Newspaper Page Text
"’WfIBMT-WEE' :ESS,
' '*• Watt harms ami haji’l ii. smith
KMTOH» ANl*rti<H**lin OK*
G-V RT EIIBVILLj£,fTv~, JUNE 0. 1871.
.in Clark.
• no, have rend with moro than ordi
"!Wy interest, the remarks of Judge
v bn Irupoiv parsing sentence of death
~ (J. Lloyd lor the murder of
C el. Fish, and }ield our editorial for
Lhi* it> iu : , that v\e may give it in whole
to our renders. Lloyd was tried and
eouvicted at Macdn Superior Court,
May term 1871, as accessory before
the fact, the case being perhaps the
most extraordinary that has ever been
din Georgia. The evidence shows
bat while Holsenbacke was the actual
p< ipetrutor of the murderous deed,
yc-fc that Lloyd, for his own selfish pur-
I ■< f’S, artfully played upon the wenk
l.i s.- and jealousy of the unfortunate
man, and keeping himself, as he be
hoved, securely in the baek-ground,
and out of the reach of discovery, at i
length prevailed upon his passions, and i
instigated him to the commission of |
fearful act. For this Holsenbacke
•as tried and convicted of murder in
the first degree at the same term of the
Court, and received the sentence of
death by hanging. But Justice was
not slow to overtake the chief conspir
ator in this tale of blood, and in the el
oquent and solemnly stirring seutence
( f this Christian Judge, we read and
hru n the late bis sins have brought
upon Iris head. While the verdict of
the Court vindicate the injured laws of
tho land, we commend the sentence of
hi;-> Honor to our readers as a fine spe
cimen of Judicial eloquence and Chris
tian charity.
Sentenced lo Dcatli.
The State vs. John Ik Holsenbacke.
Murder and verdict of guilty, in Ma
con county Superior Court, May
term, 1871. Remarks of Judge J.
M. Clink upon passing sentence on
the prisoner:
You have had a fair and impartial
trial by an intelligent jury of your fel- !
lo ,v-citizens, at and a verdict of guilty has 1
been rendered against y ou. The ver
dict is a just one. It commends itself
to the good sense of all fair-minded
people; and must commend itself to j
vyur own conscience. You have com- ;
i fitted a.great crime, and must answer
for it by submitting to the most terri
ble form of punishment known to the
law.
The whole country was startled with
the intelligence of the death of Col.
Geo. W. Fish. The cheeks of men
turned pale, who had never heard of
his name. The news Hashed across
t e wires, that us he wms returning
home, while on his way from the depot
to his residence, at one o’clock on the
might of the 28th day of February last,
h»3 was shot and killed as he was pass
ing the door of the court house.—
tSuicken by an unseen band he fell
and expired in a few moments.
Assassination is the most terrible
and dangerous crime known to the law.
I rejoice to know that it is unusual iu
this country, but is confined chiefly to
the BUtes of Italy and other less civil
ized parts ol the world. There can be,
from the nature of things, no protec
tion against it. T e highest » r lor of
courage, and the higher t developments
of manhood are of no avail. The eye
of the assassin, when once fixed upou
its victim, pursues it with remorseless j
vigor in all crowds and places, at all
times and seasons, both by day and by
night. The bravest man iu the coun
try at once becomes a coward the mo
ment he is satisfied that the assassin is
dogging his footsteps, and his hand is
over ready, at some unsuspecting mo
ment to deal the fatal blow. He feels
and realizes the alarming truth that
human ingenuity and hum m precau
tion cannot avail him; that the blow
may descend upon him, like a thun
derbolt, at any hour and place; that
an unseen hand holds the issues of life
and death iu its grasp.
