The Griffin daily news and sun. (Griffin, Ga.) 1889-1924, October 06, 1889, Image 1

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I I I rm) ■ ;- • •:.; rwsjjffli '5V,: V' Vv j , .„' „fefi ■*- IN’ ' TJ - "" 1 1 ......... Um*m -{\?}- wtih bargains that are at the top | notch of cheapness and value, n’s may claim to do every promise wo make. ONLY TOO WILLINB that you should com¬ pare our goods and prices with those of any 2KS. ao «S. ing ^heeause we know that m have the clinch •buyer. We ■PU % because we nun to buy where you can do best, and if wexan’t do better than anyoth erfimtive are will WeVe Got The Pull just on tne because bargain business, we prom¬ ise no morethan we can >rm and make our better than Our new Oo^wi^Trim go like Don’t be be backward backward in coming forward' and don’t fell over your- selves in the rusk. We are no robbers : so we won’t ‘hold you up.” Don’t let anybody hold you down, what do we mean! We mean that time for every that we [will Undersell Every Competitor. There’# no fighting or running away in this statement. If it is news to you it will interest you. it touches yew pocket book, contributes to your prosperity and savings. Are You Prepared For WINTER In DresoSoodsA Trimmings Colored, to match Flannels, Gents Whift «nd Uny* Clothing, f PMhinn M9U J# VlUUtllllJ, itofe’and Boys’Overcoats, Ladies’ Shoes Gents’ Sh ies, 4 Children’s Shoes ? Carpets from I2$«. to $1 25 per yd. Rugs from 65c. to $10 00 Each. 1302 wilt yds. Dwight Anchor Bleaching 6ic bo closed out Monday at 10.000 yds. Standard Calicos at Sc. SOO^pSttss English Tricots at 124c. SO piece* Australian Crape will be W 4mCfl§ly slaughtered Mfers at 12ic. than •feanwado you mere offer lower we er , take ’em up quick, ryou. But nobody late the gtods we i we maks. -{AT}-— | . Not M store - ,, - ' BROUGHT TO A CLOSE. , Events Harking thi. Termination of the Reign of Terror. THE FRENCH REVOLUTION IN 1704. t'unilll. Desmoulins and Hla Deed*—The Terror at It* Acute—Ochlocratlc Hor- mm-Boeni of the Dictator—Decuplta- tlon of Robespierre Deitorlbed. By JUNIUS HENRI BROWNE ICppyj-lght. 1889. by American Pres* Association. 1 OanMm had rlgMSy complained of jobbers, being pat on trial with swindlers and stock alluding banker, to Chabot and Junius defrauding Frey, an Aus¬ trian cliarged with tbs government. Men of different nationalities, politics and alleged crimes were dragged to death With Mm, making a batch tfourude), aa was oommon during the Terror. The guillo¬ tine was so taxed with slaughter that there was no leisure to discriminate. Not half the sufferers were adherents of Danton,; but among these the- most conspicuous was Camille Desmoulins, who, as we have seed. Was the first to incite attack on the Bastile. A lawyer, he never practiced, having abias in favor of literature. Possessed of genius, he would in another era have gained tame as poet or novelist But, an ideal democrat, full of aspirations for freedom, be became a pamphleteer In 1789, issuing “Phil¬ osophy for the French People” and “Free France," which brought him to the front His newspaper, The Revolutions of ST just. France and Bra¬ . bant, exercised wide influence by its vigor and beauty of style combined with trenchant wit Dantdh was his bosom friend; he ad¬ mired him extremely ; they were politically connected from the formation of the Corde¬ lier club, and fittingly died together. When be was appointed minister of justice Camille was made secretary, and they were both chosen to the national convention. He ren¬ dered the Girondists ridiculous satisfied by his “His¬ tory of tho Brissotius," but was in vain, with their fall, and triad hard, though to save them. He and his friends labored, January, 1794, to induce the convention to adopt milder measures, and he advocated con¬ ciliation in his journal, Le Vieux Cordelier. Having denounced the system of proscrip¬ tion, he favored clemency, being anxious to liberate the crowd of suspects from i prison, which caused him to be accused by r the Ja- cobins. Robespierre defended him as a way¬ ward child of genius who need not be harmed, bat insisted that his publications should be burned. “To bum is hot te answer#” de¬ clared the impetuous journalist, 111 of and thus in¬ curred the permanent will the dictator. In reply to the question of his age, at the trial, he