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VIVID STORY ^Ytwj Lad Tells of Hi? Shipwreck and Fierce Battle for Lite AMID RAGING WATERS H?ned? the Twelve Year Old Bon of the Late Capt. K. G. Miller, of the ^ ^ Wrecked Bcliooner Converse, Tells of Ills Gallant Father's l>euth and His Own K..rape. The Augusta Chronicle says the body of Capt. R. G. 'Miller, of Hephdbah, Ga., commander of the threemajrted schooner William W. Converge, which was wrecked In the recent hurricane, 3 0 uillea below St. Augustine, Kia.. has never been recovered. Shortly after the vessel went to pieces a body drifted ashore ?r that was thought to be that of Capt. Miller, but later the body was found to t)c that of another victim of the great storm. The late Capt. Miller was a prominent citizen of Hephzibah. His ? uii utwuit at Ids him) re "lOilVCtt wui n uu wj/V?* kono in Koehmond county. He was a prominent Mason and his fellow members of the order wore active In the efforts to find his body after the wreck. Hut all hope Is now abandoned that the soa will ever give up the body of this man who had pent his life in its service. Oa his last trip Capt. Miller w;n accompanied by his son, Fred 'Miller, 12 years old. The boy had a terrible experience In the storm 'u which his father, the mate and a seaman lost their lives. Fred Miller wis brought to his home in llephzlbah last Friday night a week ago. His story of his experience Is a thrilling tale of the sea. The vessel ran Into the hurricane <rtf Savannah early Tuesday morning last week. The Converse was i 4t&uach schooner and Capt. Miller held to his course, believing, no doubt, that this boat could weather ?t as ahe had weathered many be? ? c aKn.irH fore. He ft a a a cargo u? v,vc?. aid was bound for Cuba. The hurricane increased in fury and when about 30 miles below St. Augustine the vob8oI was blown upon the rocks nibout a mile and a half off "he Florida const. The wavos wore rolling > mountain-high and tho boat began to break up almost immediately. Capt. Miller ordered all hands to don life-preservors and take to the watei, J am bo boat could be launched in J *ucb a sea. Captain Miller himself preparedl his eon for the terrible journey and after telling the boy to keep bis cys <?n the shore and not look behind I .him tho captain saw that he was nafely started upon his trip and th?u *tood hack until every one of bis men had left. Then the captain abend in ed tbw doomed ship. IFred Miller says ho will remem-1 r?or that short but awful journey until his dying day. The boy is an I excellent swimmer, but no man's strength could buffet those waves and live. It was every man for him- I self, The life-preserver kept the! bey's head- above water and then h'? bad all he could do to keep his I breath from being literally pounded I out of him by the raging, roaring seaa Though his father had ordered ( aim not to look behind him the boy W" could no? resist the impulse to look I f back just once. He saw his father battling with the waves a short distance behind. Captain Miller wav^d jla band encouragingly to his sou and that was the Inst the boy ever ?avr of his father, for just then a wionstor wave came over and engulfed them all. Fred Miller folt himself ^.<>1 r?i; j (town, down, down. He no longer heard the sirean and roaring of the storm, but In his oars was h deafen-1 humming that no words can describe He felt as though he were vinnjoehod in some giant threshing j machine that was ripping and tourtng him to pieces. i He tried to hold his breath but j he was under water so long, hours I It scorned to him, that ho was forcer to swallow salt water until ho o'eAred he would burst. He gave up sll hope of ever breathing again, but hO| kept kicking and struggling to escape tho maelstrom that ha I - 1 * l>n '1,111 ill IT irpln i n no *4 vu\? i j ry jk rAt last the wave panned over ana n >i is body ahot to the surface. 