The Carroll County times. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1872-1948, January 10, 1873, Image 1

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lil.. If- Koirroil Comity Times, m PUBLISH El) BY I & MEIG3 ' 1 uV Fill DAY MORNING. 1 TERMS: 1 , ...$2 00 ■o» fYcsr 100 tiontUs ■ ,ynl<>UlS ISTAIOABLT IN ADVANCE. 9 S P 1 w jU be stopped at the expiration of fl j OT subscript 10a i» previously ' 0 t mbscriber in to be chang ®‘i‘ e * and T * w ,iie o and address as well as the ■T »ie« nt “ ta ***• ■ onr ] it , T j,j town without extra charge. ■ er ' r “ u ;o anonymous commnnica attention W flre responsible for everything ea» ■‘"'.'nr'eolßinw. This rule is Imperative. A u -' r „ „ 6U Hsc!ibc'rs name, indicates that Al ' ,t . . . 0 f inscription is out. ■ a oVERTISING rates. ■ rviri *;,,a to Businessmen to make Use ■"“’.l-Jb-to further their interests, the f»l --■ schedule for advertising b«s been S' fid- these terms will he adhered to in all cou fir iidrvrtisi n g, or where advertisements Bh-ndeilin without instructions-, ■ fi iD( , h or leis, $1 for the. first and 50 cents-fir KtbwQwmt insertion ■yfiriT iit. 1 1 m. | a m |o«.| m»• fer*T" *i *Vi»."r *s I ” ■ 2 l .:■! !.! 8 ■ 5 10 12 17 25 ■ I'himn « 12 15 20 SO Isr sis ss s k CABD& "obAIl lUSES-Et Attoincj' at Law, Carrollton, Georgia. jAMKtJ -I. JUftAxV Attorney at Law, Carrollton, CWrgJs. i, Jj. VV. LAUP Lit, Attorney nr Law, Cai roilfoi'r, G ix uLU.W. AUSTIN* ‘ ■ I Attorney at Law, t f. . olit'Hi, Ceorola.. I>. ii. I'll 0 MASS ON,. Attorney at Law, CruTuikon, Ga. It. k. P.OC’HL’STELt. House an-i Orsiwawwtal Painter, Carrollton, Georgia. J £33K 151. \ f.LCiv, Attorney at Law, Carrollton, Ga. IV.il practice :n the Talepoosa ami Home j i; ,-iii!v ihompt attention given to legal j iu'.ii- vi inn- -u..Ui t —especially of real estate IV. W. & G. W. .MLUIIELL, Attorneys at Law, Carrollton, Ga. Upscial attention given to claim.-* tor prop r'y taken fry the Federal jlrnty, I'nixione. and ■ - (j.-.vernmci’.t c’.u? is, lioiifc.teail.s_ Coilec i»rs, A c. Th.is. Chandler, Joseph L. Cobb. I’ll A.M'LLII A CO LB, Attorneys at Law, Carrollton, Ga. Prompt attention given to all legal luisi ».'« siiinvlcd to tlvena. Oillce in the Court !l"i:xo. ’ .. N. MU L 1,.N CTT, Attorney at Law, Bowdoll, Georgia. -g! attention given to claims for Pen ■ ii anesteads. Collections &o. i*. b\ SMITH, Attorney at Law, Isewsii Ga. Cy ri.-tice in Supreme and Super ior Courts J. A. AND^tiSOX, AT T OltN E Y A T LA W, Atlanta C= eorg-ia. OFf'ICB EODD’H CORNER, TlTiil practice in all the ('ourtsof Fulton, and *> adjoining couutiee. Special attention c’.ven tocoHectious'. .Kei'ers to Gartrell .te Sieijbciia. l)a. G. T CONNELL. Fhy.sician & Surgeon, Carrollton. Ga. Will be found in the day time at Johnson s Store, or at his residence at night. hits. FITTS & 11EESE, Carrollton, Georgia. Kaving associated themselves, in Uit3 prac iice of medicine, fpspectfully tender their to the citizens ot Carrollton aud Yi tiuit)" MEDICAL CAUL). Da. I. N. CIIENEY, Respectfully informs the citizens of Carroll “hd adjacent counties, that he is permanently located at Carrollton, for the purpose of IYac- Medicine. He gives special attention all chronic diseases of Females. He re thanks to his friends for past patronage, ,; 'and hopes, by close attention to t!ie proleg *ion. to merit the same • E A. ROBERSON, Carpenter and Joiner, Carrollton, Ga. ,Ah kinds of Carpenters work done a notice. Patronage solicited. P. KIRKLY, Carrollton, Ga. Would respectfully inform the citizens ol "ollton and adjoining country that he is I '°' v prepared to make Sash, Doors, Blinds c - : at s-hort notice, and on reasonable terms Reese s school, Carrollton, Ga., 1872, Tu;ti °n for Forty Weeks, from sll to sl2. B,)ar d, from sl2 to sls per month. Cpens 2d Monday in January next. lorills one half in advance. . A. C. REESE, A. M., Principal. i-A u * or Boar< l apply to Dr. I. N. Cheney, "* h. Scogin, Esq. Wrapping Paper. I newß papcrs for wrapping paper can } '’'ght at this office cheap. The Dying Year. . B 7 n. G. GAINES. Come gentle muse and help me chant, The tequiein of the dying year; And throw tlie pall of grief, oer bleak December's icy nier. Assist to sing the mourful dirge, O’er those heaps of lifpless clay, Where souls once Writhed in sin, While