The Cartersville semi-weekly express. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1871-1871, July 04, 1871, Image 1

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g \ X 1 . . r 7’ f e 1 _ ' , , , 5- • P ■ 7* lArt y v f , '*l J 1 a Ex .W.htWWIHM Published on every Tuesday/ and Frulrrrj Mornings VOLUME X. Tlic Cartersville Express j. Semi-Weekly on everv TI7RS-j ~ V ', \si) FRIDAY, by 5 fl. SMTTink Go., Editors and Prop’rs, 1 i the town of < artersville, Bartow County, Ga. j Term of Subecriptiom ONLY $£ A YEAR! f! INVAR' IHI/i’ ADVANCE. ’i uir-la M ). ; irtng Edition, one year) 1.50' I ■ latter |>r)|>o'ititMi is confined to citizens’ Tonrs of Advertising: 7 i , s/, h£ (O.i J fu*dk or />**,) i»t>r square of ten ,;j,( Softparid or lirovier tines or less, One 1 ij tr for the first, ifii'l Fjfty Cent* for each sul>» •e'liiient. Inset;! ton. „',l (i).i(rwt, One Hundred and Twenty », 'l yei colmun, or in that proportion. Ifyifdaslofial C*,ards. i •foilit W. Wofford, ATTORNEY AT IAW. CARTE K-Vn.Td) GEORGIA. Office over Pinkerton's Drug Store. Oct. J*t. X. T. WOFFORD, A. P. .W'OKFOTtt). Woli ftrd A WofForil, ATTORNEYS AT LAW-, •-•ARTRUSVILIeS, . ...si .GEORGIA. June «T, 1870. -*'''"* • v _ - - —-—Tj|> 11. W r Wiirpliof, ATtYoRNEY AT LA'W, '" ‘ , i'AtTKUSVILI K,.,« GEORGI A. : Will pmetied in the eonVtTo? the Cherokee! ircuit. J’arl jcnl.u’ alj.ont.ion gLyento tine cos-< ■i 1 ion ofeiftints.' Ciilioe with 'Col. .Xlnia John- 1 , )n . oct. John •I • J ATTORNEY AT LAW & REAL ESTATE AGENT, j CARTERSVILLE CfKORGIA. \Vi ll attend promptly to all profTcssiohalbusi- j )i," entrusted to his care; also, to tne buying and selling of Real Estate. Janl. dfcrc. A. Howard, Ordinary of Bartow County. CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA. Jan 1,1870. v A. ME. Finite, ATTORNEY AT LAW. CARTERSVILLE GEORGIA. ( With Col. Warren A kiu r ) Will practice in the courts of Bartow, Cobb, Polk, Floyd. Gordon, Murray, Whitfield and ad joining counties. * MarclrJO. T. W. MILNER, O. 11. MILNER. Hilnrr Milner, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA Will attend promptly to business entrusted to their care. Jan. 15. - ■ fr- Warren Akin, ATTORNEY AT LAW. CARTERSVIf LE, GEORGIA. Will practice in all the courts of the State. Ham. IK. Fatillo* Fashionable Tailor and Agent for, Sewing Machines, VlTlhl, attend promptly to the Cutting, Re -11 pairing, and Making Boys’ Tuul Mens’ Clothing; also, Agent for the sale of the cele brated (Srox’er ft Baker Sewing Machines. <>!*- lice over.Htokely ft VVJliimns Store. Wnpauoc from the rear. - l'chTT. W. H. Noiiißcuilhv Jeweler and Watch‘and dlbcK Repairer, CARTBRSVILI.E,.'....... XGEORGI A. (>tlicc in front of A. A. Skinner A Co’s Store. Keuncsaw lionise, MARIETTA,....’ GEORGIA. | o Gill open to the traveling public as xvell as 3 summer visitors. Parties desiring to make arrangements for the season Fan he accommo dated.. Rooms si oat and clean and especially adapted for families. A fine large piazza has been recently added to the comforts of the estab lishment. FLETCHER A FREYF.R, inpel§wt f PropyicJ(Ors. O’sHTeli)^, Fash ion able Tailor, Cartersville, Georgia. HAVE. just received the latest European and American styles of Mens’ and Roys’ Cloth ia.g, and is prepared to Cut and Making to or der. Oltlcc upstairs in Liebman’s store, East side of the Railroad. , sept. 29. B>x*. j. A. Jackson, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, OFFICE IN TIIE ME W DR UG STORE. CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA. Jan 4th. 1871. ~WK. 0. BOW LEU, ” MANUFACTURER OF!, AND DEALER IX, SINGLE AND DOUBLE HARNESS, . Saddles, COLLARS) LEATHER, &C. S UEI'AIBIVU I>OXR Willi uoatness and riisjKitclt. fife*?*’ Shop r h Wo»t Mil in Street, near the old Market House, CARTERSVILLE. GA. tVb 21-wly WM-G ROWLER. " GEAR SHOP,” by Al w. <l warn, fp CARTERSVILLE, GA. M/jutaoitbbb. of Harness, Rri- A ttifs, Boar, etc*, ano Dbalkr in , Saddles, Lonflicr. Repairing done on short nofflh*. Work war ranted to stand the test. Hides Wanted, jan. 24,1871.-swly * .. ih:.vtist. \/' AVn/’ Cartersville, Ga. Teeth dr^wn,without t>dUb t4 ic usc 01 nar cotic spray. '' ‘ mc h 9. ' J. T.'ffWEN, JKWELER, ' Main Htreot, Cartersville, Ga., bjs line as cheap as h i an be bought an ywm>rc. ' .'lu.