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fHE carroelTcounty times.
11'
■
Ell Comity Times.
}Lisne:D by
B & MEIGS,
IDAV MORNING.
kvaiuadly in Advance.
popped at the expiration of
ess subscription is previously
w subscriber is to be chanjr
e o and address as well as the
mistake.
, town without extra
to anonymous (<?ommunica
sponsible for everything en-
This rule is imperative. A
iibcM n»mc, imlif.to I*2!
'»»"*■
.nVEBTISTNG RATES.
„.,M w Kuelue.e m.u to mate nse
$ V W . to farther their interests, the fot
r^cliedl[,e for advertising has been
C term* will he adhered to in all con
«'r ' vhero
1 Y without instructions:
)rle „, *1 for tl:e first and 50 cents fir
Kibseqttent iusertiou
-
* 1 * 3 4 5 $ 7 $lO
* *1 *5 7 10 15
(lie* o 7 9 I*2 18
dies ■' 8 10 15 S3
*» ; to U 17
J l 15 20 80
r ° lamn in 5 20 30 50
r**“ ;V *) so so ioo
jiman i J * __ __ :
l ed advertisements will be charged at
r- to the epaee the' 1 occupy
ivertisements should he marked for a spect
re, otherwise they u ii; he continued, and
and tor until ordered ont.
llseineuts inserted :.I intervals }o be
j f o r each new insert.on.
(dements for a longer period than three j
are( lue, and will he collected at the begin
«l each quarter.
advertisemeau must be puid for in
,ts discontinued before expiration
i»pe,lifted, will lie charged only for time
»•
i< 4 a personal or private elm racier, in
t „ minute any private enterprise or
nr ji| bo eh rged as other advertisements.
H arc requested to hand in their favors
in the week a- possible,
jijuve terms will be strictly adhered to.
, n«idf a liberal per ceiling® for advertising
roarsell' nmwingly before the public; and
ten wt what business yon arc engaged in,
f intellige:n.'.y »nd industriously pursued, a
~ will he the result -Lhinti' Merchant*' Jlag
lllrr IV' gno to advertise my Iron ware free
iiir-i inoreii-efl with ainaamgrapldity. For
mi pact I havespeut £;JO,« ot> yearly to keep
nnrrior wares before the public. Had i been
iln advert Is inir. I never should have poscess
iiforejne of Y'JjO.UOO,”— McLeod Beltoa Jiir-
IvrttwwVike Midas' touch, turns everything
,ld Hi it your daring men draw millions of
T<iit*r.«.'-Mvrtr< Cioy.
[li:,imil• ity is to lovq, and boldness to war,
»;fnl use iif i rioter's iu):, is to success ja
s>* ”—Btfch*r.
limit the aid of advertisements I
(Me mulling in my speculations. I have
el complete fniih in printers ink.” Adver
ithe "royal road to business.” — l*<.if!\>nn.
BSWSAL St IIUSISESS CARDS.
ikindrr this* head will bo insert* and at one
iperline. per annum.
ards will taken for this department, at
itoverates. fora less period than one year.
Kill REESE,
Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, Georgia
IttSJ. JUHAN,
Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, Georgia.
'CO.W. IIA It PER,
Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, Ga.
®.W. AUSTIN
Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, Georgia.
tlw, W. FITTS,
Physician and Surgeon,
Carrollton, Ga.
S D. THOMASSON,
Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, Ga.
1 . 8 - ROCHESTER,
House ami Ornamental Painter,
Carrollton, Georgia.
BLALOCK,
Attorney at Law,
j Carrollton, Ga.
■niti Pr4 p' C ® ; ‘ n '■R* Talapoosa and Rome
■ls. ■ attention given to legal
trusted— especially 0 f rea j estate
* 4 0. W. MERRELL.
Attorneys at Law,
j , Carrollton, Ga.
“ sv(en tion given to claims for prop
fy the Federal Army, Pensions, and
r Aliment claims, Ilomsteads, Collec
“ 4c.
