Newspaper Page Text
The Carroll County Times.
CARROLLTON, Ga. March 28, 1873
EDWIN R. SHARPE, Editor.
OUR AGENTS.
Mc*Br<». Griffin A llofin:an. Newspaper Agents
No. 4 South Klr.ct, Baltimore, Md., are duly' au
ttroriaed to contract lor advertsementi* at our low
eat rates. Advertisers in that city are requeetevd
to leave their favors with this bouse. u
«.' ,ulel ; ic " »re authorized to act
in their “veral localities:
M’ J T .. . .Siind ill'll.
K. J. Gaines.* ...W Vfl'lSTJtKi 1 "
Vw. like to s. cure an agent at cve
* " ' o m <v.
Speculative Manias.
In tlie ancient saying, (Chambers’
Miscellany,) “ The hand of the dili
gent maketh rich,” is found, says the
Northwestern Review, one of the trus
est principles of social economy.—
Riches are the visible testimony of dil
igent industry—the tangible result of
painstaking and consistent labor.—
Houses, clothing, articles of elegance
and utility, public works of all kinds,
private wealth, are all products of
skillful and persevering industry.—
Someone has worked for them. Mon
ey is only a variety of wealth ; it is
an article representing the accumula
ted fruits of past labor. The industry
which tends to an increase of wealth
by labors useful to society, or which
aims by honest means at mere person
al subsistence, is usually blest, and is,
at all events, always respectable. Un
fortunately, there is a dishonest as
well as an honest course of industry.
Dishonest industry is that kind of
labor which attempts to acquire riches
at the expense of another, without the
intervention of useful services, or
without increasing in any way the
general resources of tiie country.—
This vicious and worthless species of
industry is exemplified in two ways by
robbing and gambling. A man may be
very industrious in robbing Ins neigh
# * O £3
bors by means of artifice or violence.
As striking at the foundation of so
ciety, theft and robbery of every kind
are the subjects of severe legal clias
tisemeats in all civilized communities.
Gambling may be said to be robbery
under a different form. Two parties
engage to stake a sum of money on
the precarious turn of a die, the win
nei to pocket the stake of his antago
nist. It is evident that the gaining
of the money by this means is not re
putable. The only difference between
it and robbery is that chance is sub
stituted tor artifice and violence. It
is mutual agreement of two persons
to try to rob each other, the robber to
be the party whom chance happens
to favor. Besides being disreputable,
gambling is worthless in every sense.
It adds nothing to general resources.
A party of men might gamble with
each other for a whole year, and yet,
at the end, amongst them all there
would not be any more property than
at the beginning. Some would be
rich but others would be poor. All
would likewise de demoralized Be
sides being conscious of having miss
pent their time, their minds would be
perverted to mean pursuits and any
former relish for habits of honest in
dustry would have vanished. Thus,
gambling, though not considered so
great a crime as robbery, is held in
almost as great detestation.
So injurious is gambling to the in
terests of society, that it has been
rendered illegal in most countries, and
is now little heard of as a vice openly
practiced, At the same time any
kinds of enterprise, which it is diffi
cult to separate abstractly from chance
money games, have always been less
or more practiced, much to the loss
or scandal of the cpnimunity. We
here allude to certain great public
schemes of adventuring money in
joint-stocks concerns. The union of
the capital by shares, in order to ex
ecute undertakings of a useful kind
which the wealth of no single indi
vidual could accomplish, is one of the
valuable inventions of modern times ;
and to it we owe nearly all banks,
life and fire insurance establishments
canals, railways, and other economic
arrangements and institutions But
everything good is liable to abuse.—
Besides carefully considered and ev
eryway desirable joint stock projects
selnemes of the most visionary nature
have been originated and supported
Sometimes the schemes, though vis
ionarv, were got up from no bad in
tention, being meiely a consequence
of indiscriminate enthusiasm; but in
others, if not originating in deception
they were continued with reckless
disregardof consequences,and evident
ly for the sake of immediate and un
justifiable returns. They were in fact
equivalent to the worst species of
gambling.
The avaricious desire of being
speedily rich is at the foundation of
these hideous speculative manias ; na
tional einbarassments, besides indi
vidual impoverishment, has been the
invariable consequence ; yet so little
does one generation profit by the er
rors and sufferings of its predecessors
that a mania lor speculation has be
come almost a mania of periodical
occurence.
