The Carroll County times. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1872-1948, June 21, 1872, Image 1

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THE CARROEE COUNTY TIMES. lift. *• Es Carroll Comity Times. I pUBMSHED BY SHARPS & MEIGS, I jM-pTiY MORNING, TERMS: | $2 00 I otlC 1 00 f ... pnvment, Invakiably ih Advakck. A ‘ _ ill he at the expirat ion of r '“ fi'lid for, unless suVseriptioii is previously *" '••(ldrcss or the fubscriVor is to be chang b tb! ‘ t have the old address as well as the u> prevent mistake. ' ' :'i,v Carrier in town .without extra charge. 'non paid to anonymous commuuica* ‘ N " 1) 4l ' \ve are responsible for everything en eolumns. This rule is imperative. A after subscribers name, indicates that 1 ‘G* 0 f subscription is out. ADVERTISING rates. invitation to Business men to make use nI ‘.,, UI)1118 to further their interests, the fol "Vj’vntl schedule for advertising has been ' ;. -e terms will be adhered to in all cop* v ' ! i(Wvrtisi r ’g, or where advertisements ;rl ’lidin without instructions: hor less, for the first and 50 cents for e3tll subsequent insertion 1 1 M. I 3~ M. I 6 M, I 12 M, • 1 ft 8 $5 $7 *lO 5 *7 10 15 • lIC ‘SJ jii 7 « 12 is :i u< i L < 4 s io 15 ad 4 A ' 5 10 12 17 25 , } illUltß ! ~) *>() 54J • {-olumu !10 13 *0 30 50 fctlS 113 *> 50 1W ,Uvcd advertisements will be charged ac .jiiiT to the space the v occupy. . advertisements should be marked fora sped* ~' ~me, otherwise they will be continued, and for until ordered out. ".••itiseineiits inserted at intervals to be . ,'d for each new insert.on. ,rtiscnu-nts for a longer period than three ih*. are due, and will be collected at the begin ,iu; r ol each quarter. 'u '.t advertisements must ,be pp|d for in ■lvein.-fUieiu • (iiseominved bofqre expifaDcm • :n-' „pe.:ifled, will be charged only fpr ,tiinc Wolbheti. ife* of a personal or pri vate character in : to promote any private enterprise or 1 -!, will be charged as other advertisements. v , arc requested to bund in their favors ,'j|ly in the week as possible. c above terms will be strictly a<f.hc,cJ to. q,. t ij.'bv £ iiberal per cent age for advertising Ko ,i yourself unceasingly before the public ; and ;nalteis not what business you are engaged in, f intelligently and i. dustrioiisly pursued, a v,-;I] be the result Hunts' Merchants' May • After I began lo advertise my Iron jraref me* > - ics: increased with amazing i apidity. ; l i.ivsi fpeart i‘3O,COO yearly to'ker._p , rti s ';n-for.<‘ <7io Jva'i'l V; . ttlasd,! bSQjI . ■ iii :sb -itising. 1 never should have ysossess , . ...c yf .Losty> ; Jo,*‘— McLeod JJelicii Blr like Midas* touch, turns everything ;,i. ]'• it yoiii daring men draw millions of ■ ’ ; . '-Shunt (toy. .. Licity is to love, and boldness to war, i ; c of printer’s ink, is to success in g r ..' vm ■ - •»> ■ ch*r. tv , tin- r.»d of advertisements I should i, nothing in my I have - , ; iiapiete faiib in printer's ink.” Advor t < ,itbe • royal road to business. "—Bamvm. ttjuuaoarwc •. FSOFESSIONAL & IXBINESS CARDS. '-••is under this Lepd will be inserted at one > ■ i»r per line, j>er aumvni. oocards will be taken for this department, at '.hoverates, fora less period tlum one year. OSCAR REESE, Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Gei.rgla GAMES J. JUIIAN, l Attorney at Law, . C p.r roll top , kQ eorgia, ■IF.O. W. HARPER, Attorney at Law, AArrylltun, N;v GEO. W. AUSTIN Attorney at Law, Carrolkot’, Georgia. M. W. W. FITTS, Physician and S.urg«op, Carrolltoa. Ga, D. TUOMASSO3T, Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Ga. J; - S. ROCHESTER, House am] .Ornamental Painter, Carrollton, Georgia. j £SSE BLALOCK, Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Ga. practice in the Talapoosa aiul Tic me Prompt attention given to legal ' "'•ut'ss intrusted—especially of real estate. '' • K & G. W. ML 11 It ELL, Attorneys at Law, Carrollton, €fc. ■ attention given to claims for pr&p v,!» Ini the Federal Antii/, Illusions, and ; ‘ v cr;inient claims, Ilomsteads, Collec ' 1 Handler, Joseph L. Cobb. !I -VXI)LEII & COBB, Attorneys at. Law, Carrollton, Ga. ' u ot attention given to all legal bnsi ■ “trusted to tbem. Oftiee in the Court **ouse # "■ P - KIRKLV, Carrollton, Ga. * ur;, ' ICs l' e cttiilly inform the citizens of ( v' 1 ‘ lOU and adjoining country that he is £ | } ;"l iHt'dto make Sash, Boers, Blinds, : 4 s “ort notice, and on reasonable