supplementu, hiot in thibodaui...supplementu, good goyeri4kt. iwhat it has done for loujsiana....

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SUPPLEMENTU, GOOD GOYERI4KT. IWHAT IT HAS DONE FOR LOUJSIANA. Speech of Mr. Ernest B. Kruttschnitt at the Dexnocratlc Meetlng at Lake Cbarles on Saturday Last. Mr. Ernest B. Kruttschnitt, of New Or- eans, was one of the speakers at the Demo- eratic mass meeting at Lake Charles, ad- dressing the night meeting. Mr. Krutt- echnitt spoke in substance as follows: Fellow-Citirens--It is pleasant for Demo- ,rats tn meiet in party gathering to-day, "hen r single cloud appears upon the ho- rizon, either at ho:ne or abroad, to darken i.e nicture of peace and plenty, honor and prope ri:ty wh.ch have followed throughout she whole land in the wake Democratic suc- o.tss. In national affairs we may extend to 'ach ,ther cougratulat'ons for past victories, -•d we may look with moat ierfect cont- -"ence to the future, since the electors of the imupire State have recently announced in no o:ncet'sin tontes that the national battle of i f88 wil he fought and won under the eunme leader as that of 1881, and if we turn :: om the nation to our own beloved State, have wae less catuse for rejoicing? When we :,gained our autonomy in 1876 we found hie wpople oppressed with a heavy burden of debt, bearing a rate of interest so high as to necessitate a rate of taxation absolutely ruin- ons to all enterprise and industry; the State .reditcin a par with that of Mexico and Tur. 'sy, the courts discredited and jus- :ice nuted out with tardy and uncer- sin hand, the school system a disgraece to modern civilization, our alluvial lands sub- is at to annual overflow through broken and mLined levees, the great meQtopolis utterly insolvent and subject to cotlPReess suits and attack by her importunate creditors, and as ;hough an angry heaven would never stay its Land falling so heavily upon our unhappy 8tate, the year following our newly-acquired freedom saw one of the most fearful visita- tions of pestilence to which our fair land was ever stebjectd. Our people bravely fought the terrible battle, but they felt all the gloom end the misery of the old regime still brood- mng over them in their efforts to restore the ruined commonwealth to her ancient glory and prosperity, andthey determined to break with thehated past, to discard the old Con- stitution of the carpet-bagger, and to start the work of .reconstruction from the ground np. Although at the time opposed to so com- plete a revolution, I now believe that the ac- t'nn of the people was for the best. What have we achieved under the new regime ? First and most inestimable of beneits was the fnaland satisfactory SrrLEXEN.T OF THE STATE DEBT at a rate of interest the same as that paid by the United States on her bonds. The credit of the State, unless you yourselves destroy it, will within a few short weeks be on a par with that of any State in the American inion; her bonds at thirty-six cents in 1879 are now over ninety. Her commercial honor and integrity are restored, and her securities are honored on all the great commercial dB changes in the w)rld. All this has been ac- complished harmoionusly with the assent of -. - teors, and to their complete satisfaction. -now, my fellow-citizens, I want you to understand my position uplon this Stategebt question thoroughly. I have had and 1 ave no other interest in its settlement than any ,ther good citizen in the State. I never held one of these bonds in my life, and I never teuresented one of them professionally or aoterwise. Nay, I never saw one of them. But when I see the Attorney General of the State of Virginia in a Federal jail, when I see the sovereignty of that proud State dragged in the dust and humblcd at the feet of a Fed- eral circuit judge, I thank God from the bot- tom of my heart that we have no Mahone in Louisiana to combine the lowest dregs of the white population with the solid negro vote in a violation of plightedbtate faith: and I thank God that we hae had at the helm one who by his energy, tact and sagacity has satisfied the pn p creditor at the same time that he as prdted, the people againstthe grinding demands of the tax-gatherer. Sch has een the public confidence inspired by the Demo- cratic administration tat the State treasury, once unable to borrowimoney even with all th sanctity of a legislative act to guarantee imbursement to afiscal aget, to, o:dy le without special legislation, to obtain all neessary advances from NewOrleans banks, confiding solely in the pubhlic honor. Legislation has been passed whereby Tx CITY DtBrT OF Naw ORLEANS has been established upon a basis firm and satisftory alike to debtor and creditor-a p imuore complex and more difficult of solution evet than the Statesabt-.and noth- ing now remainsto insure the pro•eity of the .•rescelt City e Poep an efficient city Sver enk This prolem the citizens of New Orleans hope to solve at the nextc municipal eleetion. If there-was any one carpet-bar evil whose effects were more universally felt than any it was the costly, dilatory, inefficient of the days of Warmoth and Kel= ig. nder our new Constitution the have been increased in number and in : efi.ecya, nad a careful examination of the of the American Bar Association .estiie me in sayn that nowhere in the United States i Justice to-day more speedily aitd Stcaotecly Iadnministered than in the If we considethe per,, 'tspD of 1he we ve every reason Snt, discretion and im- s y thepresent Executive, tut prete be ustive in my review and wtiSu in him 1 credis for the tio eJude "e by his beei all enh he has ven us e fist' man of strictest tet m grtfra ass,, r m _ and o fyetith of g i eof &aneur and 4 Gr: 4 '^ r` F ail i land of and the molSng blrd,the lad which needs but to be otikled with the plow to laugh in the harvest,' the land of balmy breezes and eternal spring." Is it credible that any sane man who reads the twin a-ticles will in the least degree be influ- enced by the more roseate of the two i My follow-citizens, I am drawing no fanny picture. I speak of that whereof I "know. Business leads me off into neighboring States, and not once but over and over again has my blood boiled as I havenotedthe air of superiority adopted by those whom I have met, in comparing their own Statdgov- erumente with ours, and as I listened to the sympathetic tones with which they commis- err. ted us in our struggles to rid ourselves of a corrupt despotism, far more terrible than carpet-bag government itself. Were not the honor and the fair fame of our beloved State at issue, well might we laugh at the charge. Think ot it, my fellow- citizens! You who bharded Grant at the zenith of his power I You who faced Galling guns and Winchester rifles backed by the moral support of the whole Federal govern- ment! To-day you are accused in the face of the American people with craven submission to 300 or 400 unarmed thieres ll But, say some of these eIr SLANDERERS OF THE FAIR NAME OF THE STATE, a great many people won't vote: the best people refuse to give the necessary time and attention to politics. Now, fellow-citizens, this argument strikes at the very root of "ur republican institutions. Iwant no Return- ing Board votes ever again cast in this State. We protested for years against the countming of votes which had not gone into the ballot box, and I am consistent. I protest against it yet. I go further. I say that no man, however rich he may be, however good he may be, however pure and noble he may be, has any right to expect his influence to be felt or considered in a republic if he is too good, too busy or too lazy to vote. I believe that every citizen in a republic should be com- pelled to vote, under the severest of penalties, at every election, but until such a law is passed I believe in ignoring every vote not cast. Whenever I believe differently I shall also believe that a republic is a farce and a failure, and that the day for a Cesar or a Cromwell has arrived. And now, fellow-citizens, who is this man, Samuel D. McEnery, whom we present for your suffrages for the highest office in your gift? I have been told that he served in an humble rank as a soldier of that same cause so dear to us all, wherein his distinguished opponent was so terribly maimed; that he ever failed in any of the duties of a soldier has, I believe, never been claimed. I first met him at a tinmb and under circumstances which I shall never forget. A committee of the United States Senate was sitting in New Orleans during the Christmas hohdays of 1876, examining into the conduct of the elections that fall, at which Francis T. Nicholls had been elected Governor of Lou- isiana. Witnesses had been summoned from all the bulldozing parishes, from Ouachita and from Morehouse, from the two Felici- anas, and from many other parts of the State. The State CentraiCommittee of the Democratic party requested me, as well as many of the younger members of the bar, to assist in conducting that investigation on behalf of the Democratic party. To me and to two others was assigned the case of Ouachita and Morehonse. It was during this investigation and under circumstances tending to form a very rapid intimacy that I first met the modest and retiring gentleman who led the movemens whereby those two parishes had been nESOUED FROM OPPRESSION. The details of the campaign have mostly faded from my nmind. I merely recall its general features-the months of anxiety, during which the white people in those par- ishes were in hourly fear of that most terri- ble of calamities-a servile insurrection; the consummate tact and prudence and firmness by which he led the people to victory. After those sid closing days of 1876, I saw and heard but little of Gov. BcEnery until he was nominated by the convention as Lieu- tenant Governor in 1879. He was given the second place on the ticket as the representa- tive of that section of the party which had been defeated in the gubernatorial contest. The days had not yet arrived in Louisiana when factions were so bitter that one body of Democrats recoiled from contact with an- other as from a leper. When Gov. )loEnery was soon after called to the gubernatorial chair by the death of Gov. Wiltz. he exhib- ited a magnanimity and sanse of honor but rarely met in public life and declined to re- voke any of the appointments made by his predecessor, except where good cause was shown to induce him to take such action. This course led to the estrangement of those who had been his political friends, but from that date to this he has administered the govermnent with an energy and a zeal which must engrave his name deep upon the chronicles of the State. He has been identified with every move for her proess and improvement. He has never aedto act and to act boldly whenever ion required. In 1883 he ste4teh i his re to the utmost limits toirotectoir lands from overflow. He was even ce ed for an arbitrary exer ise of Ix wer b section of the party-a censure not ted in 1887, because his conduct w and approved bythe Democratic d the people in 1884. He did not e moment to order strong bodies of to the seat of the late strikes in the aun tritct of this State, at . THE VERY FIRST SIGNm OF TROUVLE. He has been censured for this, accused of overrating the danger, and seeking theatrical ffect. , my friends! that is fine talk for editors and ticias removed to a safe dii- tance from the trouble; but ask the reform planters of St. Mary, Lafourche and Terre- oanne, the lives of whose wives and chil- dren were at stake, whether this action was There is and ever has been a section of the Democratic party unwilling to believe that there was any good in him. In 1883 he was sc•used of exceeding his powers in the mai- terof building levees, and he was held re- sponsible for a contract in reference to the State lands entered into by his predecessor, and over which he had no more control than yon or L The people answered these charges by a trimphant vindication at the polls in 1884, and the wve not been repeated in 1887. But it as be neres to note the-lines of attack pursued tihe pres- cat aam First carme charge that he was y of what was denominated 'persona ," that is tfb say that he had ao none bt his friens to oice, and that those friends were rpt and Incom- ete t -u dl o, the p e 2as When tep were upon t ground and whew p culars were asked for, to sexthads~firailon in '1 ri found taeo ter did ot eist in theirbut in some other on'. heeb•eena t able. nbta- the: tan taieli tn Ithe per- t and tt wase te ilse hiI0 457 th vepuw been 'lowerna sen l ,ghersta c ese Segveu ite Governor ;came e est eftaln s; liras 1ttendenn t 4 X drvr x pyF,i vi +r.i magnificent and exhaustive review of the progress and resources of this State given by Gov. MoEnery in his Monroe