Newspaper Page Text
The Carroll County Times.
CARROLLTON, GA. Nov. 1.5, 1872
EDWIN R. SHARPE. Editor.
SktST Now that 11 election is over,
wo propose tabooing politics to a con
siderable extent, and devoting our
columns principally to miscellaneous
literature, and local news. To our
friends, in the various sections of the
county, we would be much obliged
for local Items, worthy of publication,
which ueay happen in their immediate
sections.
—■ ■ -
41©“ There will be a daily mail af
ter the Ist prox, between Columbus
and Hamilton, to be carried by the
North & South R. R.
Twenty miles of iron have been
purchased for the Rome end ot the
North & South It. It., and tiack lay
ing: will commence at an early day.
♦O* ♦
The papers throughout the en
tire State, are calling for a registration
law, that will prevent Cuffee and Sam
bo from indulging their propensity to
vote ; ‘early and often.”
&ST The Atlanta Herald, says that
it has information, that authorizes it
to assert, that the question of the
recommendation of the State endorse
merit of Railroad bonds, will be vigos
rously urged upon the next legislature.
fiST Col. Lamar ot the Savannah
Advertiser says, that the largest crumb
of comfort, that has yet floated within
his reach, from the late wreck, is the
defeat of A. Johnson for Congress
, men at large in Teunessee. From the
I}' °
' /ay the Colonel writes he is by no
means an adrflirer of “ Andy’s.”
Not a Healthy Sign. —The Cin
cinnati Enquirer truly says that it is
not a very healthful political sign to
see seven years after the war, all ot
the Northern States voting one way,
and tho Southern the other. Is not
the perpetuation of the sectional line
ito bo attributed to the efforts of the
Grant leaders.
On Tuesday next, 10th inst„
a convention of the governors of the
'Western and Southern States will
meet in Atlanta, to consider the inter
ests of the Atlantic and Western Ca
nal, by which it is proposed to con
nect the rivers of the West with the
Atlantic.
There will soon be a vacancy
in the Supreme Court of Georgia,
caused, by the expired term of Justice
Montgomery. There are several as
pirants for the position, among them
L. E. Bleckley, R. P. Trippe, David
Irvin; H. V. Johnson and Herbert
Fielder.
Mr. J llenly Smith of the Atlan
ta Sun has sold his interest in that pa
per to Hon. A. 11. Stephens, who is
now sole proprietor. Mr. S. A. Ech
ols succeeds Mr. Smith as Business
Manager and Associate Editor. Mr.
Echols is making the Sun quite live
ly.
s£ar Ominous reports are in eireula
tion that Georgia is to be the fourth
time reconstructed, and this time to
be put in a good way like South Car
olina, Louisiana and Florida. The
truth is Georgia will vote democrat
ic, and this dont suit the Grant folks
at Washington.
«•—
SAVA.\SAIS, OltliTlA & AOKTSI
ALABAMA IS. It.
At a meeting of the Stockholders
of the Savannah, Griffin & North Ala
bama Railroad held on the 7th inst,
at Newnan, all of the old board of
directors, consisting of Messrs. A. J.
W hite, J. S. Boynton, J. I). Stewart
N. B. Wilkinson, B. M. Long and
G. W. Camp, were reselected. The
directors afterwards reselected Capt.
White president. The Griffin News
says :
“After the meeting adjourned the
stockholders, officers and others went
out to where they were laying the
track, about a mile from the ciiatta
hoochee river, some nine miles from
Newnan. It is a splendid bed, and is
laid with I- ish-bar iron. The bridge
which is TO feet above water, is near
ly complete, and will be one of the
best in the country, being one of the
Howe Truss patents. The grading is
progressing beyond Newnan. In a few
days a regular freight and passenger
train also will be put on the road and
run to the river. The road to New
nan is in splendid order and doing a
paying business. The prosj>ects are
bright and the work is progressing
very satisfactorily.
- - , - - -j
The New York Evening Post
says of Arthur Bonnicastle, Dr. Hol
land’s Serial, commenced in Scribner’s
Monthly for November: “Only one
chapter of twelve pages is given, but
this is enough to awaken interest.—
Therejs a good deal of quiet humor in
the dialogue, and the characters are
fresh and natural, wnile the style of
the descriptive passsages, it need
scarcely be said, is fluent and fascina
ting. Much of the effect of Dr. Holland’s
writing is to be attributed to the ease
and grace of the composition. The
■dramatic promise of Ar her Bonni
castle, however, is such as to make us
regret that the authoi has not been
wuting novels th- se many years.”
UEX r JOHN MS.
