The Cartersville express. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1875-18??, February 24, 1881, Image 2

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The Caitcrsvillo Express. CORNELIUS WILLINOHAY. Editor. For the c.///><- Viexintunce, Far til? 'lo9*o 91 f J that 9teed * f'rxi* tl IhCf , For the future in the distance,, And the good that ire can da. Cartmllle, lit., Thursday, Feb. J 4, 1881. COUNTRY JOURNALISM. There is ft squeal—a kick, you might sty-and it comes from Uncle Peter Lawshe, of the Gainesville Southron . He is disposed to grumble at the fact our city dailies will save up matter from their daily editions to print a blanket sized weekly which the publishers aend out at the low price of one dollar a year. Brother Lawshe regards Ihis as a below.*!tie-belt competition with the legitimate weekly journals The publishers of these city weeklies are enabled, at no expense, save the trifliug cost of white paper, press work, ink, and mailing, to send out a mammoth sheet that completely swallows up the onery county week lies. The Atlanta Constitution, which tends out one of these weekly “no pent-up-Utica” sheets, takes up the cudgel and comes back at Uncle Pe ter tbuswise: Whin a country weekly begins to lose its •übshribcrx, the tact is to be ascribed cither to home competition or to a loss ot interest; but vo local newspsper thot tills its field and im presses its influence upon its own community lias anything to fear from cheap newspapers pnb!i*hed t a distance. * * N. person trilb a taate for r rod inf la likely to slight his local psper provided it be a good one. This is all very true, but we wish the writer ol it was for two weeks the publisher of a country weekly Bay be gave his paper the most un ceasing labor, worked hard the whole week with the limited resources of a country editor at command; remem bering that it is a mighty rich coun try editor who can afford to hire a full corps of printers and attaches. He generally does his own work, edits the paper, sets the type, etc., and seldom ever has he more help than that of an apprentice, conse quently his paper is of small dimen sions. The few spare moments he has he devotes to canvassing for subscribers. The first man he tack les will iy: “VVa-a 1 I’d like ter take yer paper, but hit’s too high. I kin sen to the Atlanter C omtootion and git bit fer a doller an’ hits twict biggern youru ” Now you might sit down and paralyze your tongue to the consistency of a wi*t postal card in an argument with that fellow and you would never convince him that his county paper is worth more to him than the city weekly. Of course the city weekly is not responsible f r this lack of appreciation. Th**y can afford to print their big, cheap week lies* and have a right to do it. The fault and trouble lies with ih* eto a horn you look for patron age, Uncle Peter. They are theories you ought to prod. We have some of the same sort over this way, but we’ve quit trying to do anything with them. We arc trying our best to give our people a good local pape-, as cheap as we, by doing our own work, can afford, and the advan tages i.f subscription to it by the people of this county are plain enough to he seen by a blind man. Do the city weeklies say anything iu regard to our own county? Noth ing. Do they contain notices of your schools, meetings, churches,improve* meats and hundreds of other local matters of interest which yonr home paper does" without pay ? Not an item. Do they ever say a word calculated to draw attention to your county and aid in Its progress and enterprise? Not a line. And there are men who take such contracted views of this matter that, unless they are getting as many square inches of reading matter in their own as they do in a city weekly they think they are not gettiug the worth of their money. It reminds us of the man who took the largest pair of boots Iu the box because the