The Cleveland progress. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1892-1896, March 17, 1893, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THH 2 1hJOHSli. GLEN. PROGRESS. DEVOTED TO THE MINIEO, AGRICULTURAL ARD TONAL INTERESTS OF CLEVELAND, WHITE COUNTY AND NORTH EAST GEORGIA. TERMS:— One Hollar Ter Tear. VOL. IT. A. If. TIENDEBSON, Mon gcr. r—-r=snrrrr? CLEVELAND, WHITE ('OTNTY^U\f ERIDAY, MARCH IT, 189:1. ’ *ge4' NO. 11. J. W. II. UNDEUWOOI), Att< rn» y and Abstractor. Real Estate Agents, CLEVELAND, GA. 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 Beal Estate for sale will do well to to call on or write us, N LOGAN & SO MANUF.Vd I UIIKIIS OK Buggies and Wagons, CLEVELAND, GEOItGI A. Horsoshosius and Repairing Neatly and Cheaply Executed, THE PEERLESS EXTENSION TABLE. tPATHSTTBSJ 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 CETTINO AT IT. AVOID ALL BOTHER BY CETTINC A " PEERLESS" TABLE IN WHICH THE LEAVES ARE CRATED. Nothing to Wear Out or get Out of Order. The oftcncr uaed the easier it works. Ask your dealer for it or write us for pric We can suit your pocket-book. THE HILLSDALE MFG. CO. HILLSDALE, ^!SH. Are you interested in Harness? We claim to make the Best s£o* % Harness for the least money. We oniy re- quest a sample order. You will come again, ' SEND FOR PRICES. REV. m. TflLMflGF. The Brooklyn Divine's Sunday Sermon, ftobjohi: “From Twenty l»> Sev nty/’ Tienr: "Tfh» da its of our years are three score and ten ’’—Psalm xc., 10. The seventieth milestone Of lif^ Is her# planted as nt, the bflri ot the journey. A few go beyond il* multitu les never reach it. The oldest person of modern times expired at ICO veare, A Greek of the name of Strava- ride lived to 13d years. An Englishman o the name of Tnoinas Pai r live 1 l.VA rears. Before the time of Most* people bred l.Yi rears, and ir you go far cm u ;h back they lived oOO yeah."\ Well, that was ubcessm*'-, becfcUke tb© story of the xvih-ld must borne down by tradition; artd it hefcded 1ml: life tafely to transmit tli6 liews of the past. If the eanerutiubs hud been short lived, the Would so often have changed lips that it might have got all astray. Put after Moses begau to write it down and parchment told it irom century to cen tury it was not, n<'r.uf*saty tlldt pedpl4 live so long In tirdtn* to authenticate the events of the pu$t. if in our time people live 1 only twenty-live years, that would not affect his tory,since it is put in print and is no longar dependent, upon tradition. Whatever your nge, 1 will to-d y nircctlv address you. and 1 shall speak to those who are in the twen ties’, the thirties, the forties, tin flftle*, the hxtir.% and to those who ars* lit thO seven ties and heyolhh F.itd, then; l aboost thos? of you who iub in tht> twenties'. You are full of expec- tr t on. Yi u are ambition?-—that i-, if you amount to anything—for somg kind o2 .su.v meic al or mochauioal or profou nd tmw I or social or kioniiI or lit moral. It 1 find soi without any sort o saying. "Alv friend, wrong plauet, Thisi going to be i the entic 1 feel lilco you have got on the i not the world for you. you made your choice of ptorhouS m ver be able to pay for your *: -a l!«a IVno is going to sou in furyoUr boiro? There is a mirthko about the fact that you wore born hi nil,” Rut supposing you have ambition, let mo sny to nh the t wen tie : Exp-ct everything through divine manij illation; an l then you " ill get nil yon WAnfc or so nothing bettor. A rc y«-tt looking for wealthf Well, rem * n- ber that God c nitrols the mon?y m irkets, the Imrve.-ts, the drought-*, tlie caterpillar \ thy locusts, the suusuine, the storm, the land, the sea, an 1 you will get wealth. Per- ha s not that which is stored up in banks, in safu deposits, in Unito l States securities, in housts and lands, but, your clothing mil board and shelter, and that is about ad you can appropriate anyhow, Yoit cost the Lord a great deal. To fee l and cloth) and shelter for a lifetime lvquh A big mi n of money, mid if yoil get nothing more than the aosolutd necesBitiefi you got an enormous amount ot supply; Expect as much ns you will of any kind of hUcC'sh, R you exp.ct it from the Lord, you are safe. Depend on any other resource an l you may bo bn ily chagrined, but depot! 