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dSt-rVo
THE
Rj JOHN Ii. GLENN.
PROGRESS
DBVOTBD TO TUB MINING, A OHICUL TURAL AND EDUCATIONAL INTERESTS OB CLEVELAND, WUTTB COUNTY AND NORTH-
North Georgia
Dahlonega, Georgia.
Pol’ Full
Particulars,
Write For Catalogue.
He Deprecates the Merciless War Upon
the Ciiarhcter ot Dead Men
4ii<) l>ni|>s into n Itoniiiilscont Vein
hile Lnuillug Those done Before,
A. II. HENDERSON,
Mnn-gcr.
J. W. H. UNDERWOOD,
Attorney and Abstractor.
&
Real Estate Agents,
CLEVELAND, CA.
Will Buy and Sell Mineral, Timber and
Agricultural lands in White and adjoin
ing counties, guaranteeing the title to all
properties sold.
Will negotiate sales for reasonable
commission. All properties entrusted to
to us for sale will receive a liberal ad
vertisement.
Parties having Real Estate for sale
will do well to to call on or write us,
&
LOGAN & SON,
MANUFAC1URER8 OF
Buggies and Wagons,
< LKVELANO, GEORGIA.
Horststaii aii RepaW® My aai Cheaply Execated,
Sash, Doors and Blinds!
CLARK, BELL & CO.,
-Manufacturers and Dealers ill-
Sash, Doors, Blinds,
Mouldings, Brackets.
SHIHTGUjHS and LUMBHR.
Also SEWER and DRAIN PIPE. Prices as low ss tho lowest. Satisfaction
guaranteed.
CLARK, BELL & CO., Gainesville, Ga.
THE PEERLESS EXTENSION TABLE.
nns is not tile timo of tho VCir for tho dog
(Irvn. but the ma'ignnnt sUr o lied Sirius soents
t ■ li. in tho nsemdnnt. Kota'-lo tncti aro dying
aJ 1 • It nt amt iiotriile pieatthoisaed editors aro
eriUirning them with eaus lo pons, and other
eaustie pctis lit’■ going for tho critics, and out-
n iris liavo cotno into the fray and aio limiting
Rhoncd to flud i ut ivho atruiji Hilly Patlorsou
and thev arc nit raking under tho mudsills o
character and filling the newspapers with
tr luinalton and lecriminntion. Well, I titiuk
that some of them have wed most too much
languago on Juy Cloud and lien llnthlatirl
President Hayes, consider ng tliat they are dead
and can t flglit l ack, bin 1 reckon they did it
With goeil intuition as a warning to tlie'livi
and, if their real tins outdone their charily, wo
will have to overlook it, and not go to damning
them bocaltro they u; mbhm others. I have
great rosptot for Dana and itmv llorno amt
Caudlcr and the editor of the Nashville Aim-ri-
ioant I have too much icgaid for their fri n !s
and fotiowern to make war upon them, and I
wiali the country was chock full of such zealous
mm such sentinels on tliowaleh towi la whose
grand absorbing idea is the preservation of (Ir
public morals.
I iianncoy Depnv told n good slory about ttie
old ipirittnil s; who died and his tiabors thoifhl
he ought lo have a decent Christian burial, and
so they got an old village preacher to i fliria'o
and he pravo 1 nt the open grave in d tung a
hymn, and then was making a fuv swapsti eiie
remarks about tho unecriaintv of fire and lie
duty of preparing for dcaih, ni'd ,o forth, when
suddenly the bereaved widow, who was a ,n;i p
tiallst, too, rose forward and » cl: “Hton—Bt. i
right now, Mr, Johnson. I’ve Just, had a com
munication fiom my deceased hush ,ml in do
ooffln there, and he ravs von aro t il old foo
and everything y. u have said is a ho.’'
Tho good old pn ache r was set lack and cm
borrassod for a moment, and his -retie nunhl. d
and his eyes got watery an lie a,id: “Mv
friends, I liavo been pi caching the go pol fc’r
forty years, week in an I week out, an I I Imv
helped to bury most every man, woman and
child who has die d in thin "c-lilcmi-nl, hut this
Is the first time in ull my life that I nss evei
sassed by a cotpsc—and now von ninv throw in
the dire, for l’nt done.’’