price was the same as the pair, much smaller, that fitted him. Of the seventy-six members of the United States senate who will take their seats in March, twenty at least are business men, while, in addition, three others have practically aban doned law to engage in commercial or other pursuits. In the other elec tions which have just taken place, five lawyers are succeeded by five gentlemen belonging to the commer cial classes. The business interests of the country—its mines, railroads, agriculture, commerce and trade will this year have a larger represen tation than, possibly, they ever had in ttie highest legislative body. The governor of North Carolina, | and the governor of South Carolina, and the governors of Georgia, Mary land, Virginia and Tennessee have selected Senator Wade Hampton to speak for the Southern portion of the •‘Old Thirteen” at the Cowpens’ cen tennial. Governor Hampton has ac cepted the appointment. In Tuesday’s letter to the Constitu tion, Henry Grady says: “I see that General Tbomtn is quoted as offering to ‘bet £fCO Mint Mr. Davis will never publish bis b .nk while he (Totmb-j is :*ltve.’ Unless the gen eral bus determined to die very soon, it will pay some capitalist to Invite him to ‘put up or shut up.’ Mr. Da vis has finished his book, and unless the genera! can hastily intimidate the printers and binders who are now putting it into shape, will be sure to ‘come out.” I am not certain that after the book has appeared, General Toombs will not wUh he had died before it did come out, though I doubt that. It is to be grated with a very fine picture of the general, for which be took the trouble to furuisn a 5 ood photo graph, and Mr. Davis a ill say noth ingin the book that will belie the picture. If the general does not like the book, he can cut bis picture out of it. “1 notice rumors that the friends of Gen. Johnston, Mr. Stephens and others, who expect to be attacked, are getting ready to reply with *ome hitherto ‘unwritten history.’ I am ready to bet my last shoe-peg that Jeff Davis’s In ok w ill stand, when its assailants have beeii forgotten.” “F. H. R.,” the Washington cor resdundent of the Atlanta Constitu tion, writes: “While the house was considering the agricultural appropriation bill, Dr. Felton made a speech. Mr. Hurd, of Ohio, had offered an.amendment requesting the commissioner of agri cure to estimate how much more the farmer had to pay for his imple ments, his clothing, and his general supplies, on account of the protective tariff. After Dr. Felton had spoken on the merits of the bill he turned his attention to the subject suggested by the amendment of Mr. Hurd. His remarks were so well guarded that it would be difficult to define the position he took on the tariff. It seemed at one time as if he were going in squarely for free trade, and then he appeared to favor a tariff “for revenue only’” as the enigmati cal language of the Cincinnati con vention put it. But the general drift of the speech showed that the doctor is in favor of a tariff of some sort. His remarks do not appear in to day’s Record, as he withheld them for revision.” Our youthful political aspirants may take a lesson from the follow ing. Don’t know how it will pan up this way, where the jeans coat and wool hat business has been played so finely: The death of Fernando Wood re moves one of the best known politi cians of the country. He was the first man who discovered that a man could dress like a gentleman, and still letain his hold on a rough con stituency. Indeed, he said that he never dressed so daintily as when in a campaign. “The rougher the men are,’ 4 he said, “the prouder they are to see their representative dressed handsomely and as good as the best.” ‘•There goes our Fernandy,” they would say vvitli pride when t!ey saw him riding with other magnates, the best dressed dandy of them all.