T 11 ill 10 1 IK I IN McEnery on the Franchise Laws of the Southern States. THE GRANDFATHER CLAUSE IN LOUISIANA No Complaint Made by Any Party in Louisiana Against the V Suffrage Amendments-It Is Working So Satisfactorily That Republican State Committeemen Are Trying to Claim Credit for Its Passage. ! te had by the respective State com- amttees. , j 4sp; vF. HERWIG, Chairman, ! '"W. E. IIOiWBUL, Chairman. "New Orleans. January 6. 1900." iNo complaint was uiade of fhe suf arage article in the ccms'titution been built for $1 per square yard, cording to the view of the proprietor when they ought not to have cost that the presence of the negro at the more than 19 to 21 cents per square j polls -was dispensed 'with. In the yard, "were found to ibe full of barrels 1 cities and towns, where they were in order to give them bulk. State cred-1 not emnloved in large numbers by it was at the lowest ebb; warrants on I any one person, they soon learned the was (before the adoption of the con stitution. The Constitution of. the United States does not confer the right to vote on anyone. This is left exclu sively to the States. I am not aware the State treasury went (begging on J money value of their votes, and; of any restriction upon-the State as iCarondelet street at 20 cents on th. I throurih a chosen leader would sell dollar, State bonds at 50 cents on the to the highest bidder. dollar. Demoralization, and. distrust were everywhere. Under white rule e State recover ed- rapidly. 'Levees have been rebuilt; The (Republican party existed only in name, composed of a few stragglers in New Orleans who kept tip a sim ulated organization for the purpose bonds have gone above par. The State AJ?jZ iJS treasury is f ull; warrants are at once of iiig delegates to the .Republican M,hPd 1 ,ta TroTKvrmis for national convention. It Is only since both white and colored. Peace pre vails everywhere. The whites and ne- the regulation of the suffrage that the party begins to show some vitali- rr .nr'ai rma tCri' has tyv T attracting to it some intelli decreased; courts speedily and impar- anu awecie wnue citizens tially administer justice. Officers are m - rtmTP, rTSil ,ihrma ntiil dill-1 6": a iespecaaimii 10 cerciM? Remit White immigrants from the the right of suffrage. Old. time but West have come to Louisiana in large respectable Republicans and lemo numbers since the overthrow of negro crats and the -more intelligent of the -flvwnrm,- pn-, n wmr and uegroes demanded a Change in our po- v, i - l -iL-iJ n , ,, adventurous carpetbagger, none ven- ""Vr1 wuaiuws a rexormauou tnred -itthere before that time. The f suffrage. The members of the TwmiA Tnca iwn watch- convention which adopted the consti- ful that there be no return to that era ?tim 1S98 were ahle and conseien- of debauchery and crime -which I have were comromeu wicu a described. Only one serious attempt serious problem, and, in any opinion, has been to go back to it. The negroes they solved it. The suffrage article were massed as they were in 1868- of constitution provides that ev- 187G, but the energy ofjtne wnate peo- f4- - rf: pie .prevented this attempt to go back Ja fide resident of the State for "T uuiur iu. -tiit; vuiuwu ox t r riod- and so thev -will ever LW, year or tne pansn one year ana V X -cwujiu weui cpntanam oan Andteullt with them for tuuua TO "vote -ix ne can read ana so far as to claim that the .Repnbli- e, or if he own property, real or . Washington, Jan. 23.,S;pecial. Sen ator McEnery of Louisiana delivered a strong speech today in defense of the iwhite people of North Carolina. IMr. McEenry said: 'Mr. President, the solution of the race question in tthe United States is one of thej most serious problems that e er coniDontea a nation. It is con-! lined to no ttocality. (E-ery State is nffected by it. The social, political and industrial welfare of the South have influences on other - sections of the country. We are but on the threshold. No man can predict what is beyond. So far the best intellects of the South have endeavored to find some remedy to1 make the 'South pros perous, notwithstanding the presence of a vast nunnber of ignorant blacks, to make her social position clear and defined in the separation of the races, and to place her on a political basis that