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TttE SE MI-WEEKLY EXPRESS
JAs*. Wl?r HARRIS •mt SAM’LII, SMITH
LiHTORh ASI) I'IIOPRItXORH.
CARTERSVILLE, QA., FEB. 7th. 1871.
i@ta.The World expresses the opin
ion that the Bill lately introduce*! into
Cos ugrw»s to supervise elections, will
pass that body, and the whole country
will arise to deliver itself from the rad
ical political conspirators. Ostensibly
brought forward to protect the fran
chise of the Southern Republicans
against illegal action on the part of
the Southern Democracy, under the
plea of securing equal liberty at the
polls to all voters, it is in fact, only a
tyranical device to overawe the people
of the South, to drive the Democracy
from the polls, and thus secure tho
success of the Radical party in our
midst. Defeated everywhere upon a
fair expression of public opinion, ne
farious legislation is now instituted to
sustain the failing fortunes of these
mischievous men, and bolster up the
sinking cause of Radicalism among
our people. All that we ever desired
was, an opportunity uatramimled by
the bayonet, to give expression to the
popular will, and wherever and when
ever that has been done, Radicalism
ha* not had, and never will have, and
never can have a corporal’s guard for
its support The men of that party
who hold office among us at this day,
hold it in defiance of the will of our
people, and each successive election
has shown, and will continue to show
how utterly vain is every effort to drive
public opinion at the South in Radical ■
channels. Congress may listen to the
slanderous assaults of disappointed
carpet-baggers, and disappointed, and j
bitter and still more miserable scala- j
Wags, and, at their dictation, legislate
to throttle the will of our people at
the ballot-box, in order to secure Rad
ical ascendancy, but it will all be in
vain. Congress might as well know,
at once, and for all, that any such ex -
pedients will only serve to increase the
odium in which its legislation, affecting
these rights is held, and render larger
and larger, the Democratic majority at
the South. The truth is, the South is
Democratic to the core, and did a
Congress, and a party professing to be
Republican, but withdraw its arms of
force -from all these states, and leave
the people to the exercise of their le
gitimate rights, at the polls, every
♦Sfeafce at the South would walk up in
solid Democratic column. But some
thing has to be done, and something
must b j done at once, or, otherwise,
Radicalism knows that its fate is seal
ed South of Mason’s and Dixon’s line;
and failing South, the cause of the
party is gone up, and forever, all over
the Union,
United States officer it seems, are
to supervise Southern elections, and
our people are to vote, if they vote at
all, at the dictation, aud under the eye
of Grant’s military. Well be it so—if
political fatuity has seized hold of the
leaders of this reckless and unscrupu
lous party, wo can well content our
selves under such tvrranous rule,
because of the political victory in which
we are sure it will result. We judge
of the future by the past, and we tell
Mr. Morton and Gen. Grant, and all
their allies, that all such experiments
are vain follies. The vote of the Soutn
can never be secured by any such
means, and the lingering patriotism
and sense of justice of the North and
West, will not always slumber whi e
such despotic measures are being car
ried out We care not for the East.—
New England is but too worthily rep
resented by Ben Butler and Henry
Wilson, aud we are willing that her
name and her destiny should remaiu
in such appropriate keeping. The
great States of the North and the
West, will not lie idly by in the com
ing contest, while the elections in
Pennsylvania aud New York are but
forecasts of that political storm now
raging, which is to sweep away the
last vestige of the Radical party.
Did the South but proclaim fealty
to Grant, not one murmur of political
discontent would be heard at Wash
ington, and not a defeated carpot-bag
ger would have a hearing with
the chiefs of the party, at the Capitol;
but now, forsooth, because the elec
tions already passed, portend equal
calamities for Radicalism in the future,
the United States military are to be;
under the law, the constituted revisers
of the elections. Well, we say again,
if it must be, then, so let it be,
but we bide our time, confident,
that our people, unmoved by the show
of epaulettes, or it may be the rattle
of the drum, will but vote the mure
strongly Democratic. This whole
thing is wrong; wrong in its inception,
and directly at points with every cor
rect idea of well regulated liberty; and
we shall be far out of proper reckon
ing and altogether at fault, if the
views here expressed, shall not, in ef
fect, find utterance at tlie polls
throughout the North and the West.