General Gordon appears to be the
coming man for United States Senator
from Georgia. The press and people ;
throughout the State turn to him in-j
stinctively, as the man to fill the pos
sition, which will soon be made vacant,
by* the ex piled term of lion. Joshua
Hill. There is no man in the State,
who deserves more of Georgia, and
none we should more delight to see
honored than the gallant Gordon. A
tine type of the Southern man, he
loves his native State and South, their
institutions and traditions with a chiv
alric devotion. A natural and impas
sioned orator, yet the style of his elo
quence is such as to win, rather than
repel his opponents. Though no poli
tician, yet no man worked harder or
more effectively in the late campaign
for the Reform cause, the triumph of
which he believed to be best for bis
«
native section. Let the Georgia Leg
islature honor itself by electing him
t.q the United States Senate, and we
then can rest assured, that the State
will have at the National Capital, a
representative, who will be perfectly
trustworthy , and always true to her
intere: ts.
BOSTON CN ASHES,
We have only space to say in this
issue, that the city of Boston, lias wit
nessed a conflagration, equal if all ro
ports be true, to the great Chicago
fire of last year It commenced 7o’
clock Saturday" evening, and contin
ued till Sunday evening, burning u
two thirds of the city, and destroying
$200,000,000 of property.
A NE« K',» t OK GRANT’S CABINET.
It is stated, that there is a deter
mined effort, which is favorably con
sidered by Grant, to have the colored
element recognized in the formation
of the next cabinet. A negro by the
name es Langston, it is thought, will
be made Attorney General.
TIDE ELECTION.
The further returns from the elec
tion, which we have received the
past week, show that the news that
we published last week, was about
correct. Grant has been re elected,
by an overwhelming popular majori
ty. Greeley: carries the electoral vote
of only eight States, viz ; Georgia,
Tennessee, - Kentucky, Louisiana, Tex
as, Missouri, Mary land, and probably
Florida. All the rest go for Grant.
In Georgia we elect seven out of
nine Congressmen. In the 2nd Dis
trict the Rads elect Whitely, and in
the sth Freeman. Col. Harris is
elected from this District by* - about
2000 majority 7. The following are Lis
official majorities in the counties liam
ed ; Muscogee IG2 ; Marion 192 ;
Chattahoochee 40 ; Troup 510
Heard 285 ; Meriwether 300 to 400.
Bethune has, two counties, Talbot 200
majority, and Harris 118.
“BILLAUP” ON THE DEFEAT.
Charles 11. Smith of Rome, better
known as ‘Bill Arp,’ is now one of the
editors of the Rome Commercial, lie
thus descants in a late issue of his paper,
upon the Greeley* defeat:
“Baltimore Convention, and O'Con
nor, and Alek Stephens and a limited
supply of votes lias beat us. Well,
we still live. I’m not goin to bed
about it. Old Greeley ain’t no kin to
me. Grant ain’t neither, and that’s
what’s the matter. I talked for Gree
ley, and w o e for him, and voted for
him, but I never did hanker after him.
It made such an everlasting fuss in
my family I had like to run away.—
You see Mrs. Arp wasn’t rekonsiied-
She was a Straight, and then she aint
as plassid as a silver lake around my
house. I don’t mean that times is hot
or desperate, but to say the least of it
they are peculiar. A man likes to
. hav his bed and his board screen?—
Don’t lie ? So you see as my wife
was a strait it didn’t become me to be
very crooked. And I want-at home.
She’s a good oman and she’l endure
everything and never grunt nor
groan, but she won’t compermise
worth a cent. I told her I had no
pertikler use for Greeley and that he
was a darned old infatyated humbug,
but that our paper belonged to the
great unterryfide, unsalisfide, trans
morgrifide Democratic party and must
keep into line. She sed sum remarks
about papers lyin by the day and by
the week and about selfsrespeet and
independence and the like, and I grew
meek like Moses, in a few minutes.”
“Mrs. Arp thinks the paper ought
to take ‘Truth’ for a motto and work
up to it. I told her it would be a
dangerous experiment, but she says it
has never been tried yet. If I wasent
ateered the little Arps would perish
to doth durin the experiment I would
try it. Old Shank says we can’t be
worsted for be lias tride lyin for 20
years and it wont pay. lie says it
would be an episode in the press, a
kurosity, something like a elephants an
eklipse or John Robvson’s circus.”
Don Piatt says there are two
seasons in which our Administration
seeks repose from its gigantic labors ;
one is that which proceeds the holi
days, and the other ■•that which fol
lows.
DOINGS IN GEORGIA.
Now that De Castro, the illusionist
and Barnum s museum are coining to
Marietta, the local of the Journal is
happy.