Will insure stability to her dnsti tutions; make the ballot box the sacred depository of 'the liberties of the peo ple instead of the charnel house where under negro domination they were as sassinated; to prevent them by means -m -m J 'MT - - I I r I - It X ' " I T I Ii K I t H I ir,l l'1-ur T I I I I - 1 I I W T i?T:Vrrr-r Its elimina- This test is cSmnle . nh. can party of Louisiana was responsi ble for the suffra'ge clause, as it had forced the Democrats to adopt it, and that the 'Democrats had no right to claim credit for it From the day 'that the negro was enfranchised and negro domination ,t , Wn n aihnrWn? auesUon personal, assessed to him to the with the people of Louisiana to regu- a-moiinf of $300. The qualification to late the suffrage so as to eliminate the r!aand te ls tested by the ability q. qo nc iofnnr-10' tine voter to fill out the blank an- ant white man who has no conception Patim to register, which is as fol- of our form of government. The rtg .laws: S JLS? tJ -tomitol 187b, when canstitutioIl t alone affect the islana. My name is . I it aoverthrown, there was an era Qffwc 1 nriiPr in waa born in tl etattk rn f of corxupltion, vice and tyranny not Grleails ,w,hK emigrated to , parish (or county of , equaled m any age. Congressional in- th gtot tie ciril war ,Tlie n, 0n the day of , in the year :""; "Vii Ullu, ve troling motive dn the adoption of the . 1 am now - years, - months an inUal step to this corrupt era the .eonsUtutional provision was to elim- and days of a,ge. I (Ireedman s 'Bureau was organized. .nn im.an,a- mnCa .frm..h in this Stn.tp sin , The negro was made to believe tihatLua ,mo.0 ot. ;af0 ?n n since . nnri in he was under the special protection KZrZ, in flwa nf of ward No. ,f friX' cil exemption a9 not parnai to tne otf thp 'o-nrpmiPn nnui it nr-mtv iTi,d t . " w " v- . , ' T , , i wnite. race, ix ciepnvea a greau many 01 Tne oOAerament and it armj and iLisiaaa, I It is a dangerous power, , and, I am not disfranchised by L-p in he citv oif New Orleans of that the white hulk was his inferior, olie ich bas (been a tent fac,tor in any provision of the constitution of 4 tw of have resided in this parish and in precinct No. to the persons dt may admit to the electorate. Its power is unlimited. The only restriction imposed by the Constitution of theJ United States is that .the right to vote shall not be de nied or abridged on account of race, color, or previous condition of servi tude. As I have stated, the State, in the exercise of its exclusive power to confer the right, to vote, does not deny or abridge or deny the right of other citizens to vote by exempting a certain class from the xjualMcation provided for the great body of electors. There is nothing in the text of the suffrage cilause quoted to show that jthere. is any denial or abridgment of me ngnx to vox e on uccoum txi ra."e, color, or nrevious condition. The State, being the sole judge of the quaflifications of electors, can discrimi nate among the illiterate as to Sec toral capacity. This is what f5e State or Louisiana uas done. Tnere were certain persons Hiving in the country parishes who served the State with fidelity who could not read or write and who did not own property. The descendants of these people! had no op portuniity immediately, after the war to obtain an education, as tthe strag gle for an existence was 'hard. They had been voters. They attended pub he affairs. They knew wno was President, Governor of the State, and how they were elected.- ana nad a very, good comprehension of the prin ciples of the government and the du ties of public officers. v They were in corruptible. ' . 