Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE CIITCAGO TRIBUNE SATURDAY, NOV WBER G, 1875.— TWELVES PAGES SAN JUAN. ghe Dovelopment of the Summit Mining District. Nearly One Hundred Stamps to Be at Work by the Iiddle of Noxt Bummer, The Rieh Silver-Discoveries on ¥all Moune talneesA Lode Four Miles In Tength, Baflronds in Bouthern Colorado—Tho San ™ Jusn People Want One Running to the Mines, v fa1 Correspondence of The Cnieaga Tridune, gy 17 Mixiya Distuier, Col,, Oct, 24,—The developa 200t of thin dietrict is going forward wish may velous rapidity; and yol thoro ia but Bittle of N'tab excitement which usually attends pew minora’ diecovetiea. 'Tho mon who consil- (ate s majon 'ty of tho miners hiore HAVE & ENERALLY HAD EXPERIENCE fn California, Nevada, and Northern Colora- do, and bava seen Loth tho dark and prght sides ©f mining lifo. But fow of the mitc bave pasked out of the pands of the origin el locators, and thua far thero s been bat fittie of that speculation #o come mon to gold and x'fl‘vurd!scomflan. Parbaps the renson of this In that the cistrict fa dififout to reach, being high us: in the monntaius on the . ange botwoen the Atlantic and Pacific wators, withou pablic conveynr. ros or passable roads. It tho result of thia frolatyan I tn keep out the cculators wito destroy «wafidenea in the mum- ensl woalth of this xection LY oxu,_;geu;ed stato- ments and fraudulont teo Uskctions, it may ho well,in the cod, that thg (Ustrict bk beon so Locg ous of reach. Last yeer thoro wau » groat » ‘aut of confidenco fo the valno and permnuency’of tho Summit mines, Dut littls work was done®; aud, so far selcon learn, the district waw wi wily desorted {o tho wintor-months. 3 ACTIVE WORL COMMENCED, powever, eacly last &pring ; naud, hy t1e miditla of pest sumtner, oecerly 100 stampa will be o work on tho ore fiaen fron\ thu gest deposit of qumtz an ,Touth Monotain, Capitalists In New Yorlk, Chi, w50, d Wieconein ara gotting in mlils an fast an ) Y08~ n 1 wble, and thoy will bo rapidly followed bY ofbers early next spring. New vunes ure bein € discovered and located evory uny, West o1’ South Mouniniu, both on the enstorn and west- em slopes, the lodes aro moktly silver. whils gouth snd southoast silver and gol'd lodes sro found o cloxe proximity, nud froguently both metals are found in tho siamo quart: ‘Tho most extensive miver mines discovered tn this section of country thia vear mre on Vall Mountain, on tha hord-waters of the San Juan Diver, about 10 wmlos wost of this pont. Tho Ban Juan is oasily roached via n tow pass in tho range, 4 mulen west of bero ; and, unless there namote feasible pans furtlier south, this 1w tho cery boattouto for & wagon aud rathosd from the £an Luis Valloy to tho great Valley ot the Eao Juan Miver and its numerouy tubutariey., Oacs 1n thnma;m Juan Valioy, the conatruction o roads would bo EASY AND CHEAD and s yast country, not only rich in geld and silver aud oiher minerals, but in agrieuliural espacity, would bo ravidiy’ developed, Coneid- eniog tho seventy of tho climnte North, and the high mountain-rangen, it is more than probablo Abst thus would be thoLert rairoad-vouts to the rich mimng_dwliicts _on the Animas and Un- compsgue Rivers. The Tte Indiaus, in an sgreemont ratiled by tho lsst Congross, coded to the Unitad ‘States all of their re- seryein the gouthwestern cornor of Colorado, wih the exceplion of a strip of conntry 15 wiles wide on tho wouth line, and astrip u¢ milcs wido on the west, and to & point 10 miles north of the Ysth paraliel of latitude. The Iu- disne do not occupy theso strips of laud ; and it will doubtiess bie the pohiny of the Goveroment b eatinguish tho Indian titla &t no (Lstant day. Whilo the land u the river-valloys is rich, mont i thecountry containg ABUNDANUE OF INEIALS § md the productions of the soil, und the fina tmber, which is superier to muy other I over wr, will add to the valus of the mincs, aod greatly fac.tato the rveduction of thu ores. In the order of nnturo, the procivus metals are not genecally found in favorablo loca- tiope. But the mines an the Ban Juan woem 10 be & paruial vxception to thia rule, though, even thers, the lodes ran up, aud sometimea over, the bighest peake of tho adjacont mouutains. Fall Mountain, on which tho new discoverios aro located, i at tho Load of o beantitul park in tho Ssn Juan Valley, and is probabiy 11,000 feot bigh. Acroea tho river, to the southward, Mt. Ztmy, and a lofty f’“k without n pams, which uar party named Monteznaa, riso up abovo the tlouds, appareutly to & altitudo of 15,000 to 16,000 feet, From tho summils of theso lotty mougleins the evo takes in & range Ir inte Now Moexivo, Utah, Arizona, asd Northorn Colorado. Down In tho ,mt canons, tho numercns strenms which orm tho matn river dash and foam over falls miny huudred feet high,—furnisbing to tho vislon, in connection witli tho abrupt monutain- ks, o scene of naturnl grendeur It would be lpvuflflu to desenibe, enamined carolilly B ONE RILYER-LODE onPali Mountoln, which has beon traced for tewtlyImiles in a direct line, nod, with tho fpurd which run out from tne main lode, not loos tha & miles. Casod n sobid quartz wally On botl Kidos, w maas of quartz 8 foet wide, as- Wying £225 fn silver por ton ou the eurface, teémy ;u llu‘:n boon mélied into the crovice BT ol e e e theso tiesuro-voins were formed, scientific mon alter widely, and thore are wmany theories smong Nloeralogiath nud. goologiuta, fizperionco hes sbowa that they oxtend down a grant dopth into 4o bowela of iue carth, and that thoy incrasse 10 valuo sz thay go downy but li tho rost, in the brovent coudition of human knowledge, must belong to the realm of uclontific upecuintion. I underatand that the owners of thess mines Pro- bota to fornt & ney wining dietriet west of the sammit; and thas arrangements uio being made Yo put up feductiou-wopie noxt neason. ust now thore {s “considorable intorost in touthiern Colorado on Tu TUY NAILROAD QUESTION. ‘6 Beurcat points of connection for the people of the Ban' Luw Valley, nodof a!f the brau asa country, are Canou City and Peblo, Can- oty Ia 140 miles from Dol Noite, via, Ponchio s ; and Puoblo is about the surae. distance, Yia Bugra do Clristo Pasw, Tho Atchison, To- a iy Baute ¥o Ninilroad hus nlroady extended Waat L'“fl:ll:'lm-n\uh%m and Kanug !Cuy :.o 8, miled e ¥ - ll‘lex.nd is pushing mm:\g olol ugha placo with a largo working force, The mun Laa been hivornily managed, and eu- J’m %Kond-wm of tho peaplo of this scction ‘DP“'Mflmlm;v. When the work s comploted Kageeulo, 8 direct o o Chieago wil exist, via poctodr (i, 8d wlho via Abclison. T 1’ ex- Iméen b at thers will bo lively competition bo- Union Destechlhon, Topeka & Sunta Fo sud tho of Cope n-;ufln ‘lénmg:dn hflm' tho trade and travel incihmihutin lon denit, S G ol Bag phDer Fated to the commerclal contres, dosw gy i cRelon of a now lino to Pueblo nwummn'h""’ Eatiafy tho rupidly-increasing Aroad wrroll:ll: 5:’.: "rg‘.'fl"fg"s"f s wlknh ’hristo range, un iy mrg’nu: NS, Gk Dot be watixfled wilh anything olso, Tho Most of tuo Bau Luis Vallov being Tu all o :"lmunbrlor to the country for 30U wmiles what the .: mmountaing, there is no doubt but be quick mlwlw of tho ralirosd managers will o *(pejy l.lppmclnia #ts resonrces, aud push o old m:h‘u:; nu‘u: co?hmnud ity trade, a . Lt impesatlo o Wnter, s Neatoa; A 8 & ueitled fuot that there -u'u?."x{;‘:,‘.‘":f;::‘;,":“ nhl:enlflru in travoreing wl ain region of the Continent 7 illioads. When (b daso, aad the pro. © age s still tarthor apphied nlfn rmau‘ulou {1‘:& ‘uh&: rfledun- s the od Blaion le “to furalel the tivilized world more a all othror natiuns. ('lrm;l of Coarrollton, Hallipice Su o e veas 1830, arice i anva oue of the baud l“fln’-u‘ whouo signaiuros are boroe on the the ‘umbon of Tudependenco had descenasd to oy sud the venerabls Carsoll aloue re- mc“yz?