West Point received 1152 bales
of cotton last week, making the re*
ceipts for the season 5,589 bales.
The editor of the Chattooga Adver
tises writes first rate puffs for those
fanners who present him with tine
turnips and sweet potatoes.
Mrs Powell has presented the edi
tor of the Chattooga Advertiser with
an apple which grew on a tree which
lias borne a second crop this year,
buffi crops being thoroughly matured.
Mr. A. J. Her ron of Chattooga
I countv, raised from one grain of
I wheat 3G heads, which averaged 37
; grains, making the product of one
grain 1332 grains.
The managers of the election in
Savannah, have been arrested, upon
the affidavit of a negro, charged with
fraudulent election returns, and re ;
fusing to do their duty, as election
managers of the State of Georgia.
The last copy of the Clayton Times
wa3 so badly* printed, we were notable
to get anything out of it.
Mr. Samuel A. Echols, formerly* of
tho Rural Southerner, lias taken
charge ot the news columns of the
Atlanta Sun. lie is a spicy writer
and is making the Sun quite lively.
A farmer in Hall county by the
name of Kennedy has raised eight
bales of cotton ofl of six acres of
ground.
The trial of Milton Malone of Col
umbus, who killed young Phillips of
Columbus, is set down for the 2Gtli.
The Rev. I)r. W. P. Harrison
of Atlanta, has been lecturing on
Spiritualism.
Sixty young men from Fulton and
Dekalb counties, following Greeley’s
advice, have gone west.
Mrs. Bowers, the tragedienne is en
tertaining the Atlanteans.
A half interest in the Macon Daily-
Enterprise is offered for Sale.
Harry Macartbv, the commedian,
is playing in Macon.
J 11. Estill of the Savannah News
is a candidate for State printer.
At the recent session of the Grand
Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons
at Macon, S. D. Ervin of Macon, was
elected Grand Master.
The Franklin News says that
Franklin can boast of as few loaf
ers as any town in Georgia and
this too just after a paragraph, in
which it requests that those coming into
that office, will not talk to the printer’s
unless they have special business, as
their time is too precious to be spent
in idle gossip.
Marietta prances to the front and
claims that she has shipped on an
average, 75 bales of cotton per dav,
since the cotton season opened.
Mr. Joel Kelsey of Atlanta, sui
cided on the Gtli inst.
The LaGrange Reporter suggest F
M. Longley, for the speaker of the
House, and the Savannah Advertiser,
it. E. Lester as speaker of the Sen
ate.
The Sandersville Herald sa. s : The
two competing farmers for the 1 ort v
dollars offered at the late fair for the
most profitable farm were F. M. Mills
and W. C. Matthews. The former
on a one horse farm cleared twen-four
dollars per acre, the latter on a two
horse farm, cleared eighteen dollars
per acre. Considering the difference
between a one and two horse farm,
the result was very 7 near equal.
The editor of the Dawson Journal
was in a bad way before the last elec
tion. Hear him : “With breathless
silence we await the result of the elec
tion, for we feel that in the issue is
involved the rights of the American
people. It is too late now to write or
speak, urging men to action. The
die is cast,” and we tremble in antici
pation of the next news from him.
The Macon telegraph and Messens
ger gives this account of a shocking
outrage : “On Tuesday last a negro
scoundrel named Jim O. Pr y, some
times known as Jim Wilson, attempts
ed a most brutal outrage on the per
son of a little white girl, thirteen
years of age, who was on her way to
school. The affair took place in Rut
land district, in this county, and about
seven miles from Macon. lie treated
the helpless little girl with the most
shameful violence, even thrusting
sticks down her throat to prevent her
screaming. The wretch was arrested
and taken before a Justice of the
Peace, and committed for trial ; but !
yesterday morning, by some wonder-
ful carelessness, he was permitted to
escape from the officers who had him
in charge and is now at large.
Surkexcy Again. -It is with a pain
ful pleasure that we announce a revi
val of the Curious manifestations at
Surrency. From all accounts the de
monstrations are wilder than ever, and
Mr. Surrency having became so dis
gusted and disheartened that he re
signed the house to the mercy of the
invisible spirits, and will not return
soon. We know that this affair has
been classified by our brethren of the
press abroad as a first water hoax, but
now that there is an opportunity of J
witnessing it, we hope they will go :
and see for thcmselves.-J!f conEnter- j
prise.
(Special Correspondence Carroll Cos. Time*.)
Letter from the State Capital,
Editor Times : — The re-election of ;
President Grant by an unparalleled j
popular majority lias sent a chill
through the political system of the
Democratic party here. It seems that to
the masses, North, we are llebtls still
and as such that our support of any
candidate is enough to doom him
there.
