The Cartersville express. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1867-1870, April 26, 1867, Image 2

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fF. >rn the Oolurohu* Nnxi.J CAPll’Rn (>FGE\LHIL I'OI’E. When we saw the order assigning General Pope to Headquarters in the eitv of Montgomery, we felt ns-ured that he would tarry in that pretty little place hot a few days. Even the meet ing *t which Senator Felder “felt too (rood,” and Mr. Hosier dusted his vo »•: bill irv, and Gen. Sway ne “spoke a piece*’ -iml a Yankee adventurer or two exhorted and harangued, and a heap of niggers and a few poor white folks sang the niching melody of “Oid John Brown,” was not sufficient to retain the Gubernatorial General who came to waive over the Teritnries of (Geor gia, Alabama jam! Florida the magic wand with fie was wont to make ••Digger Injuns” take to their holes. "We fell that this would he so. Loyal ists, lick-spittles and lacqueys may live in Montgomery, and probably do, Imt they are a puny and insignificant breed compared to those who dwell about the purlieus and precincts of At lanta. Joe. Biown lives in Atlanta, and so does Markham and Farrow and Dunning, and a host of lesser lights of the ever faithful. Lochrane uses about there on convenient occasions. Is was there that Joe Brown recanted his liere sav of “State Sovereignty,” stud there, ves, right there it was a meeting was called, and Joe, the old he rebel who u«ed to have such a backbone when forts, arsenals and ships were to he taken, that were undefended, was re ceived in full faith and fellowship, with much hand'shaiiking, etc., Ac., into the radical camp. Even more. Yea, verilv, there dwells in Atlanta a “canny Scot,’ “little hut loud,” a wonderful manipulator of men, a powerful politi cal Prestidigilatetir, who not only knows what men say, what they do, but can even divine their thoughts. He it was who took charge of a dele gallon of fossils, who innocently sup posed they were empowered by some body to wait on President Johiisi n after the surrender, made himself manager and spokesman, and put Geor" ffia ti» iijxuii the Presi" rfrni's plan and the most (at that time) approved loyal principles. It is wonderful then, gentle reader, that General Pope should have been snatched from Montgomery, ere he had time to know her generous men, to see tier pretty women, or to ti.ste her vil lainously had water, and transplanted to the pure, wholesome, loyal atmos phere of Atlanta ? We do not believe (and we desire to sav that we respect h>s power) that he could have remain - cu in Montgomery if he had so desired, a id we are in doubt il any order from Stanton, who has sent many people where they did not want to go, and sun' 1 to pi; c s from which alas, they will never return, could now take him ha -k. The General —the Chief Mag*- i Mate of three territories—has been captured, and henceforth his head quarters are in , our pen had al most made a slip, in—Atlanta. It come about in this way : The Gu bernatorial General journeyed to At lanta, and straightway a feast was prepared. Nome men are decoyed by the wiles of women others yield to Avine, some go down to whisky. We have known a Brigadier to knuckle to a Commissary. Ye cunning souls of Atlanta knew that all men can he reached—some through their souls, (scarce) others through their pockets, (numerous) and others still through their stomachs, (multitudinous). Mine hosts of the “.National” (how appro priate the name) were hid to prepare a feast. Tney did it. It the bill ol’fare in iy be r< lied upon (they are almost as unreliable as the telegraph or a radical newspaper correspondent,) the spread made for the General surpassed the Peabody banquet as far as a Quarter master's break a-t used to lay over the i.ttiiitis tu‘ ragge-.l "rteO. Jf was ilis posed of in due order, ami then c line the “feast of reason and the fhrw of soul.” Brother Gnskiil, a cold water brother, noted during tiie war for a large line of shoes, and somewhat celebrated at camp meetings and conn try villages, for sailing into Romanism generally, let oiT the following regular but heretical toast : Our Pope —May he lie as infallible as the law has made him powerful. \\ e hail thought that it was his sword that give the power, hut the band } laved “Hail to the Chief,” and the General responded. The generous fare, partaken of was sufficient to inspire a man who had just come from a .country where boiled bzzards and roasted grasshoppers are standing dishes and “our Pope” made a good reply. If he made the speech as reported, or with the assistance