The Atlanta constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1885-19??, November 15, 1887, Page 3, Image 3

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1 THE LAW TRIUMPHS. ? Continued from Second Page. in the room, one a German printer, the other a male friend, evidently a German. TH let ter seemed even more excited than Fi elr r As The Constitution reporter announced JUlnselt, the visitor said: j “ Yes, hero are these newspapers again. If tthey hadn’t cried out hang, hang, bar ■ \l linen would not have been murdered uffiiix " Mr. Fischer, On being asked if lie had ex tatdd 64 the CSecutiou vouitl teally take pl.: ,■ c ! r - over f° r a moment expected (.over ’ftior Oglesby to pardouanj- of them. Iv. fVery much surprise Iwhen he commuted the ! sentence of Fielden andSeiiwab. if one was ‘guilty all were guilty. If any deserved death I. , J a ‘* deserved it. My brother never fear ed death. He was never airaid of anything. ’’ ’ ■'L'a'you still believe ti'.em innocent of the Haymarket murder?” •‘Of course I do. The attorney-general Idm jS6if admitted that he could not ptove that /they threw the bombs. Every circumstance U T c-M u'S*' ra 7 X tyent to show that they were not guiltv. Sup pose that I had been at Haymarket that night, Bud they found that I was a brother of the an archist Fischer. Don’t you know they would giave arrested and hung me with the'rest of Them.” , “Are you an anarchist ?” asked the reporter. “No, sir, lam not, because 1 don’t know rtyhat anarchism is, but I am a monarchist, and p hope the time is not far off when this country- P>acomes a monarchy. There will be some ■such thing as justice then, and there is not Stow. ’ ’ “Do you suppose that the case in question yas taken to all the higher courts, even to the supreme court of the United States, with any /hope of having the wrong undone ?” “No. sir,” and here the speaker began to Ipace the tioor most excitedly. _• “It was only to show how impossible it is to secure justice in this country. If the newspa pers and tho public think tire law should be .enforced, then it is enforced ; but if they think it should not be enforced, it is ignored. I (know murderers right hero in Nashville who •walk the streets free because they have been jable to control the press or public opinion, iyv.hile others not so fortunate have been hung or imprisoned for lesser crimes.” Mr. Fischer was now talking very freely, 'jand was urged on by his German visitor. “Do you think such a tiial as this would Jhave taken place in Germany?” ! “It never would. These men were tried for murder, and found guilty of anarchism. The /facts brsught up against them would not sup port the charge of murder, but they acknowl edged that they were anarchists, and were (hung for it. They were hung for their opin ions. and not for any crime.” PARSON’S WIFE ARRESTED. ,6 he Defies the Officers and Attempts to ‘ Enter tlie Jail. ‘ Chicago, November 11.—Some excitement rtvas caused at tlie jail about nine o’clock this morning by a determined attempt on the part _, .of Mrs. Parsons to gain entrance for the pur pose of seeing her husband. She appeared in Widow's we:d with tear-swollen eyes, leading Imr ® !. A" lif Tier two small children and accompanied by several other relatives of the condemned men. jSho was stopped by the police and informed (that she could not enter. ’ “I must go,” she cried, as her dark eyes flashed forth fire. “I AM LUCY PARSONS; Those are my children. We must go into the jail; they must see their father.” “It is impossible,” exclaimed tho officers, ’•‘no one can pass here. The entrance can only be had from Dearborn street.” ' “I will go,” exclaimed Mrs. Parsons, and rwith a determined effort she darted under the ropes. In an instant four officers had her in hand. She was lifted over the ropes and once again stood outside the lines. “You must obey the law,” they said, “or it may go hard with you.” “The law,” she yelled. “What do I care for tlie law and my husband being murdered. Shoot mo; kill me, if you will.” ■ Mr-. Parsons then went to the Dearb m Street entrance of the jail and renewed her effort to gain admission, with so much deter mination and stubborness that Captain Buck ley was COMPELLED TO WREST HER, and send her in a patrol wagon with her children and one of heririends, named Mrs. Holin' .to the stationhouse where she was kept locked up until aft< r ten o’clock. When finally released, she asked: “Is' the bloody busimss over?” and upon lining informed that it was she said she hud come to tho jail by direction of a deputy of ficer, who promised thst the children should ftiave the last opportunity to see their father, but the promise had not been kept. She then Started for home, passing through the crowd .without apparently being recognized by any one. Every moment a newsboy would thrust a paper in her face, crying, “Full account of the exeeuticn.” She frequently broke down ’and sobbed, and as they passed along took her (boy more firmly by the hand and walked more swiftly, keening HER HEAD BEIT DOWN. The immense crowd which surrounded the jail at tho time of execution, was kept I>a< k •by ropes guarded by armed police. Nothing Was said or done to create disorder. Great excitement occurred after tho exe cution by the furious driving of a firo wagon through the dense crowd, witli cries of “fire! make way, make may,” and shortly after ward tlie crowd was driien up on the side walk in wild confusin by a run awayteam of hors s, but no one v. as seriously hurt. Ab' i’.t the same time t’iC police undertook to prresi a man who was’mranguing a crowd in auexc id manner fn in the curbstone. He .die.' i revolver and ■ .• wed fight, but was overp v' red. disarm. <1 and sent to the station* -fiouse There was no . flier disturbance. THE HAYMARKET RIOT. AViowof the Trag'-dy, and Trial and Con viction of tl-e Anarchists. Chicago,lll., Nove . r 11. —A more strik fiig prof’ssion of civic e- nts may w.er rain be witnessed than the one having its latest out come today. The supposed abrai.