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FOR SALE BY
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ORIFFJ lf .
6
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it cmi be given In a cup of coffee or tea, or Inar*
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the patlient is a moderate drinker We GUARANTEE or an alcoholic
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a complete cure lu every Instance. 48 page book
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LIPPMAN'5
PYRARIGEI AS^ECUncroi^ I
i 8iFtVtR|
CHILLS
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^14.^1^11 liv >
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FOR MIRONS!
TO ADVERTISERS
Vfeation-FBEE. To
. those who want their advertising to pay
r weean offer no better medium for thorough
| I on * Sef ***' e ^f^S r Lst P.' an *** variou 8e * tion^,0,
GEO ROWELL A CO.,
^Hp^S^Tork
THE LMIliillS IT ODDS.
Guiding Spirits of the Revolution
Destroying Ono Another.
WAIl Of THE FACTIONS IN I7B8,
Him and Progress of the Guillotine, That
j Hoa Terrible und Bloody Instrument of
Vengeunce—The Hebertlsti and the Part
They Played la the Grama.
By JUHIP B HENRI BROWNE
Wopyright. 1883. by American Press Association.)
VIL
The guillotine was so active and terrible
np agent in the French Revolution that some
account of it naturally belongs to any recital
of that most memorable epoch. Many pen
sons have so vivid impressions of the prodig¬
ious slaughter i t caused in France as to incline
to the belief that the ghastly machine was
wholly the product of the time. Dr Joseph
ignace Ouillotin, after whom it was named,
is popularly supposed to have invented it,
add also to to have been the first to suffer
from it.
HISTORY OF THE GUILLOTINE.
The facts are these. He was a professor of
anatomy, pathology and physiology in Paris,
in the latter half of the Eighteenth century.
He was, with Benjamin Franklin and others,
on the commission appointed to investigate
the claims of Anton Manner, the founder of
mesmerism, to be regarded as a scientific
discoverer His chief fame, however, rests
his proposal to the constituent assembly
that decapitation, which had, been conflnffd
to nobles as teas ignominious than hanging,
should be adopted as the mode of punish¬
ment for all kinds of criminals.,
This was both a democratic and benevolent
measure, as he wished the ax to be regulated
by machinery, so that its action, being more
eertain, should involve less pain. Gulllotin
had uo share in the making of the machine,
which came into use in the spring of 1793. It
was originally called the louison, but got its
present name from a satirical song published
in a royalist sheet, The Acts of the Apostles.
So far from losing his head by it, ho died
peaceably in his bed at 78. He was impris-
med during the Reign of Terror, but he had
ihe rare fortune to regain his freedom and to
resume practice in Paris, dying the year be-
,’ore the battle of Waterloo. He was enthu-
iiastie about the instrument, and in replying
,(» some objections urge- 1 against it one day
in the assembly said, “It will lop off your
head in the twinkling of an eye, and you will
uot experience the least particle of pain."
At this his hearers laughed, many of whom
were soon destined to test the truth of his
statement.
The guillotine does not seem in any way to
be the sort of object to excite merriment.
bouts XVII.
Caiosme, Philippe Egalitd, whom the guests
chanced to dislike Tho figures were tiny
viol-s of ra l liqueur, and when the beads were
sever.' 1 by the toy machine the liqueur gushed
forth, looking like blood. Sardonic kind of
pastime this, but characteristic of the era
and race. When the Terror had begun—in
September, 1793—the guillotine was too hor¬
ribly real to furnish further diversion, even
to the volatile Parisians; they then ceased to
look at or think of it, except as the precur¬
sor of violent death. ,
It is not wholly a modern invention, nor
did It originate in France, similar Instru¬
ments having beet; employed elsewhere in
Europe centuries earlier. It was used in
Germany under the name pf the falling
hatchet (fallbeil) in 1595, but was superseded
by the sword; also In Italy (it was called there
the taannaia), and in the Netherlands. The
maiden, a similar contrivance, was known in
Scotland, and Regent Morton lost his head
by it in 1581.