> l '' Joseph L. Cobb.
Attorneys at Law,
CarrolUon, Ga.
al!eriti °n given to all legal busi-
Office in the Court
~ ~
at Law,
WiiUiu,. Bo ’ vd W, Georgia.
o nllon g*: v en to claims for Pen
u Heads. Collections &c.
f F. SMITH] " "
Law, Newan Ga.
‘ upreme and Superior Courts
" G T CONNELL
Rician & Surgeon,
k'*‘V found ,• .v Carrollton, Ga.
or sm 1(1 day t ' me at Johnson’s
lor bis residence at nigh*.
* P ' Rirkly^
Auld r es , Carr ° Ilton ’ 0a -
C! lllott an(i adio!n”* nfonn the citizens of
A. c °untry that he is
'*>*. »oo™, Blind*
•k on reasonable terms
(Special Correspondence Carroll Cos. Times.)
Letter from the State Capital,
Editor Tim*s -There is but little
news afloat here. Democratic iiomi
nations for Mayor and Aldermen for
,the coming year came oft* last Satur
day. Judge Hammock receiyed the
nomination for Mayor, and will make
an excellent officer if elected. In
some of the wards great dissatisfac
tion prevails at the way the uomina
lions were conducted. Voters in
many instances went from one ward to
another voting in both. Whiskey and
Lager Beer flowed freely and con
siderable money was spent during the
day in running carriages to bring
voters to the polls.
In the first ward the charge is pub
licly made and not denied, that over a
hundred illegal votes were polled. I
believe that throughout the city the
men who canvassed most expensively
were nominated Two independent
tickets, each entirely different from
the other and from the one nominated,
are suggested iri to-days Herald.—
The Constitution alone supports the
nominees thus far. An adjourned
meeting of citizens will re assemble to
night and it is thought will place be
fore the people a ticket composed of
the good men who were nominated
oi) Saturday, with independent candi
dates in opposition to those whose
nomination was secured by fraud. It
seems that this movement is not par
tisan to any extent, but is dictated by
the pocket nerve of our property hol
ders, who have been and are suffering
from the effects of the misrule, mis
raangement and peculation of those
who by fraudulent combinations,
have procured official position for
themselves, and their relations a li
Grant and the Dent brigade.
It looks like there will be a three
sided fight for the Mayoralty tot)—
between Judge Hammond an inde
pendent Democratic candidate, and
Col. T. Stobo Farrow independent Re
publican candidate ; at least they are
all in the field now.
Mr. Townsend who was wounded
in the duel last week has not yet
( recovered, but is improving. Mr
Force lias not been found. On the
! subject of the National election there
is no excitement hero whatever It is
! generally conceded that G.eeiey will
carry this State In a good majority,
but it is thought that his majority will
fall very far short of Gov. Smith's, on
account of the apathy prevailing in
the Democratic ra».ivs, together with
the Democratic support which O’Con
or will receive.
I am surprised that our leading
dailies that support Mr. Greeley do
not copy Col P. F. Smith's articles on
Centralization Ac. They are very full
of good argument and would be ap
predated by the reading public every
where. I predict for Col. Smith a
brilliant future, and regard it as an
evidence of the able editorial conduct
of the Times, that his articles are
in its columns.
The city of Carrollton does not look
baulj m print, and from the account
ot improvement you publish from
time to time, methmks it is rapidly
becoming prosperous. That its suc
cess may equal the anticipations of its
citizens, is my earnest wish. Our Su
perior Court is still engaged on the
Common-Law Docket." Nothing of
special interest transpiring in church
or temperance circles. J. A. A.
Atlanta, Oct. 29, 1872.