speech, or the Jeremiads of the reform campaign orators ? Will you vote for him who believes in the Btate, who points with pride to her immediate past, and with hope to her immediate future: or for him who, whatever his own sentiments may be, represents those who are weeping over the imaginary woes of the past, and sighing for a vague and indefinite Utopia in the future 7 One section of the Democratic party has grappled in a practical manner with practical problems in the past, and pro- poses to do so in the future. Will you aban- don it in order to cast your votes for a gen- tleman of high repute doubtless, but who proposes to give nothing but an experi- mental government, and whose followers de- cline even to give you the details of the ex- periment which they propose to inaugurate? In the face of the attacks which have been made cuon him, and with the evidence- complet,+ and conclusive--which he had fur- nished of HIS FAITHFUL STEWARDSHIP, I consider Samuel Douglas McEnery as the incarnation of the good name of the State, 4nd so believing I shall cast my vote for him; at while I name my choice. and while I be- liove that every man should take sufficient interest in his party to always have a choice for so high an office as Governor, I follow him-not as one selecting between two oppos- ing leaders in a civil war-but merely as an humble private in the great lemocratic army, expressing my preference as to a leader. When once the allot is over, if you strip the 'traps from his shoulders and rele gate him to a dishonored obscurity, we sh li bid him a regretful and a loyal farewe dress the ranks and present the same solid front to the Republican C(emy which we should have done under our own chosen leader. I have followed this campaign closely. and I have read no word uttered by one of Gov. McEnery's supporters Which he need retract if Gov.Nicholls be the nominee at Baton Rouge: not a word which will prevent all from un itng under him, should he be chosen, in promot- ing the honor and the greatness of the State ,I Louisiana: not oneword which should cause any Democrat to hesitate to speak from the same platform with him' not one word which will cause any citizen of the State to hesitate hereafter to patronize agricultural fairs merely because the Governor of the State has been selected to preside at tjp it- auguration. Would to heaven we coul say that much for the other side ! PLAQUEMINES PARISH. Meeting of the Executive Committee- The Methods Adopted by the Re- formere to Secure a Majority-Their Action Denounced by a Mass Meeting. POINTE-A-LA-HACHE, Nov. 24, 1887. The parish executive committee of Plaque- mines parish mei at Poine-a-la-Hache on Wednesday, Nov. 23, and ordered an election of twenty-six delegates to a parish conven- tion, to be held in the parish at large on Dec. 3. This unusual proceeding was prefaced by an announcement from the spokesman of the reformers, the United States naval officer, Mr. H. P. Kernochan, that the committee, at least eight out of the fifteen, had determined to carry out a plan of election to enable them to deliver the vote of the parish to the candi- dacy of Gov. Nicholls. A majorityof one on the committee was obtained by the reformers by sending to Avoyelles parish and bringing back a young man, an ex-member of the committee, who had moved to that parish to permanently reside there. A few days ago the fatherof the ex-mem- ber, in a circular letter, notified the voters of the ward that his son had left this parish to reside permanently in the parish of Avoy- elles, and advising them to elect a delegate to fill the vacancy in the committee. This letter, accompanied by a petition from the citizens of the ward that an election be or- dered in the ward tofill the existing vacancy, was taken to the president of the committee, Dr. Geo. A. B. Hays. The president peremp torily refused to order such election: then the petition was taken to the secretary, who ordered the election in compliance with the wishes of the people. The election was held; but by the arbitrary rulipg of the chairman of the committee, sustained, among others, by the illegal vote of the ex-member who had removed to Avoyelles, the elected delegate was denied admission. The proceeding was roundly denounced on the floor of the committee meeting, and the delegate from Avoyelles was openly charged with having sold his vote. After a mild de- mand for proof from the accused Mr. John Dymond drew from his pocket a series of resolutions providing for a parish election at large. The substitute offered by the minor- ity, providing for ward primaries, was voted down-8 to 7. The sentiment of the large number of spectators was strongly adverse to the arbi trary action of a majority of the committee. A r the adjournment of the committee, the le assembled in mass meeting and adop-. resolutions strongly denouncing the ns used to secure the presence of the ex- o her wk had removed to Avoyelies. In •tion thafollowing preamble and resoln- f swere adoptd: eas, the clz of the ward which he ed to represent biad met together with all Sformalities and elected amember In his place, who was denied admission by the arbitrary ruling of the chairman of the committ , Dr. •eo. A B. Hays;ve Be it Rea0seiL, That we denounce the whole transaction as d serving of the condemnation of all honorable men. We further denounce as undemocratic the re- fusad to allow the wards a representation based on the hiRhest vote cast at either the last State or national e'e-:tion. and the resort to the unn- sual practice--and one previously unknown in this parish-to have all th:elegatesput on our ticket irrespective of wards, and not elected as ward representatives in the wards to which they belonged, as ha been customary in the•st- proceeding acknowledged in the comnmf•ee by he spokesman of. Nicholls and reform (t) to hl in the interest •4 the candidacy of Francis T. Nicholls for Governor: and, while denouncing as corrunpt partisan and unjust their action, and the undemocratic method of elecoting delegates to the coming Parisah Convention, we neverthe- less accept the gage of battle of the ca•al, and will meet them on their own gtronud. and at the hands ofthe iassesbf the Democratic voters of this parish, who cannot be bribed or boughtl give an overwhelming rebuke to their corrupt methods even when covered by the flimsy gauze o'reorf . PIFJ C.ASB1 . President. LEroNAD Aaaoxo, Secretary. HOW THE FIGURES NOW STAND. o New Orlemlnsime.-Dsemocrat, Nov. 97. Yesterday was a cold, a very oold day in- deed for reform, though, strange to say, the the-thermometer pointed upinto the eighties. -The blue banner which was flung so proud- Ir and hopefully to the breeze, and which flaunted so saucily and aggressively in the firat few favoriug gades, yeeterday seemed mareintensely blue than usual, and-hung in Inmp nd frozen folds when the news came over the wires of the victories for fa all of the six parishee In e were held, that were herd . elittle trick by which the reformers had mana.ed to present quite a formidable array' of parishes for Nichols at the ontset may have had itseffeet upon the uninformed and unthinking, but the result of the elections esterdy in Onachita Aad De SOto soeqhl , Washington nd Caldwell will ntedly open the eyeof even the dullest observer and expose the charaotej of the elam set upy the licomil and rm ailent. Aeadia was eaoo den !conted upon for Nicholls and reform. It dogne solily for Niholls in the tate ,sntionoofi1884 t isa Creole prish stti l the recee d t b preent Se torte sim ,ihollf enaton Swho had hastily m- 4eel oui dtt sian ion is. ' 11,solid for Acadia seyw dele- 17' l-~ HIOT IN THIBODAUI White Pickets Attacked by Negroes in Ambush. Two Men of the Guard Seri- ously Wounded. The Citizens Turn Out En Masse to Resist the Attack. Summary Vengeance Wreaked Upon the Assailants, Six Negroes Killed Outright and as Many Fatally Wounded. A Review of the Causes Th•t Led to the Affair. The Town Now Quiet and lo Further Trouble Expected. TrmBoDAUt, ••ov. 23.-The continued threats of the negro strikers i2 thiparish to attack this town culminated this ibruning in a bloody fight, in whichfx of the netroes were killed and five wounded, and two young white men seriously hurt. After the meeting of the sugar planters and other prominent citizens on Sunday, the nibre violent of the negroes openly made threats to burn the town and commit other depredations. The citizens of Thibodaux, knowing the inflamed condition of the strikers, at once took steps to protect their lives and property. For the past few days white citizens from all parts of the parish have been coming to Thibodaux. On Sunday night the situation ha3 be- come so serious that a number of the best young men of the town and; parish were sworn in as deputy sheriffs and picketed on the approaches to the place. Monday afternoon and night alarming re- ports continued to come in and the excite- ment increased, Householders, not feeling secure even with the protection of the cor- don around the town, stood guard all night or only caught brief snatches of sleep. More timid women were UNABLE TO 6LI AT ALL. and many have not closed their eyes since they arose Monday morning. The whole town has been under a strain of great un- easiness, which was increased from the fact that no one knew when the attack would take place. Yesterday evening information was re- ceived from reliable sources that the negroes were combining and that the attack would be made last night. The cordon of pickets was strepgthened, and the coming of the neguges anxiously awaited. The night wore on, Ibwever, and there was no sign of trou- ble. The day dawned, the sun arose, and the men who had stood guard all night over the lives and property of their kindred were .preparing to go to their homes, when the 'harp crack of rifles, mingled with the rattle of shotguns, awoke the few citizens of the town who were asleep and told the men on guard that THE FIGHT HAD BEGUN. The outmost picket guarding the town consisted of two of Thibodaux's most re- spectable young men-Messrs. John J. Gor- man and Henry Molaison. These two were posted considerably in advance of the others. and, the night air being chilly, had built a bonfire and were standing near it. About 7 ~clock they were fired upon by a party of aoea in ambush. who had evidettiy con- led themselves during the night near the bonfire. As the report of the guns rang out both men fell to the ground seriously wounded, Mr. Gbrman with a bullet in his head, which entered near the eye, and Mr. Molaison with a severe wound in the lee. As already stated, this volley alarmed the rest of the guard and the whole town, and the former immediately rushed to the scene of the firing. Two young men posted near the wounded men soon reached them, and immediately took steps looking to their re- lief. While they were tmns assisting the wounded another volley was fired upon them by the negroes, but fortunately it did no damage. In a few minutes the entire guard around the town had rushed to the danger point, and other citizens began to assemble with such weapons as they could hurriedly lay their hands on. As they assembled around the wounded men, half of them unconscious of i.ow the wounds had been received, there came A THIRD VOLLEY from th•. negroes in ambush. This volley like thiecond, did no damage, but served to unmask the assailants and to indicate to the citizens who had gathered hastily with the knowl ae only that there was danger somewhere, exactlwhere that danger lay. There was an instant and prompt reply to the volley, and a general lusilade was poured into the ranks of the negroes. In a few min- utes the fight had ended. The negroes re- plied feebly to the fire of the whites at first, but soon became panic-stricken and fled to the woods. ArEa TEE EATTL the wildest rumors were afloat as to the num- ber killed. At first it was stated that from fifteen to twenty-rive negroes had lost their lives and that a large number were wounded. After thorough search by the coroner, as- sisted by other citizen, however, it was found that only six of the attacking party had been killed and five wounded. The two young men who went down under the first volley were the only white men hurt. There was a great deal of excitement in town and throughont this section durina the day, but to-night all is quiet. As a matter of precaution, however, the town is still guard- ed by a cordon of armed pickets, and all the whit in it town are under arms, acting as S~atement from Prominent Citizens of Thibodaux. Tasehon&a, Nov. 2g.