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LE CLEVELAND PROGRE
IBS.
BvJOimu. RLK3T.
DEVOTED TO THE MINING, AGRICULTURAL AND EDUCATIONAL INTERESTS Of CLEVELAND, WHITE COUNTT AND NORTH EAST GEORGIA.
TERMS:— One DeUnr I'er Tear.
-
YOL.IIT.
CLKVELAND, WHITE COUNTY, GA., FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1-894.
NO. 1.
At the present ilny about ninety-sit
per cent, of nil vobucIs built are si
»teel.
Tn 1892 (ho TJniteil States spenl
SI .‘>5,000,000 for education, while
• treat Britain expended $115,000,000
and Franco only $25,000,000.
A German statistician has stated that
if the present order of things does not
change, in 3000 yours heuco there will
only be one man to every 220 Women,
In 1891 a locomotive is to bo placed
>n Uni lino between Loudon and Edin
burgh which will Cover 100 miles au
hour, and run to the northern capital
u > ix hours.
It Has been decided by a Seattle
(Wash.) Justice that a man cannot be
convicted of using vulgar language to
an oiticer unless someone besides the
policeman hears him.
Vermont has n greater percentage ol
improved land in proportion to it*
area than any other State except New
York and Illinois, avers the Chicago
Herald, The dairy product of Ver
mont reaches $25,000,000. The Greer
Mountain boys sell $1,200,000 worth
of maple sugar every twelve months.
Of the 9585 men who enlisted in the
United States Army lust, year twonty-
tive per cent, wore laborers. Othet
callings were represented as follows:
School teachers, 02; students, 20;
druggists, 39; photographers, 13;
musicians, 211; lawyers, 7; printers,
95 ; bookkeepers, 52 ; typewriters, 2 :
engineers, 75 ; cooks, 103 ; mschiuests,
100; farmers, about 1200; and no oc
cupation, SO.
The days of flic patient mule, ns n
eanalboat motor, are probably num
bered, remarks the New Turk News.
Steam has been used ns a propelling
substitute with purtial success, but
there is now promise that the all
potent agent, oicotrioiiy, will propel
tho canal-boat of the future. Tests
T r »^e this week neus
: ^/experts have ho doubt
U-'Llf t he new motor will be found satis
■ ory in every rospect.
Grocers everywhere assort that then,
is little or no profit :u rotaiiingsugarn,
and housekeepers confirm this by say
iug that there is small economy in buy.
ing sugar by tho keg. The tradition
touching tho small profit in handling
sugars at retail is certainly more that
109 years old, for a writer ill tlio mid
dle of the lust century affirmed that
London grocers of that day-were often
out $300 to $350 a year for paper am
pack thread used in wrapping uj
s.ugar, and sumo grocers would not sel
sugar to a customer who did not nt tlx.
»anio time purehaso some other urti-
-lo.
Says tho Farm and Fireside: "The
•tressed-moat business has grown to be
one of great magnitude. Many com
munities now depend largely for their
fresh-meal supplies on tho groat
slaughtering establishments looatod <i|
the principal cattle markets of the
country. From these points dressed
(nests arc shipped all over this conn
try and also to Europe. Tho Sucre
tnry of Agriculture proposes to extend
meat inspection to interstate trsdo,
Heretofore, meat inspection 1ms liner
for the purpose of building up out
foreign trade. Now homo consumer!
are t-o have what advantages may bt
derived /pom it."
The workingmen of Milan, Italy
propose to hold a grand internationa
exposition f >r workingmen in that city
in 189-1, ami have issued a circular ask
ing workingmen the world over to sent
exhibits of the products of their skill.
All workingmen are invited to partici
pate, whether in large associations, ill
small ones, or singly. The exposition
will be divided in three classes. 1.
The products of individual workers;
2, the products of societies and associa
tions of all sorts, mid, 3, schools ami
educational institutions. All com
munications on the subject must be
addressed to the committee, Bastrelli
Way, Milan, Italy.
REV. DR. TALMAGE
tltK BROOKLYN 1>IVINK’S SUN
DAY SKIOION.
Subject: “The Morning Star.*
'nting
Tfcfcft: "J am the bright awl tA
gtnr."—Revelation xxii., 10.
