The Cartersville express. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1867-1870, June 28, 1867, Image 2

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4 i »E.t, It u»>i have rs aped the ehserva t> * : i -.I the most careless that some ot i , . *ii :n men of the South to have 1 .no utter!v demoralized by the i -.i!' of the hilt: disastrous war.— <Y , red in the field hv a two pmv eila! ..otagnn Ist. they a ret apparently vci.qii-in (1 a!-u in spirit.. When it is ■ ..:i Morel that nmnag these are some ' »i) iv«■ not only proved themselves I "id ■■ nd chivalrous ns j Bayard or t id . V m many a hard fought battle, I have also hv thtirskill ami address i rati (1 beyond quesliion that they nr,- po- -essed ol extraordinary mental i p ■ -when such facts are taken iiil(> eoM-ifh-rMon, with tljie additional t.u. that ituir eliaruelers are free from <;.i:le and hvpoerisy ofevtjry descrip nun, it«iuust he confessed that tlieir jin • nt at lit n in is a very extraordinary it u.-t n is plicable one. h is not lung ih it veteran demagogues Id,: Jm* Brown should exhort the peo ple ol the South to yield compliance with irery requirement of a Radical Congress. l rom them nothing better was to be expected. Hut yvhen pure' minded, gallant, and able men, such as tii n. hongsireet, argue for an accept ance of the despotic, and humiliating terms which in tlx ir dastardly triumph o . <r a 1 1 He a enemy the radical majority in so It the Southern people by tendering i., ihem, the ca«v k altogether different. An exph-nation of this c.nparenl in consistency is perhaps to he found m itie mistaken view of the situation t ntertained, and honestly entertained, hv sii di geulleinen as those we have nil rred to. It was natural that at the «X*>*»* ol ilic oi» vlii* ietsuo of which tin v had taught themselves to hdieve everything depended, those . vho had heco arraved on the side ol the Confederacy should feel for a time uiierly despondent: and we presume there is not one of the brave men who, during the long years ol the war, fought f i the miiepeiiilenee of I lie South, that d.,1 not experience the depressing m fi a nce of such a feeling, when at last be saw the armies of ihe South sur render, and ‘-the conquered banner” finally and hopelessly fulled. Such, we say, was the universal lecling at that trying mi incut ; and in their com plete hopelessness mosl if not all tell that they could never again under any possible circumstances take an v interest or part in the politics ol the country. I tider this depressing influence very many dctei mined to emigrate, anil some actually went so far as to seek an asy lum in (orcign lauds. As time wore on, however, and the first poignant sensations ci grief and despair wore off. two theories begin to de\elope themselves among the former rdherenls of the lost cat.se. While t ie more morbid still regarded them* selves and their countrymen as a run ijii red people subject to the will of the conqueror, the more hopeful, and, we think, I lie wiser, considered that ihe v ar properly settled nothing except toe one question in relation to the with drawal of the Southern States from "the I'Vih i al confederal ion. We have referred to the more hopeful : s also the wiser of the two classes for lire vetv cogent reasons that their the ory seetns to us not only the one ■warranted by sound sense, but by it they are placed in a position to aid ill the preservation of constitntiottal free dom and tlie restoration of the old order ol tilings. Those who having given up everything for lost now shape their -political action by that hypothesis, are doing themselves and their country a double injury. They withhold their influence from the friends that are striving lor the maintenance wf repub licanism, and give actual aid and i neiTuragemont to those who, in ap pressing the South, are engaged in the destruction ot constitutional •govern ment. Hither the government bequeathed i.s by our fathers lias been supplanted 'bv n new and totally different one, or the States which attempted to go out ol the Union, anti were not permitted to do so, are members of that Union, entitled to all the privileges and immu nities ol the rest, of the States. The war legitimately settled