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THE CARROEE COUNTY TIMES.
Il IL
t Carrol I County Times.
PUBLISHED BY
SHARPS & MEIGS,
I FUIDAA MORNING.
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•I Sum" 110 W *JJ JO M
l'Column 115 1 W u 0 ltW
- I. ■lirmniTtr' 1 * rmaamaammamma &
’IIOITHiiiONAL & (A!i')S.
r,. H’. Austin. .3-
ALSTLV & IIAiHtIS,
Attorneys at La.’.v,
Carrollton, Georgia.
OSCAR REESE,
Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, Georgia.
JAMES J. JUIIAN,
Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, Georgia,
li. 1). TUOMASSON,
Attorney at Law,
Carrol iLon, Ga.
OiIAMtLER. COBB,
Attorneys at Law,
Carrollton, Ga.
p. F. SMITE,
Attorney at Law, Newan Ga.
Will practice iu Supreme and Superior Courts
N.SJILL.NUTT,
Attorney at La«',
Bo’.vdon, Georgia.
Special attention given to claims lor Pen
iiiins, Homesteads. Collections &c.
JESSE BLA LOCK,
i Attorney at Law,
Carrollton, Ga.
Will practice in the Talapoosa tuid Rome
Circuits. Prompt attention given to legal
ksitiess intrusted—especially of real estate
N.N. Beall. O'. W. ilarper.
BEALL & HARPER,
AltVs at Law, and Real Estate Ag’ts,
Carrollton, Ga.
Will practice in the Superior Courts of
Board, Carroll, Haralson, Paulding and
Duuglass counties.
Prompt attention given to all business eir
kusteii to them.
IV. w. & G. W. MERRELL,
Attorneys at Law,
Carrollton, Ga.
Special attention given to claims tor prop
'i'lj tuLu b‘t the lateral Aroiif, Editions, aud
'der Government claims, llonisleuds, Colrec
iwis, &c.
J. A. ASDIiKSON,
AT T O It N £ Y A T LA W,
Atlanta tieorgiil.
JAMKS' BLOCK,
VYTill practice in all the Courts of Fulton, and
'i itdjoiuing counties. Special attention given
to collections. Refers to Gartrcll «fc Stephens.
h. G. T CONNELL,
Physician &. Surgeon,
Carrollton. Ga.
Will be found in the day time at Johnson s
Store, or at his residence at night,
I>RS. REESE & ARNALL,
Carrollton, Georgia.
Having associated themselves, in thoprac
tce of medicine, respectfully tender their
wires to the citizens of Carrollton and vi
v.nity. They can be found at the old Stand
1,1 Hr. \Y. \V. Eitts, to whom they respect
alv refer.
F - A. ROBERSON,
Carpenter and Joiner,
Carrollton, Ga.
. Ail kinds of Carpenters work done a
wort notice. Patronage solicited,
*• I\ IvUUvLY,
Carrollton, Ga.
Would respectfully inform the citizens of
1 lrr ollton and adjoining country that he is
°' v prepared to make Sash, Doors, Blinds
**•. at short notice, and on reasonable terms
Carroll Masonic Institute,
CARROLLTON, GA.
H Jno, J[, Richardson, President.
*SS?#J HOROUGH AND on
hikricQ lh * ,mf tern schools of Europe and
‘itega, I ,’.'’ 11 , High and healthy. Board aud tuition
,*hi rates.
Heuius first Thursday iu February;
Pali in July.
r d\V«i Tto'ins first Thursday in Aug.; ends
"«daes(Jay in November,
kb•, 1873 jy S> J - DROWN, A, B f Sec’y.
Paper.
beta,, , I ,a Iqi* wrapping paper can
A. a Ul;| y letlrp something grostly
lj, , ® l-'W to tlieir anvantage and ob-
AXD ART AGENCY,
“THE ROCKf
BY R. J. GAINES.
Oh ! Father, lead me to that rock,
That’s so vastly higher than l ,
To those beautiful pea* ly gates,
Away beyond the starry sky.