This is Christmas Eve. Our attention an 1
the nttoution rtf the Wdrhl Jfl dfoiwn to the
star t.hiU prtiuted down to tho earuvatroiry
WherejOhriat was l»orn. lint do not lot ufl
forget thqt Christ himself a star. To
that luminous fittX toy text calls us.
U flee ms as if the natural v^orhl were
anxious to makeup for tho damage it did out
niuo in lUrnishing the forbidden fruit, it
that fruit wrought death among tho Nations,
n >\v all the ttntUrnl Urd.hiet shall l.oodmo .•»
nytrtbol of blessing, Tho slunvoririg
tho wealth of the orchard Mi-ill n'uiko usthuik
of him whom HOldmon describes as thonpnfl
Jree amOng tho trees of the wood, and th.
flowers of tangled glen anti cultured part or rt
Blmlt be tho dew glifltod garland for tho brow
of tho L«r«l Jesus. Yen, even tho night shall
V'daxod, and its brightest star shall be set
us a gem in tho coronet of our holy religion*
Have you ever soon tho morning star ml-
vantageo&8ly? If It was on your way home
from a bight'• carousal, voit saw mine V»f
beauty. If yfm meroly tuHlod over on your
pillow In tho daMkhoss, glancing out of the
winded, you know nothing about the*
Cheerful i tt flu enoeof that ?-r .* • RUt theraaro
many in this hoe.30 to-night who in gr.»at
passes of thnlMifo, some of them far out at
sen, have gazed at that star and been thrilled
through with iudescrilmblo gladuess. That
star domes trembling ns though with tin',
perils of tho darkness* nrtd v.'t might with
tho anticipations Of the day. ‘ It seems emo
tional with nil tOUddrness, its eyes Jill will*
the tears of many sorrows, Tt is the gem on
tho hands of the morning thrust up lo signal
Us coming. Others stais are dim, like holy
candles in a cathedral or silver beads count
ed in superstitious litany, but this is a living
stars, a sonaictng star, a historic star, ah
evangelistic slur—bright nrtd brilliant and
triumphant symbol of the great Redeemer
Tramps are not viewed with favor in
our sister Republic below the Rio
Grande, notes tho New Orleans Picay
line. A gang of seven of these prod
ucts of the higher American civiliza
tion crossed over into Mexico a few
days ago and encamped near the town I
of Juarez. The local police soon got
word of their presence, and they found
themselves in jail forthwith. The next |
lay the Mayor released them, with the i
information that if he saw them again
they would get eleven months at hard j
labor. This is the penalty that the i
laws of Juarez awards to tramps, j
vagrants and others without visibh (
means of support. All the same, Mux
ico hAis hosts of beggars.
Tho telegraphic operator juUs hlfl flrtg . .....
silver key of tho electric instramertt, and tho
tidings fly aeross Urn continent. And no It
Booms to mothftt tho Huger of Inspiration is
placed upon this silver point iutho.houVein,
and its thrill through nil thrt o«hh. “Be-
holu 1 bring you gort \ tidings of groat joy
to nil people. llohold, 1 a.n tho bright and
morning star.” Tho meaning of my text is
this: As tho morning star preend os and
itromises tho com iug of tho tiny, so Christ
heralds tho natural and spiritual jaWrt.
in tho first place, Christ hcfrllddd the com
ing of tho creation. Tllefo was a time wlmti
thorn was no order, no sound or beauty. No
Wing stirred, No word was utloro 1. No
light sped. As far as Go l could look up. as
far out, thorn was nothing. Iinmeasu rouble
solitude. lloiglU ami dopth and length and
breadth of nothingness. Did Christ then
exist/ Oh, yes. “By him were all things
made that tiro made; things in heaven and
things in earth and things under tho earth.”