-Our labor trouble had about ceased when, on Tuesday after- noon, the people of this town were reliably informed that an attack would be made upon the town during the night. To prevent any trouble a strong guard of deputy sheriffs was picketed at all approaches. At 7 a. m. two of the guards, John J. Gorman and Henry Moldala, two of the most respectable and esteemed young men of our town, were shot f o ambush and perionsiy wounded. Two of the iefuds rushed to their assistance, and whilethey were atte tinn to relieve their wounded ocmrades,- hey were again m ambush. s Luely they were i -Afearsnstate of excitement arose and the sarmed dsof the town rushed to the e mc.n They were again fired upon and te wre ned the fire by ageners f.ussll winch was kept up until S were sperse. ome six rioters Shave. beeia killed and as many one of the s of thetomr ths arbve mentione. r d to preserre the oo t are in perfect hte; , aresguined frotnt e- ' rite pa t overnor. ' @ver" L. of the lee. ypjreaa ye- M Noe ofine in Lafonrche were crowded with ne- groes, eager and anxious to get out of the country. Trains bound for the Cresoent City were crowded with darkies. The troops from New Orleans were received at the depot by a large number of the prom- inent citizens of Thibodaux, including the Clay Knobloch Guards and the volunteers. There was not anegro to be seen in any di- rection. The excitement has to a considerable ex- tent subsided, and the leaders of the rioters, it is generally understood, have quit the country. At least they have not been seen since the affair of Wednesday. The citizens are determined to preserve the peace and have organized to that end. It appears that the trouble leading on to the riot of Wednesday commenced about ten days ago, when negroes fired on a white man named Theodule Baille, passing on the levee. Baille is a sugar boiler, and he was fired upon a mile below town. There was some firing also on Lewis Guion's sugar-house, in which quite a number of white men were lodged. Several shots were fired at white laborers on the Leighton plantation, and the overseer was struck in the face by small shot, but fortunately not seriously injured. Between Thibodaux and Houma hands under cane sheds were fired upon. Indeed things had got to such a point that citizens were afraid to go out on the public highway, for fear of being SHOT AT BY NEGROES in ambush. The Sugar Planters' Association of Lafourche appointed committee of five to wait on the five men who were suspected of being the instigators of the shooting in Lafourche, and notified them that their fol- lowers must preserve the peace. On that night shooting occurred at five different sugarhouses in Lafourche, the parties being in ambush, and on the succeeding night shots were fired at three other sugarhouses. The colored people, who had been moved away from their respective plantations, and who had taken refuge in the town of Thibo daux, were being harangued day and night for the purpose of inspiring them to deeds of violence. Some of the colored women made open threats against the people and the com- munity, declaring that they would destroy any house in the town. One could hardly go on the streets without seeing clusters of ne- groes at the different thoroughfares, indulg- ing in conversation that boded no good to the peace and order of the community. Not a few of the negroes boasted that in case a fight was made they were fully prepared for it. Reports were frequent to the effect that Jhe negn oes proposed to MAKE AN ATTACK UPON THE TOWN, MAKE AN ATTACK UPON TIHE TOWN. and on Sunday morning it was reported in the country that the negroes had assembled on St. Charles street and were thoroughly armed. It was at this time that the whites saw the necessityof organiza t ion for the protection of their lives and property, and to meet any emergency that migut possibly arise out of the present difficulties. Hence it was that in view of existing dangers the citizens of Thi- bodaux organized for the purpose of ma,n- taining peace and good order. On Sunday at 3 p. m. a mass meeting was called and a patrol organized, with a view of stopping lawlessness ant crime. A company of volunteers was also organized to picket the town. The pickets were located in every portion of Thibodaux and kept up a nightly watch. The negroes were repeatedly warned by several of the prominent and influential citi- zensof the place that lawlessness at night must cease, and that good order must be re- stored and maihtained. During Sunday large bodies of mounted men were in waiting for any emergency. On Monday the negroes were insolent, sneering at the soldiers and citizens alike, and proclaiming publicly the white people were afraid to fire on them, and that, under any circumstances, the were prepared. Monday night some unknown persons went into Franklin's coffee-house, where there were some negroes playing cards. THE NEGROES MADE AN ATTACK upon the whites, when fi.ing was commenced, resulting in the shooting of two negroes. Watson, one ofthenegroes, ran two squares and died, and the uhier, Morris Page, went to his home, painfuyy but not fatally wounded. On Tuesdaymorning large crbwds of white people, planters and others, from the sur. rounding i'euntry came into town armed, and with a eatermition to maintain peace and order. Durin the day the two Cox brothers, who were reported to be the lead- ers of the disturbing element. were arrested and iailed, the people being evidently deter- mined to put an end to future trouble. To- ward evening the negroes appeared to have been subdued, and the people were led to be- lieve that the trouble was happily ended, and that there would bd no further violence. The night passed off quietly, but at 5 a. m. a guard of file men, at the intersection of St. Char'es street and the railroad, at the south end of the town, was fired upon by a squad of negroes in ambush. The wounded men were J. J. Gorman and Henry Molaison. Gorman was shot in the left cheek with a slug. which took a downward tendency and passed out through his mouth. When seen this evening he was resting easy, but was not permitted to speak. Mr MIolaison received four shots in the right le;, only two of which have thus far been a n tracted. His cost and pants were perforated in fourteen different places. MR. M1OLAISON'S STATE-MENT. Relative to the shooting, Mr. Molaison said, in an interview with a representative of TaH T1,• F5.-DEMiOCRAT this evening: "I was one of the pickets stationed at the terminus of St. Charles street. My watch was from 12 until 6 a. m. We had quite a fire bujit, but none of us were near it at the time of the'shooting. Myself, GoTman, Anslett and Gruneburg were fully 250 yards from the fire, discussing matters and things. when a shot was fired and Georman rolled over into the ditch near by. Gorman was shot about 5 a. m. I thought it was a pistol shot. Mr. Marouge aocompanied Mr. Gorman home. Both were gone about five minutes, when I told Messrs. Anslett and Gruneburg to take my place, as I wished to assist Mr. Gorma ,. I had gone about 200 yards from Anslett when I was shot down." The shooters were in ambush in a corn field situated about 100 yards from the picket lines. Who they were is not known, except that they were negroes. Mr. Molaison is doing well. When the fact of the shooting was made known in Thibodaux the citizens organized for self-protection a company of volunteers, and the Clay Knobloch Guards immediately proceeded in the direction of the negroes' settlement and the former opened fire upon the mob and searched their houses for arms and ammunition, and in about twenty min- utes closed the aflair, after having CAPTURED A NUMBER OF 8HOToUNS loaded with slugs ai:dl buckshot. Six negroes were killed outright and four have since died of their wounds. The people of the town of Thibodaux and the parish generally regret the necessity which brought about this bloody affair. In- deed they deeply deplore it, but neverthe- less feel that it as necessary to take imme- diate and vigowjs steps to eradicate an egl which threatened to destroy not only the peace and good order, but the )ves and property of a whole community. Lient. Gov. Clay Knobloclt udge Taylor Beatty Sheriff Thibodaux, CoL I. D. Moore and others who- were seen express the deep- est regrets at the present condition of taings, and hope for an early and satisfac- tory solution of existing complications. th• planters whose places have been made the ene of trouble thus far are as follows: C. iaard, Claudet Bros., Ernest Roger, the nuion place, David Calder's, Orange Grove, Troselair & Robichaux, John '. Moore, Jr., and Peter Bergers. THE MEMBERS OF THE LOU1ISTANA RIFLES, who arrived yesterday, are Capt. C. H. Ad- ams, First Lieutenant O. T. Maler, Sec- ond Lieutenant H. T. Uviatt, First Sergeant L. J. Fellows, Seond Sergeant John Duffy, Third Sergeant Moses Corporals Beye and Rolling and -,vte arBonnecaze, Auth, Re- naud, Fallen, Munroe, Blaise, Calhoun, Barba, MLongard, Viosea, Marks, Hart, WiI- bans. Hernandez, FaIogl May, Doewer, Au.er, Meyers, Viened, ihneerg and Bey- noir. The following is the detachment from the Washington Artillery: Sergeant Vauhan. E.O. Bla raH. Rhoderdom, Ashby, F'red. A. Rube, and Dan Kelly. _As previously- stated, there was not a sin- negaro to be seen on the streets of Thibo- ux upoyn the arrIval of the troops. Very little bumnweinwas being ttaneaaeled, and the burden 9f cosveisation had special bearing onthe riot ofyestetday mernlsg. For weeks the rnegoes ht4 beena making every character of threat, luking In out-of-the-way plsces a pd .tp innoeente and inoffensive eities. -;Ti fron abroad were fired S.in thre fields and driven there- rO ,n te was no possible guarantee fr the Ofeither lifeor property under i thep t•is the negroes have thgret majority ohem are still in the hae aisdoaed )o8he eqszntryenr ;~~ii~ evening there was a rumor to the effect that the negroes were massing on the Terrebonno, about a mile and a half from the city. It was further rumored that they were thor- oughly equipped, and an attack upon the city was inlninent. A squad of citizens iu- mediately repaired to the scene of the thre at- ened danger, but the crowd had dispetrod. An attack upon the city is momentarily ex- pected, and citizens and soldhheu are alike prepr,:l for ay e•i rriemcy that nma:. ere. A guard placed uponll the oitskilrt of the town was tirld (1n last night by a n•egiL concealed in a di:ch. Negro W'omen (',ontlnt:e to atl.e Threat.', But No IFrther Trouble PI iobabli--- '"he Cox Hrotihers Relea'aed Fromu Jail. Tmir•notrx. Nov. 25.-Ti,-,ay Tihod:et:" enjoyed a day of conmparative quimtt, and a better ferli•g is existiii among al cla:. . There has been no relhxti ln, hr:w. ivr, of the vigilance of citizens and miltary for the preservation of law and orcltr in ,:li< c, munity and pan ish. Throngmout the day guards wi-re on the wa.ch, a•. the ,.:ie town and its outskirts wmre th,,ro•ughldy pa trolled. Few negroes are to be se n, at- though no obd ction has been uiget :againmt the presence here of those teaceably in- clined. ~lhis morning a representative of Taz TIMES-DEMOCtEAT, with some Of the military, visited a number of the plantations in the vicinity of Thibodaux, with a view of asyer- taiting the exact condition of things in these localities. MIr. R. IT. Allen has one of the largest plantations in Lafourche. It is situ- ated immediately in fr ont of the town and employs about 300 laborers. Mr. Allen said the strike had coat him about ONE-THIRD OF HIS CROP, and that the demoralization among hi .e- groes was so great that some of those-re- maining were rendered totally ubfit for duty. He doesn't blame the negroes so much as the walking delegate, whose chief b:miness for the past few months, he says, has been tc harangue and iil-adsise his less intelligent brother. o The splendid plantation of Mr. Andrew Price, about t. mile and a half from the city, was also visited. Mr. Price said that he lost about one-third of his sugar crop in conse- quence of the strike, but that there had been no trouble on his place. The action of the negroes, he said, was a surprise to him, es- pecially as he had made arrangements with his hands for the grinding season. For two weeks they had worked with seeming satis- faction and no complaints were made. When he found that tns strike had actually been ordered and the laborer, had withdrawn from the fiends hie endeavored to arrive at some amic able adjustment of exist:ng diifi- culties, whatever they might be. Time ne- groes, nevertheless. left the place. Within the pat day or two the old hands have been quieldy returning, and whenevera proposition to return was made in good fith Mr. Price has never failed to acctpt it. i-o charges all the recent misunderstandings between the whites and blacks to negro school teachers and barbers in the town of Thibodaux. These people, he says, are re- ally doing nothing but inspiring the igno- rant and hard-working negro element to law. lessness and