The Cartersville express. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1867-1870, June 07, 1867, Image 2

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Fn-m the Giifiin !St;sr. Letter Irani 11. El. JolniHoii. Guffis, »i.. June 3, 1867. yjr, Editor: —I am far from being t i.‘lined to write anything for the pub" lie, bill feel constrained to ask a small space in your paper, as l believe it to he tin* ilmy of evert one who Ins any regard for the principles of republican hbcrtv, to do In- duty in the present rrisis. for I am eoinp -lled to confi-- Tin I am more apprehensive of the Ins ol our republican iusiiiuiions now, than at any lime during the rebellion. Then my trust w is in the justice of the Union cause and the patriotism o* the Union army. t’ney did their duty and did it wail; bullion the Government seems to lie in the hands of those who have no regard f»r the constitution, hut seem to legislate alone for the perpetuation of their p irty. regardless of the express ed constitution il rights of the State. It is well, if not widely known, that I uof' only opposed secession in its inripien cy, but that J staked all ol life, liberty and property for the Union and the (hutstitution. and l claim and 1 believe 4t will be conceded by those who know ,u: best, that l am entitled to as much credit as any m m North or South for iuy devotion to the Union, who did not l ake up arms in the defence of the <1 tveruinent. \nd for what did I slake all? N>t for any party. No, but for ill; Union and the Cnnetilution. 'J'he rebels have been wliipped —not over jjo vered —and no one was more rejoiced at it than myself. Why? Simply h.'c iusc l considered it a Constitutional Union triumph. I thought that it set tled a great national question. It freed iny si tves, and I thought lint I was well paid for them by having my own freedom secured, and being freed from daily dread of mobs and vigilance committees. But I am sorry to be «o u pel led to confess, but candor corn pells it. th it to-day we are as far from the Union harbor of safety as we ever wer •. It seems that during this re bellion. as it lias been in all others, mo-i of the honmi. liberty-loving men of the loyal Stales went into the army, and that the halls of our national capi ia I to-day is filled with a class of men win are as far from he:ng consiilutional n*n mi m*u as were the rebels. For a islait.re, the Sherman Bill, one of their ■ ct-, in my humble opinion, is as pal p ild * a vi dution of the constitution as • a i he conceived of, and yet we are i lire atoned with the “raw head ami Idv) id.y bones” ol confiscation if we do not violate our amnesty oaths by ndopt iig it. Sell-respect, in my opinion, re quire i all men, ami especially constitu tional union men. to spurn it, and lake tlu: cons quenecs. I am counseling vvith Union men, for l know that l have Julie influence with secessionists, for I have no p diticul sympathy for rebels nor radicals. I know that there are a lew of those with whom l have acted Ihr years past, and whom l used to meet ii secret ami * ,Mr ol the v.niou cause, who entertain, or profess i • entertain, dinorent views Irotn mine; mid while I have duo inspect for them as alien, l most confess that 1 look upon them as policy men, and pandering to ihe radicals for place and power, who, i permitted, will lead us to inevitable i tiiu. I think there is hope in the land yet am! I boli ve that if \\c will main tain our self-respect by rejecting the Sli >nn:i:i Disunion Bill, v\ liieh is left to our choice, and stave oir the poison cap, that justice will yet be done us by ihe rising ol the great conservative neart ol the people North. But il we invite aggression by its acceptance, then all hope of republican libirty is gone forever from this once proud and I appv land. lam for the written constitution, and for myself, my course •is plainly marked out, and 1 think that is the only one that any man, and «specially constitutional union nr n. can pursue, and maintain his consist ency ami self-respect, and that is to register and vote all who can, and vote for no mail who will not pledge himself to oppose reconstruction under the •Sherman Disunion Bill, and also vote ••no Convention,” and if the worst comes, then “thou eanst not sav that 1 did it.” DAVE 11. JOHNSON. JLoolt IJt foiT you Gcai». The New Orleans Picayune of the