terms. *' A - hOBKItSON, ai pen ter and Joiner, Pj Carrollton, Ga. •M .tr, K ".' ‘ s °f Carpenters work done at Uollce - Patronage solicited. '’■•hlCAL CARD. , ljR - 1 N. CHENEY, ai^ad'Ul,lli ' lllurins citizens of Carroll W a , ( counties, that he is permanently I; cing f. rroPt ° n > for the purpose of Prac- chr.m? IDe i‘- Sh’es special attention iUr, ‘ s tliant- iC * f , ® RBes °.f Females. He re a. Tl(1 hories \l° ! lis friendß for past patronage, to ln'orit" t ° BO attent ron to the profes ,U(-nt the saimj • Sunshine. BY Oil AS. EDSyAUI> LtVKKE'rT. r I here’s sunshine in the valley, and sunshine on the hill; There’s sunshine on the glassy'lake, And in the sparkling nil There’s sunshine in the woodland glen. On every lout and tree, There’s sunshine lavished on the world, Rut none of it for me. There’s sunshine in the palace, and ithin the peasant’s cots ; Tliere’s scarce a work ot earth wherein The sunshine stealeth not. The lordly cities, crowded marts, The hamlet on the lea, There’s sunshine everywhere, but, all! There’s none of it for me. I lie upon my couch and hear The happy world gold by ; I here s sunshine’s smiling on each And beaming in each eye. The mocking bird the merry child--* The softly humming bee, T lreir hearts are full of sunshine, why Was none of it-for me? Oh! ’twas not meant for me, this joy— That other mortals know— It was not meant that I should bask In sunshine here below; line when the gentle band of death Shall set my spirit free, in heaven I’ll find that God has made Some sunshine too for me. Mr. Bennett and the Herald. The New York Tribune of Monday lias a long and entertaining account of the early life of Air. Bennett and his newspaper, which is very readable,— From it we make some extracts. The Tribune says : The first number appeared on the 6th of A fay, 1835, “ price one cent, and for sale everywhere.” It was started without capital. Two young printers, named Anderson and Smith agreed to print it and share the profits ,qy-Josses. The firm name was James Gordon Bennett & Cos. Another printer, of his own name, refused to accept a half interest in the project, preferring to work at a salary, and so continued for 34 years to serve the journal whic/i he saw grow from noth ing into v. magnificent property. TUn publication office and editorial room was a deep cellar at No. 2'.) Wall street, .where Bennett transacted all the business of the little concern, re- ceived. advertisements, sold copies of the paper, and wrote all the articles, reports, and paragraphs be hind a deal board. The late William Go wans, bookseller, wrote the follow, ing description of a visit to the office soon after the roper was established: u The proprietor, editor and vendor was seated at his desk,-busily engaged writing, and appeared to pay little or no attention to me ns I entered. On making known my object in coining in, be requested gre to put my money down on the counter and help myself to a paper ; all this time he continued his. writing operations. The office was a single oblong underground room; its furniture consisted of a counter, which served alscvas a desk, construct ed from two Hour barrels, perhaps empty, standing apart from each other about four feet, with a single plank covering both ; a chair, placed in the center, upon which sat the editor, bu sy at his vocation, with an inkstand by his right hand ; on the end nearest' the door were plaeeed the papers tor sale.” Bennett had no assistant in writing it. He rose at five in the morning, and worked in his room un til eight. Then he sat in his cellar until noon, selling papers, writing ad vertisements for his customers whose education had been neglected, and preparing copy for the printers. At one he went out into the streets to pick up news and gossip. From four to six he was again at his counter, and the evening was spent gathering ma terials for reports in the next day’s pa per. lie could not have gone through these sixteen or seventeen hours of drudgery had. not his vigorous con stitution been strengthened by the ab stemious and-regular habits by which his life was always marked. In 1851, the circulation of the Herald was 2Q.Q00 copies -and its in come at least SIOO,OOO. From that time until the breaking out of the war the paper gradually increased**its cir culation and value as a newspaper property. During the war its circula tion more than doubled. Os one is sue during 