Newspaper Page Text
Tiao .V jtv St tie and County
Taxes.
Fmm the Savannah Neut* and Her
nl'l, of .M onlay, we learn tiiat in accor
dance with the enactments of the last
I. •ifUlature anew tax is shortly to be
levied both by .State and eountv. for
which the tax collector will open his
b'"ks on Tncsd.iv of this week at the
court house in that city. By the pro
visions ol the law. property is taxed ad
valorem to raise the amount of $350,000
in the .State, independent of the speciti ic
taxes. All practioners of law, medicine
ami dentistry, and all (lagu.irean and
other aftists are taxed $lO each. The
owners oi billiard and other like tables
are taxed $25 lor each table; owners of
ir.n-pin alloys $lO for each dtey. A
poll tax of $1 is also assessed upon ev
ery m ile inhabituir, whether i white
person or a negro. In tie case of the
poll tax the employer is held responsi
ble for the tax*- of'liis e ijcovees. A
simple note from the tax collector to the
employer will oblige him to pay his tax.
Employers of men who huvo only the
poll tax to pay will include them in
their returns.
Whisky, brandy am[ gin pay a spe
eifiiv 20 cents per gallon.
~ will assess a per cent age
the above .State tax for the coun-
Jx.
lie New* and Herald adds that the
gest will be open at the court house,
.Savannah, on Tuesday, and will re
tain open during the week. All pwr~
oils not making returns will he assess
ed and taxed double rates. Th* fol
lowing is the new tax oath:
••You do solemnly swear that you
will irue answers give io all questions
which I may put to yon touching the
returns y on a-e about to make, and that
you will make a true return of all youi
taxable properly, so help you God.”-
At. Jalel.
Kiin.-lout K vim-csis :j *l ?.
Written lor the (Jurtersvi! <■ i spns.<,
in hat. naiiu:it.
ft u incomprehensible to me iriw a
n v sane reflecting in m can arrive at tbe
conclusion that there is no future pun
ishment in another world lor the
wicked ! Mow can it he possible that
thousands ot and e ill on* in < arji at e
who stalk abroad lho earth rioting in
crimp, and practising their dark deeds
with impunity, and without compunc
tion. sIhII “go nn.whipt ol justice’’ lor
ever ! There inn.it he a day ol wrath,
a day of retribution, when every secret
thing shall bn brought into judgement
and when those who are guilty of com
mitting deeds of oppression, outrage,
injustice and wrong, shall receive their
just deserts. Look out then, ye swind
lers, vc horae-thuives. ye rubers ve a
duli'Tcr >, vc incendiaries, ye lying
politicians, yu avaricious wretches,
who would coin tears and blood into
in >nev il you could, lor you cannot al
-war * escape; |iistire will conic like a
storm, an I “Tho dcssolatur shall be
d.'isolate !”
I wonder il the very best men do
not, souietim's, ted that it is a hard
task, ami very much against the Hesli
to labor lor the good of this sellish, un
grateful, and deceitful world ? Vet it
is our duly to do everything we can to
make lh e co nee rn better, for'
it is so arranged by an Alwise Provi
deuce, that in laboring lor \lie good ol
others is the only way to promote our
own happiness. I, t iis then "do good
and eschew evil” for our own suites, if
w* ran have no higher motives.
It is said that the I. g sl itme appro
priated $20,000. to furnish the gover
nor's Mansion with fine carpets, win
ifoie curtains Ate. Would it not have
been better, antler thr present circum
stances, to have expended the amount
lor bread to feed our starving and down
trodcu people? Or they might have
p. id some of the "Umpire State's"
just debt with it.
If the fierce little Confederate Maj.
who gallantly tyre down and burnt the
covering over my well, and presse
nubbins which my children neidod for
bread, while I was absent, last Spring,
looking after my sick family, is still out
of useful employment, lie can tint! an
opnuntt a* the same well by applying to
me, and I will help him to get to. Pa
p rs friendly to the cause, please copy,
nod forward accounts to N\ ar Depart'
moil.