strife. A negro by the name of Lawless, who was seen by the correspondent, rents several acres of land from Mr. Price, and is working twenty-six hands on his own account. He is not s striker, but, on the contrary, is work- ing faithfully and industriously. He makes $3000 worth of cane every rear, which he sells to Mr. Price. He deprecates the present strike, saying that there was no cause what. e er for it. Felix Boyd and Mat. Brooks, two of the re- turned strikers o, Mr. Price's place, say that they were urged to a strike by the Knights of Labor of Thibtodaux, of which they were members. The Knights insisted on the strike. promising six pounds of meat and a peck of meal to each striker while out of employ- mint. The first week they kept theirprom- ise, but after that time confessed their ina- bility to further provide for the strikers. Mr. B. A. Wormald's Laurel Valley place was also visited. His laborers were quietly returning with the promise of protection. The woods and cane thickets in the imnme. diate vicinity of Thibodaux are FILLED wrrT FUrTIVE NEGROES who have abandoned their homes in the town. A number of volunteers out looking for bodies of ne-roes supposed to be killed in the affair of Wednesday, report the negro women as still threatening the peace of this community. The bodies of three dead negroes were found this afternoon in a thicket on Mr. Al- len's Rienzi plantation, on the other side of the bayou. They had evidently been jhot in the affray of Wednesday, and takink refuge in the thicket died there without assistance of any kind. The report of the coroner is ianxiouslv awaited, and although prom- sed to-day had not "ap to a late hour this evening been forthcoming. It is, however, understood that fully thirty negroes have sacrificed their lives in the riot of Wednesday, although returns thus far have not equaled that number. Quite a number of darkies are accounted as missing buit whether they have been killed or 'skipped the country" is not known. Yesterday morning Judge Taylor Beatt;i, received an anonymous communication fo the effect that his life was in ;eopard- Judge Beattie has incurred the enmity ofthe ne- groes by the part he has taken in the present affair. In a conversation with a representa- tive of THE TInF.s-DsrocaaT yesterday the judge stated that he .adeveral times been warned that the assassin was on the watch for him and that his life was in his own hands. He further stated that he had exhausted every means within reason to bring the ne- gro to a sense of his real condition* that he had advised him time and again to beware of and avoid those who would plunge him into difficulties with which he was wholly unable to cope; that he would afford him the largest protection with respect both to life and prop- erty, but that when the shot of Monday night was fired there was nothing further left for him to do save that of assisting the good citizens in the preservation of law and order. These peoples it was stated, had been the means of doing incmealculable damage in the parish. Their attacks upon .he people, he said, was not only unwarran.,d, but pre- meditated and malicious, so that question of the summucr OF THE w-r-ma -over the blacks or vice vera became the all absorbing question. Capt. Adams, of the Louisiana Rifles, prof- fered the servies of his force to protect the jail in case- Williams. one of the agitators. against whom there is much feeling, and who surreunered to-day, was incarcerated therein, but the sheriff, in consideration of the fact that there was no legal justification for his arrest, concluded to avoid the re- sponsibility of holding him. On all the plantations, as far as heard from the laborers are returning to the fields, and express themselves as ready and willing to resume work. At noon yesterday some shooting from am- bush by negroes was repos6d about two miles from town, on the other side of the bayou. The attack, iris stated, was made on recently imported lacorers, none of whom were injured. A detachment of the military visited the scene of the shooting, but conuld ascertain nothing beyond what is stated above. A rumor was afloat to-day that there was about to be an uprising of the colored peo le in Terrebonno parish, brought about by the same causes as those which produced the riot in this place. The white people, how- ever, are fully prepared for any attack that may be made in that parish. Messrs. Gorman and Molaieon, who were injured in the affair of Wednesday, are rapidlyon the mend. The Louisiana Rifles and a detachment of the Washington Artil- lery are stationed at the courthouse, but at night are picketed on the suburbs of the town. Gov. McEnery, who it was thought, would be here today was telegraphed by Lieut. Gov, Knoblo. h that his presence at this time was unnecessary, peace being to s'reat extent rgetored. About 8:30 o'clock to-night the notorious Cox brothers were dis- missed from the jail and led out Jo Bayou Lafourcho where they swam the stiam and made their escape in the thicket beyond. A Patrol Established at Houma. Ho~wna, Nov. 2.--The Vhibodaux riot has created some excitement here, and measures have been taken by the authorities to pre- vent a similar outbreak in Houma. The town is patroled every night by special guards, and the utmost vigilance is exercised by the citizens. Vague rumors are heard on the streets of threatened violence and incen- diarism on thepart M5 the negroes, putthese receive only the measure of consideration that they deserve. The prevailinm feeling is that no outbreak.will occur, but it is tborght best to be provided against any contingency that may arise. A negro from the country was reported as tin to purchase a quan- tity of ammunition this morning, and was iipmediately notified by Mayor Smith to leave town. London Life. B (ros, Ma peolwho have ridden a cook-horse bnr r e th er hildhood Twill Ire arn ha there~aotur to heae t stun 8cf Ypuni srs.att as rol WIY PECPLE BECOME BAlt An Interesting Adico s on th0 5 ,Sa:ir-- Th,. I.enedy. Londron Sta :',,r t. At the op i I hto• 'ai A . IL., i".-,iiltc wthu thatit o, " " .the cholovi cail,. . : t (, "raceme th. h ir. " to l 1Ye r- a: e ,. <-•r dior t h'aI menh t. ,t, ^a. . .... ~' .. i, ex, e - Ye ' as ,d'' f , - , . 1aDr, di e tia, n m . . .; Inii in O.t00 u : ell ,tof if ... , . . . ritic t theal 1' . .. . . rc . .. i lo: t themo ire, *d , rebahihi n 1 :h h . r, ` and b i'r I ' " *n i ,a tBonged to pe M u .. ', . , . hair dleyanti fI 3•8, ' I . :1 nf } a r, . fli.. t,;ti'I 0 at li s oe hsly 3ti) thit t 'r , :rd ii": ... o: t tweith i i to fifty, .: 'ifg - 1870, whn,. th 1, att. er ', n total sn,' adtentii h w't coob tnow Lft y ." c i,- . -t,-. A: c o ithe . ,ndiu id , " the I 111 Lf',}' 1'L- .it n :Fiti di-cpohii& twat• ti ',', ii'er i, odd that exprunntaV f~l~r, i.rL-rflI mn'enoto e On ht"ir oci - he mr, ' i o nots fh ,tudy "tnd t. -,1r:r":It te ne astion they :ttil l opp rtl aty I; w it:e in the coa iug phit tlt'•i thii• t to ado with h, om ,;, .A : a"at- :'-lo nOp eituhlr = LIe8 to wh~ tin ne . rter batsnesL to einde altndh it,' iie ae o nat ehle teod etl 6 ca1e c, : 'i 'ii vi ir; , tr ;iis=,' ioa j ,of p,: eil ftn:z to rti'a-ti frmlo ert s ie to man irc, wtmn : i his xeeesivehar- inl atld us el ti.a He had n-e !tr ad in tn aposition to e~iferacnitalii, 3't his, con• iction •ae the do: wi thit att were often t ••ea Rname hair lo-uanti i tarichoogisi• s•o shady Ind tet tohe q.tion n whit they all oppotfoit'ity oi waitnrefrin the tow•nr ment of eit co:sive hair falitg••hia other cseo catl rt with a oortainty he or evenr atsi.u di for it. It was becoming itcreasred blief that dots were subt some unknown d:acsor which cause iess to human teinaE. Cases of this had .been r-u•ght •rlbthin his view, and induced him to give a good deal of l•tn' to the subject. In one insta'ie, Mr. Wheeler said. a tleman--an artiat--bhad aIrie black dog whose coat had seddenly become in fact almost white, and it was being in such large quantities that he could not had in the house witlnut everything.' tsouched being covered with hairs. This tleman had a bea!r ttfnl head of hair whe frsr spoke about the 'log, bunt uhen he again the next year he was quite baldi alrso said the femitla ert'ant that the dog had lust nearly the whole hair. For himself; he was convinced that continnous electrio current was the active and efficient hair etimutiantof the It was a remedy of great therapeutic wheo used as an aocessory to other ede t. Primarles Called In Lincoln Perii,; RuSTON, Nov. 22.-The Parish Demi Executive Committee met here to-day all the wards represented, as follows: A. Taylor, chairman, ward 1: J. P. Col proaie for A. H. Colvin, ward 2: Dr. J.. Robinson, ward 3: Amos Davis, ward Judge E. M. Graham, proxie for J. S. ward 5: 0. A. Heard, wards 6 and 7. Mr. Davis moved to elect one delegate f- each pollue jury ward direct to the Convent.n. Judge Graham offered an amendment each ward to elect delegates by primT tion to the parish convention, and vention to elect six delegatee to thi Convention. Colvin, Graham and voted yea, Davis and Robinson nam. i.nendment was adopted, and Dec. 15 selected for primaries and Dec. 19 ft- parish convention. t Having Their Coffins Mssd. Dr. Henry Hiller and wife, of Mass., do not like the idea of their being consigned when dead to theo wooden cotus, and are having for them two ponderous caskets 'a hogany. which they hope may'be to endure for untold ages. Mrs. says the common Jooden ofi to pie.es forty-eight hours after earth receives them. The Hillers $10,000 on their new coffins, w beauties of mechanical and artlt - Each casket consists-of two parts, or i' words, each body will have two cofinsin inner coffin is composed of mahogany, air-tight by being completely env copper. It rests within the outside on two elegant brass supports, which sent the big paws of a lion. It is on the outside casket, however the most lavish expenditure has been This is of mahogany also, the intei1io lned with copper the mountings of ter being noticeably ine. Every tains a group of figures, and it is-hat beauties of the carver's art are made eut. Everyfigure is carefully and made, and stands out in bold and relief. Each panel anzi'ts figures mun provided weeks of labor. To enum symbols and figures which the artist parted with a living flourish to the r of the dead would be to rehearse of all the familiar reproductions of mate and inanimate in decorative lion rampant here, there a fierce- griffin, birds of every species. fishes• plants, trees, the bow and arrow, ete, in central positions are seen Floraand cherubs blowing trumpets, tna '" harps, Apollo vth his lyre, upit thunderbolts, Neptune with his trid The caskets have been constructed Hiller's house. He says he has been $50, 00 by a prominent showman to them, Massage. The art of massage is of great an There are always some kind folk take the time and trouble to search down into the annals of the past and mit to us the facts they there find r On the questiou of massage, those wh traced out its history tells us that this was p'aeticed in very early times Chinese, and that the Greeks and also resorte4 to its aid, evidences of appear in the literature of those two countries. This ancient art has been revived, present day, on the Continent and in ca, as well as in England and is being extensively practiced. I have •pokt massage as a a)ec!anical mode of ment-and so it is: but those who us to perform it ought to have some knowledge concerning their work as finker-dexterity, The masseuse has herself acquainted with the it the function of the tissues and m which she is clled upon to opeorat therefore some study of books on this the subject is required. Then there necessary dexterous manipulations quired: there particular movements ti be learned from actual demonstra nothing but patient practice will manual dexterity needful to process. The general term of massage ine eral kinds of manipulations; these designated by French names. One•f is known as Egfeiuraue; this consist•i stroking the pars under treatmell&? stroking increases in stre gth, and nates in a firn rubbing of the skin palm of the hand. Under the effect treatment, hardness and dryness give way to softness, and the effect _ soothing. Another form of treatment is rissage. This process c sists in and kneading and rolling 'he cles; a form of massage brougnh oases where the patient is Oepri frmity or accident from taking cise. The advocates of massage the use of p~trissage also soot., vigorates the overtired and fatilg te those who have gone through an, - amount of physical exertion. Tc amtmenatl s a rapid meehan meat used as a stimulus for ro action organs which are inclined dormant. a Fseea PrtEcon maybe _ cirlar rubbings with tiy; performed i4 a rapid wse' et formed int s ,arnty apa