A German, Schmidt, built the first machine
in Paris for 800 francs, the carpenter en¬
gaged by the government having demanded
5,000 frauds, and eighty-three, one for each
department of France, were constructed. It
was first tried on three corpses at the Bicfitre
hospital, and a few days later on Pelletier, a
highwayman sentenced to death. It cqnsists
pf an ob’iqug pdgefi, heavily weighted knife,
gilding easily in grooves between two up
right posts, and desoendteg on a block. On
this the bead of the sufferer rests, being fast¬
ened there by a board, in which there is a
hollow half circle fitting to another half in a
second board, the neck occupying the sphere.
The hands of tho condemned person are
bound behind him; his legs are tied so that
there can be no movement of the body. Tho
neck is placed exactly under the knife, which
falls heavily but noiselessly, and severs the
head from the trunk instantaneously. The
the Revolution was
named Sampson,
and the hideous of¬
fice long remained
in the family, de¬
scending from Sire
to son.
The guillotine,
Inasmuch as it
severs the spinal
cord, the eonnec
tioqof the nervous
system with the
brain must, by de¬
stroying sensation
at once, be abso¬
RGmering, the Ger¬ A.VPBE CfffcNIKR.
man physiologist, maintained, within three
year* after its introduction, that it could not
pe painless on account of the swiftness of the
operation. The subject has been debated
from time to time ever since, without caus¬
ing, however, any reasonable doubt of the
entire merOifulnessSif the punishment.
SAD FATE OF THE DAUPHIN.
One of the saddest incidents of the Revolu
turn Was the imprisonment aud death of the
dauphin, son of Louis XVT and titulary king
of France. Carefully educated under the di
reetion of his father, he was, at tho outbreak
of the civil strife, when he was aged tour, a
handsome, intelligent, alert lad, but noted for
impatience and obstinacy, to his eighth year
he was imprisoned with his parents in the
Temple, where his tragic woes began. After
the execution of his father be was proclaimed
his suoceaeor by hi* unde, subsequently of Euro¬ Lon is
yvnrrr and recognized by must the
pean powers, by the Vendoeaa leader* end
A# asUtgerent royalists tc the south of
Franca. These facts, added to attempts to
rescue him from captivity, prompted therev¬
olutionists, alarmed and angry at the posi¬
tion of affaire, to secure him more firmly.
(Hie unfortunate boy was consequently
snatched at night (July 8, lj^from hi*
mother’s arras, and taken, wild with fright,
to a distant part of the building. There he
was put in charge of a brutal and violmit
cobbler, Antoine Simon, a regular sans-
culotto, who neglected and abused him sav-
He was toft alone, day and dghLln
noisome ceil without occupation food or
_jont. Impure water and coarse
___given him only when convenient, the
(unit of mch treatment being, as must have
Soar anticipated- rapid physical and mental
Somet htogbe bU had mid in reply to
twisted tote disparage
after it had been
introduced in
France, the Paris¬
ians amused them¬
selves with it. It
was engraved on
seals; miniature
copies of it were
worn on chains and
rings. At fashion-
Sable /guillotines suppers toy
of ma¬
hogany were put
the table, and
tiny figures, with
heads representing
prominent persons,
maul OI ms mother-AnttMuttl*
devoted to him -lie determined to bob. .
Nor for a long An while could be
. .......* IT bi»
<
chair, not even shrinking from
which his ceil swarmed. eri «*>*
At the end of the Terror tie was placed In
tees cruel bauds, but he was still kept in soli
tude. though bis sister was imprisoned under
'-■’-W'-X rotlCRS rn
body was identified and certified to by mem¬
bers of the committee of publio safety, with
a number of officials of the Temple, and an
autopsy held by prominent physician* the
same day In spite of these precautions pretended va¬
rious persons have, a* usual, since
to be the prince—Eleazar Williams, have an Amer¬
ican clergyman, among them—but met
with ho success.
___
THE HE8ERTISTS.
