Newspaper Page Text
civil, hiuu rs aiice,.
Tiie following is the Civil Rights
bill no-called, as it paged both Houses
ol Congress, was vetoed by the Presi
dent, and lias passed over the veto by a
Constitutional ma jority :
Sec. 1. That all persons born in the
Coiled States, and not subject to any
foreign power, excluding Indians not
taxed, are hereby declared to be cili
Zens of the United States; and such
citizens of every race and color, with'
out regard to any previous condition of
slavery or involuntary servitude, ex
cept as a punishment for crime, where
o! the party shall have been duly con
victed, shall have the same right in ev
-1 err State or Territory, to make and
enforce contracts, to sue, to be sued,
he parties and give evidence, to inher
it, purchase, lease, sell, hold and con
vey real and personal property, and to
he entitled to full and equal benefit of
all laws and proceedings for the sectl
rity of person and propeity, asjs en
joyed by white citizens, and shall be
jixjfrycdi to like punishment, pains and
penalties, and to none other, any law,
statute, ordinance, regulation or cits
torn to the contrary notwithstanding.
Sec. 2. And that any person who
under color of any law, statute, ordi
nance, regulation or custom, shall sub
juct, or cause to he subjected, any in
habitant of any Stale or Territory, to
the deprivation of any right secured or
protected by this act. or to punish
meat, pains and penalties, on account
ofsucli person having at any time been
held in a condition of slavery or invol
untary servitude, except for the pun
ishment of crime, whereof the party
shall have been duly convicted, or by
reason of his color or race, than is pre
scribed for the punishment of white
persons, shall be deemed a misde
meanor. and on conviction shall lie
punished by a fine not exceeding SI,OOO,
or imprisonment not exceeding one
year, or both in the discretion of the
Court.
Sec. 3. That the district Courts of
the United States, within their respec
tive dislriels, shall have, exclusively of
the several States, cognizance of all
crimes and offenses committed against
the provisions of this act; and also,
concurrently with the Circuit Courts of
the United Stales, of all causes, civil
nml criminal, affecting pj.-sons who are
denied, or cannot enforce in the courts
of Judicial tribunals of the State or lo
cality where they may he, any of the
i*ijjhts secured l them by tlu* first sec
tion of this act, and if any s fa or pros" '
coition, civil or criminal, lias been, or
flhatl he commenced in any State or
court, against any person lor any such
eause whatsoever, civil or military, or
any <*ther person or any arrest or im
prisuumunt, tresspass or wrong ilo.ic
or committed hy virtue or under color
ol authority deprived from this act, nr
trie act establishing a bureau lor the re
lief of Ireedmen and refugees and till
acts amendatory thereof, or for refusing
to do any act upon the ground that it
would be inconsistent with tins ad
such defendant shall have the right to
remove such cause lor trial to the prop
er district or Circuit Court in the man
ner prescribed by the act relating to
habeas corpus, and regulating judicial
proceedings in certain cases approved
March 3, 1863. and all acts amendato
ry thereto. The jurisdiction in civil
and criminal matters hereby conferred
on the District or Circuit Courts of the
United States, shall be exercised and
enforced in conformity with Hie laws
of the United Slates, so far as such
laws are suitable to carry the same into
effect, but in till eases where such laws
are not adapted to the object, or arc
deficient in the provisions necessary
to furnish suitable remedies and pun
ish offenses against the law. The com
mon law as modified and changed by
the constitution and statutes of the
State wherein the Court having juris
diction of the cause, civil or criminal,
is held, so lar as the s tine is not iucotr
sisteut with the Constitution and laws
of the United States shall be extended,
and govern said courts in the trial and
disposition of such cause, ami if of a
criminal nature in the infliction ofpun
ishment on the party found guilty.