Hoffman or Hendricks or some other
equally good man, will champion the
rights of the people at large, and Gen
Grant will find, to his confusion that,
while he might have rallied around
him a whole nation of freemen, had
he respected their liberties, he but
sacrificed a large part of a well earned
fame because he did not have the
nerve or the good sense to cut loose
from incompetent advisers. It would
be well for him and for his party, could
they take timely heed to the voice of
warning contained in the following
extract, taken from the New York
Evening Post, a Republican paper, but
u Quem Deua cult jjtrdere, prius dernen
lat :*
‘ Congress is to be asked, we hear,
to pass laws by which the United
States officers shall supervise the elec
tions in the Southern States. But will
such gross, and hateful, and danger
ous interference cure the evils of which
these Republicans complain? What
they hope to gain, of course, is politi
cal power; but how long would they
keep it, unless they manage much bet
ter than they have done ? What they
need is to allay bitterness and rancor,
to let the peopl# forget the war; and
to do that, they must stop hostilities.
They should be first to insist on a gen
eral and immediate removal of politi
cal disabilities, and the most vigorous
opponents of any and every scheme
for Congressional interference in the
local Governments of the Southern
States; and they must remember that
the United States Government cannot
put a corporal's guard at the door of
every Southern member.”
We can well conclude the universal
indignation which would pervade all
ranks at the North, were the provis
ions of this despotic bill alike applica
ble all over the United States, and the
North, as well as the South, be made
subject to its authority; aad not con
fined to the poor South, so used to
oppression, but reaching every place,
from Maine to California, where a
man may seek to cast a vote. When
the officers of the United States army
are to be diverted from their appropri
ate calling, and changed, by Presiden
tial edict, into a sort of military epis
co-pounting political corps, to do
Presidential and party work at the
hustings, good men everywhere, will
throw the projectors of such meas
ures over-board.
Gen. P. M. 8. Young.
Newsfrr a Washington informs us
that Mr. Corker, of Georgia, has tak
en his seat, his case being contested
by Beard, and under the management
of our immediate representative, the
Hon. P. M. B. Young. The ability
and shrewdness with which the case
was conducted by the Hon. gentleman
to a triumphant issue, reflects no little
credit upon him, and has elicited the
admiration of his many friends, and
even the applause of his political op
ponents in Congress. To is the more
observable from the fact, that the
claims of Beard were engineered by
Ben Butler, the acknowledged able
leader of the Republicans upon the
floor of the House, and every effort
made by him to defeat the purpose of
Gen. Young. But all in vain. The
debate upon the question shows that
Gen. Young was not only fully equal
to the occasion, but proved himself
more than a match for the member
from Massachusetts. We have read
his clear, forcible and pointed speech
with much pleasure, not only because
of the victory which it was instrumen
tal in acheiving for the right, over an
ackncwledgedly able party leader, but
also because of the credit which Gen.
Young, by this, his maiden effort,
refleclhd upon himself and his imme
diate constituency.
Remedy foe the Ear Ache. —The fol
lowing is given as an excellent pallia
tion for ear ache one of the worst and
most irremmediabie aches to which
children are subject: Take a bit of cot
ton, put up one in a pinch of black
pepper, gather it up ao£ tie it, dip it
in sweet oil, and insert it in the ear.—
Put flanuel handkerchief over the head
to keep i t warm. The application
generally gives immediate relief.
A Funeral Oration. —The Boston
correspondent of the Springfield (Mass)
Republican tells the following:
Last week, in a village hard by,
where ministers are not so plenty as
in larger places, 'Squire F , a justice
of the peace, a man of common sense
and sterling integrity, remarkable for
bluntness rather than blandness of
manner, and whose literary attain
ments extended to the writing of his
name, was called in by a colored
ily to make a few remarks at the fun
eral of their son, in the absence of the
only clergyman of the place. The
weeping friends were seated about in
the room, when he rose and said: “It’s
pretty bad; but if I was you, I wouldn’t
take on so. It’s all for the best.—
S’pose he’d lived, and grown to be a
fat, heaLhy boy; why, he’d never been
nothin’ but aa and and nigger anyhow.”
V&- A woman in Daviess county,
who has been married but six years,
four of which her husband spent away
from her in the army, has six children.
She accounts for this anomaly by af
firming that she had regular telegraph
ic and mail communication with him
during that time. The venerable post
master of Owensboro, CoL Jesse Moore,
vouches for the truth of this, stating
that he was accustomed to furnish her
with read matter at least three or four
times a week.
