsburgh bituminous coal will generate 8.2 pounds of steam at a temperature of 212 degrees, the same quantity of Lyken's Valley semi-anthracite will generate 9.46 pounds of steam at 212 degrees. While one cubic foot of Pittsburgh coal will generate 384 pounds of steam, one cubic foot of Lyken's Valley semi-anthracite will generate 459 pounds of steam. The "Spadra" coal described and treated of by Dr. Owen was obtained from a vein three feet in thickness on the Spadra creek, near its confluence with the Arkansas river, in Johnson county, and does not rank in quality with some of the coals found in Sebastian, Johnson and other counties. These coals produce but little, if any, smoke. The Arkansas river flows through the centre of the principal deposits of coal in this State, and the Little ijlock & Fort Smith Railroad also traverses these coal fields, making connection at Fort Smith with the north-west by means of the 'Frisco Railway, and at Little Rock with the east, south and south-west by means of Memphis & Little Rock Railroad, Little Rock, Mississippi River & Texas Railroad, and the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway, thus furnishing water and rail transportation to market. (lO) The extent of these coal -deposits, the cheapness with which the mineral can be mined, the fine quality of the coals, the transportation facilities, the increasing popularity and demand for the product of the mines now being worked, the low price at which the coal bearing lands can be bought, offer excellent opportunities for investment, and we may reasonably expect that in the near future Arkansas will rank as one of the leading coal-producing States. I RON. In the hilly regions, including the counties of Pulaski, Crawford, Dallas, Saline, Grant, Hot Spring, Indepen4ence, Izard, Lawrence, Logan, Madison, Pike, Polk, Sevier, Sharp, Searcy, Van Buren, Howard, Cleburne, White, Montgomery and Scott, magnetic hematite, limonite, carbonate, specular, and pot or looking-glass iron ore is found in large quantities. The hematite iron beds in some places crops out upon the surface acres in extent, in many places this iron is situate in close proximity to the coal and limestone. The iron interest of the State has not been in anywise developed. MANGANESE. In the county of Polk vast deposits of manganese are to be found, comprising the largest be^ of this mineral ever known, but it is too far away from transportation to make it of value. It is also found in Izard county. Large deposits of an excellent quality of manganese is found in the county of Indepen- dence, where most of the mineral is free from phosphorous and is near White river, a navigable stream, and to the White River Branch of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway, These mines are being developed to a considerable extent, and the mineral is in high repute with maiflifacturers of steel. ZINC. Says Dr. Owen: "Arkansas is destined, I believe, to take the lead of all the Western States, in her resources of ores of zinc and manganese. "The magnesian limestone belonging to the lower silurian period seems to be the great repository of the zinc ore, of which there are three principal varieties : the pure carbonate of zinc, the calamine or Smithsonite of mineralogists, the silicate of zinc or electric calamine, and the sulphuret of zinc "or zinc blend (black jack of the miner). The analyses of these ores prove them to be at least as rich as, if not richer and purer^ than the zinc ores of the most noted localities of Europe, and there is no reason why they should not be worked with profit to the miner and smelter." Zinc ore in abundance is found in the counties of Law- rence, Independence and Marion, lying upon the surface. A very large deposit has lately been found in the latter county. LEAD. Arkansas promises to afford considerable lead ore. This mineral is found in most of the mountainous sections of the State ; that found in the counties of Pulaski, Sevier. Polk, Montgomery and Howard is rich in silver. Dr. Owen states : " Fragments of a porous lead picked up among the rubbish at the mouth of one of the shafts in Pulaski county yielded by cupellation from the reduced lead at the rate of 234 ounces from the ton of 2,000 pounds, and a specimen of a bright steel grey ore, finely chrystaline in its structure, from the same mines, gave as much as 339-2 ounces to the ton of 2,000 pounds. The mines from which these specimens were obtained are known as the Kellogg mines, and are situate near Little Rock, the capital of the State. These mines have been worked in a crude way. Several rich pockets have been found, but no true vein. There is but little doubt that a true vein exists, as argentiferous galena, identical with that found in the Kellogg mines, is found extending from the Kellogg mine into Sevier county, a distance of 150 miles. Copper, in the form of carbonates and sulphates, has been found in many counties of the State, and within the present year a large de- posit of carbonate of copper has been discovered in Searcy county. The mine has been opened but eight or ten feet, the ore is found in large masses. One piece taken out weighed over 300 pounds, and a piece is in sight that will weigh a ton (12) or more. There can be no question but that this is a rich and valuable deposit. OTHER MINERALS. Rich deposits of antimony have been found in Sevier county, kaolin or porcelain clay of the best quality is found in many counties of the State. The best deposits are in the counties of Hot Spring, Howard, Ouachita and Pulaski. In case of the latter county it can be mined at small expense by stripping the light soil which covers it. The quartz of feldspar rock lying in close proximity will answer for a flux to be used in the manufacture of the finer hard porcelains. Extensive beds of gypsum, often crystallized into selenite, are found in the counties of Pike, Bradley and Howard. Gyp- sum and tertiary-shell marls are found in many portions of the State, which are valuable as mineral fertilizers. Nitre and paint earths are also found in large quantities. A very valuable quality of lithograph stone has been discovered in Izard and Independence counties. The quarry is now being worked and the deposit is found to be very extensive. This stone compares favorably in firmness of texture and freedom from flaws with that imported from Germany. Marble in large quantities is found in many counties, especially in the counties of Independence, Izard, Marion, Searcy, Carroll, Saline, Newton and Madison, of fine texture and of various colors, such as pink, gray, white, and in the counties of Independence and Searcy a black marble is found susceptible of receiving a high polish. The deposit of marble in this State is greater than that of any other State in the Union. The deposits run to the thick- ness of six feet. The larger portion of the marble of the State is similar in color to that of the Tennessee marble. At Eureka Springs extensive works are engaged in working these marbles. Roofing slate is found in the counties of Pulaski, Saline, Polk, Pike and Sevier. This slate, in point of durability, evenness of cleavage and beauty of color is equal to the celebrated slates of Vermont. Quarries are being opened in Pulaski and Saline counties. Soap-stone of the very best qual- (13) ity is being quarried in Saline county. Granite of superior quality is found within a few miles of Little Rock. The cele- brated Hot Springs hone-stone is found in Garland county in inexhaustible quantities, as is also the Ouachita whet-stone. Serpentine is also found in Pulaski and Saline counties, while building stone — both hmestone and sandstone, of superior quality — is found in two-thirds of the counties of the State. These rich mineral resources of the State are but little devel- oped and present a grand opportunity for profitable investment. TIMBER. No State in the Union has a greater variety of timber for use in mechanical purposes than Arkansas. According to the best estimates there are in Arkansas 30,000 square miles of heavily timbered land. The varieties of timber in this vast forest includes the red cedar, cypress, black and white walnut, several varieties of the pine, black and honey locust, beech, wild cherry, bois de arc, linn, several varieties of the maple, including the sugar maple, white, post, over cup, red, black, water, pin, bur, and many other varieties of the oak, black and white birch, black, red, sweet and tupilo gum, tulip or poplar, red and black mulbery, white, black, nutmeg, and many other varieties of hickory, peccan, catalpa, magnolia, red and white elm, white, blue, and swamp ash, two varieties of dogwood, holly, buckeye, persimmon, and many other varieties. The cypress, white and black oaks, walnut, poplar, red gum, and pine attains to very large size. Of these timbers the most abundant and valuable are the cypress, white oak and pine. The white oak is found abundantly along the uplands border- ing all the streams of the State, The cypress is found in all of the swamps bordering on the rivers, lakes and bayous in the eastern and southern part of the State. The pine is generally diffused over the hilly sections, but it is principally found in the counties south of the Arkansas river and west of the Bayou Bartholomew. It is estimated that there are fifteen thousand square miles of pine land in this State that will yield from 1,000 to 10,000 feet of lumber to the acre. The poplar is only found on Crawley Ridge and the bottoms along its base. (14) The yellow poplar here attains magnificent proportions. The country furnishing the poplar extends from the line of the State of Missouri to Helena, in Phillips county, occupying an area averaging ten miles in width and more than one hundred miles in length. In view of the rapid destruction of American forests, these magnificent timbers of Arkansas present a fine field of profitable investment, as these forests of pine and oak are in close proximity to navigable streams, and traversed by railroads, which cross these rivers and reach into the prairies of Kansas and Nebraska on the north and the prairies of Texas on the southwest. FRUITS. Apples, peaches, pears, cherries, plums, strawberries, and in the southern part of the State figs, all do well. In the northwestern part of the State the apple reaches its highest perfection. The counties of Benton and Washington, where the cultivation of apples has been a leading industry for many years, have obtained a national reputation for growing the best apples — owing to the magnificent specimens from these coun- ties shown at all of the principal exhibitions held in the United States for the last several years. Apples also grow well in the counties along the Arkansas River Valley, west of Little Rock, especially in the counties of Sebastian, Crawford, Franklin, Johnson and Pope. The apple is a sure crop in all of the northern counties of the State, The peach succeeds well all over the State, but does best south of the mountains. Quite an industry has sprung up along the St. Louis, Iron-Mountain & Southern Railway and the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railroad in the production and shipment of peaches to Northern markets. This industry will doubtless be greatly developed in the near future, as in addi- tion to these roads, the Texas and St. Louis Railway, foi its entire length in this State, passes through a section peculiarly adapted both in soil and climate, to the growth of the peach. Strawberries are grown to a very considerable extent for Northern markets along the line of the St. Louis, Iron-Moun- tain & Southern Railway, where this berry succeeds admirably, (15) being a sure crop, the vines yielding profusely, berries of fine size and flavor. Transportation facilities are good, as by means of railroads all Northern and Eastern markets can be speedily reached. The wild goose plum is extensively cultivated for shipment to Northern cities. In this State it is a sure crop. GR.\PES. Arkansas has a greater variety of native grapes than is to be found in any other State, and some are of extraordinary size and flavor. In the sandy soil of Hot Spring, Dallas, Ouachita and Calhoun is found the "old field" or Ouachita grape, which springs up in the fields which have ceased to be cultivated. It also grows in the woods upon spots where the timber is thinly scattered or is wanting. It is not a climber, and if not disturbed will grow into such a mass as to be almost impenetrable. It is rare to see it reach an altitude of four feet. The fruit is larger than the Concord grape. According to tradition this grape was carried by the Jesuits more than a century ago to Europe, and from it has descended some of the most celebrated grapes of that country. The future of this grape when treated by scientific and experienced viniculturists is very promising. Upon the sides of the mountains of south- west Arkansas particularly, in the county of Polk, is found a magnificent native grape. The fruit is of large size, light col- ored, and fine flavor. The bunches are long, but the berries are not very thickly set. In some localities this grape on account of its peculiar color and sweetness, is called the Persimmon grape. Among the innumerable varieties of native grapes is one similar in every respect to the Norton's Virginia Seedling, it will take an expert to distinguish the difference. This grape is generally diffused over the State. The muscadine is found throughout that portion of the State south of the mountains. Most of the cultivated varieties of grapes do well. The scup- pernong in the southern half of the State grows to perfection, needing no care but supports to meet its ever extending growth. A communication from Mr. Henry Shibley, a citizen of Crawford county and a gentleman of worth, cautious and careful in any statement he may make, is here attached. It (i6) shows the product of the grape in that county, which is about on an average with most of the counties of the State : Gen. D. McRae, Dear Sir: I visited Mr. Ed. Arkebauer and got his estimate and pro- duct of his vineyard. Mr. Arkebauer is rehable, and his state- ment can be abundantly verified : Gallons of Wine. Cynthiana (will yield per acre) 400 to 800 Norton's Virginia 400 to 800 Heman and Ives 400 to 800 Elvira 300 to 800 Delaware 200 to 700 Pounds Per Vine. Table grapes (Campion) ripens about July 15, yields 1 5 to 25 Perkins, ripens 15th to 25th of July, yields.. . 12 to 20 Ives, ripens August 1st, yields 10 to 25 Delaware, ripens August 1st, yields 5 to 15 Wilmington red or Wyoming red, ripens from the 15th to the 25th of July, hangs on the vine well, yields 10 to 20 A native grape, originated by Mr. George Beers, of this township, yields from 13 to 25 A fine wine grape, producing from 500 to 900 gallons of wine per acre, is given to over- bearing. Mr Arkebauer has many other varieties, but the above he considers the leading, reliable varieties, that he has tried. He has in fruit this year, More's early, Pocklington and Lady Wash- ington, they promise well. He has a Niagara, set out this last spring, that has matured 34 feet 2 inches of wood, and 14 feet of unmatured wood, without extra culture or manure. I got my first report mostly from the Thrushton vineyard. Their vines are set 8x10 feet apart, Mr. Arkebauer has his 6x8 feet. The above is considered ordinary, and may be relied upon as probable yields. But here is what Mr. Arkebauer has done this year, and is possible for any one to do. From 237 Norton (17) Virginia vines he has this year made 491 gallons of wine, (that is, will be wine) which is a fraction over two gallons to the vine, his vines as stated above, stands 6x8 feet, which gives 907 vines to the acre, which at two gallons to the vine, gives 1,814 gallons to the acre, or 40 barrels of 45 gallons each to the acre. Dear sir, the above I believe is perfectly reliable, and can, as stated above, be abundantly verified. Respectfully yours, etc., ^ HENRY SHIRLEY. Vait Buren, Craicfard County, Ark., September r^, 188 j. AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS. In all that section of the State south of the mountains, comprising two-thirds of the entire area of the State, cotton is the principal crop grown. It is not only grown upon the fer- tile and extensive bottoms along the numerous streams of the State where the product reaches as high as 2,000 pounds of seed cotton to the acre, but this crop is grown upon the up- lands as a principal crop. The yield upon the uplands ranges from 600 to 1,000 pounds of seed cotton to the acre. In the bottoms cotton is almost exclusively cultivated by colored labor, and upon the uplands by white labor. According to the census report of 1880, Arkansas produced more cotton to the acre, and at less expense, than any of the cotton States. In 1880 Arkansas produced 608,256 bales. This crop was grown on 1,042,976 acres, while the Georgia crop of that year of 814,441 bales, was produced upon 2,617,138 acres. Estimating the cost of production at $6 per acre, it amounted to ^9,444,972 more in Georgia than in Arkansas to grow that crop. Not more than one-twentieth of the lands adapted to the growth of cotton has been brought into cultivation. Along with cotton corn is produced in sufficient quantities to supply the farm. In the past two years more attention has been paid to the production of corn. The acreage of this crop in the cotton-producing section has been largely increased. The (i8) average yield of corn in the bottom is about 35 bushels to the acre, upon the uplands about 20 bushels. Oats are grown very generally upon all farms cultivated by white labor. It is a sure crop, producing from 20 to 60 bushels, according to the fer- tility of the soil. WHEAT. In that portion of the State south of the mountains, wheat is a very uncertain crop, some years yielding extraordinary crops, but generally cut off by rust. Winter varieties are the only wheats that succeed, and so far 410 rust-proof winter wheat has been introduced, the Nicaraugua has been tried and suc- ceeds, but owing to its extreme hardness it cannot be manu- factured into flour by the ordinary country mills. POTATOES. Sweet and early varieties of Irish potatoes succeed well, producing on an average of 175 bushels to the acre. Two crops of the early rose variety are often grown in the same season. SORGHUM Is generally grown by white farmers, producing syrup sufficient to supply their families. It yields from 80 to 100 gallons of syrup to the acre. FORAGE PLANTS. German millet is universally grown for forage and succeeds everywhere that the land is fertile. Its average yield is from two to four tons per acre. Milo maize is being grown by some of the farmers of the State, who speak in enthusiastic terms of its value as a forage plant. It can be cut three times in one season, yielding from three to four tons per acre, at cost of cutting, and is not affected by drouth. The blades of the corn plant, stripped from the stalk after the corn is matured, dried in the sun and tied into bundles, is universally used as forage under the denomination of fodder. In the section of the State north of the mountains and in the mountain valleys, corn, wheat, oats and tobacco are the princi- pal crops cultivated. These crops all succeed well. The aver- (19) age yield of corn is 40 bushels, wheat 15 bushels, oats 50 bushels, tobacco 1,000 pounds to the acre. In this section timothy, orchard grass, herds grass and blue grass, together with clover, grows to perfection. The area of land laid down in grass in this section, already quite large, is constantly in- creasing. Much attention is paid to the growth of live stock, especially mules and horses. LABOR. There is a continued and increasing demand for agricul- tural labor; ;^I2.50 per month and board and lodging is the average price paid for farm labor. In growing cotton, espec- ially in the bottoms with colored labor, the share system is usually followed. Under this system the landlord furnishes the land, team, feed for the team, and the necessary farming tools. The tenant furnishes the labor for the making and gathering of the crop, each, party receiving one-half of the crop produced. Where the landlord furnishes the land alone, the tenant pays by way of rent one-fourth of the cotton and one-third of the corn produced. For money, lands rent from $1.