-dly theatrical deua-ns’ra tions with red banuemaud black that took THE WEEKLY CONSTITtTION. ATLANTA, GA.. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 18W. I place in the street-: of Chfi-ax > t two winters ! ago, followed o. ;i afterb- :■ >’■--rra'ra yet om not ■ . Sit - gat ■. tatterde-r --! maliins, iorcigncrs 'ati'l d■.-■j.-iii- on the broad cdmmt.n n‘ tlie like ;;■■■: ■ me now re called as the quick forerun’ - ■ : se-ret celiar : drillings by hundreds of i-imruut. taimti.-al l riflemen in the purlieus tramiuhunt theeity. i 'I iien came the cool, deliberate dynamite ex periments by e.ireotliy s.-iee’ -.1 ina-ked repre sentatives in the woods skill'll* the suburbs, i Later on, secluded in the quiet id down-town ■ back rooms, DARK CONI LAVES of nil,l idead but brainy, un-. rupulo is leaders . eagerly dir. is.-ed as their l.Uig coveted oppor tunity the just-beginning lie . comment of the eoncerted movement for a uni form eight-hour day. How tho gigantic pea oful strikes were turned into riots, how tlie entire uotld was startled by the blood-cliillii r bomb mas i sacre in the Haymarket, then the nia gestic state trial. the amazing i bravado of the one American defendant, the horribly grotesque marriage of another of . the prisoners—every detail of these strange occur rences and the extraordinary train succeeding, now presents itself again as' it the whole had passed hut yesterday. The key-note of it all is found in the plat form of THE MYSTERIOUS I. A. A. International Arbeiter (Workingmen's) as sociation of which organization Angus- Spies and his seven eo-defendants were loadt ing members and upholders. In the interna tional platform it is urged. that “the present system under which property is owned by in dividuals should bo destroyed, and that all. capital which has been produced by labor’ should be transformed into common property “by force,” Eighty “groups” of this dan gerous association existed in the United States, chiefly at the great industrial centres, Chicago alone being the ill-starred possessor of seven. Only a portion of tlie members were armed, yet the number of this class in Chicago exceeded 3,080, every man of whom attended regular military drills, had his own title and revolver, and could obtain DYNAMITE AND BOMBS for the asking. The unarmed members of the groups were constantly in contact with their armed brethren and in hearty sympathy with their purposes and their principles. It was this compact, well-disciplined I. A. A. that had for its organs three now noted newspapers —the Arbeiter Zeitung, tho Alarm and tho Anarchist. Excepting handsome, youthful Louis Linng, who, though taking a conspicu ous part, was a mere acting agent, each of THE KIGHT HAYMARKET DEFENDANTS was directly connected with one of these pa pers. August Spies, a keen, cynical Hessian, with the subtle intellectual vigor of an lago, was editor-iu-chief of the Arbeiter. The jaunty, dare devil little Albert R. Parsons, brother of a confederate general, presided over the Alarm. At the head of tlie Anarchist, George Engel, another Hessian, but of a coarse, brutal type, out-Hcroded the most blood thirsty utterances of his compeers. While "Sam Fielden, the Englishman, sullen looking shaggy and forbidding, but as an agitator simp ly volcanic, and Oscar Neebe, the polished, at tractive Gorman American organizer, wore more especially concerned in other than jour nalistic branches of the propaganda, they were nevertheless, among the directors respectively of the Alarm and tlie Arbeiter Zeitung. Ths’ gaunt Bavarian Michael Schwab was Spies’s assistant: editor, and his fellow-countryman, Adolph Fisher, he of the poisoned dagger, was the Arbeiter'shead foreman. Not one of these men—however they might sylit hairs, could candidly deny that he was in strumental to a greater or less degree in help ing on the catastrophe at the Haymarket. Os the. legal guilt of each nothing need be said further than that its certainty was put to tests seldom if ever paralleled. During the loug months preceding tiie bomb throwing the defendants, one and all, were in cessantly active in ' AGITATING AND ORGANIZING in “demonstrations” and “experiments.” Their speeches and articles fairly bristled with impassioned appeals for tho laboring people to provide themselves with firearms and dyna mite. Specific instructions were given how to handle and use the explosive, and how to make bombs and how to procure weapons. All this was stated by the conspirators to be making roadyfor the coming “social re volution.” What was meant by “social revolution” was not left to be vaguely inferred, nor was the time when it was to be inaugurated a dim uncertainty of tho future. The “revolution” was frequently defined in speech and. writing as a sudden", bloody, forcible upheaval of the right of pri vate ownership of property, then the bringing about of astute of society in which al! property should lie held in common. Incredible as it may seem, tlie avowed pur pose was TO DELUGE THE CITY IN BLOOD of the property owning classes, first destroying tho police and militia, who were deridcil as their special champions. The period of con fusion developing from tho mammoth strikes of tlie first of May, 1886. was deiinitel.v an nounced months before as the time wlieii the fearful bolt should fall. I’itiless as was this programme and difficult as a belief i- that it ever was contemplated by men. tlm faits as stated were abundantly proven in court. The diabolism was fully shared in by wo men. Especially so was this the case in the FANTASTIC PUBLIC DFMOMSTRATION.S like the red-flag processions of ragamuffins with torches that attempted at night to enter the magniricieiit new Board of Trade when the dedication festivities of the institution had for the time, being transformed the