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Page 1: SUPPLEMENTU, HIOT IN THIBODAUI...SUPPLEMENTU, GOOD GOYERI4KT. IWHAT IT HAS DONE FOR LOUJSIANA. Speech of Mr. Ernest B. Kruttschnitt at the Dexnocratlc Meetlng at Lake Cbarles on Saturday

SUPPLEMENTU,GOOD GOYERI4KT.

IWHAT IT HAS DONE FOR LOUJSIANA.

Speech of Mr. Ernest B. Kruttschnitt atthe Dexnocratlc Meetlng at LakeCbarles on Saturday Last.

Mr. Ernest B. Kruttschnitt, of New Or-eans, was one of the speakers at the Demo-

eratic mass meeting at Lake Charles, ad-dressing the night meeting. Mr. Krutt-echnitt spoke in substance as follows:

Fellow-Citirens--It is pleasant for Demo-,rats tn meiet in party gathering to-day,"hen r single cloud appears upon the ho-rizon, either at ho:ne or abroad, to darkeni.e nicture of peace and plenty, honor andprope ri:ty wh.ch have followed throughoutshe whole land in the wake Democratic suc-o.tss. In national affairs we may extend to'ach ,ther cougratulat'ons for past victories,-•d we may look with moat ierfect cont--"ence to the future, since the electors of theimupire State have recently announced in noo:ncet'sin tontes that the national battle ofi f88 wil he fought and won under theeunme leader as that of 1881, and if we turn:: om the nation to our own beloved State,

have wae less catuse for rejoicing? When we:,gained our autonomy in 1876 we foundhie wpople oppressed with a heavy burden ofdebt, bearing a rate of interest so high as tonecessitate a rate of taxation absolutely ruin-ons to all enterprise and industry; the State.reditcin a par with that of Mexico and Tur.'sy, the courts discredited and jus-:ice nuted out with tardy and uncer-sin hand, the school system a disgraece tomodern civilization, our alluvial lands sub-is at to annual overflow through broken andmLined levees, the great meQtopolis utterlyinsolvent and subject to cotlPReess suits andattack by her importunate creditors, and as;hough an angry heaven would never stayits Land falling so heavily upon our unhappy8tate, the year following our newly-acquiredfreedom saw one of the most fearful visita-tions of pestilence to which our fair land wasever stebjectd. Our people bravely foughtthe terrible battle, but they felt all the gloomend the misery of the old regime still brood-mng over them in their efforts to restore theruined commonwealth to her ancient gloryand prosperity, andthey determined to breakwith thehated past, to discard the old Con-stitution of the carpet-bagger, and to startthe work of .reconstruction from the groundnp. Although at the time opposed to so com-plete a revolution, I now believe that the ac-t'nn of the people was for the best. Whathave we achieved under the new regime ?

First and most inestimable of beneits wasthe fnaland satisfactory

SrrLEXEN.T OF THE STATE DEBTat a rate of interest the same as that paid bythe United States on her bonds. The creditof the State, unless you yourselves destroyit, will within a few short weeks be on a parwith that of any State in the Americaninion; her bonds at thirty-six cents in 1879are now over ninety. Her commercial honorand integrity are restored, and her securitiesare honored on all the great commercial dBchanges in the w)rld. All this has been ac-complished harmoionusly with the assent of

-. - teors, and to their complete satisfaction.-now, my fellow-citizens, I want you tounderstand my position uplon this Stategebtquestion thoroughly. I have had and

1ave

no other interest in its settlement than any,ther good citizen in the State. I never heldone of these bonds in my life, and I neverteuresented one of them professionally oraoterwise. Nay, I never saw one of them.But when I see the Attorney General of theState of Virginia in a Federal jail, when I seethe sovereignty of that proud State draggedin the dust and humblcd at the feet of a Fed-eral circuit judge, I thank God from the bot-tom of my heart that we have no Mahone inLouisiana to combine the lowest dregs of thewhite population with the solid negro vote ina violation of plightedbtate faith: and I thankGod that we hae had at the helm one whoby his energy, tact and sagacity has satisfiedthe pn p creditor at the same time that he

as prdted, the people againstthe grindingdemands of the tax-gatherer. Sch has eenthe public confidence inspired by the Demo-cratic administration tat the State treasury,once unable to borrowimoney even with all thsanctity of a legislative act to guaranteeimbursement to afiscal aget, to, o:dy lewithout special legislation, to obtain allneessary advances from NewOrleans banks,confiding solely in the pubhlic honor.

Legislation has been passed wherebyTx CITY DtBrT OF Naw ORLEANS

has been established upon a basis firm andsatisftory alike to debtor and creditor-ap imuore complex and more difficult ofsolution evet than the Statesabt-.and noth-ing now remainsto insure the pro•eity ofthe .•rescelt City e Poep an efficient citySver enk This prolem the citizens ofNew Orleans hope to solve at the nextcmunicipal eleetion.

If there-was any one carpet-bar evil whoseeffects were more universally felt than any

it was the costly, dilatory, inefficientof the days of Warmoth and Kel=ig. nder our new Constitution the

have been increased in number and in: efi.ecya, nad a careful examination of the

of the American Bar Association.estiie me in sayn that nowhere in theUnited States i Justice to-day more speedilyaitd Stcaotecly Iadnministered than in the

If we considethe per,,'tspD of 1he we ve every reason

Snt, discretion and im-s y thepresent Executive,

tut prete be ustive in myreview and wtiSu in him 1 credis for

the tio eJude "e by his

beei all enh he has ven us efist' man of strictest tet m

grtfra ass,, r m _ ando fyetith of

g i eof

&aneur and

4 Gr: 4

'^ r` F ail i

land of and the molSng blrd,thelad which needs but to be otikled with theplow to laugh in the harvest,' the land ofbalmy breezes and eternal spring." Is itcredible that any sane man who reads thetwin a-ticles will in the least degree be influ-enced by the more roseate of the two i

My follow-citizens, I am drawing no fannypicture. I speak of that whereof I "know.Business leads me off into neighboringStates, and not once but over and overagain has my blood boiled as I havenotedtheair of superiority adopted by those whom Ihave met, in comparing their own Statdgov-erumente with ours, and as I listened to thesympathetic tones with which they commis-err. ted us in our struggles to rid ourselves ofa corrupt despotism, far more terrible thancarpet-bag government itself.

Were not the honor and the fair fame ofour beloved State at issue, well might welaugh at the charge. Think ot it, my fellow-citizens! You who bharded Grant at thezenith of his power I You who faced Gallingguns and Winchester rifles backed by themoral support of the whole Federal govern-ment! To-day you are accused in the face ofthe American people with craven submissionto 300 or 400 unarmed thieres ll

But, say some of these eIrSLANDERERS OF THE FAIR NAME OF THE STATE,a great many people won't vote: the bestpeople refuse to give the necessary time andattention to politics. Now, fellow-citizens,this argument strikes at the very root of "urrepublican institutions. Iwant no Return-ing Board votes ever again cast in this State.We protested for years against the countmingof votes which had not gone into the ballotbox, and I am consistent. I protest againstit yet. I go further. I say that no man,however rich he may be, however good hemay be, however pure and noble he may be,has any right to expect his influence to be feltor considered in a republic if he is too good,too busy or too lazy to vote. I believe thatevery citizen in a republic should be com-pelled to vote, under the severest of penalties,at every election, but until such a law ispassed I believe in ignoring every vote notcast. Whenever I believe differently I shallalso believe that a republic is a farce and afailure, and that the day for a Cesar or aCromwell has arrived.

And now, fellow-citizens, who is this man,Samuel D. McEnery, whom we present foryour suffrages for the highest office in yourgift? I have been told that he served in anhumble rank as a soldier of that same causeso dear to us all, wherein his distinguishedopponent was so terribly maimed; that heever failed in any of the duties of a soldierhas, I believe, never been claimed. I firstmet him at a tinmb and under circumstanceswhich I shall never forget. A committee ofthe United States Senate was sitting in NewOrleans during the Christmas hohdays of1876, examining into the conduct of theelections that fall, at which Francis T.Nicholls had been elected Governor of Lou-isiana. Witnesses had been summoned fromall the bulldozing parishes, from Ouachitaand from Morehouse, from the two Felici-anas, and from many other parts of theState. The State CentraiCommittee of theDemocratic party requested me, as well asmany of the younger members of the bar, toassist in conducting that investigation onbehalf of the Democratic party. To me andto two others was assigned the case ofOuachita and Morehonse. It was duringthis investigation and under circumstancestending to form a very rapid intimacy that Ifirst met the modest and retiring gentlemanwho led the movemens whereby those twoparishes had been

nESOUED FROM OPPRESSION.The details of the campaign have mostlyfaded from my nmind. I merely recall itsgeneral features-the months of anxiety,during which the white people in those par-ishes were in hourly fear of that most terri-ble of calamities-a servile insurrection; theconsummate tact and prudence and firmnessby which he led the people to victory. Afterthose sid closing days of 1876, I saw andheard but little of Gov. BcEnery until hewas nominated by the convention as Lieu-tenant Governor in 1879. He was given thesecond place on the ticket as the representa-tive of that section of the party which hadbeen defeated in the gubernatorial contest.The days had not yet arrived in Louisianawhen factions were so bitter that one body ofDemocrats recoiled from contact with an-other as from a leper. When Gov. )loEnerywas soon after called to the gubernatorialchair by the death of Gov. Wiltz. he exhib-ited a magnanimity and sanse of honor butrarely met in public life and declined to re-voke any of the appointments made by hispredecessor, except where good cause wasshown to induce him to take such action.This course led to the estrangement of thosewho had been his political friends, but fromthat date to this he has administered thegovermnent with an energy and a zealwhich must engrave his name deep uponthe chronicles of the State. He hasbeen identified with every move for her

proess and improvement. He has neveraedto act and to act boldly wheneverion required. In 1883 he ste4teh i hisre to the utmost limits toirotectoir

lands from overflow. He was evence ed for an arbitrary exer ise of Ix werb section of the party-a censurenot ted in 1887, because his conductw and approved bythe Democratic

d the people in 1884. He did note moment to order strong bodies

of to the seat of the late strikes in theaun tritct of this State, at .

THE VERY FIRST SIGNm OF TROUVLE.He has been censured for this, accused ofoverrating the danger, and seeking theatricalffect. , my friends! that is fine talk for

editors and ticias removed to a safe dii-tance from the trouble; but ask the reformplanters of St. Mary, Lafourche and Terre-

oanne, the lives of whose wives and chil-dren were at stake, whether this action was

There is and ever has been a section of theDemocratic party unwilling to believe thatthere was any good in him. In 1883 he wassc•used of exceeding his powers in the mai-terof building levees, and he was held re-sponsible for a contract in reference to theState lands entered into by his predecessor,and over which he had no more control thanyon or L The people answered these chargesby a trimphant vindication at the polls in1884, and the wve not been repeated in1887. But it as be neres to notethe-lines of attack pursued tihe pres-cat aam First carme charge thathe was y of what was denominated

'persona ," that is tfb say that he hadao none bt his friens to oice, and

that those friends were rpt and Incom-ete t -u dl o, the p e 2as When

tep were upon t groundand whew p culars were asked for, tosexthads~firailon in '1 ri foundtaeo • ter did oteist in theirbut in some otheron'. heeb•eena t able. nbta-

the: tan taieli tn Ithe per-

t and tt wase te ilse

hiI0 457 th vepuw been'lowerna sen l ,ghersta c

eseSegveuite Governor

;came e est eftaln s;

liras 1ttendenn

t

4 X

drvr x pyF,i vi +r.i

magnificent and exhaustive review of theprogress and resources of this State given byGov. MoEnery in his Monroe speech, or theJeremiads of the reform campaign orators ?Will you vote for him who believes in theBtate, who points with pride to her immediatepast, and with hope to her immediate future:or for him who, whatever his own sentimentsmay be, represents those who are weepingover the imaginary woes of the past, andsighing for a vague and indefinite Utopia inthe future 7 One section of the Democraticparty has grappled in a practical mannerwith practical problems in the past, and pro-poses to do so in the future. Will you aban-don it in order to cast your votes for a gen-tleman of high repute doubtless, but whoproposes to give nothing but an experi-mental government, and whose followers de-cline even to give you the details of the ex-periment which they propose to inaugurate?