— Some of our Georgia politicians, who think a dirty shirt and a rusty coat the nearest way to the heart of the people, might profit by the lesson of a man who has kept his seat in con gress for twenty-four years, and died in harness. Mr Stephens has served longer in the house than any other man. He served sixteen 3'ears before the war, and on the fourth of next month he will bring his total service up to twenty-four years. Mr. Kelly comes next, having served twenty years continuously. Mr. Randall has serv ed eighteen years, and Mr. Garfield would have served a similar length of time if he had kept his seat to the end of this congress. Had Fernando Wood lived to the fourth of March, he, too, would have served eighteen years. The reporters of the Constitution and seem to think the question debatable whether or not the “Yum-yum” song by the dizzy blondes is obscene. They can settle the matter very easily by publishing the verses and letting the public be its own judge. And so the dizzy blondes were ar rested in Atlanta as a highly immo ral show. We now move to take from the table Mr. Harris’s resolu tion that Atlanta be called the ‘‘Cracker City.” That grand old man Judge Hiram Warner, is now lying at death’s door. He was taken very ill last week, and now but little hopes are entertained of his recovery. The Radicals of the Pennsylvania Legislature have come together at last ind elected as United States Sen ator a party by the uauie of Mithell. THE LATEST NEWS. The coal product of Tennessep is G 42.024 tons. South Carolina’s two senators are both wooden-legged. A $50,000 bridge is to be built over the Tombigbee at Columbus. South Carolina state Sunday school convention meets April 13th. Much cotton has been lost in Ai kansas this season from bad weather. About 200,000 people have signed the temperance petition in North Carolina. The colored people in and around Staunton, Va., pa> T taxes on property assessed at SIOO,OOO Knoxville, Tennessee, ice compare will be able to manufacture thirty tons of ice daily this >’ear. From 2,000 to 3,000 broom handles will tie turned out daily at the faeto r> T in Whitside, Tennesee. Senator Jones of Florida, is an Irishman, a devout Roman Catholic, and a carpenter by trade. The general assembly of the Pres byterian church (South) will meet in Staunton, Virginia, in Maj\ Three hundred tons of steel ore will be shipped daily from Amherst county, Virginia, to Pennsylvania. There are ten sassafras oil factories in Buckingham, Va., and one in Amherst. The oil sells for over fifty cents a pound. During the past sixty da3’s a Rich mond, Va., real estate agency has received more than 2,000 inquiries for farms in Virginia. Fred Harper, an attache of the Air Line Railroad, was shot and killed in Charlotte, N. C., Wednesday morn ing by John Farrington for seducing a sister of the latter. There was a desperate fight between the two. After falling, Harper turned over and fired three shots at Farrington. Scribner for March. Scribner for March has a number of interesting points. The second part of Mrs. Burnett’s piquant nove lette, “A Fair Barbarian,” wlil be eagerl3 T read by those who have read the first part* and will be found even more interesting. That this story adds new laurels to the author’s rep utation is not doubted by auy one who has read it through. “Erics son’s Destro3'er, and her New Gun,” is the subject of a paper, by Mr. Charles Barnard, which has the ad vantage of presenting the first draw ings of this JoDg-expected piece of armament, with some fredi details. In “Musical Possibilities of Ameri ca,” Mr. Theodore Thomas writes practically of vocal and instrumental culture, church and theatre music, bad and good methods of teaching, and of American violins. Nevei- Lefore-engraved portraits of Charles* and Mar3’ Lamb, from old paintings embellish a short paper h>’ Mr. John Arbuckle. “In London with Dick ens” is a chronicle of the localities of Boz, including