Newspaper Page Text
STANDARD AND EXPRESS
w. 1
A. MARSCHALK, j
Subscription Price $2.
Monday, November 15,1875.
ADVERTISING RATES:
All transient advertisements Avill be charged
for at the rate of One Dollar per square for the
first, and Fifty Cents for each subsequent in
sertion. Liberal discount to those who adver
tise by the year, semi-annually or quarterly.
B. 11. RICHARDSON & Cos.,
.Publishers' Agents,
111 Bay St., Savannah, Ga.,
Are authorized to contract for advertising in
our paper.
Wright, Hoyt & Cos., hat and cap
trmming factory, of New York,have
failed for $750,000.
A special to the London Times
says the Queen of Holland is in a
precarious condition.
A distinct shock of earthquake, ac
companied by a dull, rumbling
sound,was felt at Manhattan,Kansas,
on the 9th inst.
A terrible tornado passed over the
town of Wei born,Fl a., on the sth in
stant, tearing down houses, fences,
trees, etc., destroying much property
and killing some people.
Colonel Johnson, of Dalton, made
a beautiful temperance speech the
night before the municipal election —
“restriction” vs. “no restriction” —
and the restriction ticket was elected
by more than two to one.
A little German girl in a public
school of New York was told to put
year in a sentence. After a moment’s
reflection she answered: “Last year
my sister was married: This year
she has a baby.”
Esten Cook in his life of Jackson
and Pollard in his history of the war,
says that Bee said: “Look! “ There
is Jackson standing like a stone-wall .”
These words are inscribed on the pe
destal of Foley’s statute of Jackson,
and may be accepted as Bee’s words
at Manassas.
A gentleman and his daughter, in
Port Gibson, Miss., have taken out
a patent for a means of knitting four
stockings at one time, with one set
of needies. When the socks or stock
ings, are finished, they are simply
drawn out of each other,in a finished
condition. This almost vies with the
knitting machine.
A tailor at Liverpool, named
Banks,has been arrested for attempt
ing to drown his three children. He
was in the act of throwing one of
them into the river, and said that
he was going to give them to the
Lord. He appeared to be working
under religious excitement. The
oldest child was seven and the
j luree years old.
Dr. Glenn, of Colusa county, Cal.,
owns a ranch containing nearly 45,-
000 acres having a frontage of eigh
teen miles on the Sacramento river,
and extending back five miles. Up
on the property are 140 miles of fenc
ing. Two tenants cultivate 10,000
acres each ; one, C. W. Hoog, expects
to raise 180,000 bushels of w T heat and
barley this season.
A hill-climbing engine was lately
exhibited in France. It is claimed
to be especially adapted to carry great
weights up an incline. This engine
lias no wheels, but is furnished with
six legs, three in front and three be
hind, upon which it walks, runs or
gallops. One of them at work on the
Eastern railway, weighs ten tons,
and runs from four to five miles an
hour, and can run twelve and one
half miles if aesired.
Capt. R. A. Torry, of the 12th in
fantry, commanding the post at
Vicksburg, has notified the Sheriff
of Warren county, Miss., that he is
ready to surrender private Henry L.
Johnson, who some days since shot
and killed Tobias Burke. This looks
as if the civil law' had some rights
the military was bound to respect,
and coming upon the heels of the
Democratic victory in Mississippi,
argurs well for the future.
“My young colored friend,” said
an army chaplain to a young negro,
“can you read?” Yes, sah.” “Glad
to hear it,” said the chaplain. Shall
I give you a paper?” “Sartinpnassa,
ii you please.” “Very good,”contin
ued the chaplain, “what paper
would you choose, now?” “Well,
massa,” said the meditating negro,
“If you please, I’ll take a paper o’
terbacker.”
The noted flag that waved over
Fort McHenry, at Baltimore in Sep
tember, 1814, during the British
bombardment, and which suggested
io Key the composition of “The Star
Spangled Banner,” is now on board
theTallapoosa,which is lying at Ports
mouth. It is badly torn, and has
thirteen stars, it is owned by Mrs.
Georg?anna Asmistead Appleton, of
Boston, daughter of Col. Armstead,
commander of the fort at the time.
It is to be exhibited at the Centen
nial.