1864, than 132,000 copies were sold. Its present circula tion is probably 80,030, but its profits are annually much larger than for any year during the war. Frequently $7,503 are received for a single day’s advertising. It employed, in addition to its regular force, sixty three war correspondents, at an expense for four years of $525,000. M ith reference to Mr. Bennett’s personal habits and his manner of conducting his paper the Tribune says: He was stiictly temperate and vir tuous. lie had neither low habits nor idle hours. He never drank, even at dinner, and nothing stronger than CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 21, 1872. -claret was ever displayed on his table. The impression prevails that years ago ho.withdrew from work on his paper, but this is a great error. No exchange editor in the profession was so close and constant a reader as he of the *great papers of the country down to within a few months of the .close of his life. Files of the princi pal journals were sent to him daily, and all were religiously rt ad. lie of ten clipped pages for insertion in the Herald, but generally for texts for editorials or special articles, and when lie visited the office it was to un pack his mind of suggestions stored there by reading the exchanges. lie seldom gave an editorial writer mere than the suggestions for an article, leaving him to fill up the details, lie required his editorial writers to meet daily for consultation and the distnbu tion of toiiics. When aether per son presided, the several editors made suggestions; when Bennett himself was present the editors became mere listeners, and wrote as it were, at bis dictation. In nothing more did bis personality display itself iu these meetings, and his manner of ‘‘consult ing bis editors,” by directing them what to do, and disregarding sugges tions from any one. Frequently, when a writer expressed his views on a subject, Mr. Bennett amused himself by ordering him to write, taking pro cisely the opposite view. Don’t bi’ Too Sensitive. —There are some people, ye-, many people, always looking out for slights. They cannot carry on the daily intercourse of the family without some offense is designed. They are as touchy as hair triggers. If they meet an aquaintance #in the street who happens to be pre occupied with business, they attribute bis abstraction in some mode personal to them-selves, and take umbrage ac cordingly. They lay on others the tact of their irritabillity. A fit of in digestion makes them see imperti nence in every one they come in con fact with. Innocent persons who nev crdreamed of giving offense are as tonished to find some unfortunate word or momentary taciturnity rnistak cn for an insult. To say tjie least, the habit is unfortunate. It is far wiser to t-alvte the more cLaril,dole view of our fellow beings, and not suppose a slight is intended unless the neglect is open and direct.' After all, too, life takes its hues in a great degree horn the # color of our mind. If we are frank and generous, the world treats us kindly. „ If on, the contrary, we are suspicious, men learn to be cold and cautious to us. Let a per son get the reputation of being touchy and every body is under more or less constraint, and in this way the chances of an imaginary offense are vastly in creased. TixuNaxo (Jams.—Training girls for household duties ought to be con sidered as necessary as instruction in reading, writing and arithmetic, and quite as universal. We are in our houses more t urn half our existence, and it is the household surroundings which affect most largely the happi ness or misery ot domestic life. If the wife knows how to “keep house” if she understands how to “ set .a ta ble,” if she has learned how things ought to be cooked, how beds should be made, how carpets should be swept how the furniture should be dusted, how the clothing should be repaired, and turned, and altered, and renova ted ; if she knows how purchases can be made to the best advantage, and understands the laying in provisions, how to make them go furthest and last longest ; if she appreciates the importance ot system, order, tidiness, and the quiet management of children and servants, then she knows how to make a little heaven of home—how to win her child from the club-house, he gambling table, and the wine cup. Such a family will be trained to social respectability, to busininess success and to efficiency and usefulness in whatever position may be allotted to them.