but one tiling, the fiel tint the Southern 'Stales are not out of tile 1 nion. \\ bat folly is it then, for citizens of those States to give in to the new laugh'd Radical doctrine, the offspring ol fanaticism and hatred, that the Southern States are nothing more than conquered prov inces. It may be and Doubtless is true, that just now It matters little for immediate practical purposes which ol these the ories prevails at the South, (or unhap pily the Radical party —the party of despotism—has the power to enforce its revolutionary plans. Hut this state of touigs \y *!l ik>: continue alway s, unless a m jority of the people wish it. A great pur:y is already organizing at flic North, and in the bolder States, to rc~;.-re ihe administration of the gov •> inmctrt to a coustuutiouai basis.— Sooner or later-the effort must succeed, provided, those most immediate! v inter ested do not assist the oppressors with their own hands in riveting the chains of dvspMti-m upon their limbs. I’vi accept the terms of the rerntr struction acts, so culled, would be siiiv ui.il on the part of the Southern people. Hv urging such acceptance. Urn. Uong&lrcet and those who act "iT him, without intending it, not on! v indorse a shameful outrage and mon strous usurpation, but they take from the friends of liberty and lite Constuu- I mo the now er to help. h ie people throughout the South t houhl I Tow the example of the (; a m In* r» ecuii\ OH tat \tlanta. and pla.'v tiiems !vt > on high eon.-tilu t nun i ground. They are entitled to 4-,-rui.i i ft; let ;item be satisfied. |*\vith nothing b It trie Radical usurpers, in palpable disregard of the ( onstitutiati and the theory of t!ie j Government, inflict wrongs, and at tempt to imp*, e conditions upon them, | let them not by their own acts consent 'to the iniquity. It' they will never ! lose sight ol tlie fact that lire Southern : States are members of the Union, and their citizens entitled to all the rights and privileges enjoyed by the citizens of any of the rest of the States, under the Constitution, they ran depend up on the support of an already powerlul and rapidly increasing conservative party, and they must in the end suc ceed in procuring the recognition of those rights.—-'Louisville Courier. tttf lb i ni i iwi ■ i ii'--n--r-n —r~- r *-*an ■ *■ r.Mf SAM’!, H. SMITH asd ROUT. P. MILAM Editors and Proprietors. Uai los sviilc (di. JunelS, 1867. iiMrv. «*>*«. a in-ai-Mmnattxmeu^ TJse \'tUiouut 3'silon. Black He publlcati Party of Georgia, lias made its umlnguised and] public appear ance; there can now be no doubt of the fact, for through the kindness of Messrs. Markham and Farrow, we have been favored with its salutatory address. It has existed among ns for sometime, we understand under the pro teetion of precious oaths and the auspices of dark Lantern and mid-night conclaves ; it is now unveiled, and the good people of our State are called on to “fail down and worship; 1 shall we do il 1 Now it hath a good name and wonderfully appropriate. It being the cnly sectional pirty that ever had control of the Government and ** having used the government for the last seven years for the exclusive benefit of one section, at the expense of the other ; of course nobody but a fool could deny its claims to NATION AL IT V. Having driven ten States from the Union -and indefinitely provided against their return, he would be a queer genius who would dispute its unionism. As it still has, nnd, prohub! v ever will have “nigger on the brain” it is entitled to lie called black; having lately reduced ten free and sovereign States to small military out-posts, it has sit its Republicanism beyond question. This address so carefully written in a high er latitude, informs us that this wonderful party has lately been engaged in measures of “benifleienee and restoration”—-the benifi ccnce doubtless re fieri ng to operations at home asd the Restoration to the times when Gen. Oglethorpe took possession of Savannah, and began to encroach on the wilderness of Geor gia. Several curious facts peeps out of this address. That immaculate party neither seek revenge nor punishment and 'Slavery is dead; the party however, has still a big job of crush ing ahead of it. We had bored it