said: “Thirty-three, the age of the sansculotte Jesus, the fatal age for revolu¬ tionists. " Re was condemned, as usual, with¬ out a hearing. On his way to the guillotine ho struggles the with his bonds and recalls his services to fiendish populace. “Behold the reward of the first apostle of the Revolution! Do you kill your liberators, your preservers! Jam Camille Desmoulins!” They merely jibe at him. They would have done the same had he been Jesus. The Parisian mob in those days were incarnate devils. Re soon regained composure and died bravely, holding in his hand a lock of hair of his charming wife Lu- oila They adore one another—it seems that mat¬ rimonial love is possible even in France—and she makes every effort to save him, writing the most touching letters to Robespierre, who had joined their hands and had been his fel¬ low student They elicit no reply. As behalf, a last resort she tries to excite a riot }n his and is executed a few days later. She said she longed for death, and went to in it with alacrity. She was a noble woman every sense. Tb« correspondence between her and her husband is will preserved and still read with copious tears. HEIGHT OF THE TERROR. The three months and three weeks follow- ing hr Danton’s Danton end end were were the the worst worst part part of Of the Terror, whieh ended sd with with Robespierre’s O' throw. From the 1 beginning of March to close of July, 1794, the guiHptine was steadily employed, and the awful responsibility rests almost wholly on Robespierre. He confinu- ally declared the republic in preserved imminent peril, in¬ and that it could only be by creasing the number of victims. A new tri¬ bunal was organized, and any sort of accusa¬ tion, without the slightest evidence, was suf¬ ficient to insure the death of the accused. St. Just and Couthon now formed with Robespierre a new triumvirate—the old one had been composed of Marat, Danton and Robeepierra—and the convention yielded to all its demands, It had even conceded to the tribunal the right to summon before it, with¬ out question, the deputies themselves. Robes¬ pierre had introduced what he called the wor¬ ship of the Supreme Being, marking it by an ostentatious festival, which seemed especially designed for his own glorification. The three talked glibly of the attempt of fhe}r epemies to efface the idea of the deity, as if they atone allowed him to exist. This is an ancient cus¬ tom of men who claim to be particularly piouS; they think to {move their faith in and love of God by patronizing him superlative¬ ly, and proclaiming what they have done in Ms behalf. Louis XIV is reported to have complained, upon the mortifying defeat of his forces at Ramilliee, of the ingratitude of the Almighty, after the many favors he had received from the pompous king. At this time began the wholesale slaugh¬ ters of the foee of the republic. As many as sixty, seventy,even eighty persons were beheaded daily in Paris, and often persons of m o s t different polit io s. Royalists, modar ate republicans, extremists, social¬ ists, were condemn¬ ed in batches (par fourades). There ' ^ was such a rage for ~ J —— massacre, and so TALUXX- little attention paid to guilt or wnoosuse that, in various cases, jailers marked with chalk the doors of the ceUs of thorn condemned to die in th* morn¬ ing. The doors were marked irhenjlbey were opened, on the inside, and being tout at night, the marks would not be visible; and thm other unfortunates would be taken to th» scaffold in order to complete the requi- rite number. Legal murder had grown to be a mere mat¬ ter of routine, depending on the earn and in¬ telligence of the custodians of the prisoner. ===== (J1UFFIN, GEORGIA. SUNDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 6 1889 Can anything more shockingly Illustrate tow savagery of the period! to Paris alone »t many r m seventeen hundred are said thorit: ity to have been . guillotined ..... months The men and women who insatiable maw of the Revolution, ways, throughout France have never reckoned, and never can be. Apart from the ax, many were killed in civil war. were shot and drowned by order, In the south of Franoe; so that 25,000 would not, presuina- bly, ily, be be too too large large an an estimate. estimate. At At least least <1,000 <i,000 oust have perished on the