— l Jail's Journal. The following very perspicuous and laconic manner ot telling a plain story may be instructive to slanderers: ‘•-Mother Jasper told me that she heard Grate 'Wood’s wife say that John Ilardstone mentioned to her that Mrs. Trusty was present when the widow Barman said that Capt. Ileartell’s cousin thought Ensign Doo little’s sister believed that Mrs. Oxby reckoned that Sam Trifle’s better half had told Mrs. Spaulding that she heard John Khenner’s woman say that her mother told her that Mrs. Rag stelle had two husbands.” A California obituary: ‘-The de ceased was a talented naan of roman tic nature. lie placed the butt of his gun in the fire, while he looked down the''muzzle and departed hence spoil taneouslv.” « Saturday Night. How many a kiss has been given— how many a curse—how many a ca ress—how many a look—how many a kind word—how many a promise has been broken—how many a soul lost— bow many a loved one lowered into the narrow .chamber —how many a babe has gone from earth to heaven how many a little crib or cradle stands silent now which last Saturday night held the rarest treasure of the heart ! A week is a life. A week is a his tory. It makes events of sorrow and gladness, of which people never heard. Go home to your family, man* of busi ness! Go borne to your family, erring wanderer! Go home to the chair that awaits you, wronged waif on life’s breakers! Go home to those you love man of toil and give one night to the joys and comforts fast flying by. Leave your books of complex fig ures—your dingy office—your busy shop! Rest with those you love, for Heaven only knows what the next Saturday night might bring you! For get the world of care and battles of life which have furrowed the week!— Dr;iw close around the family hearth! Saturday night has awaited your com ing in sadness, in tears and iu silence.* Go home to those you love, and as you bask in ll>e loved presence and meet to return the loved embraco of your heart’s pets, strive to be a better man and bless heaven for giving liis children so dear a stepping-stone in the river to the eternal, as Saturday night. USN A traveler was making a pedes train tour of the Alps, when suddenly, in a narrow path, he came face to face with a large brown bear. He drew a revolver and was about to Jire when to bis amazement, the bear cried out “Don’t fire!” It turned out that the pretended bear was a man employed by some guides, who sent him out dressed in a bear skin when they had a timid traveller to escort. At a preconcerted spot the bear would rush upon them, and when put to flight by the of the guides, the traveler never failed to reward their courage and devotion by a hand some present, of which the bear re cei\ ed a liberal share. ** Mary,” said an old Cumber* laiftl father to his daughter, when she was once asking him to buy Hera new dress, “ why dost thou always* tease me about such things when I am quietly smoking my pipe ? ” “ Be cause, ye are always best-tempered then, fey tlier,” was the reply. “ 1 be lieve, lass thou’rt reet,” rejoined the farmer ; for when I was a lad, I re member my poor feythei was same ; after he had smoked a pipe or twee he wad ha gi’eu his head away if it liad been loose.” —■ ■ *» 4 35- p ~o» - &2T"A western traveler came up to a log cabin and asked for a drink, which was supplied by a good look ing woman. As she was the first wo man he had seen in several days he offered her a dime for a kiss. It was duly taken and paid for, and the young hostess, who had never seen a dime before, looked at it a moment •with some curiosity, then asked what she should do with it. He replied? what she choose, as it was hers. “If that’s the case,” said she, “you may take it back and give me another kiss.” fcJ" At Memphis, Tennessee, on Saturday last, a singular detention to railroad trains was had. The obstruc tion was causeed by vast numbers of caterpillars lying on the railway tracks, and in crushing the insects, the tracks became so slippery that the wheels of the ears refused to per form their legitimate functions. The woods are literally stripped clean of their foliage by these pests, and the same condition is reported of other localities. JSfST A gentleman once asked a little girl, an only child, how many sisters she had, and was told, three or four Her mother asked Mary when alone what induced her to tell such an un truth. “Why, mamma.” said Mary, ‘I didn’t want him to think you were so poor that you had but ,0110 child.