others sweetly passed away. Tune thy voice to saddest lav, To breathe those notes of human woe; Where withered joys and hiighted hopes, And bitter streams of sorrow flow. Time, oh time! c-uel, remorseless time, How much of joy, and grief and pain, Lie buried in thy trackless path, Thy footsteps ne’er can trace again. Thy cold and icy hands hr> '\-v marred, The splendors of the gilded hall; Left the same dark shadows there, That mar the rude unpolishd wall. Go kneel beside the humble grave. That proud and haughty looks despise. No sculptured marble marks the spot, Where the mouldering pilgrim lies. Chase, oh cease, those plaintive strains, Let their slumbering records tell Rer>"at the woes of one bright year, Would be one long, long funeral knell. Massachusetts and the Xnscrip- Joxi-s on the War Flags. A Mr. T loyt, a member of the Mas sachusetts Legislature, having intro duced a resolution in that body con demning Mr. Sumner’s proposition to era**? the names of battle from the •Army Register and regimental lings, : made a speech in support of bis reso j lution, in which he denounced Sum i net ’s bid as a most atrocious propo> i sition,” the effect of which was “to j rbdn.ee Ihe Union to the level of the Confederate soldier. ’ Now we think Mr. Hoyt’s uneasiness on this subject •entirely unnecessary. If he has any apprehension of the heroes of Massa chusetts finding themselves, by any process, placed on the same level \\ ’lh the sojdiers of the Confederacy, we can assure him that his fears -are con fined to his own bosom. If the • soldiers of the Massachu setts regiments failed during the un happy conflict to prove themselves the equals of the troops of the Con federacy (and we do not assert that they did), the simpl - erasure of the names of the battles in which they I participated from the regimental flags will not now change their status. If Mr. Hoyt has the vanity to claim for the soldiers of ids State superiority over those of the Confederacy, he will luive to bring other vouchers than the battle flags of the war to establish it. Ir, as Mr. Hoyt says in another part ■of his speech, “ the rebellion was a crime,” and the inen who fought for the Confederacy deserve “ to have the blazonry <f their infamy perpetuated to the letest generation,” what should be the punishment of the fiendish fa natics who caused the war? A great writer on the law oft nations has said, in effect, that the moral responsibility rests not with those who begin, but those who cause the war, not with i those who strike the first blow; hut those who make the first blow neces sary. If then the rebellion was a crime, those who caused it were the real criminals, and the men of Massa chusetts who for more than a quarter of a century labored to bring it about, are the last in the Union who should desire to “ perpetuate the blazocy of its infamv.” Hut Mr. Hoyt who speaks for Mas sachusetts, may imagine that his poo pie have an especial voice in tins mat ter. Having done more than any other Northern State, in press, the pulpit ana the Sunday School, to bring on the war, and less in tne field to bring it to a close, lie probably thinks it is proper that they should be the especial guardians of all its hon ors. We think Mr. Hoyt claims too much. No one will object to the in scriptions being retained on all the battle Hags, if the soldiers of the vic torious North desire this to keepalive the memories ot the unhappy conflict; but as Massachusetts gave to the Union cause but one distinguished hero, she should be content with bin zoning the name of Beast Butler on her shield, and with the inscriptions of Big Bethel, Fort Fisher and Dutch Gap Canal, on the flags rendered im mortal by those brilliant achievements of her illustrious warrior. —Savannah News. Accident to Capt. White. —Capt. A. J. White, of the Macon and West ern Railroad, met with a painful acci dent yesterday, which will likely con flnq him to lus room for several days. Whilst walking along the track of the road, he stumbled and fell heavily, his knee striking the rail and severely injuring it. He is at home in Milner. Savannah Advertiser. CARROLLTON, GEORGIA. FRIDAY MORNING, JANUARY 10, 1873. From thciSavmnah Advertiser. *T enkins—Snobs. The misfortunes following the un succesful resort of the South to arms seem to be