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r ton*, will oorrwrt irregu-
b* Stomach sad Bowel*, I
_ «r‘-*src:
^MftT Who u»e them, are a mild cathartic,
Snhpl Cathartic . JH
f.”—J. T. Hess,
headache, to which I
' <ol Ayer’s
A y 0 ilL? i,,8 »
Or. 4. O. Ayer * Co., Lowell, Mm
~
tfV^uMave
Titt's Pills
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
S| 3 &
LA 8
SS®“
iiMf:
1
Rll0eS ‘° r
BT*
XOHEfJKftMAN & WHITE,
S ** UTOh i!«f
T*f1TT
is
veiy care,
smirw.
M.drtow-
.fl&SQSS
afia ""’fit, awsffli
CIselanztl.Q
as.'
FOR MEt ONLY
I POSITIVE
new fidvertUenie..'.:
TO ADVERTISERS
lAiMjfta wa aatfg
i those who want ant their their advertising t to pay
we can offer no better
and effective work that we toms of
oor Select, Local Liet.
SEC. P. BOWEIX A CO.,
Newspaper 10 gp«* Advertising etreet, New Bureau, York
_____ . .. _ . . t yH
c Bend 0 / the Beautiful Queen
Brought to the Block.
INCREDIBLE CRUELTIES OF 1703.
'*
Ie*n H aj a Mt fc. Carrier, One rf the Meet
Bloodthirsty of the •Mvetmtioatets—8o-
Aateeedents at the Queen.
Vj JUNIUS HENRI BROWNE .
[Copyright, 1888. by American Frees A sso c iation.;
VX
Jean Baptiste Carrier was one of the most
bloodthirsty of the revolutionists A native
of the old province of Auvergne, he favored
the Institution of the revolutionary tribune
as* member of the convention, and voted
for the death of Louis XVL He fanned also
the popular flame against the Girondist^. So
zealous, so sanguinary was he in behalf of the
guillotine that be was deputed to silence the
refractory in the province*, to Normandy
and Brittany, numberless wheroeivil war prevailed, condemned he
ordered' arrests, and
nieaaud women to the scatfohl on the slight-
eft he suspicion, often for no cause whatever,
also Invaded Poitou, and at Names be
had such an appetite form for slaughter that hi
speedily omitted any of trial or judicial
proceedings __
INCREDIBLE SAVAGERY.
Prisoners were decapitated by scores. In
truth, the a* was insufficient; it could n t
Uh_ Li do its fatal work
fast enough, con¬
sequently other
means of oxtermt
Gallic Caligula; be
invented new meth¬
ods of murder.
Bents war# fur-
niched with valves,
* hundreds & prison-
§pto Estates
the middle of the
' river river Loire, Ijoivo, where where,
vv
they were sunk
with tlteir human
freight. Hocalfeid
Qprims* f 1,e9? ’ wit!i h it° l “
^ Irony, republican
carkiek baptism, Several
Of these cargoes were composed of women
and children. The poor wretches were locked
up in a large building, driven out toward
dark on these vessels, and their drowning
concealed by the night. • '"' l
.
What he styled republican marriage was
hurling couples bound together, frequently
of different sexes, iiito tlio water, or forcing
them into it at the point of the bayonet. The
convention was ndt aware of these atroci-
tie*: but the citizens of Nantes, supposing they it
to be, feared to denounce Carrier lest
too should be decapitated. Finally the com
ventlon gained Information on the subject,
and the fiend was recalled by toe committee
of public safety. After the execution of
Robespierre, his arrest was ordered by the
tribunal, and be was beheaded, which fate
ha had merited a hundred times.
Some of the revolutionists carried out pri¬
vate grudges in official capacity, like Gollot
d'Harbois, who first proclaimed the republic for
He had been an actor, was on the stage
years, ami had written a number of success¬
ful plays Having joined the Jacobins, he
drew attention there ami i>v his resonant voice,
striking attitudes, impassioned elocution.