was done, but it is still engaged in crushing the institu tions which it ('Slavery) ‘established and nurtured.” We thought everything had been crushed, and are at loss to know to what, in stitutior.s they refer—hope it is no harm to ask for this small bit of information. Having established its edaims to be a party of progress and having never been true heretofore to any thing but itself, it is deemed important now to say that it will heretofore ‘-he true to its friends without regard to color or previous condition.” Fall in ye lovers of “loavs and fishes,” freely take “without money and with, out price” (ie) manhood, virtue and love of country not now being worth sufficient to command a juice. We are to have free speech, free press and free schools through Congress. As vve have never had anything of the sort, we ought to he very thankful; but it is to the “negroes of the South” that this wonderful party mak°s its special appeal.— “The Nation is indebted to the negro race for services rendered during the war” -and are paving them oIT by the three cents tax on Cotton, whereby negro wages are increased one-third over the list. Can the negroes re sist such an appeal 1 \\ e trow rat; but then the negro, so savs the address, is indebted to the Republican Party, fora tremendous amount of misery and starvation. Go in niggers, that's your place. But dont think that poor white men are for gotten in this address. Not at all. They are elevated to “equality in all respects” with the ‘negro —and their wages are increased by being brought into competition with cheap. la bor. This is a plain proposition, and ought to have a mollifying effect on the hard and un grateful hearts oi men -so recently elevated to negro ecjualitv, As it is very bad foi men to have ignorant neighbors, every body must he educated ; ami as white men are the only class who have nnv property left, they must foot the hills of educating the negro. This seems to be eminently proper and just : it not being righ to cat bread *by the sweat ofanothers brow, but if you can thumb-screw it out of him by a pro cess of taxation you will ha v e shown your smartness and done a good thing. In this wav the address promises there shall ho “no invasion efthe rights of others"; what the ne gro has being matter ot tights, and what the while man gets being a matter of grace. Os one thing about this address we are a little in credulous —the republican party— sharp yan kec idea —proposes to make the negro more valuable to the state after educating him then he was to his master in ignorance. It may succeed, we think the parry will find Jordan a bard j.ud to travel. F : na!!y the republican par tv 1m log entirely lent on giving every bodv except re' •’*—every thing commends it.-fit to the ••oitntrv I>»r whet it has done in the past. It . ,■ the ni»*:his:-‘ 1 t s*. vetr years and 1 pride- i;se!f on the n suit, il found the coun try in a mis rnUe state of peace and quiet Tel plunged it headlong into a delightful stats of war and bloodshed. It found the government burdened with a want of debt, it has in a few years sadened it with vast mountains cf such evidences of national prosperity. W onderful party ! It starts uroTr favorable auspices in our state Mr. Wm. Markham is president of the execu tive committee. When smell fry like Clay, Webster aad Calhoun afflicted this country with their rule, the people mourned, but the political Shiloh ha3 now come. Clear the track lor Markham ! lie is going to have & fourth-of-July Convention in Atlanta, which is to be composed of “neither white men nor black men.” We shall try to be on hand. Seriously, we deplore the efforts of evil and designing men to stir up parties and strife among our ruined people ; no good can come of it; no good is designed Ly it. If our people are wise and prudent, as they should be, they will consign Mr. Markham et id otn ne genus, to shame and obscurity by silent contempt. Registration. The Board of Registers for the 42nd Sena torial District, comprising Bartow, Floyd and Chattooga counties have already commenced in Chattooga, and we are grottified to learn from one of the Board, that the Citizens (white) are turning- out exceeding!