countless and sempiternal. Vv.hen the shock of war was over, and Inis section wa3 left defenceless, into every department ot Southern life, political, religious, social and commercial, was injected much of the fungus growth that sprang up and fastened itself upon Northern Society during a period of social convulsion and corruption. The Treasury agent has come and gone with well lined pockets. The'political missionary, after scooping up the hoarded coins of the credulous darkeys, has hied him back to his home. The “ Bureau Agent” no longer foments strife and discord, and offers a premium for theft and idleness. The carpet-bagger still remains encouraged and supports ed by his twin brother, the scalawag. The bayonet gleams about capitals and court houses, and the railroad de veloper still lingers around the lobbies of State Legislatures. It was impossible that these 'visitas tionssbould have come upon any people without leaving an impress. But the Southern people possessed so muck, of conversatism of sentiment, such a wealth of individuality, that the cor rupting instrumentalities mentioned cd have left but surface scars on the ; body politic. But the miserable affectations, the i frivolous fashions of Northern shoddy- ! dotn are gnawing into the vitals of i our young men, .and women too. The j first are loosing dignity of manner and ! expression. It is to be ft ared that the latter are beginning to forget the modesty which so became their moth ers. Our boys are becoming masters of slang ; our girls are learning to become loud and gushing. The bar-, rieis which surround the home circle and fireside are being broken down, and the inner relations of domestic life are being too often exposed to the prurient cuiiossity and impudent stare of an eager public. There is danger that our daughters may be come fashionable ninnies and nobodies —our sons snobs. There is no ad jective that can add force or expres sion to that word. It is a matter of shame and morti fication that the press is to a large de gree. responsible for the demoralization which has come and threatens to grow. There was a time when the di.-tinc live guerdon of a Southern gentleman was his tender, vigilant, chivalric do votion to woman, and when Southern women wore no gem in their crown of personal jewels brighter tint* tl'iaf of a sensitive retiring modesty. There was a time “Jenk ins ” —the half lacquey, half snob, who forms pa‘rt of almost every Northern newspaper staff-—had no brother on the Southern press. Now it is a fight between the Northern and the Southern Jenkins to see who can dive deeper into the recess of private life, and drag most i of its surroundings up to the garish | light of day. Attention has been dri | reeled to this subject bv the insane desires and successful attempts’to par I ado to the public all the paraphernalia |of wedding occasions. It there is a j time more than another when a wo ; man instinctively -shrinks from the gaze of all but that of her betrothed, and dearest friends, it is when she is about to approach the most important j era in her life. What business has I any impertinent newsmonger to pry into her secrets and publish her be j trothment ? What right lias the press with all of its arrogant demands ; upon public power and patience, to | parade her trousseau to the inspec tion of the vulgar crowd ? It is not quite within the province of legitimate newspaper enterprise to pry into the private concerns of peo j pie and to make then* the subject of j the stunning paragraphs. There may be some who are not j indifferent to these attentions. If so, . i let them pay for them, and have their social triumphs head lined anti tinted, after the fashion of the beards ed woman, the fat boy and other ab normal curiosities. How much ot dignity and manliness it gives to a youth whose critical eye and tongue pass judgment upon the silks, the sat> ins, the laces and ties, and the innu merable fripperies which go to make up a ladies toilet ? What .an incentive to intellectual culture is the work of describing the lads in black dress coats and white neckties and patent boots, the lassies iu muslins, tarletans and flowers; the parson pate* familias, the coachman, the butler, the leader of the orchestra, : the cakes, the fruits,- wines, dancing and decorations which