The Carroll County times. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1872-1948, July 12, 1872, Image 4

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Snaks and Babies, From Josh Bilug’s ‘mmci Box. STWI'EI) SNARL. Flic, striped snake iz one ov toe siippcryesl jobs that nature ever turn ed loose. They travel on the lower side ov themself#, and kail slip out ov sight like blowing out a handle. They were* made for sunn* good purpose, but , never hav been informed for- wliat unlcss it waz tew hav their beds smash ed. They are sod tew be innocent, but they hav got a bad reputashum, and all the innocence in the world won’t knre a bad reputashum. They liv in the grass but seldom git slept on, bekause they don’t stay long enufi'in the right place. A\ lien i waz a little lx>y and wore naked feet, and waz loafing around loose lor strawßerrys* i waz oftentimes just a goint to step on a striped snaik but it anvils cured me ov strawbor rys. It as triped snaik got into alO akre lot bed ore i did, i koiisidercd that all the strawberrys in that lot belonged tew the snaik. “Fust cum, fust sarve,” was mi mot to. I’m just az afraid of snaiks now a2 i waz GO years ago, and if i should liv tew be az old az Nebudkennezer waz, and go to grass as he did, one striped snaik would spile GO akers ov good pasture for me. \Y immin don’t luv snaiks enny more than i do, and i respekt her tor this. How on earth Eve waz seduced by a snaik iz a fust-class mistery tew me, and if i hadn’t read it in the Bible i would bet against it. I beleave evertliing there iz in the Bible, the things I kant understand i beleave tlie most. I wouldn’t swop oph the phaith i hav got for any living man’s knowl edge. Snaiks are ov all sorts and all sizes, and the smaller they are the more i am afrade ov them. I wouldn’t buy a farm at half price that had a striped snaik on it. Ded snaiks are a weakness with me. i always respekt them, and whenever i see a ded one in the road, i don’t drop a tear on him, but i drop anoth er stone on him for fear ho might al ter his mid and cum tew life again, for a snaik hates tew die just as bad as a kat duz. I never could ackount for a snaik or a kat liateing tew die so bad, un less it wa2 bekause thn waz so poorly prepared for- deth, r.ARYS. Babys i luv with all mi heart; they arc my sweetmeats; they warm up mi blood like a gin sling; tha krawl into me and nestle by the side of my soul like a kitten under a cook stove. I hav raised babys miself, and kno what I am talking about. 1 hav got grandchildren, and tha are wus than the fust krop tew riot among the feelings. if i could hav my w T ay, i would change all the human beings now on the face ov the earth back into babys at once, and keep them there, and make this footstool one grand nusscry but what I should do for wet misses i don’t kno, and don’t care. I would like tew hav 1G babys now on mi lap, and mi lap ain’t the hand vest in the world for babys, neither. Mv lap iz enuff, but not the w idest kind uv a lap. I am.a good dealt ova man, .but i konsist ov length principally, and w hen i make a lap ov miself, it is not a mattress, but more like a couple ov rails with jint in them. I can hold more babys in my lap at once then any man in Amcrika with out spilling one, but it hurts the ba by s. I never saw a baby in mi life that i didn t want tew kiss; i am wus than an old maid in this respekt. I hav seen babys that i hav refused iew kiss untill they had been waslit; but the baby want tew blame for this: neither waz i. i hare are folks in this world who ; : ay they don t luv babys, but von kan depend upon it, when they waz babys sumboddy loved them. Babys luv me too. I kan take them out ov his nest. They luv me, bekause i luv them. And here let me say, for the comfort and consolashum ov all mothers, that whenever they see nu* on the cars or on the steamboat, out ova job, they needn t hesitate a uiinnit tew drop a clean, fat baby into mv lap; i will'takc it. and kiss it, and be thankful be sides. Perhaps there iz people who will j call it a weakness*, i don’t care what they call it, bring on tho babys. I nkle Josh haz always a kind word i and a kiss for'the babvs. I luv babys for the truth thare iz in them, i uin t afraid there kiss will be ll a\ me, tlioii iz no frauds, ded beats nor counterfits among them. I wish