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WILAMS 4 DAVIS,. rpitr. a.1 ae,Dvtd to ;5leO,'A,-l Op Inusry 44 toratur VOLe XLl WINNSB3O""q SO Coo WEDNF,.SDAY'M6RN,,.., P 'VIN1 1tA f $' i THE 0I IfN I RU IS L D 1BER IL D IS TUBi.SICD WKSKLY BV 11 WILL IA XKS& DAVIS. $ Zorms.-The HERALD Ir pulisled Week y in the Town of Winnsboro, at $3.00 r uariaWy .in advance. h #jW- All trimndent advertlaounts to 6e t I'AID IN AD VANCE. Obituary Notices and Tribute $1.00 .por a quare. LOU ISIA NA. a ARtE rEPUBlIlCANS SAFE I e W.lO ARE TIlE lURDERERS! 9 ---- d NEw OnLi.ANs, April 28, 1875. r A friend writes me from the North 0 this question, "Are white ad black Uuion men safe ia life, litterty and I property in Louisiana I Th it iW the a question whioh wo of the North want a .to have houstly and sealiusly an. swered." 0 I answer : -first, the popul ition 1 of Louisiana is dividted politically 0 intowelpublioans, callei hore radicals; h and democrats, called here O..Userva. ti .tives. They are all Union wea. It U is absurd and wicked to keep up the b 4ld war animnosity by giving to the ai Bouthern republicans the special a title "Union men." The republican T pnrty in Louisiansontains a great '" many men who were -bitter secession .i6ts, now only during, but after the to vwar. 'One of the most couspionou ropubicans, who oame before the hi Congessional CommitteO nith coM. W plainti, and who was proved thero D -und then by do.mmentary evidence to P. be a rogue. Judge Myein, of Natoi 'i .toches, was a Breckenridge democrat 00 before the war, Another., 4reen, R xvho admitted that be and his sots Of %eld pretty miuch all the offices in PO Lincoln pArish, wade a xpeeoh in the M Legislature after the war advocating 1 -payment(far alaves. I could .mGn. .b tion dozens of suoh .eases. On the do .other hand, in nay limited acquaint. O* ance in the State, I know ' at least 'i 4ifteen .Northern men, who were Of strouuous republicans in the Nort, al most of whom still openly act with. no the National republican party in fed ,eral-elections, but who vote and use t all their influence for the democrati l 0 or conservative party in State and e ,p-riah affairs. There are hundreds P of such men in the State. .Even the 7) republicans themselves are .ot so ti mi). urd as !o .arrogate to them.elvw re the title of '-Union men." They 's .would be laughed at. 'IHE ViURTHORN MEN AND INEGoWoift SAFE. pe What tiy correspondent, and no R .doubt mauy other Northern men, t want to know is whether northern 't men and iegroes are safe and can got di .siouity and ijastice in Louisiana.; lu -aid to this I ieply, unesitatingly, "Yes." It is'perfee'ly true, as I ..said in.a.previous letter, that between 1865 and .1668 there was a good deal * -of oavage a id bvutal wrong infliated e -on the blacks ; and in the Qame a period, and probably for a year or .two later, Nlort.hern men who -came herv .4e take possession of the State a W politically, and who at once began a, al .prodigious-systeum of,public pluuder,' were not always safe fromn the anger t 'and resua.4ment, of the native white.. 'l3ut several of the most prominent, rep ablicaus of the city have told me ipositively thaat the 8tate.was poescea $ ble and.quiet from -1868 to d-872, and that rsae.c thena the whites had a been dissatilile mainly because they a believed -sincerely that.Kellogg~ was W not fairly.eleeot-el G-overnor and that ( ials rule was that of a usurper. If Goeneral Sheridan.ever turns in his. .faamous list of 2,600 mnurders, anil if' *aeep'uta dates to tk:em, it, will be foundt 4hatL the ,politic.d murders hap.0 pecned be'fore Al*68$, asvith the excep-0 tion of the Coushatta ahkl (Jolfax af- a ~fairs. Myers, the corrupt.Judge whoa c "laiws to.have beena driven .out of ' Natchaitoches parie.h,assured me that that parish wasone dfithe most.quiet in the State until 1-874, when he and a swindling tiax -ooilector were .driven 'out. 