He was chosen president of the national *on-
vention in tbe summer of 1793, and the next
November was sent to Lyons with Pouchd
and Coothon to punish the city Aw insurrec¬
tion. Collot is said to have ordered the
shooting, iu cold blood, of hundreds of the
inhabitants with grape shot, because lie ha 1
once been hissed there on the stage. Wounded
vanity smarts long, and dreadful sometimes
are the means of healing it, as iu this in
it is a pity that he did not meet the doom
to which he condemned hU fellows lows, as did so
many ef the extreme re veto itionists. Escap-
ing the ax, he was transported to Cayenne,
where he died miserably and most deservedly. that
Toulon sought to avoid suffered the horrors their other
provincial towns from own
people by surrendering to the English. But
it was retaken by the French, and treated
With ferocious cruelty. In fact there seemed
to be nothing but despair for the anti-revo¬
lutionists anywhevpf as the emissaries of the
convention penetrated-to every corner of the
country, literally with fire and sword. The
history of that epoch tuts hardly been equaled
for Immitigable horrors. those of the Roman
empire. In its final day -, cannot exceed it.
The coalition Of the Em-opean powers
against France did uot, meanwhile, make
much progress •, they were Inharmonious,
while the one bleeding desperate nation was fighting that
for life, and with a energy
challenges our admiration fit Paris, com¬
merce and industry had ceased. The mighty
mob robbed and ravaged as it chose; such
authority gs there claimed to be letting the
gigantic tic wild beast rend whom and what it
might Sartre avowed in speech that “Ter¬
had a
ror is the order of the day,” which it had
long been lie was one of the few leaders
who reached old age. At the outbreak he
was chosen a deputy, being a lawyer by pro¬
fession and 34. A member of the conven-
<
tion, he advocated the death of the king and
of Marie Antoinette, the confiscation of all
_____ ■.is very
fond of speaking, he got the title—the Parish
ana must, under all circumetanoee, have their
jest—of the Anacreon of toe guillotine.
Hi* associate* distrusted him, and he would
have been proscribed but for Robespierre.
He basely turned against hi* protector, whoa
be violently traduced, and was subsequently Ibis
condemned to transportation. he
avoided by escape from prison, mob having while been
nearly torn to pieces vicissitudef by a he kept going hid¬
there. After divers
den until after tbe 18th Bromaire, when he
wa* smnsetied. He became a journalist and
pamphleteer banished as a in regicide toe tom on £*£*?“*"“ tbe second return
of the Bourbons; went bade to France after
- <* of 1880 ; became n member of
council of his department later,
in 1840, He died to Ms 88th
_ of
veer. He most have been a man tome
sort Ot ability to keep his head on his shoul¬
dn't through all those timea
THE QUEEN’S LIFE AND DEATH.
The convention having pamed an edirt
(Sept IT) that all suspected persons should
tortgorewriy dealt with,
I I
■Hi
_ _
victim. .............
■elected as a
The famous battle hymn bod then bees
known to Paris little more than a twelve¬
month. though it had been composed since
the that previous time, year.
At as a
column of volun¬
teers was to leave
Strasbourg, the
mayor of toe city,
who was to give a
banquet in their
honor, asked a
young artillery of¬
ficer, Rouget da
Plate, to write a
ANARCHAK1R CLOOTK, Bonor * for the occa-
gk> TllO IWllt
wee toe Marseillaise, words and music having
been done at a single sitting. He called it the
war song of the army of the Rhine. It was
sung at the banquet with the greatest for
vor; indeed, it was so patriotically stirring
that the next day four hundred recruit* were
added to the marching oolumu. The fiery
strain* wore caught up by tho army uf the
north, but were not introduced to Puri* until
Barbaroux, with bia five hundred young
Provencals, took a prominent part in (lie
attack on the Tulierios (Aug. 10, lflkfc, whi.-h
led to the downfall of the monarchy
Since then It ha* ever boon the chant ot
freedom in France, and has gone round pa*sioii" and
through the civilized world Ft or
movement, Inspiration, it scarcely has
countorgurt. Recent icKjoi cbes ti»ve given
rise to the opinion be that tho melody was not
original with Plsle, two, but wue a « ovum const-ions fourth «» or ««*» un¬
conscious memory Hoitsmann, of the Credo of the
of one me of Mur*berg,, cum-
posed in in 1770, But the opinion is.not well
based, nor 1* it widely accepted The Mar-
set liaise is tbe true national hymn of Franco.
