Liberty Herald, Volume 24, Number 44, Plymouth, Marshall County, 28 October 1875 — Page 4
'I
'PITT? TTT7.R A T .11 !aftcr a 1,r- "iotin, -i.o, in ti'-' SCMBNER'S M ON T II LY
YOUTH'S COLUMN.
,1 JAIiK HIT OF HISTORY.
ncli Aweniblv iu 171)1, proposed
abetter way of cutting oil' people's heads than the old way of doing it
"I k .1 rt ,..1 , t 1 t W'lC !t
lelumsv why, and clumsv headsmen ' sometimes made bad work of it. But
When that tempest of madness Ilbr. Guillotiu va.s not the inventor, was speaking of just now first swept; as some books will tell yon ; nor did thronidi the street of Paris (in the be lose his own head by it, as other reim "of Louis XVI,) it .drove the books will tell you. erazed people in herds to glut their I" the question of finding ven--ear.ee upon those who were ! some new way of execution was
keeping cnplives in
the irreat prison of the Bastille. It
irim and dismal-look -
.Secretary of the College ot burgeons, and he advised sueh a method as had
of! been hinted at by Dr. Guillotiu the I will run for twelve month-. This is
before. So, then they had a
made for trial by one an ho was a knife-maker.
was indeed
in if building nnon the borders
Paris, with slnirtrish water around it, i year
and its door was entered by a draw-i machine bridge. Toward the frowning Avails j tS-hinidt,
of this prison (there is only a tall ; And they tried it on a body or two, bronze column upon the spot now) ! and found it worked so avcII that the nomilace of the citv rushed head- I they adopted it ; and people called it
Innir witli vlistnvpv woMnons th.ev t at lir.-t ''Louisettc
coidd lay hands upon. Butcher
For 1876. The publishers invite attention to the lolloAving list of some of the attractive articles secured for Scribner's Monthly, lor the coming year. In the field of fiction, besides numerous novelettes and shorter stories, there Avill be TWO REMARKABLE Serial STORIES By AMEK1CAN AUTHORS.
The first ot these, now complete m our hand-, "C5ABR2SL COI2ROY," By bim;t. iiakte.
Begins in the November number, and
UNION I'LANIXI! MILL ! if You Want To
1.: le;.i r-...-
Mr. iiarte's first extended work
Tlie scenes and character.-, which the author has chosen from, his favorite field, California, are pointed Avi;h
LIBERTY, IND. M unnf.u'iurvr of SASH, DOORS.
BLINDS, MOULDINGS,; Mi ! lH'.Ui-r in t FLOORING, AIDING, CEILING, aud Bough and Ready Dres.-u-d S T ,TTWr"RFl"R. I
SHINGLES AND LATH,! i Of t est Brr.nds constantly on h:.i,d. A'l work in my line don t Order n Short notice, l'hum fura ished aud Vci ar.das mnde l order, j
GEORGE KEELEll. '
tnr X - u. i p.. c ,i! j. f. t-f 1 - ft ' ;- tl A i '"" t " T' -fct a asi .. t t if ' 1 . J ' ,
t I I.
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Ixiiow Wlxat X.
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UUlMi UN 1
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took their clca-ers, stable-men tlieir forks, carters their- heavy oaken stakes, carpenters their axes ; and thci-c Avcrc thousands with guns and cutlasses, and there were hraAvny women with heaA-y pistols. The soldiers who guarded the prison were
so irigntenca uy xne sigins ami sounds of this tempest of the people's fury, that they could hardly make any opposing fight at all. The governor of the prison, seeing what mad rage he must encounter, would have blown up the huge building altogether, and had actually laid the match to do so, but the soldiers rebelled and forced him to surrender. Then the raging mob flowed in, and those who wore the uniform of the king were smitten to death, and tlungeon-gatcs were unlocked, and prisoners staggered out who had not seen the day for dozens ami
scores of years. A beautiful girl was caught 6ight of flying down one of the great stairways, and she was straightway seized upon by those who believed her to be a daughter of the goA'ernor, and would have been burned in the court-yard had not a few generous soldiers stolen her away and secreted her until the sack Avas oAcr. As for the governor, who was a marquis
and the kinir's friend, thcA" cut off
his head and bore it bleeding from the top of a pike-staff all down the street ; and all down the street poured the mad, rejoicing rabble, slaying many another as they went, and carrying the trophies with them gory heads on pikes, or gory heads on chafing dishes carried by women.
