The Carroll County times. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1872-1948, August 23, 1872, Image 2
The CamillCoHiilv Times.
CARROLLTON, GA Ait;. 23, 1572.
EDWIN R SHARPE, Editor.
FOR PRESIDENT.
Horace Greeley,
of new voi;k.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT.
11. Gratz Brown,
of M r gsorni
FOR GOVERNOR
James M. Smith,
OF MUSCOGEE.
Stand to Your Colors.
Thai there should 'he differences of
opinion among Democrats as to the
policy -to he pursued in the pending
Presidential election, is perfect fy nat
ural. We are not surprised therefore,
when we hear, now and then, a Dem
ocrat declare that he cannot support
Greeley, though w;e hold that*he is
hound -by the action of his party in
Convention assembled, and ..even if
he were not, that it is the part of
practical patriotism to take the less of
two evils, or if he can make no dis
crimination, to go with his friends,
with the hope of better things by such
action. We have, however no war
to make upon wliat are known as
“ straight out v Democrats, as we be
lieve the most of them, when she ides
of November come, will be found cast
ing their votes for the nominees of the
Baltimore Convention. What we
would insist upon, however, is the in;_
port an ce of unity in the party, it; the
local elections, in the Stale. With
these elections, differences of opinion,
upon the Presidential question, should
have nothing to do. Georgia has just
been rescued from the hands of the
Republican party, who after a few
years rule, have piled upon our ini
poverished people, millions of debt,
bankrupting almost our good old
State. It is important that this party,
the history of whose rule in the South
since the war, has been one of plan
dor, insult and disgrace to our people,
should be kept out of power. To
this end therefore, let no petty jealo
sies, or disappointments among
political asp'yants, for the various
local offices, disunite our party.—
It is plain that all who are seeking
political preferment, can not be nomi
nated, and hence there must be some
disappointments. In the coming
County Conventions, let every district
send up delegates that will correctly
represent them, so that there may he
I*o cause of complaint, and then what
ever may be the final action, of the
Conventions, let all abide by it, and
stand so the colors of their party or
ganizalion.
The Chairman of the State
Democratic Executive Committee, has
appointed the following gentleman,
for this Congressional District, Demo
cratic sub electors to aid in the organ
ization of the party, and to actively
assist in conducting the campaign :
(Ymipbell—John Goodman.
jCarroll—Geo. W. Austin.
Chattahoochee—W. A. Farley.
Coweta— W. M. Sparks.
Douglass—Miles Edwards.
Harris—Jas. M. Mobley.
Heard—Be Try 01 ive r,
Marion—E. W. Miller.
Merriwether—Henry Harris.
Muscogee—James M. Russell
Talbot—W. A. Little.
Troyp—Clyis. Mai>ry.
J 6&“ The “ straight out,” Democrats
met in Convention in Atlanta on the
20th inst., and adopted resolutions and
appointed delegates to Louisville.—
Very few counties were represented
in the Convention.
r l'he Republican State Conven
tion met in Atlanta on the the 21st
inst. \\ e have not yet heard what
they did.
—» «»►
t&C Atlanta has received her first
bale of cotton. It was shipped from
West Point toy Messrs. A. VI. Fadv
& Cos.
The bill changing the time
of election in this State passed both
houses of the Legislature. Under the
new hill, the election for Gover
nor, and members of the Legis
lature comes off in October, and for
county o&iccrs in January.
■
teo" Thomas J. Sp,eei\ the Republi
can member of Congress from the
* biffin District, died at Barges ville on
the 19th inst., from kidney disease.
——..«
(I in. J of.. Johnson.— This great
General lias written a letter, in which
he says, “I sincerely hope every
Democrat will vote for Greeley.”
Both branches of the Leg id a
fare have agreed to adjourn on to
bnorrow, the 2-lth in&t.
t Gi\ . Smith has directed the
Htatc tax to be four tenths of one per.
Hint.
(ComtijnniaUod.)
Nominations for County Offices.
“I.OOK VE OUT SEVEN MEN OF HONEST '
REPUTE.”
“ Whom shall we have for county
officers ? is an important question, j
now agit at ing the minds of the people; j
and the follow mg thoughts on the sub J
ject may not be unworthy of consider- !
ation, especially as the honest masses j
are rising up in their majesty, refusing j
to he led by demagogues and political
hacks, or to he bound in the shackles
of rings and cliques.
V hat ought to he the test for office? |
“Honest report,’ or the reverse? J
Drunkeness, or soberness? Ability, j
or its want ? Every necessary quali ;
fication, or the absence of all?