11 is f tifo-preservor, even his jacket, had heen torn from him. But the great wave robbed him of his father, and which had almost torn all the clothing from his own body, had also, as tf ah am ed by the havoc it had wrought, borne the boy much nearer the ah ore. Now his ability aa a swimmer served him well, and in spite of his bruises he w is able, by swimming and clinging to bits of wreckage, io keep himself afloat until rescued oy the life-boat from a nearby station. This life-boat rescued all the men In the water except the captain nud the mate, who could not be found, and one se&nuin whose brains were beaten out by a heavy timber Just as tile resources were making toward bin. MADE BOLD ATTACK (>AIJiKl> TO HIS DOOR AND KNOi'KTI) UNCONSCIOUS. The Object of the Attack In Supposed to bo Robbery and Notliina Klao, A dispatch from Gaffney lays that placo was agog with excitement Thursday night over a bold attempt / to rob and poosibly murder Will J. Francis, superintendent of the public schools of that city, it seems rrom what can bo learned of the situation that Professor Francis was sitting <n his room at his home alone counting over <a big roll of Confederale money. The blinds In the room were turned, affording a clear view to any one who might be passing. It Is evident that some perosn or persons were outside the window and saw the money. They went to the back I of the house and knocked on the door. j Prof. Francis, with his pistol in his hand, walked to the rear and opened the door, stepping out on the) steps. When he did so some out.' hit him on the head, knocking him to the ground. He was knocked unconscious and then an attempt was evidently made to cut him, as his belt and suspenders are cut in iwu He Boon regained consciousness and he hoard the party climbing over a bark fence. Me shot at them three time.* and then arose, going over to the residence of Mr. K. A. J one*), next door, and when the door was opened fell Into the house. Hehas now aiino.st recovered and Is abie to walk, although his head is badly lacerated and bruised. Officers wero summoned from town and bio xJhounds were secured and now a strenuous search Is being made by the ofllcers and a posse of citizens. Mr. Francis Is unable to slate whether there was more than one assailant or not. He cannot say what he was struck with. The bloodhounds have caught the trail and the miscrea*. as may be captured. TMli 15A<;<;A(JK law. Kuilroud Commissioners Will Knfurce It, The railroad com mission w.ll strictly nforee the law with reference to the loading and unloading of bag?..- go at all towns of over f>0o inhabits-Us. A circular calling attention to the act passed by the general as "inbly with referene to the loading of baggage has been sent to all of the roads of the State. The following is the section referred to: "All railroad companies shrill pr ovido such means or appliances an may be necessary to secure the care Till baud ling and prevent injury to baggage. At all stations where no proper appliances are supplied ti" baggagenuister shall have such usi istanco from the train hands or others as may be necessary to handle the bagagc without injury to same. That all Junctional points and towns of over 500 inhabitants, sufficient trucks he furnished to load and unload the baggago. ? THK LAItftEST STKAMSHIP. The 01> inpic Was I/Utinrhed in Ireland I>ast Week. At the immense shipbuilding yards at Relf ist, Ireland, last week, wa? launched the world's largest steam-1 jship, the Olympic, of the White Star | line. The immense craft, to be used lo /?n ?<? i no tinuuoli uoru u/UUtCC t II *? A i - i I 111 ^(11 l ; i j/nouv/iifjvi n vun ^ j lantic between Now York city and | Southh.mpton, is X22 foot Ions, has a breadth of 92 feet ami a heigm from tl ? keel to the top of the cap tain's house of 105 feet. There are | eleven sb-el decks and 10 water-light hulk he:; ds. In the ship 3,000.000 steel rivets, weighing in all 1,200 I tons. have, been employed to bind the nuapsiv? steel plates in 6 snring the greates stability; and the rudder on the vessel weighs 100 tons, yet. will be moved by electricity almost as lightly as a feather. . < U SKI) BOY'S DKAUI. Hit With a l'otttto Over the Hi?it i?Y His FBUmm', Peculiar accident resulted in the death c: two children near WiuntonSalom, N C., on last Saturday. While gatehriug his crop of Irish potatoes, J. \V. ilennott threw one towards .t banket, but the tuber struck bin 1year-oM tx>y, standing nearby, ju*>l over tb * heart. The boy died before a physician could bo summoned. The four-ye or-old daughter of J. H. Kvorhart, a Now Vernon farmer, was kilied when her skull was crushed between da- barn and the bub of a wagon as her father was putting up his lea<n. Fred Miller is recovering from his injuries at his home in Hephtti* bah. '1 ho boy's body is a muss ot bruiser and cuts, but none ol his Injuries will prove fata), and tic will be able to be about In a few days. * FOULLY SLAIN. Negro