The young man, with long curl —I
hnr who left the ehu- • i on 1 1 ’
Git It. soon alter nn, *c
will collier a gn- :i' -
old ol Ins '.ticks b\ i . i , ! I
wnii to have so n Ittog t, \ > i • n
continual re .a Miiheraite '> , told
dcprivitv o| hum ui luiufc 1) out
send but one.
Old Blinkins iv lus horse tell down
with him tbe oth r day Now I know
why lie fell down: it was bceuuse lie
couldn’t fall up.
Ladies wi h husbands, are all opposed
to second marriages. \V nlow and
young ladies are not.
Tooth ph-v • fur rm xilmox !
S into ill die -sc. by acihm tv of,
and under pas of the Sta'.e. live been
sending tooth picks ma le ol g lose -quills
to the e<u tty c mrts, to prevent the
spreading **l small pox! I have tried
one, and pim >uuee it of owl imposition.
I’ve s •ralehed my arm w.th the magic
quill.
And am subject to the small pox still.
The order of G.m. Thomas directing
the mustering out of whit" and colored
regim. .is extends to all the States in
dtyarimet.i.
THE CAIM'EIISVILLE
E X PR ESS,
SAM’L 11. SMITH AND ROB T. P. MILAM,
Editors anil Proprietors.
CarlcrsviHc, Ga., Apr. 21, INGS
g*§uTlie following article we take
from the Metropolitan Record , . and
place it before the readers of the Ex~
press, and ask their perusal. It is a
matter of some moment to us all, and,
we trust, will he cheerfully complied
with, oil the part of those who have
any experience, pro or eon ; . ' -i
“We cannot foriret that every pound
of food given to Federal prisoners was
so much taken from the scant rations
of the Confederate soldiers, and placed
their needy wives and childrentm much
nearer starvation, while the-health and
comfort of the shivering and hungry-
Confederate prisoners at Johnson’s
Island and elsewhere might have been
secured without depriving a man, wo
man, or child of a single luxury.
If we are to believe the testimony of
reliable correspondents of the Re
cord and of other sufferers in North
ern prisons with whom we have con
versed, we can see no honor which the
peopl? of the North are to derive from
the investigation of this matter and re
gret that it has been thought proper by
some to enter upon it.
In conclusion we would say that we
now wish to see the thing thoroughly
sifted, so that we may get all the truth.
Our people have read one side, now let
them read titeoihec. We would, there
fore, call the attention of our readers in
the South to a notice which has appear
ed in the St- Louis Republican, in which
Colonel M. R. Cullen, formerly one of
the Judges of the Military Court of the
Trans-Mississippi Department, now a
bookseller and stationer, No. 68 North
st!i s'reet, St. Louis, Mo., announces
lus intention of publishing a history of
the experiences of Confederate soldiers
in Northern prisons, aud requests all
who have been so unhappy as to have
such experiences to forward affidavits
of such far's as will tend to exhibit to
the world the true condition of South
ern men in Northern prisons. Col.
Cullen is said to be a man of talent and
well lilted for the task before him. We
shall look anxiously for bis book, and
hope that he may receive such co-op
eration aud assistance in Ins labors as
shall enable him to do the subject
justice.
Kingston Ga.
April 17lh 1866
Musses. Edrs: lam directed by the
Ladies of the Society for enclosing the
Kingston graveyard, to address you
ibis letter, styling our plans and asking
you to secure for us all the assistance
you can. There are, buried in this
graveyard, about two hundred Confed
erate Soldiers; perhaps half the number
of citizens, and a lew Federal Soldiers.
Many of tbe citizens mojrt deefffy inter
ested in this matter have left the State,
and it will (all very heavily on those
remaining, should '.hey alone have to
bear all the expense of enclosing and
putting in order the graveyard. The
Society wishes to erect only a simple
plank fence—but the cost of this alone,
will exceed the means of the people of
Kingston and its immediate vicinity.—
The large number of Confederate Sol
diers interred in this gravevart' gives it
a claim upon every who honors the
dead who have died l-if tlu-ir country.