I
ihe delegates soon to assemble in j
the county convention have a heavy
responsibility resting upon them. May
they act wisely in the matter, having
the “ the good name and fame” and
all the interests of the people in view
and at heart.
Hie following qualifications for of
fice appear to be the minimum which
should be required, and no one can
surety object to them or want any
candidate to he devoid of them.
( 1. Sufficient ability and intelli
gence to understand the duties of the
office, its obligations and responsibil
ities.
2. Sober b edits and good moral
character / for no other person can
be relied on to attend punctually and
honestly to official duties.
3. Well established habits of-punc
tuality and attention.
4 Moral firmness and courage
to discharge every duty “ without fear,
favor or partiality.”
5. To sum up all in one word, men
of honest report, who fear God and
respect man—whose “daily walk and
conversation ’ shall not be a reproach
to party aiid county, nor a festering
sore and corruption to the community
—men for whom the purest can vote
without self-abasement, and with
whom the rights of all will be sate—
men in whom all the people, irrespec
live of parly affiliations, have confi
dence, and who stand approved of God
and man.
It is true now as it ever was—and
it will always be true--
“ When the righteous are in author
jty, the people rejoice : but when the
wicked beaieth rule, the people
mourn.”
In all cases offices are considered
rewards; and those selected to fill them
ought to beAVorthy of the same—well
qualified lor, and a credit to them. If
! a drunkard, or a gambler or an adept in
every or any kind of evil, be selected
for an office, will it not be saying that
that office is a reward for such con
duct ? Will not the office be dlscred
ited, the people wronged, and an
encouragement be offered to evildoers?
Shall the people offer a premium for
vice and bad citizen-ship? None such
will, of course, be nominated.
But let only the best men be select
eel for office. Blebs.
CriP Air. Greeley delivered a fine
speech at Portland, Me., on the 14th
inst. The following has especial sig
nificance to us, and tells the whole
story in eloquent brevity :
From those who support me in the
South, I have heard but one demand—
justice ; hut one desire, reconciliation.
They wish to be heartily reunited and
at peace with the North, and on any
terms which do not involve the sur
render of their manhood. They ask
that they should be regarded am]
treated by any Federal authority as
citizens, not culprits, so long as they
obey and uphold every law consistent
with equality and rights. They de
sirc a rule alike for white and black,
which shall encourage industry and
thrift, and discourage rapacity and
villiany. They cherish a joyful hope
in which I fully concur, that between
the sth of November and the 4th of
March next, quite a number of Gov
ernors and other dignitaries, who,
in the absmd name of Republicanism
and loyalty, have for years been
piling debts and taxes upon war was
ted States, will follow the whlesome
example of Bullock, of Georgia, and
seek the shades of private life. The
darker and deeper these shades the
better for themselves and for man
kind, and the hope that my election
may hasten the much desired hegira
of theiving carpet baggers lias recon
ciled to the necessity of supporting
me, many who would otherwise have
hesitated and probably refused.
Gueelky.— Whatever may be said
of Greeley, be has been the brave foe
of dishonesty. He lias denounced
plunder, whether in national or carpet
bag dynasties, and, therefore, no bet
ter champion of reform could be se
lected.
No more remarkable vindication of
political principle is on record than
the return by the Liberal Republicans
to the great theory- of local sell gov
ernment, after trial ot the opposite
And as the ablest leader of that band
of men, Greeley’s adhesion to the
theory, and his selection to lead its
restoration to sway, is especially cal
culated to advance the cause among
'the Democratic Liberal Republicans,
the material from which the Demo
cracy is to he recruited —Atlanta
Constitution.
Harpei’s Weekly a Disgrace to
the Age.
It is impossible for us not to turn
aside from the special class of topics
with which The Financier deals-long
enough to say that the cartoon on the
first page of the current number of
the Harpers’ Weekly publication is a
disgrace to the age and an outrage
upon humanity itself. Senator Sum j
ner sees tit to support Mr. Greeley
for President, and gives his reasons
therefor in a published letter. Speak
er Blaine, with mingled coarseness
and irrelevancy, as publicly reminds
him of the assault on him in the Sen
ate Chamber, and demands to know
how he can vote with men belonging
to the same political party to which
that assailant belonged. Mr. Sunmer
replies by asking—what all candid
men may reasonably ask, and answer
ns they please—what Preston S.
Brooks, five years dead, has to do with
the pending election? Now the
draughtsman, Nast in Harpers’ Week
ly. represents Mr. Sunmer as kneeling
to hang flowers on his former assail
ant’s grave, decked with a most brutal
epitaph, and the cartoon bears these
| words from Mr. Sumner’s letter: “Pile
I up the ashes, extinguish the flames,
I abolish the hate—such is my desire.”