%flfl the Hviug, the Government of ¥ait og'sen ) ucw York deputed » committes to yrey n.‘: astrious survivor sud obtaly from DOy {a the publia tall uf the clty, a. to sing & #oi year of Amer presont signatnen Jeclaration * of " Itdoyendedice, ureen on tlie 4th of Jduly, 1376, which 1 viginally aubacribed on tho 20 dny of Auguat of the aatue year, aud of which I sm now tho laat murviving signer, 1o lereby pecoimeted (o the present and futurs geliers- rigeiplos of that impurtant document aa the ly inheritance their anceators could by to tlrewn, witd pray that the eivil and religions hiurties cured to my countey tn to Temotent poserily, and witcw family of man. Ang. 2, 1826, [ =S TRE GUNPOWDER PLOT, Guy Fawkes nnd the 5th of vembor, For The Chicaga Tritunr, Wavzrsma, Wis, Nov. G.—In some of the Eastern countries, huge pilos of stones wark the spots whore decds of proweas and daring have occurred, or whoro man has heon singnlarly do livered from eome groat danger, are constantly Increasing in tom for every pasaing traveler to hurl a stone upon the hesp ag ho passen, There are many thrilling ovents of history that aro almout buried bewoath o tribute of story, Jegend, and ong 3 and, as the year rolls round, aud the auniversmies como up oun by one, wa aro wont to add ur wo1ds and thoughts of com= memoration, Two Liundred and sevanly years ago to-day,— Nov. b, 1606,—thoro was suddenly revesled, at almost tho very moment of its ozecution, ons of the darkent plota that tho wor'd has over knowu, James 1, of Eugland ancondsd the throue, mado vacant by the death of tho illuattious Quosn Elizabeth, under circumstances at once poouliar and threctoning. Although an avowed Protest- | © ant, the dovotion of hin mother—tho ll-fated Mury Queen of Beots—to tho Iloman Catholic paty, togothor with tho fair promises which ha wade, caused tho Cathiolics to hope for somo mitigation of the penal laws under which they suf- fered. But they werodisappotnted in their uxpec- tations of indulgonco fiom King James; and, a8 ho possessed neither tho wisdow nor tho worlk of **good Queen Nens,” ho soon becamo oxcoadingly odious Lo the leaders of the L'upal by other hands. A daring, Gua o Fawles, wii pawe . * Johnsan, Seven purtof the houso, foro thoy had voir ol e o of n wiedintely balaw thia Housa of Lords, that had jus b been vacatod by a coal- doaler, fo thin thay s. ‘ored thirty. gunpowder. Thoy choe ? Uark nights for tho operation, for the baricls ) ate tune, by boat, acrose' tho river. Wo can almost seo thie disguised iy ees that, with mar- tled oars, crovsed t‘hln Thm\l. o8 u tha moanloss midnight. and quickly and their Ifml lcm?: wh’;ln, thiro ugh the desertad hal{s shove, run ? the echolug ¢.'y of tho watuh- man, * All's well.” ‘To malte the work of destructic ¥ Iore sure, houvy stonea and lonz bara o #1on woro among tho barrels; the train was h\d; aud the whole covered with & great quam ity of Woodaud | poc allow hij tuguts, They then throw op.en the ¢'voru af the vault, to avoid suspicion, and again dispersed. Tho moeting of Parliamont wns o1a20 1 40T pos- poned,—this thao until the 6th of Nov'omber.. and Fawkee was appumsed to firo tho wine on Protastaud sud Papal, bomewards. copy of tha Declsration of 1770, sraced nnd ated ancw with e aign 1oanunl, trint yielded to tho re with bin own hiand to tha eopy o tho grateful, solomn, and pions aupplemental | tho declaration which follown : Crate ful to Almighty Gl for the Mlessing wideh, | of, nnd “give mo your thraugh Jisnn Chaint our Lord, He haw conferred nn beloved country fn her eminclpation, aud on m S peermttiog e, undee clrcamatances of nie 1o live to tho ago of b9 yesrs, and to survive tho fifhelh an Independence, amit my anprobntion CHARLES CABBOLL, of Carrotiton, 1L'wo Catholic gontlomon of aucient family, named Hobert Catesby sud Thomay Porcy, o~ gother with neversl others, formed a plan by which the King, the Royal family, and the mom- ‘bars of Parliament, wero to bo dostroyed at ono blow, and tho reine of Government to be soized In short, thoy intended to blow up thoir ofticialy, ~not as wo do in our day, ¢ broogh tho press aund 1n speeches, bul with b ma-tide guoponder. +,%hoy weto nearly two yoars in perfocting thoir dosgorate feliow, hiad beon for many yeard I the 3 pauish dervice, was mado thoe principal Tho building next tp tho Pariiament Honso a8 hircd by the conspirators, and taken ponscas fon of by Fawkes under the assumed It was ensy of access, and entored ju tho rear by boat from the The authoras of tho plot frequently mew hers ay W planned their deeds of darliuesa, Purllamen © Was 1o conveno ou tho 7thi day of ~ay 'd, on tho 11tk of sho precoding December, the Y COUBpITators bogan to xcavate o men were thum employed for Tourteon days, *. they noverappsarad in tho upper whero K'awkes kapl walch, Be- ‘pioted their arrangoments, the meotig of Parliay Wit was postpoued notil Oc- o conspli 2018 disbanded for s tima, in the spring. For nbout” two yours tho sccrat of tne' con- spiracy baa boen” faithfully kops by more bzu twonty perdons, The uususpecting King vad ralors looked forward to the meating of 'azila- ment, littlo drenming of tho tlery destructicn tlt had beon plauned for theni. days bofore the tice, Lord Mounteagle, a Homan Catliolic Poer, rocelved frow au unkuown med- senger n lotter withont dale or sigoature. Glancing ot it, aud fAnding that it wau anony- mwous, he paneed it to one of the gentlemen with whom ko was sitting. It wan nddressod to “* Tho | 1 Nyght Hovorablo the Lord donteagle,” and | 4o road s follows : My lorde out of the love | beare to somo of yougro frendn, 4 huve o caer of youers prosorvacion thovefor 1 would sdvyso yowe as yove tender yaners iyf to do- V360 MIe xcuko o wbift of youero aiendance at this parleamaut for god and man 16l tho wickodnean of thia tyme, and thinke not nlight- i this dvortiwement but rotyro yoursself into youru conlrio whoire yowe may fcti for thowgbu theare be 110 apjarouce of annl stir yot 4 say they anall voceyvo a terrible blow this parlea- imeut sud yet they sliall not sols who hurts them thls councel is guod and can do yowe no harme for the dan- wod 8¢ soon sa yowe have burnt tho lotler sud 1 liope god will give yowe the graca to make good use of it 10 whose boly protection § comuend yowe, Circumstancen soomingly unimportant bronght this lotter to the notico uf tho Kiwng, whe saw tho matter iu a moro serious light, and caused tho bnldiug to bo soarched on the night of Nov. | bim to o5 4. Guido Fawkes waa found at tho door leading | kil bim. This is to the vaults, Ho wau &l 10ady to fira the train; Fawkes and neven of his con fedorates were triod, condenmed, aud oxecuted, 'Tho Guupowder Plot was thus complotoly un- its dosiguors fguominionsly put to death, snd their memorios sxocinted, Until quita recently, tho Gth of Novembar hag boon obucrvod as & logal holiduy in I’JIgImIIJ and_the Dook of Common Prayer vontaine o “Torm of Preyer with Thanksgiving, to bo uted yoarly upon the 6th day of Novombor, tho Luppy doliverance of King James [ boys colobrated the day with squibs, and burning Guido Fawltes in eiligy. ‘They used g ot which this in the tirst verso : Hewember, remember The 8Lb of Novenber, Annpowder, trearon, Wo kuow of no reason Why gunpowder-truzaon should over bo furgot, It oftcn . bappens that our election-dey falls upon thiy olden auuivorsury ; and wo ful that, in our time, ho contost batwean powers d the great queations of Btato and Government, are decided ay the open volls, rather than by secrot plottings. QuIxoTE JUICRSIOIES, — e A Hevzogovinian Legond, A correspondeut of the Loudon standard given thy following Hlerzegovinian logoud, wluoh ha copied {u a couvout at Butisks, and which he | cer in the learncd was rogarded as renl by the mouke : 1o the Llerzegoviua was o man who