'l AN UNIUtW P'Anti.-Hi. Tais parish has become so notori-. -ons as the most unruly in the Btate o that I have takena somae pains to as fil -o ertain the facts-; 'boeoause there, 4f li Sanaywhere, persecution of Northern I. .~men and neAroes wouldl be found. r< .j Now, thenr-4Sirst, an officinl -r*port,~ g properly nusheat'icated,of the mur-, at ders committed in this pariah from et 1868 to 1875 lies before me. They. .r< -number fortyone, and .of these ,p 'there were whit.es murdered by ba Swhitee, 1.3; colored murdered aby 'N colored, 13.; whites by ceolored, 4.r< \jcolored by whites, B-; whites by Un- 41 known persons 3'; colored by uz*newn, 8 1; colored by offier, of justice in1 o serving pfoces, 3.; Indian by a white a mao, .1. Now somebody may object a ~that the record is not correct, but to r that the reply l~ that the parish has ti been almost Otanally Blnloe 1868 ? wander Republican offloers and that! t Vhe Coroner is reputed here as else-- p Where, to be an officer very zealous In t ie collection of fees. It is not l reditable to the republio4n rule , t iat for these 41 homicides not one ian has boon hanged, and only one I as been punibsd in any way. J C iuald add that there is no evidonoe I Iat any of these tuurders arose out of [I ,)litical 0auses. t row, then, conside.r that the parish t ad for years a corrupt judge and a b iieving tax collector, who managed t I get all his sons into offioms, and a b olice jury (county Supervisor,) m ade up mainly of illiterate negroes. e overnor Kellogg, in 1874 appointed i s police jurors three colored men b ho could ielther read nor write, one n bite man -of infamous charbeter, o bot even his fellow repub;icans b ublis-ly prolestod against, and one ii scent white mau. Ut.der such p zlors the pariah tax, which alautnt. I i to $13,475, with a valuation of $8,. fi 00,000 in 1860, rose to $46,894, on a C aluation of but $2,000.000 in 1869, o 54,902 in 1870, and in 1873 it rose I , $82,207- This was the parish tax p lon, exclusive of the State tax. 2 be Supervisors allowed thenm.ielves T rue year fifty cents a mile mileage o >r every time they met. They paid 8 it $1,500 for a bridge which could b ave been built for $300, and gave v ie contractor a privilege to levy toll b pon it for his own use when it was r( Ailt. The Parish Judge, Myers, bi knowledged before the Congression. It COurawittee that he had for two qi ars retained $7,500 of parish money lia possession, in violation of an der of a District Court to rotura iti the TIeeasury ; he refused repeat. g ly to draw.juries, in order to shield i a confederates ; and yet this porson as appoirted by 4overnor Ke'Iogg, istrict Judge, a higher office. The ople formed a taxpayers' associa- at )u and warned Myers and one of*his o ifederates, the Tax Collector t >ult, to leave the parish. The sons to Boult to-day hold offioos in the 0) rish, but none of them were killed. Be yDrs and Boult walk about freely New Orleans and are not molested; i it,they tell fearful stories of intimi tion and danger to their lives, and de [I themselve.i Union Men." The of xpayors'.Aesociation wae compose.o Go republioans as well as democrats, ed d had among its members 200 groos. Myers calls it a white U ugue, of course, and talks intimida. )n of republican voterm, but the oli. b al returns of the registration -and ection show theb fIg.ros;-TheW riah had by the census of 1870 W 312 whites and 10,929 blacks. Of ese one in.five and a half blacks gistered as a voter and oni) one in ven and a half of the whites in 1874, e year of the disturbance. Of the o 665 who regi<terei 3,1l& actually ) ted, and the republicans carried