The Carroll County times. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1872-1948, May 03, 1872, Image 1

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THE ( Alt HOLE COUNTY TIMES. hi. i- KfCarroll County Times. PUBLISHED BY SHARPE & MEIGS, .cpV FRIDAY MORNING. TERMS: §9*'** 1 25 I „ n ,rm*nt» Invariably in Advance. I A P ' will be Mopped at the expiration of I * ;,e for onlets subscription Is previously ■ , time p* tfl I ? e * ,d ‘ , e9B of the subscriber is to be chang- I tbC , have the old address as well as B^* C ” LoP r<,v - nt ■<" ) b « Carrier In town without extra charge. ■ >cr '' Cd 'ution paid ta anonymous communica- I >0 are responsible for everything en *' eonunas. Tbi* rule is imperative. A after snbsciihers name, indicates that l time of subscription is out. I advertising rates. I vitation to Business men to make U9e I to further their interests, the fol ■ schedule for advertising has been ■ iD *d- these terms will be adhered to in all con- B pa for a(l»crtisi , 'g, or where advertisements ■ ?r,kdiu without instructions: ■ b * inch or levs, ft for the first and 50 cents fAT insertion r^^ITY.TT^ is *. i« «[u « W 'Tb $ 1 $ 3 * 5 *7 $lO I llnf L a 5 7 10 -13 I j loch** o 7 0 12 1H lb loch** 5 j «g n $ 5 1U « 17 35 I 1 'lv.lamn « W 15 20 30 I * rSmh W J 3 *> 30 60 I advertisements will be cliar;td ac- I r dl« to the space the- occupy. IVi adiorti*enw» l * should be marked fora spcci- Ijlcd time, otherwise they " ill be continued, and Ithirgcd for until ordered out. [ inserted at Intervals to be | t »jr;"d for each new iiißeit.ou. I advertisements for a lon avr period than three ■Bio'iths, are due, and will bo collected at the bvy in- L ui each quarter. I Transient udvertisepx'nls must be paid for in |f<vgnce I ... pjc vptm;- 4 jiiscmiu-med bo r or? expiration I/ii:w specified, will'be gpl/ for time Lbliihcd. I Notices of a personal or private character, in Utril to promote any private enterprise or I lW ,t, will be charged as other advertisements. Is are requested to hand in their favors Uatl/iq the week as possible. I' 7fjc above terms will be strictly adiicred to. I Set aside a liberal per ventage for advertising I lecprourself unceasingly before the public; and liimiiU'M not what business you are engaged in, • if intelligently and industriously pursued, a I furtunj; pH be the result -Hunts' Merchants' Mag- I mini. I “After I Ixgan to ad>erU*e my Iron ,ivj.ref reg- I lj.hsinew increased with amazing rapidity. For I leu years past I have spent £BO,OOO yearly to keep I fcj i nerior wares before the public. Had I been ■ i'R'if'n I never should have possess | ednjfortune of £33o, OtX),"— McLeod Belton Bu rn mVjlon . I Advertising like Midas’ touch, turns everything 11« gold. By it your daring men draw millions of I eoftvrs' St .tap Clay. I "Whnt audacity is to love, and boldness to wary I 111* (killful use of printer's ink, is Jo success in ■ Inilnt**.”— Btcvher. I "Without the aid of advertisements I should I (uvb dona nothing in my speculations. I have I Unm et complete faith in printer's ink.” Adver ■ tise it the •• royal road to business."— Barnum. praONAL It ItrsiKESS CARDS. frrda under this head will be inserted at one Warper line, per annum. Vo arils will be taken for this department, at !.«above rates, for a less period than one year. ' JESSE BLALOCK, Attorney at Laty, Carrollton, C«i. i "ill practice irt the Talapoosa ami lloino if'nits. Prompt attention given to legal Waiuess intrusted—osiiecially of real estate. JAMES J. JUII AN, Attorney at Law, Carrollton, (Georgia. mEO. IV. IIAUPER, Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Ga. GEO. W. AUSTIN Attorney at I.aw, Carrollton, Georgia. DH. W. W. FITTS, Physician and Surgeon, Carrollton. Ua. B “ o. thomasson, Attorney at Carrollton, Ga. R S. ROCHESTER, House and Ornamental Painter, Carrollton, Georgia. F. A. ROBERSON, Carpenter and Joiner, Carrollton, Ga. ,v‘ kin,ls of Carpentors work done at ‘ r notlce - Patronage solicited. * W. &. g. \y. MERRELL, Attorneys at Law, Carrollton, Ga. attention given to claims for prop [\J ta!fn by ‘tb, s Federal Army, Pensions, aiid i ,er Government claims, Homsteads. Collec |ions, & e> Tl ;" 8 - UI ANI>LER 4 COBB, Attorneys at Law, * Carrollton, Ga. r r ° tri l ) t attention given to all legal busi- C' e:,tri isted to them. Office in the Court itou Wi • • •• Mei) ical^ard. R b «- 1 N - CHENEY, dully informs the citizens of Carroll j 0 a<^ Ueen t counties, that he is permanently ai Carrollton, for the purpose of I'rac o T e<^cine - He- gives social attention chronic diseases of Females. lie re itj | i!iauks to ,lis friends l'or past patronage, ,i close attention to Hie profes ’lo ®* r it the same, Reese's School, TA NARUS(. . Careollton, Ga., 1872, Z 7 f ° r F ° rty Weeks > from sl4 to $42. Or* ’ r ° m to §ls per month. r ‘ s 2<l Monday in January next. r,as 0110 Half in advance. R ( ' A. M., Principal. !