go to make up a fashionable wedding 1 And it there are some who are flattered by these descriptive attentions from the irnlus | trious Jenkinses, there are more who j are deeply mortified and pained that ' they and those whom they hold dear \ are made to-furnish a public spectacle The object of these observations is jto draw attention to this innovation, | this growing evil, and to enter a I protest against its further continuance, j Lot us maintain our dignity and char, i actei* as a well bred people. We may bear the reproach that our society is cold mid exclusive. We J may suffer under tho taunt that our girls are a trifle haughty and slow to j make acquaintance. We can stand to have it said that our young men may be too free with their cups and too quick to quarrel. But for the j sake of the men and women we have : raised to distinction and buried in i honored graves, let it never be said of j us that we are going to raise a race | I of snobs. One Thing at a Time, -If you would be successful in any occupation never commence any piece j of work to leave it and begin some thing else, but stick to one thing till it is done. This plan will prove de-* cidedly advantageous We often hear men, farmers especially, complain of having so much work to do that they don’t know where to begin. There is where they are delinquent. Every farmer should the first thing in the morning, make a programme in his mind of the work to be done during the day. Then work with energy and determination until that plan is comph ted. T hus you see, he will know just what to do first, and when night comes he can say, with the poet, “Something attempted, something done.” But the men who are always commencing and seldom finishing, though they are exact in everything else, will never be very prosperous. Boys are apt to mix work and play together a little more than is consul eved beneficial by their parents or teacher. “ One thing at a time,” boys. If you have a lesson to learn, go to work, study diligently till you have mastered it : after which, if you any time -to play you will enjoy it wonderfully. ‘- Work when yon works Play when you play, This i the way, To he happy an 1 gay ! n “Stop My Paper” 4 Every p id-usher of a newspaper has heard this tremepdous order from offended subscribers, imagined by the offended to be asd.mgerou: as a stroke of lightning, but is in reality no moie harmless than a musquito bite. A good story is told by the Philadelphia Post of Mr. Swain the former propri etor of the Philadelphia Ledger. By Ills course on some public question, on which,difforentpersbns had different, opinions, Mr. Swain Lad offended a number of readers, ot.e of whom met him'on and tnus accosted him: “Mr. Swain I’ve stop ped the Ledger..” “What is that sir.” I've stopped the Ledger” was the stern reply. ‘Ts it possibe?” said Mr. Swain. “My dear sir, what do you mean? Come with me to my office.” And taking the man with him, he en tered the office at Third and Chest nut, streets. There they found the clerks busy at their desks; then they ascended to the editorial rooms and composing rooms, where everything was going on as usual; finally they ande # ■scended to the press rooms where the engines were at worlr. “I thought you toM me you hadstopped the Ledg er,” said Mr. Swain. “So I have said' the offended subscriber. “I dont see | the stoppage. The Ledger seems to |be going on.” “Oh ! I mean to say ‘I had stopped taking it.” “Is that all?' exclaimed Mr. Swain; “my dear sir, i you dont know how you alarmed me.’ The Buk. The duk iz a foul. Thare amt no doubt about this—naturalist say so, and koramon sense teaches it. They arc built sumthin like a hen, ! and are an up and down flat footed job. They don’t kackle like a hen, ror I kro like a rooster, nor holler like a peacock, nor scream like a goose, nor j turk like a turkey ; but they quak like a root doktor, and their bill resembles a vetenary surgeon's. They hav a woven fut, and can float on the water as natral as a soap bub i 1 ble ! They ar pretty much all feathers, ! and when the feathers ar all removed and there inards out, there isn’t az much meat on them az there iz on a krook-necked squash that haz gone to seed. Wild dux ar very good shooting and ar very good to miss also, unless you understand the biziness. You should