Newspaper Page Text
GKoitofli news.
Gli'aningra ami Wlnnowings from our State
Exchanges.
Hall county will have four newspapers.
The general health of Covington is im
proving.
Griffin lias received to date 20,007 bales
of cotton.
Macon is to have an annual parade on
April 15th.
Another Baptist church is to be erect
ed in Columbus.
Cox paid $7 50 for the pistol with
which he killed Alston.
The schools and colleges in Conyers
are in a nourishing condition.
In Georgia 35 per cent, of the popula
tion cannot read, and 39 per cent, cannot
write.
Gen. Fitzliugh Lee will be invited to
deliver the memorial address in Atlanta
in April.
The receipts of cotton at Rome by the
river since the Ist of last September ag
* gregate 14,000 bales.
The Cuthbert Appeal says only five
eights of an inch of rain has fallen in
that region since the first of February.
The citizens of Gwinnett county are
taking steps to build a branch railroad
from Lawrenceville to the Air Line rail
road.
Mr. Bob Alston, son of the late Col. R.
A. Alston, has gone to Washington, in
response to a telegram from Senator Gor
don.
The town of Gibson, in Glasscock coun
ty, is afflicted with measles, fn some
cases pneumonia has ensued with serious
results.
It is estimated that Georgia has receiv
ed this year, at her different-ports and
railroad stations, 69,000 tons of guano
against 71,000 last year.
Farm work has been going forward fa
mously in all parts of the state. The
weather has been fine, and many farm
ers have finished planting corn.
Mr. F. 11. Richardson, of the Atlanta
Constitution, has been selected to address
the sophomore deelaimers at Emory col
lege at the next commencement.
At an election held in Augusta to fill
the vacancy in office of ordinary, occa
sioned by the death of Judge Both well,
Mr. A. W. Walton was the successful
candidate.
Mr. Bond, of Cincinnati, who broke
his leg by falling into a cellar in Mill
edgeville a year ago, is suing the city for
twenty-five thousand dollars. The suit
is brought in the United Suites circuit
court in Savannah.
“We hate to tell it,” says the Carroll
ton Times, “but its an actual fact that
hay is brought from Indiana and sold
in .this market. And yet our farmers
spend all the summer in trying to de
stroy the grass, so vigorous is it, in this
soil and climate.”
The husband of Julia Johnson, the ne
gress charged with and acquitted of the
murder of Mrs. Farmer, of Clayton coun
ty, has entered suit for libel against an
artist named Ives, in Atlanta, for dis
playing a picture of his wife, labelled,
“Julia Johnson, the Clayton county mur
deress. ”
The next fair of the Monroe county
fair association will be held some time
during October next. Already ar
rangements are being made to secure its
success, and in the opinion of the For
syth Advertiser it will be one of the best
exhibitions of agricultural products ever
seen in Georgia.
Ex-Governor E. Brown, presi
dent of the Western & Atlantic railroad,
offers five hundred dollars for the arrest
of the villain who committed the dastard
ly act ot throwing a rock into the passen
ger train on the above road a few even
ings’since, which struck and painfully
wounded a lady passenger.
Two prisoners, Henry Williams and
Lee Callaway, the former charged with
theft and the other with assault with at
tempt to murder, escaped from Troup
county jail the other day, by knocking
the jailer, Mr. Willingham, senseless as
he opened the door to bring them some
water. They were both colored, and
Williams was, at one time, a Methodist
preacher.
Says the Ogletporpe Echo: “Judge
Win. Brightwell, of this county, has sev
eral trunks of Confederate money, left on
his hands at the close of the war. lie in
tends papering a room with it, as that is
the only use for which it is fit now. We
learn that there are actually men living
in this county who are hoarding up this
money, thinking that it will some day be
good. Several soldiers who went from
this county to the war, denied themselves
even the uecessaries of life that they
might save their pay.”
Covington Enterprise: “On Tuesday
afternoon last a most terrific flash of
lightning visited Covington. It was
quick and sharp, and heard for miles
around. The stroke centered upon a
large oak in the yard of Simon Webb,
who lives about four hundred yards from
the square, tearing the bark and going
through the body of the tree, leaving the
oak as if saws had passed through its
body. The gate post was shattered, and
for yards around the ground was torn as
if plowed by moles. A horse belonging
to E. 11. Yaney was grazing at least fifty
feet from the tree and instantly killed.”