celobrated the Jurjowdan (the feast of Ht. George), aud he weat avay (o buy wino that ne might pass the duy in » festive maunor, olias of wine, put them ou his bacy, snd sut out ho was gol mountaiue ho fell in with a cave, und ss the darkucsa was drawing on Do cosolvad to pass tho mght thers. But behold a mivacls ! the cave a Wila. 1fo was a Yttle frightenod, aud asked hor 1f he might pass the nizhy there. T'ho Wil suswered that ho might, the wing, placed hiwmself by tha thie Wiln what sho wus dolug tuuro, ed lum that she nervod Kiug liratjevich Marco, When the jlulwguvwwfl Lourd an the * door of the room i which Marco The Wils ooened it, and there Le | Lad verceived tirst Scharaz (the far-famed af she Kiog), aud then Marco himself, buthe | an usnt, and affixod that instrnment by Con- eath be perpetiated Theyo cairna 2¢, o8 It (s the cus- named ‘Thin $o ix bayrals of had to ho taken, one witontly doyosited But, a few ethe concurred to pun- pect the event in 1o wes suf- ¥, to tho number of In Waewickshire, and Catesby oud | Had others” wore | your Teconatruction, an sadly ecrronoous ag, if not mora so tuay, your advico to the nogro, which, I think yoo may now sce, would jusuro bia do- struction, 1n fact, tho Ku-Kluz would &sk no ettor protext, 1 might tell yon how leub- Zcans in oflies songht to make peace nnd hral dhie breachos, rigidly oaforcing tho luw ageinss offending Heputlicans ; end, ovou whilo they wero doing thia, thoy were (raducod, calumpi- for | sted, and every concelvablo hindrance thrown in the way, Imight apeak of tho irou integrity of Gov. Davis aud othars, standivg Catu-like boforo their own political deaths, 1ut enough of this for tho present, Tuero nust be some- apeedily, not ouly Joyal whity iranorks, 0 thonks Bo ha bought 100 throughi the | fon. Ile tinds In 50 ho Iald down fire, snd askod Bho snswer- arco Lie way opon Dr, Planck, of Scheucetady, anc Albsuy, were up to ilotfmun's Wedneaday, sud ndofl rhinocerod skiuued, cut, War-steed du‘lnlnml. tue meaf cut from the bonea, boxed, wsut to Hochoster, ‘Yle boaes will bo put tu Jurjnwdan, Then said Marco tho Ilerzegovisan: * Come {0 m hand. that Ilorzegovinian waa goin, poted him not todo 8o, fo diately crush Jrin hnnd. Iy oh, sich wrelchiod paoplo are now u Horzegovinien aoked, *When — will that bo?™" Marco mnmwerod, '*Serst thou thus No= | Aword which hengs on (ho Wall ovor eoncquor the Tnrkk an celebrato tho holy jur). Four hundrod Jong ha had drank no wine, ‘Che Herzo; okar" But ® fraud, ‘fhat was uot ouo ola, much le and celebeated bin name's day qu 1iah our Serbinu Kingdom again, THE SOUTHERN SITUATIO As Beploted by o F 22 the Bd.tor of The Chieaon Tribune: PLEXTITUD! had nomore hia long heard, and hal becoms Tho | blind, Marco aniced the Wila what man wan thora. The Wila annwaced lum (hat lio was o Iferzegovinian vihio Lind moue out to buy winn for broth- mar feel lhow fpooplo ‘aro mado now." 'The Lut the Wila whis- arco wonld imnia- ‘Then the Herzegovin. tha | Jau, hintead of bin and, renched him the hutt end of ki« gun. Marco reized il aud mnstanily broka it mto tero piecen, On which ho waig, D) c n enrih ! "The llerzegoyinien anwwerad htm, © By God. 0 Marco, wn theught you wern long dear." Thio bero nnmweted bim ¢ = 'Fbat I am nnt, my sonl But whon guns came juto the worid | ro- treatod to this cave. For 1 hiavo seen that a hole | gun ean conquor thoe grontest horn, and as long an thera i o gan shere will be no herosn. wmong the yonths, fiut now I sball boon go uut of this cwa to dentroy the cureed Tiurks. Tho wmo? Not tho brendth of two tingers mota s waoting till of itunlf it 14 entlrely drwsn out of the neabbard. It onco entirsly ont J will mount Beharaz, and lod will glvn mo eyos tiat I mny restore onr Kingdom.” After that ho required of lum that ho whonld also bring him & cup of his wine, thet ha gl 4 Finian brouglt him a strana (fifty okaa) of wine. Marco meized it and drank it off at oun draught. Then o anked him If be st bad wine, Tho Harzegoviman baid he had, rnd bronght him the mecond trava, The ioto did no lous than to drink thin, tag, oft at s slngladiaught. Thon ho asked, ** HHow much wine didet thou hase?" Tho ilerzogovinian answored, A hundred Marco eried out, * 0, wiotched world, what hnst thou becoma | Thy moasure is n bundred." Then ho katd totha Wils, #he wan to g1vo to the lerzegovinian some ducats. that fis might buy himaolf some moro wina for the feati- wal, and forbade him by bishife to tell anvhody anytbing about it. Tho llerzogoviman boughe anothar hundred okas of wlne, brought it bomo . And Lnow that thin {8 tho truth, that Marco is bl living in that bnt that ho will koan como out and con- the Turke, diive thein all awey, Rod ostah- s Postuynstor. Anderson Co,, Tox., Oct. 30.—1In the Chieago Adcance of Sopt. 23, undor the edi- torial head, is tho following: **I'ni Cmicsuo Trizuse squarely calls upon tha inkulted and anused freedmen to dofend thouselves, to strilie or shoot if auybody strikea or shoots them sitacking burglar, derer.” of spooch nnd the prose was and trawplod under foot, in order aiming 0 sap the vitals of Uod-disbonoring, Slavery in disrepate.” by tho " laws of PRk © bolllon betore Robel juriov ', calling forth tho to prey stitlan “of resistance for @ pretext by experiouce, aud more subtle py prudeuce, alwazs beon = loading dosire of thoir heact, I tlmo and space, I venders of the mlutakes thiog dome. aud that for tho negro, but for tho n order ta ovortbrow tho Government, whick hos After prosonting sppropriato roasons for indors. ing you, the paragranh clokes thus : * If neithor the State nor tho Genernl Government protects them from murdor, itis their dutyto protect themsolves and thelr familios, aven to the takiug of lifo, na it is that of auy white wun to shoot an bighway-robber, or mur. An an old Texan of nearly thirty years, T think 1 undoratand the situation botter thau witnor of you; and I thivk, if you understund it, you would not spenk a8 you do. Not but what your position is just, but not expedient. In this couunty fhero is nearly en cqual number of whites and blacks ; in ile outira State, the white popu- Iatiou Jargely predominates. I supposo tho aui~ mus of the Texas mind is & fair index of tuntof the Iale Rebel Coufederacy, Takiug thisos o Losis, I think, without ample protection from the Governaent, that policy would be virtually suicide. It was a ponal offouse by the lawe of tho Blave Btates, to teach a pegro how to read the Oracles of God; tho constitutional liber:y iguored to keon the mnegro in sabject ignoranco, with a dictatorial arcogance chinracteriatic of tyranis his nation by fotting asida tho declaration that **All men have an equal Tight to lifo, liborty, nud tue pursuit of bapyinoes ;* tho negro was reduced beunzutl tho brate, whilo the laws of God and mau vore ket in defianco by ignoring the marrisge-relation, and all thoao social tios of kindred dser to tho humao heart (how oft has my heatt blad whilo soms old negro, with streaming oyes aod sobbing hesrt, hna toul mo how * Massa took mo away from wy wifo and childron long yoars ago " the slave was whippud, insulted, maltreated with every ingonuity of cruelty; aud eoven if, per- Bub | chance, thoro was o kind-heartod master, 'the soul-destroying laws wonld m to treat them ns humans. As neampleof tho freodom of speesh gun teed by tho Federnl Constitution, the great ato of Texas madeit a Peciientiary offcuse 10 BPOAK ID suck n wayas to biing Afiican With theso as dats, con you expoct the freed- .men {o bootberwiso than {(gnorant, supomtitions, t'mid, aud not qualified to unito in concorted action 7 Then, again, tho powers that now rule ars tho eama tyran:s of the past, who repard the lawa' of noithor God orman. Tho Keate Govorn- mem\ i8 transformed into an engine of oppres- sion ; the Ku-Klux relgn supramo; tho Conrts are me'ckerioa of justice, whero Dintrict Attor- neva beast of their sasociations fn tia Iebel armies,~ desounce negroes iudicted by Rebol Grand Ju riee, nnd against whom no offense tho Btate, whito decpest projudicos nya ‘08t the race, and declaring that i‘om‘um’jnring were mado for just such, In the faco of this, tho hitndred thousand murderers in Toxas, inoluding thosn wha have upprovingly ntiended mupderin, @ mobs, bosides those guuty of every grado of a*imo known to law, arc not only at large, but_tn aufacturo and contsol pun- lio “opinion. Aod tL'0 remdout white mau, knowo to Lo loyal to t\ 1@ Foderal Qoverument, it not murdered i person . 