} well —w«n done for chattooga ! Every man who is entitled to register should unhesitatingly cotuc up like a man, yet, like a patriot and take a libera! share in this, a matter which is of such great impor tance to the people of the whole Southern country. Wc would advise our citizens not to let any feelings of prejudice or opposition to Military Bills be permitted to keep any of them from registering. If you are too stubborn to do this, knowing- it to be fory our own good, you may sorely regret cr’e many more months passes by, We earnestly feel, that it is a sa cred duty of every friend of the State, and es pecially those’who‘took-sue hun active part in the Southern cause—you are the very men weare appealing to. The same duty and sense of honor that has called you before, is new ap pealing again. If the people of the South, no matter for what cause, fail to exercise the power of voting, they leave the Government of the States in the hands of our Radical enemies to beardown and trample over us with the heart and concsicnce that has no mercy. God for bid 1 that we may ever be placed under the control ofsuch tyrannical, God forsaken, un principaled and unforgiving set of people as as these Radicals are. Therefore we urge it upon you, whether you are for or against a convention to register,-and your vote will not he entirely lost to your-country and friends.— We look ujMin this-matter as-being one ofalmost as gre at importance, as ever we did one of the hard fought battles during the late struggle.— [f every man will go to the polls with his neart, soul and body determined to succeed, we will, beyond a doubt, in our minds bear off the col ors, and drive our defeated Radicals from a-* mongus,and disappoint them in committing their hellish and inhuman deeds upon us. You may rest assured that they are going to mass the negro vote against us, and it will I be necesarv and important that we should be pre pared for the contest. We know that it will be hard for them to get the advantage of us if we will do our duty. No doubt but they will carry a greater portion of the most ignorant and ambitious negroes with them. But the most enlightened, and well thinking colored people will vote with the South, and with people that they have been reared up with and know to be their friends. I.et there he no strife ainoiis ESS. Il is a settled fact, remarks the Athens Watchman, that the Radicals are at tempting to organize a party in this State, and that they desire to control 1 ilte Convention. This they hope to do by divisions a p mong their opponents —some of whom are in favor of, and some opposed to the Convention. Now let us upset their calculations. Let all who arc not Radicals unite in the several counties upon the same candidate or candidates for the conven tion, and then, whatever may be the result, whether the Convention shall be voted down or held, sound men will be elected, and Radicalism dcieatc-d in its every incipieney. This matter is so important that we trust there will be no further disputing about the convention - Let every man vote for or against it, just as lie believes to be right, but by all means, let all who are opposed to Radicalism unite upon the same man or men. Every honest voter must perceive the neces sity of adopting this policy. Among other Houses that wc visited, while in the Gate City, was the Liquor store of R. M Rose &i Cos., our friend Rose gave us a cordial welcome by taking us in. and we won't say what lie gave us, but we can assure you if you will call on .him, you will be satisfied that he is a peifect gentleman, and that he will sell vou pure and unadulterat ed liquors of every and any kind. We are supprised that our friend Fitch, of the Griffin Star, lias not found lit is house. Give him a call, Fitch, anti he will give you his card, and we can assure you, that you will never tegret the call! We know ! £gs~Coi. F. McLeod, of Florida whose recent disappearance in Wash* ington C-;tv was mentioned lately in the Courier, has turned up safe in Bal timore. lieiliL'y *4l .a*i il c* •“ a lictC Siiit* guinttry Nerne.” [From the Atlanta Jaftliigenccr.