;If this is also the desire of Harper’s
j Weekly, that “journal of civilization,”
!is doubly condemned; if it is not the
j desire of Harpers’ and of tHe Grant
! party, they ought to he overwhelmed
jby the vote of the people of the Uni
ted States.
Where will he the United States
in another ten years if the hate is not
abolished but nurtured? So far as
the Adminisiration party are trying
to win the contest on the old war is
sues, they are pursuing a course at
once a blunder and a crime ; and if—
which we do not assert—the election
ot Mr. Greeley is the only way to real
ize Mr. Sumner’s__quoted desire, we
unhesitatingly say that it is the only
hope of the country. But decidedly
there should be some limits set to po
litical caricature. Mr. Morgan has
not been free from fault in Ins repre
sentations of the President, but his
conceptions have less force than Mr.
Nast’s although his drawing is often
better ; he touches only the living,
however, while Mr. Nast lias before
this time outraged the dead. Whet her
men in public life have any rights
newspapers are bound to respect is a
question which might he profitably
considered just now. —Xtio York fi
nancier.
KdY Ex-Senator Doolittle thus speaks
of Mr. Greeley. He says :
“From the very day when Lee sur
rendered his army Horace Greelev has
been the true friend of peace and am
nesty. ills signing Jeff Davis bail
bond, for which lie has been so sore
ly denounced and criticized almost to
expulsion from the Union Club of
New York,*was the crowning act of
his life in advocacy of peace and am
nesty. The very day of Lee’s sur
render we find him writing an editori
al on “Magnanimity in Triumph”and
lie has from that day to this boon the
consistent advocate of peace and good
will to the South. He has thus shown
his manhood and his faith in lmmanitv.
It is the only safe policy for a con
quered people to adopt toward the
conquered. It. is an honorable and
Christian mode of dealing with avail
quished foe. ‘ Peace on earth and
good wjj) to men ’ is the teaching of
Him who brought peace to the world,
and never has there been a greater cx
emplication of this truth than that to
which I have referred. This is the
very point at issue. We want not a
peace like that of Wilson and Bont
well, by the sword and with chains,
but a peace secured by trial by jury
and the habeas corpus —a peace com
ing from the hearts of the people who
love their noble country, knowing no
North, no South, no East, anil no
West. With such a peace we can
forget the troubles of the past, and
clasp hands across the bloody chasm.”
The Greeley Drift. —Hon. E. A.
Rollins, Chairman of the Maine Grant
State Committee ; Horatio King, Buc
hanan’s Postmaster General ; Col.
names Watson ebb, formerly edi
tor of the New York Courier an I Eu
quircr, thirty-two Republican members
of the lowa Legislature, Gov. Stephen
(t. Harding, o! Milan, Indiana ; a pi
oneer of Republicanism; lion. Ga
lushaGrow, one ot the most influen
tial Republicans of Pennsylvania ; are
all recently out for Greeley. —Atlanta
Constitution.
jgQT* In speaking of Mr. Greeley’s
kindness and goodness ot heart, we
take pleasure in recording a fact which
occurred in Greenville, shortly after
the surrender of General Jonnston
The Rev. Mr. Gvjbn., a baptist clergy
man, living near this place, had taken
from him by the Federal raids, two
horses and other property. lie was a
poor man, and wrote an account of the
raid and robbery for the Tribune. Mr.
Greeley received and read his com
munication, and in return sent him a
draft for two hundred dollars-! Osow
this shows the heart of the man.
a contrast between this act of charity
and those bloody expressions of dia
bolic revenge, uttered by General
Grant’s Secretary of the Treasury, the
other day at the public meeting in
North Carolina. He said the bloody
chasm between the North and South
had yet to be filled with other carcasses!
This man was sent to North Carolina
by General Grant to advocate his re
election to the Presidency ! How can
a man, with a Southern heart in his
bosom, assist in elevating such a mili
tary chieftain to the Presidency !
Greenville Enterprise.
Aii editor wrote a leading article
on the fair sex, in the course of which
he said: “Girls of seventeen and eigh
teen are fond of beaus.”. When the
paper was issued, he was rather shock-;
c*d to discover that an unfortunate
typographical error hah madehim say:
“Girls of seventeen or eighteen are
fond of beans.”
Neat.