huge building into a scene of social brilliance with out a local precedent. The repulsive, blas pheming intruders of both sexes were stern- J ly forced back at tho muzzles ol three dozen ; police revolvers. In affairs like this the dusky | wife of Parsons and other no less desper i ate women seemed in their proper clement. : Os the many other queer outbreaks preceding | the Haymarket tragedy, the niost staitling at i tiie time, perhaps, was the parade Tlnmksgiv ; ing day, when in ridicule of President Clevc | land's proclamation nearly a thousand uncouth men and women of the slimis. headed by ban- ■ tiers of black and red, traversed the choice res ! idence avenues wildly yelling and scoffing at | the well-dressed people who crowded to the | windows, anxious to learn the causeof tumult. The city authorities affected, for some | reason, to ignore all ebullitions of the mob. As i a result of this <1 FILIAL IMIII I I•Jllixcr, ' when the time came at hist for the eight hour | labor disturbances and the simultaneous in- ■ atiguration of the secretly-cherished “rcvolu , t on,” tho anarchists were a power indeed, and i the police wire ignorant ol danger. It is true , that the C hicago papers c r.tamed timely in timations of the plots, but owing to tiie iiecu- ■ liar attitude of tho high municipal antliori . ties, the articles were treated as rank sensa tionalism. Just one day before the time set for the | strikes Louis Lingg, the bomb-maker, slipped ■ into his lodgings a heavy, suspicious-looking | box, three feet in length. The box contained I aluige invoice of dynamite. Its deliveryat. i Liiigg’s lodgings was the first immediate prep-’ ’ aration for THE BLOODY RESULT of five days later. For many week- previous I Lingg had been purchasing and experimenting • with dynamite as the paid agent of one of the j seven International “groups,” but subsequent i events showed beyond any reasonable doubt | that this particular explosive made the bomb j that was hoard round the world. The bomb, I with lift v others nuuiufai tured by Lingg under 1 tho auspices of the International a-sociation, i which furnished the money, and of which tiie ( celebrated defendants were not members sim- I plv. but leaders. Next day, May 1, the eight-hour strikes be | gan in earnest, and by nightfall, when the first , intelligent estimates were obtainable, fio.ooo I meu walked the streets idle. Tromplly inthe ! morning, Sin* lay, when tiie cbuiche- ilirout'h i out tin lily -. ere ie-i,unding with swelling hosannas, the stuffy little Bohemian hall on Emma street was crowded witli members of THE LF.HR AMI V> l-Hlt VI REtN, ! an mner circle ol the omnipresent interna'- | ional. Detailed plans for the ncar-at-haud i conflict witli tho police were submitted by | Editor Engel, and listened to by Spic , Licit , tenant I- is her. These platis wei.- tic- one, ; followed alieost to the litter at the H.'yn: n ' kit. but the decision to co o w.i- not reached at this meeth.g D.stiad. it ! was determined to tak" action i at another gathiring of the I.'.iir and Wehr in a !a: .:<» 1.-. : :.:cl nior> • n'l '’ ition. >o be ass inbk-.i within twenty-four 1 ours. This 1 was to be in Grelf’s hall, Monday night, ; May 3. Tho Arbeiter Zeitung, of which Spies and I Schwab were the editors and managers, called ,ether the arine l men who were to engage j in this SPKUIFIt COMP At T T<» MCnDEI’.I ’< he iSumhix edition, published a few hou: « a';«'r tlie Bohemian hall meeting, , ut'ir :' ; m.(l this caitalis.legend : “V—Komnrn Aknit.ig Abend.’’ (Y —Come Monday night.) } Tins was the summons to the armed sections I to mce*. as they did. Monday night at lireif’s. ; The call wa> publi shed again Monday after- • t-oon, indicating the importance of the matters I to tome before the minting. The Sunday is.ue of the Arbeiter had a significant arti cle. urgin.' uiuick and immciliate action,” addmg: ’By Mou<lay or Tuesday the conflict must have reached its highest intensity, else srn cess w ill then be doubtful.” Almost be fore the ink on this could dry Spies was at tho Sunday afternoon meeting* of the central labor union arranging to have himself dis patched to Mef'ormiek’s tho following dfty to address the thousands of strikers out along tho old Black road. From the top of a freight oar. on the prairie near McCormick’s, next*afternoon-- Monday— Spies belched into tho ears of the 12,000 ex cited strikers, mostly foreigners, the hottest harangue over uttered by him in public, lie spoke in the German language, of which he is more master even than of English. The effect of his words was like magic. “on to m’< okmick’s!” was the cry. The maddened horde, urged for ward hy Spies, Lingg and other daring anarch ists present, rushed at the great factory like so many wild beasts. They had caught up bowl ders and clubs on the way nd in an instant the thousand windows of the factory were be ing shivered in countless fragments.*' Then it was that patrol wagons, loaded with police, tho horses covered with foam, dashed through the crowd from behind. It is admitted by Spies that ho ordered the mob, many of whom were flourishing revolvers, to resist ’the attempts of the police to quell tho riot. Os course the victors were the police, but that to Spies, ac cording to his own accounts, was not of much concern. The blood of workingmen had been drawn, and when he satisfied himself that such a result was produced, the anarchist leader coolly withdicw, though the battle was at its height. Taking a street car direct to the Arbeiter Zeitung office, Spies, after a hurried consulta tion with Schwab. Neebe and others, decided to call the Haymarket mass meeting, and then wrote THE INFAMOUS “REVENGE CIRCULAR” Twenty-five hundred copies wero issued as quickly as printers could work, and every thing was now ripe for the murder-compact meeting that night in Greif’s basement, the same that had been called by the Arbeiter Zeitung that day ami the day before. In this connection the exact wording of the circular, especially the latter portion, foreshadowing theslaughter of the morrow, tho fatal Ith of May, possesses peculiar interest. Spies wrote: ‘*R E VENG E! REV ENG E! “WORKMEN, TO ARMS! “Men of lab. r. this afte-noon the bloodhounds of your oppressors murdered six o: your brother's at McCormick s. Why did they murder them? Be cause they dared to b»* dissatisfied with the lot which your oppressors lu«v.