Lead me by thy gracious power,
To the rich ti ensures of thy love ;
And 0 ! make me thankful' Lord;
For every blessing from, above-
Give me wisdom from on high ;
Thy tender mercies I implore ;
The grace and courage to believe,
■And trust to erring sense no more.
Arm me with thy righteous zeal,
To do thy will from day to day ;
With that fixed, unwavering faith.
Aud love that l'adeth not away.
Teach my heart to joyfully sing
The raptures of redeeming grace ;
That I may chant subhuier strains,
Beyond this temporal dwelling place.
Lord ! in thy precious blood I see
The light and hope cf endiess years;
Oh ! lead me by the fruitful liehis,
//’here thy eternal love appears.
Guide, 0 ! guide my wandering feet,
JUhere’er my erring footsteps roam;
Lamp of truth and G'uspel light,
Lead me, guide me, safely home.
•<<>.►
John Forsyth, the toughest
heart that beats in the South, has a
stirring editorial upon Louisiana af
fairs, that appearing as it does in the
leading journal of Alabama, is cer
tainly deserving of serious attention,
aud exhibits a sterling phase of South
ern feeling, Read vvliat the old vete
ran has to say.
“ Louisianna cannot fight the United
States Government. Nor can Ala
bama, nor all the States together.—
TJiey ai'e bound hand ajnd foot, and
the federal forces stand guard ovey
them, France is squeezing out lier
material life blood to pay her German
conqueror the enormous indemnity of
five milliards of francs, and yet France
would give a drop of her blood for
every franc for the power to fiv at the
throat of her enemy. Rut France
bides her time, and, while waits, the
male babies ot France are being rear
ed to the one thought, that the stain
upon her glory is to be washed out in
German blood, though she has to wait
a hundred years. The Franco-Ger
maji dispute is adjusted, not settled.
Ireland lives in hope; and even Poland
with her crushed nationality aud par
titioned territory, breathes and palpi
ta-tes, if she dare not utter her hopes
of regeneration. Fighting, then, is
out of the question. There is no use
for gunpowder now, except to ‘keep
it dry*’
There is another last appeal to
down-trodden people, by conquerors
dear to justice and to mercy. But it
is forbidden to this people. The ge
nius of the South is against assasina
tion. They tight, they kill, but it
must be upon the iield of battle, or
on questions of personal honor. The
]w?opjo cad not assassinate, and yet
none were so provoked to act upon
the principle,sanctioned,as we believe,
by, the laws of God and man, that ‘it
is lawful to kill the tyrant of the peo
ple.’ Public war and private assassi
nation, then, are forbidden in the case.
What then ! But one thing friends
and countrymen, and that the hardest,
the severest of the virtue—fortitude.”
Judicious Advertising. —As the
Spring trade will soon open in our city
we commend the following truthful
remarks from the New York Journal
of Commerce:
“People who sit nervously in count
ing-houses or behind their goods,
waiting for men to take them by
storm, and making no effort to let the
world know the bargians they have
to offer, will find the seasons very un
propitious. Many of those who have
spent large sums in hiring drumers,
and paying for other well known ap
pliances of trade, have effected large
sales, but swallow up too large a share
of the receipts in such enormous at
tendant expenses. The best remuner
ation has been found by those who
have returned .to the more legitimate,
old-fashioned methods of pushing
their business. We say it, not simply
because we are interested in this line
of expenditure, but as our best ad
vice to all who wish to be enterpris
ing or to secure a larger custom,
there is nothing now so effective to
this end as judicious advertising. We.
ao not believe that any who have val
uable service or desirable property to
offer, can fail of rich harvest by con
tinuous advertising on a large scale.”
g€T > Two young ladies one of whom
is named Annie, enter the store of an
acquaintance and observing a kitten,
Miss Annie takes it up to fondle.
“O my, what a sweet, darling little
kitten. What’s its names ” “It has
not been christended yet ” “O, the
dear thing ! Do call it Annie, won’t
you! ” “ Should be yery happy to do
so.” said the gentleman 4 44 but it isn’t
that kind of a cat ”
niiiW i it ◄ <
A “smile ” that foretells soin
row—the one you take in a bar-room.
