The Carroll County times. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1872-1948, September 27, 1872, Image 1

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the CARROJLL, COUNTY TIMES. Times. * PUBLISHED BY I , HA RpE & MEIGS, M KV kkiday morning. I TERMS': ■d f3r 100 B floCl VnM iNVARTAfItT IN ADVANCJC. ■ ' ,,rlß ll i; c stopped at the expiration of H Lie* cubecription is previously sos tll( . HubSotibcr is to l>e ebang- H 4 i*«- the old address as well as the ■’V farrier in town without extra charge. . )H id to anonymous commnnffca ■ responsible for cverythirtg cn- H* li "Linn?. This rile is imjicktiVe. A B-' ;,rr r *ci’hociiberS name; lytlicateft tftrit Macof jntecriptioUlSoUt ' I u)V ektising rates. II *, ,-itation to Business men to make use ■*’i mne to farther their interests, the fol , | schedule for advertising has been ■-’ tcrmß will be adhered to in all con- B f ' !: u,.rtiHinL' or where advertisements ( 0 r mberuHi j,, ■ Lin without instructions. ■ mrhor h-.s, fl for the first ami 50 cents fir K*seon«at insertion IgrnTLi Via i, ia mr m *f mimrs ■laches f, 7 <) |l2 18 48 10 15 28 |loches * 10 12 IT 25 ■inches ® j 3 30 ■ Column go 30 50 |f"l» mn ; go 30 f)0 100 ■ jj-cil advertisements will be chUrjed ac- I!. to the spaee thev occupy. |n ver t Wcmente should be marked for a epeci |ae. otherwise they will be contimied, and I ,i for until ordered oat. I ..tisements Inserted at Intervals to be |Ljf»r each new Insert.on. Ccrtisements for a longer period thaW three | ire due, and will be collected at the begin lot each quarter. f .at advertisements must be paid for in Ktriisomefif* discontinued before expiration IL-pcdtted, will be clfixrgcd only Tor time I tsof a personal of jwlwie t-barac'.er, 111 ■id promote any private enterprise or ■ . w j|i be charged as other advertisements. [ Mt a are requested to hand in their favors L i# the week as possible. Lbove terms will be strictly adhered to. ■■ „ v ,e Vdsvsb per centage for advertising uiie-iwingly before the public ; and Maes not. what business you are engaged in, ■;i iniHligeatiyaud inaustriously pursued, a ■.,,,. will be ti:e retail—-Mirchanf*' Mag ■ 11«. u: to advertise my Iron ware free ■ . .. increased with amazing rapidity. For ■.....i spent tWiMHM yearly to keep ■_,« ires In ior- Ibojiublk. .-llad I been ■ ..ivcnisim/. 1 never FhflUiS huve possess ■s, . r el UfOd,"— McLtod Belton Blr ■urii-ir:like Midas' tonch, turns everything ■>,i Ilyit.vanivdaring sum <irnw millions of ■ "-'ftaart ( V«j/. ■ m a'l'laei! y is to love, anfi V,ol&rvef*s to war, iw of printer’s ink, is to success in ”—]Jec cktr. ■ e:r the aid r.f advertisements I should ■*«•> mithieg in my speculations. I have ■'.-I faith in printer's ink.” Adver ■ ' •• royal road to business.”— Barman. ■©SIOXaL & IJISINESS CAKDB. ■ri-aukr this head will be inserted at one ■*per line. per annum. ■fcrirta will be taken for this department, at ■ ihmrates, fora less period than 011 c year. rkese, Attorney at Law, S Carrollton, Georgia fcIESJ. J l'll AN, Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Georgia. HARPER, Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Ga. ■ ®.W. AUSTIN ■ Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Georgia. ■ *UY. W. FITTS, Physician and Surgeon, Carrollton. Ga. I D. riIUMASSON, ■ Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Ga. S. ROCHESTER, S Bouse ami Ornamental Painter, Carrollton, Georgia. | )& E BLALOCK, Attorney at Law, I I Carrollton, Ga, I• i' in the Talapoosa and Rome ■ ‘ rum pt attention given to legal S5 Ul Arubtec\— especially of real estate *• w -& a. w. mebreli. Attorneys at Law, I Carrollton, Ga. ■ mention given to claims for prop- I. ' 4lll h tke Federal Army, Pensions, and I ’ er Umejit claims, ilouisteads, Collec- I Joseph L. Cobb. [’ ' X HER & COBH, Attorneys at Law, Carrollton, Ga. I attention given to all legal busi 1T lUs ted to them. Office in the Court I Attorney at Law, j Bowden, Georgia. a U<*ntiop given to claims for Pen ■‘‘'steads. Collections &e. *' p - k t oQl(i Carrollton, Ga. inform the citizens of gaining country that .be is ' «bhurt 10 . malie Sash, Poors, JPlinds, f J I,lot >ce, and on reasonable terms. arpente r and Joiner, ~4 11 kii„i. Carroll ton, Ga. jrt noti Ce 3 ( p 1 ar pentorg work done at 1 all 'onage solicited. lI^BVEYinoL "' ' llle °ffers his services to any r rkd °ne in this line. ■ 1 P<*r