* assigned to them. They de manded bread and they gave them lead for an an swer, mindful of the fact that thus people are most effectively silenced. You have for many, many years endured every protest; have drudged from early in th • nvlining till late at night; have sufcred all tons of privations, have even sacrificed your children. You have done everything to fill tho cotters of your masters— everything for them: and now, when you approach them and implore them to make your burden a little lighter, as a reward tor your sacrifices they send their bloo ihotmds—the police—at you in order to cure you, with bullets, of your dissatisfac tion. Slaves, we ask and conjure you, by all that is sacred and dear to you, avenge the atrocious murder which has been committed on your brothers today, and which will likely be committ -d on you tomor row. Laboring men’ you have arrived at the crossway. Which way will you decide? For slavery ami hunger or for freedom and bread? If you decide for the latter, then do not delay a moment; then, people, to arm.*! This must be your motto. Think of the heroes whose blood has fer tilized tho road to progress, liberty and humanity, and to strive and become worthx of them. ‘Yoi n Bbgthers. Neebe and other notables of the I. A. A. took horses, and in person scattered the cir cular broadcast, not failing Io leave copies with the rank and tile of the international “armed sections” gathering at Grief’s hall, 51 West Lake street. That the circular gave the impulse to the action of the armed sec tions at this Monday night meeding, and inspired tlie adoption of THE I’I.AN OF BOMB-THROWTNQ agreed upon, is apparent from the fact that its contents were first fully discussed. Then the complete detailed plan of the particular method of inaugurating the wholesale murder for wliitd) they originally organized, was form ally considered ami adopted, the time for the slaughter being h ft for the Arbeiter Zeitung to designate by publishing the signal word “ruhe” (peace). This latter feature was the work of Adolph Fischer, who had come to the meeting straight from the Arbeiter Zeitung, where lie had been assisting Spiesaml Schwab. That Fischer was carrying out the plans of his superiors appears more cleaidj’ from the cir cumstances that it was h<* who MAN’EU VRED THE “ARMED SECTIONS.” Out of their idea of holding the Haymarket meeting in the morning instead of at night, as Spies and the other leaders had decided. A darker picture is not to bo found in history than this spectacle of four-S(?ore murderous conspirators in the wretched saloon basement, remorselessly plotting the massacre that occur ed not. a hundred yards distant, before another midnight pas.-< <J. Rudolph Schnaubolt, the thrower of the Haymarket bomb, was among the eighty or more assa sins who composed this horrible meeting. Though adjourn ment did not come? till long after eleven it was not 7 o’c lock next morning. Tuesday, when Louis Lingg, a member ol this identical “armed section ” opened the chest of dyna mite that had lain untouched in his lodgings since four days before. Under I.is expert di rections six ol’ the men v. ho attended the mur der meeting of the previous night quickly sot to work then and there filling globular shells with dynamite. Early as was tho hour, Fischer was also at work getting out the handbills calling tlie Hay market mass meeting. The handbills’ last words were: “ Workmen, arm yourselves and | appear in full force!” W hat Spies. Schwab I and the other 1 a<h rs were doing that day I may be partly inferred from the BURM.NG AIS’I.tLS J R I’E-l-’J J. and calls “To A’’ms!” that a;>i>eared in their newspaper organs that ev “Ruhe,” ' P‘ nm d by Spie s’s own hand, stared oat of the i Arbiter Zeitung. \fter the papers were off and their editor, had swallowed a hasty sup- | per. it is known that Spies. Pa;-on. >, Schwab, I if widen, Fischer and othei ruling .• pirits, i mostly im;inb<-i . of the sel‘--amo “armed sec- i tiun > that held tiie Grief's hall conclave.went into close: sesdon at the Ililornalional head quarters in the Arbiter Zeitung building,where reports by messenger and telephone were re ceived as the moment ; sped. Lingg’s crew of bomb-makers v, •■re 1 still assid uously at work. lor some r-ascus he himself was enable to remain with them all the time, ami theevening lotind him cursing their slow progress. It was sometime after 7:.?) p. m.— the hour me ntioned for the Haymarket meet- ’ ing to begin—v, hen Lingg pi it into a little : trunk wLat bombs were ready—some fifty or sixty—and started with his burden fortheap- ' pointed rcncß/voiis, an anarchist’s saloon near I by, known a- Neff’s hall, 5S Clybourn avenue. ; He was met on LB way by a m»* :-ung‘T who hid coin o to hurry him along. Th • trunk was left open in a pa®age-v vof the domi, and . without more ado men began dropping in j quietly, alone or in couples, FUCKETIXG A BOMB OR TWO each, and vanishing into the darkness. This : celerity may h'r. c soinpuiifet modified Lingg, j but his diday was not the only stumbling bloclc : of the reds. Twenty-five th- a tnd people, the anarchist - leaders O',*imaie'l, would be gath» i'‘<l together in the Haymarket. This v. as not an extrava gant expectation, when 12.000 had b .-n so o.’. ily mas ed near Me p ormick’s. But fear of f'Ut'icr rioting kept pretty nnieh e.i rybody at hom< aboii: 'JH-.o man, marly ail of tlwm uuii.i.