Some Husbands. —Some husbends
never leave home in the mornino -
O
without kissing their wives and bid
ding them “good-bye,” in the tones
of unwearied love, and whether it be
policy or fact, it has the effect of fact,
and those homes are generally pleas
ant ones, provided always, that the
wives are appreciative, and welcome
the discipline in a kindly spirit. We
know an old gentleman who lived
with his wife over fifty years, and
never left home without the kiss and
the “good bye.” Some husbands will
leave homo without saying anything
at all, but turn round at tho last point
of observation and wave an adieu.—
Some never say a word, rising from
the breakfast table and going out
with a heartless disregard of those
left behind. .Their wives seek sym
pathy elsewhere. Some husbands
never leave home without some un
kind look or word, thinking that such
a course will keep things straight in
their absence. Then on returning
some husbands come home pleasant
and happy, unsoured by the world ;
some sulky and surly with its disap
pointinentments . Some are called
away every evening; some doze away
m speechless stupidity until bed time.
“Depend upon it,” says Dr. Spooner,
that home is the happiest where
kindness, and interest and politness,
and attention are the rules on the
part of husbands."
—-
If motive were always visible,
men would often blush to “the most
brilliant actions.
CAROL LION, GEORGIA. FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 8, 1872.
How to I>3 Somebody
Don't stand sighing, wishing and
nailing, but go to work with an ener
gy and perseverence that will set ev
ery obstacle in the way of your sue
cess flying like leaves before a whirl,
wind. A milk and water wayofdoing
business leaves a man in the lurch ev
ery time. He may have ambition
enough to wish himself on the top
most round of the ladder of success
but if he has not the go-aheadatveness
to pull himself up there, he will inevi_
tably remain at the bottom, or, at best
on one of the very low rounds.
Never ssy I cant—never admit
there is such a word ; it has dragded
] ts tens of thousands to poverty and
degradation, and it is high tin*o it
was stricken from our language ; but
carry a whole lexicon of I cans and I
wills with you, and thus armed, every
obstacle in the way of your success
will vauish.
Never envy your neighbor Ins sue
cess, but try and become like him, and
as much like him as you can. If at
first you don’t succeed, don’ wilt down
with despondency, and “I can’t,” but
gird on the armor of I can. And my
y/ord for it you will.
Always bear in mind that whatev
er is wortn having is worth toiling
long, earnestly and manfully for. So
sure as a constant dropping wears
away the hardest stone, so do con' j
stant efforts insure success. If you
work manfully, persistenly and
with energy, you may smile, be hopes j
ful and happy when life’s clouds hang :
darkest, for as sure as sunshine suc
ceeds the storms, so sure a bright tu
ture awaits you. .
Whatever you undertake try and
excel in it. That is what makes occu
pation in life honorable and profitable.
A first class quack is better than a
second rate doctor.
Great obstacles in the way of sue
cess are, fear of being laughed at and
what somebody may say. Never fear
sneers and remarks when right leads
van, but push right straight ahead
with your eyes and thoughts on the
brilliant future
Don’t always be saying to yourself
lam going to do so-and-so'to morrow
but act to day. If you are invited to
make a prayer, get up and make one
if it be as simple as, “Grant O Lord,
that we may not think comtemptuous
ly of our rulers ; and furthermore
grant, we beseech Thee, that they
may not act so wo cannot help it!’
Ifyou arc invited to speak in lycemn,
get up ifyou can say no more than,
“Thank you sir I don’t speak.”—
Next time you pan get a little further,
and so on until you can handle the
English language or any thing else,
as a Yankee does a jack-knife.— N. J.
Mechanic.
- *• . ,
Women Have no “First Love.”—
The cynical essayist of The Saturday
remarks as one of the oddest points of
difference between man and women,
that woman has no first love. The
long alphabet of lici affections is with
out any distinct end or beginning.—
She mounts by insensible gradation
from dolls and kittens and pet broth
ers to the zenith of passion, to descend
by the same insensible gradations
from the zenith of passion through
pet brothers to tabby cats. There is
no such event, as a first kiss forms in a
ben's life, to mark for woman the tran
sition from girlhood to the sudden
maturity of passion ; she has been
kissing, and purring, and fondling,
and petting from her cradle, and
she will pet, and fondle and purr
and kiss to her grave.