the riAh by 315 majority. It was own that many nogroesivoted with v( e conservatives, and many others hi ged at home, because they were sgusewd with the theft of the 'chool' T Kid. A rn0LrLrPAn SM. In I have taken Natabitoolies as an Y ,ample, because it has an especially V, il reputation. Contrast with this I pariah tI which the republioants t ve given te people an honest and '1 onomical goTeranent, and whare W ore has been no disturbanee. There st 'e but four or'ive honestly govern-.a I parishes in the State. [ ape n ti be well informed about one of If eso, Tensras, like 'Natchit'oohes, ab tton planting country, and with a s rge iproponaderance of negroes. '~ here bas never, since 1868 been any 0 sturbance in TenMs, nor any pre- 04 noe of intimidation. Here is the M ory sinoe 1868 :--The -republicans T ho came,.inLe it.f romn -the Noa th bhup. it mind to be4uenest and sensible morp. heIr loader was Gene'ral Ssel, now a istant Attorney Gener.al -of the tate, and .an .abla man. Tihey pur- oi raded soase .of the moist subs anti .1 rPthe old resident. to take parish " li-,es. Trhey took care 'to .put d ways three. prnamineut whites 0 id two colored m'n en the police l' hr,y. The parish.djudge had been a P onfederate officer, and Is a capable bi mannd a properly holder in the -r irish. They h 've always persuaded '0 ze negroes to ob;ot such mren to 'the mcoul offices. Tensmas had, 'in 18'79,A 400 whites and .1 I;018 blaoks. p h th economical mnannaeet they ave-extinguished since '1880 a dabt 'c MilO0,000, contracted for levees be. ~ ire the war, paying off '$43,OO0 cf P .The rest woe proved ifraudulent 'ti the,ourts. The pel~sh has good '" auds, bridges, thirty sehool., .four b raded sokools---two for eaoh coler I P has money in tde tr'easory ; its 'as sment is eery low 4 the eourte ar.4 e s1ooted, d&e laars are enforcou~ m ieceobtainr; eves stock stealieg ha. C iee put down. Meantime, the g ert,hern men have not ceased to be ,~ publieas npr hawe they gIon,a up a eir share of the offices, The gta't4 @ snater and kopresentative and somh the local ofditoro. are )JortherJnmp ~ id rtepublicane. The negiroes ar ~tisl1d, and wire once somse drunke. c sffians, from #. noighbo*ing eunt( ti roatened tO'oo14p In) anid. 'ttack ~ S orthern mnap6.ho larges6 m4elag of b hitqa ier:assemrbld .in the countif rem'ptly gathered, and sent word to' so towdios that the07 would be ahot. [own if they showed their faces in he pariAh. Surely the story of those two arishes tells the reason why dis. ontent and sometimes Jisorder are ound in parts 6t Louisiana. 4-It Is ot the radicals, but the t(sietoe, hat we hate and oppose,'* said more ban one oonservative to me. And 1 elieve it to be the truth. ' I haveln9t ime to wander 4lf over the State ; ut I have examnined every case ,here I have neard of complaints of special hostility to republicana, and i every case I have found that there ad been gross and long continued isgovernment, extravagance, denial [justice and tolerance of disorder y the courte. I was told for in. ,aneo, that Madison parish was not a leasant plaice for a republican." !ery well. I find in four years -ow 1868 to 1872.-the reconstrue irs ran up a debt in this parish of rer $142,000. This parish .had, in B70 by the censuv, only 936 white Drsonp. It registered in 1874 only 55 white voters and 2,135 blacks. he few whites were, of course, the ivners of almout all the property. Uch nonlstrous misuanagenout, )rie by so few taxpayers, mifht iry well create ill-feeliag and strife-, it the parish gave, in 1874, 1,614 publioun majority, and the vote ran it fifty five short of the registration. itinidation is, of course, out of the iestion. LOUISIANA MURDRIM. In the North we have heard so ueh about murders that I was very ad to get hold