While it is the highest grade of
crime, it is the lowest order of vice, and
can only emanate from a mind thor
oughly corrupted and depraved, and
totally devoid of ail the nooler instincts
of the race. The man who seeks the life
of his enemy on the public throughfare,
gives at least a narrow chance for de
fense or escape. The crime is a great
one but our infirm nature will allow some
merit to the boldviolater of the law , and
sometimes will surround the criminal
with a false halo of courage and intre
pidity. But he who from a secret
nuking place, at the dark hour of night,
Gaya his unsuspicious victim, exhibits
not one redeeming trait, but human
nature in its most degraded form-man
fallen from lfis high estate of honor to
the 1 owesLoondition of vice, and below
even some of the nobler instincts of the
brute creation. No wonder that such
a crime as this shoukl awaken the
whole country, and make men every
where feel the insecurity of life—the
want of that protection which the law
i's ls throws around the lives of the
} >cople.
There h no evidence that Colonel
Fish ever knew that you had an unkind
wish or entertained an unkind thought
toward him. You met him as a friend,
find never permitted any suspicions
a wakened in his mind of your evil pur
iok s'towaid him. The base and ut
terly groundless charge, which you and
.your cofederate had hutched up against
r, u, you never communicated to him.
Hi was suddenly cut off without the
fai i- ,-t sm.pi i Hi of any ev 1 t ought
on our p.u t,.
Your present condition may be trac
ed to yonr habits of idleness and dissi
pation. If you had lived an industri
( ous life, you would probably have lived
a sober man, and would this day have
been enjoying the society of your fam
ily, it contented and useful citizen.—
1 \’our vicious habits forced the wife of
yonr bosom to abandon 3 7 0 u, and to
h* ek protection under her father’s roof.
Here is but another instance of the
wrongs of woman, indicted upon them
by the brutal conduct of indolent,
thriftless hush nds. Inlenoea is the
curse of this age. Labor keeps the
| mind and body in healthful exercise,
1 and leaves no time for the indulgence
of the evil passions. Hence those
crimes that startle mankind are gener
ally committed, not by the honest sons
l of toil, but by the idle and dissolute
inhabitants of towns and cities.
You have brought a gieat calamity
ou the family of Colonel Fish. The
wife is without the protection of her
, husband, and the children are without
the fostering, guiding hand of a father.
| A good w ife can, with that heroic for
titude which only a woman can exhib
it, surrender her husband to a natural
death. She sits by lfis bedside and
watches ove r lfis restless slumbers, she
administers to his most trifling wants;
j she cools the fevered brow; she relieves
, the parched thirst. And as she sees
{ the tide of life ebbing away, she prays
j that her Heavenly Father may spare
j him and raise him again to health.—
But when his eyes have closed in death,
she bows her head with Christian sub
mission to the will of her Maker; and
in after years she looks back up?>n the
event, with the melancholy satisfaction
that every care and attentiou which
affection could suggest were used to
smooth his passage to the grave.
*Ou this occasion the wife was wait
ing the return of an affectionate hus
band. The children were asleep, and
she, as an ever faithful sentinel, was
keeping sleepless vigils, and watching
the fleeting hours when her husband
should return. He came! Not as usu
al, full of life and hope and affection,
but bom to her embraces by the hands
of friends, a bleeding, mangled corps.
It is best to draw the curtain over the
mighty sorrow that dwelt in that
li msehold on that solemn night.
Nothing iu nature equals the love
of a tender and devoted wife. The
Bible gives an interesting account of
the love of David and Jonathan, but
this falls short of the love of the wife
for an affectionate busbar,d. She
bows before his intellect and worships
his courage and manhood wth more
devotion than the heathen devotee
when he bows before the shrine of his
idolatry. She is bound to him by
those ties, which the severests advents
of life, which sickness and sorrow and
the changes of fortune only strengthen.
But you have rudely sundered^these
tit s. Mrs. Fish is now a broken down
woman. The grave has cast the shad
ows of death over her life, and these
shadows will lengthen out as time ad
vances, and will never disappear from
her pathwa}’ until her spirit ascends
to that better world “where the wicked
cease from troubling and the weary
are at rest.”
