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About The Cartersville express. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1875-18?? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1878)
THE EXPRESS. Cartersville, 6a., August 8, 1878. THERE IS A CHARM I.\ KISSING. Oh! there is a charm in kissing Pretty maidens on the sly, When the old folks, wrapted in slumber, Heed not moments passing by ; Wacn you put your arm around them, And they nestle at yon heart, Then you tind the charm iu kissiug, And the bliss of Cupid’s dart. Ob, there is a charm in kissing - Tasting of the blissiu! wine That a maiden’s heart doth oft'er When her lips are pressed to thine ; When the loving words are spoken, And she bids you hope and wait — What is there, so nice as kissing In the wiching hours so late ? Ob, there is a charm in kissing, And the bliss will ne’er grow cold— Many will repeat the story, When the silver tints the gold, How upon apleasaut evening, In the purple twilight glow, They first felt the cuarm of kising. And love’s thrilling bliss did know. CRrSTS AND CRUMBS. Carbolic acid or amonia, in the foot hath, will euro perspiration ol the feet. A bit of sandpaper in the house will keep needles sharp and save annoy ance. Furniture polish can now be bad by tlie pint; applied with a cloth it makes the furniture look like new. Bed clothing packed away for the summer, should have a sprinkle of camphor gum. Bugs will get in where moths may not. Powdered borax sprinkled around the baseboards and on shelves will drive cockroaches and ants away. Branches of the elderbush, hung in the dining-room of a housa, will clear the room of Hies. There is an odor which insects detest. A bottle of cement, a bucket of paint, with hammer and nails, will save to any household ten times their cost every year. Old-fashioned, hulled corn; such as our mothers liked to prepare, can be had in restaurants the world over, and is much called for. Fresh cream is the best cure for sunburn. It draws the fire and soothes and heals. The mau who permits door-knob s to be kicked around the floor, gates to remain unhinged and doors to swag has no right to complain of poorly cooked provisions and badly ironed shirts. Kerosene lamps which arc trimed daily rarely explode. The careless ness of the housewife can be blamed for most of the lamp explosions. The husband who takes down and carefully puts away the clothes line, alter the Monday wash is out of the way, will not be buried at public ex pense. Indeed, he will have means to bury others. The farmer who makes his wife bring water from a spring year after year, because h e “has’nt time to dig a well” at the house, is simply giving the doctor what he should keep in his pocket. Lime tor Arn.E Orchards. —“I have used lime for apple orchards at the rate of twenty bushels per acre for many years and find it very bene ficial.” To Cure a Felon. —When indi cations of a felon appear, soak a piece of ronnet iu warm milk until it becomes sott, and apply it to the part affected, renewing it, occasionally, and keeping it on until a cure is effected. W ATERMELON PICKLES.— Ten pounds of the rinds, boiled in water till tender; make a syrup of two pounds sugar and one quart of vine gar, half ounce cloves, one ounce cin namon ; this to be poured over the the rinds, boiling hot, three days in succession. To Keep Lemons for Years!— Grate the yellow part of the rind, and squeeze the juice; add to every four lemons a pound of sugar, and put in glass topped jars. These are equal to fresh ones in winter for pies, and can also be used for lemonade. Canned Tomatoes. —Place the tomatoes in a pan and set in a hot o /en ; when thoroughly cooked they can easily be slipped out of the skin into the cans ; fill the cans with the juice that is left in the pan and they are ready to seal up. The cans must be prepared in the usual way. A Cheap and Good Pudding.— Four ounces, each of suet flour, cur rants, raisins, and bread crumbs ; two tablespoonsfnl of good molasses, and half a pint of milk. Mix well and boil two and a halt to three hours. Use wine, or brandy, or plaiu sauce, as may be prefen ed. This is a pretty good substitute lor plum pudding. Bread Griddle Cakes.— Soak bread over night in milk, sweet or sour (if sweet, sift baking powder in the flour ; if sour, use soda,) by pour ing boiling water on the soda, stirring well; pour the hot water into the cakes, but not the dregs ; one half cup flour, one egg to a pint of soaked bread, sufficient milk to make a good batter. When rightly made are pre ferable to batter cakes. Neuralgia and Rheumatism.