Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 8, 1881, Page 16

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LU ; 2 . THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 1881—SIXTEEN PAGES, q ~ mis ne of tmvet was by the Memphis & Little THE SOU TH. i Rock Railroad, one 3t the roughest ‘and most sptiys . Ast y 8, In, 80 | even upon the shortest day of tho year, can y priyed of thelr lender, were forced to with= | committed ere th : met a the nao) rev Pe eae to ie Do ral to buve Deen. envored Uy. intl, “OF BULLDOZIN pilyer), of tie ill comm tte are Ui day ended, was 9 for disagreeable fron blghways in Amerien. The | They only move backward. - course, about the beginning and ending of this Thy affair, naturally enough, was magni- Uoth Mr. Lanier and Dr. Jones wero cath; countty between Memphis anit Pittie Rock : DRAIN AQE AND 1.088 Peete yer fect: and cantly pxtinenieiet = fed Into Aniwiense proportions. IL was “ns | advined to get ont af tha way. | Dr, Jones at A Gloomy ‘State of Industrial fs extremely Fertile, ant tal needs enter oriae ‘The conseanences crowing ent, of this galste, adn, anata ppreclabin on clear eatd Tho Contested ‘Seat from the Fifth minted Ot ei nwell oeigtent. wane fa int poruacdite Baits he" nFsonnlly Affairs in That Ou tha face of the earth, Lhe urinel pals cra Ly ea uate tu Hee tee aatantere san pole iteett istanty shrouded in perfect blackness Louisiana Congressional dowi, of course, With n strong hand. | land, tint it was Lanier who wasthreatened .. pultivated 19 eotton. | From Little Rock, vii | the’ productive “forces represented by coin Nov. 16 to Jin. 2 w periat of seventy. Distrist. the taporers, 1 realized in. {ts full-extont | VCH days. Supposing that the sun his eet i (supposing a chreumpolar sen or body of water this season; and, of course, both eapttal and | Gnimited to vision un Sept, 2h not to rae nati) Jabor are damaged and must sustain loss. | Maren 18 for that pirtledlar point, giving a | Moy a Democrat Was Returned Over a The Gail sonean, has. provented B from gath- | period of about tifty dys of unl ‘ornily varying: Fl ering more than hate of the cotton which was | twilight, the pote hins about 188 tive of cutitine Republican Majority of Fivo produced by hls. efforts on A’s fifty-ncrg | ous daylight. (0 days of Naey log twilight, and Thousand. fleld. But New-Yeat's Day has passed, and Bovonty-navett of perfect inky HaFenons tei with it Bo has. passed along to a new | When the moon hns a nerthern deotinntton) tn home for anuther year, md the flld, | the period of n typical year. During n period of ii rf Wun aH eg leg at tho brand | Sua She utoaatuie pols ae toe | TRO “Hon.” Js. Floyd King, and the Hodeebo picked i has lusts labor and A, | AVeRctee Seat anoe us hens Permits em Modes by Which Ho Mado Him- half his rent. But the condition of the car self “' Honorgble,'* talists nid that of the Iaborers are vory dit. |) ferent ihe former Pretty securetl hy THEIR WEDDING JOURNEY. There was a guthering of the bulldozliy Ifg hhuself insisted that Lanter should. ke ¢lans for that purpose. ‘The Hon, J. Kova Of the streets. Just after Tamplighe se King was 4 Tirtundiet-Goneral of initia. | Doctor was sought out by a colored: nia Mo placed himself at the head of 1 veritable | who, linving heard the threats, hiplored bhiq anny of bulldozers for the invasion of ‘Ten-') to xo home, ‘Cho Doctor sald, * Let tv look gas, Ifo diel nopawalt any inatructions from | about a ditthe, and £ will” A tow of the Gov. Nicholis, The opportunity was at hand | bulldozing gentry were In the Dbarroutn, for tho crushing out of alt Republican oppo- | Lhe room was It tp by an open fireptace, sition to his (King’s) Congressional aspire | Upon the street-corner close by was a lam tlons, He wns not tho man to allow tho ogy | that Jit up the walk in front of the barroom portunity to Bilp through any hesttancy In | window, At this window, Just after belp, the mutter of orders from the Governor. Ho | sought out and implored by the colored mag assuned himself as delegated with full pow- | to get out of the Wave appeared Dr. Joes, ers, Hs telegram to Gov, Nicholls has a hig- | To was thus, in the fight of the Inimnp, seen torical Juterest attached. “It was tho sturt- | and recognized by those on tho Inside of the Ing polnt, as tt would seom,of (te Nicholls!) room. Across tha strect in one «rection Section. Pine Bhut, to Arkansas City, in Chicat Couns 5 ty, on tho Mississippl River, abot 200 miles Felow etptibss is icants Shiels pa: fe hrough the. very chioicest cotton-growing Bad Weather Causes the Loss of a region tn this cotint Down Ung aver to ekabure by steamer isa pleasant Journey Third of the Cotton i tite a rell ef from the “Jammed-tip mental n bad cars, rolling over oxecrable apologies Crop. for railroads, Onelther bank of the Mlasis- ve ‘ sly, nlong this hart nt Abe eollrae ned Soule : ‘ . of the most magnifleent cotton estates on the Interested Parties Attempting to Un- flabe. | Auch or tha route between Vicks: pure ant Selins passes through rich alluvial derestimate the Extent of the bottoms, and the remsinder ef tho route lies : Disastor, Across plant ridges of au thy sandy soll, a NG P Tha cotton-plants in the. lelds tn these uty 5 3 ‘4 Ne subsequent downfall, It was, In elfect, “Aim } were a squad of tho bulldozers, seemingly . at regions are. very. low, nnd only afew bails | (UE Nays, alinust au exorbitant rats of tne ANE by Se Hewett Wholesale Bloodshed and Frand—The Assastnation | ow crosslnue tho river with a9 men” Walling for thelr man. second squad wert The Lahor System of the South—** Sharg- are produced to each stalk. Here a great 4 4 shis home of a year without the means to buy TE NULTIALS. i Tila wife w new enlico dress, cr himself a pale ‘aoe coote Ateporter. : aia Republican lor and dallonat of brogans, All over the South the kind of | phe g Onell, z dhl ‘ ian : hr pactous and elegant parlors of the movoweny, t Ave ‘deserlliett Hae take Hon, J. W. Boneset, whose position among who cultivated the fields. have left | the haut ton hns been assured ever since he siitelal. Correspontensh of: The Chteaa Tyitaume, them. Of course, others haye comes but | collected the Insurance money of his store | NEW Oneeans, La. Jan. %—The case of Goy. Nicholls, to give hii his due, wagsnot | similarly stationed on the corner oppo: of tho bulldozing stripe, Wo had puarnuteed Jamp. A man from directly morose te tte the Republieans, in his Inaugural, full pro- | left bis squad and walked over to where ston. tection. Le y naturnly assumed that, as | Dr, Jones looking tu at tho whilow. THe Qovernor, he alune should direet the move- | thus camo up behind lila Intended victhn, ments, if any, of the mflitla, ‘The reception Not ten feet off, in the shadu, stood the of King’s dispnteh is sald to have put bin In | colored man by whom the Doctor had just been ntowering passion, “Dain iin,” 1 part of the cotton lias been prekerts Indeed, Cropping” and Its One-Sided very Ite remains in the field. Selina, Ala, 0 tlon. fy quite acentre for the Inlund cotton trade, peration, and in lis