1 on God and all will bo we 1. It ih tv good thing in the crisis of life to have a nian of large mentis buck you up. It is a gr ufc tiling to have a moneyed institution stall l buliin l you in youn undertaking, bur, it is a might ier thing to have the God of heaven and earth your coadjutor, an l you may have Him. I am so glad that I meet you while you are m the twenties. You are laying our. your plans, and nil your life in this World and the next tor 600,1)00,000 yours of your existence will be affected by those plan?, it is about 8 o’clock in tin morning of voUr lif >, and you are just starting out. Which way are you going to start? Oil, the twen ties! wenly” is a great word in the Bibl All our Harness is Hand - m ado and Hand-sewed. Only the best Oak Leather used. Buy direct from the manufacturers and save two profits. Let us know what you jj want, we will make you a special price. jj Ail goods can be returned if not satisfactory Sash, Doors and Blinds! CLARK, BELL & CO., Manufacturers and D ab is in Sash, Doors, Blinds, Mouldings, Brackets. fiTTTTVQ-IjHS andL LUMBEH.. Also riKWEIl unrl DRAIN PIPE. Prices as low ,.s the lowest. ri.it it. faction guaranteed. CLARK, BELL & CO., Gainesville, Gn. Hiram ”0 cities, The flying roll that Zeclmriali bhw was 20 cubit*. When the sailors of tin ship oil which Paul sailed Bounded tin Mediterranean 8?a, ifc w.is 2) fathoms. Wlmt mighty things have bean done in the twxitied Itomului founded Rome when lie was 20. Kents linislio l life at 26. Lafayette wtw a world reii >wned soldier nt Lii. Obar.iu accjinplisho l his chief work by ‘.’7. Ronaparto was victor ov.-r Italy nt 2<i. Pitt was prime mini t.r of England at 22. Calvin had complete 1 his immortal “jiistltuoo.” by the time ha was 20. Grotim was attorney general at 2d. home of the mightiest things for Go 1 an 1 eternity have been done in the twenties. As long us you can put tho figure “2” before the other figure that helps du?oribj your uga I have high hopes about you. Look out for that figure “2.” Watch its continuum > with as inuc i earnestness as you over watched anything that promised your salva tion or threatened you demolition. Wlm a critical time, the twenties 1 Wnilethey con tinue you decide your occupation an l tile principles by which you will bo guided. You make your most abiding friendships. You arrange your home life. You fix your habits. Lord Goi Almighty, for Jems Christ’s su.;e, have mercy on all the men and women in the twenties 1 Next 1 accost those in the thirties. You nro at an age when you find what a tough thing it. is to get rccegni/.i I an l estabUs i d in your occupation or profession. Tun yours ago you thought nil that was nee *ssary for success was to put on your shatter the sign of physician or dentist,or attorney or broker or agent,and you woul l have plenty of busi ness? ilow many nones you s it an l w.tito 1 for business and waited in' vain three per- tons only knoa—God, your wife and yourself. In o > nmarcinl life you h ive not; Im I the promotion an l tli j increase iu salary you anticipated, or the place you expected to o cupy in the firm has not basil vacated. Tne produce of tho farm, with which you expected to support yourself and those de- pen l.ng on you, and to pay the interest on the mortgage, has been fur les? than you anticipated, or the prices were down, or spe cial expenses for sickness made drafts on your resources that you could not have ex pected. In some respects tho liar lest doaado of life is the thirties, became the results are generally so far behind the anticipations. It fs very rare indeed that a young man do33 as did the young man last Hun lay night, when he came to me and aald; “I hava barm go marvelously prospered since 1 came to this country that I feel, as a matter of gratitude, that I ought to dedicate myself to Go 1.” Nine-tenths or tho poetry of life has been knocked out of you since you came into ili9 thirties. Men in the different pro- id the f t on wh ? fli> pubtiiU Mr. i greatest, time < , in God’s na i ifc tho groato F is for all tli »s * i butfcfrtff fl,. you will m figure “3.” As ifc i the struggle, I adjui an 1 by God’s grae?, neh'evement. My prt the tremenious crises MNtlio tiilrf fne« fa tlldt by tile vVa*^rcd drtgldo the pros- ent decAdc i’f ydllr History ydd ddaid alt the following deca leg. When I W08 iu Russia T was disappointo I In not seeing the battlefield of Haro lino. Why was there fought such a battle at. tha* small villng* ? Ifc was TO. wlies fyotn Mo onv. Whv tllflt dCspafatj stru; »le, in which 135,- 0).) Frenchmen crippled with Id),000 Ku - «i ms, and 3),0 )0 dead Frenchman and 53,000 dead Russians ware left, on the field? It was because the fate of Moscow, tho sacre l city of Russia, was decided there—decided TO miles away. And let me toll you, people of the thirties, foa rtrd UdvT at the Herd lino, whence Mil resound itfl successes or its moral (ilsasters clear on into tho seventies if you live tp tho jihredsedre rtbd tonmf the text. Next t accost tUo fortjb?!. Y ours is the de cade or discovery. 