18 tranto.l with such in diguities that Lifo itsole’, I8 & burdou ; whilo trea- son Lo the Fedoral Gova rment is tho pasaport to omoluments, oftices, a'd_bonow. Lheso aro centorod as o unit; thoy loa ve no stone nuturoed upon tho igucrance and wupec- the mogro, wid try to {4012 commin _overywhare, The tiuo epeeches und famityg paragraphs in matchies nnd touchwood were found in hils pock- j'nur Northorn papers, from vigisors hove, aro ots; and tho vessol that was to baar himto tho Coutivent lay at anchor in tho Thames. Drought bofoie the Kiug, Lawkes boldly con- fesncd his own tronson, but wuuld not reveal tho namea of the athor conspirators, Jected to the moet dreadful torture, bnt not even thoe rack could extort from him tho namen of his pssociates, until they appeared in army, They, with their attondants crsous, nssombled attompted to defend thomsolv Poroy woro kiltod in the attwc mado prisonors. ust liko tho raport almost ready to be mnas aftor what was thought o thovough examination ot tho last houso of Inquuszion, whon wator found Its way, and lod to the fluding of the tor- turod hundrede, to whom death womld have beon received aa & boou. Thie treanon, tho faléchood, the cruelly, oro tho same, grown more ounning might, tall ia man, Ilow can we holp oumselves, bound hand and foot, snd cast into tho liery l'ur‘gnlm‘xh?r ixh #oalod than when Slevery was in ats giory! "Thora i8 no epreal, butto the patriot santiment of the Unlou, to send the ministorlng angoel Lo looso us, sud let us join yoa in tho battlo-cry for ¥Freedow; that the work of tho Pilgrin- Fathers, the patrotivm of the siresof tho liovo- As a rulo, onr mouths aro raore Jution, and tho noblo actiovemonts of var brothiers in supporting the Biars and Stripea, ho held in grateful remembrance; and outh suffur tho full Fodoral laws, lifo now a4 in tho o Let all loyn‘"A Jasven Rr, P. M., Plentitud i e Taxidormizing a iKbinoceros, Troy (N. 1) Thaes, bappincs." Foropaugh’ that wo wnay proyo worthy beneflcfanes of thoir pricoloss heritage, Iut how 18 this to bo dono? Btnp ‘Treason of its power, Let every pur’uml oill- penalty of tho law. Let Robel Pederal Judges, Commis- mouard, and Marhials, who not ouly wink at, Lt clandeatinely fudorse, tho violation of the bo at ouco removed, and let loyat ‘men fill thetr places; for 'W'ronson isaw full of Imicst days of tiie Laboll- mon Act a8 a unit, bury tuitling difforonces, und unito as ono man in showing the world that right, and truth, and Justice, can live in a Hepubliv; aud that the ns- sumpsion lu 8 true vno, *That all men Lave au equal night to lite, ibesty, aud tho putsuit of d Dr. Hall, of #hapa in thateity, or. nother words, the sl ton wil bo prepare 1 for v w1 in thy Al bany Musoum. Lhe huda war sl for preparas tion for wtndine, Prof. Ward. of Nocliesicr, with Lis sesisian's, arrived on the grounl Tuey. day, Prof. Werd prozesded to a blickemith- #hop and had a numbar o peeolisr Loole toada under his oxn supacvision, and prosured grap- nely, 1opey, ole, Tho Ialar of remnving the skin wan conmence | Wednoy J; Tuy skin ba from E{ to 1 ineh thick, aud eown ides ity weivht may oltamed when i wiated that it ro- aured twetvo strong mea £ W2 the ho rontain- ing it The wlun will kave woge redueed e half in butic, and will ba pat over o manhin, by fuo sproved I'rench acthed, the ol Gorma; mietho§ of wluding with wien v betng Fond ix racticable. Fu propeily jaciare the skin aren vat will ave to be mad-, 1 which the ekin will b2 placed over nivhtma solation of i nnd ra It i i | i | I ! L | ; 1l be tuien out each dey aid worked dovin, Tha operation it 1n mirn 11 oot o works, 1t i3 beliover that 155 animal ean by placsd in the mnsos s winter. i he akots.on will 1, et Lofoio nest Auggnnt, e utd & poution of the tendons will o eent b0 4hn Altwy aiei.cal College aurd tho vienato Cornell U . ‘Tha ammal Wis 7 voas 3 wirnify wos de- liverud v chieved that tho body will THE FINANCIAL QU Nt Astather Plan o Setel Tu the Ldutsr of Lhe Ulacago Trib iy v, 1, Nov. 4.—~Tho financial ques- tion haw been tho cll-ateorbing one ever sinco the recond inaugural of Pigeident fivaut. Orae Lot bave “orated ™ upon it, and wastod miltions of tann of gan, Btatesmen have wwnilowed ity and vomited foith their lucubrations to listen- ing Henatew, eud gaping peoplo; &nd mada nothe ing of it. Henators have *‘eet" onit, and wal- lowed over it, and pulled at it, aud pouuded it, and pumameled it and proudly pumiped alt the wisdom out of their jonderons paunchos; aud noting came of it Reoreyontatives have rippnd, and raved, and ranted, avd rattled, and rumbled, and raaped, and rallied, and run, sud rosrod louder than thundor, about It ; and nothiog happened. Lvery Congreseional rooster in tha country hns crowed, aad cackled, and caved, and cavortod, nad clapped his wings, and collapeed, on the quastion ; und nothing camo of tlat. Financiers hovo financed, and figured, and formulated, and fumed, nud fosged, and fowented, and fathomed, sod, boing fercely fircd with fincal foil.e, fiipped, and flopped, and Lnaliy fizzied ; sod nothivg has come of their lator, Hankers Liavo od, and bawled, and bel- lawied, aud boarted, and blawed, aud bickozed, and backbit, sud belitlod, and bofooled, and belfoggad, aud boat, and bruised, and battered, aud barsed, and bullied, and badgered, nnd barted, on the great question; and notbing Lax cgue of all that, Merchzuts have merchandised, and mounol, sud moped, aud moditatod, sud twelaucholize It aud memotishzed, cud mado momorandums, aud maandored, and matured, and mouled. anil “ine 3 i an advanead stats of | tre w told of n *loukm exe o i nnney, and a shneks v o a brivgvard il not 16 " detliad, 4 ) il had a ehild during tho iyl Jirower's repurt shows cendy ensugh that thatrades of which ho aseais tnvolve a Bpazied of labor which womon are nnt Ltled to undertako nader comunl. from 1ll fathers oF laebande, and which theyiasi at tines an | under ccodiyinns o el Doy 1nnas bo sarionsly injnrious to t, Nuthing riort of an sbeolutn Tation of fealo labor in the Tact, meet tho compdamn! cent and Other t Andies. nton fnien, b "L~ Tliia inland wwae awort ¥ 0 harpeans, wi eansed counid- tod af life: wud (il vist injury to proper- Vs VIncent non it ieritnee.d more vin- Jant ytoema, i th ity naviug haun Lol anpirecodanted aian 11 v twelve howrs thi wauosg 1 uearly 19 inclien of raia £ Dreviously the weathior inl Leaq It and opprossive. ‘Lbie long-cottivuad and riilipe: heat caused 6 gool deal “of nlarmi Ly ha fet throughont the itand, Weathur-wive WWest Indi- g predictod Liat 00 MNUBIAL RAlLeinaes was the sure forenfunsr of elth:r a hurrlcano or oy earthqual The {udling of ansic'y waw ag vated by tho report that' tho I8INGUB vo .o monutain, the 8 uifriere, which in situated n' (ha northe:u extremity of the island, hai shnry BOMS aymptoms of uuoaminesw, At L #trong sme.) of sulphur was tolt for a 1oy tance arcund the mount: by rhips paseing the s ¥ milen, 1o wan recallod that a siwisr parinn o unisuaily great and suitry heat bad preeeded the ablo eruption of the Souflfiiere 11 1912, ured wid2-gpread havoe covering tho o of ashes, bar; i crops aud upreading rwm, from woich matis eataten never recavered, B