day, or $2 per lot Ihe following lines were writ ten upon first hearing of the death of General Lee, by R. J. Gaines, of Villa Rica, Ga. ROBERT E. LEE. The noble, the generous and brave, The gallant Old Chieftain is dead. Oh long may the Cedars and Jessamines wave O er the spot where the hero is laid. No more his shrill voice’ll be heard, As the broken, shattered columns retirfe, When the deep muttered thunders are stirred, Ab.d the Regiments are girdled in Are, No! he has gone to that bright, stilly shore, Where there slumbers are tranquil and sweet, The clangor of arms will disturb him no more, In thktfeacefnl and giorious retreat. His virtues and dee"cls are fondly enshrined Deep, deep in the hearts of the Nation, Let wreathes of woodbine and cypres? be twined At she pdtths forth her heartfelt libation. While the bright pages of history Unfold The sjdendorS that luster his name, There'll be written in letters of gold, His password to glory and fame. The trntli was his watchword and guide, Thro’ the storm and the battles fierce blast; ’Twas that God upon whom he relied. That crowned him with victory at last. While thousands are mourning to night, O’ver the noble the brave and the free-, Every true heart should thrill with delight, As it honors the name of Robert E. Lee, (Communicated.) Scene in a Hotel, Not long since, a company of gen tlemen, on their way from East Ten nessee, to examine the mineral re sources of Carroll county, Ga., stop ped at the “Kimball House/’ in older to take the train, next morning, for Newnan. It was precisely three minutes after 12 o’clock,, when this Geological I'roiipfy entered the reception room of that elegant and magnificent struc ture. The servant was ordered to show the company to room No. 64, but from some cause or other, the afore said waiter, became confu* ed, and lost his way, and after trotting 'round for about three quarters of an hour hove in sight of the lights below ; and in the full rapture, of the most extatio joy, was heard to exclaim: “ I gollies, 1 knowed vve’s all right!” and then turned round and addressed his sable co-laborer, (who was engaged in a dif ferent department,) in the following laconic style : “ Ilalloo ! Sambo, I can’t find No. 64 in dis house.” “Dar you fool Grant nigger, I always know ed you neber had any sense, here you’ve been three long days and nights, and hain’t learnt de circumvo lution of dis house. You woolly headed, sap-brained * v e-m ob Africa! dident you know dat Massa Kimball, ’foie he went norf de last time, Aided No. 64, into 65 and 66 —den ’corden to ’nalogy dar aint no number 04, in de stately ’portions ob dis ’lossal buil din—Put de gemmen, from Tennes see, in de saluberties ob “67,” den eir cumbulate yourself down dis way— amputate de culinary apex obdat noc turnal luminary—den wrap yourself up in de ebony hues ob dat colored individuual, de ‘ white folks,’call ‘mor fus,’ and linger in de pleasing slum bers ob de most elongated tranquility. Ise educated nigger, Guffey, dats what makes me so fluent in de languages. In a short time everything was as still, as a hush on the sea. This beauti ful fossiliferous cool formation , had calmly, smelly sank to rest Drinking. No man ever became a drunkard, lived a drunkard’s life, died a drunk ard’s deatli, and filled a drunkard’s grave as a matter of free choice No one ever became an excessive drinker who did not begin by the habit of be ing a moderate, a very moderate drinker. If it were the habit of all not to take the first step, and thus not be come moderate drinkers, the unuttera ble horrors, and woe, the destitution and crime, which results from this master evil of intemperance, would cease. Wives and children and friends and communities would not mourn over loved ones thus dishonored and lost. But it is the habit of drinking becoming the law of their being and of their daily life, the lack of resisting power resulting from this terrible thraldom, the fever of habitual tempta tion and appetite, which causes tha* yearly death march of sixty thousand of our people to the saddest of all graves, followed as mourners by half a million of worse than widowed wives and worse than orphaned chil dren. The Rome Courier of Tuesday says ; “M e hear a painful rumor from Har alson county to the effect that John K Holcomb, a good citizen of that coun ty, was called out of his house one night last week by a disguised party of men and shot. Mr. Holcomb was a Democrat, and his murder is attri butable to the Radical wretches, who’ have so long tyranized over that coun ty. Ilis body was found next morning about a mile from his house.’ ♦<*» • EST 1 The cemetary in Thomaston is being repared, so says the news. CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 27, 1872. The Gospel, I 1 ROM THE FRENCH OF j. ,f. ROI'SSEAU. TRANSLATED FOR THE TIMES BY MISS E. B. R., CARROLL MA SONIC INSTITUTE. The divinity of the Gospel is an ar gument which speaks to my heart. Behold the books of philosophers, with all their pomp ; what are they compared to it ! Is it possible that *a book, so sublime, and at the same time so simple, Could be the work of men ? Is it possible that he of whom it speaks could be a mere man ? Has he the tone of an enthusiast or of an ambitious secretary? What gentleness what purity in Ins manners ! What elevation in his maxims ! what touching grace in his instructions ! what profound wisdom in Ills conver sations ! what presence of mind, what penetration, and what justice in his Tespouses ! Where is the man or where 1b the wisdom that knows how to act and to suffer without weakness, without ostentation ? V hen Plato describes his imaginary just man, covered with all the oppro brium of crime, yet worthy of every reward of virtue, he paints, trait for trait, Jesus Christ. The resemblance is so striking, that all the fathers felt it—dt is Impossible to be mistaken in it. What prejudice, what blindness, or what bad faith one must have to daie to compare the son of Sophronis. ca to the son of Mary ! What a dif ference there is between them ! So crates dying without pain, without ig nominy, easily sustained, to the end his character ? and if that easy death had not honored his life, one would doubt whether Socrates, with all his mind, was any other than a Sophist.— He invented, they say, morality \ but others before him had practiced it : he only spoke what they did ; lie on ly put into lessons their examples. Aristides had been jTtet before Socra tes said what justice is; Leonidas had died for his country before Socrates taught it was a duty to love ones country ; the Spartans had been sober before Socrates praised sobriety ; be fore lie had defined virtue, Greece abounded in virtious men. Bid whore had Jesus learned that pure and elevated Morality which he alone taught and practiced ? The death of Socrates, tranquilly conversing with his friends, is the gentlest one can desire ; that of Jesus Christ, expiring in torments, reviled, railed at, cursed by all the people, is the most horrible that one can fear. Socrates, taking the poisoned cup, blesses him who brings it and who weeps ; Jesus, in the midst of a fright ful punishment, prays for his infuiated persecutors ! Yes, if the life and death of Socra tes are those of a philosopher, the life and death of Jesus Christ arc those of a God ! Shall we say that the history of the Gospel was invented ? My friends, it is not thus that one invents ; and the life and acts of Socrates, of which no one doubts, are less attested than those of Jesus Christ. To support this is only to postpone the difficulty without destroying it ; it would be more inconceivable that four men had conspired to fabricate this book, than that a single man had furnished the subject of it. No where in Jewish authors do we find such a tone, such Morality $ and the Gospel has charac ter of truth so great, so striking, so perfectly inimitable, that the inventor would be more astonishing than the O hero 3 The Commandments. I. THE MOSAIC CODE. 1. Have thotf no other God than me. 2. Before no image bend thy knee. 3. Take not the name of God in vain. 4. Do not the Sabbath day pro sane. 5. Revere thy father—mother too. 6. Be ware that thou no murder do, 7. From vile adultery keep thou clean. 8. Steal not, although thy state be mean. 9. Bear not false witness, shun that blot. 10. What is thy neighbors covet not. 11. THE CHRISTIAN COMPLEMENT. Which one of all God’s commands Should most observed be in all lands 1 1. Love thou the Lord with all thy heart : 2. Thy neighbor as thy better part Sallie s Bedtime. A father, not very far from here, read in the paper the other morning that the “ Utica girls who wish their beaux to go home the same night they call, pull a string at the proper hour which reverses ft picture, on the back of which appear the words “ Ten o’clock ig my bedtime.” This father, who has a daughter given to late hours when a certain youth sits up and helps her keep them, thought he would try this Utica plan, so he wrote in large characters on the hack of a huge portrait of George Washington, this inscription : “10 o’clock is sallil’s bedtime.’ 