Newspaper Page Text
CarffTSTlllfi Oa.<* Cct. •*•* ♦l.
W. Murphy i*our authorised A?cnt
*W„neVtor. To receive and receipt for Swb
* ription to the Express, and to collect claims.
W. F. WKKMB *« onr authorized
JmU and traveling A*ent, to receive and re
n cipt for subscriptions to the Express.
All contract advertisers in the Express
are considered regular subscribers.
All persons indebted to ns, ei
ther by Note or Account, are requeu
ed to come forward and make settle
ment at once, as we are compelled to
raise money, and can not give farther
indulgence.
R. W. Satterfield k Bbo.
Sep. 12, 1871, sw-ltn.
For Revt. —The Brick Store Room
on west main street. Now occupied
by Satterfield Pyron & Cos. apply
at once, to
Satterfeld Pyron & Cos.
Angels Wait Ilcsldc the Door.
Words by Annie Curtis.— Music by C. F. 3hat
tuck.
Music in October Number Peters’ Musical
Monthly.
Angel forms are o’er me bending,
Angels wait beside the door.
And 1 hear sweet voices blending
Over on the other shore.
Dark and still the shades are falling;
But the flash of starry wings,
And the Bound of voices calling,
Joy unto my spirit brings.
I am weary, doubting, grieving,
God will set my troubles right,
When for me the morn is waking
Over on the hills of light.
ASaTßaclielor's Toast—" Woma—
n morning star of infancy, the day
star of manhood, and the evening star
of age. Bless our stars, and may
they always be kept at telescopic dis
tance 1”
HsgrWhen we are alone, we have
oar thoughts to watch; in the family,
our temper; in company, our tongues.
ttSfA spirited girl observes that, to
her mind, the women who do not want
female suffrage because it will cause
division in families, must be a precious
meek set. A woman of any pluck can
pick a quarrel with her husband with
out waiting to split on votes.
Salt Lake, Sept. 26.—A large num
ber of Mormons are sending their fam
ilies away. There is apprehension of
a collision between the United States
and the Mormons.
New York, Oct. 2.—A special to the
Herald , from Salt Lake, reports a ru
mor that Brigham Young is indicted,
and will be tried this week.
The Mormons continue to buy arms,
and the Mormon journals advocate
open resistance.
It is understood the Federal author
ities will ask for reinforcements.
Salt Lake, Oct. I. —Three compa
nies of United States troops have ar
rived. They were sent by General
Augur upon a. requisition from Gover
nor Woods.
Salt Lake, Oct. 3. —Brigham Young
has been arrested and indicted for li
centiousness, owiug to sickness he was
allowed to remain in his house under
guard. The Marshall and another
company of Federal soldiers have ar
rived. Serious resistance is not improb
able. It is believed lhat Brigham
Young will be indicted for murder.
Judge McKean, of Utah, who is
waging such a stubborn warfare
against the Mormons, is, says the
Washington Patriot, acting under in
structions from the Capital, and the
Administration promises to uphold and
sustain him in his efforts, even though
it should be necessary to employ the
military power of the Government.
When Brigham Young received
the ten boxes containing the imported
silk dresses and cashmere shawls for
his thirty wives, he said to a friend:
“Ah, if you knew the cost of these
goods, you would not believe for a mo
ment that I practice polygamy as an
earthly pleasure. No, air 1 it is with
me a stern duty.”
Seduction Case. —DeKalb Superior
Court was engaged two days last week,
on the trial of Rev. M. D. Wood, on a
charge of seduction. Miss Cbivers is
the name of the young lady, and said
to be respectfully connected—a pupil
Aud member of the same church of
the accused. A verdict of guilty was
returned by the jury. Council gave
notice of motion for new trial and for
arre3t of judgment.