-iys at liis post, ready toservq liis c,y war;, nted to give satisfaction. I 38, EU>- ; strain* jfemo.TlK.ge ' or ]uoe>biVß T low, anil 4’hc. c disouscshaVrsel dom been treated succeseTuUy. The profession ha- sought dil tige.rtly for some that wo'ld enable them to treat thesS "diseases with success. At that remedy lias been 'discovered by one oft he ritO't.*k.jlful übysibiaouln Lhe-StaU* of Geo*g»VL Tdie remedy It Bradheld’s Female Regulator, It is purely vorct able, and is put up in Atlan ta, Wy BRAIiFIELD A CO. Haiti purify the -blood and strengthen the system, relieve irritation of tho-kidneys, and is a perfect specific for all the above diseases; as certain a cure nsiyuinine is; in < Wil* and Fevers. For a history of J.iseases. and certificates of its xvorderful cures, the reader is referred to the wrapper around the bottle. Every bottle wav-t ranted to give satisfaction or money refunded. LaGrange, G a.. March 2d, 1870. HR YLJFIELD ,tCO., ATLANTA, GA.: Dear Kirs; 1.-take, pleasure in *fatimr that 1 liavc used, for, the last twenty years, tliemedi cine vouareputting up, known as DR. J. BRAD FIELD’S FEMALE REGULATOR, and con sid<*r it the l»e>< combination ever gotten to gether for the diseases for which it is recom mended. I have been familiar with the pre scription both as a pr ac t i t,io mo-sp f|p ocH qif’i fit a*d in domestic practice, and can IronGatly sat that 1 consider it a boon to su can but hope that every lady in onr whole land, who may be suffering in any way peculiar to their suv, may ho ahUiffo-procure a bottle, that tiieir sufferings may not only He relieved, but that Hu-yjnav be restored to health Sc strength. With my kindest regards, lam, resi>*otf'iiliy, IV. It. FERRELL,.HE D* 1 We, the nndesigned Druggists, take pleasure in commending to thb trade, l>r. J. Itradliekl’s Female Regulator—believing it to he a good and reliable remedy for the diseases for which he recommends it. W. A. LANSDELL, PEMBERTON, WILSON, TAYLOR & CO. RED WINE ft FOX, W. (LA WSIIE. Atlantic Ga. W. ROOT & SON, Marietta, Ga. ‘ % ACTS Whli gentleness and thoroughness upon the Liver and General Circula tion*— the Bowels In Natural Matron and Cleanses the System from all iiupuri- J*®"* \ and - \ I Never fails f_ ntn i ”to Core Tjl an vjr r ' S. Prophitt’s] i n nidl-^^^*—**'"T**. "* ' yy.y. Enlarg ment, liyspepsia, Imligestion, Loss of Ap petite, Nausea, Soar Stomach, Heart; Burn. Debility, Low Spirits, Cold Feet ami Hand#, Costiveness, TJstlessness, Colic, Chronic Diarrhea, and Chronic Chills and Fever. I®* Compouned in strict with skillful chemistry and scientific pharmacy, this purely veg- f 0 t a 1> 1 e Com |>o uml * has. after the severo-J 1 CELEBRATED I test of t xv t y| | J xears in cessant use.! «^ r '- ....—njhecn styl ed the Gnu at Restorative and Hecitkbant l.y the enlighterieil testimony of thousands us ing it; so harmoniously adjusted that it keeps the Liver in healthful action; and when the directions are observed the process of waste and replenishment in the human system con tinues uninterruptedly to a ripe old age, and man, like the patriarchs of old, drops into th£ grave full of years, and without a struggle, whenever; y ID k a th claims his “ r . . | Ipveroga tive. vdit-jijjivcr Medicme.iipted to t he most'| 1 Idellcate robnsteOnst ittdaoip tn can'he gTyoTTxmji fapial safety and success to tho fating child, invalid lady or strong man. > jtine2, 1871. ■ . , nil. o. S. I 9 HOP HITT’S Anodyne l?nin Xa:ill It. Vfevfcß FAILING! KILLS PAIX E\ EVERY FORM. Pains Jn j hi whs, Rhfvrntatosnip. Ncurjil/ia, T ’onifhs. Colds, h, oiichPtPAWoCtion*. Nidifey Diseases, fhjs pepsia, hirer Complaint ; Colic-. Cholera , Cholera Morbus, Pleurisy. Asthma, Heart Rum. Tooth Ache. Jaic Ache, Ear Ache, Head Ache, Sprains. Bruises, ..Cuts. Contusions, 'Fores, 'TAaerated Wounds, Scalds. Burns, Chill Plains, Frost Bites, Poisons, of all kinds, vegetable’or animal. Os all ■fjpA I X ~Tv r LX. IT 7| tmi »3t.-ww»'»ii»wis 1 'li~nr—lTT ml,lm h' bwim j the Remedies ever discovered for the relief of Suffering humanity, this is the best Pa#* .dedica tor known to Medical Science. The cure is" ipeedy and permanent in the most inveterate diseases. This is no humbug, but a grand medical dismre.i'St. A Pain Killer containing no poison to inti am e, paralize or drive the inflammation upon an in ternal organ. Its efficiency is truly wonderful —KEIJEPI3 INSTANTANEOUS, it is'devtine.t'tO. banish pains and aches, wounds and bruises, from the facd,ol' the earth. k may 6, 1871. !