A. F. Gibson, the alleged murderer of
I>. W. Coleman in Macon last Novem
ber, and in whose case the jury, after an
absence of forty-six hours, were unable
on Monday to agree, made a statement
in open cour last Saturday in which lie,
while confessing the deed, attempted to
excuse himself on the plea of drunken
ness. He said that on the day of
the shooting he was intoxicated,
and when he shot Coleman he really
knew nothing of what was going on. He
is a one armed man, who, according to
his statement, contracted the habit of
drunkenness in the army, a habit which
he has since been unable to free himself.
Monroe Advertiser: “On last Wednes
day afternoon while Tom Giddings, a lad
about sixteen years of age, was careless
ly handling one of the military guns, a
Springfield rifle, in the rear of Mr. M.
G. Turner’s store, he cocked it and pull
ed the trigger, thinking, he says, that it
was not loaded. But it was, and the gun
fired, sending a large ball with terrific
force through the back door of the store
to the rear df Messrs. Brooks & Harris’
saloon, where their porter, Henry Crow
der, a worthy colored man, was sitting.
The ball struck him in the right shoulder,
breaking a portion of the upper bone of.
the arm, and went through the fleshy
part of his breast. It continued on its
•course and struck the back wall of Mr. J.
b. 1 ‘rector’s store and narrowly missed
the head of a gentleman standing there.
Henry Crowder’s wound was both dan
gerous and painful,>nd Drstßudicill and
Alexander, who dressed the wound,
thought the arm might possible have to
be amputated, and were of the opinion
that his condition was critical. It really
seems as il the oft-repeated warnings
about the careless handling of firearms
will do no good. They should not be
allowed to go into the hands of. you no
boys under any circumstances. In this
instance a worthy colored man with a
large family dependent upon his person
al labors is, if he gets well, almost disa
bled from work. Playing with a deadly
rifle was altogether unnecessary; the
consequence of the act are indeed fear
ful. We can only repeat what has been
said a thousand times: ‘Parents should
control their children.’ ”
THE IPEER SAVANNAH.
Editors Chronicle and 1 Constitutionalist:
Will you allow me a statement in re
gard to the appropriation of SIO,OOO for
the upper Savannah river, which Hon.
M. A. Candler, in an interview with the
Atlanta Constitution, failed to make en
tirely satisfactory to me?
That appropriation passed the house
and went to the senate. As Mr. Ste
phens earnestly desired that appropria
tion, I, as a member of the committee of
commerce, gladly aided him in getting it
before the house committee, and succeed
ed. It was stricken out in the senate.
lion. J. B. Gordon is on that committee
in the senate. He can explain its defeat
in that body.
Savannah harbor received SIOO,OOO.
As Mr. Hartridge wap dead, and that
district had then no immediate represen
tative, I worked for that harbor with all
the zeal and energy of my nature. lion.
M. A. Candler admits that he opposed it.
He thought that there was so “much
wrong in the section that he could not
vote for it.”
Judge Reagan and myself were the
only southern men on the committee of
commerce. I can testify to his zeal for
southern rivers and harbors, and I think
he will do me equal justice.
Whether internal improvements in the
abstract are right or wrong was not a
question for us to settle. We were re
sponsible to the country for a faithful
discharge of the duty placed upon us.* If
the Atlanta Constitution will look over
the different amounts allowed to Georgia
before I was placed on this committee
and compare them with the amounts al
lowed since that time, I suppose they
will be convinoed of my faithfulness, al
though they may think proper to with
hold that conviction from the public. If
Georgia depended on the vote of Hon.
M. A. Candler for help to her rivers and
harbors, she would receive nothing, as
he has uniformly voted against such
bills. Very respectfully,
W.‘ 11. Felton.
#—
THE MEXICAN VETERANS.
The bill in regard to the Mexican vet
erans, approved on February 19, is as
follows:
An act for the payment, to the officers
and soldiers of the Mexican war, and
the three months’ extra pay provided
for by the act of July 19, 1848.
Be it enacted by the senate and house
of representatives of the United States of
America in congress assembled, That
the secretary of the treasury be, and he
•is hereby directed, out of any moneys in
the treasury not otherwise appropriated,
to pay to the officers and soldiers “en
gaged in the military service of the
United States in the war with Mexico,
and who served out the term of their
engagement or were honorably dis
charged,” the three months’ extra pay
provided for by the act of July 19, 1848,
and the limitations contained in said act,
in all cases, upon the presentation of
satisfactory evidence that said extra
compensation has' not been previously
received; Provided, That the provisions
of this act shall include also the officers,
petty officers, seamen and marines of the
United States navy, the revenue marine
service and the officers and soldiers of
the United States army in the prosecu
tion of said war.
t . .