Knoxville, Sept. 30.—Nelson gave
himself up this afternoon, and gave a
bond of twenty-five thousand dollars
to answer an indictment for killing
Gen. Clanton. His father, Wm. G.
iirownlow, R. C. Jackson and Joseph
Jacques are his bondsmen.
11. I. K. Heard From.
The report was current on the
Greets yesterday that Mr. H. Kimball
W 'T in a ftw days, return to Atlanta
‘°aJed with cash. And further, that
"bile in Europe he had succeeded in
establishing a line of steamers between
Liverpool and Brunswick.
11 is is news! We have all along
a painful uneasiness about
j. K feeling that nothing but a
, !le °f steamers across the Atlantic
° u l<i make him happy.— At. Sun.
A jealous lover in Missour
pa.lenges his rival, and was dumb
prided by the latter’s accepting the
' challenge and naming ‘pistols,’ at
fcli paces. ‘Give me thirty days for
,‘ractice*’ cried the challenger. ‘Not a
Vy* was the stern response. ‘Oh,
" a take your gal and go to thunder
‘ Vi r ’ indignantly exclaimed the
‘ nke youth as he started for home
LOCAL ITEMS.
town MATTEIiH.
J»T. Glbwon, Loonl Editor.
[From the Savannah iVeicz.]
Affair* in Georgia.
A STATE HOAD CHORUS.
A SOXW OP MODERN “ CREASE."
Strophe.
W e have found a good place for our clan
We know where the greenbacks are
kept—
Forthe lack of which we are wan—
For the want of which we have wept.
’Tie the State Road Treasury, where
An abundance of plunder is found
In convenient piles, and the air
Is futl of a jingling sound.
Where the wonderful fountain of “grease”
Ever softly and pleasantly plays—
Where are pastured and historical geese
That drop the auriferous lava.
A ntietrop b.
We rob, and we cheat, and we steal,
And we steal, and we cheat, and we
rob,
But, somehow or other, we feel
Thit people are sick of the job.
Our batiks they are laden with B’s,
And our B'a are besprinkled with
“due”—
All our money is going for fees,
And the dollars still left are but few.
Can “developers” be on the “make,”
When they build Hi Hotels at this rate?
What matters it how much we take,
So we spend nearly all in the state?
Epode.
We have clambered a difficult Hill—
W r e have toasted our batter cakes
Brown
Our Bullock has grazed to his fill—
And the Opera House clock is run
down.
Our banks are still laden with B’s,
And our B’s are still sprinkled with
“due"—
But Joe Fry, with ominous ease,
Has got everything in a stew.
e woods ! spread your shadows apace—
To your deepest recesses we fly ;
Patron Baint of the thief! give us grace
To follow the footsteps of Fry.
Prominent Men In the Baltimore
Convention.
JAMES R. RANDALL.
Mr. Randall, though hailing from Augus
ta, Georgia, is a native of Baltimore, and
author of the famous war-lyric, “My Mary
land,” a pocnr which has extorted even from
.Northern critics the conspicuous praise of
being the best song produced by the late
civil conflict. Os lateyeajs, Mr. Randall
has bee* addicted to prose, and from 1864
till 1867, conducted the leading Democratic
paper in Georgia, through whose influence
primarily the noble fifth drislrict. the home
of Stephens and Toombs, was recently car
ried by 7,000 Democratic majority, against
a hitherto Radical supremacy of 11,000 ne
gro and scalawag votes. We are sure that
Baltimore and Maryland will gladly wel
come back, even for a brief sojourn, her
gallant and gifted sons.
GEN. P. M, B. YOUNG,
representing the Gherokee Railroad, is one
of the finest looking men on the floor of the
Convention. He was a Major-General of
Cavalry in the Confederate army, and was
a brave and gallant officer and distinguish
ed himself in many a liard-fought battle.—
It was universally admitted in the army of
[Northern Virginia that General Young was
the handsomest man, not only in his corps,
but in the entire army. lie is still a young
man. being only 32 years of age. Still in
experience and knowledge he is an octoge
narian. He is at present a planter, culti
vating his large estates in Georgia.