L/itli Mas a .fang and carefully written editorial headed, “Caution to Kmi grants,” in which it earnestly dissuades planters, and others from the Southern States, from emigrating to Brazil or British Honduras, showing 1 by irrefuta ble arguments that they cannot better iliemsoivesor their condition in those countries, hut, on the contrary, tha l they arc doing better here. 4 July Session of Congress. Developments leave no doubt that the leading Radicals are determined, if possible., to secure t July session of Congress. They have added to the impeachment hue and cry, and the additional plea that the national nnat)- eial situation demands legisl t on.—r Judge Spalding, of Ohio, who, it will he retnemnered, violently opposed a summer session, is now claimed as having been convinced that one is needed. It is said, however, that more than half the Senators, and a great number at tne members of the House, "ill iie in Europe at that time.— Daily Press r-sT'OM/Jie JOili id .May, l fi 6s, Jef ferson Davis was captured at Irwinton Ga.; on the 10ih of M ay, 18G0, he .was indicted i.jp treason by the Grand Jury «>f Norlb.N, and on the lOth of May, SKi?, hr was released trom Fortress Monroe upon Habeas Corpus. { friju \Y 1 1 e is a four-quart meafurrfiliP a side saddle ’ fua ;««** it ho’ !s a 03! on { a gti 11 jii • ' The Express. ■££J> ft gggfej|||„ SAMI* H. SMITH aw ROBT. P, MILAM Editors ami Proprietors. I'urlerMVillc La, June <*, is<>7. j i Ifoni a rontiident I e where a letter from II. Johnson, Griffin, (hi., which we find in the that city. Mr. J we have knoAvn for years, 1 and can vouch for his unswerving de : votion to the TUniori, not*” only gyring I the war. but long before was precipitated. lie withstood the jeers, taut ami ridicule of seces sionists which were sq lavishly heap ed upon him oil account of his politi i cal views, but was never known to dis own m deii^' Jiis allegiance btrand Ibve lor Slates Government.— i Though often overpowered bv force of j numbers in argument, and frowned down by popular opinion, lie fearlessly and boldly enunciated his attachment lor the Union, lie is certainly one true, consistent Southern Union Man upon whom there is no discount. Our notion is and lias been that the i South fiad better adopt the shortest • and quickest route that will lead us ■ hack into the Union, and restore to us j all our privileges and ammunities even | though it does lead through tho valley |of humiliation. But when we read a : letter from the pen of so staunch a U j nion man as Mr. Johnson is and has | been, planting himself upon the Con stitution of the U. S. and laws under the same, and viewing the political condi tion of the country in the light that he does, we are almost upset in our no tions and views, ami scarcely know w but to think, speak or do. If he was a strict partisan, we would know how to take him, but he is a firm admirer of the Union, and has proven it Urne and again by staking life, liberty and property on its perpetuation. While ! lie is uncompromising *iu his devotion I UI ilie Union, at the same he is mag" | naniuious, kind and merciful towards i his once foes but now vanquished.— Read his letter. Georgia Factories. The following article on factories we take from the Memphis Appeal, and submit it to the readeis of the Express with the hope that it may afTori 1 some additional light on the subject ofcotlon and wool factories, a subject which has elicited some interest on the part of the j citizens of this place and section. All | are alive to its importance, but the po verty of the people and country is so abject at ibis time that we don't fee! able really to biiid a respectable pig pen. But, then, we hope it will not always be so, and we want to fan and keepalive the little spirit of enterprise that has been kindled in the bosom of some of our people, until providence enables vis to consummate the great work already partially projected. iNo section in the South affords more am ple facilities for the erection, propell ing and feeding of these great enterpri ses than this timber and stone abun dant, water-power unlimited, and min eral and agricultural resources ample, no finer country for sheep-raising, and the Western & Atlantic Railroad run ning along the d’viding ridge between the mineral and agricultural districts. But all these advantages are known and appreciated