** «. 10 IJr -l- N - Ca f x E v. Written for the Carroll County Times <‘My Childhood Home.” BY R. J. GAINES. O how I love my childhood home ? % A here the rippling streams are flowing My weary footsteps long to roam. A here the Dear Old Oaks are growing. Where the moon serenely shines ; ind the stais are brightly beaming, Oh, there ’mid the clustering vines, My childhood heart was dreaming. There’s nwta tree ’round the cot, Where love’s early pledges were made; But some sweet dream, endears the spot. Where my youthful footsteps strayed. p boyy dear ! was every loved thing, My heart all aglow with admiration ; As I drank ikom tuc d,eep gushing spring— Nature’s purest and sweetest libation. ’ Pis the richest treasure, I’m sure ! That man ever raised to his lips— Sparkling and precious and pure, As the nectar that Jupiter sips. If home be the mansion of bliss, And O if that blessing be thiue ! Never exchange a pleasure like this. For the goblet that sparkles with wine. <‘Cut um Too Short.” * * * The distance between my post and Santc Fe wqs over three him dred milys, and to facilitate matters I was ordered to survey anew and shorter route-cutting off about seven ty miles. A company, numbering eighty men, was detailed for the pur pose; and, as the course led partly through a wooded region, a cogsidera ble squad was required to act as ax men. Three or four lively black and tan terriers accompanied the com mand affording no little amusement by their activity in snapping up un wary gophers, rats, mice, and other vermin. The aborigines who frequent ly honored us with their presence claiming so be “good Indian, me,” were excessively pleased at those per formances. On a certain occasion, one stalwart fellow, who spoke a few words of English, said to me ; “Nantar h, heap good dog,” “Yes,” I replied, “they are good dogs.” “Cut’ cm ear, cut’ em tail, make ’um good dog ?” .“Certainly; it is because their ears and tail* are trimmed that they get around so lively.” “Aough ! Me got a good, dog ; cut um tail ?” “Yes, bring your dog, I’ll have him f<jj you/’ Next day, my Navajo friend appear ed with a small, black, Indian fiee, sporting a long tail and ears to corres pond. Unroliiuig bis precious quad ruped from his blanket, he signified a cLesire to have the job done without delay ; so 1 called two men, and bade one hold the dog while the other docked his tail with an ax. This did not suit Redskin, who refused to trust his favorite to the tender mercies of a savage w hite man, and preferred to peyform the operation himself. I therefore ordered one of the men to hold the dog’s tail over a convenient log, while the other held his head and forepaws. All being ready, the In dian seised an ax, but, instead of us_ ing it as any other person would have done he swung the blade high above bis head with both hands, as if the object to be seperated required bis whole strength. Just then the soldier who held his tale gave it a sudden pull, w hile the one at the head gave a corresponding push. Down came the keen weapon, dividing the unfor tunate “purp” just forward of the hind quarters to the infinite disgust of the Indian, who picked up the disjointed halves, threw his blanket oypr his shoulders with indescribable dignity, and exclaimed in guttural accents : “Ugh ! H—l! Damn! Cut’ um too short.” — Overland Monthly. Who Ahead?” A gentleman asks the girls the fol lowing pointed questions: ‘‘Could you love a man who wore false hair on hjs head, and when he had enough of his own? Who painted his face and improved his form as you improve yours ? Who pinched his feet with small shoes, his hands with small gloves, his waist with corsets; and then, as if he lias not already deformed himself enough, tied a huge bustle around his neck, and thrust tinv - mountains of-wire into his bosom ?” In reply to which a lady responds: “Could you love a girl who defiled her mouth with tobacco and loaded the air with fumes of segars ! Who staggered home several times a week the worse for liquor ? Who indulged in fat horses, bet high at races, and swaggered around the streets with questionable companions ? Which picture wears the most alluring colors?’’ We also see it reported that Mrs. 'N an Coot says if she had all the mon ey ever paid for liquor, she could buy every foot of land in the world.— Very likely. And if she had the money paid by women for back hair she could buy every drop of liquor in the world. CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 3, 1872. General Lee. AN ENGLISH OPINION OF THE GREAT CONFEDERATE CAPTAIN. An English writer of great ability has published an article in Blackwood’s Magazine in which he gives a correct expression of the worlds opinion of the great Confederate Captain, Robt. E. Lee. \\ e copy the following para graphs from the article alluded to : “ More than a year has passed away since the death of General Lee. In ordinary times such an event could hardly have happened without reviv ing, it only for a moment, much of the eager interest with-which, between 1861 and 1865, the old w T orld watched die titanic civil war of the new. But during the October of 1870, when General Lee breathed his lg&t, the siege of Paris absorbed the thoughts and engrossed the attention of civil ized mankind. Little or no notice has therefore been taken in England of the death of one who, when his ca reer, character, and military genius are better understood, will in spite of bis defeat be pronounced the greatest sol dier, with tw'o exceptions, that any English-speaking nation has ever pro duced. Upon the other side of the Atlantic, circumstances have conspired to obscure the great deeds and spot less purity of the noblest son to w’hom the North American continent has hitherto given birth.“ “ Lord Macauley tells us that •< no creature is so revengeful as a proud man who has humbled himself in vain;’ but during the concluding years of Gen. Lee’s life no symptoms of passion or vindictiveness were discernable in his daily bearing. lie mourned over the abject aud oppressed condition of South Carolina until death freed his soul from tire suffering which crushed Mr, John Esten Cooke makes it abundantly evident that he died of a broken heart. But in order that the virtues of a singularly pure and noble character may not be unrecorded in England, we desire to follow" Mr. Cooke through some of the most no table of his hero’s life, aud to do what in us lies to make Robert E. Lee’s memory a precious possession where ever the English tongue is spoken.” “Without maintaining that Gen. Lee who was neither an Alexander nor a Hannibal, and bad such odds against him as these two great Cap tains of ancient history, it is doubtful w T hether any General of modern times ever sustained for four years—-a longer time now a days than Hannibal’s fif teen years in the remote past —a War in which, while disposing of scanty resources himself, he had against him so enormous an aggregate of men, horses, ships and supplies. It is an under rather than an over-estimate of the respective strength of the tw'o sections to state that during the first tw r o years the odds w r ere ten to one, during the last, twenty to one, against the Confederates. The prolongation cf the struggle is in no slight degree attributed to Mr. Jefferson Davis, w r hose high character and unselfish ness are even now, undervalued by the Confederates, and totally denied his conquerors. The courage of the rank and file of the Rebel army is re freshing to contemplate in these 4 a y s ? which have seen a Europen war be tween tivo nations equal in numbers and resources triumphantly closed in seven months, and stained by three unprecedented capitulations of Sedan Metz and Paris. But after all, the one name which in the great Ameri can civil war, posteris narratum at que traditum superstes erit, is the name of Robert E. Lee. ‘‘Upon the 3d of June, 1862, Lee assumed command of the Confederate army of Northern Virginia. From that day forward until the 19th of April, 1865, his life became a term convertable or synonymous with the history for thirty four months of the North American continent. Upon both sides armies of immense magni tude fill the eye of the reader, while generals succeed to generals, strut their hour upon the stage, then are seen no more. But the American war as intercedes further and further into the distance, is seen to have de rived its shape and form from General Lee more than from any other indi vidual who fought on either side. Ie would be difficult to speak or tbink of the history of Europe between 1800 and 1815 without having the tongue occupied exclusively by Napoleon.