— Would’t he think we were dreflifl poor ? ” “ Suspicion always haunts the guilty mind : ” A lawyer and a consta ble entering a car on the Savannah and Charleston railroad, one flay last week, a man in Hie car hastily rose and leap ed from the train, which was going over a tressle bridge at the rate of twenty miles an hour. The officer was not in pursuit ot him/ A Missouri murderer, sentenced to be hanged, offers to shoot George Francis Train if the Governor will pardon him. His proposition is wor thy of consideration. From the Atlanta Constitution. Cincinnati and Philadelphia Contrasted, The Radical Convention of Pltila delphia has done its work. It was composed largely of Federal office holders, who owe place to Grant, and who, therefore, had no other course but to support the author of their for tune. They did it unanimously. Xo one expected any other result. Grant's nomination was a foregone conclusion. Sumner made his great speech of in vective against Grant, hoping to drive the Convention to throw Grant over board. Os course it failed. It sim ply rallied Grant’s friends to him.— Nothing eould*have been more timely for Grants success with that Collec tion. Sumner’s speech leaves, howev er, an impassable gulf between the two. Whether he will remain a pas sive spectator in the fight, or take ground for Grant’s defeat, remains to be seen. Os one thing we may be sure, viz. ; Grant will get the full strength of his Radical faction. And another thing is equally settled, viz. : That scorn ing concessions that were expected, the Grant party stands squarely ou its platform of straight centralism. It has made no effort to take the wind out of the sails of the Liberals, as ma ny believed and predicted. And this last feature is significant. It shows the belief of the Radical leaders that the body of tbe Northern people are still bitter on tbe war, and that the successful programme is to still play hate and proscription. The logic of this cannot be evaded. There is a sectional sentiment of proscriptive bit terness prevailing at the North, which the Grant men believe to be large enough to carry them to a continuance of power. The refusal to grant full amnesty, the determined attempts to continue Ku-Klux laws, suspension ’of habeas corpus, use of soldiers at the elections etc., show this, and form a marked contrast to the Cincinnati movement. And furthermore, this contrast utterly explodes all theory that there is no difference between Grant and Greeley and leaves consistent Democrats no duty Lut to take Greeley as between the two. This much is decided be yond dispute. The m.im who hereaf ter says Greeley is no better than Grant is blind to facts, and must ex pect his opinion to be shorn of its strength by its unfairness and injus tice. But let us look a little closer. Bar 'ring the indorsement of what amnes ty has been done, though it was done against the Radical vote, by the help of the Liberal 'Republican vote in Congress, and also the little sop thrown out about respecting reserved right, which is totally falsified by ev ery other declaration of the platform the whole concern is for genuine uu conditional centralization. It carefully draws the distinction that the unconstitutional amendments must be upheld because right, and not tolerated merely because law, and the infamous doctrine of enforcing them by appropriate legislation, such en forcement to be entrusted only to the Radical party, is broadly laid down. Resolution 12 justifies every Ku- Klux law, every congressional inter ference with the ballot box, every en forcement act. lii fine, the platform is a square, thorough, unemasculated enunciation of the most venomous and full-fledged centralism, and in perfect antagonism to the broad declarations for constitu tionalism as contained in the follow ing words of Horace Greeley, that “our policy should aim at local self-govern ment, and not at centralization; that the civil authority should be supreme over the military; that the writ of ha beas corpus should be jealously upheld as the safe-guard of personal freedom; that the individual citizen should en joy the largest liberty consistent with public order; ai*l that there shall be no Federal subversion of the internal policy of the several States and munci cipalities, but that each shall be left free to enforce the rights and promote the well being of its inhabitants by such means as thejudgment of its own people shall prescribe.” The gauntlet is thrown down.