Newspaper Page Text
r w . =7=gT.TE==aa.r:: . t . zrsrs.~r~-.Tr~''— ~* v ’ -auji - —-i 1. ji..- w ■ - ■ =*—
THE CARROLL COUNTY TIMES.
k. i-
Il'arroli County Times.
I published by
1
I ~v FKIDAY morning.
I ’ TERMS:
pA elir * 100
1' - t 8 rNT.vR.ABLY IN ADVANCE
■Mi r- lbe popped at the expiration erf
unless subscription is previously
liiDeps i(lfor -
Irircd- q , tho subscriber ia to be cliang
■tiicadd ri ‘ . address as well as the
I °LVr carrier in town without extra char-e.
p” • . to anonymous commumca
■ jtteutiou ■ onsiWe for everything en-
I , eoiomns. This rule is imperative. A
t'.' aft'r subscriber? name, indicates that
|^ e of subscription is out.
ADVERTISING rates.
I Invitation to Business men to make use
r‘Luna to further their interests, the fol-
I fC< bt-ral schedule for advertising has been
| i dtese terms will be adhered to in all cou
r* I ■idrertißi n g, or where advertisements
f !i ,~1 in without instructions:
1 Cch or le»s, $1 for the first and 50 cents fir
Lubscaneut insertion
M. I 3 M. I 6 M. 112 M.
[ u I*l $3 |5 n $lO
IB* I*2. 6 7 10 15
I“ c ; 3 7 9 12 18
H 10 15 23
I#** « 12 15 20 30
lU " 10 15 20 30 50
sr lis 23 80 iu °
IJessIONaL k wusinesh cards.
■SCAR REESE,
I Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, Georgia
pAMES J. JUIIAN,
I Attornej* at Law.,
I Carrollton, Georgia.
to. W. HARPER,
I Attorney at Law,
I Carrollton, Ga.
to. W- AUSTIN
Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, Georgia.
L W. NV. FITTS,
Physician arm Surgeon,
Carrollton. Ga.
E. D. THOMASSON,
Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, Ga.
I S. ROCHESTER,
House and Ornamental Painter,
Carrollton, Georgia.
JESSE BLALOCK,
Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, C*a.
Will practice in tlie Talapoosa and Rome
Kail*. Prompt attention given to legal
liiness ot real estate
If. iff & G. W. MERRELL,
Attorneys at Law,
Carrollton, Ga.
Special attention given to claims for prop
til taken by the Federal Army, Pensions, and
s.itr Government claims, Ilomsteads, Collec
iOM, ic.
Thos. Chandler, Joseph L. Cobb.
CHANDLER & COBB,
Attorneys at Law,
Carrollton, Ga.
Prompt attention given to all legal bus\-
ws» entrusted to them. Office in the Court
House.
5. SHELNU'fT,
Attorney at Law,
Bow don, Georgia.
Special attention given to claims for Pen
! as, Homesteads. Collections &c.
P F. SMITH,
Attorney at Law, Newan Ga.
F; “practice in Supreme and Super ior Courts
h. «. T CONNELL,
Physician & Surgeon,
Carrollton. Ga.
Hill be found in the day time at Johnson s
Store, or at his residence at night.
J. A. AXDLKSOA,
ATTORNEY A T LA W,
Atlanta Georgia.
OFFICE DODD'S CORNER,
W l ' practice in all the Courts of Fulton, and
M «<ijmniug counties. Special attention given
•° wUectiou*. Refers to Gartrcll <fc btepheue.
F - A. ROBERSON,
Carpenter and Joiner,
Carrollton, Ga.
, kinds of Carpenters work done a <
>lo 't notice. Patronage solicited.
W AIItKLY,
Carrollton, Ga.
respect fully inform the citizens of
; lr ollton and adjoining country that he is
\ r prepared to make Sash, Doors, Blinds
at short notice, and on reasonable terms
N J. ARGO,
House, Sign, Carriage
And Ornamental Painter
Newnan, Ga.
*j s ° plain and decorative paper hanging done
neatness and dispatch. Ail order«
P'omptly attended to.
Orders solicited front Car oil ton.
SCHOOL,
Carrollton, Ga., 1872,
for Forty Weeks, frem sl4 to $42.