H. A. BMITH
Mr. H. A. Smith is the representative df
Rome, Ga., of which city he is the honored
Mayor. He is a young man, in his thirties,
with a flue, good face, which expresses in
lineament the good nature below. He
served in the same regiment with the writer
of this sketch—the gallant Eighth Georgia
-—and was one of the best of that regiment,
known at first Manassas as Bartow’s regi
ment, and the casualties in which, during
the war, numbered ever nine hundred The
regiment was in thirty six pitched battles
and combats, and more than a hundred
times under fire. Mr. Smith lost his arm at
Farmville, Va., just before the surrender at
Appomattox. lie is an attentive, sensible
and working member of the Convention.
HON. WM. M. TUMLIN,
of Cuthbert, Ga*. the earnest and able advo
cate of the railroad interests of Georgia, is
perhaps the most promising young man in
the convention from the Empire State of the
South. Wealthy and distinguished family
connections in Cherokee, Georgia, together
with his great personal popularity and unti
ring devotion to the political as well as rail
road interests of South-western Georgia,
have combined to bring Mr. Tumlin promi
nently before the people of Georgia; and he
is recognized as one of the most sagacious
political leaders, as well as an earnest advo
cate of the numerous railroad enterprises
now in course of construction. His ap
pointment by the Convention to the Com
mittee on Railroads was a good one; and it
is regretted that the committee was depriv
ed of his experience and judgment in the
discussion of matter to come before it—Mr.
Tumlin being unexpectedly called to New
York yesterday.— Baltimore Evening Jour
nal.
IQA. Fanny Fern, who married Par
ton the biographer, said, “for the most
part, the more sensible a man is the
bigger fool he marries. This is espe
cially true of biographers.”
ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS
CASH FOR FIVE DOLLARS.
Th® South Carolina Land and Immigra
tion Association, haring at its head such
men as Generals Butler and Gray, and John
Chadwick, Es-q., propose to give away fire
hundred thousand dollars in cash gifts, tick
ets to cost only fire dollars. The highest
prize is an Academy of Music, worth $250,-
000.
The drawing takes place in October. The
proceeds are to be used in bringing immi
grants to the South and settling them on
lands, and the scheme is endorsed by the
morst distinguished capitalist and publical
ists in the country.
A school boy being asked how
the weeping willow came to be called
by that name, said, “Cause one of the
mean plnguey things grew near the
school house and supplied the master
with switches.”
“Jonny, what do you expect to
do for a living when you get to be a
man ? ’ “Well, I reckon I’ll get mar
ried and board with my wife’s mother.’
A Hoe Meadow.
On Tuesday evening last we enjoyed, in
company with our esteemed and enterpri
sing fellow-townsman. Col. J. J. Howard, a
stroll over his meadow, which is the finest
we ever saw; and in fact, we learn that a
gentleman from Kentucky remarked the
other day, that he had seen nothing in that
celebrated grass-growing State, that would
surpass it. As we walked over that beauti
ful and luxuriant carpet of green, we won
dered why everybody did nt have one like
it, or as near like it as possible; and conclu
ded, as Abe Lincoln did, when he beheld
the first gun boat, that “there ought to be
one in every well regulated family.” We
thought of rich milk and butter, and fine
beef-steak, until oar salivary glands became
unpleasantly active; and we returned with
a determination to sow grass in the mor.
ning, in the evening, and beside all waters,
until success shall reward our persevering
labor. Why is it that we of Cherokee Geor
gia are so dependent, while we hare the
finest country in the world! Why send to
the north and west for beef, bacon, wheat
and musty hay, when all these things, and
many others, can be produced so success
fully and profitably at home ? Let us awake
from our slumbers, appreciate and improve
the blessings which a kind Providence has
lavished upon us, and enjoy our pleasant
places and goodly heritage.