of various “locals” afterwards wrote it out, we would advise him. even at his time of fife, to follow up the Governor business. His parents spoiled a good politician by sending him to West Point. We like his speech, all except the following: “I am sure it is not necessary to tell most, if indeed any, of those here present, that the legislation of Con gress, which l have been sent here to execute, was conceived in no spirit of hostility or bitterness to the Southern pc 'pie, hut ns the speediest and most satisfactory means o! restoring the Southern States to the l nion.” It in a v not have been necessary to tell those present that the Congress was a veiV mild, amiable and generous body, but we, who have seen the brandishing of “Old Thud's” tomahawk, and heard the ravings of Butler, Ashley and Boutwell, and the polished, pointed sarcasm of Senator Sherman, that the Southern people had been made suffi ciently infamous, need just a little more ligh* to >••!!, vjiire >»: of the ;i * r iii 1•--- * > • - of the happy family rce isiy congre gated in the-Capitol at Washington. The President of the United Slates. “Hail (’olumjiia.” The Thirty-Ninth Congress. “\ aiikec Doodle.” The National Unity of the States— one and inseparable, and “Rally Round the Flag,” followed in quick succession, when a Colonel Farrow ro-e to rally around the flag, j He thus rallied : The Thirty-ninth Congress which j ha« just been toasted, has done much to restore our country, and though de signing men sav it was composed of dissipated and wort!)less njen, yet the j truth is it possessed much of the brains j and true character of our eoun’ry. It | was a body capable of solving the great problems submitted to it, and if we will hut conform in good faith with its re quirements we will be happily restored j by the Fortieth Congress, u Inch is! controlled by the same leading spirits j ol the Thirty-ninth.' The only hope, oI restoration is through Congress, which means, the Republican party, j That party has preserved our Govern- j incut and has laid down the principles ! and conditions upon which we can he j restored. We should place our shoul ders to the wheel and give (Jen. Pope that support and cordial co-operation which our dearest interest dictate. We never bend of Fairow before, God knows we do not desire to hear ol him again. Next came a sprig from the “(Jim ol the Say,’ and was doubtless intended to he tin- gem of the evening. Lochrane responded to “Our Coun try's Flag.’ Are territories allowed (lags! We do not know, but Loch, tiie same good natural Loch ol our earlier days, who could rally the McFlannigins, and O’Dowds to “riliil again the Gouv eminint” was there with his brogue, blarney, blushe, and smirk, and made at the flag, as follows : Judge Lochrane being called upon, said that lie arose to respond to the toast, not without considerable embar rassment. This toast, lie suit 1 , embrac ed every thing that can be conceived that had reference to tho i> aii <1 n :il i ( y . the honor and the glory of the countiy. He reviewed the history of the flags of the different nations of antiquity and modern times, and showed that the flag of the United States was superior to them all. A General Dunn, done up the “Army and the Navy” with a slight polishing off oft he inevitable nigger. And Joseph, the profound, the astute, the erudit Joseph Brown, settled the Judiciary part of the enter aiument, by expressing the very kind wish that the Supreme Court, which admitted him to* its bar in the face of a Congressional enactment, would decline to hear the an peal of the oppressed people of Geor gia. Then came an oasis in this desert of loval laudation. Judge Warner was called upon to respond to the “Bench and Bar.” Old lli could not see it. and passed with a very muddy sentiment. Perhaps thestuidy old New Englander, was thinking of his life long devotion to the Union, and the reward he receiv ed for it, by being robbed, hung and scorched, by bandits in the garb of the glorious “Boys in Blue.” The Fress, the Merchants, and the Hotels, were duly toasted, decanters and glasses were emptied, and without a “j-ar” (a polite term for stumble we suppose) the lights were let down, the guests departed, and the Captured Gen era! slept in bis permanent Head Quar ters, the Gate City of Georgia. [From the Uriffin Herald.] Grand Banquet in Atlanta. The men in Atlanta who woiship at the feet of the powers that be. engaged in giving Gen. Pope a grand reception on Fruity- last* r l'hc supper was magnificent, and presume from the conduct displayed on that occasion, that the wme flowed freely. The Rev. "Col." Gaskill, who, it seems, was chaplain oil the occasion* introduced Gen. Pope by offering the lollowing toast: “Our Pope—May he he as infallible as tiie law has made him powerful.” To which toast Gen. Pope responded, indicatinggood will towards the people of his district. Col. Farrow tvss next called for to respond to the toast. “Rally Round the Flag.” His speech was about as good Radicalism as could have been had in Massachusetts. 