*• * 'Es * CURTIFUC A TITS: We, the undersigned, haved used Dr. Propli itt’s Piepaavtioirs, and take pleasure in recom mending them to the public, as being all he claims for them; Col. ltd jlcnderson, Covingtsotj, Ga.; l) T Beg ers, cqvingttm..Ga.; O* Porter. Xo viujrtAn. Gh'A Prof. J LMones, Covington. Ga.’, Rev. M W Ar nold, Georgia Conference; Rev. W W Oslin, Ga. Conference; F M Swanson, MonticeMo, Ga.: Ro bert Barnes, Jasper County, Ga.; AM Robinson, Mpnticcllo, Ga.; James Wright, Putnam county, Ga.; A\\ estbrook, Putnam countv, <>;u; Judbfe JJ Floyd, Covington, Ga.; W L BcbCe, “Cov ington Enterprise,”; A H Zachry, Convers, Ga; George Wallace, Atlanta, Ga.; Dick" Lockett, Davis county, Texas; W Hawk Whatley, Cus sota, Texas; W C Robert*.,.l>iuden couiifcv, Tex as; Tommy & St ewartt, 'Atlanta. Ga; W A Lans dcil, Druggist, Atlanta, Ga; It F Maddox & Cos.; Atlanta, Ga.; Uriah Stephens, Cartersville, Ga.; A N Louis, Lowndes comity, Ga.; Joseph Lam), Lowndds eotnitjv G.*v.; tTas. Jrtfereon. Carti’rt viile, Ga.;. WJ. Lljis, J)oo4y county, Ga.; W A Forchapd. Dooly coffittv, Ga.;Joh‘t4 B. Davis Newton Factory, Ga.; B F Bass, Low mines co. GOWER, JONES & CO MANUFACTURERS OF And Dealers in CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, 1, 2 & 4 Horse Wagons, MATERIALS, &C. REE AIRING, of all hinds, DONE WITH NEATNESS and DURABILI TY. .cartersville, ga. fl'h. /, 1871.w1y ■ Saits of Clothes from $2,00 to SI,OO at Sattfufeild, Pyron & Go’s. Bridles, CAHTLRSYALLL, HARTOW COUNTY, (‘jKOROLV, JULY L tS7 L. 7 . 7tk , JL tA ** A' » x i * ■ f , SeTiodule of*the CAfeTERSYILLE & TAN-WERT I’. E. 0N and 'after January 20th, 1871, the trains Leave TA A' LORS Y IT, LE, at 9.3 ft, A. M. “ STILEBRORO’, at 10, V. M. “ FORREST HILL, at 10.25, Y.M Arriving at CARTERSVILLE. at 10.5 U, A M Leave CARTERSVILLE. at 1. P. M. - ' Arrive at TA Y LOTtS VILLE. at .... 3. P. M. A Hack will soon he running from Cedartoxvn to Taylorsville via. Van Wert, connecting with the trains. * • ' - "An Extra train will be run to Cartersville and Return, to Taylorsville, every Friday evening*, lly order of the President. D. W. K. PE ACOCK. §ee»y. CHANGE-OF S C H E D U iTr Western ,t- ats antic? n. r. ejee ON and after 28th instant, trains will run on this Road as follows : NIGHfL PASSENGER TRAIN—OI’TWARP. Leaves .\tlaota, - 6 :id. p. li. Arnvrs hf Chattanooga, ...; 1 43, A.’M. I)aY passenger TRAlN—Outward. Leaves Atlanta. .... 8 15,' * a. jl Arrives atJJhattanooga .... .... ;4 25, p. si. • NIGHT PASSENGER TRAlN—lnward. Leaves Chattanooga 5 10, P. M. Arr^oe, -at’Atlanta 1 42, a. ji. day passenger train—inward. Leaves Cbaft'aßoog^p ' ~..5 (D, A. si. Arrives at Atlanta'"... 1 38, p. si. DALTON ACCOMM-ODATION. Leaves Atlanta i 3 4ft,*P. *M. Arrives at Dalton p m. Leaves Dalton ~...3 25, A, M. Arrives at Atlanta. ..T AY. ... .."..10 IHI, A. si; E. B. WALKER, mj.iv 2»,.187L Master of TransporttUsion. lowshe & Haynes, HAVE ON H AND AND are receiving the iineet stock of the Very Latest Styles of niftmoitd and (*old •TEW ELRY, in upjierYieorgia, selected with e at care for the Fall and Winter Trade. Watches, of the BEST 'M AKERS,-of both Europe and A merica; American and French Clocks; sterling and Coin Silver Ware; and the best quality of Silver Plated Goods, at price's to suit the times; Gold, Silver and Steel Spectacles, to suit all ages. Watches and Jewelry Rkpairsd by Competbnt Workmen; Also Clock and Watch Makers Tools and Materials. sept 13.-swly ATLANTA, GA. W. H. GILBERT. a. BAXTER, T. XXY BAXTER, Jr. GILBERT &" BAITER, (SUCCESSORS TO W. 11. GILBERT & C 0.,) Dealers In IIARDWVRE, IRON, STEER, X.IIES, CLOVER k GRASS SEEL. A % i / it AGENTS FOR SALE OF GOAL CHEEK COAL. ■Peruvian Crnano. And other - Fertilizers. Agricultural Implements, Agricultural and Mill Machinery. ALSQ GENERAL COMMISSIGN MERCHANTS For sale and Purchase of COTTON, WHEAT, COEN. And all otkfcr Country Produce, Cotton, Hav AND OTHER PRODUCE SHIPPED ON LIREKAL TERMS. GILBERT & BAXTER, Cartersville 4*a. Jan. 19, 1&71—ly. - JAS. W. STRANGE, Dealer la, and Manufacturer .Os >: ~,.T1K WAKE, ASD Honse-Fmmishing Gifoocl.s. ALSO DEALER l\ , First-Glass Stoves At The JLoivest Cash Prices. WILL BARTER FOR COUNTR Y PRODUCE, RAGS, AC. Cartersville, Jan. 20th, ’7l -ly. H. 11. PATXKLO, Agent 6ROVEH &■ BAKER% CELEBRATED 0 BOTH .THE ELASTIC AND SHUTTLE - ,OR . LQEKSTITEH, SUITABLE FOR ANY KIND OF FAMI LY SEWING* NONE BETTER* Hen an<l Roys’ Clotliing Milne on the Most Reasonahle Terms. In fact, almost any description of SEATING done As Cheap as the Cheapest! AND iy THE REST STYLE. Lyman Chapman, Brick and Stone' CARTERSVILLE, GA. I.