Well, I don't think that a cornse Is instill d
in sassing tlioproneher, nor should the preach t
saas the cotpsc 1 , especially when be coitsels
not a spiritualist and can’t light hack. It's I ad
enough to saw tho living, c H| eciallv tvl etc tl..
saaseo hasn't got any newspaper. Ifivi-ivnn.i
had a nowspsprr, I reckon 11 ; <- editors would be
more careful who they htntpooiicd, and it wmiM
boa good law to make every editor give an
open column in his paper for the r. plies oI
their victims Nobody ought lo suss inmlm
behind fortifications,whether it he a pulpit or
editor's chair, or a lawyer's lieu te e 1 or a pee li
coat, I leave heard lawyers be turnu hi.ri lotn-
poon and soandulizc putlie s anil witne-ns tie
tho court to ;n ami say things thev woiildont
dsro to say (tit of of it, attel it is a wonder lo
me that they don't gi t passed hack with a Hticie
ofti tier than they ile. Many of (Item otoss.ox
amine a witness upon the presumption that lie
came there to tell a lie, and they will twist h m
ami turn him anil make him till one if :hcv
can, and if they can't then liny will tell a lie
oil tho witness in tltcar. mneut of 'in. case.
Public sasa behind tinh<- fortifi-s intis is Inst
as hail 18 private- aiaiidir. '1 he Do ii<’ireei c..un-
tryman feels helple ss, hut I o ha in t i lw ,. |, H
wrath, and all he can do is in my, “Vmj lust
come out of the corporation lines'and I'll li li
you.”
1 was ruminating about tills when tlio sad
news of Justice Lamar's e e ttlle canto ever (lie
wired. Th*ro WI H a innili 1 man, a got til man a
scholar, a hero and, wilhitl, as inrnb'c as a wo-
man. What southern man hut him could or
would liavo pronounced un eulogy on ( buries
Sumner, all e ulogy in iliqitcnl. so touching,
that rot-a 11*10 it electrified tho tm ion, and
iltil much to t ea ore peaen alid harmony be
tween tlic north and the south. He wees a grand
broad man. and breathe e t Ii nentospl o e higlior
and purer than meat of us. The treat men of
the nation wore ilia ft iends anil ailrn rcr . I sup
pose there is no (pics i- ns bout where his spirit
is, and that even lhoagiu-st cs will save '-yes
if there is a heaven to which liter gor'd spirits
go Mr. Lamar's is there.” No malignant shaft
will bo hurled at him tr. m pre.s or pulpit.
How tnUch better for a iiisti to live tint. way.
How much more honored la his memory than
that of Ge.uld or Untie re r Hayc-. 1 know Heat
Georgia is proud of having given birth and
education to Justico Lamar Kmory college is
proud of having I ecu Ids alum iitnler. Georgia
la proud of ltia nohlo tailor and of his Uncle
Mirabcau Lamar, the hem of Kan Jacinto and
tho president of Te xas. Mm is proud or Judge
Longstrcot,whose daughter Justice Lamar mar
ried, anil of Judge Longs I reel’s father, wha
waa the first inventor of propelling boats by
Bioam power, and did actually have a boat on
tho Savannah river before Fulton hail one on
tho Hudson, trim Is proud of all these Lamars
and all tire Longslreets, including “Old Polo,”
whom our veterans loved >n<! followed to tho
bitter end.
Tito J,Dinars were of Huguenot ancestry, and
I would ask no nobler pedigree than that. The
10,000 French exiles wfeo settled in Charleston,
UI el nearly as many more in Savannah and tho
interior, gave chaiacter to the society of thoao
cities that they leave never loaf. Character for
truih, justice, integrity, courage and honor;
what names wero more honored in our south
land than tho Bayards, Bacots, Duprees, Du
boses, Gailliards, Hugers, Legs rite, Lawrences
Marions, Mauigattlls, Porchers, itaTenelB and
- Tl "
rants, Tho descendants of these Hague-
■ots now Deck tho Jana, and, wnerever they
havo intermarried, tho blood and the honor of
their aim* stora havo been mainWiinwL Justico
Isiimar never forgot that ho wuh a Huguenot,
and that his ancestors were baptized in the fire*
of nwrsccution because of their Protestant faith.