Mr. Tulkinghorn’s house, Limehouse Hole, Jenny Wren’s house, the lons of Court, efi. Dr. B. E. Martin, who contribute this paper, writes from personal fa miliarity with the places which he describes. Another similar paper is to follow. There is an illustrated article on “John Singleton Copley,” by his granddaughter, Mrs. Amory, giving a biograj hical account of an American painter popularly little known, and presenting engravings of “The Boy and the Flying Squir*. rel,” the “Boy Rescued from a Shark,” “Lady Wentworth,” and other illustrations. Still further va rieti’ is given to the number by a second paper of “Recollections of of American Society,” by Mrs. S. W. Oakey; an illustrated paper on “Striped Bass,” by Mr. Francis En dicott; an account of “Protestantism in Ital\',” by Rev. Washington Gladden; more “Notes of a Walk- er,” including discussion of Shak spere’s natural history, by John Bur rough.-; “A Dangerous Virtue,” a ; striking short story, by M. H. H. Boyesen; the tilth part of Mr, Schuy ler’s “Peter the Great as Ruler and Reformer,” illustrated by Blum Neh lig, and others, and the concluding paper of “Glimpses of Parisian Art,” with studio sketches by Jourdain, Alfred Stephens, Rice, Egu3quiza, Madrazo, and others, and interesting personal material. Among the po ems there is a sonnet (“TvVo Homes” by Dr. Holland, who, in “Topics of the Time,’' writes of “George Eliot” and “The Metropolitan Museum,” and takes note of Bishop Coxe’s ex ception to part of a recent paper in Scribner on the Bible Society. “Home and Society” treats of “.A Mother’s Duty to tier Girls,” “A New Cooking Stove,” and “Serv ants’ Rooms and Quarters.” The book notices are by specialists, as fs the aim of the magazine; and this month they have much variety and suggestiveness, a review of “Endy mion” being especially interesting. “The World’s Work” deals with “Artificial Ballast,” “Power for Pleasure-Boats,” “Optical Tests for Milk,” etc., and “Brie a-Brac” has humor and pleasantry of its own j well-established kind. New Advertisements. For Sale. ONE six weeks old .Tersey Eell cnlf. Ap ply t • G. 11. AUBREY. To Whom it may Concern, or any other Man. ON and after the 14th inst. the Stock Ordi nance will be enforced in this city. Look out for your hogs and goats, and pen your cows at night. GEO, S. COBB, Clerk City Council. G\ EORGIA, Bartow County. Charles T. T Dabbs, executor of Thomas Dabbs, de ceased, has applied for letters of dismission from said trust. This is therefore to notify all persons concerned to file their if any they, have, within the time prescribed by law, else letters will be granted said appli cant as applied for. Feb. .'7. 1881. 12t J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary. GEORGIA, Bartow County,—R. P. Lackey, executor of B; T. Harrison, deceased, has applied for letteis of dismission from said trust. This is therefore to notify all persons concerned to file their objections, if any they have, within the time prescribed by law, else letters will be granted said applicant as ap plied tor. Feb. 7, 1881. 12t J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary. (GEORGIA, Bartow County.— Serena D 3T Man ford, guardian of ltena Munford. Lemuel I). Munford, and Eugene R. Munford, has applied for letters of dismission from said trust. This is to'notify all persons concerned to file tlieir objections, if any they have, within the time prescribed by law, else letters will be granted applicant as applied for. Feb. 7,1881. 