The Carroll free press. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1883-1948, February 15, 1884, Image 2

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There is consider in Troup and Merriwet? ties about mad dogs The LaGrange reporter says that the Hon. W. O. Tuggle has return ed- from Washington. . Qu&QUH friend J. W. F. Little, has been nominated by the president to be post-master at West Point. Parnell, the great peach orchard man, West Point, has 127,700 trees in his orchard and expects to plant out 35,000 more this year. Captain Hary Jackson is an avowed candidate for congress from the Atlanta district, and seems to be making pretty good headway. Mr. Morrison, chairman of the way and means committee of the lower branch of congress, has introduced a tariff bill, which provides for a 20 per cent reduction of duties on most of the articles that are in the tariff list. It is thought that the republicans will oppose the hill, and thus a square, live issue will be joined between the two parties of the country. There are some signs of the political pot simmering in Georgia, after a while it will begin to boil, and then get red hot. This is go ing to be a lively year in politics in this state, arid the Free Press proposes to take a hand in the scrummage. Free and unsliack- eled in our utterenees, we hope all "Ways to .be found bat- tlin g for the right as we understand Chattanooga, Tennessee. ' Chattanooga, Febuary 9.—The condition of the Tennessee river is the all absorbing * them of to-day, and fears are entertained that there will bo another great flood. There have been heavy fains for several days,and the signal service officers state there will be a rise of forty feet, even if the rains cease now. The river is thirty feet by those who claim to have watched the riv er that the probabilities are great that the city will be under water on the present rise. H rei f the C'omptro office with pleasure; ex-Judge G. It. Carpenter stays away from South Carolina, but has done pretty well n the star rout cases, and has not changed his politics more than half a dozen times; Cass Carpenter is a wreck in Denver; ex-Chief Justice Willard has drifted to Washington, having been digested and disjected by his Democratic employers of 1876; the irrepressible Judge T. J. Mackey also open a law office in Washington; Cardozo, ex- State Treasurer, and Swails, once President of the S nate, looks con tented with clerkships in the Treas ury; Whittemore serves the Lord in Massachusetts with the same unction that he did in the Senate of South Carolina; Charley Leslie is as shifty in Kansas as ever he was in Barnwell county; lvimpton once “financial agent” of the State in Wall street, is a lame duck among the curbstone brokers there; Puffer, who once handled the assets of the Bank of the State, comes to Washington occasionally, cheerful but not; MiDevitt knows the value of four aces in Colorado as well as when he had revenues of Edgefield county to’back his hand; John B. Dennis prospers in Dakota; Joe Woodruff practices shorthand in a counting room in Philadelphia; not so profitably as when he was the king pin of the legislative ring as Clerk of the Senate and Presi dent of the printing company; Na gle is a special agent of the Pension Office; and, last but not least, Frank Moses, the young native Governor of 1872, having served out his term for swindling, in the county prison of New York, is now teacking the ‘ ‘rustlers” of New Mexico some new tricks. Last Week’s Record the Least Disas trous of the year. New York, Feb. 8.