Three negro children, aged three,
four and six years, were burned to
death on the place of Mr. Winston
Eberhart, in the seventeenth district
of Coweta, on the 2d inst. The pa
rents had gone off some three miles
to pick cotton, and had left the chil
dren alone. The building is suppos
ed to have been set on fire by their
caielessness, or accidental Iv. Four
W i GI ? present, and strange
to saj, failed to rescue them from
the burning building.
TRAINED JOURNALIST.
j Yeunaa Star.]
Mr. A. Marschalk, who is about to
start a newspaper at Cartersville call
ed the Planters' Advocate , was liter
ally born in a printing office and
cradled on an old-fashioned press.
He told us the tale as related to him
by his parents. He is a man near
fifty years of age, an excellent and
well educated printer and a reliable,
truthful man. He says fifty years
ago his father was a poor man, just
married, and had got hold of a little
type and an old press of the most
primitive kind and got a room to put
it up in. His wife lived in the office
with him, did the cooking and wash
ing there and helped him at the case
and press. He had no other assis
tance, and very little furniture, one
bed, a couple of chairs, a skillet and
oven, and a little table furniture.
Mrs. Marschalk’s confinement was
premature, and the infant was wrap
ped in its swaddling clothes and laid
on the bed of the press, as there was
no other place to put it. The boy was
raised up a printer and received no
education whatever, except from his
parents, and the types. He says his
father had forty subscribers and four
exchanges. The subscribers paid
mostly in provisions, and the family
relied upon the legal advertising of
the county and an occasional job for
money to buy their clothing and pay
for house rent,and yet they got along
first-rate, and the Marschalks were
useful and valuable members of socie
ty.
This article Is very far from being
a statement of facts. In the first
place, we told Fitch nothing, and
spoke to him only once, and then but
to answer a point blank question,
when upon the Press excursion last
July—the only time we ever met.
We did tell Col. Christy a portion of
our early history, which, in his usual
gentlemanly and truthful way, he
embodied in an editorial for his pa
per, but we held no converse what
ever with Fitch, who was drunk and
disagreable.
The Atlanta Constitution has our
thanks for copying that portion of
Fitch’s article which he seems to
have intended as a personal reflection
and ridicule. We have a hope,how
ever,that neither Hemphill nor Clark
knew of its intended publication.
We care not for any statement made
by this drunken imbecile Fitch,who,
for some unknown cause, seeks to fix
a stigma upon the honored name of
our deceased parents, but, because
his article has been copied into
more than one other newspaper, we
deem it necessary to correct the erro
neous impressions which have been
conveyed by it. At the time of our
birth, in \Bl7 —which was not, as
Fitch says, premature our father
had been for years publish
ing a newspaper in Natchez, was the
owner of seven or eight negroes, a
neat little cotton plantation and some
city property, and it was a matter
of taste, rather than necesity, that he
had his printing office and family
residence in the same house. Our
rn a4-V> r>M rl I -1 L- - ' r x c
another, and never assisted him in
his office. At that time he had two
apprentices J. K. Cook and Sid. Cal
ender. The first named became a
prominent man of Mississippi, while
the second died in harness in Bay’s
job office in New Orleans, since the
war. On our sth birth-day—June
5,1822 —we were sent to school. From
primary schools of the day we went
to Washington College, Mississippi,
subsequently to South Hanover, In
diana—and this proves the falsity of
Fitch’s statement about the educa
tion received from the “pareuts and
types.” We shall excuse this hero of
the Borne Fair upon the presumption
that he was just recovering from one
of his “spells”and had the head-ache,
was in a bad humor with himself
and all mankind,and hence his attack
upon an escutcheon honored so far
above him or his antecedents.
VICTORIA-NYANZA.
Stanley, the courageous African
explorer, has been heard from. Two
letters from him were forwarded by
Colonel Delbellfort,who left Ulagalla
April 12 1875. The Colonel and thir
ty-six of his soldiers were massacred
on the route; but the letters were af
terwards found among the slain,
stained with blood. Stanley says he
has thoroughly explored lake Victo
ria Nyanza, and demonstrates the
utility of that magnificent sheet of
water. Livingstone was wrong in
saying that lake Victoria Nyanza
consisted of five lakes. The river
Sherneya feeds lake Victoria Nyan
za, and is the extreme source of the
Nile yet found. Stanley had sever
al conflicts w ith the slave dealers,and
on one accasion he was attacked by a
hundred natives armed with spears,
iu thirteen canoes. He repulsed
them after a severe fight, killing sev
eral. King Nitesas, friendly to the
explorer, received him with im
mense demonstrations of honor.