1 do not mead the dis covery of tho oiltside; but the discovery of yourself. No man kno\V3 himself until he is40. He overestimates or underestimates himself. By that time ho has learned wlmt ue can do or what ho cannot do. lie thought he had OdtUmercial genio* enough to become a millionaire;but now ho'is satisfied to make a comfortable living. He thought ho had rhetorical power that woul l bring him into the United States senate, now ho is content if ho can successfully argue a common case before a petit jury. Ho thought he had medical skill that would make htm a Mott or a Grosso or a Willard Fai'ker ora Sims? naif he flu is his sphere is Unit df d family ^hysiciaU; pro scribing for the ordinary ailments that af flict our race. He was silling on iu a fog and could not take a reckoning, but now it clears up enough to allow him to And out his real latitude and longitude. Ho has been climbing, but now ho lias got to tho top of tho hill, and ho takes a long breath. Ho is half way through the journey at least, and ho is in a position to look backward or for ward. He has more good sense than he ever had. Ho knows human nature, l’or he has boen cheated often enough to an the bad side of its and lie has Met so many gracious and kindly and spleudl 1 souls ho also knows the good sido of it% Now ea m yoursjlf. Thank God for tho past mid deliberately 8<*t your dontpAs* for another voyage. You have chased enough thistledown. You lmVo blown enough soap bubbles. You have scon tho unsatisfying nature of all earthly things. Upon a n nv chapter with God an l the world. This da- cado o.’the forties ought to eclipse all its predecessors in worship, in usefulness an 1 in lnp hue s. “Forty” is a great word in tho Biule. Go 1’s ancient people were 4 ) yean in tho wil ierness. Ell judged Israel 40 year?. David and Solomon and Jehoash ivi.gned 40 years. Waen Joseph visited his broMie»t ho was 40 years old. Oh, this mountain top of the fortiesi You have now the character you will probably ..ave for all time artd all eternity. God, by His grace* EO.uetinles changes a mail after the forties, but after that a man never changes hiniself, Tell me, oil men and w >men who are in the forties, your habits of thought an l life, and I will tell you what voii will forever be. I May make a mistake once in a thousand times, blit not more than in that proportion. My sermon next accosts tho fifties. How queer it looks when In writ- t your ago you make the flr.sb of the two figures a “5.” ihia is tho decade which shows what tho other decades have been. If a young man lias sown wild oats and ho has lived to this time, ho reaps the harvest of ifc in tha fifties, or if by necessity ho was Qouipolle l to over toil in honest; directions he is civile l to settle up with exacting nature soni i time during tho llftieH. Many have it so hard iu early life that they ura octogenarians at 50. Hclatlcas an l rheumatisms and neuralgias and vortigos t insomnias have their playground in tire Joseph was sold for 20 pieces of silver. Bam- lilties. A man’s hair begins to whiten, and, son Judged Israel 30 years. Bolom m gave although ho may have worn spectacles be fore, now he asks tho optician for No. 14 or No. 13 or No. 10. When he gets a cough and is almost cured, he hacks and clears liis throat a good while afterward. Oh, ye who ure In the fifties, think of it! A half century of blessing to be thankful for, an 1 it half century subtracted from an oXistonce which in the most marko 1 cases of longevity Imrdly ever roaches a whole century . By this time you ought to bo eminent for piety. You have been in ho many battles you ought to bu a brave soldier. You have made so many voyages you ought to be a good Bailor. Bo long protected and blessed you might to have a soul full of doxalogy. in Biblo times in Canaan every 60years was by God’s command u year of jubilee. The people did not work that year. If property ha I by misfortune gone out of one’r. posses sion on the fiftieth year it came back to him. If ho had fooled it away, it was returned without a farthing to pay. Jf