■— <■»
Dr Pryor of Cedartown com
mitted suicide on the 19st by taking
hmdsmuru.
Scribner’s for April.
The record of “An Hour among
the Greenbacks ”in Scribner’s for
April, is as entertaining as a story.
I he unnamed author certainly writes
from a thorough acquaintance with his
subject, and gives, with the aid of pic
tures, the best account yet published
of the working of the currency De
partment Miss Proctors piofusely
illustrated description of “ Moscow
and Southern Russia ” will be read
with peculiar interest at this time, at
well as the sketch of “ An Emperor’s
\ acation at Vichy.” Among the il
lustrated papers are an article on
America’s prima donna, Clara Louise
Kellogg, with portrait, and “ An An
cient American Civilization,” with
pictures of Peruvian antiquities. Be
sides Dr. Holland’s serial, “Author
Bonnieastle,” there is, by way of fic
tion, the beginning of a very power
ful story by Saxe Holm, “ The Elders
Wife,” a sequel to Draxy Miller’s
Dowry ; “ Martins Lea’s story,” by
Normou Holm; “The Automaton-
Ear,” a strange romance, by Florence
McLar.dburgh ; and “ The Flea and
the Professor,” by Hans Christian An
derson. Prof. Atwater, of Princeton,
ably discusses “ Needed Modifications
of our currency and Banking System,”
and among the poems we find some
striking verses by Mr. Stcdman, en
titled “ Ilyptia,” and having reference
to the woman-lecturer of to-day.
From George MacDonald there is
another beautiful translation from
Novalis. In “ Topics of the Times,”
I)r, Holland writes of “ The Latin
Nations,” “ Clean Hands ” “ Lord
Lytton,*’ and “ Party Virtue.” The
Old Cabinet has a protest concerning
Catalogues,” something about expres
sion etc. Home and Society, Culture
and Progress, Nature and Science,
and Etchings,"are perhaps more inter
esting than usual.
The May number of Scribner’s opens
thesixth volume, and, as the publishers
say, “ Tills it the time to subscribe.’
Wood’s Household Magazine
for April invites us to the following
t £ feast of reason and flow of soul: ”
The Good Goddess; Mid-Siimn.er
Dream; The Slow Poisoning; Whims*
by Addison ; Miss “Pop In ; ” Music;
Make Your Opportunities; A Prize
Story; An Honest Rumseller’s Ad
vertisement ; Unreasonable Devotion,
by Gail Hamilton; Simplicity in Pray
er; My Little Gentleman, by L. M.
Alcott; Cradle Song, by J. G. Hol
land; Riddle-Tikkle Tak ; Good Ad
vice, by Harriet Beecher Stowe; and
Editorial including the Pictures in
Our Homes, Correspondence, House
keeper, Fashion Letter, Sense and
Nonsense, Home, etc. We also no
tice that about four thousand profes
sional men and women, farmers, etc.,
who want “something to do,” may be
accommodated by addressing the Ed
itor. For specimen copy, enclose two
stamps and address Wood’s House
hold Magazine (Times Building,) New
Yoric City, or 81 and 83 Front-st.,
Newburgh, New York.
No Usury Laws in Georgia.
Under our present law the borrow
er is free to obtain money at any
price but the sum to be paid as inter
est must be stipulated in the written
contract. The text of the act, which
has been made a law, is as follows :
An Act to repeal the usury laws in
this State, and to fix the rate of ins
tercet in cases where the contract
ing parties make no contracts in
writing in reference there thereto.
Section 1. Be it enacted by the
Senate and House of Representatives
in General Assembly met and it is
hereby enacted by the authority of'the
same, that from and after the passage
of this act, all Jaws in this State upon
the subject of usury be, and the same
are hereby repealed.
Sec. 2. And be it further enacted,
That the rate of interest in this State,
when the same is not agreed upon
in writing by the parties, shall be
seven per cent, per annum, as hereto
fore allowed b) law.
Sec. 3. Whenever the parties to
any note, bond, or bill, or other con
tract or evidence of indebtedness
which bears interest, shall agree upon
any other rate of interest, whether the
same be more or less than seven per
cent., and shall insert the amount or
rate of interest so agreed upon in the
written contract, the same shall be
legal and valid to all intents and pur
poses, and it shall be the duty of the
Courts of this State to enforce such
contracts
Sec. 4. And be it further enacted.
That in no case shall more than seven
per cent, be allowed unless the same
be provided for in the written con
tracts.