Farm Hand Charged With Murdering a Florence Farmer IN HIS COUNTRY HOME F our LoadN from Mhotgan Find Ixxlgment In Victim's Ifcxly.? Killing; Occurs in De?d Man's lies* J donee wherf Hlajrer Kvidently lay in Waiting for His Upturn. A dispatch to Tho N'ows nnd Courier from Florence says to be foully murdered within the con 11 nee of his own home was the fate of Mr. Elihu M. Moye, a well known uud highly respected farmer and citizen of the Ebenezer section. alx>ut ten o'clock Friday night, and Clarence Ham, a ginger-cake colored negro, about 3 0 years old, is in jail, charged by the coroner's jury with being tho man who committed the heinous crime, and using Moyo's own gun to kill his \ictitii with. The news of the horrible deed was telegraphed in to Florence at an early hour Saturday morning to the sheriff, asking that he come at once to ICbonezcr and bring with nini Coroner Cooper, as Mr. Moye had been found dead ou his piazza, supposedly from the hands of a murderer. Sheriff Hurch and Coroner Cooper hastily went to the scone, and the news as telephoned In proved to Ik: a reality. The news spread Lhrougni)ut the Kbenezor section with lightning-like rapidity, and it was only a 1%^ h n ?wl ?*<wiu /?f nnrttJii C I I 1 i I \ I U I V UUIIUI vuu */* JM. had gathered about the Move hoiue, with the hope of gaining some information us to how he met death in such a foul and dastardly manner. All the while from the time the news became Known until the coroner's jury had been empanelled, the entire neighborhood was wrought up and there in no telling what might have happened had it been known at that time that Clarence Ham, the negro now in Jail, had had anything to do with the taking of the life of hJtihu Mo ye. The Sheriff had learned that Clar ence Ham had d>een in the employ of Mr. Moye some weeks ago and had been discharged because he failed to work to s\iit his employer. Laal week, however, Mr. Move agreed to take Ham back and put him to work. Saturday morning Ham was the only negro on the plantation who failed I to show up, and Sheriff Bureh, in order to see what there was in him, put him up before the Juiy to testify and lie stated that he had left the place late Friday and wont to a woman's house by the name of Kthel j Wilds Friday night, where he stayed. While he was testifying, Deputy I Sheriff llarrel! was sent to the Wilds woman's house to bring her also up a witness and while at the house Deputy Harrell thought he would search the premises. He found in a bureau drawer a coat belonging to Mr. Moye and a pair of trousers. These he took along with him to the inquest, and it proved to be the right evidence on which the murder could bo laid at Hum's door, for it was the coat that Mr. Moye wore Friday night, and tho one he had Just divested him- i self of a few moments before the! killing took place, as was sworn to! by Mr. Harold Cole, who had accompanied Mr. Moye to Timmonsville to a protracted meeting. Letters ami n+lwit* li'l A f 'VI Vf Al'A O u I iI \ . i }/u| 'V i o \j i ui i ifi w o ?? v; i found in the pockets, going still further to prove Mr. Cole's testimony, and tending to show that Hum is the criminal . Mr Move was married several yc rs ago to Miss Minnie Hartvli who preceded him some eight* o;; months ago. He has sine*1 liv-nl alone, excepting when his maiden sister visited him. Ho was a son of tno late Wash Move, of old Darlington and is survived hy one brother, Mr. Theodore A. Move, and two slsteis, \tiss Mary Move and Mrs. Sarah Mann, all of Florence county, together with a large and wide circle of near relatives and hosts of friends. The horrible murder has been the talk of the town and county, for ah the people knew Klihu Moyo, and they were terribly shocked when the news was first handed out. Clarence Ham, the supported slayer of Mr. Mo> e., is behind the bars of the Florence County prison and stands charged by the coroner's Jury us the Mayer of Mr. Moyo. Had it uot have been that a petition was quickly circulated Immediately after the Inquest, calling upon Solicitor \V. H. Wells, by Mr. John McSvveen, of Timmonavllle, asking lhe Govern* or to order a special term of tne Criminal Court in the county to try Ham, and the cooler heads of thono preeont, there 1* no tet'fng but what Ham's body \touid now ho t?wlu# lng from a tree in the forest*near Mr. Moye's home. All intoroated, .however, agreed to await the Court's verdict and Iiarn lives