i was a baby (not only once more.) but forevermore. Jo si i, Bili ;ncs. —* Why is a poor doctor like a moV? Because you can Hack him by hi3 noles in the ground. BQT Josh Billings says : “ All you have to do to raise oats is to plow the land deep, then manure it well, then sprinkle the oats all over the ground, one in a place, then worry up the ground with a drag all over, then set up nib s to keep the chickens and woodchucks out ov them, then kradio Ihgn rake together with akradle, then rake them together with 'a rake, then bind them together with a baud, then stack them up with a stick, then thrash them out with flail, then clean them up witlf a mill, then shar pen both ends of them with a knife, then stow them away in the granary, then spend wet days and Sundays trapping for rats and mice. It ain’t nothing but plum to raise oats—try it. I *. A foppish passenger on a Mis sissippi boat, who “just for fun, jump ed on shore at a landing and drawing a bowie knife, rushed up to a gawky-looking fellow at a wood pile exclaimed : “ I have found you at j last—you are the man I’ve been look ing for ” The gawky looked at him for half a second, then straightened out his arm like a jibboon and knocked the fop overboard into ten feet water. Resuming his position against the J woodpile, he drawled out : “ Is there anybody else on the boat looking for me?” iEE There is a young lady inPhila | delpliia, who whenever she feels like | enjoying a joke, drops her bonnet and | shawl on Fainnount bridge, and then 1 stays away fronf her friends fora week i or so. A Louisville German, quietly sip ping liis beer and playing “sixty six, pi a saloon, is informed by an excited compatriot rushing in, that his horse had run away. “Ah! Yy don’t you sclitop him up a leedle?” Being told that distance prevented, he turns to his partner: “Come, Shake, hurry up and blay dish game out. If dathorse git schavsh up my wife gif me Hail Golumbus, aint it?” ZztT A spirited girls observes that to her mind the women who want fe male suffrage because it will cause di visions in families must be a precious meek lot. A woman of any pluck can pick a quarrel with her husband with out waiting to spljt on votes. A great mistake with 4many farmers is, that they sell or cat their early chickens, and save late broods to breed from. Those do not got their growth before winter sets in and the result is, that the next spring they have undersized fowls as breed * i ers. This being continued from year to year, is it any wonder that breeds run out. Farmers and others who raise poultry should save their early chickens, and select the best to breed from changing eggs occasional ]y with those of their neigh! ors who take the same pains as themselves.— In this way instead of having their fowls “run out,” they would improve. A little attention in this direction will pay the breeders of fowls, as I know by experience. Fon Eounokk in Houses.—Found up a piece of alum as large as egg ; divide it into three parts; wrap one of these around the bit, and let your horse wear it in his mouth live or six hours ; or until the alum is all used by the horse in this way, which which generally requires twelve or fifteen hours. Use your horse mod crately the next day. It makes no difference how badly a horse may be j foundered, if taken in time he will he j perfectly well in from thirty six to I forty eight hours. IiKWROY l Olt CV.UKi'.KO-Sl’IN AL Ml'.X ixgtxis. —M e learn there h:\ve been several very severe cases of this much to be dreaded and fatal disease recent ly in Dr. T. W. Sims’ practice. One, a negro girl, was taken while in the field at I sham Weaver's a few days since, and carried home insensible.— The Doctor being sent for at once, found her neck and shoulders as stiff as a board. Haying used all the usual remedies for twenty four hours, tlie patient continued to grow worse, until she was almost in a state of col lapse ; then, as a last resort, the Doc tor applied a red-hot iron to the back of the head and down the spine, till the skin was well charred, and in ten minutes the symptons all passed off; aiul she is now well, except the effects of the burn —Covington Enterprise■ WEIGHTS AND MEASTKEG BUSHELS. r.BS. Wheat...,. GO Shelled Corn.... 5G Corn in ear 70 Peas GO Hye 50 Oats 32 Barley 4S Irish Potatoes GO Sweet Potatoes GO White Beans GO Castor Beans 43 Clover Seed - g(p Timothy Seed 4g Flax Seed ! ! ’.! ] 56 Hemp Seed 44 Blue Grass Seed 14 Buck Wheat 32 Dried Peaches.. 