[For the Bxfbess.
To The People of UartowCoan*
Jfe&tr*. Editor*: —Through your val
uable paper, let us again appeal to the
people of Bartow County.
Can we make our County the ban
ner County of the State ? How ?
Listen. The Legislature at its last
session, adoptee! an act, establishing a
Common School system, throughout
the State. The act prorides that the
citizens of each Militia District, meet
and discuss the school subject; its in
terest and welfare. Meet in each Dis
trict at an early day, ana talk with one
another about this Commou School
law. Determine whether you will
build cheerfully, houses iu your dis
tricts, sufficient to shelter the poor
girls and boys who now have a chance
to get a liberal education. The Legis
lature has appropriated one-half of the
earnings of the State Road, and other
monies, to maiutaiu these schools; and
say by your action whether or not you
will let that money go into the pock-.
eta of plunderers of the State Treasu- >
ry, or be speut in the education of
your children.
Nothing can De done by the County
Board, or District Trustees, until they
build or lease the School houses. This
eau only be done by the levy and col
lection of a tax sufficient for the pur
pose. They have the power to raise
this tax. It may be very burdensome,
bat can be made lighter, by co opera
tion between people and officers.—
Then, let there be School Meetings
held in all the districts, at onee. Go
to work. See that every negro in the
County, whose children may reap the
benefits of this law, pays his tax —if
not in mouey, point him out to the
Trustees, and see that he is required
to perform labor sufficient to pay nia
tax. This can be done under tne law.
Meet. .See that the law is strictly
executed, and then the scueme may be
a success. Don’t let a few individuals
run the thing, when you are by law en
titled to a hearing in the matter. Tne
law can be made a great blessing to the
people; it can be made a curse. But
by doing your duty, fellow-citizens, no
harm can be done to anybody; while
in every district in your County, at
least three mouths iu each year, every
poor child, unable to pay tuition, may
get the benefits of a school, and in
twelve non tbs it may be said of old
Bartow, “she has her ten Public school
houses, filled with scholars and teach
ers. Her people are being educated.
Homes will be made glad, hearts hap
py.” Will you adopt the suggestion?
Let us see. Babtow.
[For the Express.
To The People of JBartow Cuuu
ly.
Messrs Editors: W e desire to make in a
series of papers addressed to the people of
Bartow County, an appeal to the county
pride. Fellow citizens! We can make, iu
the short space of twelve months, our coun
ty the Banner county of the State. How.
Listen while I talk with you a few mo
ments. There are Ten Militia Districts in
the county. There should be immediately or -
ganized in each district, a branch society
of the Bartow Agricultural society. Meet
then at an early day, at some central part .n
your district, organize by the election of a
President and Corresponding Secretary,
adopt a Constitution and bylaws for tiie reg
ulation of your order.
Go to work; meet once a mouth; get ail
the Farmers in your district to join tne so
ciety; at each meeting debate some question
concerning the science of agriculture; invite,
at each meeiing, one of your members to de
liver a lecture on the “Produce ot Cotton,
“Cultivation of Grain,” Urasses etc. Ciub
together and subscribe ior suthcient Agricul
tural journals.
Wliy ! Farmers! will you sleep iu the co
*y bed prepared lor you lay your miners,
wlio sleep tue long sleep ' A ucy gave you
the pud, lueu- practical experience ; you
Still loliow in tlie beaten tracts oi your lutn
ers, regarUiess 01 tue experience ol tlie ag
ricultural works, regarUiess ol tlie experi
ence ol even your neignbor.
There suouul De system in all tlie depart
ments Ol labor, wneuier u oe intellectual or
puysical ; wnetUer iu me learueU proiesaiou
or any otner department! ine laimer, iite
tUe lawyer, snouid read—like inc uivcuame
stuuy. Alien do what we suggesi; organ
ise as a society ; suuacnbe lor agi tcuuutai
papers; tell etuit otner your experience in
planting cotton, corn, wneut, oats, grasses;
send up your ueiegaies to me meeting 01 me
County Society aunuatiy!
in twelve mourns old Oartow can prouuty
boast oi Her ten agricultural societies, com
posed ol larmers, WHo are not seemingly
negiectlul of tUe requirement s oi me age ;
wlio are determined to avail tnemselves ol
all the opportunity to build up tneir Coun
try; who will demonstrate tuat mind, as
well as muscles, must be employed in tilling
soil by those who make money ut the plow !