After next Tuoaday Toddy will be a has boon. Ho will bo disastrously i beaten in Now York, WANT A MONK WHO IS CHAJCUKD WITH SOME TKHKIBLK CHIMKS. IH*tectJve# Hunt in Three Countries (JKhteljr WutchlnK for the Missing Monk to Arrest Him. The Police of Germany, Austria, and Russia are searching for a fug! itive Paulist monk, who Is charged with tho robbery of precarious stones valued at $3,000,000, and the murder of his brother, a postman. The robbery took place a year ago at Czostochowa, Russian Poland. Tne church there contains an image of the Virgin and Child ascribed to St. I.uke. Tho image once belonged to the mot bed of Con stun tine the Great, and has been at Czestochowa since 1 3 8 2. Miraculous powers are ascribed to It, and myriads of pilgrims have visited it during the past six cent uric* Some 300,000 Popes go there each year. The image had been docorat ed with precious objects of vast worth, presented by Popes, 10 m per oib uuu rs.iiigs. 1 ne virgiit h crown,| given by Pope Clement in 1715, was valued at $50,000. A rope of pearls given by Queen Hedwig, of Poland, \vjh worth hundreds ol thousands jf pounds. There was a painful sensation throughout Poland when the news of the robbery of $3.000,00u worth of the treasure was made known The missing monk, who was attaen ed to a C/.estoehowa monastery, is said to have been last heard of a; Lodz. He is stated to huve oeen living rioutously with a woman at War caw and other towns. The discovery of a body in the river Wart a adds to the mystery. Tinman who had evidently murdc?red. was found sewn up In a sofa. ile proved to be a postman, brother or the monk. The public prosecutor has me.-n while ascertained that the monastery authorities misled the police in their attempts to trace the authors troth of the robbery and tie postman's death. The monaster) has now been officially sealed and exhaustive investigations ara taking place. Several nronks are under arrest. * MKIiTINH WILL UK IIICLU. Kevivnl Services at Knir (*r<>un<ls on Thursday. That h grout meeting will bo he?d in the fair grounds on Thursday night of the state fair was the an imuucemont made Friday by th" committee of ministers who for over three weeks have Iveen conduct int ho revival services in Columbia. The tirst meetings were held by ali the congregations simultaneously, each church securing its workers, and leaving to the other churches the matter of selecting preachers, etc. With the close of these meetings Siiuduy, it was announced tli.it meetings would ho hi Id in the state house. These meetings will bo con tinned, but the mass meeting will be held at the fair grounds, and it proposed to secure a larger hall for the other services in Columbia during the week. * ? ? . WOMAN'S ACT OF 1IICHOISM. She May Die ;\ft?r Saving IIit MKtr-ess from a Kiro. At Albany, <*a.. Llllie Preston, a negro woman, employed by Mrs. Leo Whldny, wife of a loc-til merchant, is near death, after having s veil her mistress from death by lit iato Landay night. Mrs. Whidh s dross was 'ignited at an open grate and stu ran Into the yard of her home. The ingro woman overpowered her, drag-j god her to the bath room, and extinguished the tltimes. Mrs Whidby is very seriously burned, but will re- j cover. The negro woman's hands | were burned to a crisp and she is badly burned elsewhere. INFANTILIS PARALYSIS PI Z/I.L. ICdorts to Ascertain Cause and Treat merit Futile. A dispatch from Providence. K I., says glneo June I, 20o cases of infun?(!.. tiinnloulii ...? v i iv i * \ i %? nin ii ii > \> irrru I r?|K?i UMI l u [ the stale hoard of Health. Of this number 23 have resulted Ui death. Nine other suspected cases are t>?infi wutchod. Kvery effort to deter mine the enuao, treatment and cure of the malady has proved practically! futile. Not only have children been afflicted, but many adults have been victims and several have died. It was thought that adults were numumo from the dihtoase. (llvll War Shell lCxpUxlo*, A bombshell which hid lain half buried since civil war days in tuo yard of a negro, Georgia Towns, of Da Hon, Oa., within a short distance of the old breastworks, exploded Friday when struck with a piece of iron in the hands of Town*' grandson. The child's mother was altght, l> hurt and the clothing of two boys | standing nearby caught tire. * "HELP, YANK!" Two Brothers Meet on the Battery in Charleston Very Recently AFTER FIFTY YEARS A Grand Army Man Wan Gazing at