The Carroll County times. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1872-1948, October 18, 1872, Image 1

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Tfl E CARROEE COE NT A TIMES. It !• Ki'iirrollCoaiiiy Tillies. 1 pUBLISUKD BY I & M£3IG , I v 1-UI DAY MORNING. I TERMS: 1 $2 00 Year I 1 00 aiontbp I ‘ IMVAIHABI.T m Advanck. 1 ‘ willbe stopped »t th«s expiration of U for. unlein* subscription is previously j 1r ,... oi' thn subscriber is to be ebang- H' | );iro ibe o and address as well as the c to prevent mistake. (I ,rricr in town without extra charge. j(ll) p a irt to anonymous coimnunica ■ UL , ;ire responsible for everything en ’ . r euliimus. This rule is imperative. A I L ’^‘, t |-|,. r .übsetibers name, indicates that Uoeof subscription is oat. 1 .advertising rates. I invitation to Businessmen to make use | to further their interests, the fol '.V ib-THi schedule for advertising has been ■ *'"]' ilie“e terms will be adhered to in all con i' l,- idrertis "g, or where advertisements Branded in without instructions: m" i, ~r stl for the first and 50 cents ftr id*’ ll (,r 1 ' * ■ cM ub-i ; <itient insertion W#wEi 1 1 t. | 1 m. | 3 m. |Bm.| 12 M. 1 !$ 1 I$ 3 |« 5 $ 7 $lO ■ ‘ 2 5 I 7 10 15 1 ! 3 7 I 9 12- IB I : f"-,;;:; ! 4 »1 10 15 s» ■ 4 "! I 0 I 10 I 12 17 25 I sl ! 1 ,"...,,,. It 12 i 15 20 30 I' , i I*l |IS 20 30 50 I ftiS !15!20 |3O 50 100 ■ advertisements will be charged aC ■ ' to the spaee the- occupy. ■ u| jdvfrtisemeiits should he marked fora epeci ft'd nine, otherwise they will be continued, and ■tVr;" <l for until ordered out. 1 Advertiseineuts inserted at intervals to be |,hsr-cd for each new insert.on. ■ t,ivert; sent cuts for a longer period than three I ',ni„s. tre due, nud will l>e collected at the begin l],< <>i cacti quarter. I ;r.insieiit advertisements must he paid fur m Hjrnoi'e. ■ vivrltscm nts discontinued before expiration sin* -tflc.l, will be charged only for time Hbtidieii. I'.oticcs of a personal or pr'vate characler, m M { to promote any private enterprise or H, :—t. will be eii rged as other advertisements. I \,PiTi i.-o: s are requested to hand in their favors Hourly in the week as possible. I ;.bave terms will be strictly adhered to, I *« ! ' ■ a liberal per centage for advertising I ,I -r ■,('!)' uu asingly befoie the public ; and - m t wii;i business >on are engaged in, 1, f■ ijtly .ititl i-diWrioimly pursued, a . Ibo the result— Merchant* Mag \,ut 1 -o i• to advertise my Iron wan free vi.hc'-1 increased with ainnuingrapidity. For ■.;n past I have spent £30,'00 yearly to keep , rim- vires before the public. Had I bv u •..!vtirti<lna, In« ver should have possess . ...eel B3r>),o<W,’‘—.l {cLtod Belton B\r t •!!!-;■ .; like Midas’ touch, turns everything l bi t youi daring men draw millions of t -ir • .1 i-. '—Stuart < 'ay. : .-uni, • iiy is to hive, and boldness to war, : i use oi i rluter’s ink, is to success in Wiicsh Beechsr. out the aid if advertisements i should >• 4 a<- nothing iu my speculations. I have a i omple.to faith in printer's ink. 5 ’ Adver . • * tin: •' rojal road to business.”— Barman. "XWVm.il £ 'ICINESS CAROS. l 'Mi muler this head will bo inserted at one ' • ’ riM'i lint*, per am nm. will betaken fur thia department, at 1 kr rates, foi a leea period titan oat* year. OSCAR RI.KSE, Attorney at Law, t ‘;t ■<)!;ton Georgia JAMES J. JUIIAN, Aft > ik-v at Law, Carrollton, Georgia. 'o.O. W, HARPER, Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Ga. r 'kO. W. AUSTIN Attorney at Law, Carrollton,. Georgia. i'll. W. W. FITTS, Physician aid Surgeon, Carrollton. Ga. £• L>. THOMASSON, Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Ga. R -S ROCHESTER. House and Ornamental Painter, Carrollton, Georgia. j ESSE BLALOCK, Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Ga. " ii] practice i n the Talapoosa and Rome , 1 li| t>. Prompt, attention given to legal 1 :il> ss ajtruste I—especiallyl—especially of real estate " 'V, A G . W. MERRELL. Attorneys at Law, Carrollton, Ga. Special attention given to claims for prop "‘taken by the Federal Army, Pensions, and ’tar Governmcclaims. Ilonjsfeads Collec- Ac. Chandler, Joseph L. Cobb . ‘ !1 -ADLER & CORD. Attorneys at TA"*, Carrollton. Ga. 1 'in ' attention guen } n '**-''*'* f | n,s * '* • .Me.] to them Office iu the oun actis* *' Atto j ev at Law. Rowdon. Georgia. ''" ■'l „ given to claims so Pen lw ’ H.unesteafU. Collections &e. !