The Cincinnati Enquirer puls one j
plan of the Administration achieve
ments in the tel lowing neat manner: j
It, is claimed as a great achievement
for the Grant Administration that it
lias paid off £291,0Q3,030 of the pub
lic debt in about three years. It is
exceedingly doubtful whether it has j
done this, but even if it has it makes
a poor comparison by the side of An
drew Johnson’s Administration. Mr. :
Ilo.ut well, the present Secretary of the I
Treasury, in a speech delivered in the
House of Representatives July 21,
1868, said :
“On the Ist of April, 1865. the pub
lic debt, liquidated and ascertained,
was $2 366 033 000 and the §1066 033,
03) which we paid between the Ist of
April. 1865, and the Ist ot January,
1868, would have been added to the
public debt as proper expenses of the
war, if we had not, out of the public
revenue from day to day, liquidated
it. In the face of this great fact that
in two years and nine months, by ex
traordinary efforts to be sure, we paid
$1,060,033,0 )3 of the public debt, are
we to assume that thereafter the peo
pie of this country are not annually to
make considerable payment of the pub
lic debt of the country? Almost one,
third of the entire public debt ot the
country has been paid in two years
and nine months, and lam not will
ing to stand on the assumption that
we shall not make large payments in
each year hereafter.”
The sums raised by taxation have
been much larger under Grant than
I Johnson. Is there one Grant'de who
will dispute the statement of his own
Secretary of the Treasury ?
Gref: lev's Philanthropy. —A wri
ter in the (S. C.) Enterprise gives the
following instance of the- practical be
nevolence of our next President :
“In speaking of Mr. Greeley’s kind
ness and goodness of heart, we take
pleasure in recording a fact which oc
curred in Greenville shortly after the
surrender of Gen. Johnson. The Rev.
Mr. (twin, a Babtist clergyman, living
near this place, had taken from him
by the Federal raids, two horses and
other property. He was a poor man
and wrote an account of the raid, and
robbery for the Tribune. Mr. Gree
ley received and read his communica
tion, and in return sent him a draft for
two hundred dollars. Now, this
shows the heart of the man. What a
contrast between this act of charity,
and those bloody expressions of dia
bolic revenge, uttered by Gen. Grant’s
Secretary of the Treasury, the other
day, at the public meeting in North
Carolina. He said the bloody chasm
between the North and South had yet
to bo filled with other carcasses! Thy*
man was sent to North Carolina by
Gen. Grant, to advocate his re-elec
tion so the Presidency ! How can a
man, with a Southern heart in hbo
nodi, assist in cjoyatiugtfwh a milita
ry chieftain to the Presidency.
The New Post at, Akh vnoement. —
By the new postal law which came
into operation on the Ist of July, a
great benefit has been conferred up
on the general public. According to
the new regulations, packages of dry
goods, hardware, drugs, (except liqu
id drugs) and other merchandise not
exceeding twelve ounces in weight,
can be mailed to any part of the Uni
ted States at a charge of two cents
for each two ounces or fraction of two
ounces. Much time and money will
be saved by this arrangement. The
post office authorities will forward a
twelve ounce package to San Fran
cisco for twelve cents. For instance,
a pair of boo'ts, if neither boot weighs
more than the specified twelve ounces
may be wrapped up in two separate
parcels, and sent across the continent
for twenty four'.cents. Up to the
present time, it is said, the post office
has lost money by the new system,
simply owing to the fact that the
general public has not taken advan
tage of it to such an extent as will
make it r( munerative. But it is con
fidently expected that when the ad
vantages of the system are thoroughly
appreciated, the scheme will prove as
profitable to the government as it is
beneficial to the public. It is, in fact,
nothing more nor less than an adop
tion of the English parcel post, and
although the charges in England are
somewhat less than the rates adopted
here, yet when it is remembered that
the distances are as nothing when
compared with those in this country,
it will be seen that there is no cause
for dissatisfaction.
Axoxru.ous.—Perhaps no more
anoinaloUs and remarkable spectacle
was ever, presented than is now shown
by the Democrats who- are holding
back from support ot Greeley.
For seven long years they have
been groaning under and seeking to
remove the iniquitous oppressions of
Radical rule.
So odious had that rule become that
Greeley and a large body of republicans
revolted from it.
Yet these Democrats declare that a
movement to overthrow that bad rule
is not preferable-to aiding that rule to
continue its enmities.
The lolly of such a course is inex
plicable. The change to remove ty
ranny is at last at hand, and we are
called upon to reject it because Gree
ley is the instrument of delivery.—At
lanta Conlitution .
A youth iu an Eastern city was en
amored of a young lady in that town
but was- too to pop the ques
tion in person, so Ik? went to Pitts
burg and telegraphed to her, “Will
you marry me?” ‘ He waited an hour
or two in a fever of anxiety for the
reply and got this brief but pointed
sentence: “No you fool, you," and he
had to pay for his lady love’s dispatch
besides.
*1 he New Election Law.