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA. FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 28, 1873.
F oin the New Yoik World’s Correspondent
Novelty in Surgery.
A DEAD Man’s BRAINS TUANSFERED
TO A LIVING SUBJECT.
It was at Leipzig that the experi
ment was performed. A soldier who
had killed the colonel of his regiment
in cold blood, and whom the severity
ot Prussian military discipline would
have caused to die a hundred deaths
had it been possible, was deliberately
handed over to the surgeons, by sen
tence of court-martial, and was con
fined in a strong room in the military
hospital, entirely in the dark as to the
late which awaited him. He was
kept there ready for an emergency,
which did not fail to occur. A keeper
of a beer cellar in Leipzig, a man re
sembling, in many respects the con-,
dernned soldier, and who had been
seized with acute inflamation of the
heart, or rather of its investing mem
brane, was brought to the hospital to
die of that incurable and promptly fa
tal malady. No sooner had the an
ticipated death taken place than the
dead saloon-keeper was placed on a
table by the side of another operating
table on which was the chloroformed
but Jiving body of the soldier.
Two surgeons, with assistants, pro
ceeded alike in both cases to divide
the scalp over the summit of the skull
from ear to ear, turn back the divi
sions, and remove the skull cap by in
cisions, and passing around the skull
like a crown. In the soldier, whose
carotid arteries had been prepared for
compression, these vessels were clam
ped so as to prevent hemorrage, and
but a few drops of blood were lost
during the entire operation. In each
the dura mater was incised, and the
hemispheres of the brain were remov
ed bv an incision with a snarp, thin
bladed knife passing above the eerebel
him, or a narrow portion of about two
inches in diameter called the crura 1
cerebri. The brain of the saloon kee
per, which was sound, the heart di
sease having left it inact, he having
been sensible to the last, was trans
ferred to the skull of the soldier, and
by air ingenious cotnrivance, fully de
tailed in the Gazette, the continuity
of the arterial and venous tubes was
established.
The greatest care was taken in se
curing the natural adaption of the
parts to a fraction of a line, and the
skull, having been replaced simply,
was held down and in-position by the
scalp, which was drawn over and its
edges confined by strips of adhesive
plaster, and over all was placed a
bandage. It was not until several
days had passed that the pressure
upon the carotid arteries was entirely
relaxed, although before the skull was
replaced the flow ot blood in the ves
sels of the brain was proved to be re
stored. The chief fear was from the
results of inflamation and suppuration,
but fortunately neither ensued, and
the wounded parts healed kindly.
There was from the first no difficulty
in feeding the patient, nor was difli
culty anticipated, for it is well known
that in puppies and kittens in which
the entire brain has been removed
sucking and swallowing go on as well
as before the operation, and in this
case the nerves which preside over
deputation and digestion were far
below the point of section
The patient remained in a sound
sleep for two weeks, as in a case of
appoplexy, the circulation, digestion
and all the vegetive functions oflife
being uninterrupted. The gradual
union of the parts was shown by faint
but gradually incresing movements of
the limbs, of the jaws, and and of the
muscles of expression in the face. —
Speech did not become possible until
the close of the third week, and then
it was hesitating, stammering, as a
child learns. Although it was evident
that the patient tried to utter words
and sentences, it was very gradually
that the power of of intelligible*' arties
ulation returned.
When speech became intelligbile it
was found that the soldier, as he
seemed, had forgotten entirely his
millitary training and discipline ; on
the other hand he told at a formal ex
amination, in the presence of a num
ber of witnesses, the price of all the
wines and beers, such as the saloon
keeper had been m the habit of buy
ing and selling, manifesting the un
impaired cerebral activity of the lat
ter. His memory recalled the saloon
keeper’s relatives, friends and custom
ers, whom he called by name. The
soldier had been ugly, taciturn, re
vengeful ; he now had the saloon
keepers frankness and even garrulity
in spite of his stammering utterance.