by us, and it may be truth fully said of us that the spirit is will ing but the purse is weak. As early as 1838, nearly thirty years ago, a cotton factory was built on the Chattahoochee at Columbus, Ga. Its beginning was small, but it steadily in creased in business and prosperity down to the day of its destruction by the federals in the spring of 1805. On the return of peace it was rebuilt, and down to the present time it has been engaged in the protitabie spinning of yarns. Some 2500 spindles are run ning now, and the number will be doubled the present year. The <;om'i>§j winter, a ! so, it will again enter upon the manufacture of cloths. It is said to have water po\ycr enough to run 100,000 spindles,/and to increase its manufacture of- yarns and cloths in «The capital stock is 8250, root!; with privilege of increasing to $1,000,000. The tirst enterprise proving very profitable, another company was or- gan'Zed mi that viciui'y in 1850. and went into operation two years after with a capital stock-of paid ill. The first four years it paid an annual dividend or twenty-five' per cent. Soon alter the capital stock was increased to -8270,000, ami three hun dred hands were constantly employed. In 1800 it consumed 2392 bales of cotton and sU2,bales of wools averaging 5 pouods to the bale, and produced 69 ) hales ol osnuburgs, thirl \ -four hales coltouades, 240 bales colored woolen goods. 331 bales shirting, 387 bales of yarn weighing each three hundred pounds, 9G7 bales cotton stripes, 533 hales kerseys, 650 pieces cassimeres, 390 bales of sheeting, 992 coils of rope, 21,281 yards of sewing thread, and 2625 pounds ol shop twine. 'The fac tory was, also, burned by Wilson during his raid through Alabama and Georgia, but immediately after the return of peace rebuilt. 'J'he capital stock now is §450.000, of which §137,- 500 is paid in. 'The new buildings are nearly ready io receive the machinery, and when in full operation will employ 500 hands and run 300 looms, with wool and cotton spindles in proportion. And what hasJjeen done on the Chat trhoachcp, rh,e New Orleans Pic* uyur 7T, can he done ali through the south. There is no country in the world more bounteously supplied with suitable water power, and none whose climate is any way more favorable. — Instead of a dozen cotton and woolen factories in the Slate of Georgia, there might easily he found site.* for five hundred, enough to work up all the cotton and wool raised in that state, at least into yarns, and to supply all the people with suitable clothing. The same may he said of the Carolinas, of Alabama, Mississippi and 'Tennessee 'Through all those states run living streams of purest water admirably adapted to all the purposes ufinanufae~ turing. There is no climate more healthy. The raw staple is ready at hand. There is a vast market at home, and what is not wanted for consumption here can he exported at immense profit to the north and to foreign countries. 'There is no reason in the world why we could not have as good machinery as they have in Euglan !, and labor as skilled, for thousands of starving oper atives there wot,ld eagerly jump at the chance to emigrate hither, and compa nies, like those of the Chattahooche, thus supplied would, he capable of turning out the finest fabrics known in Lancashire, and supply a large portion of the markets of the world. It is reported that Horace Greklev has written to J. C. Breckenridge. requesting him to return to his country and take part in Reconstruction. [Opinion. A number of the garrison at Rome, Ga., trot inc-How after being paid off the other day, and sixteen deserted. A reward of thirty dollars each is offered for their arrest.* Gov. Jenkins has pardoned John E. Haves, editor of the Savannah Repub lican, who has been confined for some lime in the Chatham Jail. We think this act of Gov. Jenkins wise am! merciful. Florida is said to be filling up with immigrants faster than any other South ern State. Settlers, chiefly from New England and New York are going there in great numbers. A colored candidate for the State Convention, in Flu«ana county, Vir ginia, announces himself in favor of a low taiiff, no taxes, plenty of money at the South, and cheap whiskv especi ally. A Home for Mr. Davis. —The Mississippians are inaugerating a move ment to raise means to purchase a home for Mr. Davis, at