> F SMITH* Attnvnoy a | Haw. Newan Ga. ■* ktlicti in Supreme and Superior Courts l a Q. T CONNELL Physician & Surgeon, Ga. J ‘ : acid in he d*y time at .Johnson’s ‘ l or at his residence at night. * *• kirkly, a Carrollton, Ga. inform the citizens of i.( . " ;i: -' "• Coining countrv that he is Ac'. 10 make Sash, Doors, Blit Is ' notice, and on reasonable tenns t-v a For the Carroll County Times. Demcated to the P. M. who ?tole my Dollar Bill. BY R. J. G A IKES. Blasted be the roguish heart! Accursed by every human ill— May clouds of sorrow ever rest ! On the P. M. who stole my dollar bill. May every gust and passing breeze Each brook and nmrmering rill Infuse his soul with lasting grief ! The P. M who stole my dollar bill. And as the golden hues of morn, Shed their light o’er dale and hill. May each a thousand pangs inii ct! On the P M. who stole my dollar bill Let bis lands with serpents groan, W ith rocky tugged fields to till ; And locust, lice and froths infest! Ihe P. M. who stole rnv dollar bill. May every breath the villain draws, His wicked soul with torture fill; And every living thing give paisi! To the I*. M. who stole ray dollar bill. Long ere bis corn is fit for use, Oh, may it all be turned to swill — Starvation, stare him in the face! The P. M. who stole my dollar bill. And may the waters scarcely flow, And low the grinding of the mill The l ocks refuse to crush the grain ! ! Os the P. M. who stole my dollar bill. Before the balmy cup is pressed, May all its cooling contents spill, Leave the thirst still burning up! The P. M. who stole my dollar bill. May every bite the scoundrel takes, All his nervous functions chill, And turn his lips to cakes of ice! The P. M. who stole my dollar bill. Let time in its resistless flight, Make his sufferings gteater still, — ■ Erect on earth a perfect hell! Eor the P. M. whostole my dollar bill. Let music’s softest, sweetest strain, His inmost soul with horror thrill ; And be accursed throughout the laud! The P. M. who stole my dollar bill. ; May frightful fiends infest his bed, YY itß cries of muuler! murder!! kill, No sweet slumber close the eyes ! Os the P, M. who stole my dollar bill. ! ! And il‘“Old Esculapius” comes, .May he invent some noxious pill, iMat will burn like lunar-caustic 1 The P. M. who stole, my dollar bill. ! And when the fatal-hour arrives, As it must a id surely wit!— Then let conn dess and mans haunt! The I*, hi. who stole my dollar bill. | “Old Nick” will Lear bis spirit down i Beneath the fiery reel-hodill ; And there loiever tortured be! The P. M. who stole my dollar bill, i V ilia Rica, Ga. flow o ead aL2 c\v pap© . In reading a book, there is but little room left for choice of the order of pages to lie pursued, and yet even the:e the real bookworm has his art. lie knows whai not to read at all and what to read, if at all, after he lias read the table of contents and the opening and the last chapters. But newspapers are open to a wan dering and eclectic eye. You may read ai your own taste or fancy or skill. There is a facilty in reading a paper to which most are strangers. Every one will learn in time to find his corner column—as the editor and general reader will look first at the telegraphic, the merchant to the mar ket and stocks, the lawyer and specu lator to the sales and suits, the novel ist to the tales of love, the old women to the deaths, and the old maid to the marriages—which she reads with a sigh. These are the first glances ; and then comes the skill, or want of it in reading the paper generally. Your editor or man of scissor?, has an eye like an eagle’s, which sees ! only the live things that can be ] pounced upon and eaten. Your man of less skill and of more leisure lays to as a boa constrictor to a rabbit and I swallows it gradually beginning at the ( first of the paper, Caption, date motto i and all and going down through col umn to the advertisements and read ing these in their order. After a man has seen his speciality —his most pressing business column ior part of one—if he is anything of a reading man he will read down at least the heads of the telegraph news, then the heads or the leaders of the edito rial matter or local items, then the communications such as lie sees inter esting, then borrowed matter, then the new advertisements, and lust of all the poetry, stories and anecdotes. In these times there are few only who can pretend to read all the above ! p art ‘s. But it is provoking to see a man begin anywhere on a paper and r ead—as well pleased with the local written and paid for by the man, who has an axe to grind, as he is with the de&finy of