a man had been enslaved, ho was in that year emancipated, A trumpet was sounded loud and clear an l long, and it was the trumpet of jubilee. They shook bauds, they laughed, they congratulated. Wimt a time it w/i.s, that fiftieth yoarl And if under the old dispensation it was such a glad time, under our new and moro glorious dispensa tion lot all who have come to the fifties hoar the trumpet of jubilee that I now blow. That was tho allusion made by Air. Toplady, the great hymnologisfc, when no wrote; Dlovr yo tho trumpet, blow Tho kindly solemn sound; Lot all the nations know, To earth's remotest bound, The year of Jublloo Is come. Return ye ruusomod sinner* homo. Yo who have sold for naught Vour heritage above Shull have It Inclc unbought— The gift of JeriUH’s love. Tne year of Jubilee has come. Return yo lausomed sinners name. My sermon next accosts the sixties. Tha beginning of that decade is moro startling than any other. In his chronological jour ney the man rides rathor smoothly over the figures “3” and “3” and ‘T” and “5,” but the figure “6” gives him a big jolt. lie says: “It cannot be that I ami)). Let me ex amine tin old family record. 1 guoss they made a mistake. They got my name down wrong in the roil of births.” But, no; the older brothers or sisters remember tho time of his advent, an l there is Borne relative a year older, and another relative u year younger, and, sure enough, the fact is estab lished beyond all disputation. Hixtyl Now your great dangor is the temptation to fold up your faculties and quit. You will fool a tendency to reminisce* If you do not look out you will begiu al most everything with tho words, “when I ii-hm JUS and occupations saw that you were was a boy.” But you ought to make the rising and th y roust put an estoppel on you ! sixties more memorable for Hod and the YOULL APPRECIATE ™ STEARNS VVMEEL. SO EASY TO RUN s41moj>t runs its se/f. NONE. OF THAT TERRIBLE RATTLNG NOISE SO COMMON TO LAWN MOWER 5. And it 'cuts closely in filOli. TOUCH (MASS S ^i/^ a!r £.csmm 6; stand in the way. be suppressed. 30 to 4 t it is an eapeeially hard time for young doctors, young lawyers, young merchants, young farmers, young mechan ics, young ministers. The struggle of the : thirties is for honest and helpful and re munerative recognition. But. few old peo ple know how to treat young people without patronizing them on tho one nan l or Buub- r.ing them on tiie other Oj, the thirbiesl Joseph stoel before Pdaraod at 31 David was 30 years’old when he began to reign. The height of Solomon’s temple was 3 ) cu bits. Christ entered upon His active ministry at.30 year.? of age. Ju las sold hinunlf for 30 pieces of silver. Oh, the thirties! What a word suggestive of trmtnph or disaster! Your decade is the one that will probably afford the greatest opportunity for victory, because tnere is the greatest necessity for struggle. Head the world’s history an l know what are the thirties for gool or bad. Alexander the Great closed his career at 32. Frederick tiie Great made Europe trainable with his armies at 35. Cortes conquere 1 Mexico at 30. Grant fought Shiloh ahd Donetam when'K Raphael died at 37. Luther was the hero of tne reformation at 35. Sir 1 nilip byduoy got through by 32. ^ , . , The greatest deeds for Go l and against Hun were done within the thirtie*, an I your greatest battle? are now and between the time wuen you cease expressing your age by truth than the fifties, or tho forties, or the . thirties. You ought to do more ddring tho ' next ten years than you did iu any 30 years I of your life because of all tho experience i you have had. You have cornmitto i enough mistakes in life to make you wise above | your juniors. Now, under tho accumulated } light of your past exporimeating, go to work for God as never before. When a man in tho sixties folds U[> his energy cud feels he has doue enough, it is the devil of indolence to which ho is sur rendering, and God generally takes the man at, his word and lets him die right away. His brain, that uuder tho tension of hard work was active, now suddenly shrivels. Men, whether they retire from secular or religious work, generally retire to the grave. No well man has a right to retire. TLe world was made for work. There remalnefch a rest for tho people of God, but it is in a sphere beyond tho reach of telescopes. The military charge that decided one of tho greatest battles of the ages—the battle of Waterloo—was not made until 8 o’clock in