St Patrick’s day was celebras
ted throughout Georgia with great
eclat. Judge Lochrane made the ad
dress in Atlanta, and the lion. A. H.
Stephens in Augusta. Lochrane’s
speech is said to have been a splendid
effort.
Harris county comes to the front
with an old negro, 102 years old who
can walk 15 or 20 miles, with little
fatigue, and with eye sight so good
he thread a needle.
Atlanta and the North and
South Railroad.
We clip the following article from
the Chattanooga Times and present it
to our readers fin* consideration, with
out adding any remarks of our own:
We see from the Columbus papers
that the first twenty milts of this new
road has been completed, accepted
and the Governor of Georgia wiii en
dorse its bonds. These facts insure
the early completion of the North and
South Georgia Railroad. It strikes
us it Atlanta does not at oncestep tor
ward to aid, and obtain some infl >■
ence in the man a eme it of this N. &
S. G. R. U., that she will, xchen too
late, find that her rivals will not per
mil this new railroad to be run to her
advantage. Our people are looking
with hope to this N. tfc S. Railroad.
A competing line to Atlanta ami
Columbus , can be readily made out of
this road. We are not in a condition
just yet to “ take a hand in the enter?,
prise.” The time is not far off when
we will be ready. If Atlanta compels
us to “ carry the heft” ot this new
road and our friends ar«‘tobc brought
in to build it, we can only assure the
Atlanta people that we will “ trade
to the best advantage for our city.
At this time, we would be glad to
‘join hands” with Atlanta, Rome
and Columbus, and build the N. &. S.
G. Railroad, so that it be, what it
should be, simply a compering line to
the road now built. It may be that
in the near future, it will be deemed
to oui interest to combine with some
one or more of these localities to run
the new road, We intend to “ take
care ”of Chattanooga at all events.
We would prefer that all be suited.
But if Atlanta does not “ wake up
she may find that we are “ a trading
people.” If she is ieft “ out in the
cold ”it will be her fault. We now
offer the “ olive branch ” on this new
enterprise.
.—
A Noble Trio.
“Ilmv sleep the brave who sink to rest,
/nth all their country’s wishes blest.”
The little town Lexington, Virginia
is indeed highly honored in being the
resting place of three of our modern
immortals, whose names the South
will not willingly let die. Tt.ere sleep
in that town three great men of the
South—General Stonewall Jackson,
General R. E. Lee and Commodore
M. F. Maury. In their mental char
acteristics they were very dissimilar,
each from either of the other two ;
but in this they resembled each other,
that they were great, good, patriotic
and pious men—an honor to their
birth place, their section and their
age. — Savanna}* Republican.
Tiie North and South Rah.koad.
—Col. W. A McDongald, President
of this Road, was in the city on Wed
nesday, on his way to New York to
make arrangements for a sufficient
quantity of iron to finish up track
laying as far as LaGrange, which he
hopes to sec completed in a few
months. Only three miles and a half
of the grading remains to be finished
between Columbus and Lagrange, and
considerable of the work has been
done on that.
Notwithstanding many obsticles
have had lobe surmounted, the con
struction of this road has been pushed
forward with more rapidity than any
similar enterprise in the State—all
due mainly to the perseverance and
good management of Col. McDougalu
and Capt. Chipley, the Secretary and
Treasurer, and Acting Superintend
ent. — Atlanta Sun.
The Circus Business. —Whether
the circus business is profitable or not,
it is certainly of value to State and lo
cal governments, and presents some
points of interests to hotel keepers, if
we may believe Mr. John Robinson,
who has grown in the profession to be
“ Old John Robinson.” This veteran
manager has lately presented his bal
ance sheet of last year’s business to a
reporter at Cincinnati, and from it we
learn that last year he paid as licenses
to State and municipal governments
the trifie of $121,000, and to hotels
and livery stables over $435,030. The
total disbursements of Old John’s show
in 1872, not including salaries to acro
bats and employes, foot up $1,083,581.
-
The Southern Census.— .At every
session of Congress since the close of
the war the effort has been made to
secure authority for the payment of
the census-takers ot 1860 in the
Southern States. The effort finally
succeeded in the last days of the last
session, but it does not seem to be
generally known, although quite a
number of people are interested in
it.