He was totally blind. Although the
nerves of smell and sight had been
approximated in the operation, they
failed to unite. It was both sad and
strange to hear and see the soldier
groping in his infirmity ot blindness
and giving proof of all the patient
endurance of and goodness of heart
which had made the saloon keeper
deservedly esteemed and propscrous.
These are the main facts m the case
as far as detailed in the archive, but
the subject of the experiment presents
so many importrnt problems of the re
lation between blood and brain, of
heart power and nervous energy, that
we may be well assured that no facts
of interests in the changed condition
ot the culprit will be permitted to eir*
cape notice and record. A grave
point of discussion is whether hs must
still be considered a criminal and sut
ler execution as a guilty soldier, or
shall be pensioned and liberally cared
for in his infirmity as a guiltless and
much-suffering beer seller. Public
sentiment is divided. Emperor Will
iam says “ Ya,” peremptorally. The
Emperor William’s judges, therefore,
all say ‘*Ya wohl.” The Emperor
William’s professor of metaphysics in
the Emperor’s university say it is a
case ego and non-ego, and the people
seem willing that the matter should
rest there as far as the metaphysical
assets of the question are con
cerned.
For my part I merely give the facts
of the case and the proof on which
they rest. Sigma.
Our former Presidents.
Jefferson was calm, clear, critical
comprehensive and orderly.
John Adams was emotional in his
nature, and was fiery and forcible.
James K. Polk was proud, firm
combative, dignified and determined.
Andrew Jackson’s firmness and,
force of character have become pro
verbal.
Madison had originality and dis
crimination,
Franklin Pierce was very harmonious
in his mental organization—well bal
anced.
Zachary Taylor was firm, hopeful,
intelligent, honest, positive and inde
pendent.
Millard Fillmore is more courteous
than commanding, and wins rather
than compels.
William Henry Harrison was kind,
affectionate, upright, prudent and cir
cumspect,
Monroe was more remarkable for
practical talent and common sense
than for depth and brillancy.
Washington had strong common
sense, clear reasoning powers, in tegs
rlty firmness and self-esteem
John Tyler was brilliant aud offhand
rather than deep and profound. lie
was firm to obstinacy.
Martin Van Buren was cautious,
shrewd, clearsheaded and reticent, and
was highly polished in manners.
John Quincy Adams was compat
ive, argument!ve, and thorough, and
had an ordinary memory.
We may add that, Lincoln was
amiable and easy tempered.
A Johnson was upright and stub
born
Grant a man of “ Commanding
presents,” a lover of cigars and fine
horses.
* •««<!!>*>
Fitch of the Griffin Star on
Murders.
If there is anything we really ad
mire and enjoy, it is a first class mur
der. We have two delicious cases of
recent date now in view. In East
Macon last Thursday, a Mr Burge
shot and instantly killed a Mr. W. W,
Towler, about a beef account of some
seven or eight dollars.
This exhibits a commendable ener
gy on the part of this gentleman as a
collector. As soon as he is released
from jail, which will be very soon, we
shall be glad to give permanent em
ployment to this gentleman to take
charge of a large share of our ac
counts, for we know he would brino-
O
in cash or scalp?.
Another neat little job was got oft
at Whitesburg, Capt. Jack White’s
new town, the present terminus of
Savannah, Griffin tfc North Alabama
Railroad in which one George Grey
shot and killed Edward Sims,. From
the accounts we have received, there
was little provocation It was otilv
a matter of a little recreation. This
killing at once established the char
acter of the place as one desirable to
emigrate to, and we are sanguine it
will soon be a city, and have a May
or and Policemen, &c, who can sit
about and enjoy these little pistorial
diversions.
There are numerous other cases re
ported’from day to day, more or less
interesting; some are very dull, but
they generally are gotten up in sufli
cieutly romantic style to be enjoyable.
They show a most refined state of so**
piety, and are ample proof why there
should be a great influx of emigration
hither, and why none should move
away. We aie longing for a first class
highway robbery with murder This
is a complication most delightful cf
all- ' l
Agriculture as a Pursuit.