jvs ii was mat wnv so it, Ava
characteristic vividness ami poAver: and the Avovk is Avithout doubt tin
most irranhie record of e;Rlv Call-;
But Dr. Louis i Wc alj;o begin ia thl, janutvr it or make it. j nmnbcr,
. Luaonugeu i.um ,..u ,, i HpHILIp KOLAFS FRIENDS,
so rarciv Avrong, iiijikco hi
Josh Trimble,
said he didn't invent
eTjster
(AV
Avhich is
mistake in saying he did iiiA'ent it.) So the people Avent back on the name ot lr. Guillotiu all because a poet of that day had made some jingling rhymes, in Avhicli the honor
had been referred to him. The real truth is, that a machine like it had been used in Italy, at Genoa, two hundred years before; and in England, at Halifax, and in Scotland, at Edinburgh, more than a
hundred years before. The Scotch people had called it "The Maiden." It is a dreadful machine, and does A'cry quick Avork, as I knoA ; for I have myself se en a man's head taken off by it; and 1 never Avish to sec such a sight again. And now. avIia- do vou suppose I
have run over this bloody bit of his
tory? Only as a sort of introduction to two of your good friends a man and a woman, who lived in Paris through all this time of blood, and who yet have written the two most charming and pleasant stories for children that are anywhere to be found in the French language. You know them both in English. "Who the writers were, and what the stories were, I must tell you some other month. Donald G. Mitchell, St. jicholas for JSrov.
on
many a day thereafter, and for mahy a ve?k- mOlltlV; ami for yrjav Mioever nuS'a noble, or friea'd of the hated nobles, or rich, or friend of the hated'ricb, li-ed, if he lived at all in that city of revolution, in great dread and danger. There was not much feeling at the first against Louis XVI., for lie was a far better king than those who had gono before him. He was kindly at heart, and Avhat Ave might call now-a-days a gentlemanly, amiable man,
with not much force of character, and disposed to yield to the opinions of those avIio had been his old advisers. These, by their obstinacy, brought him very soon to grief. The people forced him to trial, and there was a forced condemnation. His head, too, fell before the fury of the enraged people, and Avas held up by the executioner upon the scaffold for the thronging mob to look upon., This poor king had left behind him in the prison a son, Avhom he had taught, as he best could in those dreary prison hours, arithmetic and geography. Do you think the boy ever forgot those lessons, or ever forgot the sorroAV and the loud Availingsofhis mother, the queen, when the king went out to his bloodv death ? A little after this, those crazy ones who were governing France so madly in this time, gave over this prince boy to the care of a shoemaker and hi3 Avife, to whom they furnished a lodgment in the prison for this pur
pose ; and they did this in order, as
they said, that the bringing up of the
boy might be as Ioav as that of the
lowest of the people. Poor boy! poor prince ! A little later, Marie Antoinette, the queen, was taken out of her dun-
geou io go u iriai. xuey called, it a
trial, for the sake of decency ; but I
think they kneAV Iioav it would end
before they called on her to appear
If the judges before whom she stood
had said she Avas innocent and must
go free, I am sure that the wives of
the wine-sellers, and the fish-womeiii and the hags of Paris would have snatched her aAvay and carried her off to execution, if they had not slain her with their OAvn bread-knives in the street. These mad people had such a thirst for blood I It Avas better, perhaps, that the judges should say the Queen must be beheaded (as they did), than that these wild women should cut her in pieces. She certainly died an easier death by the guillotine. You don't know Avhat the guillotine is ? It is simply a grtiat knife sliding In grooAres between two upright posts, Avhich by its fall severs the head from the body in an instantand it is the most human way of executing capital punishment if there be any humanity about it. The machine vas called Gv Motive,
The nilai;d find Avlfe had arranged that Avben one Was drunk the
other should Avovk, thus keeping on J
every other day. Imt once John kept drunk for three days and came home in di-tress. "And Avhat are you crying about asked his helpmate. "Oh, 1 feel so unhappy, ''cried John. '.Uwhappy I and you've been trunk Avliiil've bccif working every simta dav l-'"fcivrc veefcrdavlr J expect to V. an anger,"-"" "
Or, Show Your Pa3sport." By Edvai:i Eveuktt Hale. The scene of this story is laid 4;tbc Southwestern territory, now forming the States of Loui.-ana and Texav, at the time of Aaron Bur's treason. The character lived in a section which Avas now American, now French, and now Spanish, and this record of their adventureous liA'es makes a story of intense and unflagging interest throughout. A Second-'Tanner's Vacation, By Col. Gr.o. E. "Wa::i:inc, Jr. Col. Waring is now in Europe,
visiting, in a row-boat ride of tA o hundred and fifty mile, one of the most fertile anil interesting of the A'ine-groAving valleys of Europe. This second scries of papers promises to be even more interesting than that with which our readers are al
ready familiar. CENTENNIAL LETTERS,
Edited by John Vance Cheney. A rare collection of Revolutionary Letters, mainly from stories in the hands of the descendants of Col. Joseph
"Ward. They are full of interest, and will be read with a rare relish in connection Avith the Centennial celebration of the year. Brilliantlv Illustrated Articles on
AMERICAN COLLEGES, ' "Written respectively by their friends, will appear during the year. The reA'iA'ed interest in college life makes these papers especially timely, and Avill secure for them unu-ual attention. OLD NEW YORK. Elegantly illustrated articles on Old New York, by John F. Mines. Avill appear at once, and AViil attract the attention of all. in city or coun-
trv, Avho mark Avith interest the development of the great metropolis, and affectionately remember the quaint peculiarities of its uld.m time.