We now have more kinds of national
money than ever before in our history as
a nation. The different sorts can be enu
merated thus:
1. Copper cents.
2. Nickels.
3. Subsidiary silver.
4. Old silver.
5. Standard silver dollars.
6. Trade dollars.
7. T wenty-ceut pieces—special coinage.
8. Gold/
9. Treasury notes.
10. National bank notes.
11. Fractional currency.
According to letters from the Cape,
Ketchwayo, the Zulu king, is as merci
less as he is bloodthirsty: “I have known
him to kill fifty women and children to
feed his golden eagles. As bravg as a
lion, he will fight until he dies; and if he
only sees a scratch on one of his warriors’
backs when they return home he is put
to death, as Ketchwayo thinks he must
have turned from the enemy and have
thus received the wound.”
The revival of the old waist is threat
ened by the English dress-makers, but
the only women to whom it was ever be
coming were those whose figures had the
graceful outline of a broomstick or - a
gymnasium wand, and it is to be hoped
that American women will not take it up
again. *
An intelligent member of the Arkansas
legislature has introduced a bill abbre
viating the season of lent from forty to
twenty days. He explains that every
thing else has come down fifty per cent,
since the war, and there should be ijo
discrimination in vor of leht.
Surrogate Calvin, in concluding a very
lengthy decision in the Vanderbilt will
case, says: “I am of the opinion that the
probate of the will and codicil should in
all things be confirmed. Let a form of
decision or decree be presented for settle
ment and signature in two days’ time.
Sunday morning we wrote very plain
ly this: “Blatherskite.—Webster in his
unabridged dictionary gives the mean
ing of the word thus; ‘A blustering
talkative fellow,’ Mrs. Felton applied the
term to General Gordon.*” — Columbus
Sun.
> ♦ >
Galveston; March 21.—A dispatch to
the Daily News from San Antonio says
the democrats of the sixth congressional
district, after a three days’ session, nom
inated Columbus Upsen to fill the vacan
cy caused by the death of Mr. Schleicher.
Charlottesville, March 20.—Monti
eello, the.home of Thomas Jefferson, was
sold to-day in partition between the
heirs of the late Commodore Uriah P.
Levy to Jefferson M. Levy, the principal
heir for ten thousand and fifty dollars.
Wade Hampton, Jr., prints a card de
nying that he attended a ball given to
Gen. Sherman at Jacksonville, Fla., and
saying: “I certainly would have avoided
a man who was guilty of the cruelty of
burning Columbia, and the cowardice of
denying it.”
It is a Conspicuous feature of the forty
sixth congress that life faces of no col
ored men are to be seen. In the forty
third congress there were nine colored
men, in the forty-fourth, six, and in the
fertyrfifth, three.
The ladies belonging to the Chicago
charitable societies are' busily preparing
their carnival of authors. Miss Alcott
has been invited to take charge of “Mrs.
Jarley’s wax-works.”
Capoul is coming over to this country,
and will get $42,000 for six‘months of
singing, which is pretty good wages con
sidering the low state of the labor mar
ket just now.
A visitor observed to Meissonier that
he seemed to h'ave none of his own pic
tures. “Too dear, my dear madame,”
said the great artist, “I can’t afford such
erticles de luxe.”
Extraordinary attentions and honors
were paid to Gen. Grant on his arrival at
Calcutta.
Legal Advertisements.
Bartow County Sheriff’s Sales.
WILL BE SOLD before the court house door in
Cartersville, Georgia, on the first Tuesday in
April next, 1879, between the legal sale hours
the following described property, to-wit:
Lot of laud No. 247, lying in the 16th district
and 3rd section of Bartow count}', Ga., contain
-160 acres more or less with the" improvements
thereon. Levied on and will be sold as the
property of Mrs. E. M. Branson, one of the de
feiKtants, to satisfy one Bartow Superior Court
fi. fa. in favor of Albertine Johnson vs. J. C.
Branson and Mrs. E. M. Branson. Said proper
ty in possession of J. C. and Mi s. E. M. Branson.
Also, at the same time and place, the north
half of lot of land No. 267, in the 6th district and
3rd section of Bartow county, Ga., containing 160
acres more or less. Levied on and will be sold as
the property of 1). F. Bishop to satisfy one state
aad county tax fi. fa. vs. said Bishop. Levy
made and returned by John W. Hill, L. C.