— Avery simple relief for neuralgia is boil a handful of lobelia in a half pint of water till all the strength is out of the herb, then strain it off and add a teaspoonful of tine salt. Wring cloths out of the liquid as hot as pos sible, and spread over the part aifec red. It acts like a charm. Change the cloths as soon os cold, till the pain is all gone, then cover the place over so as to prevent taking cold. Rheumatism can often be releived by application to the painful parts of cloths wet in a solution of salsoda and water, If there is inflammation in the joints the cure is very quick ; the water needs to be lukewarm. Apple Yineger. —To m tke go and apple vinegar in the easiest possible way put the parings in a stone jar and add just enough waun water to wet them through thoroughly. Cover with a coarse piece of muslin and set in a warm place until fermentation beging. Then strain—first through a coaise sieve (this is to remove the skin) then trough a piece of towel ing. After this has settled drain it off into a stone jug* Tie a coarse rag over the mouth to keep out the in sects without keeping out the air. Stand in the kitchen near the stove till sour enough for use. Almost be foie you are aware of it you are sup plied with good vinegar without its having cost anything except a little labor. ROME SOt If IN 01 MANIKE It is stated, from an experiment carefully made by Samuel F. Dana, that a cow fed on a daily ration of twenty-four pounds of hay and twelve pounds of potatoes will yield, in ad dition to her liquied evacuation, over 31,000 pounds of dung per year, con taining 189 pounds of ammonia, which, with other chemical materials amount in value tf over forty dol lars. By the same authority, it ap pears that the liquid manure amounts to over 7,000 pounds per annum, and surpasses the solid excrement in value iu the ratio of two to one. This makes the total value of the manure equal to cost of feeding. Josiah Quincy, Jr., found that a good cow, when kept on the soiling system, yields three and a half cords of solid excrement, and that the liq uid manure, when absorbed with muck, is worth more than fifteen cords, "worth from five to eighteen dollars per cord. Joseph Harris estimates that he got forty-one and a half cents’ worth of manure per week from pigs that were fed at cost of thirty-seven and a half cents per week, thus showing that the value of the whole cost of feeding. We get these statements from a letter of Conrad Wilson, in the New York World. Professor Stockbridge, of Massachusetts discredits the state ment by the very reasonable calcu lation that the solid evacuations which are credited to Mr. Dana’s cow more than double the whole amount of her solid food. After making large abatement, however, from these reported results, there is no doubt that the cost of the feed used in fat tening cattle is very largely repaid in the value of the manure. It is ex pected as a maxim in farm economy that the best way to market the pro ducts of the field is by turning (hem into flesh. We thus get the lull value of the food consumed, and save the manure for enriching our fields. A sensible farmer remarked to us, not long since, “The manures you make at home are agricultural ma nures, because they enrich the farm er.” It is certainly wiser economy to spend seventy-five dollars in home made manure, when the animals which made it repay the cost in flesh, than to expend it even for the best commercial fertilizers. Better still to make the feed at home, and thus make both the meat and the manure without paying out any money.— Farm Journal . SHEEP FARMING FOR THE SOUTH. Exclusive cotton growers is an un satisfactory business. It has brought many planters to bankruptcy, and more into debt; and the advice is given, “raise corn, grass, anything but cotton.” The American Agri culturalist has for many years advo cated the growing of a variety of crops in the Southern States, to such an extent as would involve all the planters capital and attention. First, food crops; then crops to consume upon the farm, and then the crops to sell. Southern farmer then has food, meat, manure and money ; and in this case, the money is more apt to stay with him than that procured by the sale of cotton, from which is de ducted the cost of fertilizers, food in terests, etc., and a very small balance, if any, is left for the planter and his w'orkmen. It is encourageing to note the change which has occurred of late years in this direction, and the fanners. The acreage under wheat, corn, oats, grass, fodder crops and clover, is yearly widening; and that