viehulty are some very fine lowland — cotton plantations, Buck to, Meridian, and thenee narth on the Mobile & Ohlo Ratlroad Maladjustmebt of the Relations Botweon | to Cortuth, and then west 100 miles to Mem- Uf course, during the time oceupted tn maklog fits wide Clea Vane cottes puck — | ent had ample opportunities afforded him Ko Progress Possible under Present Conditions | oF wake if carefal inquiries Into te. condi. : Mow Can the Evil Be Remedied ? tlon of the country ino material point of : view, aud also the intellectual and moral charucteristies of the inhabltants, Of the Bpectal Correspondence of The Chicago Tribune. material Interests, the results of enreful ob- - Covixetos, Tenn, dan. 5—Oll Inhablt | servation, supplemented by uarded Ingulry, ants inform your correspondent that in a Junde ine to the conclusion ¢ are re re an i Jong period of tlie—perhaps within titty | Mot Wea prosperous or i pel cond . » hav Fait Thero is at least 45 percent of the cotton years—they have not experlenced the rlzors | cron grown on the tow ands stilt in tho flele of winter so palpably as during November | in inany localities in. the river- button and December of lust year, The holldays | and along the marging of creeks, more than were bitterly cold for this climate, the mer- | 0 ver cent of thy cotton remains ttnpleked ae on | throughout the whole extent of the region cury often sinking below zero, It has been | visited. On such flelus are produced the best , ‘ ; : fa he, | warned. He thus had a full view of both nes hie! Meii- | the cotton will nut'be theirs if they pick It, | that burned up last fall, were the scene Inst | Mr. UB. 1. Lanter, Republican contestant | = . ae "4 iS oth tho Land-Ownera and the CTR HT See tenon eereia ful they make two lnste to attempt to perforut evening of an coyent which brought tonether ‘gainst the Hon, J. Floyd King for tho sent 1 have ie called out ae mina myselt te ioe a the ees ul me ta Laborors, region on the Continent, 20 degrees below the frecz ng-vol WFisiat. | about threo hundred of thedlite of the city, it | 4 Codgress from the Fifth Loulsinna Dis- | | ‘fhe movement begun by Mr, King, how. | recognized Dr. Jones, and all saw and recog. * 3 tempt would be valng it 13 an fwpossible | belng nothing less than the nuptials of tho trlet, has been already considerably discussed thing for an ordinary mortal to pick cotton | host's eldest daughter, Miss Beatrice, to Rue in the Northern press. It has been seen ns durlng freeziug weather; itis libor tint can- | pert Rollingstone, Esq., 0 prominent society | ot least entitled ton hearing, Mr, Lanier not be perforuied with gloves on. ‘The Inev- |, a nt the anine time has been the subject of not e cons mnees Will anrely follow,-- | YOUNegentleman who nsslsts Alessrs. Blank & 7 that is, ge aunt cotton crop ot 1890, eth Blank in conducting thelrextensive wholesalo | ® little of abuse and vilifiention. Itis snfe punted at one tine nt nently 6,000,000 of’bnies, | dry-goods business, ‘That it was the most | 0 Assume thaton tho ono sido but n small will not greatly exceed 4,250,000 bites; and, as | recherehé affalr of the season none who were | Proportion fins been told, while the measure a sequel, Will eauso bankrupteles and: com: | therg can doubt. Fair womenand brave men | Of Democratic abuse must be neeepted much SHEET Terie aed alfecting the vied with etch other In seeing who could cat lke the Irishman’s dreams, by contraries, as a . | affording, In fact, a powerful argument in the WHAT REMEDY ? the most ice-cream, and it was. universally napa pa erase ih 7 .. 2 gentluman’s fryor, One must have known ‘The question ns to whnt remedy ean be 1 remarked that no such lay-out had been seen piled te correet the existing tI or u midint- siney the days of the Retlof aud Ald Society, something of tho South—must have Becn tistinent of tho relations between eapltaland | ‘The happy patr started Easton the o'clock | sud Known tho man—must have been Teter iy one more easily asked than an | train, and tpon returning will reside with | acquainted with the Lotisiana flold, to write ever, was well under way, The Parish of | nized tho man stealing up behind hit. re *Tensas was fairty overrun by the armed bull- | party approached to” within a Yew feet dozers under hislead. Howevermuch hemay | drew a large-sized revolver, Just at this have been Individually culpable, thelr path= | time Dr, Jones turned Iinsetf around, Hy way was Iiterally strewn with Republican | turned to meet a revolver at full cock thrust blood. ‘The Republican blacks werg mut- | fairly into his face. Ho was shot‘down erg dered and outraged on every hand, Mr. | he lid tina to utter u word, aft Katrfax, tho Hopublean candidate, was Thus was murdered, for no offense other’ forced to flee for his life. ‘The other Ke- | than being a Republican lender, Dr..AV. B, publican lenders, as well, were forecd to ex- | Jones. The facts as here given Thave trom patelats themselves from their homes, ‘The | one of the witnesses. Strangely enough, the Republican opposition to Mr. King was | Grand Jury in the parish where tho murder erushed,§ IIe was elected to Congress, ag a | was conunitted have not been able to fing matter of course, va an overwhelming Dem- | out who was the murderer. Stranger stil oeratle majority, ft was thus only that the | United States Marshal Jack Wharton, 4 Fifth Louisiana Congressional District was | New Orleans, sone hundreds of miles away, carried by the Tlon, J. Floyd King in 1878 | has not only found him out, but has found swered, It would seem mreasonable prope- | the bride's parents, providing the old man | ynderstandingly of the ense at Issue, Ho has yet to answer, In thi: nection, t ¢ 7 k a gloomy holiday season down here. cotton, sitiun that au extension of the duration of the | does not try to carry too much January Mr. Lanter, ns haa been published, was an. indictment sili raniine in the Untted potoae tan ine erat nase We The ios ‘The {inhabitants of the far North have no AN EVIL UNDER THE sUN. tenure by which homes and lands are held by wheat. a 8 41 born In Northt Carulinn. He was though a | States District Court at New Orleans, truth Is that no jury dare indict; that overy conception of the miseries of the people In| Aythough It {s not my purpose to: discuss thode a fl, He tforuelabar af fhe, panes ay the Tuativond Tevoter mere boy at the time, a Confederate soliller, | TH COURSE OF AND EFFECT UPON Gov. man onn jury and voting for an indictinent this latitude during tho provalenco of | political or social questions in this letter, | Uy Yor the evilg whieh, wo have | ‘Tho funded debt of tho L, X.