The following bill, which was intro*
ducetl into the Senate by Hon. Colum
bus Heard, of the 19lh Senatorial I )is
triet. lies passed both houses, and lack ß
only the signature of the Governor to
become a law. He will, no doubt, ap
prove it to day :
a diu..
To bo entitled an Act to Regulate
the Time of Holding Elections in
the State of Georgia.
Skc. 1. Re it enacted, etc., That all
elections be held in said
State, under the constitution and laws
thereof, except for members of Con
gress, Presidential electors, and county
officers, shall be held on the first
Wednesday in October of the partic
ular years in which, under the consti
tution, elections are required to be
held, at the places established by law,
and under the election law ot the
State.
Sec. 2. That all elections for mem
bers of Congress shall be held on
Tuesday alter the first Monday in No
vember of the year 1872, and on the
same day in every 1 second ye;ar t hereaf
ter.
Sec. 3. That all elections for conn
ty officers shall be held on the first
Wednesday in January of tiie years
in which, under the Constitution and
laws of said State, elections should he
held to till such offices, beginning on
the first Wednesday in January, 1873.
The too profuse use of the fitly
of “Colonel” elicits these pertinent re
marks from the Philadelphia Post :
“To call a man ‘Colonel’ is to convey
the idea that he is of a mild, meek
and benevolent disposition. It is al
so an evidence that he never was a
soldier. For instance, we may recall
some of the Colonels of Philadelphia.
There are Colonels Forney, McClure,
McMichael, Scott, Mann, Fitzgerald,
Phillips, Hincken, Green, and Fritz
Os what regiment? And we might
mention many more gentlemen of
high standing, who have never been
in the army, and can only be called
‘Colonel’ as a tribute to their .antipa
thy to blood. If every Colonel was
a soldier, the standing army in Phila
delphia would be a menace to our lib
erties. Their number is as gieat as
it was in San Francisco, to which
John Phoenix bears witness in the fol
lowing storv : “The steamboat was
leaving the wharf, and everybody was
taking leave of their friend?—all
but John Phoenix, who had no
friends t o bid hi m fa irw ell
Ashamed of his loneliness, as the
boat sheeren off he called out in a
loud voice, ‘Good-bye, colonel!’ and,
to his great delight, every man
on the wharf took off his hat and
shouted, ‘Colonel, good bye !’ ”
The Vindication of the Law.—
The record of ciime in this State for
the past twelve months shows n mark
ed decrease. The reason is manifest.
The strict enforcement of the law, and
the execution of murderers in all sec
tions of the State has exercised a most
salutary influence. Let violated law
be vindicated prompt!}' and unerring
ly, and crime, will continue to de
crease. The feelings of this com mu
nity have been shocked by a deliber
ate homicide, and excitement natural
ly runs high. But our people are too
law-abiding and have too much con
fidenee in the sure administration of
justice to allow any efforts or to engage
in any attempt to take the law into
their own hands. This is justifiable
under no circumstances. But let
every man, who seeks the peace of so
ciety and the safety of human life Ir an
the ruffianism of the desperado, see to
it that our courts administer the law
without fear or favor .—Atlanta Gmi
sit ut ion.
Tailing Hour: Papers.— Of course
city papers contain a greater amount
ot reading matter than country papers,
but which is the most interesting ? Do
the city papers say anything in regard
to our own county ? Nothing. Do
they contain notices of your schools,
churches, meetings, marriages, and a
hundred other local matters of inter
est, which the country papers publish
free gratis? Not an item. Do they
ever say a word calculated to draw at
tention to your country and its thriv
ing towns, and aid in our progress and
enterprise? Not a line. And yet
there are men wh*o take the contrary
view of this matter, that unless they
see as much reading in their country
paper as they do in a cit<* paper they
are not getting the worth of their
money. It reminds ns of the person
who took the largest pair of boots
in the bow, simply because they cost
the same as the pair much smaller that
fit.
NE W AD VERTISE ME NTS.
GEORGIA. Carroll County.
Z A. Homier, having appl'ed to be ap
pointed guardian of the person and property
of YViiliam Marion Scott, a minor under
fourteen years of age. resident of said Coun~
ty. This is to cite ail persons concerned to
be and appear at the term of the court of
Ordinary, to be held next, after the expira
tion of thirty days from the first publication
of this notice, ami show cause, if they can,
why said Z. A. Bonner should not be intrusty
ed with the guardianship of the person and
property of William Marion Scott.
Witness my official signature,
aug.23—im. D. B. JUH AX, Ord y.
GEORGIA, Carroll county.