I be]ii vo in Wood-in bloodr d stook—whether
it be in ma n or benst, but I bare no patience
wuh a man who bos nothing else to boost of.
I know many men who sprang from very hum
ble parentage and have made their way to the
front unaided and with no family influence.
Such men command respect everywhere, but,
Ftill it is a comfort to any man to have a noble
ancestry, and it is an iiicintive to him to do
right and keen up the family record. If he
fails or falls, he has scandalized the pedigree
and becomes a scrub.
Speaking of ancestors, it is most astonishing
how little wo know of them. My children have
of late been trying to make up a family tree
and I was asbamed that I could tell them so
little. I could go book two generations on the
paternal side and then bad to skip over to a
Kalem newspaner of 1775 that is in the family
and it had thirty-six coffins pictured on the
margin across the top, and every coffin had a
name and tho nanus wero of 1 ho volunteers
who fell at the battle of Concord. Ono of them
1T ’ RMo knows it
yet. 8he loves to tell her children about her
§ ran dim, who was Hines Hob an d hor grand-
la who- was l'olly Hplt^hd how princoly thev
lived at the Cowpr ns m YValton county, and
how many splendid boys and beautiful girln
they raised, ami how they, once lived in Etfton-
tgn and their children grew up ntul married tho
erenm of the land and settlcjUu Macon, Colum
bus and Talbotton and Tusl#geeHnd MontRom
cry, and how tho Holts we^ kin to Dixon H
Lewis and Boling Hall and ejfcr so many more
etc., etc. •
Well, ns the glils Wereup the family
tree, and putt ng everyffciflPfcwu m black and
white, they asked their mother for tho maiden
name of her grandmother H^h. “Her name
wsaJPolly Dixon Reward,” Ihe said. “Ativ kin
to William H. Howard suTd 1. Bald
emphatical y. “Ho taught school in Eatonton
ubcht that time," said I, "and I dident know
but wlmt they might have been relabel.” No,
indeed,” said she, “my ginndmoT.tr Holt was
Just tho best woman in tho-\u rid, and cverv-
bodv loved her.”
Well, tho girls kopt writing ull ov. r the coun
try, niul fhia ly they not a copy of tho i coord in
the oil Holt family Bib’c, that is still in tho
Holt fajpi y at* Columbus, end ilicro it was
In the liana-writing of the old Ri.ooHtor:
“I mnrrlcil Polly Dixon Seward, in Eatonton,
Ga. Bhe was a daughter of Samuel H. Seward,
and her mother was a Miss Jennings.”
'1 he girls then turned to Appleton’s biogra
phy to rim down il o Sewards of Georgia, but
found nothing, t o they lend’ up ( n William
II. Howard, found where he taught school i»»
Eatonton, and how his son William It. Bownrd,
Jr., was now a w< althy banker at Auburn N. Y.,
Rndbeforenhylioiiy kmw.it, they had writli r
^jfhitn for lug codigree, and hwroto back a
moo friendly letter and sentthema printed
book that said liis grandfather was Samuel P.
Reward, nnd his grandmother wns a Jennings.
Well, ir tlm( don’t mnke my wire’s granamoiiier
a sister of Williani'H. Seward,rivlrat’a the reason.
I’m having high old fun now', for, you see, I’ve
been sorter overshadowed about this pedigreo
business. It was never thrown up to mo that
1 wns a yankor—not exactly—but I had boon
one some timo, or my falser was, nnd tho
South Carolina stock had sorter redeemed mo.