& Z ¥.1.R, | Hesettled at Lake Providence, La., better “ ee WOt course Nr Ente oo ny Mat th such weather as that which, has vis-| yet there Is a tatter which I cannot well | OS est t lense: ; Stee tere if " antl ‘ The “ Tensas War” was mado the subject, i » Lanier got out of the way, 1 » from the inal Cthiscom- | Polated out. A system, of tong lenses, } over which Mr. and Mrs. Rollingstone start- | than ten years since, Hv identified himself | at the tine, of an oficial Investigation. Gov. Of course, too, being out of the way, he doeg ed eso regions ° based tipon meertain Axed valuation ut the oR x i ‘ obo | XN i se not care fo return. So to do, fol Sted th i during” the: at muntenti ied ‘ th H bor net is anit ad tain Axed valuatt et ud ‘for their wedding-trip Inst evening, Is | with the policy of Reconstruction, Ie be- | Nichulls delegated vertain of his trustworthy it » for the present tumn and winter of the Inst year, | Munleation, It Is the Inbor methods of tho | tine of making them, which would afford n | oo ‘i Be R me ‘ 7 ut least, would be but to fuvite a fate simi} South, and the effects growing out of such | yo, ble—nay ave: Thernl— ane | S7480,210,14, but it fs belleved that, with tho | came thereby, in effect, a deserter and renc- | friends to visit the scenes of the inurders and t nitlag From Replember itt oveuliet alustel! ON | systems upon carteion. itis strange, Hon for tho capltal Invested tn the fads an | funuguration of the new frelght tarlif, this | gade from the Southern cause. Letiiim who putrages, and menor, Not content with thls, do.thak forced pon bs ferent ae bepposes, more than two-thirds of the days, and, as n | but itis true, that the Southern people, 93.8 | tenements, would, it seems, be more sutis- | sally redtieed. Asplen- | atestlons the situatlon.look nt the ease of | ie Visited the parish to lnyes! «for himself, " Kilt, di Tahir iB is olan isis a ines ai Ca Neat ret prea factory te batt Hie in ndowhers cata es Fe ee ELAR e lira cn rey iitted Gen, Longstreet. Mr. Lanter, Uke Long: ae eens ielemsted by: tha Governor 10 Lane ————— a HESS) be saavendet a ps eo aE tbr tier tent which must always block the wheels of the enue: _ Nuptoee’ Mie inborine elnees, up for tho happy pair by the Company, and | street, in jolning the Republicans, placed | ‘They caunot well by accused of personal bins ? IN A QUANDARY, : rat oT rien oe art Tote the present the | Brauress in their sectfon, wid Cifectively at | by giving them the assurnncy of 0 fixednoss | It wns Indeed a pleasant pleture to see them | himself practically outside tho pate, ii i tavor of; tha’ Tenubleates: the report ‘Ohteayo 2 Sani and: Lea “SHAE EONS: ls { ‘d res ls prawell ln Wealtly rie aps An Me | tn hablution; and, nym conseayenee, they | chatting enyly with a bevy of friends before Tle beeame thencyforward, with. the ex- | Sows in ey might Tele aptenees conn Por Tea Coiba THbo, : season hns been 9 succession of rain and | Otter i ot tne tt Te ee eerie the | Would naturally strive to secure aud retuin | tho train started, In case the freight pool is | tremists, un enemy to “tho South.” Ife ts v | mitted. 16 is nono_tho less damning tn its “Wot xt OUS RIDE: miulisy afore ante rating wi Teen a South thetinal outcome must be ‘lisustrous, the guotloplolons of thelr, nelgibors., wilh broken, as now seems probable, tt ts pretty | man of decided abllittes; ig 2 ready spenkor; conelusions,. Gov, Nicholls, tvo, natlsfed Ray comme now, Sr preacher, ‘ thnws, which have rendered ig impossible to | ‘ne inbor of the South must be placed upon nerd iendly ar through | stfe to say that grain shipments over this | fs credited nga somewhat foretble writer. | himself by personal inquiry upon the And Lam very anxious pursue any outdoor tasks for more thon one- | q basis lfterent from that whiel It now | 4" Gyusao sintricnals Bonen mn a he L will Inrgely Iuereaso during the next | He employed his talents iu the Republican | round. Io feit himself grievously out. For you to make us one. . : ; i Q course of years. lease of, say, | rond w 5 or M ; we i ead fourth of tho time. Sinee Christmasday the stands, upon, or ratrogressiot; not pro} ree | twenty-five ‘venta, With’ a yearly ‘rental | threo months, Ab fnst the hour of departure cause, Iespoke for and championed tho Te A So a ais eles The wedding: Flo is ay ” P corresponding to ia = prafits 0! ho | cate, nid a es t ¥ ti ts ur tight to be united, temperature has been Arctic, anil the frozen | slot must pe tho inevitable *butcome, Te ts ponding to th ts of th nicl tho train moved slowly out of the | setts of the bincks, Ie established and | eee ene ei ee oe ie took hick and Our tty! i streams and soll carth remind one of the se- | freely admitted that there arabnrtlirs whieh | most valuable Investment at the time the | depot, the bride looking bewutiful ns she | Cajted the North Louletana Republican. lo | honorable around. Tie thought the nublet ‘To ev'ry onc is clear.” vere frosty wenther of Wisconsin and Min- | fccm alnost insurmountable in the way of | joase Is made, and secured by condittons of | threw kisses to the merry group of friends fortis L a Republican. honota BF aids i tought th puntsh- 4 sin and Min- | jomogentzing the interests of all the peoule. | Hen, forfelture, and other safeguards, would | that stood on the platform, Whether or not | accepted Republican positions. Me bogan | ment should be proportionate to the olfense, MINISTER. nesota, During -n perlod of twelve days | —making then identleal., ‘Che black skin of | gyotd a higher and better-secured ‘Invest- | Vanderbilt's seneme of congotidntion will | with that of Acting Sherltf, in 1870. The slt- ils action mi by no nett well recolved: 0 say not so, iny Indy, _- shown his blessed face to wretched mortals 7 gate tlie, elevate the renter toa more re- | [tf on frelghts.wlll have to be adopted with | she, .. ils y 5 sowie clegree the material well-being of the ta- pital a “Ati erty ening s i t ] Sheriff elected was Mr, A. J. Parlin, repre- | the country lenders bygan te wane. The And docs not know his mindt dwelling hereavouts, rer, aud. his sure progression to 4 higher RTM REAR TN Catan ent Se eg anne A ale, beat tho sented as. an estimable gentleman. ‘The see- | matter of tho Gonstitutfenat Convention was But come again to-morrow, DAMAGE TO TIE COTTON-Chor. and better lite, must. necessarily prove a * = tris a ve 1 * tion, th aver si 1 turbulent on tho carpet. ‘The subject of a new election . When ho hus sober grown, ‘Tha long-continued bad - weather has | fullure in the ‘end. Without permanency nal Jnhoree wilt bp Cun MlAtEry assuninee ot tee ore parties te, Less Worn gure itw HH eaheaith ae call te ing ep bile. for Governor, hitherto unpopular, began to And Twill surely wed you, ny thi } ho more prompt payment of the rent to the . way an unhealthy locality fora Republie- itherto a ‘And he anil b ” ronglit immense dinmage tothe Interosts ot quel advancement canal. tale place at landlord, at Is not elnimed that this would cnossiNe THK VERRY, an ollie. Following tho lection, alr. E. be Drona ot taller Latha ie va cesar bs Aton Bro Wiets obs tie ateeeslept Vials ci emplate LA ete an Baa ate al By the Marine dteporter. IL, Masters, Republicau ‘Tax-Collector, was | publleang, did tho business. Gov. Nicholls Brine ‘ ley, and this fact will exert no small Influence hoblhanon ore SAUER conlediyite " cat problem ie a? presented iy ti Avast henvine?? killed, Nubody to biame, as a mntier of rie Tiusse, HUE eave Ainiaall Away, " “Bhow pity, Mr] Broachor, on the commercial nnd