the evening, but somo of you propose to go into camp at 2 c/clock in the afternoon. My subject next accosts tbosj in the seventies uud beyond. My word to them is congratulation. You have got nearly if not quite through. You have safely crossed too sea of life and are about to enter the harbor. You have fought at Gettysburg, and tne war is over. Here and there a skirmish with tho remaining sin of your own heart an I the sin of the world, but I guess you are about donp. i There muy bu ir.nc work for you yet on small or largo scale. Bismarck, i>T Germany, v gorous in tho olghtios. The prime minis ter of Kuglnnd strong at 84. Haydn com posing his oratorio, “The Creation',” at 7) years of age. Isocrates doing somo of jiis best Wcjrk dt 7*. Fiivto busy thinking for all succeeding Wilti^iesdtM: \Vflliam Blake nt 07 learning Italian, so as to 1 fead Ifittjte iu the original. Lord Cookbiirn! at 87 writing his best t:%,itise. John Weslev stirring groat audiences at 85. William C. Bryant, without spectacles, reading in my house “Thnnnto’pSis” til 83 yemv of a p?. Christian men find, vfromoii iu all de partments serving God after becoming septuagenarians and octogenarians and nonagenarians prove that thorn are possi bilities of work for the aged, but I think yon who are passed tho seventies are uoar being tUroUgll i How do you fool about it? You ought to bri jubilant; liadatl93 life is a tremcmtoUs struggle, aii l if you hrtvvi got through respectably and usefully you ought o feel likd people toward the close of a sum- ner day Seato t ou the t'dcka hatching the sunset at liar Harbor or Capa May or Look out Mountain. 1 am glad to say that most old Christians are cheerful. Daniel Webster visited John Adams a sh irb time before Itis death and found him in very infirm health. He said to Mr. Adams: “lam glad to seo you. I hope yoii ut’0 getting along pretty well?” The reply was: “Ah, sir, quite the contrary. 1 find I am n poor tenant neoUoyiug a home much shattered by time. It sways and trem bles with every wind, and what is worse, sir, tho landlord, as near as I can make out, does not intend to mako auy repairs.” Dr. Reman, after p issing into tho seven ties, was itskod by my frien 1, Rev. Dr, Spear, “Dr. Deiimd, jio\V is your health now?” an 1 horepliel. ,{ i hate on me an in curable disease.” 4< >Yhafc is that?” asked my l ricn i, and the septuagenarian replied, “Old ago.” Roth of tiie old moil I have mentioned intende l their retdarks for faaetlousiiess, and old people have aright to be facet ious. An u,;o I woman sent for her physician and told him of her ailments, and tho doctor said; “Want would you have mo do, madam? I cannot make you young again.” She replied: “1 kno.v that, doctor. Wlmt 1 want you to do is to help in) grow old ft little longer.” Tho young have their .troubles before them* The old have tluiir troubles behin l them; You have got about till out of this earth that fchevo is in ifc. Re glad that you, an aged servant of God, ure going to try an other 11 e and amid better surroundings. Stop looking back add look alien I. Oh, yo In tho seventies, mi l tho eighties, ami tiie nineties, your best d iys are yet to come; your gran lest associations are yet to be formed; your best eyesight is yet to bo kindled: your belt hearing D yet to be awaken > 1; your greatest speed is yet to lie traveled, your gladdest song is yofc to bo sung. The most of your friends have gone over tho border, and you are going to join them very soon. They are waiting for you; They are'’watching the golden snore to see you land. They tiro watching tho shining gate to see you come through. They uro stand ing by tho throne to seo you mount. What a gla l hour when you drop the staff and take ilia scepter; when you quit tho stiffened joints and bduomo an immortal athlete I But hoar! heart a remark partinonfc to all people whether In the twenties, tho thirties, the forties, tho fifties, tho sixties, tho seventies, or beyond. What we all need is to take the supernatural into our lives. Do not let us depend on brain and muscle and nerve. AYo want a mighty supply of tho supernatural. We want with us a di vine force mightier than the waters and the tempests, and when the Lord took two steps on bestormed Galilee, putting ouo Coot on tho winds and tho other on tho waves, He G raved Himself mightier than hurricane and illow. Wo want with us a divine force greater than tho liras, and when tho Lord cooled NobuoUadueezar’s furnace until