It is as an invincible army to the nation. A
Flench general wrote during the Revolution:
“Wo fire fighting one against ten, bat toe
Marseillaise fights on our side.” Another
said in his dispatches: “Send mo a thousand
men and a copy of toe Marseillaise, and 1
will reply with victory.”
Not many historic events are sadder or
more pitiable than the execution of Marie
Antoinette. Far more than her royal hus¬
band was she out of place -on the throne of
France. Every circumstauce of her career,
every trait of her character conspired against
Sw*WY; Tr.tez-'o'l j
EXECUTION or MARIE ANTOINETTE,
her peace and life. It was an evil destiny
that drew her from Vienna to Versailles, and
evil followed her to the scaffold From {ho
hour that tho mob had compelled Versailles tho royal
family to quit the palace of for the
Tuileries—her life wav then attempted—she
had cherished small hope of any kind She
had been a close prisoner since the death of
Louis, ami had looked dally for Iter doom.
tit ie well nigh impossible, pven after the
passage of a century, to judge humirtially of
the acts or characters of the Revolution.
Records of the time are colored by the pas¬
sionate prejudice of tho royalist or repute
lic.au What one lauds, the other censures;
tire martyr hero is the traitor there. Pa¬
triotism on one tide becomes crime-on the
other The heat of the French was so in¬
tense that truth itself had been almost
burned up, or, at least, warped and twisted
thereby. It is hard to decide today whether
many of the leader-* were heroes or mon¬
sters. Probably they were, in such madness
*f the state, .a combination of both. In a
political agony of that sort, humanity ceases
to be normal While we are shocked at tb«
atrocities perpetrated, we can see the causes
that mode them possible.
Marie Antoinette was early designed by
her mother, the renowned Maria Theresa, to
be the wife of the French dauphin, with tbe
intent to strengthen Austria against Prussia
She was unconventionally reared, her educa¬
tion was neither sound nor systematic, hot
showy and superficial, fitting such as^ber empress
mother imagined to be to her station.
She never found favor in her adopted ooun-
trv. Her dislike of etiquette and formalism,
her girlish levity offended the court and no¬
bility, while the commons hated her from tbe
outset as a foreigner and a species of advent,
ureas. They Invariably spoke of ha-as the
Austrian. Her lightness, gayoty. love of
pleasure and excitement were in such con¬
trast with the gravity, reser v<-::: i, r»-k ward-
ness of Louis as to appear like the disloyalty
with which she was constantly charged
Her husband did not attract her naturally,
and toe sought animated companions, many
of whom were wanting in morals, where sire
could find them. She was so indiscreet, so
indifferent to public guilty appearances, that it is
not strange toe was of gra’ve offenses
She certainly acted at times as if she did not
valuo her reputation, and a woman, most of
all a queen, who values not that, is apt to be
insensible to everything. She never went to
the extreme that was generally iiclieved;
she was not Criminal; but so far us public
opinion was concerned she might iu> well
have been. The notorious theft of the dia¬
mond necklace Indelibly stained her good
name, though she was entirely iunocent of
aught more serious than a detire to .possess It
—it was valued at about $400,000—when the
royal exchequer was nearly depleted.
Politically, toe was as ill starred as she was
socially. She acted in place Lomenie of her indifferent
husband. Calonne and de Brienne
were ministers of her choice, and toe was
hated for their squandering of the kingdom^
revenues. She tore adverse to toe aatomWy
of the notablee and to the Mates general, not it*
without cause, for the former body, at
first convocation, fixed upon her the respon¬
sibility of the deranged finances. She was
incapable of comprehending the poverty and
wretchedness of tbe French people, and her
efforts to show sympathy with tbe working
classes, daring the autumn of 1780, only ren¬
dered them more fanatical In their hatred.