— Radicalism is defiant and sanguine.— It sticks to its heresies boldly, aud throws itself on the country. It is formidable in strength, and is backed by the power of the administration. It makes its issue clearly sectional. The struggle will be desperate. It behooves the Democracy to con sider well before deciding its course? Can it defeat Grant without the aid of the Liberal Republicans? Can it af ford to reject the co operation of those of the Radical party who have left it disgusted and alarmed by its centra lization and despotism? What is the most unsectional policy to pursue, t’lat will ra'* *e the contest, and thwart the efforts of the Radicals to make a sectional fight? Brethren, the battle will be no child’s play, the result no worthless bauble. We must bring to bear between this ami Baltimore the coolest wit, the soundest judgement, the broadest statesmanship, and the most self deny ing patriotism in settling the Demo cratic programme. Let us have no more brash commit tals of individual will,, regardless of the party judgment, but let us consult in brotherhood, reason in good tem per, decide carefully, and stand to getiieu for the uttered verdict. • — L —~— o *c»<* Grants -Letter of Acceptance. Gentlemen— Your letter of this date advising me of the action of tl*e Convention held at Philadelphia, Pa.*, on the oth and 6th of this month, and of my unanimous nomination for the Presidency by it, is received. I ac cept tbe nomination, and through you return my heartfelt thanks to your constituents for this mark of their confidence and support. If elected in November, and protected by a kind Providence in health and strength to perform the duties ot the high trust conferred, I promise the zeal and de votion to the good of the whole peo ple for the future of my official life as shown in the past. Past experience may guide me in avoiding mistakes inevitable to novices in all professions in all occupations. When relieved from the responsibilities of my pres ent trust by tbe election of a succes sor, whether it be at tbe end of this term or the next, I hope to leave him as Executive, a country at peace with outsidomations; with a credit at home and abroad and without embarrassing questions to threaten its future pros perity. With the expression of a de sire to see a speedy healing of all bit terness of feeling between the sec lions, parties or races of citizens, and the time when the title of citizen car ries with it all the protection and priv ileges to the humblest that it does to the most exalted, I subscribe myself, very respectfully, your obedient ser v&m, ' ‘ * U. S. Grant. It is amusing to note how eagerly the Administration organs quote from Democratic sources, and how readily they approve Peinocratic utterances, when they are opposed to Greeley. Just at present such pa pers as the Albany Evening Journal are constant echoes of the New York World, in its declarations of Mr. Greeley’s weakness. It is natural to suppose that if Mr. Greeley is as weak as the World says, the Grant organs would be pleased to have the Baltimore Convention indorse him.-—- It certainly would seem to he shrewd political management upon their part to help on such a consummation rather than to work against it, as they are doing. The fact is, tliey appreciate that Mr. Greeley’s indorsement at Bal' tiniore would insure Giant’s defeat in November, and the} recognize the World r.B an effective ally.— Chi cAnnati* Enqvxer. -• Philadelphia Contention There are about fifty colored dele gates here from the South. They fra ternize with the whites, stop 5t the best hotels, eat at the same tables, and drink hourly over the ’Continental bar. —Philadelphia Cor. A r eio York World. Yel, voi of it! That is Grant and his party policy. Perseverance.