7 ' - '' No money or other Consideration akin to' bribery could (influence them. They had a personality. They did hot vote en masse at the dictation of any one, ilt was rignt, it was just, tnac they should be continued as voters. The exemption is not partial to the and that any personal grievance he me OYexthrwr of governments and the this State bad would at (vnofi ibft rio-litl flw'- hh ti.. m... 1 JJi?JS of tvlng uMican goT- tide 202. i(fll and corruption which prevailed under this government ;from 1SOS to 1877. The recollection of that period is like a hell-bom dream, and one is almost unnerved at the mention. It is the darkest and most shameful pe riod in the history of the human race. The wonder now is that by force it .was not sooner terminated by an out raged people. Annul the legisllationj of Louisiana which has for its sole object the ad vancementxf both races, the progress of the State socially, politically and industrially, and inaugurate again ne gro domination in that State, the . tragic period of 1876 will be re-enacted. The White Republicans of .Louis iana make no complaint against the provisions of the present 'constitution regarding suffrage. The more intelli gent' negroes accept it as a wise settle ment of the question of suffrage. The ignorant as ; the negro race are indif ferent about it, as they have - long ceased to have any political affiliations except those which were momentarily created by the purchase of their vote. There never has been any disposi tion on the part -f the people of Lou flsiana to deprive the negro of any of his political or civil rights. There has been and will Continue to 'be determin ation, fixed and tmalterable, to deny him social privileges on, equality with the white, to prohibit him from as piring to an equality in social' life, which nature forbids. , Very recenltly the so-called National I Itepublican party in ilxraisiahja 'held a meeting of its executive committee The chairman, II. P. Herwig, of the regular Republican pafty of 'Louisiana, was present and eveidently the con trolling influence in shaping the pro ceedings of the National Republicans There was a combine made between the two organizations. The following resolution was adapted: "Resolved, That all Republicans, and alii other persons who' are qualified as electors under the constitution . and laws of this State, without distinction ns'.to race, color, religion, nativity or former-political affiliation, who con- domn the usurpation of 1896, who fa vor free, fair and honest elections, who believe in the selection by the people of their registrars' of voters and of all other election officers, and who desire to strip the executive of Ithe power to dictate to; and control, through his appointees, all conven tions, registrations and elections, arc invited to participate dn the selection of delegates to the convention which is called by this committee." The following agreement was enter ed' into between the two organizations : "lit is agreed between P. F. Herwig, k , chairman of the State Republican Cfomimittee of the State of Louisiana, and W. E. Howell, .chairman of the State Itepublican Committee cf the State of Louisiana, . toat .tnere nan be a joint call issued by the commit tees, presided over by the said Her wig and HoWell, for a primary elec tion to elect delegates to a State con vention to be held at a time and place to be agreed on, say, not 3ater than the of February, 1900, for the pur pose of nominalting- a Republican State .ticket and for delegates at large to the National Republican Comveiution called to 'meet at IThiladelphaa on the 20th day of June, 1900. "All -Republican qualified '.electors under the constitution! and laws of Louisiana shall 'be ent itled to partici pate in said primary. "Rules and regulations for the con duct of said primary to be agreed on by a committee of five: from each party. r ' ' ' The said Herwig and Howell obli gate themselves to appoint a commit tee of. their respective committees, to renort to their respective State com mittees the means adopted to. carry onit hp mronses aforesaid "The object and purpose, of this flXTwuTimt lis to iharmonize all party differences .and to present a imi'ted front, to the common enemy and bu'rld aVp a strong Republican party in this State. "Final adtaon on the, agreement is to With the exception of this disfran- s reference to ar , T" 11 -v- X-a X 1 . summaiily punished. This too often Umment. It is corrupt. It is unreason- causes to be conviction of crime the ir " " ff 1 ! Fiiir-. iiir II I'M S iiIK 1 II If I I 1 LTt'IIl-. lb JIMS 11 U I LUillSIiimfJmT w 1 iirJi to mn. mony of some negro who imagined he thought .It is a dead weight, and is at hard labor, inmates of charitable viieuuu diiu ps nvw-wom wuvny moved by an external force. It has no institutions, execut thie iSWIdW iiiii.c-u. TkArftrm !i nrv. nn rndiinriiifl irv. It irallS Hrtrid' thiAcft ,00111 : . n . , I " - I uciuuui VWUHIII'CU. i 11 illlV .ls? uxvc "ocui. .u unaer rne nower ana oominion or oue ouDiic inson. intprri into-A rirtna dxmyrxr rt ! ntrv-r. o I o urn c . rm . ,-r mAnmr I . s I v,vv iviin.va. , um m avj- iTTian or a. lacuon. ana is 'inovea lrre-ine or lainr p nprsnnc e -i,v- :i . i . . " . .. w ua1 iue pxiiite ui. euipuuiug ntgryes, sistibly In a course tnat a directin: 1 r1 ( I I I I I L I'll It I I 1 4-" III JI j I wmy I J I I 1 I V I www i II n-j-4 j-vMi- I - . . personar knowledge, the sum or -nit- The bestowal of wlitical .power upon w .w ' teen hundred dollars for the year. Ne- me numbers-the impersonal mass- residence can vote if he be aMe to B1WS wwuie justices 01 xue jieaw, cannot 'do jus-rffied. It as not the gov- read and write or nosseses irooertv vnr9.Wa cWriffo io.o-i do is,fi'ff i. e i -r ,m 1 , . w.ue oi pjssseses property LT . , . ""vi""' enwutuu xitrv iic. iu vni utr- assessed to bim of the value of S300 TrC ' rr.r "c " J ril 1 ' veiP iiilo auswuubui. unj-eAtiusivu constitutional oibiections can be a vi t.iiq .rri i i i.t l -.ft .ill t ,i j if i i irri iw i z w I - - - I -s i va "- -uai-iiut. -iiibui """- wi iuiss iuupei-juaa mass is xiitreiuaui m-geu to these quallficationf . The i gvveraur ua iuvvaj.-ueu. iu uhuj. no violation or any representative law. wnsitution, J section 5 article i97 ex They were ignorant, insolent, and op- Its inclusion ! an the electorate is, the Cepts a certain class' from the quali P've, sioi'u. wnupi, ucuuu imruuw. aegraaauon or tne wnoie. neat ions above stated. It is this article ne . ignite aeat m eigne years in- line multitude is everywhere dan- against which com plaint is leveled be vreuiseu m urn iwur iu liny ouuiiuu u.ui- gerous xo une itatev out tne oesrowai cause it is stated it discrimimites iurs. .Liiey wexe iKwice juiure m lpai- or power upon it is to piace tne arms asrainst the nwn a .nTiain isihes and councilmen rn the towns and of her arsenals in the hands of the is contained in a proposed amendment v;iiitr. aii Aiiuvuitii ciiitj. muuiuiijiu 'Uiiuu. l is TUt; uureasoaoi viie ijiaie to tne constitution of SNorth Carolina indebtedness increased in the same when it calls upon ignorance, ; vice which is the occasion" of the resolu- proportion that the sstate aeDt naa and erime to determine its career." (increased. The State expenses alone tion offered by the Senator from that rlihe writer from whom the above State. Section 5 is as follows --ru. -L pm rvrvn rv"irw m.v. .1, I j.x; - I legitimate. expenses ought to have "The object of every political con- 9rv v iq -t nTlv . been then as now, one and a quarter stitution is to exclude this element- to .en.titled to vote under the constitu- miuion 01 aoiiars. rnax is,v xne am-person-ai mass -irom Hon ct..ltlltoo nTr ,fo Ji It is well .known that laws were en- authority in the State. The' reference TTnifWi ;o.j.t ...p, h. acted during recess. They rwere pro- o-f power to its subjects the organiza- anj no SQn ,0r grandson of such muigarea, alter tne aujourimivnt oi uon 01 society to un-uiai lorce, -wmrc nerson nnt. tinn rpar ,0, the legislature as having been passed the, whole effort of civilization has nf tli fitlfk of fln;kn .f hiil , J T ' J. - J. i C 11,1- ,1 11 " 1 " waien uiey never were .. pre seuiwi iu weu w ;wresu n xiotu ujc mmu uuu stitution, anil no male person of for .1110 wuj. ixi, juiuug .iv.v Ai unuumt, nj. eign oiriu wno.was naturanzeu prior ulently manipulated m order to snow : Democratic government is a repre- to tiie isj. ,i.lv .f jnrmn,rv icqo kaii that they went through the regular sentation of a person by a person, and be denied the ri"-ht to ritpr ind course of Jegislation. liie courts as not an inert mass .oy a person. Kvery Tote in this -tat bv rpqn f .hi! a rule were corrupt. Negro jurors elector has a personality which finds J failure to possess the educational or were impaneled, ana no wuut? auau rcprestenia'iion in xiie .govemuienr. property qualifications prescribed by had an opportunity in criminal cases In the very able and interesting ad- this const i-tu tion: Provided He shah for a fair trial. , dress recently made before the Senate :aave resided in this Stntft for five. A dnmkftn ind on the United by the distinguished j-unior Senator yiea-rs next