In the face of the attacks which have beenmade cuon him, and with the evidence-complet,+ and conclusive--which he had fur-nished of

HIS FAITHFUL STEWARDSHIP,I consider Samuel Douglas McEnery as theincarnation of the good name of the State,

4nd so believing I shall cast my vote for him;at while I name my choice. and while I be-

liove that every man should take sufficientinterest in his party to always have a choicefor so high an office as Governor, I followhim-not as one selecting between two oppos-ing leaders in a civil war-but merely as anhumble private in the great lemocraticarmy, expressing my preference as to aleader. When once the allot is over, if youstrip the 'traps from his shoulders and relegate him to a dishonored obscurity, we sh libid him a regretful and a loyal farewedress the ranks and present the same solidfront to the Republican C(emy which weshould have done under our own chosenleader.

I have followed this campaign closely. andI have read no word uttered by one of Gov.McEnery's supporters Which he need retract ifGov.Nicholls be the nominee at Baton Rouge:not a word which will prevent all from un itngunder him, should he be chosen, in promot-ing the honor and the greatness of the State,I Louisiana: not oneword which shouldcause any Democrat to hesitate to speak fromthe same platform with him' not one wordwhich will cause any citizen of the State tohesitate hereafter to patronize agriculturalfairs merely because the Governor of theState has been selected to preside at tjp it-auguration. Would to heaven we coul saythat much for the other side !

PLAQUEMINES PARISH.

Meeting of the Executive Committee-The Methods Adopted by the Re-formere to Secure a Majority-TheirAction Denounced by a Mass Meeting.

POINTE-A-LA-HACHE, Nov. 24, 1887.The parish executive committee of Plaque-

mines parish mei at Poine-a-la-Hache onWednesday, Nov. 23, and ordered an electionof twenty-six delegates to a parish conven-tion, to be held in the parish at large on Dec.3. This unusual proceeding was prefaced byan announcement from the spokesman of thereformers, the United States naval officer,Mr. H. P. Kernochan, that the committee, atleast eight out of the fifteen, had determinedto carry out a plan of election to enable themto deliver the vote of the parish to the candi-dacy of Gov. Nicholls. A majorityof one onthe committee was obtained by the reformersby sending to Avoyelles parish and bringingback a young man, an ex-member of thecommittee, who had moved to that parish topermanently reside there.

A few days ago the fatherof the ex-mem-ber, in a circular letter, notified the voters ofthe ward that his son had left this parish toreside permanently in the parish of Avoy-elles, and advising them to elect a delegateto fill the vacancy in the committee. Thisletter, accompanied by a petition from thecitizens of the ward that an election be or-dered in the ward tofill the existing vacancy,was taken to the president of the committee,Dr. Geo. A. B. Hays. The president peremptorily refused to order such election: thenthe petition was taken to the secretary, whoordered the election in compliance with thewishes of the people. The election was held;but by the arbitrary rulipg of the chairmanof the committee, sustained, among others,by the illegal vote of the ex-member who hadremoved to Avoyelles, the elected delegatewas denied admission.

The proceeding was roundly denounced onthe floor of the committee meeting, and thedelegate from Avoyelles was openly chargedwith having sold his vote. After a mild de-mand for proof from the accused Mr. JohnDymond drew from his pocket a series ofresolutions providing for a parish election atlarge. The substitute offered by the minor-ity, providing for ward primaries, was voteddown-8 to 7.

The sentiment of the large number ofspectators was strongly adverse to the arbitrary action of a majority of the committee.A r the adjournment of the committee, the

le assembled in mass meeting and adop-.resolutions strongly denouncing thens used to secure the presence of the ex-

o her wk had removed to Avoyelies. In•tion thafollowing preamble and resoln-f swere adoptd:

eas, the clz of the ward which heed to represent biad met together with all

Sformalities and elected a member In his place,who was denied admission by the arbitraryruling of the chairman of the committ , Dr.•eo. A B. Hays;ve

Be it Rea0seiL, That we denounce the wholetransaction as d serving of the condemnation ofall honorable men.

We further denounce as undemocratic the re-fusad to allow the wards a representation basedon the hiRhest vote cast at either the last Stateor national e'e-:tion. and the resort to the unn-sual practice--and one previously unknown inthis parish-to have all th:elegatesput on ourticket irrespective of wards, and not elected asward representatives in the wards to which theybelonged, as ha been customary in the•st-proceeding acknowledged in the comnmf•ee byhe spokesman of. Nicholls and reform (t) to hl

in the interest •4 the candidacy of Francis T.Nicholls for Governor: and, while denouncing ascorrunpt partisan and unjust their action, andthe undemocratic method of elecoting delegatesto the coming Parisah Convention, we neverthe-less accept the gage of battle of the ca•al, andwill meet them on their own gtronud. and at thehands of the iassesbf the Democratic voters ofthis parish, who cannot be bribed or boughtlgive an overwhelming rebuke to their corruptmethods even when covered by the flimsy gauze

o'reorf . PIFJ C.ASB1 . President.LEroNAD Aaaoxo, Secretary.

HOW THE FIGURES NOW STAND. o

New Orlemlnsime.-Dsemocrat, Nov. 97.Yesterday was a cold, a very oold day in-

deed for reform, though, strange to say, thethe-thermometer pointed upinto the eighties.

-The blue banner which was flung so proud-Ir and hopefully to the breeze, and whichflaunted so saucily and aggressively in thefirat few favoriug gades, yeeterday seemedmareintensely blue than usual, and-hung inInmp nd frozen folds when the news came

over the wires of the victories forfa all of the six parishee In

e were held, that were herd. elittle trick by which the reformers hadmana.ed to present quite a formidable array'of parishes for Nichols at the ontset mayhave had itseffeet upon the uninformed andunthinking, but the result of the electionsesterdy in Onachita Aad De SOto

soeqhl , Washington nd Caldwell willntedly open the eyeof even the dullest

observer and expose the charaotej ofthe elam set upy the licomil

and rm ailent. Aeadia was eaoo den!conted upon for Nicholls and reform. It

dogne solily for Niholls in the tate,sntionoofi1884

tisa Creole prish

stti l the recee d t b preentSe torte sim , ihollf enaton

Swho had hastily m-

4eel oui dtt sian ion is.' 11,solid for Acadia

seyw dele-

17' l-~

HIOT IN THIBODAUIWhite Pickets Attacked

by Negroes inAmbush.

Two Men of the Guard Seri-

ously Wounded.

The Citizens Turn Out En Masse to

Resist the Attack.

Summary Vengeance Wreaked Upon

the Assailants,

Six Negroes Killed Outright and as Many

Fatally Wounded.

A Review of the Causes Th•t Led to

the Affair.

The Town Now Quiet and lo Further Trouble

Expected.

TrmBoDAUt, ••ov. 23.-The continuedthreats of the negro strikers i2 thiparishto attack this town culminated this ibruningin a bloody fight, in whichfx of the netroeswere killed and five wounded, and two youngwhite men seriously hurt.

After the meeting of the sugar plantersand other prominent citizens on Sunday, thenibre violent of the negroes openly madethreats to burn the town and commit otherdepredations. The citizens of Thibodaux,knowing the inflamed condition of thestrikers, at once took steps to protect theirlives and property. For the past few dayswhite citizens from all parts of the parishhave been coming to Thibodaux.

On Sunday night the situation ha3 be-come so serious that a number of the bestyoung men of the town and; parish weresworn in as deputy sheriffs and picketed onthe approaches to the place.

Monday afternoon and night alarming re-ports continued to come in and the excite-ment increased, Householders, not feelingsecure even with the protection of the cor-don around the town, stood guard all nightor only caught brief snatches of sleep. Moretimid women were

UNABLE TO 6LI AT ALL.and many have not closed their eyes sincethey arose Monday morning. The wholetown has been under a strain of great un-easiness, which was increased from the factthat no one knew when the attack wouldtake place.

Yesterday evening information was re-ceived from reliable sources that the negroeswere combining and that the attack wouldbe made last night. The cordon of picketswas strepgthened, and the coming of theneguges anxiously awaited. The night woreon, Ibwever, and there was no sign of trou-ble. The day dawned, the sun arose, andthe men who had stood guard all night overthe lives and property of their kindred were.preparing to go to their homes, when the

'harp crack of rifles, mingled with the rattleof shotguns, awoke the few citizens of thetown who were asleep and told the men onguard that

THE FIGHT HAD BEGUN.The outmost picket guarding the town

consisted of two of Thibodaux's most re-spectable young men-Messrs. John J. Gor-man and Henry Molaison. These two wereposted considerably in advance of the others.and, the night air being chilly, had built abonfire and were standing near it. About 7~clock they were fired upon by a party of

aoea in ambush. who had evidettiy con-led themselves during the night near the

bonfire. As the report of the guns rang outboth men fell to the ground seriouslywounded, Mr. Gbrman with a bullet in hishead, which entered near the eye, and Mr.Molaison with a severe wound in the lee.

As already stated, this volley alarmed therest of the guard and the whole town, andthe former immediately rushed to the sceneof the firing. Two young men posted nearthe wounded men soon reached them, andimmediately took steps looking to their re-lief. While they were tmns assisting thewounded another volley was fired upon themby the negroes, but fortunately it did nodamage.

In a few minutes the entire guard aroundthe town had rushed to the danger point,and other citizens began to assemble withsuch weapons as they could hurriedly laytheir hands on. As they assembled aroundthe wounded men, half of them unconsciousof i.ow the wounds had been received, therecame

A THIRD VOLLEYfrom th•. negroes in ambush. This volleylike thiecond, did no damage, but servedto unmask the assailants and to indicate tothe citizens who had gathered hastily withthe knowl ae only that there was dangersomewhere, exactlwhere that danger lay.

There was an instant and prompt reply tothe volley, and a general lusilade was pouredinto the ranks of the negroes. In a few min-utes the fight had ended. The negroes re-plied feebly to the fire of the whites at first,but soon became panic-stricken and fled tothe woods.

ArEa TEE EATTLthe wildest rumors were afloat as to the num-ber killed. At first it was stated that fromfifteen to twenty-rive negroes had lost theirlives and that a large number were wounded.After thorough search by the coroner, as-sisted by other citizen, however, it wasfound that only six of the attacking partyhad been killed and five wounded. The twoyoung men who went down under the firstvolley were the only white men hurt.

There was a great deal of excitement intown and throughont this section durina theday, but to-night all is quiet. As a matter ofprecaution, however, the town is still guard-ed by a cordon of armed pickets, and all thewhit in it town are under arms, acting as

S~atement from Prominent Citizens ofThibodaux.

Tasehon&a, Nov. 2g.-Our labor troublehad about ceased when, on Tuesday after-noon, the people of this town were reliablyinformed that an attack would be made uponthe town during the night. To prevent anytrouble a strong guard of deputy sheriffs waspicketed at all approaches. At 7 a. m. twoof the guards, John J. Gorman and HenryMoldala, two of the most respectable andesteemed young men of our town, were shotf o ambush and perionsiy wounded. Twoof the iefuds rushed to their assistance,and whilethey were atte tinn to relievetheir wounded ocmrades,- hey were again

m ambush. s Luely they were i

-Afearsnstate of excitement arose and thesarmed dsof the town rushed to the

e mc.n They were again fired uponand te wre ned the fire by

ageners f.ussll winch was kept up untilS were sperse. ome six rioters

Shave. beeia killed and as manyone of the s of thetomrths arbve mentione.

r d to preserre theoo t are in perfect

hte; , aresguined frotnt e-' rite pa t overnor.