Mgw
Remark able Longevity.— A West
Virginia correspondent says :—“Lin
coin County claims the honor of hav
ing the most remarkable case of lon
gevity in the State af West A irginia.
The individual alluded to is Mr. Sis
bas Cooper who was born in what
is now Greenbrier County, on the
9th day of March, 17G6 ; making him
106 years old last March. This old
gentlemen lives five miles from Lin
coln Court house, lie makes a trip
to the Court-house about once a week;
comes and goes aloue; mounts and
dismounts from his horse without as
sistence. lie is quicker on the foot
than many men who are only fifty
years old. This old gentleman in his
youthful days married-Miss Lucy Mar
tin, who died ou the Bth of March
last, at the ripe old age of one hun
dred and ten years.
—- —
Cows.—During the hot weather in
August the flow of milk is apt to fall
off considerably, and it is difficult af
terwards to bring it up again. Bran
and spoutffeed are usually cheap, and
can be used to great advantage. Our
plan is to keep a large trough of wa
ter in the yard, and mix as much mill
feed with the water every day as the
cows will drink. It pays in the ma
nure, in the increase of milk, and in
the improved condition of the cows.
If you have any green corn, now is
the time to feed it liberally. If very
succulent, let it wilt.
The Secret of Eloquence.—l
owe my success in life to one single
fact, namely : At the age of twenty- !
seven I commenced, and continued
for years, the process of daily reading :
and speaking upon the contents of
soiiio historical or scientific book.—
These oft* handed efforts were made
some times in a cornfield, at others in
the forest, aud not unfrequently in 1
some distant barn, with the horse and
ox for my auditors. It is to this ear
ly practice iu tho great art of all arts
that lam indebted for the primary
and leading impulses that stimulated
mo forward, shaped aud moulded my
entire subsequent destiny. Improve
then, young gentlemen, the superior
advantage you here enjoy. Let uot
a day pass without exercising your
powers of speech. I hero is uo pow
er like that of oratory. Caesar con
trolled men by exciting their fears ;
Cicero by captivating their jiffecucns
aud swaying their passions. The in
fluence of the one perishing with its
author ; that of the other continues
to this day.— Henry Clay.
- ——-— — —-—
Courage. —True bravery is sedate
and inoffeneive ; if it refuse to sub
mit to insults, it offiffs none ; begins
no disputes, enters no needless quar
rels ; is above tho little, troublesome
ambition to bo distinguished every
moment ; it bears in silence, and re
plies with modesty, fearing no enemy
and making none ; and is as much
ashamed of insolence as cowardice.
The Whites of the South to be
Kept Under.
| The New York Tinjes published an
I elaborate letter by a saint in Massa
chusetts, who professes to have been
all through the South and ascertained
the true sentiment in Rebeldom. He
reports it as very bad, intensely bit
ter to all that New England holds
dear, and ready at any moment to
burst out in open rebellion. Even
body hates the Yankees and all their
works, and would take the first op
portunity to cut the throats of all
their cherish,od “wards”—who are rep
resented as in a state of helpless and
infantile innocence. lie poupludes ru
follows :
“The only safe way is to keep them
under by a united Republican North
until the colored population are strong
enough to protect themselves ”
The whites are to be kept under
until the negroes can rule. This is,
remarks the Richmond Whig, the
doctrine of New England—re-echoed
[by “Giant’s own”—and is in accor
dance with what has heretofore been
Grant’s policy. We have been told
that the good man iu the White
House only sought an opportunity to
sh >w how much he loved the South—
that lie would stretch his conscience
to come to the relief of the distressed
section—all the while backing the
thieves who were plundering it, and
scourging it with blank warrants and
bloody assizes.