the capital of t!ie State. o@“There has been a split in the Radical Convention at Nashville, and each faction has nominated its candid ate for Congress. The Convention was principally composed of negroes. Returns of tfie registration in Lou isiana show that on an average seven negroes are registered in eacii parish to one white man. The lion. C. L. Vallandigh am is to deliver the address before the literary societies at. Oxford, Miss , University at the ensuing commencement, A couple of gentlemen in Rocking ham county, Ya. have obtained a patent to make whisky from cornstalks. Ir is ettimated that the total vote of Louisiana, if all were registered, would be forty-seven thousand whiles, and uventy-two thousand blacks. factory has just been com pleted in Cuthbert, the operatives of which are chiefly daughters of deceased Confederate soldiers. —Rev. G. IV. Salvidge the Agent of die Freed men’s Bureau, <u Dalton, has been relieved. James A. Crocker, of Rome, pub lishes a card in the Courier announcing his withdrawal from the Union League in that place. i roscrl^f| by lilac Loyal League. I.ETTKR OF MR, GREELFY — HE HURLS DEFIANCE AT Till? • •ja.OCKHEADS.” From the New York Tribune. lUj these Presents Gredin": To Messrs, George W. Blunt, John A. Kennedy, John O. Stone, Stephen 11% ntt. and thirty others, members of the Union League Club : Gentlemen : I wa« favored, on the 16th instant, irv an official note Irom our eveicoiirteous President, John Jay. notifying me that a requisition had be- n presented to him for “a special meeting of the an jgarlv day, for the purpose of taking into consideration the conduct of Horace Greeley, a mem ber 01. the club, who has become a boiulcinan for J< fferson Davis, late chiel officer of the rebel government.” [We here omit some phraseology in t !i e way of courtesy which is not es sential.— Eds.] 'The single point whereon I have any occasion or wish to address you is your virtual implication that there is something novel, unexpected, astound mg, in my conduct-in the matter sug gested by you as the basis of your ac tion. 1 chose not'to rest under tiiis assumption, but t<V prove that you, being persons of ordinary intelligence, must know better, On this point I cite you to a scrutiny of the iccord. [Mr. Greeley here introduces extracts from the Tribune which prove that, from the dale of Lee’s surrender to the present time, he advocated magnanimi ty toward the South, universal amnesty and no shedding ol blood or other act of revenge. “Slavery,” he said in 1853, “having, through th& rebellion, com mitted suicide, let the North and the South unite to bury the carcass, and tjben clasp haiiils. across the grave.”— Mr. Greeley got** on to recite how he was subjected to renew partisan assaults qf the murder of Mr. Lincoln. He says :] At once, a concerted howl of denun ciation and rage was sent up from every slide against me by the little creatures d'honi God, for some inscrutable pur l .. . . .* p’-osc, peinuts to eutt a majority of our minor journals, echoed by a yell of “•Stop my paper !” irom thousands ol iijnperfectly instructed readers of the 'Tribune. One impudent puppy wrote me to answer i a'egor ea y whether I was or was not in favor ol hanging Jeff’. Davis, adding that I must stop his paper if! 1 were not ! Scores volunteered as surances that 1 was defying public opinion—that most of my readers were against me—as if I could be induced to white what they wish said rather than what they need to be told. 1 never before realized so vivid the baseness of the editorial vocation according to the vulgar conception of it. ’The din raised about my ears now is nothing to that I tljen endured and despis'd. lam bu nffiiated by the refieelion that it is (or was) in the power- ofe such insects to innoy me, even by pretending to dis cover with surprise something that 1 liuve for years b<en publicly and enr pnatically proclaiming. 