Yes, ho antedated tUftcroatlon. Ho led forth
Arcturils and Ills sons. Ho shone before the
first morning. His voice was hoard in tho
Qoucert when tho morning wars serenaded
the advent of oe.riflfaufaarth, when, wrapped
inswttddliVig olothosof light, it lay in tho
ntms of the grunt Jehovah. He saw the first
fountain laid, lb- sa w tho first light kindled *
That hand which was afterward bnlshefT
upon tho cross was thrust into obfttte, undit
brought out one world and evvttng It irt that
orbit, and brought Ortt rtltother world and
ewnng it in niidthef orbit, and brought out
all the Worlds and swung them in their
parlieular orbits. They enmo like sheep
at tho call of a shepherd. They knew"
his voice, and he called them all by
their names. Oh, It is an Inter.-si ih'
thought to mo to krtoW that Christ had some
thing to do with the creation. I see now
Why it was so easy for Him to change Water
into Witte. Ho llrflt ornate! tho water. 1
setj now why it was so easy for Him to cunt
the maniac. He first ‘created the intellect. 1
sno now Why it was mo easy for Him to has i
tho tompest. He sank Geuuesarot. I see
now why it was so easy for Him to swing fish
Into Simon’s net. He made the fish. I see
now why it was so easy for Him to give sight
to the blind man. lie created the opticfterve.
1 see now why it \VnS so cosy for Him to rain i
Lazarus from the dead. ’ He created Urn
body of hazards and the rock that shut him
in. Some suppose t hnt Christ came a stranger
to Bethlehem. Oh, no. He created the
shepherds, and th*' flocks rhey watched, and
the hills tm which they postured, and tdio
heaVehs that overarched their heads, and tho
n.Ugols that chanted the chorus on that Christ-
iniia night. That hand which was afterward
nailed to tlie cross, was an omnipotent and
creative hand and lllri whole univern j was
poised on the Up of one of His lingers, Be
fore the world was Christ was. All the
World came t rooping up out of the darkness,
and He greeted them, as a father greets his
children, with a “good morning,’’ or a “good
ulght." Hail. Lord Jesus, morning star of
the flrut creation.
Again, Christ heralds the dawn of comfort;
In a Christian soul. Mometiirtos we eome to
passes in life where all kinds of Iribillutlons
meet us. You are building up some great
enterprise. You have built the foundation —
the wall you arc just about lo put on the
capstone, when everything is demolished.
You have a harp all strung for pwcufu-t ac-
cord, and some great agony crushes it.
There is a little voice hushed in the house
hold. Blue eve closed. Colordashe 1 out ol
the cheek. The toot still Jmteril of te-
quick feet ill tho hall, the neuvy trend <>
those who march to the grave. O.i, whul
are people to do amid all liiofl * sorrows/
Home sit down and mourn. Borne bite their
lip until tho blood comes. Rome wring their
rmle hands. Home fall on their faces. Home
lie on their backs helpless and look up into
what soerns (o thorn an unpitying heaven.
Borne pull their hair down over their eyes
and look through with a fiend’s glare. Homo,
with both hands, press their Hot brain and
want to die and cry, “O God, O Go l!”
Long night, bitter night, stupendous night
of the world’s suffering 1 Romo know not
which way to turn. But not so the Christian
man. Ho looks up toward tho heavens. He
sees a bright appearance in tho heavens.
Can it be only a flashing meteor? Can it be
ouly a falling star? Can it be only a delu
sion? Nay, nay. The longer ho looks tho
more distinct it becomes, until after
awhile he cries out, “A star—a morn
ing star, a star of comfort, a star
of graoe, a star of peace, tho star of
the Redeemer!” Pence for nil trouble.
Balm for all wounds. Life for ail dead.
Now Jesus, the gruj\t heart healer, comes
into our home. Pence ! I'eaco that passetit
all understanding. Wo look up through our
tears. We are eomforted. ft is the morn
ing star of the Redeemer. “Who broke off
that flower?” s-tid one servant in the garden
to another. “Who broke off that flower?’’
And the other servant said, “Tho master.”
Nothing more was sain, for if the master had
not a right to break off a flower lo wear over
his heart or to set in the vase of his mansion,
who has a right to touch the flower? And
when Christ comes down into our garden to
gather lilies, shall we fight Him back? Khali
we talk as though He had no right to come?
If any one in all the universe has a right to
that which is beautiful in our homes, th'*n
our Master has, and He will take it and He
will wear it over His heart, or He will sot It
in the vase ol the palace eternal. “The
Lord gave, and tho Lord hath taken away;
blessed b® the name of the Lord.” Peace,
troubled soul! I put the balm on your
wounded soul to-night. The morning star,
the morning star of tho Redeemer.