— Similarly the name of General Lee has blotted out in North America all recollection of those by whom he was supported or opposed. It is very possible that if at the end of 1862, Stonewall Jackson had been transfer red to the command of that Western Confederate army which, under Bragg, Joe Johnson or Hood, became famil iar with nothing but disaster, Lee’s tame might have been shared or di minished by that of another Virginian luminary. But impartial history will eventually pronounce that it is more imposible to regard either Grant or Sherman, as Lee’s equal, than to main tain that Wellington and Blucher were greater than Napoleon because ( they defeated him at Waterloo.” “ \\ e submit to all military readers that never yet did 5Q,000 men quit them more gloriously than these tater demalion and starving l&outhern regi ments (1864.) “ Never let me hear,” says Sir Walter Scott, ‘that brave blood lias been shed in vain—it sends a roaring voice down through all time.’ ! It is not necessary to comment upon j the magnificent abundance and varietv of food, drink, and munitions of war supplied to the two hundred and fifty | thousand men who followed General Grant; but when military epicures, while familarizing themselves with every detail of Worth and Sedan, profess themselves unable to study ; the irregular emilliet of two armed i American mobs, wo venture to' tel l them that in all that constitutes true manliness, the fraus-Atlantic civil war far surpasses the Franco German con flict. Nothing is easier, says the stew ard of Moliere’s raiser, than to give a great dinner with plenty of money; the really great cook is he that can set out a banquet with no money at all. Gen. Grant in 1864 drew upon an almost inexhaustible treasury General Lee’s account was heavily withdrawn before the campaign be gan. Nevertheless, it is every day more and more patent that Mr. Swin ton was right in believing that the ragged famished, and suffering regi menrs of seoessia, numbering altogeth er fifty nine thousand men, would have disconfitted their two hundred and fifty thousand pampered and sur feited opponents, if Gen. Sherman and his western army had not revived the spirits and re-anmiated the coin age of his drooping colleague in Vir ginia. Victrio caus.i ZXis. placioit, sed victa Cantoni .” “ The fame and character of Gen. Lee will hereafter be regarded in Eu rope and America under a dual aspect. In Europe we will consider him mere ly as a soldier; and it is more thau probable that within the present cen tury we shall have accustomed our selves to regard him as third upon the list of English speaking generals, and as having been surpassed in soldierly capacity by Marlborough and Welling ton alone. In Amereica, when the passions of the great civil Avar shall have died out, Lee will be regarded more 33 a man than as soldier. His infinite purity, tenderness, and gener osity, will make his memory more and more precious to lijs countrymen when they have purged their minds of prejudices and animosities which civil war invariably breeds. They will ac knowledge before long that Lee took no step in life except in accordance with what he regarded as and believei] to be his duty, and they will hold up his example, as one of the brightest pat terns which they can set before their children,” « “ Drummers.*’ Most noticeable, both for voice and manner, are hosts of “ drummers,” who know every body; whose fund of stories is never exhausted; who travel to the best of our belief all night, and who sell goods and customers all day ; /we never heard of one’s being caught asleep, indeed we believe they never sleep.) who keep one eye ever open for business, and the other con stantly watchful for car flirtations.— Men whose clothes, although of good material, have a general air of Having been worn several weeks without be ing removed ; whose “ cheek ’’ is boundless ; whose tongue is tireless. They are the exclamation points in the history of modern travel. They are the most constant pf all classes in the patronage of the hotels, flattery of the servant girls, and the abuse of the porters. They are comets of business astronomy, eccentric in orbit and ap pearance. They possess much ot the shrewdness of the old Yankee peddlers, together with more of their own, and they increase in numbers, in ingenuity .