There is now a good deal of crimi
ination and recrimination going on
between Greeley Democrats and O
Conor Democrats wlnqli ought to stop.
The opportunity* is past and gone and
in place of saving this or that faction
of the party is to blame for our defeat,
wp ought to harmonize and concen
trate our forces for the smaller coni
ng contests. These we, can control
by* proper and persistent efforts. Af
ter all, until we have largely increas
ed population and widely diffused
wealth at tho South, we cannot sue
cessfully compete with the North i:i
Presidential elections. There they have
both and here we must have both be
tore we attain political significance to
any great degree. We can have both.
We raise the staple that clothes the
world. We must manufacture it,
thus furnishing employment to our
own poorer classes and reaping the
! profits now made off us by* Northern
and European manufacturers. Again
our large landed proprietors ought to
dispose of their surplus lands to poor
and landless whites already here, on
liberal terms, thus retaining them
I among us —as well as to white eiui
! grants from other States and countries.
The repeal of our usury laws, is
absolutely necessary in order to bring
an influx of capital. There is a better
money 7 market in Georgia and the
South than at the North and East and
! it would come here but for the legaliz
ed robberies to which it is subjected.
Our homestead and exemption laws,
too, demand modification to say the
very* least of it. Once fairly open the
way for a flood tide of capital and our
Railroads will be built, our staple will
be spun, woven, printed and sold at
home, we can do cur , own Fire and
| Life Insurance, manufacture our own
Iron, paper, implements, in short Cap
ital will bring us increased industrial
population ai.d both together will
make us very soon the freest and most
prosperous people on the glohe.—
These thoughts are not news, but
your correspondent believes they can
not be too often or too urgently im
pressed on our people. This county
went Radical in the
the result of fraud on the part of the
Radicals and apathy among the Dem
ocrats U. S. Special Deputy Marshals
run the machine. A Democrat was
allowed to vote, no doubt about
that, but in order to do so, bad to ap
proach the ballot box through a
double file of the aforesaid officials,
Col. Glenn, was defeated for Congress
in this district, a result very* hard to
account for, as well as to submit to.
Full returns from all the counties
are not in. Greeley carries the State
by perhaps 15909. Glad to know
that Carroll redeems herself.. The rc
suit or the election in this county
alarms the nominees of the Democratic
party, for county and municipal cili
ce?, and emboldens the Republicans.
It will take hard work to beat them
hereafter but I think the work will be
done. The Epizootic is here but do
ing no particular harm. A telegram
to one of our Fire companies states
that two thirds of the city of Boston
is in ashes and still burning. Won
der if anybody has been “loving his
enemies and heaping coals of fire on
their heads.” Tiade good—-work for
mechanics and laborers scarce and
very irregular. J. A. A.
Atlanta Nov., I lth 1832.
The Atlanta Herald gives this ac
count- of a wedding and funeral : “It
will be remembered that on Tuesday
Miss Ida Van Epps was married to
Dr. Wilcox. The wedding ceremony
was commenced at three o’clock.—
M bile the bride, in all the flush and
glow and pomp of her young woman
hood, stood drinking before God’s al
tar the sweetest draught that is ever
put to woman’s lips, George Van
Epps, her brother, unknown to her,
was dragging Lis poor broken, dying
body to the old home in this city.—
Wasted with consumption, he had
been to Florida, trying in her kind I
sunshine to repair his shattered frame, j
Failing in this, lie had struggled back
here to die—to go to God from the
old home hearthstone—to bless with !
his last breath the sister lie loved so
well. His sister was not told of his !
arrival. It had been arranged that
she was to go North on a bridal tour.
The wedding was over ; the kisses
and courtesies of friends were show
ered on the happy bride, and she was
hurrieef to the carriage—not to take
the train for a gala trip to the North,
but, amazed and stunned, to the death
bed of an idolized brother. He died
on Tuesday night, The pale horse
had waited inside the purple glamour
of the wedding church for his vie \
tim.’’
.
SclT’ If a toper and a quart of whisky
were left together, which would be
drunk first f
•• IIUD TOP ” I'L.VSIIES*
Mr. J. C. Harris news editor of the
Savannah News, but better recognized
among the j>ress gang, as “ lied Top |
or “Pink Top,” from the slight, incli
nat ion of his top knot to a‘‘beautitul au- j
burn,” is a lively boy, and we propose
{riving our readers from time to time,
under the above heading, some ot the
many witty flashes from his pen, that
enlivens the news columns of the sterl
mg paper with which he is connected:
A little quarrel in McDuffie county
between two persons—botli ot the
colored way of shoving their ballots—
resulted as usual. One of them was
I vaccinated with an axe.