The Great Hat Dealer.
Attention is called to the semi-an
nual proclamation of the great Hat
Man of the South, John M. Holbrook
of Atlanta. For years and years this
geutleman has been the leading dealer
of this section, and notwithstanding
the fine and large stock he has always
kept, they are not to be compared to
the one he is now opening at his mam
moth store on Whitehall. His retail
department is on the first floor, where
is displayed an endles* variety of the
very latest styles of fall hats,, caps, & c-
Here will always be found the polite
and accommodating Charley Wootin *
who never tires in showing you hats
and fixing you up nicely.
On the second floor is the jobbing
department, where are piled boxes of
hats, reaching to the very cei ling
Country merchants should make a
note of this.
Adjoining the wholesale rooms is the
millinery department, presided over by
the most accomplished milliners in At
lanta. The stock of ladies' furs is
large and varied, and of all prices
The ladies are most respectfully invi
ted to call and examine.
See further particulars in the adver
tising columns.
The Markets.
We hav« heretofore said but little, thro’
the columns of our paper, about the mar
kets, either at home or abroad. The time
has come for us to spur up on this subject.
We hope, in the future, to be able to quote
regularly the prices of leading articles, as
follows ;
Cotton. -Up to the 3rd inst., New York
quotations were from 20 to 20$ cents.
New Orleans, 3rd, 19p9195.
Baltimore, 3rd, 19}(9195.
Wilmington, 3rd, 18$.
Norfolk, 3rd, 18|.
Boston, Ist, 20b
Savannah, 3rd, 18b
Charleston, 3rd, 18b
Mobile, 3rd, 19b
Galveston, 3rd, 16|.
Augusta, 3rd, 18.
Memphis, 3rd, 18b
Philadelphia, 3rd, . 19J
Atlanta, 3rd, Cotton, 17$.
Cartersville, sth—We quote the market
at from 17 to 17| cents for new.
We quote Corn at 70 cents per bushel ;
Wheat from •I- to $1.50, wide margin ; Hay
$25 per ton; Bacon, shoulders 8 to 10, clear
rib sides 9 to 11, clear sides 10 to 11, hams
canvassed 17 to 18; lard 13 cents per lb.,
Butter 20 to 25; Eggs 15 to 20; chickens 25
to 30 cents, in this market.
The three last named articles very scarce.
Lumber from $12.50 to $16.00 per M ft.
Lime 40 to 60 cents per bushel.
Corn mealsl.; Flour from 3 to 6 cents;
wheat bran 1 cent lb.; Sugar 12 to 15 cents;
coffee 17 to 26; syrup from 75 to sl.; Salt
$2.25 per sack.
The above are outside prices, at wholesale
and retail.
Bixr, gross, 2b; nett 5c ft on foot.
“ Fresh mess from stall, 4 O 10c ft.
Pork, “ “ “ SO 10c “
Mutton, “ ** “ 8 O 10c “
Be Contented. —Bulwer says that
poverty is ODly an idea in Dine cases
out of ten. Some men with SIO,OOO a
year suffer more for want of than
others will with SSOO. The reasou is
the richer man has his artificial wants.
His income is SIO,OOO a year, and he
suffers enough by being duned for un
paid debts to kill a sensitive man. A
man who earns a dollar a clay and
does not go into debt is the happier of
the two. Very few people who have
never been rich will believe this, but it
is true. There are thousands and
thousands witn princely incomes who
never know a minute’s peace, because
they live beyond their means. There
is really more happiness among the
workiugmen in the world than among
those who are culled rich.
[Scientific American.
JtttT The ‘Anti-Kissing society’ form
ed by the fascinating damsels at Sara
toga don’t seem to work very well, as
fifteen out of the twenty-three mem
bers were fined the very first week.—
There will be an overflowing treasury
before long unless the eociety disbands.
The curious will be delighted
to know that the word ‘its’ cannot be
found in the Scriptures from begin
ning to end.