‘ prepared to do any .of the above work «pon short notice and at, low f.guers / ILGRGI A, B VRTDWCOrNTY.—T. M.fftew \ H arc lifts applied for exemption of personalty, a.Kt- L will pass upon tJte#s*,in# at Wo’clock A. M., on the 3rd day ol July, 1871, at my ollie'e. June 21st, 1871. >, J. A. HOWARD. Ord’y 11. C. “Onward and) Upur&d” SHARP &FLOYD, Successors to Geo. SHARP, Jn., ATLANTA, GAY;, Wholesale And Retail Jewelers. Ae Keep a Large and Varied Assortment of FINE WATCHES, CLOCKS, DIAJIOXDS, JEWELRY, ’ AND SPECTACLES. b mm m A SPECLUTY. We Alahufaetuae Tea .’Cks, Forks, Spoons. Goblets', Cups, Kuives, etc. . For Af]riculturtd Ifait^a. 4Ve are prepared to fill ao v order for Fairs at short notice; also to give any information in regard Uk Prernsnyee. . . . » Grcjers by msiil or in person, will receive prompt and careful attention. WO ask a com parison of Stock, Prices and Wdrkmartship Witft kny bouse in the Ktate. Watohes and Jewelry carefully Repaired an.l Warranted. Masonic Badges aod >Simday- Sc’iyol Badges made to order.. All Work Guaranteed. ENGRAVING FREE OF CHARGE. SHARP & FLOYD. May 23, swly. ...... CONSUMPTION, Its ( I nre anH Its Preventive BY J. H. SCHENCK, M. D MANY a human being has passed away, for whose death there was no other reason than the neglect of known and indisputably proven means of cure. Those near and dear to family and friends are sleeping the dreamless slumber into which, had they calmly adopted Dll. JOSEPH H. SCHENCK’S SIMPLE TREATMENT. and availed themselves of his wondeVfuT e flic a-' cions medicines, they would not have fallen. Dr. Sehenck has in his own ease proved that wherever sufficient vitality remains, that vital ity, by liis medicines and bis directions for their use, is quickened into healthful vigor. In this -statement there is nothing.presump tuous. To tlie faith of the invalid is made no representation that is not a thousand times substantiated by living and visible works. The theory of the cure by Dr. Sehenck’s medicines is as simple aslit is nr failing, rts philosophy requires no argument. It is self-assuring, self convincing. The Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills arc the first two weapons with which the citadel of the malady is assailed. Two-thirds of the cases of consumption originate in dyspepsia and a functionally disordered livei. With this condition the bronchial tubes “ sympathize” with the stomach. They respond to the morbific action of the liver. Here then comes the cul minating result, and the setting in, with aIL its distressing symptoms, of CONSUMPTION. The Mandrake Pills are csmpofserT of one Os Nature’s noblest gifts—the Podophillum Petta tum. They possess all the blood-searching, alterative properties of calomel. But unlike calomel,.they “LEAVE NO STING BEHIND,” The work of cure is now beginning. The vitiated and mucous deposits in the bowels and in the alimentary canal are ejected. The liver, like a clock, is wound*up. It arouses from Its torpidity. The stomach acts responsively, and tlie patient begins to feel that he is getting,,at last, A SUPPLY OF GOOD BLOOD. The Seaweed Tonic, in conjunction with the Pills, permeates and assimilates with the food. Chylifleation is now progressing without its previous tortures. Digestion becomes painless, and the cure is seen to he at hand. There is no more flatulence, no exacerbation of the stomach An appetite sets in. Now corhcs the greatest Blood Purifier ever yet given, by an indulgent father to suffering mffii. Sohenek’s Pulmonic Syrup comes jn to perform its functions and to hasten and com 18 etc the cure. It enters at once upon its work. Nature cannot he - cheated. It collects and ripens the impaired portions -of the lungs. In the form of gatherings, it prepares them lor cxpectorations.and lo ! in a very short time the malady is Vanquished, the rotten throne that it occupied is renovated and made new, and the ]«[tient. in all the dignity of regained vigor, ■steps fqrth'to enjoy the