An'Echols county negro got his
J head in the cogs of a horse power the
oilier day, and materially damaged the
machine, lie was looking for a nickel
which lie had dropped.
It is understood that old John
Robinson has in his show a full blown
Northern Liberal Republican—the
| only one ever seen in this country.—
John keeps him cm ice to prevent his
spoiling.
Bill Arp, alluding to the newspaper
! squibs in regard to the sliding of Ben
! Hill, savs we all ought to he thankful
that Ben didn't take the hole in with,
j him when he slid in.
Alas! how serpent than a sharper's
tooth it is to have a thankless friend,
j Scruggs, late of the Era, is suffering.
| A colored voter entered his house in
j Atlanta and attempted to abstract
theretrom something of value.—
Scruggs fired an empty horse pistol
into the air, and the package of luy
alty gathered itself up, and carried
away a window-sash and a couple of
pea-green blinds.
A Wilkinson county man was very
much troubled the other night by a
troop of goats in the piazza, and he
went out in his night gown to drive
them off. This was fun for the Wil
liam of the gang. lie just erected
! himself on his hind-legs and slapped
j the farmer out into the yard, where
' the dogs, not understanding his
sudden appearance, went to work and
disrobed him in a few moments. It
is understood among his neighbors
that as soon as lie sheds his present
i crop of plasters, lie will go gunning
r t a William goat.
EOBA&E <lK£UEiL£;ir.
Notice ot Ziis Resumption off tlie Fd
iloi'ia! Control of die Tribune.
New York, November G, 187?.
The Tribune to morrow will publish
the following :
A CARD.
The undersigned resumes the cdß
tor-hip of the Tribune, which he re
ihuuts’.ed on embarking in another
line of business six mouths ago.—
Henceforth it shall be his endeavor to
make this a thoroughly independent
journal, treating all parties v, ith politic
cal fairness and candor, but courtinsr
the favor and deprecating the wrath
of no one. If he can hereafter say
anything that will tend heartily to
unite the whole American people on
| the broad platform of universal suf
| frago, he will gladly do so. For
the present, however, he can best
! commend that consummation by
silence and forbearance. The
The victors in our late struggle can
haid’y fail to take the whole subject
of the Southern rights and wrongs in
to early and earnest consideration ;
and to them for the present he remits
it.
Since he will never again be a can
didate for any office, and is not in full
accord with either of the great par
ties which have hitherto divided the
country, he will be able and will en
deavor to give wider and steadier re
gard to the progress of science, indue,
try and the useful arts, than a parti
san journal can do; and he will not be
provoked to indulgence in those bits
ter personalities which are the recog
nized bane of journalism. Sustained
by a generous public, he will do his
best to make the Tribune a power in
the broader field it now contemplates,
as when human freedom was in the
arena of political partisanship.
[Signed] Horace Greeley.
During the late war a man out west
in a small gathering of friends, was
urging upon their minds the impor
tance of enlisting. “Go my brave
friends.” said he ; “fight for your
country—die for it, if it be neccessa
m ; for it is sweet to die for vour na
five land.” “But,” said one, “if it is
sweet to che for one’s country, why
don t you go ?” This was a dose, and
for a moment disconcerted him; but
rallying* he declared that he, as an indi
vidual, “ was not fond of sweet
things.”
Remedies foz the House Disease.
—ln addition to precautions and reme
dies already published by us we give
to-day two receipts which have been
used and recommended by most relia
l)le authority.
R. Lotion for Horses.
4 «>z. Sp irits of Harts home.
2 oz. Tincture of Arnica,
pints Oil of Hemlock,
pints Alcohol.
Bath neck and under jaws.
Also ten (10) drops of aconite on
tongue three times a day.
The other is the course pursued in
some of the stables containing valua !
ble trotting stock.
Bandage the limbs and soak band
ages with spirits. Rub the throat with
turpentine. -Mix a small portion ot
ipecac and tartar emetic with molas
ses ; put a few drops on the tongue
every half hour.— &av.
NKW ADVE RTISLM KN TS~
GEORGIA—CarroII County*
Sarah t). Musick wife of J. C. Musick has
applied for exemption of personalty, and 1
will pass upon the same at ten o’clock a. m.
on Saturday the 23d instant at my office,
nov. 15. h, B. *1 UHA N, Ord y-
G CO B <« I A—Carroll Cun lit).
George A. Moore has applied for exemp
tion of personalty, and setting apart and val
uation ol homestead, and 1 will pass upon
the same at ten o’clock a. m., on Saturday
j the 23d instant, at mv office.
novls. D. 11. JUST JN. Ord’y.