What is known as tho Reign of Terror—the
whole Revolution, lasting six years and three
months, is often so regarded—was signalized
by a new calendar, assumed to have begun
Sept 32, 1793. Christianity, specially sig¬
nifying Roman Catholicism, Which the peo¬
ple associated with every form of despotism,
was also abolished, mainly as a political mea¬
sure, and the religion of Reason substituted
therefor. Nothing in that momentous and
maniacal time bos so startled the theologic
world, or made so deep an impression.
Hdbert, Pache, Bouohotte, Vincent, Rousin,
and other furious partisans, conspicuous in
the movement, had rendered themselves odi¬
ous; but Auacharsis Cloots and several of
his companions were as sincere as generous,
if visionary, and unquestionably had the tor
provement and welfare of the human race
nearly at heart. If mankind oould be made
to follow reason, which it never could, this
world would be a wonderful advance on
what it has been thus far, whatever its forms
of belief.
Clootz, whose proper praenowtoa were Jean
Baptiste, was a Prussian baron, though edu¬
cated in Paris, having ample means and the
disposition to apply them to the development
of his social and political theories. Aiming
to unite an nations in one common brother¬
hood, he traveled with this laudable view far
and wide to spread his doctrines, fife pro¬
claimed himself tho spokesman Of the human
family, and at the dawn of the Revolution
returned to Paris to take part to it No one
was more devoted than he to the grand up¬
heaval: he gave a considerable sum for the
public defense, and spoke frequently and
passionately against monarchy and the
church, which had been instrumental to keep¬
ing the people to subjection. He urged that
a price be set on the head of the Duke of
Brunswick and the king of Prussia, and of¬
fered to raise at his own expense a legion of
his compatriots in behalf of the republic.
Made a French citizen, he was chosen a
member of the national convention by the
department of Oise, and distinguighed him¬
self by his fierce democracy. His detestation of
princes and of all rank was most intemperate,
though undeniably earnest. He was an in¬
tense socialist; but the foot that he was rich
and bore a title made Robespierre and his co¬
adjutors suspicious; they were, indeed,
afraid of him. Consequently, they caused
his expulsion from the Jacobin dub, and im¬
plicated him with Hubert, Chaumette, Momo
ro and the rest, on the ground of attempting to
corrupt the people and get oontrol of the
government. There was not the least evi¬
dence against him—evidence, direct or in¬
direct, was not needed during the Terror—
but he was condemned all the same.
On the scaffold he was imperturbable, as¬
cending the steps as he would have ascended
to his bed chamber. He requested that he
might be the last of his companions to die,
because he wished to verify certain theories
he had formed by seeing their heads fall He
then protested against his sentence; appealed
to the human race; predicted the ultimate
brotherhood of man, and joined the spent
No nqau could nave gone out of
philosophically. Among his curi¬
ous writings were, “The Certainty of the
Evidence of Mohammedanism,” “The Orator
qf the Human Race,” and “The Universal
Republic.”
Hubert, who was one of the twenty decap¬
itated with Clootz, has been painted blacker
than he was, as almost every revolutionary
leader ha* been. He was bitterly prejudiced,
full of fiery hate, but there is little reason to
doubt that he was generally honest to his
implacableness. The frantio extremists, of
whom he was one of the principals, got their
name—Hdbertista—from him, And were also
styled by tfie less r4d'°4l> Enraged (ln-
ragGs). He was not, as has been alleged, of
vile parentage, bis father being a master
jeweler, and he himself having studied at the
oollege of his native town, Alentjon. Nor
was he at any time engaged to swindling.
From his boyhood he seems to havo been a
passionate lover of justice, and to have
shown marked democratic tendencies. The
capture of the Basblle took him to Paris,
where he began writing pamphlets on the
popular side. He-quickly issued a small
newspaper, Le Phre Duchesne, of a violent,
inflammatory kind, which gained an im¬
mense circulation among the lower classes.