F 4rd, from £l2 to £ls per month.
U^Us 2d Monday in January next.
ms one half in advance.
A. C. REESE, A. M.. Principal.
For Board apply to Dr. I.N. Cueney,
H - Scogiti, Esq. ’’
•'hdical CARD,
p Dtt -1. N. CHENEY,
informs the citizens of Carroll
j ( U<ijace: d counties, that he is permanently
at Carrollton, for the purpose of Prac
toan He gives special attention
diseases of Females. He re
•■rjd hn*, sto friends for past patronage,
t ' cFose attention to the profes
,o merit the ? ame
I CANNOT LELL.
R bile passing through the garden gate,
J/e plucked a rose and gave to me,
And, blushing, whispered in my ear
A word of love, and hope and cheer,
I know my heart was heating wild;
I cannot tell the reason why,
For he was hut a country hoy,
And I was but'a silly child.
lie wrote mo letters to the town,
A lift I replied in words of love,
I hope he has forgiven me;
The wrong I did I could not see,
I never knew such priceless joy—
I cannot tell the reason why—
. I never knew such peaceful rest,
As when I loved country hoy
To-day 1 found the rose again,
Among the relies ot the past:
Will it not bloom afresh once more,
And bring the happinesss of yorel
I cannot rest my aching head—
-1 do not know the reason why—
I wonder if we’ll love ag.ain.
When l am dead ! when I am dead !
THE OLD,LOVE.
I met her, she was thin and old,
She stooped and trod with tottering feet;
Her locks were gray that once were gold,
Her voice was harsh that onee was sweet;
Her cheeks were unken and her tyes,
ltobbed of their girlish light of joy,
Were dim ; I felt a strange surprise
That 1 hud loved her when a boy.
But yet a something in her air
Restored me to my youthful prime ;
My heart grew young and seemed to wear
The impress of that long lost time,
I took her wilted hand in mine,
Its touch awoke a world o’' joy;
1 kissed her with a reverent sigh,
For I had loved her when a l>ov.
From the St. Louis Republican.
A Short Sermon on Charity.
• Great charities are an honor as well
as a blessing to the race ; but lktle
charities are most acceptable to heav
en. It is comparatively an easy mat'*
ter for Astor to found a library, or
Peabody to establish an educational
fund, because their wealth is supera
bundant, and natural ambition no lest
than praise wo.ithy. Philanthrophy
teaches them that wealth properly us
fed may bring them what mankind
most craves, grateful remembrance af
ter death. But the world would be
intinitly worse if there were none but
giants of benevolence—if the benevo
lent pigmies did not live and work
unseen and unknown on every side.—
It was the widow’s mite, not the
Phareise’s golden talent, which brought
commendation from the lips of
“who spake as never man spake.”
Yet the charity which exhales in
cash or self-sacrificing labor, is a very
small and insignificant thing when
compared with charity which io
breathed out in our innermost thoughts
and secret acts. It is tolerably easy
to do good to our neighbor, but res
markably hard to think kindly of him
when he is a rather disagreeable per
son. It is so easy to condemn where
perhaps, condemnation is not really
deserved; it is so hard to pity, even
where pity is urgently demanded.—
Yet kindly thoughts and magnani
mous pity are more acceptable offer
ing to God than all the sacrifices that
ever blazed from the summit of Mount
Moriah. When shall we learn to
make allowances for one another—«.to
appreciate the differences ot birth, ed
ucation and social surroundings, and
'correctly measure the influence which
these exert upon the conduct? None
but the lowest of ruffians would ridi
cule or abuse a man because he hap
pened to be born with a hump on his
back, or with a leg having a club toot
attachment. But men and woman
born with humps on their temper,
lameness of understanding, obliquity
of mental vision, or with any oilier of
the innumerable malformations of the
j soul are considered legitimate objects
iof obloquy and belabored according
ly.
The author of Pilgrim’s Progress
looking at a criminal on his way to
jail, said: “But for the grace of God,
there goes John Bunyan!” We have
sometimes thought there was more
suggestiveness in that single remark
than in the whole of the wonderful al
legory which has made Bunyan im
mortal. And in these two familiar
verses—with which we dismiss our
congregation—is more wisdom 1 than
can be found in ten thousand sers
moos :
Then gently scan thy brother man,
&till gently sister woman —
Though they may gang a kennin wrang.