They persistently declared that she was al¬
ways platting with the emigrants aud the
European coalition to bring about the in
ration of tbe oountry, a suspicion whiob in
variably frenzies the French mind. The
dread of foreign enemies gaining a foothold
on their soil explains many of the excesses
and savageries of the revolutteelste
After the royal party bad been captured
and brought back from Varenne*. the queen
underwent a complete change All her fri¬
volity ceased; bar conduct became exalted,
her attitude heroic. She bore her harare-
menta and humiliations in the friends, Temple, sepa¬ be¬
rated from her children and as
fitted, the daughter Of Maria There
may not have known how to live, she knew
how to die. The last two month* and a half,
her courage, a* it bad long
curetiore against her, denoting that her trial
wm a sanguinary Bat when charged
kps:
, the acc laimed wi th righ teous
- r^lraoatitiTafl to*
,
,T
ito
’
re
turned seremdy to
prison A const!
tutioimi curate viw
Red her there ; she
ssvys
bU mtoV
tr at ions At 11
o'clock (Oct. 16) toe
went to to* scaffold. She was pale and her
too* had undergone a She striking change; bat
she spoke no word. su b mi t ted to the
ax without a tremor, but not without is
faint smile of diedain, which tbe sharp blade
deft away, with ail bar sorrows.
Sweet Flowers.
The fairest butte are often t he first
to wither, jtnd the ravages of dtaenee
tnuke ha vee with rJp'TJffi the beauty, an well
among American women are those of
a tn oat (ifetrenfflng deecription. they These
•‘weaknesses,” fitt insiduously are sugges¬
tively termed, patient becomes sap pale the
health, an the the
and emaciated, she she appetite loses loses grows
fickle fickle and and feeble; feeble; strength strength
ae the attacks increase ip severity.
and.is all such in sufferers despair, in ] here .Pierce’s world-
famed all Favorite “female Prescription, complaints.” which Its
cures
Tl»« Health of the ‘Mind.
each which hr most close and important. W«
the mind affects the state of the body There
arafeete of .every day knowledge; we tee)
within uf the two distinct natures, warring
with each other, or in accord with each other,
■HHBB We feel and are
have yet to learn to appreciate, t* the ind*
the other. We are cotnoiou# that toe food
of toebody inflames* to* be*Mtrirto*»M,
a* when we *ay of *oma unsuitable or indi¬
gestible thing, “It has made in* dull of mind,
it has made me sad, It has wad* me irritable,
or baa in come other way affected my equa-
<
Btrtwe do not recognize With likereaffinere
and in to* woe way the effect of toe food*
of the mind on the mind and it* health; nor
is this remarkable, for the body feeds per¬
ceptibly,and by one stonwoh atone, while tire
mind feeds imperceptibly, by five stomachy,
•tenant, be that good orib*L>ti*Lj*<ra undl
by which it is renewed and from day to day
sustained. These foods of the mind entering
the mental organization, the camera nervosa,
largely, if not altogether, mold that organiza¬
tion Into set form, according to ita quality
for molding. They are so like the touch of the
sculptor outtho clay that to a large extent all
men ami women born shape their mental sur¬
face according as they arc led to give it form
and shape. 1 could not if i should search for
years find a better simile. Common foods
and drinks must be healthy ‘ma$ in order that the
material of the body tar good, and the
impressions which enter tho bod/ by th*
senses, the foods and drinks of tho mind, must
also be healthy in order that the mind may
be good. Granting, therefore, that, toe sute
stance A.*.a is good l and ..re-n«pre*^ the molding or modeling
S
-....... 1 .. .......
Vigor and Vitality
are Hood’s quicxly given Sarsaparilla, to every part of tired the feeling body
is by entirely The That bloofi is purified,
overcome.
enriched, and vitalized, and carries health in¬
stead of disease to every organ. The stoni-
abh ml, is toned The and kidneysand strenghened, liver the appetite roused and re¬
cto invigorated are
The brain is refreshed, Try the
mind mode dear and read y for work. i
Mercurial Poison.