bore of some parish itistics on this stabjeot. The State vernment, which has almost en. rely neglected to punish murder. s-being too bubily engaged in 3-ling-lias, of course, no such icial returns of crime as it ought possess. I have been able toob. in returns, chiefly made by oouity Drks and coroners, from only thir en parishes, not counting Pla. um ne, which I have before given. rom 1868 to 1875 athere have been these thirteen parishes 8.13 m4r ra. Of these -vinety-three were whites by whites, 148 were of lored by colored,' thirty -two color. by whites, three colored by ofi. ra of justice, five colored by persons known, seven whites by unknown, o whites by mobs and five colored Pobs. The State has Ofty-seven ri,hes. Most of the- qthirteen of iclh I have given returns have a pulation nearly equally divided tween white aud black, and I sue. zt the .figures give more than an erage number of murdere of whites whites and less than the average murders of blacks by blacks. laquemine, for instanee, not count in-the above list, registored, in 174, 510 white aid 2,160 black tero, and there I found that there d been since 1868, 88 murders, of hioh 31 wore of blacl4 by blacks. here is good evidence for the state. ent that the large majority of urders-in tho State in the lest six tare are of blacks hy blaelzs, insti. Lte -by whiskey and jealously. The igroes drink less whiske - this year an two or three years ago, when ey were getLing much higher .ge.e; but their demand for it ie rong that I fiad the planters goner., ly sell it to them in the little plan tion stores, Jhavinag discovered 4eat athey did not -their4ands would' be running offelsewhore to get it, or me negro would peddle it in the bins. Thu cplantation .negroes manonly carry a razor as a conceal weapon, and, absurd as this seems a weetp.rn of attack, they inflict riuuand often fatal wouunds with .I'Tho rior soeem.a to be their vol ito weapon el-owheor, also, for found it so in 'Dohaa ware. They he to it probably boonauso it hilath ieapest weapon with a keen edge. It is noct only a faot that turimao has sr the republican rue-nzeitheor iwo against the,par--on,no.r .vgui.ast to -3-u there is great coin aint that the pardoning power has eon abused. I have fo-and but one turn on the subgeot, which shows rtsinly a liberal uso-of t..ie prero itive. Firom January d, '1878, to ar ch 5, 1874, 'Governor Kellogg irdonod thirteen enrderers-al vst one a.menth--besides sir wn an.vio ted ofj manslaugbter. ,Tbe hole number of pardone. during this iniod was -eighty four, and among ac o4eaiees thus condoned are pois ung, rape, shooting into a dwelinag. s&gl pry, assault with intent .64 kill arjury and bribing wit :eses. New bon society is sidA to be by Goever not- Kellogg ina a .disorderedh state ad when 4e himself aokooutledges, he did to me, that 'rius is not morally punished, stirely it is a: rious error to pardon with- so free hand pe cns.onvicted df such ave and dangerouseorianes .as. i wve mentloned.- Its oannet fail- to erese disorder. Unhappily it, mnet beinag the courts Idte reat4r mniempt thanf their gesreral etup on and ineffiolebop alla e the' bate, and from the fowest -to th9 ighest, htve already b'*wght * lp6b LOtSIANA 9?465v. To return to the anantian of my Northern friend, Lou144 Is at peace. I doubt it thore is a single man within its borders who does not sincerely call himself a Ilon man. The people unlversally apt the Union--nothing is more cett in than this. Also, there is'do dlbpoition toreen-lave the negro;t 'Tbo plan ters hav% disoovered that free labor is far more economical than slav4. lverywhere planters ave already demonstrated to me the profitable. ness of fr3e labor, and ' .'aokno*l. edge that all their feas of disorgaii. ,ation proved groundle.. The bit