—The business failures during the last week, re ported to R. G. Dunn & C'o., number ed for the United .States 282, and for Canada and the Proyinches 46—a total of 278, against 327 last week. There is a marked decrease in the number of failures all through the country, particularly in the Southern, Middle and New England States, and also on the Pa cific coast. In Canada there is a slight increase over even the high figures of recent weeks. For the whole country the total is the small est uoted in any week since the commencement of the year. In the last issue of the Coweta Advertiser, the announcement is made that the publishing firm o M, C. Cabanis & Co has dissolved by the retirement of Mr. Cabaniss, although there is no charge in the proprietorship of the paper. It will be issued hereafter every Friday by the Advertiser Publish ing Co., W. W. Wadsworth having ■charge of the business department for the preaserrt. CAROLINA’S CARPET-BAGGERS. fcfot^)ne of the Old gang Left in the State Outside of the Federal Offices The South Carolina Democrats, *ays a Washington special to the New York Sun, will make no effort *0 capture the seat made vacant by *he death of Mr. Mackey. The dis trict will probably be represented by a negro, and the chances of ex- Uongressman Smalls are said, to be fcood. - While Mackey was not a ‘carpet-begger’ he was one of their •crowd. Mr. C. It. Thompson, who Was prominent in South Carolina politics it the days following the war, in speaking of the carpet-beg- Sgers, says that they are scattered from Dan to Beersheba, and that, •outside of the Federal officers, there fis toot one left. Patterson has given the State a Wide berth since 1876; Tom Robert son. the other Senator, is a paraly tic'in‘-Columbia; Bowen, who held Charleston and all her interests in his grip, is dead; Elliott, .the smart est negor devoleped by reconstruc tion—Congressman, Speaker of the House and Attorney General elect —is. making a precarious living in New Orleans; Wright, the negro Justice of the Supreme Court, is loafling in Beaufort; Dunn, the Comptroller General, Ls peddling a patent glue in Boston; Hardy Sol- omonds, the financier and keeper of the State deposits, has a little bake shop in Kansas; Gurney, Coun ty Treasurer of Charlnston, is long since dead; Parker, the manipula tor of millions of cod version bonds ke ej> 8 Music store in Indiana and ce the husband returned, but allowed to visit his wife le child. He again felt for estern home, leaving his Wife little- child to the protection of mother’s- parents, ast week Mr. Echols returned o Rome and though his attorney, Mr. H. M. Wright, a talented young member of our bar, sued out a write of habeas corpus to get possession of the child, whom he describes as “a handsome little blue-eyed boy.” The writ has not yet been served and thus the case now stands. The young mother claims that the Mormon religion of her husband was the cause of the estrangement, and says that it will break her heart to take from her the only source of pleasure left from the happy days of her short wifehood- her darling child, whom its father left when a babe. We shall make no comments until after the case is decided. GEORGIA PACIFIC R. R. TDIE TABLE, ADOPTED DEC. 9th S3 CENTRAL STANDARD TI3IE . ZETA-IRIS/tfllEj- look: iTOTJiR, reived one car load of WAS IT A DREAM. A Singular Vision Which Appeared to Dr. Bruce in Florida. Dr. Walter Bruce, of this place, says a Micanopy special of the 8th inst., has recently had a very sin gular revelation made to him in a way that is hard to explain. He is a native of Virginia, where he married Miss Stribling, of Fauquier county, some years ago, and soon afterwards removed to this State as one of the pioners in orange plan ting, and has ever since been ac tively engaged in that business.