It you will Live the Sm tety a not.ee
and rccc ,e subscriptions, and forward
them to the I’r, usurer, you will be coil"
icring a great favor. Respectfully,
Mrs. Dr. Johnson, President.
Mits F. T. Howars, Treas.
We will take great pleasure in re
ceiving and forwarding any contribu
tions our citizens may be disponed to
make; and hope it will not be neces
sary for us to urge them to their duly,
in a matter to all so dear and sacred.
Who will be the first to respond ?
Morri'N Aaiuinnr.
A philosophical Grammar of the Kug
lish language, dialogically and pro
gressively by Prol, I. J.
Morris. A. M.
This is a school book which de.
serves the attention of the public. It
makes a highly credit aide effort to re
met' the incongruous elements of the
English language to uniform rules.—
English grammar, generally, appears to
be writteu to exhibit the absurdities and
inconsistences of the language itself,
aud they perplex the Student witn il
logical division*, with unmeaning terms
and names, and with rules burdened
bv exceptions. I'he aim of Prof. M.
is to simplify nnJ arrange tne laws of
the language so lli.it :■ -tincture nur
be comprehended hv < stud nt, and
be impressed on bis tn m yby a pro
gressive and system ,ir m ;hod.
Pkentice on IL.owm.ow. —Gov.
Brownlow, ot Pennc-see, has waked
up Prentice ol tne Louievtile Journal.
TiIJE AMEAITIES OF JOURN
ALISM.
George D. Prentice Not Dead
Yet.
HE POLISHES OFF GOV.
IIKOIV If LOW.
A Specimen ol'tlie “Retort -
Courteous”
[From the Lou ; sville Journal.]
Parson Brownlow, the Irreverend
Governor of Tennessee,' lias published
one of his eharacistiealjy low and dirty
articles aboout us in the Kr.oxviile
.Whig. In that article, he has nut stat
ed a single truth, nor any thing approx
imating to a truth. Whenever lie sits
down to abuse anybody, ites cluster a
round his pen like blue-bottle flies -ouml
a horse’s ears in July or August. He
lies with his pen, lies with his tongue,
lies with his gestures, lies through ev
ery pore of his yellow ami shrivelled
hide. Lies issue from his mouth like
the honored locusts from the throat of
that other great beast described in the
Apocalypse. He is probably the “fath
er” of as many lies as the honored and
tailed master he serves.
The Parson is now a fierce aboli
tionist. He goes as far in radicalism
as the lowest and worst radical in the
nation. He would gladly, bathe his
hands and leetaud wash Ins face ill the
blood of every man who is not a radi
cal. But this disposition oi his is of
recent origin. In May, 1860, .when
the fire-eaters among whom he claim
ed to be a leader, broke.up the Dem
ocratic party by forcing two Democrat
ic candidates upon it w:;h the settled
purpose of gelling Mr. Lincoln elected
and then using his electiou-tis a pretext
to destroy the Union, he was probably
more ferocious against the radicals,
more vengeful and revengeful towards
them, than any other editor in the
country. The following front a letter
of his dated May 1860, to -the Rev.
Mr. Pryne, a Northern man, whom lie
hated with a fiendish hate Iqr having
defeated him overwhelmingly in a pub
lic controvercy at Philadelphia, will
show what sort of position he occupied
at that time:
“But, sir, the South can in two
months enter into an alliance with ei
ther England or France, commercial
and political, offensive and defensive,
and in either case it will be utter ruin
to the Northern States of th’is Confed
eracy. England and France want our
rice, tobacco and cotton, but they don’t
want the manufactures of New Eng
land. An alliance between England
and these Southern States, will break
the existing tariff system, discriminat
ing in favor of New England manufac
tories, as a rope of sand, arid scatter all
your hopes to the winds, and coming
at once in collision with'•your ancient
competitor, and her low Wages, with
out that protection which has built up
ail your cities and towns, you must he
destroyed. Whenever' such an alli
ance shall be formed, and at either Liv
erpool or Havre, and purchased again
at high rates, New -England will see
the hand-writing cn the wall!