Shad- rach, Meshach nud Abednogo did not oven have to fan thoiusolVos Ho prove 1 Himself mightier than tho fire. Wo want a divine force stronger than wild beust, and when tho Lord made Daniel a lion tamer He proved Himself stronger than the wrath of the jungles. There are so many diseases iu tho world wo want with us a di vine physician oapublo of combabiug ail ments, and our Lord when on earth showod what He cou’fl do with catalepsy and paraly sis ami ophthalmia and dementia. Oh, take this supernatural into all your livosl How to get it? Just ns you got anything you want—by application. If you want any thing, you apply for ifc. By prayer apply for tho supernatural. Take ifc into your daily business. Many u man has been able to pay only 50 oonts on tho dollar, who if ho had called in the super natural could have paid 101) cents on tho dollar. Why flo 98 men out of 109 fall in business? Because there are not more than two moil out of a hundred who take God in to their worldy affairs. “Behind, the great, unknown staiidoth God within the shadows ; keeping watch upon His own.” A man got up in a Now York prayer meet ing and said: 4 'God is my partner. 1 did business without Him for twenty years and tailed every two or throe years. I have I been doing business with Him for twenty ' years and have not failed once.” Oh, take | tho supernatural into all your affairs I I had such an evidence of tho goodness of God in temporal things when i entered active life I miiBt testify. Called to preach at lovely Belleville, in New Jersey, I entered upon my work. But there stood tho empty par sonage, and not a cent bad 1 with which to furnish it. After preaching throe or four weeks the ollicers of my church asked mo if I did not want to mice two or three weeks’ vacation. 1 said “Yes,” for I had preached about all I know, but 1 feared they must be getting tired of me. # When I returned to the village after the brief vacation, they haude 1 me the key of tho parsonage and asked me If I did not want to go and look at ifc. Not suspecting any thing bad happened, I put Die key into the parsonage door and opened it, and there was tho hall completely furnished with carpet and pictures and hatrack, and I turned into the parlors, and they were furnished, tho softest sofas l ever sat on, and into the study and found it furnished with book-oases, and 1 wont to tho bedrooms, and they worn fur nished, and into tho pantry, and that was furnished with every culinary article, and tho spiceboxo3 were filled, und a flour- barrel stood there ready to bo opened, and I went down into tho dining room, and the table was set and beautifully furnished, and into tho kitchen, and the stove was full of fuel, and a match lay on the top of tho stove, and all I had to do in starting house keeping was to strike the match. God in spired tho whole thing, and if I ever doubt His goodness, all up and down the world, call me uu ingrate. 1 testify that I have been in many tight plucos, a,lfl Hod always got me out, and He will got you out of tho tight places. But the most of this audience will never reach the eighties, or the seventies, or the sixties, or tho fifties, or tho forties. He who passes into tho forties has gone far beyond tho average of human life. Atuid the un certainties take God through Jesus Christ as your present and eternal safety. Tho longest lito is only a small fragment of tho great eternity. We will all of us soon be there. Kternltyl how near it rolls; Count die vast value of your goals. Beware and count tho awful coat What they have gained whoso goals are loaL TO IMPEACH THIS JUDGE. Another HonanUoit Sprung in Mi* Ten-* ursseo l.egialftture. A Nnshvilti) ffpeclnl 8ttya: Shelby county furnishod ariotfief eennation in tho shape of impeachment proceeding, ngainat tho judge of tho criminal cmirf, Julius ,1. Dubose, lion. John K. Good- \Vifi presented n memorial to (he house, eigned by 8,000 ollUen. of Memphis, ask ing the court of that county to bu abol ished or that some means for ridding the community of Judge Dubose be adopted. Mr, Babb, of Shelby, then of fered a rcsoHitfbft of impeachment accom panied by lengthy chaffer of live moat icrinus nature. There are twelve articles uud thirty- five or more specific charges. Tho ju igo la charged with tmjundiclul, tyrannical nud brutal treatment of lawyers and cil- iBens, With arbitrary and unconstitution al abmo aud prostitution of tho powers and functions of the judicial oilier ', with unfair