Newspaper Page Text
Hu JOU.X It. GLEN.
VOL. '1 IT.
THE CLEVELAND
: ;X'v.yj.-'i’ i
.
DEVOTED TO TUB MINING, AGRICULTURAL AND EDUCATIONAL INRBrOSTS Of OLbYBLAND, WHITE OOUSTT AND NORTH-EAST GEORGIA.
■ ■■ta.n 1 J-, -■i-^ l ':’"!W^3^rae=, % .aslu
CLEVELAND, WHITE ( OUNTY/GA1*FRIDAY , NOVEMBER 16, 1894.
TERMS:— Ont Dollar Per Tear.
NO. 46.
(PIEDMENT AIR LINE.)
Route of tho Groat Vostlbuled
Limited.
•ILiXTA * rtlAIU.OTTK A1R-MMC
DIVISION.
Aloxandor, J. r.; M. B. Moore, N. I*,
nml J. 1’.
NacoOliiek—427 Dint., First Satin - ,
dnysiu each month, Hirnm Ontnmn,
J, 1*.; J. B. Lumsden, N. P. anil «T. P.
Rho.au Oiif.uk— 802 Dint., Fourth
Saturdays iu each month, .Tuo,
Bowen,‘.J. P.; J, A. O’Kollev, N. P.
and ,T. P.
Blue Bueek—721 Dint., Second
Saturdays in each month, It. P. Kin
sey, J. P. ; J. B. Robertson, N. P.
ami J. P.
Tkhnatee—558 Diet., Fourth Satur
days in each month, Juo. Mnppiu, J.
P,; J. 0. Bell, N. P. anil J. P.
Town Greek—836 Dish, Third
Saturdays iu each month, Hughes
Allen, J. 1’.; J. E. McAfee, N. P. and
J. P. .
Chattahoochee—1497 Diat., Second
Saturday in oach month, B. 13. West
moreland, A. P.; J. H. Westmoreland
N. P. and .T, P.
RliV. DR. TAIJIAGE
Busmess
Mem
Want
s.LIju n>t IvLf.il,
>.No «5. j
Dftlly Dolly
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t».20 j -m -i'J r.m;
lti.J'.Diti 11.cl urn
l2.tofh.iiV l*j 4» n n I2.f»0
", .00 atu
v.aj um: 1 i.ca p:n; ia.an x
11.20 nut! 1.02 pm
■ •• •' 1.-.W pi
Id.LS avn l-.MLtt.ni l .ft) pr
.... ; 2,oa in
11.07 HU* 12 :tui> 2.t>0 j.io
12,2‘ t ill 3/2 uni 4.10 j i
ul,,. L 1.10 p.nj 2 4) umj 6.2o pr
/■
Accuracy
Compteteniesa
Conciseness
Convenience
r.
Eqr.jaiv/.-a VtP
BROOKLYN DIVINES SUN
DAY SERMON.
Subject: “Victory Over Pain.**
Tptt ‘Nullhor shall there be anymore
po i'. *—K*volition xx?., 4.
The first question that you ask when about
o ehnmro your roslittMieo to any el? v is i
‘What Is tho health of tho place? Is It
shaken of fprrlhln dDonlors? What nro tho
hMIs of irortallly? What Is tho death rate?
How hltjli rises tho thermometer?” And nm
I not reasonable In asking, What nro tho
pauitnry eondltions of tho heavenly city Into
which wo all hope to mov •? My text nn-
ivers it by saying, ‘‘Neither shall there be i
bdv more pain.”
First, I remark, there will bo no pain o!
disappointment In hrnven. Iff could put
the picture of what you nutfotpatftd of life
‘ you began It beside tho picture of
what youbavo ronlisad, I would finl a groat
difference. You have stumbled upon groat
'appointments. Perhaps you expected
riehey, snd you hnx’o worked hard enough
to pa n them \ you have planned and
worried an 1 persisted until your hau ls worn
worn, and your brain was racked, an 1 vour
heart fainted, and at the end of this long
strife with misfortune you finl that If you
ive r.of I nen positively defento.l It has been
drs'wn 1 ntt'e. It Is still tug and tussle,
is year losing what you gaiood Iasi,
lanoial uikm rtalutles, pulling down faster
hau you build. For pc*rhapi twenty or
thirty v ars vou linvo bor-n running your
era t straight Into t?ih tenth of the wind.
Purlin p* you have had domestic disappoint-
menf. Your children, upon whoso educa
tion you lav shed your hard earned dollars,
hava not turned out ns exnaotorl. Notwith
standing all your counsels and prayers and
fltiin.siaklng, they will not «lo right. Many
n goo l father has lmd a bad boy. Absalom
tro l on D ivid s heart. That mother ntver
tmaginodnH this ns twenty or thirty years
ago she sat by that child’s cradle.
