Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 45, Number 23, Jasper, Dubois County, 13 February 1903 — Page 3

WHY HE FORGOT THE

L

W3Q

VI o I

REDUCTION AS A REMEDY. OS ikr Tart Csrtals Drill of Hellet tram Trial lliPrrMlva.

AVALENTINE STORY

Ml

hat to tt "ible you i. the ( uwn-up Boy

HP leg

Tr Crown-up Bl, 2C 'tin Ago.

said llibut they

olllv adver

tisod for to-day. Dil I can't pBMl My jt do 1 n t n." She hand d him an adv. rt seinem rut from a morn pUttT. "lie needed a N0M 111. II for tl month, and you ran get one toast tor IT enats.

IK on think V"1 end ne up to the

When Chrii.tmaw came be pot a shock. The Ferkins boy, whose folks were rich and who NH ! ;ie. "one and over" for fear of fettiag dirt on his )irt waist, guvs Laura a little ring, with a blue stone in it, anl a whole Bat k of chewing Wl The Grown-up Hoy wituesl the presentation anI writhed. At the first opoprtunity be 'licked' Tbl PtrhlM boy, tal.iiu? rare to select t me and place so that I. a lira should j th-re to see. Nor did she crem an unw illinfr spa 1 1 . r Nt yet had the Crown-up Bof

dared to urenthe a aiou that was

AMERICAN MILLIONAIRES.

a rrrtlifii avrr mm 10 saw

ii kick Tuer Twelr las asewae Weall.

eould top and

hou-. .'" The i.r..n-up Roy gm off his car at Slate -trcel and went into the big hop Mh.t-b vva making a run 011 hitehea utensils. 1 he lMN was already crowded. At every -..unter dozens of vw.men were p ii 1 p over the targain-, while be!. ' ' in -.1 ie-.v ori.eu in their black uniforms, pounded on the glass top with their pencils and cried: M ash girl, cash girl," in shrill, nasai V c-. Men carrvinff hi? bundles and

wgrjro ith.mt any ran into him nnd had led the burred HWaJ when he .topped to Perkins boy

apo!'

guuw.ng at his t,t.ii. I'.ut one afteri. u the way home from school w.th the "gang." he ia-ed M J r's drug store and sum the window lull bf valentine,, i ! retofore he had no use for any thing but "coniies." lie

had

L 11 king " Mm Ptf n, ti ,

seen the I'erkius boy buying a

lace and turtle loe confection, and

"gang" in calling the ".Softy" in a most of

fen, ve aau iu-sult mir manner, out

Finaliv the f.rnwn-up Boy took now the wvorld had changed for him.

urjge sf Hi n. e-'it ies and caught He was a "softy" himself, and he

by the sb-eve a younür man wh.. was felt that nothing hut tue niggesi vai

iu-hing by with the air of a tneral hrincitr his hricadc into action, "t offe mill- I "J-isth flo..r. riiMit hand s.rtion

State street front. elev three aisles to the ., :h. two to the wet." The impatient young man hurried wax. The 1 r o un-u p Hoy fas r.d the- elector Iwenty-tive people fought for a p!a - 111 it. Then it crept.

trembling with iti heay ioad, up the ii.gh shaft. " t Sport in' goods, coffee mill y lea, groceries, lawn mowers, valentine., an perfumeries. .ir.,t..-d the elevator man as the ai

ja-ed the fi"h flKr. The (irown-up l- got out at the sixth fl.-or as he had be n dirette! and :r: t tnc rl'nt V ig paper -iTi projecting into the aisle, caught his eve. and. for some reason, held h: attention:

In Preside Kooaevelt's nier-age 1 was a remark to the effect that .1 . .. 1 .rT h M reineiiy for the oppre ton of the trusts. And yet when pub lie prot I against tb extortion of the coal trust baMBM ! '"r- l" lr kjppfiil longer, what ia the first thing congress doea? Suspends both the an .hracite and soft coal duties for one jear ihat 1. the effc I of the n plan. When, in the early part of lat sum

ner. the beef trust began forcing its

prices upward, placing a fictitiou value on its product and robbing con

sumers right and left for the benefit of

the few. what wa the first rene..