A circular will be sent from the
census office* 10-morow to all persons
interested, setting forth that “ t or
gt ess, bv, an act approved March od,
1873, has authorized tne payment,
without proof ot loyalty, of claims for
-compensation on account ot services
iit the census of 1860, and giving con»
structions concerning the preparation
by the claimants or their heirs.
Mr. Daniel Graddick, an old citizen
of Harris county died on the 15th inst.
He was in his &>kh year.
Cotton in North Geoigia.
And now comes the announcement
that the year’s crop, or grand product
if you like, of fertilizers is sold and
that no moie can be had to supply
the hungry demand. W hat does this
mean—this tremendous increase in
the use of fertilizers throughout our
immediate section of the State ? Jm
liters* din your own affairs, you are
not fully cognizant perhaps, ot the
wonderful agricultural developments
of tne past few year-, but more par
licularly of lust year.
Briefly, then, it is a settled fact
that, through the enriching and hast
ening aid of fertilizers, the gray lands
of Northern Georgia constitute the
finest cotton section, all tilings con
sidered, in the world. We mean the
sedgy gray fields underlaid with an
impenetrable clay, the very lands that
could not be coaxed into the growing
of corn, and that were once offered
almost without money and without
price. These lauds have become the
choicest cotton producing region of the
country ; and the purpose of this ar
ticle is to give you the facts that sups
port this assertion.
The impediments heretofore in the
way of cotton-growing on our gray
loam uplands have been the sterility
of the soil and the shortness of the
season. It is now fully ascertained
that fertilizers are a sure remedy for
both. Major Austin, of Oak Grove,
had three and a half acres of land
that would not grow oats or wheat
high enough to cut, and that would
not make any corn lie tried cotton
using 203 pounds ofguanoonan acre,
and cleared $47 70 per acre, after
charging to the lot everything that
pertained to it. In the same way Col.
Baugh, of East Point, secured thirty
bales from thirty-eight acres of land
as poor as lies around Atlanta. The
boll-worms and caterpillars never lux
urate at the expense of North Georgia
farmers and the rust rarely bothers.
Laborers can work the entire yea”,
and white laborers from the North or
from Europe are not troubled by chills
fevers or epidemics of any kind.
Before the completion ot the Air-
Line Railroad to Gainesville, only n
few hundred bales of cotton were
grown on tlie Chatahooohee Ridge.
Between 7,033 and 8,033 bales of the
crop of 72 have already come in from
the same territory; and good judges
think that from 12,(330 15,000 bales
may be expected from the crop of'73
if it is an equally good season. And
there is no finer upland cotton than
that brought in by the Air-Line Rail
road.
The clay foundation bolds, for per
matient use, whatever is put on the
land ; droughts do not affect loamy
lands as they do sand hills—in fact,
the champion cotton belt lies to the
north and east of Atlanta. The rovo
lution that the free use of fertilizers
has created, is transforming a vast
wilderness and waste into a very pro
ductive territory. The preparations
on the Chattahoochee Ridge for cot
ton-growing are enormous in the ag
gregate; for all the farmers have
caught the corn and cotton fever.
If the season of ’73 proves to be a
favorable one, the gentlemen who
have been so busy in asserting that
Atlanta has no basis of prosperity,
that if a crow journeys across her
tributary provinces be is forced to
carry his rations, and other like non
sense—those gentlemen will be con
fronted with facts, and better still,
with figures that will confound their
owl-like predictions. The “paper
city ” proves to be the focal point of
the best wheat, corn and cotton section
of the South. Put that in your pipes,
ye croakers, and smoke it. We will
give you the figures, in less than a
year, to fortify these statements be
yond all possibility of reputation.
Atlanta must prosper. With a rich
country on the outside, and a vast
carrying and jobbing trade inside, she
can not retrogade, and intelligent men
know it. The pressure at the lumber
yards and the new buildings that are
springing up in every quarter of the
town, attest its prosperity. But is it
not a pity that our natural resources
are not supplemented by factories
that would let us tally 100,000 in ten
years ? W e cau get along without
them, but with them Atlanta would
speedily become the commercial me
tropolis of the South. — Atlanta Con
stituiion.
Southern Claims Commission.—
The commissioners have completed
their revision of the list ot special
commissioners employed to take testi
rnony in the Southern States. In
Georgia, J. L. Conley and S. A. Dar
nell, of Atlanta; Virgil Ilillyer of
Savannah : J. Clarke Swayze, ot Ma
c«>n ; W. W. Merrill, of Carrollton;
and Aaron K. Richardson, oT Coving
ton, have been appointed.