} Asa matter of news, anti to show the eflect the scare had upon the poor man, we copy the following extract j from Bill Kelley’s Philadelphia speech, 1 made upon his return to the bosom of j his constituents, his said that when bespoke of “that sanguinary scene,’l where the bullets were falling around “thick and fast as autumnal leaves in brooks of Vallambrosa,” tears as Lige ; as horse apples could be noticed con: s-! iug each other down the cheeks ol his aftected and sympathizing hearers.— When tine reader shall have perused this extract, lie will come to the con clusion nt once, as we ci it!, that Mr. Kelley is a whole-sized brick, m addi tion to the one he generally totes in his hat ; 1 left you nt the invitation of the Governor of Louisiana and t'he Mayor ofNew Orleans, to visit that distant Stale and city, hoping that 1 might serve our distracted country, and eager to view that nearly one-half of our c.s- Mississippi territory, from which, by reason of my love of personal liberty. 1 had so long been excluded. I did not dream of danger. Others spoke of it. hut 1 scoffed at the idea. I went, hearing no hatred to any man ; but believing that the truths which far the last eleven years I have been in the habit of proclaiming to you, would be especially useful to the people of that section, L gladly availed myself oi lhe opportunity of uttering them kindly and courteously in their midst ; and, my friends, throughout my extended ex cursion, I was received with all ihe kindness and courtesy the people vvere able to bestow upon me wiverever I went, save in one city. I, therefore, beg .you not to charge the murderous spirit of the Mobile mob to the South ern people at large. [Applause.] That outrage was due more largely to An drew Johnson, the refractory President of the United States, than even to the municipal authorities of Mobile, or the mob they should have held in subjec tion.. The chief promoter of’that mur derous riot was a recreant Northerner, who had been sent to that city by the President as Assessor of Internal Rev enue. Colonel Mann, formerly of .Michi gan, who owns the Mobile 7 'Lutes. That paper had, in advance of my arrival, excited the passions of the Southern people against me. and in an article on the day preceding my arrival, every allegation, in which Colonel Mann admitted in the presence of two gentlemen now present to be wholly false and unfounded, had inflamed the passions of the Irish citizens of Mobile against me. But not to detain you with the details of that sanguinary scene, let me say that the outbreak was provoked by no indiscreet word ot mine. It had been planned before 1 went to th.e meeting, if not before I arrived in Mo - bile, and the man immediately behind me would have been shot through the head, as he was, and another not five feet from me would have been murder ed, as he was, at the pre-concerted signal, had Ibeen reading the Litany or the Fiord’s Prayer. lam told that it has been sneeringly said that 1 got under a table. J have never been a soldier or sought reputation at the cannon’s mouth, and very freely admit that, when the bullets were whizzing bv and pattering against the wail be hind me, I wo.uld have thanked almighty God for a bullet-proof table under which to creep. We might add to those interesting excerpts., but the foregoing will serve to show the great gap between Mr. Kelley and the real facts of the case. Without intending to be in the least degree offensive, we think we see the honorable gentleman as he rose from beneath the mahogany and started from “that sanguinary scene,’’ at a two-forty pace, his eye in a fine phrenzy rolling, and exclaiming, As far and near tfieAkißets Mss, I’ll seek a safer place than this. Hlaxrnllian rardoned—Slieri dan's Telegram F® Gea. €»rant. New Orleans-, June 25. —A dis patch from Galveston says an Austrian who passed throuh that city to-day, cn route to the North, representing him self as a;n officer of Maximiliian, stated that the Emperor had been pardoned on condition of leaving the country as soon as the ports of Tampico and Vera Cruze are opened for his departure. The 'l'imes of this morning, in an article commenting severely on Sheri dan’s telegram to General Grant, says, it contains gross inacuracies of fact and errors of low logic, and that if the conduct and language of this remarka ble document is sanctioned by any