— He is well known about here as a man -of sound judgment, high standing and for the most practical ideas, and is far from being a be liever in any of the popular “isms” of the day, especially spiritual ism. Late on the night of Friday, Dec. 28, he was awakned from a sound sleep at his house in this place by so strong a feeling that there was some mysterious presence in his room that lie got up and lighted a lamp and looked all over the house hut, finding nothing unusual, he returned to bed and apparently fell into a light sleep iff which there appeaaed to him a vision of his wife’s brother R. M. Stribling, in a deadly conflict, in which he had his throat cut in a most horrible manner, and was removed to a store near by, where he was placed on a counter, and after the apparent lapse of time ho died from the effects of the wound. The vision was so real that Dr. Bruce could sleep no more, and when morning dawned he went out, hut could not rid himself of the very styong impression it had made upon him. He related the dream, as he called it, to several of his friends, and later in the day visited a well- known spiritualist in Gainesville,' who told him that some awful calamity must have befallen young Stribling. And, sure enough, the next mail from Virgina brought Dr. Bruce a letter, an nouncing the death of his brother- in-law in the exact manner he had seen and at the very hour that it had happened to him in his vision. A sister of the murdered man, visiting relatives in Kentucky at the time of his death, had a similar dream, and, while relating it at the breakfast table, was hand ed a dispatch, announcing its ful fillment. PREMATURELY BURIED. The Sad Fate of a Young Girl who was Supposeed to be Dead* A sensation was created in Day- ton by the discovery of the fact that Miss Hock wait, a youdg lady of high social connections, who was supposed to have died suddenly on January 10, says a Dayton, Ohio, special of the Sth inst., was buried alive. The terrible truth was dis covered a few days ago, and since then it has been the talk of the. city. The circumstance of Miss Hock- walt’s death was peculiar. It oc- cured on the morning of the mar riage of her brother to Miss Emma Schwind, at Emanuel’s Church.— Shortly before G o’clock the young lady was dressing for the nuptials had gone into the kitchen. A few moments afterward she was found sitting on a chair with her head leaning against a wall, and appar ently lifeless. Medical aid was summoned in—Dr. Jewett, who af ter examination, pronunced her dead. Mass was being read at the time in Emanuel’s Church, and it was proposed to postpone the wed ding, but Father Hahne thought best to continue, and the marriage was performed in gloom. The examination showed that Anna was of excitable tempera ment, nervous and affected with sympathetic palpitation of the heart. Dr. Jewett thought this was the cause of her supposed death. On the following day the lady was interred in the Woodlan. The friends nf Miss Hock wait were un able to forget the terrible impress ion, and several ladies observed that her eyes bore a remarkable natural color, and could not dispel an idea that she was not dead. They conveyed their opin ion to Annie’s parents, and the thought prayed upon them so that the boddy was taken from the grave. It is stated that when the coffen was opened it was discovered that the supposed inanimate body had turned upon its right side.— The hair had been torn out in hand fuls and the flesh had been bitten from the fingers. The body was reinterred, and efforts were made to suppress the facts, hut th ere are those who state that they Atlanta to Birmingham 167 Miles No .1—Westward. No. 2 —Eastward Leave—Daily. Ar riv e—Daily 7 Offa m lea^ e Atlanta , 8 30 p m 7 21 a in U ♦Peyton 51 8 11 p m 7 23 a m Chattahoochee u 8 00 p m 7 3D a m ♦Concord cc 8 00 p m 7 42 a m u Mableton cc 7 53 p in 7 51 a in u Austell cc 7 45 p m 7 58 u Salt Springs cc 7 38 p m 8 13 am u DougLasvilie cc 7 23 p m 8 27 a in u Winston cc 7 10 p m 8 43 a in u Villa Rica cc 6 55 p m !) 02 a m tt Temple cc 6 31 p in !) 25 a m u Bremen cc 6 09 p m 0 50 a m u Tallapoosa .. 