Also, at the same time and place, the undi
vided half interest in lot of land No. 144 xp
the 22nd district and 2nd section of Bartow
county, Ga., containing one hundred and sixty
acres. Levied on and will be sold as the prop
erty of B. G. Poole, one of the defendants, by
virtue of one Bartow superior court 11. fa. iu fa
vor of Baker & Hall, C. C. Parrott, transferree,
vs. sard B. G. Poole.
Also, afthe same time and place, lots of laud
Noe. .653, 476, 474, 473, 465 and 464, each lot
containing 40 acres more or less, all lying iu the
17th district and 3rd section of Bartow county,
Ga. Levied on and will be sold as the property
of F. M. Martin to satisfy one Bartow superior
courtli. fa. in favor of Gray and Erwin, admin
istrators, etc, for purchase money of said lots of
land. The defendant in possession of said lots of
land.
Also, at the same time and place, will be sold
the following property,to-wit: Lots of laud Nos.
110 and 143, lying and being in the 22nd district
and 2nd section of Bartow county, Ga. Levied
on and w ill be sold as the property of W. P.
Ward by virtue of two fi. fas, issued from the
Justice court of 1,0415 t district, G. M., in favor of
Baker & llall-vs. VV. P. Ward. Lev} - made aud
returned by D. A. Vaughan, L. C.
Also, at the same time and place, one house
and lot in the city of Cartersville, Bartow coun
ty, Ga., containing half acre, more or less, bound
ed as follows: fronting Douglass street, on the
east about one hundred feet, north by Lawrence’s
property, on south and west by T. 11. Baker’s
property; said lot running back west about two
hundred feet more or less, Levied on and will be
sold as the pabperty of W. B. Bishop by virtue
of one justice’s court fi. fa. issued from the 822d
district G. M., in favor of F. P. Gray, adminis
trator of Lewis Tumlin, deceased, vs. said Bish
op. Levy made by J. W. Hill, L. C.
Also, at the same time and place, the house
and lot where Dr. M. G. Williams now lives, in
tiie city of Cartersville, Bartow -county, Ga.
Bounded as follows: east by Cassville street,
north by west main street, west by property of
A. G. B. Vandivere, south by property of G. W.
llill or lands of the estate of J. 11. Ruckmau,
deceased, containing one acre more or less. Al
so the house and lot in the city of Cartersville,
Bartow county, now occupied by Thos. H. Ba
ker as an office; bounded on north by the law
office of Abda Johnson, east by public square,
south by St. James Hotel, west by vacant lot.
Levied on and will be sold as the property of
Thos. H. Baker, one of the defendants, to satis
fy one Bartow superior court fi. fa. iu favor of
Theodore E. Smith, administrator of A. E.
Gregg, deceased, vs. J. I>. Head and Thos. H.
Baker.
Also, at the same time and place, five acres
of timbered land, more or less, bounded on the
north by P. L. Moon’s, east by land of P. L.
Moon’s,'and the land known as the tobacco fac
tory lot, ou the west by railroad street. Also,
five acres, more or iess, bouuded on the north by
land of P. L. Moon; on the east side by Gilmer
street, on the south by property of Robt. Parrott.
J. C. Wofford, J. W. Keith’s brick yard lot, and
on the west by the old tobacco factory lot. Also,
eight acres, more or less, bounded on the north by
Johnson street, and lot of Willis Johnson, on the
east by Douglrss st., and lot of Willis .Johnson, on
the south by Carter st. and land of N. S. Eaves
and the African church, on the west by land of
N. S. Eaves, Gilmer street and two cabins aud
lots aud Mrs. Sander’s lot. Also, one vacant lot
on Market street, bounded on the north by
Market street, east by house and lot owned by
Jackson and Tumlin,‘south by iwoperty of Foote,
and property of Jackson and Baker, west by
property of Edward Payne aud Essex Choice.
Also, one vacant lot ou Church street, bounded
north by Church street, east by Stonewall street,
south by property 61 G. C. Tumlin and vacant
lot belonging to Lewis TumHn’s estate and by
D. J. Guyton’s lot, and by Thus. 11. Baker’s lot,
west by A. R. Hudgins’ bouse and lot. All of
the above lands and lots are situated in the town
of Cartersville, in said county. Also lots of land
>7os. 312 ane 336, in the 4tli district and 3rd sec
tion of.said county, each lot containing forty
acres more or less." Levied on and will lie sold
as the property of defendant, Frank P. Gray, as
administrator ‘of Lewis Tumlin, deceased, to
satisfy a Bartow superior court fi. fa. in favor of
Silas Stephens vs. B. G. Poole, D. W. K. Pea
cock and said Frank P. Gray, as administrator
of Lewis Tumlin, deceased. Property in posses
sion of said Frank P. Gray, administrator of
Lewis Tumlinf deceased, and pointed out by
plaintiff in li t fa.