precedm? the date at States bench at midnight signed an from Indiana he attempted to show which; he shall apply for registration, nmiPr vrffAnizinff the lerislature of tnat tne wupmos were incapanie 01 and shall have registered in accord the tState, and no -member was per- s ellf -government. (Me read many state- ance with the terms of this article mitted to enter the state house with- meats fixm intelligent men residing prior to September 1, 1898; and no rvnt ii. wiit siirned bv the United among tnem, snowing tnat it tney naa person shall be entitled to register States marshal. Polling places were the right to vote they would vote ac- under this section after said date before dawn taken possession of by coramg to rae -wan 01 aior or t The inclusion of this class does not negroes, who stood in long lines, ana -uien mpiujs j. uu Mxclude the negro from voting. (He it was with great difficulty and hu- or meir own, no inaiviuuami, no pei- nas tne ip TOmm)n with the miliation that a white man could son all ty, and, are an impersonal mass, .j. ,peopie oa th,e conditions alike vntA White men under arrest for rime views entertajiievv uy a, me u-i ,rmlirji.hl tr .hrtfh 1 -nas fhnt some fancied wrong were brought to The views entertained by the distin- read and write, or that he owns a fhe noils under a suard of United tguisnea .senator are xnose 01 a. uiaji- certain amount f renl nr nernnfll St-ates soldiers to encourage, edify it f Republican ISenators in this Dronertv. He is dpnrived of nn 7irht and amuse'the negro voters. The en- Ohamber, and, I presume, of the Sen- ,of suffrage .ijy the conferring of it tire State was a military camp, and ator irom uaroimd., who louercu ,upou aMthCT class. If the suffrage United States troops were almost daily the resolution amendment, because it conferied the P,m.nloved as political asrents. Detach- If a people as ancapapie of seir-gov- riarhf to vote unon certain citizens, is ments were furnished sheriffs and eminent it is not entitled, to be in- to be interpreted as a discrimination constables' to make arrests on war- trusted witn electoral power, xnis against the negro, then no privilege mnt a issued bv courts of record and Us - self-evident. The description or could .be granted to anv white citizen justices of the peace. The parties 'in thel Filipinos is exactly "that . of the by a, State unless a negro was grant- many instances were turned over to negro race 111 ajouisnaua.. 111 ;uitu a toie same, xne lourteenui amend- tlie military authorities and, under the experiment or governmenx ami ment declares that the privileges or Hvp nretense of a rescue, kept under made a great failurev. While same of immunities of citizens Of the United a military guard. United States mar- the authorities quoted by the 'Sena- states shall not be abridged y any shals forged by the hundreds tne tor irom inaiana say tne v .ujpino state. rrnis amendment was intend- n.TmeS OI Uniteu. .JSiaifS oilllillLSvfeiuii- uiij,uu ijjc juuuoicu mui muiuti.jp'u tu lo iwuttxi. vnx; lUlivi, tsu I'Uitt uim ers to warrants; and arrested with government under restrictions, the! could not be discriminated against in United States cavalry the most re- negro experiment in jjouisiana snow- public places of amusement and on spectable citizens on fictitious charges ed that the negro was unsafe when public conveyances and in the courts, and placed them in irons.', and con- din charge of the municipalities of Suppose a State should for some rea- fined them-in loathsome dungeons, i Louisiana. Uhy, then, do some of son or other provide for the free The Itepublican Representative the Kepublicans insist upon mulcting transportation of some of its citizens from the 'Fifth Congressional district J upon Louisiana and North Carolina a on a public conveyance, then accord- of Uouisana had the boldness to pub lish in" a 'Republican paper called the Intelligencer, in order to give him greater power over the negroes, that these troops had been furnished at his request, on the requisition 01 tne ..At- torney General or tne uuueu -Luies, for the sole purpos-e of keeping the Re publicans in power. People lived in terror. Every man went armed, ex pecting an attack at any moment from the negroes. It was the pastime of drunken negroes riding along the