Again, Christ heralds the dawn of millen
nial glory. It is night in China, night in In
churches. Her vast population shall
Mirrortdol' themselves to Christ. What Is that
dgllt J Sod btedkirtgover the trtfl of t lie Alps?
Tho morning. All India shall come lo (Idd.
Her idols shall bo cast down. Her jugger
nauts shall be broken. Her temples of in
iquity shall be demolished. What is that
light I see breaking over the top of the Him
alayas? The morning. The empurpled
rbbi.da Shell tfild the paid t*[ the odtlqduring
day. The Hottentot will come out of his mud
hovel to look at the dawn; the Chinaman
will come up on tho granite cliffs, the Nor
wegian will get up on tho rooks, and all the
beach of heaven Will be crowded with coles*
tirtl inhabitants come out to see the sun rise
over the Heeun of the world’s, ugduy. , They
shall oduie front the oaot. and front tho uosi,
from the north, and from the south, and sit
down iu the kingdom of Go 1. Those swel
tered mi'Ur tropical suns. These shivered
under Icelandic temperature. These plucked
dia, night in Siberia, night for the vast i
jority of the world’s population. But
. , _ut it
seems to me there are some intimations
the morning. All Spain is to bo brought
under tho influence of the gospel. What is
that light l see breaking over the top oi the
Pyrenees? The morning! Yen, all Italy
shull receive the gospel. She shall have
her schools and her colleges and her
tho vineyards in Italy. Those packed the
Ic.ibdxi’s iu Chinn, 'i.’ltose Were aborigines
lifting nil tlleir ddsky faces ill tllodawii. And
lUd wind shall waft it. an I every mountain
shall been qe a tr.insllgilrationj ad-1 Ilia sea
will become l ho w.iikin ’ plaeu Hf hi id Wad
to I the w »\ clifls o! stormy Tiberias, nil 1
;ho song of Joy s!i til rlsotQw.tr I heaven, at* l
ihe great sky will beoo no a sounding board
watch shall strike back theahout of salvation
to tho earth until It rebounds again lo tho
throne tu the Almighty, au 1 the morning
s-.ar of Chrifltiad hd;> > \tfill hc.-d.nn Hid full
tmnbtirst Df millennial g'.orv.
Again, <’ ir>t heralds the. dawn q. heaven
up u uv-ry Christian's dyiiig pilMw i sun i
pose yod hare h<» Uts l that the eh tra de •-
-tics t> p.-.) >!•> Iu thdir healthy days arc
very apt to bo their characteristics in their
iyi/ig days. The dying words of ambitious
Napoteon were, ‘‘Head of tho army.” The
dying words of po'He Lord Byron were, “I.
must Me t flow" The dyillg t^of'dV of
.vVeatlouHte Lord Nelson wre, “Kiss me,
I lardy.” Tlfn dying words of Voltaire were,
as ho saw one whom ho supposed lo be
Jesus in the room, “Otosh that wretch.”
Bui 1 have noticed that the dying words Oi
Christians always mean peace. Generally
the pain is all gone, and there is grout
quietude through the room. As ono o:
these brothers told me of Ids mother in the
Inst moment: “Him looked Up atid nrtld,
pointing to some silperiiatural being that
deemed 16 bo in tho room, ‘Look at that
bright form. Why; they have ecum for me
now.’ ”*
The lnttloo Is turned sd that t’Ao light is
Very pleasant. It is peace all arouu l. You
oak yourself. “Why, pan title lid a dying
room? It is so different from anything I
ever exported.” And you walk tho floor,
and you look out of the window, and you
come back and look at your watch, and you
look at the face of tho [hittoilt agnlil; arid
! link'd is lid change, except that the fane is
becoming more radiant, more illuminated.
The wave of death soems coming up higher
and higher, until it lias touched the ankle,
then it comes on up until It touches the
kuoe, and then it comes on up until
it roaches the girdle, and thou It comes
on up until It roaches the lip,
tmd the aotil in about to bo floated a Way intc
glory-, and yoti roll buck the patient’s sleeve.