At all events it was never intimated that my
folks woi'o as good as the Holts, nnd I have al
ways encouraged my children to hold up tho
family blood, which was tho Holts, nnd I gener
ally claim kin with all the Holts I come ncrots
from Virginia to Texas. But now theso inves
tigating girls havo run their mother’s pedigree
right sQuaroym, to William H. Seward’s father
another full-blooded yankee, and this thing
baa been smothored and kept from mo for forty
tour years. The littlo book say s that old Samuel
Reward was a slavo owner, nnd lmd a most
faithful servant whoso name was Cliloo. Well,
that's a)1 right my wife’s mother had a slave
named Chloe, and she is in tho family yet, and
I reckon is a grand daughter of the other ono,
The little book says that William IT. Seward
taught solioo 1 six months nnd then wont back
to UuiBli bis college course} but. old Eatontu
pooplo told mo ho fell iu love with a Georgi
girl and she kicked him, nnd ho went back n
jeeted niul dejected. But it stems that his aii
ter, who came with him I reckon, captured a
Georgia boy, and there never was a happier un
ion. So it is according todovo andiBO)ipturo: “Ono
shall bo taken and tho other left, nnd I’m
proud that I he blood of old Hnmnel Howard and
of Colonel Jennings is in my children’s veins
for they wero not only slave owm rs, but wit
fighting atock in tho revolutionary war, and
that lets my girls in among the Daughters
of tho Iti volution and of course, into first-ch
society.
Wo aro about even now—me and my wife on
ancestry-half ynnkeeg nil round. I’m holding
my head up and am calm and serene, blit if
anybody asks you what, Mrs. Arp says about
Mioho unexpected proceedings, please toll them
that you don’t know.—Bill Aitv,' in Atlanta
Constitution.
STEEL PRODUCTION.
Billelln of Amci'tcnn Iron anil Steel
Association.
A Philnilelphin dispato'i of Thursday
says: The Inilletiu ol tho Am ricun Iron
and Steel association presents Oomplet*
statistics of thu production of Bossetn
steel ingots attel of tho Hess: mcr steel
rails of all welghifl and sections in tho
United Bt ites in 1802, except cunpaia
tively thu small quantity of fiti's made l.y
other manufacturers from purchased
blooms.
In tho statistics ingots itru Included in
the production of a few clnpp— Qiiffitits
& Robert liussemcr plants, and alset tho
production of steel castings.
Total produitlun of Bessemer s'ccl it
gots lor 1802 is 4,100,082 gross ton
for 1801, 0,247,417 gloss too-. The t
tal production of Bessemer steel ingots
in 1880, the year of the largest produc
tiou prior to 1802. wns 0,(188,871 gro-.e
ions, which was 472,101 toils less titan
iu 1802. Tho total product of Bessemer
steel rails in 1802 with tho exc ption
above noted, wan 1,488,847 gross tons,
an incre so of 210,1)50 gross tons over
production in 1801.
PARADING THEIR POVERTY
Reforo (lie Lords nnd (,'otnmonors of
England’s Parliament.
A London cablegram says: About two
hundred and llfty wretched looking vic
tims of poverty nnd privation gathered
on Towir Hill Tuesday morning and re
solved to make a display of their rugs
and misery before the lords and com
moners in parliament. Tho mob had no
settled plan of procedure; they wore too
hungry for that, hut one and all they
starteei in tho direction of tho parlia
ment homes.
It was a pitiful procession and excit
ed tho sympathy und surprise of tho
spectators. The police at first did not
interfere, thinking that the gathering
would disperse very soon; but when it
became apparent that tho famine-strick
en wretches really meant to make n scene
before parliament, tho police dispersed
them.
BLAZE IN AN INSANE ASYLUM
A BOX OF TABLE LEAVES IS NOT AN ORNAMENTAL PIECE OF
** FURNITURE FOR ANY DINING-ROOM; AND IF PLACED IN
SOME CLOSET, THERE IS ALWAYS MORE OR LESS TROUBLE IN
GETTING AT IT. AVOID ALL BOTHER BY GETTING A " PEERLES8 ”
TABLE IN WHICH THE LEAVES ARE CRATED.
Nothing to Wear Out or get Out of Order.
The oftener used the easier it work*. Aak your dealer for it or write ua for prices.
We can suit your pocket-book.
THE HILLSDALE MFO. CO.,
HILLSDALE, MICH.
Otct Six IInndied Insane Patients in
the Building but all Escnpe.