“1, sir, would favor an alliance with
peace as a means of more effectually
punishing agd starving out —the aboli
tionists of the North. The far seeing
monarch of the French would unite
with us on our own terms, as it would
afford hi in an opportunity to crush the
commerce and manufacturer of Old
England, ami make her feel that she is
dependent upon hei ancient enemy, as
well atone for villainous treatment of
his illustrious uncle, Napoleon Bona
part• Disolve this Union you infa
mous villains, and we shall make this
proposition at once to Louis Napoleon,
a most sdgacimis monarch, and he
would quarter at New Orleans 200,000
French men. and at Chesapeake 200,
000 more; we would then command
the M issiaaippi Valley, whip the North -
western States into our Southern Con
federacy. ami we would then turn up
on the New England States, and cause
the huriicaneof civil war to rsgc and
sweep from Mason and Dixon's Imp* to
the ton! UUlll. tvo
would extinguish the Us: ..bolrlion foot
hold on the comment oi America! Face
to face, knite to kune, an to steel,
ami pike to pike, we would meet you,
and as we would cause .yuu to bleed at
e very pore, we would make you regret
m tbe bitter agonies of death, that you
had ever felt anv concern fur the Afri
can race!
“Sir, if the fanatical, wicked and in
fernal course pursued by your unprin* I
ripled associated is coutioued, thp result
will be as I have said, and you and
your children will live to see it. Pale
faced poverty and dismay are staring
some of your manufacturers and opera
tives in the face. We are sending our
orders to England anu to France for
our goods and driving \ our hell-deserv
ing freedom shriekers into the holding
of Union meetings and making these
against their wills, curse all agitators
of the slavery question, and resolve
that John Brown got only justice when
hung at Charleston. Carry on your
war if you choose death rather than
life, ami you will stain every swamp
in the South with your own and our
blood, and with the vengeance ofan in
luriaicd foe we will be upon you in
the North, at the hour ol midnight, and
as long as a lucifer match can be found
we will burn up your substance.”
Brownlow was for having all these
horrors perpetrated if the fanatics oftlie
North should keep up if. ir warfare up
on slavery, that is. if they ziiould do
exactly what he afterwards did—did I
before slavery was abolished by war. I
He was fora battle of sections it the
Northern fanatics should continue their
clamor; in that event he was for an al
liance oflcusivc and defensive, between
| the Southern Stales and France or
j England; he was for having France
place 200,000 men at New Orleans, arid
two hundred thousand men ?t Chesa
peake; he was fo r taking possession of
the whole Mississippi Vafley from the
ltaliz to the Falls of St. Anthony,
whipping the Northwestern States into
! his Southern Confederacy, and then
tturning upon New England jirid caus
ing the hurricane of civil war' To rage
.from Mason and- Dixon’s iine to the
cod-fisheries oftlie'North, anil burning
the Northern cities and towns with the
midnight torch. And these were not
his views and resolves as a hot-headed
boy, or a person in the prime of life;
they were the malignant declarations
of a white-haired, gray-beardeu old
man, upwards of fifty, if not full sixty
years ol age. They were the
utterances of a preacher, a pretend
ed dispenser of the Gospel of. Christ,
of one calling himself a man of God !
No traitors jo all the South have ever
exhibited more of the hellish spirit of
treason than he. He published the iu
fernal language that we have cited when
perhaps no other men in all-thevworld
would have defiled his mouth or paper
with it to save his neck from the hang
man’s baiter. He shri#*tU himself a
walking volcano, with snoty upon his
peak and all hell in his bosoni.