Add yon put your linger on the pfllso; and It
is gutting Weaker atid weaker; and tltd piilrtr
stops, and ydd hatdly know whethot'the life
has gdne dr not. Indeed, you cannot tell
When she goes a wav, site goes away so ealnif
ly. Perhaps it ia 1 o’clock in the morning,
tnd you havo the bed wheeled around
the window, and tlie dying one
Into the night sky, and she roob
that altracts her attention, and
wind it ‘
. Why; it f4 it it ah It Is a star
its silver rim in pouting a supc
into that dying experience. .\Rd ft
“What is it that j*ou are looking at?”
Bays, “It is a star.” You say, “What star Is
it that soems so well to pleaSC you?'* “Oh.’
she flays* “that is the morning star—Jesus!”
t would like to havo my death bed tindet
that evarigcllRtlC star—I would like to havo
my eye Oil that star, BO l could bd assured Of
the inOrnlng. Thoillho daah of thosurf rtf
the sea of dedlh wmild biily be the blllrtwiug
up Of the promise, “When thou passost
through tjid Waters, I will be wit It thee, and
stalactite^ making il JflUar ott tlu
other side, and you push /(gainst
the gate that swings
between
Die t\vrt pillars, and ns the gate' flashes open
yoti liiid It id Otto nftMo twelve gates Which
:iro twelve pearls. Ulo&cd bn Gad that
through this gospel the mammoth 0»Vo of
I he sepulchre has beeotno the tllmnihod Btar
Ohatnborof tho King!
I Would God that if my sermon lo-day
aoos not lead you to Ohrist, that before
morning, looking out uf tho window, the
astronomy of the night heavens iliigL't load
you to the foot of Jesus.
llark I Hark! To Oort the ohoru« breaks
From every host, from every gems
Put one alone, the Savior Hpvak*
lr* tliu St »r of netbleh-m.
SCIENTIFIC' AN1) INIUJSTMAIu
the rivers, they shall, not overflow tfi
All other lights will Call—the light that falls
from tho scroll of fa mo, tho light that flashes
from the gem lathe beautiful apparel, the
light that flames from tho burning lamp! of
a banquet—but this light burns onandburns
on. Paul kept his eye on that morning star,
until ho could say: “lam now ready to hr
Offered, and the time of my departure Is ill
hand. 1. have fought the good light. I have
finished my course. 1 have kept the faith.”
Edward Puyson kept his eye on that star
until he could say, “Tho breezes of heaven
fail me.” Br. Goodwin kept Ills eye oil that
evangelistic star until he could say. “lam
swallowed up in God." John Tennant kept
bis eye bit that evangelistic star until he
could say, “Welcome, sweet Lord Jesus -
welcome, eternity,” No other star ever
pointed a mariner into so safe a harbor, N<
other star over sunk its silvered anchor Intc
(ho waters. No other star ever pierced suid 1
accumulated cloud, or beckoned with such »
holy luster,
Willi lanterns and torches and a guide, w*
went down in the Mammoth cave of Ken
tacky. You may walk fourteen miles and see
no sunlight, ft is a stupendous place. Rome
places the roof of the cave a hundred feet
high. The grottoes filled with weird echoes,
cascades falling from invisible height to in
visible depth. Stalagmites rising up from
tho floor of the cave -stalactites descending
from the roof of the cave, joining each
other, and making pillars of the Almighty’s
sculpturing. There are rosettes of amethyst
in halls of gypsum. As tho guide curries hi?