I would not willingly wound your
feeliugs by a single harsh word, unbe
fitting the solemnity of this occasion.
The Almighty has burdened your
conscience with this great crime. It
is as much as you can bear. I would
not torture you with an effort to add
to its weight.
It is with pleasure I turn away from
the saddest of earthly scenes, aud with
confidence invite you to the mercy
seat. Death is the stern penalty of
your transgression. But the Savior
came into the world to save sinners,
and by his death has given a free in
vitation to all men to come to him.—
Let me beg of you to discard the infi
del teachings of the bad man who is
your companion in crime, and look to
Him alone who can give peace and
immortal life. Let the time allotted to
you on earth be spent in repentance ,in
humble supplication before the throne
of grace for pardon and forgivness.
If you will truly repent, you are invi
ted to come, and the promise is sure
and everlasting that he will not turn
you empty away. “Seek and ye shall
find; ask and ye shall receive; knock
and it shall be opened unto you:” and
may the Lord have mercy on you.
[For tlie Cartersville Express.
Religious Ednration.
The great want of the age and of
the country, is Religious Education. —
Physical and mental culture and de
velopment are proper and important;
but of how much greater importance
vs the cultivation of the moral nature
—the heart? This would appear evi
dent if we consider what society would
be without the restraints which reli
gion imposes, and the safe-guards it
affords. The world is bad enough at
best, but how iu finitely worse would it
be without the Gospel of Christ, with
its heavenly precepts and conservative
principles? The history of nations
teaches us that knowledge unsancti
fied by religion, can never make a
people prosperous and happy. Virtue
and Intelligence must go hand in
hand, to accomplish an end so hupor
tant. The peace of society, aud good
government require that the people,
the whole people , should have good
principles—.good hearts as w r ell as cul
tivated minds. If such were the case,
we would have “peace, quietness and
assurance forever.” P. H. B.
‘For whom are you concerned ?’ asked
a judge of a witty lawyer. “I no con
cerned lor the defendant, may is * (lease
your Honor, but I am retained by the
plaintiff,” was the reply.
“First class iu spelling stand up.
J >hn spell w 7 euth( r.” ‘W-e-a-i-o-u t-h- -
j-O- i-r' “W I 1 J< hn, you can sit down;
than \ ill.- worst spell of,
we ither we have had for a long time.’
Editorial Miscellany.
It is reported that Chap Norris, the
notoiious and villainous sheriff of War
ren county during Terry’s reign, is
bung.— Sac. News.
Rev. Mr. DeCamps, a minister of the
Baptist church, was killed near Ckoco
ville in Coweta county last week, by
Win. Headley.
The Rothschilds are said to have
loot from 50 to 75 millions by the re
sult of the Piussian French war.
General McMahon has issued a con
gratulatory proclamation to the French
army. Paris is trauquil, and trade
show 8 signs of reviving. Heamioun
c< s the deliverance from the Commu
nists, and that order, security afcd la
bor are about being restored.
Judge Rcbt. V. Haid( mi n, of Clin
ton, died 1. st Tuesday. He was so
many years Judge of the Otmulge*
Circuit, and one of the ablest law offi
cers in the State.
The amount of the Alabama Claims
is 13 millions. Per contra; the British
subjects’ claim against us is 20 mil
lions.
Strike the ballance, and, if the late
treaty is ratified, the United States
pays to England 7 millions.
The University of Kentucky has pur"
chased Ashland, the home of Henry
Clay, for $90,000.
Secretary Fish has resigned his of
fice and Grant has accepted. Pierre
pont, it is said, will succeed him.
The good people of Albany are lux
uriating in fine vegetables. Irish po
tatoes, squashes, beets, cabbage, cu
cumbers, onions, and, last though not
least of all, gittn corn— all in abun
dance.