40 Dried Apples 2i Onions 50. Salt 50 Stone Coal v ... 80 Malt 38 Bran....* 20 Turnips 5S Plastering Hair 8 L nslacked Lime - 80 The’Campaign Opened! Sharp Times *lhead! • , The Presidential campaign for 1872, will, no doubt, be, one of the most exciting, ever held in this country, and in order to place our paper in tlie hands of every .W.AV in Carroll County, we have de termined to offer the from now till tlie close of the election in at the following reduced rates : Single Copy •- - cts. Clubs of five or more 50 cts. Always in Advance. Ci 4 'STfe Kl> 'a /? < ts£ Twr iy\ r ia«r mtr*( yA IS I&OEI -a ftmJ hjl \ IT ME t& [s the official organ of Carroll county, and in .Polities is and will therefore in the coming campaign, advocate the principles and interests of that, party. We shall endeavor to snake the TIMES an acceptable paper in the Home circle by publishing weekly, inter" csfing miscellany <Sk. c , * we would say, that we expect to devote a special department to his interests, which will he filled w ith valuable clippings from our agri cultural exchanges. m bl 1 © ihe.Susliiesg Man The TIM.ES offers an-excellent medium for advertising, <*s its cir-. dilation is rapidly increasing, until now it ranks as one of the most popular weeklies in the State. TANARUS& Otfj* J Fr ien ds Every w here we would commend onr enterprise, and ask for their aid in extending our circulation. NHAftPE «fc MEIGS, • ; Publishers. PROSPECTUS FOR 1872. FIFTH YEAR. 4 Representative and Champion of American Art AldLino = An Illustrated Monthly Journal claimed to be the kansonust Papeete in the H odd. ‘‘(lire my love to the artist workmen of the aldine who are striving to make their profesion worthy of admiration for beauty,as it has always been for usefulness.”— Henry Ward Beecher- The Aldine, while issued with nil the reg ularity, has none of the temporary or timely interest characteristic of ordinary periodic als- It is an elegant miscellany of pure, light, and graceful literature, and a collection of pictures, the rarest specimens of artistic skill, in black and white. Although each succeeding number affords a fresh pleasure to its friends, the real value amPbeauty of The AJdine will be most appreciated after it has i been bound up at the close of the year.— While other public publications may claim j superior cheapness as compared with rivalsof Ia similar class. The Aldine is a unique and j original conception—alone and unapproacb- I ed—absolutely without competition in price l or character. The possessor of the volume i ju't completed cannot duplicate the quantity of fine paper and engravings in any other ! shape or number of volumes for ten times its ! cost. The labor of getting The Aldine ready on the press is so gieat that repn ting is out of the question 1 With the exception of a small number specially reserved for binding, the c ditien of 1871, is already exhausted, and it is 1 now a scarce as well as valuable book; NEW FEATURES FOR 1572. ART DF.PA KTiIKXT. The enthusiastic support so readily accord ed 1o their enterprise, wherever it lias been introduced, has convinced the publishers of | Tiie Alditre of the soundness of their theory that the American public would recognize and heartily support any sincere eflort to ele vate the tone and standard of illustrated pub locutions. That so many weakly wicked sheet? exist and thrive is not evidence that there is no market for anything better-indeed thesuc cess of' The Aldine from the start is direct l proof of the contrary. With a population to I vast, and of such varied taste, a publisher ! can choose his patrons, anu his paper is rath i er indicative of his own than of the taste of the country. Asa guarantee of the excel lence of this department,the publishers would beg to announce during, tlie coming year specimens from the following artists: W T Riel nrds, Granville Perkins, James Smilev IV m liar,, F (A C Parley, it H Piquet, * Wm Bearn, Victor Nehlig, Frank Beard, Oofniiiv Smiley. Wm H Wilcox, Paul Dixon, Auo. Will, James II Beard, J llowe, Those pictures are being reproduced with out regard to expense by the v ry best en gravers in the country, and will bear the se