lantern ahead of you, the shadows have ail
appearance supernatural and spectral. Tlie
darkness is fearful. Two people, getting
lost from their guide only for a few hours,
years ago. were demented, and for yearn sat
in their Insanity. You feel like holding
your breath as you walk across the bridges
that seem to span the bottomless
abyss. The guide throws bis calcium light
down Into the caverns, an 1 the light rolls
and tosses from rock to rock and from depth
to depth making at every plunge a new rev
elation of the awful power that could have
made such a place as that
A sense oi suffocation comes upon you as
rou flunk that you are 250 feet in n straight
line from tho sunlit surface of the earth. Tho
/uide after awhile takes you into what is
•ailed the “Star Chamber,” and then lie
nays to von, “Hit hero,” and then be lakes
(helantern and goes down under the rocks,
and it gets darker and darker, until the night
is so thick that tho hand an inch from the
nye is unobservable. And then, by kindling
me of the lanterns and placing it in a .cleft
■ • tno roes, there is a reflection east on me
dome of the cave, and there are stars coin
ing out in constellations—a brilliant night
heavens—and you involuntarily exclaim
•Beautiful ! beautiful!” Then ho takes the
lantern down in other depths of the cavern,
qml wanders on. and wanders off, until he
comes up from behind the rocks gradually,
and it seems like the dawn of the morning,
and It gets brighter and brighter. Tho guide
is a skilled ventriloquist and he imitates the
voices of the morning, and soon the gloom
is all gone, and you ntand congratulating
yourself over the wonderful spectacle. Well,
there are a great many people who look down
into the grave as a great cavern. They think
'.t is a thousand miles subterraneous, and all
echoes seem to be the voices of despair, and
the cascades seem to be the falling tears that
always fall, and the gloom of earth seems com
ing up in stalagmite, and the gloom of the
eternal world seems descending in lliostalac-
lite, making pillars of indescribable horror.
The grave is no such place nt that to rue,
thank God.
Our Divine Guide takes us down into the
great caverns, and we have tho lamp to our
feet and the light to our path, and all the
echoes in the rifts of the rock are anthems,
and ail the falling waters are fountains of
salvation, and after awhile w<; look up and,
behold! the cavern of tho tomb has become
a king’s star chamber. And while we arc
looking at tho pomp of it an everlasting
morning begins to rise, aud all the tears of
earth crystallize into stalagmite, rising up
in a pillar on the one side, and all the glo
ries of heaven seem to be descending In
Jnutoful of jnwH tho butterfly has a
curled proboscis like that of an ele
phant.
Thd Vegetarians coutend that tho
fininialM that do not eat meat are tho
isti’oligdfd.
A year on Jupiter is equal to olevoil
years, ten months aud seventeen days
on our globe..
The current over tho Mersey bar,
Liverpool; since the extensive dredg
ing operations lias been found to in-
'•reascq inuph td the sHrprisd of h linin'
her of engineers engaged in the work;
who have thought that if tho channel
wore deepened tho current would be
more sluggish.
Xmbstevf? avn not peace-abiding crua-
tnceanfl. They hnnnoi Ini persuaded
to grow up together peaceably. Jf a
dozen newly hatched specimens are
put into an aquarium, within a few
days there will bo only ono—it large,
fut and promising youngster. Ho lias
eaten all the rest.
The helicoid rtilfMncmiotei’ is said to
ho quitd independent of friction for
all excepting light winds; but it. is not
hd si triple iii cioustnietidii as the cup
form. Tlie air meter consists of it
single screw blade formed of thin
aluminum, and made as nearly as pos
sible into tho exact shape of a portion
of a helicoid.
.By placing twd itdii bat’s at seven or
eight yards distance from each other;
and, putting them in communication
on one side by au insulated copper
wire, and on the other side with a
telephone, it is said that a storm can
bo predicted twelve hours ahead
through a certain dead sound hoard
In the receiver.
Wo call now talk any distance; hear
at. any distance, write or draw pict*
lures at any distance. It only remains
for us to^soe and feel at any distance.
sight is now nearly
" t bo
jsirTWflFWTOentR- ol
m’TorTfflropy, ftH applied to medical
problems, have been offering pretty
strong evidence that parasites arc tho
origin of malignant and cancerous
tumors} so tho Pathological Society of
Loudon appointed ft committee to in
vestigate tho evidence, which commit
tee unanimously reports that, notwith
standing tho labor expended, the
point is not proved—tho parasites are
•lot demonstrated.
The Letter as a Mascot,
Is tho lottor “J,” like tho letter
“E,” so indispensable that it is as dif
ficult to find a list of names without
the former appearing in it as it is to
find ft complete sentence in which tho
latter does not occur? Is the above
the cause of its frequent appearance
in the names of America’s great men,
•r is it really a mascot letter?