Also, at the same time and place, lots of land
Nos. 248, 389, 288, 236, 387, 197, 284 and 470, all ly
ing in the 4th district, of the 3rd section of Bar
tow county; Georgia, and each lot containing 40
acres, more or less, and lots of land Nos. 2,3 and
38 in the 22d district of the 2nd section of said
countv, aud each lot containing 100 acres more or
less. And one vacant lot in the city of Carters
vllle in said county,'bounded as follows: on the
east by Gilmer sti-eet, on the south by the lot and
residence of Mrs. M. M. Parrott, on the west by
Railroad street, and oii the north by F. M. Dan
iel’s lot, containing two acres more or less. And
one vacant lot lying In the city of Cartersville in
said county, fronting one hundred feet more or
less On Market street, and running back two
hundred feet to another vacant lot, the property
of the estate of Lewis Tumlin, and bounded ou
the north by. said vacant lot, on the east by the
property of G. C. Tumlin, and on the west by the
property of D. J. Guyton. Levied on and will
be sold as the property of the defendant, Frank
P. Gray, as administrator of the estate of Lewis
Tumlin, deceased, to satisfy one Bartow Su
perior court fi. fa. in favor of Aaron Knight vs. B.
G. Pool, D. W. K. Peacock and said Frank P.
Gray, as administrator of Lewis Tumlin, de
ceased. PrQpertv in possession of said defend
ant, Frank P. Gray, administrator of Lewis
Tumlin, deceased, and pointed out by plaintiff
in fi. fa.
JAMES KENNEDY, Sheriff.
A. M. FRANKLIN, Deputy Sheriff.
PRODUCE.
All kinds of produce taken in exchange for
goods at the BARCAIN STORE.
For anything yon want go to
THE BARCAIN STORE.
THE H. I! KIMBALL HOUSE.
Scoville, Selden & Cos.,
Proprietors;
ATLANTA, ; : GEORGIA.
THE KIMBALL HOUSE IS ADMITTED
to be the finest hotel building in the
Southern States, and the equal in interior ele
gance and comfort of any in the whole country!
The entire building will be thoroughly com
pleted. and all the rooms will be newiy and lux
uriously furnished throughout.
The lessees on their part will spare neither
labor or money in their personal efforts to con
duct the business in such a way as to make
THE KIMBALL HOUSE
worthy of the most liberal patronage. They re
fer to the high reputation of the several hotels
now under their management (the Arlington
and Norvill Houses in Lynchburg, and the Ar
lington. in Danville, Va.) as an evidence of
their ability to carry out their promises in good
faith. With ample means aud resources, they
do not hesitate to pledge to the people of Geor
gia especially, as well as of the whole country,
that ,
THE KIMBALL HOUSE
will be kept up to so high standard of excellence
as to delight all who may seek pleasui-e and com
fort under its roof.
The city of Atlanta enjoys well-merited fame
for the healthfulness and salubrity of its climate,
being 1100 feet above sea level; aud hence is be
coming both a favorite
Summer' and Winter Resort.
Its splendid elevation fortifies It against the en
croachment of malarial diseases, and exempts it
from the enervating influences peculiar to many
less favored localities. Atlanta has proven in
vulnerable to the visitations of yellow fever and
cholera, and is accepted as a suitable point of
refuge for exiles from districts infected with
those epidemics.
COUCH HOUSE,
(Kingston, Georgia.)
This large and comfortable
House is now kept by W. W. Rainey. The
traveling public will find good, plain accommo
dations. Parties wishing board through the
summer will find Kingston one of the healthiest
and quietest localities in Upper Georgia. Three
or four families can get comfortable rooms in
view of trains. Terms very reasonable.
jly2s. W. W. RAINEY.
BARTOW HOUSE,
(Cartersville, Georgia.)"
MR. SUMNER HAVING REMOVED FROM
the Foster House back to the old Sumner
House, and having spent considerable time and
money in refurnishing and fitting up his hotel,
is now prepared to accommodate the traveling
public In the most acceptable manner.
Terms Very Low and in Keeping with the
Times.
BOARD can be obtained at this house cheaper
than anywhere else in North Georgia. Stop.and
see for yourselves. seps.