empires or the fate of cities conu 'nsed into a paragraph and heralded vy the very lightenings of God. The reading of the world now and everywhere is chiefly in the newspa per. It is literature and the life of so defy and he who keeps up with the world and is not a laggard, must know how to turn off the reading with fa cility and dispatch. CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 18, 1872. ihe lectio I—A Ltudy. FUTURE OF THE NEGRO. The question of race obtrudes forci bly at all popular elections in our country. Ever since the war the re* cui rence of an election lias been the j rignal fur great excitement, much bit i ter speaking and writing, and no little bloodshed. The question forces itself upon us :—shall we ever witness quiet | elections ? is it impossible for two races, tlie white and the biaek to ex ercise the franchise together in peace? Do the causes of riotous conduct at elections and duringheated campaigns lie deeper than party preferences and political differences? W e are disp >sed to think they do. The mere question of Radical or an Li - Radical preference is, not we think the cause of all this excitement culmi mating in bloodshed and loss of life. It is a question of race It lies in the idea of equality demanded and asser te d on the part of ono race of another. It is a demand which has taken on the most convenient and the least dan gerous form—the political—it is true but it is plain to be seen that it will not stop there. The unwillingness of the superior race to yield the claim, (and it never will be yielded) is made ! the most of by the leaders of the infe rior and constant distrust, unrest, and lack of*confidence, remit an and will re sult. The advice proffered by promi nent white citizens to the colored masses on Wednesday, was not disre garded because it was unwholesome, unreasonable, or partizan, but because it came from white men, it was the calm earnest exhortation of the supe ior race. The incoherent voluble ex cited and unwise counsels of colored leaders were accepted tor reasons that could not be framed in language—they were instinctive natural and belonged to common blood and color. We a' e not blaming them for heed ing the advice of tlrnir own chosen leaders, they certainly can do so with out censure from us we are only try- j ing to account for it. There is the ; fell fear in the African freedman that his white faced nieghbors, and former masters are bent on re enslavement of him and lie wi 1 not surrender this fear in the fa«e of the most earnest declarations to the contrary. \Ye doubt if he ever will! If in the remote future such a ca lamity is brought about as the re en slaveinent of tne colored race it will tie because the race refuses to accept peace in confidence and co-operation of the superior race We can see no ground for the fear in any other view—we do see ground for it in the view just presented. The very dreadful thing all good men will seek to prevent will be brought to pass by the negroes them selvs by their insane rejection of po litical co operation and union with their white brethren. Wc do not utter these things in haste or in heat, they are deliberate, well considered convictions of one who cannot accept human slavery in any view of it (except as punishment for crime) to be in accord with the laws of God or His moral universe. If therefore the leaders of the col ored people and the people themselves really live in dread of re-enslavement, let them consider their own conduct and its tendency. VYhen questions now confined to the Southern States exclu sively come to be national; when the growing antagonism, the stubborn'po litical separateness of the races cemeup for final adjustment, one of two alterna- will present : —accept the leader ship of dominant race, and enjoy without let or hindrance your just rights, or let there be war and the weaker must be slaves. We would prevent this finality.