great was tho vise Janca of the oxplo ion thas the leand of Jaa- doos, whick lies 80 railes to the windynrd. was d with o layer of axhes waveral tuches deep, 8 tndend, waw (ho fall everal hours of tis day were turucl into towal darkoewe. Floro iw uanls o suong breezs 110 eadt-northeast blawing from Isrbas door. and all this jwizenso wass of asbias must Linve Leen thrown into the &ir 16 a huipht above the range of tho trade wnd, It is nand that dur- idg tink eruption the voiro of tha rouffricre evuld ve hewid for nearly 5 dragues arowad. At Darbadoes tlie forts wera nil wunned, sagit was though: that there must be gome great enwags meut Letaeen hotiln teets ; but 50 ternbie b came the noise that they 8iun Wers cenhvine that it was to no carihlv aztillary tues hsioneid, Wheu tho news reached St. Vinoant of the earthe quakie which destroved Cucuta 16 a3 aldo re- mombored that the eraptisu of 1512 hallesu im- ediatuly procedod by o tromend jus enrtl juake, which i ono minute, uoder a clondlias & Acorching wun. hat sufliced to destroy th 3 of Caraccas, oud Luiy amud its ruius pearly 10,000 ps.of At midday on the Sth the thermouincter atood ot 97 degrees 1 tho shado, Giving the ms Xing of tho mescury, honaver. convevs no wleguats 03 the eralj weasured, and monndzred, and inesticated, and mashed, aud marrted, and mortgagod, aod got wed, snd mavinchl, snd mewn, woaut molvy matters; aud that minounted to notinng. Hiatesinon, lawyerd, ductors, preacuers, mer- chants, mechinics, farmers, everybidy, and all the world and bia wife, have debatod and argand thiy groat question, up and down, scioss aud baes, and o and 1o, aid turonqu sud through, aud ulack and biie, 26d pro and cou, and off and on ;: and never huvo cume to any conclurion, Everybody renconed ; everybedy bas ar- gueds ovursboisy Lis finsuced ; ovoryoady lng got wad, and ranted snd panted, and cussod aud uwors, atd ripped and tire, and criod nid ca- vortod, and bellowed nod soorted, and bogged and bessechel, aud yelicd and screechod, ard roarad amd Lorad, everyvoly to death on tho great provient; and sull money is scarco nud nrd to haudle. Aud then the quentions t sre asked ovory day aro enough ta compel a man Lo resort to sui- culo, What do you think of tho couvert.ula londs, hey? Wunl'w yoor opinion of Kel- loy's 'plao, hey? Veonid yoim nbolsh Na- tionnl Danks, bey? Do you thmk it Dbeut to tesumo, coutract, oxpaud, or busi, hayi Do you believe 1 paying a mot of d——n bloated bondholders 1™ gold, be # Is golt monay, hov # 15 tao voluma of the currency suf- ficiout to do the busiuess of the counry, hey? len't greonbacss gaod owouph for wuytod: Diey? Ah! theso aro uos tho not like the good old times, liey? Ain't calic, and prints, and musling, o d——d sight caosper thay they wero in 1847, hoy? All thoae, andn thousand other questions, aro asked overy day; and nuver ausmeicd patise factorily to ansbody. ‘Then thoro 1a mitch talk fn wiso circles about bullion sud bonds, and banks, and the Baik of Lugland, sud couvertibla this and interconvoti- Llo that, and gold certificates, and **oeightoon eiglity-onea ™ aud * niuoteon minoty-sixes,” nod Irench assignats aud John Law, the balance of trade, tho talaneo of powar in Enropo, and the eifoct of tho war in Moutenegro. Aud some havo debated tho question whother or not the departare of tho L'rinco of Wales from Hrindisi to India woull uffect mouoy matters, or the movemont of corn towards Luropent markets, Now, this great financial question ought to be seltled, 1t ought, for tho | eico of nocio.y and tae welfaro ol tho cammunity, lo be sattled. Thero aro millions of reasuns why it ought to be sot- tled. Toriustauce, I have beeu )nuuml{ wait- {ug its sottlement that I might adjust, or ju somo wuy arrange, certain debts which T owe, Must I be compotied to wait indefinitoly? If o, my affairs will suffer, Isayit can bo settled, and sottled at onca, My plan ta thia,—and I proposs it knowing tho full 1mport and taeaviog of iy words : L aay, ** Let 'er "—and all must sco the benotit of such o policy—** rip." HENNY ViNcNT, s BEAUTIFUL HILLS. O beantitul bills of loanugo! Tuall your Hpring-timo beauty dressed ; Opentisg buds Dy hun careared ; Tail vuke howing Ligo Luughs g0 1 rown Taintly through thelr vmerald crown Beght stugingg birds and babbiing brov Dimpliug un through suuny nooke: O beautirul bills L love! O beautitul hills1 *twas long sgo 1 playod on your sunny slopes, Ti youthtul Jov, and with Les That )ifo would ‘ever Lo as fuir. At zgoonilda’s huat, the shadu Wora cool und deep, eud, ol “There's 1o rest now for g tired feet On the beautifol hilla © inourn ¢ O beautitul Liflls in Autumn-tie, Yaur Liltows o billows of gold Hpzend gently on, aud even rolled Aiay 10 tho valleys below § “Flie ev'ning-su luut brilliant glow ‘o tuyal ratca, sud desp, red tircs, "Wyt rok and Tell u faunting spices, 0 tho beuutiful hills I loved, O beautiful bills! with allencs bound, Blopluig in petce your wintry sleep, Wil whtle roves wrapped afonnd wo deop Loowimg bigh up, i sail-whito shrouds, svemfug 1a tonch $ho lowermg clouds, “Cuit bide away the sun's brikht my: utirul by of childish dayat ud beautitul hills of my dreama padorsssine i remule Lubor in England, New Yark Ezprew, T.ord Shaftesbiry caily niteution to the recant- Iy isaned veport of tho luspectors of Factories und to the painful information which it containg ou the subject of formale labor in tho DBlack Country, or in ‘*the nail and chuin district.” Frou both the uail a6d chain trades there are, Lo sy, *strong ropresentations made agaiust tha labor of women, whetlior as Lo nubers em- plovad, or tho size of the orticles mnde, The womon take tho place of fatheis.-and husbauds, wvinio te men aro 1dlo and druuk.” The root vt tho evil in tho Black Country appoms to bo dravkennesy ; no matter whether the drnker be puetdior, collier, chaim or nail waker, ‘Iho out- 1y aguinst tuo colliers’ and puddlers’ wives working is very groat 3 2ot perhiaps so much from thoir intlux mto tho tiade, bus trom the fact that fhoy work night and day, toil aud slave, and not for tho prica that straightforward masters wonld Rivo, bUL TOF KWY Prica suy crafty knave of a muscer chaoeos to olfers™ In tho meautime tha busbaud i3 1u somo public-house, av his oaso, and straining bis * whilfet! for some future running on boefsiveks aud $ho Lest of good fare,” Nor g1t only {0 tho Lall and chain trado that the practico of husbauds living on their wives' labor provaild. A yooug wowen, addreasing Mr, Hrower, sud, “1 master, L wish you would miako iy susn do u littlo more work uid me les 1 marrioi a wwoll, Ldid.” To the lnquirs whi gho weant by & #woll, tho roply was, <\ arhen [ mariod him (o the mornin’ be hud & smart gold wateh sud eaain, and u wmart diokey. but whea we camne to Ko to bed at night I'n blessed if he had vre & shutt ov, sud ever siuce I've had to koop vim by workiug b the brickyard, and uot onty keop bi: but tind him mouey o drivk," Aud 1t 14, 1t 00w, u growing oustom for adlo, lagy youny tediso look out for ekiliod, indnse ious mives 1u ozdor to obiain an easy life.” 