Mureested? The removal of the tariff

on meat. And the threat of such a.

word of the pas- I tion being forced ny popular p.

did more than anytnmg eise m uro.K the packers to their senses says the L'tka ()le.erver. If tariff reduction is not rfmedy at bast iu jwrt for trust oppreswion. tariff reduction would not be the means of curbing the extortion now practiced by so many of the.e big combinations, why is it that eery s p gestion of tariff reduction raises a how! of protest from the protected Industrie and sends their representativs in

coio'ress ir.t- a panic of fear V Kegu a ) tlon, restriction, a curb on high handed ' extortion are what the trust parti.

jlarly dread. If removal or redaction of the tariff on trust-produced articles docs not have this effect, why are the tr:--s o airitat ': every tin e such a proceeiling is suggested? Congres started in on the present session with the evident intention of following Senator Hanna's suggestion to "stand pat" on the tariff sjMttoi

The declaration that tariff reduction would biing no relief from oppression u a "bluff" which the suffering el the people in the coal famine ha"called." The hollowness of the whole attitude of congress has been exposed The permanent character of the bargain between the protectionist in congress and the capitalists who have so effectively organized for the retention of the present scale f tariffs. :ould not have been more perfect U revealed than it has been in the dimaalon of the coal situation. Throngh- . . -i L

out the whole controversy mrrr us

I taW m

mi

n . nein Ll,re.

entine of all, marked at the enormous ligure of 75 cents, would fitlyexpress the depth and fervor of his aff tctions. He carried in the kindling for four weeks at ten centa a week; he gathered and sold 11 cent' worth of old ron and nine cents' worth of bottle; he sncrificed his "slingshot" for a nickel to the Perkins boy; and finally, at the last minute, his fond grandmother gave him the dime . led to make up the MMsHIJ amount. .er. lefre or since, has the iirown-up I Joy had so proud a moment as when the coveted masterpiece of al.nt.nes became his prop-

arty. He was piuuiea tor a um a. ine ,vnU)alliV with the victims of ntnTl(i fairlv ar.d Mumrelj in produe-

to how it should be sent, uui ne r.;. ,r .or of honest lntectioi . L.'ni, ... V.ae schemes

1 a 1 Ä 1 tuitM rr IHK v run - . .

to reconstruct the tariff on a nv-te equitable basis The only purpose discoverable in the reluctant consent of the majority to make this flight concession to the million of American consumers was to give them something to keep them quiet for the time, and to make that somethir.p as little as nossible. All of the protectionist talk

in onen session, in committee and in

It : ieM.i ted from New York that for the just vur ,Lc l- "l Mr" Pierpont Morgan has amounted to M.Wf., ad" Ik1 ' coni derably less than i.e evpe t..!. If he ... f4 lo t..nd tiit in the Ii I M Ttltatll haa aome reason for disappointment, for it ia I If Wl 1 1 that Mi K- .kef-..e: : a during the year added from lluu.OOO.OOO to $110.000,000 to his fortune. He is obliging enough to ay tt-at be cannot be certain of any figure within $10.OUO.OOO. At any rate. whuer be the exact truth, the we will not say the profits, but the -gains, or perhaps "ag." got by these millionaires must have been immense, say s the London

News of recent date. Hy what means hae these mencome by their einnitless millions? Have t mm men added much, or added at all. to the wealth of the world.' Is their personal contribution to the welfare of ,ndnstry in proportiontotheirpersonal monetary gains? Wtalt h is made only and exclusively by labor, either of the hand or of the mind, so employed ss to incteai e the power -f muscular labor, or what are called labor -saving appliances. During the past year what has Mr. Rockefeller done in this way to augment man's power of creating wealth out of the new materials of nature? That by merely investing capital capitalist finds work and . 1 ei for others we kn w; that he is

rightfully entitled to profits is freely admitted. Hut has Mr Rockefeller's increase of income to the extent of ? $100.000.000 teen made in this way? Certainly not. Then "again, the man who invented double and triple expansion contributed infinitely more to the wealth and welfare of mankind than Mr. Plerpont ; Morgan has done by sll his shipping combines. Mr. Pierpont Morgan has contributed nothing. Yet be secure a lot of money. N-r has he contribMl by the ordinary method of in- 1 vestment. Then bow is it all done? Simply by contrivances, very clever, ; very far-seeing, on the part of these j men to draw to themselves a huge pro- ' portion of the wealth w hich other men produce either by their labor or by ! the.- -pital directly employed. All political ecotomy. even that