It is said that the German army is
about to adopt an electric light for
night signaling, which will use the
clouds (when there are any) as a
screen on which to project the sig
nals. The apparatus was tried in
Berlin recently, the light given be
ing so powerful that ordinary wait
ing could be read at the distance of
one mile. The experiments were
successful, and startled the people in
the streets, who saw the signals in
the heavens, but knew not whence
they proceeded.
Texas Productions. —Five cam
els, foaled within twenty miles of
Austin, were sold in that city last
week for $l5O each. They w’ere five
years old. Mr. Hemstead who rais
ed them, can supply all the circusses
in America. He proposes to rear
ostriches and elephants,and is making
preparations to receive Shetland po
nies at his ranche. These especially
flourish on Texas plains.
SOUTH FLORIDA.
SIXTH LETTER.
I Editors Standard & Express :
—ln this communication, I propose
to speak of the soil, climate, produc
tions and appearance of the country
and character of the people. At the
outset, I would say, that their can be
no serious question as to the superi
ority of the gulf to the Atlantic coast
in the minds of candid people, both
as to soil and climate. lam so well
| satisfied of it, and that in two years
the gulf coast will contain much
more wealth and a greater population
than the Atlantic coast, that I am
going to make it my home at any
rate. This gulf coast of South Flori
da embraces most of Alachna, Ma
rion, Hernando, and all of Levy,
Hillsboro and Manatee counties, and
presents many elevations surprising
ly great to strangers. The streams
in the counties above named, are not
large, and generally have good cur
rents. They rise, especially those of
any length,such as the Hillsboro and
Witlilacooche rivers, in shallow
ponds, covered with wild lettuce, and
at first run slowly. When the riv
ers rise,the lettuce becomes detached
and is born down in immense quan
tities by the current. So great is the
quantity sometimes carried down
; that the surface of the water is entire
ly hid from view. When the water
falls, this vegetable matter is left on
the banks to rot, and it becomes very
offensive, and is the fruitful source
of sickness in the vicinity of these
streams. There are other streams
emptying into the Gulf, south of Ce
dar Keys, but they are short and of
no importance in any sense. I speak
now of the country between Cedar
Keys and Tampa. The soil seemed
to be of the same general character
throughout the country. The only
difference I could perceive was that
in some, as in the hammocks,a larger
admixture of vegetable matter, and
perhaps more undecomposed marl.
In fact, the large bodies of ham
mocks, I consider the remains of
ancient coral reefs. A strickly clay
soil does not exist in South Florida
to my knowledge,and what clay there
is appeared strongly calcareous. The
whole of it pine and hammock con
tains a large percentage of lime, and
the poorest of it in appearance needs
only vegetable matter to enable it to
produce abundantly. Cut down the
pines, and in a few years something
like a hammock growth takes its
place, and in time, by the accumula
! tion of vegetable matter, the land
I will become a veritable hammock.
|On the Alafia there are no ham
| mocks, as in Hernando and Marion
counties. There they are nothing
more than what are known as bot
toms along the bank of the river,
tending more than a quarter of a mile
from the river,sometimes low but I
believe all drainable. There is no bet
ter land in South or any other part
of Florida than this pine land. The
only advantage I could find in the
hammock was that they would pro
duce better, just cleared, than the
pine. But for durability, etc., the
pine lands are very superior. Of
course their are grades of pine land
not so many as some writers had led
me to suppose. I saw some appar
antly very poor, looking like a mass
of white sand, but none so poor but
that humus would not cause it to
j blossom like a rose. The cow pea is
at home on this soil (such looking
land would not sprout peas here),and
three crops can be raised and turned
under a year. This would enrich the
poorest land, enough to make 15,00 ft
of sugar to the acre. It is also the
; best soil for oranges ; why, I know
| not, unless it is dryer, i. e. affording
better natural drainage. The differ
erencein the land, iff my opinion,
arises from the greater or less-quan
tity of vegetable matter in it and its
! drainage.