manhood or the woman hood that was GIVEN UP AS LOST. The second thing is, the patients must stay in a warm room until they get well; it is almost impossible to prevent taking cold when the lungs are diseased, but it must he prevented or a cure cannot he effected. Fresh air and riding out, especially in this section of the country in the winter season, are all rtrong. Physicians who recommend that course lose patients, if their lungs are badly diseased, and yet because they are in the house, they must not sit down fpiiet; they must walk about the room as much and as fast as the strength will hear, to get up a good circulation qf blood. The patients must keep in good spirits—be determined to get well. This has a great deal to do with the appetite, and is the great point to gain. To despair of care alter such evidence of its possibility in the worst cases, and moral cer tainty In all others, is sinful. Dr. Sehenck’s personal statement, to the Faculty, of his own cure was in tlwse modest words : Many Years ago I was in the last stages of consumption ; confined to ray bed, and at one time my physicians thought that I could not dive a week; then, like a drowning man catch ing at straws, I heard of and obtained the pre parations which T now offer ter the public, find thewmftde a perfect cure of me. It- seemed to me that I could feel them penetrate my whole system. TBpysoon ripened the .matter in mv lungs, and T would spit up more than a pint of offensive yellow matter every morning for a long time. As soiyn as-yia* hogan to subside mv.jcough, fevei, pain and night sweats all began to leave me. aqd inv anpetße became so great Chat it was with ttiillculfy that, I ootijd k^ep’'from efftiftg WO ’’TtfifWi: 'f “sopn g!?lhbd'fny rtfWSgih, and have grown in fiesh ever since.” “I wa- weighed shortly, after n\y recover}’,” added ’the Doctor, “flieh looking like a mere skeleton; my weight was onlv ninetv-seven liounds ; my present weight is two hundred and twenty-five pounds, and for years I hitve “ ENJOYED GOOD HEALTH.” Dr. Sehenck has discontinued his professional visit to New York and Boston. He or his son. Dr. J 11. Schemck, Jr., still continue to >ee patient's at their office. No. 15 North Sixth street, Philadelphia, every Saturday from 9 a. m., to 3 p. m. Those who wish a thorough examination with the Rcspirometcr will he charged five dollars. The Respirometer declares tne exact condition of the lungs, and patients can readily learn whether they are curable pr not, Tho directions i'or taking the medicine are adapted to the intelligence even of a child. Follow these dfrontons, and kind nature will do the rest, excepting that in some cases the Man drake Pills are to be taken in increased doses ; the three medicines need no other accompani ments than* the ample instructions that do accompany them. First create appetite. Os returning'health hunger is the most welcome symptom. When it comes, as it will come, let the despairing he of good cheer. Good blood at once follows, the cough loosens, the night sweat is abated. In a short time both of these morbid symptoms are gone forever. "Dr. Sehentk’s medicines are constantly kept in tens of thousands of families. Asa laxative, or purgative, the Mandrake Pills are a standard preparation; while the Pulmonic Syrup, as a curear of coughs and colds, may be regarded :is a pro »hy lac term against consumption in any of its forms. Price af the Pulmonic Syrup and Seaweed Tonic, 41.50 a bottle, or $7,50 a half dozen. Man drake Fills, 25 cents a box. For sale by all druggists and dealers. JOHN F. HENRY, EIGHT College Place, New York, WHOLESALE AGENT. NOTICE. VLL PERSONS who remained Loyal to the Upi tod States Government during the lata war, and who,Turnished to or had army supplies taken, bv the Federal soldiers, can learn so zie tliiug to ttieir interest by calling upon me by the 27th inst, at my ofliee in Cartersville. W. L. GOODWIN, Claim agent. Cartersville-. June 22. 7871.* PO ETRf. * Oh ¥«*, I mu a- Democrat. [air, BONNIE blue flag.]