roads to fire into dwelling houses.' IPrior to an election they became more turbulent. The people could no longer stand such a condition of affairs. For some months prior to the Presidential election of 1S75 they became unusual ly violent and unruly. The conseiquence was that the in dignation of the" people broke into fierce energy and overthrew the negro carpetbag domination. At its end the State was in a pitiable condition. Tax collectors had stolen the collections they had made. The State treasury liad been looted and - the auditor's books made way with in order to. pre sent prosecution. Xrevees which had goveroimemt that they will not toler- ing to the views of those who com-' ate in- the newly acquired terri'torie? plain of the suffrage amendment in If it is to secure the negro vote for the constitution of Louisiana, the the Republican party, they will not State would be bound to grant the succeed, unless you withdraw a part same privilege to an equal number of of the army from the Philippines and negroes. again make a military camp of the Amendment fifteen of the Constitu entire State.- tion of the United States says: xvevaew wie history 01 negro suurage rrn,- tiwxns f ne TTnitrJ in Louisiana. When first exercised igtates to vote shall not be denied or fey the negro, he fell under the power abridged by the United States or by of the carpet-bagger. The entire ne- any ,state on a.ceount of race, color, gro vote was moved by one influence; it was one aggregation. It was kept solid by continuous, unremitting at tention, by promises of land and mules, by threats of a return to slav ery, by promises of social equality with the whites by the encouragement of race prejudices. When the power of the carpet-bagger was broken, the negro fell under the domination of the whites. (He was as tractable as when under the power of the carpet bagger. He voted just as ihis imme diate employer in the country dic tated him to vote. He had no will Wherein is the denial or the abridg ment of the negro's right to vote by the inclusion of one class into the electorate? The right to vote still r mains to him unimpaired. No one will say that the educational or prop erty qualification provided for both races denies or abridges his right to vote under the fifteenth amendment. The gravamen of the complaint is that the same exemption from the educational or property qualification was not accorded fhe negro. If this had been done, the educational and -of his own. In some localities it was ( property qualification would have so well, known that the entire vote been useless and the suffrage would on the plantation would be cast ac- have been in the same condition as it the war between the States large num bers of foreigners have come to New Orleans and many have gone into the sugar district who can not read, and write and who have not the property qualification. (Prior to the Consti tu tion of .1898 they were voters, even after they had filed a declaration of J .1 i l - T . i -A U 1 intention ito pecome citizens 01 une United States, and were influenced and controlled by leaders and voted en masse as directed. This class has been disfranchised, and will remain so until they become, qualified voters. In the opirdon in the case of Un'ited States vs. Reese et al. It said by the organ of the court: "If citizens of one race, having cer tain qualifications, are permitted by law to vote,; those of another having the same qualifications must be." This is the strongest language in the opinion reiaitiing to tne oeniai or'. abridgment of the right of the negro to vote,. This statement means that where the general law prescribes the qualifications to vote the negro who has these qualifications can not be de nied the privilege. The State of Louisiana has a provision an dts Con stitution prescribing qualifications for voters, white and coloredand the vio- ilation of the fifteenth amendment must necessarily be in the denial of the voting, by a refusal to permit the negro to register or to deposit 'his vote on account of his race,' color, 'or prev ious condition of servitude. The ex ception of a certain class from the qualifications provided by the Consti tution in no way affects the negro's vote, nor does dt affect the right to vote of white men who were not voters in Louisiana or any one of the States of the Union in 1867 or prior thereto. It has ben held by the Supreme Court of the United States that the Constitution of the United States has not conferred the right of suffrage up on anyone, and that the United States has no voters of their own creation, in the States. (21 Wall., 178; United States vs. Cruikshank et ah, 92 U. S., 542.) In the latter case it was said by the court, after having quoted from United States vs. Reese et al., 92 U.