under cotton at the same time is only slightly diminishing; thus leaving the cash crop, nearly, if not quite, as pro ductive as ever; but rendering the expenditure for food and fertilizers very small, or completely avoiding them. But it is always safe to have two things to depend upon, so that if one fails, the otbor may remain, and wool is precisely a companion crop for cotton in this respect. Besides, with wool there is mutton, which is a food crop, and sheep manure is of the richest quality. Wool is always salable, and is the staple of a large home manufacture. It is worth more in many places, at a distance from the seaboard, than on the coast, if there are mills in the lo cality to work it up. Mutton and lamb, if of fair quality, are always sal able to the local butchers, and pro vide a very agreeable fresh food for the farmer’s family. Sheep w r ill thrive exceedingly in the Southern States. There are vast tracts of land, notably, the piny woods and table lands of Western Georgia, Carolinas, and Eastern Tennessee, which are un surpassed as cheap sheep-v alks. In ihe South, sheep require less feeding in the winter than in any other part of the country, California excepted, perhaps. Root crops may be grow*n and fed oft* from the ground by a ‘penniug’ system, and thus the soil be richly and cheaply fertilized and pre pared for cotton or corn. Large tracts of adaptable land can be cheap ly procured in many parts of the South. There are several varieties of wild grasses and other plants which grow spontaneously, and which fur nish excellent pasture for sheep; among these are the so-called Wire grass, Bermuda grass, Crap grass and Broom sedge. Other plants of an as tringent and resinous character grow in tne old fields and pine woods; and blue grass of the best kind grows abundantly upon the table lands. From ample experience, it has been found that fine wool, and wool of the common Merino crosses, can be grown very profitably in the South ; flock owners of large experience have rated the cost of growing wool under the most favorable circumstances, as low as six cents per pound. The cli mate enable the raising of early lambs for Northern markets, to be carried on with the greatest facility ; and the easy communication with the North, as well as markets of the South, en sure a ready sale of the products. This heading reads rather formida ble, but otherwise is as simple aspos sible. It is this: That in removing the hay from the field the “rakings’’ should be allowed to remain, for two reasons : One is that it will not pay fur the labor in gathering them up ; the other that it does pay and twice over, in being scattered over the field and acting as a mulch for the exposed roots ol' the stubble. It keeps the roots cool and moist and will add large to the next year’s yield of tim othy or orchard-grass. Man) first class farmers already do this, but there are so many who do not that it may be worth while to remind them of the advantage of it. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. W. C. EDWARDS, M ANI E ACTI Kia OF AND DEALER IN Harness, Saddles, Bridles, Whips ROBES, BLANKETS, ( OBBN, FEY-NETS, die. Cartersville, Georgia. Repbil’ing Promptly Execntod. NICT3 ROSEWOOD COFFINS ALL SIZES TO SUIT. SUMNER HOUSE:, C’oriier Main ami Tennessee Sts, 4’arlersville, Ga, o jyj R. SUMNER HAVING REMOVED FROM TIIE FOSTER HOUSE BACK TO THE Old Sumner House, ami having spent considerable time and money in refurnishing and fitting up liis Hotel, is now prepared to accommodate the Traveling Public in the most acceptable manner TERMS VERY LOW AND IN KEEPING WITH THE TIMES. Board can be obtained at this House cheaper than anywhere else in North Geoigia. Stop and see lor yourselves. aug X A. R. HUDGINS, West Main Street, - - Cartersville, Georgia. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN FAMILY GROCERIES, FINE WINES, Produce of every kind, and a Stock of Greneral IVLeroLiandise. His Stock is new*, having just been bought from the Northern and Eastern markets, at the lowest cash prices, which will enable him to sell them to thfc people of Bartow an 1 adjoining counties AT BOTTOM PRICES! He returns his moft gratefu 1 acknowledgments for past favors, and most respectfully solici a continuance ol the same from his friends and the public generally. J. J. HOWARD & SON Exchange and Deposit Bank, Cartersville, Georgia. Deposits received subject to Sight Draft. Collections made iu all parts or the United States and Canada. Sight Exchange on New York and Atlanta bought and sold. Foreign Exchange bought &sold Buy and sell Gold, Stocks, Bonds