As to the climate, I would say that
I passed the whole month of July
and part of June and August on the
Alafia river. I w T orked after walk
ing two miles to my work,the whole
of nearly every day, a thing I had
never done in my life before. I gen
erally got to my place wet to the
knees, with walking through the
dew. I never had a moments sick
ness or even uneasiness during the
time. I slept well, and had a good
appetite. The hottest day I remem
ber,the thermometer stood at eighty
five degrees. I saw men working
July and August(raen from Georgia,
South Carolina and Alabama), at
hard manual labor. They informed
me that they had no more inconven
ience in doing so than in their res
pective States. On the other hand,
old residents such as Capt. Leslie, in
formed me that the climate was ener
vatiug and one could not do the work
that he could do in Georgia,hut lam
free to say they did not prove it from
their own cases, for I saw the Cap
tain do harder work in his sugjir
cane in August than I ever saw a
North Georgia farmer do at the same
season of the year in his field. I saw
plenty of mosquitoes, no fleas, no
sandflies and no gallinippers—fish
plenty, and game scai’ce. In fact I
was very agreeably surprised at the
rarity of venimous reptiles. More
rattlesnakes have been killed this
summer within a quarter of a mile
of my house,than I heard of in Hills
boro county.
The productions are sugar cane,
cotton,corn, oats, potatoes, and starch.
Pine land without green manuring
or cowpenning, would not pay in any
of these crops, unless perhaps in po
tatoes or cassava lightly cowpeu
ned or otherwise manured (and it has
wonderful facilty of retaining ma
nure),all these crops pay well; sugar,
I think, a little better than the rest.
It will rattoon from three to seven
years. The people as a class, are I
think, as good as anywhere. I never
met greater kindness, and among
perfect strangers, and it is a pleasure
to me in this way to acknowledge
the courtesy of Capt. Leslie, Col.
Lockhart, Dr. Hackny and Mr.
Moody. In concluding this too long
communication, I would only say
that Florida is no paradise ; that hard
work is essential to prosperity there
as elsewhere, and except the climate,
it did not present to me any greater
charms than middle South Carolina
and Georgia. In this section of these
two States, are as many elements of
prosperity as any where on the face
of the earth. The orange business,
though having in it much of value,
is vastly overrated. I think eight
out of ten groves will prove failures
for reasons which I have not time or
space to enumerate. K.
THE BEECHER SCANDLE.
We are to have a second volume of
this disreputable business. The Ply
mouth membership are not quite sat
isfied as to the guilt or innocence of
their great moral tutor, and have ap
pointed a committee to investigate
the charges against him—to examine
thoroughly into the matter. The
New York Herald says:
“What with the proposed appeal
of Mrs. Moulton to the Congregation
al Council, and the investigation
soon to be opened by the Committee
of the Congregational Ministers, there
seems to be a gloomy certainty that
a miserable business will again be
ventilated before the public. It is
claimed that this new Committee, if
it really does take the matter in hand,
will certainly examine Miss Tilton,
Mr. and Mrs. Bichards, Miss Susan
B. Anthony, and all other witnesses
who have not had a full hearing be
fore the Brooklyn City Court. It is
understood the committee will not
begin the investigation for a week or
two.”
Clark, of the Constitution , is com
manding the Okefenokee expedition.
He will write long letters of interest,
while in the swamp, and they will
be kept in type and printed in book
form when he returns. We will have
one of those books if we have to steal
it,
m mriill mi i■ ■ n
New Advertisements.
EORGIA—-Bartow County.
\X Elias liamsour has applied for exemption
of personalty, and I will pass upon the same
at 10 o’clock a. m.. on the 23d of November,
1875, at my office. This November 10th, 1875.
novls-2w. .J. A. Howard, Ordinary.
Sealed Proposals.
SEALED PROPOSALS will be received un
til the first Tuesday in December, 1875,
for the letting of the Bartow County Pauper
Form nltd emiat* CLa tnu
year i3to.
Bidders will be required to be ot good moral
character, and give bond and good security,
tor the proper cai'c ot the Paupers, Farm and
other property of the county on the farm.
Bidders will be required to specify in their
bids at what amount per bead they will sup
port the paupers. The successful bidder to
have lull use and control of the farm.
The Board will also receive and consider
bids for Superintendent of the farm.