5 44 p m 3*0 OS a m t; Muscadine cc 5 27 p m 10 27 a m u Edwardsviile cc 5 08 p in 10 46 a m u Ileliiu cc 4 50 p in 11 00 a in u Davisville . cc 4 35 p m 11 OS a m u Choecolocco 4 28 p m 11 18 am u DeAruianville cc. 4 18 p m 11 31am t; Oxford . u 4 05 }) m 11 35 a in tt ♦Oxana. cc 4 00 p in 11 30 a m u Anniston cc 3 56 p m 12 05 p m t; ♦Berclair cc 3 29 p m 12 15 p m u Eastaboga u 3 19 p m 12 33 }> in CL Lincoln cc 3 01 p in 12 53pm U Seddon cc 2 40 p ill 1 09 p in CL Eden cc 2 25 p hi 1 2S p ill CL ♦Cook's Springs “ 2 07 p m 1 48 p m CL ♦Bromptou cc 1 48 p m 1 58 p m CL ♦Leeds • c 1 33 p in 2 33 p in cc ♦Irondale cc 1 01 p m 2 50 p m CL Birmingham cc 12 45 p in Read down fi^Read up PORT ROYAL DISSOLVED BONE, for composting 1 Also one car load of DIAMOND COTTON FOOD GUANt,, ;un satisfied it will be to Real Estate Agency. In opening an agency of this character, in the city ol Carrollton, facilities are of fered to those desiring to sell property, to'the best advantage, by placing it prom inently upon the market, and to such as desire to purchase, it affords the best me dium for obtaining a perfect title to the ga,,,,—n uiattev jtf paramount considera tion in buying property in the present day. The renting out of lands and the eolleetion of rentals in kind, or other wise, constitutes a part of tlie business of the agenev, as Well as tlie collection of claims and adjustment of over due pa per. Executors, guardians, trustees, and all who occupy fiduciary relations, will find it profitable to confer with this office in reference to the management of es- tates.We, A long experiene in this ime«w-' remoVPTl to hi ■ new brink store in the northeast corner of the square, where hies me to offer my services to the public ‘Vp be ,. ul t0 ],;* numerous friends and customers. He has recently re- with confidence, and I promise only . , j.' jTjj d w inter stock of goods, consisthig in part of reasonable charge for services refidered.* w,vc '* ” u . «* Office with S E Grow, Esq , in the Court Vnd other -fiindard brands coming. Give me a trial and vour interest. NEW GOODS. N few BRANDS, COME KIGHTALONG. Very Respectfully, A. C. S-A-XOIST. C. B. SIMONTON, r.vr.u«»i eton, Georgia, House. SEABORN N .JONES, Attorney at Law, THE SUIT. NEW YORK, 1881. JL Si Dry Goods, Family Groceries, Clothing, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Notions,&c. &c. HARDWARE and WAGON MATERIAL •v specialt v. A general assortment kept on hand at nil times and sold at the vegr ERY and GLASSWARE, lieve it. call and see us. Special bargains The favorite * Flag stations CONNECTIONS. At Anniston with the E. T., Va. and Ga. for Jacksonville, Talladega, Uhilders- burg, Calera and Selma. At Birmidgham with L. and X. for Blount Springs Decatur, Eulaski, Grand Junction, Memphis, and all Arkansas and Texas points, and with Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific railway for Tuscaloosa, Meridian, Jackson, Vicks burg, New Orleans and all Texas points. G. J. Fokeacre, L. S. Brown, Gen’l F. & P A., Superintendent, Atlanta, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Carroll MASONIC Institute, MALE AND FEMALE. T HE SPRING TERM OF THIS Re stitution will begin January 21st, 1884, and continue six scholastic months. The fall term will begin on the third Monday in July and continue four months. Tuition. from 81 .DO to S3.DO per month. HVTTTSIO- Miss Minnie Reese, one of the most ac complished musicians of the south, will have charge of the musical department. For further particulars, address II. C. or S. J. BROWN, Carrollton, Ga. Gr From the Rome Courier. Let her Keep the Child. A sad case of estrangement be tween wife and husband was brought to light yesterday. The facts are about as follows: About four ypars ago Mr. Sam Echols aud Miss Alary Vincent, both of Floyd county, knelt at tjie alter .and pledged their troth. Everybody ; pronounced the match one of true | love. A child blessed their union after a year. But twelve months j had scarce left their imprint on the ; little one’s brow ere the young i husband and wife parted. He went to Colorado to become At $tor.