— We are honestly devoted to a bourse of reasoning and conduct which will render it impossible if’ we are heeded. We would not reeuslave our colored people, God forbid ! We would live in peace and concord with them. We would accord them their constitution al rights and protect them in the same. We would multiply the facili ties for their education everywhere, may more and appriciate the blessings of liberty and political rights. We would -encourage them in all huii i orable pursuits and avocation, trades and professions. But it they array themselves under the banner of race prejudice or a political faction devoted to our impov erishment, disfranchisement, yea en slavement ; —it, listening to false teachers, they lend themselves to in cendiary schemes for public robbery and plunder, for the entail.i ent of frightful debts upon us and our children, as well as upon themselves ; —if this be their purpose, genius and deliberate, unalterable determination, then we accept the issue but in sorrow under the most feeling and painful protest ! We acsept it because it is i thrust on us and we cannot uvoid its We accept it to defend the right and preserve our State from all the ills sought to be imposed. Let no man misinterpret these words of ours. Let no man say that we resort to mob law or appeal to the unworthy passions of men. We deny ! \\ e are presenting a vital mat ter to our colored friends, and because they know us to be impartial and un partisan, we take the liberty—and ut ter this our warning. It is not true that the interest of one race is antagonistic to that of the other under the same laws ! It is not true. And therefore, when the ma jority of men find that Radical rule is | n, le of terror, robbery, injustice and partiality—and combine to over throw it, and succeed, it is the inau guration of the war of races for the colored population to get up incipient rebellion, excite discord, contest the rights of the dominant race, deny the pre-eminent claims of the heavily (al j most exclusively) taxed to correspon ding representation and stubbornly re fuse to submit, but instead plot to overthrow ! And they—the colored people— 1 must be tbo greatest sufferers in such ; a contest. The Federal Government is not in condition and never will be 1 more, to interfere as it has done, with these matters in the States, and r this thought should not be lost upon us. And that thing—as we have already said—which we and all men pray ! God to forbid, will come to pass and the race raised to a glorious pinnacle of! liberty and co operation m self-gov ernment, will be thrust down into dust again, by its own dec reel- Macon Enterprise. —p Greeley as a Business Man. Hie Grant papers having claimed! that Mr. Greeley’s election would in-! jure the business interests of the country, the New York Herald, inde- , pendent, has been ascertaining the opinions of business men on the sub ject. One of its reporters has inter, viewed A. T. Stewart, (who is very good authority,) with the following re sult : Reporter—Mr. Stewart you are probably aware of the existence ot an impression in the public mind, and which is sought to be stregnthened to aid the Administration interests in the coming election, that the elevation of Mr. Greeley to the Presidency would lead to results adverse to the financial interest of the mercantile community and of the country generally, I have been directed Herald to call up on you, sir, to learn whether it is agreeable to you to make public your views upon the subject. Mr. Stewart—What is it you want to know ? Reporter—Well, we want to know whether you look forward to Mr. ’ Greeley’s election as likely to produce uneasiness and financial difficulty in the financial world ? Mr. Stewart—l do not Why should it lead to difficulty ? Reporter—Well, it is said that Mr. Greeley’s peculiar financial views would be the reverse of those enter tained by Mr. Bout well. Mr. Stewart— : Can you tell rue what are the views of Mr. Boutwell? I never could learn that he had any special views or policy. I supposed his course was controlled by his judg ! ment of existing circumstances. So ; far as his policy consists in purchasing, : at a large premium, government bonds not yet due, 1 think the sooner that is terminated the better for the country'; | and the sooner it is understood that j the Government intend entering upon j a policy which at some future time, 1 no matter how remote, will lead to re sumption of specie payments, the bet ter it will be for everybody. Contin uing the course that has been pursued the last four years will never lead us j i to specie payments, but leaves every j merchant at the mercy of gold gam blers. Reporter—Then you have no fear that the election of Mr. Greeley will ; produce any financial difficulty ? Mr. Stewart —None whatever. Reporter—What do you think of his present views on the tariff ques tion ? Would they not if carried but by a change of the tariff lead, to some confusion with merchants? Mr. Stewart—Not at all. On the contrary, I think Mr. Greeley leaves that question where it always should be left—with the people their members