We present the readers of the Sun
with the following extract from an
able introductory lecture before the
agricultural class of the State Univer
sity of Georgia, by E. M. Pendleton,
M. D., Professor of Agriculture and
Horticulture :
I am aware that efforts have been
made to underrate tanning as an oes
cnpation, and that parents frequently
find themselves deleted in their plans
when they wish their boys to be lib"
erally educated with a view to this
nobler calling. Their fellow-students
jeet at them, the fair sex frown a little,
and even sensible friends seem to
think it a poor business for an intelli
gent boy—and all boys are gifted, you
know, their parents being the judges
-1 wish, as far as I may, to disabuse
your minds of this unwholesome pub
lic opinion, founded as it is upon the
pretension notions of a purse-proud
and effete aristocracy.
In every age and every civilized
country, Agriculture has numbered
among its votaries many of the most
learned and most noble of the race.
Job, the greatest man of the East, was
a husbandman ; and Uriah, Ling of
Judah, “ had much land, both in the
low country and in the plains ; hus
bandmen, also, and vinedressers in the
mountains and in Canned, tor beloved
husbandry.” Laertes, the father of
Ulysces, King of Ithaca, was engaged
in hoeing when his royal son found
him, and it was belived that this was
no uncommon thing among the Gre
cian leaders. Cincinnatus was called
from the plow to be Dictator of Home,
and returned to it as soon as he had
achieved the independence of his
country. And the same is true of
Washington. And yet, we find up
starts of the present day too proud to
follow a pursuit honored by such no
ble examples :
The greatest objection to Agricul
ture as an occupation is found in the
indisposition ot our young men to
work for their bread. Manual labor
is degrading in the eyes of some very
foolish people, and every subterfuge
possible is used by them to make a
living without it. So intense has this
prejudice become, that I have seen
young men of good minds leave their
landed estates, and immolate their tal
ents in measuring tape, or attending
to some traveling agency, with a small
salary, and nothing to inspire them
with bright hopes for the future. The
same time, energy and perseverance
devoted to the plow, heading the la
bor of a small farm, would not only
insure them better profits, but open
up in the future bright anticipations
of an independent lile, surrounding
by broad acres and overflowing barns.
When is is remembered that agri
culture is the basis of all human soci
ety ; the sustenance of all human life ;
that without it commerce, the mechan
ic arts, and other callings in life,
would utterly fail; that twelve hun
dred millions of human beings denend
upon it for their daily sustenance ; that
nine-tenths of the fixed capital of all
civilized peoble is embarked in it, and
more than two hundred millions of
men are daily laboring with brain and
muscles in its interests ; the agricul
tural art rises in majestic proportions
so far above all others that in compar
ison with it, they dwindle into utter
insignificance.
In viewing this noble art from so
sublime a standpoint, how ridiculous
becomes the flippant opposition of
shallow pated boys, who themselves
disdain to laboi, would fain induce
others too seek with them, in th 6 dust
and bustle of the forum, a scant liveli
hood and a poor eminence. How su
premely absurd, on the part of parents,
to make a pettifogger or an empiric of
a boy, who, with proper training,
might have made a first class farmer,
and at the same time have saved him
from the vices of an idle officeflife,
and insured to him a much better
prospect for a solid living.
It is also true that agriculture is the
most independent occupation. When
men of every other calling in life have
to compete for business, and seek, oft
times, obsequiously for patronage,
the farmer commits his seed to the
ground in full confidence of the prom
ise, that “ While the earth remaineth,
seed-time and harvest and cold and
heat, and summer and winter, and day
and night shall not cease. It is in
fact, the only calling which lias a Di
vine promise connected with it, and
God’s direct blessing upon it, For
He has promised to send upon the
husbandman the early and latter rain,
and to bless, not only the just, but the ;
unjust, with sunshine and showers.