considerable portion of the American people, the Constitution had better be consigned 7to the flames at once, and the republic delivered over to anarchy aild chaos. Poor. Colfax. —A correspondent of the Cincinnati Commercial disposes of Colfax’s Presidential aspirations in this wise: “Colfax was bamboozled by a few rrazv fellows into the beliefthat he had a chance, and the poor little man lias been worrying himself, nigh unto death ever since. He has been writing to the Fenians about Vinegar Hill; to the Christians about the happy land; to the Jews about Jerusalem; to the Bap tists in favor of immersion; to the the Calvanists in favor of hell fire; to the Catholi ‘s in favor of the Pope, and to the Radicals hallelujah for the niggers. And as if this wasn’t enough to elect a man, he has lectured three thousand lom huuderd and fifty five vrtr? on buffaloes, bears and wild c :s. A gentleman wri'iag to us from Carnes v file in Georgia sa\s: **l want vour opinion in regard to lhe reconstruction shemo. l'o yeti not think it would he our true policy to vote against a convention ? W e shall have a radical party here, headed by Joe Brown, ex-Govcrnor. l ut I liiiuk we shell be able to beat him on the re construction question. lam opposed to all such measures as the military hill, and shall do ail 1 can against a con ven* ion.” V/e already have repeatedly express ed our opinion on the point mentioned by i!its gentleman. Our opinion'•ac cords with his. We do think that the true poh'ey of the people ol Georgia, and of every other Southern State, is to reject the iniiitary'schetne, in the lir.-t instance, ii posible, by rejecting a convention, but in the last instance, if necessary and possible, by rejecting the constitu tion which the convention submits, in no other way, we conceive, can the radicals be prevented from ravishing the electoral vote of the South in the next Presidential election, and thereby perpetuating their power .in the gov ernment. The acceptance of the mil tarv scheme would be a virtual surren der of the Southern vote to the radical party, riveting the chains of the South, and consummating the ruin of rue Republic. The rejection <.i tllO sc heme, however, will exclude the South from all part in the election, leaving the battle to be fought bet ween the conservatives and the radicals of ;iie represented States, with tiie moral certainty of the victory of the former. The rejection will be in the nature of a solemn appeal from the usurpation and tyranny of the. radical party to tire justice and-sell-interest oft lie Northern people. And the appeal will not he in vain. It will be answered by the defeat of the radical party, followed up by such demonstrations of .public ('pin ion as will speedily lead to the deliv erance of the South, and the salvation of tire Republic. This we firmly be lieve. God grant that the Southern people may Some to believe the same tiling before it is too late. —Louisville Jour nal. Washington Alive, 'Che Constitutional Union says : If our friends abroad imagine for a ino that we are without cur usual excitement in this city, they are much mistaken. Washingtonians were never more active. The city is alive with meetings every night and in every quarter. The Surratt trial ; the aeliv i» ty among temperance people ; the pressure upon ail the Departments of the Government; thevist ofthe Presi dent ; the domestic tragedies, and the reassembling Congress, have all tended to rouse our people up with the weather to fever heat. There is a great lack of theatrical amusements, though we have no doubt but what they will soon be supplied. Washington, the seat ofthe Government, is ever the seat of excitement, and it is safe to promise all lovers of scandal, .politics, and sen sations of whatever kind, that they can find in Washington papers, during the summer, a plenty of that sort ( of mental pabulum. The New York Herald declares : “Congress must go straight to the mark —boldly, fairlv openly, in the eyes of the nation and lite world—and impeach Mr. Johnson for the high crime and misdemeanor of a usurpation of power, of the exercise of authority against the law, of conspiration with his Cabinet to render null and inoperative laws the energetic and