-!;.k ;bly aiiarcnidl'n<k»nbto»|Jy the smallness rd the crowd made the anarchist i •■'. ) he d by a mob ol workmen 2'-,'/.0 stiong Lad cnringed to a prmpr.cfive tight \ < n an archist ; alone on one side and the pol!*-.* in f>• eon the otlicr. Itv,. u* ni e,A: . .-t < ual! pe< tator In the tfaymiMket that al itch existed somewhere, and apparently tlie m* < t ing’s manager.< were all c ompletely at -ca. The great dim-lighted squaj e wa", < decidedly | uncanny «ccnc with its scattered .groups of g€?s ticulating, trampi>h-looking occupants lining the sidewalks and pouring in :<n i out of the rickety surrounding saloons. Th? Arbeiter Zeitung confereno; of had hmm a pro longed one, and when at last Spies, Parsons, i Fielden and the rest reached the Havmarket . square they seemed ' BENT ON A WAITING GAME. It will probabl y never be known whether the evident hesitancy was caused by the delay of Lingg’s confederates, a proposed abandonment of the outbreak, or tlie hope that the police would attack and attempt to disperse the dan . gerous-looking crowd before the speaking n q I 11 THE GALLOWS. should begin, thus relieving the leaders from appeal ing to incite riot. Finally, an hour and a half late, Spies, Par sons and Fielden addressed the crowd, iu the order named, using a ivagoii for their rostrum. Tho first two, in comparsion with their usual harangues, were tamo as a pair of doves. Gradually the crowd thinned out. No police interferred, and tho chance tho “reds” had waited inodths for was nearly gone. The meeting would be a laughing-stock to tho public, the leaders would be discredited by even their own ilk, and THE RUHR-SIGNAL would mean not tho “social revolution” be gun, but the International association col lapsed. Fielden was worthy the occasion. He had boon in the background on the wagon with Schnaubelt, the bomb-thrower,Spies mid other directing minds, who saw plainly that some thing must bo done, and quickly'. Therefore, when his turn came, Fielden stepped boldly to the front, discarding all pretense of mild ness. He electrified the rabble at once. Tho crowd swayed excitedly backward and for ward in the narrow shadowy confines of Des plaines street, into which they had come from the open square, and pressed eagerly closer to the tlickeiing gas-lamp that lighted tho speak er’s shaggily-bearded face and powerful form. When he tragically urged tlie wrought-up mob, standing in plain view of a police sta tion, to “throttle and kill tho law,” tho disguised officers in the crowd saw the necessity of PROMPT ACTION, and word was passed to their commander. Captain Bonfield, following the plain direc tions of the state law covering exactly such cases, gave orders to have the meeting dis persed. Seven companies of police, 175 men, led by himself and Captain Ward, inarched in platoons, extending from curb to curb, tho short distance on Desplaines street, from the station to the speaker's wagon. As the police approached, Fielden shouted to the crowd: “ Here come the bloodhounds. You do your duty, and I’ll do mine.” Captain Ward, in a loud voice, called out: “In the name of tho people of the state of Illinois, I command you to peaceably disperse.” Fielden, stepping down from tiie wagon, gave the “rtiho” excla mation: “We are peaceable.” Instantly the bomb was thrown, tho first in free America. A sputtering spark in the air, on tho ground a blinding burst—that was all. Blackness was everywhere. Tlie pigmy cracking of tiie pis tol shots out from the luob-jnmined sidewalks, a few tall forms in tiie street rapidly closing together, the ilasli and smoke of volley alter volley from them and tlie rear platoons, then tiie din became hideous with the groaning of mangled men, and tho yells of rage and fear in the wild scramble, for escape. THE SEQUEL lias stretched out to today. Foremost it in cludes tho death of seven bomb-sliiin police, and tlie slow recovery of sixty officers wound ed. The immediate arrest of all tho chief malefactors, barring Parsons alone, was fol lowed by their prompt arraignment, for mur der Juno 21, before Judge .Joseph E. Gary, who proved himself as able as ho is worthy. The escape of Schnaubelt, the actual thrower of tlie bomb, who was set free before his im portance was suspected, was a blunder only equaled by the mistake on the opposite side when Parsons made his sensational voluntary surrender. THE FIRST DAV IN COURT. Two months precisely was tho length of tho trial, engrossing from day to day tho attention of tlie civilized world. Whatever legal talent could do was exhausted by the defense under tiie direction of Captain Black, while State’s Attorney Grinnell directed tlie prosecution with a skill reaching every point. Deatli sentences for all but Neebe, and the penitentiary for him; (lie tour of American cities by European socialists, Liebknecht, tlie German parliamentarian, and Aveling, the English scientist, in an attempt to give pres tige to tin 1 condemned and gain sympathy for them ; the effort io make sentimentalism have an effect through the ostentatious love-mak ing of Spies and Miss Van Zandt and their subsequent proxy marriage—all these followed each other in rapid succession. Next camethe introduction of the anarchists’cause as an is sue in Ciiicago politics, resulting in tlie crushing DEFEAT’ OF THE RED FLAG advocates. Abraham Lincoln's ex-partner, Leonard Swift,presenting tlie defendants’ case to tiie supreme court of Illinois created a now sensation, but his efforts were no more effect ive than subsequent ones for tho “reds” by General Bntler, Boger Pryor and J. Randolph Tucker before the highest court of tho nation. George Francis Train and his queer exploits were in singular contrast with the grave legal proceedings and tho bitter struggles in the , trades unions. Tho splits caused by friends of the con ! dcnincd in two of the greatest brotherhoods in i tin: world —Knights of Labor and Turners— ■ have bad far-reaching effects, but the atten tion of people at largo lias been much more strongly arre-ied by tlie events of tlie past few days, iseginning with Parsons’s extraordinary ' demand for liberty complete or death, and ' Spies's cijiially surprising appeal for a little • lease of life, everything seems to have com bined, if possible, to make this period exceed j in world-wide interest the days of tho Hay market mussacre. —- - —. THE DEAD ANARCHISTS. At tlie l iid<*rlaker’M Establishment Where thej'arc Viewed by Friends. Chicago, November 12.