•. * 1 in persistency, and in everything with every year. While they resemble each other, each class has peculiarities of its own. The New York drummer may be known by his diamond, by his restlessness, by his pocket full of illus trated papers, and by his assumption ot superiority over all other drummers. The Boston drummer wears clothes of a milder cut, displays the most fault less taste as to traveling bags, is }>ar tieular as to the gloss of his hat; but for all that, wears the distinctive marks of his profession in his face, aud tells his profession in his manner. The Philadelphia drummer follows his New York brother, and renders him the homage of close immitation. Shipping interest —sending money to Europe to pay off coupons. Napoleom the Third. The ex Emperor Napoleom evident ly does not feel very keenly the heart sickness which is supposed to attend the deferring of hope ; for he has abandoned the habit of seclusion at Chiselhurst which he at first assumed | and is perambulating the country as gaily and smilingly as if empires were not and ambition were a lost vice. He appears suddenly at rustic gatherings in a straw bat and his pockets well stuffed with cigarettes, sits himself by the modest tables and feasts geni ally with the yeomen of Britain, bow ing gracefully at their lusty cheers and gallantly passing the homely dishes among the maiden. Amayrllis is wild with delight, and forthwith buys a wood-cut of his Majesty which she hangs in that temple cf rustic in nocence and virtue, her bedroom.— The next we hear of the “bloody ty rant,” as the Reds are pleased to call this rather stout and very pleasant faced old gentleman, he is taking a promenade, with the ex Empress on his arm, through the lovely town of Rochester, pestered somewhat by lac ed sheriffs, and cocked-hatted beadles who persist in paying him ostenta tious honors, but very ahmably ac knowledging the welcome which the people give him all along the irregu lar, geble-iidorned old streets. Then he takes a steamboat ride, sitting cross legged on deck, and consuming numberless cigarettes, and familiarly chatting with any one who is ambi tious to remember having spoken to an Emperor. It is, perhaps, a ques lion with him whether, after all this is not a pleasanter life than the fever ish one which he has led so long at the Tuilleries—whether peace without power be not a happier thing than power bristling with constant danger and difficulty. Now he can sleep well, and not feel his crown pricking him in his dreams ; and the chain shirt—if that story about the chain shirt was not a slander—may hang and grow dusty, forgotten in the Chiselhurst garret. The Rothschild Partnership. The Overland Monthly gives an in teresting sketch of the rise ot the world-famed banking family of Roths child : In 1812, Meyer Anslem Rothchild died leaving to the mighty fortune, of which his wisdom had laid the foun - dation, ten children—five sons and five daughters—placing upon them the injunction, with his last breath, of an inviolable union. This is one of the grand principles to which the suc cess of the family may be traced.— The command was kept by sons and daughters with religious fidelity.— Sisters married with urmnimous con sent of the mother and all the chil dren. Brothers remained in copart nership, Their places of residence by mutual agreement, became far asun der. Anslem domiciliating liimself in Frankfort j Solomon in Vienna, Chas. in Naples ; James in Paris ; £.nd Na than in London— But their union re mained indissoluble. Before 1820, tliehousehad become übiquitous. Like a net work, it had spread itself over Europe and its operations were felt tremblingly in till the great loans con tracted by nations. In days anterior to electric telegraph and railroad, their couriers traveled from brother to brother. They conveyed the earlist news. Mails were outstripped ; gov ernment expresses were left behind ; relays were ready at every post, com mercial dispatches subvented by pub lic companies as well as private enter prises, failed in successful eompetion with the Hebrew firm. Nathan Roth child received in London news of YV a terloo five hours before it