Everv number is proiuseiy inns-
s ill IT
jXTxiLlori. County,
rl?i ii Ooipi and Sh(M't.Iro:t "Wji i vj'j?v., i c in, v.ui.. v hwt.cC1,, - A! i 1 . i , X - a.. A . i A.
"" ' ," mi-
j.cq!-:ou lmml u j
Well SoIoctedStock of tho FIfJEST FRENCH AND EnalisJt Co a t in us ! -' CD Tho Finost and
mmrml r s Viwiinff
t I r i a f "i
sruvcinBE rm nu;
C3
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'Liberty Herald
Doeslfins, Cashlmeres,
tiooi! l"U or no ialo. E
Of all iina-liuil-nii,
I Farmer's 3oIicrs from Ten to Sixty Gallons, j AT li:iCl' THAT Iticrv Ci M V XT I T J u X ANi!ii:;;i;
Ltborty, Indiana.
THE WEEKLY
3I. JoiHbS, j VSAJ r.a IK SIKGEB SEVIHG MACHINES kxi 1' A RTS. NEECLES AND OIL For al Seulntr .Machines. I'KOJSr ATI UN UOX GIVKX T'J Imnw ani Clcaalni IMiui. OrrcK ox Maix Si i: i.t, LlirJlX'V, 1XDIAXA, J. S. "W Smith. Canva-.ii:g A iri ut.
U l'tt ix $u.S t;v(-''-t 1 fi;r;3r 1 ft . V
lf I.M-IU;.'.C Si"4 .i.d -f Such as Tin Roofing. Cuttcrm;. cc r-" IT" il . I A TIX jm
WHEri YOU Y-'AUT GROCERIES ?S. D. Byrams Cheap (irocerv Store. ' A I . t ...
" i '. . . i
0", T;.;-y ' ' 1 V." ' " ' ' - - -
J
interest and
For 1876.
One of Uic Largest and Best Sewspapers in the West.
Should Be in Every Household,
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cd, tin.s.nubly'ir .u-s.to triv. t o Jj j " ti j -1 f.njiL J ' UJ'iUy. loscviptrvo una narrative ailVlcsJ I t j.,T-t. -
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I'rourod lor every soldier, no matter how sliirhtly disabled by wounds, disease or acri-
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U. S. claims settled. StiulS st:up tor laet news. XO KKK until vonr clain: IS l'AII. N atii an W. l-'iTXiiv.K ad, V. si. Claim Attorney, lndiu.iapolis, Irul. ull -lt, Greenbacks Equal to Gold at J.M.Stanton's Store AT Q.UAKERTOW2I, Lcatini EOuseJorjtaj Dry GooasI I Invito thccitizcns of Union ami mUainin'countics to examine my largo aud atC'i selected stock ol' Fall and Winter Dry- Goods, DRESS GOODS, Shirts, Flannels, Cassimcrcs, Jeans, Cloths, Linens, USTapfcins, Towels, Sheeting Muslins, Calicos, Ginghams, Cotton, Yarns, Trimmings, Carpet "Warp, Corsets and Notions, And tho Largest and Best i'ock of
emu Slioes!
Cor?r of Market and Seminary f?ls. S. JSpdeMahan, Pastor. Pi cat Inn s,' ever? alternate Sabbath. Public Prajr and social meeting every intervping S:ibbat!i nipht. Class Medmrs Subbatli niorninnt . oclotj Sabbath Seh.ool at J :"0 p m. 1 W. Wood, Superintendent.
SA1
Sim
BIIIDOKr.S CAT1IULIC ciirr.en, : -Simdav Schiol at 9 n. r.t.
Servjess'Ow. Sumlavs
nt lisi r,t V Q
10 :15V. tc. Pas tot
mil Holy tlays.
civkcs nt
J. M. DeArco,
4IRISTIAN CIIUKCII, On 3ikct street, between Union and fi'Tinnr.ry streets. Sabbath S.ti 'oliA'ery Sabbath at '2 p. m.
BfiEVOLENT QHDZllG.
iri.