aim about three foot ahead ov them, aud let them fly up , to the shot. I hav shot at them all day and got nothing but a tail: feather now and then ; but this satisfied me, for I am crazy for all kinds ov sport you kno. There are sum kind ov dux that ar very hard tew kill, even if you do bis them. I shot .one whole afternoon* three years ago at sum dekoy dux, and never got one ov them. I hav neve told ov this before, and hope no one will repeat it—this is strictly confidcnshal —Billings. Bi 1 Arp on a Bus:-le f Sec here 3,lark Antony—if I was you l wouldent take on so about the | fashions. They don’t bother me. Its none of your business what the wo men put on or put off so they behave i themselves and look just, as party as I they can. They arc a heap b'ettei | than you or me anyhow, whether they ; behave or not. I wouldn't give one woman for several men no time, would you? Now see him smile and pat that off foot. If women want to wear bussels, let em wear em. I thought that panears was the best because they stuck out side ways and wasent in the way of leanin back when they set down, but they know which is the best side to stick out on, and its no-' body's business but theirs. They may wear anything they want to, bussels and hoops and hangovers and ccn vexes and collapses and whimadiddlcs and stickouts and topknots come down, and anything else so there is a woman hid away somewher inside of it all. Its all sham —that rubber bus sol —there ain’t no substance nor back bone in it. I've seenem fiat and seen em blowed up. There ainfc a bit of harm in em, but I never saw or.a on a woman, that I don’t want to hit it just hard enuf to make it pop. 1 golly wouldent she jump high and holler ? But I’m not a goin to do it, no sir, I’ve got too much respect for woman. Their bussels don’t hurt nobody, and I do despise to see • a man always pickin at a woman’s close. If they dident wear somethin to disguise era the men would quit business when they co.me about. Purty women al ways did wear something to sheer the men away. It’s been so forever, Dm in the war 1 seed one who jest dressed as Lateral as life without any paddin or etufiin and when she cum along the boys jest laid down and rolled over and hollered. They warnfc fit for business for a week. But I confident bear to see cm go with their faces all tied up like they do in Tur key. That would mighty nigh kill me. It I can look into their blessed countenances I can put up with their fore rig-gin and bind riggin and top and all. A good, sweet, purty face speaks for all the balance of the oraft. I wgnldent marry narry girl on the earth till I see her face, and not then if she dklent stilt me. If the eyes, nose and mouth are all right, natur is | an indorser for the balance. Paint j aint nothin—shape is everything, j They cant paint a shape, nor a glance of the eye. You may paint a house ever so white but that don’t signify what’s inside of it. But when you see bright roses and poses and bios so:ns in the front yard and a vine over the door, and clean, clear win der.gl as a shining, you may bet your hat on the balance. You ueedent worry about the bussel nbr the back. Women have been doing that way | ever since old Solomon wrote about j 'em. If they do learn a little as they ; go, it’s all right. They can straighten I up when its necessary. No spinal ; disease about that. Thenib the very j sort what can lift two bushels of meal ; without crackin a bone. Its only a 1 passing fashuu—and will last till something else come along. Nature made cm that way, and you can’t change it. The more you try, the more you can’t. The more you abuse their bussels, the more they ! stick em j at you—so let em alone, I eav. They are all the same about fashuns, and the last one would put em on if they had their own way and plenty of money. I wish I was jest rich ennf to give every lady in the land a string of dimands and a hat full of pearls. Giood gracious ! how quick that Meth odist dissiplin would be busted on the jewelry bisness. Well, Ido like to see em look party, and so far as I am concerned, if ribbons and flowers and flounces and furs will help to do it, its all right. Some of the birds are dressed up mighty fine, and I reckon their pride aint much of a sin after all. But understand me, Mark, I dont hanker after %usse!g, tho they do say it makes the nicest little shelf for the arm to rest on in the world-, when a feller is dancin abound with hi3 gai. That’s all right, provided the feller aint a dancin with ray gal. Ip he is, why he may take her and keep her, that s all. Bax Aar. i [Rome Com. Who Shall bo Senator, Editor Morning JSTeics : —Several writers to advance, their favorites for the Senate, have concentrated their fire ou General Gordon, whose fitness for the position all had recognized.