on order. Prompt attention given to Commercial Collec tions. augl DAYID W. CUIIKY, WIBLISALE 4 MIL DRUM, CARTEBSYILLE, GA., DEALER IN Drugfl, Ylicinicnl*. Patent Medicines, Paint*, Oils,Yarnislies. Window Glass, Putty, Lamps and I.amp Goods, Trusses of the best make. Fancy and Toilet Articles, Hair, Tooth and Hail Brushes, Perfumery and Toilet Soaps. Cigars and Tobaccos of the best Brands, Spices, dee., Ac. PHYSICIANS’ PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED AT ALL HOURS. Pure Burn, jun 15-1 y. The Stanton House, CHATTANOOGA, TENN. milE STANTON HOUSE is now prepared to accommodate permanent ami transient guest? _l_ with every coinlort and convensence to he found in any first-class hotel in the country, Ii is situated near the Kailroud Depots, and hut a short distance from the business centre of the citv. The house has been recently refurnished throughout. The sleeping rooms are large and comfortable, the sample rooms for commercial agents spacious and convenient; the dining room airy, cool, well ventilated and supplied with every variety the market affords. A Billiard Room, Bar Room, Barber Shop? and a Telegraph Office are Established in the House. We solicit the patronage of the traveling public, and feel assured we can give better accom modation than any house South, and guarantee satisfaction at all times. 11, N. McLANE, Chiel'Clerk. OLIVER P. POUTS, Chief Manager. 11. R. STONE, Late of Maxwell House. New Advertisements. STATE OF GEORGIA. Comptroller General** Oflice- Atlanta, Ga., July 10,1575. To whom it may concern: A Met of Wild Lands returned by Tax Re ceivers, as in default for taxes for 1577, has been published iu the Atlanta Constitution once a week for four weeks, as required by law; and ten posters, containing said list, has been sent to the Honorable Ordinary of each County, to be posted in his own, and the Clerk of the Superior Court’s office, and other public places in the County. Citizens are respectfully requested to ex amine said list, and make corrections, or pay the tax, and save further cost or trouble. Very Respectfully, W. L. Goldsmith, Comptroller General. NEEDLES, ATTACHMENTS, Parts and Findings. For all Sewing Machines, also the best qual ity of MACHINE OIL, Furnished at the lowest prices by W. 11. WIKIiE, & CO., Cartersvillc, Ga. 37 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga. 59 John St. New York. OLD RELIABLE. AS HERETOFORE, I am still dealing In all kiuds ot FRESH MEATS, HIDES and TALLOW. Call at “CARTERSVILLE MEAT MARKET,” West Main street. A. G. B, VANDIVERE. aug 1 JOHN TANARUS, OWEN, practical •PI WATCHMAKER HR l j •gM AND jeweler, ('IAN Supply anything in the Watch, Clock J an< * Jewelry line, at the most reasonable prices, and warranted to prove as represented. Work done in the best manner, and Warranted (o Give Satisfaction 1 am not selling below cost, nor am I work ing for fun. au g l W. o. BOWLER, UKA'.KR IN HARNESS, SADDLES, SADDLES, WHIPS, SPURS AND COLLARS. Repairing done at shortest notice. Will soil II A R I\ E S S Cheaper than any dealer in North Georgia. Give me a call. aug l-0m E. RIDLEY & SONS 309,311 k 3111-2 Grand St. N. Y. Spring and Summer Catalogue and Price ristof Millinery & Fancy Goods, SENT FREE On application to any address. Our Cat alogue this season is a complete Trade Circular, con taining nearly 200 pages of closely printed matter, interspersed with over 500 Illustra tions, comprehending every article a lady is likely to want lor herself, her family or house hold. A dozen different grades of each article, with the price marked in plain figures ageinst each article. LADIES SUITS AND CLOAKS Under-garments, Hosiery, Laces, Trimmings Dress Silks, Ladies, Misses and Chidren’s Shoes, Boy s’ Clot li in TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED HATS, HOUSEHOLD GOODS* We promise the same attention to orders en trusted to us as if purchaser was present. ESTABLISHED 1849 Klw. Ridley & Sons, 3J9, 3111-2, GRAND ST., 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68 and 70 ALLEN ST., NEW YORK. ang 1-ti. CITY LIVERY, FEED AND SALE STABLE. This stable is stocked with good gentle bu - ses, good Phaetons, OPEN AND TOP BUGGIES, hacks to suit all public travel. Careful drivers sent out with all Teams. Great pains taken to select horses that will please all that ride after them. Give us a trial. Stables East Main street, ( artersvillc, Ga. THOMPSON A SCOTT. Proprietors July 11 18.