-S., 214: "From this it appears that the right of suffrage is not a necessary attribute of national citizenship,; but that ex eruption from discrimination in the ex ercise of that right on account of race, etc., is. but it, must be' expressly averred. (United States vs. Cruik shank, 92 U. S., 542.)" , The f atet is, that all negroes who can read and write, and who have the qualificalicns of residence, are in the electorate, and aoil will be when they . . -J -i i acquire these quainucaxions. from this is will appear that the article was striking at ignorance among both white and colored, and not at the ne gro race. , : The word "white," which would show a discrimiantion on account of color, etc., is not m the- article regu lating the suffrage. Affirmatively it confers the right to vote on the negro. (Ex parte Yarborough, 110 U. S.,651.) The right to vote in tne tate comes from the State; but the right of exemption from the prohibited dis crimination comes from the United States. The first has not been granted or secured by the Constitution of the United States, but the latter has been The provisions in the Constiitution o Louisiana in regulating the suffrage do not express any discrimination on account of race, color, or previous con dition of servitude. It is not enough to infer or suspect that the suffrage article in the Constitution discrimi nates. In McfPherson vs. Blacker (110 U. S., page 1) it was said, reviewing both the fourteenth and the fifteenth amendments: "The right to vote intended to be protected ref ers ifco the right to vote, as established by the laws ana Constitu tion of the State. There is no color for the contention that under the amendment every male inhabitant of the State, being a citizen of the. Uni fied States, has, from the time of his majority, a right to vote for Presiden tial electors." The State therefore having the ex clusive power to say who shall be electors, has the might to discriminate between its jcitizens as to capacity for electoral rights, provided t makes no discrimdnation on account. off race, -color, or previous condition of servir rude. (Williams vs. Mississippi. 170 U. S., page 213.) The State has the exclusive right of prescribing qualifications for the vo ter. It has prescribed them, and ev . ery negro in the State can vote if he has these qualifications, which in the general law are common to him and the white man. .. . In the State of Louisiana the ne groes who ?an not read and write are those who were slaves. They are fast passing away, leaving a generation behind them who can read and write, . and who have learned to do so in the schools established for colored people by the State of Louisiana. The elec- . tion -law of Louisiana is of the Aus tralian kindk and every 'voter can now have his vote counted and an ex pression of his will enforced. There negroes can register and vote with out initerf erence. The State of Louisiana has done a great deal for the negro. It has ele- vated him morally and intellectually. He pays no taxes of any amount, yet the people of that State cheerfully and generously contribute ' for his schools and bis churches. Schools are in every neighborhood. The State has; " organized a prosperous umiversitv. wheTe there is industrial training and facilities for a higher education. As the negro will not patronize a school where white teachers are provided, a normal school ha? been, provided to educate their teachers. Besides the university established and supported 1 by the State, there are several colleges of a high order; with able faculties. 