Sec. 4. Thill lilt! District Attorneys,
Marshals, ami Deputy Marshals of the ]
United States, the Commissioners apx
pointed hy the Circuit atul tcrriton.il
Courts of the United States, with pow- ■
cr of arresting, iiupiisoouig, ir bnhuj; j
tirfeiulers against the laws of the Uniteil
States, the officers and agents of the
Freed men’* Bureau, and every other
officer who may be especially impow
• red by the President of the United
Stales shall be and they are hereby es
pecially authorized and required at the
expense ol the United Slates, to in
stitute proceedings against ail and ev
ery person who shall violate the pro
visions of this act. and cause him or
them to be arrested or imprisoned, or
hailed is the ease mav be, for trial be
tore such ol the United Slates or ter
ritorial courts as by this act have cog
nizance of the offense, and with a view
to affording reasonable protection to all
persons in their constitutional rictus of
equality before the law. without dis
Unction of race or color* or piovuiu
condition of slavery on:n-oa::uar. >. r*
vitude, except as a ;> - : r
crime, whereof tlw party sn.td li.tvi
been dulv convicted, and the pr> n H
discharge ol the duties ■ th.s
shall be the duty of the Circuit i oiu >
■>! the United States, and the Supreme
Courts ol the territories of the United
Sian-" troiu time to tune, to increase
the number ol eoimniss. tiers. so as to
atlord a speedy aid convenient means
lor the arrest and examination of per
sons charged with a violation ol this
act.
Sec. t>. That sid Coinii’isMonert
the Judges of the Circuit and District
Courts of the United States and the
Judges of the Superior Courts of the
territories; severally and collectively,
in term, time, and vacation, upon sat
isfactory proof being made.*"to issue
warrants and precepts for arresting and
bringing before them all offenders a
gainst the provisions of this act, and on
examination to discharge, admit to
hail, or commit them for trial, as the
facts may warrant.
Sec. 6. And such Commissioners are
hereby authorized and required to ex
ercise and discharge all the powers and
duties conferred on them by this act,
and the same duties with regard to of
fenses created by this act, as they are
authorized by law to exercise with re
gard to other offenses against the laws
ol the United States. That it shall be
the duly of all Marshals and Deputy
Marshals to obey and execute ail war
rants and precepts issued under the
provisions of this act when to them di
rected ; and should any Marshal or
Deputy Marshal refuse to receive such
warrant or ol her process when tender,
ed, or to use all proper means diligent
ly to execute the same, ha shall on con
viction thereof, be lined in the sum of
one thousand dollars to the use of the
person upon whom the accused as al
leged to have committed the offense,
and the better to enable the said Com
missioners to execute their duties laitii
uilly and efficiently in conformity with
the Constitution of the United States,
and the requirements of this act they
are hereby authorized and impowered
within their counties respectively to
appoint in writing under tlu-ir hands,
any one or more suitable oersons from
time to time to execute ali such war
rants and other process as aforesaid
shall have authority to summon and
call t i their aid the bystanders or posse
comilalus of the proper county or
such portion of the laud or naval forces
of the United Slates or of the militia
as may be necessary to the performance
of the duty with which they are charg
ed, and to insure a faithful observance
of the clause of the Constitution which
prohibits slavery in conformity with
the provisions of this act; and said
warrants shall run and be executed by
said officers any where in the Stale or
territory within which they are issj'
ed.
Sec. 7. I’hat any person who shall
knowingly and wrongfully obstruct,
hinder or prevent, any officer or oilier
person charged with the execution of
any warrant or process issued under
tiie provisions of this act, or any per
son or persons lawfully assisting him
or them from arresting any' person for
whose apprehension such warrant or
t’rocess may have been issued, or shall
roscuH, or attempt to rescue, such per
son from the custody of the officer, oili
er person or persons, or those lawfully
assisting as aforesaid when so arrested,
Pursuant to the authority herein given
and declared, or shall aid, abet, or a*r
sisl any person so arrested as aforesaid
directly or iniirertly to escape from the
custody of the officer or other persons
legally authorized as aforesaid, or shall
harbor or conceal any person for whom
a warrant or piocess shall have been
issued as aforesaid so as to prevent his
discovery and arrest after notice, or
knowledge of the fact that a warrant
has been issued for the apprehension
of such person shall for either of said
otfenses be subject to fine not exceed
ing 84<)i>, and imprisonment not exceed
ing six in tilths by indictment before the
District Court ol the United States for
the district in which said offenses may
have been committed, or 'oclnre the
proper sourt of criminal j trisdic ion,
it committed within anv one of:lior
ganized territories ol the United State.