'tho wanitary coudition of tho ebops, Mr, Diowor uays, {4 often bad, Womon work often & Toxy, dea of tho sudling cluseness of tho wenther, Lomdenty in the igland for forty years declared that the. had nover befora experieuced Leat o) tiying avd prolonged, The preat licat coutinue:d diriug tho day, sud at Bubset thers was & very BNETy wie, o4, ecinliy 1o the Boutinwest, Shorily after sunyet the whole sky bocnme very lumiovud, aud this appzarance lasted for o coupleor houin, It was wiecesdod vy intonsels vivid nnd beatir. ful wacot Lgatniug, which 6. t.mes ap earod to rueh in a torront of flumo from tho cioulds nui uhowred tho whole heaven to be of a strange up. eartbly blue color ¢ thre wound of distaut thu. der conld aiso bo heard, At ubout 11 o'clock g . & emart gale from tho monthwes. in, dnving = befora it deuss Inase of Iniy-black ciouls. Toe dakoess Lo camo 8o great that it could alwost ba fo.t, and ot midnight a terribie thunderstann buret oves tha islaud, sccompaniod by a tremendous dowu-poie of rain. Bleo, wau tmponsible, the noi<e of the thunder was o a.palling. sud nesily sll tl habitints of St Vincea: pas-ed tha night ing tho progress of tho huric.u-. Tuo ram scemed to come down in 06 uul ruuen shieet o water, bus the darkuess wak 83 praat that. ex- cout durug the fitfal glare of thy hightufuy, it waA imp msiolo to t0a & vard, The wowy of ths nvers, sbosed wibio ao bour tha. wtrens ahich the parehing heat bad lert hrmmize and almoss drel up, had become zorn torzents, A litlo before 6 o'clock there wus nugicient Light to seo the #lato of ofaw 1ho etrects of the towu of Kinguio 5o, the c: tal of the isiand, were all flondnd, 10 patts to tho dupth of over 8 fewi. The markot-plasaand o b- er upen spscen bad bicoma lakos, and all low Iy g grouud was covered with water. Tho moui- tain streams, which bofors midnight Rught have been erorsad dryshod, wero now pounn,g duwn vast volumes of muddy wator, havine i wome Instauces rigen over 13 feel within tho ¢ix hoare, ‘The southrostorly wiod hud increasnd, aud b daybreal it was biowing » whole galo of win with a (remeudous seg on. Lefors ¢ o'cloch of tho ten vessels anchored in Kiwgs- tormn Bay soven had been driven ashore by the violance of the sen, and & Iarge jportion of the landing-stago washed W Tho rain smil continued to come dosu i torrents, but from daybreak its violenco sensibly nbated. Heavy lnudalips wero secu on all the bulle srounda Kingstown, doing great damage to tho crops, as acros of cultivated Inud were ear- nied away at a time, In Kingatown s dumber ot housies wero washed away, uud tso bridges torn down by the forco of the water, Tha greater vortion of tho Iowin Catholic graveyard wus catried away, and & number of recently tuterred bodiea wasliod down to tho sea. The rain feil steadily nutil mudday, when it ceaved for a timo. Much auxioty was felt a3 to thu condition of tho out districts, but for u tims ull communica- tion with them was cat off. Tho rivers lad nisan to such a boigut that 1t was impossible 1o ford thow, and oll the bridges bal buen swept away, A Weat Indian slood subsides alnost ag rapidly au It rinos, and within a couvle of honry the stroame had tallen 8o much that they bo- came iwpassablo. At Calliaqus, on the wind- ward coast, two vessely wore driven msliors by the storm. Tho damage done turoughout the 1sland to the crops and eatate works has buzn very great. In nany places tho grouud presemis an appesrauco ad if waterspouts iad fallen, the oarth being rent futo cuasms 10 and oven foot decp, and in somo instances over lue feet n length. Large landwliys oc- curred all over the island, and dd geeat injury. On one pluntation nomrly 1ftoen ncred of cancs wero thus destroyod, ‘Tho roads throughout the island have buocn almost | evorywhoro reneted impasaable, Mauy arram- root mills have beeu destroyed, which lius caus- od a good doal of distress, 83 they were gener- ally owned by negro cultivators who are without any means to rebuild them. Io the beautiful Mariaqus valloy, oue_of thio finest pioccs of meonory in tho Wost Indies, tho populons vil- lagos of Mesopotamia aud Hopdwell woro so severely injured by the tloodu that the inlabi- tants, numbering doveral hundrods, have resoly- od to migrate to avother locality, sbsndontng their former habitations, In thosv villages over thirty bonses weru swopt awsy ia aun hour. in ono of thoks houses o womsu named Samnoly, whose busband bad very je- +| contly died, lived with Ler three childron, ‘Ail four of them were drowned. Ity a curioud coin- cidouce, the river—which rushed in a tortent tbgough tho village grave-yard, snd uprooted a numbor of bodiss—carried the collin of “tne man Hamucls almost to tle vory spot where ki wile xnd children had been swept away by tho dood, I the Vala of Buceauont, on the Louward Coast, soveral persons lost their ives during the ftoud, It is nu yob uncertuin how mauy livea wore lost nltogethor; owing to the diftleulty of communi- cation rolinble statistics canuot yet bo obtsined, From the intelligsnee w8 yoi recolvud, this lurricanu nppears to have oxteudel over o vory Inrgo portion of the West Indics, sud to bave beco soveroly felt at Barbadoos, Martiniquo, Dounuios, aud St, Lucla, At dartivijue u trad- mg-vossel oatled the Codtish, bolonping to 5t, Viucent, went down at her movriogs, =ud all ber craw, numboriug twouty hauds, wore loss. —~~——e Colorade's Great Ranch, The Umaus Herald, by means of & correapond - ent, **‘Uraveler,” informs ua that My, J. W, 1Y, of Northorn Culorado, is the catele Ling of tho \Yesh and has the **boss suuch ' of thy country. £ ‘I'hts range is 156 milos long, begins ot Julese burg oo tuo east wod extends to Uroeley oo tho west, Wwith 1ts southern bounsary tho Houth Platte Ilver sud its noithern tho divide wouth of Lodgs Tolo Cruvs, Its sbape 18 shat of & vight-auglod trangle, tho right anglo boiug ot virocloy and thy base ling the Suuch Platle Rivor. ‘L'uo obicf rauch i3 wbout 10 mites from Julcsburg, whoresll the catila Boughs by 3y, 1tiff are ban 1t is on the river, and the boltoles neur by produce hny for tho horsos. Ie outs uo hay for bus catile, ‘Thoy live the eutiro year ou tho rich native grosaos on tho ravge, sud, with e exception of sevure witters, tho percoutsge of lows i not very yreat. Ho omns in foe 20,000 acres of the raugo, and has upou it 26,000 head of catils, The calves branded thia year amouut tv 5,000, sud hiy tales of ¢attlo the prodent yesr will awouny (9 abous | the ramo numbor, which will realiza abont £150,00, or 2303 head, [lo emplovs from twelve tothriyati.omen, Ho haa advnrtised for 20,000 Texan cattle, to be dolivared at hin ranch in July ofnest year. Fhicas must bo yearlings. For thoan bn pays 87, £11 and $15 tespoctively, according o quality. Ho estimates the iucroass from his home besd to Le 70 per cont yearly. Hin Blupuing poluts re Pine Blufts and Jnlasburg. on tno Union Pacitic, and st Deor's Trail, on tho Kansas Pacitie. , Lawt yenr tho prpanse: amounted Lo less than slanding this com; ar. bnsiness i4 one of gre: of herding, &e., 29, but notwith- wonll ousiay the ik, The losyes somo- timen by thele anl death are frghtful, Tho wititer of 1471-'2 waa very savera, and, svernzed 320 per hioad, it i eaid, amonnted to $100,000, win \Ir. T bas now invested 1 cati'o as eanital amonnta to nearly $590.001. In nddation ha hian 160 Lead of horaes and males, usad prin- cipally in bording, together with wagnnx, Lisuris, fences, rorralg, -inachines, ton.s, inyg {m m-f and the largo trast of land beforc tca- tonzd, 1een, The ¢ T'rue fuwa; Can Cincinnats Commeretil, JACKS! Misa., Nov. 1,—Tus whites ara pre- porod. Thoy are ejuipped like an srmy, Every while -mau “lims frow one to turee pistoly, aud ths most of them have oue or mora guns of the fatest sud moat dealdly patteras, Tuese arms aro nll londed and prito: d. and at baud, Thero + & bioody moaving inall tha, It is the resuit of o diastors of negro ruio, and tha deterni- tiou to carry tha risction at all hazards, And ‘it they will. Tho Htaiejs lost to tho He- us, and all that wise and madorste men cxn el ~nad thero are any such liaro—is 10 trv ;,[ i i r:vll,.