Babtow.
A Massachusetts paper tells of a col
ored woman who had been lately con
verted, but was so unfortunate as to
fiy into a passion over the misdoings
of oue of her neighbor’s youngsters. —
Her mistress remarked upon the im
propriety of such conduct iu the case
of one about to join the church, and
received this frank response: ‘T have
’sperienced religiou, an JL’se gwiue to
join de church; but, Miss B , I’ll
scald dat nigger fust.”
JSSKThe Hon. Joshua Hill has been
seated as Senator, from Georgia, and
1 it is thought Dr. Miller will bo soon.
__
Uliscellaueontn
The Madison Springs property, in
cluding twenty-seven buildings, the
large hotel among these, was entirely
destroyed by fire on the night of the
25th of Jan. No insurance.
Columbus manufactures, it is said,
700,000 cigars, on which the United
States tax is SSOO.
The Americus Courier has suspend
ed, and goes to Jacksonville, Fla.
The old farmers say that the preseut
unusualy dry cold winter, is indicative
of a good crop year.
The Orphan’s School, at Atlanta, has
250 pupils, and four teachers.
Atlanta has a female type-setter, in
the person of Miss Sallle Finley, from
Rome.
The total amount resulting from the
sale of seats in Henry Ward Beecher’s
church, this year, is $61,000.
The Studebaker Manufacturing Co s,
of South Bend. luiL, turns out. iu
complete finish, a wagon every 20 min
utes.
The Board of Trustees have located
the Orphan’s Home, at Norcross, on
the Air Line Railroad, 20 miles from
Atlanta. Rev. Peter A. Heard is Su
perintendent.
k young lady was found dead in a
creek, a few days ago, near Dalton,
with marks of violence on her person.
Hon. Sami. McCombs was thrown
from his buggy, at Milledgeville, and
died from his injuria recieved by the
fall.
H. M. Turner, the negro preacher
and politician, of Macon, has been
charged with an attempt to incite in
surrection, and has given bond for his
appearance.
Rev. C. J. Oliver, of Athens, was
married in Rome, Ga., Jan. 26th, to
Miss Fannie T. Shropshire, of Floyd
Capt. Dunlap Scott, it is thought,
will represent Floyd co. iu the next
legislature, vice H. A. Gartreil dec’d.
co., by Rev. W. F. Cook.
Beard will contest Corker’s seat in
Congress, and is now taking testinao
°y-
Positive intelligence of the safety of
Dr. Livingstone, tho celebrated Afri
can Explorer, has been received in
England.
Rev. C. M. Irwin has resigned the
charge of the Baptist church at Madi
son.
A good story is in circulation
in Washington, respecting Beast But
ler. A friend said to him one day:
“Why, General, how does it come
that you, who despises Grant, should
be his warmest adviser?”
“Old Spoons’’ brought his oft eye to
bear upon the inquisitive individual
and replied:
“You forget, my dear sir, that I have
always been a criminal lawyer.”
Strawberries. —This fruit can only
be had in perfection under high cul
ture. Select a sandy loam, manure
high, keep the ground free from weeds
and grass, let the plants stand in
double rows, twelve inches each way,
with alleys, two feet wide, for conven
ience of working and gathering.—
Mulch in the spring with wheat straw,
to the depth of four inches. After the
fruit has set, watering the plants.
Hen Manure on Corn. A writer
on this subject says: “I had a field of
corn which grew very slowly and the
prospect for a crop very discouraging.
A neighbor offered me the droppings
of his hen-roost. His offer was gladly
accepted, and two wagon loads of ma
nure was the result. This was liber
ally applied as far ns it would go.—
Two weeks aftOr this application there
was a great difference between the ma
nured and unmanured poition; the
manured part was much larger than
the yellow, sick-looking uumannred
portion. At length many good farm
ers expressed great wonder at the vast
difference between tho portions. ’The
part manured yielded three times as
much as the unmanured to the acre,
and much superior iu quality.”