—The doors of the undertaking establishment to which the bodies of the dead anarchists were taken after the | execut/m yesterday wore thrown open by six j o’clock this morning, and the crowd which had been waiting to view the remains began to file in. Only the bodies of Parsons and I Fischer werejleft to gratify the morbid curios- ■ ity of the crowd, the remains of Spies and En gel having already been removed. Occasion ally one of the curious would mutter somu- i thing as ho would gaze upon the upturned, distorted fares of tlie dead, but most of the i people passed on silently, after a single glance • at tho countenance of these much-taiked-of ■ men. At ten o’clock tho casket containing the ! body of Fischer was taken out. It was to l»e taken to the home of his wife. It wa< quickly lifted in a wagon and an oil cloth covering spread over it. Then the undertaker and hi* assistants mounted the box and the wagon was driven out Milwaukee avenue, followed by a crowd of small boys, most of the. grown P* -ople staying behind in the hope of getting a giance at Parsons. A detail of police just going on <lut,y < ame along at the time and marched alter the wagon. 'J hr wagon with its guard of boys moved on to the house of Mrs. Fischer, just a block east of Milwaukee avenue. It is a two-story frame structure and occupied by several fami lies. Mrs. Fischer’s apartments are in the rear on tho ground floor, and are entered through an arch under ti e rear stairway, leading from the second story. 'J his arch v. i draped with whit< and black cambric. Around the house was a great crowd of woim n and childicn, evidently belonging iu the neighbor* h-.od. These were morbidly curious rather Cm'.lub. j o . Fourth Pj J. O T V b n. t H I .Vo. OFFICIAL DRAWING -OF THE- Eouisiann State Lottery SINGLE NUMBER, CLASS “L.” Drawn at New Orh-an*, Louisiana, on Tues- day, November 8, 1887. FULL PRIZES. __- __________ No. Prize. jXo. Prize. Prize, 323 SlOi'zii:.'-. $:-,on fpn 416 11X;2.i1<9 1(X .'lO.’Sll |op 5.0 ... 201 25246 300.’>0e:li> jp.) 911 200 2.1:;17 1U0150626 bno 973 101) 25111 200:50790 PH) 998 201:28,31 100 50791 .... fiQO 1092 1(4125367 200150910 an) 1330 100 25874'. 100|50988 300 11711.. 10Ci2.->:i6s 100|3117,> 100 r>6s 100|26223 20051286 200 1831 200'26276 1000 5131:', JO.) 1846 10021282 .... 100:51453 200 2125.. 2® 26(176...... 500'51467 200 2182 10C2.ii:'.>'> 1 Olli 51533 300 2403 100:267110 ItWi.ilOOl 1011 2632 100.27159 201 51772 100 265'J 10C’|27166 10( 51577 "00 26'11 100 2'211 100 519X5 JOO 2900 W':!Al>s 230 52711 ion 3007 liK'!27::il3 100 ..'B2O .. JOO 3127 20Ci27;0i..... 100 52870..,. 290 3569 ... 1« 277:18. 200,53231 Jyfl 4000. 10( ;278!7. IOC 53276 ,00 4282 ... 300 -’7826 lIX- 51. 05 DOO 4112 100:- 090 Ift: 53616 ... 11)1) 4585 M‘NI« 100 53670..... 500 46>52 100,:*.' T.V 200 53.80,1 100 4720 100 2-.1.12.... 106 s;:>>l6 lthl 4812 100 287, > 1300:51058 |(io 4810 PCI ~'B-.'<2 100',n0t.... 20n 5287 2001'28988 100 1.(310 jqo 6:108 2i*>..'91.6 100'.’. (333 100 51,57 100 -".■'2l 300 51377 100 5488 lOO'-WU11.... 500 51101 boo 5117 100 29898 100 51111. 200 0180 lOOpaWl 100|i(739. 200 55ft 200.10081 100.51793 200 5711) . Ift. :i»l-2 260.J524 100 5902.. 100 30261...... 1110 l .153 Joo 5934 80i;ftWl 1000.5174 200 6:133 100 30'07 100|.'5227 JOO 615.8 50(>:::o''89 30. :.5106 .... 200 6379 2OO!3O7;t 106:5531 1 j (w 61.87 loo:308:!() W 155913 500 06-15 100:30826 1061.56013 100 6816 B«’|elo9.'> 101L56015 JOO (iSft) 20(i:''1208 100 5106.5 joo 69'.u 101 • :r_’■:> 100511139 3fl o 701.5 20e ::1553 :.ii(il >6:11.19 500 7115 10o':’.li'.07 500|.h813 JOO 7::..'l 2«'31655 1(10 ::oo 7367 80l'.:l:>"6 200153110 330 7466 100:32016 1011. .0653 JOQO 7182 1(>11'320.,9 1002.6775 .... JOO 7918 J(K‘.217.: 300:6.101 f,(K) 7:K> 2« ■■•2l!’l. 2<X.1. 5696.8. ... JQO 8171 100 3221* 1(>»;.6‘.h0 .. JOO 8256 100l621«2 300 572:11 |)oo 8612 Id 200 37:«H. -,00 8659 100 IT. 200 37691 100 8723 100 325.2 300.57851 200 87;>5.... 200 3 ; 0'7 liiu'.'.Mj;', 200 9131 200 33128 151 >Blsl ]QO 9173 10o|:i::if'l .... 2Wj.581(>l j,x> 9296 ]00|332'-‘3 100,58185 f,OO 9154 60r:''3IOJ 500|i8230 100 9990. 1001331U2 10058258 100 10092 200e3e8/ 100 .'>8290 100 10330 Ift. ::'.73S 100 58ft>2 100 10153 100’33829 100j.86'.» moo 10136 200 3391:1 Sft>|sSSl6 ”00 10IG2 200,331'1:: 200 388:10 100 10191 IftlMlOt 100 58846 gflo 10544 200;::l-’»8 100 51)096 100 m.i’.o 3U(.|:;i‘2 l :l 300 59117 ]OO 10691 300 31369 106 39339 fioo 10644 200|3|88l 100 59439 200 10683 10(131916 10(0.591561 800 11)858 101,1:15665 2(10561 500 11001 ... 2(X.::>102 301.1.59671 100 11()20.._.. 10013’189 100 5975.5 200 11600 300 3, >2ll. 100 .59825 100 11651 200 35213 100 60016, 100 11713 200-.2’Ji; 2ft 3(iOV-’.l t OO 11755 20(i 33126 100 (101113 100 11885 300A'.(73. 50:hw;.,| 200 11892 I(X)'3'.SB 1001(10697 200 12158 100 35591 100(1(1803 joo 1231)3 100::>857 200161036 ]OO 12486 10001. .879 :(»> 6(1'8 200 12527 joo::5.i:.: Jo .1611:3 200 12.88.. 2(x:.'l. 20161261 190 12675 100 360111 «(».'i;H99 mo 12'13.... .100 :’'«lß7 100 0K,2 1060 12831 200;:-0z:l. 200:611,90 lw , 131 111 100 2(W1',182(> 100 i:'.219 ioo'::i'.los 100 61.8.(8 200 13 ’.13 301 ''oo ; 100 6203.5 200 13.2.7 ]fti!:i'o::2 10i)0i;.'|22 joo 13367 100 oil.“1 800 <>2219 joo 13189 100 :W l'X) (122',9 100 13(01 I(x: ':'"7 2J1>|62.'.|1 200 13506.. 50007007 300162411 joo 13.V9 200137262 J0(1(i26.'0 JOO 13.596 200 ’V. '..: .... 500 >126'4... 