Mercury is frequently injudiciously used by
quack doctors in casks of malaria and blood
poison. Its aftereffect is worse tha» the or- ,
igud disease. B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm)
contains no mercury, -but will eliminate mer¬
curial poition from the system. Write to
Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, (la., for book of
convincing proof of its curative virtue.
A. F. Britton, Jackson, Tens., writes: “I
aught malaria broke, in Louisiana, and saturated when the
ever at last my system was
with poison, and I had sores in my mouth
and knots on my tongue. I got two bottles
B. B. B., which healed my tongue and month
-nd make a new man of me.”
Wm. Richmond, Atlanta, Doctors Ga.,writes: syph “My
ilitic wife ife could could iritis. hardly hardly Her see. see. Doctors dreadful called called It it condi¬ »yp -
eyes were in
tion. Her appetite faffed. She had pain de¬ in
her joints and bones. Her kidneys were
ranged also, and no one thought she could be
cured. Dr. Giilam recoin mended B. B. B.,
which she used until her health vas entirely
K. P. B. Jones, Atlanta, Ga., writes: “I
Tbs troubled appetite, with pain cupper colored back, eruptions, aching
loss oi in the
joints, debility, emtriation, loes ol hair, sore
throat, and great nervousness. B. B. P. put
my system in fine conditio
Weaker than Water.
A man is never in a mpre debilitat
ed condition than when he hag weath¬
ered a case of measles. The system
finds it hard to bear up under the
weight of the disease and almost re¬
bels against the strain npon it. And
yet there is a remedy such which answers
tbe requirements of a case. A
prominent druggist and physician
writM *
Darlington, 8. C v
Gentlemen—Your tonic has been
going very well this spring There
nas been a good deal of measles, es¬
pecially left amon the faetoy debilitated operatives,
which them in a con¬
dition, Jor which your tonic seems to
be the very thing, and it has sold
well. Yore truly, A. Boyd,
John M. I).
For sale by E. R. Anthony.
The Grand Prerequisite ot Vigor.
The dual operation of digestion and assim¬
ilation is the groud prerequitite of vigor. To
insure the conversion of food into rich nutri
regu(ate, to invigorate digestive
tbs* facilitate its
procemes, should be the '
troubled with a deficit I
urea, incarnate, t
usually traceable
Overcome this and you
it* multifarious^
long as
constipation and
onghness rbai
- ’u . ■
I I #
■:
I-if tttfj? I, V H
•fclil
-)o(r
We at# heie, and here to slay and have on hand
a large stock of 2 1 IFftHb' 7 A * ‘a’V
DOORS, SASH AND BUNDS !
Which we defy tofu petition on. Re Imre a- large stock of “bom dry lum
her,’ of ttto fiueet. vuality m«l «ou gunniltTf'rtbT' very
c -be pine* to « onie. Ohih is n ’‘home* e ore home,
bo time a9d att
I» t<
stand liow to do the work. For t how*,
solicit k WCii$Kp^»Utelr coutiudnee of oosuge■ A Jx m nsrere*
a the same.
00 « T FORGET THAT
help by jgi oar boom home tabor. Keep the money h
wur twon and country. Don’t
OFFtCB^-Plagtere’ B^whpuee. Fa r
»P»€
(Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Pntasilnm)
Physicians .ndores P. k A te a 200 '* ssses yen util Zteti. toto tefl riteteto.
form* snd sfegre of Priaudy, Safentery s use of P, P. P.
sad TwIImt Jypfi fl l«,'iit i W»ni » iTO l *W:
nutttsm, Scrofulous Ulcer* snd Wfctecbloodistnan! W-btoHU.ta.aatapteMmuktrate# MMrabe.U
sey OomplainU, old'chronic Ulcer* that m
—ram—n. Ill III..... ismte
SYFHttlS in
gf
CompUlilts, Mercurial Poison,. Tetter,
rrtT-.x— .- Pi LI PPM AN BROS:, Prilrimiu, HtJ
exeeUsnt spplHxer, building up Urn
%Mm r v fi tv y.iiy *g|- ^ —'
- :
RHEUMATISM
k7*t : *
HE ERRORS "YOUTHand MANHOOD
EXPERT H 3 METREATMEN 7 Dt fl ■€* i T 4 * f p
^ CUBE®
“IfUNlP » T *AlW*<CO«l« A*i»
. I TIME TdU 1 3,
In effect September lstv 1880.