- mon minister, and she with her child sought a home beneath her father’s roof. After a year’s be as narrated. The Congressionnl Library. For several years Congress has been trying to pass a bill to erect a Congressional Library building. A bill for that purpose appears to make verv little headway. That a library building in needed very few Congressman will deny. The pres ent library in the capitol is literally choked with books and pamphlets. The shelves are full and the halls arc blocked. Material continues to accumulate, however, with wonder ful rapidity. The Li,L>t'urivR is at his wit’s ends to know what to do with it. as is valuable and cannot be sold as waste paper. A proposi tion to dispose of it in that way would i/jcms a storm of protest even from Congressmen ,vyffv seldom or never look into the library, Sonie- thing must soon be done to provide more room, or the books, papers and pamphlets must be dumped on the library floor. The reason why Cougi-fcatf not authorized the construction of alibidAA bjoUflipg H because charges of corruption have been made in connection with every library bill that has been introdu ced. It is alleged that the avail able sites have been purchased by syndicates pf speculators, and are held at prices that" aye fay beyond their real value. Senator Morrill has a bill before tby /Senate now to erect a building on a square imme diately in front of the capital, and Air Hurd has a bill in the house to erect a builing south of the capitol. There is no immediate prospect that either bill will pass.. Senator Ator/iJlf ailed, up his bill last Thurs day hut so union oppo^Lon was shown to its consideration wisely concluded not to press Unless it is concluded to erect a li brary on government land or some patriotic citizen donates a suitable site ; the present Llbrarjqn may not live long'enough to see his beloved | books properly cured for in a safe and commodious building. 54TH TEAR OF ODEY’S LADY’S BOOK. Low /price of $2 per year. Subscriptions will be received at this of fice in clubs with this paper. The Fi:ee Press and Godey’s Lady’s Book for one year at 82,DO PROSPECTUS FOR 1884. We propose to make it without excep tion the best as well us the cheapest Home and Fashion magazine in America,. and we believe a perusal of the list-of attrac tions to appear each month will prove convincing to every reader., Each Number will Contain A beautiful steel plate accompanied by a story or poem. A finely executed por trait "of one of the ex-presidents of the United States, with a short sketch. Ex cellent colored fashion plates of the pre vailing styles of dresses. Numerous il lustrations of fashions in black and white. Illustrations and designs of the latest patterns in fancy work, in colors or hlack and white. A11 illustrated household de partment. An illustration of architec tural design. A piece of nicely selected music. A full-size cut paper pattern. Choice recipes for the household. Be sides a rich variety of literary matter contributed hv.eminent writers, embra- WHITE SEWING MACHINE Sold exclusively hv us. rr . „ oa „„ . rv Genuine Woolen Concord *Je<ins from t<> 4.") cent> pei \;ud. .1 ^ - ie knows, are standard goods. If you want a gun or . lock, call on us. Dir. A. C Saxon and J. A. Huggins are witIi me and will he glad to-welco e their friends at these headquarters. U t-hev dont **14 you they wout uisult j^u. II. AY. LONG. T. I*. LON'O. About sixty million copies of 'Hie Sun have gone "out of our establishment i during the past twelve months. j If you were to paste end to end all the ; columns of all The Suns printed and sold last year you would get a continuous ! strip of interresting information, common j one know sense, wisdom, sound doctrine, and sane wit long enough to reach from Printing