Road Steamers.— ibe application of
steam to the propulsion of vehicles up
on common roads is co stautly extend
ing aud growing in favor. Mr. Thom
son, of Edinburgh, Scotland, the
inventor of the road steamer, which
bears nis name has found his facilities
too limited to meet his orders, and
has consequen ly licensed other man
ufacturers to make these engines. A
bouse in New York is also manufactur
ing these steamers for the American
market In an experimental trial of
one of these machines b ilt for the
Woolwhich Arsenal in England, it
drew two heavily loaded vehicles up a
grade of one in eight, with steam at
120 lbs., the road being qui e slippery
with mud. Tried on a level field, in
parts of winch the wheels sank three
inches, it accomplished a mile in seven
minutes.
Influence of Mo jeiute Drinking.—
The Buffalo Christian Advocate con
tains the following.
“Horace Greely says a man may
drink moderately but steadily all his life,
with no apparent harm to himself, but
his daughter become nervous wrecks,
his sons epileptics, hbertiness, or incur
able drunkards, the hereditary tendency
to crime having its pathology and un
varied laws precisely as scrofula, con
sumption or any other purely physical
disease. These are stale truths to
medical men, but the majority of pa
rents, even those of average intelli
gence, are either ignorant or wickedly
regardless of them.”
The Influence of the Jloon on the
Weather.
There is no ‘notion’ move firmly fix
ed in the popular mind than that of
the influence of the wind. etc. Scien
tific men, acting on the theory that
“where there is «o much smoke, there
must be some fire,’* have given much
attention to the subject, and have hint
ed at certain theories as being possi
bly correct Unfortunately, the re
sults of different series of experiments
have failed to agree, and we are as far
as ever from any reliable confirma
tion of the popular belief, except in the
siugle point of the dissipation of clouds
by the full moon. Sir John Hersehel
believes ttu\t “clouds have a tendency
to disappear under the full moon,” and
that ‘a slight preponderance in respect
to the quantity of min near the new
moon over that which falls near the full,
would be natural consequence of a
prepondenee of a cloudless sky about
the full.’
Arago, who concurs in this opinion
refers to a common expression among
French people that “moon eats up the
clouds.” It has been observed by the
writer that a large moon has tendency
to dissipate clouds in dry weather,
but has little or no such effect when
rain is falling. Beyond this trifling fact
there has thus far b en found even by
the closest examination of the relation
between the State of the weather and
the condition of the moon during a
period. of six years not the least ground
for the popular belief.
Not only is this belief unworthy of
intelligent beings, but it is subject
to the oddest contradictions. For in
stance, in New England, a ‘wet moon’
i§ one which is so much inclined that
it ‘wont hold water,’ on which “you
can’t hang a powder horn.'* At the
South a “wet moon” is one which “lies
on its back.” It is supposed to be
“full of water,” and as its center fills
up, the water is forced over the edge
and it rains. When we consider that
the moon is a sphere, and < hat its ap
parent shape depends only on the
manner in which we see the sun’s light
upon it, it becomes even more incom
prehensible that any connection should
have been imagined between its ap
pearance and the amount of the tain
falling. What we call the ‘changes’
of the moon are purely arbitrary, it
changes constantly, and as much at
one time as another, that thers is no
reason for supposing that it will rain
more or less at that particular part of
ns change that the almauac makers
have, for convenience, selected to in
dicate its “quarters ” We often hear
it said that wa may expect rain (or fair
weather) pretty soon “because the
moon changes to-night.,’ so it does;
but it changed jnst as much last night,
and it is changing constantly, day and
night, from one end of the century to
the other; it always makes the full
change, from new to old, once in every
lunar month. -—Am. Agriculturist.
A Miser Makes a Mistake of $495,
and Drops Dead. —A miser, reading
here, was reputed worth $20,000. He
had a nephew, a very worthy young
man, who was going ouc West to seek
his fortune. A few days before he
was ready to leave, he went to the old
uncle to sell him some notes of hand
which he held. The miser would not
touch them, but said: “You have al
ways been a good boy, only a little too
extravagant. I will make you a little
present before you leave.’’ Ho drew a
check on the bank for five dollars, as
he supposed,. but, owing to his bad
eyesight and worse penmanship, it
proved to be SSOO. This unaccountable
act of benevolence soon became noised
about town, and, of course, soon came
to the ears of the miser. He rushed to
the bank, and, under much excite
ment, asked one or the h&nk officials
what the amount of the cneck he had
given his nephew was. “Five hundred
dollars,” said the clerk. ‘ What!” said
the miser. “Five hundred dollars,”
said the clerk, producing the cheek.—
After reading, and trembling in every
muscle, he gave one long-drawn sign
and exclaimed, “My God 1 I am a
ruined man!” then sank down and
died. —Knoxville Correspondent of the
Abingdon (Id) Democrat.