By order of the Board. This lltli of Novem
ber, 1575. JOHN 11. WIIvLE,
nov!s-2t Clk. Board Comm’rs, B. C. Ga.
Notice.
rjnHE copartnership heretofore existing be
£ tween Mrs. Sr,llie I. Harris ami Marga
ret B. Rogers, in the “Kingston Mills,” is this
day dissolved by mutual consent. The busi
ness of the firm will he settled by Janies G.
Rogers, Agent, This November 15th, 1875.
SAL LIE I. HARRIS,
MARGARET I*>. ROGERS.
The “Kingston Mills” w ill in future be run
by tlie undersigned, and a continuance of cus
tom by bis friends is respectfully solicited.
This November 15th, 1875.
JAMES G. ROGERS. Agent.
J. B. Morrison, Miller. novls-8m
Tiie Largest & Best Stoct of GlotMng at
M. Sl J• Hirsch’s
Clothiers and Tailors,
CS2 Whitehall Street,
A tlant a, Georgia,
A Full Assortment of Gen’ts FnnMlng Goods
Always on Hand.
Nov. l-3m
John T. Owen'
At Sayre & Co.’s Drug Store,
Main Street,
WILL SELL WATCHES, CLOCKS AND
Jewelry, Spectacles, Silver and Silver
Plated Goods as cheap as they can be bought
anywhere. Warranted to prove as represent
ed.
All work done by me warranted to give sat
isfaction. Give me a call. Novi
ONLY ONEJDQLUR!
Savaimali Weekly Morning News,
Will be sent to any address six months for One
Dollar. This is one of the chtujkstjcee/cliespub
lished. It is not a blanket sheet in which all
soits of matter is promiscuously thrown. It is
a neatly printed four-page paper, compactly
made up, and edited with great care. Nothing
of a dull or heavy character is admitted into
the Weekly. It is an elaborately compiled
compendium of the best things that appear in
the Daily News. The telegraphic dispatches
of the week are re-edited and carefully weed
ed of everything that is not strictly of a ew
character. It also contains full reports of the
markets; thus, those who nave not the advan
tage of a daily mail, can get all the news, for
six months, by sending One Dollar to the pub
lisher; or for one year by sending Two Dollars.
The Daily Morning News is the same relia
ble organ of public opinion that it lias always
been—vigorous, thoughtful and conservative
in the discussion of the issues of the day, and
lively, sparkling and entertaining in its pre
sentation of the news, in gathering and pub
lishing the latest information and in discuss
ing questions of public policy, the Morning
News is fully abreast of the most enterprising
journalism of the times. Price flO for twelve
months; $5 for six months.
The Tri-Weekly News has the same features
as the Daily News. Price $0 for 12 months; $3
for 6 months.
Money lor either paper can be sent by I*. O.
order, registered letter or Express, at publish
er’s risk.
Address all letters to J. 11. ESTILL,
July 29 Savannah, Ga.
HOUSE and LOT
FOB SALE!
A HOUSE and LOT, on the Rowland Ferry
road, % of a mile from the courthouse, in
Cartersville. The house is beautilully situ
ated on a five-acre lot; has 10 rooms, good
stable and all the necessary outliouses.a splen
did well—ail under new plank and post fence.
Price Three Thousand Dollars!
one-third cash, balance on time. Titles per
fect. Apply to ARTHUR DAVIS,
or Stokely St William j,
mar!Btf. Cartersville, Ga.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
law and Heal L state.
W. T. WOFFORD,
ANY business left with Capt. Sauiford and
Mr. Waters, who are in mv office, will re
cieve my attention. I will he at mv olllce usu
ally between the hours of 10 and 11 each morn
ing. ]lcblß] W.T. WOFFORD.
O. Pinkerton. Lindsey Johnson.
Drs. Pinkerton & Johnson.
Physicians aiul Surgeons,
OFFICE— in Johnson & Carry’s Drugstore.
March IS, 1875.
J |M. MOOJi"
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA.
Office: Up-stairs, over Stokcly & Williams,
West Main Street. Marll
akin a son,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA.
Feb 11, ly.
QHO. C. TUMLIN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA
Office : Up-Stairs, Bank Block.
jan 29-1 y
Q H. BATES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CARTERSVILLE, GA.