4t J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary. GEORGIA— Bartow County. Judge H. Denmon has applied for exemp tion of personalty, and I will pass upon the same, at 10 o’clock, A. M., on the 19th day of February, 1881, at my office, this January 96th, 1881. * J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary. Georgia, bartow county. Ordinary’s Office, Jan. 10,1881. James Bell has applied l’or letters of admin istration on the estate ot V. P. Bell, deceased. This is theiefore to notily all persons con cerned to file their objections, if any they have, within tnetime prescribed by law, else letters will be granted applicant as applied lor. J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary. (GEORGIA, BARTOW COUNTY. T Ordinary’s Office, Jan. 10,1881. V. A. Heath has applied for letters of guar dianship of the persons and property of Wil liam G., Charles E., and Carrie Helms, minors. This is therefore to notify all persons con cerned to file their objections, if any they have, in my office within the time prescribed by law, else letters will be granted said applicant as applied lor. J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary. (GEORGIA, BARTOW COUNTY'. T Ordinary’s Ollice, <, an. lU, 1881. John S, Ilollinshcad has applied for letters of guardianship of Minnie C. Rowland, minor. This is to notify all persons concerned to file their objections, if any they have, in ray office within the time prescribed by law, else letters will be granted said applicant as applied for. J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary. Advertisers by addressing george p. ROWELL & CO., lOSoruceSt., New Y'o'k, can learn the exact cost of any proposed line oi Advertising in American Newspapers. One hundred page Pamphlet, 25c. PLAYS! PLAYS! PLAYS! PLAYS! 174 DR Reading Clubs, for Amateur Thentri ‘ cals. Temperance Plays, Drawing-Room Plays, Fairy Plays, Ethiopean Plays, t.uide Books, Speakers, Pantomimes, Tableaux fights, Magnesium Lights,Colored File,Burnt Cork, Theatrical Face Preparations, Jarley’s Wax Works, Wigs, Beards ami Moustaches at reduced prices. Costumes, Scenery, Charades. New catalogues sent lree containing lull de scription and prices. SAMUEL FREFCH & SON, 38 E. Fourteenth Street, New l'ork. Petition for Divorce. LAURA A. MADDOX ) No. 6, January term, vs. > 1881. Bartow Supe- JOHN E. MADDOX, j lior Court. Ride to perfect service.—lt appearing to the court that the defendant does not reside in the county of Bartow, nor in the State of Geor gia, it is, on motion of the plaintiff, ordered by the court, that said delendaut appear and answer at the next superior court in said county of Bartow to the above stated case, else the case will be considered iu default and the plaintiff allowed to preceed. It is lurthcr ordered that this rule be published once a month lor four months in Tiie CAktersville Express a newspaper published in Cartersville in said county. By order of the Court, this Fell. 3, 1881. J. C. FAIN, J. S. C. C. C. The above is a true extract from the minutes of Bar ow Superior Court, F. M. Durham, C. S. C. B. C. BARTOW HOUSE Cartersville, Gi a. RECENTLY RENOVATED. JAS. B. ENLOW, Prop. CLEAN BEDS AND FARE REASONABLE. I Jan-0. For Sale! A Half-Ayrshire Caw with young Calf, Apply to Ur. J. T. SHEPHERD, Cartersville. E, I), GRAHAM. A. M. FOUTE. GRAHAM & FOUTE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. CARTERSVILLE, OA. Practice iu all the Courts, State and Federal. OFFICE UP-STAIRS, Over First Door South of Post Office. Willarfl Hotel Lottery Postponed To April 7, 1881, FOR A FULL DRAWING The drawing will take place at Louisville, under authority of a special act of the Kentucky Legislature, and will be under the absolute control of disinterested commission ers appointed by the act. LIST OF PRIZES. The Willard Hotel, with all Its Fixtures and Furniture, $250,000! One residence on Green Street $15,000 One residence on Green Street 15,000 Two Cash Prizes, ea h SSOOO 10,000 Two Cash Prizes, each $2,000 4,000 Five Cash Prizes, each SI.OOO r^OOU Five Cash Prizes, each SSOO 2,500 Fifty Cash Prizes, each SIOO 5,000 One Hundred Cash Prizes, each SSO 5.000 Five Hundred Cash Prizes, each S2O 10,000 One'Set of I?ar Furniture 1 000 One Fine Piano 500 One Handsome Silver Tea Set 100 10 Boxes Old Bourbon Whisky, $36 