As part and parcel of this program
me, comes the news, that carpet bag
Spencer has sent a delegation to
Grant to obtain troops “to insure a
quiet election” in Alabama. This is
said to be the beginning of a similar
policy in respect to all the Southern
States. “A quiet election 5 ’ means
one conducted after the fashion of
Louis Napoleon—when his prefects
controlled the ballot box.
Josh Billings’ Resolutions.
That i won’t borry nor lend—espec
ially lend.
That i will liv within my incum ; if
i have tew git trusted to do it.
That i will bA polite tew everybody
except muskeeters and bedbugs.
That i won’t advise ennybody un
til i kno the kind of ad vise that are
anxshus tew follow.
That i won’t wear enny more tite
boots if i have lew go bearfoot tew do
it.
That i won’t eat enny more -chick
en soop with a one-lined fork.
That i won’t swop dogs with no
man unless i kan swop two for one.
That i won’t object to enny man on
ackount of his kuller, uuless he hap
pens tew be bin
That i wont swear enny unless i
am put under oath.
That i wont believe in total deprav
ity, only in gin at 4 shillings a gal
lon.
That poverty may be a blessin’,
but if it iz, it iz a blhssin’ in disguise.
That i will tak my whisky strait—
strait tew the gutter.
The world owes me a livin—provi
ded i ern it.
That i will stick tew my taylow as
long as he will stick to me.
That i won’t swop enny bosses with
a deakou.
That no man shall beat me in po
liteness, not az long az politeness kou
tinues tew be az cheap az it iz now.
That i won’t hav enny religious
kreed miself, but will respect every
body elso’s.
That if a luvly woman smaks me
on one check i will turn her this ofii
.er also.
That if a man kalis me a pliool i
wont ask him to prove it.
That i will lead a moral life, even
if i lose a deal of phun by it.
-•-« -Zr+ ————
The Province of Women.— Next
to God, all true men reverence wo
men, as mother, wife, sister. We re
verence her so entirely, and love her
so perfectly for making life itself
worth living, that we would not have
the celestial ideas with which all the
chivalry of our sex clothes her, dese,
crated by contamnating associations
and such intercourse as shall tend to
unsex aud rob her of her sacred dow
er. The genuine dignity, tenderness
virtue and real beauty of a "woman s
life are the product of the shade and
refined privacy, unfitted for contac
with the grosser world, the glare of
the burning sunshine or the cutting
winds and storms. Reverence is the
atmosphere in which she thrives ; se
verely and coldness kills her ; and
yet her domain is greater than that of
man.
—4 o
ES2T An old lady combatted the
idea of the moon being inhabited by
remarking , with emphasis, that the
idea was incredible—“ For,” said she,
“what becomes of the people in the
moon when there is nothing of it but
' a little streak ?”
»
A wag lent a clergymen a
i horse which ran away and threw him,
| and then claimed credit for ‘aiding in
J spreading the gospel.”
The South.
The Southern people are giving
much attention lo agricultural and
mechanical fairs. They have learned
that the surest way to prosperity and
power is through the stimulation of
industrial enterprises. They have a
broad and fertile domain, and they
now see the advantage of fully devtl
; oping the resources which nature,
with prodigal hand, lias laid at their
feet. They are glad to extend the
hand of friendship to all men of char
acter and enterprise who come among
them. Those who join with them iu
| building up are welcome, but those
' who tarry will* them only to plunder
them, very naturally, are treated with
marked coldness. They have drones
euough at home, without being forced
to take care of others from the North.
They need workers—not idle, shift,
less vagabonds. It is a good sign to
see Southern people take so much in
terest in industrial fairs ; and it is en
couraging to hear men talk as Geo.