which is in other r spects unsound, is

If Colonel Arthur Lynch Had Been Executed J J

Some Ways In Which His Life Might Havn Taken Under the Enalirh Lawn,

OK the first time in more than half a century the lord chief jutice of the Hnghsh court has been called upon to pass sentence nmin a nerson under an

indictment for high treason. Fortunately for Col. Lynch. the condemned man. the sentence of death which was pronounced upon

r.ng-

muted to transportation for life. Ha was sent to Van 1 in-mati's laud and there ended his days. r r. n a review of certain chronicle of crime taken from the old Newgate criminal calendar, it appearsthat there were not more than nine of ten treae son eases duru,r the l'.it b century i Kngland and that the most of those were confined to the first few yearn

of the centurv. In one or twoor tnes

. . I ut.h f ne

mm in . , . , .,,k-,

...... I.. un commute': to instances. Iiunn , a in kt . -

Mai.no. .

ti.h

.... 1 1 . ..! mv be still criminal

Hie iiii.iri.o......... "J. .1.- ...nliub that

' ' I " luiiiiur uau ' ' .

v r

Interested, and their

further lessened even a paruon ma follow. The commutation of the sentence was predicted by all. immediately upon its being given out. beannse U was known that the public conwiei.ee would not permit of the enforcement of the supreme fMlttj. This fact serves to call attention to the marvelous change in the public conscience in the last century According to the strict letter of the Knglish statutes the lord chief justice might have lawfully pronounced these terrible words: (To the prisoner) .hold up thy band. "You of the jury, look at the prisoner and harken to the charge: He stands 'nrfirted . . for that he is a false trsitor against the most illustrious and most excellent prince our sovereign lord (To the prisoner.! "The judgment which we give you is that which the 1 law says and speaks. And therefore I you must go from hence to the place from whsnce you came; and from then you shall be drawn through the s'reets to Tyburn: there you shall h. hajigcd i4 the neck, but cut down hef-.re you are dead, your head shall be

made them genuinely dangerous coo-

f.plracies against the Baglllll government Of thee lh ato street conspiracy is one of the most notorious. In 162C s party of desperadoes planned to destroy an entire company of minrs of the government, while the latter were assembled at a banquet at Lord Harrowby's mansion. It was arranged thai one of the psrty should procc.d to the house with a pa reel -ad- ... to Lord Harrowby and that when the door was opened compani, 1 - arert to rush in and bind the servants, or in case of resistance, kill them, and occupy all avenues of the house while a chosen band should pro

ceed to the batiipietinir chamber and

there massacre all of the guest with the aid of hand grenades. Bot this plot was betraed by a member of the gang. Bieren conspirators, among thMBi Ar'hur This' lew ood. the leader, were tried for high treason and con1 :. 1 i.ed to death by the process of lianiring. drawing and quartering. The ! . nces of six of them were commuted to transportation for life, but the ring leaders suffered the extrem

not been heard from the protectionist I fonnafd on the principle that capital side of the bouse a single expression of j . onjT ueful to the world when em-

was too much ashamed to ask advice.

At first it seemed almost nec-s-ary that it should be acconipinied by some original poetry. This was tried, but if en up iu despair. Finally it was decided to semi it without any marks to identify the sender.

It was certain, as he looked at it.

that I-iura would know at once that it eame from him. Resides, if the

gang" ever found it out they would bT wag ,n thf fftfCt that tn,, BIS - f X 1 C. IiA I m' m

Ai-i:.Nr..NBa.

lie -t. pped to the

r..r,V life miserable for him. Ni tie

went so far as to carefully dNguNe

his hand in writing the ad-lress. and

counter and he sttDMrf out in the dusk after "ip-

p.eked up one of the ater lace crea-j pr to drop it into the small box.

ti-.ns diMlaed upon it, says the Lni

eng Iril-i.ue. At the top stood a paper angel, btowfaef a silver trump-, et. Th.- let i f the angel rested j upon a bank of pink clouds, spotted j with green and eilow. Re.ow were! two h lg wl. le tnrtle dovev The doxe- ". r ti-d t. e, ther w.th a erim-n ribbon, üetween the angel end the iloe- was a blu-hirg upid. "I kaea yo i." was the tender legend. It was "a jxHir. tawdry affair, further cheapened by a wanton sign; alw -e UM eo inter:" "Paper Lace Val-entiie-Red m ed to l'Jc " The '.r-wn-u;. Ib.y remembered when n. .thing m-re beautiful than s

i upid and flower be!eckeu vaicniins

lie went to school next morning

in an excited and unhappy frame of

mind. He feared lest the "gang" might disco er that he bad become a "softy." Consequently he was unusually rough, and fought several successful battles on the way to the schoolh.-oe. He hoped that Laura, who had surely gotteL the time, would not