scaffold, and many i of these were • so so prominent fUiisOsArsis to make the number appear much larger. It added tenfold to the horror that the them with all the volubility and of the French populace. The better known, the more distinguished the victim, the fouler the abuse. Poor Marie Antoinette could hardly be driven through the crowd that yelled itself hoarse in her denunciation. She would have been torn to pieces but for the guards. So it was with hundreds of others, The mob mo was always fiendish and would have ....... murdered the nMfA«4nna4aa unfortunates themselves fhamanliraa couki omi 1 /J they have had their will, believing every one of the condemned to be a malignant aristo¬ crat who had robbed, persecuted and abused them in every possible manner. To read the accounts of those days fills the mind with an¬ guish. They seem unreal, the creation of morbid and gloomy imaginings. Couki hu¬ manity ever have been to diabolical! The wildest anarchy raged; heads were constant¬ ly falling; every educated man and woman walked under the shadow of death. Paris and the other large cities of Franoe appeared to be veritable hells, in which the proletariat played the part of demons and outdemoned the demons of an invisible and ideal world. This interminable slaughter, this hideous despotism, for which Robespierre was held accountable, terrified beyond endurance the Parisians, wonted as they were to terror. Their Instinct of self preservation demanded a change, any change being regarded as a re¬ lief. Every one felt too much afraid of Robespierre to venture a suggestion for his deposal, and yet the whole city would have rejoiced at it. Suob was the condition of the community that each man distrusted his neighbor. To incur the slightest suspicion was to be lost People hid themselves at night, dreading to deep at home, lest they the should be awakened by a summons from tribunal—the certain harbinger of death. DOWN WITH THE TYRANT. Danton’s words to Robespierre, “I drag him after me,” were winged with prophecy. From the moment that Danton fell, even these nearest to the dictator felt that they might follow him at any hour. Their feelings woe entirely vindicated. Week after week the guillotine was pressed to do the bloody work required of it Would there be any end of the slaughter! Would it not go on until France had been depopulated! were the quee- Wm H0BESPIKR8E WOUNDED. tiona that people asked themselves. St. Just and Couthon seconded in everything their chief, whose bloodthirstiness appeared un¬ quenched and unquenchable Not only Paris, but the whole country, had visibly begun to react against the agonizing months end sea¬ sons of miscellaneous massacre. Tallien, though he had been one of the ul- traists, perceived that Robespierre had lost confidence in him; that his head sat uneasily on his shoulders. The cause was, if cause arpre needed, that in his mission to Bordeaux in the autumn of 1793, for the purpose of rooting out all trace of the Girondists, he had, after redundant cruelty, grown sudden¬ ly humane. This is explained by his falling violently in love with a beautiful woman, still in her teens, Mme. de Fontenay, daugh¬ ter of Count Cabarrus, minister of finance in Spain. Born in Saragossa, but a resident of Bordeaux—she had been divorced from her husband, member of the parliament there— she sympathized t£e with the Revolution, But French republic, having taken offense at her conduct, had thrown her into prison, where Tal- Jien finding her, re¬ leased and married her. Going to Pa¬ ris, her beauty was greatly admired; her home became a center for the mod¬ erate republicans, and, later, of toe most brilliant so¬ ciety of toe capi¬ tal. She naturally dreaded and hated Robespierre, and, 'band’» knowing her hus- tm. TAW®*- feeling, stimulated it constantly. She may be said, indeed, to have been one of toe principal con¬ spirators against toe three, never permitting Tallien’s courage or energy to Sag. He saw that the time was ripe to strike the blow. Robespierre, who had .reason to believe him insincere and immoral, publicly denounced him in June, and was instrumental in expel¬ ling understanding him fyom his to* Jaoobin club. Tallien, mortal peril, united the Hdbertista, Dautonists, all tbs factioaiste hos¬ tile to the Terror, and brought about its ter¬ mination. But to his wife more than to him is due the glory of the issue It is signally fitting that a woman should have checked toe flow of the best blood of the nation. Resistance to the sanguinary tyrant, as be ws* styled, arose even among safety the members of the committee of public When be demanded its reorganisation toe national con¬ vention had, for the first time, the hardihood to refuse, which was bis doom, since his in¬ numerable enemies were at on|j aroused thereby. He had been anxious to expel from the convention those whom be considered traitors and criminals, and its members were alarmed for their own safety. Unable to control th# committees, be withdrew, and tried secretly to defeat them. During toe last few weeks of Ms life he was Re appeared almost a lay figure in tbs government. in the convention July 26 and began to read an elaborate, crafty speech In which appeals to oonciitatioo were mingled with bitter accusa¬ tion* He was interrupted by a tumult. Bil- laud-Yamme accused film of tr easo n, and abUMd him violently. Tallien drew a dagger and swore he would thrust it into his own breast if this Cromwell shook! trioasph. The deadly question the ing other parties, duel Of :sp but Robespierre mount* the tribune, foee, who bad been waiting under suddenly roar out, “Down with tlie tyrant and repeat the cry tibsnsrer he opens I /mouth. He Is stupefied He has not days before, - sM». attacked attacked on on every e even the Mountaineers mm-' need. Finally, -- i > d’Herboia, who presides, president of assassin*. 1 dotiumd the right to speak;” but ha can say no more nOBESPIEBRE ON THE SCAFFOLD. Garnior del’Aube bawls out, “The blood Of Danton chokes you I” And all around, (he terrible clamors, “Down with toe tyrant!" Some one yells, “The accusation I” The whole assembly rises, and glowers at him. Resistance is futile Despair settles down an him. His hour has struck. He, with St Just and Couthon, is dragged off to toe prison of Luxembourg. Tho Commune organizes an rescues him; conducts him to Villa, where ha refuses to sign an appeal arms; but his party acts without him. The convention, teaming of too rebellion, onUa- the accused and toe members of the mnna Harriot, commander of too force, joins the Robospierreaus and to resist the troops of the convention. The Hdtel de Villa is besieged tn the night (the majority of toe sections of Paris imviaggem* over to them) and gain an easy victory. The dictator, seeing that all is test, shoots him¬ self, not through the bead, as intended, only breaking his lower jaw. At 4 of the afternoon all Parte is exr cited, watching the tumbrils as they move to the Place de 1a Revolution; the guards point¬ ing out the one lioui in whieh W illvU toe vUO dictator VAiCWAiAJr lies, IloS, file uu> jaw bound u] than alive a! 13 ©yes opso occasionally, showing intelligence lligenco and and mortal mortal terror. He is insulted as the cart goes by; a wild, hag¬ gard woman leaps on too wheel, and all screams: “Go down to hell with the curses of wives and mothers ringing in your ears, drowning toe last whisper of hope!” The executioner snatches off the rag from toe jaw. Robes¬ pierre sees toe gleaming ax, and utters aa unearthly groan, hideous to hear, never to be forgotten, tn another moment Robespierre’s bead falls Paris draws a long breath. The nation awakes from its hideous nightmare. The Reign of Terror U at an end. Tame Teal. So much praise is accorded to the intelli¬ gence of the higher dumb animate that we sometimes forget the large number of unpre¬ tending little creatures who are willing to be loving and companionable, if we will but encourage theta- A writer in Macmillan’s Magazine thus describes a duck, which evi¬ dently possessed a power of thought and feel¬ ing quite equal to that of some dogs; This was not a domestic duck, but a teal, which my friend brought down with hte gun, slightly wounded. Out of compassion he tied it up in a handkerchief and carried it home. The captive soon grew accustomed to its new mode of existence, and strongly attached to ail the members of the family, seeking for them when it felt lonely, and always exhibit¬ ing anger and distress in the presence of When a cat or deg fondled in Us pres- enoe, it would run to toe spot, , administer a few vindictive blows to the animal with its spft bill, and