1 [Wo omit what Mr. Greeley says ctluceniing an adherence to his life expressed aims, again reiterated con cerning Jefferson Davis, though plied with the promise of the United States j Spiatorship from New York.] j Gentlemen, f shall not attend votir | meeting this evening. - I have an en gagement out of town,' and shall keep | it. J do not recognize yon as capable of judging, or even fuliy-coniprehending me. You evidently regard me as a weak sentimentalist, misled by a maud lin philosophy. I arraign you as narrow-minded blockheads, who would like to be useful to a great and good cause, but don’t know how. Your at tempt to base a great, enduring party on the bate and wrath Necessarily en gendered by a blood}* civil war is as though you should plant a colony on an iceberg which had somehow drifted, into a tropical ocean. I .tell you here that, out of a life earnestly devoted to the good of human kind, your children will select my going to Richmond and signing that bail-bond as the wisest act, and will feel it did mote for freedom arid humanity than all 'of you were competent to do, though you had lived to the age of Methuselah. 1 ask nothing of you, then, hut that you proceed to your end by a direct, frank, manly way. Don’t sidle off into a mild resolution of censure, hut move the expulsion which I deserve if 1 de serve any reproach whatever. All 1 care for is that you make this a square, stand-up light, and recoid vour judg ment by yeas and nays. I care not hejw lew vote with me, nor how many vote against me,; lor 1 know.that the latter will repent it in dust and ashes before three years have passed. Un derstand, once for all, that I dare you and defy you. and that I propose to j fight it out on the line that l have held from the day < f Let's surrender. So long as any man was seeking to over throw our Government, he was my enemy ; from the hour in which lie laid down his arms, he was my formerly erring country man.' So long as any is ■ at heart opposed to ilje unity, ' the Federal authority,'or to that asser tion) of the equal rights pf all men which fas become practically identified with loyalty and nationality, I shall do my best to deprive him of power; but whenever he ceases lobe thus, I demand 1 is restoration to all the privileges of American citizenship. I give you fair notice that 1 shall urge the rc-eniranehiserueiw of those now proscribed tor rebellion, so soon as ] shiiil (eel confident that this course is consistent with tiu; fteedom of the blacks and toe unity rff the Republic, ait Li that 1 shaiJ .•-oi'o.nl a jtccali for si! now in exile for participation in the re bellion, whenever the country shall have been so thoroughly paoifud that its saicty wiil not thereby he endanger ed. And so, gentlemen, hoping that > i»u will henceforth comprehend me somewhat better than you have done, 1 remain years, Horace Greeley. jXcw Fork, May 23, 1807. Confiscation. THE SECRET OF RADICAL STRENGTH IN THE SOUTH. i'iie Helena, Arkansas, correspond* enl of tlie Memphis .Ivuhtnche alludes to the prevailing idea in the Arkansas freedmen’s minds: The most singular illusion prevades the entire element ol our negio popu lation, touching the threatened roniis cation of Southern homesteads, by the Radical Congress, tv lien it meets in July next. Scarcely a grown-up man or weman of African extraction, in town or country, but believes that he or she will very shortly be placed, by virtue of a Congressional edict in possession of the comfortable homes and broad acres of liis or her whilom master or mistress.’ This subject and its proxi mate realization is thoroughly can vassed under the seal of clan and ‘ colored” confidence, by every group of ebon idlers who meet together on the highway, in fence corners, or at the doors of their cabins, and finds now and then expression from the lips ol indiscreet, dissatisfied and “unfaithful stewards,” twitted by their employers for their idleness, and urged to better conduct—“De culled people will soon hah all dese plantations,” is urged by the foolish and the vicious among the blacks every day in extenuation and excuse of idleness and gross negligence of duty, or both. Such, says the Cherokee Georgian, are the rascally and pernicious teach ings of the white leaders of the “Loyal Leagues” in Georgia, to attend the dangt rous and clandestine meetings ol which thousands of the poor Africans are induced, by such vain hopes, to lose a day’s work every week, and to spend, in contributions for expenses, a portion of their hard earnings, which go to sustain a class of men who care no more for the true interests and happi ness of the blacks than il th-'y were so many sheep. —[// ile/iigen ccr. The New York Herald, for what reason we are at a loss to know, con j tinr.es to denounce Chase, Underwood, Greeley, Gerritt Smith, anj