' @ver" L. of the lee.

ypjreaa ye-

M Noe

ofine in Lafonrche were crowded with ne-

groes, eager and anxious to get out of thecountry. Trains bound for the Cresoent Citywere crowded with darkies.

The troops from New Orleans were receivedat the depot by a large number of the prom-inent citizens of Thibodaux, including theClay Knobloch Guards and the volunteers.There was not anegro to be seen in any di-rection.

The excitement has to a considerable ex-tent subsided, and the leaders of the rioters,it is generally understood, have quit thecountry. At least they have not been seensince the affair of Wednesday. The citizensare determined to preserve the peace andhave organized to that end.

It appears that the trouble leading on tothe riot of Wednesday commenced about tendays ago, when negroes fired on a white mannamed Theodule Baille, passing on the levee.Baille is a sugar boiler, and he was fired upona mile below town. There was some firingalso on Lewis Guion's sugar-house, in whichquite a number of white men were lodged.Several shots were fired at white laborers onthe Leighton plantation, and the overseerwas struck in the face by small shot, butfortunately not seriously injured. BetweenThibodaux and Houma hands under canesheds were fired upon.

Indeed things had got to such a point thatcitizens were afraid to go out on the publichighway, for fear of being

SHOT AT BY NEGROES

in ambush. The Sugar Planters' Associationof Lafourche appointed committee of fiveto wait on the five men who were suspectedof being the instigators of the shooting inLafourche, and notified them that their fol-lowers must preserve the peace. On thatnight shooting occurred at five differentsugarhouses in Lafourche, the parties beingin ambush, and on the succeeding night shotswere fired at three other sugarhouses.

The colored people, who had been movedaway from their respective plantations, andwho had taken refuge in the town of Thibodaux, were being harangued day and nightfor the purpose of inspiring them to deeds ofviolence. Some of the colored women madeopen threats against the people and the com-munity, declaring that they would destroyany house in the town. One could hardly goon the streets without seeing clusters of ne-groes at the different thoroughfares, indulg-ing in conversation that boded no good tothe peace and order of the community. Nota few of the negroes boasted that in case afight was made they were fully prepared forit. Reports were frequent to the effect thatJhe negn oes proposed to

MAKE AN ATTACK UPON THE TOWN,MAKE AN ATTACK UPON TIHE TOWN.and on Sunday morning it was reported inthe country that the negroes had assembledon St. Charles street and were thoroughlyarmed.

It was at this time that the whites saw thenecessityof organiza

tion for the protection

of their lives and property, and to meet anyemergency that migut possibly arise out ofthe present difficulties. Hence it was that inview of existing dangers the citizens of Thi-bodaux organized for the purpose of ma,n-taining peace and good order.

On Sunday at 3 p. m. a mass meeting wascalled and a patrol organized, with a view ofstopping lawlessness ant crime. A companyof volunteers was also organized to picketthe town. The pickets were located in everyportion of Thibodaux and kept up a nightlywatch.

The negroes were repeatedly warned byseveral of the prominent and influential citi-zensof the place that lawlessness at nightmust cease, and that good order must be re-stored and maihtained. During Sundaylarge bodies of mounted men were in waitingfor any emergency. On Monday the negroeswere insolent, sneering at the soldiers andcitizens alike, and proclaiming publicly thewhite people were afraid to fire on them, andthat, under any circumstances, the wereprepared. Monday night some unknownpersons went into Franklin's coffee-house,where there were some negroes playing cards.

THE NEGROES MADE AN ATTACKupon the whites, when fi.ing was commenced,resulting in the shooting of two negroes.Watson, one ofthenegroes, ran two squaresand died, and the uhier, Morris Page, wentto his home, painfuyy but not fatallywounded.

On Tuesdaymorning large crbwds of whitepeople, planters and others, from the sur.rounding i'euntry came into town armed,and with a eatermition to maintain peaceand order. Durin the day the two Coxbrothers, who were reported to be the lead-ers of the disturbing element. were arrestedand iailed, the people being evidently deter-mined to put an end to future trouble. To-ward evening the negroes appeared to havebeen subdued, and the people were led to be-lieve that the trouble was happily ended, andthat there would bd no further violence.

The night passed off quietly, but at 5 a. m.a guard of file men, at the intersection ofSt. Char'es street and the railroad, at thesouth end of the town, was fired upon by asquad of negroes in ambush. The woundedmen were J. J. Gorman and Henry Molaison.Gorman was shot in the left cheek with aslug. which took a downward tendency andpassed out through his mouth. When seenthis evening he was resting easy, but was notpermitted to speak. Mr MIolaison receivedfour shots in the right le;, only two ofwhich have thus far been a

ntracted. His

cost and pants were perforated in fourteendifferent places.

MR. M1OLAISON'S STATE-MENT.Relative to the shooting, Mr. Molaison

said, in an interview with a representative ofTaH T1,• F5.-DEMiOCRAT this evening: "I wasone of the pickets stationed at the terminusof St. Charles street. My watch was from12 until 6 a. m. We had quite a fire bujit,but none of us were near it at the time ofthe'shooting. Myself, GoTman, Anslett andGruneburg were fully 250 yards from thefire, discussing matters and things. when ashot was fired and Georman rolled over intothe ditch near by. Gorman was shot about5 a. m. I thought it was a pistol shot. Mr.Marouge aocompanied Mr. Gorman home.Both were gone about five minutes, when Itold Messrs. Anslett and Gruneburg to takemy place, as I wished to assist Mr. Gorma ,.I had gone about 200 yards from Anslettwhen I was shot down."

The shooters were in ambush in a cornfield situated about 100 yards from thepicket lines. Who they were is not known,except that they were negroes. Mr. Molaisonis doing well.

When the fact of the shooting was madeknown in Thibodaux the citizens organizedfor self-protection a company of volunteers,and the Clay Knobloch Guards immediatelyproceeded in the direction of the negroes'settlement and the former opened fire uponthe mob and searched their houses for armsand ammunition, and in about twenty min-utes closed the aflair, after having

CAPTURED A NUMBER OF 8HOToUNSloaded with slugs ai:dl buckshot. Six negroeswere killed outright and four have sincedied of their wounds.

The people of the town of Thibodaux andthe parish generally regret the necessitywhich brought about this bloody affair. In-deed they deeply deplore it, but neverthe-less feel that it as necessary to take imme-diate and vigowjs steps to eradicate an eglwhich threatened to destroy not only thepeace and good order, but the )ves andproperty of a whole community.

Lient. Gov. Clay Knobloclt udge TaylorBeatty Sheriff Thibodaux, CoL I. D. Mooreand others who- were seen express the deep-est regrets at the present condition oftaings, and hope for an early and satisfac-tory solution of existing complications.

th• planters whose places have been madethe ene of trouble thus far are as follows:C. iaard, Claudet Bros., Ernest Roger,the nuion place, David Calder's, OrangeGrove, Troselair & Robichaux, John '.Moore, Jr., and Peter Bergers.

THE MEMBERS OF THE LOU1ISTANA RIFLES,who arrived yesterday, are Capt. C. H. Ad-ams, First Lieutenant O. T. Maler, Sec-ond Lieutenant H. T. Uviatt, First SergeantL. J. Fellows, Seond Sergeant John Duffy,Third Sergeant Moses Corporals Beye andRolling and -,vte arBonnecaze, Auth, Re-naud, Fallen, Munroe, Blaise, Calhoun,Barba, MLongard, Viosea, Marks, Hart, WiI-bans. Hernandez, FaIogl May, Doewer,Au.er, Meyers, Viened, ihneerg and Bey-

noir.The following is the detachment from the

Washington Artillery: Sergeant Vauhan.E.O. Bla raH. Rhoderdom, Ashby, F'red.A. Rube, and Dan Kelly.

_As previously- stated, there was not a sin-negaro to be seen on the streets of Thibo-ux upoyn the arrIval of the troops. Very

little bumnweinwas being ttaneaaeled, and theburden 9f cosveisation had special bearingonthe riot ofyestetday mernlsg. For weeksthe rnegoes ht4 beena making every characterof threat, luking In out-of-the-way plscesa pd .tp innoeente and inoffensiveeities. -;Ti fron abroad were firedS.in thre fields and driven there-

rO ,n te was no possible guaranteefr the Ofeither lifeor property under

i thep t•is the negroes have

thgret majority ohem are still in thehae aisdoaed )o8he eqszntryenr

;~~ii~

evening there was a rumor to the effect thatthe negroes were massing on the Terrebonno,about a mile and a half from the city. Itwas further rumored that they were thor-oughly equipped, and an attack upon thecity was inlninent. A squad of citizens iu-mediately repaired to the scene of the thre at-ened danger, but the crowd had dispetrod.An attack upon the city is momentarily ex-pected, and citizens and soldhheu are alikeprepr,:l for ay e•i rriemcy that nma:. ere.A guard placed uponll the oitskilrt of thetown was tirld (1n last night by a n•egiLconcealed in a di:ch.

Negro W'omen (',ontlnt:e to atl.e Threat.',But No IFrther Trouble PI iobabli---'"he Cox Hrotihers Relea'aed Fromu Jail.

Tmir•notrx. Nov. 25.-Ti,-,ay Tihod:et:"

enjoyed a day of conmparative quimtt, and abetter ferli•g is existiii among al cla:. .There has been no relhxti ln, hr:w. ivr, ofthe vigilance of citizens and miltary for thepreservation of law and orcltr in ,:li< c,munity and pan ish. Throngmout the dayguards wi-re on the wa.ch, a•. the ,.:ietown and its outskirts wmre th,,ro•ughldy patrolled. Few negroes are to be se n, at-though no obd ction has been uiget :againmtthe presence here of those teaceably in-clined.

~lhis morning a representative of TazTIMES-DEMOCtEAT, with some Of the military,visited a number of the plantations in thevicinity of Thibodaux, with a view of asyer-taiting the exact condition of things in theselocalities. MIr. R. IT. Allen has one of thelargest plantations in Lafourche. It is situ-ated immediately in fr ont of the town andemploys about 300 laborers. Mr. Allen saidthe strike had coat him about

ONE-THIRD OF HIS CROP,and that the demoralization among hi .e-groes was so great that some of those-re-maining were rendered totally ubfit for duty.He doesn't blame the negroes so much as thewalking delegate, whose chief b:miness forthe past few months, he says, has been tcharangue and iil-adsise his less intelligentbrother. o

The splendid plantation of Mr. AndrewPrice, about t. mile and a half from the city,was also visited. Mr. Price said that he lostabout one-third of his sugar crop in conse-quence of the strike, but that there had beenno trouble on his place. The action of thenegroes, he said, was a surprise to him, es-pecially as he had made arrangements withhis hands for the grinding season. For twoweeks they had worked with seeming satis-faction and no complaints were made. Whenhe found that tns strike had actually beenordered and the laborer, had withdrawnfrom the fiends hie endeavored to arrive atsome amic able adjustment of exist:ng diifi-culties, whatever they might be. Time ne-groes, nevertheless. left the place.

Within the pat day or two the old handshave been quieldy returning, and wheneveraproposition to return was made in good fithMr. Price has never failed to acctpt it. i-ocharges all the recent misunderstandingsbetween the whites and blacks to negroschool teachers and barbers in the town ofThibodaux. These people, he says, are re-ally doing nothing but inspiring the igno-rant and hard-working negro element to law.lessness and strife.

A negro by the name of Lawless, who wasseen by the correspondent, rents severalacres of land from Mr. Price, and is workingtwenty-six hands on his own account. He isnot s striker, but, on the contrary, is work-ing faithfully and industriously. He makes$3000 worth of cane every rear, which hesells to Mr. Price. He deprecates the presentstrike, saying that there was no cause what.e er for it.