1 Then he arranged the picture so that when he attached a string to the frame, he could reverse it from his bed cham ber; but when *Saliie entered the room an hour later, her {esthetic eye was outraged by observing the portrait of George hanging slightly out of plumb, so to speak, and in adjusting it her fathers little game was revealed in all its subtile ingenuity. Sallie was not a Utica girl, howev er, so she just went to work and neat ly effaced the figure “0,” leaving the 1 standing solitary and upright—which you will observe made a few hours difference in her bedtime. That night, as usual Sallie received a visit from her voting—which his front name it Was Henry—and her paternal parent attached his string to G. W.S portrait, and retired to his downy couch. About 16 o’clock, while Harry and Sallie were deeply absorbed in some knotty problem, with their heads so contiguous that you couldn’t insert a piece of tissue paper between them, the father of his country suddenly turned his face to the wall, as if he was ashamed to gaze upon sich do ings. Henry, with a sudden start glanced at the picture, and saw the handwriting on the wall, as it were, which read: “1 o’clock is Sallies bed time.” Then Henry looked at Sallie with an interrogation in his eye, which was soon dispelled by the fair maid murmuring,“lt’s all right.” Hen ry said of course it was all right— that he knew 1 o’clock was her bedtime and he thought it was plenty late enough for a young girl to be out of bed, but what business, he said, had George Washington’s portrait to be flopping about in that way? Then Sallie explained—and the twain resum ed work on the problem, Henry put ting his arms around Sallie to pre vent her falling off the chair. Meanwhile the old man was listen ing for the front door to open, and his would-be-son-in-law’s foot steps pattering over the pavement with the V es ofhisboots pointing f om’the house. The sounds not falling upon his ears, and thinking maybe the old thing did’nt work right, he gave the string another, pull and George W. again fa cedthe audience. Then he listened; but he heard no footsteps—nothing but a peculiar sound, something resembling the popping of champagne corks. Then he grew cross, and gave the string another jerk, causing G. W. to turn about with violent suddenness, just as if he was dreadfully out of lm_ mor, too. And still all is quiet below, except the popping sound. Then the string was pulled again— and again—and again—indicating that the old fellow was just ready to explode with rage. And for fully fifteen minutes did he have the por trait of the man, who could not tell a ie, turning excited flipflaps and things on the wall, like a bewitched gymnast, until he fell asleep exhausted—Sallie’s father fell asleep, not the portrait. Henry kissed Sallie goodnight at 1 a. m., remarking as he did so, that it would seem like a long, long, wea ry year ere he would see her again until the evening of that day. The next morning her father exam ined that portrait, and when he fully understood the situation he was pain ed. He shed a silent tear, detached the string, sponged out the inscrip tion, and walked away with the weight of fifty five years upon his shoulders— that being his fige. He says that a girl who will go back on her father that way. would just as lief not disgrace her parents by marrying a Congressman.