-u uver to-taorraw wituout tue sbedding » of the Late 1t these 13 any distarboneo 8% all it will bo SUFE ehutt, it very dendly, Tho members of tha waite clubs, to whick organizations s majors i uf liavo their bauds upon tueir ataim, and. i thera is 8 * riot " betwoen aced, the tire-boil i to tap, tap, tap, tho Mo by orieho the keena of disturbatico from sl -}ueru-xn. end, ag they eay, end it {u- taotly, lue fearas thay the’ slangbtor will be tout-nued Lesoud thoss who conuoiiod & breach uf the poace. Aa tor the negroes, thoy are uot armad to any conniderablo extent. A faw are, tho majonty are wot. They knos komething of the thotougunnss of proparanon nmonz tho whites, aud this oven 1 su coment of wafety, for 1t s botter for tuem, as a matier of bumauity, to vield a few points i the Kaie than to subjec: themuelves 1o tho vene geauze of tho whited, ‘Tnat w, thoy Ladd Letlor 1 13 whit may ApEear 10 bo agyrission reeietance. A cano in poail: llerctos 1010 tho negroes LRYe venu i tho habit of 1orm. 1% & hwe 6t tho polls and votug oue right alter suother, until tuu last coloiad wan vy cass bia - The whites way tuat they wil no sab- it Lo this louger. und tis decros Lins guac forsh, L the lines or o tight!” Noa, this has provented the whites from votiug, and 1816 about bieing; crowded 2 any tro.n tho volls is stafl, Vers sonsibis, bowever, the llo- pub.icans bave yielded thiy foint in tue ivsironts urlll eaco, aad w.ll ot rorm compact hnes ot tho polls Avafn, it bosbeen their hahit tocome into Jaciwon from all iho countrs o4 elestion day, sud voto hero, ‘Fhe wistea way they must no. do 1, or there will bes nght. ~ Agmin, the e- pablicavy yieid tua puini, And b 13 weil tlioy Ao, Ajariy haviog no pussible curuce 1na dight bud better yield winor potnts than to risk e Cut. e sences, Tue wuiten aio detarmined ta carry the olec- tou, and will earzy it whuthor ur wo, and it s G=elons Tor the buvtian to hoid ont w4 to m nor de. taild, ILhos come to 8 peiut wheio 1t in nseless for the lte, nblicaus to even ALEOPE 10 vares tha eleczion, anl taew emef conecrn enould bo ot preveut blosdnliod, Lus county, und all eurrounding countics, coulatn & lars: Prejunderance of newro pupulns tion, but they A8 PUWCTIedd i BO DBDY Husop 10 whsert ali maintain (Heir statii as vote without Federal wid night at theis baex, ‘1) connty bas a coloved pupmiztion of ior o toone—to bo exack, 8.0 wiit olucke, Yazoo County bische, Warron Coant: bine wiies Lo 14862 Coun hay Lue Ti1 Think of s inzge connty with bue 741 white men, women, ani caldren? Tlinro tiwazes teazh the dcduy end pentiencas of tue cotured race, all whito hun docatnonts and 112310 tho cob rary potwithatanding, In thesy heavy uegro connties, when wl e abie-bodied waite t@en were wuthe araiv, the In jnever at. fowpte! to £2ric 3 bow for tue 4 xheat | Tiza witan i reacn of Luman Lo v frecdom, For all they Luve baine in wlavery aud in frcoedom they hz.o pevor syiemptod ro- k2 ¢l “Yhen, you may ask, why nre tho whites of Mias gignippl 1 aoms ¥ Vhat ere they afrald of Lhey are not acraid of noyibing. “fhey re in arms to carry tha ele: Thay wag that tho nuegeocs nre usterls ines tent to bo the ruling clagy, thiat tiieir deven years rule bus brousht the State well nigh to tho ¥erze of ruin, that tnxes tiwve fncroased 500 por cent, and property do- procisted 200 per exns under tho nyrro'y experi- ment as & govoruing poveer, aud chat tiey, the whitos, 85 a matier of aself-presarvation, aro going topat an end to it, They irealy admit their great mistaka in nob taking right bold of the easp in the pro;or spirit imme- dintely after the \Ver, giving tae uegro thewr haud and litliag hun fo citzenship, and winning Lt to » firm allcganco befute the carpnie hagger could come Letween them, But for two 3 ¥ remcined ecllenly aloof, and in that timo the sarpet-bazgers won the negroos, und tave mahoaged them to their own per<onal (nter- artr over since, tid totho 1ntinite detrimont of tho State. o tho negro must sufter for the whita man's follies, ‘Lo-night in uany yarts of the late, or whore considervd necessary, thero 1 to ben “uight riding " and shooting, 1 18 not on the pro- grammo to do bodils barm to any person duriag these rides, but merely to arouse n degreo of un- caginess i tho dariy's mind, and cause him to connider it hestnot togo totho alection. A very littlo offort thin wey frizhtons many ne- groed, Ten whita men gallo, ing over tho conn- try and shooting intu tho air, whoup- ing and yelling, slthough they do nut injure the Lar, or rather the wool, on u singly person'a head. cun prevent o hundred negroes from cowing to the polls out of pure alarm, In tho castern part of the Stato they have actually got moall cannon, which they pull about at vight, avd firo ** salates," as they call it, Tuey talic theso ** boomers " from vlantation to plaa- tation, boing carcful not to do bodily harm, or bring thuniselves within the clutehies of the 1'od- eral law, but mumply fire ** wulutea™ at each plan- tution. “Fbis, esrriod out on s Isras sexle tho uight beforo tha olcetion, will causo tho tinud darky to think that Lo had better stay at homo and pick cotton, If any of thoso men ahiould Lo arreated for firlug off their old blunderbnenos, they would put ou an innocent look, aud chaim nud prove that they wero morely firinyg a National \£aluzo of tlurty.aovou guus 1n houor of their oxpected victory. I saw a dispatch from a town in tho northern part of tho Stato, yostorday, saying thut u salitte of tuirty-3 ven guus was firod, and that tho fir- ing; wed kopt up ** until a very fate hour.” Yes, and avery gun fred **at a lute honr ” will keep at ieast oue tesro from tho poll, and heneo thefie- ivgr. A National ealuco fired at midnight iv cor~ tainly not an indictablo offensa, It 18 not in the vrogramuwo to do bodily barm to tho nogroes, for 1t bas dawnod on tho Mis- sissipps miud that tho blacks sro essontinl to the wolfuro of tho State, and that without them thero can be no cotton in tho Mizai tomy, aud i icksbuig, to sy nothing promising towns, would perlsh from the faca of tha earth, go to decay and tho dogs, But thers in ® strong disposilon to run off the local teaders of t'o blacks snd give tho masses to nndorstand that it would bo better for them to vofe tho white wicket or not voto at il I atili hold to the Agures I gave you Indc weak, namely, that from 8,000 to 10,000 no- groes would voto the whito ticket, and fully 15,000 will not vote at all. This will give the L¢mocrats tho Stata. Jacksoy, Miss,, Nov. &.—Hundreds of usgross wvotod the Democratio ticket, saying that tho Giovernment had rofaved ¢o come to tho suppart of tho Ropublican party, aud that they would get on the good ride of the whites. Tho fouling liero to-uiglit botwaen the races s bettor than st auy timo eluco recouuiruction, X ———— startling Qccurrence at tho COrystal Palace, Lloyd's Lomdun Newaraper, On Thursday night & scens of tho mout in- tonsa exoienient vceuried ut the Crystal Patuco. L was aunounced that Bignor Gregocim, '+ Jove, tho Thunderer,” would duecend on un ioolived wire from tho top of the northern tower to the lake ou tho torraces d & showor of fire- warks. Soon after Y o'clock bo cowmencod bia descont frou tho tawor, bewy sudpouded under tho wire, to which thiore wore runniug pulleys to steady b tlight. o got about half-way down, wheu frous some causo or other the julloys woull not work and Lo remained tixed to the laca, aud tus tire-woris werved puuly o revenl hie terrible tion 10 tho ypactators. Thers e remnined for s considerable time, with~ Qub auy oro beluy ablo o reader Liw ssdsiauge, and the exaltemant ronsequont therson can ba better imaginod than describad. At length an oxpediont waa renorted to by a man throwing n fopn rutind the wiro at tho lower part and then giadually working 1t up to tho place whoro the man waa still fastnned in such a terrible manner, Ooo of tha men omplosad i the flreworks. dis. r[ly then, by groat conrago and akill, pulted himaell Liand over band up by the rope, agd Gn- ally succeedad in gotting up to the wiro, andy Attor cansiderabla dificulty, managed to liberate the fising Jove from the ligature by which one fout was fnstenod to tha wire. Having dono thls, ha desccuded by the rope and got to the ground {n uafoly, Tlis example wan