manufacturing Intet- | mg tquor of the South Is really not organ: | those who cultivate the soll shouid | “Jt was tho Second-Mnte that spoke, and nt | course, Mr, Partin, Sherlff-vlect, had reason THE LAST CAMPAIGN. And do not keep vs waiting ests of thecountry, Its true that cotton-re- | ied at ull, There 13 something 9f,8, ayia | pwn {t. But, sineo. that result cannot | his words the gang-plink fell with adull | to expecta similnr fate. Me deemed it the | The last eampalgn opened with the Re- purillanother days celp! in the principal markets have been | of employment adopted smone landlords, wz achieved under existing circumstances, hud on the deck near the iee scuppers, just ene 4 publicans at ao decided disadvantage. he y Ipts In the priuelpal markets have b f empl jupted tiiandlords, | be achieved under existing elreumst thud on the deek near the 4 just | part of prudenco to leave the parish, Mr. B, | Publieaus at led disndvantage. ‘Th jor if, upon the morrow large during the present season; but hence- | who are lere the eapitalists, which, after all, | the lease system will aceompllsh the next | abaft the port puddle-box, and the Luey Awh | 3), Lanter, under a mutually satisfactor: reglstratlon, to be sure, gave a very fair And know what ho was uolng, by WI @ wl {3 worso for the agricultural Iaborers than | best effects, ‘The only objectlon which can ty Beas ¢ clory | showing. ‘The official figures of record In He Cited forth they will be light, At least 40 per Gent: ne stood buldly out into the East River, It was . q % a ( fo woud nut marry me! fn 1880 ipl | 2re,the tenant Jaws of Ireland, ‘Che land | be urged is tho distinction between the races dl h had b arrangement ratified by Gov. Warmoth, took | the office of the Secretary of State show bet- BR. barra, of the crop grown in 1850 In the Mississippl | fords, owners of the soll, evince no dispusl- | of agrleultural Iuborers—the negroes aud | eight bells, and thestarboard watch had been | {, upon himself to act In hisstead. Ho] ter than 2,006 Dinels, against something Valley ‘still remains ungathered;: and the | tion te dispose of any part of thelr largo es- present outlook {s, that it never will be | tates, and are contented to dwell amid decay “picked. No person, without some previous | and dilapidutlon rather than to establish Acquaintance with the business, can form an about them settlements of stall farmers, who always make prosperous the country In Aecurate idea of tho loss entalled upon the | which thoy establish themselves, These men, ecotton-growers by tho phenomenally bad | in thelr short-sighted selfishness, prefer any. season. Acres upon neres of thé fleccy staple, | menns to xeduire largo productions for theni- into ‘which no picker lus penetrated yet, | selvesjand insoduing overshoot the mark, and # “a YJ make no headway in nccumulation, while gleam whitein the fields. It is very probable | thojr estates depreciate In valuu as thie move- it will romain there. 1t Is safe to estimate | nents of the bring along the dust of ruln, that the waste of the crap of 1850 will amount | ‘They forget that a portionof the estate might to at least 1,500,000 bales, probably reaching } become more valuable than the whole, while as much ns 2,000,000 bates. 9 prosperous jgoumanity about thom would CONCEALED FACTS. OFeatae a DO See Ene eo ER Di be Your correspondent has observed a dis- Asystem which prevails more extensively position among Southern factors and Jour- | (ian ny other in thls region of country Is nals to conceal the facts—or, to express it | what Is popularly styled “working of the more mildly, to belittle the fsets—concern- wbarees als a at of tenaniey i hprusttite - | ably unknown reales ie ue Antena beat ptahnen by ime eae: north of the Ohio, 1 will endeavor to explain the whites, But the South still etings to the | set. There was no farbuard watelh, but the | served out the term. Ie was next appointed negro race with a tenacious grisp, ‘They | Captain lind the clock hung on that side of | yy Warmoth as Public “AdLuuinistritoe: Mee Must occupy some position among the pop ‘ fal a - teAdi 0 Jation, V Wat shall that position Ge? It will RRA eprint tlon hu held until 1875, ‘hls was followed be hnpossibie to retain them in a position of up when on duty, by Is appolntment as ‘lax-Collector serfism. ‘What then? Long-term leases Te Second-Mate went forward, ecarglesty | at tho hunds of Gov, Kellogg. Fol- Se TE Te tae tranny picking bls teeth witha mariin-splke. Whon | lowing this he was elected in 1870 breast of the mizzen halllards he clewed uv | Gjerk of the District and Parish Court, ofthe landtord, A Inborer, white or’ black, wv Sartarle: ie 9 a arish Court will then have inducements to creet bulldinis iis shapenderiess pants sd Seo ate lle gota cali fia 1872, ns 8 membor of and permunent Tmprovenients, and to “West by nor'west, by north, by west- | the State Republieau Executive Committee, fertilize the lund so ny to inerense [ts pro | nor west? and also ns Chatrmat of the Executlye Com- duetiveness, and to surround his home with rn >is New Xt 1 A alae economlent appilimees, which would grow why 1a Now York harbor ike ace! ebratest multe ot ie parle tat ates conaldse tip as wnatural sequence of long leases, ‘To *“Becauac It tins tyth offings.” able property, several houses In tho double the production would proportionally ye) x yg | Town of Lake Providence, and ranked at redueo tho rents, when the landlerd would Ane Why is a farmer Ike a ship's one tine as the heavlest taxpayer of tho be prevented, by the conditions ot tho lense, © Beeuuso he is a tiller.” plnee. from stepping In and appropriating the Jes- “Correct. Why Is a bridegroom crossiny ‘Mr. Lanier was thus a ronegade and cap- seu's Iuprovements or making them a pre- alps if fense of vuluy to increase. his rents, Ono | Mg Atlantic tke one of tho ship's olllcers?” | tain in the enems’s eninp, Io wasn tencher thing Is certain: there must be aehange] yy this tie tho ferrybont had reached | among tho blacks,—was a veritable teacher of froin the present system -or rather want of Naw York, Lot us loaveher therefor nyear, | sedition in that ha taught thom their pollt- over 11,000 whites. The registration, being . the work of Democratic offleints, ig not to be “y iT eee Nae assumed ns prejudicial to their side of tho | mo London professional beauties have a rival house, Cavil who may, 0S per cent of the | ina youth of tha musculus sox, one Oscar Wiidy Dincks, If Jeft to themsclyes, are Republic- | a poet and “npoatlo of the esthatic school” . ans. Ife who asserts to the contrary elther | His photography appene in tho shop window knows nothing of. tho facts, or knowlngly | beside those beautiful women who may say. wi iisrepresents,'Thoy will vote the Rtepublic- pe sas of the popular ballad, + My tate an tieket, too, If they vote at all, no matter | #8 ty fortune, gir, Able young gentloman, uty how great tha presstire to the contrary, or to | fifty uistincton In various lines Gf usual wort, what expedients they may have to re-} prefers to oimploy his time {n posing before Lor