^0 to ^8.00 per acre. STOCK RAISING. No State is better adapted to the growth of live-stock than Arkansas. The native grasses, as catalogued by Leo Lisquereux, number 155. While the extensive canebrakes found along the banks of the various rivers and bayous of the State furnish abundant v/inter pasture for cattle, and the mast furnished by the vast forests of oak and hickory timber, renders the raising of hogs a cheap and profitable business. In the hilly sections, sheep thrive, costing nothing but salt and herd- ing. In the northern sections of the State raising horses and mules is largely prosecuted, and is very remunerative. Heretofore, but little attention has been paid to improved breeds of cattle, but during the past and present year several herds have been brought in, and when acclimated arc healthy and prolific. The native cattle are grown with so little expi^nse and trouble, owing to the extensive ranges covered with nutri- (20) tious native grasses, some of which are green and furnish food for cattle throughout the winter, obviating the need of feeding, that the want of improved breeds has not been felt. Improved breeds of sheep, notably the Cotswold, have been introduced and thrive. Improved breeds of hogs have been brought into the State, such as the black berkshire, Jersey red, Poland, China, Chester and Essex. The black berkshire seems to succeed best. In fact, Arkansas is naturally adapted to stock-raising, possessing all of the essentials in this direction ; a climate neither too cold in winter nor too hot in summer, abundance of water, and the adaptability of its soil to the growth of the cereals and the cultivated varieties of grasses. Timothy is suc- cessfully grown throughout the White River Valley, returning large yields, and wherever it has been tried upon rich bottom lands it succeeds. Red-top or herd's grass succeeds in any part of the State where sowed upon low, damp land. The red clover either sowed with timothy or planted alone, returns re- munerative crops. In addition to these are the large number of nutritious native grasses, furnishing abundant pasturage from early spring until late in the fall. Among these are the Lespidesa, a low-growing, branching perennial plant, springing up in all waste, worn-out lands, and in the woods where the shade is not too great. It furnishes food for cattle, hogs and sheep early in the spring, and is but little affected by drouth. About the same time the Bermuda, in the southern portion o{ the State, makes its appearance. It is a creeping perennial grass, very nutritious, forming a dense sward, not injured by heavy grazing or being tramped, little affected by dry weather, furnishing excellent grazing for all kinds of stock from early spring until late in the fall. In May the crab-grass makes its appearance. It is an annual, indiginous grass, growing on both cultivated and uncultivated land. All kinds of stock are fond of it and thrive upon it. All that is necessary to secure a crop of hay of this grass is to plow and harrow a lot of land in the month of May, when the crab-grass will spring up densely (21) all over it, growing very rapidly, and yielding from one to one and one-half tons of excellent hay to the acre. Col. John P. Moore, one of our most successful farmers, speaking upon the subject of stock-raising in Eastern Arkansas, says: "I sometimes see in our agricultural papers expressions of doubt as to whether or not our climate and soil are expressly adapted to the production of the grasses in the highest degree, and, to satisfy myself, I have been measuring some to-day, and find my clover over six feet high, (common red clover), and the heads- of timothy ten to fourteen inches in length, and it does not require the selection of the largest of my clover to come up to this measure, but I can show it by acres. Now, this would seem to be proof sufficient that we have a country unsurpassed, not only for cotton, but especially for the grasses. This being so, then it follows that we have advantages that can- not be surpassed for stockraising." MANUFACTURES. The Tenth Census of the United States reports the num- ber of Arkansas factories at 1,202, giving employment to 4,557 persons, with total investment o f ;^2,953,I30, and yielding an annual product of $6.'/i)6,\$g. Among these industries are flouring-mills, cotton-gins, foundries, cotton-seed oil mills, woolen mills, saw-mills, furniture, cooperage, barrel, agricul- tured, hone, whet-stone and marble works. In the absence of statistics it is impossible to state what the increase of manu- factures have been since the last census. Manufacturing enter- prises in Arkansas — though yet in its infacy — has unlimited possibilities. Here is to be found an immense quantity of tim- ber, cabinet timber, ship timber, hard timber for agricultural implements and furniture, and soft timber for building pur- poses, zinc, iron, copper, coal, slate, marble, potter's-clay, whet and grindstones ; transportation — both river and rail — leading to all great centers of trade, all of the elements and agencies necessary to maintain great manufacturing towns lacking but the strong hand of capital to set them in motion. (22) SPRINGS. Hot Springs, the waters of which have a world wide repu- tation, need no description. Tens of thousands of people in all parts of the universe, who have been restored to health by the water, testify to its virtue. The City of Hot Springs is easy of access by railroad, only sixty miles from Little Rock, the State capital, and tickets to the Springs can be purchased in all parts of the United States. The Mammoth Spring, in Fulton connty, is a phenomenon worthy of description. The main body of water, issuing from an opening 120 feet in circumference, flows uninterruptedly at the rate of 9,000 barrels a minute, affording valuable power for manufacturing purposes. From compression, probably, so large an amount of carbonic acid is held in solution that the surface of the wonderful fountain is in a continual state of effervescence. The Kansas City, Springfield & Memphis Rail- way passes close by and in full view of the Spring, and along the whole length of Spring river, a bold stream produced by this Spring, presenting a fine view of the many rapids on the river. The Mountain Valley Springs are located in Garland county, twelve miles northwest of Hot Springs, and are famous for the medical qualities of the water. It is shipped to all parts of the country, and the demand for it shows a rapid growth. Eureka Springs — These springs are one of the wonders of Arkansas. They are situated in Carroll county, and number forty-two, within the corporate limits of the city of Eureka, Tradition has long ascribed wonderful curative properties to these springs, but it was not until 1879 that they were brought into prominent notice, when Judge Sanders, of Carroll county, who had been afflicted for years with an erysipelatous condition, with dropsy supervening, was advised to try the efficacy of these springs. In the month of May, 1879. he accordingly took a camping outfit, with his family, and came to the spring. In a short time improvement was perceptible, and he remained ten weeks. During this time the erysipelatous ( 23 ) condition entirely disappeared, the dropsical effusion ceased, and he was well. The news of Judge Sanders' improving con- dition spread throughout the country, and by July ist, 1879, there was quite a camp of invalids. On the 3d day of July, 1879, the first house was built, and from that time the temporary box and log houses multiplied with wonderful rapidity. The news spread to adjoining counties, and each person cured sent word to others ; and in the fall of 1879. there were at least 2,000 people here. Although fifty-five miles from the line of any railroad, and on government land, away from any settlement, the town grew rapidly. During the winter of 1879-80 the rush increased with a ratio that seemed wonderful. Still there were no regular lines of public conveyance, and the livery business at Pierce City, Mo., (the nearest railroad point), was taxed beyond its capacity to carry the travel. Visitors came in wagons, hacks, carriages, and all kinds of conveyances until the spring of 1880, when regular stage lines were put on, with a daily mail, and have continued since, the distance growing less as the railroad was constructed, until now the stages are among the things that have passed away. The railroad is completed, with daily trains, thus carrying visitors to the city direct from all points. Analysis : The waters of a number of these springs have been analyzed by analytical chemists of the highest repu- tation. We give the analysis of the Basin Spring, which was both quantitative and qualitative. These analysises were made by Profs. Potter and Riggs, of Washington University, St. Louis Mo., and by Messrs. Wright & Merrell, St. Louis, Mo. These gentlemen are chemists of eminence and ability. Each gallon of 23 1 cubic inches contains the following, viz ; Chloride sodium, 0.19 grs. ; sulphate soda, 0.13 grs. ; bi-carbonate lime, 4.43 grs. ; bi-carbonate magnesia, 0.47 grs ; iron and alumina, 0.08 grs, ; silica, 0.31 grs. Total, 5.85 grs. Free ammonia, 0. 14 ; albumi- noid ammonia, 0.07 parts in million. The gaseous contents, as ascertained by Prof Juan H. Wright, of the firm of Wright & Merrell, is 28.52 cubic inches in each gallon of water. It is worthy of note that the gaseous contents of the water of Eureka Springs are remarkable from the fact that there is a (24) large proportion of nitrogen. The large proportion of nitro- gen is proof of a proportionately large amount of oxygen. These springs have obtained a national reputation for the cure of cancer, rheumatism, dyspepsia, and many other chronic diseases. In addition to these, are many other springs, possessing curative properties, such as the White Sulphur Springs, at Searcy, in White county ; the Armstrong and Griffin Springs, in the same county ; the Blanchard Springs, in Union county ; the Ravenden Springs, in Lawrence county, and Sugar Loaf Springs, in Cleburne county. HOMES FOR IMMIGRANTS. This pamphlet is not issued in the interest of any indi- vidual, land or railroad company having lands for sale, but by authority of Hon. Simon ?. Hughes, Governor of the State of Arkansas. Its object is to furnish authentic information to home-seekers, and to induce immigrants to settle upon the pub- lic lands and become citizens of the State. The information furnished has been carefully collected from official and other reliable sources. UNITED STATES HOMESTEAD ACT, Under this law every citizen and every foreigner who has declared his intention to become a citizen of the United States, is entitled to enter at the United States Land Office, i6o acres of land by paying a fee of ;^ 18.70. Of this amount, ;^I4 must be paid in cash, and the balance in five years. There is now subject to homestead entry in the State 5,525,680 acres. Arkansas has 2,000,000 acres of Jands which she offers to donate to actual settlers. The Donation Law of Arkansas pro- vides: Section 4,249 : "The right of the State to all lands other than town and city lots which have been forfeited to the State for non-payment of tax penalty and costs due them, may be donated to any adult citizen of the United States, in tracts not to exceed 160 acres to each applicant therefor ; provided, each sub-division of such tract shall be contiguous. (25) Sec. 4,251- Hereafter no person shall have the right oi donation to any of the lands of this State forfeited for the non-payment of taxes due thereon, except such persons as may actually settle and reside upon the lands so donated, and make the proof of improvement within eighteen months from the date of the certificate of donation. Sec. 4,252. Any person wishing to obtain such donation shall apply therefor to the Commissioner of State Lands, and at the same time shall file in the office of said commissioner his or her affidavit stating that he or she is over the age of twenty-one years, and that the land applied for is for the pur- pose of actual settlement, occupancy and cultivation by the applicant, and not with a view to speculation. Sec. 4,253. Upon filing with the Commissioner of State Lands a written application and the affidavit provided for in Section 4,252, such commissioner shall issue a certificate under his hand and seal setting forth that such applicant had applied for a donation of the right of the State to the land described in the application, which certificate shall further state that if within eighteen months from the date of the application the applicant shall present proof to the commissioner that he or she resides upon and has cleared, fenced and put in readiness for cultivation five acres of the same, shall be entitled to a deed from the State, conveying all the right, title, and interest of the State in and to the land mentioned in the certificate. Sec. 4,254. Each individual receiving such donation shall, upon completing the improvements required to be made upon said lands, obtain from some justice of the peace residing in the township where said land is situated, a certificate setting forth the quarter-section, township, range and county where said land is situated, that he has been within ten days next preceding the date of his certificate, on the identical tract described, and that the improvement on said land is a bona fide substantial im- provement, and shall state the number of acres cleared, fenced and ready for cultivation upon said land. And such certificate shall be evidence that the donor has complied with that part of the law requiring the land to be improved. ( 26 ) Sec. 4,256. On presentation to him of the proof of im- provement, provided for in Section 4,254^ the Commissioner of State Lands shall execute to the donor, or to his heirs or assigns a deed under his hand and official seal, conveying all the right, title and interest of the State in and to the lands so donated, which deed shall have the same force and effect as other deeds which such commissioner is authorized by law to execute on behalf of the State to forfeited lands, • Sec. 4,257. The deed of the commissioner shall be evi- dence in all courts of a good and valid title in the donee, his heirs and assigns, and shall be evidence that the land has been regularly forfeited by the original owner ; that the State had properly donated its right thereto, and such evidence shall be received by the courts." The fee to the State is ;^io, to be paid at the time the cer- tificate of donation is issued, and ^i for the deed. Thus for ;$ii a man or woman can acquire 160 acres of land. This land is also for sale by the State at fifty cents per acre. In addition, the State owns 817 acres of Seminary lands, 16,000 acres of Saline lands, 15,000 acres of Internal Improve- ment lands, and 70,000 acres of Swamp land. The price of the Swamp and Seminary lands is ^i.oo per acre ; Internal Improve- ment and Saline lands, ;^i.25 per acre. The price of lands owned by individuals ranges all the way from fifty cents to fifty dollars per acre, owing to location and character of im- provements. Persons seeking homes, to obtain the great advantages present>„d by Arkansas to that class, are advised that they should come in person and carefully examine the land before purchasing, for while there are millions of acres of as fertile lands in this State as is to be found elsewhere, there is also a large amount that is unproductive and of little value. Immi- grants coming in should travel over the country, examine the land and crops, talk with the people who, when they find the immigrant is desirous of becoming a citizen, will show him every kindness and give him all necessary information. In addition to the lands owned by the United States and (27) the State, the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company, the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railway Company, and the Little Rock, Mississippi River & Texas Railway Com- pany own large tracts of lands in this State which are offered for sale on easy terms. EXEMPTION LAWS. The exemption laws of the State are very liberal. The Constitution in Article IX provides: " Sec. 2. The personal property of any resident of this State who is married or the head of a family, in specific articles to be selected by such resident, not exceeding in value the sum of five hundred dollars in addition to his or her wearing apparel and that of his or her family, shall be exempt from seizure on attachment, or sale on execution, or other process from any court on debt by contract. Sec. 3. The homestead of any resident of this State, who is married or the head of a family, shall not be subject to the lien of any judgment or decree of any court, or sale under exemption or other process thereon, except such as may be rendered for the purchase money or for specific liens to labor- ers' or mechanics' liens for improving the same, or for taxes, or against executors, administrators, guardians, receivers, attor- neys for moneys collected by them and other trustees of an express trust for money due from them in their judiciary capacity. Sec 4. The homestead outside of any city, town or vil- lage, owned and occupied as a residence, shall consist of not exceeding 160 acres of land with the improvements thereon, to be selected by the owner, provided the same shall not exceed in value the sum of ^2,500, and in no event shall the home- stead be reduced to less than 80 acres without regard to value." The Constitution further provides, that if the owner of the homestead dies, it shall vest in the widow and minor children. TAXATION. By the provisions of the Constitution taxation for State purposes is limited to one per centum ; for county purposes, to (28) the half of one per cent, for current expenses, and half of one per cent, to pay indebtedness existing prior to the adoption of the Constitution in 1874. RAILROAD LANDS. The St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company offers the following inducements to new settlers in Arkansas : The St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Com- pany will sell its lands in Arkansas to new emigrant settlers at the following discounts : 1st. When one-sixth of the purchase money is paid down, a discount of 8 per cent, from the old approved prices. 2nd. When one-fourth of the purchase money is paid down, a discount of 16 per cent; and 3d. When all the purchase money is paid down, a dis- count of 25 per cent. To those purchasing land of the company, a rebate of thirty-three and one-third per cent, on freight paid on the immi- grant's movables over its lines will be allowed. To settlers purchasing land adjoining that of the company, a rebate of twenty per cent. Proof of purchase and settle- ment must be made to the Land Commissioner, at Little Rock, within ninety days, accompanied by receipted freight bill. To those purchasing 80 acres of land from the company, and paying one-fourth cash, one-half the purchaser's fare ; and to those purchasing 40 acres, and paying all cash, the whole of the purchaser's fare paid over its line, will be deducted from amount of purchase money. USUAL EASY TERMS OF SALE ON ARKANSAS RAILWAY LANDS. Terms No. i. At time of purchase, and in the year fol- lowing the payment, is 6 per cent, interest on principal ; and in the third and each year thereafter, one-ninth of the principal, with 6 per cent, interest on the remainder until all is paid, giv- ing a credit of ten years. Terms No. 2. At time of purchase and each year there- after, one-sixth of the principal and one year's interest on the (29) remainder, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum until all is paid, giving a credit of five years on deferred payment. Terms No. 3. At time of purchase, and in each year thereafter, one-fourth of the principal and one year's interest on the remainder, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum until all is paid, giving a credit of three years. Terms No. 4. The whole purchase money down at time of purchase, and deed given to purchaser. Arkansas railroad lands are sold from ^2.50 upwards, with a general average of from ;$3 to $5 per acre for good farming land. The Little Rock & Fort Smith Railroad Company owns - large bodies of land in the Valley of the Arkansas, and offers the following inducements to immigrants : CONTRIBUTED BY THOMAS M. GIBSON, LAND CONMISSIONER. HOMES IN THE ARKANSAS VALLEY, ARKANSAS 800,000 ACRES OF AGRICULTURAL AND TIMBER LANDS FOR SALE — PRODUCING ALL KINDS OF GRAIN, COTTON, FRUIT, STOCK, ETC. — A NAVIGABLE STREAM RUNNING THROUGH THE MIDDLE OF THE ENTIRE GRANT LONG CREDIT AND LOW RATE OF INTEREST The Lands of the great, magnificent Arkansas River Val- ley contain, in the highest degree, every condition for the suc- cess of agriculture. We have the most fertile soil, where all the manifold pro- ducts of the world can be raised in endless profusion. Cotton is the staple product, and yields in average one bale of about 500 pounds per acre, worth at present prices from ;^40.oo to ;^50.oo. Corn grows as well as on the best lands of Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, and brings better prices. Tobacco grows most successfully on almost any kind of soil in the Ar- kansas Valley. Wheat, oats, rye and barley do well every- where on our Land Grant. Potatoes generally give two abun- dant crops during one season on the same piece of land. Peas, beans, turnips and garden vegetables of all kinds and varieties grow nowhere better, and are from three to four weeks earlier than in a more northern climate. (30) We have the most perfect climate, nowhere surpassed in regard to health, extremely mild in winter and not too warm in summer. We have on our lands, for building and other purposes, the best timber of all kinds and varieties in the United States. Our mighty forests contain eighteen species of oak, to- gether with hickory, ash, cottonwood, walnut, cherry, pecan, mulberry, sassafras, gum, sycamore, dogwood, cypress, cedar, pine, and other valuable timbers in immense quantities. We offer you, in winter and summer, a range for your cattle that certainly cannot be excelled in any other part of the Union. We have, in our navigable rivers, in our numberless creeks and streamlets, in our clear springs and wells, the purest and best water in the world. As a fruit country the Valley of the Arkansas can chal- lenge and successfully compete with any part of the American continent. We can raise the finest grapes in the Universe, and our apples, peaches, 'cherries, pears, strawberries and blackberries defy competition. We offer you on our Land Grant everywhere a good neigh- borhood, thickly settled with intelligent, law abiding, industrious husbandmen ; wherever you settle you will find abundant school and church facilities, and all tokens of civilization, pro- gress, thrift and prosperity. For your products you will have the best market in the world. The Little Rock & Forth Smith Railway, intersecting the whole territory, affords easy and direct communication with the chief marts of the country. And last, but not least, we will sell you these magnificent lands at the lowest figures and on the easiest terms. You can secure a splendid home on our Land Grant at the average price of $4. per acre, payable in instalments, extending over six or ten years. Besides the rare resources of the soil, the Arkansas Valley (31) possesses an inexhaustible wealth in its minerals — coal, iron, lead, gypsum, silver, zinc, salt, copper, etc. The coal found in the western portion of the State of Ar- kansas is unexcelled by any in the world. The Counties of Conway, Perry, Yell, Logan, Pope, John- son, Franklin, Crawford and Sebastian form, so to say, one rich bed of coal, superior to the bituminous " black diamond " of Illinois and Ohio, and for manufacturing purposes even pre- ferred to the renowned anthracite of Pennsylvania. The best of building stone — marble, granite, sandstone^ etc., are found in abundance in the territoiy comprising this Land Grant. In short, the Arkansas Valley is "just the thing " for every industrious, enterprising farmer. It is, all things considered, the loveliest, fairest, richest, healthiest part of the State, and is destined at no distant day to become one of the wealthiest and most populous portions of the country. The Little