*7. - 1878. THE CARTERSVILLE EXPRESS SIX MONTHS FOR FIFTY CENTS ! In order to extend the circulation of The Express, and to give the public generally an opportunity of bearing witness to the fact that we iutetul to publish the best Weekly Journal in Cherokee Georgia, we will send Tuk Express from now until the first of January, 1579, for Fifty Cents. We recoguize the fact, that our interest and that of the people are identical, and wc shall endeavor to subserve and carry forward the aims and objects which will indissolubly blend the interests of this section of Georgia iu every possible manner, and publish a LIVE, WIDE-AWAKE, PROGRESSIVE PAPER, which will be welcomed by the Fanner, the Mechanic, the Housewife, the Merchant, and the people generally, 0 THE OED EXPRESS is Firmly Established; has stood the storms and changes of twenty years-,during which time has unflinchingly represented the Constitution of our fathers, and been true in its advocacy of Democratic principles. In the future it will strenuously oppose the dangerous, destructive and oppressive doctrine of Radicalism, and will continue with the “Old Guard” in defense of the rights and privileges of the people, it will, in the future, be devoted to GENERAL INTELLIGENCE, and will contain the latest Home and Foreign News, and will use its influence to merit and receive the patronage of the public, by proving itself worthy of it. In addition to this, it wil LEAD THE VAN ! In publishing abroad the many advantages of this most beautiful section of country, and will seek to invite an influx of skilled Farmers, Capitalists and Manufacturers, to assist us in constructing a prosperous future, and in making OLD BARTOW THE PEER OF ANY COUNTY IN THE STATE as regards a Commercial, Agricultural, Manufacturing independence. Blarl with us now, and JOIN THE VAST THRONG for whom we expect to furnish entertainment for the year. Our friends everywhere are urgently solicited to make up clubs iu every neighborhood as rapidly as possible. I’atronage and encouragement extended to the Old Express, whose object it will ever be to Illustrate Cartersville wherever it circulates, cannot prove otherwise than a Good Investment, resulting in satisfactory dividends to patrons aud citizens generally. AVe start out with The Largest Circulation of any weekly paper published between Atlanta and Chattanooga, if not in the Slate, and confidently expect to double and quadruple it within a very short time. ‘ 1 ' : ! ( ' |f ; o ADVERTISERS Would do well to hand iu their favors at an early date, as through The Express, they will certainly be able to reach the working, laboring, purchasing masses of Cherokee Georgia, and the people generally; and although our circulation will be very large, our advertising rates will be placed at figures In conformity to the times. n ' - OUR JOB DEPARTMENT k Is supplied with two fine Power Presses, together with a splendid assortment of Job type and material in every variety, as well as the newest and latest designs just received from the foundry, will enable us to execute in the finest typographical manner all work entrusted to our care, and at low rales. Please address for sample copy of paper, and further particulars, THE EXPRESS, Cartejsvillc, ilft. The St. James Hotel, CABTERSTILLE, - - GA ABOVE NEW HOUSE—THE MOST COMMODIOUS AND SUPERB IN ALL ITS AP- X pointinents in North Georgia, Is now receiving a generous putionage from the traveling public—evincing the appreciation which this leading hotel was designed to merit from com mercial and general travel od the great KENNESAW ROUTE. AS A SUMMER RESORT, THE ST. JAMES is already the favorite of a number of the best families now booked for rooms, single and en mite,. Application for aparttaent* by mail or otherwise will receive at tention. Commercial travelers from Boston to New Orleans recognize the superiority of the St. James, and are of its daily guests. Friends in all parts or the State and elsewhere, under stand that the ST. JAM KB, cau be none other th,,n par excellence, first- class. R, A. CRAWFORD. Professional Cards. a. 11. II ATI is. ATTORNEY AT LA W CARTERSVILLE, GA. Office up-stairs over Stokely & Williams. dccU-1 v J* A. BAKER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, GA. Wl I.L rU ACTIOK IN- ALL THE COU RTS of llartow and adjoining counties. Prompt attention given to all business entrust ed to his care. Office iL Bank Block, over the Postoffice. janl7-tt. U. t. PARROTT. ATTORNEY AT LAW. CARTERSVILLE, GA. Prompt attention given to all business en trusted to my care. BZi?