spoedily followed by Bignor Gregoriny, to the intenso rolief of the assembled thousands, S R ——— TIE INQUISITION CHIAMBERS, A Visit to the Torturing Instrumenta ; of Nuremburg, Correapondance Luwiscille CouriernTonrnay, About » week ago wo were in Nuremburg, whers wo wont 80 teo tho chmmnbera of tho In qiusition. A8 very fow Llounnts visit these P (for they nro not oven montioned iu a Enide-hoak publisbiod fn the city), I thought 1t mizhi noy be amiss to sitempt s doscription, First wo wero conductod to 8 small room with tho walls comaul stely covered with torturing fnstro ments of avery doscription, ‘Fhis room was used Ly te reqular oflicers of tho State. Thers wau a Spauish cloak—a bacrel with the bottom knock- ed aut and 2 holo tn- the top large onongh for tlie neck —aud above this o wiro cago for the head. ‘Thin cloak the druckard was compaliled to wear about tho sirects, thus repressntiig s Lottomless tirrel. Tho torturing clair bas high arina, with the ccat, bacl, and arin-rests covered mi‘: iron srier. “Thio vietinr was strapped to this chair, woighta atiached to bis bauds and teot, aod then ™ koand: ed” arit were with a myiko.covered rollor. Hpanish collars, Spamish Laois, thumb-scraws, thuimb-hammers, and fludics aro to be sesn in umber ; besiden various instruments for cutting off o little at & timo of tho ears, nose, tin. gere, and tongue, and for pulling out the tougue. Jhirre wero wido ladien tor grop ing meltel pieh, The tmtramoent they had for catebiog thoir man might bo used, with advabtage, by Aomo of the Loulsvilie policemen, It connisty of a long stiek, at the end of wineh ia a kind o fork wita kpring provgs that will opeu whoo gomothing is forced bo.weeu them. In days af yoro, when it was deeired to catch & man, one would walic up b hind lum and cateh his neck Letween the prongs. ‘Ino pronza would opso and hin neck would bo euc:relad by & Spanishcol lar, i. e., iron spikes. After exnmintuyg variout other fustrumeuts, nwoug which wore neveral usad for bolieading, alss axed ana block, wo were conducted to tho chawbers of the no-called “Voumo (ericht.” Iheso arn a reres of five . directly underneath tho old city walle. through tho first we waro shosn the “utreteher.” Iy this mode of puvisment tho victim was let down through a holo [u the coiling; lus feet were ntiached to ron rings in the Hoor, onul lus armd to a voke suspended from a bloek. By meann o1 & windiass Lo was thus slowly torn Lt 11om timb. . n tiie nex: room 18 tho *“Spsnish Mule," o high Luard with tbe upper edge sharpened. Aerone this thoe poor fe.luw wus veated and stoud weizhta (une of shioh I could hurdly Bift) wero attached to lus fcet, fhe *vcradlo” is a semi- exbinler, with tho wterior eovered with spikes, As lato as 184 w womau swan rocked to slecp in thincradla! The husbaud was accused of bav- mg #tulen gome wuney, and with his wife way pui ta the *reck, Tho hasband eurvivad the proot of his tnuocence, but tap wite died m the cradio, Next we wero conducted through a lobg, patros, crooked parsnge, cut out of the malid rock, Amall van ‘There faeng the wall we oW the celeb.ated ** Eiserno Juuefraa,” an iron figure of b wowan ebort$ feet hich, The Agure is divided 4. tna way oown from side to side, and the front bdf, dividad again wo as to ma'ta doork, nttached by hung ut ths sides, to the back lalf. Gn the 1wstlo of these dours are n nuniber of itan spikien G to § duchos long,— ono for ezch 070 and twenty-threo for various parts of the body, Lo ciose these doors, when the man wus 1wwde, o bireo from the wall was neeesarry. Gudarneatn the liguro id a trap-door, throuzh wEich the cory d on to a sot of kuives, v Ve the water in the cunal velow. “Tha bones and ekuils found thure £how whero the spukes entaied, ' FORGIVEN.” Jieturey 2o, 357, by Thamat S. Nulle, ob Y1 e Fzpeeition ef 1655} 1 Eite, 6 aoul whove light liath fied, up atrean, u buule Life's sea hat tossed, A witiiere d lower, Kpeut e, a friond we've lost,~ A cout, pall, a1 dirge, Wit of the dead, {Suggeetod ), A biroi Al Eolewnn =l atill tke rao: A lenely widow ita by v giel'z corse | Eecaliiii eundersd ives deg give remorse, Uubiceued Wikt o Jarent’s carés rejuire, 1t by the fire; Death hiolds thie mald, nat long to be wn falr; Around lier piiiow fulis her giurious hair; Aud shiently the matron broods despatr, Death, kind nnd cruel, hath each 1ifo chord riven ; Too Lits the tother Lutl hee child forgiven ; Bt lut us bop: they'll mcet agaly in eaven, Ocr., 147 La Motrz. e T ‘s Unfortunnte Minve Bailey,” Harper's Muzazine, This grest fact may probably bo taken for granted: Lvery person of mature years who speake good Luglish, aud is at ol familiar with the logendary poetry of the t.ame, hau read the sfieciny verses taut recitd the trinls of ** Misw Batley, untorinnato Miss lailey.” ‘Thoe disbelief iu the dustu of that indy eeems to be almoust univarsal. But recent fiterary research by En- glish psholars haw developed tho ract that other varsed in referency to lor have been disvovered that impars resh interess to her domestic luse tory. Thus: AUDITIONAL YERSS, Nuxt moru bis mau rapp'l ot his door Ol Jetin," wiya e, “eomo eis we; ' 301 1y one-pound tote,” Crieid i, “*(lood Huaven bless e ! % cure 4 your one| Blive taen your leatber bry O, Miag Ltz ¢ Tae wicked phoy Mias Baveyt QUEL TO MIN$ DAILEY, Alulyulr iy acpd aalr, i Wio pleancd Ui Leatia i siny Froia olf fhy tester of her bedr o Ous mornicg she was swinglug, Ut 1alber'd Aty gervant-mnan— “Tiney eali’d bifur’ Darby Daly— Teacized her by tho alender watat, Aud erlwd, * 13 thin Miss Dalioy 17 O, Miss Nailey? Lufortunate Miss b Tho paor mald n convulsions iay; All thought sho bad drparted ; Wi Daroy with tho bellows blaw Her windpipe il sho started Bha sigh’dand call'd for TLo creaturs Jook'd quite paloy : While Darby roar'd, “Tue wicked thisf, Homurder'd poor Miss Dalley " Oh, Mus Bastey 1 cle, Then with acudgel In bis flat, Han (o the Captain's ehiamber; Who thought It was anotlier ghst, Or w.1me unwelcome stranger. ‘When Darby niade bim Lumble, 80 e fourisliod liv 2hillahh, And by \he ueck b lugg'd uim off ‘T visit pour Misn Bailoy [ , Poor Misa Liiley 1 ese, ‘Tho Osptatn bold, had now arrived: Hays Darby, * llere I chargo ye, Mako up aMiles without delsy§ "m goluy for the clargy.” . Ha fiew lockid up bald Captali Smith, Who own'd bo acted frailly; Aud with a kles to reconcile Te grectad poor Mies Lslley, et e L st Next Darby cams with Parson Brigge, Aud Lugyd the knot be'd tle, sir, Haying, ** Il you dou't, upon my soul, P cruatir shy will die, air. ‘The Cavtain took lier by the hand ; No couply looked more gayly ¢ Wil Dariy roarod sloud, ¥ Amen I” And warricd was Misa Dalloy, On, v Baley 1 ete. s Wi A LouvesSiok Sailor. Sun Francisco Dullatin, Anexciting scene occurred off North Point yes- tenfay morning as the French corvette La Volta was_leaving for Tabitl, During the time that tho Volta semaled in the harbor, ons of the men, 1t geows, ucllized hig **liberty days” in lavishing his attentions on a young French womsu reeiding in this city. The altschmeut was rociprocated, aud wlm{]thn day of partiog camo 1t went bard for both. As the vesset kot under woigl, the love-stricken sailor, with & bouud, cloared the bulwarke and headed boldly for the shore. The corveite was instautly stoppod, & bost lowered and msoned, aud bis capture spesdily effected. But Lie wau 0o sooner placed on deck thau he sprang overboard again, ouly to ba captured in the swmwo mauuer as be- fure. Among the witnesses of Lis pluoky at- tuinpk to escape, who stood on the doclk as North Point, was tha object of his dovotion. Her face was tho very picture of despair whon she sam hot Jover captured the scooud time, ot . **Mike, have vou settled thal.affair with Lewis ¢ ¢ Yes, be kicked ma out of the stoop 1ast waolr, sad siico that ho Las stopped bolies=