•*-
Horses Dy’no.— The Monroe Ad
vertiser says in the neighborhood of
Col. Jossey’s plantation in Monroe
county, the horses and mules are dy
ing up rapidly. They were attacked
py the epizootic recently and relansed,
and the disease has turned into the
glanders. The Colonel has lost all
the horses on his farm but one, and
those of his neighbor? are dying out-.
A Plea for Pardon.
The editor of the S.imter Republi
can who was present last week at
Webster Com t, where a young girl
named Kberhurt was sentenced to be
hung, says that a strong effort will bt
made to induce the Governor to par
don her. The editor himself strongly
endorses the movement, and has this
to sav of the unfortunate girl:
f
Iler parents are poor, but honest,
people, encumbered with the support
of a large family. To relieve their
burden somewhat, they allowed their
daughter to do service in the family
of Spann, little dreaming they were
placing her in the hands of a craekcd
braijied monster. Simple minded, in
timidated, confused, overawed, she
became a participant in his diabolical
work
On the night of the murder this
girl was called fr m her couch by
Spann, and told to bring a handheld
chief. Not knowing what was going
on, she obeyed the summons, and
found Spann binding a rope across his
wife’s throat. He ordered her to
bandage his wife’s mouth. Fearing
to disobey the murderer’s command,
holding the ends of the handkerchief
in her hands she laid it across the
woman’s month ; Spann then forced
it into the mouth with his lingers.—
The young woman, bewildered and
alarmed, obeyed the man, scarcely
knowing what she did. Alone with
this madman and his helpless victim,
beyond the reach of help, she feared
his violence might be visited upon her
if she disobeyed him. After the foul
deed was accomplished, she bogged to
be allowed to go to her parents. He
told her she must flee with him, that
if she remained she would certainly
be arrested and hung. Thus menaced,
she fled with him, not as a paramour,
but from fear of vengeance ; and du
ring their flight she begged to be al
lowed to return to her parents.
Tlio Press Tax.
\Y e dipt 1; efl 11 owi ng' in ref eren ce
to the Press Tax from the Atlanta Sun:
The members who opposed this bill
will find that they have deep waters
to wade through to get to the Capitol
in the future.
The failure of the present General
Assembly to relieve the Georgia news
papers of taxation shows a spirit of
injustice to the press we could have
scarcely believed existed. It seems
to us there is a want of intelligent in
formation < n the part of a majority of
the Legislature on this subject entire-,
ly inexcusable. They seem to have a
sort of prejudice they cannot over
come. They don’t seem to understand
the principle. that lire ptess is the
greatest educator in th.e land, and that
knowledge ought to go to the people
free of taxation. They don t seem to
comprehend the situation on this
| point. They are blind to everything
i upon this subject except a morbid pi c
; ju*lice they cannot overcome.
The State of Georgia is the only
! country in the civilized world that
taxes its press,
Col. S. J) Smith, of Coweta
county, and a contractor on the Sa
vannah, Griffin tfc North Alabama
Railroad, was in town yesterday, and
says only one halt mile of grading is
necessary to finish the work to Car
rollton. The trains now run to the
Chattahoochee river, and will be in
Carrollton before a great while.— At
lanta Sun.
Mr Charles Kingsberry, one of
Romes most promising young men,
has moved te Atlanta, and has taken
a position in the house of Moore &
Marsh. Mr. Kingsberry is a decided
aquisition to Atlanta society, and we
are glad of his coming— Atlanl
Herald.
—— «#» —.—
The Cleans. —And yet there is no
end of the war in Cuba. Every week
or two there is a battle, always fol
lowed by a Spanish bulletin that a
brilliant victory had been obtained,
with now and then a dispatch from
Madrid that fresh battalions were
about to leave to reinforce the loyal
army. They are both generally desti
tute of truth, especially the last, for
the present government of Spain
needs all the soldiers it can raise to
but down insurrections at home, and
more besides.
We hope the Cubans will succeed
in throwing off the yoke of the rotten
old country. It is totally incompe
tent to govern anybody ; it can’t gov
ern Spain much less any foreign couti-*
try, Macon Enterprise.
NEW AD VERTISE MENTS.
Carroll county.
W. rs. Marclmyin has applied for ex
emption of personalty, awl s-l« itig apart and
valuation of Homestead, and I will pas.upon
the same at ten o'clock a. m on Saturday
the sth day of djml. at mv ..ffice, in Car oil
u»n. D. B. JUIMX, Ord’y.
march 23.