President Brown has just paid into
the State Treasury the $25,000 due for
the rent of the Western & Atlantic
Railroad, for the month of May.
Col. Dunlap Scott has been c lected
in Floyd to fill the vacancy in the Leg
islature occasioned by the death of
Capt. Gartrell— majority GOO.
The Southern Presbyterian Church
contemplates a great Southern Univer
sity. The Genera] Assembly at Hunts
ville appointed trustees to receive and
hold all funds which may be contribu
ted to the object, until the meeting o
that body in May next, at
Va., when the question will be finally
determined. It is supposed that At
lanta bids fair to become the point of
location.
Kansas City, June 2.— Mace appear
ed in the ring to-day. Coburn failing to
appear, the referee, Holliwood, declar
ed Mace the winner of the stakes.
The Harper Brothers use in their
publishing house SIO,OOO worth of pa
per every day.
The Methodist Book Concern Com
mittee, at New York, decided on Sat
urday to suspend Dr. Lanahan from
the assistant agency, and appointed
June 8; h for investigation of charges
presented against him by Rev. Dr.
Carlton.
The letter writers say the Senate ad
journed last Saturday, sine die, with
out notifying the President, and it was
commented upon in Washington os a
very extraordinary slight to that Func
tionary.—Sav. Rep.
The Constitution says, speaking of
Mr. Law’s lecture, that “Mr. Law is
nature’s own orator, and his lecture a
mastely production. It is rare that
we uieet with the equal of lecture or
lecturer.
Uses of Ice.— ln health no one ought
to drink ice-water, for ii has occasion
ed fatal inflammations of the stomach
and bow r els, and sometimes sudden
death. The temptation to drink it is
very great in Summer; to use it at all
with any safety, the person should tako
but a single swallow at a time; take
the glass from the lips for half a min
ute, and then another swallow 7 and so
on. It will be found that in this way
it becomes disagreeable after a few
mouthfuls.
The present annual production of
tobacco is estimated to be 4,000,000,-
000 of pounds.
A French chemist says that if tea be
ground like ccffee before hot water is
poured upon it, it will yield nearly
double the amount of its exhilerating
properties. Another writer says if you
put a piece of lump sugar the size of a
walnut in a tea pot, you will make the
tea infuse in half the time.
There is a French female dwarf, of
perfect form, now' in England, in her
ninth year, 19 inches in height and
weighs just 6 pounds. She is a pleas
ing and gentle child.
Detectives.—We hear that a Con
vention is to bo held in Atlanta soon
for organizing adetective force through
out Georgia. Col. Enq.
Some people make their religion go
a long way. A good woman bought a
lottery ticket the other day, accompa
nying the purchase with the soliloquy,
“The Lord knows how it’ll turn out.
It’s all in the hands of the Almighty, I
s’pose.”
A young lady, of Cleveland, Ohio,
received a letter on the eve of her wed
ding, saying that her lover had a wife
and two children iu a neighboring
town. The poor girl read the letter
through, turned her face towards her
mother who was iu the room, and ex
claiming, “Oh, mu !” dropped dead on
the floor.
Chop Prospects. —Upon a survey of
the whole field, so far as w r e have been
able to compass it, we are convinced of
two things, namely: that the crop of
cotton will fall short of that last year,
and the crop of corn be one of the lar
gest over raised in the Cotton States
[&u;. Rep.
The High Joint Treaty.
The Washington Chronicle publish
es a semi-official report of the treaty
made by the High Joint Commission.
England agrees to pay for the rava
ges of the Alabama and other priva
teers, and regrets them. The claims
are to be examined by five arbitrators,
one appointed by the United States
and Great Britain each, and three by
a designated sovereign State of Eu
rope or America. All other claims
included between April 13, 1861, and
April 9, 1865, shall be referred to a
mixed commission. The limitation as
to time, and the application of the
views of Lord Granvile, as expressed
in regard to property of British resi
dents iu the recent Franco-German
war, that foreigners are not to be en
titled to any special protection for
their property, or exempt from milita
ry contribution from either side, kills
a large number of British claims of
vast magnitude, and excludes most ol
the cotton claims of British residents.