(Custom made end Warranted) to Uc found In Union county. All at the Very Lowest Trices. Having advantages not po?ses t by many in tliecotmty, 1 inn prepared to oOVr iny trons inducouicuta I'ot to be tound tle where. I Pay no Rent or Clerk Hire and givo jny friend llio bcc2t. ffTheyery hi-hest market pri.-e. jmld for all kinds of l'rodiiee. Come and seo (alter look in elsewhere) if tlto lxttomis nul Vnocteil completely out, and that yon kui more lor your dollar than yon can ixtsnh- gvi at any other c-tore. in the county. I mean Luincn. J. M. STANTON. September ISth. 1ST5. ii:'J-tf
i. o o. r.
Mrton Lodgo, No. 155: Meets cverfSaturday evening nt 7 jn ,n Gjlner KncanipmciVt, No. 100 : Meelthc 1st and 3rd Monday even in3 k each month. Lilft? Lodge, No. 10, Daughters of I6ckah : Myots the 2nd and ivi.i; tiUiig'W each monlh. lorr Lodge, No. IJ I, al College Corne': rMeets every Saturday eveni;;. Bciel Eacampment,No.73,at Cub lege brner: Meets the 2nd and -1th Monfty evenings in each month. Jksvns i!!o Lodge No. 350: Meets i'ery Saturday evening. Vally DKlge, No. 351, at Dunlapsvi' : Meets every Saturday eveuii. Abigtou Lodge, No. 154: Meeta cverylaturday evening.
ilASONIC.
CLptcr No. 48, R. A. 21. :JIccts on o ilte fore tho full moon. B1j Lod-e, No. 13, F. & A.M. : McctVedaesday, on or before the full irjon. IJntrjsvillc Lotl t;i-F; dr A. M : Meet SattmUy eight on or before the fuiraoon. Corvllus Lod-c, No. 232, Abin-
ton H vne, county, fleets Moi.d.iv
m-ht h or before the Full Moon in
every tenth.
T - T 1 T " f itf.
t ' 4. i . IN"
BDiiilb'i'lC )i
yob Jrriniin&
ui.'rrr.!: m:.iw, r.it.i. n i : i NUl i; JlI. At-
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jDc::-:-,: j ".-" ' , .".' ' ... Xleot j --v v K , A' "
3
in r-i; - V
CO Per Cent. mzim 7 i
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TATKM IINTS. i:n vr.r.MM. biuppiNi; T.
jVii tTti r i- c v,d a j.. ...
I'AMpiir.r.Ts. mici: a MMtH povru:
WAiniANTKK ir.ni, moi:t;ai;p. ifj:i. j vst i cirs i ; la n i; s.
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i
VUU'VT.Al, l'.I.ANKS,
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IT M A 3 C I . TUT.
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in .-it h.r.ery if r:;y S..:..". ft' l" ! . l!:..,i r." v v. ".' t r, -t ' '
u :n-rr.' ' --"'' f i ".- :h r :. ' , "- DO NT FAIL TO EXAM INF. IT. 'ix t.s. A"a 1 1 tcxl
'cy Route to Texas.
T . i
Fashion Catalogue.
Joseph rinnei:.
FEINTED O.t
Short aS"otieo
AND AT FIIICEh THAT
DEFY COLIPETIOfl
La.Fies ul'sctib-f,,r ) DOMESTIC MONTHLY, j KXV aill JJ G 3. 1 Q T I
For Sale. Two Spring Wagons, one and two horse, nearly new and in good order. Inquire of Win. Yauiaii, at Fuuip Factory, Liberty, Ind.
Forble at A treat Darwin. Ilavig decided to have Iit crtv, I ofiVr n residence at a price that any one dcjriiiff a plea?:int Home Jinetv
loeatetlvvill find it to tlu'ir advan
tage- toke me before inm-ha-iii'.
d. Ii. NF.WtttMU.
Subsdos Foi The Herald.
8 1.5-0 IV r A:cu:.i, j AND UXK Di"I.I.Ai:. WtJlIIJf vT't "DOMCSTIC !
Paper Patterns .A..S Pmnium. Aiur.r.-.
V) UL ill . .'U I U.. I J ISO SUie "St. , hi; lW.i-.its I r,. f. f
House, C-ics-o, L. (t.'.O l
DUNHAM & coo?:: II,
UOCRTY, IND. I . .": . r 1 i t; t, j, 1 i., J,, ". ,f TTfT , tt HC(ll Corn Oats.,. v IJcwlrtf,
- . 1 ),-.... j. . ,c ,:..v
iiWuiu uia Oid ii.--u.-iji
I. .-, r. ,1 TY- f X " t' t: ,
j Paint tntr, Cralnt::. P.:;u-r::
ti' Orders tiy rrorcit artt'iitictt.
t r ... t !
rev. i iv c i
(tion -.:..:.r.:c
H . 'It -