Rock, Mississippi River & Texas Railway Com- pany also own a large amount of finely timbered lands, which they offer at from ^i to ^3 per acre. TRANSPORTATION FACILITIES. The commercial value of everything depends upon its availability and upon the power it possesses of being readily and easily converted into commodities not possessed by its owner. The most fertile lands, inaccessible to market, have but little more value than sterile wastes. No section of the Southwest surpasses Arkansas in accessibility. By means of h.er numerous navigable rivers and railroads the products of her fertile soil, forests and mines can be speedily and cheaply transported to the principal markets of the country. RIVERS. The Mississippi river constitutes the eastern border of the State. The Arkansas, passing entirely across the State from west to east, divides it into two equal parts, while the White river. Little Red, Black and St. Francis rivers furnish constant navigation in the north-eastern part, and the Bayou Barthol- (32) omew, the Ouachita and Red rivers supply water-way trans- portation for the southern parts. These rivers flow through as fertile lands as are to be found anywhere, and empty into the Mississippi river. Vast forests of the most valuable timber is found in quantities along these streams, all of which are crossed by the railroads traversing the State, insuring cheap and speedy transportation. RAILROADS. This State has i,8oo miles of completed railroads, furnish- ing to the greater part of the State direct communication with all trade centres. North, East, South and West. And the Great Eastern Railway Company, now in process of construc- tion, beginning at Fayetteville — on the 'Frisco Railway Line — on the western border, and running east through the northern part of the State to the Mississippi River. When completed, this road will render accessible a populous and prosperous sec- tion remarkable for the salubrity of its climate, the fertility of its soil, and its rich deposits of minerals. The completed lines of railway in the State are : THE ST. LOUIS, IRON-MOUNTAIN & SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY. This road makes the direct connection between the rail- road system of Texas, seeking a northern outlet, and the numerous lines of railroad centering in the cities of St. Louis and Cairo. The route of each section was selected after care- ful and minute surveys, and a thorough examination of the country: and altogether, forming the shortest, cheapest and most direct line between the termini. The total number of miles of road in operation is 6y6. The position of the line will be found as valuable for local business as it appears for through business. It puts in communication thirty of the best counties of the State of Arkansas, running close to the county seats of fifteen counties, and passes through the capital, Little Rock. It has, at the present time constructed, and in contem- plation and course of construction, a number of branch roads, which will give communication with almost every part of the State. (33) It connects at St. Louis with all the roads to the North, East and West; at Cairo with the Illinois Central and the Cairo & Vincennes ; at Little Rock with the Little Rock & Fort Smith, the Memphis & Little Rock, and the Little Rock, Mis- sissippi River & Texas railways; at Malvern with the Hot Springs Railroad, and at Texarkana with the Texas & Pacific, and the general system of Texas railroads. It is the main artery for distributing immigrants and exchange of freight through a territory so vast as to be prop- erly called the Great Southwest. LITTLE ROCK & FORT SMITH AND THE LITTLE ROCK, MISSISSIPPI RIVER & TEXAS RAILWAY COMPANIES. These two roads now constitute one continuous line, com- mencing at the City of Fort Smith, situate on the Arkansas river at the western border of the State, and traversing the Valley of the Arkansas river from Fort Smith to within a short distance of the mouth of that stream, it crosses the Mississippi river and connects with the Mississippi Valley road, thus form- ing a direct and short line to the City of New Orleans. It crosses the Arkansas river at Little Rock, where it makes connections North and South with the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern, and to the East with the Memphis & Little Rock road. At Fort Smith it makes connection with the 'Frisco road to all points in the Northwest, and at Pine Bluff, with the Texas & St. Louis road, it connects with all points in Texas and the East. This road also extends to Warren, the county seat of Bradley county, one of the southern counties of the State. It passes through the centre of the coal fields of the State, and through one of the best grain, fruit, and cotton pro- ducing regions to be found in the South. MEMPHIS & LITTLE ROCK RAILROAD. This road runs from the City of Memphis to Little Rock, connecting with the systems of roads centering at these two cities. It passes through one of the best cotton producing sections of the State. (34) KANSAS CITY, SPRINGFIELD & MEMPHIS RAILWAY COMPANY. This road, coming from Kansas City in Missouri, runs across the north-eastern part of the State to Memphis. It crosses one of the best agricultural, as well as timbered, parts of the State, and furnishes an outlet to the prairies of the North-west for the lumber produced from the vast forests of valuable timber through which it passes. ST. LOUIS & SAN FRANCISCO RAILWAY COMPANY. This road, coming from the City of St. Louis, enters the State in the county of Benton, passing through it, Washington and Crawford counties, reaches Fort Smith in Sebastian county, connecting with the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railway at that city, thus making, connection'.with New Orleans, Texas and the East. This road passes through the main apple producing part of the State. BATESVILLE & BRINKLEY RAILROAD. This road starts from the town of Brinkley in Monroe county, where it connects with the Memphis & Little Rock and the Texas & St. Louis, by which all points East, West, North and South are reached. It passes through Woodruff county into Jackson county, and is now being constructed into New- port, where it will connect with the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company ; but a few miles remain to be constructed. This road develops one of the best agricultural, as well as best timbered sections of the State. ARKANSAS MIDLAND RAILROAD COMPANY. This road starts from the town of Helena on the Missis- sippi river and runs through Phillips and Monroe counties to Clarendon, where it connects with the Texas & St. Louis Railway Company. This road runs through a populous and very fertile country. ARKANSAS & LOUISIANA RAILROAD COMPANY. This road starts from the town of Hope on the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern, and runs to the town of Nashville, in the county of Howard. This road makes accessible one of (35) the best sections of the State. It is in contemplation to con- tinue this road to the Indian Territory west, and to the city of Shreveport, in Louisiana, to the southeast. SEARCY & WEST POINT RAILROAD COMPANY. This is a short hne connecting the town of Searcy with the town of West Point, situated upon Little Red river, navigable for steamboats at any season. This road crosses the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern, making connections with all points. HOT SPRINGS RAILROAD. This, road starts out from the town of Malvern, on the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway, and runs to the celebrated Hot Springs, making that point accesible by rail with all parts of the Union. THE TEXAS & ST. LOUIS RAILWAY, (tHE COTTON BELT ROUTE.) Starting at Cairo, (111.,) the line crosses the Mississippi river on transfer steamers to Bird's Point. From here a south- westerly direction is taken through the counties of Mississippi, New Madrid and Dunklin (in Missouri), which are noted for their timber as well as for their productive soil, corn and wheat being their principal crops, the former averaging sixty bushels and the latter twenty bushels to the acre. This is also the farthest point north at which cotton is raised to any extent, considerable being shipped from Maiden, the most important town in southeast Missouri, After passing through these coun- ties, the St. Francis river, which is here the boundary line be- tween Missouri and Arkansas, is crossed. The road follows the eastern slope of Crawley's Ridge, through the counties of Clay, Green and Craighead. Crawley's Ridge forms the divide between the waters of the St. Francis and White rivers, and is composed for the most part of silicious clay and marl, resting on a bed of gravel, and its reputation as a thoroughly reliable fruit country is estab- lished. Grains, grasses, fruits and vegetables are prolific in this section ; here also is found the only poplar in the State in large belts. . (36) Jonesboro, the county seat of Craighead county, is a thriv- ing town. At this point the hne crosses the Kansas City, Springfield & Memphis Railway, and makes connection with that line for Memphis, Kansas City, Springfield, Fort Scott and intermediate points. From here the line passes through Poin- sett, Woodruff and Monroe counties, all of which abound with timber, to Brinkley, where connection is made with the Mem- phis & Little Rock Railroad to and from Memphis and Little Rock, thence to Clarendon, the county seat of Monroe county, and an important lumbering point. Here the road crosses the White river, over a substantial iron bridge, and, leaving the bluffs, intersects the magnificent prairie counties of Prairie and Arkansas. Here the Grand Prairie bursts suddenly upon the view, an inland sea of level land among the mighty groves, stretching its vernal carpet on either side, here and there a mighty monarch of the forest reaching its stalwart arms o'er the bowing grass beneath. On the highest point of Grand Prairie and just midway between the White and Arkansas rivers are located the towns of Parham and Stuttgart, in the heart of the finest farming country in the State. Eight miles to the southwest is located the new town of Goldman. From Goldman to the Arkansas river the road crosses Bayou Meta, Wabbaseca Bayou and Crooked Bayou, along which and in the bottom lands of the Arkansas are found the richest cotton lands in the United States. The next point of importance is the City of Pine Bluff, beautifully situated upon a plateau upon the banks of the Arkansas river, surrounded by pine lands. It is quite an attractive city, with excellent drain- age, fine schools and many churches, and is unsurpassed for health by any city in the State. Pine Bluff is the county seat of Jefferson county and has a population of about 6,000. A new era has dawned upon this town since the completion of the " Cotton Belt Route," and it is destined at no distant day to be one of the most important cities in the State. Leaving Pine Bluff, the road enters the famous Yellow Pine region, which extends south from the Arkansas river more than (37) 150 miles into the great State of Texas, passing through Dor- sey, Calhoun, and Ouachita counties. Camden, the county seat of Ouachita county, is the next important point. This is one of the oldest settled counties in the State. Its soil is good, ar|^ Camden has for many years controlled a large portion of the shipments of southern Arkansas and eastern Texas. One saw mill located at this point has a daily capacity of 6,500 feet. From Camden the line continues on to McNeil, in Columbia county. From here a branch line has been built to the town of Magnolia to meet the require- ments of the immense cotton shipments from that section. Leaving McNeil, the main line passes on through Columbia, Lafayette and Miller counties to Texarkana, 418 miles from Bird's Point, and the terminus of the Missouri and Arkansas Division of the "Cotton Belt Route." Texarkana, situated on the boundary line between Texas and Arkansas, is a thriving and prosperous city of 6,000 inhabitants. The Texas Division of the " Cotton Belt Route " extends from Texarkana through Waco to Gatesville, Texas. HEALTH AND CLIMATE. In point of health Arkansas, with the exception of the swamps along the streams, will compare favorably with any part of the United States. Even in the swamps the sickness is of a mild character, yielding readily to medical treatment. In the hilly and mountainous sections it is exceptionally healthy. No section is so blessed with health-restoring springs, many of which are renowned for their curative properties throughout the nation. The happy location of the State between extreme heat and cold avoids the vicissitudes of the weather with which so many sections are afflicted. The mean average temperature is 60 ° Fahrenheit, the mean average rainfall is 49 inches. SCHOOLS. Arkansas has a well organized public school system, with a State Superintendent of Public Instruction and a County Examiner in each county. Provision is made in the constitu- (38) tion of the State for the support of public schools, requiring an annual tax of 20 cents upon each ;^ioo of taxable property, to be levied and collected for that purpose, in addition to a per capita tax of ;^i upon each adult male inhabitant. The territory of each county has been laid off by the respective county courts into convenient school districts, which are managed by three directors elected by the electors of the district. In addition to the amount raised by State tax, each school district by vote can levy a tax of not in excess of 50 cents upon the hundred dollars for the support of its school. A large portion of the districts vote the full amount allowed by law, paying in the aggregate for this laudable purpose seventy cents on the hundred dollars of taxable property together with a poll tax of one dollar. In towns and densely populated neighborhoods this enables the schools to be kept open for nine months in each year. In the sparcely settled sections the schools are kept open for so long as the amount of money available will justify. All are kept open at least three months in each year. Graded schools have been established in all of the cities and in the larger towns of the State. The Arkansas Industrial University, a part of the public school system of the State, is located at the town of Fayetteville, in the county of Washington, For beauty and healthfulness its location is unsurpassed. The buildings are handsome, commodious and admirably arranged for conve- nience and comfort. They are situated upon an elevated pla- teau overlooking the town of Fayetteville, and furnishing a view of the Ozark Mountains unsurpassed in beauty and sublimity. The faculty of the University has been lately reorganized, and under the management of Col. George M. Edgar, its energetic, capable and scholarly president, it promises to attain high rank as an educational institution. The medical department of this University is established at Little Rock with a full corps of pro- fessors composed of men eminent in the medical profession. The course of study embraces three years, and is very thorough. In addition to the State University as a part of her public school system, the State has established at Pine Bluff a normal school for the education of colored teachers. The building is (39) one of the handsomest educational edifices in the State, con- structed of brick, with slate roof and granite trimmings. This institution is now in successful operation. Under the school system in this State the races are kept distinct, the colored children being taught in schools separate from the whites, and receive for their support a pro rata of the fund raised by taxation for the support of the public schools of the State. Besides the public schools, industrial university, etc., the State has established and is fostering a school for the blind and for deaf mutes, both of which are located at Little Rock. These institutions are well managed under competent, exper- ienced teachers, and are accomplishing much good. In addition to the public schools and university there is a large number of private colleges and schooL, among which may be mentioned the Methodist College, at Little Rock, under the auspices of the Methodist Episcopal Church; the Philander Smith College, at the same place, for the education of the col- ored race, and the Arkansas College, established at Batesville, under the auspices of the Presbyterian Church many years ago. Under the management of Dr. L J. Long, D. D., its pres- ident, and one of the most successful and thorough educators to be found anywhere, this institution has constantly grown in popularity, and is a grand factor in the education of the youth of the State. The private colleges and schools are largely attended. INSANE ASYLUMS. The State has also established an asylum for her insane^ and furnishes it a liberal support. The buildings and its sur- roundings, the medical and other attendance is so perfect as to leave but little to be desired towards the treatment and com- fort of the unfortunates who are there confined. SOCIAL FEATURES. The tune and dialogue of the Arkansas Traveler, which has attained wide circulation, has created the impression abroad that the citizens of this State are of the kindred or the lineal (40) descendants of the fiddling squatter, that they are a whisky- drinking, slothful, ignorant race. In addition to this, persistent misrepresentation has taught the world to believe that the bowie-knife and pistol are indispensable parts of the dress of an Arkansas gentleman, that life is insecure, and murders of fright- ful frequency. How strong this impression we discover from the surprise expressed by persons from distant States upon their first arrival. They are astonished to find how different a person the true Arkansas man is from the ideal Arkansian that he fully believed in until he saw for himself For honesty, morality, intelligence and observance of the laws, the citizens of this State will average with the citizens of any State in the Union. The law inflicts a severe penalty for carrying a pistol, butcher-knife, sword-cane or brass knuckles, as a weapon, and there is no statute more rigidly enforced. Prohibition of the sale or gift of intoxicating liquors attains in a large portion of the State. The question as to whether intoxicating liquors shall be sold or given away in certain localitfes is fixed by a petition to the proper county court, and the law clothes all adult females with the right to sign the petition, and if a majority of the adult inhabitants residing within the prescribed territory sign the petition the county judge is required to enter an order prohibiting the licensing the sale of intoxicating liquors within such prescribed limits. In many of the largest and most populous counties in the State there is not a single dram-shop or licensed seller of intoxicating liquors ; the penalty for violat- ing the law. is so severe that but few attempt it. Churches and schoolhouses are to be found in every neighborhood. Nearly all Christian denominations are to be found in the state. The people of Arkansas have ever been distinguished for their kind- ness and hospitality to strangers. They fully realize the importance of inducing immigration into the State, to enable them to bring the waste lands into cultivation, and develop the great natural resources of the State now lying neglected, and they gladly welcome every one coming to find a home in its borders. It makes no difference where he is from, or which (41) side he took in the war between the States. The prejudice and animosity arising from the war has passed away forever. Now the question is, what sort of a man is he ? not what side he was on during the war. Settlers from the north, who served through the war in the Federal army and who are Republicans, have settled in all parts of the State, and are treated socially and otherwise, just as other neighbors by the communities in which they reside. The tivo races are progressing harmoniously. For years the colored people have gravitated to the towns and to the rich alluvial lands along the rivers. The larger number are to be found along the valley of the Arkansas and the eastern and southern portion of the State. There are fewer colored people to be found in half the counties of this State than can be found in an equal number of counties in the State of Ohio. SKETCH OF THE BEAR MOUNTAIN MINES. (Contributed by A. M. Beam.) Gen. D. M. McRae— Dear Sir: In answer to yours of September lOth, I will say Bear is the headquarters of Bear Mountain mining camp, (which is twelve miles square), and lays in Montgomery and Garland counties. Bear is fifteen miles west of Hot Springs. It is situated at the foot of Bear Mountain, of the Ozark range, and is, geologically speaking, in a metamorphic basin, and is traversed by numerous veins of metaliferous ores of gold, sil- ver, lead, iron, etc., silver and lead predominating. The ore gangue is principally an iron-stained, partially crystallized, sili- cate quartz. The general lay of the country is hilly and moun- tainous, some of the mountains reaching an altitude of 1,285 feet, fine timber nearly everywhere, with an abundance of clear mountain spring water. The main mines are first, the Mam- moth, a stupendous lead running northeast and southwest at twenty degrees, and dipping to the north at forty-five degrees. This lead is traceable for quite a distance and is opened by first a shaft 6x8 ft. and 60 ft. deep, by the C. H. Jacob's Mining Company. They have some 250 tons of ore on the dump, which give an average assay of ;$I3 per ton. Shaft No. 2, by the Bear Mountain Mining Compony, 4x6 ft. and 15 feet deep, (42) has the same characteristics as the shaft above, except not so much iron oxide, but more quartz. There are a great many shafts ten to twelve feet on this lode with no change worthy of notice. Then the Black Diamond ranks next, which is owned and operated by the Bear Mountain Mining Company, who have a tunnel 50 feet (with an air shaft) and a shaft on the lead 50 feet deep, have 75 tons of ore on the dump that will give an average of ;$I4 per ton, and 75 tons that will give an average of ^10 per ton. The strike and dip is northeast and southwest, with a dip of forty-five degrees to the north, with good solid walls. The Spanish Lode comes