of Congress, “uncontrolled by party legislation. I have always contended that the tariff laws, to which our oountry looks for ts reve nue, should be dictated wholly by rules of equity and justice and so a3 to bear equally in their application upon all interests and classes. Take off the party whip allow the members of Congress to consult the interests of their respective constituents in fram ing the tariff laws, and I believe we would find every interest much better 1 served and protected than it now is [.From the Louisville Ledger.] “The Old Parties are Dead.” The above sentence appears iu a leading and labored editorial article in the Courier-Journal of yesterday. The sentiment contained in it consti tutes the key to action of a class of politicians to whom reference is made in the article from the Savannah News which we produce,and to whom we had recent occasion repeatedly to allude. I uneral orations constitute their stock in trade The- class is divided into two grades. The one buries the Democratic party, while the other performs obsequies over the Republi can party V> ith the latter we would in nowise interfere. 1 hough we fail to see evidences of the demise, we do sincerely trust those who have the matter in hand will succeed in proving that the Re publican party is dead. At present it appears to us a rather lively corpse. But we are quite willing to be con vinced that appearances are decep tive ; that the apparent vitality is on. !y galvanic, and will soon disappear. I here is in truth no reason why the Republican party should not die. Its mission is fulfilled. It came upon tho political stage with a single idea, and that is novr obsolete. It has, in fact, accomplished more than it set out to do. It was organized to destroy sla veiy—to make the negro a free man. It has not only accomplished this, but made him a citizen and elector.— Therefore it can afford to die, and the j sooner the better. Other parties have sprung up, ac j complished their work, or failed, and passed away with the exigencies that gave rise to them. They had no oth er foundation than expediency—were based upon some question of policy— in the administration of public affairs, which, having been determined, left nothing for its advocates to stand up on. Not so, however, of the Democrat ic party. While it has not, since its organization, been unmindful of ques tions of policy, and has treated them as they have arisen, it had its founda tion deep down below all matters af fecting mere policy in the administra tion of public affairs. While other organizations battle for measures of policy, the Democratic party was built upon principles which are funda mental ; which relate to the structure ands ibstance of the government ; which grow out of and attach to the philosophy of our system ; which in here in the Constitution, and which cannot lapse while that instrument survives. Take any of the old ques tions, which we all recognize as ‘dead issues”—as the national Bank, the system of internal improvement, the distribution of the proceeds of the sales of the public lands, Jvnow-Noth ingism, the negro question in all its phases, etc., and while the Democrat ic party treated each as it arose, still it never made any one of them the pivot upon which it turned, the cen tre to which its actions tended. From the earliest days of the Re public there have been two anla^onis t # O tic ideas at work—the national and the confederate—the latitudinarian and strict construction of the Consti tution—the concentration of all pow er in the General Government, and the preservation of the reserved rights of the States. To antagonize the former and enforce the latter of these ideas, the Domestic party has organ ized.. It was founded by Thomas Jefferson, who regarded our Re publican institutions in danger of being overthrown and subvert ed by a centralized despotism.— From that day to the present this has ever constituted the guiding star of the party—its pillar of cloud by day and pillar of fire by night.— Though called upon to meet many collateral issues, as the years roiled on and brought mutations with them, yet never for a moment was this sub stratum doctrine left out of view.