Your life has been n chapter of dlsnp-
po'ntments. But oomo with me and I will
show you a different scene. Jly Clod's grace
en’.erltig tho other city, you will never again
have a blasto l hope. The most jubilant of
expectations >rll! not reach the r nlta.xtlon.
Cnm‘ng to the top of on#mlil of joy, there
xx 111 be other hoi gin s pisfug up1u the vision.
TVs song of transport will but lift you to
higher anthems, lii^0^^^S2MUor.il but n
pit ail. Rcorps of dlanfmfy IfSe ypHUrea
contending for a caratm, s4ru't^jlo ns to
xvhich shall have it. OurnuLmw sro Uitt-
nltely susceptible to sutTeihig. eye, tho
foot, tho baud, with Irdmtuso oup s .\elty of
anguish,
THE LEGISLATURE.
T'ie 11;;!.i child mooln j»t tho entrance ot GEORGIA'S LAW-MAKERS MEET
n manifold lUsunni'S. Si#L.lin'ir tho shrill
V of Infancy ns tho inDi-M strlki's into ths AAU HI.GIN nORK.
Ilia
[ Infancy ns tho l:tnVt
swollen Run. Vou see 1ls i eel In tonsurm
Ini? fevers (hat tnks mar 1 ) than half of thorn
Into the Oust. Old m?n y'asnoa. dlszy and
weak nml short briinlhod and dim olsljt.d.
On every northeast win eomo down pieur-
nnd pni uinonlns, \'ar lifts Its sword
nml hneks nway tho life of wholo gi'imra-
i ons. The hospitals of tho north groin Into
the ear of Got their dhmphtlut. Astatic
holerns and ship tuvors ond typhoids and
London plagues maho tho world's kuucs
' noe’t together.
Pain has cone through 'very stroot nn 1 up)
very ladder and down e\ s y shaf). It Ison)
e wave, on tho mas-, on tho huaeh.v
founds from clip of nlerhsnt’a task and
adder’s sting and eroe.ddeV tooth and
horse’s hoof an l wheel's revolution. IV i
gather up tho Inllrmittes of our parents nnd
Irin on t to on - ehll lrna the tnheritanoo
nugmeuto.l by our own oljkuasses, nnd they
add to them thnlr own disor ders, to pass tho
Inhoritunea to other gau n' illons. In A. I).
2il2 the plaguo lit ttome sihotn into tho dust
5003 chlams dally. In lit, in Gonstantl-
ile, 1000 grave jiggers were not enough to
bury the don I; In 131SI ophthalmia sdsid
ho whole Prussian army. At time, tho
nrtli lias swoltorp I Willi ■iliT’Wlnq.
Cniint up tho pains of '.'istarlltB, whom
30,000 .' ill ; of t’oateuoy, waoro 100,030 fell,
of Chalons, where O’la.hfV) felja_ of Marius'
light, lu which 203.000 It'll i of tho tragedy
at If ,rat. wlinre GeogyrigWinn maosaorod
1.1103,000 111 'n, an l of NTBiC where ho slow.
1.717,000 no,) ,lo j of the iJtlDjSOO this mon-
sier snarlllaa.l til fonralli voqflfcs hn sv lit
forth to do as hi daiiafi*. to oxlounvlnato
the entlrn Chinos* natlonsiiud maku ikp otn-.
piro ii piisluri) for eattle. \
Think o ' tho denth throes of tho e.OOO.IlOO
men saorlflasil In ons r.v-t|«l«tn' of Xerx«s.
T link of tho 120,000 that perished In tho
siege of Oden I. o) 330,030 ,load at Aare, of
1.100,000 dead la tho siege ot Jerusalem, ot
1,810,000 o! tho dead at T toy. nnd then gorn-
plotn tile rev.ow bv oonslAiring tho stupou-
dotts esllnvitn of JI lmu’i’T - B ll'ko, that tho
loss by war lmd been thlrty-fly i tlm"0 tho
outire then present noiuilajtlnn of tho globs,
(Jo through and ex.iiuuo' tho lamirations,
tho gunshot fraoturos, tha sn'mr wounds,
the-gashas of tha hattlaax, thoshtin othomh-
shell an t explode I mlno.nul lulling WitH
nil 1 those destroyed an OT tip) gnu cm>
ilag'h nud tho hoof ot 11*0 oai-slt'V hors3,
thohurnlug thirsts, tha^rmip li^srs, tha
rosls that shivered, the iroplahl suns that
“■ Ad I It up, gnheflt It^o.Shi) Hf»i,
Rontluo Husluoss of Doth llouso anil
a Heimte—llllls of Interost.
Tho people of Goor^in, through
thoir representatives, tho members of
tho gouerul nssombly of tho state,
elontod two United States souators
Tuesday. By tho full domooratio vote
in both branches they seloetnd Hon.