was an nounced on Change and made £200,- 000 in consequence. During the great revolt in India. Havelock’s suc cess which changed Consols from 84 to 80, wa3 known at the counting room in Lombard Street a full day before it reached the bank of Eng land. Lord Palmerston regretted, in his famous reply to Mr. Disraeli, that Government had to depend for its ear liest advices of the attacks upon Se bastopol on “the courtesy of the Israe litish house.” It was the same during the Franco Itallian war ; it held good five years ago when Prussian legions thundered their triumphal progress against the strongholds of Austria; and it is only yesterday that the Rothchilds discounted in the London market the fatal surrender of Bazaine a full two hours before it was recorded by the telegraphic wires that stretch to the Royal Exchange. A yankee editor says: If the party who plays the aceordeon in this vicinity at night, will only change his tune occasionally, or sit where we can scald him when the engine lias steam on, he will hear of something to his advantage.” A Racy Examination. The following racy examination of candidates for admission to the bar is taken from the Western I.aw Journal: The examination commenced with : “ Do you smoke ? ” “ I do sir.” “ Have you a spare cigar ? ” “ Yes sir,” (extends a short six, “ Now, sir, what is the first duty of a lawyer ? ” “ To collect fees ” “ Right. What is second ? ” ‘ To increase the number of clients.’ “ When does the position towards clients change T ” “ When making out a bill of costs.” “ Explain.” “ We then occupy the antagonistic position. I become the plaintiff and he becomes the defendant.” “ A suit decided, how do you stand with the lawyer conducting the other side ? ” “Cheek by jowl.” “ Enough, sir. You promise to be come an ornament to your profession, and I wish you success. Now, are you aware of the duty you owe me ? ” “ Perfectly.” “ Describe it.” “It is to invite you to drink.” “But suppose I decline? ” Candidate scratches his head. “ There is no instance of the kind on record in the books. I cannot an swer the question.” - “You are right, And the confi dence with which you make the asser tion shows conclusively that you read law attentively. Let’s take a drink and I will sign your certificate.’’ In the Wrong Bed. An amusing incident occured in Carver street last evening. A lady went up stairs to put her little son to bed, and, a3 she was about to light the gas the child, hearing a sound of breathing, cried out, “Oh, mama, there’s a dog in the bed.” “Guess not, cliild ; I ain't no dog,” in an an gty, childish tone, came from the bed. Turning toward the couch, the lady saw two eyes, shining like balls of fire in the darkness. Seizing her child she ran affrighted and screaming to the steet. Two policemen were sum moned. With clubs and dark lan terns in hand they invested the cham ber; and when the gas was turned on, there snugly coddled up under the bed clothes, was a four ov five year old darkey, as self possessed as if up on his mother’s knee. “Who are you ?” said the officer. “Horace Greely Bennett, sir,” said the child. ‘Where do you live?” “In Anderson, street.” “llow did you come here?”— “Father went out wid the ice cream, and I tuk a walk.” The little fellow had seen the front door open, and en tered. Going quietly upstairs and finding an unoccupied bed, he laid his drowsy form upon it for rest. The lady’s heart had ceased to throb with fear, and giving Horace Greenly Ben nett a doughnut, she consigned him to the custody of the police, who sent him home. A novel Temperance pledge is that which orignated in the New York Stock Exchange the other day. It is addressed to sensible practical tem perance people’ and runs as follows: “ We, the undersigned, deprecating thq growing evil of iutemperanoe, and believing that it is in a great degree induced by a mistaken idea of socia bility and politeness ; therefore, with a view of mitigating this evil in a prac tical way, we hereby pledge ourselves to pay pnly for the liquor which we ourselves drink, and to abstain from drinkiug any liquors which others pay for.” Lix£3 in Lord Byron’s Bible.