It is most extraordinary and most
disgraceful that any portion of the peo
ple of Tennessee,' tnuV-r.g- this man as
they did, voted to mak i:;:u Governor
of that State. i Their oTnv excuse inn.-i
be, that they were under military iayv,
and so not really free agents in,his e
leeiion. No other Stale was ever af
flicted and disgraced and cursed with
such an unmitigated and immitigable,
such an unredeemed and irredeemable
blackguard as her Chief Magistrate.—
lie is a parody, a caricature, a broad
burlesque on all possible Governors.
He is a montrosity.
He is a thing as much out of nature as
Barnum’s woolly horse, or his giants
and dwarfs, or his call with two heads
ami legs—four of the legs poiuting to
ward the zenith. 11 is blood is hell
broth, which Satan will one day sup
with a long spoon. They say there is
lire in him, but it is hell-fire, every par
ticle ot it. Though he is but a single
swine, theitf are as many devils in him
as there were in the whole herd that
“ran violently down a steep place into
the sea.” His heart is nothing but a
hissing knot of vipers, rattlesnakes,
cobria, and cotton 'mouths. He never
argued a question in his life, approach
ing no subject but with fierce, bitter,
coarse, low, abjurgationz* IJis longue
should be bored through and through
with his own steel-pen, heated red-hot.
This man, as we have said, calls
himself a clergyman. He holds forth
in pulpits- lie preaches, pray?, and
exhorts, draws down his face, drops
thP corners of his mouth, arid under**
takes to look sanctimonious. And yit
heseems alyi-aye,trying in bis pulpit
discourses to see under HpMjhin dis
guise iie can venture to curse and swear
and blaspheme. He can’t offer up a
prayer in the- house of God without
telling the Lord what an udrtrnal scoun
drel, damned thief, or cursed vagabond,
this, that, or the other neighbor is.—
From his youth up to his old age, he
has no personal controversies without
attacking the wives, fathtrs, mothers,
grand-fathers, grand-mothers, brothers,
sisters, children, uncles, aunts, and
nephews of his opponents. He has
sought to strew his whole path of life
with the dark wrecks of wantonly-ruin
ed reputations, He has aerer had an
hours happiness except in the unhap
piness of others. He hns ever said to
evil “he thou my good!” He has al
ways carefully joted down all that he
has ever heard unfavorable to gentle
men while professing' to be their
friends, so as to be ready for a day of
alienation. He howls venom, talks
venom, breaths venom, belches venom,
coughs venom, sneezes venom, spits
venom, drools venom, sweats venom,
stinks venom, and distils venom from
his nose. Not the fuliginous exhala
tions from the boltoinfesv pit, not the
fire-and-briinstone fumes IV m ihe sooiy
throat ui ihd Devil, r.r evermore
blighting aud blasting than 1"9 ct-ftrs
ed serpent breath. II- never bad a
friend on earth outside >t ms own fam
ily. No doubt there are those fear
him for his fiendish ferocity, hut no hu
mail being not oi bis household ever
loved or respected him. He wilUyet
have his reward. Sowing in wrath, he
will reap in agony. Fury and hate
may stifle in’liis heart the feeling of re
morse for a time, blit, Nemesis, with
her horrid whip, will yet scourge him
around the whole orb ok- being'. All
the hairs upon his head will seem to
him to be snakes like the hissing and
lorked-tongued locks of the Eunienides.
When he snail retire, as be soon must,
from the noisy and tumultuous strifes
that have ever engaged and Still engage
all his thoughts, he wili not have a sol
itary, pleasant and serene memory of
the past. On the contrary, a store of
bitter and desolate and torturing recol
lections will corrode and eat up his
very heart, until, cot off from all hu
man sympathies, exiled from the pale
ol all the beautiful genialities of life,
having no friends or companions around
him to soothe him in hi# moral and
physical solicitude, deserted by man
kind whose enemy he has been and
loathed by God whose holy temples
he has sacrilegiously desecrated by his
hurried mockeries if religion, fester
ing from head to foot with the polluted
and poisonous puddle-water in his
reins, standing as an outcast and paria
on the lone desert of despair, shrinking
from the past, agonized by the present,
and not daring to gaze into the future,
heholding in fancy upon thp door ol
h;s own soul to the words, “Hope
comes not here ‘.hat comes to ail,” shut
out by murkiest clouds from every star
that to others lights the path to the
tomb, and writhing uuder myriad curs
es *nd execrations piled like a moun
tain of Jiving coals upon his head, he
shall long at last to make his escape
from earth—scarcely asking to what
more dreadful destiny.