BBS

When St. Mad Facs at M.m.

valentine by that

liim weeks to ae the

for the first one he

had exited for his

eves. And, ia those days, they used , .s a.tl more than t$ cents

It had taken

monev to na '.

p'mhaseL He smiled as he thought an it. It must have been more than ."O -.ears ngo. He had just entere.1 the fourth grade over

inexperienced thank him publicly for sending

it.

trifling remissions of duties would, for the present, relieve the tariff sj-vn from attack, and would permit the other out rapes of the system to remain without modification. In fact, this anxiety to protect the rest of the system against successful assault appear? to have been more potent in hastening action upon the coal tariff than desire to do justice to the stiffercr from the 'amine of fuel. It was a case of losing a little to -rive much. But it was enough todemonst rate the principle that tariff reduc ion Is a means of relief from trust oppression . THE SUGAR TRUST MYSTERY. Oae Direction in WhlcBi the MlraeleWeetttaa Trl eei to Be at I noil.

mir

for the amazing accumulst ion ot ncnes bv a ft w favorably circumstanced in- . dividual by method- quite different j methods which are not. so far. legally 1 dishonest, and wi.-h do not go through the mehes of tne l.w. but gaoodging round the ends of the net. Cannot the net he made longer? It will be l.v and b. but prohohly not until there I ha come an industrial disaster great- . er than the world Thss ever known.

THE TARIFF THEORY, nanee r the ihsi i,rot-ie idea DreomliiM To,. Well ef Haled

The drawtwek clause of the tariff 1 law allows a refuni: of duties to anybody who reexports an imported article either in the original or In a different shape. Thus, if tin plate is imported and then exported in the forma j of cans containing oil. or salmon, or j condensed milk, or what not. the duties on the tin plate will be refunded, provided Ihe exporter identifies

the material as the same on winen dotv was paid. It is not easy. however, to "identify the material. So much trouble and delay are involved in ihe nrce that in many case it costs

more than ?t comes to

To Ps'ti ns Bo,

at the old t'nion school. When M took his seat on the boys' side of the room the tir-t day he noticed ncroes the center aisle, where the girh of the sixth grade sat. a young dbinity In n blue checked

white apron

wer

.... , . . wmm . I ,1 .. e

wnat IS tne mmio . . , ...

,W r tuu, inr. fit J J.3(niH., HJ'

inrh im ilres and a

.1 -v... ilder r:.ts Her eye

big and blue, and her hair hnr.tr

. ,..n her ba. k in l"" ' '

. . I with a Hue r:bbn.

vva.- g-gcling and lookiag around the room ai sll the new boys and girU it wU. a case of boe at first sight

on the part of the Grown up Boy. ami ,i as his first attack. That moraing at recess he waite. j ontil -he came out. looking more bca.tiful than eer in hei I ttle pink , ,nr .onnet. Then, in full sight of his g,Klde-. he fell up4.11 and "licked his be-t friend and henchman by way of displaying his prowess. He had "1 d"" tht" ,riend frequently isefore and therefore felt sure that I heshoulu moke inipressoe exhibi- , tioa. When the snow, fell and the . ...t "to wash the girls faces he pursued ha haart's desire I areund the sehoolhouse yard, as an . Indian hief the JP" ho want- for a wife. He then threw her down in a deep drift end rul Md snow int.. her eyes snd tn ith until she eried anl went in and told the

Then when anotner rs.v

tea. 1 er call'd he iy " lb -

"tattle tale." he prompt kun fur 10 ooinf-

If she did he wmld be tempted to

deny it. Vhen school "took up" Laura was in her seat, but ahe did not etn look in hi direction. He wondered whether the valentine had not yet been delivered or whether she wa- ent. rely overcome by the magnificence of the offering. Next morning when ngnin she neglected even to glance at him, he de

cided to brintj matters to a crisis. He skillfully threw a "paper mV which landed on her disk. Wheu she turned quickly he was prepared for an eloquent acknowledgment in her eye Mut she only "ma.ie a face" at him. 1 ha t was the only a. kn -w ledgtnent that he eT got. The 1'erkins boy and Lain a grew up toget her. an.l final ly he heard, after he was a Grown-up Bay h. tu -elf, that they were married. Twenty years after the Valentine episode he had gone back home and had been introduced to Mi

she 1'erkins and her four ch.ldren and

had wondered how he had ever fallen in love with such a huge, commonplace, uninteresting woman. That evening, when the tirown ip m got home from the city his wife

spoke alwit the coffee mill. "Ii wasn't delivered this afternoon." she said. I suppose you ordered it all right." "I'm sorry." said the Grownup Hoy, weakly, "but 1 really forgot all about it."