terest democrat L have avt in the Stste said to me. "We are fortunate in Ulne thing *hiah I-ittle expected I at the close of the war ; we hayb the best laboring force iq, the. world." He went on to tell we that before the war he had often to pay, for extra hands which he bired, from $160 to $200 a year, two sui's of olothink, rations and medicine. Now he pays $13 to $15 per month and a ration. "And they work just about is well, txoept when somse neoursoi politi. olan comes up from Now Orleans with a brass band and sends word, as was done last fall, that Gener4l Bat. ~ ler ordered them all to turn cat to a politioal lueeting.* Oneof the hope- . ful bigna is that I have not Aearda , single man in the State speculate about'-tho future of the negro," That sort of nonsenle has disappeared. Nor have I anywhere found the negro shy of speaking his mind on polticai subjecti. I laughed at a planter onl last evening, who told we how well his hands.wrkd up a saatein of shares in the oroppof whom b -1 shall speak in another lotier, and how faithful and ser.viceable they , were. lie, said, "But the soomps all voted against me at the last ale'tion.' "I'm glad of it," he added, "for I a could not hae refused ithem %nytling o they asked it they had Yated for me, c and it saved we probably $500, .for they know ho.w.to ask a favor -fur a favor." THE ONLT sOURCS OF DIRORDEB. 0 II do not exaggerate wheo Z say that the only 4ause.of disorder In the V State lies in the corruption and inefllenny of the .tate and parioh I governments. The eoemrowlse is ac.' 0 cepted by an overwhelming ma'ority v of the conservative party in good: a faith. The people hope for an im. provtment in the administration' U rud are willing4o, give ithe Governor; t and the other rulers a fair trial. t Even Marshal Packard tells we the' d State is at peace. It has, as ever. A Southern, and for that matter, every 0 Northern State. has, a propertion of a lawless and ruManly persons. This 0 class is not numerous, but is compos., fC ed of idlers, drunkards and braves, '41 who..go armed.j and when a communi. 0 ty Is excited thy ore re dy to eow- r mit outrages, not only on baoks, but on whites, even on each other. I was a touched by the remark of an elderly i man from a,remote.parlsh. He said: ti -"The Strte government and the a courts and officers it gives us are so cl .nefficient that we have to deal with t these ruffianly young men ourselves. d I have suone than one taken my life ,p in my hand4o o_* erve the pews r4 when the 'Sher was too cowardly or .a ineffoient to do his duty. We have s' not had a murderer punished .in our q parish in five years, except one, and b ho was pardoned cut of the Poniten.. li tiary. We live near the Texas line, ti and desperate men some.and,go,eaal- ha ly. Instead of being abused as dis. ta orderly people we deserve praise h th it we have kept ne good order as 1] we have, when~ the Governor 'has e time andi again ai pointed corruopt and t1 inlicienatollca,r.4,.nd whon, in fact b society lase had to be ronintrained e; againuat, the abuses and ineffi'iou.cy of d the governmenutr by the private effort of the good citizens." This man p spoke the truth. Jit ais a solemn rand o undeniable faet that the repubian g r&nJers-of Louisiana have disorganla. 