'Fite next toast was “Our Country’s Flag,” to which Col. O. A. Lochrane responded. This speech, we Hunk, was in miserable taste to come from a prominent rebel. The next speech Avas from General Dui-ii in response to the toast “Our Army and Navy—Tested in war, we trust them in peace.” This speech was, by odds, tiie most p-Uriotic and in the best taste of any delivered dur ing the evening. The seventh toast was reserved for ex-Governor Brown—“ Reconstruction Let it proceed under the Sherman bill, without appealing to the Supreme Court of the United States—the arbiter of our civil rights, and not of political issues.” Governor Brown responded, fully endorsing the sentiment, eulog ising Judge Ctiase, and saying “lie had no doubt they (the Judges ol the Su preme Court) would refuse to try the question raised by Mississippi and Georgia;*’ thus endeavoring to forestall the action of that high tribunal by throwing bis great weight against Georgia’s reuse in court. 1 nis is a bad record for the hero ot Forts Jack son. Pulaski and the Augusta Arsenal. \Ye Avill not accuse the city of Atlanta of being so politically rotten as tlie conduct of sonic ot her distinguished uuii a\ *.i!rJ iudh'iu ; put 're -alievt there fire cities, even i:i New England, more true to the cause of justice and the Constitution, than Atlanta, it' there i«, as we suspect. a considerable party [here who hold with Governor Brawn, Colonel Farrow and the (‘pinion News paper. Tin- Express. SAM’L H. SMITH axi> ROBT. P. MILAM Editors and Proprietors. Cartersville, (Jti. ipril 26, tS6t. llit Business Importance of Peace. The following article taken front the Augusta Press, represents the true condition of the South at the present time. The war left us very poor in deed, having swept off our negroes, money, and subsistat.ee, to a great de gree, and devastated our lands and de stroved our homes; all litis evil can be endured and still not entirely paral ize the energy and enterprise of the thus impoverished people, for they, in a few years at most, would have arisen from poverty to plenty if not affluenre, hut, this continued state of revolution in times when all hearts are panting for peace (so essential to prosperity), has well nigh demolished the scanty heritage left us from the wreck. Ev ery face wears the evidence of uncer tainty and disappointment. No one seems to know which way to turn or how* or where to commence life again. If he has no capital, lie has no credit, and prominent among our losses is that o {confidence. If he lias capital, he is loathe to invest it, not knowing what a day may bring forth—confiscation, tax tion, or starvation, either singly or combined. To move is perhaps a leap in the dark, to stand still is death and destruction. One says “hold,” while another says “onward.” All we want now, and all we ask is Peace, with an assurance of its continuation. .Take away our votes, depose us from office, but give us peace and quietude, sve ask no more to secure our future success. What we lack in means and appliances to recommence living, nature has lav ishly supplied in climate, soil, and re sources, and, - above all, the will. Only trjve us Peace and success is sure. O 'Flic great need of the South is peace. Not merely the hollow truce which stops the desolating march of armies and the red carnage of battle, but the assured and permanent adjustment of the cause of war, which puts in active exercise ail the arts and conditions of peace, which restores confidence, un locks, capital from the clutches of distrust, and establishes peaceful re lations between those lately at war. Such a peace, it must be admitted, has not been fully secured. We need not stop to inquire whether Ave have done all that a magnanimous victor should exact to secure peace; it is sufficient to know that still harsher terms are re quired, and that the blessings of peace will be denied us until we accede to them. The question is not, whether, as an abstract matter of right, these last exactions ought to be imposed, but whether ive can escape them by refus ing their acceptance or afford to risk the evils which may attend their