— B. Dodd in Xor ristoten Herald. Last year one Baron Wehrlein circulated large quantities of counter feit Austrian treasury notes in Vienna and Hamburg. He fled to New York Yoik, and took refuge iu the sociiety of that place. But a sagacious and an energetic Vienna detective, Chas. Degen, managed to entice the rogue back to Europe, and for his service the Emperor of Austria has bestowed an order upon him. — It is impossible to say how many dog-days there are in a year, because everv dog has his dav. Greeley and Grant. THF. DIFFERENCE SPIJENDIDLY PRESENTED John Forsyth, editor of the Mobil/? Register, has been invited to make a speech. Too unwell to do so, he writes a letter. In it he discusses with a master hand the imperious ob ligation resting on a Democrat to sup port Greeley. lie is one of the truest Democrats in the land, a natural born idiosyncratic, constitutional “Straight. lie with his usual vigor and felicity plumbs the kerual of the matter. He admirably presents the differ ence between Greeley and Grant. We call attention to his words, no less that they come from a high Dem ocratic authority than they tell the truth and vindicate the right in an unanswerable and conclusive man If our Democratic friends would but take Greeley at his word, and trust the fealty to its creed of the great Democratic party, no Democrat it seems to us could hesitate to g.ve a cordial support to the party pro gramme. We call especial attention to that part of the extract we give below from Forsyth’s letter, showing what we have so long endeavored to impress upon our readers, viz: that the action of the Liberal Republicans in return ing to constitutionalism after trial of the opposite, is the most cheering sign of the times in its unexpected and gratifying vindication of Demo cratie principle for which we have been so long contending. But the difference between Gree ley and Grant as chiefs of contending parties is that between good aud evil political virtue and political crime— the one striving to save, the oilier to destroy. No sign or promise, or hope is held out of reform it Grant is re elected. Indeed, his re election would be claimed as the popular indorsement of the “sum of all (his) iniquities, and if there is any profounder depth of false, wicked government to bo sounded he would feel that lie had the people's license to fathom it. If the people elect to keep Grant s party in power, they will have elected to part with free self government. I have said the question is not where and what Hor ace Greeley was, but where and what he is now. And let me give you a test of what he is now, as it gushed like a suddenly unimprisoned fountain from the hearts of the Southern peo ple, for it was this people who first took him upon their shoulders and bore him to his present eminence as leader and champion of the American Constitution. Why did the South rush to him as their deliverer? Because frera that, dark cloud that overhung our hope, behind Cincinnati there leaped a viv id flash ot lightning that foreshad owed and pronounced its deliverance. Behold the new revelation that broke from a Republican Convention, in the following—-fourth resolution of its platform: “Local self government with impar ti&l suffrage, will guard the rights of all citizens more securely than any centralized power. The public welfare requires the supremacy of the civil over the military authority and free dom of person under the protection of habeas corpus. We demand for the indivdiual the largest liberty consistent with public order; for the State, self government ; and for the Nation, re turn to the methods of peace and the constitutional limitations of power.” What more than this, in the fulness and emphasis of the enunciation of the cardinal principles of the Southern Democratic faith, had we ever asked for, or could Thomas Jefferson him self have formulated? And then came Mr. Greeley ’s letter still further ill us trating and emphasizing these long contemned doctrines. And what did all this teach? This and this only, that the finest intellects and the most upright men of the the Republican part# found themselves drifting with the Grant party over a precipice that would engulf the freedom of the coun try. Starting back in affright, they | sought for some iron ring-bolt in the granite of enduring principles to which to moor the drifting constitution and arrest its progress to ruin. Th ey found it in the democratic doctrines of a divided Federal and local sover eignty, in the “largest liberty' for the people'’ in “civil over military authori ty,” in the sacred heritage of the pro tecting a>gis of the “habeas corpus,” in the “State, self-government,” in “the return to constitutional limitations of power.” Out from that Convention, too, long with the glorious light from an "unexpected quarter, came Horace Greeley , himself transformed. Once our Saul of Tarsus, he beamed forth from that vast assemblage a Paul, the apostle ot a fresh inspiration of Liber ty. Is it any wonder that