verest critical comparison with the best for eign work.it being the determination of the publishers that The Aldine shall be a success ful vindication of American taste in compe tition with any existing publication in the wo; Id. LITE 11 VRY DEPARTMENT. Where so much is paid to illustration and get. up of the work, too much dependence on appearances may very naturally be feared To anticepate such misgivings, it is only nee es#:iry to state that the editorial management of The Aldine lias been intrusted to rtf. RICHARD HENRY STODDARD, who has received assurances of assistance from a host of the most popular writers and poets oi the country. THE VOLUME FOR 1872 will contain nearly 300 pages and about 200 fine engravings. Commencing with the num her for January, every third number will con tain a beautiful tinted picture on plate pa per. inserted as a liontlspice. The Christinas number for 1872 will be a splendid volume in itself, containing fifty en gravings, (four in tint) and. although retails at 81, will be sent without extra charge to all yearly subscribers. A CIIROMO TO EVERY SUBSCKI h r was very popular feature last year, and will be repeated with the present volume. Hie publishers have purchased and reprodu’ cod, at great expense the beautiful oil paint, ing by SKIS, entitled “Dame Nature’s school.’ The ciiromo i- 11x13 inches, and is an exact facsimile, in size and appearance, of the orig inal picture. No Aifterican ciiromo, which will at all compare with il, has yet been of fored at retail for less than the price aked for The Aldine and it together It will be deliv ered free, with the January number, to eviry Subscriber who pays for one year iu advance TERMS FOR 1872. One copy, one year, with Oil Ciiromo B~> 00 Five Copies “ *• “ 20 00 Any person sending 10 names and Bio will receive an extra copy gratis, making 11 cop ies for the money. Any person wishing to work for a prern inm, can have our premium circular on npnlica lion. We give many beautiful and desirable article ofieml by no other paper. Any person wishing to act' permanently as, our agent, w.il! apply, with reference, enclos ing sl. for outfit. James Sctton &(Jo , PUBLISHERS, 23 Liberty street,New vork. Tlic&ivaiiiialißepnblicaii. ESTABLISHED IN 1802. PUBLISHED BY IIARDI£E & SOFDDF.R. < 'IAS S. HARDEE. IIENKY W. PCI'DDEP,. —lnvariably m Alvcmcc : One year - - SIO,OO Six months - b.OO Monthly ] The "Weekly Republican is published every Saturday Morning. One year f ° 00 Six months - - - ] (K.) -Three months - - - J( j IlatCN of Advertising: One square, first insertion - $4 O 0 Each subsequent insertion - . 75 A square is ten measured iintvs of Nonpa reil tvj**. I/f- All advertisements ordered to bo in sorted weekly in daily paper, or in weekly edition, will be charger] one dollar per square for each insertion, except when varied bv special contract. THE r.EPtBLTO.iy, Is the oldest newspaper in the South, and is earnestly devoted to her interests. It con tains all the latest news, I»y telegraph and by letter, on all subjects of general interest— Commercial, Agricultural, Seientiffic and Miscellaneous—thereby adapting it to every class of the reading public. No pu j ns o ' r expense shall be spared to maintain its repu tation as a first class paper ip every respect. - l Send. lSend. tor sample copy. 1 ELIZABETH GOLDEXA Libel for Di va. > vorco in Haral HENRY GOLDEN. )son Sui>e’ior Court, March Term 1872. It appearing to the Court by the return of the Sheriff, that the Defendant does not reside in the County, and it further appearing that lie does not reside iu this State. It is there fore ordered by the Court, that service be perfected upon the defendant by publication in a public gazette of this State once a month for four month?, that said defendant appear and answer at tho next tonn of this Court, or that the case be considered in default, and the plaintiff lw» allowed to proceed. R. 1). HARVEY, Judge S. C. R. C J. S. McEhvreath, Att’y for Libelant. A true extract from the minutes of the Court this March 27th 1872. Grefn B. Jkxkixs C. S. C. may 10. 