re jection. For six long years the in dustry ofthe South lias been paralyzed; our fields deserted and laid waste : our workshops neglected, and every de partment of art and industry become prostrate, until the necessities of our impoverished and starving people appeal iti language more eloquent than tvords for an end of tiie vexatious conflict* J’he existence of actual war was scarce ly more fatal to the industrial interests of the country than the suspense which attends our present condition. It is this that prostrates tiade, that inter rupts labor and retards all enterprises for the improvement and development of the country. It is this that makes money scarce, for capital slums a coun try when the government is unsettled and society unstable ; and the scarcity of money defeats all substantial pro gress. Consequently we hear of shops closing for want of business, or ol means to pav tiieir hands; and of farms lying idle, because the OAvners can neither feed nor pay the laborers. A continuance of this state ot things must drive off much ofthe labor that is left us. and prevent the introduction of tabor cr c-»pt* *1 from cbroail. M e are requested to say tb;t the I 26th. (to-day.) - will he commemorated by the ladies of Kingston and vicinity, Avith appropriate ceremonies. A pro cession will be performed, hymns sung ! and probably an address delivered, and the graves of our soldiers decorated i n I with flowers. The ladies of Carters vilie and vicinity are incited Cos unite jin the ceremonies, and are requested to bring flowers with them. All are ! invited to attend. Let the ladies and | gentlemen of Cartersville and vicinity ! organize parties and go up and assist in j the solemnities of the occasion. Alav Day. —The first day of May is j rapidiy approaching, and we bear of |no celebrations, May partys, or Ex cursions in anticipation hereabouts.—- | Can’t we have a Sabbath School turn j out. ’ pic-nic. pleasure excursion, or j something to break off the throes of | political and financial convulsions ! which have so long distracted our rest and threatened our ruin ? Let us have a little^recreation, and something to remind us of tlie reminisences of the past and inspire our hopes for the fu ture. What say you ladies and gen tlemen of Cartersville and surrounding country ? Shall we have a little re creation, or shall we still continue to slew iu this awful state of torpidity? All may speak at once if they wish. Sabbatci Schools. —Nearly every sentence memorized in childhood and youth, is indeilibly impressed upon the memory, and has much to do with the formation of character ami habits in af ter life. Thus the importance of mak ing proper impressions upon the mind and hearts of the young. In ihe Sab bath School this work is most effect ually done. It io here the young mind is directed to J sns as a Saviour, and the affections elevated above- the grov eling objects of time and* sense. It is lo re the seed is deposited the fruits of A-viiich are to be gathered in middle life, and in hoary old age. It is here the heart is trained for holy communion and the lips for lisping hosannas of praise. Nearly all great and good men commenced life’s caieer as sabbath school scholars. It is the greatest aux ilery of the church—the first stepping stone into the church, the first round in the ladder upon which descends the choicest blessings of Heaven and the richest gifts of God. Mail} a poor, ragged outcast of earth can attribute their deliverance and salvation to this great mean of grace. Here the poor have been made rich —in immoital honors, and the ignorant made wise— in the lore of heaven. Wherever is found a cli?pel, school-house, or even a faintly circle, there the standard of | morality and piety may be raised by ! the organization of a Sabbath School. But look around us. See the number of children who have never entered within the pales of a Sabbath school, who are growing up in ignorance, in indolence and licentiousness, who, if if properly instructed might become the greatest lights in the church and the brightest ornaments in society. — Let us throw our influence all on the side of the sabbath school by attending ourselves and inducing all others to do likewise. The sabbath school—the nursery-of heaven.* *■ Nef.dingßeconstruction. —lt seems that in Brownlow’s dominion there are some left. The facetious local ol the Nashville Banner gives an ac count of an old negro, one Fritz and, who, forgetful of bayonets, was indul ging in the following serenade : I followed Old Mas’ Robert. For four years, near about, Got wounded in three places, And starved at ‘Point Lookout.' I cotched’ the ‘roomatism’ A eampi- g in the snow, But I killed a chance of’ Yankees, I’d like to kill some ‘rro.’ I hate the Constitution, This-great Republic’ too. I hates the freedmen’s buro In uniform of blue ; 1 hates the nasty eagle, With all his bras? and fuss, I hates th. Yankee nation — I hatgs ’em wuss and wuss! T A jd - ' - NICK NACKS. Josh Billings says there is nothing more touching in this life than to see a poor but virtuous young man strug gling with a moustache. At a municipal election in Tuscum bia, Ala,, on the Ist instant, Major Siqss received four-fifth? of the colored votes for Mayor, against the Radical candidate, who was a Bureau agent. Major Sloss was elected. Checkmate — John moves his arm ’round Julia’s neck ; She moves one square, aud whispers— check ! He nothing daunted moves right straight Ff sTp- t"h>-rs, ami palls out—“mate”! Tiie Rest:lt. The Baltimore Gazelle says : “We should like to know from some intelligent and candid man—for are some such—who approve of the policy of the Federal Government in I IS6I, and sustained it throughout the ! war, what he thinks of the result? If he will c*3st his eyes over the South he | will see only a devastated land and j beggard people. Fair cities and pleas i ant villages have been given to the flames, and thousands of peaceful home steads nothing remains save crumbling wails and tottering chimneys. Rail roads have been torn up, bridges de« troyed, fences burned and cattle driven 1 oflfor slaughtered in many parts of nine lor ten once prosperous States. Thou sands upon thousands of the inhabit ants of this great section of country having been deprived of the means of cultivating their lands, and are hold ing the latter by so insecure a tenure that they cannot borrow the little money they need. Men, women and ! children are all suffering the crudest * privations, and they are all living tin- J der a military despotism which has J supplanted the Constitution which the J war was ostensibly gotten up to pre serve, A region throughout which, a short time -ago, peace and plenty reigned, and whose crops of cotton, sugar and rice brought into it untold wealth, has relapsed into the condition : of an unorganized territory, whose I ° j population makes no more than enough to supply its daily wants. In the foreground of the ghastly and sicken ing picture may be seen the late con tended laborers now transformed into political puppets, They crowd into the already over-stocked towns and flock after the seedy and venal knaves who are sedulously haranguing them, and who are to help them in a little while to assume, in many places, po litical ascendancy over the white race. If our honest “loyalist*’ will turn his eyes then to the North, he will wit ness a different but very discouraging state of things. He will see a people who, through the passions and the license which civil war engenders, have become fearfully demoralizod, if depraved. So accustomed have they become to the exposure of fraud after fraud committed upon the Government by people who were professing to serve it faithfully and were fervent in their j protestations of patriotism —ro often | have they heard that a loyal man ren | dered his country a service when he took or destroyed a ‘traitor's’ proper ty, that they have almost ceased to blame a swindling or thieving ‘patriot.’ Nay, more, Butler is the glory of Massachusetts and a leader among her people. So frequently has the clang of ilie battle doors resounded through out the North—so often have the pub lic journals of that section, in obedience to the behests of Government officials, of high and low degree, been compelled to keep silenca to sp°aK only in a bond mail’s key, With 'bated breath and whispering humble ness”— so constantly oflate years lias the duty of non-resistance to despotism been preached from the pulpit, that the Northern People seem to have lost all that sense and love of constitutional liberty and that hatred of arbitrary power which they once boasted of as their chief characteristics. 'J' h e staunchest opponents of a military despotism are not ashamed to espouse the doctrine that an oppressed and helpless people ought not only submit' but should; lest worse things befall them, conciliate a tyrant by kissing the rod with which he smites them and by doing his bidding with as striied cheerfulness and hypocritical avowals of thankfulness for the maopiauimity which has prompted him to let them live. A few years before the war Mr. Choate, of Massacusetts, who had long watched the rising tide of demagogistn and corruption, exclaimed in a letter toafiiend; ‘Your estate is gracious that keeps you out of hearing of our politics, Anything more low, obscene, purulent Hie mainfold heavings of his tory have not cast up. We shall come to the worship of onions, cats and tilings vermiculate! ‘Renown and grace are dead !’ ‘There ‘is nothing serious in mortality.’ If any wiser saw or instance, ancient or modern, occurred to me to express the enor mous, impossible inanity of American Miings, I should utter it. Bless you r lot then which gives you to volcanos, earthquakes, feather-tinctured chiefs and dusky sights of the tropics.’ Could he arise now and listen to the recital of our story ol the war lor the Union aud the Constitution —could he sum up the hecatombs of those who sleep m bloody graves; count the human wrecks that nre drifting helplessly on the surges of life’s stormy ocean ; hear the multitud- J inous cries and wails which daily go up | Heavenward froy> hungry and desolate women and children—could he see the condition of the ravaged South, weigh the burthen of debt and taxation which the country is wearily bearing, and consider the irresponsible and unscrup ulous despotism which has set itselfover the laws and the Constitution, would he not, in agonies of shame and indigna tion, curse the day in which the Northern people demanded war? Can any hon est, Christian man look at the result and do otherwise?” Xews. Mr. Bonllv has sold out the Fort Valley Ledger to Geo. VV. Maddox, and retired from the business. Our compliments to the incoming editor and best wishes for his success. The Rev. R. K. Porter was install ed as Pastor ot the Central Presbyterian Church in Atlanta, on Sunday last. The President has pa rdoned ex- Goveruor Vance, of North Carolina. It is announced that Congress has determined to postpone until December, action upon the hill or resolution restoring the political rights of Ex-Gov. Brown. There are 143 schools for freedmen in Georgia, with 145 teachers, and 7,847 pupils, New York has contributed $170,000 to the relief of the South. fi*aF"The charter election in Albany N. Y., resulted in the election of the Democratic city ticket, by Seventeen hundred majority. The Illinois constitutional convention will be composed of seventy live Re publicans and twenty-five Democrats. The New Mayor of Augusta.— Mr. B. F. Conley lias been appointed by General Pope to the Mayoralty of the city of Augusta. Lee <s* Gordon’s Mills, which were often referred to during the progress of the campaign around Chattanooga, were burned on Thursday night. Gen. R. 11. Chilton, late of Gen. Lee’s st iff, is now agent of the Colum bus (Gu,) Manufacturing Company. Dr. Sam. Bard, of the Era, lias been admitted to the bar on a license front the Supreme Court of Louisiana. J. C. Peters, of Georgia has been appointed agent lor the distribution of seeds in the South, and to perfect tfie list of Southern statistical correspond ence, and to co-operate in the organiz ation and improvement of Southern agriculture. Mississppi in the Supreme Court. Our dispatches inform us that lion. R. J. Walker has filed an amended bill in the Supreme Court in behalf of Mississippi, and the U. S. Attorney General moved to dismiss both the Mississippi and Georgia bills for want of jurisdiction. It *vas agreed by counsel that the motion sliouid be ar gued the 26th, next Friday. .||M h I New Spring and Summer GOODS, Clothing, Hats, Boots, Shoes, and a thousand and one things too tedious to e numerate, just received and for sale cheap for cash , at J. ELSAS’ Cheap, Cash Store, Cartersville, Bartow co. April 28th. New* Advertisements. • STEWART COOK STOVE. THE LATEST IV OX HER And Most Complete Improve ment or the Age. $5,000,000 MADE WfTH THE STEWART COOK STOVE, "VOT by the makers and seller*, but t v the users -L, Kiuin testimony furnished by the c.ass of petsci is refernd to. It appears that the said Move, on account ot its dumb Illy and fnei-savin* qualdus, I,as p ov«vt> a source of incunie l<> families w) o huv, useu it,avera ging at least fourteen dollars a year. 30,000 of those stoves have been put Into use during the lHst eight**" years. Allowl K e ch stove to have been used ti n year.. o an average, the whole amount of saving, with Interert at six per cent., is five million of dollar*. The price of quietness, comfort, and health Secured to s family by the use of a culinarv appiratus per fee 'y ad'p'eil to tbelr wants, cannot be reckoned in and llirsand cent*, Rut we have not space here to tell you of nil the vir tue* and advantages that these Stoves p sses over all others. So we cordially invite all, especially the la dles, to CALL AND EXAMINE before purchasing elsewhere. ALSO CIDER MILLS, STRAW-CUTTERS, Ths Latest Improvement in Plows. &c., &c, We offer the celebrated Phtenlx and Wilcox, Gibbs A Co.'