PROCLAMATION.
By His J. Jenkins,
Governor of" Geor^tt:
Executive Department, ]
WfiLLKDGEviLLE, April 15, 1866. j
Public attention has doubtless been
given to Circular No. 4. issued on the
6th inst., by Brig* General David Till
son, A. A. Com. Bureau Refugees.
Freedmen. and abandoned Lands, and
approved by Brev’t Maj. Gen. J. N.
Brannan, Comd’g Department of Geor
gia ; arid to General orders No. 17. of
Brev’t Maj, Gen. Brannan of the same
date.
By these orders a large jurisdiction
“i civil and criminal cases whsreto
freedmen alone or freedmen arid white
persons may be parties, heretofore de
nied to State Courts, is yielded to
them. As will appeal in the sequel,
this does not amount to positive and
final withdrawal of military authority.
It is unquestionably a highly satisfacto
ry advance in the.process of restora
tion to our former political status, which
maybe followed- by a future advance
in the same direction, or by a retro
g.-ide movement, as circumstances may
indicate. It has been induced mainly
by the legislation ol the General As
sembly relative to the status of the
freedmen. It wifi not be lost and may
be speedily pushed further, if the ju
diciary, in Corn is of inquiry and in
Courts of record—the Bench and the
Jury Box, give effect to the letter and
the spirit of the laws by them enacted.
In the full assurance that my fellow
citizens, official and unofficial, who
inay be called upon to participate in
the administration of justice will hold
the scales in perfect equilibrium, as be
tween individuals and classes I con
gratulate the people of Georgia upon
this earnest of coming restoration to
interior self-government. In.our con
dition, neither conscious rectitude of
intention, uor noisy and unbecoming
profession of it, will avail aught. i —
Practical demonstrations-, which in -
credulity itself cannot gainsay, and
nothing less, wil work out our redemp
tion.
It is of great importance to us that
upne.mistake the effect of tbe Presis
dent’s recent Peace Proclamation, and
of tbe orders above referred t . Our
eonditfon is certainly anomalous, and
mischievous errors might result Iroin
theoretical speculation upon those doc
uments. 1 therefore state, as the re
sult of official intercourse and ot care
ful examination ot previous orders and
circulars, which are only modified, not
withdrawn—
-Ist, That the Agents in the several
counties of the Ireedinens' bureau, still
have jurisdiction in all cases “between
freedmen and others, when the sum in
volved does not exceed fifty dollars,
exclusive of interest. They may also
take cognizance of and try all offences
committed by freed people or against
them, provided the punishment does
not exceed a fine of fifty dollars or thir
ty days imprisonment at hard labor.”
They are also still charged with the
duty of examining and approving or
disapproving labor contracts, and of
assisting and protecting, by legal means,
freedmen requiring such aid. Trials
by strictly military commissions are
dispensed with, except where the ac
cused is a soldier, or the offence charg
ed is one against the Federal Govern-,
ment.
sd. I'have high authority for saying
that “the President’s Proclamation!
does not remove martial law or oper
ate in any way upon the freedman’s Bur
eau, in the exercise of its legitimate juris
diction;” thocch “it is not deemed ex
pedient to resort to military tribunals
in any case where justice can he at
tained through the medium ot civil au
thority.” My impression >s that, in
case ..| military arrest by orders from
li adipiartcrs. Department of Georgia,
interlefence of Slate Judges, hv habeas
corpus, wilt not be permitted. .Such
orders, I belie e, will be rarely, if ever
isssued, and I trust conflict will be a
voided.