E. Dodge talked in his address to the
people assembled on the State Fair
Grounds at Little Rock. In speaking
of Arkansas, he said :
“Like a child brought safely through
the ills incident to childhood, she
comes forth in maturity, “conquering
and to conquer.” Not by brute force
—nor armed aggressiou—but by the
grand moral agencies of Energy and
Enterprise. Although at times her
sickness was nigh unto death ; and
even though the poison of ruinous
taxation still permeates her system,
and the air she breathes is still tainted
with the lingering blight of political
pestilence, “ there is life in the old
land yet.” She “cometh forth as a
strong man to run a race,’’ and any
cause or combination unfriendly to
her glorious destiny will bo swept
away by the resistless charge of her
cohorts of Farmers, Merchanics,
Merchants, and Capitalists, under
whose thrifty influence, obstacles
which now seem insurmountable, will
“vanish into thin air.” — Turf Field
and Farm.
—
Weather Wisdom.— -When von
wish to know tvhat tlie weather is to
be, go out and select the smallest
cloud you see. Keep your eye upon
it, and it it decreases aud disappears,
it shows a state of the air which will
be sure to be followed by fine weath
er ; but if it increases in size take
your great coat with you, if you are
going from home, for falling weather
will not be far off. The reason is
this : when the air is becoming"charg
ed with electricity, you will see every
cloud attracting all lesser ones to
wards it until it gathers into a show
er, at id on the contrary, when the fluid
is passing cft‘, or diffusing itself, then
a large cloud will be seen breaking to
pieces and dissolving.
Tiie Way to Succeed.- —Fortune,
success, position are never gained but
by piously, determinedly, bravely
striking, growing, living to a thing.
In short, you must carry a thing
through if you want to be anybody
or anything, no matter if it does cost
you the pleasure, the society and the
thousands pearly gratifications of life.
No matter for these. Stick to the
thing, and carry it through. Believe
you were made for the matter, and
that no one else can do it. Put lorth
your whole energies. Be awake, elec
trify yourself, and go forth to the
task. Only once learn to carry
through a thing iu all its complete
ness and proportion, aud you will be
come a hero. You will think better
of yourself ; others will think better
Os YOU.
Curious Chinese Proverbs. —The
ripest fruit grows on the roughest
wall. It is the small wheels of the
carriage that come in first. The man
who holds the ladder at the bottom is
frequently of more service than he
who is stationed at the top of it. The
turtle, though brought iu at the back
gate, takes the head of the table.—
Better be a cat in a philanthropist’s
family, than a mutton-pie at a king’s
banquet. The learned pig didn’t
i learn its letters in a day. True merit
*
I like the pearl inside an oyster, is con
i teat to remain quiet till it finds an
opening. The lop strawberries are
; eaten first, lie who leaves early gets
! the best bat. Pride sleeps in a glid
-1 ed crown ; contentment in a cotton
' nightcap.
I Am Income From a Snuff Box.—
Carafa the composer, who died recent
ly, was far from rich. His principal
j income was derived from a snuff box.
This snuffbox was given to the au
| thor of “La Prison d’Edinbourgh,
; about thirty years ago, by Baron
James de Rothschild, as a token of
! esteem. Carafa sold it twenty-four
hours later for seventy five napoleons
jto the same jeweler from whom
|it had been bought. This because
known to Rothschild, who gave it
j again to the musician in the following
1 year. The next day it returned to
the jeweler’s. This traffic continued
till the death of the banker, and lon
ger still, for his sons kept up the tra
; dition, to great satisfaction of Cara
i fa.
I Carroll Masonic Institute,
CARROLLTON, GV.
,I’aj. Jiio. Richardson, Presldenf.
This Institution, under the fost
tering care of the Masonic Frater
nity, regularly 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 au«i America.
Spring Term, 1872, begins February Ist
aud ends July 17th: Fall Term begins August
Ist, and ends November 20th.
Tuition and board at reasonable rates.
£ Jf* Send lor circulars
REESE S SCHOOL,
CakroLltox, Ga., 1872,
Tuition for Forty Weeks, from sll to 842.
Board, from 812 to sls per month.
Opens 2d Monday in January next.
Twins one half in advance.