next. It is owned by the Bear Mountain Mining Company and the Arkansas, Kentucky S^ Texas Mining Company. The Arkansas, Kentucky & Texas have a shaft 35 feet deep, with 75 tons of ore on the dump that gives an average assay of ^5 in silver, i^i-SO in gold and 30 per cent. lead. The Bear Mountain Company have a shaft 20 feet, with cross-cuts, etc., with an average assay of ^5 in silver and 25 per cent, of lead, with ;^i to $2 in gold. The Lost Louisiana mine is also on this lead. It is owned by the Riverton Mining Company, of Riverton, Nebraska, and the Old Spanish digging is 75 feet deep and 75 feet in diameter at the top. They have sunk a shaft 55 feet deep, commencing nearly in the bottom of the old digging and still are in loose ground, and a cross-cut of 40 feet shows that they have not got out of the old work yet. They have here a great many curiosities in the extent of the cell work, and have the finest specimens imaginable of pure, crystallized litterets of lead in leaf, for their ore assays from ;^3 to $S in silver, $2 in gold, and from 10 to 95 per cent, of lead, with immense bodies of ore in sight in every direction. The next is the Fawn, owned by the Riverton and Boston Mining Companies, and have considerable development work done, and the ore assays from ^5 to ;^2i per ton. The Empire, owned by the Bear Mountain Mining Company, has considerable development work and assays ^20 in silver and 25 per cent, lead. This mine is capable of producing ore at an outlay of ;^i.25 per ton. The Mississippi Mining Company own an ex- tension on the Empire, and are making calculations to pusli (43) their work rapidly. The Ozark and Black Chief are new dis- coveries and assay from ^5 to $6 in silver and 25 to 30 per cent, in lead, and are five nice, clean lodes with an abundance of ore in sight, and there is an offer made to put up a smelter on the Ozark by a Hot Springs company. The Bear Mountain Smelting Company was organized in December, and have fire- brick made and other materials on the ground for the erection of a lo-ton reverbatory furnace. They put up a small test fur- nace for making matting tests and have made numerous runs with good success. They sent the matt to Omaha for refining and the report was very satisfactory. But there is a new inven- tion, by C. F. Hartsfeldt, of Newport (Ky.) that seems so far in advance of the common reverbatory furnace, that in all prob- ability they will put in one of those instead of the reverb^itory intended at the start. Bear is a neat little burg of lOO souls, with nice clear spring water, some sulphur, some iron, and as healthy a location as can be well found. SKETCH OF COAL MINES OF STIEWEL & CO. Gen. D. McRae — Dear Sh : In compliance with your request for information on the subject of our coal mines, would state that we own the Coal Hill coal mines, a shaft situated at Coal Hill, in Johnson county. We are working same with steam power, said mine having a depth of 78 feet ; thickness of vein, 48 inches ; present capacity, 250 tons per day. We are now sinking an additional shaft to connect with the above, half a mile further west ; depth of shaft will be 130 feet, and are putting same in a condition for an output of 500 tons per day. The above coal is a free- burning semi-anthracite coal, containing over 90 per cent, of fixed carbon and about i per cent, of sulphur. We also own and are now occupying the Eureka coal mine, also situated in Johnson county, a shaft 58 feet in depth, vein 42 inches, worked by machinery ; present capacity 200 tons per day. This coal is more of an anthracite. This coal has also over 90 per cent, of fixed carbon, and nearly free of sulphur. (44) We also own the Excelsior coal mine ; shaft 55 feet in depth, vein 42 inches ; and the Peacock coal mine, a slope all situated in Johnson county, on the line of the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railway, and within two miles of the Arkansas river. Our coals are all smokeless, and are used for all kinds of stoves, grates and steaming purposes, and are used altogether by the L. R. & F. S. Ry., and the L. R., M. R. & T. Ry., and by actual tests for steaming purposes two tons of our coal has proved equal to three tons of the Pittsburg coal. Truly yours, STIEWEL & CO. (CONTRIBUTED BY THOMAS LAFFERTY.) In writing of the coal interests of Arkansas, the works of the Ouita Coal Company deserve special mention. The re- organization of this company last year with a capital of ;^I00,000 and practical men to manage its affairs, has already opened up a very large business that is new to the States. The Ouita coal is mined in Pope county, near Russellville, and is a very superior domestic coal, rich in carbon, free from smoke, soot, slate or other impurities, and is, perhaps, the best semi-anthracite coal found in the United States, as the following comparative analysis will show : COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF NOTED COALS. BY CHAUVENET & BLAIR, CHEMISTS, ST. LOUIS, MO. COAL. OUITA Pittsburg — Bituminous. . . . Big Mud^r, which acts wonderfully upon the kidneys and has great curative properties, but it has never yet been analyzed. OUACHITA COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY S. W. MALLORY, CAMDEN.) Is situated in the Ouachita river valley, from which stream it takes its name. Its southern boundary is 24 miles north of the Louisiana line, and separated from that State only by Union county, which, together with Columbia county, forms its southern boundary; otherwise it is bounded by Nevada, Clark, Dallas and Calhoun counties. Of its 900 miles of area, nine-tenths is alluvial deposit, the face of the country presenting east of the Ouachita river a level, and west an undulating upland. One-third of all the area is improved, 8,880 acres of which is United States land and subject to homestead entry; 5,000 acres belong to the State, 6,000 acres are owned by the M. O. & R. R. R. R. & C. F. R. R., and 3,850 acres by the St. L., I. M. & S. R. R. Cotton is the principal agricultural product, yet corn, wheat, turnips, potatoes, rye, sorghum and tobacco are produced here b\' all who see the folly of relying alone on (106) cotton as a means of exchange. With proper cultivation and a fair average season the ordinary soil of the county will produce a bale of cotton to the acre. The average crop of the county is 10,000 bales. Corn never fails to yield from 15 to 40 bushels per acre. Irish and sweet potatoes yield fine crops and produce from 200 to 300 bushels per acre. Wheat is not planted to any extent, but will yield from ten to twelve bushels. Turnips and peas are fine crops. Rye, barley and millet can be grown and become paying crops. Sorghum cane never fails to pay, the syrup commanding a ready sale. Tobacco is not extensively planted, yet it pays the planter liberally for his toil, as the large factory now going on in Camden will testify. All kinds of fruits, such as apples, pears, figs, quinces do well. Peaches and grapes deserve especial mention, as nowhere in the State do they grow larger or more delicious. Strawberries of the finest quality grow luxuriantly. Dew- berries, whortleberries, blackberries, raspberries, gooseberries all do well here. Redtop, clover, timothy, orchard and blue grass all are cultivated and yield well. The burr grass of California, Texas blue grass, Bermuda^ Johnson's grass and Alfalfa are southern grasses of known value, which will give a rotation of green food almost the entire year, and therefore stock-raising could be made very profitable, for our short mild winters, fine grazing and abundant running streams afford fine privileges and advantages. Heretofore very little attention has been paid to this industry, but blooded stock is now being introduced, and of cattle the Holstein, Alderney, Durham and Jersey breeds ^succeed well. The supply of timber in the county is enormous. The hills and ridges are covered with fine pine forests. Walnut^ cherry, oak, beech, hickory, dogwood, maple and elm are found in abundance, and the bottoms are filled with gum, white and black tupelo, cypress, hackberry, sycamore, overcup and pin oak. The county has over twenty saw mills scattered over her territory. The largest of these is situated at Camden, on the Ouachita river, near the steamboat landing and the depot of the Texas & St. Louis Railway. The Ouachita river and two railroads are at present our shipping facilities. The Texas & St. Louis Railway crosses the county from northeast to southwest, and the St. Louis, Iron ( 10/ ) Mountain & Southern Railway from the northwest corner to the center. The Ouachita river runs through the county from north to south, nearly through the center. The Little Missouri river is on the northern boundary, both being navigable. In addition to these, the two Bayous, Mill creek, Gum creek, Smackover, Ecore Fabre, Freco, French creek. Cypress creek. Old river, Chappel, and eight or ten beautiful lakes are distributed over the country, and furnish fine fish and abundant water through- out the year. In the hills above Camden, near the river, are found exten- sive beds of lignite coal, these are now being developed by a New York company. Other coal beds crop out at Newport Landing, in the southern part of the county. Manufactures are scarce. We have a number of cotton- gins, grist mills, and shingle mills, but only one wool factory^ and one wood and wagon shop. Good improved lands can be bought at from ^5 to ^15 per acre; unimproved lands may be had at from ^i to ;^ 5. 00 per acre. The soil in the bottoms is a black stiff and black sandy loam; in the uplands red, grey and black sandy loam, and in the mountains similar to the latter. There are forty-five school districts, with sixty school- houses, kept open from four to ten months, one high school at Camden, and no community in the county is without its church- houses, Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians and others being represented. Of principal towns we have Camden, with 2,000, and Stephens, with 130 inhabitants, PHILLIPS COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY GEN. JAMES C. T.\PPAN.) Situated in the eastern portion of the State on the Missis- sippi river, contains 659 square miles, two-fifths of which is alluvial level land — no prairie and very few hills. The popula- tion is about 24,262, of whom about 16,000 are colored. About one-sixth of the county is improved. The principal crops are cotton and corn, but hay, sorghum, peas, potatoes, millet and oats are cultivated. The yield of crops per acre of cotton, on hill lands, 600 pounds; on bottom lands, 1,000 pounds; average crop of corn, uplands, 17 bushels; oats, 20 bushels; Irish potatoes, 100 bushels; sweet potatoes, lOO bushels; turnips, 200 bushels; field peas, 50 bushels per acre. Of the cultivated grasses, timothy .yields 4,000 pounds; ( 108) redtop, 4,000 pounds; clover, 6,000 pounds; millet, 6,000 pounds; orchard grass, 4,000 pounds. Fruits of all kinds, apples, peaches, pears, plums, apricots, nectarines, quinces all do well, and of small fruit, strawberries do best. The Concord, Catawba, scuppernong and Isabella grapes are grown with satisfaction. A great deal of attention has been lately given to the rais- ing of stock, and improved breeds of cattle and horses have been introduced with success. Among the finer breeds of neat cattle are the Jerseys, Holstein and Hereford, of which the two former seem to do excellently here. Of horses, the Norman stud is being experimented with. Pine, cypress, gum, walnut, oak, cottonwood, poplar, beech, ash and hickory grow in abundance, and the sassafras, catalpa, elm, gum, holly, maple and sugar-tree are found everywhere. Two railroads and the Mississippi river furnish ample means of bringing these woods to a market. The Arkansas Midland Railroad, from Helena to Clarendon, and the Iron Mountain Railroad, from Helena to St. Louis, traverse the county, and several creeks, though not navigable, enter into the Mississippi river, the eastern boundary of the county. A few manufacturing enterprises, one for the pressing of cotton seed oil, one for the manufacture of spokes and felloes of carriages, wagons and agricultural implements, have been established within the county and do a good business. There are improved and unimproved- lands, which may be bought, the improved at from $10 to 20, and the unimproved at from $1 to ;^5 per acre. The general character of the soil in the bottoms is of a rich, alluvial nature, and in the hills a clay soil. The county is well watered by natural springs and run- ning creeks. For domestic use, both spring water and cistern water is used. There are about thirty free schools in the county, which are kept open on an average during eight months of the year. Of high schools there is one for colored people at Southland, an academy for girls of the Catholic church, and a few other private schools of a high character. Church-houses for white and colored people are distributed throughout the county, and can be found in every settlement. Namely, in the principal places, are two Episcopal, one Cath- olic, two Presbyterian, five Methodist and two Baptist churches for white people, and about thirty for the colored race. The principal towns are Helena, on the Mississippi river, with a population of about 5,000, Marvell 250, Trenton 250, Poplar Grove 700, Barton 50. ( 109) POINSETT COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY HON. BEN HARRIS) Is located in the northeastern portion of the State, and bounded on the north by Craighead, west by Jackson, south by Cross and Crittenden, and east by Mississippi counties; has an area of 756 square miles, one-fourth of which is in hills, half level, and one-fourth prairie. The State owns about 10,000 acres in the county, and about one-third of its area is improved, and the United States still own 80 acres. The principal crops are cotton, corn, oats and wheat, of which cotton produces in the uplands 900 pounds, in the bot- toms 1,500 pounds of seed cotton to the acre; corn, 35 bushels in the hills and 50 bushels in the bottom lands; wheat, upland 15 bushels, bottom lands 20 bushels; oats, uplands 20 bushels, bottom lands 25 bushels; rye, 35 bushels in the hills, 40 bushels in the bottoms; Irish potatoes, lOO bushels; sweet potatoes, 175 bushels; turnips, 75 bushels, and field peas, 40 bushels per acre; sorghum yields about 300 gallons of syrup to the acre. The cultivated grasses succeed very well here. German millet, clover, timothy, Hungarian and blue grass yield as fol- lows: Timothy 5,000 pounds, redtop 5,000 pounds, clover 8,.ooo pounds, millet 4,000 pounds, Hungarian 3,000 pounds. Fruit, such as apples, peaches, pears, plums, grapes and quinces are grown and do well. Of grapes, the scuppernong is thriving. The county is especially adapted to cattle, and in fact, thriv- ing to all kinds of stock-raising, and some attention is given in this direction and to the improvement of stock ; of cattle, Dur- ham ; of horses the Clydesdale and Norman, and of hogs, the Poland do well. The timber of the county consists of poplar, which is dis- tributed over about one third of the area; white oak, red oak and hickory grow abundantly, and good cypress brakes are in some localities. Three railroads in the county, and the L'Anguille and St. Francis rivers afford good opportunities for the shipment of lumber. The Texas & St. Louis Railroad runs through the entire western part of the county, the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad traverses the center, and the Kansas City, Springfield & Memphis Railroad passes through the eastern portion. The L'Anguille river, flowing in a southerly direction through the central portion of the county, is navigable for ten miles ; the St. Francis river, watering the eastern portion, is navigable in its whole length. Of minerals, nothing has as yet been developed. The number of public schools in the county is sixteen. (no) which are kept open for about six months in the year, which afford ample opportunity for the education of the population, about 5,000, of which about one-tenth are colored. The prices of land in the county range from $5 to ^15 for improved and from ^1.50 to ^5 for unimproved lands. The character of the soil is good, and consists in the bottoms of black sand and in the uplands of red clay. The county is well watered by constantly running streams, with their tributaries, as well as by abundant springs, and in the northeastern part by lakes. Cistern water, as well as spring water, is principally used for domestic purposes. Of mineral waters, we have the Udiber Springs, recom- mended for dropsical affections and indigestion. There is a high school at flarrisburg, the county seat, and fourteen church-houses throughout the county, principally of the Methodist and Baptist denominations. The principal towns of Poinsett county are Harrisburg, with a population of 590; Bay Village, 250; Weiner, 75; Fisher, 65. POPE COUNTY. Is situated north of the Arkansas river, which is its southern boundary, while Johnson, Newton, Searcy, Van Buren and Conway counties are its other limits. This county has an area of about 500,000 acres of land, considerably broken, one-sixth of which is mountainous, one- sixth hills, one-third level and one-third alluvial ; of prairie there is comparatively none. Its population is now estimated at 18,000, of which about 1,000 are negroes. Forty-five thousand acres of the area seem to be improved, and of other lands, 160,000 acres are owned by the United States, 10,000 by the State and 80,000 acres by the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railway Company. Xhe principal crops are corn, wheat, oats, rye, barley, cot- ton, tobacco and vegetables. Cotton produces well; on hill lands 700, on bottoms 1,400 pounds of seed cotton to the acre; the average yield of corn is from 20 to 50 bushels, of wheat from 8 to 16, of oats from 18 to 30, of rye from 25 to 30 bush- els, potatoes, both Irish and sweet, from 200 to 300, turnips 300, and field peas 40 bushels per acre; tobacco produces about 200 pounds, timothy 2,000 pounds, redtop 2,000 pounds, millet and Hungarian grasses 3,000 pounds to the acre, and sorghum yields about 100 gallons of syrup on average land. All varieties of fruit are successfully cultivated. Peaches are a sure crop ; apples do well, and grapes will produce any- where in the county. Hogs, of which we have the Berkshire, horses and cattle, arc thriving, but little attention is given to stock-raising. ( III) This is a good timber county, and all the varieties of valu- able timber are grown. White oak, pine, cypress, over-cup, red, black and post-oak are found in large and paying quantities, and our facilities for shipment of lumber are as good as any in the State. The Little Rock & Fort Smith Railway runs east and west for 25 miles across the southern part of the county, and the Arkansas river is its southern boundary for 30 miles. There are other streams. Cabin creek, Illinois creek and Point Remove creek, which, however, are not navigable. Coal is found in the county, but is developed only for private use. Of manufactories, we have a few flouring and saw-mills, and one cotton factory, at Russellville. The features of the soil are black, sandy loam and buck- shot in the bottoms and sandy loam in the uplands. The prices of land are, for improved, from $6 to ^40, and for unimproved, from $2 to $8 per acre. The county is well watered ; in the winter and spring by creeks and branches, in the summer by wells and springs. Some streams never fail in an ample supply, and water for domestic purposes is drawn from wells and springs, and is generally soft. The educational facilities are as good as common schools afford, there being schools in all the districts, and which are kept open from three to ten months in the year. Of towns, we have Russellville with 1, 000, Atkins with 500, and Dover with 400 inhabitants. All denominations seem to be represented throughout the county. Methodists North and South, Presbyterians of the old school and Cumberland Presbyterians, Missionary and Hard- shell Baptists, Campbellites and Catholics, all have their houses of worship, amounting to about 80 churches. PRAIRIE COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY HON. JAMES E. GATEWOOD.) Prairie county is situated in eastern Arkansas, Its western border extends within thirty miles of Little Rock, the State capital. Is bounded on the north by White county, on the east by Woodruff and Monroe counties, on the south by Ark- ansas and Lonoke counties, and on the west by Lonoke county. It is almost a level plain, embracing within its limits very little uneven or broken lands, the lands being chiefly rich bottom lands, and what we term here timbered uplands and prairie, both of which are productive, and while not rough or broken, are well drained by small streams, which empty into larger streams, to find an outlet in White River. It contains 460,800 acres of land. There are 41,000 acres of State land subject to donation (112) and 45,000 acres of railroad land, of which 4,750 acres belong to the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company, and 440 acres still owned by the United States, and subject to homestead entry. The population of the county is 10,980. The soil is very productive, varying in color according to locality. On the ridge land it is dark gray, on the bayous or creeks of a brown hue from 18 to 24 inches in thickness and very mellow, in the river bottoms and on the surrounded hills, situated between Cache and White rivers, it is a black alluvial with a substratum of sand. Nearly all products which can be grown in this latitude can be successfully cultivated here. The principal crops of the county, however, are cotton, corn, wheat, oats, sugar-cane, potatoes and hay. In favorable seasons the yield of all these is fine. German millet, Hungarian, redtop, timothy, blue grass and red clover produce well; tobacco and rice do finely; table vegetables of all kinds yield abundantly. Fruits of all varieties may be grown with profit. Apples, peaches and pears bear abundantly, and plums seem to be better suited here in soil and climate than in almost any other part of the State. Grapes bear prolific. The Concord, Ives seedling, Hartford, Morton's Virginia, Delaware, Little Red and scuppernong are the favor- ite varieties. Mulberries, strawberries, whortleberries, black- berries, dewberries, hackberries, cherries, muscadines and wild grapes are found in all wooded parts of the county in great quantities. Uplands yield about 1,000 pounds of seed cotton per acre, and bottom lands about 1,500 pounds. The average yield of corn on uplands is 35 bushels and on bottom lands about 50 bushels. Average yield of wheat on uplands 20 bushels, of oats from 50 to 75 bushels, Irish potatoes 150 bushels, sweet potatoes 100 bushels, per acre. Sorghum produces from 50 to 75 gallons per acre, and field peas from 50 to 75 bushels per acre. The putting up of hay has become a considerable industry in this county. The hay is made on the prairies from prairie grass, is baled and shipped by the carload to distant markets, and while only a few years ago there were not more than three or four points where hay was put up, now are sheds, presses and side-tracks almost at every station of the Memphis & Little Rock Railroad. Fruit-raising also has received a great deal of attention of late years. Strawberries, tomatoes, early peas and earliest varieties of plums, peaches and apples are made remunerative in distant markets. The raising of cattle has, however, become one of the greatest industries of the county. Large bodies of prairie are ( 113 ) being enclosed with wire-fencing, and are turned into stock ranches. Ah'eady there are several of these in the county, containing from 3,000 to 5. 