14,400 OP Baskets Champagne, $35 350 Five Hundred Cash Prizes, each $lO 5,000 400 Boxe Fine Wines. S3O 12,000 200 Boxes Robertson Countv Whisky, $30..0](X)0 400 Boxes Havana Cigars $lO 4,000 Five Hundred Cash Prizes, each $lO 5,000 Amounting to $369,850. Whole Tickets, $8 | Halves, $4 | Quarters, $2 Remittances may be made by Bank Check. Express, Postal Alonev Order, or Registered Mail. B3T Responsible agents wanted at all points. For circuL-us giving lull information and fot*! tickets, address W. C. f>. WHIPS, ! Willard Hotel, Louisville, Ivy If O M E mi Mil minniin 27 Broad Street, iSome, Ga. BRANCH OF THE ATLANTA PUBLIC Prod lice, Cotton & Stock Exchange J, F. Cummings & CJo ? Managers. QUOTATIONS from all the Principal Cotton and Produce Markets received Daily, <r, , all changes in the Market, which are free to the public. Future transactions in Cotton. Grain and Provisions. Call or scud for circular explaining method of doing business. JS^"Transaction with this exchange can be settled with this exchange, or vice vgi a nd... fob 173 m VIRGIL L. WILLIAMS, MANUFACTURER OF . TIN and SHEET IRON WARE, and dealer ix ‘mSSggigm Stoves, Hollow-Ware, Stamped Tin SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, Queensware,Glasswaxe, Lamps,&c CAKTERSVILLE, GA. Market Price given for Cotton Rags Beeswax, Tallow, Ac. nov3s-3m A STOZ: K'THEiIER. A AURE REVIVER. TRON BITTERS are highly recommended for all diseases re quiring a certain and efficient tonic ; especially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, J icr viitlent Fevers, Want of Appetite, Loss of Strength, Lack of Energy, etc. Enriches the blood, strengthens the muscles, and gives now life to the nerves. They art like n charm on the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptic synmtocas, such as Tasting the Food , Belching, Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn, etc. The Ollly Iron Preparation that will not blacken the teeth or give headache. Sold by all druggists. Write for the ABC Book, 32 pp. of useful and amusing reading— sent free. BROWN CHEMICAL CO., Baltimore, Md. BARTOW COUNTY—OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. • County Officers. Ordinary—.!. A. Howard—Office, court h ouse. Sheriff-Jas. Kennedy.- Deputy sheriff—A. M. Franklin., Clerk oi Superior Court —Tlios. A. Word. Treasurer—Humphrey Cobb. Tax Collector —W. W. Rich. Tax Receiver—W. W. Ginn. Commissioners —J. H. Wikle, secretary; A. Knight: W. I. Benham ; A. C. Trimble; T. C. Moore. _ CITY OFFICERS—CARTERSVILLE. Mayor—R. B. Trippe. Board ol Aldermen—T. C.WoflTord, E. Payne; L. A. Chapman, A. L. Barron; Jno. A. Stover, M. 11. Gilrcath; W. C. Edwards, R. IV. Satter field. Clerk-George Cobb. Treasurer —Benjamin F. Mountcastle. Marshals- John A. Gladden, James 1). Wil kerson. CHURCH DIRECTORY. Methodist—Rev. I’. M. Ryburn, pastor. Preaching every Sunday at 11 o’clock a. in. and 8 o’clock, p. m. Sunday school every Sunday at 9 o’clock a. m. Prayer meeting on Wednesday night. Presbyterian--Rev. Theo. E. Smith, pastor. Preaching every Sunday at 11 o’clock, a. in. Sunday school every Sunday at 9 o’clock. Prayer meeting on Wednesday night. Buptist--Rcv.lt. B. Hearten, pastor. Preach ing every Sunday at 11 o’clock, a. m., and 8 i . m. Sunday school every Sunday at 9 o’clock, Prayer meeting on Wednesday night. Episcopal—A. W. Rees, Rector. Services oc casionally. v j f|||) IMPROVED EXCELSIOR CORE-YOUR BACK ACHE. And all diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder and Urinary Organs by wearing tlie Improved Excelsior Kidney Pad. It is a MARVEL of HEALING and RELIEF Simple, Sensible, Direct Painless, Powerful. It CURES where all else fails. A REVELATION and REVOLUTION in Med icine. Absorption or direct application, as op posed to unsatisfactory internal medicines. Send for our treatise on Kidney troubles, sent free. Sold by druggists, or sent by mail, on re ceipt of price, £3. Address The “Only" Lung Pad Cos., WILLIAMS ULOCK, DETROIT, Midi. This is the Original and Genuine Kidney Pad. Ask for it and take no other. 