honest enforcement of which- was vitally necessary to the prosperity ofthe people and the peace and wellare ofthe country. On these broad issues he must he impeached and removed, and it must be ('one this sum mer, or it will be too late.” It seems strange that the public tran quility should be considered as of so little moment! A revolutionary step of extraordinary violence is to be resorted to under a passionate impulse, and to accomplish a merely partisan object. Such is the evidence of a leading newspaper! Cheering News. — We have been informed, says the La Grange Reporter that the people of Northeast Georgia are almost unanimously opposed to the call of a convention under the Sherman bill. We also learn that the people of Middle Georgia tvili vote overwhelming majorities against convention. This is, to us, very cheering news. We had thought a convention was a foregone conclusion by 30.000 or 40,000 majori ty. Indeed, we are not very sanguine that the State will be saved from the dishonor of the curse of a mock conven tion. —•••t ►-■ The Augusta Constitutionalist says: The Nation is ventilating some po litical opinions which, if not novel, are “as good as new,” so long is it since they have ceased to pass ciurent, and which are likely to affect its political orthodoxy very seriously in the judg ment of a good many people. It de clares its belief that “no political opinions, however sound, can make knaves ami charlatans anything but a curse to the community.” If that isn’t revolutionary, we should like to know what would be? What does our Com mon Council think about it ? What Congressman Ashley to say on the subject? Is General Butler indifferent to such flagrant, knave-defying radi calism as fhis We must have a ; meeting of the Loyal League. i nsronsr explosive ktro oil, This Oil TnMtei the best, s --tot and cheapest light of anything known It to W iu sup •*>!(• rev I cau be used in auv Kerosene or Coal Oil Lamps, b> attaching the LI -HI Hi L fe *.LLNFL, which is m* .ferab’e to til othe-s. This Oil mikes a clear, blight iftjht, I** ami burns longer than other Oils and l .* sve as a til! >«v candle It will not explode, as caa be dem .nstiated in a.moment. Tlie METEOR S VFETY LAMP Is e. perfect gun—a universal favailte —and gu a L.UU i lor less than half a cent an hear. For sale by KIRKP ATRICK & CO, CartemlUe, Ga. F. M. ELUIS, LnlUuue, Oh. RLFE \V . TIIOTXTON. P.rprletnr of R rtow and Gordon eoun'ie-. Alsu sat f>r ike sale of C -unty fights. Those desirous of making ■luoiuj, wlu do well to correspond him at Calhoun, us. J e amMiwMMiMMWMmiilK ll'——in—MirillTlW liHfiri lllT'lflillMfcl HUM II ---I - I J la S’* WHOLES VLE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Hoots and Shoes, Feather. Calfskins and Shoe t’lndiiigs: t take this method of csl’lng voor attention to the fact that t have return, and toAtUn'n and have opened n Rawson’s building, cotnei of Whitehall and Hunter Streets, (next door to Chamber.ln, C ole & Boynton » elegant Dry Poods store,) one of the most complete stocks of Boots and Shoes, Hemlock and Oak X>cc. f lier, Calf Skins, Lining and BindintUng Shins, LASTS, PEGS, SHOEMAKERS' TOOLS AM) FINDINGS to »e fond in tb's City—in short, everything usually found in a first class fli e and Finding “tore, which stock I t .p, upose to k • ep lull at all dines, and sell them at. a price which cannot fall to suit, liolcs&ic Ol* Having had an experience of fourteen yearn in this business in the sta*» of G< oral a, and ha" ! ns' spent moat of the art two pears in the Northern andJßasfern m rkets, oath :'«<• several la rye Souttirn Honeen, I Hater myself that lli v taperlor advantage* over all competition in bnylt e—-end mak.ng all my j purcha es ear. lu- irely for oath only and having determined to sell for CASH ON ILL, \ Ldi. ' I will duplicate any bill of Goods in my line, bough! of Jobbing Houses in New Tfork cr Boston, adding only expense of transportation. &c e to This point. THE ABOVE, TOGETHER WITH THE ENORMOUS AMOUNT OF MV PURCHASES ENABLES ME TO SELL BOOTS AND SHOES AS LOW AS 4NY JOBBING HOUSE IN TiilO UNITED STATES. G've tnca call and satisfy yourselves. Remember the place— son,s Building, corner ot Mntiter and Whitehall Streets; next door to