— As the children of Israel, in their forty years’ pilgrimage in the wilderness? were called upon to adapt themselves to divers new and unexpected cir cumstances, and were sometimes be trayed into murmuring?, yet always when they camped pitched their tents round about the Tabernacle, and guarded the A v k of the Covenant, so the Democratic party has amid all the fluctuations and freaks of political issues and public sentiment, preserved from destruction the casket of the Constitution. True it has been much battered, and sometimes rent; but it is not yet destroyed ; and, until it shall be, there will be, work for that same old party. Until the States aie the Democrat ic party must live. To day there is greater need for its services to the country than ever before. There nev er was a period when the centraliza tionists were, half so active or han so , insolent as at present. A brief taste of power has irade them desperate ! and determined. Having for a few years had their heels upon the necks of the people of one section of the Union, they have rcsolued to make conquest of the rest. Disband the Democratic party and there will re main no barrier to the consummation of their purposes. The Democratic party is neither dead nor dying. There may be pro fessed apostles who would betray it into the hands of the enemy; but they will find themselves m a politcal Gol gotha ere they aware. The fact that for the present campaign Democrats with unanimity support Horace Gree ley for President, may not be constru ed into an abandonment of the old faith, or a surrender of the old align incut If we can use Greeley to check the progress of centralization and make him an instrument ofter ioi to the consoiidatiouisU, well ; and this we have abiding trust we shall do But whether we win or lose this fight under the lead of Greeley, the principles, an organization of the Democratic party must remain intact tijl the States are all free, or all alike provinces of “The New Nation.” ,«►«*. Neat. The follow article, which wo take from the Savannah Republican, strikes a keen blade between the joints of cer tain men’s satanic harness. It is well deserved: The Political Undertaker of the Period. —Venom and froth in equal proportions, with an insolence equal led only by the 7/icrsites of Horner that “ Dog in forehead But at heart a dver.” have always characterized the raving of b\ endell Phillips. Asa partisan of ihe Learned Leather Dresser— Ulys ses Grant, L. L. D.—and tho “Natick Cobler”—he has gone down to the headquarters at Lynn, Massachusetts, and there relieved his system of so much poison, that it is wonderful tha t he could have carried it and live. Y\ e cannot blacken our page with the utterances of this foul mouthed and black-hearted railer, and give only one short, specimen, to justify the se verity of our comments. That the creature has power to do mischief is undeniable, so has a ser pent —hissing and stinging have been the great business of Wendall Phil lips' long and mischieveous life devo ted to stirring up strife and maligning every prominent public man in Amer ica— his present idol, Grant, included. Here is the extract to which we re. for. : The reason why I support the Re publican party is that to my utter sur prise, to my indescribable delight to my relief, I have at last lound a party that is willing to execute all the laws that are given them. It is for that reason that I say “Long live Ulysses Grant. May he continue to be Presi dent of the LThited States until every white man over forty years of age who lives south of Mason and Dixon’s line has been forever put into the ground.” [Loud and continued applause.] We do not wonder so much at these drivellings of dotage, as at the “loud and continued applause’’ which greet ed this statement, at once so inhuman and un-Republican. The spirit it breathes toward the South we will not comrm nt on—but as the Psalmist allots three score and ten as days of man thirty fiveyears more as the reign of Grant is an aspiration for that Im perialism to which his followers are pa ving the way. Such is Grantism—such is Northern Republicanism. “Oh King, live forever!” is. the Ori ental prostration of spirit, from slave to masters. “Oh King reign forev er !’ is the Phillips parody upon it ; but the sentiment and the inspiration are the same in both. That Wendell Phillips assails Gree ley with frantic ferocity—as the friend of the South—is but natural and prop er. The only tiling which could in jure the large-hearted and lage-brained man who offers such a contrast to his own narrow bigotry and sectional hate would he his praise. Whenever the whole Southern population over forty desire in-decent burial they will know where to find as cheerful an underta ker as the grave-digger in Hamlet Wendell ! Wendell ! think of your latter end and pray. If your ven oiq strikes in it will kill you. — Courting Widows.