A Chicago special says: Fire broke
out Tuesday morning in the engine room
of the insane asylum at Dunning, about
wero of tlio volunteers | twelve miles from tho city. There wore
hM 0 mvff(’w. ^ attl ° of C . 0,,c0r< h 0n<i of them , 800 insane patients in the institution
or hia uncle, and so m^daughtore haven't ' Fir , e COm '>“ nie . S were . ^ the city
exactly certain whether they could slip in among anc * neighboring suburbs, but were un-
tim n.n.hi™ „/ o,. able to accomplish much, owing to the
fact that little or no water was available
f- r fighting the fire. The wind blew
directly away from the main building and
saved that part of the institution, but tho
tlio Daughters ot the Revolution or not You
aeo it is stylish now, and a big thing in aociety-
nut, somehow, I never took much stock in it
Lo bo a Confederate veteran was honor
enough for me. You see, mv
father was a full-blooded yankee, anil
came south when he was a young man and
taught rchool, and never went back to Massa
chusetts. He morried a native of Cbarlerion.
S. C-, ana frotn'tfiat union I sprang, which
made mo high-tempered. My mother waa .
Bootch-irish, and her father, an exile from the
persecution that followed the deaeh of Emmet- I
hut that is ail that I know about myself. ’. i f ,
But when I come to tho maternal side, which
is my wife’s, I come to quality people, for my
wife’B mother was a Holt, and they wero blood
ed stock. Considering that I was about half
an Irishman and half .a yankee, I don’t know
how I ever got into the Holt family. But I did
and it wasent very hard work cither; she was as
willing as I was. Her good old father, Judge
Hutchins, was one of theso self-made men, and
dident have a very long line of notable ance*.
tors, but the Holts had lands and negroes and
and carriages and silverware and gold watches
and gold-lit eded canes and pedigrees from away
engine room containing tho boilers and
ilyamos used for heating and lighting
the institutionwas completely destroyed.
A POWDER EXPLOSION.
Five Kegs Blow Up in it Mine and
Injure Forty Men.
Five kegs of blasting powder explod
ed Tuesday morning in the Star coal
mines at Cooksvillo, Ohio. Forty men
at work iu the mine were all knocked
no'.vn. Two fatally burned. One man,
standing at the mouth of the mine was
blown fifty feet und badly burned. Many
others were hurt. Tho force of tho ex
plosion was felt three miles.
Bengal fur is all tho stylo.
Fichus are grontly in voguo for din
nor.
Tho newest wraps are tnado with
sloevcs.
Tlioro is a now fur collar with muff
nttachod.
Airs. Loaso, the Kansas political
lender, writes poetry.
Several women in Holland earn a live
lihood ns practicing chemists.
Tlio Woman’s Collogo of Baltimore
has over 600 students this season.
The yenr 1892 was rotnarkablo for tho
number of international marriages.
When a rnembor ol tho Prussian Royal
Family is married tlio “outfit” Is paid by
tho State.
Airs. Talraage, wife of tho famous
divino, wears a Russian sable cloak down
to hor feot.
Tho ex-Eatpress Eugone, of France,
devotes two or throo hours of cacli dny
to writing hor memoirs.
Tho first toriu of tho Woman's Col
logo counoctod with tho Brown Uni-
versity has boeu n success.
Both Grook nud Roman ladies painted
their faces, for white using whito load,
for red tho juice of an unknown horb.
Tho Duchoss of Portland is tho only
woman who ovor had a dross mado and
sowed on her person whilo she stood up
right.
Miss Coralie Quay, daughter of tho
Pennsylvania Seuator, is ono of tho
bright young womon of Washington
aociety.
Alias Parker, of New Alexico, runs a
tolegraph ollice, two express companies,
a railroad olllco, a ranch, and keeps hor
hair combed neatly.
Fivo of Vassar's aiuinn® aro taking
post-graduate courses at Yale, two at tho
University of Chicago, ono at Ann
Arbor nnd ono nt Loipsio.
Mrs. Whitolaw Reid will soon bo the
possessot; of ono of tho largest diamonds
iu tho world. It Is now botng cut for
hor by a famous Dutch lapidary.
Miss Sadio Boyd, of Ohoyenno,
Wyoming, and a student at tho Denver
(Ool.) University, traveled 110 miles at
the recent election to cast her first bal
lot.
Mrs. Cleveland has a wondorful old
Puritan rag carpot ol whito and blue,
which is over 100 yoars old. She
always has it with her; it is used iu her
boudoir.