the South was aroused from her long despair to hail the new deliverence from so unexpected a quarter ? Aud who shall say that the Democratic party has abandoned its principles when it takes to its arms the allies who have paid it the highest eomplment aud crowned it with the most illustrious victory of its life—the peaceful victory of homage from its former antagonist to the im mortal truths and virtues of its consti tutional creed ? •«>. —Ten days after the death of Mich ael Carre, the Freuch artist, his dog died of grief for the loss of his mas ter. The Press C onvention. The following Resolutions were passed by the Georgia Press associa tions at a meeting held recently in At lanta. Whereas, The last Legislature inoet signally failed to recognize the ser vices of the press, and the l ights of its members as citizens oj Georgia, by according to them that consideration justly due it; and, Whereas, It refused to pass several bills preferred at the instance of the press Convention for the common ben efit of its members ; therefore, be it Resolved by the press of Georgia in convention assembled, That we earnestly deprecate the course ot the late Legislature, and especially of the Senate, in refusing to legislate in be half of newspaper interests upon a. just and equitable basis. Adopted Resolved, that we strongly con demn the action ot a Legislature, first in the history of Georgia in imposing a tax upon the press, utterly ignoring its efforts in behalf of liberty, educa tion, goodgovernm ut, civil’z tioa and Christianity, and the general inter ests of the people and State. Adopt ed. Resolved, That in defeating the bill regulating the matter ot adver tisements, the Legislature acted kca priciously andjjunreasouably, as said bill affected chiefly publishers and their rights, and did not infringe upon the rights or legal interests of others. Adopted. Resolved, That we express our unfeigned astonishment at the course of certain Senators in going beyond legitimate argument in denunciation of the Press and that we pledge our selves to hold up to just censure any public man so far behind the times and age in which he lives, as to deny the Press its proper and rightful rank among the grand foremost agen cies of progress and civilizlion. Resolved, That we regard the newspapers as an institution, separate and apart from either proprietors or conductors, with an existence all its own, and as such wielding an influ ence greater than any single person or set of persons and second to none in the land, and certainly not inferior to that of many men in public station notoriously elevated to their position by the power of the press. Resolved, That the committee appointed at the last semi-annual meet ing of the Association to superintend the various press interests needing legislation be and are hereby instret ed, to push them before the in Legis lature in January next, and publish their report on tax as soon as possible and that we members of the press of Georgia in convention assembled, do hereby determine to assert our rights with one common voice, to’pledge our undivided and professional influence and energies in aid of the before-men tioned committees, and in their ef forts to secure those rights. Resolved, That the press of the State be requested to publish these res olutions and the forthcoming report of the tax committee. BST' The London Times of August 10th says the Royal Humane Society had just awarded its silver medallion to Mr. John Dodd, United States Con sul at Tam sin, Formosa, for heroic conduct in saving the lines of ship wrecked sailors. - -m «C > —M. Thiers has expressed an opin ion that in all probability he will be able to pay r off the entire indemnity to the Germans by September of 1873. —A movement is in progress in England, and meets with advocacy in the House of Commons, to do away with Sundays labor among the employ es of the Post Office Department. —«• JBST* Dr H. V. M. Miller, the “De mosthenes of the mountains” addres sed the citizens of Griffin recently. B£s?