To step aside is human.
One point must still be greatly dark,
The moving why they do it,
And just as lamely can je mark
How far, perhaps, they rue it.
If ho made the heart, 'tis He alone
Decidedly can try us;
He knows each chord, its various tone,
Each string, its various bias ;
Then at the balance let’s be mute,
We never can adjust it—
What’s done we partly may comp lets,
But know not what’s resisted.
■m —»
flSTWare county, Ga., has produo
ed a tweenty six joint stalk of sugar
cane.
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA. FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 20, 1872.
The Prayer Test Question.
There has been a good deal of dis
cussion in both secular and religious
papers of what ia called “ the test” of
the efficacy of prayer, proposed some
time ago by Professor Tyndall,
the English scientist. He proposed
that a single ward of large hospital
should be set apart for this purpose,
and that those who believe in the ad
vantages ot prayer for the recovery of
the sick should devote themselves du
ring some mouths, at certain hours, to
'pray for those in the ward, and if at
the end of that time there was a del
inite improvement in the health of
those persons over tlsat of those who
were not so prayed for, it might be
considered a proof that prayer did
produce an effect on the out ward uni
verse. The proposition of Professor
Tyndall has been considered by the
religious world as wanting in humili
ity and submission to the law of God,
and would seem like an attempt to
coerce Him, by appealing to Him to
do what lie might not see what was
bast to be done. It is held that the
test does not correspond with the con
ditions of prayer—of sincerity of the
right spirit,and of faith —as contained
in the Sacred Scriptures.
Such a prayer as Professor Tyndall
recommends, according to one divine,
would be .something like this : “Oh,
Lord, raise the sick in this ward rath
er than in the other wards, that al[
the skeptics may be convinced of the
effect of prayer.” “ Such a prayer,” it
is held, would not be sincere, and
could not be offered in faith. Chris
tians will not believe that God will
cure more sick persons in one waid
than in another, merely to convince
persons of the efficacy of prayer. If
this test should be tried, and if the
persons in that ward prayed for should
recover, science would say: “There
were some physical reason* why those
in that ward should have recovered
rather than in the other. There are
three conditions ta acceptable prayer-
One is that it shall be true and sincere
that is we shall not ask for anything
but what we really desire. The so.
corn! is that it shall be in a Christian
spirit; that is, we shall not ask for
what we do not wish to have; and the
third is that it shall be in faith.’ ”
The Old Testament records an ex
ample where the prophet Elijah,
when only seven thousand men were
left in Israel who had not bowed the
knee to Baal, proposed a test of lire to
decide who was the true God. While
the circumstances of that period and
the spirit and purpose of the appeal
warranted the divine interposition, it
is also recorded that the appeal oF the
rich man in hell, as recorded in the
New Testament, to send Lazarus to
his five brethren to urge them to le*
pentance, on the ground that they
would repent if one went unto them
from the dead was answered: “If they
hear not Moses and the prophets,
neither will they be persuaded, though
one rose from the dead.”
It might also be urged that Chris*
tians could not, consistently with the
injunctions of the New Testament to
pray for all men, restrict their prayers
to one ward in a hospital without ex*
press authority from Him who gave
the command; to make an exception
for the satisfaction of those who ques
tion what Christians believe to lie His
own word.— Baltimore Sun.
Question by an Absent blinded
Man,
An absent mindcu man propounds
the following conundrums :
Did you ever write a letter to a
dead relation, and only find vour mis
take out when you wanted the ad
dress f
Did you ever stand for three-quar
ters of an hour before the glass won
deling where on earth you had seen
that face before ?
Did you ever go on singing a verse
of a hymn after the congregation had
finished some time ?
Did you ever light a cigar with a
ten*pound note, and then stick the
lighted end in your mouth ?
Did you ever meet your father in
the street, and wonder for fifteen
minutes who that ruin looking old buf
fer was ?
Did you ever run about until the
perspiration trickled from yonr two
brows, looking for your pen and spec
tacles, one of which was behind your tar
and the other on your forehead ?