200 13726 10(1 s(x>ji;2B(,9 pto 13799 100 37486 100 62870 100 1382'.) ia.3’lo 200(12991 JOO 138'41 10(,!3778....... 101162973 200 139.'.1 IM :7800 100 1',1023.... joo 1:.9’1' 8«:ol6 100:.:, :1 0'.17 100 112'3 200.-021 206(18123 8(X) 111(41 100’38286 100 63305 2(8) I'”.' 100 382119 1(». <13317 JOO 116 :8 1(X '3- .O 6 1(» (13319 200 14710 10(>.'.8>:(3 3(K izttlll 100 118.;.’ 100:38710 I'll' 2 00 II'.KH 100 38717.... 100:<i3|'.H ji,1 15219 200 3887.1 100.63618 r,()0 1.5 ’Bl . 100(10 38. 1OO 1 .;.'.712 50,1 15383. 100:19125 100|1',3884 100 13511.. 80(|3'Jli() IMLI3MI 100 1.3550.. lOeW'IIO 200|63076 mo 1,1623 100 39811 >M’...028 HX) 15631 1<IOI:1081»8... 10000'61106 .. .. 100 15931 100j'39975 '-'OOIOIIO. >..... ]l)0 1608!) 100 10012 10061183 HX) ICODO 100 10207 10Wi>1399 ](» 161 111 2(X) 10375 200:04561. ... 100 16183 100110158. .. 10016168'.) joo 16321. 1(4.105'0 200 '11719 l(>0 16356.. 100 10681) O'Mol'.Hl) 200 16393 100 40810 1I)O6,5O8;5 Kg) 16463 JOO, 11052 100'6.5295 JOQO 16618 200 112'2 2()0 65«0:l 100 1<:68(1 500111378 J 00165834. . 200 16-851) 500:110 1 100 <16004 2W 16859 IM<!IJI63 10Li,6|05 | (X ) 16959 100(1170 JOOftJKK) ]oo 16971 100 11481 1001(6335 j (aio 172(7 10(11.6'1 800 6643.5 .. ]o() 172Z8 20C 11573 2'K 1(16555 ](X) 172,6 10011638 I«''6«Kl2 . JOO 172-10 800,1203'.).. 100,|r,B’o ... HX), 17188 200 12118 10O|i;i,!i;J8 300 17762 100 12216 200 67082 2W 17984 100 42271 200 67111 2ft) 18070 HlK'l 12167 100l67.')0l| HX) ISI/W JMl'l.’O!', 67308 ..... 200 18196 1 (Xi 12726 200 6731'2 1(H) 1- 100 12717. Oft. 6731!) BIX) 18311 80(1 12812 100 67887 100 18 1118 100 12845 101,67118, . HX) 18.',17 100 12'81.... 100 '17161 3(X, 18583 RCM 12897 100 ,',7(.<:<; pxj 18'< ,3 2M IZO.O KI 4 ' . . 100 1903!. 100 13200. 100 6798'2 200 19051 100 43W1 2(X6801| 100 19339 300 (3:17 200 1180.18 (XX) lOIM) I'M 13,-18 I'Xii.Hxli) 200 19793 1(X) 13572 300)8225 3IX) 19721 100 139 ft) 100.18311 JOO 1973 I'X) i::e'l7 2MI ’,3lh) 3-X) 202. 6 100 11012 2M '18645. 300 20273 2(X 141.55 DOO 68752 600 '.0277 100 U 717 100 68931 200 20373 W 14719 100 68969 100 20393 100 147 X1 100 IHMIrtO... 5000 20539 . 106 I (811 100 (>9192 Hi) 20575 100 1.50L5 2M 69310 200 20577 100 00308 .. SOOOO 21’618 1(X) 1'284 I<«> 61)117 31st 10,72 KX 1M,73... I'ft <8)195 ... 100 ■218.86 100 1.,7 18 100 ..'.1,1)3 . HX) 2(Z).:<; HX I >BIB 101 61X,26 300 21015 HX< 15380 ZU 119731 J(X) 21181 :;a I6(ft2 lift 19897 ... 200 21219.. lU' 16110 204'70113... 20000 21:56 1« (6'213 •••. 100 70197 100 211(9 ItX IG2IO 3(M 70217 I<X> 21189 Ki :w>7 «0(. 70372 100 21.1.'. H« u in.... ‘M ;i).,i 200 21741 IM) 1L81.7 lot 70'410 800 21811 20 1(1901 300 70597 100 2181,1 2li 16''Ml. 2ft' 70652 JOO 21950 10)17152 10'70753 100 22060.. 2M 17191 80 70974 500 :."2:1I, IO 17194 JO 71177 100 22190 1<( 17270 ~i 71211 .... 300 2 74)7 KM 17.::< .... 100 7121,8 100 22.13 10 17110 IO 71'.’,9| 7/90 2- >9 IO 17613 3<X 71107 100 '.l 20- . .... I'' 71111 . 130000 2/702 2'! .7’ I'l 1118 H)0 231.1 i:; 101)3177 ::x 71461 HX) i 2337’2 W I-.' I 20 7|.ft'2. .. 300 2.-111 2M|IB.:I> .. 10 715.8()0 2 1.'.3 IM ill ' 8 .. . IM 71OX) 100 | 23715 :« 1’179 lO> 71'27 300 237',:: W .I'/II .... ft( 71757 201) 23017.. 100 100 I 21012 JO j’-•,>■■. .... J')' [71863 300 21161 26 I 91<l. . 1‘" 71917 200 I 21167 l(Xii Zttft ..... 21.' 7'2030 <2OO 212.12 2<r<3i7 20L?2131. 100 | 2i::io 11X0 19316... io 7211, 500 21::',3 !0'|:)317 30 72881 200 213.. ..... looiltftll 10: 72992 ft") ' 24.170 I'X>|I9II" .. H: !,;;<)»)... . 2<)o : 24378 ... 10 19.511 lift 73971 1(4)1 21385 201 DII'L. . . 2 < . 100 ; 2II'») lOtll'l- , 1 29 7 1119 ..... HX, ! 211'.3 ion .'«<:. . 100 73W7 ... 100 21 <2 lO.’'/)137 . . 100,73599.. .. 100 I LOTTF.KY !>K I lI'I.VG. ! M>. I’rize. No. Prize.' No. Prize. 7KIO #1.,)82i-.:i 510)13)757 5100 73)21.... 20( vz'li 100:90979 100 7 10 .82751 500,909 )7 )ft) ... lift 500:91211 JM 7111 1 ... 0)0 < «r< 10)91121 ... 101 71177 .. 3(X> 8:1111 109'91112 100 Hl' ■ .. 11H! -.11 100 91617 ax) I 71211' IftlAl.lS.l 100.91810 JO) : 7 2. oSlX''.'lß6s 100 71'8 ... Im -' ■: ... 21X '.'l''..'l KM I 71 .. . 118' ■> o'l .... 10( O' 073 J<» I fill'. ■ ,KS 2001'12075 10), | 7 . I'"SHSG„.. 8000 L’l6:’. 100 7M173 fixiß!iiot 2(X)':tli’>l JOI 7 ; ''■'.... 100 816 11 HWI':',I7O 100 7 .01 r.JC’ SIH-.'U . . Sot 11.(68 .... 100 7'"l'l IOO.8IS.1; 10193875 11)1) 7'.'1:1.-'. 100 81855 1W'1:'.11.5 100 76''11 ... 2181 1856 2ft)'.1:1118... ll\) ... 200 810)1 ... 500'13151 HM 7'l .'-I . 2'l') 'l!''!' .... Ift !':'.s')2. HX) 190. ■.(''?■( 21X19’198:’.... 100 762. 111 luil'r.'.i; 200'11037 HX) ftl::3| :«» <C7 100010-'O SIM 7”'lo JIXI 3.5117 .... 100 '.' 11 :‘.s Ji» 766:0 200 ' 5 100 i'l'J'J', *ji>3 768.51...... ::oo Ss'.''6 ..... HHH'I'J-V, 200 71'07',) 100:8.571'', 100')1167 .... HX) 7,051 109 858|'i ... 20091'171 77071 .... 2ft) '’!'o, lift . r.OOi) 770' 3 SIX' 8 .'.ftl 100 III.' '7 liX) 77108 300 86263 20O:H.O. . :•.'») 77126 10( >62„7 2(8) 917.9 2’o 77169 SOOwtw» 100'.'1821. ... H» 77 lift 100:.86572 600,'.H93'.' I'ft) 77581 500;81',67.5 2iX. lllllle 2M» 77661 100,81ft'.'.) 100 95:27!' 200 7803:1 200,86692 100195352 lift 78201 lift si-,72!; lift '.l-4)89 781li,'> 21X1 86757 lift '9.5-5'28 2IM ■78.5'23 lift 8117110 100 |1i. r, 59 300 73670 HU) -Xlsi’.l two 91772 200 78711 JT056990 300 ft'dlV 200 78804 300:87213 100 9(019 300 71)011 10:872'21 lOOl'.ft'OAS' f"» 79'.'31 500 <:',i; JOO O' 1.152 z... 2ft> 71'264 100'8.327 200 96V.H IM) 7115(17 l(ft;87::72 lOOlwftl'.V ' t’ftj 71'571 206 671'1 3(3)9116',2 b'.V 79580 100 87.311 5001X1676 5’X) 79710 100:878!):; lift 96711 ... 1030 79<05 100 87'111 lOOjwiS.ii U)0 802"0 11'00 88210 lift ’.lOOlft 11)0 803110 ;,W>38.:..8 100.96931 S'.::''il 50n..3.8:178 llftOLO.'l ZOO Elft'.'S 109,88619 200 1)7:125 100’ 805 ,3 HR) SB|'.'.)| 21X1'171'22 ... 10) 8(1103 100|88696 100 97,553 300 80:'ftt SOO: 887'99 1(»975!)2 100 8071' 100;8.S.-02 300'.)7637 200 Ifle'i; .... 101)6862:; 100 97611 100 809'2:1 lift,s.6!>".7 21'0 'i7'.6:; . ... 300. 