Office in the Court House,
reb. 6-
A m. jpoute,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
CARTERSVILLE, GA
{With Col. Warren Akin,)
Will practice in the courts of Bartow, Cobb,
Polk, Floyd, Gordon, Murray, Whitfield and ad
oimng counties. • March 30.
JOHN tv. WOFFORD. THOMAS W. MILNER
OEFORI) & MILNER,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
CARTERSVILLE, GA.,
OFFICE up stairs, Bank Block.
-5-U.
ROBERT B. TBIPPE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CARTERSVILLE, GA.
01-'i ICE with Col. Abda Johnson, in the
Court House.
uiayl-31m.
Cartersville Advertisements.
SAVE YOUR MULES fT
flinty Three Hundred Dollars.
Fonr - anfl-a-Half Horse Power.
ONLY S3OO 00!
\ r Ont ATTENTION is directed to theex-
I ceeding low price ol‘ the BOOK WALTER
ENGINE. These engines are especially adapt
ed to the driving of Cotton Gins, small Grist
Mills, etc., and guaranteed to do all claimed
lor them or the money refunded.
Orders received and further information
furnished upon application to
T. W. BAXTER,
Agent for Manufacturer,
aplß-y. Cartersville, Ga
INSURE IN
THE SAINT LOUIS
Life Insurance
ICOMPANY.
ITS PLANS are so easily understood and its
Policies ate so plain thaiLis impossible to
be deceived in them, and there is no chance for
you to be disappointed in the future.
' By tleir Frntis snail n Know Item,”
This old Company has been’a faithful trustee
for the tcidoivs and orphan #, and has paid
Over Six Millions of Dollars
to its patrons in death losses, ahd now holds
over seven millions pledged to future payments.
INSURE IN THIS
Tried and Faithful Old Company,
where you will get the largest amount of Life
Insurance for a given amount of money.
W. 11. HOWARD,
„ Agent, Cartersville, Ga.
THOS. U. CONNER,
Manager of the Georgia Dep’t.,
Sept 13, 1875-y Macon, Ga.
A. ROBIN
lailatnw art flesler
FURNITURE.
Cartersville, Georgia.
4 Ll> KINDS OF HOUSEHOLD FURNI
xU tnre on hand and manufactured to order,
lie makes a specialty of
WHEAT FANS
and keeps a )ail stock, f1 is are undoubtedly
tbe best ever made.
Call and sec his line display ol Furniture.
noTIB-tf.
EDWARDS & CALLAHAN.
Manufacturers of and Dealers in
Harness and Harness Mateual,
Saddles,
Bridles,
Collars, Etc.
Cartersville, Ga.
REPAIRING done with durability and dis
patch. Col. R. H. Jones’ new brick
buiiding on West Main street. Also, dealers in
and metalie wood
Burial Cases anil Caskets.
Always on hand, and is ready night and day
to wait on those win* need his service
feb 3-sf.
Bartow House,
Cartersville, Ga.
IN IIIS HOUSE lias again been leased by the
. undersigned, and she hopes her old friends
and customers will not forget her. Her tables
are supplied with the best to be had in market,
and the rooms are neatly and comfortably fur
nished. MRS. E. M. STOVALL,
P. 8. SHELMAN, Proprietress.
Clerk. . j unelT*tf.
HIISCKI.I.ANKOI7N AIVi:UTISK.HE.VrN.
THE
Mobile Life Insurance Company
Jfobiie , Alabama.
Maurice McCarthy, h. friend,
President. Secretary.
JOHN MACUSRE, SHEPPARD HOMANS
Vice President. Actuary.
TnFl I\FC } 1~ F, IV X .XU U %va * organized June, 1871 bv u
JunfsT AiUJISI <> merc.,a,„ s or Mo*;.,'
lias Issued over Four Thousand Policies.
and paid out for death losses
OVER ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS,
Every death loss has been paid promptly and without,del.ay.
THE MOBILE LIFE
Is rapidly coming into popular favor with Southern insurers,
VIGOROUS and PROGRESSIVE
HOME COMPANY.
About the only Southern Company
■*: :t increased the number of its policy-holders, last year.
Insure in this Staunch and Reliable Company.
R. H e JONES, Agent,
Cartersville , Georgia.