1872—4 m. Scienfic American for 72. TWEXTT-SI7VEXTII YEAR. Tilt?pplcndid weekly, greatly enlarged and im proved, is one of the moat useful and interesting journals ever published. Every number ia beauti fully printed on fine paper, and elegantly illustra ted w;th original engravings, representing New Inventions, Novelties in Mecunics. Man- CfACTCHES, Chemistry, Photographt, Ax curtECTURB, Ai.aicu.nu:. Ek«.ineeh inu. Science & Art. Farmers. Mechanics,Juventor*. Engineers. Man ufacturers. Chemists,'"and IVo pie of all Frofea aious, or Trade, or Trades, will find the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN . Os Great Value and Interest. Its practical suggestions will save hundreds of dollars to every Household, Workshop, and Fac tory in the laud besides affording a continual source of Valuable Instruction. 'The Editors are } assisted by many of- the ablest American and F i ropean writers, and having access t.» all the lead ing Scientific nnd Mechanical journal of the world, the columns of the Scientific Aiu 'M. an are cou stantly enriched with the choicest information. An Official List of all the Patents Issued i> Pub lished Weekly. The j r.rlv numbers of the Scientific American' make two aplyidid volumes oi Nearly One Thou sand pages, equivalent in size to Four Thousand ordinary book pages. Specimen Copies Free. Terms.—.s3 a Year; $1 50 Half Year: Clubs of ten copies for a year, 50 each, $25,00. With a splendid premium to the person who forms the Club, consisting of a copy ot the celebrated steel-plate engraving, “ Men of Progress.” Iu connection with the publication of the Scientific American, the undersigned conduct the most extensive agency iy tho world for procuring Patents. The best way to obi tin an answer to the ques tion—Can 1 obtain a Pauut is to write to Mi nn «fc Cos., 37 Park ltow, New York, who have had over twenty five years experience in the business. No charge is made for opinion and advice. A pen and ink sketch or full written description of the invention, should be sent. For instruct ions concerning American and En ropoan Patent?—C tveats—Re-issue. Interferanees Rejected Cases, Hints on Selling Patents, Rule, and Proceedings of the Patent Office, The New Pateut J.nwi’JSxaminations, Extensions, infring ments, etc., etc., send for Instruction Book, whieii will b e mailed free, on application. All busines i strictly confidential. Address MU NX & CO. Publishers of the Scientific American 37 Park Row New York. Savannah Moiling News, EUU Now is tbc time to subscribe for it. You have your choice, anu can take either the Daily, Tri-Weekly or Weekly edition THE MORNING NEWS. Is, in all respects a Democratic Journal faithful to Democratic principles, and earnest in advocacy of Democratic measures. It be lieves that the success of its party is necessa ry to the salvation of the country. Depop ulation as a News Journal will be mantuin. ed as heretofore. In Domestic, Foreign and Commercial Intelligence-, Literature, Ac., it surpassed by any paper in the conntrve Its whole eharractcr is comprehensively that it is a great Democratic and Family News paper, devoted to the interests of the South, I’o every business man its markets alone is worth many times its subscription. COL. W. TANARUS, THOMPSON, with able Assistants has control of its Editorial and News columns; while its corps of Reporters arc reliable in every respect. Terms—One year, §lO ; six months, $5; three months, 82 L X. THE TRI-WEEKLY NEWS Is published every Monday. Wednesday aud Saturday, and is made up from the Dai ly Editions’ Thumb— One year, §C; six months, §3; three months 81 G THE WEEKLY NEWS Is issued every Friday; is designed for country rceaders, and contains a careful sum mary of the news of the week with the prin cipal editorials, the current news, the latest dispatches, and full market repods. Terms —$2 a year; §1 for six months. No attention paid to orders unless accompanied by the money. Post Masters everywhere are author ized to act as agents, 8@l*» Money can be sent by Post Office Order or Express at our risk.' Address J. if. ESTILL, Bay Street. Savannah* a riiEttsrrouY cvfasuiox. pliiaefee, and * IXSTItCCTIOX.” Harper's Bazar. • * XOTICES OF THE PE ESS. It is really the only illustrated chronicle of fashion in the country. Its supplements alone are worth the subscription price of the paper. While fully maintaining its position as a mir ror of fashion, it also contains stories, po ems, brilliant essays, besides general and personal gossip.