"You re the most absent-

minrtrf! man I ever saw." said hit wife, somewhat petulantly. "And now It's too latt to get one for 27 centa." "My business is fo engrossing." answered the ir -wn-up Bojr, llnuly that ran onehtn't to npent me u remci'i" thior-"

trust? The other day when

employes in the Havemeyer sucar refinerr in Williamsburg- the largest

In Mr. Lover-

ucH

with

bi'l in coneress to .'ipense

1 UtAtiiifleAiion altogether. Under this

Til ZrmSU American-made tin plate when clshier. window for their pay they exported, wo,, d be en ej .0 be r

rate, ine am- - imported and duties hsd been pen". The theory of the blessed tariff, says

THE EXECUTION OF GUY FAWKES cut off and your bodv be divided into I penalty. It is doubtful if any set of 4 ... be disnosed of aa bis men ever went to their deaths with

. . . .... ,

were bluntlv told that the work were

closed indefinitely. There was no warning not a hint had been dropped that any such thing was in contemplation, says the Chicago Chronicle. What does it mean? Is the market overstocked? Is it necessary to curtail production in order to maintain trust prices? If so the facts must have Wen known to the trust officials for a considerable time, and there was opportunity enough to give warning to the employes. The attorneys for the protectees do not forget to remind us every day that the protective svstem is sll for the

benefit of lhoe who work for wages

the New York Post, is that it merely

cover the ciffcrener in wages between the cost of the importe.' and the domestic article. If that is the truth, the domestic producer and the foreiirn producer stand on the same footing In the American market. Why should the user of the foreipn srticle have aa advantage in the export trade? That is what Mr T.overinir would like to know. Hut we should like to know how the case stands when the duty on the foreign article is 4.000 percent..

- 1 . I a J .nsA . n t urn I ttilnritv

,--v i.itasc. And I pray i.ou 10 grenier aim y aa" J ml ... ... 1 , 1 ... ilmrr l.v ihi

ha, nie rev on your soul. The law authorizing this sort of , 1 t.nce ha nver been erased from the statute books and stands us a bor-

m .a I I

rible memento 01 tne cngiuuu m was. but that has now passe d and gone. I The improvement in public sentiment, j and nothing ehe, has made such a sen- j tence impossible of its being en- j forced. Kngland has not been compelled to I Jeal with a treason case for a period j f some CO years; and th. prisoner at that time arraigned, established a nasi cas. of insanity and wan acquitted f treason, though he was detained, of course, to "await her niaj sty 's pleasure." Thi man wa Ldwanl Ox-

ford snc. Io wa arr. si.o ior a .einjo

with more bowing and smiling to the

. i .d and with more jests among themselves and to the hangman than th. v. It is not dirtieult to determine at lOOat what time the Knglish conscience be can to demand less cruelty than had been practiced in the punishtn.nt of traitors. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, while the law continued to be carried out in full as to qunrterinu. the Inst acts in the ragedy of II aeent ion were no longer perforated enan the living body, but more as a matter of form, after life was MCttaet, The "when ou are hall dead" part of the sentence liegan tc be left ou' This was -rue at the exe

cution of th hand of conspirators.

Bgitsfi T E9l t an

aa in tn " imea.

mat it mas s 1 t mes over wh n It

hich ani t' v.- worser pieniy 10 no - Fl cmtinuallv reiterated .er- i Prted . . port of oXhrf

tlon. It make the industries pros

perous. It makes

a -1..- ..-An -In v 'litis, it, Ttit V

K-.-h nrices and buy more than be rrs not now dreamed of.

r- c "

manufacture? Will not Mr Lover-

I IM MimieillXB s ws- . m A m 1 price, high snd ing's bill pnt our blessed tariff into too e able to pav the glsrinp s lieht snd expose it to dan-

POINTS AND OPINIONS.

