.ASSASSINS.OF ARKANSAS. : , A TRUE AND AUTHENTIC NARRATIVE. Of the Celebrated|ayeUenrllle War. - ' (Concluded from our last.) In the meantime, the people appeared absolutely stupificd. They collected in groups, looking sadly into each other’s fa ces, yet scarcely daring to whisper their disapprobation of the damning deed, and taking no stops to arrest the assassins, whose drunken shouts roverberated thro’- oWi the village. If tho truth must be known the citizens were concerned for their own personal safety. They knew that within that grocery wore twenty-five, thorough desperadoes, and more than a hundred loaded maskets. ' The clique had friends, too, in tho south, ern division of tho county, where (he Cano Hill Lynchers; under Captain Mark Bend, had only five days previously, hung six men on the same gallows tree. The con sciousness of these fuels hiing like a rtioun tain of iron on tho hearts of the bewilder ed people, paryTizing all their energies, and fettering their lips to silence. There was an exception,- however, to' this singular stnto of terror—an exception 1 that manifested itself in a strange way. 1 There had recently settled in Fayetter- 1 ville a'young uttnrnoy by tho name of Al-j berf Willis, as might bo read on the small : sign-board hung before the doorof his hum- 1 ble office'; and no one then knew, or cn-- red to know more about the unpretending stranger,'who, with his wjfe and one little! babe, lived jn poor stylo and in utter scclu-1 sion. His face never darkened tho en trance of the grocery ; his voice never' sounded in tho broils of tho gaming table; j he nevor attended tho balls or churches of tho village. , , I But he might often bo seen wandering ! at the evening hour,, with nn open volume 1 in his hand, his gaze alternately glancing! -from its leaves to tho western sky, us if dividing his attention betwixt the thoughts j of the immortal dead and the works of cv-j er living nature. It was reported, nlso, that | tho bacchanals ns they reeled homo near the morning hour, always saw the rays of n candle twinkling from tho window of his study. Indeed. Ball had oracularly called him “a ernzy student,” though few could divine what a student was. During the forenoon of that Sabbath of murders, the young lawyer had been out gathering specimens of botony, and was returning across the public square at the instant the affray commenced, tie stop ped as if thunder-struck, tho flowers fal ling from his hand; and as u statue tilt tho denouement of the trftgedy ; and then, as he beheld tho assassins [fur ry away to t,he grocery, apd witnessed the unaccountable fear and stupefaction of the multitude, his thin lips writhed into o strango smile. He approached the largest group knotted around tho corpses, and be gan to lecture them in u sort of conversa tional speech, and more extraordinary still the burden of bis remarks was a justifica tion of the murderers. “I am astonished, my frienddj”—such wns the substance of his address—“l am! truly astonished at your silence on an oc-, casion so glorious as the present. Your I leaders, tho excellent chiefs and political fathers of your country, men elevated to j high office by your voles, and enriched by < your taxes, have mercifully seen fit to kill, only three men, when they had the power] and right to kill you all. And yet you do ■ not thank them! You penl no loud lutz 7,as ; you do not even follow them to tho j grocery, although the rum is to run freeh for n whole week ! Are you lost to grati-j Hide and all sense of shame, or do you . ■ dare to think they have done wrong ?. Can; vou be such idiots ns,to deem it a crime; to slay poor men? Did they not have suf ficient reason to do it? A common hunter,] dressed in leather, had the presumption toj chastise.one.of theso rich robed gentlemen for insulting his affianced bride J Whatj ri°ht had n hunter to such a beautiful girl? A? 1 beautiful womon ought to be mistresses , for your officers and politicians ! And then .you forgot the honor, accruing to yourj country, by the perpetration of such brave i deeds! The public papers will circulate ]the story over the civilized world, and thus it will read: ,G«eat Achievement at Favettck ville !—One lovely Sabbath in July, while they were worshipping God in their church their bank officers, their peace officers, and their district: Judge, shot down with pistols and hewed to pieces with knives, threo of their brethren; and they, tho aforesaid citizens, viewed the act in silence. Thoy .did not move ;to arrest their gallant lea dera.;' they w'ero too grateful lor the cx ,'omptipn of [their ownprecious lives I” The voice of the speakor was inimitable, r and low, ; but musical, nnd piercing as a trumpet; and had he exhausted imngina tiopTor .meaps to arouse the deep indigna tiop of the popular soul and heart, he could not havo''conceived any better fitted to the end than that feigned justification. . At its clpsa. there swelled up a, hoarse, half sup-| ] ‘pressed , murmer, like the commingled: growl from a menagerie of wild beast - —j ' J,et it burn on in smothered sccresy—tho j conflagration will blaze another.day! As; ’ for the student, be,picked up his botanical .epecitnens, turned- cooly on his heel, and ‘ pursued his course homewards. '; , the next morning, the Goronor’s '.lnquest eat over the dead bodies ; and the ' y]umor [havipg flown on tho wings of the wiijd, ! a thousand were on ' tho, „, By -a practice prevalent . jot Arkahstys, attorneys word; allowed to '.oppearVoo ~oither; side. Am even dozen ‘ ,]wer,h engaged for the assassins. , The gold ‘of the" cliquo had already bought up all but oneand that one was top insignificanf I mr a thought. Y . - 1(1 Ijifthb pride of their wealth and',power, the fymhll office, the sign board ' dha the lustrelesS name of the student, Albert Wjllis; qnd yet he was present.— sat heufthe'hfad of'ihe corpse that 1 had hd6n i! Jqhrt GkifiryV with a' face;aS phi it a-vsiteii'noo r-r;i: < ■■■> A WEEKLY PAPER: DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, AND FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. ]PmMnsk©