and partial administration of Jus tice with prostituting tiro power of his office to personal nud political ends; with defying uud nullifying tho writ of hnboas corpus with nppoiuting unqualified and unfit persons to ihe office of attorney general pro tern.; with die- rOgatd of liio rights of citizens; with lowering the dignity of the bench and imparing tho popular rospect for the ju- diciury. A special commiltoo was un pointed by the speaker to consider the multer. THE BRIDGE COLLAPSED And a Heavy Freight Train Goes Do mi with it No Loss of Life. Tho most disastrous freight wreck llmfc ever occurred on the Chicago and Erie road happened at Limit, Ohio, Wednes day morning, about one mile west of the station. The third section of west bound freight train No. 83, with a heavy train, derailed a car at the switch before reaching tho bridge, and when the bridge was struck tiie middle span of it gave away, and nineteen cars, with tho caboose, wero piled up in tho stream, thirty feet below. Tho engine .and several cars were all that passed over safely. Fortunately the trainmen wero all in front, except the conductor. He escaped by jumping. The conductor thinks there were three tramps iu a box car, who got on at Kenton. If they were, they were ground to atoms. The cirs were reduced to splinters, and only two or three of them can be repaired. All wero loaded with merchandise. ICemetery Enclosures, k- Window Guards, *—JAILS—* AND STRUCTURAL IRON. M "ina 0 w«°rk., Roanoke, Virginia. Br o , mcV, ninhmnnrt Vii Virginia, Th< m LER Carriage and Harness Co. AT DAHLONEOA. A branch of the State University Bpring Term legina First Monday in Feb ruary. Fall Term begins First Monday in /September. Bi-at hcUooI In tho south, for atuilont. with IlmHcil means. Tha military training is thorough, boing under a U. S. Army officer, detailoil by Ilio Beorolary of War. Biudenia are prepared and licenced to teaoh In the public flchools, by net of (ho legialature. I.cctmcB, on Agriculture and the Bclenco. hy distinguished educator* and scholars. For health tho climate ia unsurpassed. Altitude 11287 ti nt. Board »I0 per month and upwards. Me ssing at lower rales. Kach sonator and representative of tho state ia entitled und requested to appoint ono pupil from lit. district or county, without paying matriculation foe, during hia term. For catalog or information, address Secre tary or Treasurer, Board of Trustees. Are now ready to mipply tho wants of the con sumer with Carriages anil Harness of overy de- scrlptlon, at prices that, defy competition. We are the leaders. Let those who can follow, pur manufactures are made to give per reel satisfac tion and the “ Miller " guarantee stands good all over the country. Finish, Workmanship, Strsnath and lltimtIf combine tho “Miller work. Send for our illustrated Catalogue and ■ice List giving you fuh particulars and Ideas of c : manufacture, to THH MILLER CARRIAGE AMD HARNESS CO. St. Paul Building, 27 West 4th Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. tty "4 BLOOMINGTON, ILL Co Our No. 23 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. MKND KOI* C'-AT» T-OOijKr- Buy a Good Gash Register„ f: THE MERCANTILE, PRICE, $25.00. % Used and endorsed by nearly 10,000 progressive MereliantH, A PERFECT CASHIER, NEEDED IN EVERY RETAIL STORE. It has tho latent Improved combination lock. It is the quickest register to.operate. It records transactions in the order made. IL records money paid out und received on account . It shows who does the work. It educates you iu correct methods. It prevents disputes in case of error. It will pny Hu cost every month in saving of time nud money. It Is pructicul, durable and reliable. It is fully guaranteed for two years. WRITE TO THE MANUFACTURERS FOR FULL PARTICULARS. AMERICAN CASH REGISTER CO., 230 Clinton St., Chicago. CLEVELAND HIGH SCHOOL, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA. Spring Term Begins January 2(1, 1893. Fall Term Begins July 10th, 1893. Tub monomaniac who, in 1839, stopped Queen Victoria while she was riding on horseback in Hyde Park and proposed marriage to her has recently died in Bedlam, tho celebrated insane asylum of London. He seemed to bo perfectly sound on every other subject, was well educated, and wrote very sen sible letters relating to insane asylums and the reforms which could be made in them. He was eighty-four years old. 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 CIIAS. W. MERRITT, Assistant.