000 licad of cattle, besides large numbers of mules, horses and sheep. Cattle are being con- stantly shipped to markets at Little Rock, Memphis and St. Louis. Cattle do well in this county, and stock-raising is con- sidered one of the most remunerative enterprises in the county. Our winters are short and mild, and stock need but very little attention or feed. There are about 150,000 acres of prairie land in the county, situated principally south of the Memphis & Little Rock Railroad, which are being rapidly bought up for grain farms and cattle ranches. Water for domestic uses is generally from wells, at a depth of from twenty-five to fifty feet. It is pure and healthy, except near the river and bayous. Our school facilities are good. We have public schools in almost every neighborhood of the county. At Des Arc, at DeValls Bluff, Hazen and Hickory Plains are very fine public schools. Labor is scarce. Good workers for farms can procure sit- uations at remunerative wages. Our timber consists of white, post, red, black, Spanish, live, over-cup and willow oaks, black-jack, hickor)' of various kinds, cypress, willow, black gum, walnut, dogwood, cherry, chinqua- pin, sycamore, cotton-wood, red bud, ash, tupelo gum, maple, box-elder, hackberry, sugar maple, red wood, elm, pecan, per- simmon, sassafras, etc., etc., all in good quantities. The streams of the county are White river, running through the eastern portion for forty miles. Bayou Des Arc, running east and west through the northern part, Bayou Wattensas. running east and west through the middle, and Lagrue and Bayou Two Prairie, running through the southern and south- eastern parts of the county, and Cache river on the eastern bor- der of the county. Des Arc, with a population of about 1, 000, is the county seat, DeValls Bluff has a population of 500; Hazen, 350; Fredonia, 200, and Hickory Plains 250. Improved lands can be purchased at from $5 to ;^io, and unimproved lands for from ;$ 1.50 to ^^5 per acre. Lands forfeited to the State can be purchased at 50 cents per acre, and railroad lands for from ;$2.50 to ^5. PULASKI COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY HON. SAMUEL W. WILLIAMS.) One of the most centrally located counties of the State, is diagonally traversed by the Arkansas river, which throughout the county maintains an average width of a quarter of a mile, and is of sufficient depth to bear large and commodious steam- ( 114) boats. Pulaski county contains tlic ca[)ital of the State, and has a population of about 45,000. Tiie features of the county arc\hiily tu the extent of three- j fourths of its area, which is 781 square miles. Only about one- ! fourth of the county is alluvial, and there are no prairies in any part of it. About 25 per cent, of the lands of the county arc in cultivation; 26,300 acres belong to the United States, 5 p-r cent. to the State of Arkansas, and about ten per cent, of the lands belong to the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern, the Little Rock & Fort Smith, and the Memphis & Little Rock Railroads. Corn and cotton are the principal crops grown in the ■county, and all other ordinary farm and garden products are cultivated to the profit of the farmer and market gardener. The yield of the various crops per acre is, of cotton, on the hill lands, Soo pounds; on the bottom lands, l,6oo pounds seed cotton; corn, 20 bushels on uplands, 40 bushels on bottom lands; wheat, about lO bushels; oats, 40 bushels. Tobacco is not planted in sufficient quantities to give the yield per acre, but gives a good return to all who grow it. Root crops bring a good harvest. Irish potatoes, lOO bushels; sweet poteitoes, 200 bushels, and turnips, 300 bushels; which latter, however, may be increased to 500 bushels, when cultivated in good bottom land. Cultivated grasses, such as millet, clover, timothy and -orchard grasses do well and produce abundantly. Timothy, 3,000 pounds; red top, 2,000 ; clover, 3,000; millet, 4,000 ; Hun- garian, 4,000 pounds per acre. Those who have cultivated milo maize and alfalfa speak well of their yield. Pulaski county is the home of the peach and the pear va- rieties, and surpass New Jersey in the former and California in the latter. Good apples may be produced here, but not as _good as in the northwestern counties of the State. It beats the ■ world for blackberries and whortleberries, produces good straw- . berries, grapes, raspberries, plums, and all fruits, but cherries. Of tlie g:-ape all varieties are cultivated, but the Ives seedling .and Concord do best. There is not much attention paid to the raising of stock. The Jersey and Ayrshire cattle, however, seem to thrive best, while the Durham breed is affected by our hot June and cool fall nights, but when sheltered at night and fed in sheltered pastures, shaded by trees, they do well. The Berkshire hogs succeed best, the Poland swine next ; dark or colored varieties do well. White hogs, however, take the mange, and do not thrive. About half the county — that part south of the river — grows hard pine, and white oak grows on the creeks and on both sides of the Arkansas river. The cypress is pretty well used up, but some can be found in brakes upon narrow slips of wet land, on .the banks of lakes and sluggish bayous in the alluvial parts of (115) the county. Here also can be found the hickory, ash and red gum trees in abundance. The market facihties of the county are good to Little Rock, thence by water or rail to New Orleans, St. Louis, Mem- phis, Kansas and Texas, the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & South- ern, the Memphis & Little Rock, the Little Rock & Fort Smith, the Little Rock, Mississippi River & Texas Railroads all run- ning to or by Little Rock, the county seat and State capital. Of navigable streams passing through the county we have only the Arkansas river; other streams, are its tributaries, the Bayou Meto, Palarm, Big Maumelle and Little Maumelle, Fourche, White Oak bayou and Lawson*s creek. Silver and lead mines have been worked. Coal and iron is found, but has not been worked, and limestone and slate quarries may be worked with profit, but have not been yet developed. Pulaski county has a variety of manufacturing enterprises, such as lumber factories, sash, blind and flooring mills, furni- ture factories, wagon and carriage factories, foundries, cotton- seed oil mills, cooperages, woolen and cotton spinneries, flour mills and cracker bakeries, which have been and are now carried on profitably. There are within the county, and in operation for from three to nine months in the year, forty-three good schools, in as many school districts. Within the city of Little Rock, and in addition to the county schools, are eight large schools, which are kept open nine months in the year, and afford good oppor- tunity for education. The price of improved land, according to location, is from ^lo to ;$ioo per acre, and that of unimproved land from $l to to $20. This, of course, does not refer to land near Little Rock, where there are improved localities worth as much as in any other large city. The character of the soil is, in the alluvial parts, a sandy loam, in the uplands much varied, mostly, how- ever, a clay subsoil covered with a gi'avelly loamy surface. The hilly lands class as uplands ; near the small streams there are alluvial deposits. The county is well watered by constant running streams, and in the hilly portion there are many clear springs, pure and healthy. For domestic use both springs and wells furnish water, which is principally soft. There are both chalybeate and sulphur springs in the county, but no health resort has been established. Pulaski county is especially favored with educational ad- vantages. Four of the eight free schools are high schools. Of private schools are St. John's college, now suspended; a Meth- odist university; the Philander Smith college for the colored people; Professor Conrad's high school; Mrs. Warner's high school for girls ; the Convent high school ; Professor Bale's commercial college and school for telegraphy and shorthand ; (ii6) the medical college and a law school; and the two State insti- tutions for the education of the blind and deaf and dumb. There are fourteen churches in Little Rock belonging to colored denominations. The white people have two Presbyterian churches of the old school and one Cumberland Presbyterian church ; one northern and three southern Methodist churches ; one Catholic cathedral and one of the German Catholics; one Lutheran church; two Episcopal churches; two Baptist churches; one Congregational and two Campbellite churches. There are also church buildings belonging to different denominations. The population of the county which, according to the last census in 188.0, was 32,653, is now about 45,000, of which about 15,000 are colored. The principal cities are Little Rock, the capital of the State and county seat, with a population of about 26,000; Argenta, 1,000; Jacksonville, 200; Mabelville, lOO; Wrightsville, 500, and Sweet Home, 100. RANDOLPH COUNTY. Is in the northeastern quarter of the State, joining the Missouri line on the north, on the east Clay county and Greene county, on the south Lawrence and on the west Sharpe county. Randolph county embraces 700 square miles of fine agricultural lands. The western portion of the county is generally hilly and broken, the eastern portion mostly level, the soil in the latter portion being nearly all alluvial, with an admixture of sand, rendering them easy for cultivation. The hills and uplands are well suited for the cultivation of fruit, and for stock raising, which has so far engaged but very little attention, this county is well and favorably adapted, and affords fine facilities, owing to the number of springs and creeks of good wholesome water, and the abundant pasturage at all times available. Stock keeps fat all through the year, and hogs, finding an abundance of mast in the woods, require no feeding and are fattened with but little cost. About one-fifth of the county is improved; 49,120 acres belong to the United States and may be entered under the homestead act, or bought outright at ^1.25 per acre; 16,000 acres belong to the State and can be donated, and about 19,400 acres are owned by the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company, and are for sale on their easy terms. In fact, improved land may be bought for from $2 to ^50 per acre, and unimproved lands for from $2 to ^$6.50 per acre. In the bottoms the soil is a deep black sandy loam, loose and friable ; in the hills, black loam with a clay foundation. The lands produce well anything that may be grown in this latitude and climate. Cotton has so far been the principal staple, but corn, wheat, oats, rye, Irish and sweet potatoes, turnips, sorghum and peas are grown with success and abundant return by all those (117) farmers who have diverged from the old beaten track and have thrown aside the destructive theory of one crop cultivation. Cotton produces" on uplands 500 pounds ot seed cotton, on bottoms 1,200 pounds per acre, the average yield of corn on hills is 30, on bottoms 75 bushels per acre, wheat produces 7 to 15 bushels, tobacco 1,000 pounds, oats 20 bushels, rye 20 bushels, Irish and sweet potatoes lOO to 200 bushels, turnips 300 bushels, sorghum from ']6 to lOO gallons of syrup, and field peas 25 bushels per acre. The cultivated varieties of grasses succeed well. Clover, timothy, redtop, millet and Hungarian grass yield from i to 2 tons per acre. For v/ant of transportation but little attention has been given to fruit as a market crop, yet there is no better fruit land and climate in the world. All the varieties of apples, peaches, pears, quinces, plums, cherries, grapes, strawberries, raspber- ries, gooseberries, blackberries and dewberries succeed well here. The principal growth of timber in the uplands consists of oak, hickory and ash; gum, cypress and tupelo abound in the bottoms, and there are in the county five rivers navigable for logs. The St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad, and the Kansas City, Springfield & Memphis Railway touch the county, and Black river. Current, Fourche, Eleven Points and Spring rivers abound in many excellent fish. In the western part of the county are found lead, zinc, iron, manganese, but these are as yet undeveloped. The population of the county is about 11,725, of which about 600 are colored people; school- houses, 56, kept open from three to ten months; postoffices, 15; 804 farms, with about 31,578 acres of improved land. We have some excellent mineral springs. Ravenden and Warm Springs, which have been developed, and are specifics for general debility, dyspepsia, dropsy, ulcers, kidney affections, scrofula, sore eyes, and numerous other diseases. There are forty church-houses of Baptist, Methodist, Catholics and Campbellites. Our towns are : Pocahontas, pop- ulation, 500; Ravenden, population, 200; Warm Spiings, pop- ulation, 200; Walnut Hill, 1 50; O'Kean, lOO. SALINE COUNTY. (DESCRIPTION FURNISHED BY J . T. SHOEMAKER, ESQ.) Saline county, centrally located, is bounded on the north by Perry and Pulaski counties, on the east by Pulaski county and the Arkansas river, on the south by Jefferson, Grant and Hot Spring counties, and on the southwest and west by Gar- land and Perry counties, embracing within its limits 489,422 acres of territory, the western portion of which is mountainous and hilly, the eastern and southern level, about equally divided (ii8) hilly and level. The creek and bottom lands are good, rich soil, and some of the level land is alluvial. No prairie. About one-fourth of the lands are improved, five per cent. 62,920 acres are owned by the United States, and subject to homestead entry, and about 3 per cent, belong to the State, and 91,200 acres are owned by the St.. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad Co. The prices of land vary according" to location. For im- proved from ;^5 to ;^30, unimproved from $1 to ^5. The soil in the bottoms is black loam, in the uplands grey and black sands, and in the mountains, rocky. Corn, cotton, wheat, oats, rye, sweet and Irish potatoes, turnips and all other farm and garden products suitable to this latitude can be grown here successfully and yield good results. Cotton produces on uplands 600 pounds, on bottom lands, 800 pounds ; corn yields from 15 to 30 bushels ; wheat, from 10 to 12 bushels ; tobacco, from 700 to 800 pounds ; oats, from 15 to 18 bushels; Irish potatoes, 100 bushels ; sweet potatoes, 200 bushels; turnips, 100 bushels; sorghum, 80 gallons of syrup; field peas, 60 bushels per acre. Redtop, orchard, timothy, millet and herds grasses and clover are grown, and yield from 4,000 to 5,000 pounds per acre. Fruits do well in this county. Peaches, apples, pears, grapes and strawberries are raised for home consumption and the market. Of the Concord and Delaware grape the yield is good and abundant. Not much attention has been given so far to the raising of stock, but horses, mules, cattle and sheep all do well here. All uplands are well timbered with pine. An abundance of white oak in the bottom lands and very little cypress. The facilities for marketing lumber are generally good. The St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad and the Mississippi River^ & Texas Railroad furnishing transportation, and the Saline river with all its forks and tributaries in seasons of high water are excellent float-roads to the Arkansas, though other- wise they are not navigable. Gold, silver, iron, zinc and lead have been found, but not developed to any extent. Of manufactories, we have only saw-mills and several stoneware factories in paying condition. We have 60 common schools, kept open about five months in the year. The population of Saline county is about 12,000, of which about 1,500 are negroes. Of churches, belonging to the Methodists, Baptists, Cum- berland Presbyterians and German. Important towns are Benton, with a population of 800, Bryant, with 50, and Woodson, with lOO inhabitants. (119) Water for domestic purposes is obtained from springs and wells, and is generally soft. SEARCY COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY G. B. GREENHAW, ESQ ) Is situated in the White river valley, about thirty miles south of the Missouri line, and bounded by Baxter, Marion, Boone, Newton, Pope, Van Buren, Cleburne and Stone coun- ties, has an area of 6oo square miles of land, considerable broken, there being nearly one-fourth mountains, one-fourth hilly and two-fourths level land in the county. One-half of the lands of the county are United State lands, acres^ which are open to homesteads, and about one-fourth are im- proved. Corn, cotton, wheat, oats, rye and barley are among the principal crops raised, and their average yield is, for cotton on hill lands 600 pounds of seed cotton, on bottom lands I.OOQ pounds per acre ; for corn, from 20 to 30 bushels; for wheat, from 8 to I 5 bushels; tobacco, 600 to 1,000 pounds; oats, 2a bushels on uplands and 50 on bottom lands; rye, from 8 to 15 bushels; Irish potatoes, 200 bushels; sweet potatoes, lOO bushels; turnips, 200 bushels; field peas, 30 bushels, and sorghum 100 gallons of syrup to the acre. The cultivated varieties of grasses succeed well, and timothy, redtop, clover and millet yield from 2,000 to 3,000, and even 4,000 pounds per acre. Apples, peaches, pears, grapes, and in fact all other fruits, can be raised successfully. Apples do, however, best of all. No attention has as yet been given to stock-raising, though the county is well adapted to this business in many ways. There are about six square miles of pine lands in the county, and cedar, white oak and all other mdigenous trees, except cypress, can be found in abundance. The facilities for marketing these resources are, however, none. We have no railroads and navigable streams. The country is well and abundantly watered by clear and constantly running streams, such as the Buffalo fork of White river, which intersects the northwest corner of the county, Rich- land, Calf and Bear Creeks, which flow from south to north into Buffalo Fork, Red river and Big creek, in the southern part of the county. For domestic purposes, springs and wells furnish- soft water. There are a few mineral springs, to which people resort for the sake of health, claiming to be benefitted by their use in dropsical and other affections. Gold, silver, copper, lead and fine marbles of various kinds have been lately discovered, but so far have not been de- veloped. The population is about iO,000, with but 16 or 17 negroes. (I20) We have 6o free schools, kept open from 3 to 6 months in the year, but we have no high schools in the county. Churches are found in all settlements, and belonging to nearly all Christian denominations. Of towns, there are only two of importance, Marshall, the county seat, with a population of 150 inhabitants, and St. Joe, with 50 inhabitants. The general character of the soil is, in the bottom, black and sandy or stiff loam, in the uplands, light sandy loam, and on the sides of mountains, black rich soil. The prices for im- proved lands are from $10 to ^20, for unimproved lands, from $2 to ^5 per acre. SEBASTIAN COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY H. I. FALCONER, ESQ.) This county is located on the western boundary of the State, its northern boundary is formed by the windings of the Arkansas river, in the south it is bounded by Scott county, and in the east by portions of Scott, Logan and Franklin counties, embracing an area of 364,800 acres and containing a popula- tion of 30,000, about 2,000 of which are colored people. The general face of the country is varied in its character. There are mountains in the southwest, prairie in the southeast, hills, ridges and bottoms in the center and level alluvial belts in the north along the Arkansas river, so that there is about one- twentieth of the county mountainous, thirteen-twentieths rolling, three-twentieths level, one-twentieth alluvial and two-twentieths prairie, about one-tenth of all the lands being improved. About 15,000 acres of the lands belong to the United States, and about 3,000 acres to the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railway Company. The soil in the bottoms is of a deep black loam, in the uplands of a gray and sandy character, and in the mountains much varied in value and composition. The crops principally grown in the county are cotton, corn, wheat, oats, r>e, ixiillet, potatoes and all the garden products. Cotton pro- duces well — on the hill lands from 500 to 800, in the bottoms from 800 to 1,600 pounds of seed cotton; corn, on uplands, from 25 to 35, on bottoms from 50 to 75 bushels per acre. The average yield of wheat is, on uplands, 12 1-2, on bottom lands 20 bushels ; that of oats, 25 bushels on uplands and 50 bushels on bottom lands, and rye yields from 15 to 20 bushels per acre. All