Fort Sumter and Was Accoatcd by o frwhkfatA VHorun and Ihvrnf nition Follows as the Old Soldiois Shake Hands. To moot ono's brothor suddenly by the merest accident after a separation of fifty years is a thing thic has happened to very few people on earth, yet that Is what befell Capt. Robert Graham, of this city, not I long ago says the News and Courier. Capt. Graham is a well known citizen i of Charleston, being manager of the) American Rrewing Compariy, of this j city, and formerly clerk of Court. He was among the curliest to outer th<? Confederate service after Soul i Carolina had seceded from the Co Ion, and he nerved in mo wasninglon Artillery with courage and fidelity throughout the war. He was also a prominent member of the South Carolina Jockey Club in the old horse racing days in this State. The story of the dramatic reunion of ("apt. Graham and his brother, Samuel, who served in the Union army and who is now a resident of BayKline, N. J., is told as follows in the New York Telegram: Parted nearly a haf-century, four years of which they spent on opposite sides of the blazing, shottorn battlellelds of the civil war, two brothers have just been reunited by I a chance meeting in a Southern city. One of them lived in Bayouno, N. J., the other in Charleston, S. C.t ev ?r since the early eighties, and both hav< achieved success. Mr, Samuel Graham, who lives a. No. 4 2 East 12nd. street. Bayou 113, is a grand Army man, with a most brilliant record of service in the Union army during the civil war. Naturally proud of the organization if which he is a member, he wears its button wherever he goes. On a recent visit to Charleston, S. C.. the home of his childhood, h? .cim wf uml i i! L? on the Battery looking across the bay at Fort Sumter ana musing on the Mining events which | occurred there nearly half u century ago. Ho \v4s suddenly slapped on the Khoulder, as a gonial Southern voice exclaimed: "Hollo, there, Yank!" "Hello, there, Johhny Keb!" answered Mr. (iruham, turning with a smile to greet the tine looking Confederate Veteran who had Interrupted his musings. Hoth smiling, they extended their hands and exchanged a hearty greeting Then, as eacli man was about to make some commonplace remark, l?i> e in 11 u <) (i,/l <m )>i< fn<iii Thui r looked at each other's face with a curious interest, which was not with out a touch ot' awe. Memories of days long past surged Into tho minds of both, and trembling hands were raised as the simultaneous ojaculaooiis ejaculations sprang fnm their tion sprang from their lips: "Robert!" "Sain uei!" "Rrot her!" Reunited after ftftw years, the lira thera, who as hoys had parted, one to light for the Confederacy, tho oth er for the Uniou, fell into each owner's arms Mr. Graham, of Rayonne, was taken forthwith to the old homestead hy his brother Robert, and *n a r<*- j union with his relatives there, mart' ed hy ail the wuriuth and affection I ...1.1 .V > I,/,.,., I ., 1 ( ' 11 I v JI liar ill iUm it>\ > 14 i ii v i i i uwnjii i?v i ? ty famous, he enjoyed a mont ihem orablo visit. With tin' firing of Fort Sumtn, tho brother**' relations worn abruptly severe! Robert, the eider, Item only nineteen years old, enlisted 111 the ranks of the South under Oen. Heanregard and laur fouht through out the war with Gen Wide llamp ton Sain u* I w .is only JUte* u > ?-:? r old at the outbreak of hontilit.iv but hi th? HiH'oml veur of tne w.i^ he enlisted in the s 11H regiment o?" Now York .Mr. Graham, of Kayonne h'?;> th? distinction of beinp one or ;? do*"", survivors ot a r>arf> of two tho.aud who stormed a rebel battery at fho battle o? w*?Tii1' n'lti v was almost annihilated by the em;iny'fi guns, a mere handful. of whiih he was one, eHouping rolling do- n the hill torn by the deadly tire of the Southern artillery. At the close of the war the brothers went their separate ways and never met until the dramati; reunion of a few days a/to at Charles'on. fRohert. the elder brother became i prominent as a breeder of throuorgb| bred horses in Charleston and uchiov ed considerable sncoesa as a d?uiler Samuel learned the printer'^ trade in New York and worked at different times on most of the dally newspapers of the metropolis atnonx them the Evening Icuegrain. H was a reporter and proof-reader on he old Kxpress when Amoe Curomlnspi, one time Representative in Conxr*>a*, was in charge of that journal. Sub BREAKS THE RECORD FOR GROWING CORN ON