CITY OF CAKIIOM.TOY
BUSINESS LOTS
FOR SALE,
AT
AUCTIONT
On the first Tuesday in December next-
These 24 lots are all of them well situated
for business, having peculiar advantages
which will be apparent to those who mjy ex
amine them with a view to business in this
young and thriving city. There need be no
longer any excuse about high prices, for
j these lots will he sold to you at your own
price. Terms of sale one half cash and bal
ance in six months with interest. [ will take
pleasure in showing the lots, and will consid
er bids and if reasonable, will close sale with
those who may desire to commence improvo
-1 ments earlier than saledav.
novlo. JAMES J, JUIIAV. *
Administrator’s Sale.
BY Virtu re of an order of the Court of
Ordinary of Oar roll county, will be sold be
fore the Court House door in Carrollton,
on the first Tuesday in January next, with
in the legal hours of sale, the following
property to-wit:
Lot no. 27, and east half of lot no. 29, ex
cept Unit portion situated in the north East
corner of said half lot, on which 1). IT.
Witcher's store house, now stands ; A r o. 27
containing GO feet front by 200 ieet back,
a;;<] half of no 29 containing 30 feet front
by 200 hack, both situated it; the town of
Villa Rica on the route of the Western R
Road There is a good store hou e, arid
also a good dwelling, with 5 rooms on the
premi es. The dimensions of' the store house
is 25 by GO feet.
Also —The late residence of James M
Blalock, deceased, in the town of Carrollton,
sit'a’ed the east sided the-treet running
north, bounded on tire north by Jam s P
C lonian's residence, and on ihe east and
south by P G Garrison, Said lot contains
about 24 acres and lias on it a splendid
house and all necessary ont-huild i gs.
Also —A lot lying on the South east
corner of the Public Square, having 30 feet
front and 100 feet back.
Ai.so—A lot 20 by GO feet, south of the
store h m>e now occupied by .lessee Blalock,
both of said lots being in the town of Car
roll ion.
Also —One half interest in town lot known
as the ol I .Moreland lot. hoarded on the
wist by the Baptist chinch lot (’Deluding all
the glade 0" wet land on sai l lot.) on tlie
noitu by the a Jay between it and the Tim
lin; o-n lo', on the cast by I)?. Tam er, a> and
Jamas G 'J nmn-rV lots, and on live South by
John W Stewarts land. Said lot contains
two acres'more or less, and lies in about 100
yards of Savannah Griffin ami N. A. Rail
Road IJi pot site, in the town of Carrollton.
Said one half interest will be sold, reserving
to the estate damages done said, Tot by the
Railroad company.
Also —An undivided halt interest in an
8 acre lot in the incorporate limits o' - Car
rolton, lying north of the old Carrollton
l’oft'q ip the old field of the Court House
and . djo ling lots ox'iicd by F A and l) L
Tru sill. P G Garrison and Dr. Johnson.
Also —'l lie north oast fourth of lot no.
250, iu the ori.iivjl 5tH district of Carroll
county, and also 10 acres in the sou’ll west
coen r of lot no 249, both tracts containing
about 01 acres, on which there is a good
dwelling house, on buddings and fourteen
aoriN of c earvd hind,— the balance well
timbered, Tht r are .-bout 7 or 8 wen sos
nunii»er "fin brunch bottom on the place
uncleared Ihe place lies on the Newnun
Street, and inddc of the corporate limits of
t! e tii\n ot Carrollton, and within 4J of a
j mile of the Court House, it b -inir the place
on vvh vh Gem go Boggne now lives.
Also —lso acres, jt being the east half,
and north west fourth, of lot of land no. 163
|in the 1 Orh District of t'anall ('aunty. Si!
farm has about 60 acres in a good state of
cultivation, the balance being timbered land,
and good dwelling, outbuildings orchard &a..
; upon it This farm js 2 1 4 miles from Car
! rollton. on the .Jacksonville n.ad, and is now
| occupied by ft ft Sharpe, ft.-q.
Also —A very valuable farm whereon
James Norman now live-, four miles north of
Carrollton, known as lot 225 in the truth
■I) strict of Carroll county. There is about j
! 60 or 70 acres cleared land under fence with
; ordinary dwelling, out buildings, orchard &c.
On the place there is some good rich branch
bottom land to clear.
Also —l he east half of lot of land no
-347 in the 7th District of Carroll countv,
i said land lying about 5 miles north of Car.
j rollton, and has about 12 acres cleared land
on it Ihe saw timber is not included
with the land, it having been sold previously.