root crops yield abundant returns, and cultivated grasses of every kind do well. Timothy, redtop, clover and millet yield from 2,000 to 4.000 pounds to the acre. Fruits are pay- ing well. Apples, peaches, pears, even cherries, plums and berries of all kinds yield a good harvest and produce luscious specimens. Of grapes, the Catawba, Scuppernong and Con- cord do well. Considerable interest is now beins: manifested (121) and much money is invested profitably in stock-raising. Fine breeds of cattle, such as the Jersey and Durham, have been successfully introduced, but hogs of the finer breeds have not done well. The country is stwdded with valuable timber, and walnut, pine, oak, hickory, maple and ash are found in paying quanti- ties. Cypress, however, exists only in small brakes in the bot- toms. The shipping facilities by water are good and consider- able walnut lumber is thus exported, but the high freight rates of the railroads make the shipment of lumber by rail unprofitable. Of railroads, we have the Little Rock & Fort Smith and the St. Louis & San Francisco Roads ; of streams which are navigable, the Arkansas and Poteau rivers ; of other streams, the Vache Gras, Big creek and Muzzard creek. Coal is being developed to some extent all over the county, and farmers haul it into market as elsewhere wood, but owing to high freights and a want of other facilities the market is confined to the county. We have a few manufactories located at Fort Smith, of which there are three furniture and one ice factory, one foundry and one cotton compress and oil mill. Sixty-seven public free schools are distributed over the county, of which 5 are in Fort Smith. These are kept open in the country 5 and in the city 9 months in the year. There is also one high school, Buckner College, situated at Witcherville, in the county. All the country is abundantly watered by running streams and springs, and these latter, together with wells that are sunk, furnish good, wholesome and soft water for domestic purposes ; there are also several mineral springs, chalybeate and sulphur, in the county, but they have never been analyzed, and their vir- tues are not known. Fort Smith, the county seat, is located on the Arkansas river at the head of steamboat navigation, and adjoins the gov- ernment reserve, which is between it and the Indian Territory. It has a population of about 10,000, is the seat of one of the federal courts, and by privilege of government license has a large and lucrative trade with the adjoining Indian nations. SEVIER COUNTY. The area of the county is 597 square miles. It has a popu- lation of 9,000, 20 per cent of which are of the colored race. The county lies on the western boundary of the State, near the northwestern corner, and in the Red river valley. It is bounded on the west by the Indian Territory, on the south by Little river, on the east by Howard and on the north by Polk counties. The general face of the county is level, there being only about one-fifth in mountains and one-fifth in hills, but there ( 122 ) is no prairie. One-twentieth of the lands are improved, 20,000 acres belong to the United States, 40,000 to the State, and none to railroads. Cotton, corn, wheat, oats are the principal crops, but rye, barley, potatoes and sorghum are grown everywhere. Cotton produces 500 pounds on uplands, and 1,200 of seed cotton in bottoms. Corn yields from 15 to 30 bushels; wheat, 5 to 10 bushels ; tobacco, from 500 to 1,000 pounds; oats, from 25 to 40 bushels, and rye from 5 to 10 bushels per acre. Irish pota- toes, .sweet potatoes and turnips will average from lOO to 200 bushels; field peas, 15 bushels, and sorghum, 100 gallons of syrup per acre. Bermuda, orchard and herd grass are the principal grasses grown, but other cultivated grasses will do well. Timotljy, redtop, clover and millet will produce from 2,000 to 4,000 pounds, and others in proportion. Peaches, apples, plums and pears are grown, but not ex- tensively cultivated. Though the forests contain pine, white oak, cypress, of which pine occupies one-half of all the lands, the timber of the county is undeveloped, there being no facilities of transpor- tation except by Little River to a very distant market. There are no railroads as yet in the county. Lands can be bought, improved at from $2 to ^^loo, and unimproved from 50 cents to $5 per acre. The soil is generally of a loamy character, more or less mixed with sand. Manganese, lead and silver have been found, but not de- veloped. Streams and branches and springs are plentiful everywhere, and the water of wells and springs is soft. We have a few mineral springs of chalybeate and sulphur character, but only of local importance. There are 30 common schools open five months in the year, and high schools at Lockeburgh, Brownstown and Nor- woodville. We have of towns, Lockeburgh, with 300 ; Brownstown, with 50; Benlomond, with 50, and Norwoodville, with 100 population, and churches are found in every settlement. SCOTT COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY J. C. GIl.BREATH, ESQ. Became a county in December, 1833. Its boundaries have been changed repeatedly till 1881, when its boundaries were fixed as they are at present. Bounded on the west by the Indian Ter- ritory, on the north by Sebastian and Logan counties, on the east by Yell and on the south by Mongomery and Polk counties. It has an area of about 1,000 square miles, is a typ- ical Arkansas county, and one in which are found all the ele- ments for a prosperous and progressive community. The fol- ( 1-^3) lowing are statistical data from county and United States records : Area, acres, 700,000; assessed valuation, $1,125,000; aver- age value of assessed land per acre, ^4; acres of land belong- ing to the United States and subject to homstead law, 278,000 acres; acres belonging to the State subject to donation, 12,000; school lands, i6th sections, acres, 12,000; individual lands, acres, 150,000; annual rent of land, 33 to $6 per acre. The present population is estimated at 17,000, of v/hich about 40 are colored. There are 64 school districts in the county, in all of which are school-houses. The face of the county presents an undulating timber hills, valleys and table lands, the titles bemg unquestionable and prices for lands ranging according to quality from $2 per acre upwards. Homesteads can be had by paying the United States fees and complying with the homestead laws, or can be entered by purchase at the price ot ;^i.25 per acre, which is being done rapidly, and it is believed that Scott county has increased in population more than any other part of the State, owing to the superior opportunities of obtaining h.omesteads and cheap lands. The roads of the county run generally east and west, on account of the contour of the country. One of the main roads runs north and south, and is called the Line road, on account of its close proximity to the line of the Indian Territory, being the principal route for travel from the Arkansas river to Texas. Four streams and their tributaries cross the county, viz. : Petit Jean flows an easterly course close to its northern bound- ary, Dutchess creek traverses for twelve miles its eastern part, flowing northeast, and Poteau river, flowing thirty miles through the center of the county in a westerly direction, and the Fourche le Fave river, which rises in the extreme southwestern corner of the county, and flows for fifty miles through, on its way to the Arkansas river, being bordered by rich valleys, with as good and productive land as in this or any other State. The average elevation of the county is about 700 feet in the valleys, and the highest mountain point is about 2,000 feet above the sea level. Water is abundant lor all purposes, including manufactur- ing, and water can be had by sinking wells from 12 to 15 feet, and there are many noted mineral springs equal to any in this State except Hot Springs. The soil is generally a sandy loam, and will produce any- thing which is indigenous between the tropics and the Canada line. Corn, wheat, oats, rye and barley grow w ell here, and so do all kinds of grasses, and as for fruit and vegetables the world cannot beat it. Many large orchards and vineyards in the county give evidence of the productiveness of fruit in this county, and as the native grapes are almost as fine in size and (124) as delicious in flavor as cultivated grapes, it shows that the county is the natural home of the grape. As regards small fruit, and any kind of berries, it is only necessary to consider how much labor you will command to care for them, and they will return you ample interest. Cotton is the staple of this county, grows well and produces from three-quarters to one and a-half bales to the acre. Minerals in this county are abundant and diversified. Coal is found all over the western part of good quality, and in veins four to fifteen feet thick, and in many places m other parts of the county in paying quantities ; it is free of sulphur, iron and phos- phorous. It is different from the coal in Sebastian county and on the line of the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railroad. Lime- stone and iron are also plentiful in the southern part of the county. Churches, schools, cotton gins, saw-mills, grist-mills and planing mills are in every section of the county. There are also two high grade schools, one at Waldron and one at Cauthron, both having a large attendance, are well conducted by able teachers. The timber of the county is of many varieties. Pine, oak, cedar, gum, ash, shell-bark hickory, walnut and post-oak are in large area and fine quality. The peculiarity of the pine timber in this county is that much of it is known as the cork variety, so called because of its easy working and smooth grain. Cedar and gum also abound in considerable areas. We have a mild climate, and last winter only one snow about two inches deep. Horses, mules, cattle, sheep and hogs do well with but little feeding, there being an abundance of range, and many are raised here, but are generally sold while they are young to ranchmen farther west. Our railroad prospects are good, per- manent surveys having been made of the Little Rock & Choc- taw Railroad, Kansas City, Fort Smith & Sabine Pass Air Line Railroad, Fort Smith & Southern Railroad, all of which will pass through Waldron, our county seat. Waldron, the county seat, is forty-five miles south of Fort Smith, one hundred miles west of Little Rock and twenty-one miles east of the line, between the State of Arkansas and the Indian Territory, is beautifully situated on the banks of the Poteau river, and is a substantially built town of mostly brick buildings in modern style. It has about thirty business houses, with about eight hundred inhabitants. All the leading Christian religions except Catholic have organizations here, and the facilities for churches and schools are ample. There is room for more people here. (125) SHARP COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY SAM. DAVIDSON, ESQ,) Is situated in the White river valley, joins in its northern- most point the State of Missouri, and is bounded by Randolph, Lawrence, Independence, Izard and Fulton counties, has an area of 590 square miles and a population of 12,000, about 200 of which are colored people. The general face of the county is rolling, one-half of the county is hilly, the balance level and undulating. Nearly one- fourth is alluvial formation, but there are no prairies. The soil in the bottoms is alluvial and very fine, in the upland it varies in quality from the best to poorest. Two hundred thousand acres of all the lands are improved, of which about 72,000 acres are in cultivation. The United States owns 136,440 acres, the State 20,000 acres and 7,000 acres are the property of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad Company. Im- proved lands can be bought for from $2 to ^20, and unim- proved lands from 50 cents to ^5 per acre. The crops gener- ally grown are corn, wheat, oats, rye, cotton, Irish and sweet potatoes, sorghum and some of the cultivated grasses, such as redtop, clover and German millet. The average yield per acre of cotton on hill lands is 550 pound*, on bottoms 1,000 pounds of seed cotton per acre, of corn from 30 to 50 bushels, of wheat II bushels, oats from 16 to 30 bushels, rye from 10 to 12 bushels, Irish potatoes 160 bushels, sweet potatoes 225 bushels, turnips 200 bushels, field peas 16 bushels per acre, and sorghum realizes about 1 10 gallons of syrup to the acre. Timothy and redtop bring about 2,000 pounds, clover 2,600 pounds, and millet and Hungarian grass nearly 2 tons to the acre. Apples, peaches, cherries, plums, apricots, quinces and pears produce well, but peaches seem to succeed better than any other fruit, a failure in the peach crop being very rare. Of grapes, the Concord, Delaware and lona succeed best, but the Ives seedling, Salem and Martha have also been grown with success. Considerable attention has been paid for the last five years to the raising of cattle, horses, mules and sheep. The county is well adapted to stock-raising, and a few heads of Durham and Hereford breeds have been introduced. Sheep thrive well and are free from disease. Pine, all the varieties of oak, walnut, hickory, ash, syca- more and cedar, are found in the county; a belt of pine timber in the southwest portion is covering an area of 15 miles in length, and from 2 to 5 in width. There are as yet no facilities for the marketing of pine, but the railroad passing through the northern portion of the county affords good facilities for the marketing of oak, ash and walnut, which abound in that region. The Kansas City, Springfield & Memphis Railway passes (126) from northeast to southwest along Spring river, through the county. There are no navigable streams, the principal ones, however, which are Spring river, Strawberry river. Poke Bayou, North Big creek. Big creek, Piney fork. South fork, Mill, Reed's, Rock, Martin's and Sullivan creeks, and many other smaller branches are running all the seasons, and afford good watering for stock and other purposes. Water for domestic uses is ob- tained from springs and wells. Of mineral springs, we have Cave Spring, with an im- mense supply, which is located in a huge cavern, near the road leading from Evening Shade to Batesville. The water is per- fectly transparent, and so light that blood, ink, milk and other fluids of that density will' sink to the bottom of the vessel con- taining the water. It has a free effect on the action of the kid- neys, and is considered good in treatment of the diseases of that organ. It has, however, never been anal3'^zed. There are many minerals, such as zinc, lead, manganese and iron found in this county. Zinc has been mined and smelted at the works of the American Zinc Co. at Calamine ; pig iron has been made at Beven's furnace, near Calamine, but the works are now idle. The part of the county in which these minerals are found being remote from transportation, there are no facilities for their being successfully marketed. We have a icw factories, one for tobacco, wool-carding mills, a broom factory, distillery, and about ten good flouring mills. We have about 57 common free schools in the county, which as such are kept open for three months in the year. In addition, and for higher attainments, we have at Evening Shade an excellent high school, and also the Liberty Hill Academy and the Ash Flat Institute. Twenty-five Methodist, 20 Baptist, 5 Cumberland Presby- terin; i old school Presbyterian and i Christian church are found in the principal settlements. (^^ towns we have Evening Shade, the county seat, with 400; Ash Flat, with 250; Hardy, with 200; Williford, with 150; Calamine, with 50; King's Mill with 50, and Center, with 50 inhabitants. STONE COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY W. H. H. OYLER, ESQ.) Situated in the White river valley and in the northern por- tion of the State, is bounded by White river in the northeast and east, and in the south, west and north by the counties of Cleburne, Van Buren, Searcy and Baxter, embraces an area of 600 square miles. The general face of the country is broken, one-fourth of it bemg mountainous and the rest hilly, with a few alluvial strips ( 12/ ) along the banks of the rivers and streams. About one-eighth of all the lands are improved, nearly three-fourths belong to the United States, 6o,000 acres, including i6th sections, to the State, and i6o acres are owned by the St. Louis, Iron Moun- tain & Southern Railroad Company. The soil in the bottoms is alluvial, in the uplands a light sandy loam, and in the moun- tains black sand with limestone foundation. The prices of land vary from $"/ to ^40 per acre for improved, and from ;$2.50 to Sio per acre for unimproved. Cotton, corn, wheat, oats and all other farm products are grown and make good crops. Cotton yields from 500 to 1,000 pounds of seed cotton on hill and bottom respectively, corn produces from 25 to 40 bushels, wheat and rye 10 bushels, oats 25 bushels, Irish and sweet potatoes and turnips from 100 to 250 bushels, and sorghum about lOO gallons to the acre. Timothy, redtop, clover and millet, as well as other of the cultivated varieties of grasses, produce well, and yield from 2,000 to 3,000 pounds per acre. Live-stock receives increased ■attention, but the Durham breed of cattle is all that has been so far introduced. Fruits of all varieties and kind succeed well here. Of grapes, the Concord does best. Nearly all kinds of oak are found in the forests. The white oak grows all over the county in abundance, and pine, cedar, walnut and hickory are in some localities, but there is no cypress. The only facilities for ship- ping are furnished by the While river, the only navigable stream, and there being no railroads in the county. Of minerals, we have iron and manganese, but these have never been developed. Water for domestic purposes, obtained from springs and wells, is both hard and soft. The "Bon Air" mineral springs, containing iron, are recommended for all diseases for which iron is used. Common free schools are in every district, and at Moun- tain View we have a high school. Baptist, Methodist and other denominations have churches in every neighborhood. Our principal town is Mountain View, with 140 inhabitants, and the population of the county is 6,000, of which 100 are negroes, ST. FRANCIS COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY J. M. STEWART.) Situated within six miles of the Mississippi river, with its eastern boundary, and in the St. Francis river valley, is bounded by the counties of Crittenden, Lee, Monroe, Woodruff and Cross, contains an area of 397,018 17-100 acres, and a popula- tion of about 12,000, 4,000 of whom are colored people. The (128) country is generally level, with about 7 per cent, rolling up- lands, 88 per cent, being alluvial and 5 per cent, prairie. Twenty-five per cent, of all the area is improved. Four hundred and forty acres belong to the United States, and only about 10,000 to the State, but the Memphis & Little Rock Railroad owns about acres. The crops generally grown are cotton, corn, oats, wheat, rye, potatoes, turnips, peas and pumpkins, in fact everything which this latitude produces. The average yield of these crops is, on hill lands, for cotton 1,000 pounds of seed cotton, on bottoms 1,500 pounds; corn, 25 bushels on uplands and 40 bushels on bottom lands ; wheat, from 10 to 18 bushels; oats, 25 to 35 bushels; rye, 15 to 25 bushels; Irish and sweet pota- toes, 250 bushels; turnips, 400 bushels; field peas, 60 bushels, and sorghum, 180 gallons of syrup per acre. All varieties of cultivated grasses do well. Timothy and redtop produce 4,000 pounds, clover 5,000 pounds, and millet 6,000 pounds per acre. Pears, apples, peaches, quinces, plums, cherries, grapes, are cultivated extensively. Pears, apples and plums succeed best, and of grapes, the Concord, scuppernong and Martha pro- duce most 'abundantly. Very little attention is paid to live stock. The country seems well adapted to this business, having abundant water and grazing privileges, and some improved breeds have been introduced with marked success, the Jersey cattle doing well here. Our timber is abundant. Cypress, white oak, walnut, red gum and hickory grow everywhere, and the facilities for mar- keting lumber are also abundant. The Memphis & Little Rock Railroad intersects the center of the county from east to west, and the St. Louis, Iron Moun- tain & Southern Railroad crosses the center of the county in a northerly direction. The St. Francis and L'Anguille rivers, running parallel to each other in a southerly direction, are navigable, and have many excellent tributaries in the ccmty. On the Memphis & Little Rock, about two and a-half miles east of Forrest City, is an immense marble bed, covering about 320 acres of land, and from 8 to 20 feet deep, producing a fine article. The general soil of the county is productive. In the bot- toms we have buckshot and black sandy loam, in the uplands clay loam. Improved lands can be bought from ^5 to ^40 and unimproved from ^l to ^$10 per acre. There are forty common schools distributed over the county, kept open from three to ten months, according to the vote in the district in which they are located, and the Helena district high school is located at Wheatly. Thirty Methodist, Baptist, Cumberland Presbyterians, Old School Presbyterians 129) and Catholic churches are found over the county and generally in all neighborhoods. Our water is principally hard, and is obtained from wells and springs, but a good deal of cistern water is used for domes- tic purposes. The Stewart and Davis mineral springs have some reputation as a cure for dyspepsia and diarrhoea. The principal towns are Forrest City, with 2,500, Wheatly 300, Madison 300, Mellbrook, Goodwin, Palestine and Colts Station with about 150 population each. UNION COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY S. B. BAIRD, ESQ.) With an area of 1,080 square miles and a population of about 15,000, one-half of which belong to the negro race, is situated in the southern part of the State and the Ouachita River Valley, which river forms its northwestern boundary; other boundaries are, Ouachita county on the north, Columbia county on the west, and the State of Louisiana on the south. The general face of