Whereas Margaret Walker, administrator
of John M. Walker, represents to the court,
in her petition, duly filed, and entered on j
record, that she has fully administered John ;
M. Walker’s (state. This is, therefore, to
cite all jversons concerned, kindred and credi~ 1
tors, to show cause if any they can, why said
administrator should not be discharged from j
her administration, and receive letters of dis
mission on the first Monday in December
next. IK B j VII AN, Ord’y.
aug 23 -4m.
Just Received
AT
B.G.BIBAMER’S
A fine lot of New Flour, Lard, Bacon, Tof
fee, and other Groceries, all of which will be
offered cheap for cash. f uug. 16,—tf.
Parlor Still.
Hr. .T. A. Clopton, of Huntsville, Ala., lias
invented a small Still run by an oil lamp,
that will make
From Five to Twenty five Gallons of
Pure Brandy a Pay.
Every family South ought to keep a few
gallons of pure Brandies for medicinal pur
poses, and if made by themselves they would
know it was pure.
During the fruit season, 500 gallons of
good Brandies can he made out of
Dewberries, Blackberries, Strawbcr
ries , Carries, Blums, Beaches,
Grapes and other Fruits,
A circular with full directions for its use
with a drawing of the apparatus, will be for
warded to any address, upon a royalty of five
dollars, with the right to use it in their own
family.
This indispensable apparatus, can be made
by any Tinner at a cost of three dollars.
Nothing of the kind has ever been gotten
ont before. No one, after using it, would
ever be without it for one hundred dollars a
year.
All monies must he sent by Express or
Postoffice orders, to h s agent, 11. B Roper,
Huntsville, Alabama. aug. 16.
TWO HUNDRED DOLLARS l
Are You Out of Employment 1 We wish
the address of ere-v man and woman out of
employ ment. We have work for them. Ad
dress (inclosing stamp.)
G EORGE. J. JOHNSTON,
P. 0. Dux 108. Montgomery, Ala.
aug 16 —ts.
Oxen for Sale.
I will sell on the first Tuesday in Septem
ber next, before the Court House <Jo©r in
Carrollton, to the highest bidder, for cash or
on time with a good note, one yoke of large
young Oxen, welt broke.
aug. 16. It. V. UPSIIUIt.
GEORGIA, Caruoll County.
Application will he made [to tke Court
of ( orroll county, on the first
; Monday in September next, for leave to
I sell all the real estate, belonging to the estate
of James (). Blair, deceased.
W. 11. JOHNSON, Jr. Adrn’r.
July 26—40d.
11. 14. Kramer,
CARROLLTON, GA.
Is Agent for
Daniel Frails Cotton Dins,
FINLEY S ECLIPSE PRESS,
AND
3CHjFIELDS patent cotton presses,
Cull and get prices and particulars.
ang. 1 6.—ts.
Administrator’s Sale,
By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordinary
of Carroll county, wit! be sold within the usual
hours of site on lirst Tuesday in September next,
Sixteen acres of Land, more or less, within the
corporate limits of the Town ot Carrollton, said
County, the same being situated in the northwest
corner of lot number one hundred and twenty
eight in 'lie tenth District of said county sold as the
property of Samuel Byers, colored late of sjid
County, and for the beneiU of tihe heirs and ered'
tors of said deceased,
Terms credit till the ISth Nov. \vi,h note ant.
approv'd security, or lieu upon the premises.
This 17tl) July 1872 J. M. GRIFFIN Adm'r.
July 19, lsl2-4lld
Carroll iSherill Miles*
Will be sold before the Court Howe door
in Carrollton, Carrroll county Ga . witli’n the
leg'll hours of sole on the first Tuesday in
September next, the following property to
wit :
The east half of lot of laud. No. 280, in tile
original Seventh District of Carroll comity,
Georgia, levied on as the property of It. //'.
Patterson, to satisfy two ti fas issued from
the Carroll county couvl, in favor of Mande
vilie & Stewart vs. It. W Patterson.
Levy made on the 29th of July 1872, and
returned to me lsv a cou.sta.ble, this August
Bth 1872.
F. M. WILLIAMSON. Sh’ff
rfug. otli 1872
GEORGIA, Carroll County.
Thos. Bonner, Sen. Administrator on
estate of Win. S. Bonner, deceased, applies
for letters of dismission from said trust.
Therefore all persons interested will be and
appear at my office, and file their objections
it any, by the first Monday in November
n’xt, why said letters should not be granted
1). B JUH A A 7 , Ord’y.
aug. 2, ’72.
■G EORGIA — Carroll County.