Whilst, therelore, thus communicat
ing reliable information, 1 seek to guard
the whole people against erroneous
impressions regarding the extent to
which the Federal military authority
is relaxed, 1 respectfully call upon the
civil authorities to assume and to ex
ercise, in perfect fairness and justice,
the jurisdiction clearly restored to
them. Calmly and patiently pursuing
our now ascending course, let our act*
illustrate our titles to fuller confidence
and higher rights. Faithful observ
ance of the Federal Constitution and
impurtial administration of tne law,
will best indicate intentions honestlv
entertained and distinctly expressed,
but cautiously accredited.
Charles J. Jenkins,
Governor.
General Grant, who the radicals have
been counting upon in their w arfare
upon Andrew Jounson. has given them
distinctly to understand that he hearti
ly endorses the whole course of the
President. ,
Washington n.alters.
W’ashinoton, April 20.—President’
Johnson made a speech on Wednesday
to a crowd of soldiers and sailors, and
yesterday to a multitude of negroes, in !
both of which speeches the President
made telling hits on Kadicals, and de
clared his untaliering determination to
uphold the Constitution. ,
NEW ADVERTISEENTJS.
A. L. Pitts, F. 0. Moore,
| ot Tennessee. formerly of Chattag’a
A. L. PITTS & CO.,
GROCERS
> --AND--
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
JJII VE on hand a limited supply of
Family Groceries,
generally ; also a good Lot of COTTON
YARNS, good APPLE VINEGAR. BUT
TER, EGGS, and COUNTRY PRODUCE
taken in EXCHANGE.
Refers to Win, Crutchfield & Cos., Chatta
nooga, Tenn., and J. W. Wilson & Cos. Nash
ville, Tenn. Cartersville, Ga., Apr. 24.3 m
USE
HAIR REST!!RAT/VE.
DO YOU WISH YOUR HAIR TO AL
WAYS LOOK GLOSSY, LIVELY,
and BRIGHT! If SO,
USE KRAMER’S HAIR RESTORATIVE.
Are you turning grey ? Is yOur hair kill
ing out! Are you troubled with itching
ol the head ? Has your hair a dead ap
pearance l Do you wish to keep rid of
dandreth and all Head Diseases? If so,
USE KRAMER’S HAIR RESTORATIVE.
It acts upon the roots of die Hair, cau
ses the natural grease and coloring mut
ter to come out, and
KEEPS THE HAIR IN A HEALTHY CONDITION,
There is no more pleasant Hair Dress
ing in use. Many living witnesses are
in Atlanta anti all parts of Georgia who
can testify to the good effects of KRA
MER’S HAIR RESTORATIVE.
Read the following from a well known
citizen, and call upon the Proprietor
who can cite you to several citizens
who will cheerfully testify to its effica
cy. Atlanta, Feb’v 20, 1866.
Mr. S. R. Krarner:
Dear Sir : It is witli pleasure I cer
tify to the efficacy ol \ our Hair
Restorative, as several per
sons ot my acquaintance, becoming pre
maturely .gray, upon my rpceommeiid *
atiori, used it, and I am happy to state
that in fcvery instance, (and many came
under my observation,) it proved ef
fectual. I would recommend it to all
persons whose Hair needs restoring.
E. P. RICE,
Exchange Broker.
PREPARED BY
8. R. KRAMER,
And Sold by Druggists Generally.
April 34, 1866.
FOUR-HORSE AND TWO-HORSE
KENTUCKY*
Threshers ,
FOR SuLE
CN A SHORT CREDIT.
In view of the present scarcity of
money, I have concluded to sell a few
of these CELEBRATED THRESHERS on
short time to responsible men, to be
paid for, promptly, on the FIRST PAY
OF AUGUST) 1866. A' s< ‘ a few
Meap e r s ,
on the same terms.
Apply early so as to have the Ma
chines on hand in time lor harvest.
J. J. HOWARD.
Cartersville, Apr. 24. 1866. wlm
JOHNSONS & GORDON.
Bring no groceries here!
Metalic Burial Cases,
(FISK’S PATENT.)'