sort. Ilure, ns seen, was n very decided Re- | don soctety in eccentric uttire and with a Mly ia publican majority of colored” Republicans | his hand,—iilles which they call arums, belor nlone. Unfortunately there wera but few | whut ono may call tho distinguishing sign of bis others, ‘The Republican leaders of tha past, | affected and senscicss schvol, who consider tao, were mostly gone. They lind elthar been | themselves tha solo representatives of usthetle killed, or had sought other and moro healthy | thought, costumo, and mutnors, climes, ‘Tho trouble, therefore, was in tho ee matter of the organization. ‘Lhe Intimidation Oil and Music. and violence of previous campaigns had left Prof. Ed Holst is ono of the leading Pro its effect, ‘There was an evident widerstand- | fessors of utusic In Chicago, Inn recent in dng, in various localities, that Republican or- | terview ho stated: For tho last two years [ ranizntions would not be permitted. The | have suffered Intensely with sore throat and i? system,—or the material Interests of tho 3 e ~ | blacks saw the situation as ane | neuralgia, which from time to thino rendered season, Nor do I bellovo in the approximate | 262 839 tuake tha iden cofpnrekenslbles We GoUntES, at lonst of tho South, aust sulfer. THY VILLAIN. en Tit He re colnet ing the said of standing mennee. ‘They could get | me unfit to attend to iny scholars and com rellablilty of the “crop-estimates? for 1880 pers Aire Te landemnes. ale line a Held BOM WARNING WOnDS. Dy the Seorting Tepurter, al well-nigh unpardonable sin of acquiring | along without. any particular danger, | sition; but Lam now, thanks to that adinire Herbert Montravers was na handsome but | property through tho holdlig of Republican Lee eee OF ties muay kuoit ae ‘anee proflignte young man on whom dissipation | positions. He was under the ban, He must as does your correspondent. But, with ‘a | had sct its hideous seal, Lis deep binckeyes | needs hold his life in his hands, Ie must pretty accurate knowledge of all the condl- | could beam with melting tenderness wlien | expect, asa mntter of course, to be forced tons in which the inhabitants of the'cotton- | jyoking Into those of trusting maiden or | Into personal difflcultics. Such ts tho gentle- sKrowlng reglons find themselyes, the future | otter, wi ‘ : 7 I : é Feo eee tea agit froma | Ritter. with the vold, eruel glare of a tier | manly way, in th fand af Reconstruction, of busiuess pulntof view. ‘the retall trade in | 8s it watches {ts prey. Hoe had seen Beatrice | getting rid—Lbeg pardon, “ getting shut,” to all lines nist feel cramped ere the vernal | a8 she emerged from the hotel one eventing, | give the proper Southern phrase—of 4 troub- days sinfle upon this now cloud-shadowed | Jeaning on her husband's arm, and fallew | Jesome Republican. It 1s certainly the way country, When the merchant who had | y; 0 Wi é calentsted upon doing a busiiess of vlulently in love with her Sangamon County | tu which the Louislana gentry, in particular, § ‘unel grace, He had his mustache freshly dyed, | have rid themselves of n goodly number of eats 8 Se aon ange ere and from that moment wasn changed man. | Republican leaders. Mr. Lanter was not des- ouly been able tu do $100,000 worth, then hu | ‘I'he next night he again watchedat tho hotel \ tined to prove an exception to the too general will feel tho pressure; and the tradesman | entrance, and threw the gleam of | rule, Mr, Lanter, like too many others, much ST gale RoR OR Ga en ed his breastpln in her off eye asshescoreddown | ay a veritable necessity, hus killed bis man. i from the ludies’ parlor. She shrank | iy has been represented.in this connection of reekoning comes and only $10,000 wor | has been suid. And sv througivall grudes | BReK | instinctively | and broke, | tho | _strangely enough from the Southern stand- ‘They could draw upon. themselves a repe- | ble remedy, St. Jacobs Oll, perfectly cure, tition of past outrages. ‘The matter was sim- | and can cheerfyjly recommend it to all who nly one of abstaining from, or foining in, a | are similarly atliicted, Republican campalygu. ‘Tho bine! § Were Vvery 4 ec eget naturally disposed to remain at home, ‘The ) A official returns for the district show some 55 f ver cent only of the registered vote to huve os been polled, Of ‘course, the larger propor- 4 v 1 tion of those fniling to vote were colored Re- publicans, Had the Repubilean vote reason- ably to be counted upon been brought otit in CHICAGO the Parishes of Concordin, Madison, Ounch- Sta, Tensas, and Eust Carroll, to say nothing 7 . of othor Republican Joealiiles, Mr, King 1) ar ee tl MC ca must have been beaten by. fully 5,000 nyijor- ‘! ity. Itdoes not follow, by any inanneér of ° s mienns that, even upon tho vote, as cast, Sr. King was honestly ulected. Mr. King was The ‘Best and Ablest Republica, in from popular in ie d dct, aieny a8 N \ th rT he whites expressed -them: s openly In 3 favorof Mfr, Lanier, the’ Republican noml- Owspaper N te Union. & whitch have been sent abrond. On nn aver. | Of, say, fifty acres, with a tenement upon It, age, I believe the crop of 1870 was larger, | Usually o very ¢heap and uncomfortable alfalr at that, Mr. B is au agricuitural and certaluly the season for gathering Was | javorer, with a fuinily. Last January he much more favorable than has been the pres- | moved Into the tenement on A’s estate, une entone. The tone of commercial journals | der this kind of tontract: A furnishes B touching the cotton crop Js someting of a | With the texms and necessary utonsils for the , cultly f the land, - Of course A fur- surpriso‘to ono who is familiar with the | Cultivation of the land. | Of course A tur country from Cairo to Natchez, and from } provistans for. the Pare B. At ty) “the valley of the Red IJtiver to that j end of the year the crop grown on the fleld is of tha Alnbama, These periodicals employ | cauatly divided between A and B.A docs afarmore cheerful tone i alscussing the nothing.not « day’s work to cultivate ory fer the crop. jut one-half of tho yleld matlar thou the faets warrant, But do | fils reward 33 gives hig labor, and thit of they know the facts? It !s scarcely to be bo- | four others at lonst, which, at the wage-rate Meved. Thero are reasons which prevent | of 1680 in-this_ section of country, will innke the disclosure of the actual condition of af- | the necuunt of & stand Bvout as follows if fairs, which will o blows ¢ h | the ground be pial i + When cat stated. Tho faels ay ttiey ond To proparing Ofty acres ready for planting, oes sescesseveveescas coves 45 | of merchants and tradesmen, ‘Tho land. fs . sort of . ce do. He was | 5 UY NAmb will not be given much publicity until con- ro plaattie fifty acres, at 30 cunts. sf 15 | holders will not tare quite so badly; but Herbert at) Divetied silghth i AT per et a i otk ioe the te it Ky nee, dn preference. nite & proportion of : t tohye plowing. 