't; red -sooiety, instead o f protecting thei . good oitizens. The only damager .to ti the peace of Louisiana to.day lips In the corruption and ine&eh.rncy of her .a euIere, who oall themselves reui. I, cans and have thus gained th.e couna- * tenance of the Northern republican a party and the aupport of the federal o admInistration. These wmen has's tJ ommitted a great erime age.last the te eonatej., the greatest' crime which hb eiillsed,menrean eomnmit a for their p misrule.hss struck a blow at the vety b foundations of society here ; they a has.e corritpted th'e public morals they have degraded and debaacbei the'negross, whomueye Were ost4o A lead intto the .eueise of oiti.ensnl -; h and, survey$ng the story of their nm. I rule, I am constrainea to say that theif' plunddr of the Staid, monstrous lh as It has been, Iethe oast. of. thair ' offendes, loc this graver .orime toi,dhbbth add''ioaliso a StIme P thsu 4o eteal its t&ee. * VliARLES8NORDHIOW', t douren u eys isp te Saltaa $ T90 Yves d latt.I *Aho b arep, -and we a , beohelor, he might he comparatIvely t contanted. . $,001s1n0gd fNweapohi". On te. ith of. ;a6jV hegslaerfof Louisiaa art adq idba d<Nd tioif 'dd &nd then , teoiganij4' by 4nfat bEyonets. ; ThI 4.actien &et not- Only Tha Stste buts t ho i 1pitso ft" by, t1mr.ayf. Afia athe South bN f long been .40 dioddlid tik "'44 iif O i edle k, 6 Ug is dlVided igalnst ithelf..ad aonswluset cha6e n thergoue qwgnt, .e ao.grpg sups .ev.0g hea, th. 6 a &omI~4 99e ud more-tbam Ah', 1ol es to gew- England 1Me s Ksvid : .ew pP Pg 11O'p; Co On , N. I June . .6gdeitiAre nist td-dayj'drelfE itealt twelve 'eOtors' .lee ualiA6, John Sanbors 4,416oted re Ident of $he Ponpte, re,eayng uooratio vtes; Repubiloans d .i4d to vote; Ave ,tW Ubli Ins 6 e f iibddo f6 VOdj'.' ' 'r to tbbu completed the er nisation' inder DemorAtio . Ous0oe, The oedinqg .anator. Aset .eewhere, und made a tomp. ra r atp. l'e House is ballokIint fo speaker. he entraboes to to, ':i0tu are ;uarded by police. A1aiSC;Is r4p4ung upao .the rurtb.;aso,arseA, like objokens, come o0e We roosk and we. bope %hi (1io1 .con g as giak . it s r a?q. The New laiipuhtke 'em irogio ooptalos se.ver%l features sikn. ar totho In tloulaland. - A Legi4la.: iva elooAm, a raturnia.g bosr4, .a. o,aiting out of,mopbers,of.oe partit od counting In of members of anoth t, by which the political compleiou f the ,Legialathte Is chaviged; and'- 0e1 Pthdrawal of Ae mimority.,are the, Beds of disoord in both case#. The. rcis in the Loulsianx 'ffdr go nown.; we will now give a ammary f the causes,of the .New ivmpmkie lsturbanoo. The law requires a majority of ate to 4leot,,not a.tore p4rajity., At the last eleotion :Nathanli lead was republ.ash oandid to in no of the Senatorjal District's. Manyl otaa were cast for 64Matt" Head,j nd these being counted for .Na 'aniel, the democratio candidate did ot receive a.majority. But it appears ant by the election laws of that Stilto iefusll,christ'an.name of every 'can idate must.be give, or the vote is aidered a -lank. The *aaaera . r election, coalisting of the Governor md his council, four democrats and me republican, threw out the votes ir "Natt" Bead, and thaR declare Ia qponent da6td- TChe republi. io member of the counoil thereupon signed. In another distriot, sixty-four votes. ore east for a candidate who was Ieligible, and thest votes being rown out,4he.democratio candidate,' h44efore had a plurality, was do. ared to have received a mgority of is votes cast, and' his election was solared. This,ohanged the oba.s lotion of the Senate, whereat the publicans beemim highly duidignan ad threatened revolution. The a.e iii 1. gIven in the' despatch above aoted. The caMe will he brought' sfore the eourts for a decigsin, on. is, Grant prefers to hend Sheridan settle the guestion .ui eC arngJe. It alaimed tnat .e votep were in. inded for Nathianiol Uead, and that a maorally.Is entitled to the sot'. utt, on' the othier hand, there is an iplinit law on the 'aubjot dealarlibg mat i.nnproperly declaring -1eritten diots '.sanot ho counted. *The nvassers therefore noted in acort. inece with the law. It it Iudierous to see the repumbli.su arty, thbat has so longaen r6ngbdbod eretthe deorats and the people saneely, sempet4ed to adop s6e sotice of a