• Sec. 3. Thai the District Attorneys,
the Marshals, and their Deputies, and
the Clerks ol the said district and ter
ritorial courts shall be paid for their
services the like fees as may be allowed
to them for similar services in other
eases; and in all cases where the pro
ceedings are bclorg a Commissioner,
lie shall be entitled to a fee of ten dol
lars in full for liis services 'in each
case, inclusive of all services incident
in such arrest and cxammatuwi. The
person or persons authorized to axe
cuu* the process to be issued by such
Commissioners for the arrest of offe
tiers against tiie provisions ol tins act.
slinit lie euuiled to a fee oi rive dollars
lor each person lie or they mav arrest
aml rake tie tore uuy such t'oimiiiiticn
er as aforesaid, with such oilier lees as
may he deemed reasonable bv such
Commissioner lor such other addition,
al serv ices as may he necessarily per*
lortrcj by him or tin in. sucli t s at
tending at the examination, keeping :,i -
prisoner in custody, auJ providing
with food and !..m,s during hts de
tention and until tiie ri.ial determina
tion of such commissioner, and in gen
eral for performing such oilier duties
as may be required in the premises,
such lees to be made up in conformity
with the lees usually charged by the
officers ol the courts of justice within
the proper district or county as near as
practicable, and paid out of the Tress*-
nrv of too United Slates, on the oer
t .-.ate >l the Commissioner of thedis*
; : u untu which the arrest is made,
>e recoverable from the defend"
as i part of the judgment in case
'f conviction.
S v. 0. Thai whenever the President
. me United Stairs snail have reason
u* briieve that offenses have been or
ire likely to be commuted against the
provisions of this act Hitiim any judi
cial district, it shall be Uwiul for him,
in Ins disc re uou io direct the JuJge,
Marshal and Dislrtci Attorney of such
district to attend .a such place wjtlu
:he district auii at such lime as he may
designate tor the purpose ot the more
speedy unit's- and trial of persons
charged with a violation of this act ;
and it shall be the duly of every judge
or other officers when any such requi
sition shall be received by him to at
tend at the place and for the time
therein designated.
Sec. 10. That it shall be lawful for
the President of the United States, or
such persons as he may empower for
that purpose, to employ such part ol
the land or naval forces of the United
States, or of the militia, as shall lie
necessary to prevent the violation and
enforce the due execution of this act.
Sec. 11. Thatupon all questions of
law arising in any cause under the pro
visions of this act, a final appeal may
Le taken to the Supreme Court of the
United States.
[From the Chicago Times - ]
Getting into Southern Society.
The inquisition of fifteen at Wash
ington, fearing the effect upon the pub
lic mind of the testimony of General
Lee aud other Southerners who are
familiar with the sentiment of the
South, have hastened to flood the coun
try with the evidence ofGeneral Terry.•
This officer started out by stating that
‘•I do not come in direct personal con
tact with the people of Virginia, *
* * * and I have no so
cial intercourse with any except those
known to the Union people.” After
Terry has sworn that he does not come
in contact with the people of Virginia,
he proceeds to swear that they are
very loyal; and that they would
gladly embrace an opportunity to se
cure their independence. General Lee,
who is a Virginian, swears that they
are loyal, and would not avail them
selves olTlie embroilment of the United
States with a foreign power to renew
their war against '.lie government.—
Who is the more reliable in this case,
Lee, or Terry? We need not answer
the question;
If we examine Terry s testimony
closely, we shall find the explanation
of his hostility and that of many other
Federal officers in the South, lie says
there is the same hatred among South
erners, the same contempt for North
ern men titat there always was. The
Virginians do not seek him, lie says,
and it would not become his position
as a commanding oilier, nor consistent
with his self respect, to seek them. In
other words, Terry very unmistakably
shows that lie is chagrined over a fail
ure to get into Southern society-
What is true ol Terry is true of a great
many other Federal officers in the
South; and this chagrin finds vent be
lore the reconstruction committee, in
the shape of deadly hostility to, and in
tentional or unintentional misrepresen
tation of the South.
There are two pointi of prominence
connected with this question of admits
tance to Southern society. Southern
women entered upon the contest for the
independence of the South with an en
thusiasm of tlie opposite sex. The
failure, therefore, was more disastrous
in its reactionary effects upon their
feelings than it was in the case of
Southern men. The Southern women
are more disappointed, more prostrat
ed by the failure than the men. When
to this is added the tact that almost all
these women are mourning for the loss
of some relative, it can scarcely be ex
pected that they would be willing to
look favorably upon men whom they
cannot but regard as the instruments by
Which their pride has been humbled,
tin i r hopes blasted, their property de
stroyed and their lathers, sons, lovers
and brothers slain. These facts are so
glaring that ihe-Federal officer who at
tempts to force himsell into the society
ol Southern women, or who indulges
in chagrin because of failure in such
| an attempt, is a brute in one case and a
; fool in the other.