Did you ever take up any body else’s
change for your own ?
Did you ever hang yourst f over
the back of a chair in place of your
top coat?
Did you ever pay your tailor in an
absent mood %
And did you ever sprinkle your
strawberries with salt, pocket the sil
ver forks, drink out of your finger
glass, or scratch somebody else’s back
for your own.
A False Idea.
A mistaken idea is that entertained
by many that riches are necessary to
perfect happiness. It is scarcely nec
essary to state a fact w> well under
stood, that many men and women,
possessed of great wealth are exceed
ngly unhappy. A thousand things
occur in the fluctuations and bust
scenes of life to bring sorrow and dis
content to the homes of the rich as
well as to those of the poor. It is in
the homes of people ot moderate
means as a rule, that happiness is
found.
“Put money in thy purse,” said the
mercenary and selfish lago. In his
estimation, lucre was the magic kev
ot happiness, to position and power—
to all that is desirable on earth. Get
riches ; no matter how, get riches. It
is false and fatal sentiment; a delusion
and a snare. Such teachings have
been the ruin of thousands of young
men of the highest promise.
A good name is to be preferred to
great riches. So runs the proverb,
and the history of the human race is
the verification of its truth.
The highest riches do not consist in
princely income ; there is a greater
wealth than this. It consists in a
good constitution, good digestion, a
good heart, stout limbs, a sound mind,
and a clear conscience. Someone
says good bones are better than gold,
tough muscles than silver, and nerves,
that flash fire, and carry energy to
every function, are better than houses
and lands. Better than money is a
good disposition; and that man is
rich who has generous impulses, a
noble soul, and who is hopeful and
cheerful, and who has the moral coin
age to keep the even tenor of his way,
whatever may betide him. Such a
man is rich, though not accounted so
when measured by a money standard;
but lie stands immeasurably higher
in point of true worth to the sordid,
avaricious cormorant whose only claim
to consideration consists in his money
bugs.
Economy in a Family.
There is nothing which goes so far
towards placing young people beyond
the reach of poverty, as economy in
the management of their domestic ass
fairs. It matters not whether a man
furnish little or much for his family,
if there is a continual leakage in Ins
kitchen or in his parlor: it runs away
he knows not how, and that demon
waste cries “More i” like the horse
leech’s daughter, until he that provide
ed has no more to give. It is the
husband’s duty to bring into the house,
and it is the duty of the v ife to see none
goes wrongfully out of it—not the
least article, however unimportant in
itself, for it establishes a precedent—
nor under any pretence, for it opens
the door for ruin to stalk in, and he
seldom leaves an opportunity unim
proved. A man gets a wife to look
after his affairs, and to assist him in
his journey through life—to educate
and prepare his children for a proper
station in life, and not to dissipate his
property. The husband’s interest
should be the wife’s care, and her
greatest ambition carry her no farther
than his welfare or happiness, togeth
er with that of her children. This
should be her sole aim, and the thea
tre of her exploits in the bosom of her
family, where she may do as much to
wards making a fortune as he can in
the counting room or the workshop.-
It is not the money earned that makes
a man wealthy—it is what he saves
from his eaanings. A good and pru
dent husband makes a deposit of the
fruits of his labor with his best friend
and if that friend be not true to him,
what has he to hope ? If he dare not
place confidence in the companion of
l>ia bosi.m, where is. he to place it ? A
wife acts not for herself only, but she
is the agent of m any she loves, and
she is bound to act for their good and
not for her own gratification. Self
gratification in dress, or indulgence in
appetite, or more company than her
husband’s purse can well entertain,
are equally pernicious.
—— ♦♦ -
Home Sunshine.— Many a child
goes astray, not because there is want
of prayer or virtue at home, but sim*
ply because home lacks shunshine. A
child needs sunbeams. Children look
little beyond the present moment. If
a thing pleases, they are apt to seek
it. If home is the place where faces
are soar and words harsh, and fault
finding is ever in the ascendant, they
will spend as many hours as possible
elsewhere. Let every father and
mother then try to be happy. Let
them talk to their children, especially
the little ones, in Mich a way as to
make them happy.
J&sT Worldly friendships are like
coffee grounds the oftener they are
drawn upon, the weaker they grow.