House square to the top of Mount Cop ernicus in the moon, then back to Print ing House square, and then three-quarters of the way hack to the moon again . But The Sun is written for the inhabit ants of the earth: this same strip of in telligence would girdle the globe twenty-seven or twenty-eight times. If every buyer of a copy of The Sun during the past year has spent only one hour over it, and if his wife or his grand- , father has spent another hour, this news- paper in 1883 has afforded the human : race thirteen thousand years of steady j reading, night and day. . j It is only IK little calculations like these that you can form any idea of the circulation of the most popular of Ameri can newspapers, or of its iniluenoeon the opinions and actions of American men (given and women. The Sun is, mid will continue to he, a newspaper* which tells-the truth without fear of consequences, which gets at the facts no matter how much the process .costs, which presents the news of all the world without waste of words and in the most readable shape, which is working With all its heart for the cause of honest goverment. and which therefore believes that the Republican party must go. and go in tiiis coming vear of our Lord, 1*64.; SSSS^'DEALEBS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE, sure to he the most interesting year in its alt'll A 8 uS'K, -'in/eo wto ?£ JSStoSr ■ Dry Goods of ail kinds, Groceries, light and heavy, ' Boots, Shoes, Hats and Caps, Clothing to fit anybody, From the smallest boy to the largest man. Hardware, Crockery and Glass ware of all kinds. All of these goods arc-for sale and we don't propose to he undersold by any one. The public are earnestly invited to examine our goods and prices before huyjfjf elsewhere. We also' sell the * LIGHT RUNNING, NOISELESS HARTFORD SEWING MACHINE, The best in the market. Vow a word r<> our friends whip owe us. We are greatly in need of the money due us. either f/>r sj>ods or guanos. We are compelled to set tle u}) our indebtedness, and cant do so'unless our friends who owe us eon* 6) oar rescue. So ple,age come up and settle and save cost. „ We have just received a fresh lot of GUANOS and ACIDS for WHEAT .and OATS. Come to see us one and ail and you will find W. O. Perry and John II. Ward i.i*.,;ys on hand,to show you good"-. Respect fuliy,. and literary, scientific, and domestic ' RIIl'DY & SPURLOCK, intelligence, make the Weekly Sun, the newspaper for the farmer’s household. To clubs of ten, with $10 an extra copv free. Address 1. W. ENG LAND. Publisher 1Sl *’ x vn L: MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS, LONTG &G CO. GENERAL MERCHANDISE, Have special nducements to offer the farmers of Un roll and suirwnidingcounties when they come to< arrollton . We have a large and well selected stock of goods and will sell as cheap as anybody'. SHOES! SHOES!! SHOES!!! We make a LEADER of SHOES. Before yon buy your winter stock lie sure aud give us a call. We can and will save-you from 15 "to" 25 per cent, on these goods. Remember the place, brink store southeast corner public square. We will selhgood* Cheap Either for Cash or On Time. (jive us a call. We have anything found in a first-class country .store. Our store is headquarters for Singer Machine needles. LONG & CO. R H U D Y & S PU R LOCR, GEORGIA, TKIIMS TO MAIL SL liSCIUllEHS : Tin* several editions of the Sun are sent hv mail,post paid, as follows: • DAjLV—50 cents a month, -86 a year; with Sunday edition, -87- SUNDAY—Eight pages. 'This edition furnishes the current news of the world, special articles of interest to everybody, and literary reviews of new" books of the highest merit. $1 a year.