Suppose the case reversed. Sup
; pose that the ISouth had conquered, and
that, tO"day, the North was a desert
! held by Southern troops. Would our
wives and daughters wish to associate
with swaggering gray-backs who had
been instrumental in reducing them
to poverty and in depriving them ol
their natural protectors? We should.ie
gard our women as coarse and unfed*
mg if they ventured to take any such
; course.
The other prominent point iu this
matter is. that in Southern society, as
in any other society, a gentleman is ad
missible, whether he come from Bos
ton, Paris or Kamschatka. No gen
tleman vi ill few re him-.elf into a house
of mourning and propose a game of
euchre or a dance in conntciion with
ttit obsequies of tiie deceased; and, in
like mimin, no gentleman will geek
udtmssiun into Southern society until
people have buried tin-1 r uead. In
time, tiie dead \tii! be buntd, the peri
od ol mourning will be past, the.biuer*
ness of recollection will become less
ened. and then the doors id Sauihern
mansions will swing on oiled hinges
for the entrance of the gentleman, re
gardless of lus nationality.
W e cannot conscientiously promise,
when that tune arrives, that these doors
will be wide open to New England and
tiie entire North. Blatant abolition
ists, who offensively insist that the
Southern negreas is the intellectual
anil social equal ol the Southern white
j women, will rind it as hard to get into
Southern society then as they do now.
This laet alone will probably bar the
doors of Southern hopes against ninc
| tenths of the Puritans. Respectable
, society in the South is like respectable
j society everywhere; it is an aggrega-
I lion of sympathetic social elements,
and it repudiates everything uncouth,
j brutal and offensive.
NO ELECTION.
The New jersey Legislature ad
journed, without ejecting a Senator in
place of Mr. Stock toil.
THE CARTKERSVILL
EXPRESS.
SAM’L II- SMITH and ROBT. P. MILAM,
Editors and Proprietors.
C'artersville, Ga., Apr. 17, IS6
®Sg*The many friends of
JESSE R. VriKLR_
announce him as a Candidate for.thyposition
of Judge of the County Court authorized by
late Act of the Legislature,
March 20, 1866. Ide
are authorised to
announce the name of
WM. 11. PRITOIEf r
as a Candidate for Solicitor of the County
Court, at the election on 2d May next.
the earnest solicita
tions of my friends, I present my name
to the Public as a candidate for Judge
of the County Court ol Bartow county,
at the eleclion on Wednesday, the 2d of
May next, T. 11. TRiPPE.
are authorized to
announce the name of ANDREW
H. RICE, Esq., as a candidate for the
office of Solicitor ol the County Court.
April 10, 1866.
are authorized to
announce the name of ROBERT C.
SAXON as a candidate for Solicitor of
the new County Court of this county.
What tiie Soulli oh trill 1© do.
Every observer of passing events,
must seethe rapid tendency of the con
duct and legislation of the dominant
party in this country to the disintegra.
lion of all government, and the destruc
tion of civil rights. The whole federal
legislation of the country, is actuated by
one single idea—a fiendish hatred to the
people of the South. In the hope of
crushing aud ruining everything noble
and good in the South—of blasting our
every hope, checking every aspiration,
political, social or commercial and de
grading for lime and eternity, our high
character—this ruling faction is willing
and iudeed endeavoring cliaius
for its own enslavement. The “abom
ination of Desolation.” the Civil rights
Bill-now stands in the temple tiie cap
ital of the nation, and receives the wor
ship of those who have sworn faithful
sentinels on the watch towers ofliberty.
The President has in vain endeavored
to check the rapid strides of those fa
natics to consolidation—to despotism,
anarchy and desolation. The sturdy
oak has been compelled to yield to the
power of the storm. An unrestrained
and unscrupulous majority has broken
over the constitutional barriers estab
lished tor the protection of the co-ordi
nate brandies ol the government, and
both the Judiciary and Executive de
partments have become powerless for
accomplishing the great objects of tlieir
creation. We claim not to be a proph
et, but if evil and great calamities are
not the result of the present state of af
fairs tfie ordinary course of nature must
lie reversed to prevent it The South,
always conservative, long since ceased
to have any voice in the government.