Boginning with our Presidents I find
it as the first initial letter in tho names
^>f eight; tho only President of tho
Confederacy also began his name with
the “littlo mascot.” In the list of
the Vice-Presidents I find it six times,
divided equally between tho Christian
and the surnames. Among tlio names
of the Presidents pro tom of tho Hen-
ate it occurs twenty-two times, and
among tho Speakers of tho House four
teen times. Thirteen of the Hecro-
taries of State commenced their first
names with “J,” and one used it as
the initial of his surname. In tho
realm of Justice tho record is qqualjy
if not more startling, tweuty-ono out
of n total of fifty-five Chief Justices
aud Justices beginning either their
first or last name with it. Besides the
above we find it in nearly all tho mul
timillionaire's of the country, viz : John
D. Rockefeller, J. J. Astor,Jay Gould,
J. M. Sears, J. S. Morgan, J. 33. Hag-
gin, J. W. Garrett, John Wanarnakor,
J. G. Fair, John YV. Mackay, J. G.
Flood, John Arbucklc, J. .13. Stetson,
John Clftflin, Joseph Pulitzer and
dozens of others.—St. Louis Republic.
First American Steam Locomotive.
After one has spent a day viewing
the splendid railway exhibit at Chic
ago’s great Fair, or even tho showing
made at our own Exposition, it is dif
ficult for him to realize that every
th iug relatiug to that branch of in
dustry is the result of but sixty years’
labor. All the giant strides that havo
been made in tho railway enterprise
of America have been brought about
within the memory of many men and
women who daily walk tho streets of
St. Louis. In 1881 the railway (?)
connecting Albany with Schenectady,
N. Y., hud less than a dozen cars, each
drawn by two horses ! Later on, in
1882, X believe, locomotive engines
wero introduced, but us tho railway
ran up and down hill, just as the
wagon roads of to-day, the locomotives
had to bo assisted by stationary en
gines, thus making double expense.
The very first steam locomotive
constructed in America was made by
the Kembles Company of West street,
New York, in 1830-31. This pioneer
American “triumph of the mechanic’s
art” was shipped by sailboat from tho
manufacturer’s shops to Charleston,
S. C., where it was put together uud
first used on a short freight road be-
tlie city lust named and u small place
CtAled Hamburg.—St. Louis Republic
“DON’T BE FOOLISH
And sell these Nobby, Stylish, Elegant Suits at the
same price other merchants sell the shoddy slop-shop
stuff they are compelled to buy when they come East
late in the season,” a leading* Wholesale merchant
said to ns.
Nobby Suits, Stylish Fabrics, the pick and choice
of Thousands of Novelties such as late buyers and
Job Lot Seekers can't get are being sold at
AUCTION PRICES!
Give is you] 1 Trails. Try ns once OSCE means ALWAYS!
LIPSTINE & HUMAN,
WRECKERS OF HIGH PRICES A1 SHODDY CLOTHING.
ARLINGTON BLOCK,
GAINESVILLE, GA.
Oil 1 [SeSeSber
CT rap IP fi-j B carenu inveattjrat
jgjj log jgs ISMS BMT1 ft ltyamltho merits of onr Tablets.
nanmuiiinmiiiiiiimi.iaHiiUnMi<miMnfi>nniiii(mtmMMmnN|
WE mJAIUHTETS A CVHK 3
ami invito tho in oat I
nvcatig.'it.ion as to onr rospcttisibli- g
J Doable Chloride of Gold Tablets
, HILL’3 TABl
UruK^lMl.H at. 9 | ,00
If your Uiugglht.(
f READ ....
j TESTJ.MO.NjALS
Will completely destroy fhort ©sir ft for TOBACCO in from 8 too tints. Perfectly harm -
1ms; cuuho no slekuasH, ami may lio pi vein In u cup oftcabl* eofl>u w ithout tuo know!
cage of tlio patient, who will voluntarily stop smokingor chuwiftgia ivfew (lays
DRUNKENNESS anil I0RPIIIE HABIT
tlia patient:, by tlie use of our SPECIAL FORMULA GOLD CURE TABLETS.
During treatment patients nronli’owcd tho frro uso of Liquor or Mor.
phJne until sueb Hindus they shall Voluntarily give them up.