Among the debutantos in Washington
this season will bo daughters of Chief
Justice Fuller, Justico Brower, Senator
Brice aud tho Brazilian Alinistcr, Sonor
Mendonca.
Mrs. Mary Sheldon Barnes, wife ol
Professor Earl Barnes, of tho chair ol
education in tho Leland Univorsity, ii
assistant professor of modern history in
thu same institution.
Mmo. Yo, wife of tho Coroan Minister
at Washington, undertook to losru
Freuoh for conversational purposos, but
has given it up, being uuahle to pro
nounco the nasal soundB.
Mrs. Dopow is, in sotno respects, the
opposite of her witty husband. Blto
has a serious fuco, big black eyes, long,
straight features and a low, sweat voice.
Her favorite colors aro garnet and
mauve.
Tho Queen of tho Belgians has just
ordered two or three phonographs, the
purposo of which is to record her
mnjosty’s extempore compositions on the
piano. Bhe is a very good hand at this
sort of work.
Miss Foster, daughter of tlio Secretary
of tho Treasury, lias great ability as a
decorator of chiua, in which branch of
art she has attained such proficiency as
to warrant tho building of a kiln at hor
own house in Ohio.
Tho New York City Chapter of the
Daughters of tho Revolution are getting
up a fund for tho statue of Washmgtou
for Franco. Tho act is in recognition
of France’s gift to us of the Liberty
Statue nnd the statue of Lafayette.
Tho Archduchess AInrio Theresa, sis
ter-in-law of tho Emperor of Austria, is
about to found at Meran an opbthaiinio
hospital, whore the patients will bo
treated by her brother-in-law, Duke
Charles Thoodorc of Bavaria, during his
spring residence thero.
At tllfe last mooting of the Board of
Trustcos of Colgate Univorsity, Utica,
N. Y-, hold in New York City, it was
decided to admit women as students in
that institution. It was also docidod to
build a gymnasium modeled after that
of Cornell University.
Mmo. Mondouca, wife of tho Brazilian
Minister, is ono of tho most agreeable
hostesses in tho diplomatic corps at
Washington, and is ably supplemented
in her duties by her daughters. Mine.
Mondonea has the typical Spanish typo
of beauty strongly developed.
The Duchess of Tecic has contributed
no less than 2600 articles of clothing for
the poor to tho London Noodlowork
Guild during the year. Wncn some ono
remarked upon her untiring energy, tho
royal lady said, with hor cheerful smile,
“Yes, the people ought to bo fond of
os, for wo do work hard for them.”
Tho famous Bryn Mawr school, near
Philadelphia, has for its medical direc
tor a lady, Dr. Kato Campbell Hurd,
who is the daughter of o physician, and
after her college course had practical ex
perience in hospital and dispensary in
Boston, then took up athletics undor
Professor Sargent, and finally visited
England, France, Germany and Scandi
navia to study her specialties still
further.
AWAITING ORDfRS.
A Win
Vessel*, with Slenm Up, Heady
to Still for ltinvr.ii.
A Sm Francisco special S iy«: A tlb-
puteh fiom Ainrn sand Tuesday n’ter-
tioon B:,ys the H.n-gur ami Adams
are now lying in tho stremn, steam
up, both Imvit-g tlicit- complements
of men, stores a- d ammunition
aboard and re.-.tly to proem d to s-a
only awaiting orders from \V shingtmi’
lie Mont-rey art ivcil during tie morn ■
ittg nud «ill lie ready t-> go into contitits-
cion ill two days. Men arc swarming on
her to push her lo completion. The old
m niter Comanche will ha reittlr f-r nst
inside ot a week. A. full force of tnnr
tire working on her.
IT IS NOW SENATOR LINDSAY.
Kentucky Semis Him to Washington
as Carlisle’s Successor.
A dispnch of Monday frrm Frankfort,
Ky., says: Judgo William Lindsay will
ho Rent to Washington as tho successor
of Senator J. G. Carlisle. Tho new sena
tor is almost ns largo as David Davia.