The heterogeneous masses of the North
and West.never trad a genuine appreci
ation of the great principles of our con
stitution. The affection among the bet
ter classes of these fanatical sections for
our form of gover ament is being every
day rapidly diminished. They are grad
ually preparing for any change that,
may overtake them. They see that
nothing is sacred in the eyes of iheir
rulers, and are at any time to
witness the fall of the government.—
.More aud greater resolutions, are inev
itable and Jacobinism is the g*-al of the
.present tendency. With these facts
stuborniv confronting ut, what should
wc of the South do? or rather, chalocd
and bound as we are, what can we do?
—One thing is setirr.; we are a politi
cal nonenmx. The fiat has gone :orih.
the word has long since i ■ - t n
and we look in vain for it to return
void. Ambition must no longer be the
lever of the Southern mind, and politi
cal aspiration must cease to entertain
the Southern heart. While good gov
ernment, and honest rulers, without
which there can be no good govern
ment, is always to be desired they are
not the only objects of laudable ambi
tion, or the only source of noble aspi
ration. While it is true that we are
political outcasts in our country, we
still baVe left us. a noble heritage in
trial country. We have lost much and
suffered much in the recent war. but we
have not lost all. Our houses iiave
been burned, our ieids laid w aste, our
thurch.e; dcmo!i-.*rtd and town* und
villages destroyed, but we have pre
served an unstained character, and are
still the owners of a generous soil bless
ed with a climate second to none in
the world. We can still stand amid
the rnins of our former magnilfeent for
tunes and *hank God that so much has
been left us—not only material wealth
but of social virtue and religious influ
ence. We have energy, mind and the
favor of providence. With these we
can make our desolated fields bloom
and blossom again as the rose. Our
homes, now darkened by the absence
of those who once cheered us by their
example and solaced us in our misfor
tunes, may still be happy under the be
nign influence of the virtues that have
ever,in times ol peace adorned our char
acters. Our churches, long in silence
and ruins, must again be made vocal
with the praise of the Redeemer. Our
schools and colleges sunk from view in
the smoke and storm of revolution,
must again rise to give light and life to
coming generations. Politically dead,
we may become more thoroughly, mor
ally and spiritually alive. Every field
for the amelioration ol our brotherhood
lies open and inviting. Amid the gen
eral ruin which we fear, we see but too
plainly in the future, we can heartily
exclaim in reference to the objects just
mentioned—“these be tby Gods O Is
real.”
Administrators, el al, are requir
ed to sell properly in the county where
the deceased, to whose estate the pro
perty to be sold belongs, resided when
he died. This fact is not generally
known. Col. E. E. Field, Adminis
trator on the estate ol E. M. Field, late
of this county deceased, some weeks u
go advertised some real estate lying in
Cherokee county, to be sold in Canton.
Judge Milner informed lmn that it was
illegal, and we have this week changed
tiie advertisement accordingly, which
will be found among the legal adver
tisements on the fourth page of this
paper, and to which we invite attention.
Crockery. —Our old and esteemed
friend T. R. liipley has again renewed
his old business—selling crockery, (fee.
flu has associated with him in business
Mr. Wood, under firm name of Ripley
Wood. We have patronized Mr.
Ripley, in days oCyore, and can truth*
fully say that our dealings have been
the most satisfactory. He is a free, o
pen hearted gentleman—cneerful and
courteous, We most cheerfully com
mend this house to the patronage of
the people. See card.
JBerSf-It will be seen from another col
umn of this paper, that Van Epps <s•
Tippin have just opened a wholesale
Grocery and Provision house in Atlan
ta. Mr. Tippins was formerly a citi
zen of this county, and is known to a
great many of our readers. We were
in this house, while in Atlanta, and will
do the gentlemanly proprietors justice
by saying that it is one of the neatest
and most tasty establishments in tiie
city. If you want to feast your eyes
on something beautiful to the sight, and
vour mouth on sometning delicious to
the taste, don’t fail to give this house a
call.
Furniture. —Don’t fail to read the
advertisement of Geo. P. Frazer in an
other column. Me has something else
besides furniture to sell; and some
thing, too, that will soon be very much
needed by farmers—Reapers. Read
his advertisement, aud when you go or
send to Atlanta, don’t forget this house.
A Mistake Corrected. —Mr. Thos.