Just Received
FINE
TABLE CUTLERY!
A New Suppiy of Castors
AND OTHER PLATED WARRE.
CHEAP AS THEY CAN.BE 80UFHT
iu any Southern market.
J. T. OWKN.
**k. On one of the late terribly hot
days, a little boy of three! years and a
half, who was perspiring very freely,
ran in to his mother, saying, “O mam
ma, I* leaking all over.”
Trust what Time has Sanction
ed.
The maxim that the voice of the people is
the voice of the divinity, may in some cates,
be open to doubt, but the testimony of hon
est and enlightened witnesses extending
through a series of years, and all to the same
purport, is worthy of credence, admits of no
question. Upon such testimony the repu
tation of Hostetler s Stomach Bitters as an
antidote and cure for many ailments is
based. During the twenty years that it has
been before the world, innumerable prepa
rations intended to compete with it, have
gone up like rockets, and come down Ihe
extinguished sticks. Meanwhile the prog
ress of that incomparable tonic has been
swift and steady—always upward and on
ward like the eagle’s flight. Its introduc
tion produced a revolution in therapeutics,
and it proved to be one of those salutary
revolutions that cannot go backwards. To*
day Hostetler’s Bitters is one of the most
popular remedies in christeudoin, aud com
mands a larger sale than any other medicin
al preparation, domestic or imported, on
this side of the Atlantic. Asa Cure for
dyspepsia, billious disorders, nervous affec
tions, geaeral debility, and as a preventive
of epidemic fevers, it takes precedence of
every other remedy. This fact should teach
the ambitious country dealers who endeavor
to foist their local abortions on the public iu
its stead, how futile their small attempts to
cajole the community must necessarily be.
Where the game fish have failed there is no
chance for the “suckers.”
“THE LIVE DRUG STORE.”
RED WINE & FOX,
DEALERS IIN
Pure Drugs,
Medicines and
Chemical**,
Paints, Oils, and Window Glass.
Having increased ocr storage capacity and enlarged our general
STOCK, we are able to offer to the trade inducements unsurpassed by anv bouse in the
Southern country. Call and examine lor yourselves, at Nos. II and 13, Corner of White
hall and Alabama Streets, ATLANTA, GA. REDWINFAFOT
Sept, 251870-wl « ivjx.
J. & S. BONES & CO.,
IMPORTERS OF AND DEALERS IN
IROI AID STEEL,
Hardware, datlery, inns, &c.,
ROME, CA.
Besides having D£(TI>E])LY the LARGEST STOCK
of HARO WAKE, in all its Departments, in the Chero
kee country, we are the Exclusive Agents lor the sale of
Celebrated Portable, Stationary,
AND
Plantation Engines.
PORTABLE CIRCULAR SAW AND GRI§T MILLS,
AND MILL MACHINERY OF ALL KINDS.
Persons intending to erect Mills of any kind, would do well to consult with us,
And can be furnished 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
hy us. Send for Catalogue aid Price List.
March 31, 1871. J.& S. RONES & CQ.
SeprETYl:y*S OfiICE Cr'tTRU. 1
Cresokee Oa. Aor'l As'tocr.vrnv, >•
Ctrter*vil|e, Gu., Sep 28, 1871 )
Articles for exlrhition, and persons
visiting the Scoml Annual Exhibition
of the Central Cherokee Agricultural
AMkiciatinn, near Carters vill«, Ga., will
be pissed over the lines of the Wes
tern <fc Atlautic and Cherokee Ruil
i
roads, at the regular rates and retnru
ed free npon presentation of a certificate
from the Secretary of the Association
of such attendance or Exhibition.
An extra train will be rim from
Cartersville to the Fair Grounds, as
needed. D. W. K. Peacock,
Secretary.