The sea fishery question is settled
by allowing both nations to fish unre
strictedly in each other’s waters, ex
cept shell-fish, salmon, shad and river
fisheries. Fish and oil, except fish
preserved in oil, are to be duty free.—
England claims that the United States
gels the advantage of privilege in this
matter, and a mixed commission with
a friemdy umpire shall say whether
she ought to pay England anything
for it.
Free navigation on the Canada riv
ers and on our lakes is arranged. All
these stipul diotis restore practically
the treaty of 1854.
The question of the Northwestern
boundary line is Lo be referred to the
Emperor of Germany. This involves
the ownership of the Island of San
Juan, on tha Oregon boundary.
These are the main points of the
treaty.
Pittsburg, May 27.—A coal sha.t
three hundred feet deep is burning,
supposed to have been caused by fric
tion in the hoisting apparatus. Thir
ty or foi ty men were in the carriage.
The engineer stood at his post hoist
ing away till the timbers supporting
the rope broke while the carriage was
asceudiug. All in the carriage were
certainly killed. It is unknown how
many were in the mine. Some thir y
or forty men are supposed to be in tne
mine, and it is certain that they will
be drowned or suffocated.
Pittsburg, May 27.—The scene
about the burning shaft is one of great
distress and anguish.
Tw r o steam lire engines, one from
Scranton and one from Wilkesboro’,
are on the ground. It is thought that
no waiter will be thrown into the shaft
from the top, but we are told that the
shaft will be drenched with water with
in 24 hours, so . that if not suffocated,
the poor unfortunates must drown—
there is no escape for them.
Later —The fire engines are playing
on the ruins which are so hot that no
one can apprc&ch them, and it will
probably contiuuo so till morning.
Latest —A dog has just been sent
clown in the shaft of the mine, and was
brought up alive, which encourages
them to think that tlm 33 men may
yet be saved.
Be Faithful to Your Friends.—
Never forsake a friend. When ene
mies gather around, when sickness
falls on the heart, when the world is
dark and cheerless, is the time to try
true friendship. The heart that has
been touched will redouble its efforts.
They who turn from the scene of dis
tress betray hypocrisy, and prove that
interest alone moves them. If you
have a friend who loves you—who has
studied your interest and happiness,
be sure to sustain him in adversity.—
Let him feel that Lis former kindness
is appreciated, and that his love was
not thrown away. Real fidelity may
bo rare, but it exists in the heart.—
Who has not seen and felt its power ?
They only deny its' worth and power
who Lave never either loved a fii nd
or labored to make him happy. The
good and kind, the affectionate and
virtuous, see and feel the heavenly
principle. They would sacrifice wealth
and happiness to promote the happi
ness of others, and in return they re
ceive the reward ol their love, by sym
pathizing hearts and countless favors,
when they have been brought low by
distress and adversity.
“Silence in the Court room there!”
thundered a police magistrate the
other morning. ‘'The court has al
ready committed four prisoners
without being able to hear a word of
the testimony.”
(yKOEULA, BARTOW COUNTY.—Whereas
Cephas P. Anthony, Administrator of the
er-tate ol Abel 11. Anthony, deceased, represents
to the Court in his petition duly filed ami enter
ed upon record, that he has fully administered
Abel H. Anthony’s estate. This is therefore to
cite all persons concerned, kindred and ered
**®rs, to show cause, if any they can, why said
Administrator should not be discharged from
bis Administration, and receive letters of dis
mission, on the first Monday in September, ’7l.
(ri ven under my hand ami seal of office, this
sth day of June, 1871.
J. A. HOWARD, Oru ’y B. C.
J. T. OWEN,
JEWELER,
Main Street, Cartersville, Ga.,
Will furnish anything in hi.- line as cheap as
it can he bought anywhere.