—A bachelor ac quaintance, who, doubtless has Miss ed finding the way to damsels-hearts thus s]teaks of courting widows : “There is nothing like an interesting widow. There’s as much difference between courting a damsel and an attractive widow as there is in cipher ing in addition aud the double rule of three. Courting a girl is eating fruit— all very nice as far as it extends but doing the amiable tea black-eyed bereaved one in black crape, comes under the head of preserves—rich, pungent syrup. For delicious court ing we repeat, give us a lively “wid* der. ’’ — Constitution. A spirit level. Drink, that lowers man to the level of the beast. Carroll Masonic Institute, • CARROLLTON, GA. 3laj. Jno. JI. Richardson, President. tThis Institution. under the fost teriug care of the Masonic Frater- regularly chartered and or- ganized, is devoted to the thorough co-education of the sexes, on the plan of the best modern practical *ehools of Europe and America. Spring Term, 1872, begins February Ist and ends July 17th: Fall Term begins August Ist, and ends November 20th. Tuition and board at reasonable rates. Send for circulars *^3 REESE’S SCHOOL, Carrollton, Ga., 1872, Tuition for Forty Weeks, from §l4 to §42. Board, from §l2 to §ls per month. Opens 2d Monday in January next. Terms one half in advance. A. C. REESE, A. M., Princijial. For Board apply to Dr. I. N. CubXey, and 11. Scogin, Esq. MEDICAL CARD. Dr. I. N. CHENEY, Respectfully informs the citizens of Carroll and adjacent counties, that he is permanently located at Carrolltou, 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 F. A. ROBERSON, Carpenter and Joiner, Carrollton, 0«. All kinds of Carpenters work don® a short notice. Patronage solicited. SURVEYING. L. P. Mandeville offers his services to any one wanting work done in this line. ZS± To rms §5 per day, or §2 per lot N. J. ARGO, House, Sign, Carriage And Ornamental Painter, Newnan, Ga. Aiso plain and decorative paper hanging done with neatness and dispatch. All orders promptly attended to. Cfk. Orders solicited from Carrollton. Look to Your Interest. JUHAN & MANDEVILLE, Dr assists CARROLLTON, GA. Would inform the public, that thpy have just received, a large addition to their stock, consisting principally of a select assortment of S TA TIONERY, ALBUMfit, PURE WINES AND LIQUORS. LEMON SYRUP, SUGAR ifC. Wo make PAINTS A SPECIALITY As we keep always on hand A LARGE STOCK of every kind of ixiint and painting mate rial, also a varied and an immense as sortment of Drugs. Chemicals, Oils, Dyestuffs, Window glass and Picture glass. Putty, 'Tobacco, Pipes, Cigars, <Jfcc., &c. We have on hand tho largest and best as sortment of CONFECTIONERIES AND PERFUMERY ever offered in this market. STUDENTS Will find it to their interest to purchase their Lamps, Oil, and Stationery from U3. iir Virginia leaf Tobacco, best stock, and fine Cigars always on hand. June 7, 1872. i\EW STOCK! NEW STOCK! NEW INSTALLMENT OF GROCERIES «. AT J. F. POPES, CONSISTING Os Bacon, Lard, Floui, Sugar, Molasses, Better lot of Shoes than ever, Fine Cigars, Smoking Tobacco, Snuff and Whiskies, You can make it to your interest to cal and see me before buying elsewhere. JAMES F. POPE. april 26, 1872. Savannah, Griffin <fc N, Ala., Railroad Leaves Griffin .....I 00 r at Arrives at Newnan 3 45 P a* Leaves Newnan 7 00 a X Arrives at Griffin 9 47 A X Connects at Griffin with Macon and Western R. Western & Atlantic Rail Road. Night Passenger Train Outward, Through to N York, via. Chattanooga. Leave Atlanta 10:30.p. m. Arrive at Chattanooga 6:16 a. m Night Passenger 1 rain Inward from New York Connecting at Dalton. Leaves Chattanooga’ 5:20 p. m. Arrive at Atlanta 1:42 p. m. Day Passenger i rain—Ontward. Leave Atlanta *• m - Arrive at Chattanooga 1:21 p. m. Day Passenger Train—lnward. Leave Chattanoog 5:80 a. m. Arrives at Atlanta k:32 p. m. Fast Line, Savannah to New York—Outward. Leaves Atlanta.... 2:45 p. m. Accommodation Train—lnward. Leaves Dalton .. 9:25 p. m. Arrives at Atlanta 10:00 a. m. E. B. WALKEB, M. T. Atlanta and West Point Railroad. DAY PASSENGER TRAIN (OUTWARD ) Leaves Atlanta 10 a. u». Arrives at West Point - - 11 a - m * DAY PASSENGER TRAIN —( INWARD’ ) Leaves West Point 46 p. m. Arrives at Atlanta 5 15 p. m, X’GUT F .'.EIGHT and passenger Leaves Atlanta 8 00p.m. Arrives at West Point ....... . . 1045a.m. Leaves West Point 300 p. m. Arrives at Atlanta 1007 a. m. Time 16 minutes taster than Atlanta City time. NO. 41.