I®, A Galesburg farmer whose pew
rent was raised to $26, exclaimed:
"Great Cnesar, here’s a nice state of
affairs—the gospel going up and pork
going down. What's to become of
us?”
Administrator** ftalc.
BY virtue of an order from the Court of Or
dinary of Bartow countv. will b« sold on
the fl rat Tuesday in October. 1871, at the Court
House, door in Carters ville, in said county, be
tween the legal sale hours, the tract of land, in
said countv, whereon Hazel Loveless resided at
the time of his dearh. containing about 160 acres,
more or less, adjoining lands of Hula Shaw,
I -J. N. Peace and others ; the same being' com
; posed of parts of lots No's. 72 and 73. in the 15th
I district and 3d section of said rountVj; about
T 5 acres cleared; the balance well timbered; tol-
I erably well improved, and finely watered. Also.
■ in the 16lh district and Subsection ol
1 shim county, containing 160 acres, more or less,
all in the woods and well timbered Sold as
the property of Hazel Loveless, deceased, for
t‘i? purpose of distribution among the heirs of
said deceased. Terms of sale: One-half Cash;
the balance on a credit of twelve months, note
and security. Interest from date. Bonds for titles
given possession given, immediately after sale,
GREEN B. I.o\ ET.ESS, Administrator
August 23d. mb AZLE LuVELKS *’ dete » sed *
fail to read tom
j BRIDGES’ ADVERTISEMENT.
THE DALTON *IK SI ERIE*.
OFFER for sale this sea«nn a large stoca of
grafted fruit li\hm* consisting of A PPI.F.s,
■•southern varieties. I’KACHKs, PEAKS ami
PLUMS, ( HEKKIES, APRICOTS, also grape
vines, straw lurries Ac. B. Hamilton,
R. S. How tc Traveling Agent, will canvass
Bartow county this fall.
Cartersville, Ga.. A tig. 7th 1871
- . - _A
GEORGIA SOAP FACTORY
MAKES THE BEST GRADES OF
LAUNDRY SOAPS,
And Will Soon Add
TOILET SOAP.
SELL CHEAPER THAN THE
SAME QItXITY CAN BE
Laid Down From Any
MARKET in AMERICA.
All the Profits we ask, is what is paid in
NEW YORK MARKET.
TUY OUK GOODS,
AVI) WE WILL
RISK the BALANCE.
Take All Grease In Exchange.
TA LLO W ESP £ Cl A LL Y DESIRED.
HITCHCOCK & SPENCER,
july 18— ts. Atlunta, Gh.
tW” Box 18; Office at Howard & McCov’a
Drug Store, on Peach Tree Street.
I®.TOBACCO —Messrs. JOURDAN,
HOWARD & HARRALSON, Atlanta, Ga.,
have on hand the following Choice Brands
of manufactured Tobacco, which they offer
to trade as low as the lowest:
Brown’s Log Cabin,
Qpbin Home,
Golden Choice,
Pike’s Peak,
Winfree’s Gold Leaf,
Pranly’s XXX,
il on tsief,
Ilyco Belle,
* Peach Mountain,
Sunny Side,
Saranac,
McGhee’s 4 A,
Golden Rule,
Rosa Belle,
Glebe Twist,
Crown Navy,
May Apple.
And many other desirable brands not men
tioned; together with a fiuo variety of Smok
ing Tobaccos and Cigars.
He that bloweth not his own
horn, his own ?i oroi will not
he hlowed ! ! !
PTTRT Tr 1
HUNG SALOON
AND
CONFECTIONERY,
West Side of the Railroad,
CJIItTLRSVMLLL, GJt.
On and after the 15th instant,
Single Heal, 50 Cents.
Board—per month, #lB.
Confectioneries, Fruits, and
Family Groceries ke_ t on hand
and for sale. sep 15
JAS. W. STRANGE,
Dealer In, and Manufacturer Os
TIN WARE, AND
Ilouse-I'urn ishi nj; Goods,
ALSO DEALER IX
First-Class Stoves At
The Lowest Cash Prices .