“The Sheriff of Upson county', af ter feeding a colored prisoner in jail a few days ago stepped out to get some water and returned to find the “color ed troop” gone. &2T A hot-headed youth at Water bury, \ t., was recently trying to catch a base ball, when it rolled upon the railroad track just in front of a coming train. But Young America was not to be cheated/and lie went for the ball just in time to be caught by’ the cow catcher of the engine and carried along about 200 feet before the train could be stopped. The boy wasn’t hurt but he missed the ball. * A lost cow was lately adver tised by the following notice, which was posted on trees and fences near the owner’s dwelling: “Strayed or Stolen—A large Red Kow, with Yal lar Specks on her right ear. She is about seven or eight years old, and be longs to a poor widow with a short tail Ten dtillars will be given to anvbody who will turn her to New ark, Giiue 17, 180069.“ Blessed are they that are ignorant for they are happy in thinking that thev know evervthine. * * O Carroll Masonic Institute, CARROLLTON, GA. !Haj. Jno. M. Richardson, Preside*!. This Institution. under the foM tering care of the Masonic Frater t t r^^jjfenitv, regulariy chartered and or ganized, is devoted to the thorough co-education of the sexes, on the plan of the best modern practical schools of Europe and America. Spring Term, 187*2, begins February Ist and ends July 17th: Fall Term begins August Ist, and ends November 20th. Tuition and board at reasonable rates. [ *T Send for circulars REESE S SCHOOL, Carrollton, Ga., 1872, Tuition for Forty Weeks, from sl4 to $12.- Board, from sl2 to sls per month. Opens 2d Monday in January next. Tt'ims one half in advance. A. C. REESE, A. M., Principal. 5 For Board apply to Dr. 1. N. Cuk.vkY, and 11. Seogin, Esq. MEDICAL CARD. Dr. 1. N. CHENEY, Respectfully informs the citizens of Carroll and adjacent counties, that he is permanently located at Carrollton, for the purpose of Prac ticing Medicine, lie gives special attention to all chronic diseases of Females. He re turns thanks to his friends for past patronage, and hopes, by close attention to the profes sion, to merit the same J. J. PATMAN fi CO., Carjxmters, Newnau, Ga., Would respectfully inform the citizens o Carrollton, ami vicinity that they are prewir ed to do all kind of Carpenters work at short notice and upon the best of terms. All communications addressed to them at Newnan, will be punctually responded to. N. J. ARGO, House, Sign, Carriage And Ornamental Painter, Newnan, Ga. Aiso plain and decorative paper hanging dona with neatness and dispatch. All orders promptly attended to. Orders solicited from Carrollton. Look to Your Interest. JUHAN& MANDEVILLE, ll'ZDi* uggists^ 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 $L\ We make PAINTS A SPECIALITY As we keep always on hand A LARGE STOCK of every kind of pnint and painting mate* rial, also a varied aud an immense as sortment of Drugs. Chemicals, Oils, Dyestuffs, Window glass and Picture glass, Putty, Tobacco, Pipes, Cigars, Ac., &c. We have on hand the largest and best as sortment of GONFECTIONEfUES AND PERFUMERY ever offered in this market. STUDENTS Will find it to their interest to purchase their Lamps, Oil, and Stationery from us. U#* Virginia leaf Tobacco, best stock, and fine Cigars always on hand. June 7, 1872. i\EW STOCK! MW STOCK! NEW INSTALLMENT OF GROCERIES AT 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. TOPE. april 26, 1872. Savannah, Griffin X N. Ala., Railroad Leaves Griffin 1 00 r x Arrives at Newnan 3 45 f 3t Leaves Newnan 7 (JO a m Arrives at Griffin 55 47 a u Connects at Griffin with Macon and Western It. Western X Atlantic Rail Road. Night Passenger Train Outward, Tbrongh to N York, via. Chattanooga. Leave Atlanta . ,10:30.p. m. Arrive at Chattanooga 6:16 a. in. Night Passenger Train Inward from New York Connecting at Dalton. Leaves Chattanooga’ 5:20 p. m. Arrive at Atlanta . 1:42 p. m. Day Passenger Train—Outward. Leave Atlanta 6:00 a. m. Arrive at Chattanooga 1:21 p. in. Day Passenger Train—inward. Leave Chattanoog • ?130 a. m. Arrives at Atlanta lT32p. m. Fast Line, Savannah to New York—Outward. Leaves Atlanta 2:45 p. m. Accommodation Train—lnward. Leaves Dalton 2:25 p. m. Arrives at Atlanta, .10:00 a. m. E. B. Walkkb, M. T. Atlanta and West Point Railroad. DAY PASSF.SGER TRAIN—(OUTWARD) Leaves Atlanta.. 7 10 a. m. Arrives at West Point... ..1140a. m, DAY PASSENGER TRAIN—( INWARD’ ) Le .ves West Point 12 45 p. m. Arrives at Atlanta 5 15 p. m. N T GHT FREIGHT AND PASSENGER Leaves Atlanta 3 00 p. in Arrives at West Point 10 45 a. m. Leaves West Psint 300 p.m. Arrives at Atlanta 1007 a. m. Time 15 minutes faster than Atlanta City time. NO. 38.