minority, and e~. .Tbje vs aggeleted Sen.ater e oampriirng jo full strength of the *u4ablIdan. arty, retidLug 1ree die State Iogge i,a bedy, teus, hate resented .aa taposing spectacle. And the o?sr helmieg numsber of sevedn demoerate ho thus bdilied a*Mak sdesbarg, aght to- be heail sehasned 'of em.etees. this embroglio is, a 4nps i eae, y 't.te tha.t Miol wie ntors opah. tbe revented frm ahaoylng tt 6t~Ie"c y its petty querirols. We shell nais the result with interest. We heat tetjESN4j bVoouli ainst Leslie for$91,-W0 wich, it alleged, he has never. teoonted~ for the land go:qaJ.ion JiusIness ; also a4'etdaviteh~ haen,wae as aw for Irauudaledit 40o e recent election i 'BaV6*eIt Cddh !, andrt Jats 4 idieWsehl had 'bb reser egsinstbinmfeV. biot.- The irrepressibleP Vill bave. pIOet of a.inea o had abdlald bhe e s t ey'sta a et e birty pui.4as ae d for his aus hid ren. Qnoo 'poO4inellee wefaagf1 h Ali, a holy man,.who kept eato f, pojob day " in add " da' "T 8 ( niish 4Hywre' rifaogi~al Jght #W*p.WadI eOa 01 p 1it, ~Ak?I,A, , 0~@poI1,Ti0e~ 911~a a irfo P 0. ti 4%%1tagaa tte'Jishe f - ti O s p t W dderf krop obody ,.knew the pnq# oftl P'Itfmb Qde'r the doe, u A#d ***0a;da.by ther y shafh th who Vsbad'i9 beaJ thor 6ol dl lve out evil agfr4tg frg i t.b: pe. 'llrNiia dimefrdi afat th Ae 4aol pleo.; and its fame 4g 4 edkom a. the :aAd 8heikh A PU, 4hY 'I'hs beali ert tiWI odrintd he ha Ahrdu14 Jdtie ton and whinso one "laOe'gnl a? d, -r nipu At o d hi, or un e i pltaio art 9Il.jago6 hous w;asaeonj his ighi aand -pre'ie6tn him'.4itLa dka Whi h had,for Any geapfthp14 out onb 'JoUrney. n D ihrugiolties pad Wyo and.v.illao aIr ats am.p.nte wbotin Mos lt fl~or q,.n4to plae.~ tIf hellge ioewas sf,tee oae nit 91sio 61. WIGBy BinIsa.d ib 0o.g a, u lo di- ildg dowl yhis donkey :oo4 gte h as epio ates, and vwento b..e in.the 16 hi he wasokg, p d hi don y, se dtd qe . a id Ipalf' but' hisit the hy lactre Wau Aftret:ne'oo, r htelib st6ene tob devoured byJaoka and vultures, he i1, 9nd tho Uf .e xtothes:oorit boty..! dpt.dowq.p n9pp. b.4i e aht' tob Thn, jj po the. nws, andplrm thonged t orOlddd AsiZoe came , OUIna frozo M06A. H ads aurpried t, sees man alonein this wildernew aied haite m why he was weeping Mohamma he rplied : 90 Hlajji I . haerund .6the tomb of a holy, proph at, and I have vowed to be its kee r butw ana great need? The Hajj &hanked himtor the nows, and di meented 4 to visit the holy place, an< gV6e Mohammed a rioh prosent At r gof, Moammed hatened ti the fvillage and biight pro v1sionv, and Ohen returned to the hoIZ prq tomb tamb. Th*rejji sprea enews,land pilgrime thronged t< the spot with rleh presient ahi cffer lngo. As monbyocameIu, Mohatnwet broght manouand,uUtnso and aostij tomb, with astall white dome tha! D9uld be seen across Jordt%. Z< li,v6d in a littl4:roomv by the tomb, and soon the miraeutous lights begat to appear ke the tomb atnight, whiot Mohm ted.had kindled when eno om was near. Ue iereased in fame aut walth,~r andhorqh' tombA cami beb rMgadMed roepoflie geae shJ'ins ob head .rs .sr, o y At enth Shik Aoip hoearo th< an'gi'theo murit o a visit toat bombk All, thafaous frophet. tWhi she adthere.gth Iihis riphgsesad Jaf grec eod 8laoone and emoney hed~ b,wdri-lenc to hsrayhe towi in( that holykeepe of th tob * 8Mashallab k.oomsala' salhak StIhAlllU'ewllo.llhb The dey .8ek asod himnk ho .hh< uWte &re ad ho h.. ondta tiifo 64 Mheam reple.pd :a i'y ae as rbadep to.uteru th4 k.wta~'e oinf eou't'wai Shk oA. ofth afo. mqa. afaer, t .$yo~6 hpnoed 6beskh, y uste 1;eei we'hithuan, e and n w hmisen 1 tliO toinhtof that - donkey's fatheOk MasbalblaP - said Aohanmed-1 iat "mayA4lla.ha1l.es.4e llear.4 oe. a hol donkey IIP Ot. his story is tolI4, by 17r. f6s' Ig long A issipoary in Oyrpa, 1ige.. . re TJo' rgoa" on nlteria. id' -0eneral Shetwag's foinoirs W id srve,P goo',purp,se so far as e if to oQi orne . 