WILL BARTER
FOR COUNTRY PRODUCE, RAtfS,&C.
Cartersville, Jan. 20th, ’7l -1 y.
Lyman Chapman,
Brick and Stone
Mason,
CARTE RSVILLE, GA.
1 prepared to do any of the above work
upou short notice and at low tiguers
i ."oo in ’siipxh
Red Rust Proof Oats
AT * •! ► w
MARK W. JOHNSON'S.
OPPOSITE
Cotton Warehouse, on Broad Street
ALSO
800 Hvisit. .Selected Netui
Barley, ... .
200 Husli. Need Rye, to ar
rive.
500 Rush. Need Wheat,
210 Hush. Red Clo ier,
215 Hush. Red Top as
Herds Grass.
224 Bush. Orehard Grass.
100 Bush. Tall ffleado’f
Oat Grass, to arrive,
175 Hush, Blue Gras*, au
all other useftil Gras
ses, Ae.,
500 Cwt. Fresh Turnip
►Seed ;
ALSO :
100 Tons Sea Fowl Kifwan
ami uthefGaam*, for Wheat, etc.
ALSO :
500 Dixie Plows and other
Plows, from $3 96 to 35 50, cheaper than homo
made •‘Scooters.”
A LSO :
The Keller Patent Graft
Brill, For Bowing Wheat,etc.
ALSO : Everything else needed in the Agr
cultural line, at
MARK W- JOHNSON'S
P. O. BOX *», Atlanta. Ga.
Mptfi-Sm.
New Fall
And
Wlntei
GOODS.
Being just
Received
BY
STOKELY
&
WILLIAMS
Cartersville, Georgia.
All kinds of GOODS for
LADIES, GENTLEMEN,
BOYS AND GIRLS WEAI
Os the Latest Styles,
At tiie Lowest Prices,
For Cash, or on short
Timh TO PROMPT PAYING
CUSTOMERS!.
The Goods
Were selected,
In person, in N, Y.,
By one of the FIRH !
Fall and see !
And FRICKS
AND BUY!:;
All persons indebted to us novr, are
urgently requested to s< tile up wit!;
out delay. Let us wipe out old score
by liquidation, and commence anew.
September 29th, 1871.
STOKELY 7 & WILLIAMS.
Dealers in Dry-Good *, dc .,
Cartkrsville, Ga.
f 1 EORGIA BARTOW COrNTY.-A. M. Tin"
\3Tner has applied for exemption of person *!>,»
and 1 will pass upon thenamo ailO o'cock a. v.’
on the 9th day of October 1871, at mv offlee.
This Sept. 28th, 1811.
J. A. IIOWAUD.
Ordinary B. (
J - C. Register, Tinner,
AXB DEALER IX
Cook, Heating and Office
STOVES AKD GRATES TIN-WAf
~ \a>a '■ iA, !i A KT< )\V COCN’I T— TV here
AJFj many citizens of said eonntv hare petit
e<l Court ot Ordinary of said county. »
»irtrng fDT County purposes, tariisoouf/""*
portion ot the Enirmount road that ru*p 4h . rOiS .
Bartow county from the Gordon con." 4 ! ,ID . e
its junction with the Canton road, a"* 4
upou the Calhoun road from said ro “ nt * .
intersecting the < Anton road near I.
Mills, in Bartow eonntv ; and. _
missioners to revise said tl'tiT. f ‘v
pointed bv the Court and !-“~ e reported i* far
of said change therefore. »■< Persons ooncc
ed are notified to tie and appear at mj r
or liefore the 3d day of October, l.*t «ndk.
cause, if any they can, why >.ud < hange sh
"ci veil",; tiller n.v hf" 1 anil ootci “ * i *»* 4 ‘
this August 26d*. tb J A HOWARD Onli*i.r'
ti*.;. a,