solicit a care® for itself. Tho most carious thing in its bis history was that it took a special liking to its captor, and sin¬ gled him out to receive its most marked at¬ tentions. When be went away to business in tho morning, toe teat would accompany him to toe street door to see him off, then return contentedly to th* yard; and in the after¬ noon it would again repair to tbs door, al¬ ways left' Open, and, standing composedly on the middle of the step, await its master’# re¬ turn, for this teal took aocount of time. If, while it stood there watching the road, a stranger came in, it would open its bank, hiss and strike te bis legs, showing os much suspicion and sense of proprietorship as a dog does when it berks and naps at a visitor. Its owner’s arrival was greeted with dem¬ onstrations of affection and joy. It would follow him into the house, and spend an hour or two very happily, if allowed to sit on hta feet, or nestle against them on the hearth rug. ____ Cure of Cataract. A physician reports marvelous affects in Us own case from the use of the juice of tho plant cineraria maritima in cataract. eye' Six yean before trying it his right was oper¬ ated Upon, but without good results. His left eye was also affected with th* same disease Mid total bHndness ensued, It is reported that be was then advised to use the Juice of this plant, which is held in high repute by the natives of Trinidad, and bo began the in¬ stillation of one or two drops in each eye three times a day The result* manifested themselves very soon After a few weeks ho was aide t# see, and could tell tho time from his watch. After four week* the improve¬ ment was vary marked, and te tbs present time ho is able to count the fingers and see them with the right eye, which ted been operated an without result. Ail this hap pstMd in too short time of abotetwb month* Professor Dr. Foster, director of the Uni¬ versity Ophthalmic ( SS5 recently drawn toe i pedagogues to what sigbtedi ha cause of short namely, tote they srs aU tars which are too tight cease that hod come under — — ■— tient* ware suffering from* ehreote ooea- plaint Isxnjght on by * distort«mce ta the raguiar and norma! flow of blood, cmeesd by toe wearing of collars which were not targe ugh -Hotter*. YHEYGdIN STYLS Delegate ta itlBjMM* tin* Three A.iupric»ji i Start on Their Tour of lnSPeof* • tion. It. II >wleiiM<i Tr i.u That Kvsr Left Wa-dilnglii;) (Its, Wl h Oil# KxeepMon. A I.l-t of the D*b( 4 tei and Th < <• Who Ai-.i OiMp i iy TU -m e.i TJi Or Journey. ; WAdiusurcui., Oo:, J. -At just ft* - starting, the train bearing the delegates to the international congress on their Teunejlvattia tewr of inspection, railroad polled station. out It of writ tin the handsomest train ever run Out of that station with the possible exception Thera were seven oar# In the train, aB vestibnted and all fresh from th# Penn • SrtrtB Jr mediately oar, "Espevaiau, ’’ idi behtm . the engine, wa-j tottered Conj^Ms-Tog in gold, “ln- terijutioual America^ lurnisnea eieotnenty to the smoking room. Behind tho com¬ posite. tar was too dining ear “Wind- ■or/ oacy. meats lighted W. Boyd, at night too if sasMffiSiJfe George • ^"sasTaf Palace ;-uitending Cm- company, wow on every to armngen reaoh ----- ataliou at 7:80 o’clock. They ware i signed of tlio to Mate his liejpartment. place the Each train and was t on i tested to the cam. There were v«v Inter the people delegates. in tho station to <ay good-by to Shortly before the time for the depart- ore of the Gam Secretary Proctor af- rived. He «*< going to West Point with tho pursy to witness the tmveiling of tho Child Mr. - Gm-tis pictures annouuced there. that^all At 8:14 of thu party were a station. tSi!XiF£S?lSJK&3 , & Air Curtis mado a mistake, however, when ho said that ail of the party were on board. Three minutes after the de¬ parture of the train ex-Heuator Hender¬ son, the Lorried temporary chairman the station. of the con¬ He ference, lute into for the melancholy was tco even Buti-Iuction of seeing the train pull out of the station. He was met by a repre- their Thu uttaohes list of delegate! amt w-orutaries ou the train ie with fol¬ os low-, Perns Ai'geutiue iionuftl Republic Queutaia; Roque Saueaz %:». aeoretary, YoLird#; Jfelchor Obarrio. Attaches, Alrtbiades Velar le, Mariano Velarde. J. T.o il—Lafayette Amai-al Valettte Rodriguez Salvador Pereira, de O. do Men lo.ioa; secretar/. Josj Ajfosto F#r- reiur-.i <rt Go&tiv, J wpuu do T’rirtaa Via- eoiu. Los. Attaches. Alfredo oilveira da Mo roes Go.ue/, Teirir.v. (Jarioa Martino, Mmio de Men louca. Colombia — Curio, Martinez Bilvo, CliuittM Col.lerou; eecrotaries, Julio Reugifo, MorLu Aunt lor. Co.