Agents wanted in every county in Ceorgia. Address
R. O. RANDALL,
juuc24-6m General Agent and Manager,
I . ROME, GEORGIA.
H. PADGETT >V SONS.
Contractors and Builders, Manufacturers of Sash, Doers.
Only Three Hundred Dollars.
. BLINDS, Etc.
I |: FLOORING A SPECIALTY.
Having purchased one of the best
COTTON GI NS, and a PRESS
ete U Te°4iU del, 'iVS^TheESt'SkVrSJSg """" bc *"“***"■
tl in “ h "“T ”>> tto, w. feel safe in ,„i„
P,^ a ,r° and t 0 fu , rni ’ sh P arti . e = With Flooring, Ceiling, Doors, Sash Blind* IT- i■ -
t&n aVtffe lowes?pOce V . ery bCSt mU * n * and to takc buildings of every
Thankiui lor the patronage we have had, we respectfuly ask a liberal share in the future.
August 23,1875-4 mos & SONS*
T. W. BAXTER,
liiiisipi Mmtat ail General Ajeit fir lit Salt if SiaiW
Fertilizers, Agricultural Machinery, Gins,
Mowers and Reapers, Wagons.
Saw and Grist Mill, Sorgum and Mill Machinery,
Threshers, Horse Powers, Horse Rates, Cotton and Hay Presses. Eugines.
SOLD AT MANUFACTURERS’ TERMS AND PRICES.
Office on Main Street.
Warehouse on \y. & a. Railroad. a P IB-y. Cartersville, Georgia.
ROME FEMALE COLLEGE.
Fall Session will Commence first
Monday in September.
REV. J. M. M. CALDWELL AX
• j nounces that the exercises of the
' -I, ngrar' above named Institution will be re
sumed as stated above, with a Full
Faculty of lirst—class Teachers.
Cgggjr He gratefully acknowledge- the
. , - patronage hitberu .receive
ed by this College, and hopes there will be no
abatement in the exertions of its friends in its
behalf. It is very desirable that all pupils
should he present at the opening of the term.
Ten per cent, deducted from the catalogue
prices tor board.
For lurtlier particulars, address
auglS-m J. M. M. CALDWELL, Rome, Ga.
FURNITURE!
Coffins, Coffins, oCffins.
IN CONSEQC ENC'E of the scarcity of money
I have l-ccuccd the price of my Collins as
oilows:
Metallic Cases 20 p ecernu less than formerly.
I irst Glass Wood Coffins from $8 to $25.
Second quality do. do. fi to 18.
Ihird do. do. do. 2to 12.
Common Coffins from $1 50 to SB.
My Hearse furnished to customers in the
city. free. T. F. GOU LDSMITH.
August 2, 18T5 3m
NEW SCHEDULE.
Cherokee Rail Road,
FROM and after this date the following
Schedule will be run on the Cherokee Rail-
Leaveltockmartat 7-00 A M
“ Taylorsville, 8:00 •*
. StiUsboro, 8:25 “
Arrive at (. artersville, 9;io “
Leave Cartersville 55*00 P M
“ Tayiorsville 4 ::30 “
Arrive at Rockmart, 5:15 J
GOWER, JOSES & CO.,
AFTER MANY YEARS of close applica
tion and indefatigable labor, have suc
ceeded in building the best
WAGONS-BUGGIES,
Carriaies & Phaetons
Tl./>t were ever introduced Into this country-
I heir trade extends far and wide, and their
work has given entire satisfaction. They are
now selling a great many Jobs, and have
Reduced Their Work
TO
EXTREMELY LOW FIGURES!
0
Thankful for past favors, they would s x •
a continuance Oi their patronage.
Gower, Jones & Cos.
are also Agents for the celebrated
Studebaker Wagon,
and keep constantly on hand their
2-HORSE FARM WAGON.
ALSO
Diamond and 3-Spring Picnic Wagon,
for sale at extremely low prices. The*c wag
ons h..ve been fully tested in this country, ai■ *
have been proven to be the very best Western
wagon ever introduced here.
PRICES FOR 2-HORSE WAGONS:
23* Thimble Skein Brake and Spring Seat $ ®
“ 100
31* “ “ “ 1* 1* 105
Diamond Spring Wagon
Picnic 3-Spring “ 13d
apl22-y.