not .lohn Free

President Roosevelt will have to worry O'l h about the Hnv vote in 1901 Detroit

Pre-s. Ks-Senator Wolcott. of ( olorad... said that Teller was elected.

was sensible. Then be ocean .. I I . I -mm - . , I I

icw tne r..c -

Mis Haet'S Ossies 20 Years Aflsr.

wants. Itut somehow it generally happens that whenever trouble comes it comes in some protected industry. Now It is the sugar industry, which is protected to the extent of 7.'. per cent, or more of the value of untaxed soger. It Is mysterious. v.. .rommiiit action is t hreatened

which can hurt the refining interest. I a treatv ' CK

,r .....j - Mbanv reus. reducing the duty or. raw -gar from A,n""- K ... . Cuba 20 per cent. It is by no means 1 Thrr' w,n J m .vi. ;it K tl. ihe reouolican nat.onai

certain inui iuh .r -, "... n;.!-" Tiers fled Hut if It should be the only pos- when the band rlsy D.x e. There . . ,w. ... .'.I-.... will he n contest between the Roose-

sine eneci niton me iiirmr..i ...1. v . :. ... velt and Hanna forces as to wh.cb

WOUld oe IO rii.uir ... - - . ilil. JJUS material that much cheaper without can sine the loudt m the choru 1 ti,, least diminlshine its nrotectlor -Hneinnati Fnqnirer.

on the refined srticle which It sella 1'rcidont Hoosevelt Is not It Is instructive to note that those , ing his influence a McKinler wool! whosttributeallonrprosperitvtoth have usenl hi if he had lived. Pie miracle working tariff never have any meriran people wi. that he would

to offer of the.e strange ,o0w m-re no.eiv in inr i'"

,-v time In convent ion

to shoot gueen Victoria as her headed by Col. F.dwnrd Marcus Des-

11

carriage was being driven through the

streets. This was in 1-40. At aix.ui

the same period, when the hartist

movement was in progress John rrost

and other enthusiasts 01 tnsi agna

tion were arrested for participating in j : ... .1 .. ...... r ft i tr l.tfH

au armeu upnsnijf un.i . ,.,B

for treason In accordance with tne

Bard, distinguished ns n man of an

cient and honorable family, which planned in 103 to kill the king in his carriage and to start an uprising I iiL' the disaffected. Rut one ha onlv to turn back into

j the preceding eentnry to find plenty of accounts which tell of the carrying

apparently invariable rufe that is fol- on, 0f the original sentence In all its

l.ariiarnv. Aiinoupn case ..i 1. o.

when the nrioner is lounil

.... .... Mmt

irui.tv. the estrenie eniu

were numerous in the eighteenth cen-

passed upn thm; but their sentences lurT probably the most notorious ot were commuted to transportation, j 'wa the gunpowder plot with which

Later, in 185$, thej were allowed to f;v Fawkes and numerous rompan-

return to Kngland. Transportation

iK-can to lie a favorite pe nalty in the

firat quarter of the century;

it was

ions w ere connected. This was no less than a we',, planned attempt to blow ..r. the kit ir nnd parliament and all

a convenient wa v of getting prisoners j the assemblage present at the opening

out of the wav without bloodshed when w..intl of Kngland's great legislative

exiiat:tior

freaks of their prosperous tariff-sheltered trn-

of the rrest msn he o nttine'y ..na ,o ahtj enlorlred Roeheter 'vf.

the demand for leniency cases calling

for capital punishment where the offense was not appalling, became strong. Then were perhaps two or three eases of treason in which, after the extreme penalty passed, the sentence OHM rommuted to transportation. In 33, for example, one Dennis Collins MM ennvie'ed of hiph treason for having thrown s stone st Fine William IV I'.ut the prisoner was a man of some 70 years of age and an old soldier. x ho hri lost s leg in his country 's ser

vice, ior thse reasons the desth i wicked ser'ence flrt -ironcntnced, wn con-

bodv. The cellar underneath the parliament was filled with barrels of gunpowder, whleh were only discovered 12 hours before the torch wss to have been applied. A pamphleteer of that time nftet giving a somewhat too detsiled description of the execution of these conspirators ends that part of his narrative with n word nbont (itiy Fawkes. "the greatest knave of all. who." he sa s. "made his end on the pallow a nrd th Monh to Is (Treat joy of the behold, rs. that ihe land was enled of e

villian,' atllTOW VAUKt