Jle is always at liis post, ready to serve his
customers.
Every thing waraiued to give saikfiuci ion.
$500,000.
To k 6km Map.
THE SOUTH CAROLINA
I, VI» AO IMMIORATION ASSOHATIOA
Under the auspices of the “South Carolina State Agricultural and Mechanical Society,'’ will give
a SKIIIES OF CONCERTS, at the Academy of Mv.sic, Charleston, S. C„ commencing October Ist,
1871, fbr the purpose of raising a fund to enable emigrants to settle upon lands selected by the
Association for homes of Northern and European farmers and others, in the State of South Caro
lina, and for their transportation thither and support for the ii;*t roar.
REFERENCES IN SOUTH CAROLINA.—Gener;:! Wade Hampton, Hon. B. F. Perry, Governor
M. C. Bonham, General Johnson 11 ay good, lion. Armistcad liurt, Hon. -James Chesnut, General
John S. Preston, Hon. W. I), Simpson, Andrew Siuloads, Esq., Hon. G. A. Trenholm, Governor
J. L. Manning, Hon. J. B. Campbell.
$900,000 to he awarded to the Ticket Holders of the Series of Concert s to commence on the First
ot October, 1871, at the Academy of Music, Charleston, S. C., on which dav the Drawing commen
ces.
150,000 Season Tickets of Admission, and no more, at $5 each.
All the premiums, including Deed and Certificate of Title to Academy ofMusic, will be deposit
ed with the Nationel Bank of the Republic, New York.
$500,000 ill Cat i£t s .
Ist Gitt, Academy of Music, Charleston, S. C., :ost to buiM ?230,000, having an annual rental of
about $20,000 from Opera House, Stores and Hulls; the baihling being about 930 feet by 60, and
situated corner ol King and Market streets, in the centre of the citv, and well known to he the
n ‘inest building and most valuable property in Charleston; valued at 250,000
4t!i. Gift—Cash
*£• Gifts—Cash each SI,OOO 25 000
Cash each 25 P 2.500
2,404 Gifts, amount to SSOO 000
BUTLER. CHADWICK. GARY & CO., ’
AGENTS SOUTH CAROLINA LAND AND IMMIGRATION ASSOCIATION.
General M. C, Butler, a
John Chadwick. Esq, > Charleston, S. C.
iaa General M. YV. Gary, >
COMMISSIONERS AND SUPERVISORS OF DRAWING:
Gonoi.il A. R. B right, ofGeorgiia Colonel B. H. Rutledge, of South Carolina.
General Bradley T. Johnson, ot \ lrgmia. Hon. Roger A. Pryor, of New York
June sth, 1871—swim
J. & S. BONES & CO. ?
IMPORTERS OF AND DEALERS IN
IRON AN® STEEL,
Hardware, Cutlery, Cans, Sc,,
ROME, OA-.
Besides having DECIDEDLY the L.IDDEST STOC K
HABDH ABE, in all its Departments, in the Chero
kee country, we are the Exclusive Agents for the sale of
Celebrated Portable, Stationary,
AND
Plantation Engines.
PORT ABE E CIRCULAR SAW AND CRIST MIEES,
AND MILL MACHINERY OF ALE KINDS.
Persous intending to erect Mills of any kind, would do well to consult with us,
Aiiil can he fiimisliefl at Strictly manufacturers Prices.
Blandy’s Portable Steam Engines and Saw-Mills have taken
the First Premiums at
The United States Fair,
The Ohio State Fair at Cincinnati,
The Ohio State Fair at Dayton,
The Ohio State Fair at Zanesville,
The Ohio State Fair at Sandusky,
The Indiana State Fair at Indianapolis,
The Missouri State Fair at St. Louis,
The Tennessee State Fair at Nashville,
The Goergia State Fair at Macon,
The Arkansas State Fair at Little Rock,
The Agricultural Fair Association Ga. & Ala. Rome'Ga.