— ls you wish to do good, do good. It you wish to assist people, assist people. The only way to learn to do a thing, is to do it, and that implies, before you learn, to do right you will do wrong—you will make blunders, you will have failures— but persevere and in the end you will learn your lesson, and many other lessons by the way, A young man of Tremont, N. Y., a book-keeper in a house in New York city, recently began smashing clocks, crockery, glassware, etc., in his home, declaring that the Lord pre ferred him to live in a lunatic asylum. They prevailed. A misanthropic paragraphic says: “The touching spectacle of a boy leading home his drunken parent was witnessed at Burlington, lowa, last week. Ihe progress was slow how ever, as the boy was considerably 'the drunker of the two.” London has thirty-five theaters and the thirty-sixth is in course of build ing. The richest tin mines to be found in the world are those of Cornwall, in England. “I don’t care much about the bugs,’’ said Warmley to the head of a genteel boarding house’ “ but the fact is mad am, I haven’t the blood to spare ; you that yourself.” Carroll Masonic Institute. CARROLLTON, GA. Maj. Jno. M. Richardson, President. This Institution, under the fost toring care of the Masonic Frater legularly chartered end or gauized, is devoted to the thorough Jr co-education of the sexes, on the plan of the best motfern practical schools of Euro]>e aud America. Spring Term, 1872, begins February Ist and ends July 17th: Fall Term begins August Ist, and ends November 20th. Tuition and board at reasonable rates. (jfT Send for circulars "Vjd REESE'S SCHOOL, Carrollton, Ga., 1872, Tuition for Forty Weeks, from sl4 to sl2. Board, from sl2 to sls per month. Opens 2d Monday in January next. Terms one half in advance. A. V. JIBES K, A. M., Principal. £ >/“ For Board apply to J)r. I. N. Cheney, and 11. Scogiu, Esq. E. W. HAllPErl, Carpenter aud Cabinet Workman, Would announce to the Citizens of Car rollton. and Carroll county thut lie is now prepared to do all kinds of Cabinet work, such as Making and Repairing Tables, Chests, Framing Pictures, Laides Work Boxes and 'Fables. In fact anything in the above line he is prepared to -do at his residence North of the Seminary. april 5, '72-2m. J. J. PATMAN & CO.~ Carpenters, 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 terras. All communications addressed to them at Newnan, will be punctually responded to. ARGO & MARTIN, House, Sign, Carriage And Ornamental Painters, Newnau, Ga. Also plain and decorative paper hanging dond with neatness and dispatch. All orders promptly attended to. EkiU Orders solicited from Carrollton. Look to Your Interest. JUHAN& MANDEVILLE, CARROLLTON, GA. Would inform the public, that they have just received, a large addition to their stock, consisting principally of a select assortment of STATIONERY, ALBUMS , PURE WINES AND LIQUORS. LEMON SYRUP, SUGAR IfC, We make PAINTS A SPECIALITY As we keep always on hand A LARGE STOCK of every kind of pg.i,ut aud painting mat a. rial, also a varied and nn immense as sortment of Drugs. Ukemicals, Oils, Dyestuffs, Window gluts and Picture glass. Putty, Tobacco, Pipes, Cigars, <fcc., &C. We have on hand the largest and best as sortment of GONFECTIQNERIES AND PERF MERY ever offered in this market. STUDENTS Will find it to their interest to purchase their Lamps, Oil, and Stationery from us. t Virginia leaf Tobacco, best stock, and tine Cigars always on hand. June 7, 1872. \E\l STOCK! NEW STOCK! NJ»V INSTALLMENT OF GROCERIES J. F. POPES, CONSISTING OF 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. Savannah, Griffin X. Ala., Railroad leaves Griffin 100 pm Arrives at Newnau ...3 45 p m Leaves Nevruan 7 00 a m Arrives at. Griffin ’ .9 47 a m Connects at Griffin with Macon and Western R. Western Atlantic Rail Road. Night Passenger Train Outward, Through to N lork, via. Chattanooga. Leave Atlanta 10:30;p. m. Arrive at Chattanooga .‘ 0:10 a. m. Night Passenger 1 rain Inward from New York Connecting at Dalton. Leaves Chattanooga’s 5:20 p. rn. Arrive at Atlanta 1:42 p. m. Day Passenger Train—Outward. Leave Atlanta 6:00 a. m. Arrive at Chattanooga L2l p. in. Day Passenger Train—lnward. Leave Chattanoog 5:30 a. m. Arrives at Atlanta 1:32 p. m. Fast Line, Savannah to New York—Outward. Leaves Atlanta 2:45 p, m. Accommodation Train—lnward. Leaves Dalton 2:45 p. m. Arrives at Atlanta, .10:00 a. m. E. B. Walkeb, M. T. Atlanta and West Point Railroad. DAY PASSENGER TRAIN (OUTWARD) Leaves Atlanta .7 10 a. m. Arrives at West Point ..1140 a. m, DAY PASSENGER TRAIN —( INWARD’ ) Le ,ves West Point 12 45 p. m. Arrives at Atlanta 5 15 p. m, N T GU? FREIGHT .AND PASSENGER Leaves Atlanta 3 (jQ p. hi. Arrives at Weftt Point 10 46 a. m. Leaves West Point 300 p. in. Arrives at Atlanta . 1007 a.m. Time 15 minutes faster than Atlanta City time. NO. 25.