Cteorgriu, Carroll County*
Minerva K O'Aeai has applied for exemp
tion of personalty, and 1 will pass upon
the same at ten o’el<»ck a. m , on Saturday
the 29'h of Match 1873. at mv office.
m.treh2l. I). B. JUll'lN. U.d’y
T. /r. Barnes. J. L. Beavers. 3. J. Hardy.
BARNES, BEAVERS & HARDY,
Contractors end Builders.
A'e prepared to take Contracts of all kinds
and styles, and guarantee their irork to be
done in a neat and wormanlike manner.
| We solicit the patronage of the public
generally, and would ask those contemplating
building, to give us a. trial.
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Opr Fireside Friend —Eight Pages
Large N ? ~e. lUnMrate-l. the Family Weekly.
is in its Third Volume and has a tuined Hit*
in ryes’ circulation ol any paper pub i-lnd in I
ihe West. Its success emitdcs the proprie j
ors »o fitrnish the best, most desiratile nn.l J
most useful original reading mutter in gient ;
variety, that money can buy, and to mike ii |
a Homo Weekly suited to the wants ol
ever, family. Subscription price of §3 per j
year of 52 numbers.
THE ELEGANT CHROMO
“ SIT Bi>”
“ze 1G x2O inches, 1G colors, .JcKnow!-
tged by all to be the h iuds(i;„e.st and most
v;th:a!)le premium picture in /fnieriea.—
K'eiV suliscrjber is presimted with Inis
trnnio at the time of subscribing, (no
vailing) and also receives a numbered ny
tifiieaie entitling the holder u> a share in the
• n.'trii buiion of §25.000 in cash andotlnr
premiums.
The Distribution Takes place on the so
•end I’u sday in June next. The Chr< ino
ad certificate sent on receipt of price.—
1 ecimcn Copies, Premium List, etc.. <»iv
ing lull particulars sent free to any address.
Agents Wanted
Either local or canvassing in every town.
Large cash pay and the best outfit. Send at
llCe lor tel ms. T>i<ilC'S
OUil FIRESIDE FRIEND .
Chicago. lii..aud Badiniore. Md.
‘THE FINEST T \!TE <’ORN FOR THE
SOUTH.’
Larok York .“ Wkei - okn —An improv
ed variety, of very targe size, reh sugary
flavor, and exceedingly productive. Packe
(bv mail) 25 cents.
ADo a general assort nietil of seleet Harden
and Flower .Seeds - sl. §2. S3 S3. Si and
S5. collections of the choicest varieties mail
ed io any address on receipt ol remit'anee
Refer (by perm»ssion) to Hon. J S P.l-ek
vVa-hington. I>. « .. Weiser, Son & Ca 1.
Bankers. York. Pa
ED*' DJ EVANS A C*).
Vurserym'n and Sa!esm« n York. Pa.
Seed Oats.
2,00(1 bushels of Seed Oats and all other
Family Groceries for sale on t nm to plan
ters. * JONES & CO.
Whitesburg, <7a., march 14-2 t.
Agents Wanted.
(RoPer d-iyt men. women, hoy- and girl-
ulN make money rapidly selling my popular
ufid satiable
PICTURES !
Send stamp for circular and term- to \gcnts.
addre-e, S. R. Freeman, Calhoun, Ga.
maach 14—ts
[Established 1830. J
WELCH & GRIFFITHS,
r J) Manufacturers of Saws.
S C P r R 1 O R TO ALL OTHERS
EVERY SAW WARRANTED.
Files, Belting and J/achinery
J Discounts..^: %
(f) Welcm & Griffiths.
B isiou. M ns., au l Ditroit, M.ch-
The Guido is published Quarterly. 25 rents pays
for the year, winch is not half the et at. 1 ho-e
who afterwards send money to the amount of One
Dollar or more for seeds ms" also order 25 cents
worth extra—the price paid for the quids..
The First Number is heanttfuf. giving plana for
making oral Horn ,-s, Dining Table Decorations,
window Gardens, &c., and a mass of information
invaluable to thi lover of flowers. 130 pages, on
fine tinted paper, some 500 Engravings, and a su
perb Colored rlate and Cliromo Cover. The Fist
Edition of 200.000 just prinied in English and Ger
man. JAMES \ ICK.