After August, 1792, fie was a very active
and virulent member of ibe revolutionary
commune. Tho Girondists, to whom he was
exceedingly hostile, having secured his arrest,
he was released on account of the menaces of
the mob—be was undoubtedly fearful a demagogue, drama—
, like so many actors in that
and became more popular than ever. During
his trial, for which he was in no wise pre¬
pared, and which he saw would insure his
death, his courage failed him. But he rallied
when going to the scaffold, where he had be?’J
Instrumental though Ip seqdipg 80 raan y P°° had r
Wretches, the commons, who
idolized hint, flouted him with characteristic
fickleness, and repeated to savage irony the
phrases he had written to Le Pfere Duchesne
to like circumstances. Poetio justice was
dealt out to him as to nearly all (he leaders of
tha —ben Reyolutiop. in the opposite or wnat
was person
he would have been imagined to be from his
truculent journal Not ugly, grotesque or
delicacy towards
it a k* tt k . women, and was
scrupulously neat and elegant to his dress
Rabid atheist as he is considered by the
orthodox, , be tie married, married, at at the ine acme acme of or his ms
power, a former former nun, Franqoise Goupille, of
the Assunv motion of Saint Honord, whom he
called his i Jacqueline Jacqueline, In leaving the order
toe lost none of her faith in. or esteem for
Christianity, and was accustomed to explain
to other women the principle* of democracy,
to which toe was warmly 'attached, strictly
according to the Gospel She was a model
wife, and shared her husband’s fate, twenty
days later
Hdbert, wild as his doctrines war*, no-
many *ound primfiplssta his new*
■MR.. “The — first ' 1 principle principle of of property," property,” »- he
t" “Therigh------- rights of man, staffer «s
understood by princes, ere the rights to they
and to starve, and with three rights
seldom interfere." “The mtecttlotfea have
made the Revolution for equality; the time
baa neared for Am nronnisre' wahor* Mtored
- ; -. ■
'
i for Us {Hai ti Warty in I
turn, and regarded Jeans as the first sans¬
culottes, which in a broad moss he truly waa
..... ' Ml ......." ' ..... ........
Patton fer Hejaeted (tauten.
A curious custom prevails Island* among When the in¬
habitants of the Saudemaa a
girl who has beta number of suitor* is car¬
ried off by ber accepted hours lover the wedded
pair, within forty-eight of the wed¬
ding, send a cup of poison distilled from the
balalula tree to each of the bride’s former
admirers, iff any of the recipient* feel that
they canuot become reconciled to the mar¬
riage they drink the poison will aud die, lam but if
they decide that they (arrive the of
their intended wife they throw ewny the
il to bouoi
with the surviving admirer* of hi*
wife,-New York Telegram.
‘About re*.
Fog aud its causes have been the subject of
much discussion. By one writer the cele¬
brated liondou fog Is attributed to the tool¬
ing of the air by radiation from hillsides
near the city, which air, flowing down, en¬
velops the city. It has also been suggested
that a cool northerly wind on the west side of
a storm Bows Into the saturated air on tho
south side and condenses fog. In Newfound¬
land it is thought that fog is produced by the
flowing of a saturated curreut southward to
cooler waters, which often have Ice floating
to them, to nope of these cases, however,
does it seem that the theories advanced have
been substantia ted, and the subject offers an
Interesting field ot investigation to the scien¬
tist.—Boston Budget.
The Worst Nasal Catarrh,
no matter of how long standing, is
absolutely tarrh Remedy. cured by Dr. Sage’s Ca¬
It does not merely
give relief, in the hut produces permanent
cures worst fuses. 50 cents, by
druggists.
How She Snares Him.
Bar Harbor Letter.
Sitting on the staireaae is the prin¬
cipal form of fliration, anti when
there is a ball, almost every j^irl ap
pears with a long-tail gown, that she
may cover two or three steps below
the one she is sitting on, and thus
keep her conversation from being
heard. She flirts in what might be
called “sledge-hammer fashion.”
There are no delicate shadings or
leadings up in her hook of coquetry.