— loxlom Saturday Evening Gazette. There never was any paper published that so delighted tlie heart of woman. Never mind if it does cost you anew bonnet; it will save you ten times the price m house hold eeonomv it teaches.—Providence Jour, nal. The young lady who buys a single number of Harper’s Bazar is made a subscriber .for life. —New York livening Post The Bazar is excellent. Like all the peri odicals which the Harpers publish, it is al most ideally well edited, and the class of readers for whom it is intended—the moth er and daughters in average families—can not but profit by its good sense and good taste, which we have no doubt, are to-day making very many homes happier than they may have been before the woman began tak ing lessons in personal and household and social management from this good-natured memo.—The Nation N. V. scßscniPTtoxs. — 1572. Harper’s Bazar, one year, SI 00 An Extra opy of either the Magazine Weekly or Bazar will be supplied gratis for every < ’ll cl Ihe üb.-cril.crs at $4,00 each in one remittance: or, six copies for S2O 00 without extra copy. Subscriptions to Harper's Magazine, Week ly, and Bazar, to one address for one year, £lO 00 ; or two of Harper’s Periodicals to one address for one year, $7,00. Back Numners can be supplied any time. The four volumes of Harper’s Bazar, ror the years 1868. ’6'.), ’70,71, elegantly bound in green morocco cloth, will be sent by ex press, freight prepaid, for ?.,00 each. The postage on Harper’s Bazar is 20 cents j a year, which must be paid at the subscriber’s j post -o I;ice. Address llaepeji & Erotfeu. N. Y. - HIBERNIA; OR IRELAND THE WORLD OVER , Is the title of a book of one hundred and lorly three pages, teeming with fun an huhior. Tt contains one hundred Poems, Odes, Paro dies and Bongs, and is oue of the best hits at political Rings and Iri.-h influence in Ameri cana (lairs ever published. The Songs arc many of them arranged to popular airs, and the Parodies include all the popular poets. — The loading journals speak of it as a book of uncommon merit, every page of which fur nishes the occasion for a good hearty laugh, j Fifty cents, sent with the address of the sender, to McLoughlin Bros., No. 73 Duane Street. AYw York, will secure a copy, sent J prepaid by mail. * FORTY-SECOND YEAR Cody's Lady's book, for 1872. The cheapest of Ladies' Magazines b tcau - ts the best. For the past loriy two years the Book i been considered the guide of woman ” every tiling that is calculated to elevateV sex. The Oi.i> Familiar Writer Whose stories have * this end, have all been retain’d Marion n 0 land, Jno Churchill, “ I,ar Louisa 3. Dorr, Metta Victoria S. Annie Frost, Mrs. C. A. Honk ’ r son. Sue Chestnutwood, Mrs ]>7 nison, etc*, ITave a reputation for excellence in the * • ting far above any others in the mar,?’ line. Our Colored Fashion -mates ,\ r the most correct of any published i n t L country. Beautiful Stehj, Pistes.— the Lady’a Book gives 14 < ach year. Original Mrsic. — Godj’a is /ho Cn magazine iu which music prepared expiesY for it appears. Model Cottages.—The onlvngm azine in this country that gives tbese'dis: 7 the I»ady’s Book. Drawing Lessons. —ln this we arc a!» alone. We have also a Children's a Horticulture and a health department. Body’s Invaluable Recipes upon every subject, for the Boudoir, Nursery, Kitck- House & Laundry. Tin'teb Engravings.--This is a series e.f engravings that no one has attempted |,, ;l ourselves. Ladies fancy Work department.- Some T the designs in this department are printed in color?, in a style unequalled. Iu ad it ion to all the übove attraction* there will be published, monthly, a dnnK page engraving, the general title of whit a will be Mrs. Lolipops’ Party. We prnn> these sketches (outline in their character) ta be superior to any of the kind heretofore published.. TERMS. One copy, one year fJOi Two copies, one rear fi’pn Three copies, one year 7 jq Four copies, one year . lot 11 Five copies, one year, and an extra eo»>v j.» the jierson getting up the club, making J x copies. Uot) Eight copies, one year, and an extra 1 v to the person getting up ti.e club, inaS.:i nine copies. 21 (Hi " Kleven copies, one veaj, and an extra r.-v to the person getting up the club, mak U twelve copies. 27 i>o To accommodate our subscribers. we ui’J club with Author's Home Magazine andCU; cren's Hour at the following price.