all who were proximately or remotely instru mental in the release of Mr. Jefferson Davis, on what it persists in terming “stiaw bail.” Nor is il satisfied with mere abuse and vituperation, but it is lining all it can to Stir up the worst pas sions ofThe mobile, valgus, by editorial leaders, such as the one contained in ttie Herald of Monday last, headed : “No Treason—the National Debt a National Swindle.” We have already referred to tiiis singular course of the Herald, and must confess that, accustomed as we arc, and long have been, to the vagaries and sudden summersaults of that versatile and manysided sheet, we carnal hut be surprised at its present hitter and agrarian altitude. Os course it is galling that Mr. Greeley should have got 850,000 worth of advertising from a Copperhead municipal corpora tion, and extremely unpalatable to a sensation writer like the Herald to have i been outdone by the Tribune in the Jeff . D vis bail business; but these cannot be plead as adequate reasons for pro posing repudiation of the national debt. We can al® understand that the Herald may haveV™ one of the object&in view in this to damage CltfleL Jus tice ('base’s’chances for ne.vt ffres- Jdeney. But this again, it wnulueeem to us, could be managed in kss equivocal manner. To talkrrf im peaching Chase not Registers of Bankruptcy, as has been doing and for not Mr. Davis, is simple fatuity. \ [Charleston soil's. From Washington. Washington, May 21, noon. ! President leaves here on the Ist and ! will he in Raleigh on the 4th of June. Judge Chase has granted a writ of error in the cast: of the United States vs. Joseph Bruin, whose properly was confiscated by Judge Underwood and sold during the war. The writ was grounded—First: The District Court condemned and sold the absolute estate I of the petitioner in and to property, which judgment was beyond the power of the Court to pronounce. Second: The condemnation of property was for treason, of which the party could not be adjudged 'guilty except upon the finding of a jury. Third: The pro ceedings were in admiralty when they ! should have been upon the common law I side of the Court by information and not by libel. The New York Herald is alarmed at the results of the Radical crusade a i gainst the South. Congress did the ; mischief and it very prooerly appeals to Congress to remedy it as follows : “Congress should come to the rescue on this point. It sliould certainly as semble in July and take measures to i provide against political campaigning in ; districts not politically free, but subject !to military law. if it does not we shall J sge undone all that has heretofore bee h [done toward a restoration of the 1 States.” t —The Governor of Missouri has ofFerd a reward of three hundred dni - lars each for the arrest of the gang wh o robbed the bank a! R:r*hiut»u, ui that 'Stat' the' other da v. Ma VliGlii.l'l and the Imp rial govern ment iu Mexico has effectually p aved out, and : he is now a prisoner in the hands of the lib erals. Thus ends the struggle in Mexico, which has been long and heated. What wid be done with him has not yet* transpired, tho’ if he escapes death it will be by the skin of ilia teeth. The nesrro boy who killed Bud Ham monds in Aiianta some months since, and who was to have expiated his crime upon the gal hws on io-ii.iv, has been respited by Gov. Jenkins. One freodmail tilled another at or rear Adairsville, one day this week. have not learned any ofthe particulars of the affair further than that the killing was done The Supreme court is now is ses sion at Milledgevi le. Judges Harris and Walk ’er presiding. Judge l.umpt in was visited hy Ia paralletic stroke, a few days since, at Athens, | and his recovery is thought doubtful, j N. B. Since wri.ing the above the South ern Watchman b ings us the sad intelligence of his death, in Athens; on Tuesday last. Tl' e have received several communications which will make their appearance as soon us our limited space will admit of it. Why don’t Wilcox & Gibbs advertise their splendid Sewing Machines more extensively I Because they cannot make them as last as they can sell them ! While in Atlanta, a few days since we called into the popular Dry-Goods house of Messrs. J H. White & Cos., and found them busily engaged in measuring off and wrapping up goods, for the delighted throng of smiling faces and