. fr rom flue RoineUem h>r.' Oh V 9« I am a I>eaKKM*at! I glory in the name; For I can speak my sentiments 'Without the least of shame. I enyy not the scalawag. That trios to rob our State, For in the end I think they'll moot Avery bitter fate. Chords— Hurrah, liurrah, for all the world can see There’s manhood m the land that shouts, We can and will be free. We do not have a prejudice Against the good and true, Who come to make our state their homes, ■ > • •• , v v • '’S 4s honest people do, But as for laws that cost sp much, We do not ask your aid, Nor can wehll your carpet-bags; For all the means have played. Hurrah, hurrah, for our old Empire State; She has been trodden under foot, But she will yet be great. Our glorious Constitution, We loved so long and well, Have been proclaimed by Radicals’ As covenants with h—ll. They swore they would protect them ) And make us wholesome laws; But as they failed to do these things, I’ll try and state the cause. Hurrah, hurrah, for Gen‘ Young so bold, Although lie’s young in name, the Rads Begin to think he’s old. The thought of losing all the power, Os taxing you and me, Was not a very pleasant thing, As every one can see. A Veil put in Sambo’s ballot, It will help to make us strong, And beastly Ben he winked and said, “That would bo nothing wrong.” Hurrah, hurrah, but keep your spoons in sight, And if he comes about our place, AVe’ll watch him day and night. They say our school fund is secured, We thought so long ago— Secured to nigs and carpetbags, And scalawag's, you know. They gave our bonds 'and took our cash; But yet they don’t reveal Thai we these bonds will have to pay For fear we think they steal. 'Hurrah, hurrah, we’ll bring them back to taw, And teach them that it is not right To violate the law. Old Rufus B. ho proelamates, His pardon he bestows, And spends our dimes, but* does Lb care, . Which way the money goes, If he can keep his partj strong, Till next election’s o’er ? Perhaps he thinks they'll him * King, •-1 Or Governor once more. it’ . - • Hurrah, hurrah, the office you may seek, * ■ ._»,j * But people do not like your plan Os making pockets weak. ' ' - h 'S« i .1 M They’ve tried to crush our liberties, And over us to reign, But now*, with ballots.let, us, show, We will he free again. Unfurl your banner, Democrats, And work with all Tout might ; For we are taught, and do believe, “God will uphold the right.” Hurrah, hurrah, our triumph’s al most won; The Constition that we love, AVas loved by AVashiugtou. A. N. M. ■ i —TP JWT’ 7* ! — 8 ™" r T7” r "‘ -■ r - BzsE A Cincinnati,Jliau got rid of his mother-in-law by greasing the cellar steps with soft-soap. Reconstruction in Arkansas has reduced the taxable property of the State one-lialf and multiplied its taxes by three. Radical departures are be ginning to be numerous, iu view of this result of Radical hgislatiop. figsT* Why need our militia not be afraid of water? Because they are clad in divers uniforms. Bjsfju 1 love to kcMFh in winter. The meny. girls'l now When rwl outside is drery And kivered up with sno; I lo e te kourfc in winter Release the old folks died The cold & stormy weather. And hurrie off to bed. •• AETlrnlinrc « ——- .m A writer \n the Cincinnati Tiuuj#, ha\lug'peiused Holace G Am. lev’s book ‘about hit'tniDg, with the eilbci o£ nnuUhed, nnlkee the iuukU he is CiUt-fui lo vxpoua.l is “rot. uy il. O.:” -• t •*k The basest fraud of earth ife agricul tare. The deadliest thf-nns rhnu ever ghttercii to ;i2«kl dufcXitssL to bc.my, is i speak ibelmg Qti this subject, for Jl’yp _ glutei ed and beguiled, and" slid destroy ext by this same at eh cm" ceiver. buy has made me a thousand prom-, isxs, a*id brpkeu eyeiy pne.of them. She has promised me early and the min has drowned tr.em; late potatoes, and the drought has witherdD tu*<jUi. »r, . '*44*7 *■ * , • .• • t- 1 mlT> > j She has promised, me jummer s.pi'.slus, and the worms have eaten them; ■ winlef' 'scJu';tshe?'auJ the' b'dgs 1 lßive devo'uned them. v * - * < She baa "promised ciicrrioa and- the curcuho- ,hut stung., thtqu, and thc\ f fioutam living things, to the eve and unsavory to the taste. She has promised' strawberries, and the young chickens have enveloped them, and the eye cannot see. them. She iifife pfcomslsed tomatoes, aiid the old hens have eiieompassc’d them, and the hand cannot reach them. No wonder Cain killed brother. He was a tiller of the ground. The wonder is that he didn’t kill Ids father,' and then weep because he hadn’t a grandfather to kill. No douofc his Early Rose potatoes, for which lie paid Adam sevou dollars a barrel, had been cut down by bugs, from the head waters of the Euphrates. His Penn