The Kentucky North Western Agricultural Society.
The Great Industrial Exposition at Cincinnati,
And many other Fairs of less consequence, and never failed
to beat all competitors, in any contest in which they were evei
entered.
We give a full square guarantee upon all the Machinery sold
by us. Send for Catalogue and Price List.
March 31, 1871. J. & g. BONES & CO.
“THE BEST.”
“THE KELLER PATENT
GRAIN DRILL,
V
IS THE best Machine now made for Sowing
Wheat, or Grass Seeds and Fertilizers. Far
mers will please send for Descriptive Circulars,
before buying any other Machine.
AYERY STEEL PLOWS,
UTLLY PLOWS, (cast.)
WATTS PLOW’S (east.)
Guanos, Norway Oats, Barley,
Grass, Clover, and all Kinds
AGRICULTURAL IMPLE
MENTS, and
Mill Fiirnisliiiig Goods,
Including the Celebrated
WARRANTED
INGHAN WHEAT SMUT MILL-
SALE ON BEST TERMS.
Send for Price List.
MARK W. JOHNSON,
sept. 23, ’TOi-wly Atlanta, Ga.
SCHOOL NOTICE. ~
THE Trustees of the Cartersvihe Female
Academy have secured the services of
a lady at Danville, Ky., of the highest qual
ifications and character, to take charge of
the school. She will commence about the
first of July. The actual time she will give
notice of on her arrival here. She will
come with tliQ best testimonials, and we un
hesitatingly recommend her to the patron
age of the public.
J. R. PARROTT,
ABDA JOHNSON,
Trustees, W. 11. GILBERT,
P. L. MOON,
JNO. W. WOFFORD.
June ‘l,—tf.
Hauling; itiul
As,v A. Dobbs, having supplied him elf with
a mule §ud wagon, is prepu cd to Tl.ia! and
Plow for my one wi king hi ? erviees.
F. M. hichardson,
Dealer in
Stoves,
Grates,
House - Furnishing Goods,
TIN WAKE,
Corner Whitehall and
Hunter Streets,
Atlanta, Ga.
jan- 1, 1871-wly -
DANGER IS AT TOE DOOR!
|Preparc to Avertlt.
i
We will erect, in the most approved and
scientific manner, the Iron, Zinc, or Copper
Rod; ca i put them up much cheaper, and
on better terms than parties from elsewhere.
We also do all kinds of Painting, Freecoe
ing, Wall-Coloring, Paper-Hanging, &c., in
the very best style, and on reasonable
terms.
All work warranted to give entire satis
faction. HOFFMAN & STOVER.
Carteraville, Ga.
P. S.—All orders left at the New Drug
Store will receive prompt attention.
June 2,-sw2m.
FOK SACK.
The Old Methodist Church Building, wil
be cold, at public out-cry, before the Court
Jruce door, to the highest bidder, on next
' . • Cartersville, June 1.
fctJ'-LhiiiAiAN HAS RETURNED FROM
M VRKET WITH HIS MAGNIFICENT STOCK
OF SPRING AND St .AIMER GOODS !!!.&&
NEWADVERTISEMENTS
H.J.fUYELS
DEALER IN R EAL ESTATr
* nXKLLI, P. 4.
GAEGUNG OU
is good for
Bum* and Scald*. .
OhiMoino,
Siera-n* and irroW »r />, .
(dipped If, m d*, 'P' 1 ' *'
Flesh Wound*,
Front Bite*, ’ f
External Poisons, sit-t/'i'' k '' o ** r, y.
Sand Crook*. m t**,- GY,,*,
GaL’* nf All Kind*, V"' 1 * 1
>/ tfa*t Cr*u k i /i r * r ■
Poll Eril F t p , ~frU
Bite* of A nhnal*. Inserts Rout,7* /'*
H... U.W: 5l „, . I
Twenty-Fir© Cent#.