-.ii ..oKjniu iiica iieraardo .Mau.it’l Calvo. Ayggbnj'ii iw^ i . ty, oGuatemala leruaulo Cruz; seore- &. llomiugo Estrada. Attaches, A. Arroyo. Jeronimo . .. Zelaga; u,lu „ d #ec»e- terics rt Constantino Piallos, Richard Viliairoiicn. Mc.ioo-Matias Romero, J. N. Na¬ varro, Jose Yves Idmautonr; secretary, Adolfo ’ Mnjioa y Horatio Hayttgo. Ouztnan. At- Nictinnigdu taoln*. it oiacorga. Peru . if. C- C. iiegarra; secretary, Albc :o i nioou. Jacinto Costillanos, Sam¬ B.i a ioa uel \u. .Lw o. Nih; U. y,*<y Alberto secretory, Henr Veiioiuela ;>aiii> *f. Fmnoisoo Antonis, Silva, Mica nor flolet Peraza, Jose Andrade. United Hta tea-Cornelius N. flirts, Charles R ™’ ' "* tnd rieiiry were of the party: W. E. Curtis, spe- Smith and Edward A. Tascot, attaches; F. U. Peuhk, representing the Spanish Wal¬ Ameiitan Commercial union and ker Alaine. who The oonespondents aooompany of the the partv are Mr. Farnham, Mack, United Press; Mr. Hood and Mr. ofthe Assorted Press; Mr. Clanoey, of The New i ark Herald; Mr. Mr. of 'Hie New York lelphta World; Mr. of The Phils Pres#; of The Washington Star, Leslie and two rep- resen tatives ofFrauk ■ W««W 3 r. SsSrtSM Tlie seeretaij of war. wompanied 67 thence to his home in Vermont, white those M hoaoeomptety him willreteum to Washington. Walker Blaine will go 8 :C p. m.. At 4 p. m. there will Is a military salute and a 1 wFsfc asn.'ash delpuia, by Oem. the response by aomm indnnt of the ““ te 9 tool(*i 1 \yd^Wir«m Tru* P ta^,7| reoefFtion ta the delegate# and othf- r The deleg;tax from OhlM ami Eem . - dor wUljoiii Chill Jews the jm«v at Boston, are: Curios tfmntfto, I’nuUno A :r.£Tu.H ano; cei-ivtai-y, dut*.>i 1 ,. iiinas. A.'*. I ; ■•OR TANT P iJKLON. I Jsdss a.,wc-«r UMm * C m. That Wt I Over AH the -ealer S-lutrM. San T'kancisoo, Oct X Judge Sta¬ yer lias rendered m doetoum in tti# ‘ In the summer of 16*7 : wiK&ss? *• J udge Sawyer (overthrew i.wfmt i ST 53,»fe°'& which were seised in Behri year and were ordered to came to lhwke’s bay and i this Dort instead. It * schooners sorted this prrte run away with their or#ws. a# establishes that the order# of- toe ret- enueofiMta Mid oourtahold good any » he« in American water#. ..... sou Strert.^where she and her I were boarding. They itiTnoil had ! been nnt 4 mirmur ~if would ltka to mb lu>r ridt in met i th i‘U but did you and must she kiss deliberately me good by.” J so, sprang c && ipiSS.'Cl oeuse. .' (•;- k! x, A Death. ;f - eSKtSZ haiHna OftYf port & . triuni). front i i . Thursday morning, mud b« ssasSr caiftais Wommi ^nffrago party ofthe Le" New York hoi* # state oonveution he; to-day and to-morrow in the town he) About twenty-five delegate*; wclud be a flattering i xt, fjjtfhttj ooifimitfcooi Krelght Wreck Ssttr vieok Cdzvbiakd, on the O., Ashtabula, Oot. 0 r&2 . a BSKSl md Pittsburg road, near turned Milner badly complete injured. somersault The a high embankment, Inrt giueer nor fireman were and a caboose were tot ally ) Yw«»i.>-Rts u Live* Lost. JSB£2£&stttllS! l- Rio Janiero, foundered at sea in a ( on Sept 5. All hand# were lost exo- r . seven men, who were landed at Naseaik The total low of life is about twenty- sight ___ GvmMInf Houses to B* Class#. ; Nsw Osunxk Chto of the ordered city councils the doting Mayor of all 1 the has ffi&SW&iftsS plo but cou^oili ASas refused to oif ft, indorse hi# views, and have ordered him to close nli the gambling places at once. -=» ■' . ... _ Justice Field In New York Nxw Yoke, Pffi* have, ingtheoMfainHyhome for the post ten . in the Berk- De-pandent Farmer Bangs Himself. posed to have been tho cause. Short In H|< Account*. to needy * 8 . 000 . The ahorteg# will be made goo d by h» bondamea. Ooiltr on cixMosa C >sat<. B(jFFA.no, H. Y., Oct A—Lester eighteenth Paulkner which charge# has count been him of f^gailty with makinff ^toe Mao inlSyj8B7. a _ report to t he government in - »< v , Cnrpwrnl Tvm-r In Nsw Sort aged 87 yean. _______ :(J Pt Thai tttettete/ i #oaand< m “Si' ISP? "2$ ' Itii