It is the most healthful avocation,
requiring a residence m the country,
where everything conduces to vigor
and longevity. It not only guarantees
that equanimity of min i, which men
who dwell in cities rarely have, but
induces to those regular frugal and i
j virtuous habits of body, which are
! rarely enjoyed by denizens of the bu
sy marts oflife, where the pestiaerous
exalatior.s, from thousands of eorrup
table human bodies, spreads disease
and pestilence around. The pleasure
of rural life are superadded to it; the
lowing of the herds, the waving corn,
the fleecy cotton fringed with golden
hopes, and the genial and bracing at
mosphere, all tend to give cheerfull
ness to the mind, and health and vi
gor to the body. To them, as Milton
sang:
j ‘ Sweet is the breath of morn, her rising
sweet.
i With charm of earliest birds.”
With regard to the Comparative
health of cities and rural districts, 1
have made some calculations, taken
; from the United States census, which
! presents this matter in a very conclu
sive light. In four of the largest ci
ties of the Union—New York, Phila
delphia, Baltimore, and New Orleans
—2.29 per cent, die annually, while
in the rural districts of the States of
New York, Pennsylvania, 1,43 per
i cent die annually. According to this
| rate, take a ward of ten thousand
i persons iu one of these cities, two
hundred and twenty-nine die during
each year’ the last one will be dead
i m forty-three and a half yeais, while
j it will take just seventy years, at the
rate of one hundred and forty three
1 per annum for the rural districts. Os
| 1 ......
: course, many persons live m cities be
i youd the age of forty three; but the
number of infants who die, as com
pared with the country, reduces the
vital statistics to this low figure. The
difference is not as great in tne small
er cities and towns ; but even here,
there is a market difference and one
well worth weighing by those who
desire to enjoy long life and good
days.
The comparison as to lunacy, idi
ocy, and deformity, not to mention
crime and violent deaths, is largely
in favor of the rural districts. In my
visits to the Northern cities, I have
been struck with the number of per
sons afflicted with distortion ot the
spine and other deformities in the
public thoroughfares, while such
things are rarely ever seen in the ru
ral districts. But as the old adage
says: “God made the country and
man tnade the town,” we could not
expect results to have been different ;
and yet, the rush is for the cities.
We care not how many they build nor
how large; we think, where there is
wealth, a surburban residence very
delightful; but to the poor boys of the
ot the land, who have to struggle for
a competency, wo commend Agricul
tural and Rural Life, as the surest
read to success and most conducive to
health and happiness.
The farmer, also, lias the conscious
ness of knowing that he is a producer
of the material substances which feed
and clothe the world All other class
es of society are consumers, and add
nothing, directly, to the material
wants of society. True, they are all
; useful in their several callings ; but
| the necessity for many of these call
ings grow out of the greatest evils
which afflict mankind, It has been said
that preachers live upon the sins of
the people ; lawyers, upon their crimes
and doctors, upon their sicknesses.
And yet, there are men foolish enough
to think that one of these learned pro
fessions is more honorable than that
which feeds and clothes the world.
Boys, Listen to This.
True as the Gospel is the following,
said by Robert Collyer, of Chicago :
“ It is true that the working, suc
cessful men of to-day were once poor,
industrious! self-reliant boys. And
the same thing will be repeatt and, for
from the ranks of the hard working,
economical, temperance and persever
ing boys of to-day, will emanate the
! progressive, prominent men men of
the future.
| Every man doing any sort of work
|in Chicago to-day, was r aised a poor
man’s sou, and had to fight his way to
place. Not one of them as I can acer
i
i tain was a rich man’s son, and had a
good time a boy. All boys should
grow as strong as a steel bar, fighting
their way on to an education, and
then, when they are ready, plunge in.
to life with that traditonai halldollar
and a little bundle tied up in red hand
kerchief, as I have known great men
to start. I tell you that in five and
twenty years, when most of us that
aie in our middle have gone to our
retribution, the men of mark in this j
country will not be the sons of those
whose fathers can give them ali tliey
wish for, aud ten times more than
they onght to have, but will be those
who are brought up in farm houses,
and cottages, cutting their way thro’
the thickest hindrances of every sort;
and all the brown stone houses of thi,
metropolis will be as nothin?* to brio <•
out the noble man.