80921 l()0 891X12 ..... 100 98191 100 80968 Hftjsii.’l:; 51»‘'.>8.5:>5 200 'O'l'.l’J 100 89869...... 100:9568.> 2<» 81031 2(4)89.660. 300 98807' 11X1 81185 100 8'.)'.)21 200 98967 300 81:120...... ll)00‘(HX)2l lift!)':!):) 1.... 200 ■81456 lift 'XIII9 ItKXl'lftZOZ HXI 81513 2IX) 90:'.".:l HKI.'.ft.CIS ;fto 81.511 3001X1'287 1(81 1'9372 200 81627 100;90315 500 9!)434 200 81.819 KHJ95318 100’119181 . ... 200 51933 200 90363 2lft'!ft.M)3 ' 509 8191X5 2(3)1X1133 100 11'.1’,'.7 '2’lo 82262 21X190181 100i'.)97(i:5 200 82351 100 9i . ’2l 1(X» 99810 109 82439 800!X):155 . .. 200'.ft.8ft’ ... 100 82512 —■ 100 90703 501)':ft!) 11l 100 “ APPROXIMATION PRIZES" 10U mu libers from 71361 to 71161, inclusive, be ing numbers on eneb side of the number thawing the Capital ITlzc of $150.000.*. £3os 100 numbers from 69318 to 09118. Inclusive, be ing 50 numbers <>n each side of the number drawing the t-apita 1 Prize of $50,000 '‘o® 100 numbers (toni 700 -3 to 70163, inclusive, be ing 50 numbers on each side of the number drawing the Capital Prize of $20.000 100 1006 numbers ending u ith JI, being the two Inst, llgures of the number drawing the Capital Prize of $150,000 50 The subscribers having sii|K’rvised the single nmn« her drawing, class “I ,” Louisiana State Lottery, hereby certify that the above are the numbers which Were this day drawn from tho 1(X),000 placed In tho wheel, with tho prizes corresponding to them. Witness our hands at New Orleans, La., this Tues day, November, sth, 1887. '7; T' I < onnnmsxione™. Prizes cashed in full without reduction. No. 71111 draws capi'al prize, >OOOO. sold in New Orleans, Boston, Mas-.. Memphis. Tenn., .lack son, Miss., Newport Nows, Va., Share Falls, I>ak .’Orleans. Neb., Missoula ami Anaconda, Mont.', ami Vancouver, B. <'., Canada. No. 69368 draws second eap'.tal prize, ii ioooo. sold in New York, Now Orleans, Oakland, ('al., Burling ton, lowa, Edinburg, 111., Denver, CoL, Monon gahela City, Pa . Mt. Vernon and Elwoo<l, Ind., ami Oldham, Dak. No. 70113 drawsthlrd capital prize, S.OiHHt, sold in Nashville, 'l'enn.. Kansas City, Mo., and Ea t Las Vegas. N. Mvx. No. 1->2Bl draws SIOOOO, sold in Men p us. Tenn.. Kansas City, Mo., and Coh rado, hx. No. 39898 drawa SIOOOO, whole sold in Philadelphia, Pa. Nos. 18506, 690 >6, 81480, 91535, each draw .*SOOO, sold in New York, Neu Orh ans, Boston, Chicago, Hah Francisco, Washington, D. C., Washlij ton. La,, Hnringfl’id, 111., < iarendon and B'miter, Texiia, Silver King, Ariz., Guatemala, Central America and other points. —— ..I..■■■■■■■■■ ii ß UNPRECEEEN'I ED ATTRAC TION ! OVER A MILLION DISTRI BC'IEtX CAPITAL PRtZE. $300,000. Louisiana State Lottery Company.' Incorporated by 11 O I.ealslnture In 1868, for Ediu a tloniil iiivl i ii.i'itnbk: puijioscs, nml H i ii'nn''fif'W innde ii part of I)"' present Htnto Constttutlon, iu 1V,9. Lv mi overwhelming ixip'ilar vote. )|8 (.i.uiit Slnulo Numbor DruwlngH l ike pfiii i- toonllilv, nail ih« Grand Seinl-Anniial Hi .iivliiKr regularly every months (Juna anil December.) "Wo do hereby certifv tbiit we supervise the ur ran'"'nii'iits lor iill the ' Monthly and Hemi Annual bniv lni;8 o! The l.ouisiixiiu B'tate Ixxttery ( oiiip.iny, and in I> 'i:on nianiige and control the Inawlnut tlieiiisui.'". mid Hail Hie Niiiii-uie coudui't' il with honexlv, lalmexft mid in good iiiilli towmil all pur* ties mi'i w' - niitliorlze the (ftmpaiiy to use tliisfer. tlllciite. with liic-slinlles of our signatures attache!, in Its advertisements.” C'oinrnlHftionerii, W(* the nndiTsigned Banks and Bankers will pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisiarift Htate IxHterla* which may be presented al our counter*. J. 11. OGEESBY, I’rcH. Louisiana Nat’l Bk. PiERKE I.ANA I X. Pres. Htnte Nat’l Bk. A. BALDWIN, i res. New Orleans Nat’l Bk« ( AHL KOHN, l‘ie». I nion National Bank. (iKA\D SEMI.mriHL I) HAWI Nd In the Acodcmy of Music, New Orleans, Tuesday, December 13, 1«87. CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,000. 100.000 Ticks’!, al Twenty Dollar, earls. Ilidev. *>1O; Quarters i»r>; Tenths Twentieths HD. I,IST Os PHIZES. 1 PRIZE OF J3ft),ftft Is S."4X),O()0 1 PRIZE OF 10),ft)0 Is IftiOOO 1 PRIZE OF ft),ft*) Is 50.009 1 PRIZE OF C25,ft.0 1- 25.000 2 PRIZES OF lU.ftft are 26,000 f> PRIZES OF 5,000 ore 25,000 25 PRIZES OF 1,000 are 25,000 KX) FRIZES OF ftft are 50,000 200 I’ltJZItS OF 000 are go 000 ftft l l-.IZES OF 2ft) are J'ft.iNO APPROXIMATION PKIZKS. 109 Pi izos of oftx> approximating to 0300,000 Prize lire 60.000 Ift) Prizes of 0300 approxiinallug to 0100,600 Prize are ft),000 Ift) Prizes of 02W) approximating to 050,090 Prise are 20,ft» TEP.MINAL PIUZIiS. 1,000 Prises of 0100 decided by 3300,090 Prize are Ift),oot I,oft) Prizes of 0100 decided by 01ft),ftft Prize uro •ssssess.■■■••aS..X. 100,000 3,1»i Prizes amounting to 81,056.000 For Club Rates, or any further intonnntion, apply to the undersigned. Your handwriting mu.st be oil tinet and Hignature pla n More rapid return mat delivery will be asauie I by your enclosing an Eu velopc bearing your full addreiMi. Send POSTAL NOTES, Ex uro w Moqey Order*, or New York Exchange tn oroinary lelter. Cur rency by expreio (ut our expense? nddrc-s4-d to A. DAI I’HIX, New Orleans. J.a., or M. A. DAUPHIN, Washingtons D. C. tddrf'S R"gisleped l.dters to ' NEW OHLEANS NATIONAL HANK, New Orleans, La. I’ !■ V I V P F P 1 bat the pr. Mcnce of Generate k L in L .’I D L 11 Beauregard and Early, who ' in charge of the drawings, Im a guarantee of abaolutO : fat rm * and integrity, that the chance* are all equal, an<l that no one cun |w>sMlbly divide what number I will draw a Prize. HEM EM BEK that the payment of all Prizes it Gt AKANTEED BY FOLK NATIONAL BANKIB of New Or’c.His, and the TickcU are .sign'd by the I’redldent of an Xn«tltutioli, whose : chart -red rights are reengnlied in the high-'*! : UourLi, therefore, btware of airy imitation* of. I auonymou* scheme*. suumuuwad I 3