ONU AORK OF BANI) BY BOYtt. A >IarllK>r? Count)- Boj IV>d?CHl Over Two Hundre<I and TweotfKtftht Bushels on One Acre. The Stato says another world'* record for corn production has been broken in South Carolina. A 16trna t* 1/1 i./\?r < I .1 ( >. i * t. - ? ? r% _ __ ;*7l?l -VIU I VOI W 1 IIK W1 iue I'tte 1X9 section of the State nas produced 228 bushels and threo pocks of com on one acre of land. Besides the mooey that he will receive fiom his crop he Us to get $500 in prizes and a trip to Washington. The unknown boy, for his nam*' will not be announced for several days from the Washington office of the United States farm demonstration work is a member of one of the boy's corn clubs and his record is sworn to by witnesses. The official announcement and the boy's own story of how he secured such a marvelous yield will be printed in The Stair within the next several days. (The unknown boy has broken alt world's records for production of corn bv a boy and he Is within 27 bushels of the great yield of 256 bushels by Brake, the Marlboro county farmer. The boy Is the sou of a minister and the reeord-breaaing yield was grown unon the bar sonage land His story of how he accomplished such an unusual feat is of exceptional human interest. The boy grew the corn under the direction of the United States faun demonstration work, of which Ira VV. Williams is at the head in this State. The largest yield last year was 1G2 1-2 bushels, which was secured by ttascombo Usher. He will send an excellent exhibit to the South Atlantic States corn exposition, which is to b? held in Columbia from l>ecembor 5 to X. SWINDLING TIIE NKGltOKK. A White llascal Arrested While At m Negro Church. A dispatch to the News and Courier says a white man was arrested Wednesday in a negro church tibou*. a mile below Cross Hill, explaiiii? to the negroes u great scheme of lending them money at f> per cent interest. It seems thai a man was \rouod some two or three months ago and arranged everything with the ne groes, and this man was to receive the commissions, and the money was to he let to the negroes later. He told the negroes elj:- mO'zwoOGo ? \ ? ? H.MU l lie UliKriH'h it WtHll iD (UOfl II i ho North some time ago and loft $50,000,000 t<> be loanod to the negroes at 5 per cent interest, but the/ were to pay as a matter of good faith so much money down before tho money could he gotten, according to their rtiting, according to the property they had. some paying $13.25. $20, $30 and $50. He was Just about ready to receive their money when Officer Lane and Policeman Kooa arrested htm. He is being tried now before Magistrate Culberson, at Cross Hill. He was at a negro church Tuesday, and it is said took in a good deal of money frem the negroes. The man had an appointment Thursday at a large negro church some live miles from Cross Hill, where he would doubtless hove gotten more money, km the uegroea are "well to do." I WAVTKl* TO HK.VH TOKFKIK). ! Hut It Kenulted it) (lie l>4\it(.h of m Farmer Nearby. The Louisville and Nashville raitj road agent at lOlkmont, Ala., placed a target torpedo on the track SaturI day afternoon," Just to hear it ?x? plodo." A passenger train, southI hond. exploded the torpedo. T. W. \\'? 11a, well known fanner of Do[' atiir county, was waiting for the j'r in to go home when the. torpedo Is'ruek hltn near the heart, killing him iriRtantly. The agent who plar. (1 the torpedo on the track ww n"?t ;Injured. ~ - eminently Mr tl raham opened a printing establishment of hiH own at No 2 6 Frankfort street, New York Me has lived in Hayonne more 'han thirtv yearn and has held nearly every ottice within the gift ot that city These includ?? terin? as sch?o] t riivil A/i .^finnoUmori o/\?n 1 a. ...... ..XV, v v.- ..v .. ....... , I'l'im V MLIllllli*jsloner health ooiMmtssioner and Jusit Ice of the peace lie is now ero* ployed In the signal department at i police headquarters Among the countless incidents J which made his Southern visit deilightful to him Mr f?raliara says ; nothing pleased him more than a greeting he received from seven ;l?o?utifnl young .Southern women, 'who welcomed him with the cry: "There'r our Uncle Sarn! To hie delighted surprise he found that they wore all neic?tt. | Mr Graham Is still In excellent h.utlfh and does not appear to b* j within a decade of tho ajC* of 80. ; to which ho confesses. H? is on# j of tho heat known and most popoUu i ?>*ddeuts of Bayonnc *