The Sabbath.
As public journalists we feel it pe
culiarly incumbent upon us to use all
our influence and energy, not only to
promote virtue and morality among ail
classes of our people.
This cannot be better accomplished
than by urging upon all, both by pre
cept and example, a proper aOserv
anee of the Sabbath day. We are
sorry to see a disposition on the part
of the young p%ip!e of our city to
spend the day especially set apart for
divine purposes, in loitering around
the street corners, or visiting the var
ious haunts of vice and immorality,
in disobedience, not only of the divine
commands, but of the advice of kind
parents and friends, who, with tender
solicitude and painful anxiety, watch
and weep over these demoralizing and
wicked tendencies that lure them on
imperceptibly until at last they are
overwhelmed in the vortex of irretri
evable ruin. Then, in the gloomy
walls of some prison cell, or fleeing
from the sword of justice tor some
crime committed, either in boat of pas*
sion, or under the influence of other
evil influences, they reflect upon
the errors of their youth, the advice
and tender appeals of a fond mother,
or kind father ; the tears and entreat
ie3 of a loved sister or brother, conie3
to them with a pathos aud persuasive
ness that carries them back to the Hap
py days of their youth ; and those
memories crowding upon them cause
the channels of grief to overflow with
the bitter tears sorrow to their already
bleeding hearts.
There need be no other argument
used to convince the young of the
danger that lurks in every form with
in the pleasures that our pathway
through life, than to refer them to
the frighttul increase of the various
crimes that are daily to be read in
the public prints a.id while we reflect
upon their horrible outlines, and stand
appalled at their magnitude and atroc
ity we never think that we too are
trembling upon the verge of the same
awful precipice, ready to be bualed
to its dread depths. We cannot, in
the exuberance of youthful feeling,
consider these dangers, unless xre ul
low our selves to be guided by those
who have traveled these dangerous
paths before us, and carefully avoid
every temptation, and evil that visits
them.
We call upon the young folks to
consider these truths. Go to the Sab
bath school ; go and hear the man of
God, and weigh well his precepts 1,
and then listen to the prayers of the
loved ones that daily and nightly as
oend to heaven in your behalf, then
will you see the error of your ways ;
then can you look back upon the dan
gers that have threatened you ; and
with a heart overflowing with thank
fulness, and a determined mind to
shun those evils in the future, you can
travel safely along the pathway of
life, ready for that better and more
glorious one that is prepared for you
“In that house not made with hands,
eternal in the heavens ” Remember
the Sabbath day to keep it holy.—
Atlanta ILrald.
♦
A Pair of Eavauder B-ides.
Eli Perkins, of the New York
Commercial Advertiser, is “on the
wing.” He stopped at Homer the
other morning for breakfast, aud had
the good fortune to meet a quartette
bridal party,” of which he thus dis
courses :
This morning at the Syracuse House
I breakfasted with a pair of brides
and a pair of bridegrooms—a sort of
bridal quartette. They were from
Cortland, I think, in the country. I
knew they were just married from a
variety of reasons. First, when they
allighted from the omnibus to enter
the hotel, both young ladies took the
arms of the gentlemen* who said,
“Dear let me carry your satchel.”
Just behind them came some old
married people. I knew they had
been married some time, for the men
pounced out, starting,luggage in hand
straight for the hotel, leaving their
wives with small satchels 10 follow
single file, behind them.
At breakfast the brides appeared in
bridal lavender. Everything was la
vender—lavender dresses, lavender
hats with lavender strings, and laven
der gloves. If ever I get married
Mrs. Perkins snail wear (it‘ she pleas
es) a suit of plain black, aud then we
can enjoy our honeymoon in peace,
j The young husbands wore broadcloth
; suits aud black hats. Both wore pa
| per coliars aud culls, and oue wore a
paper shirt-bosom. Alas ! what a
j shock such deception must be to a
young and guiseless wife ! Why, in
my opinion, a paper collar is no more
indication of a real shirt than a cloths
line.
At breakfast these young husbands
didn’t help themselves first when
they sat down at the tabm, but they
turned to the brides in lavender, and
said lovingly, “ Have a roll, dear ?