A. 0. REESE, A. M.. Principal.
* For Board apply to Dr. I. N. Cukxey,
ami 11. Scogin, Esq.
MEDICAL CARD.
Dr. I. 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. lie 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, Ga.
All kinds of Carpenters work done a
short notice. Patronage solicited.
SURVEYING.
L. P. Mandeville offers his services to any
one wanting work done in this line.
Terms $o per day, or $2 per lot
N. J. ARGO,
House, Sign, Carriage
And Ornamental Paintor,
Newnan, Ga.
Also plain and decorative paper hanging dono
wkh neatness and dispatch. All orders
promptly attended to.
Orders solicited from Carrollton.
Look lo Your Interest.
JUHAN & MANDEVILLE,
CARROLLTON, GA.
Would inform the public, that they have
just received, a largo addition to their stock,
consisting principally of a select assortment
of
STA TIONE RY, ALBUM S,
PURE WINES AND LIQUORS,
LEMON SYRUP, SUGAR fyC.
We make
PAIN IS A SPECIAU TY
As we keep always on hand
A LARGE STOCK
of every kind of paint and painting male
rial, also a varied and an immense as
sortment of Drugs. Chemicals, Oils,
Dyestuffs, Window glass and
i’icture glass. Putty,
Tobacco, Pipes,
Cigars, Ac.,
&e.
We have on hand the largest and best as
sortment of
CONFECTIONERIES AND PERFUMERY
ever offered in this market,
STUDENTS
Will find it lo their interest to purchase
their Lamps, Oil, and Stationery from us.
UNTT Virginia leaf Tobacco, beet stock, and
fine Cigars always on hand.
June 7, 1872.
NEW STOCK! SEW STOCK!
NEW INSTALLMENT OP GROCERIES
AT
j . F. POP ES,
CONSISTING or
Bacon, Lard, Flour, Sugar, Molasses, Better
lot of Shoes than ever, Fine Cigars,
Smoking Tobacco, Snuff
and Whitkieg.
You can make it to your interest to cal
and see mo before buying elsewhere.
JAMES F. POPE.
april 2G, 1872.
ftivannali, Griffin & N. Al t., Railroad
Leaves Griffin IGOrs;
Arrives at Newnan 3 *5 p Jt
Leaves Newnan 7 00 A x
Arrives at. Griffin 9 47 a m
Connects at Griffin with Macon and Western R.
Western & Atlantic Kail Koad.
Night Passenger Train Outward, Through to N
York, via. Chattanooga.
Leave'Atlanta 10:30.p. m.
Arrive at Chattanooga 6:19 a. in.
Night Passenger 1 rain Inward from New York
Connecting at Dalton.
Leaves Chattanooga’ 5:30 p. m.
Arrive at Atlanta 1:425. in.
Day Passenger Train—Outward.
Leave Atlanta a. m.
Arrive at Chattanooga 1:21 p. m.
Day Passenger Train—lnward.
Leave Chattanoog a- m ‘
Arrives at Aflanta ........ ...W„p. m.
Fast Line, Savannah to New York-Outward.
Leaves Atlanta -2:45 p. si.
Accommodation Train—lnward.
Leaves Dalton ..2:25 p.m.
Arrives at Atlanta, 10:00 a. in.
E. B. Walkeb, M. T.
Atlanta and West Point Railroad.
DAY PASSENGER TRAIN —( OUTWARD )
Leaves Atlanta. 7 10a. m.
Arrives at West Point ..1140a. m,
DAY PASSENGER TKAIN—-( INWARD - )
Le wes West Point 45 p. m.
Arrives at Atlanta 5 15 p. m,
X T GIJT F.'.EIGIIT AND PASSENGER
Leaves Atlanta * P - m *
Arrives at West Point . 10 4o a. m.
Leaves West Pwiut 300 p. m<
Arrives at Atlanta lOtu a. m.
1 Time 15 minutes faster than Atlanta City time .
NO. 44.