the county is comparatively level, with no mountains, and only a few hills draining well towards the Ouachita river. About one-sixth of the county consists of improved lands; 43,400 acres belong to the United States, 80,000 to 100,000 to, the State 12,000 to 15,000 acres to the Mississippi, Red River & Texas Railroad Co. The general character of the soil in the bottoms is sandy mixed with alluvial, in the uplands sandy. The'prices for improved lands are $1.2^ to ;^5.00, for un- improved lands, 50 cents to ^1.25 per acre. The principal crops of the county are cotton, corn, oats, peas and potatoes, of which cotton yields on hill lands, 6 to 800 pounds ; on bottom lands, 1,000 to 1,200 pounds of seed cotton to the acre; corn, from 12 to 15 bushels on uplands, on bottom lands, from 20 to 25 bushels; oats, from 15 to 25 bushels; to- bacco, from 800 to 1,000 pounds ; rye, from 7 to 10 bushels; Irish potatoes, from lOO to 300 bushels ; sweet potatoes, about the same; peas, from 10 to 12 bushels per acre, and 100 gallons of syrup to the acre of sorghum. Of cultivated grasses very few are grown in the county. Of fruits, peaches, apples and grapes are grown for domes- tic purposes, the varieties of grapes grown being principally the Scuppernong. The timber of the county is abundant, and the forests are abundant in all varieties. Pine and white oak abound on all unimproved lands, and cypress grows along the margins of streams. We have no facilities for shipping lumber to markets except along the northeastern boundary of the county, where the waters of the Ouachita river furnish a navigable highway for all purposes. So far no railroads have been built in the ( I30) county, though it is expected that facihties of this character will exist at no distant day. The population is now reckoned at about 15,000, half of which are negroes. While coal and iron ore is found along the marginal hills, no development except for private purpose has so far been made. Tne educational advantages here are as good as generally in the country. About 120 common schools are distributed in the different school districts, which are kept open about three months in the year. In addition, we have the Eldorado and Blanchard high school, and another good school at Mount Holly. The Baptists, Methodists and Presbyterians have about sixty churches. Of principal towns, there are Eldorado, the county seat, with a population of 500, Hillsboro lOO, Blanchard Springs 150, Mount Holly 150, Lisbon 50, Three Creeks 75, Cham- pagnolle 75, New London 50, Caledonia 50. The county is well watered by constant running streams and branches, which intersect nearly every section of its terri- tory. Water for domestic purposes is obtained both from springs and wells, and is generally soft. Of mineral springs, we have Blanchard's, Wooley's and Perdue's Springs, the waters of which have been analyzed and show valuable medic- inal properties. VAN BUREN COUNTY. Bounded on the north by Searcy and Stone counties, on the east by Cleburne county, on the south by Faulkner and Conway counties and on the west by Pope county. Area about 460,890 acres. Population nearly io,ooo, about 100 colored. The southeastern part of this county is a plateau, some 400 feet high, while the balance of the lands are hilly and mountainous, with a few bottoms along the streams. Two hundred and forty-eight thousand nine hundred and eighty acres in the county tDelong to the United States and may be entered under the homestead act. The Iron Mountain Rail'vay Company owns now no land in the county. There are about 60,000 acres under improvement. The principal crops raised are corn, cotton, oats and gen- eral farm products, the highlands in the south being especially adapted to the growth of oats and wheat. The soil is generally good, of a siliceous character, and having a clayey, retentive subsoil, is not much affected by drouth. Cotton produces well, and will yield, on the table lands, from 600 to 800 pounds of seed cotton to the acre, and in the uplands, where the soil has an admixture of sandy loam, it will produce 800 pounds on an average, which increases to 1,600 pounds in some of the more fertile bottom lands. Corn yields in the same proportion from 20 to 35 bushels to the acre, and wheat 15 bushels. Cultivated grasses do well in this county anywhere, and v/ill harvest from (131) one to two tons per acre. Fruits of all kinds, especially grapes, do equally well. For stock-raising this county seems especially adapted, and though but little has been done to try the improved breeds, wherever the Jersey, Durham and Holstcin have been brought it has shown the climate and condition of this" section to be favorable to their growth and continuance. The timber of this county is varied and abundant. In the southeastern part of the county abounds the pine in luxuriating h>rests, and oak and hickory, sweet and black gum are found along the streams in large belts. Van Buren has no railroad or navigable stream, and the marketing of her timber resources is therefore out of the question. Otherwise the county is well watered, being intersected by numerous clear and beautiful streams, bordered by rich pasture lands. In the northern por- tion we have Owl Fork of White river, with its many little trib- utaries, flowing in an easterly direction ; in the central portion, running east, we have Little Red river; in southwestern part are the head waters of Point Remove creek, and southeast the Xorth Fork of Cadron creek heads in the county, flowing twelve miles towards the south. There are many good mineral springs of good healing qualities. Those named the White and Black Sulphur and the Price springs are the most favorably known among them. Coal is found in the county, and is used for blacksmithing and other purposes. We have fifteen common schools, and many church-houses ■J distributed through the county. The county seat is Clinton, with about 200 population. Of other towns and villages are Liberty Springs, Choctaw, Scotland, Oak Flat and Bee Branch and about twelve post- offices. WASHINGTON COUNTY. (CONTRIBUTED BY J. P. CARNAHAN AND F. R. EARLE, ESQ.) The area of this county is 890 square miles. It is situated in the northwestern corner of the State, and is bounded on the west by the Indian Territory, on the north by Benton county, and the east by Madison and on the south by Crawford coun- ties. The general features of the county are broken, being about one-third mountainous, one-third hills and one-third level land. Originally about one-fifth of all the lands was prairie, including some of the highest hills. About one-third of the level lands are alluvial, especially all the valleys of the streams. One-half of all the lands of the county are improved. Thirty- five thousand acres belong to the United States and 20,000 acres to the State. Practically no lands in Washington county belong to railroads. A few scattered forties were selected however, by the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railroad Company' (132) The soil of the county is generally good, in the bottoms alluvial, in the uplands a clay loam with a red clay foundation, and in the mountains sandy loam and clay loam. The prices of land are, for improved, $$ to $25 per acre, and for unimproved from ^1.25 to ;$io per acre. This is strictly speaking the grain-raising portion of Arkan- sas, but nearly all crops which are raised between the cotton lands and the British possessions will grow here. Corn will yield from 20 to 50 bushels, wheat from 8 to 16 bushels, oats from 30 to 40 bushels, rye from 8 to 15 bushels, Irish potatoes 150 bushels, sweet potatoes 200 bushels, turnips 200 bushels and sorghum 150 gallons per acre. The cultivated varieties of grasses do lirst-rate. Red clover, timothy, redtop, blue grass, millet, Hungarian yield abundant returns. Timothy 1,500 pounds, redtop 1,500 pounds, clover 3,000 pounds, millet 4,000 pounds, and Hungarian grass 4,000 pounds per acre. Where alfalfa has been cultivated it has produced 3,000 pounds. This county, by its climate and soil, is one of the safest and most productive fruit regions of this continent. Apples, peaches, pears, plums, cherries, strawberries, raspberries, black- berries, gooseberries yield handsome crops and profits. Grape culture is being tried with success. The Concord and Norton's Virginia are doing best, but others, such as the Neosho and Delaware have been tried with promising results. Stock-raising receives more attention from year to year, and the county is well adapted to this purpose, especially to the raising of hogs and sheep. Hogs have been generally im- proved. Horses, cattle, mules and sheep have been improved only partially. Shorthorns, Jersey cattle, Berkshire hogs, South- down sheep and Leicester sheep and Norman horses are among the breeds imported. White oak, walnut and cherry are found in paying quanti- ties, but white oak timber is more abundant than any other. There are no facilities for shipping. Freights of the railroads alm'^^ amount to prohibition thus far, except on railroad ties, millions of which have been furnished to the St. Louis & San PVancisco and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railways, and whatever timber the railroads want for their own use can be shipped without any trouble, but none other to any profit. The railroads in the county are the St, Louis & San Francisco, com- pleted north and south, and the Pacific & Great Eastern Rail- road, now building east and west. Of streams and springs there are an abundance. The principal ones, in addition to White river, which alone is navi- gable, are Three Forks and Illinois creek. All these streams and others never go dry. Minerals, such as lead, coal and salt are known to exist, but have not been developed. (133) Flouring mills, woolen mills, fruit evaporators and shops for the manufacture of plows and other agricultural implements, as well as for wagons, have been established and are thriving. Washington county has a rapidly growing population, now about 30,000, of which only about 900 are colored people. We have schools in every school district, about 135 in all, which are open free for instruction in the common English branches from three to eight months in the year. We have also the Arkansas Industrial University, an institution of the State, the Cane Hill College. Cincinnati Academy, Lutheran Seminary and Fayetteville District Conference Institute. Of churches, there are forty, belonging to Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, Roman Catholics, Cumberland Presbyterians, Christians, Luth- erans, Adventists and Dunkards. The water used for domestic purposes is found both hard and soft, and is obtained from wells and springs. Of mineral springs we have chalybeate and sulphur springs. The analysis of the waters show the presence of sulph. magnesia, sulph. alumina, sulph. iron, bicarbonate of lime, bicarbonate of mag- nesia, and is recommended for rheumatism, general debility and biliousness. Our principal towns are Fayetteville, 2,800 inhabitants, Springdale 700, West Fork 300, Cincinnati 300, Boonesboro 350, Evansville 200, Prairie Grove 300, Goshen 250. WHITE COUNTY. L (CONTRIBUTED BY ISRAEL M. MOORE.) P- Situated in the White river valley and divided nearly in halves by Little Red river, one of the tributaries of White river; bounded on the east by White river, on the north by Jackson and Independence counties, on the west by Cleburne and Faulkner counties, and on the south by Lonoke and Prairie counties; containing an area of nearly i,iOO square miles and a population of 20 000, of which 2,000 are colored people. The face of the country is rolling, three-fifths hilly and two-fifths level ; of the latter about one-half alluvial, with no prairie. About twenty per cent, of the land is improved; 12,700 acres belong to the United States, 29,000 acres to the State and 84,400 acres to the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company. The soil is generally good and produces well, and the prices are moderate: for improved lands, from S5 to $2^, and for unimproved, from ;^i to ;$iO. The crops generally grown in this county are corn, cotton, wheat, oats, peas, grass, potatoes, turnips and sorghum. Cotton yields on hill lands 800 pounds of seed cotton, and 1,500 pounds on bottom lands. Corn averages from 25 to 40 bushels, wheat from 7 to 10, tobacco from 600 to 800 pounds, oats from 25 to 40 bushels, (134) rye from 8 to 12 bushels, Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes and turnips from 150 to 200 bushels, field peas 20 bushels and sor- ghum 125 gallons of syrup to the acre. Redtop, clover, millet, timothy and orchard grass grow- well and produce from 3,000 to 4,000 pounds to the acre. Fruits and grapes succeed remarkably well, except per- haps pears, which are subject to blight, especially the dwarf varieties. Apples, peaches, plums, quinces, strawberries, black- berries, raspberries and gooseberries yield large and luscious fruits. Live stock is receiving considerable attention of late, and the county is well adapted to its growth. Improved breeds have not been introduced to any great extent until recently. Horses, mules, cattle and hogs succeed best, and sheep do tolerably well. The stock business is looking up, and is the most profitable business of the county. Of timber we have all varieties common here : white,! black, red, post and overcup oak, black walnut, hickory, ash,, cedar, pine, pecan, cypress, cottonwood, sweet and black gum, and Spanish and cow oak. Valuable white oak grows in almost any part of the county abundantly, and pine and cypress in considerable quanties. The transportation facilities for the marketing of lumber and products generally are good. Of railroads we have the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad, intersecting the county from north to south. Of rivers and streams we have White and Little Red rivers, which are navigable, and quite a number of small streams, running all the year, which are not navigable. Water for stock and farming purposes is abundant in all parts of the county ; for domestic purposes springs and wells furnish both hard and soft water; and of mineral springs we have several which, for their known health restoring qualities, ha?Ts become celebrated, and the summer and sanitary resorts of invalids from all parts of this continent. Among these are the most prominent the sulphur and chalybeate springs of Searcy, recommended and sought for malarial affections and general debility, and in the midst of a thriving city, turnished with all the comforts and conveniences for rest, recreatioYi and enjoyment; the Armstrong chalybeate springs, for all disorders caused by indigestion and sluggish action of the liver and kid- neys, and also provided with good accommodations ; and the Griffin springs, with fine chalybeate waters, recommended for indigestion and malaria. The educational facilities are first-class. There are about eighty-eight school districts, with from one to three schools in each, which are kept open from three to eight months in the (135) year. At Searcy we have a first-rate male and female academy, and at Judsonia the Judsonia University. Of towns and their population we have Searcy with 2,000, Beebe i,ooo, Judsonia 700, Bradford 100, Russell 100, Bald Knob 50, Kensett lOO, West Point 200, El Paso 200 and Center Hill 50. WOODRUFF COUNTY. (CONTRIBUIED BY W. P. CAMPBELL.) Woodruff county was organized in 1862. It lies immedi- ately on the east bank of White river, directly west of Memphis, Tennessee. It is nearly forty miles long from north to south, and about twenty wide from east to west, and contains 384,000 acres. It is part of a system of lowland farm country which extends from Black river southward to the confluence of White river with the Mississippi, and is noted for its extraordinary yield per acre in corn and cotton. The greater portion of the county is very level. The soil is a rich dark sandy loam, very quick and generous, is unsurpassed in fertility and continued usefulness. To a maximum product per acre in corn and cotton, it is shown by official statistics to be also a region highly adapted to a diversified farm industry. Grasses, fruits, garden products^ oats, rye and millet find a congenial home in its soil and climate, and therefore specially suited to the small farm. Though probably to the extent of three eighths of the whole is unsuited to farm operations without original expendi- ture lor drainage, that it is thoroughly appreciated for its val- uable timber is shown by the fact of only 37,309 acres having record as public property, the remainder 346,691 acres being the property of individual holders. The forest area — timber known to be of merchantable quality and size — is estimated at a quarter million of acres. The prevailing varieties are accord- ing to the following order of distribution: White oak, gum, ovcrcup, ash, hickory, red oak and cypress. To the excellent character of the farm lands and timber it is to be added that the county is also deserving of kindly mention on the score of population. The white inhabitants, who are in excess of the colored two or three hundred, have a standing throughout the State as being among the most respectable in Arkansas. The colored citizens, who as a rule were the slaves of their present employes, are most orderly and prosperous, especially since they are not without the encouragement and sympathy of their white neighbors. The price of the best grade lands, improved, is from $1$ to ;$40 per acre, unimproved ^10 per acre. Second grade, im- proved, from ^10 to $20 per acre, unimproved ^3.50 to $8 per acre. Timbered lands, according to character of soil on which it is found and accessible outlet, from 5i-50 to ;^io per acre. (136) The evasive and subversive rule of under estimating values for purposes of taxation having also obtained in this county, but little conception of its progress and advance is to be gained from its local statistics of assessments, and from crop reports. The present population of the county is 14,000; number of polls, 3,510; number of scholars enrolled in the public schools, 1,950; number of school districts, 22; organized churches, Methodist 8, Baptist 4, Presbyterians 2 ; State and county tax, 12 mills on ^$100. Number of towns, six : Augusta, Cotton Plant, Deview, Howells, Grays Station and Riverside. Augusta, the county seat, is situated on White river, eight miles from Riverside, on the Batesville & Brinkley Railroad, and ten miles from Russell, on the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad. The remaining towns — with the exception of Deview — are situated on the Batesville & Brinkley Railroad. Transportation facilities are afforded by a tri-weekly line of steamers from Memphis to Augusta, and by the Batesville & Brinkley Railroad, which passes from south to north through the heart of the county. Woodruff county extends a hearty welcome to good, honest and industrious people from all sections of our common country, who will aid her in rebuilding her waste places, and the development of her wonderful resources. YELL COUNTY. Bounded on the northeast by the Arkansas river, north by Logan, west by Scott, south by Montgomery and Garland and east by Perry counties, contains an area of 186,700 acres and a population of 14,500 inhabitants, of whom 900 are colored. The face of the country is undulating ; twenty per cent, in mountains, the tops of which are tillable ; fifty per cent, in hills and thirty per cent, is level ; of the latter about ten per cent, is alluviaLand five per cent, prairie. Nearly thirty per cent, is improved. There are 280,000 acres of United States lands sub- ject to homestead. The soil in the bottoms is very rich, and, with small exceptions, free from overflow. In the uplands it is productive mixed with sand, and in the mountains, where level enough to be cultivated, it is generally fertile. Land can be bought, im- proved for from ;$io to ;$40, and unimproved from ^3 to ;^io per acre. The crops are usually good. Corn, wheat, cotton, oats, timothy, red top, clover and tobacco produce well, but the latter is only sparingly used. The average yield of cotton on hill lands is 800 pounds, on bottoms 1,600 pounds per acre. Corn yields from 30 to 50 bushels, wheat from 10 to 15 bushels, oats ( ^37 ) from 40 to 60 bushels per acre, and the grasses produce from i to 2 tons. Fruits are raised as yet only for home use, but apples, peaches, grapes, strawberries, nectarines and other varieties do well. Stock-raising has very little attention, though the county is well adapted for propagating and feeding of all kinds of cat- tle ; the Jersey, mixed with the native scrub, thrives well, and Poland China and Berkshire hogs both do well, weighing from 400 to 600 pounds. Of railroads we have the Dardanelle & Russellville road, a feeder to the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railroad, which runs to the river bank opposite Dardanelle, in this county. Of streams we have the Arkansas river, the Petit Jean and Fourche La Fave, which are navigable, and the Delaware, Chicaloh, Riley, Dutchess and other running streams, abounding in fish. Coal is found in pany localities and is used for domestic purposes, but has not been developed; but the most and best leads are eight and ten miles from the Arkansas river and from the Dardanelle & Russellville Railway. We have only a wool carding machine, which does a moderate business, and the Dardanelle Manufacturing Com- pany, employing a number of hands in the making of wagons. There are about seventy-five school districts in the county, with an average of one school to the district, and which are kept open from four to ten months. All denominations have houses of worship in the principal settlements. Our towns are: Dardanelle, with 1,500; Danville, with Ferguson's Mill, 350, and other small villages — Bluffton, Briggs- ville. Gravelly Hill, Fair Hill, Jennings' Falls, Centerville, Ola and Chicaloh. Water for domestic purposes is obtained from wells and springs, and is usually soft. Of mineral springs we have the Dardanelle Sulphur Springs, about eleven miles west of Darda- nelle, than there is no superior sulphur water. Nebo Springs, 1,500 feet altitude, are said to be a specific for dyspepsia. No analysis. THE CITY OF FORT SMITH. Is situated on the line between the State of