-/ WEEKLY—.81 a year. Eight pages of the best matter-of the daily issues; an agricultural department* <>t mifi- jualled value, special market reports ROBBINS, BRO. Y CO. SIXTY-THIRD ‘YT1AR. saw the body and knew the facts to Rug novels, novelettes, stories, poetry, J charades, dialogues,arfand fashion notes, together with current notes of the day. As tins magazine Las been before tin* public for over 'fiftyRears; all may feel assured that the above will he carried out to the letter. Address all communications to J. H. Hattlenbeek & Co., 1006 Gfiestnut street, Philadelphia. Send for Il’ustrated Circular and Club Raisers’ Lists. the largest newspaper pub lished IN THE SOUTHERN STATES. A Business, Family, Literary . AGRICULTURAL JOURNAL. Not a Local Pap'er, but one Suitable to Any Locality. THE SAVANNAH WEEKLY NEWS <>Sk’Y i xi> A sKittAi. ) Gji $2 QO . Tills mammoth slict-r contains 8 pages of tnigli residing matter, comprising ail the hews of the week. Telegraphic- Dispatches up to the hour of going to press, A, ral Items, Original'Serials, etc. departments devoted to Georgia, Florida real .Spilth Carolina news. ■' -To tin,* farmer tjia artisan, the husi- uess or pi-o'feSS'ihnal ntihiV who bn? not tile advantages' of a daily mini, ftih yanuah. Weekly Xtik s is the medium by which he can be informed of events trines-, pil ing’in the busy world, wild her in his own State dr the most distant part of the globr Anouncement Extraordinary. GREAT REDUCTION LX PRIC E ! “Tm; Saturday Evening Post.” ■f2.00A YEAR FOR SINGLE COPY OK $1.00 A YEAR IN CLUBS OF 30. Now is the Time to Raise Clubs for the Coining Year. We arc determined to get a very large list of new subseripers, and in order to j do so we will receive suhscriqtions at ! ONE DOLLAR A YEAR in club’s of ten! And. as an inducement .to each of our j subscribers to send a-club, we will give a i gratis copy for every club of 10 at -81.00 j each: Remember, we will not send a , single copy for less than -82,00: and in j order to get the reduced rate, one must j send at least ten subscriptions, we can not send a less number for less than | •82.00 each, Think of it! 10 copies of THE POST one j year, with one extra for sending till' chib i making 3 3 Tor|ir's, for *$I0*00 ( ’As'toThe Post there are few in this count ryj.or any other count ry,who arc not familiar w ith it. Established in 1821, it is the oldest paper of its kind in America, and for more than half a century it lias been recognized as the Leading Literary anil Family Journal in the Uiuted States. For the coming year we have secured- flip best "-riters of this country and Eu- ( j-ppe,-' in Prose, a ml Verio, 1 act and IK- . lion. -! , A record of over sixty years of con- ■■ tinuous publication proves its worth and popularity, TmrPosT has never missed an Issue. Jts fiction is of the highest order—the best original stories, sketches and Narratives of the day. ji is perfectly, f'.v from the degrading and polluting Which cJuiriictcrizcs insny oth " Mahufacturers and Delers In ITALIAN AND ELY LAND AjARBLJJ, MONUMENTS, BOX TOM® HEAD and FOOT STONES, Granite for Buildings and Cemetery Inclosures, Iron for Fencing Dwellings and Grave Inclosures, v ORDERS SOLICITED and PROMPTLY FILLED. . Office and Works, No. DO LojfilStfeW* *. •' ^TL-A-ISr'r^V, - - - - - GEORQfA... FARMERS LOOK TO YOUR INTEREST! ioo Cooking Stoves just Received THE STOVE EMPORIUM Stoves off from last season, down low, and must be sold 1 / ALSO Tin Ware, Hard Were of all kinds. Crockery, Wood. Willow ami Gia.is W.aj-o Brooms, Trays. Sifters, aud a general assortment of House Furnishing goodjj.- Come every bodv aud price and he convinced. .* ‘ JESSE EL. CGELIEmST- ; so-called literary and family papers,: h ! gives more for the money, and of a bet- j ricultu-1ler class, than any other publication ini Special j the world. Each -volume contains, in ! addition to its well-edited departments, I twenty-five first-class serials, by the best livings auffiors, and upwards of five hun dred Short stories. Every numberrS i (replete \vul» ns-Jul information' and I Amusement, comprising Tales, AUvep; j hires, sketches, Biography, Anecdotes In addition to a first-class newspaper j l J0nnie t n tw 1 ersonais. News, mt, i m a mbdefjite price we offer to each vear- ' Hunioi,, iiistoi leal^Essij s, hemarka lV snberlbe'i a eoirv - Ao.r **f rim ‘mil.