Ho is a typical Kentuckian in manners
anil appearance nud ultout 65 years cf
ng-’, a lawyer by profession, served on the
state supremo bench nud has been for
years a state senator as well as Kentucky’s
cotnmi-sioncr to tho World’s Fair. Four
months ago President Harrison tendered
it m the position of interstate commerce
commissioner, an office which lio declined.
SEVENTH DAY EVANGELISTS
Assemble in Convention at Battle
Creek, Michigan.
The Seventh Diy Evangelist Ministers’
institute began a three weeks’ session nt
Battle Creek, Mich., Monday. Over 600
ministers, representing nearly every por
tion of America, South Africa, England,
Austria aud tho Scandinavian -countries
were on hand.
Morloy’s Heirs tViu.
A London cablegram says: A verdict
wns rendered in tlio Morley-Longbnm
case Friday, awarding the plaintiffs
£140,000. Thu defendants wero ordered
to pay tlio costs. Tho judgo before whom
tlio case was tried declared tho amount
of m.mey sued for had been obtained by
tlio Longhttms from Henry Aiorley by un
due influence, which he ex- raised under
tho cloak of religion,
January Debt Statement.
ilte debt statement for January allows
dccrettso in the cash in the treasury
during tlio month of about, £3,(100,000,
making the net cash about $20,000,000,
against $20,000,000 on the first day of
January 1802. This decrease is account
ed for largely by the fact that $7,250,-
I'OO was paid during tlio month on the in
terest uccount.
Fruitless Balloting.
A Washington special of Tuesday
says: Thosuratorinl situation remains
unchanged in Wyoming, Washington,
Nebraska and Aioa'ann
NORTH GEORGIA
THE CUSHMAN m.!
ft
Ant!
f ROB FENCES,
-:ij Cemetery Idwres, jt-
Window Guards,
*—JAILS—*
AND
STRUCTURAL [RON.
*, Roanoke, Virginia.
Richmond, Virginia,
v | v # tk *
. , he Miller
Carriage and
Harness Co.
ur $45.50
Road Carriags.
Are now ready to supply tho wants of tho con
sumer with Carriages and Harness of every de
scription, nt prices that defy competition. Wo
lire the leaders. Lot those who can follow. Our
manufactures aro made to give perfect satisfac
tion and tho “ Miller ” guarantee stands good all
over the country. J'lniah, Workmanship,
Strength and Jieautu combine the “Miller”
work. Send for our illustrated Catalogue and
Price List giving you full particulars und Ideas
of our manufacture, to
MILLER CARRIAGE AND HARNESS GO.
St. Paul Building,
27 West 4th Street, Cincinnati, Ohio.
7B
BLOOMINGTON, ILL.
&
AT DAHLONEGA.
A branch of the State University
Bpring Term begins First Monday in FeJ-
ruary. Fall Term begins First
Monday in September.
Best school in tho south, for students with
limited means. Tho military training is
thorough, being under n U. S. Army officer,
detailed by tlioHeoratary of War.
Students are prepared and licensed to toaoh
in the public schools, by act of the legislature.
Lectures, on Agriculture and the Science*
by distinguished educators and scholars.
For health tho climato is unsurpassed.
Altitude 2237 feet.
Board $’.0 por month ami upwards. Messing
at lower rates.
Each senator and representative of tho state
is on titled and requested to appoint one pupil '
from his district or county, without paying 1
matriculation fee, during his term.
For catalog or information, address Socro- ;
tary or Treasurer, Board of Trustees.
Our No. 28 End Spring, with
Drop-Axle both front and rear,
Is the best looking and most
serviceable buggy made for the
money. Ask your dealer to
show the BLOOMINGTON
MFG. CO.’S line of Buggies,
Wagons and Carts, and buy
no other.
HKND FOR CATALOatJtt,
Advertise!
It Will
PAY YOU.
CLEVELAND HIGH SCHOOL,
. CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
Spring Term Begins January 2d, 1893. Fall Term
Begins July 10th, 1893.
Tiitioi in all Classes per Month, $1.00.
In connection with the Spring and Fall terms, will
he taught the terms of the public schools.
For further particulars call on or address
ALBERT BELL, Principal,
Or ERAS. W. MERRITT, Assistant.
Advertise
It will Pa