sylvania wheat had been winter-killed, and wasn’t worth cutting. His. Nor w*ay oats had gone to straw, and would not yield five pecks per acre, and his black {Spanish watermelons had been stolen by boys, who had pulled np the vines, broken down his patent fence, and written scurrilous doggerel all over his back gate. No wonder he felt mad when he saw Abel wills ling along •with his fine French merinoes, worth eight dollars a head, and wool going up every day. No wonder be wanted to kill somebody, and thought he woffid prac.ice on Abel. Ang Noah’s getting drunk was net at all surprising. He had become an husbandman. He had thrown away, magnificent opportunies. He might have had a monopoly of an}’ profession or business. Had he studied medicine there would not have been another doctor within a thousand miles to call him “Quack;” and every family would have bought a bottle of Noah’s Com pound Extract of Gopher AVood and Anti-Deluge {Syrup. Asa politician, he might have carried his own ward solid, and controlled two-thirds pf the delegates in every convention. Asa lawyer, he wouhl have been retained in every case tried at tlie Arrarat Quarter Session, or the pld Ark High Court of Admiralty. But he threw away all these advantages and took to agriculture. For a long time the ground w r as so wet he could raise nothing but sweet flag and bullrushes, and these, at last, became a drug in tlie market. What wonder that when, at last, lie did get half a peck df grapes that were not stung to death by Jn phot’s honey bees, he should have made w 7 iue and drowned.his sor rows in a_ “flowing bowk” The fact is, agriculture would de moralize a saint. I was almost a saint when I went into it. I’m a demon now, I'm at war with everything. I fight myself out of bed at J o’clock, when all my better nature tells me to lie still until seven. I fight myself in to the garden to work a brute, when reason and instinct tell me to stay in the house and enjoy myself like' a man. I figlit the pigs, the chickens, the moles, the biros, the bugs, the worms— everything in which is tlie breath of life. I fight the dfeke, the burdocks* the the thistles, the grapes, the weeds, the joots—the whole vegetable kingdom." I fight the’ keat, the frost;-the rain, tlie * iiail—in short, I fight the .universe,'and- get whipped in every battle. I have no more admirtitiofl to : on the fath er of George Washington foi 'forgiving . the destruction of his favorite chew y , tree. A cherry Hee is only a. eujL : cuiio: nursery, and the grandfather of his coitlitiy Knew it. I have half A Jute ft cherry trees, and the day i&y 1 young Gtorge AY ashing km is six years, old I’ll give him a hatchet and-reit him tq do,i u w ith every, cherry tree on thq place; rt( . t' EST During our late unpleasantness with “the best gouernmeot the* world ever saw,” a soldier from die Souay South fell in love A blushing, mai den in the Valley of Virginia.,and he was bashful, and lovO hud'|lumlvi ed his tongue, he sent her the follow ing lines with a boquet of flowers-. Accept this boqnet from a feller, AVho oft has heard the cannon bailer, Has seen tlie war blonds darkly rise, Like fifty buzzards dhefi they flief; Has heard the war-fife loudly tooten, And done a mighty heap df sbooton; AYlia now is bigger than his dad, And wants to marry mighty bad. Says Katie tq Uc r Jlmsband, “John,” , What rock does true love builS upon T t ' Quoth John, and grinned from ear to ear, “The rock of yonder cradle, dear.” • ■ 4MK. Si&m. 1 fS., rroi>nelm- s . i£3 .nafesk - r - » *' , 4 * „ |lic/l uiJci lt h. Os ail the monuments consigned to the flames by the idiots of the Commune, there is none whose loss wilf TVmorfe keenly felt by the French ’people than the Chateau dea Tuiteriea Originally cons trucked hy Philibert Di4>riue. and Je.ui BulUut for the mother of ( Chfiilcs. JLSI., Caihenugjjo Medfeis, the i:\imefous cluing*** it un- Ueni'ctot in its itifbrnhl distribution and lee&rutVdn*- us well us in its out side appearance, from its inception in -ldU4 to its total destruction iu 1871, l were typical of the varied fortunes of the rulers df France during 4he last three hhtldred years. The Valoia, tb*>. Bourbons, die Terrorists, the Con sular jam'll meat* .feipoleou I, Louis XATIL X, Louis Philippe, the JKipuhiib of 1818 and Napoleop 111 , sircceefted t *^a'felT i (.)Uier