sparkling eyes that lined their coun ters, and upon their counters and tables were piles upon piles and heaps upon heaps of the riches and most beautiful goods, while their shelves abounded with almost every variety of goods, notions, etc., ofthe latest styles and the finest fabrics. Upon the whole, they have a superb stock of goods and are selling them at the lowest figures. See advertisement- The L'quor House of 11. M. Rose & Cos., Atlanta, Ga., sustains a reputation for keeping and sel ingfine and pure liquors tha hut few like dealers ever attain. T ev chal I urge comparison or competition in the South. They have a very superior stock on hand, and are anxious to secure the patronage of liquor dealers throughout Cherokee Georgia. See card in another co man. IWIJQOOR STORE. “ Wh lesalc Dealers la Brandien, Wines, W liiskeys, Gins, Rums. Ate. &c. No 2 Granite Block, Broad SI r. Atlanta, Ga. IMPORTED AND DOMH3TIC LIQUORS of every Grade offered at low figures. Country dgjtlers are specially invited to give us a c ill and sample our I/quurs, width we guarantee to be as we re) rest m them. And satisfaction given in every transaction. June 7—tc. R M. ROSE & CO. . WOOL CARDING. The undersigned is putting up machinery for running wc ol cards at his mills on Etowah river near tbs VV, »- tern A. Atlantic R. R. bridg,-, 1% miles f. oin Cartmsv lie and wll be p r t pared to do loie carnine about the Ist fit July. Work will be done in a satisfactory manner and at reasonab e ra-ts. Cards all new. Is also prepared j to grind wheat, and corn. Patronage ts r*-S| ei-tfolly solicited. jeT—3m \V. J AtcCLATCUEY. Hlft •Acres of Bartow I sell three tracts of of Land embracing l 1290 ACRES. *YI will give the best bargains now in the county. \' Ist Tract. \ 9JO acres—4oo acres cleared, under goad fence and in a high stale of cultivation. The whole tract lies well, produces freely and is pleasant to cultivate. T is ncu I'WO MEHCII 'NT MILLS. CHURCHES AND HIGH SCHOOLS convenient—health and society good. The improven ents consist of a newly finished dwelling with six rooms—G!u house Smith's shop and other necessary outbuildings, together with six other separate tenements on the place. 2nd Tract, Contains 320 acres—SO cleared, improvements common. This place Les 1 mile of the town of Eutiariee. 3rd Tract, Contains 50 acres, one half cleat ■ and. The above lands can be bought separate or together, Terms e sy. Interest in prerent crop sold with th place ii eesired and posses.iou given, lorty days from and .y of Bale. R. T. LEbKE. June 1,1867. w3tn Bartow Mterifl’s .Sale. WILL be gold before the Courthouse door in the town "f Cartersvil e, on the first Tuesday in July next, within legal sale hoars, the tellowing property to wit : One two acre lot in the town ol M m uses, known us the O. L. Upshav lot, levied on as the property W. 0. Bruce to satisty an attachment. H fa issued from Bartow county co„rt in favor of T. C. Crane against said Bruce. Property pointed ut in said fi fa. Also one Hay horse, levied on as the property of Berry man F Mostelier, to satisfy a fi fa in favor of the Inte rior court of Bartow County, state of Geotgia, v « said Berryman F. Moste ler. A so one Sorrel horse, levied on as the property of John Shuler, to s tisfy a ti fa in favor of the Inlet ior Court of Bartow county, state oi Georgia, v ssatd John Sfaule-. Also one Buggy, levied on as the property of Zacha riah B. Aycock, to satisfy a fi fa in favor of th» Inter or court of Bartow county, state of Georgia, ®« so and Zichartsh B Aycock, Also one Brown Mule, levied on as the property of Jonathan McDow,to a itisty afifa in favor of the Infe rior court of Bartow county, state of Georgia, ® 8 said Jonathan McDow, Also one Sorrel Mule, levied on as the property of Bay lis W. Lewis to satisfy a ti fa in favor of Inferior court of Bartow county, Ga.,®«said H W Lewis. Also one Bay Horse, levied ou a.t the property of J M Rogers, to satiny a fi fa in favor of Inferior court of Bartow county, state of t * said J M. Rogers. W.L. GOOD WIN, Sheriff, June 6, 1867. Postponed Sale. Also, at the same time and place w'il be sold. One lot of lumber lying in the town of Carters viPe in rear of Loewenstein A Pfeifer’s store, four thousand feet more or less lying on lot adjacent to A, F. Morrison, Levied on as the property of Caleb Tompkins, to satisfy a fi fa issued from the County Court of Bartow in favor of Samuel Ga>r»U vs said; Tvmpk'ne jt fi. 16*1. W.L. GOODWiX, Sheriff, HO VE PEOPLE CP THE TERRITORY OP GEORGIA !