BARGAINS ! BARGAINS!! BARGAINS !!!
Large and varied stock of ;-i o • : (
L i q u o r s',
to be sold -t -Cost!! !
BEING desirous of discontinuing the Liquor
7'raile altogether, wc will positively sell
our entire stock . •> '< * * '
liv e 0 S T !
; . . i• ; _
Cos n fitting -of
BRANDIES,
WHISKIES,
GIN,
RUM;
WINES,
CHANPAGNE
AND SO FORTH.
Cssh or Short Time, with approved security
JOHNSONS & GORDON,
Alabama Street, Atlanta, Ga.
apr 24. . .
lAA N °- 1 COTTON PLOWS, for sale
1' /'/ by J M <*J C ALEXANDER.
Atlanta, Ga., apr ?4.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Credit Sale
AND
HAY,
-BY-
A. K. SEAGO,
Atlanta, ca.
Who has now in Store a large stock of
corn, oats & hay,
Which he is authorized to exchange
COTTOT DELIVERABLE TO HIM
OUT OF THE FIRST PICKINGS NEXT
FALL. TERMS REASONABLE. GOOD
COLLATERAL OR OTHER APPROVED
Security required.
Cash obligations will
be taken where tbe
parties preterit. Im
mediate application
should be made to
.A.. jEU. SEAGO,
Commission Merchant,
ATLANTA, GA.
April 24. 2w
Jeffci-Non
Insurance Company.
For Fire, Inland, Life and Marine Insurance.
C’hit it capital, $250,000.
Office at SGOTTBVILI.E, VIRGINIA.
in csted in b< st stocks and real
_ estate. No Company can be mure sol
rent witli ample mean* to pay Liases, none
shall be mure prompt. Apply to
JSU. VV*. WOFFORD, Agent.
Cartersville, Ga., April 24, 18fi6. ly
Administrator’s sale.
BY virtue of an order from the Court of
Ordinary of Bartow county, Georgia, will
be sold, on the first Tuesday in June neit, at
the Court-house door in said county, between
the legal hours of sale, Town Lot No. 4, in ti e
town of Cartersville, in said county, the same
being forty feat front by two hundred feet back,
on the East side ot the Public Square in said
town; the same being a vacant lot. Terms
made known on the day of sale.
Patrick iansfield, Adm’r
ol Morgan Sweeny, Deceased.
Apr. 19, 1806-
SILAS O’SHIELDS,
'll Fashionable
Ji. TailOr
Cartersville, Ga. apr 17
JOHN W. WOFFORD,”
Attorney at Law,
CARTERSVILLE, GA.
A1 *°’ FIRE INSURANCE AGENT.
Represents the best Northern aud
Southern Companies. Can be found
at the law office of Wofford & Parrot I.
A j>ril 10, 1866.
HILBURN HOUSE.
Corner cf Broad and Alabama Streets, one
door from Whitehall Street, Atl.inln, Gn.
This house is in the center of the business
portion of the city, and hut a short distance
from trom tho Passenger Depot, and conveni
ent to all the Rail Road Depots. Fare good
and charges moderate.
L. J. HILBURN, Proprietor,
apr 10. formerly of Catoosa Platform.
SASSEEN HOUSE.
At the Junction of Peachtree and Broad
Streets,
ATLANTA, GA.
Board per Day,. $3.00
‘ J Ijdafd per Week 15.00
E. R. BASHEEN, Prop’r.,
apr 10. formerly of Washington Hall.
WYLYS, GARROLL \ CO..
Wholesale Dealers in
GROCERIES
•' AND
WESTERN PRODUCE
Collier’s Buildings, Whitehall Street,
Atlanta, Ga.
KEEP constantly on hand a large supplv
of Corn,
Oats,
Rye,
Flour,
Bacon,
Lard,
Sugar,
Coffee,
and soforth and sofort
All of which we offer to the Trade at the Lot
est Market rates, at Wholesale exclusively.
Apr 10. 2m