W. Dodd wrote us a letter, last week,
withdraw ing his name for the candida
cy for County Court Judgeship. The
letter was misplaced, and wc took oc
casion to make the announcement from
memory, in winch we misrepresented
Mr. Dood’s position, hy faying lint he
urged the claims of Judge I'rippe. We
have finee found tiie letter, and take
pleasure in publishing it, so that his
position may be understood.
Echa-.lec. li*. Aorii 2. 1800.
Mess. Editors'. Allow me to slate,
mrougfi your columns, that I am no
candidate for Judge tithe new Couniv
(' otirt. Tht impression lias gone into
several portions of the county that I
was; in fact, I authorized some of my
friends to use my name. Since I have
examined the bill creating such a court,
and I find the responsibilities, connect
ed witii the qualifications, to require
one ot the best judges of law Bartow
has. I am unwilling to ask for any
office in the gift ol the people, that 1
feei so incompetent to fill. Let us e
lect one of the best lawyers we have,
THOS. W. DODD.
Cotton Seed.
A SMAl.jj LOT OUFRESH GENUINE
TENNESSEE COTTON SEED, also,
a Lot of SOUTHERN SEED, for Sale at
A. L. PITTS A. CO.,
2 doors South of Post Office.
Carterrrille, April 17.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Musical & Dramatic
-fettetaimwiti-
AT
Stilesboro’ Institute.
IFIRIJDA.Y USTia-IEIT:
APRIL 20tl, 1866.
THE entire proceeds to be expended
in purchasing glass for the lustilute
Buildings.
The Entertainment will consist of
Vocal and Instrumental
MUSIC,
BY
THE YOUNG LADIES OF STILESBORO,
A company ol Young Gentlemen
will appear in the CELEBRATED HIS
TORICAL DRAMA .
William Tell!
The music selected is mostly new.
A rare treat is promised the Public.
I*ricc of Admission 25 Cents.
Tickets for sale at the Post Office.
Doors open at 7—Curtain rises at 7L
P. M. April 17.
liipley &. Wood, Agents
[Successors to TANARUS, R, RIPLEY.]
Dealers in
CROCKERY
CHINA,
AND GLASS
WARES.
And l&ottse Fuinishiug floods.
a'fES.
Whitehall siu ti, Atianta (
April 17, 1866.
hie New Furniture More
OF
GEO -IP- EE/AZEB,
Peachtree Street,
ATLANTA,” GEORGIA
Over Eddleman ft Banks’ Shoe Store,
Extraordinary Inducements
Offered 10 Furciiasers
A large lot of new and tasty articles of Fur
niture and Carpets—fine Brussels Car
pets at .$2 to $3 per yard—now beingreceived
w hie la I will continue to sill at the
Lowest Figures.
FARMERS! FARMERS!
Look (o your intereit,
To the Wheat Farmers of Middle Georgia
and Alabama, 1 have orders for 50,000 bushels
of Wheat, for which the highest cash prices
will he paid.
I also call attention of Farmers to have their
fields cleared of stumps aud rocks, as I shall
havs the best
Reapers,
Made for sale, or to Reap on Shares- This
caution is necessary, as no Reaper will suffer
his Machine to enter fields only at the risk of
the farmer, where these obstruct - ! ms are in the
way. Now is the time to do this without dam
age to the crop. apr. 17hn
VAN EPPS & TIPPIN,
Wholesale Dealers in
Grocerieii and Provisions,
Alabama Street, near Whitehall,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA*
y AVE in Store and to arrive :
50 bags Rio Coffee;
20 hags Java Coffee,
20 hbls A Sugar,
20 bids Extra C Sugar,
10 bids Crushed Sugar,
20 bbls Porto Rico Yellow Sugar,
5 bi<xes Brown Sugar,
20 bids Golden Syrup,
20 kegs Refined Syrup,
20 bbls Mackerel,
100 kits No. Mackerel,
5 bbls Pickled Herrings,
10 boxes Cod Fish,
20 k gs Soda,
50 boxes Gandies,
Pepper, Spice,Ginger, Mustard, Oysters in cars,
Catsup, Pepper Sauce, Lemon Syrup, Pickles,
Sardines, Concentrated Milk, Figs. Raisins,
Prunes, Almonds, Brazil Nuts, English Wal
nuts, Pesafi Nuli. F.ilberts, French Che touts,
Jellies, Soda Crackers, Butter Crackers, Peach
es in cane, Black aud Green Tea, Soaj , Cop
peras. Extract of Logwood, aiso Corn, Bacon,
Lex Cheese, &c. apr 17 lrn
t J. M. HARDIN,
Dealer in
FAMILY GROCERIES,
Confectionaries,
Tobacco and Cigars,
AND
COUNTRY PRODUCE,
Which he will eitl.er buy or sell.