100 | then they constitute only a small ulnority of not notice this, being engaged in falling over | simply on tho wrong side of the house. Had | the whites, too, remained away from tho 5 ‘ Penimient can. Aw JOnRae, nerve faly purposes! to route booing Fn ae ee ey A hulteaisumpcion | RUTMMK whlch tho porter bad apparently let | Ho been a. Dumosratle instond of w Stopud- | polls. ‘Tho Denigeratie management, tow | Tho Weekly Tribuno One Year for (ht, o — + f ayer, had control of the count, ‘The s . of inerchundise cannot compensity for the 1 % lican leader, the unfortunate fact of tho fo SEAL x 1 say on ie the crop grown In 1880, not much more than Total for oultivatto tee seee eres soee$400 | Tysg of tratte from the netunl producers, ines Oaks us ue malt be frat enciee killing would hnve been advanced, If at all, littic need oF pest butlduzltie, The question Dollar in Clubs of Five. two-thirds will be picked and prepared for | If tho fleld Is fertile, and the season favor- It appears tu bu an Inevitable sequence | standing near by. “'Lwust gets pool or two | as rathor to hig credit than otherwise, y Dt ei Pt : ‘i ' market. i able, the fifty-nere felt will siloldt Say, 50,000 of existing eauses that tie commercial clusses | SNS ‘Mr, Lanier has certalnly Wttle enough of . {r, Lanier makes a showing of a system of = transposition of igures from the Republlean. Now is the Time to 0 the Democratic side, which must prove a Subsceril a But the merchants, and even many of tha | Pounds of cotton in tho seed, Y eetuwing reglon must svult harvesting this crop is about ns follows: * OF the catton-kraw iii rey Stand face ty face Wits aerisia of ho mean | Litt Roxt, afternoon Bealrles went out aay 4 i My alone, She had jogged perhaps half a mile ae ee ee eee Soe eat. ine | aud was gettin 2 Ma into fier stride when Heneetorthdie rectbis must bo lghte—vory | hin Pano enw Lesbort avout ev lengths ta gathered, will not be, and could, not be, if ihe fied And going atendily. oy fo iB ghe tho myst enxer disposition were shown, But | renched the threcqiarten Lote ve i well ae the gloomy despundency of the industrial | tho next carrier, but, he was soun head-and- chasgey,—the farin and plantation taborersy— } head with Wer, and under a strot ult, cused by thelr failure to renp wgulr coward | Jest Meu peates hit her uene nucle ond for thee toll, Ai judeu Huy cous | went tom brenk, In her confusion eho mur pensation nb. a ors Cede en mured somethingabvout having left her sealp- work, must exert no siall lnitue “5 mae) te tnee’ in bringlug about a crash, ‘These ing boots at hone. ‘This remark opened the the desperndo in his appearance, Ie iy of aamall, lithe form, welxbing perhaps from 180 to 155 pounds, Te impresses you at once as far more of the Northern that Southern type, HHly general appearance, in fact, In thls respeer, is not n little deceptive. Ona sues the wide-awake, pushing pecullarities of tho descendants of New Englund, rather than the comparatively stow-conch showings of the South. ‘Tat he possesses intelligence of no mean order, Is apparent at a glance. That ho is aman of quick determination and resolute will, ls equally apparent, Ue hing withal a gentiomatly, plensing address, and evidunces’ a genial. kindly tinture, “Te ts planters, are interested in undereattmating | ro preking 60,000 pounds of cotton at 75 cents the extent of oe saat wrought by the cle- aeareltty: i sarees Es ‘i ve i ments in the cotton-lields, ‘Thoy are prone, | 26 baling 14 12-17 bates (B's shure), «4.004 too, touxaggerate the amount of the pro- ‘To whicn udd cost Of cultlvAtlOn,.ssseesedeeee 4 duction, For what purpose? Let ino explain, Total of tho COSt to Be. .sscsecesss serene ny BUUD ‘The crop of 1870, as every one knows, was a Now, n case B's cotton shows a good sam: large one, and the prices obtained were quite | dle, and the market Is good, he may average, remunerative. The people of the cotton. | £4¥; 10 cents per pound on sale, whieh will yluid Im, say, $760,—which sutn, taken from growlug belt had become comparatively fre | {ho eostut produetion, leaves $169. pourer from dobt when they realized on the crop of | thnn tho market-value of tho Jubor expended , 1870, and began to provide themselves with | on A's land. ‘ the comforts and many of tho luxuries of | , Now, how stands the account with A, the Interesting study to a Congressional Cor milltee. PIC menkes 1b, to, Hino my gochey ly 80) urray 0! Acts, 4 shows Republican Votes enst for hitaelf to. have becn systemnt- | TH Tamoyn ts the best business medium ef jeally counted for Mr, King. flo icives ne | commercial oxponont of this city, und ts unduytel tho ures tn tha different hartshorand local. Revels te pi piiwontial Hepubliean es. They foot up an aggregate In the dis. |p ; Te a ee ee eee ioy how | ,riltiealiy Sin ‘rermose {¥a atatwart Reputties ‘. me his (Lantor's) majority upon the netual votu | pomapteer,and wilt remain so untlt ote ee ay cast as over 800,—Mr. Lanier, ag ovident, | enjuy the right to voto and be voted for, and have®, was counted out by the Democratle mannge | paiot honoatly counted, without bulldozing or ches ment, and Mr. King, by the samo process, | tng, and until elyii and political Mborty fur binck Lr i way fora conyergation, and before they re- ‘was counted Sn. publicans, aswell as white Pomocrats, bs as teal 7 ty peuple constitu vastly nore than a mujori- | (irned to the hotel Herbert had told his tove, ust the man, unquestionably, to give the ks 5 " list Sorte, . Mfe. Tho compatative freedom of the Mls Janus CCI oan Hy of to puobles sine ere ae very tow Hw | Bue fet us summarlz emocrutla management & good doal of PIE RTEING (GE DNS Ne DON ER Re Hires eaters eal _ sissippl Valley from n visitation of the yel- Jow-fever epidemic In that year led to the bin (ean for taut notes tires taont hope that in 1880 the country would ba ene | ‘To baltug 14 1-17 bales of cotton. * threly exeinpt from the presence of " Bronza A. John”; and these conditions, desires, and ox- Aine Raeeceemnneti iad "a B, say 14 rey _ Pectations led to somethiing likon remarkable | bales of the ayeraxe weight of 500 pounds, “business boom” In the latter part of the | or tho Int obtalned from 1,700 pounds of seed - commerelal season of 1879, Well-dolng then | cutton.. As the cotton comes from the same sowed the seeds of hope for a like boom In Nulds, and ns Be Ne Thand Wo the fall of 1880, In consequence of | ean reallze ax much from Its sale, ‘Phen tho these hopes, tho merchants and brokers | necuutt stands thus with Az of all kinds prepnred ta do a | ‘Toexponse nocount., + Targe business. ‘Tha tradesman who would | BY provocds of sulos of desafo enough in bringlnga stock of mer Not DAMIANO. sss ssorsserserssvsevees soesseBO70 chandiso worth §10,000 atralned his credit in This ts Just the amount which A recelves order to “Jay in” nastock of §20,000; and so | as rent,—that ix, about $0.50 per acre,—which, “of the heavier dealers in the larger contres | yt. SA co of wlteny ia tie presclt.stnte of trade, They all overstocked themselves | or tha real-estate market, dows nut oxceed with dry goods, ‘notions, grovories, provis; | $35 tu $80 per acre, Surely, che Southorn fons, etc., and now find themselves withont o fandowner ennnot ‘compiait he does not munrket, since those who would have been’ | net realize a suidiclent percentage on. his in- _ their, customers ura ‘without’ tho menna | Veatiuent. 