Felix Boyd and Mat. Brooks, two of the re-turned strikers o, Mr. Price's place, say thatthey were urged to a strike by the Knights ofLabor of Thibtodaux, of which they weremembers. The Knights insisted on the strike.promising six pounds of meat and a peck ofmeal to each striker while out of employ-mint. The first week they kept theirprom-ise, but after that time confessed their ina-bility to further provide for the strikers.

Mr. B. A. Wormald's Laurel Valley placewas also visited. His laborers were quietlyreturning with the promise of protection.The woods and cane thickets in the imnme.diate vicinity of Thibodaux are

FILLED wrrT FUrTIVE NEGROESwho have abandoned their homes in thetown. A number of volunteers out lookingfor bodies of ne-roes supposed to be killed inthe affair of Wednesday, report the negrowomen as still threatening the peace of thiscommunity.

The bodies of three dead negroes werefound this afternoon in a thicket on Mr. Al-len's Rienzi plantation, on the other side ofthe bayou. They had evidently been jhot inthe affray of Wednesday, and takink refugein the thicket died there without assistanceof any kind. The report of the coroner isianxiouslv awaited, and although prom-sed to-day had not "ap to a late hour this

evening been forthcoming.It is, however, understood that fully thirty

negroes have sacrificed their lives in the riotof Wednesday, although returns thus farhave not equaled that number. Quite anumber of darkies are accounted as missingbuit whether they have been killed or 'skippedthe country" is not known.

Yesterday morning Judge Taylor Beatt;i,received an anonymous communication fothe effect that his life was in ;eopard- JudgeBeattie has incurred the enmity ofthe ne-groes by the part he has taken in the presentaffair. In a conversation with a representa-tive of THE TInF.s-DsrocaaT yesterday thejudge stated that he .adeveral times beenwarned that the assassin was on the watchfor him and that his life was in his ownhands.

He further stated that he had exhaustedevery means within reason to bring the ne-gro to a sense of his real condition* that hehad advised him time and again to beware ofand avoid those who would plunge him intodifficulties with which he was wholly unableto cope; that he would afford him the largestprotection with respect both to life and prop-erty, but that when the shot of Mondaynight was fired there was nothing furtherleft for him to do save that of assisting thegood citizens in the preservation of law andorder. These peoples it was stated, had beenthe means of doing incmealculable damage inthe parish. Their attacks upon .he people,he said, was not only unwarran.,d, but pre-meditated and malicious, so that question ofthe

summucr OF THE w-r-ma

-over the blacks or vice vera became the allabsorbing question.

Capt. Adams, of the Louisiana Rifles, prof-fered the servies of his force to protect thejail in case- Williams. one of the agitators.against whom there is much feeling, andwho surreunered to-day, was incarceratedtherein, but the sheriff, in consideration ofthe fact that there was no legal justificationfor his arrest, concluded to avoid the re-sponsibility of holding him.

On all the plantations, as far as heard fromthe laborers are returning to the fields, andexpress themselves as ready and willing toresume work.

At noon yesterday some shooting from am-bush by negroes was repos6d about twomiles from town, on the other side of thebayou. The attack, iris stated, was made onrecently imported lacorers, none of whomwere injured. A detachment of the militaryvisited the scene of the shooting, but conuldascertain nothing beyond what is statedabove.

A rumor was afloat to-day that there wasabout to be an uprising of the colored peo lein Terrebonno parish, brought about by thesame causes as those which produced theriot in this place. The white people, how-ever, are fully prepared for any attack thatmay be made in that parish.

Messrs. Gorman and Molaieon, who wereinjured in the affair of Wednesday, arerapidlyon the mend. The Louisiana Riflesand a detachment of the Washington Artil-lery are stationed at the courthouse, but atnight are picketed on the suburbs of thetown.

Gov. McEnery, who it was thought, wouldbe here today was telegraphed by Lieut.Gov, Knoblo. h that his presence atthis time was unnecessary, peace being tos'reat extent rgetored. About 8:30 o'clockto-night the notorious Cox brothers were dis-missed from the jail and led out Jo BayouLafourcho where they swam the stiam andmade their escape in the thicket beyond.

A Patrol Established at Houma.Ho~wna, Nov. 2.--The Vhibodaux riot has

created some excitement here, and measureshave been taken by the authorities to pre-vent a similar outbreak in Houma. Thetown is patroled every night by specialguards, and the utmost vigilance is exercisedby the citizens. Vague rumors are heard onthe streets of threatened violence and incen-diarism on thepart M5 the negroes, putthesereceive only the measure of considerationthat they deserve. The prevailinm feeling isthat no outbreak.will occur, but it is tborghtbest to be provided against any contingencythat may arise. A negro from the countrywas reported as tin to purchase a quan-tity of ammunition this morning, and wasiipmediately notified by Mayor Smith to leavetown.

London Life. B (ros,Ma peolwho have ridden a cook-horse

bnr r e th er hildhood

Twill Ire arn ha there~aoturto heae tstun 8cf

Ypunisrs.att as rol

WIY PECPLE BECOME BAltAn Interesting Adico s on th0 5

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b i'r I ' " *n i ,a tBonged tope M u .. ', . , . hair dleyantifI 3•8, ' I . :1 nf } a r, • .

fli.. t,;ti'I 0 at li s oe hsly3ti) thit t 'r , :rd ii": ... o: t tweith

i i to fifty, .: 'ifg -1870, whn,. th 1, att. er ', n totalsn,' adtentii h w't coob tnowLft y ." c i,- . -t,-. A: c o ithe . ,ndiu id , " theI 111 Lf',}' 1' L- .it n :Fiti di-cpohii&

twat• ti ',', ii'er i, odd that

exprunntaV f~l~r, i.rL-rflI mn'enoto eOn ht"ir oci - he mr, ' i o nots fh

,tudy "tnd t. -,1r:r":It te ne astion they:ttil l opp rtl aty I; w it:e in the coa

iug phit tlt'•i thii• t to ado withh, om ,;, .A : a"at- :'-lo nOp eituhlr =LIe8 to wh~ tin ne .rter batsnesL toeinde altndh it,' iie ae o nat ehle teodetl 6 ca1e c, : 'i 'ii vi ir; , tr ;iis=,' ioa j ,ofp,: eil ftn:z to rti'a-ti frmlo ert s ieto man irc, wtmn : i his xeeesivehar-

inl atld us el ti.aHe had n-e !tr ad in tn aposition to

e~iferacnitalii, 3't his, con• iction •aethe do: wi thit att were often t ••eaRname hair lo-uanti i tarichoogisi• s•oshady Ind tet tohe q.tion n whit theyall oppotfoit'ity oi waitnrefrin the tow•nr

ment of eit co:sive hair falitg••hiaother cseo catl rt with a oortainty heor evenr atsi.u di for it. It was becomingitcreasred blief that dots were subtsome unknown d:acsor which causeiess to human teinaE. Cases of thishad .been r-u•ght •rlbthin his view, andinduced him to give a good deal of l•tn'to the subject.

In one insta'ie, Mr. Wheeler said. atleman--an artiat--bhad aIrie blackdog whose coat had seddenly becomein fact almost white, and it was beingin such large quantities that he could nothad in the house witlnut everything.'tsouched being covered with hairs. Thistleman had a bea!r ttfnl head of hair whefrsr spoke about the 'log, bunt uhen heagain the next year he was quite baldialrso said the femitla ert'ant thatthe dog had lust nearly the wholehair.

For himself; he was convinced thatcontinnous electrio current was theactive and efficient hair etimutiantof theIt was a remedy of great therapeuticwheo used as an aocessory to otherede t.

Primarles Called In Lincoln Perii,;RuSTON, Nov. 22.-The Parish Demi

Executive Committee met here to-dayall the wards represented, as follows: A.Taylor, chairman, ward 1: J. P. Colproaie for A. H. Colvin, ward 2: Dr. J..Robinson, ward 3: Amos Davis, wardJudge E. M. Graham, proxie for J. S.ward 5: 0. A. Heard, wards 6 and 7.

Mr. Davis moved to elect one delegate f-each pollue jury ward direct to theConvent.n.

Judge Graham offered an amendmenteach ward to elect delegates by primTtion to the parish convention, andvention to elect six delegatee to thiConvention. Colvin, Graham andvoted yea, Davis and Robinson nam.i.nendment was adopted, and Dec. 15

selected for primaries and Dec. 19 ft-parish convention. t

Having Their Coffins Mssd.

Dr. Henry Hiller and wife, ofMass., do not like the idea of theirbeing consigned when dead to theowooden cotus, and are havingfor them two ponderous caskets 'ahogany. which they hope may'beto endure for untold ages. Mrs.says the common Jooden ofito pie.es forty-eight hours afterearth receives them. The Hillers$10,000 on their new coffins, wbeauties of mechanical and artlt -Each casket consists-of two parts, or i'words, each body will have two cofinsininner coffin is composed of mahogany,air-tight by being completely envcopper. It rests within the outsideon two elegant brass supports, whichsent the big paws of a lion.

It is on the outside casket, howeverthe most lavish expenditure has beenThis is of mahogany also, the intei1iolned with copper the mountings ofter being noticeably ine. Everytains a group of figures, and it is-hatbeauties of the carver's art are madeeut. Everyfigure is carefully andmade, and stands out in bold andrelief. Each panel anzi'ts figures munprovided weeks of labor. To enumsymbols and figures which the artistparted with a living flourish to the rof the dead would be to rehearseof all the familiar reproductions ofmate and inanimate in decorativelion rampant here, there a fierce-griffin, birds of every species. fishes•plants, trees, the bow and arrow, ete,in central positions are seen Floraandcherubs blowing trumpets, tna '"harps, Apollo vth his lyre, upitthunderbolts, Neptune with his tridThe caskets have been constructedHiller's house. He says he has been$50, 00 by a prominent showman tothem,

Massage.The art of massage is of great an

There are always some kind folktake the time and trouble to searchdown into the annals of the past andmit to us the facts they there find rOn the questiou of massage, those whtraced out its history tells us that thiswas p'aeticed in very early timesChinese, and that the Greeks andalso resorte4 to its aid, evidences ofappear in the literature of those twocountries.

This ancient art has been revived,present day, on the Continent and inca, as well as in England and is beingextensively practiced. I have •poktmassage as a a)ec!anical mode ofment-and so it is: but those who usto perform it ought to have someknowledge concerning their work asfinker-dexterity, The masseuse hasherself acquainted with the itthe function of the tissues and mwhich she is clled upon to opeorattherefore some study of books on thisthe subject is required. Then therenecessary dexterous manipulationsquired: there particular movements tibe learned from actual demonstranothing but patient practice willmanual dexterity needful toprocess.

The general term of massage ineeral kinds of manipulations; thesedesignated by French names. One•fis known as Egfeiuraue; this consist•istroking the pars under treatmell&?stroking increases in stre gth, andnates in a firn rubbing of the skinpalm of the hand. Under the effecttreatment, hardness and dryness

give way to softness, and the effect _soothing.

Another form of treatment isrissage. This process c sists inand kneading and rolling 'hecles; a form of massage brougnhoases where the patient is Oeprifrmity or accident from takingcise. The advocates of massagethe use of p~trissage also soot.,vigorates the overtired and fatilg tethose who have gone through an, -amount of physical exertion.

Tc amtmenatl s a rapid meehanmeat used as a stimulus for roaction organs which are inclineddormant.

a Fseea PrtEcon maybe_ cirlar rubbings with

tiy; performed i4 a rapid

wse' et formed ints ,arnty apa