Bacon, Flour ami Meal,
Always on hand cheap at
TH E BARGAIN STORE.
Pattillo’s New Coffee Pot^
THIS COFFE POT
IS anew invention. It thoroughly extracts
the essence of the coffee free of grouuds, and
will save half the expense of old style of pots.
It is neat, convenient and economical. Call and
see one at the tinshop of
G. F. PATTILLO, Cartersville, Ga.
Refer to the editor of The Free Press, J. C.
Maddox and T. J. Lyon. feb2o
Pf
ORGANS
V ■ EI4t?ST.NP
rK j SP^ An FACTORIES
U|Ml orJ WEST MERIDEN CONN.
F. L. FREYER,
General Agent for the South.
The Leading Organ of America.
RAPIDITY OF ACTION, VOLUME,
PURITY AND SWEETNESS OF TONE!
I invite "a critical examination of every por
tion of the Instruments. They must be seen to
be appreciated.
Agents Wanted Throughout Georgia,
Alabama, South Carolina and Florida.
KRANICH & BACH,
C. L. GORHAM & CO.,
UNRIVALLED PIANOS!
RAVEN & CO.’S
(Late Raven & Bacon)
Square and Upright Piano.
THE BEST MEDIUM PRICED PIANO IN
AMERICA. Avoid being “taken in” on
cheap and worthless instruments and by “roam
ing agents.” Buy only from a reliable and re
sponsible dealer, under whose warrantee you
will be safe. As General Southern Agent and
buying for cash only. I can sell you at “Agent’s
wholesale factory prices,” and by buying from
me direct, you will get the benefit of the agenFs
commission and save you $25 to $l5O on each in
strument. Every instrument fully warranted
by the manufacturer, and myself, giving you a
double guarantee for five years.
I will put any instrument on trial a
your house, and if it does not prove perfectly sat
isfactory, will take it away again, without any
expense, risk or trouble to you.
PIANOS AND ORGANS rented, tuned and
repaired, and satisfaction guaranteed. Illustra
ted Catalogues, fully describing and showing the
extex-nal appearance of each style of instru
ments, mailed free on application. All orders
by mail to me at Marietta, or Atlanta, or left
with Col. A. M. Foute, Cartersville, will meet
with prompt attention.
Be sm’e to write, or see me, if you want to get
the best instrument for the least money, cash or
on time, At Wholesale Factory Prices.
Fiist-class organs at SSO and upwards.
10“ SATISFACTION GUAIiANTEED.
Correspondence solicited.
F. Hi.
Marietta, or Atlanta, Ga., No. 28 Whitehall
Street. [octlo-13m.j
HARDWARE.
Horse Shoes, Nails, Axes, Ilames, Traces, Back
Bands, llarne Strings, Plow Lines, Hinges,
Screws, Buckets, Tubs, Well Buckets, Brooms,
and everything else for sale cheap at
THE BARCAIN STORE.
5r PLAYED OUT !Zm
YES!
That is just What’s the Matter with Thousands of
PIANOS and ORGANS
Scattered throughout the South that children qre
daily forced to practice on, regardless of the fact
tlrat neither pleasure nor progresss can be got
from hn antiquated, worn out relic of the days
when their mothers “took music.” If you want
your children to learn fast, and become musi
sician, get them elegant instruments, with the
improvements of the present age, ana you will
be surprised at their rapid advancement.
SuDerb Instruments
from Old and Perfectly Reliable Makers are now
sold so extremely low and on such easy terms
that all creation can buy.
LUDDEN & BATES,
SAVANNAH, GA.,
The Great Wholesale Piano and Organ
Dealers of the South, now sell instruments
from all leading makers direct to purchasers on
th Q Ko Agents, Mo Commission Plan , at Manu
facturers Factory Prices , thereby giving pur
chasers the large commissions heretofore paid
agents. From SSO to SIOO actually saved in the
purchase of an instrument under this new sys
tem. Write for particulars. We can’t be un
dersold.
7 Oct. Pianos. ‘ $135 4 Stop Organs, $55
7 a Oct. Pianos, 145 6 Stop Organs, 65
Oct. Pianos, 1(50 9 Stop Organs, 65
Gr’d Sq’e Pianos, 178 12 Stop Organs, 75
Mason & Hamlin’s Organs,
Four Sets Reeds, 9 Stops only SIOO.
Send North and be Swindled !