'Had the negro continued in power, the State would have been one vast sea of desolation; values of all kinds would have been destroyed, fields un- cultivated, improvement of all kinds delayed; schools would have been closed, and he, the tool of unscrupu lous adventurer's, .would be now sunk' in moral degradation and mental dark ness. ' The People of the South availed them selves of the first opportunity, after the white people gained the ascendency. to rebuild their shattered fortunes. In 1870 there were 4,352,317 bales of cot-, ton, with am aggregate value of $326,- 032.066; in 1880, 6,605,750 bales, of an aggregate value of $344,555,920; in 1890, 8,652,597, worth' $369,118,787.02; In 1898, 11,119,994 bales, worth $243,- 399,668, but because of the low price of cotton -4 cents per pound this enormous increase was worth $100, 002,200 less than the crop of 1890. From 1870 to 1890 the population of the South increased 100 per cent. From 1880 to 1890 the South made an advance of 37 per cent 8n farm pro ducts as against a gain of 50 per cent for ail the rest of the country. The total value of farms for the South in 18S0 was $660,000,000; for the rest of the country it was $1,555,000,000. In 1890 the .South had gained $107,000,-" 000, or 16 per cent, while the rest ot the country had gained only $141,000, 000, or 9 per cent. During the year just closed there were established in the South Indus trial enterprises to the number of 1,938, comprising agricultural, forestal and mineral dnduistries. In nine South ern States there are 4,773 knitting ma chines; in five there there are 57 woolen mills, devoted to making all wool and mixed wool. Several of the' Southern States are manufacturing fur niture from native woods, said to be as good as that made elsewhere. Cot ton factories are being establisheni everywhere near the fields of produc tion, and during the past year there was consumed 1,400,026 bales. Coal and Iron mines have been opened and furnaces and rolling miWs established. Railroads now cross every section o the country. "The opportunities of the South are those of the nation." Let her alona and her possibilities for the future can only toe conjectured. They are limit- less: The rapid industrial progress of the South was impossible under negro domination. Restore to the negro in discriminately .the ballot and invest him with power, and there will not only be a check to the progress of the South, but the advantage gained will be lost. . There can be no admixture of tha races. This is a law of nature. They, must wrork out their destinies on paral lel lines, which can not come together. The Anglo-Sixon blood and bra ki will always be the superior and can not be subordinated to the negro. The negro, unifortuntely for thd country, is here to stay. His depor-. tation is impossible. He has strong local attachments which will keep him in the South. He must move along in his own line of development,, directed, encouraged, and assisted by the An ciloJSaxon. He will become more in telligenJt,' more self-sustaining, and ; better adapted for work along all linos of industrial development. Since tho supremacy of the white people has asserted itself the negro ds becoming more tractable, a better laborer, a bet ter, mechanic, and in some instance has attained a respectable standing in the. professions. These intelligeist ne groes are in the electorate and ara helping to ehape the destiny of thd State. It would be a cruel wrong ta again throw tnem oacK into race nos tility and prejudice and to consign those who have the opportunities fot advancement; xo again (jxssess me aueu that they are Svards of the nation," better than a white man, and are en titled to1 government support and ta live in idleness and dissipation. We of the South are making the ne gro's condition better every day. 1U has been treated so as to destroy, to a great ejieiii, luc .xjixiA -l,ix- dered by carpetbag government. HQ is regarded as a factor in the 'Sooth's future development. He is not de barred from work because he is a ne . . , . . . i i . i factories, and the professions are open to him for his development. We do not deny his- political rights be cause he is a negro. We regulate the suffrage because he is ignorant, and at present the majority of the negra race has no electoral capacity. The course of civilization ias been in the supremacy or tne wmte race. The physical properties of soil and cli mate have had less. influence than in (Continued on. Eighth Page.)