Next door to the Post Office,
March 5. Cartersvili,k, Ga.
celebrated
Clothes Washer
and Wringer,
On hand aid for sale, in Atlanta, by
a r r 10. T. M. &R. C. CLARKE.
NEYV ADVERTISEMENTS.
Georgia, Bartow county.
Whereas A. J. WEEMS
APPLIES tome for Letters of A(1 minisfra
tion on the estate of Jno. W. Weems de
ceased.
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish
all and singular, the kindred and creditors of
saiil deceased, to bo and appear at my office,
within the timo prescribed by law, and show
cause, if any they can, why said letters should
not be granted said applicant. Given under
mv hand and official signature, this
17th April, 1860. J. A. HOWARD,
Ordinary.
G eorgia, Gilmer county,
Whereas, Ira Sisson applies to me for
Letters of Guardianship of the persons nul
property of Allen B. Sisson, Calton Sissen, W.
P. Sisson, Ht sikiah Sisson, Simpson Sisson,
and Frances E Sis,on, minor heirs of Charles
Sisson, late of said county, deceased.
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish a?l
persons concerned to be and appear at my of
fice, within the time prescribed by law, and
show eause, if any they have, why said Letters
should not be granted. Given under my hand
and official signature this April 17, 1169.
T. J. STALLINGS, Ordinary.
Georgia, Gilmer county, Notice
is hereby given to all persons concerned,
that James G. lnlow, late of said county, de
parted this life intestate, and no one has applied
for administration on the estate of sf id lnlow,
and that in terms of the law administration will
be vested in the Clerk of the Inferior Court, or
some other fit and proper person, thirty days
aher the publication ot this citation, unless some
valid objection is made to his appointment.
Given under nay hand and official signature,
this April 17, 1866. TANARUS, J STALLINGS,
Ordinary.
SILAS O'SHIELDS,
"fa Fashionable
M Tail Or,
Cartersville, Ga. npr 17
JOHN W. WOFFORD,
Attorney at Law,
CARIERSVILLE. GA.
Al<o. FIRE INSURANCE AGENT.
Represents the best Northern and
Southern Companies. Gun be found
at the law office of Wullord & Parrott.
April 10, 1806.
HILBURN HOUSE,
Corner (f Broad and Alabama Streets, one
door from Whitehall Street, AS Hi Mitt., lii.
This house is in the center of the business
portion of the city, mu) hut it short distance
from lruin the Passenger Depot, and conveni
ent to all the Rad Road Depots. Fare good
and charges -noderate.
L. J. HILBURN, Proprietor,
apr If). formerly i Catoosa Piutiorm.
SASSEEN HOUSE.
At the Junction of Peachtree and Proud
Streets.
ATLANTA, GA, ,
Board per Dap, &3.tW)
Board per Week 15.00
E. R. SASSEEN, Proe’r.,
apr 10. formerly of Washington Hall.
M>BRIDE, D3SSETT & CO.,
CORNER OF HUNTER AND WHITEHALL STREETS.
Atlanta, oa.
Importers ami wliolmlo
Dealers in
%x 0 1 Iu rn ,
China and Glass Wares.
Full lines of
C. C. CHINA AND GLASS
at prices at low as any house in the country,
We pay no jobbers or importers profits, but
bring our goods directly from the
Potteries of Europe,
and
Manulacturies of America,
and can ofier goods upon aa favorable terms
as any house in the South.
Goods carefully repacked for the country
trade. J
A flue asso.-tment for sale in the original
package.
Assorted Crates very low. april 10,3ra
WYLYS. GARROLL & CO..
Wholesale Dealers in
GROCERIES
AND
WESTERN PROOUC E
Collier’s Buildiags, Whitehall Street,
Atlanta , Ga.
’TT'EEP constantly on hand a large sup p'
l\ of Corn,
Oats,
Kye,
Flour,
Bacon,
Lard,
S.ugar,
Coffee,
and sfortb and of* it.
All of which we offer to the Trade at the L ci
est Market rates, at Wholesale exelu siveiy .
Apr 10. ?m