No. 15— Daily.
Is>ave Griffin...... ...;.....,.........8«4ff a. m.
ArriveAtlanta.,,...........................8:06
No. lfl—D aily.
Amy# Arinrilfc urrmn............... 8 "" ...................£25 HcOo p-.!®-
No. 8 —Daily. ?
Leave Macon...,.,.............................!!:30a.m. *
Arrive Grifflh................ 5:25
Atlanta................................i :00 J
No. 11 —Daily. ■
Leave Macon................................. 8:2,i n.m.
Arrive .a,:...,. “
Atlanta., - ,...12:30 p.m.
No. 1 —Daily.
Leave Macon...’;. ..l:40jy. m.
Arrive Griffin........................ ..3:53
Leave “ 4:00 “
ArriveAtlanta;......,......----„„...6;48 “
No. 18 —Daily.
Arrive nSffln...............................
V :i . Atlanta....... ...................JO;40 , “
Leave Atlanta................... <1:50 a. m.
Arrive A rrlvo (IvifRn Griffin. **.L i. BllT' *
“ Macon. ........... * 10:30
No. 12 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta.............................2:18 p. z
Arrive Griffin.».».,.4:00 ”
“ Macon .............................,....6:15 •“
NO. 4A-DAILV.
Leave Atlanta.....,..;................ 7:05 p. m.
Arrive Griffin..„.................. 8:35 “
T „ ,
Macon.... ..11:00
No. 14—DAll/r. *
Le» v « Attenta ;..„^.......-i-......—2:^ a. m.
“ Macon............... 1:00 p. m.
i.No. 27—Daily,
Leave Gnffla^..................—-—
Arrive Ca^THon.~ .......4....U.....aHi85; “
No. 28— Daily.
u *’SBS5E£r
Arrive Griffin.„---------------- 7:20 “
No. 20—Daily, except ShkbaV.
Atelve LeaVe Griffin......................... NewnaB..............,......„..:..>...4:30 1:80 jM “
4
&e CMtomSn ::
No. 00 —Daily. ExcEPTGrafDAT.
Leave Newnan............................... 8:06 *1 ,(r
i ii I ii'iV^iTrVii i~ nViVii t
et Pates, best rostra, schedule, write to
'.••a- Bmniaahrg*,,* >*•*!:,
Hi
-<&* I
BY FAB
—TO—
NEW YORK OR BOSTON
.....' --(I* VI.,-—
SAVANNAH
I —AffD WriB— *
OCEAN i siEAMSHIP: LINf
-OP TWO-- i .
Central Railroad of Georgia-
SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS
Now on safe at reduced rate*. Good to 'riz
turn until October31et, 1888.
Free^nn'the teat and dnst, < te§dent to ]3]-
Rrtli Routes. If you are sick the trip wdl in¬
vigorate and Imfld you up. ... >i
Go East by Sea and You’ll not Rcyret It
the merits oi tbe ftonte via Savannah Fir-
ther information may be had by applyihg t-
the Agent at your station or to
M. 8. awf^-waai BELKNAP W V SHELL MAN. *
g <p ,
Gen ’I Pass. Agent.
Savannah
-PRES
Agents Wanted! Catategne 12**1
RUBBER STAMPS* SEMMA
BADGES, CHECKS, STENCILS,
3 ) 5 I :JL
ThiiWhalmsu
JM ...
,
th# •MBA I
In i
w *v
We tt-
wiUj
Grand
At the i
atrSr* to
i
3 Fiuzes or tv#*? f**SSS
8 Psizes or
M Fnarn or
■
00 Prises of ns:
100 do.
iot entitled to 1
A(
dreired! Ubl
^ l)
_
Address Reflisteree s.
part or fr
For Sale 1
v* i 1
latffiT J?"*
r*rm' ^
' * ■■■rTT-
•