James J. Julian, applies for letters of ad
ministration ou the estate of W. C. Buise,
deed, this is therefore to cite all. and singly
las the creditors and next of kin of said
deceased, to be and appear at my office, with
in the tftne required by law, and show cause,
if any they can, why lettets of administra
tion should not be granted to said applicant,
on the Ist Monday in .September next.
. D. B. JUH AX, Ord’y•
aug. 2, 1872.
GEORGIA, Carroll County.
Application will be made to the Court of
Ordinary of Carroll tounty, on the first
Monday in September next, for leave to sell
all the real estate belonging to the estate of
Henry E. Wise,late of said county, deceased.
W. H JOHNSON, Jr. Adm’r.
July 2.6 T 4od.
GEORGIA, Carroll County.
Application will be made to the Court of
Ordinary of Caruoll county, on the first
Monday in September next, for leave to sell
all the real estate of M. C. Heott, late of
said cooaty, deceased.
IE N. WIGGINS, Adm’r;
July 26—40d,
For Sale.
The undersigned offers to sell in the town
of Carrollton, one business Lot near the
i square, also a residence lofr in ttie Northern
part of'tlie town. For further particulars,
apply to G. W. HARPER.
July 26—lm.
PlilllFV VdiTuiOßi
For Scrofula. Scrofulous
Diseases of the Eyes, or
Scrofula is any form.
Any disease or eruption of
the Skin, disease of the Liver,
Kheumatismin, Pimples, Old
Sores,Ulcers, Broken-down Con
stitutions, Syphilis, or any dis.
ease pending on a derpraved
condition of the blbod, try
Dr. CrooliL^s
SYRUP OF
(Poke Root.
It has the medicinal property
c{ Poke combined with a prep- i
aration of Iron which goes at
•I
Jill®
once into the blood, performing the most
rapid and wonderful cures-
Ask your Druggist for Dr. Crook’s
Compound Syrup of Poke Moot—
take it and lie healed [maylO 72 ly
NEW ADVKIiTISKMKvuB
;|
reull quick fur tla. ... *l.l
gl _JM ■
S2SOAMONTII™,i I?TO J;;F
and kf,-check. Dios a ™
cular and samples, krkk g \'i ? Yfl
U": • "
RARE CHANCE ! ; ,
Ankara, we will pay you * w , ' "
cash, if you will engage' win, n 1
Everything furnished and exu-l"
r.A.ELi.SAc,,d:^I
50tW AGES rs Wanted I
live “ Greeley A Brow,, ' M
& Wilson” campaign charts ti.
out. Send for circular. Immn,,," ■
Large profits. Uaasis & l,- b ‘
pire Map and Chart Establismej •i- ■
Street, New’ York. '’ l 1 L .■
“ Psjehomancy, or Soul i j ii;! J
I low either may fascinate and
love and affections of any p.rson M
instantly. This simple mental
all can possess, free, by mail, for *>■
pet her with a marriage guide, Fn!’ TU
cle, f beams, Hints to Ladies’, Av*
exciting book, one hundred ’then. n - iS9 S
Address T. WILLIAM ACO v".VI
Waktkd tor the Autohio,
HORACE GHi:i;i.f|
Anew illustrated ediiion, now 'I
tliis the best and only edition Wt : I
himself and endorsed by the 'JVi),,., ■
our eighteen hundred and seventy ;, I
pa ion manual for all parties, just .fl
$1 50. One Agent sold 80 in i|, reo \ ■
Splendid Steel Portrait of Greolt v ?i I
a month made selling the above
4\v E. B. TREAT, Pub. 805 BY - I
AGENT^YANTLI)
FOR goodsbeed’s
PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN BOOK I
EVERT CITIZEN WANTS IT. I
Alpo. for CAMPAIGN GOODS. \,n.
GOODSPEED'S Empire PublNifi ij, I
Orleauf, Ctncinsatl, st. LouiC ■
1)0 i\OTFAIL
secure one of the |
CELEBRATED IMPlfuVi J
STEWIIIT CiiOK m\
With itn special attachments. Boaster \\. I
Broiler The Stove and Furniture rareii i.. J
for safe shipment. Books sent on appli<. . I
FULLER, WARREN & t 0., 236 Jlatei >t \ I
THE JIKCOKDS (IF TESTS I
at Lowei-G Mass., ju-oves 1
N, I\ BUHHAM.S '
2NT civ L>inc 1
BU)ienor io all others. u p
higher percentage than any other |1
wheel of common finish.