Also— lol acres of land in the town
of ( arrollton, known as the north half of
; k>t no 232 in the alh District of Carroll
county. Said lot being within the present
corporate limits of Carrollton, and being
>'eil timbered and having several beautiful
building site? upon it, makes it highly valu
able. ¥
j Ail sold a? the property of J. M. Blalock
I deceased, It 1 1" the benefit of the heirs gad
j creditors of said deceased,
i I erms of sale half cash and the balance
1 2! months credit, to he secured bv re
taining tides until the full amount of pur
chase money is paid.
D, M. I.OAG, Adm’r.
Administrator’s ISale,
B i \iitue of an order of the Court of
Ordinal \ of Carroll county will be sold before
the Court House door in Carrollton, on the
first 1 uesday in December next, within the
legal hours of Sale, the following projierty
to-wit: The north east fifty acres of lot No.
219 in the sth district of Carroll county, Ga j
Sold as the property of J. M. 7/ardage late of
said county deceased, apd for the benefit of
the heirs and creditors of said deceased.—
Terms Cash.
SARAH HAUL A GE , Matrix.
oct 18. tds.
Administrator’s Sale.
BY Virtue of an order of the Court of
Ordinary of Carroll county, will be sold be
fore the Court House door in Carrollton, on
the first I'uesday in*Deoeipfier next, withiu
the legal hours of sale, the following prop
erty, to-wit: Lot of land number two hun
dred and nineteen in ip the sixth District,
Carroll county, Ga. Thirty acres bottom
Jana, and sixty acres cleared, and a good
dwelling and other out lying on the
Carrollton and Yanwert toad three and one
halt miles from A ilia Rica on the route of
the Georgia Western Railroad. Sold as the
property of Isaac Hannah, late of said
county deceased. Terms cash.
JAMES GREEN, . , ,
RICHARD HANNAH, Adm rs ’
oct 18, tds.
ffihW ADVEIITISKMiTI
DO]\F , »j»
Bb deceived, hilt for cough* co
hoarseness and bronchial ditti, ui ' fl
WELLS- CARBOLIC T J,l
Worthless imitations are on th P ‘•'M
only scientific preparation of c.,J*’b ? ■
Lung diseases is chemically cotiji, Dl
well known remedies, as in the,' * 1
all parties are cautioned a<rain-t,7 T,f ' .■
In all eases of irritation of ti"" 1 ' *i*l
hranethese Tablets, should he
cleansing and healing proper!ksY I
Be warned, never neglect n A Jv ■
in its incipent s ate when it her I
cure is exceedingly difiiault. ‘ Y I
Tablets as a specific. ~'! s j
JOHN q. kELLORd. lsp ,
AGENTS
WANTED. i^jfc*** ’ I
Y. MTg Cos., 21 courtland 8t N y i
“Hand stamps • a ii
Jots wanted, w, u. n, Davi.A'c
Nassau. N y. u - »■
BUILDERS- Send stamp f ur e , . ■
building A J Bicknlu. k <_'o •>- ‘ ■
-• 'arrtt.4®
FREE TO [t . h M
An elegantly bound cauva»«i D * ’
best aud cheapest Family Bible"" ' m
will be sent free ol charge p, ~, " Vrr ■
contains nearly 500 tine ScriptmF’,- . ■
agents are meeting with m,j ,. ° ' >■
Address, statiug experience tt( . I
show you what our agents are i ‘
Publishing Company. Memphis T,' I
Georgia. ’ un - o .Jj
Wanted—Experienced Book l YY''
vassers, in all pans ol the l s : ' I
of Roger rooke Taney, Chief j tI .J
preme Court of the US. j y,,i ,' ■
published in. thi*country, throw! 7 * I
upon our constitutional ana p„h lu "J ■
a work of extraordinary inters*• f I
nent value to tlie historian, itn-1 . I
man, the Politician and every c . " '■
readers. Sold by subegriptjY 1
sivc Territory given.
For Terms, for ijfe of Tanet-i
Lee Ac. address ut once, Jfiirnin "‘t ■
Baltimore. ‘ • aCo -b ■
$75 to $250 per month
where, male aud female, i„ r «
genuine improved com ox J
SEWING MACHINE, This luac'aille \ -I
hem, tell, tuck, quilt, chord i, U(i ’■
embroider in a most superior in '
only sls. Fully liceused and n
five years, we will pav *U(hi •
chine that will sew a stronger n>, I
or more elastic seam than our* 7, ■
*' Elastic Lock StichJ’ Even ,
can be cut, and still the cloth l v if ' ‘
apart without tearing.it. we nj ,
STS to sVsoper month and e\[„'i i '
mission from which twice tbat amw. "
made- Address Secomb A (
Mass.; PiLsburgh, Pa., chica
St. Louis, J/o,
AGENTS— W AN TED
CHEAP FARMS! FI’KK n uV
On the line of the Union IViti
1*2,000 000 acres of the best fa
J/ineral Lands in America.
o 000.000 acres in Nebraska, in • „ •
Valley, nv'v for sale.