Not by reputable makers like Steinway, Chick
ering, Steek, Knabe, but by bogus manufacturers
who advertise S9OO Pianos for $260; $650 Pianos
for $175; $270 Organs for $65. Deception and*
fraud are in all such absard offers. Buy instru
ments made by old and always reliable manu
facturers like
Cnickeri ng & Sons,
Mathushek Piano Company,
Hallett A Davis,
Knabe A Cos.,
Mason A Hamlin,
and you will have those that will last a lifetime
and please you better every day.
No Bogus or Beatty Trash
Sold from our house. The maker’s names are on
all instruments we sell and full information as
to quality, durability and comparative value
will be cheerfully given. To aid purchasers in
making a judicious selection and secure for
them the llnest instruments for the least,possible
price is our invariable rule, and to this we owe
our immense success and increasing trade.
WIT V we can sell @°od instruments so ch efln
W 111 Because we are WHOLESALE
ERS (not merely agents, representing rjaniif.se
timers in Seven States and selling m'orAnsbm
ments yearly than all other Dealers
combined. A small wholesale profit on each in
strument is all we want. eacn m
STRAND FROM UNDER
and let everybody undersutna, once tor all , now
and forever that LTJDDEM A &ATEScanH
and won t be undersold. Count us in for all
/. * " r "’ and 110 niatter where
the prices find bottom we are
Ii 1011 E THAR!
You hear us now. Come and C us when you
gC i , v n m\™ LUDDEN & BATES,
julj 18-3 m. Savannah, da.
“ An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure.”
4jt
. -
DIPEBIAL EGG ><>l>,
FOE ALL VARIETIES OF
Poultry, Fancy Fowls, Young - Chicks, Ducks, Oecse and Turkeys.
WILL 31AKE YOUlt HENS LAY.
Prevent and cure the common ailments and increase the profit of the Poultry \ ard from 1111 \ to
ONE HUNDRED PER CENT.
The imperial egg food iias been successfully used during the past
year bv the principal fowl fanciers of Rome and Floyd county.
Testimonials of parties who have used the Food furnished on application. Trial packages by
mail prepaid for 50 cents.
A Live Agent Wanted in Every County*
jggy*" Liberal Terms. Satisfaction guaranteed or no pay. Every one who has fowls will see tlia
value of this sovereign remedy. Call on or address
CHAS. 15. LANGWORTHY,
Office Southern Agency, 90 Masonic Temple,
mch6-3m ROME, GA.
THE BEST SEWING MACHINE EVER PRODUCED,
Whether for Family Use or Manufacturing,
IS THE
Double-Thread, Lock Stitch, Light-Running
j"N¥w""D'AVTs7j '
It "W ill Last a, -Lifetime.
VERTICAL FEEL.
The Vertical Feed is the greatest advance made in sewing mechanism since the invention of
Sewing Machines. We invite a careful examination of it, believing no one can fail to recognize
the fact that it is
THE MOST PERFECT SEWING MACHINE MADE.
Sold by EDWARDS & BOWLER, Cartersville, Ca.
feb-20-3m
BAKER & HALL,
HARDWARE DEALERS,
(Cartersville, Ga.,)
POCKET KNIVES AWD CUTIiKBT.
THE CELEBRATED WHITEWATER WAGON,
Plnetons, Carriages, Baggies anil Spring Wagons Cheap,
Rubber ani Leather Belting, Corn Shelters Straw Cntters, Carpenters’ Tools
fAnr-. ! O/imck AIM We liave anything from the point of a needle to the mouth
vome one . A'CmlO Mil . of a cannon, sans B(rici.
W. C. BAKER,
july!B H. H. HALL.
T. F. aOULJD^MITH,
DEALER IN
FURNITURE, METTALLIC AND ROSEWOOD COFFINS,
Burial Shrouds, Etc., Etc.,
"West Main Street, : : : : : Curtersville, (teorgia.
Can be found at store through the day aud at night room over store. fiifrg°All calls promptly
attended to. • * feb27-6m
B E R*K S H.I It E HOGS
—AND
. COTSWOLD SHEEP
✓ *
4 BRED AND FOR SAFE BY
TOM ORTJ TCHFIELD,
(At “Amnicol a.,” near Chattanooga, Tennessee.)
'
.
U TT E JP E P>” SJRE AND DAM WERE BRED B 11EBKR HUMPHREY, OF
..wrAs’ fwmds at head of my herd of Berkshires.
lORON TO,” s 1 , re 0 f mv brood sows—bred by Philpot, of Middle Tennessee, was slaughtered last
Be 2f )n oY we]shlr) g 705 pounds !