—LOOK TO YOUR SNTEREET! And come to the Store of And buy your Clothing, Hats, Boots and Shoes at New York Cost. We are determined to confine oueselves strict] y to a Fancy Dry-Goods trade. Hence we make the above proposition to sell out that p?rt of our stock AT COS \\ Country Merchants Look to your interest! Ladies call at our store and !>uv wmir Fancy Dry-Goods Cheap. We arc aivare of the hardness ofthe times and the scarcety of money in the country, and with direct reference to the wants ol the trade, we bought our Goods at prices that will authorize us to sell them low indeed, and we are determined to sell as we bought, as now our motto is quick salts and short ptofiis. J. IL WHITE $ CO, East side Whitehall Street. June 7,—3m. Atlanta, Ga. Griffin Star please copy. E.EDWI2TU & IFOIXI. Atlanta, Ga. The nt'entlnn of Drtigg'st-, Merchants nnd other* i, invited to our anti -l stock of Dings. Me li cii.cs, Dyestuff , Imported nnd American Fancy Goods I’ei turneries, Toilet articles &<■., & •. Also in store an.' t" at rvo 25b Hox»g Frcmh and A niei ican Window tilns-, 2000 P.mi da Putty ( n lil older ) Id L .Is Pure “Non Exp' Mivtp'l o.| OP, far pvefern Me to the I atte-t Petro O , 6 Kills Tenets Oil, o lit,la White- O.ik I.u .ricating Oil, 5 libD Urd Oil, Sp -r o . P N Hta foot Oil end Vatltishes f ail hml 1000 Buis VWi te Lead and Zincs—Large lot Spanmsh Flout 1. digo, WARRANTED EDOD. 100 MY LEDISH LEECHES, a large varletyof Patteut Hetfittttes, WINES AND LIQUORS, <fco. &!., ail Id vvuiua are offered vbiu i.U W. Visitors to our City will find at the **&!▼> ©a®® it ft most delightful Refrigerating Brink, drawn from the Famous and beautiful "ARCTIC" jink Jfoimt, ' call and try it. REDWINE & FOX, Corner Whitehall & A a. streets, Atlanta, Ga. NOTICE TO all whom It may concern, the urdesigned hereby gives notice, that he has filed h's peti'lon with the Ordinary of Bartow Court'y to he di-ch'vrged from hit Exeenti rehip on Bennett if. Cm yere. last V ill hi and tes tament, on account of hnsiness « rr«r pement-, and Ina b lity therefi r m to attend said It ust, that in two months loin t lie b' git i lr p r f ’le pihlicHth n o' this no'h e he will apply fi r the sanction of said petition, at and to be discharg'd from mid exert,*orsh p. je. 3—6 m. C B CONYERS, Ex. ofß II Corye’f, dec. Georgia, rartow county — to nil whom it may concern, M. L. Pritchett having in proper form ap plied to me for l> t ers of * dniir ivtisnon with the will ant extd, on the estate of B nnett li Cor ytrs late of said county, this is to cite, all at and si, pu sr the ert ditois and next of kin. to he and appear at nt.v office within the time allowed by law, and sh'w cr u-e if»nytley can. why said letters -hou and no' be erunted t<> sud ap plicmt. Witt e.-s my hand and official s'gr atu e. je. 3 IS67—B;d. J. A. UU W AKL>, Ord. Bartow Mori gage Sheriffs Sale- VY7ILL be sol t before the C 'urthouredonr in theti wn lV of Cartereville, on the fi -st Tuesday In August next the following proi erty to wit; One fourt'eri horse power Engine and B< iler,ar and r n* Double Geared Po table Twenty F"i r Incr torn Mill. Levi, u on as the proper'y ■ f C. T. Parkei, to satisfy & rr jrtaage fi fa issued from Bar ow county ■out, in fa vor of J £ Whitehead, Agent fi r Hart AMnrsnna. gainst said Perktr. Properly pointed out i> e«id mort gage fi fa. jt.3 W. L. GOODWIN. bhß. Georgia, bartow county.—whereas IM. m«i. ford app tes to Die fi r Letters of Admipistratji ii ont e estate Fredrick D. B atfiein, late of Bartow c< unty de ceased. This is to cue all concerned, both lindreo and creditors of said de< eas-d, to show cause, if tiny can, within tlr© time | merit'd bv law, why said ieitera should not be granted to said applicant. Given undei mv hand and official s gia»ure, this th# 81»t day of M .y 1867. J. A. HOWARD, Ord’y. GEORGIA, BARTOW COUNTY,—Two mon'hß after date application will be made to the Court of Or dinary of said county, at the first regular term after the expirat on of two months from this notice, for leave to sell all the real estate of Wm. A McCravy deceased for the benefit of the heirs and creditors of said deseas jd. May 29th, 1867. FANNIE COX, Admr’x. A. D. McCRAYY) Alim'l