Arkansas and the Indian Territory, on the south bank of the Arkansas river, about fifty feet above the ordinary level of the river. Its topog- raphy is such as to afford excellent drainage. The city limits are a mile and three-quarters by a mile and a quarter, containing about 12,000 acres. It is divided into blocks 300 feet square, intersected by alleys 20 feet wide. The (138) blocks are sub-divided into 12 lots 50x140 feet. The streets range in width from 50 to 120 feet. In 1880, when the United States census was taken, there were 3,256 inhabitants in the city; at the present time the population is estimated at io,odo. Of this number about 1,200 are colored and about 1,000 Germans. Ever}'- State in the Union and almost every nationality is here represented. The writer has lived in Fort Smith nearly fifteen years and has been a close observer. He fully certifies that Fort Smith is a remarkably healthy city. The physicians say that there is no disease which they could properly term the prevailing one. The political parties are pretty nearly equally divided. It is said of this city that "no rebels returned after the war and no Yankees came here." Such a thing as political or sectional proscription is unknown in either social or business life. Every citizen here enjoys every social and political right they could enjoy in any city in the country, north or south. It would be impossible to find a place where a man will find his level or be given credit for his full worth sooner than in this. The latch- string is always out, and the hand of welcome extended to all who come into the city to seek their fortune in any honorable pursuit, regardless of nationality, section of country, political or religious belief. There is no city in which a man's wealth or poverty has less to do with fixing his social status than in this. There are in the city three Methodist, two Baptist, one Presbyterian, one German Lutheran, one Catholic and one Epis- copal organizations having very creditable church buildings. The Campbellites are now building a church, and the German Catholics are about to commence one. There are three large public school houses for the white children, capable of seating about 1,200 children, and a large brick school house for the colored children. In addition to the public schools, the German Lutherans have a large school, and there is a large Convent school, beside several other private schools of minor importance. The public school system is rapidly improving, and its high school privileges constantly being increased. The last United States Congress made a mag- nificent donation to the public schools of this city, granting to the city of Fort Smith, to sell for the benefit of the schools, about 200 acres of ground, which has been cut up into 1,200 lots 50 by 140 feet. Less than one-third of them were sold last spring, yielding ^125,000. The policy of the school directors is to hold the principal intact, using only the interest. Another sale will probably be made in the course of two years, giving time for the lots already sold to be built upon. It is believed that from this source that a fund of $400,000 will be realized, the interest of which, with the city's pro rata of the ( 139) State school tax, will give ample means to conduct a splendid system of schools without resort to local taxation. The city of Fort Smith has a bonded indebtedness of about ^7,000, which is being reduced annually by a tax of two and one-half mills. Fort Smith's pro rata of the county in- debtedness is about ^4,500, making her total indebtedness ;^i 1,500. This county's indebtedness will all be paid within two years. The State, county and city taxes for the present year amount to ^2.35 on the $100 of assessed valuation. It is esti- mated that the assessment shows but about 40 per cent, of the true value of the property. This makes the rate of taxation but about 94 cents on the true value of the property. The taxes for present year are made up as follows : State 4 mills, county expenditures 5 mills, county bonds 2 mills, special school 5 mills, city expenditures 5 mills, city debt 2 1-2 mills. Next year the school tax will be reduced three mills, the county debt tax one-half mill, reducing the tax two per cent., which on true values will only be 80 cents on the ^lOO- Under the constitution of the State the utmost limit of taxation that can be imposed after the old indebtedness is settled is 2 1-2 per cent. This includes a 5 mill special school tax, which can only be levied by vote of the citizens of the school district. Neither county nor city, since 1874, has been permitted to loan their credit or issue bonds for any purpose except to fund indebtedness existing prior to that date. The city is well built, containing a large number of highly creditable private residences. The resident portion of the city is not built in blocks. It is a rare thing to find a residence built on less than one lot of 50x140 feet, and from that up to a full block of twelve lots. The business portion of the city is built of brick and stone from two to three stories high. The character of the buildings is such as to show that the citizens have confidence in the prosperity of the city. A ^40,000 court- house has been settled on by the county, and a large United States court-house is to be built. There is an ice factory, telephone exchange, gas w^orks, water works, electric light company and street railway in full operation, all of them built with a view to extension and en- largement to meet the growing demand. Fort Smith is the present terminus of the St. Louis & San Francisco and the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railways. The latter connects at Little Rock with the St. Louis, Iron Moun- tain & Texas, the Memphis & Little Kock and the Arkansas Valley Roads, and will be extended to Arkansas City in Kansas. The St. Louis & San Francisco Road is to be ex- tended to connect with the Texas system of roads at Paris, Texas, so soon as the bridge across the Arkansas river, near ( I40) this city, is completed, which will be January i, 1886. Another road is being projected from Baxter Springs, Kansas, its present terminus, to Galveston, Texas. The Arkansas river, which is navigable in the heavy freighting seasons for large boats, is a constant menace to the railroads and insures Fort Smith fair freight rates. During the entire year small boats, built for the trade, add largely to the commerce of the city, ascending the Arkansas river to Fort Gibson in the Indian Territory. The county, probate and circuit court is held here. In addition to these, the United States district court for the Western district of Arkansas, having criminal jurisdiction of the greater part of the Indian Territory, is held at Fort Smith, bringing crowds of witnesses, jurors, etc. The annual expenses of this court is about ^250,000, the greater part of which is spent in this city. Much attention is being paid to manufactories. The oil and cotton compress is the second in size in the United States. It covers nearly three acres of ground, and ranges from 20 to 50 feet in height. It is estimated that this institution, by the purchase of cotton seed, saving in cost of ginning cotton, and making a center for cotton buyers, adds to the wealth of the section of the State in which it is located not less than ^250,000 per annum. There are two steam furniture factories, capable of working one hundred hands ; two large steam cotton gins running nine 80-saw gins; two iron foundries; two machine shops; a steam flouring mill; galvanized iron cornice manufac- tory ; one large planing mill, another being built, and three saw mills. A large number of wagons are also made. There is an abundance of timber of all kinds. The city is near to the iron fields, and water that will not scale the boilers. Within six months the finest steam coal in the world can be laid down at from seven to eight cents per bushel. Two bushels of this coal is equal to three of Missouri or Illinois coal. Its analysis shows 80 per cent, of fixed carbon. It is remarkably free of sulphur, burns with but very little smoke, to an ash almost as soft as wood ashes. The supply of this semi-anthracite coal is inexhaustible, and is found near the surface in veins from three to eight feet thick. The rivers and railways afford ample transportation for the rapidly increasing trade in manufactured articles. At a very near day the Indian Territory will be opened to white settlement. When this occurs it will add thousands of acres ot the finest land to the sup- porting territory of Fort Smith. The territory is entirely destitute of manufactories. This fact, in connection with the fact of having railroad and river routes into the territory, insures the success of almost any manufacturing enterprise. The main articles of commerce shipped from this point are (141) cotton, wheat, small fruits, berries, early vegetables, cotton seed meal, cotton seed oil, furniture, hides, lumber and cattle. There is a large jobbing trade done in groceries, dry goods, clothing, liquors, drugs, cigars and hardware. Among the prominent business houses are the following wholesale : Four groceries, four hardware stores, five dry good stores, two drug houses, three liquor houses and two cot- ton warehouses. It is estimated that the business of the city reached to nearly $10,000,000 during the season of 1884-85. There are upwards of 200 business houses. During the past three years there have been but seven failures, two of which were conclusively shown to have been fraudulent. Fort Smith draws a large trade from Scott, Franklin, Logan, Sebastian, Crawford and Washington counties and the Indian Territory. Its markets are well supplied with fruits, vegetables, berries, game, fish and meats of all kinds. Fair competition keeps everything to eat and wear down to a minimum price. Coal hauled in wagons sells from 14 to 15 cents per bushel. When the railroad is extended, as above stated, coal can be retailed at 10 cents per bushel. One ton of this coal will go as far for heating purposes as three cords of the best wood, which can be had at $3 per cord. In conclusion, the writer wishes to say that the foregoing is written in the utmost spirit of fairness. Those who come will find upon investigation that there has been no speculation or bombast indulged in. Earnest workers from any State or nation will be cordially received and welcomed as a part of the population, entitled to and receiving every right and privilege accorded to every other person. J. H. Clendening. LITTLE ROCK. (CONTRIBUTED BY JOHN A. PIRTLE.) The city of Little Rock is the political and commercial capital of Arkansas. It is located near the center of the State on the right bank of the Arkansas river, on a bluff or elevation 450 feet above the sea level. The elevation rolling, affords a natural drainage so perfect that but little artificial aid is needed to make Little Rock one of the most perfectly drained cities in the United States. The city is platted upon broad streets run- ning at right angles, and numbered east and west from Main street, and north and south from Markham street. The city is supplied with water from the Arkansas river. It is built of stone, brick and wood, many of the buildings being of modern architecture and substantially built. The population is about 25,000 people, who are thrifty, smart and progressive. Much intelligence and true man and womanhood dwells here. The Valley Route, the trunk line from the northwest to the south- ( 142 ) east, is crossed here by the St. Louis, Iron ]\Iountain & Southern Railway, the north and south trunk hne railway. These railways, with the Arkansas river, which is navigable to this point, added to the Memphis & Little Rock Railroad, give competitive transportation facilities equal to any other point. The capital building is of old architecture, located on the bank of the Arkansas river near the center of the city, and presents a quiet and tidy appearance of days gone by. One square to the south is located a modern three-story stone building, built by the United States and occupied as a custom-house, post-office and United States court-room. The penitentiary, insane asylum, deaf mute institute and school for the blind are also located here upon spacious grounds, and in buildings of new architecture, substantially built for the purpose intended. Ten miles or more of very complete street railway, operated in good shape, affords cheap and ready transit to all parts of the city. Telegraphic communications by two companies cheapens the transit of news to all parts of tlie world, as does the ccmpeti- tion by two telephone companies afford cheap telephone service to all parts of the city. There are seven Methodist, four Bap- tist, two Episcopal, two Presbyterian, one Disciple, one Lutheran and two Catholic churches in Little Rock — all of which have houses of worship, some of which are quite preten- tious and costly. There are eight public schools in the city — all supported under the State law by direct taxation. There are 3,500 pupils enrolled this year, who are taught by forty-five teachers. The Little Rock University, Little Rock Female College, and Roman Catholic Convent, are schools independent of those public, and are well patronized. The commercial and political interests of Little Rock establishes its prosperity and future growth. Manufacture aids, and as this industry develops so will it be a strong support to the city. Agriculture is not only a support from the immediate and adjoining territory, but for large areas of good lands that are penetrated by our rail- roads in all directions. Little Rock is shown by statistics of the very Wghest order to rank as the only second most health- {\\ city in the United States, which fact adds another to its many virtues. For this blessing, the elevation and its complete drainage, and the excellent equable climate, with a mean tem- perature of 64 degrees Fahr., the city is indebted. The manu- factures of the city are few and confined to two foundries and machine shops, three furniture factories, three lumber, door, sash and blind factories, two cotton-seed oil mills, one lock factory, one vinegar factory, and brick-making, 8,000,000 of bricks having been made in the city this year. As a point for future manufacturers, many capitalists and other minds of the first order express as a fact that Little Rock is one, in point of location, of the first order. That competitive transportation, ( 143 ) cotton direct from the field, timber of all varieties, iron and other minerals, stone, water and coal, all lie here together, and only need the muscle and direction of capital to make the city- one of the first and most profitable manufacturing points in the South. There are three national banks, with $3,500,000 capital, and one private bank, with ^^50,000 more. The receipts and disbursements of the city per annum may set down, in round numbers, as ;^50,000,000, divided among and including, cotton, $4,500,000; groceries, $6,500,000; dry goods, $2,500,000; meats, $1,500,000; hardware, $2,000,000; feed, stock and grain $3^00,000. The receipts and disbursements of real estate, wages and sales of manufacturers will amount to $30,000,000 more, making, in round numbers, $50,000,000 worth of real solid business done per annum. MINERAL LANDS OF SOUTHWEST ARKANSAS. Of the mineral wealth of a large portion of the country known as "Southwestern Arkansas" there can be little doubt; in fact, there is hardly any description of mineral, or even of quasi-minerals, that cannot be found within the area of Hemp- stead, Howard, Pike, Sevier, Polk and Montgomery counties; and it needs only the awakening hand of railroad enterprise and facilities to bring these rich mineral deposits into practical notice, practical working and financial success. The general lay of these mineral lands is about as follows : Commencing in the county of Sevier, at or about "Ultima Thule," we find a range of mountains and hills extending northerly and then easterly across Sevier county; thence run- ning due north across Howard into Polk county, and soon after entering Polk county dividing into two spurs, running east and west. Among these mountains lie the principal sources of some five important streams, viz : the rolling forks of Little river, the Ouachita, the Cossatot, the Saline, and the Little Missouri ; and it is amongst these mountains, and at the head- waters of these streams, that all this mineral wealth lies. One of the oldest, and possibly one of the richest, mines in this mineral region is the " Bellah Mine," situated in Sevier county, in township 7, range 32, which, it is believed, is a con- tinuation or extension of the " Kellogg Mine," in Pulaski county. Mr. Bellah, who was the owner of the mine, stated to Davin Dale Owen, the celebrated geologist, that he had sent some of the ore from his mine to Liverpool, England, and that it yielded seventy-three per cent, of lead, some copper, and 148 ounces of silver to the ton The " Davis " and the " Wolfs " antimony mines, a few miles distant, also show traces of silver, the only analysis made showing, however, only seven or eight ounces of silver to the ton ; but it must be remembered that none of these mines have been fully developed or worked. ( 144) The workings so far may almost be considered as surface scratchings. Quite recently, in section six (6), township seven (7), range thirty (30), west, some ore has been discovered, which is stated to have yielded forty-two per cent, of lead and fifteen ounces of silver to the ton. On the Rolling Forks, some six miles from the " Bellah Mines," may be found roofing slate of the finest quality. Salt wells are also to be found in this region, which now are unworked, but before and during the war were of great use and profit. But, altogether, the most remarkable and interesting mineral of all this region is the white malleable iron, regarding the existence and malleability of which a great deal of scepticism is said to exist. It is found in the corner of Howard county adjoining the frontier of Montgomery, Polk and Pike. During the war, it is stated on good authority, the inhabitants of the vicinity used to take the ore as it was picked up from the ground, and, in an ordinary blacksmith forge, hammered it into horse-shoe nails. Whether this is true or not, it is certain, and can be abundantly proven, that the ore can be taken, and being heated in an ordinary blacksmith forge, can be welded and beaten into any desired shape. It should be remembered that this white iron has been more than once analyzed. The United States branch mint at Charlotte, N. C, gives the following re- sult : " Oxide manganese from pyrolusite, psilomelane to man- ganese, 50-1000 gold and silver trace." Mr. Charles E. Wait, of the Missouri School of Mines, make the following quantitative analysis : Water 9.94 SiHcia 16.27 Ferric oxide 69.69 Ferrous oxide 1.03 Alumina 2.55 Sulphur 3 Phosphoric acid trace Total 99.51 This outcrop of this ore, as far as it has been explored, runs for two miles west to east, showing a width of from 15 to 30 feet, with an unknown depth. There can be no doubt that this development of iron, in so pure and malleable a form, will some day be immensely valuable. The magic touch of a rail- road will some day convert it into gold. On the Little Missouri river, in Pike county, are found vast and valuable beds of gypsum, of the best quality, and only a few miles from these gypsum beds has been discovered a bed of "kaolin," of the best and purest description, both inex- (145) haustible as to quantity. In townsliip 8, range z(\ in this county, are also found large beds of lignites. But one of the most valuable pr( ducts of Southwestern Arkansas, when railway facilities shall h^ve become numerous, will be found in the cretaceous formation, which, principally developed in Hempstead county, still runs more or less through every county of Southwest Arkansas. This cretaceous forma- ti m i.>> admirably adapted for the manufacture of "Natural Portland Cement." Boulogne, in France, is the only other known locality where the natural formation can be dug out easily, and contains all the ini;;redieiits requisite to the making of this valuable cement of world-fmie and world-wide demand. Now, to sum up the mineral resources of the Southwest Arkansas, we find that we have lead, silver, copper, white malleable iron, antimony, gypsum, salt, lignites, silicious iron ore, kaolin, white pipe cla\', asphaltum and the natural Portland cement in the shape of the cretaceous formation. In addition to these, a discovery is rumored of an enormous bed of fish phosphates, in Hempstead county, but no analysis has as vet been made of this. In closing this article. I am bound to say that I am largely indebted to Mr. Ernest VViedem.mn. of Washington, Arkans;is, for access to his valuable maps and specimens of the mineral resources of the southwest, which are very complete and ac- curate, and probably no one is better acquainted with the mineral resources of the southwest than Air. Wiedemann, CLASS OF PliOPLE WANTED. Arkansas is too accessible from every side, and is in pos- session of too many natural advantages, to pay the passage of any immigrant or to invite masses of unproductive people to it. What is wanted is men willing to work, especially men who will buy or rent land and cultivate it — who will make productive the millions of acres of land now lying waste; laboring men who will work for wages; mechanics, and men with capital who will engage in stock-raising, utilize and develop our water powers, erect manufactories, develop our mines of coal, iron, manganese and other valuable minerals. None are wanted ex- cept those who are willing to work, or have capital to invest, who by their capital or labor will increase their own and the people's wealth. No man who is willing to work need hesitate about coming to Arkansas because he has no money, for there is always a demand for agricultural laborers at remunerative wages. To all who are willing to work, or have capital to in- vest, a cordial invitation is extended to come and take advantage of the great opportunities to he found in our State, where they will meet with a cordial welcome from a hospitable, moral, rights respecting people. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 014 646 057 4