Chamberl'n, Cole & Boynton’s Dry Goods Store, and the sign |«g*» F| A £\g \£ * La ts A'A ii Wd\ 'S a N. B. lam not connected In business with any ether house in this city. Th sig .a id the ii. m ■ X - T. Z3 A. IST ZC3- Samuel Clayton, R. A. Clayton. $ 0 LAYTQ N & SON, DEALERS IN GfflSßlL IffIRCIIHDISS, CARTERSVILLE, GA. We keep a genera! stock and can fnrnisli you wiih anything you wa lit. C. me to see us—we will sell you goeds a at.'reasonable prices. Come and look at our st 'vk —No harm done if we cant trade. Should friends us with consignun nts or orders, we whi use cur eV ery itit i o c vof their iuteresig. GUTTER, EGGS, DRIED BLACKBERIES Ccc. taken at mmket rates for goods. 5000 LBS. Clean Cotton and Linen wanted. When ready sacked we will take them at 5t cent, 'per ft>. for goods. Bring them in any tpianift v. gS?“Mr. Uriah Stephens is » ith ijs—he Invites all h;s friends to call and see wite.t he can do tor them Atlanta Quotations allowed for Gold Dust, and oid Bade Bills. jo 28. GfCcubaclis ! Greenbacks I ? To loan on uncwfnlrercd Thai estate Eor sale, or exchange for cifv or town pro per tv-. in -North Georgia land, 1923 antes of No. 1 farming and timber land 11 miles from Sa vannah Ga. It is in one fourth mile of d< pot and i't one half mile of tide water - Add!,ess D't, II rrr.it A Br, ur. Cartersville Ga, OLD DEBTS!i OLD DEBTS!!! AII persons indebted to the old Mercantile firms of of HOWARD, STOKELY & CO.. and J, A. & S. ERWIN, are respeciluliy urg ed to make liberal payments on these debts out of the present wheat crop. All who refuse to re-poiid to this call for only part payment will he sued. '1 hesedebts are from six to ten years standing, and longer indulgence cannot be giv en. Cali at J. A. ERWIN & CO.'S store where the claims are, and make libera! pay ments and save suits. Cartersville, Ga., June 18, IBfi7. J. E. Roberts RETAILDEALER IN Corn, Meal, Flour. Baron, Sugar, Coffee, Tobacco, &.c. &c. At Skinner <fc Shepherd’s old stand, on .Tain street:, between Jones’ Carriage Shop and Strange’s Tin Shop. )Hg*K. R. llahg-.s with J, E. Roberts )e ill,— ts. Cartersville, Ga. SOUTHERN BRANCH OF THE NATIONAL STOVE Works, Sew York, RICHARDSON & SANFORD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN Stoves. Ifolloic-icare Block-Tin, [ TIN-PLATE,SHEET-IRON and TINNERS Limp, Cutlery, House-fur rishing Goods of every Description’ PLATED AND BRITANNIA WARE, Keystone Block, Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga. F. M. Ricpardsox. L. V. Sanford- J. T. JENKINS k CO. Success's to McCAIIE Y «!t - 3’J. | WHOLES VLE DEALERS IN Drugs, Faints. Oils, C-tiomichals. Window • £''\ V < x A. Cft/ K | V YI’LSt 'g ’♦ ♦ I^. imtii % tiling S't. y-1 w V VV-4 - V WVv V/v > ♦ CO 7!. VLB rnios S ,l.n> a L. SSUI. T I,I S TSt CUTS, Atlanta, s, Gissesme, Wl'i’il ' %&f ft tit f . w fir i d-ts-ms Wholesale nml Retail Dealer in illl) CDl'ilS BOOTS / SHOES *»> YAh'KtE NOTIONS, NC. Whitehall S rect. je 28—ts. Atlanta, Ga. Kates on Wheat from Cartersville, TO Macon, IP Centr. “ Savannah, :>(1 •* *• New York, Philadelphia, I -iti “ “ iiultimore, f Cars go through from Atlanta to Savannah without transier. Firs-t class Siile Wheel Mean ships, leave Sa vannah every T uesday, Tnursd <y and Saturuay, there by securing to shippers prompt delivery In New Yoiit, free for.yarding and no whartage or Urayage on wheat lor New York, thiiradelphia or Baliimare. U. J. FOREACRE, General Agt., je 23, —1m Atlanta, Ga. NOTICE. CartcrgxiHo, Ga , June 25th 1837. I)y order of James Milner. Judge of theSu 3pf,rior Cosu r t of the Cherokee Circuit, there will be an adjourned term of the Superi or Court held for the County of Bar'ow on the sth Monday tn July next, for the trial of criminal cases. Jurors, parties and witnesses will take due notice and govern themselves ac cordingly. THObi. A. WORD, Clk. L. C. B. C. DR. HUGH A. BLAIR, Physician and Surgeon, Cartersville, Georgia. TANARUS) ESPECTFULLY tenders his professional services to J\ the public. st h's residence, on Main St., late resi dence of Mr. P. Marsh. June 21. To arrive this week at the great emporium new linen and Marseilles niits and will be sold the usual way for less than anv one else can sell the same goods, Blair & Br, dshaw.