within thttf his toric pile; wl -ode gilded panels and pietilm and T uils aad were the se* jlept hinny l 'bfi|iiyi*t t .aur S( TANARUS” v> > hoart-iending pataTrophes ’and dynastic plots and counter-plots fatkl to eferc.se’stteh List inb Influence over the dfetihies of mankind. In one of the pavhions of the Tiuieries might ixppQp .a snaulh curiously carved Buhl table, whorequ Louis XIV me I to play Clirds witfl nis favorites, and up *i»n which Louis XVI indited his pit eous appeals to The French natiua, Robespiefte signed the death warrants of.his* victims, Napoleon the Fust wrote sounding decrees and protfluA tiohs, and Louis the XVIII his billet doux and epicurean verses; where Charles X signed the fatal or.donnanc*x wmch led to his dethronement, and Louis PhilLippe wrote his euforcqd ab dication. Within those walls came Moliere and Corneille and Lully to submit their masterpieces to the court of the ,‘Tioi Boh il,” in the same hall where Voltaire, the precursor of the,; revolution, was publicly crowned a hundred years later in the presence of Marie Antoinette, one of its predes tined victims. There sat the Giron dists and their lie ice adversaries of the Mountuin, and where Tullieu, flourishing his and igger, invoked the vengeance of the people against Robes pierre and his coll* agues, und trough# them to the gullotine they had kept so long iu motion against their oppo- nents. On the Ist of February, 1800,, Bona*- parte entered the" Tuileiies with Jose phine. In 1814, be left the old palace with Mario Louise and the Uoi do Rome neither of wh iin was to see it again. A few years before the captivs of St. Helen.i'he said to a distinguish ed visitor,* pointing to the enthusiastic crowds shouting before the Tuileries: '‘Do you know why they are applaud ing me ? It is because lam the peo ple crowned.’' Iu 1848, the provisional governoieufc. of the Republic resolved that the Tul ] cries would henceforward be used us a hospice for disabled public servant* (invaUdvs ciuda,j while a convention 0 f working men was summoned to delib erate on the “organization of Libor” in the Luxembourg Palace. The advent to supreme power of the man of Sedan restored the Tuilo ries ta its original destination, as a monarchical ‘palace, and a luxurious, and scandalously extravagant court held nightly revels therein tor eighteen years, under the leadership of that gay Spanish beauty w ho, on the dizzy ele vation she had reached, like Josephine, by the power cf hei chanus, held un disputed the sceptre of fashion, and used eostly edicts, implicitly obeyed turoiaghout the world by all their mu on es, whose fathers and hpsbands, could afford tp respond to their frantic appeals of "Notating to wear.” Euge nie's power is gone, and the bad ex ample she has set “stiff lives,” as pa ler-fmvdiaa. • knows to his sorrow.— What a pity it is that we cannot say of the extravagance she Lias done so much to disseminate what we are mourn fully compelled to- write of* the magnificent palace- in which it was most conspicuously 'exhibited Sic trim mi gfaritt' intend*. — N O. I aikiit i. -«.»V; ■ 2* —*; —. • A Story. • > A '^exitfc r of a New York paper giVt-9 the. folip wing snake* stary: wifc myself wore Wr a noise ?r -m tne shell jvkieh coMlimed onr small store: of crocTitnf /followed by'ii which I sliowed tMt a great portion of our cups and fluD £ to tW. floor,r Springing up. to discover the author'of fill k upon China,” I fobnd a large* snake in a somewhat un pleasant fix. He had'crawled up the s\t4U #ttwctpd by a hjupberof eggs which he saw scattered about. Oue of these be Lad swallowed—and in orders to get at the next, be had put his head arid ia portion of his l*>dy. through the j hwijple 'of .a jpg which happened to stand between the coveted delicacies. The handle was just Open enough to let hrs bodp in the luttural shape, slip through, but not *>sufiicient to let it pass when pulled put by nn egg. In this position lip had swallowed second egg. His snakeslnp thus found htrhself TmUblD to advance or retreat; nnd in about to' escape from this novel stoek, had caused the aepidpnt which had aroused us. lof course proeeeded at. once tp execute summary justice upon the interloper, but the eggs' he had swallowed were a dead loss- Air. K<hert McCain v. of Mur ray county, died very suddenly on Friday night last. NUMBER i.