Wo send particulars nml pamphlet of testimonials free, ami shall
bo Bind lo pincO Miff errors from any of these habits In comriiuniea-
tlon with persons who liuVo been cured by tho use ol*our Taui.kth.
(tBLKTS arc for solo by all fijcst clahs
“O per package.
„ . ulocfl not keep them, enclose us 551.00
nml wo will send you, by return mail, a packugu oi
Tablets.
Write your mime and address plainly, and stafco
. let lief Tablets ur«i *’T Tobacco, Morphine c “
Liquor Habib
DO NOf flH bECfilVEP into purchasing
any of the various nostrum^ IJmti M e being A'
offered for sale. Ask fur HIILL^S
TABLETS and tnkouoothc
Mamifuoluied only by
-ttib:
OHIO CHEMICAL CO,
61,63 & DC Opera Block
IJMA, OHIO
particulars
cure for tobtteef) hai lit, arid foil ml it would
do what you claim for it. i used "ten cento
•tilth <»f the strongest chewing tobacco ft day,
and Irom one to five cigars; or I would smoko
from ten to lorty pipes of tqbncco. Jlavt
and i
hewed
jnolced for twenty-five yWnrs. and t wo packages
of your Tablets cured ino ho I iuivo no desire for It.
If. M. JAVLOKI), Leslie,Miell.
Donns FnnitY, n. Y.
Tun Ohio Chemical Co.:—Gentlemen:—Some time ago i sent
for $1 .(hi worth <»f vonr Tablets for Tobacco Habit. J received,
them all right,and, although 1 won both a lienv-y smokorundchewor,
they did the work in less than thr “ '* * ’
...- - days. I nm.c ___
Truly yours, MATHEW JOHNSON, l’. O. Box 45.
PiTTsnunaiv, ta.
Thf. Ohio Chemical Co.:—Gf.ntlkmf.n:~It gives me pleasure to speak n
word of praise for your Tablets. My son was strongly addicted to the use of
liquor,ond through a friend, I was led to try your Tablets.
v.-. Ho was a heavy and
constant drinker, but after using your Tablets but i hreo days ho quit drinking,
and will not touch liquor of any kind. I havo waited four month befuro writing
you, iu order to know tho euro wuo permanent. Yours truly
s truly,
MRS. HELEN MORRISON.
Cincinnati, Ohio.
The Ohio Chemical Co:-Gentlemen Your Tablets have performed amiraplo in my ease.
I have used morphine, hypodermically, for seven years, and havo been eured by the use or
two paokages of your Tablets, and without any effort on my part. w. luiluay.
A.ddrc»Bs nil Orders to
THE OHIO CHEMICAL CO.,
bl, S3 and Sb Opera Block. UMm, OHIO.
(in writing ple.-mo nioiiUon tlilnpaper.)
Do Don
EVERY MAN HIS OWN
DOCTOR.
By ... HAMILTON AYERS, M. D.
4 Valuable Book
of 600pages, illus
trated, coutaining
knowledge of how
to treat and cure
disease, prolong
FEEL SICK?
Disease commonly comes on with slight
symptoms, which when neglected increase
in extent and gradually grow dangerous.
take RIPANS TABBIES
SUFFER DISTRESS AFTER EATING.
TAK E RIPANS TABBIES |
TAKE RIPANS TABBIES ‘
F ° r 0EHS O^ThE^IOMAOH ALL r>IG0:1 " TAKE RSPANS TABBLES
Hipans Tubules Regulate the System and Preserve tho Health.
ONE
GIVES
RELIEF.
EASY TO TAKE
QUICK TO ACT
SAVE MANY A DOCTOR’S BILL
Sold by Druggists Kverywhcrc.
life ..nd promote Sash, Doors and Blinds!
happiness.
CLARK, BELL & CO.
Sent by mail, post
paid, on receipt of
Price, 60c.
Manufacturer, and Dealers iu
Address nil orders to
11C Loyd Nlreet,
ATLANTA., (LA.
Sash, Doors, Blinds,
Mouldings, Brackets.
siihvgUjEi* and lumber.
Also SEWER and DHA.IN FIWI. Mots a. low as the lowest. Salisfactiou
guaranteed.
CLARK, BELL & CO., Gainesville, Ga,