Buefa,-v»#r. Kew- York:
the Relsineer Sa* h If>ck and
FASTEN YOU3 Wlfc
No apriog to break, no eottine , L U
ble very eas.ly »ppli-d ; hold- L V '■' h<- 5
and a -elf- whn „ at
Semi-tamp for circu ar. Lir« ai.
bronzed lock- sent to anv a !rlr^' !lr .
paid, on receipt nr s .. ti. vIA n the i
tbe trade Ag< nts wanted Sn dQ, r ,
LOCK CO.. No.
uaim Ol t
FIRE
EXTlNGrisiji L
SEND FOR li A
“ITS REOORdh’
407 Broadway, X. V. 78 M a ,
Ia u,e i{ - t in the *•
Agents wanted. Fen l f or
dress ‘Domestic’ Skwing Mv( u n 1
TH K BEST BUstv -
opportunity and the ( a l„,n ,
ferd is to be found in an \J* a A V” n! ’ !:
scriptions tor * for hkjf,
Henry W lrl Beech.,’, '
Great LITERARY, FAMITY v 8
"ith which Is gtnti nw;iv
French Oleograph
called “Little Runaway and her ,
gra/t/ie are toe choicest cla-a ~f P . ET *
ing in nil*—the perfection ofehrom ' " , Ar
the sorporb pair of On
Chrom&a, Wuiv Awake ! f / r '
Ar*lec*p." subject- I.I FL-SIZK-ch. •'* b
Hes of original Oil Painta.' Thi» 1
largest circuUttU\n tn the Wmhr. n inf!? 1 '
made better tlwn ever. Heria tale* s 1
moil- author-, i.. M. Alcott Ei>u P
Harriet Heecmkh Stowe ~|C v,,. i "'
contributors. Illustr t(e<i ffo'Hqt/ \„A
numbers of Mi— \icott,.« -torv rvyA '■■■'
com mi# ion* piid! Oae 1 gent m* X ‘
months: another ss:rr in 35'dav«-
one week; one $37.«0 in one day’ ' ’
from and slo to %4v» per dav' rr *
often* are even more profitable ' h, e
gets the Picture Preniiam whe-:
GOOD AGENTS HAN'T HI) " ’
TANARUS« ge. good territory, ton- usiedi/
early for ircutars and tern,-, j. 7; T
New Jfork; Doalou Lhica<»o l' l ■ <
Cisco, Cal. *
Build Cheaply
SKV9’ FOR PRICE LIST OF
indows
Blinds, Boars, Mouldings, Satp at f V-
Mantels, and all kind of Builtimjr
simple stock, and fteH:ties wnlii»7;t-}
Geo. 0. St»mk.Nß A Cos , Baiiitii,,- \
DEATH-BED OF GEN. LJ
A magnificent 14x18 inch Engravin - TANARUS! • *
and lriend»«regrouped -orrowtaily ari. ;■
in r<i's death-bed. The »cen» is sotoi chc
tiful, the seutim<ent of t!ie pictnre i- ,
the ch;irautcr--o life like that everyho v
it. It i-truly a gem of ar** one wn , ,
bang in the parlor o! every. S»>nthir
>ent by mail, postpaid? on roeisrpt of
-30 cent.-,. .Agr-ut*- wwutedr *(!>' „
J. C Stw: AT ImJRISDSV. MttM.il, T-n
WOSKThS CLASSY;;.:
unteed, iie-ectabfe ciuploynunt :t || (i;
eveniug; nocapi tnl reijuired; full lustre r . ,
valuable package of good- sent free bv n. t
dress, with ix cents return-tamp m.v.s,,
lfi Cortland St.. New Y»vrk.
<1 000 Seward
1 •UUU For- . 11 r •■ase of Wii ti, 1*•
lidiing, or U/eeratcd JM-.
Kino'- Pile Remeivt fails v* ewe. 1 i
i xpre—!y !o cure the Hies, and i-ahi,
by all Druggists. U
HO 1 ;
1 suffered with> CaT.-.v . Tuny \n .
was cured by a sim.i. • etueifl-. t?
receipt, post a'e free, t . LtuLTcird 11
J. MKAi), 1) awer 17<1 gVraciiM*. N V
Clitiltliili StlPLitßlfl t'ol El
October Term I.WX
BTATK OF HKUKHI.V. Ga t II t
Benjamin A. Styles*, j Lib*-I l«»r |)i -
vs. V!:Ui r W-p rill t‘t
Murgii ret D. Styles, j vice.