Then put some butter ou the lavender
bride’s plates* and they looked up and
said, * Thank you dear,” with a smile
too happy to describe. When break
fast was over one of the young Ims
bands smiled sweetly, and said :
“Now, darling, cant I smoke just
once—you know you said I might ‘I
“Yes, Charley, just once!" and
then the two brides stood and looked
vacantly out of the windows till their
sweethearts come back.
When the old married people sat
down there*was a different scene. —
The old fellows scooped in their beef
steak and sausage, never lookiug up
to see how their wives were getting
along, ami when they got through
they shuffled off into the reading
room and loaded up meershaum pipes
with the strongest cavendish. Then
they talked politics, expectorating on
the stove and around the zinc stove
mat without once thinking of their
poor wives, who were left to amuse
themselves with neighborhood gos
sip.
TJte Summer is Ended.
“The harvest is passed, the Summer
is ended.” Thus read Ruth a few
minutes since, before the twilight ful
ly deepened.
* Aud sitting here now, it comes up
again for our mediation. The Sum
nier is ended—the Summer of rest, of
relaxation, of recuperatiou, for many ;
the Summer of idleness, of fashionable
folly of wickeduess and dssipatatlou
for many more. Back from the cool
nooks, the quiet resting places, come
those who v.a ut for their bodily good
back from haunts ot fashion and fool
ishness, of sin and shame, hie those
who sought there only excitement
and feverish waste of time.
The Summer is ended. To all,
what lias it taught ? Are any rested
in spirit, calmed by the peace of na
ture and made glad by the holy com
munion through Nature with Nature’s
God? Are any strengthened in their de
sire to be mere earnest in the work
of the future to help on God’s purposes
with a firm heart and unfaltering hand?
Are any (would they all were) sick
of all the glitter of fashionable unrest,
and ready to cry out in the anguish
of remorse, because the Summer is
ended and their souls not saved ?
A summer’s parsing should bring
much ot sober reflection, of serious
resolves, of quickened spiritually.—
If there be one time more than anoth
er when man gets near his Maker, it
surely is the Summer time, when God
speaks daily in the sweet voices of
bud and blossom, in the tender rustle
of the leaf and branch, in pleasent
breezes, and by the surging water
brooks. And whoever hears the “still
small voice” throxgh day after day of
happy idleness should return to labor
profited. Whoever hears not the
voice so still—whoever listens most
for speech of fashiononly—should re
turn to Autumn walks, and sigh for
opportunities los.k for good ungained,
and being all unblest:— Americanßu
ral Home.
CJ* No pci sect wc 1k is made witb
out labor autl pain and weariness.—
What matter it the years pass by un
heeded 1 We live in deeds, not years
—thought not breath. We should
count time in results accomplished;
not by figures on a dial. We will
work, not for fame : glory and honor
bring not peace ; be who lives for ap
plause will find more sorrow from the
censure o! one than praise from the
applause of many : not for pleasure ;
perfect happiness comes not in this
life. No, our labor shaT! Le for good
to ourselves and others, and as we be
hold the fair proportions and perfect
outline of the form created by our ex
ertions, the toil and care shall seem as
nothing.
A typographical error in a Lynch
burg paper, made “a drinking fund”
of a “sinking fund” recommended in
Grant’s message, which is almost as
bad as the error that made “a meet
ing of Indiana Bee-keepers,’ “a meet
of Indiana bar keepers.”
Josh Billings says, You kant find
contentment laid down on the map ;
it iz an imaginary place, not settled
yet : and those reach it soonest who
throw away their compass and f-o it
blind.”
Ain’t if wicked to rob dis
here roost, Jim ?” “Dat’s a great
moral question ; Gumbo ; wo ain’t
got tin.e to argue it now—hand down
another pullet.’’
“It’s forty years, my old friend
John, since wo were boys together.”
“Is it ? Well don't speak so loud ;
there’s that young widow in the next
room !”
Carroll Masonic Institute,
CARROLLTON', GA,
I'aj. Jno. 3k Richardson, President.
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
'A.
seLods of Europe anil America.
Spring Term, 1872, begins February lit
and cuds July 17th: Fall Term begins August
Ist. and ends November 20th.
Tuition and board at reasonable rates.