Rectifying Mistake*.
Asa minister and a lawyer were rid
ing together, said the minister to the
lawyi r:
‘Sir, do you ever make any mistakes
in .pleading ?’
‘I do, said the lawyer.
‘And what do you do with the mis
takes ?’ inquired the minister.
‘Why, sir, it large ones, I mend
them; if small ones, I let them go, said
the lawyer. ‘And pray, sir,’ continued
he, ‘do you ever make mistakes in
‘Yes, sir, I have-’
‘And what do you do with the mis
takes ?’
‘Why, sir, I dispose of them in the
same manner you do—l rectify the
large ones, and pass the small ones.- —
Not long since, continued he, *u& I was
preaching, I meant to observe that the
devil was the father of liars, but made
a mistake, and said the father of law
yers. The mistake was so small that
I let it go.
Williams, of Oregon, gave Gen.
Grant a beautiful saddle, expecting to
be made Attorney General in the place
of Akerman, who had announced his
determination to resign; atid now,
having been restored to health by the |
result of the election in Georgia, Aker
man declines to quit the cabiuet. This
is certainly placing the President in
what to anybody else would be a very
awkward predicament.
A traveler asked an emaciated
Georgian if the climate of the
swamps is unhealthy. “Wall, no,” re
plied the loyal native, “’' aint un
health ; we have the fever and ague
all the time iu these parts, but then
we enjoy a powerful undertow of
health.”
GOWER, JONES k CO.,
MASPFACTCKERS OF
And Dealers in
CARRIAGES, BUGGIES,
AND
1, 2 & 4 Horse Wagons
MATERIALS, *C.
REPAIRING, of all Linds, DONE
WITH NEATNESS and DURABILI
TY.
CARTERS VIILE, GA,
fob. 7, 1871. wly
V. H, RICH ARB SON,
DEALER IN
STOVES,
GRATES*
HOUSE FURN
ISHING GOODS*
TIN WARE, &C.
Corner Whitehall rnd Hunter Streets,
jan. 1, 1871 Stlanta, s
BEAD THIN !
I feel grateful to my friends and cus
tomers for their liberal patronage in
the past, and will contiuue my
Liverj' Business
at the old sta'nd, where I propose to
give as NEAT A 1 URN-OUT as can
be had at any stable in the up-coun
try, and respectfully solicit a continu
ance of their patronage.
In justice to myself, I am compelled
to adopt the cash sjstem, in order to
ke«p my business in neat style.
Very Respectfully,
W W. MILAM.
To All Whom if may Concern •
GEORGIA BARTOW .COUNTY. —Green B
Loveless having, in proper form, applied
to me for Permanent Letters of Administration
on the Estate of Hazlc Loveless, late of said
County deceased. This is to cite all, and singu
lar the creditors and next of kin ofsaid decased,
to be and appear at my office within the time
allowed by law, and show couse. if any they can,
why permanent administration should not be
granted to Green B. Loveless, on Ilazle Love
less’ Estate. Witness mv band and official sig
nature. Feb. 1,1871. J. A. HOWARD,Ord’y.
TOBACCO.—Messrs. JOURDAN,
HOWARD & HARHALSON, 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,
Cabin Home,
Golden Choice,
Pike’s Peak,
Winfree’s Gold Leaf,
Pr&nly’s XXX,
Montsief,
Hyco Belle,
Peach Mountain,
Sunny Side,
Saranac,
McGhee’s 4 A,
Golden Rule,
Rosa Belle,
Globe Twist,
Crown Navy,
May Apple.
And many other desirable brands not men
tioned; together with a fine variety of Smok
ing Tobaccos and Cigars. .
Premium Alabaster
Hendrix Mountain Lime.
The Whitest!! The Purest!
Made at the New Kilns of
A. C. LADD & CO,,
In the side of Hendrix Mountain, near where
the €artersville & Van Wert Railroad crosses
Pettit’s Creek, about two miles southwest from
CartersviUe, is now
Open to the Market!
For sale in Cartersvilie, by
JAMES ATTA WAY, Agent.
sept, 15,1870.
future the Editorial Rooms of the
'CARTERS VILLE EX PR kSS" w-!lbe in
Col. J. . Harris’ Law Office, where the
business of the office will be transacted, and
where subscribers can get their papers.