*’ 1 Mlieo over the >tore of Stokely A- Wil liams. janl7-6m Robert IS. Trippc, A TTOR NE Y A T LA\V , CARTERSVILLE, GA. Office in the Court House. AY ill practice In all the Courts except Bartow County Criminal Court. Collections promptly made.' octlS W. T. WOFFORD. | | J. M. NEAL. WOFFORI) *V HEEL, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. CARTERSVILLE, GA. docT-3in. _ T. W. MILNKK. J. W. HARRIS, JK HIIKEK A HARRIS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, CARTERSVILLE, GA., Office on West Main Street. R. W. JII RPIIEY, ATTOII NE Y A T LA W, CARTERSVILLE, GA. OFFICE (up stairs) in the brick building corner of Main and Irwin streets. dee2-tf. A. n. lOIITE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CARTERSVILLE, GA. Special attention given tn the collection of claims. Office, west side public square, up-stairs over W. \V. Rich & Co.’s store, second door south of Bos to nice. _ nraylL. .1 Oim.MO(L\, ATTORNEY AT RAW. Office at the Store of P, L. MOON & SON EAST MAIN STREET, CARTERSVILLE. GA. jun 22. LA.W CA.H.D. CAKKY W. STYLES, JAMES TT. VINCENT. STALES fc VINCENT, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, Canton, cueuokek county, ga. WILL PRACTICE IN THE SUPERIOR Courts of the Blue Ridge Circuit, and oi jrsartow, Gordon and Hall ; in all the Courts of Cherokee county ; in the United Mtntes Dis trict and Circuit Courts for the Northern Dis trict of Georgia, and in the Supreme Court of Georgia. Land cases and criminal law made specialties, and all business by mail or at office will be promptly attended to. uprSS-lf. Dr. J. Dickson Smith, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN & SURGEON OARTERSVILLK, GA., Office and Resi ence at the Ricks House Dr. J. A. Tigner PRACTICAL DENTIST. Offiee over W. H. Wiklc & Co.’s store, CARTERSVILLE, GA. Having severed his Profess Hf. sional connection with Dr. Johnson, hereby invitee hie for mer patrons and friend.-' to cull and see him at liis own office ; and would im press upon the community the great impor tance of having their dental work attended to uromptly. Call and see him. maylfi-tf. Hotels and Ilestauraiils. LITCHFIELD HOI SE, AC/WORTH, GA. E. L. LITCHFIELD, Proprietor. and dQNVENIENT to the depot, and its tallies V/ supplied with the very best tiie market affords. XIIE FOSTER HOUSE, Cartersville, Ga. JOSHUA St M.VEB,^Proprietor. THE accommodations and fare at this House are unsurpassed in this section, and the charges are as tow as the lowest. junc22 THE C HOICE HOTEL, Corner Broad and Bridge Streets. J. G. RAWLINS, Proprietor. Situated in the Business part of the City. ROME, GA. Passengers taken to and from the depot free of charge. 11. RAWLINS, Clerk. nov23-tl. 141 HI BALL HO USE, ATLANTA, GA. Largest and most Commodious House sontA ON and after July 15th, the Rates of this Elegant House will be S3.GO PER DAY t G. MCGINLEY & CO. COUC HE HOUSE. Kingston, Ga. JIIS large and comfortable house is now JL kept, by \V. YV. Rainey. The traveling public will find good plain accommodations. Parties wishing board through the summer will find Kingston one of the healthiest and quietest localities in Uppct Georgia. Three or four families can get comfortable rooms in view of trains. Terms very reasonable. June2s W. YV. RAINEY". " THE RONE HOTEL, (Formerly Tennessee House.) BROAD STREET, near RAILROAD DEPOT. J. A. STASSBERT, Propietyr. Rome, Georgia. miHS HOTEL is situated within twenty steps of the railroad platform, and con venient to the business portion of town. Servants polite and attentive to their duties, figy** All Baggage handled Free of Charge.. julyl9. YV. M. STEEPLES Clo-;_ THE NEW Davis Sewing Machine. THE GREATEST Novelty OF THE AGE. and the best dewing machine on the maiket, as allYv”, osce ft readily acknowl edge this fact. We respectfrjiy j nv ,te the public to come and examine OUI . ma eliine w hether you want to buy or J’ o t, We alsq, keep second hand machines of va rious k , U( jg ) w arranted to be in perfect order, whic’,. we \ V it| sell cheap. ■ e are prepared and ready at all times to im pair si wing machines, cooking stoves, guns, pistols, clocks, watches, jewelry, musical in struments, umbrellas, parasols ; in fact any thing that is liable to break Or get out ol or der, at prices to suit the times. All work warranted. - IIAKYVKLL A WINBURN, West Main Street, ap rf 1-tf Cartersville, Ga. Atlanta Medical College, ATLANTA, GA.* The "Twenty-First Annual Course ol Lectures will commence OCT. 15,1878, aud close MARCH 4th. 1879. , _ _ Faculty.—J. G. Westmoreland, YY . I . Westmoreland, W. A. Love. Y . H. Taliaferro, Jno. Thad. Johnson, A. W. Calhoun, H. Logan, J. T. Banks: Demonstrator, C. YY. Nutting. . Send for announcement, giving lull infor mation JNO. THAD. JOHNSON Dean. J uly 25, 3m.