— They concede that he was a distingu ished soldier. Yes, the man who, whilst yet a Colonel, in an official re port of his accomplished commander, General 1). 11. Hill, in an army of I heroes, won the proud epithet of the | Bayard of the Army of Northern Virginia.” Tire man who was called by a gifted historian, “ The Thunder bolt of the army in the latter days of the Confederacyby another beauti ful writer, the ‘Kingof Battles,’ who j came so near achieving impossibilities by .the magic of his genius." The man who with universal acclaim, of j the army and the country, was hailed Young Stonewall, and through count less battles boro the mantle of that i immortal man, unscathed by any shaft of criticism ; torn only by the balls ; of the enemy. Such a man they do admit is a great soldier. But lib friends go further, and confidently i challenge a comparison, between him , and any competitor for Senatorial honors, in every element of intellec tual and moral fitnes3. One of there, his oratory, was indeed one of the in- j spiratious of his military career. A soldier of Gordon’s once said that he didn’t want to hear Gordon speak any more on the evex»f battle, for he made , t him feel like he could storm hell, and he didn't think it safe to attempt that." Eloquence ! Oratory ! Why the very day of the surrender in the morning, in one of his burets of mar tial impetuosity, he drove the enemy before him, capturing several guns, and in tire evening, in an address to the army, he painted the dirty of re signation and the grandeur of fortitude in language so vivid, that the rising of indignation at the surrender, dis solved in showers and the soldiers stood bathed in tears. Gordon is ora tor as well as soldier born. But his opponents call for a “ con stitutional lawyer,” and Gordon meets the demand. During and before the canvass with Bullock, Gordon’s coins munieations were greeted with ap plause. They were not only spoken j of always as able, but, in some in stances, as characterized by striking and profound originality. The objec tion, then, merely means he is not a practicing lawyer. Who, before and during the revolution was the great est constitutional lawyer in America . A Virginia planter, Colonel James Mason, pronounced by Mr. Jefferson the most' powerful debater he ever knew. Os all of Georgia’s gifted rep resentatives, Mr. Forsyth was prob ably most prompt, vigorous and suc cessful in debate. This eloquent Sen ator abandoned the practice of law, as General Gordon did in early man hood. Our historic Troupe was not a lawyer. We have heard that Mr. Calhoun thought Forsyth the ablest debater of modern times except the English O. J. Fox. Fox certainly never read a law book except for lib eral information, and this suggests that England’s grand statesmen, the Burkes, Fitts, Foxes, Sheridans, Peels, Cannings, Gladstones, were none of them lawyers ; at least as such were never known. Erskine was the most eloquent lawyer of the British Isles, but failed utterly as Parliamentary de hater. We make no controversy with the noble profession which has furn ished so many of our ablest statesmen. Many of the most eminent lawyers in Georgia have urged General Gor don’s candidacy for the Senate upon the grounds, not only of moral, but .of superior intellectual fitness for the position. Whose speeches have drawn so many distinct echoes of ap proval and applause from surrounding States as General Gordon’s ? With a broad brain, capacities of vi : n:% ;u.- analysis, inferior to none, and that perfect equipoise of nil the faculties of the mind that assures the most con summate judgment, with a great heart to pour its intuitions over the under standing, he stands richly endowed with gifts of the intellect and the soul, that fit him to rise to the full height and level of any crisis that may come upon the country. J L'STICL. The Drift Towards Central isation. There are several bills before Con gress. introduced by members of the Grant party, to following effect: 1. lo purchase and run the tele graph as a Government institution. 