E-jP* Send for circulars
Mill 1 STOCK! SliW STOCK !
NEW INSTALLMENT OF GROCERIES
AT
J. F. POPES,
CONSISTING OF
Bacon, Lard, Flour, Sugar, Molasses, Batter
lot of Shoes than ever, Fino Cigars,
Smoking Tobacco, Snuft
and Whiskies.
You can make it to your interest to cal
and see me before buying elsewhere.
JAMES F. TOPE.
april 26, 1872.
To Out Customers,
We have Just received a largo stock of
SPRING AND SUMMER DRY
GOODS,
The latest Styles of Ladies & Gents. Hat*,
Boots d3 Slioos,
HARDWARE & CUTLERY,
CROCKERY <fc GLASSWARE.
Also a large stock of New Obleaxs Suoae
and Golden Stbcp.
STEWART St LONG.
March 29, 1872—1 y.
Look to Your Interest
JULIAN & MANDEVILLE,
JT CLg^iiSi
CARROLLTON, GA
Would inform the public, that they have
just received, a huge addition to their stock,
consisting principally of a select assortment
of
STA TIONER Y, ALB (JUS,
PURE J VINES AND LIQUORS .
LEMON SYRUP, SUGAR frC.
We make
PAINTS A SPECIALITY
As we keep always on hand
A LARGE STOCK
of every kind of paint 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, Ac.,
&c.
We have on hand the largest and best as.
sort meat of
GONFECTIONERIEB AND PERFUMERY
ever offered in this market.
SI UDE V TS
Will Gnd it to their interest to purchase
their Lumps, Oil, and Stationery from us.
t >/'■ Virginia leaf Tobacco, best stock, and
fine Cigars always on hand.
Juno 7, 1872.
NEW SCHEDULE.
Savannah, Grifiin N. Ala., Railroad
Leaves Griffin.., 12 40 pm
Arrives at Newnan 3 20 p h
Leaves Newnan 380 pm
Arrives at Whitesburg 4 35pm
Leaves ff hitesbnrg ... C 30 a m
Arrives at Newnan.... 7 15 a m
Leaves Newnan ...7 2j a a
Arrives at Griffin 9 15 a m
Connects at Griffin with Macon and Western It.
Passenger Train on Macon A* Western
Railroad.
Leaves Macon 815 a h
Arrive at Griffin 11 49 a m
Arrive at Atlanta 2 40 pm
Leaves Atlanta ....8 20am
Arrives at Griffin 10 82 a M
Arrives at Maeoa 2 Qs;p si
Western A Atlantic Rail Road.
Night PasecDf'er Train Outward, Through to N
York, via. Chattanooga.
Leave Atlanta 10:30.p. ru.
Arrive at Chattanooga a. in.
Night Passenger 1 rain Inward from New York
Connecting at Dalton.
Leaves Chattanooga' 6:20 p. in.
Arrive at Atlanta 1:42p. m.
Day Passenger Train —Outward.
Leave Atlanta 0:00 a. m.
Arrive at Chattanooga 1 ; ~1 P- m.
Day Passenger Train —Inward.
Leave Chatlanoog .5:30 a. m.
Arrives at Atlanta ■••• ...1*32 p. m.
Past Line, Savannah to New r York—Outward.
Leaves Atlanta 2:45 p. in.
• Accommodation Train—lnward.
Leaves Dalton , .... .. 2:25 p. m.
Arrives at Atlanta. 10:00 a. m.
E. B. Walkeb, M. T.
Atlanta and West Point Railroad.
DAY PASSE KG EE TRAIN’— ( OUTWARD )
Leaves Atlanta 7 10 a. m.
Arrives at West Point ..1140 a. m,
DAY PASSENGER TRAIN —( INWARD’ )
Le.vea West Point. . .- r 12 46 p. m.
Arrives at Atlanta w"'" m -
N T GUT F.*.EIGHT AND PASSENGER
Leaves Atlanta. • • • 800 p. m.
Arrives at 1' est Point 10 45 a. m.
leaves West Pwint . ....... 300 p. m.
Arrives at Atlanta 1007 a. m.
i’lteo minutes fester than Atlanta Citvt m*.
NO. 50.