Mild Climate, Fertile S
for Grain growing and Stock Raisiio ,
by auy in tile United State*.
Cheaper in Price, more favorable ,
more convenient to market than run k
where
Free Homesteads for Act!: .' -
Tlie best location for colonies-Si „
to a Homestead of llioacri a.
Send for the new Descriptive P
new maps, published ii English, i
and J auish inailed free evurv veil n
Address.. ' u. j j ); ,
4»v Land com’r IT. P. P. ]{. , J .
T !i o in p sob'
WORLD RENOWNED p.cri.N
G-Xovo-IPittiiis
CORSET.
Economical . i
-A. Perleot pi
Ask for Thompson's Gesdink G;
ting every Corset being sixrajietl v. ■
name TITOMPSfIN. and tlie tiai* .
Crown. Sold by all First-C'l i.*s I) ■
jfSra
. It it) not a physic which may give t i*.
lief to the sufferer for the t:r.-1 ft*
which, from confirmed use brine- F>•• -
dred diseases to aid in weakening the u '
is it a doctored lienor, which, under the j
name of "/fitters’' is so extensive!}' pains-',
the public as sovereign remedies, but il ‘ ;
powerful Tonic and alter culr-e. pronca*"'- ‘
; the _ leading medical authorities l f l
Paris, and lm» been long neecTby rher r * : ’
i cians ofotliercountrieo with wbiukrfu;
results.
Ur. H ells' Kxfradcf JurdL’
; retains *6 the merik-Ifcal Tirtnes- per* ’’
i plant and must betaken as a permanent
agent.
Jx there wont of action fra, your Liter 9 ~;
I Unless relieved at once, the hlotNH r. l » » V
| by deleterious secretions, prodticiic' •' r, ‘
skin diseases, blotches, Felons iiirina- U
Pimples. Ac. .f;c.
Take Jnrubeba to cleanse, parity
vitiated blood to healihy action.
| Have you a Dyspeptic Slvmarh? 1 ..■**
lion is promptly aided the system is a- :
with loss of vital torce poverty of 'be
j Dropsical Tendency. (icuerJ Weakness w - 1
tude.
i 'J'ake it sq assist Digestion w thont re*' :
will impart youthful vigor to the weary-.
Hit re you Weakae*s of the /»f VtW/ ■
in danger of Chronic Diarrhoea or the 'ices •
fiamation of the bowels. Take if to ° •*’
tion and ward off tendency to nflamits’ ■
Have you weakness of the Uterine or I< '
qansf You must procure instant reliefer;
liable to suffering worse than death. ■■
to strengthen organic weakness, or life
bnrr.cn. Finally it should be freyyeiit;
keep the system in perfect health or you s'-
• wise in great danger <f malarial, m;?--*
contagious diteases. , >
JOILY Q. KELLOGG, 18 Bai .ft
Sole Agent for the Uni!ci ' j!!
Tr oy, Oue Dollar per bottle, Scrr.
lar. 15014
GEORGIA, Oakkoll Gou.vtl
To all whom it may concern.
John T Meador of Fulton county U -
plied to me for [>ermaneut lettercl -- .
istr 4 tion, on the estate of W ilham Me- ■
of said county, this is to cite all av:
| lar, the creditors and next of kin, "•
Meador, to be and appear at mV <
ill the time allowed by law, and "
if any they can. why permanent
tion should not be granted to John T.
on William Meador’s estate.
Witness my band and official
this Oct. 25th, 1872- .. n
D. c.jnux^
Valuable Fine Land torrf
I offer 50 acres of good pine land
situated six and a half miles Sou: ■
rollton, lying on the Trickum i
good dwelling, smoke-house, stain?
with a *ood well of water on the
There is about 3 acFes of cleared w- *
place. Jas. A-
Xov l-2m.
GEORGIA, Carroll County.
To all whom it may concern,
Robert C raw ford of Fulton coni’.'
in proper form applied to me for
letters of admin etration on the e^
Jf'iHiam Tliut man, late of said cout'T
to cite all and singular the credito**- j
of kin of William Thurman, to he al ;f ‘
at my office within the time allowed
and show cause if any they can, wil -' 1
nent administration should not beff r .
Robert Crawford on IFilham
estate. . . tu -f
lt r i tnees my hand and official .' ....
' D. B. JI’HAN, Otto*
oct 25, 1272 lm