THE LAST CALL.
Those indebted to me for subscrip
tion to the Cartersville Express up to
January Ist, 1871, and for advertising
and Job Work, are again notified to
settle up without delay. lam now
making out accounts, and will turn all
over to the collecting officer for col
lection, as soon as they are made out
Merchants are pressing me, and I will
be compelled to press YOU! if you
owe me. S. H. SMITH.
B£*£„Bubscribers not getting the Express
regularly will please let it be known at this
office, as, in the revision of our subscrip
tion book, names may have been overlooked
unintentionally. Copies of the paper can
be supplied, at any time, at our Editorial
Rooms. Subscribers wishing their paper
left at those rooms will please let ua know it*
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
M IU JJ |MI c x
prepaid to f'uSdid, *i| wftS are »"*
employment at home, the whole or th*
! for , the spare moments. Busing, or
and profitable. Persons of either spy „ *7 '‘Rht,
from 50c. to $5 per evening, i" a nAT" '
i M,,n hy uevoting their whole time to
ness. Roys and girls earn nearit Z L
•iieu. That all who see this notu-t ' **
send their address, and test the h.wo* “**>
make the unparalleled offer:To* such '''
not well satisfied, we will send*!
trouble of writing. F«U pan ie ' r ° r , thc
hie sample which will do to eomniw,« w,.!? Ua ~
and a copy of 7*c />**,«>«
one of the best and largest r*n, >r,. * m '*—
ever published—all senffreeV mad
if you want protitable work. 5d5&
- ALLEN ft CO., Augusta. .Maine
Address “DAY-800K,,’ New York City
UNHERSALISM. Wt»atl7iT.
Send for the STAR IN THE WEST*
Cincinnati. A large 8-page weekly; estab
lished 1827. It meets all the warns of the
family; $2 50 per year; $1 25 for six months.
Try it. Specimens free. Address William
son & Cantwell, Cincinnatti, Ohio.
JIRLSII AN SI aXI>ARI) opposes Sects and
V'' advocate* Primitive Christianity. Best and
viVuilfn F im 7 ,y \ Voek, l> 8 P a tP‘s,’ « columns
Edited by Elders Isaac Errett and J. 8, Lamar.
a vear. Specimens free. R. W. Carroll
ft Cos., Pubs., Cincinnati, Ohio.
NOW’S YOUR CHANCE! Just
Out I AGBXTn WAITED.
Mv new chart “I.ibkkty,” 28x:W in., take - ,
didlv. tifteenth Amendment, Emancipation
1 reclamation, Election Scene, Processions, ft<
Portraits of Lincoln, Howard, Grant, Revels,
ftc. All brilliantly colored. Large protits to
agents, E. C. BRIDGMAN, 29 Beckman Street,
New York.
/"I 5 persons to successfully canvass for
\JjCi X Premiums we offer, and receive a
?s5 Waltham Watch for yourself. Address Peo
ple's Weekly, Dayton, Ohio.
J£NU IN E VroRW AY A A ATS, and Alsike
\Jf Ciover.--_l_v Sample Packages sent
FREE to all Fanners; also a copy of the AMER
ICAN STOCK JOURNAL, hv enclosing stamp
to N. P. BOYER ft CO., Parfeesburg, Chester co.
Pa.,
YTEW YORK Safety Steam Power Cos. Steam
JLN Engines, with aud without cut-off, and Sec
tional steam Boilers, built in quantitiesby spe
cial machinery. Send for circular, 44 Cortland
J. F. EDDY,
Cotton Commission Merchant
7 Market Stjuare.
PROVIDENCE, R. I.
Cash Advances on Consignments of Cotton.
VICK’S
FLORAL GUIDE
FOE 1 87 1.
The first Edition of One Hundred and Fifty
Thousand Copies of VICK’s Illustrated Cata
logue of Seeds. and Floral Guide, is published
and ready to send out. 100 pages, aud an En
graving of every desirable Flower and Vegeta
ble. It is elegantly printed on fine tinted pa
per, illustrated with three hundred tine Wood
Engravings aud two beautiful
COLORED PLATES.
The most beautiful and most instructive Floral
Guide published. A German edition published,
in all other respects similar to the English.
Sent free to all my customers of 1870. as rapid
ly as possible, without application. Sent to til
others who order them tor TfiS CENTS, which is
not half the cost. Address
JAMES VICK,
Rochester, K. V
GEORGE F, GANTZ & CO’S
SEA FOAM!