2 wherewlth to buy, beenuso thelr cotton ts In remit apa See ieebte: oa maavatihe ce ere it will over eee away ne rae aha mee usually poor tenement which A places at his sold very few, and are willlng to be deluded | the Southwest at any rate—A may ~ $nto the beltef that ibwill yet bo wall with qieet by summary peers ase ithe dist rey ‘eben ely puacouens ‘tor Pea trite thit Instances, of ejuctuents ard very varus but itis equally true that this whole chink,’ from — present’ —_indleutlons. | cuuntr: Pet about Covi aut The merchants are simply endeavoring | throughout Aiptony, Lauderdal ay wood, Ww tide over a shonl of diificultles, and chor- | Fayette, and S| qwlby Counties, In ‘Tennessee, Ish the delusive hupe that the cotton-growers | ls been Merally | torn up” yy, the tenants or croppers chiiging farma, Very few per wiltcumote theirald an the end, and save | guna will he fad toulay on the same urns t them from wrecking thel> fortunes. Hence | which they cultivated lust year. This per- the apparently cheerful view of tito situation | petual changing about cannot. but have an which they take, The cotton-brokers havea [evil cfieet upon those who are forced todo f % so, Such a thing as social or educational ditferent reason, but are actuated by pro | progress RINDUE beaple placed In such cir- The murder of a Hepublican leader must, | athe future, avin tho past, Vipe Tawa e wiles of course, come tn, The only Jupublican of | ouritcation of tho publia servicos tho advocacy oft! prominence ns sich in Janke Providence, | poasonablo projects of decals rotor oa! i & 1 rgld econ aside from Mr, Lanier, was Dr, W. B, Jones, | tn pubic oxponditures; opposition to aubsidies Mr, Jones came to Loulslana somo slX Years | corporate joubery in all. tts forms; and the presen alnes from Alabama, Mo had long been 8 | gon of oqual rigtita to ull cltizons, North and Soutd- promiuent aud zenlous Renubtoan. Ih Tu: was a Bell and Everett Elector in . Tio was t : Grant Elector, ngzaln, boll In 1808 and 1872. The Marits of Tha Weakly Trlbuns dle was amon of rare ability and cournge, | Asa Newspaperareapparont to all, We doltuve tt and, aside from polities, was Iehly respected, | it excols,in the amount, quality, and yarloty of Ut Ho Jolued with Mr, Gabler in the editing of | soading-mattorwhich jt provides, overy other public tho North Loulsiana Republican, Me was | tonot tho kind tn this country. Tho spaco altott responalble for the nominationo€ Lanter, Ho | tondvorttsora ls purposely kept down tu narrow I>, Indored with might and matn in advocacy of | tts. More tian Afty columns of clear, tepible (yor his election. Me made hhinselt withul, as | plteceach week with the Latest news, odlwrial disc may be imagined, particularly obnoxfous to | alone, stories, cssays, pooms, humordus parazts74 the extremlsts in opposition, spoctal articlos of Interest ta farmora, and tho ls Tt was the byonting: of the day following tha | markot roports, . olection. ‘There had beon a gathering during | Its market roports aro unsurpassed, embracing 3 the day from the country roundabout, seeks | the information which farmors require for the tne: ing the news, Naturally, the rougher ele- | went transaction of businusy, both as putlora und bel aincnt of atleast a somewhat Inwiess com- | ors . “ munity were well represented, Some invent ye Facts about ratlroad combinations and rates five or thirty kindved spirits—gontiemanly | swaye noticed in Tuc WreKLy, ant bulldozers, one and all—were swaggertug | lmprovemonts of agricultural machinory ani it about the streets, A ell known, tapraum || methodect nuttalng term products are desc was tho general few uations, afore Haye Ticeal dec weltea on ThG Barra and Gude See ed a ee ee to ee att! | 0, £611" on *Lorticunure," and "* Vowrinatas,- Siaroe tod thole double-barreled shot- gn ‘vho Fiold and table,” in exch lsue of TH "The KEKLY, The Parish of East Carroll showed Itself | “io tome Department, gossip about tho tasbat ng givine better than 1,000 Republican ma- | yor: stories, and 4, te rity, Ni f pooms, Iitwrary aclectlon jority. No nows from thaother parishes waa, 1 " pod Ue mako TUR WERKLY at vo ty the ladics ¥ attractive ty us yet obtutnable, Lanier, to tso tho South- | youngor mombors of tho fatally. orn phrase, had “got ‘away with” tho | 7 : or presumed, intl eatriod’™ the “dlstriet Extraordinary Cheapness. Dr, Jones was tho man who had “trotted nl Loe of single wilt ress out* Lanier, Lr. Jones was the Unite | gignagoen dicecoplenctries wresunr Teves! States Supervisor of Election. . Dr. Jones | wiitbe waited one year for Moe Dollars, pustase Pe was the one who was to suporvise tho re- | paid, und us any ono can make ups Club of need turns in Lanier’s behalf, Sir, Lanier and | tes, ‘tt roduoce the prico Ww ONS DOLLAR Dr, Jones were two of those damned Rad- | Year, For Twenty Dollars Twenty Copies ” feals,” who must be got out of the wily. sont ove year, and a frae cupy to the gutter-up ‘The outlook, ag wight drew on, became | Cub. J more and more threatening, Only those who trouble, ‘ Ed aba dtane Tlerbert this section, ‘Their prosperity is the mer THLE FIVTIE LOUISIANA CONGIESSIONAL DIS- ‘Thier. chant’s bonanza; without them he must neil, Atuport for they are hls Lest—nay, almost his only— custumers; and, when they fail, tho ner: chant wus Boot follow, Last year ¢! ‘alled, aA yenr of toll pas: clusion ihey found themselves no reher, and | I mean the court-room was full. Of course fn most cases poorer, than when the year | the Court mildht have been full also, but Ie begap, ‘Choy have uo money, wd can “buy | yy, die < SA: very little, Any one possessed of oplnary would by Hbelous to sny so, (See 2 Illa p, culties ult that will'tailuw, | 7, Nix va. Stix.) ; mage pes SHADRE eet oe ‘Stlenea in the court!” said tho Balliff, Thave drawn no dark-shaded picture of | Ue dtd not say this with any idea that any- the gloomy condition of the cotton-gro wing | body would mind, but because he got ssa belt. {hive nu motive whatever to exagger> | day for it. 5 ate the umount of damage Wrought by the | ‘fie casa of Rollingstone ve, Rollingstone, PAS viel have Vistted tho iutof Old | 8vBUcation for divorce on the Rround of King Cotton” this seazon, Although the cruelty: waaito bo heard, ‘The first witness jv has been actlye, and movements from As PEACTICe, tie viuntations quite heavy, these signs are |, Whatls your name, madame?” asked hor not judivative of what the future will prove. Inyyere. {co Rollingstone.” Itign fact, known to every one,who hus tye HATICS ingatone, passed through the pouty i districts, cw ptalden paar ere ve! le cotton ‘OF 3 pared for AAR. held on the farms {i Has your husband treated you cruelly?” Bi lantaltons, fare Biatouses ue a es airs respect 2” * arm-sliet eo Ce ust g i % = teuytied and tiiare fa little or no seed-cutton ' \s Me said I could not make mince ples like in the field-pens, - It 1s sate to say that five: | is mother.’ . sixths of ull the cotton baled of tho crop of What resemblance does the defendant's 1890 iy now in thy lands of factor brokers, Holler bear to a inince ple?” inquired the fee OE a Sareea andl hag Dest en | "Oh, I monnt that Nes sald Teouldn’t make tered ‘uinong tho receipts of the crop of 1ssu. a3 good ples ig his mother could, A We may allow i bert eatininte iy tual Iu ee ho uiyeree be granted,” sald the when we suppose thatone-thitd or one-fourth fe of the cation how Temuluiug in the fields uny |, Jtupert atood Mke one atunned, but finally possibly be vicked, Lut Hit is doubtful; Ee RC Rae ea dazed sort ot re " : +“ Betruye te disheartends * croppers nay. teltctho Tntnea pie. Hn, hat Ha, hal? y' y The Daylight of an Arctlo Winters “;REQUIESCAT. ‘Lieut. Schwatka, stnoe bia recent return from a sucessful expedition in search of the roms For ‘The Chicago Tribune, , of Sir Jobn Franklin's {l-futed company, com | (Tho Yenr dics slowly, with a broken heart.) THE DIVORCE, Dy the Law Ieporter, dy aN At Its cule The court was full, This Fifth Loulslana Congresstonn! Dis- trict. is one of those Southern sections the ecullarities of which the Incoining Congress Will do weil to atudy. At ts represented—or, more. property: speaking, misrepresented—by the Hon, J. Vl oval Kow, ‘Chat Mr. King was aver properly efected by the falrand honest yote of tho people, as v whole, for whom he ix permitted to speak, it is tho baldest pre- sumption toclutin, ‘She district ts unqttes- tlonably Republlean by fully 5,000 majority. It ts unde up of the “Parishes of Caldwell, Enst and West Carroll, Catahouln, Claiborne, Concordia, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln, Mud: |? Ison, Morehouse, Ouachity, Richland, Union, aud Tensas, It thus takes In the “hill par- Ishes” in tho northern part of the State, with certain of tha *rivar paristies" border- ing on the Mississipp! on tha cast. ‘The former are largely Democratle,—ure peopled in the main by the “poor whites,” and con- stitute the recrulting ground for the gonial bulldozers with which the district has been folrly overrun, ‘The Intter are made up of large plantations, ure filed with blacks, and fre as a result overwhwliningly Republican, ‘The district became Democraus only through the Inauguration of a veritable reign of ter- ror, ‘The Repubtlean leaders were singled out one by one ns objects of attack, 4 ey were nssusinated, out ond out, wore force into personal ditouttles to the same ond, or wore obliged of necesalty to flea tho parlsh, The Republican strongholds wera ruthicsly invades by gangs of armed bulldozers from the hills} S THE TENSAS WAR The Ropublican canditate, Mr, Fatrfax, ind his home in the Parish of Tensns, Tho parish was the one invincible Republican stronghold in the district. . ‘The Republicans generally throughout the distriet were bo coming organized and certain of success, +8175 ae ton, and e + signa ¢ ‘ho tide could bo: turned only through or | have seen the genial bulldazers In thelr lalrs: ; , ; net ; thacly alma iar motives, —nuimely? sulf-preser> | Gumstances 1s simply impossible, Date the Dect api tie tay roe i qyvare tho old unrest dob shuku my souh, anized bulldozing and intimidation. ‘Lhe | can be preaumed to appreciate tho situation, | gingte Pia The Tribu 10 vation and self-Interest, ‘This decree of tute fully to tie lot of the | rod ‘or total darkness. In latitude 8) deyrues | Or Lovu. Asda pia mad Gla Your, home of Mr, Fairfax was surrounded in the | ‘They were sfateree in squads here nnd | sor cubs of Hive 141.0 uact A TOE OF OBSERVATION, Jandlesa whites og well us to that of tho luck | suiuutes, 20 seconds north—the bighest polut | What outlawed pruniiees sturo at bie, mute, wight by a gang of bulldozers from the Par- | there, scowling and vengeful, ‘They filed | yor cluus os twonty (aud o: Your correspondent has but Iately mado | Jess blacks, No one to-day feels and he has ishes of Catahoula and Franklin. Sho rald, ag seems undenlable enough, Was Dut pari ofa preconcerted plan of eunpaign, ‘Tho arty were led by a Dowocratic brave from Vatahoula, by the name of Peck, Mr, Faire fae contrary perbups to Deinosratle gxpec: ‘ations, was game. Ue wus supported by a few of ‘nla Republican adherents, ‘he Deu: ver poached. by mun—thery are four bours and | Like dead white faves peering thro’ the night? forty-two minutes of twillzht on Dec. =, tho | What Summer hopes, what resalutions pure, shortest day {n the yeur in the Nortberi Hem | Iu sluln bofare ine Ih thelr fragite bloom} faphere. 10 tatitudé & degrees 27 tatautes uorth | What sweet dreaina drift befory mine ungulshod —tho bigbest polut where white men have wine eyed, tered—thore wre alx hound and two minutes tn Beyond wy eager touch! O bitterness the shortest duy; and latitude 34 degrocs 43 min- | OF Life thut is go much boreft of beauty and of utes north, 372 geographical inilus nourer tho touderness diving! north pola than Maurkbum reached, and iva e gougruphicul wiles from that point, must yet be | O dying Year, gray with your griefs and eins, out of the taproom, each succociing tine | For The Pally Tribune, por month. looking but the more and more murderous. | Forsaturday, We pagy Livorary Balti One would take up hls doublo-barrolled gun | For Sunday, W pagus (Double Sueot), par veal betimes, Jogi welt! to i soniltion, fu tt~ | Bpectmon coples sont free. cot marks ost time for hunting bucks. y ‘address log Hunting “bucks,” bo It understoail, ts the eee bara Ani furl, Dagiall jauisinna vernnealar for jiantine A Mewlitances tiny bo mado either by draft om ubwveen a Radical” and a" nigger’ aenin, | Boat-oai ry rud loptare at 00! thera is but little. difference. “the goaiice | “address crortoe eaters 4a extended journuy for the Pirpose of Hote | an assurance of dwelling in the -houso he ug the condition uf the country and the'pros- | now occupies, and into wiileh he only yester- pects of the people in what $6 knowsas the | day cay Jonyer than ull the next New- wer Mississippi Valley, Taking Memphis | Year's duy. ‘Thus it comes about thut there Asan initial polut, n visit was first made to | ise peruinnency in social institutions, ho {ttle Hock, the flourishing and handsome | gurantes of stability in church-organizanons > Gupital of Arkunsus, where thers Is much | or educational foundations, Increase of *: better society, more Crilerpriniy and @ far | wealth, the cultiyution of a better social ovratic bulldozers were glycan warm recep- rene. more beautifil elty, If uot quile go large a | growth, the movement toward retinement i | aituined Lofore the true Piutonlo zooy, or that | Die unregretted—yo wore dranched with tears! { tion, Mr. Peck, the centlemunly bulldozer | wanty bulldozora were getting thoinselyes In THE TRINUNE COMPANY: | population os Mewphis cau boast. The | Ui houlo and eoclul clrele must by arrested | ouain which thero is no twilight whatsoever, ec. ie 1880. Fassia Duuscoue, | in the lead, was killed. ils Yoltowers, de | trio dor inurdes, hata murder was to be Cor, Madison and Deasbora-ats., cuicase'® 3 ’

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