It up pear iog ti» rL‘ t Vmrt tt« rt.e r
of the rdf rifl tout tbe *»-:i-ndit
resi le in this C"nnM' r .-jrfrl n >fbr ..
ing that she-tloes ii- >1 ri'M-le .*t 1
it is oit m a ion of r* miMfl mTai
said deiendiiiit up; ear atal a es. a
next Term ol this i’ourt else Lie im
consalered in default an-; tU- }' . » 1
ell to proceed, and i: is finD. r ..> iir« t
this Buie be puiili>hed in tfv-< arro'i"
I imes, a public (j»Zctt ol tbi-shah «■
month (or lour moiiih-.
lluch Bluiianan Jii'lu'e 8 f I
A true extrac* from '!i«* tit ntin-s 4 •*
Court this October 3t>lh 1872
dec G. J. and. tJuiFKiv. < '
CARROLL SI'PiIRIOR COIUT
October Term tsjg.
Joannali Kobitisoti, 1 ])tvoire in 1
vs. v .-.uperior t’eurl
Isaac Uobiiison, j IV*in. 187*2.
It appi'Hriug to ill. t’ouit l»y tt.r
of the Sue; .fl th-.t 1 t.i D l< inlaid a ’ •
case is not to In- found p, -;uii •■'•it •}■ 1
apt earing that -uid ifelc-ti<l lit <i - 1
-ide ill Hiis Slpte; Ii s 'iier. l. b <‘.-l ’
'he court, that si rv ee of the -a '1 1 v
fierfepled on the -aid defendant hj I '
licatioii of tin- older once a inot.t'i '
nioiitl.E picvioi)- in ijn* i,i xt Trim
Coni t. in the Cnrn-ll County l in»
“IIUtiH BU*'TIA.V)V
Jn go S. < Id
A true extract (mm the np.iialc- "
Court ihi.- Oct 3n*h 1872.
dec. fl. 72 i). u , (Luth-v.
(>EOlU>lA«earr»!l County*
*' HrfiiKvs William S. i»■ »n**i‘ ,‘ •
t raj or ol (Vasa done-, repp .-cuts 11
m i.is petition duly filed, that lie
.drainistereil Nh-h Joic-s e-tde. i
therefore incit * nil js-rsod.s i-ot.C’'
dred and creditors, to show cause. N"
can. why said aim ;ji-traio.r so • o't
discharged from his admmistrat 1 • '
ejeve letters of dismission, on dir
*ia\ in next
' W D. B. JUfIAX, OHt
jm 24 1873
GEOKtHA, Carroll Coimv.
Whereas, J. B. Williamsot. a-im '
of Win, Oueal, represents to tiiv ( ' u
iietiition, duly filed and entered ’
that he has fully administered W ll,
estate, this is therefore t<* cue and! i
ctiuceriied. kindred and cre.lii''' ‘
cause if any they can, why saio *'
tor snould not lie d>sch t'g'‘d 1 7 1 ' • 1
ministration, and receive letters "*'
on the first Monday in Apt iH |, ‘ x ,
\), B. JJJU
dec 20 1872’
GEO BC* I A »-C’arroll C« lI,U> ‘
U i.en-a-. J. V " alson j
J. M. Lassi tlei. nprestmta »«
in his petjtio . duly fil'd, a ' j ,!.
record, that lie has lull.' a
Li-set U-r’s ecta e RG ‘" .Jr
cite all jargon* c<« e n.sl, kn
tors, !(, show eau-M* If .
1 adniiinstrator should n ■ o < ■
his udniiiiisira inn. aftd ie<‘‘ *<■" )n
mis-ion on the Gist
n-x:. U. B JU» AV
I d.»c2o—4m
«E(HMH4wCarr#ll c.iim')*
IhiiKßKAs. N. Sheinutt, A w ’
, B A. Mo ris deceased, rei'J ' a u,i *
j Court, in hi* jietitio» : did} J* . I( |,„ii,;- f
[ «n! on recotd, that he has fm
saiil B. A. Morris’ estate: Di►
to cite all persons concern ■ . c* 3
creditors, to show cause, and all -' ( |jsci |ar *.
said administrator should no j ve kj*.
from his administration, an “ , . in •
of dismission, ou the first O*^-
next. D. B- ■*
fco. §l, lf7«