She begins by saying, “Do you know
I really wondered whether you really
meant what I heard you say about
me?” The unfortunate young man
has probably said nothing, but she
is counting on his forgetting whether
he did or not, and usually her count
is correct. He says, “Oh really, Miss
De Vere, I couldn’t have said any¬
thing about you that wasn’t pleas¬
ant.” Miss De Vere feels then that
Casey is at the oat, and that the
game is in her own hand, so she an¬
swers with her most intense look: “I
heard thatyousaidthatyouthought
I was hard-hearted.” Then the un¬
fortunate, who doesn’t care whether
sne is hard-hearted or not, but thinks
if she eats much mort ice cream she
will have to have a dose of ginger,
responds: “Oh, no, but you have
been cruel in not letting me come
near you.” Then he wonders that
the ground doesn’t open and swallow
him, for she has been running after
him day and night until he has quite
made up ljis mind tq leave the place.
If she knew how to be coy this would
be her opportunity, but instead she
says; “Well, I will try and be kinder
to you in the future. Tomorrow you
shall go buckboard driving with me
in the morning, you shall lunch at
our table and ws Will have a long,
quiet afternoon together.”
« sultry grief air, and
•t was rent with i
I loved her well.
and grows;
rose,
ngnt dare tier face wt y glows,
1 not- tell.
Tion Favert
wrong! -ht the spell.
An Eminent Doctor’s Prescription.
Dr. C P. Henry, Chicago, 111., who
has practiced medicine many years
says: Last Spring he used and pre¬
scribed Clarke’s Extract of Flax (Pa-
pillon) Skin Cure in 40 or 50 cases,
and never knew a ease where it failed
to cure. “I know of no remedy I can
rely for all on diseases so implicitly.” of the Skin. Positive Applied cure
exterally. Clarke’s Flax Soap Is tbe
best for babies. Skin Cure $1.00.
drugstore. Soap 25 cents. At Dr. N. B. Drewry’s
RUPTURE
A written guarantee to Absolutely Cube,
No detention from business. flatted Endorsed by
tbe leading physicians of tl\e States.
Write for circulars,
Dr,It, C. K. MeCANDLISS, Atlanta, Go.
Office 30(4 Marietta St., Corner Broad.
MERCER UNIVERSITY.
MACON, GA.
FULL FACULTIES. FIVE SCHOOLS
1. The Preparatory Department.
2. Tbe College of Literal Arte,
4. 3. The The Sdetifio Department Department of Theology.
5. The Law School.
TUITION FREE in the Department of Lib¬
eral FALLTFHM Arte, Science and Theology. the
begins on last Wednes¬
day For 425th) Catalogue in September. othi information
logue and and other ad-
dress, Rky. G. A. .. NU.V.VA NU.V.VA LLY, D. D., ...____ Preei
dent, or JO J, Ili’ A.VTLY, Sec. pro tem
Macon. Ga. iullTwedAsuSw
Notice.
Notice * is berebo * given thot application will
‘ “ ' tore now in session to
the recording to the
all fine County orders Commission¬
ers of and forfeiture in Hpaid¬
mad* ing County only and to have forfeiture Payments on same
Commissioners by fine and and order from
on a fine forfeiture ac¬
count to b* specially kept bv Treasurer and
for kindred purposes
by When post 10
years old He was so
feeble, thin and de¬
sician ranged who that bad a phy¬ been
sent for declared
him dying of scrof¬
ula. The revolu¬
tionary authorities
jpronounce these all of
accounts
grossly exagger-
ated, and many of
or manner, as was
Marat, he was, re-' op
the contrary,
markably hand¬
some, and his coun¬
tenance full of
gentleness, even of
tenderness, when
in repose. He was
'ordinarily very raving po¬
lite; and,
sans-cnlotte though
he was, be often
evinced chivalrous
HAVE MOVED Til 1J11! ,STOCK OF
SASH, (4 M DOORS f AND DLINDS
' 46 turn (0.11. | Johnson’s Y & W "■?
To No. old Stand)
Where All Sizes Sash. Doors, Blinds. Mantles, &c n
will be on sale at lowest market prices. We will also mid to our busiuevs a
complete line of
Builders’ Hardware,
and will have goods to suit ail classes of buildings from the cheapest to the
finest at prices to suit tho times. Respectfully, Call or write for what you want.
AYC0CK MANUFACTURING CO.