My bheeo a r e from home bred and imported ewes, and sired by imported rams being bred and
South, are acclimated. They average about nine pounds each, annually of clean wool.
®^£U p .OHASERS NEAR HOME SAVE RAILROAD CHARGES AND RISKS.
war’kARRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. tapr2l.
IP®Bd & CONDE: , N ui^JOOR^ I fnl li F
N§!,ER ffi|SES FOR STEAM. HAf/ vS A LJk
CE4RIIMG * CENES^J2®^
<sm wmjutSLPME list.
Prices Range from
Sews any fabric, from lace to leather.
Has the automatic self-regulating tension and
take up.
Always in order, and never fails in its duty.
Produces the best quality of work in the great
est variety.
Requires no instructor. The printed direc
tions alone are needed.
Made from the finest material, by expert work
men.
Try it. It has never failed to give perfect sat
isfaction.
to $45.
Every Machine Warranted.
THE FREE PRESS.
An Independent Democratic Journal.
THE PEOPLE’S CHOICE.
1879. FOII 1879.
C. 11. C. WILLINGHAM, EDITOR.
THE FREE PRESS
Will remain the unflinching exponent of the
free and independent voters and the friends of
political freedom throughout the Seventh Con
gressional District; and will support the great
principles of Jeffersonian Democracy as the
grand bulwark of American liberty.
THE FREE PRESS
Will earnestly advocate these principles {(the
octrinejof Jeffersoniauism) sq the liberal politi
cal tenets that recognize the right of the people
to govern themselves independent of the edicts
of juntas, rings, cliques or combinations, organ
ized under whatever name, to defeat the popular
will for merely partisan purposes, or to advance
the schemes of personal ambition.
THE FREE PRESS
Will be, in a word, what its name imports—an
independent journal—a “sentinel upon the
watch-tower” of public liberty—to warn the
people of all danger to tlieir rights and the
cause of “law and order,” and to thwart all at
tempts by corruption and intrigue to overthrow
or impair good government.
THE FREE PRESS
Will devote much of its time and space to the de
velopment of the agricultural and mineral re
sources of this section of Cherokee Georgia.—
With this view we invite information from all
reliable sources in regard thereto.
THE FREE PRESS
Will ever be found to be in the interest of the in
dustrial classes, the mechanical, the agricultur
al, the mercantile, and all who labor, resolved to
do all it can to maintain the rights, the dignity
and the just rewards of honest toil of the strug
gling masses.
THE FREE PRESS
Has reached a circulation in less than six months
never heretofore obtained in that time by any
country weekly paper in Georgia. We intend to
make it still worthier of public patronage. We,
therefore, ask the friends of the paper to aid usiu
further exteuding its circulation, thereby en
hancing its usefulness and value as an organ
and defender of popular rights.
THE FREE PRESS
Is printed from bran new type, in band
some style, and will be sold at the following
Rates of Subscription:
One copy one year S2OO
One copy six months 1 00
One copy three months CO
CLUB RATES.
Five copies one year . . . $8 75
Ten copies one year, 15 CO
Twenty copies one year 25 00
Fifty copies one year CO 00
As an Advertising Medium
The Free Press is not surpassed by any other
paper on the State Road. The rates are very
liberal. We invite the attention of all business
men to this feature of our paper.
All orders for the paper must be addressed to
The Free Press,
CARTERSVILLE, GA.
Fashionable Barber Shop.
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA,
Upstairs, Over Xew York Store, Bank Block,
By JOHNIAYLOk.
Has been in the business 35 years,
aud is one of, the most accomplished bar
bery in the South. His shop is well and comfort
ably furnished. lie is the only barber in the
State who uses Phalon’s Celebrated Chemical
Hair Invigoratorf to prevent baldness and dis
eases of the scalp. All who have tried it know
it to be a specific.
He also uses the celebrated Russian Couissan
Shaving Soap, which is known to be the best soap
in the world. It has the invaluable property of
preventing pimples and all cutaneous eruptions.
To those who shave twice a week, he will fur
nish a private soap and lather cup, free of charge.
The patronage of the public generally is in
vited aud respectfully solicited. Polite, courte
ous and gentlemanly treatment is observed to
ward all, and satisfaction guaranteoed.
julylß JOHN TAYLOR, Proprietor.
J N? 17 7 W.4L” ST.
D.f-
L.C. N £BI N’GEH, Manager..
W. H. WIKLE & CO., A greats.