-; The receipt of {4, 00 will j»ay lor Coder's Lady’s Bock and Author's Home M.’gazine for one year. Five dollars will pay fdf Body's Lni'ys Book, Author’* Home Magazine* and C] ; ... dren’s Hour for one year. The money must all be sent nt me time/or any of the clubs and additions mav be made to clubs at club rates. Ek#* Canada subscribers must send 24 cents additional for every subscription to the Lady’s Book and 12 cent? for e :i 'or of tin? other maguziue?, to pay the An riea ivst age. 1 low to Remit. In remitting hy n..i . a Post office Order on Pliiludelphia, or a Draft on Philadelphia, or New York, payable to the order of L. A. Gody, is pref.irable to bank notes. If a Draft or a Pout-Office Order car ■ not be procured, send United Cstutacs or Na tional Bank notes. Address L. A*GODY, n. f. Cort’cr Sixth and Chestnut Stn- s Philadelphia. A PAILY PAPER IN UR.FFIN Prospectus OF THE mm DAILY JVEWS. Having, by experience abroad, Lecnne fully satisfied that Griffin is as good a plac: to live and make a living in as any in (h' n gia. 1 have made up toy mind to return, ami , on the Kith day of Januarj', commence tL puldication of fi live morning par>er, to be called THE GRIFFIN DAILY NFS . The puper will !>e published in the interr t of no party, clique, faction or r : ng. or in the interest of any individual except myself. It will be independent in politics—advo cating only the right as it is given to.mo ic understand what is right. The purpose of the paper will be so give 7 HE NEWS— true news—news at honv and from abroad—commercial, general un i political news, all prepared in such a nv fitter as to give the most of it iu live most ;. L; ble shape People who want fc patromze such a pa per as this, are invited to come up wim their subscriptions and advertisements. Ti News will be printed on good, dear t; p • at five dollars j»er annum for the daily, ami one dollar and fifty ceuts per annum Dr m weekly. A. M. Spriours. SERI UNIT'S MOMMA. An Illustrated Magazine, Edited A J. G. HOLLAND, Author of “ Bitter-Sweet/’ “ Xatliriitf » “ Timothy Titcomb's Letter,” Ac. This magazine, which has risen so rap. 1. in popular favor, has now been GREA TL Y ENLARGED, and will be still farther improved during t!.. coming year. Arrangements have been perfected to se cure the best Illustrations, and Ike mot in ! nent contributions on both sides of the A" kin tie. Scribner for 1872 will be insarpa--'- ed m literary as well as artistic excellence by any periodical us its class in the worM. The January A’umber will beespecially tractive,and will l>e worthy of preservative as an excellence of American art. A sth of Papers by Mr. Gladstone, Prune ' : ter of England, will shortly appear: j an able discussion of the Aational Bai.L --: System of this country; a icw Stcry i Mrs. Olimpliant is promised, <fcc.. i every number will be rich in shorter J'® l ' j Illustrated ‘ ylrticlea of popular Sc - Poems, Esays Editorials and reviews, T’he subscription price is SI,OO per } ■■■• ! payable in advance. ._ 5 *• To pnable all parties to commence s the series, which we are sure will be worth.' ; of careful preservation, we will send to s> : . dealer or new subscriber, the 12 numbers - Volumes 1. and 2 for SI.OO, or the 14 num bers prior to Jan. 1872, for one dollar sr. l half. The whole will contain more >• Three Thousand Pages, more than 1 ive } l - , efred Brilliantly Written articles, and Ac/- ’ One Hundred completed Stories, dak* / Adventure, Wit and Humor, Poems *> : combining with these the ablest cd-t' r - a f and the most beautiful illustrations, sen'.-' l * them said by the critics to be fuby e ( l a: the work of Gustave Dore. . The cheapest, choicest and most charge gift books for the family. , y A Whole Library in Itself for H’A $5 y 2 . We quote, as fairly represertLr the general sentiment of the press in regard to the Monthly, the ing from the Buffalo Commercial Monthly is a splendid It has taken its place in the front n ’ ! "V )f ’ the periodicals of the world. In the Lj of its typographical appearance, the l lo '' tion of its illustrations, the variety 11 L’ reading matter, and the vigor of its edi fCll ‘j t and in general good and moral infinercL is a publication of which America . proud.” Remit in Checks or P. 0. B * u orders. For sale by all dealers. Scribner Sr CO \ « 0.74 Broadway >•