For X Cheat) X Goods
. ......GALLON........
W, M.HOLMAN «tCO
We Standard A Sugar for making cake. Citron. Currents, Prunes and al
kinds of Extracts for Flavoring. The best Pat. Flour, Mince Meat, Jellies
and in fact anything you want.
★ TURKEYS, FISH AND OYSTERS.
Leave us your order and it will be attended to.
THE FARMER S 7 CO- OPERATIVE GINNERY
Owned and Run by More Than 500 Farmers! Plenty of Cotton Bagging and
Ties Always on Hand and FURNISHED AT COST ?
Capacity of Ginnery 70 bales per day. Cotton delivered free to any ware¬
house in the city. Farmers who pick as much as a bale of cotton per day
should drive.iramediately to the Ginnery, and save time and labor. Mr. Lu¬
cius Johnson, Superintendent of tbe Ginnery, was elected by the farmers
themselves, and will see that every man gets full satisfaction.
All Cotton Seed can be Disposed of, if Desired,
without moving them. Wagons unloaded by elevators. We appeal to our
town farmers as well as furmers from the country, both white and colored
to bring their cotton to the Farmers’Ginnery.. v
W. E. H. SEARCY, President.
N. B. N. B.—Stock BARROW, General Ginnery Manager. Oil Mill
in the ana is readyfor delivery. Notes due
should be met by Oct. 1st, as promised. Stock canstill be bought; but will
soon be worth a premium. Be wise and act quickly.
(Prickly Ash, Poke Boot and Fotasstnm.)
• MAKES POSITIVE CUBES OF ALL POBM8 AND STAGERS OF-
Physicians ondoree P. P. P. as a splen¬ you will regain flesh sad strength.
did combination, and proscribe tt with Waste of energy and all disease* reaulUng
great sstisfictlon tot the cures of all from overtaxing the system are cored by
forms «nd t ‘ages of Primary, Secondary tho use of P. P. P.
and Tertiary Syphilis, SypMHtte Rheu¬ Ladles whose systems aro poisoned snd
matism, Scrofulous Ulcers and Soros, whose blood is in an impure oondlfiondu#
Glandular Swellings, Rheumatism, Kid¬ to menstrual 1 [regularities are peculiarly
ney Complaints, old Chronic Ulcers iliat benefited by the wonderful tonic and
SYPHILIS S SCROFULA
have resisted all treatment. Catarrh, Skin blood cleansing properties of F. P. P.,
Diseases, Eczema, Chronic Fem&lo Prickly Ash. Poke Boot ted Potassium.
Complaints, Mercurial Poison, Tetter, Sold by all Druggists.
Scaldhead, etc,, etc. LIPPMAN BBOftq Proprietors,
P. P. P. is A powerful tonic and on
tp.csUout appitizer, building up the WHOUSALC DaVMMTB,
system rapidly, tt yOu are weak and Block, SAVANNAS, SA.
feeble, and feel badly try P. P. P.. and pman
RHEUMATISM
ELECTRICITY^ ths VITAL FORCE
THE ERRORS aFYOUTHANDMANHDOD,
wrapper,^t^.
imtiii'biiiiiULial/i ■) i
oMhArissj mam .
“I HEARD A VOICE* IT SAID, MOOME AND ESE."*
WHELESS -PRESS STAMP Moifii’u, Keaprc si I is
CO- Feeders an; Condensers.
748 REYNOLD STREET, AUGUSTA, Gt
Agents Wanted 1 Catalogue FREE!
RUBBER STAMPS, SEALS, THc BEST ENGINES ; no BOIURS.
BADGES, CHECKS,STENCILS One 6 horse 2nd band Engine and 50 Saw
STEEL STA MP$, &c. (ini with Brooks Prees, termite els j
Sole Manufacturers of Osborn's Eiret-cloe* G rites Mower. 00.00
Tho Wheless Self-Inking Rufctbat Reapers... 100.00
Starr .d Printing Press
Improved Mil burn Gin-
Centennial al e Gin
Hall s Self elf Feeder Sir.
Prices as towns same grade anywhere.
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