To the Afflicted.
I>r. I. N. CHENEY, Respectfully in
forms the citizens of Carroll and adjacent
counties, that he is permanently located at
Carrollton, for lAie purpose of practicing
medicine in its various branches, he has alsv»
completed an excellent office, near his resi
dence, and furnished it with a good assort
j mentofail kinds of medicine He can be
I found by those in need of a good Physician,
| at his office on Cedar Town street, north of
the Court House, at all hours, when not pro
' fessionally engaged.
j Those suffering with chronic diseases,
i Mile or Female, will find it to their interest
, t<> chil tram b in before it is too late. Mv
t charges will he reasonable in all cases.
b'b 14. I. N. CHENEY M. D.
J. I'. I> 0 P E
Announces to his many friends and onsto
| mers that he has on hand a large lot of pro
j visions
FAMILY SUPPLIES,
CONSISTING OF
' Bacon, Lard, Syrup, Sugar, Coffee, and a
large lot of Flout, and every tiling
usually kept in a
Family Grocery.
And you will also dud him supplied with
W hi.-kies of all kinds and prices, lb has
on hand a large lot of Hardware, which ha
| intends to soil cheaper than the cheapest,
i Tobacco and Chewing Gum in abundance.
All persons wishing to purchase any
thing in my line would do well to ca.l
oil me.
james f. rom.
U?* A'] those indebted to me will please
come forward immediah ly and pay what
they owe as 1 am needing the money, •* A
word to the wise is sufficient.” *
jan, 21 1872.
Livory, Ssilcs,
AND
Peed Stable,
Cai*rcllto2i, Oco.
I llaviug opened a first, class Livery Stable
,in Carrollton I respectfully ask the patron-
I age of the traveling public. Good buggies
| and splendid horses, with cares ul drivers can
be obtamed at reasonable rates. Travelers
( leaving their socks w ith me may rest assured
, that they will be well led and attended to.
E. W. WELLS.
July 10, IST 2—ly.
LIVERY AND FEED STABLE,
BILL BENSON
Carrollton, * ■ • • CJeorgda.
fM
—***—— ■— — M —-- - -• .-*>*
Having leased the Stables of Mr. Daniel
near the hotel, l am now prepared to feed and
board horses on the best*of terms. Horses
and vehicles also kept to'hire, and parties
Conveyed to any part of the country they
may jvish to visit
Hors- s left with me, will be fed and at
aftended to.
( ReferenoevS.—Citizens of Carrollton, and
Carroll county genet ally,
jan 24, 73. “BILL BENSON.
To Our Customers,
We have Just received a large block of
SPRING AND SUMMER DRY
OOOBS,
The latest Styles of Louies & Cexts. llats,
Boots Shoes,
HARDWARE A CUTLERY,
CROCKERY & GLASSWARE.
Also a large stock of New Orleaxs Sugar
axd Goldex Syrup.
STEWART h LONG.
Match 20, 1872—1 y.
THE
6 *Si!ver Tongue”
ORGANS,
, maxufactueed by
E. P. XEEDIIAM A SOS,
l itl, 145, & 147 East 23d Street New York
Established ix 1846.
Responsible parties applying for agencies
in sections still unsupplied, will receive
prompt attention and liberal inducement*
Parties residing at a distance from our a»
t homed agents may order from our factory
Send for illustrated price list. novla
J. T. Holmes & Bro.
DEALERS IX
Family Groceries,
ALL KINDS OP
SO3AR. COFFEE ■ MOLASSES, FLOUR,
Bagging and Ties, Tobacco, Cigars. &.e.
—ALSO
Confectioneries of all kinds. We ask one
and ad to call ou us before purchasing else
where.
In the house formerly occupied by W. S
flilley, South side Public Square, Newaan,
Geo, g»a. oct. 4, 72—ly
CRY GOODS, GROGi RiES & HARDWARE,
Z\£l- G-iaoo,
FARMERS STORE,
West side Public Square, Nowuan. Ga.
oct 1,72—6 m.
NO. 13.