2. To assume jurisdiction over, and reguiate the fares of the railroads. 3. To pass a national election law, and supervise and control the elections | of the country. 4. To seize upon and exercise the j control of all the common school® in j the different States. 5. To enter upon and ooadenrr? property in the States for the Federal Govefhmeut without tire consent of the State Legislatures, or even against their remonstrance. In addition to this, a Federal Judgtf in Louisiana, assumes to decide who j are the eanvottere of votes in that State, and thus foists upon the people a Governor, Lieutenant Governor, aud Legislature, which they did not elect; aed the Grant .administration, with the bayonets of its soldiers, sustains the Judge.in this revolutionary usur pation. No other party in the histo iv, of this country ever thought or dared to broach such dangerous iuva sions of private right and public liberty as is attempted by these propositions and this usurpation. Can anybody doubt where this policy is tending?— Union and American . Carroll Masonic Institute, CARROLLTON, GA. Vaj. Jno, 81. Richardson, President This Institution, under the fosi taring care of the Masonic Frater* ni; v, regularly chartered and Or ganised, is devoted to the thorough i. co-education of the sexes, on the plan of the best mo-fern practical schools of Europe ami America. Spring Form, 1872, begin* February Ist ml onus July 17th Fall Term begins August Ist, and enas November 20ch. Tuition and board at reasonable rates. I -f" Send for circulars “^£3 . To Oar Customers, We have Just received a largo stock of SPRING AND SUMMER DRY GOODS, The iatest Styles of Ladies & Gents. Hats, Boots Cs3 5333L00J5, HARDWARE & CUTLERY, CROCKERY & GLASSWARE. •Also a large stock of New ObleakS Si/oau and Golden Svnt’P, STEWART & LONG. March 20, 1872—1 y. Look to Your Interest JUHAN & MANDEVILLE, p; |‘X3>se assists.^ CARROLLTON, GA. Wbuld inform the public, that tliey have just received, a large addition to their stock, consisting principally of a select assortment of STATIONERY, ALBUMS, PURE HINES AND LIQUOR A. LEMON SYRUP, SUGAR $*C. We make PAIN IS 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, &c., &c. We have on hand the largest and best as sortment of CONFECTIONERIES AND PERFUMERY ever offered in this market. S'IVDENTS • Will find it to their iu»erest to purchase .their Lamps. Oil, and Stationery from us, L'W* Virginia leaf Tobacco, best stock, and fine Cigars always ou hand. June 7, 1872. INTEW SCHEDULE. Savannah, Griffin & N. Ala., Railroad Leaves Griffin 12 40 p x Arrives at Newnan 320 P m leaves Newnan 330 r x Arrives at Wkilesbnrg 4 35 r x Leaves Dkltcsburg 6 30 a u Arrives at. Newnan 7 15 a ji Leaves Nevrnan 7 25 ak Arrives at Griflin V 15 a m Connects at Griffin with Macon anil IVesteru If. Passenger Train on Macon X Western Railroad. Leaves Macon 815 a x Arrive at Griflin 11 4«a m Arrive at Atlanta 2 40 pm I.i avoa Atlanta 8 20 a x Arrives at Griflin 10 82 a x Arrives at Macon 2 M Western X Atlantic Rail Road. Night Passenger Train Outward, Through to N York, via. Chattanooga. Leave Atlanta 10:80.p. in. Arrive at Chattanooga 6:18 a. m. Night Passenger 1 rain inward from New York Connecting at Dalton. Leaves Chattanooga' 5:20 p. m. Arrive at Atlanta 1:42 p. m. Day Passenger Train—Ontward. Leave Atlanta 6:00 a. nj. Arrive at Chattanooga 1:21 p. m. Day Passenger Train—lnward. Leave C’hattanoog' 5:30 a. ra. Arrives at Atlanta • • ■ • -T:32 p. m. Fast Line. Savanuak to New 5 ork—Outward. Leaves Atlanta ...2:45 p. m. Accommodation Train—lnward. Leaves Dalton ... 2:2-“ p. m. Arriveaat Atlanta, .10:00 a. m. E. li. Walkeb, M. T. Atlanta and West Point Railroad. DAY PASSESGRR TRAIN ( OUTWARD ) Leaves Atlanta 7 10 a.m. Arrives at West Point ..1140a. m, DAY PASSENGER TRAIN —( INWARD* ) I.e .vea West Point 12 45 p. m. Arrives at Atlanta 5 15 p. hi, N T UIJT F/. El GUT AND PASSENGER Leaves Atlanta 8 00 p. m. Arrives at West Point . 10 45 a. m. Leaves West Paint 800 p.m. * Arrives at Atlanta . 1007 a. w. Time g minutes faster thanAtlantu t me. NO. 2.