Ihmvplilet and Price List, hv X F J
BURNHAM. York, Pa. j
water
WASH IN UTON UNI VKISSITV
MEDICAL SCHOOL
BALTIMORE, MIL
The next Annual Session of this iis'
lion will begin Oo ober Ist, 1872, and
tinue five months. The Clinical adyun;..
of the School are unsurpassed
Fees including Dissection and 11 os;
Tickets, $65. For Catalogues contun
full partiwuiars apply to
Prof. Cuas. \Y. Chancellor, ]>;,
4\v, Ba t more, \
Koanoke College, Salem, \a.
Twentieth Session, begins Sept. 4tb. ]-Ti
Expenses for 10 months about S2OO. !
embraces Board and Tuition, inclii In,' t;
ern Languages, as well as all neees'.irv u.,
dental expenses. Kjreeial attention irvi c' »
unsurpiissed location, salubrious olm
, moral ami intelligent commiiniix. tlin,. ...
course of study, good condui t of Mul.
&c. Students in attendance from lniii>
different States, Send for C.ita*ogue.s f
culars, &c, to Rev D. F. BITTLE. 1»
President. {-.i
rBLOODPUR^R
_lt is not i p' - c which may give temp :
lief to thy •' t-/>r for the first few d 1 - -
which, fron . ied u*e brings Pile* .ud V
dred diseas-. .>1 iu weakening the irn i : <i
is it a doct.o \ ‘ juor. winch, under the unpoi*'
name of ‘irtturt. t* so extensively palm™
the public ns sovereign renteuies. hut it )• » ' f
powerful Tonic and (iheraiive. pronounced
the leading medical authorities of Lowt'>*>
Paris, and tins been long used by th<- r.-uo’.-ir p
cians of other countries with wonderful u :
results.
Dr. Wells’ Extract of JuralA
retains all the medicinal virtues peculiar u. w
plant and)must be taken as a permanent cars'-
agent.
It there want of avtion in your hirer and ty'
Fult-SH relieved at once, the blood Ik-. in.;
by deleterious secretions, produt i.- rotund’ ”
skin diseases, Illotches, Felons, rurtules. 1 a>‘ £l
Pimples, Ac, .1-;.
Take Jurubeba ro cleanse, purity and re-.'
vitiated blood to healthy fiction. . , (l ...
I hire you a Dytneptic Ntomarh f [ ' ;
tioa is promptly aided the n
with loss of vital lore- poverty of the y
Dropsical Tendency, Geiier_l Weakness or
tude. . r •
Take it to assist Digestion without re-;
will impart youthful vigor to the weary i-ul
Hire you Wtakaeoi of tlu InUtl'as*'. >
iu danger of Chronic Diurrhcea or the dr 1
llamatiou of the bowel-. Take it a!._ay
tion and ward off tendency to inffamitatj'. -
Have you weakness <rf the TJUr’m
gaiujf f You most procure b, - taut r. : ■ Ol .•'
liable to suffering worse than death
to strengthen organic #eakn<sf. or; • _ w
bunion. Finally it should be frequent..' - " ,
keep the system in perfect health or you a
I wise in great danger of malarial, aria
! contagious dbease*. vV
JOHN Q K EPLUGG, 18 Plot. St.A *
Sole A gen l for t lie l nited
< Price, One Dollar per bottle. Send. 1 -
lar. -
Valuable Land for
I offer for sale two small farms.eleven®;.;-
east of Carrollton and seven south _'
Rica. There is on each place,ff r 7 r ~ : .'
cleared land, suitable ft* corn ar.d c0 _
Both places are well watered and ■
houses and orchards, Said farms ar V n £
settlements, handy to churches a.-
schools, one of them has a good g t, |
and is a good stand tor ginning- ; ■
Ac. ’J’he rail road is destined T
Auy one wishing to buy would do J
call on me, as I expect to quit farm l -
sell low for half cash, and the other > '
Persons wishing to write to m
dress meat .dllen's Mills. .„no
;iag u, 2m W. TANARUS, WCBAW-
ELIZABETH GOLDEN, > Lil*l <*' :
vs. > vorce " , ilf
HENRY GGI.LtEN._ )son
Court, March Term 18.2. re oim
It appearing to the Court by 1,10 ; .
the Sheriff, that the Defendant does m t - •
in. the Countv, and it further appe- Aber*’'
he does not reside In this State. « be
fore ordered by the Court. t,,at ®f hKca iipi'
perfected upon the defendant l>\ l ,u nl h
in a public gazette of this State once -
for four months, that said dele.r
and answer at the next term ot 1 , t gu.l
or that the case be considered * ■
the plaintiff be allowed to
R. D. HARVEY, Judge SA - -
J. S. McElwreath, Att’v forLibeUn ■■
A true extract from tjie nnnotf'
Court this March 27th 1872. g C
Green B. JfnkwbA. -
may 10. 1872 —4m.