I’atl'iok Wnlsh ns senator for tho short
form, ending March 4, 1895, nml Hon.
A. O, Bacon ns sennlor for the full
term of six years, beginning Mnrch 4,
1395.
SESSION OF THE IlOUBH,
1 Otii Day—Tho first guns in the war
ngniust tho present, oonviot, 'enso sys
tem were fired in tho house of repre
sentatives Monday morning by Mr.
Bennett, of Wayne, and Mr. Houston,
of DcKulb. They both introduced
bills lookiug to the employment of tho
state convicts when tho lense by which
they tiro controlled hits expired. Tho
bill of Mr. Bennett provides for tho
improvement of tho public roads of the
state by working upon thorn persons
tlonvioted of Monies. Tho bill of Mr.
Houston looks to tho working of con
victs upon a farm, but ho is particular
that it will not conflict with free labor.
This bill provides that the governor,
Urn attorn oy-goneral nud five mom bars
from tho gcuernl nssombly shall pnr-
chuHO a fnrjn of not loss than .1,000
nor more than 10,000 aores,
video for an rtppro_ “
000. Both 4)111* wore
tontiary committee, .
Bibb. introdnoed an imp&Ftantbill in
tho houso looking tP*jh*Ak>l<Uifo of, a
oftnsti|(ltlShr’""
1895.
d. Ono v, no by Mr. Bowlings, of Wash
ington, and held in view tho lessening
of elections. It provides that all
elections for county officers shall
bo held iu Octi/',r when mem
bers of tho general nssombly tr-
elected, instead of in January, ns at
present. Tho otlior bill was by Mr.
Pittman, of Troup. It provides fur the
consolidation of all elections, congres
sional, state and county, on the Bitmo
day in October, to bo fixed by tho
committee. Mr. Branch, of Columbia,
introduced a bill to reduce tho sidnries
of the members of the railroad com
missioners. Many oilier measures were
considered nud the houso adjourned
until Mondny.
SESSION OF TUB SENATE.
10th Day.—Tho sonato was in ses
sion blit twenty minutes Mondny. It
is wailing on tho houso for something
to work on. There were but twenty-
throe sbnntors present. Two bills were
introduced, one by Senator Roberts,
making it a penal offense to aid nn iu-
mnty of tho asylum to escape; nud ono
by Sonator Btnrr prescribing how legal
servioo may be effected upon oompnuies
or corporations having property but
no ngent or plncb of businoss in tho
state. Tho senate, like tho house, ad
journed until Tuesday afternoon.
11th Day—The sennto mot nt 3 :30
o’eluok TuoBilny afternoon, nnd in a
quiet and uninteresting way officially
sanctioned tho work of last Thursday’s
caucus by casting its vote for Patrick
Walsh for the short term, ending
March 4, 1895, in the United State*
achate,, and for A. _0. Baoon fo* the
lung term, commencing March 4,1806.
Theu Senator Harris, of the twenty-
third, intrednoed a resolution, whf '
was unanimously adopted, that aj
committee of two from the sor*‘"“
five from tho house .he 4
to examine into /.l^, nyestmt ooflviot
system or the state,, ana to suggest a
:b"i)gfl the system, in' order
stii dt'tno
■ill to provide for a general registra
tion of all voters in Georgia. This
oill makes the tax collectors of
nch comity registrar. Mr. Mcn-
roo introduced an important
ill. It was a bill to amend'seotiou
3149 of tho code rotating to traders.
his amendment proposes to prevent
placing of regular merchants in tlni
hands of receivers, and muko the taiv
apply only to insolvent corporations, j
A number of olh"r new bills were eon-;
sidered, and at 12 o’olook tbo senate
went into Iho houso to coi.solidnto tint
vote for senator. j
18th Day.-j-Ih tho Honalo Thursday,;
the resolution introduced by Senator
McGregor to ratmi a joint oommitte« i
to present an election law after the or
der of tho Australian ballot system.
*»», on motion of Mr. MoGregor,
token up. Ho moved its adoption. ’
Mr. Ctimming gloved that tho resolu
tion he roferred to tho oommittee on
privileges nud elections, 'lhe resoln- %
tion took that course. Senator Bob- ,;V
erts, by consont, introduced a bill re
lating to working publio road*. Tho
bill proposes to repeal the road taw
now in effect. Senator Boyd intro
duced in tho senate the same bill «s
was introduced in- tho house Wednes
day, providing for a diopeusnry iu
all counties where liquor is now sold.
The judiciary committee reported
tho hills of Mr. Gumming to deter
mine the descent of property where
parties are lost in the nnme catastrophe;
also how foreign wills may bo Admit
ted to probate in Georgia. Senator
Sanford itftrudnoed a resolution pro-
vidiug.for a joint oommittee of three
from *Xfie senate and Sve from the
hourt to ascertain exaotly when the
onviot lease expii
report the
** early as
uobdto