he woes low suf-scel Col. is speech ctivo be f Iodi-eople of on them luty they rnntry to irty that hour oftreason th, were kl flag, that the ed itself id rush-the en* ; up and restored iwo; and ?lory the Itars and iq^ that s to that fully ac-rould see jw be rc-urrcnoy, and all j involv-llis re-r of the rgumcn*n N’T Y.it Oory-ase fresh the Re-, but al-of com-iu Blue, i, in evThe LatestVOTE.son will man with □ pported they will j Blue a L county, lls in Oc-it as one the Renow who who they eld fight-and they hey have wanting-ho will leave fo Springs. Presi thinks it doubtfi leave the CapitaThe Reign of Terror iu Tea-uennee.Refugees from Hu Klux Violence.Fori Pillow Forrest Fanning 1 Hie Flames.The Seymour Mob Spirit Rampant.HX'E.And Still They Come !Nhcellaneons NTewi from Wahbingtou.A Sample of W hat the Condition of the Nation Will he if the Ku Hlux Democracy Come into Power.MeetingConflictNashville. Te%*n., Aug. 21.A company of white refugees from Hickman county reached tho city yesterday, who were driven from their homes by the Ku Klux. They are respectable farmers and old citizens of the State. They say that there is less security in Hickman county for Union men now than at any period during the war. The Ku Klux who go about the country in gangs of twenty or thirty in number warned them to leave, and they abandoned their farms and crops aud catnc to Nashville for safety.Gen- Forrest is still fanning the flame of violent feeling in West Tennessee by his bullying rebel speeches, ilia last speech, at Baton, in Gibson county, was more violent than his Brownsville speech. It is believed that he is in full sympathy with the Ku Klux organization, if not its lcad-er.It is the opinion of gentlemen who reached the city to day, from various portions of Middle and West Tennessee. that an election could not now be held under the franchise law in a doz en prccints outside of Memphis and Nashville. The reign of terror is almost universal in tho counties romote from these centers.A few days ago Dr. F. W. SparliDg, one of the Metropolitan Police Commissioners, was approached by a police lawyer named Newton, who slapEed him familiarly on the back. Thelr., who was about to opcu court, resented the familiarity, whereupon Newton, instead of apologizing, told the Dr. id a threatening manner that he would eec him again; that he was as good a man as he was, etc. Newton had been convicted of various offenses in the court, and the Dr. refused to permit him to appear again. Out of this has como a prosecution of the Dr. on a charge of oppression in office, which is exciting high feeling it the city. Great crowds have attended the oourt for two days past, and the Conservatives are trying to make political capital out of itondeuwYellow fever quarantine, in An old man, i eighty years of t Columbus yeste:The internal r St. Louis coun fioal year endin, 550,000.A dispatch fr is no improverac Accounts from I bad.A death frotr New York yeste pital. The pati (he street nod d: It has transpi field’s visit to K war, was to sccu the French troo The remains ( bull were bui Springfield, III large concourse the oldest citizi compauied the Mr9. Trumbull born in Springfi Two women, and daughter, a York, charged w ale Libby, p turers, in vvhosi forewomen, oul $40,000, by gift: compelled to pr missal.Fifty barrels* phis were seize* on the 20th, by leged ioforraalit the revenue lawTwo men at Yard, while und bell, on the 20tl air valve bccom them 19 dead, bi sibly recover.By the direct War a board of at the Washingl day of Scptemi thereafter as p: pose of testing t the constructedHaThere are £ Chinese in New“Ilistoricus,' comes out for tl ley's Miltonian*Stave coachc* American betw hotna, in JapacThe fifth NaSpiritualists wi ter, N. Y., on tMackerel fist Lawrence has ful this season sA letter cont and addressed