* MANIPULATED GUANO, We also offerto the public ail kinds of Selected Fam ily Groceries and Provisions ol all sorts ; also u choice assortment of l'aucy Groceries, Caudles, Nuts etc., etc. As we are dealers lu Agricultural imp'rinent*. Ma chinery Ac., we Invite Correspondence lr. m ah pai t' of the American onion, from Manufacturers of tin sume and i tier ourselves us ageuts for llutrsule. Indeed' so tar us ti’iue is concerned, we ha veto say that ’ “No pent-up Utica contructg our pow’r* ; 'lire wnoie Uuuudle a continent is ours 1" JOHNSON & ECHOLS, Commission Merchants, Whitehall street, ATLANTA, CA. tyOne Thousand pounds of llutter offered 10 the puouo—very nice. April 20,1:01. wSw Montvale Springs, 18 6 7. TIII3 popular Summer resort, having been placed In thorough repair, and furnished tviM new Furniture, will he opened for visitors on the Ist of JUNE next, under the direction and control of the undersigned— Proprietors of the American Hot l, Atlanta, On. .Montvale pres, nt* the strongest attractions to both the ii yu id and pleasure-seeker, no less on account of its retirement and the beauty of Its surrounding secne ry, than . f the restorative powers of it* water. tVe have reduced the price of Hoard to the lowest Ugutes comisie.it with a proper provision for the Entertain ment of our Guest*. Board, per Day, fa OO “ w eek 2U (Id “ per Month, CO 00 with an allowance tor families. Travellers by Railroad reach the Springs by special conveyance from Loudon, or by regular dai.y mill coaches from Knoxville, Tenn. WHITE 6c WHITLOCK. April 26,18 GT. Attention Millers! We have just received a large Invoice of the bos l Double-anker Bolting Cloths, of all desirable numbers, which we offer LowJor Ca»h ! MILL PICKS, SYTHES, GRAIN CRA DLES, WIRE CLOTH, and many other articles which you need and which we are desirous of selling, Call and see us when you visit Atlanta. J. M. & J. C. ALEXANDER, Whitehall Street, ATLANTA. GA, April 26, 1867 vvGin Georgia, Bartow County. Superior Court, March Term, 186 7. Joseph E Whitehead, v Libel lor Divorce. vs, l Rule to Perfect Scr- S a rail F, Whitehead. ) vice. I T appearing to the Court, by the return of the Sh*r .l iff, that the defendant does not reside In the County, and it further appearing that the does not rcsiue in this State: It is, on motion ol counsel, < Vdei ed, t hat said defendant appear and answer at 'he next teim of this court, else that the case be considered In default, and the plaintiff allowed to proceed ; and it is further Ordered, That .his Rule be published In t'.e Cartert ville JCxpiens once a month for four months. JAMES MILNER, J, S. C. C. C. A true extract from the minutes. April 26, 1 “67. T. A. Word, clerk. Georgia , Bartow County. Bartow Superior Court, March Term, 1867. E’iza Dunahoo , vs, VDili for Injunction and Ro- G R. M. Tracy. ) lief. IT appearihg to the Court, by the return of the Sher iff, iu the above stated case, that the defendant does not reside n this county, and it further appearing that he Is anon resident of the State; I' is, heicby Ordered, That the defendant appear at the neit term of ibis court and plead, dtmur r.r answer to said Hill, and default ihereof said Bill be taken pro coii/tnxo, and that this order be publish and once a month for thiee months in the Curtmxville Expretat. JAMES MILNER, J. 8. C. C, C. A tru" extract from the minutes. April 26, 1867, T. A. WORD, C'erk. Shoot, Luke, or give up jour a- tt nsrin ■ *. rrHOSB having Guns or Pistols mCBEIHL' J at the shop of J. F. A J. Q UA K- M Ei.L, upon which tl e money i» due for Repairs, are hereby notl fled to call, at once, pay charges, ar.d take them away, or they will be sold lor repairs. We can’t eat nor wear guns or pistols, and wc have nub working simply tor ar, accommodation. Cartcrsville, On., April 19, 1867, Thresh out your Wheat! T *m still the AGENT for the sale of those excellent J Ken'ucky THRESHERS, both four horse and two horse SIZES. The reeert improvements made *n these THRESHERS rend r them the n ost desirable of »ny 'hat are now offered for salp. They are easily MANAGED, and not liable 'o get out OF OJWR. Order* solicited, the sooner the RETT ER, *o tha the MACHINES may arrive in good TIME Carte.sville.Ga. Apr. 19«v2m. J. J. HOWARD REMEMFIB.—Roback s blood pills” are made both I ssspsS readily in the it .tnacli.