'The' anwerqe Aand a o s t 'bi"ctn hv pro d e e d8 ory ' gondrilly based;, )a UPon tho declarqron that while hq.. 1 corm and.ed ono ff-tho bei tro p ;1,1 i qou n er yon' a bat a o e.et *bi bppbsed by 'interior d nu nar9.4A0angon Rep uNioans p .he ame nay. be said of ,very d Federa.qqorPl. The contrary on d be 0aid - of noo e o. Ispo Pispoth v.ick. C. fXfet'tie', "ke deral Qenerals are r. Hrough.,.with their wrangling, tho 8 IlmSarti4l histori. will pupl, up Xhat, * ath i pSoqd: i ho resOurcep li. h the war would fava bepnsottliO'ih-six nonths.M-Conslt. d t . Oe 00QC811011 too Few. Phring.a class meeting h6ld by the ; Methodist brothr,en of aSouthem . o village, 13rother Jonas went am,;g lfie.colored portion of the OQugrega tion. Vindiug thre a man notoe'ous foIr his erdeavor to qervo-od on tho 6 Sa,bbath, aind, Satan t,ho rest of the q,Qk, ho . s i "Wekl, Brother t Dik,1 1am g ' to sco you here. t H1averi't stolo ny 'Orkeys siNP' Isa,' Xot ol ist ,W41horDlok 11" S "No, no, Brother Jones, no tu. 3 keys,~. "Nor chiokens, Brother Dick ?" --No, no, Jrotbor Jopes, no ohiok. ens,"' f "Thank the Lord, Brother Dick ! That's doing well, my brother 10 s said Brother Jonos, leaving Brother Dick, who inmmedlately relieved his I oVor-burdoned consoenoe by hafing a to anear neighbor, with an immense - sigh of relief, "If he'd said dtoks, Viva timi, who' were arrost6d by *ite4r.,'A- batiod'Polleotot' Ci rpen tor'O vllijial, charged with ill ici whiskey distilling, in Piqko,n.s, worp earried bforo the United State0 [ Comissioner, when fogr' of them - gavo bail for their appearanla at th next.torm of Court; the fifth took i. leg bail from the Coimis4ioper's I oflico, and has not yet been heard of . i After the release of the prisonera., they rooeived information which led thep to believe that a neighbor had informed upon them, when they ,feul upon him and beat so severely that I his life is despaired of.-Aepix. Ex-Senator Carpenter writes to the bfilwaukee News about the "olamor" over his anpoaranoce as counsel ,for the whiskey ring. Oe is practicing law now, he says, and P1 *hall khore. fore, accept the duty of, defendinz such persons, oharged with any oft(IOe as may wish to employ ine,' whether charged with laroeny, perjury, for. gory, murder or troen.; and .-.my ,present impression is--though i should want more time to condi dor It -,that I should even defend an i tor ,sued for libel." A n ICiglih j urnal- not... the 14ingu-. lar eoiuoidekou that Mr, Miohael Levy, the loading publisher of Paris, and Mr. John Harper, the leading publisher of N"ow York, died on the. same day.- Another coincidence is that Mr. lreokenridge -and Mr, Bright, whom he succeeded as the presidinig (oflicer of the Senate, died ,almost at the samo time. ..E.rIe. The collapse of' the litrio Rai'tway Commpaniy is simply the icevitable result of fraud, cshioanery and bad faith. 4e nly antedates a still more atrocious sw.indle cal led iXceo trpue. *A MiIwko .b a wallowo4 half a doz:en taal' 6n, 44 hia mother domsnYt hkud't 'aseroki fdr heiin when hid is oist on the street'play, ing Wlhb those Gluokerson. boys4 8he . jost brings a mnagnet to tJ1o \doorb and 'heifhies, to it like a noeslie to the pole. *SAP Franoiseo ije to haay.?oyeo $ 40,00O,000 permanently finvosted in me.renfsctories. The annual value of the products Is estlanale?d at $88,500,. 000. .Thse Iadiq of Tgxap are end esvorp ng to collect money fortb PUe pujpos ~f purchasing a home for Jeffrgo 1atid in Ltiat Stat6 add presentingl to him'. ,.. *. il K(enttfokyLegislattae to rettM6bte tob f eeral-AEthary Taylor, aest *: SLouisville, which has g one tp;VylpJ.,~, * I" No', h eli.,T bug CostfMrk dest oyed the-gotiJdast