Ik am entirely new' Inven
tion without any of the bad
qualities of Yeast or Bak
ing Powders Soda, or
Saleeratus. Is strong
er than any yeast or
baking p >wder in
the world, and
PERFECTLY PORE.
TAKE NOTICE.
Light, well raised Bread, Biscuit and Cakes,
digest easv and conduce to good health. Good
health makes labor of all kind easier and pro
longs life. SEA FOAM POWDER will make
Bread, Biscuits and Cakes, always light.
SEA FOAM is WARRANTED'to make better
lighter, healthier, sweeter, more toothsome and
more DIGESTIBLE and Nl TKITIOL'S Bread,
Biscuits, cukes, Puddings, Ac., Ac., than can be
made any other way.
NEWS TO HOUSEKEEPERS.
A barrel of Flour makes forty pounds more
of Bread with SEA FOAM Powder.
No time required for dough to raise, but bake
in a hot quick oven as soon as mixed.
SEA FOAMsaves Eggs, Shortening, Milk, Ac.,
and is a wonderful economy.
GEORGE F. GANTZ & CO.,
136 & 138 C e<dar St., Hew York.
$5 TO $lO PER DAY.b?»..JB2S
who engage iu our new business make Irora $5
to $lO per day In their own localities. Full par
ticulars and iustructions sent free by mail.—
Those in need of permanent, profitable work,
should address atoiiCe, GEORGE STINSON &
CO., Portland, Maine.
Agents ! Read This !
WE will pay agent* a salary
ofs3 >per week and expenses, or
allow a large commission, to sell our new and
wonderful inventions. Address,M. WAGNER
A CO., Marshall. Mieh.
EMPLOYMENT FOR ALL.
SALARY PER WEEK, and expenses,
mPOYt Pttiti Agents, to sell our new and use
ful discoveries. Address B. SWEET A CO.—
Marshall, Mich.
AGENTS VV ANTED— New, Large Uui
ted States Map, with immense World
on reverse side. The best assortment of Reli
gious and Historical Charts, Stationery Packa
ges, Ac. Earge profits! No risk ! Il AA IS A
LUBRECHT, Empire Map and Chart Establish
ment, 107 Liberty Street, New York.
USE m “YfGETABLr I
10 JL OPnlmonary Balsam JO/ 1 *
The old standard remedy-for Coughs. Colds, Con
sumption. ”Nothing better C'UTLjSk Bkos. A
CO., Beston.
TTPHAM’s Debilatory
BJ Powder. —Removes superfluous
hair m fire minute*, without injury to the skin.
Sent by mail for $1.25.
UPMAM S ASTHMA CURE
Relieves most violent paroxysms in fix* minuU*
and effects a speedy cure. Frice $2 bv mail.
The Japanese Hair Stain
Colors the whiskers and hair a beautiful black
or BROWS. It consists of only one preparation.—
75 cents by mail. Address S. C. UPHAM, No.
721 Jayne* Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Circulars
sent free. Sold by all Druggists.
HEUMATISM.— Linch’s Awti-Rhki
matio Powders has cured thousands
of cases of Rheumatism in the last ten years,
many of them in which all other remedies had
failed. For evidence correspond with J. G.
GIBSON, Eatonton, Ga., or inclose $2 by mail,
and It shall have prompt attention. Price $2
per package. Liberal discounts when sold by
the dozen or more.
SYCIIOMAXCY.-Any lady o r
gentleman can make SI,OOO a montb t
3ecure their own kappines and independence,
by obtaining PSYCHOMANCY, FACINAi
TION, or SOUL CHARMING. 400 pages;
cloth. Full instructions to use this powder
over men or animals at will, how to mesmer
ize, become Trance or Writing Mediums, Di
vination, Spiritualism, Alchemy, Philosophy
of Omens and Dreams, Brigham Young’s
Harem, Guide to Marriage, &c.. all contain
ed in this book.; 100,000 sold ; price by mail,
n cloth $1,25, paper covers sl. Notice. - Any
peson willing to act as agent will receive a
sample copy of the work free. As no capi
tal is required, all desirous of genteel em
ployment should send for the book, enclosing
II cts. for postage, to TANARUS, W EA'ANS & CC-,
40 South Bth St., Pfcihulelnhia.