The Gargling Oil has been in ,
ment for thirty-eight vear< *n »*® * blni.
fair trial, hut be sure and follow <Wu k U »
Ask your nearest druggist o*-Ti. n . r ert nv
ent medicines, for oue of our \fif r,D "it.
N ado Mecums, and read w h it and; manacs and
about the Oil. ' thc *#y
IDe Gargling Oil is for sale hv all r«
ble dealers throughout the Cnittd pecta J
other countries. “ “W# u#,n
Our testimonials date from 1833 m
md and are unsolicited. Use the r, ,
and tell your neighbors what good it B ’
U e deal fan-ami liberal with all ,i, " I
contradiction. Write for an 1 ', U(l ,!e ''l
Book. Almanac or CoG|
Manufactured at Lockport, N y I
MERCHAT’S
GARGLING OIL COMPANY,
■huix iionijn. si-..-
FRACRANT SAPOLIENE~
cjoiins Kid Glove, ami all kind, ofCleth, ,
Clothing: removes Paint, Grease, Tar 1
stoutly, without the least iu'urv tonY's!?'
fabric. Sold l.v Druggists aad Cr . ne :"
Dealers. FUiGR \M' SAPOUEnF, ’
Barclay St. New York, 46, La Salle St.,‘Chici c ,,
CHEAP ADVERT 181NG.—We
an advertisement in Right Hundred
rival) Newspapers for Six Dollars IH . r
Per week. One line one week will cost Si v n'T
lars Two lines will cost Twelve Dollar, ami
Ten lines will cost Sixty Dollars, s, n .i Y,‘r '
Printed List Address GfcO. P. RuWEJ i * L
Advertising Agents, No. 41 Park Row . N. y.
Agents : Read Thisl
W E n ILT ’ VAY AGKNTS a S.\| Ap.
▼ T oi PUR YVKI IV and Exp©©*'
or allow a large commission to sell our new n i
wonderful inventions. Address M. W \(,\m
& CO., Marshal, Midi.
ikl A A DAY FOR ABB, with Stencil
N? ll* lools, Address E. A. Gralnm
Springfield, Vermont
(LQO X A nio,,tl '. horse and carriage fur
njslied. Expenses paid. 11. u
Shaw, Alfred, Me.
A MILLION DOLLARS.
Shrowed but quiet men can make a fortune bv
revealing the seci-et of the business to no one '
Address GEO. WINSTEAD,
GBB Broadway, New York.
JW.VANNAMEE, D., successfully cure*
© all classes ot Chronic and Acute Diseaws.
Send stamp for circular containing partiularn
and testimonials. Address Box 5120, New York
Mini,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
|
TO MERCHANTS.
««» *-
GRANITE
End
E. C. WARE,
Exactly suited to the wants of Country Merch
ants, of our own Importation, packed to our
own Order
IY EUROPE.
We sell them for net cash for SBOD9
Direct Importation
OF
TABLE AND POCKET
C utler y.
Any New York bill of
Cutlery.
Silver l’latod 'Ware,
and Crockery,
Duplicated.
Save Freights, Breakage, and Delay, by buy*
ing from us.
Manufacturer's Agents
for -
Crlass-Warc.
The largest and cheapest stock of
FIRST-CLASS
FRUIT JARS,
in the South.
SAVE YOUR FRUIT.
for Price Lists.
Mcßride & co.
may 22-wly ATLANTA, GA.
Read the flaming advertisement of Mc-
Br Cos., Atlanta, 6a.
Loyless’ Tearl White Lead is ' far *
ranted equal to any in town, and sold for
less. Maysth,-H
-
See new advertisements in this pl
per. _
A Large lot of Glass. Oils, arni-i'-
for sale CHEAP, at the New l>r«g
Store. May s‘h,-tf.
Globe Flower Cough- Syrup cures Asthw*