— These Lines were copied from the fly leaf of Lord Byrons Bible—-probably the very one his sister gave him, as the Marquise de Boissy writes this was the one he daily used: Within this sacred volume lies The mystery of mysteries, Oh ! happy they of human race, To whom our God hath given grace To hear, to read, to see to pray, To lift the latch and force the way ; But better had they qever been born, Who read to doubt, or read to scorn 1 * <•> Outside of the friends of Grant, the Davis and Parker Ticket of the La bor Reformers is encountering little, if any opposition, in any portion of the country. The people appear to be ripe for the movement, and it gath ers new volume and momentum with the lapse of every day.— Tuskaloosa Times. ■ ■ Newton said : “Endeavor to be the first in your trade or profession, whatever it ma) be.” And this, by the way, is the secret of success and excellence. It matters comparatively little, what the trade accupation or profession may be, provided it is use ful. Carroll Masonic Institute. CARROLLTON, GA. 3laj. Jno, 31. Richardson, President. This Institution. nud*r the fost /jkra, tering care of the Masonic Fratw . regularly chartered and or gnnized, is devoted to the thorough co-edncalion of the sexes, on the plan of the Tfcst modem practical schools of Europe and America. Spring Term, 1872, begins February Ist and ends July 17th: Fall Term begins August Ist, and ends November 20tli. Tuition and board at reasonable rates. I3T” Send for circulars E. W. HARPER, Carpenter and Cabinet Workman, Would announce to the Citizens of Car rollton, and CurreH cottoty th*t he is now prepared to do all kinds of Cabinet work, such as Making and Repairing TuMes, Chests, Framing Pictures, Laides Work Boxes and Tables. In fact anything in the above lino he is prepared to do at his residence North of the Seminary. april 5, ’72-2ai. J. J. PATMAN & CO., Carpeuters, Newnan, Ga., Would respectfully inform the citizens of Carrollton, and vicinity that they are prepar ed to do all kind of Carpenters work at short notice and upon the best of terms. All communications addressed to them at Newnan, will be punctually responded to. ARGO & MARTIN, House, Sign, Carriage And Ornamental Painters, Newman, Ga. Aiso plain and decorative paj>er hanging done with neatness and dispatch. All orders promptly attended to. Orders solicited from Carrollton. Julian & Mandevillc, ugglsta^ CARROLLTON, GA. Have Just Received, 2000 lbs., Pure White Lead, 500 gallons, Liuseed Oil, 100 gallons Varnishes, all kinds, A LARGE STOCK of every kind of paint and pointing mate rial, ako a varied and an immense as sortment of Drugs. Chemicals, Oils, Dyestuffs, Wg,dow glass and Picture glass. Putty, Tobacco, Pipes, Cigars, &c., We have on hand the largest and best s*. sortment of CONFECTIONERIES AND PERFJMERY ever offered in this market. STUDENTS Will find it to their interest to purchase their Lamps, Oil, and Stationery from us. Oarden SeedLa, A large assortment, Onion Setts and But tons. Fresh and Geouine. Feb, 16. NEW STOCK! NEW STOCK! NEW INST Vnr.VIENT OF GROCERIES AT J. F. POPES, CONSISTING Or Bacon, Lard, Flour, Sugar, Molasses, Better lot of Shoes than ever, Fine Cigars, Smoking Tobacco, Snuff and Whiskies. You can make it to your interest to cal and see me before buying elsewhere. JAMES F. POPE. april 26, 1872. RAIL ROAD STORE' If you want goods cheap and reliable buy from BLALOCK & NEW. Jan. 12, 1872—ts. Savannah, Griffin & N. Ala., Railroad Leaves Griffin 1 00 p at Arrives at Newnan 315 pm Leaves Newnan 7 00 a M Arrives at. Griffin 9 47 a jt Connects at Griffin with Macon and Western B. Western Atlantic Rail Road. Night Passenger Train Outward, Through to N. York, via. Chattanooga. Leave Atlanta Kh3o.p. m. Arrive at Chattanooga 6:16 a.m. Night Passenger li&in inward from New York Connecting at Dalton. Leaves Chattanooga’ 5:20 p. m. Arrive at Atlanta 1:42 p. m. Day Passenger Train—Outward. Leave Atlanta 6:00 a. ra. Arrive at Chattanooga 1:21 p. m. Day Passenger Train—lnward. Leave Chattanoog* 5:80 a. m. Arrives at Atlanta V 32 p. m. Fast Line. Savannah to New York—Outward. Leaves Atlanta 2:45 p. m. Accommodation Train—lnward. Leaves Daltpn 2:25 p. m. Arrives at Atlanta 10:00 a. m. E. B. Waxkk m, M. T. Atlanta and West Point Railroad. DAY PASSENGER TRAIN — (OUTWARD) Leaves Atlanta 7 10a. m. Arrives at West Point.. 1140 a. m, DAY PASSENGER TRAIN —( INWARD* ) Leaves West Point 12 45 p. m. Arrives at Atlanta 5 15 p. m, . N'GHT i: EIGHT PASSENGER Leaves Atlanta 3 00 p. m. Arrives at West Poin t .. 10 45 a. m. Leaves West Peint 300 p. m. Arrives at Atlanta. 1007 a. in. Time 15 minutes fastci than Atlanta City tUp.», NO. 18.