280c16m ffo 4 A Outfit furnished free, with lull in- It I l l s trdctions for conducting the most fej# lia V profitable business that any one can engage in. The business is so easy to learn,and our instructions are so simple and plain, thatamy one can make great profits from the very start*. No one can (ail who is willing to work. Women have made at the business over one hundred dollars in a single week. Nothing like it ever known before. All who engage are surprised at the ease and rapidity whith which they are able to make money. You can engage in this business during your spare time at great profit. You de not have to invest capital in it. We take all the risk. Those who need ready money, should w r rite to us at once. All furnished free. Address True & Cos. Augusta, Maine. Advertisers by addressing geo. p. ROWELL & CO , 10 Spruce street, New York, can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of ADVERTISING in American newspa pers. ge Pamphlet, 10 cents. SECRET SOCIETIES. \ KNIGHTS OF HONOR, vAXIf I X Vi**-* / Bartow Cos. Lodge, No. 148, meet- J'lPjHgjuC every Ist and 3rd Monday night Lurry’s HJI cast bide yfthe W square, Cartersville, Ga. W. L. Kirkpatrick, A. C. Smith, Reporter. Dictator 4 ME RICAN LEGION OF HONOR, Carters- Ville Council, No. 152, meets every second and fourth Monday nights in Curry’s hall. geo. S. Cobb, .* J. W. Harris, ,jr., Secretary. Commander. POST OFFICE DIRECTORY. Mails North open 7:30 am 4:52 pm -Mails South open 10:10 a m 9:0*4 pm Cherokee R. R. open 0:55 p m Mails North close 7:00 a m 4:00 pin ails South close. 9;45 a m 8:30 pni iierokce IMI, close 7:30 an, Reck Mail, via Fairaiouut, leaves Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays at 5:00 am. Arrives Mondays, Wednesdays ami Fridays at 5:00 p m. Monev Order a,nd Registered Lottei Ollice open lrom 8:15 a m to 5 i> m. General Delivery open from 8 a m to 6 pm. Open on Sunuay from 9am to 10:30 am. J. It. WIKLE, P. M. WESTERN & ATLANTIC R. IS. ON AND AFTER .June 20th. ISSO, trains on this road will run as follow?: NOfiTHWARJ). •stations. J No. 1. j No. 3, j No. .t. j Atlanta, 2 50pm 520 am 7 50am 5 10pm Marietta, 3 35 *• 0 08 •* 8 43 0 0!) *• Cartersv’e 4 30 “ 7 23 “ 9 49 “ 7 22 “ Kingston, 500 “ 7 51“ 1018“ 800 “ Dalton, 028 “ 5)26“ 12 03pm Chatta’ga. 825 “ IQ 58 “ 140 “ SOUTIIWAKD. , STATIONS. No. 2. j No. 4, No. 0. ■ I A' Chatta’ga. 5 25pm | 7 05am 0 45am Dalton, 7 15“ 8 37 “ 10 13“ Kingston, 843 “ jlOlO “ 107 pm sSoam Cartersv’e 907 “ .10 48 “ 202 “ 804 “ Marietta, 10 12“ 1151“ 429 “ 733 “ Atlanta. 1100 “| 12 40pm 015 “ 850 “ CDKROKEE RAILROAD. ON AND AFTER Monday, October, 11, 18n . trains on this road will run daily, except Sunday, as follows : WESTWARD. STATIONS. NO. 1. NO. 3. Leave Cartersville, 10:00 am 2:05 pm Arrive ao Stiles boro 10:30 ain 2:51 p m “ Taylorsville... 10:57 am 3;17 p m Kockmurt 11:30 am j 4:07 p m Cvdartown 12:35 pm j 5:30 pm EASTWARD. STATIONS. NO. 2. NO. 4. Leave Cedartawn 3:10 pm 0:40 ain Arrive at Jtockinart 4:08 pin 7:58 ain “ Taylorsville... 4:45 pm 8:48 am * Stiles boro.— s:oßpm 9:14 am “ Cartersville.... 5:45 pm 10:10pm ROME RAILROAD COMPANY. On and after Monday, Nov. 17, trains on tLis Road will run as follows: MORNING TRAIN—EVERY DAY. Leaves Rome 0 30 a m Arrives at Rome 40.00 a n> EVENING TRAIN—SUNDAYS EXCEPTED. Leaves Rome v; 5:00 a m Arrives at Rome •• 8:00 pm Both trains will make connection at Kings ton with trains on the W. and A. Railroad, to and from Atlanta and points Smith. EBEX IIILI.YER, l’res. Jas. a. Smith, G. I*. Agt. KIDNEY PAD GILMORE Sc Cos. Law and Collection House? 620 F Street, Washington, 1). O. Make collections, negotiate loans to'all businees aouflded to them. La#J Soldier’s Additional Homestead Laud Warrants bought and sold. d3?*3