- f veut ^ rtew inventions, curious celem ASKEW, BRADLEY & CO. , B-A-ELO-A-IEES! ! ! * t • f . * * Y j '*: We-have a large and well selected stock.of Dry Goods, Groceries, Giothing, Boots, .. Shoes, Eats, Notions, Trunks, &c. In fact everything usually kept iti a first Class store, which we propose to sell at- 'X’EJ^E ATE!ELAT LOWEST EIGTTEES. Give us a call and wo will convince you that we mean just exactly tviwt we nay, ALSO ASKEW & BRADLEY Next door to AHKLV. BR-YL'LEY & CO have on hand a large stock of FURNITURE, COFFINS AND BURIAL CASES. OOEExEl$S TO Jslo, I3XJ4R.IAVL CASES, FEiOiVE TO $100. Metallic cases furnished on short notice. \'aultlca’ses‘;turl i:oveangs furnished and red free in tlie.citv, Dop’r fail to give us the first call, for we can cheaper than they can tie made or bought elsewhere Burial Gloves, etc. Also the tulle: statistics, Facts, Recipes’ Ilfnts, Cautions, Poetry, science. Art, PhUioSophv, Man- , , , . . ners, Customs.-Proverbs, Problems. Ex- delivered free in the.city, imp’r fail to give ns the first call, for we can nirnian periments, Personals, News Wit and the/n eheiljier than they can ’he'inade or bought elsewhere. Also a full line of J ’ kabl6 J‘Burial Rohes*. Burial Gloves, etc. Also the fullest and tastiest line of-furniture ever brought to Carrollton at prices to suit everyone. YVe carry a full line of Pat ent Bed. springs arid. Mat tresses: we al-iv-lunkt* a speci.dt} <>f , .* 1 SEWING IstEA.pilXlSFES- . Aiiachnieiits. O’!> a* d N' ‘'dies. Sowing Machines repaifeil hv a first-class maehi- nert. A'lFwork gimrfiTiteed: Dfdvi s’fpr coffins filled (l^y ASKEW &i . IV snhcrlbei a coin »£ ,i,.f Sf rim nub- 1 r ve,U! ‘’ mvemiuu-, curious cercmon- Hslied novels"of the : ^oiiiing<Neu*s Libra , ;rk-. ’ "*!^ ,l 'i W a . n .^ complete re- i*v ti’/v ■ fK»rt of- all tile latest. -as well as ' ’ Subscription $2p ye;ir in advance. | »11* life noVelt ids in neVdhi^Vk. and fuff ' , - • w ! est and freshest infonnatiou relatni^toi TJCB oAYAN^AI( i all iqaiUAc iff pgrsqual-a^d home adorif-; j ment, anil domestic matters To tin* pem j MOT? lYrrMf'' TvTRWQ lfio everyU here it will prove ym* of the - IVlUKiV 1 IN Lr IN JA VV O* i best most instructive, reside and moral j tiii:gi;kat DAit.Y ok the HocTiiKA-ST ! papers that has ever entered their homes , -- . i«, ■■ ■ Puhlished at the principal seaport off \Vo trust those who dusign making up t J LT7 j ^ | 11 ^ * . \ - • ♦ all anti ei the .South Atlantic States, it gives prom- dubs will be in the field as early as pos s on SSOS iumvn tp all the matters relative to-COM-, silde Our prices to club subscribers bv i i,™ ,yr ,, WT , rtA . , v viewv v-V STkKEU’ that he WIaL a, well as tq the AG1UCUL-; the reduced TO fie arc’so 7dw that if tlm A 1 li ’*' , * i A 1 " (>A ’ -i _ TUBAL, MECHANICAL * aim MaNU- iiiaiti i* is ffinperh* emdariied. very few Will he pleased to have hi> old frieuds and ensiomers, one. aud all cal - K: 1 1T *~ FACTUR1NG interests of the South. j who** desire a Jirst-ela.ss liu-iai v paimr !'inehls stock and ger the advliiitages of liis LOV.* PRICES before pure *iie. • Ihvkecpscourtaijiiy oirhaud? Dry Goods'^ Groceries, and Notions, 1 I'UUl- rchasiiig olso- t * .... , pa'}. * . Its STATE, GENERAL, LOCAL and |, will fiesitate to suhserihe at once afid U’liere,'4 Ikykdejjs'cdnstantjv oirhand jrARKETilejiartments are acknowledged thank the getter-up of the club for hrin<>- to he the best in this section, while its ing the paper to their notice Remember. TELEGRAPHIC REPORTS of the . tlie getter-up of the club of 10 gets a free ! news of the day are full and couiprcheu- ' copy oMhe*paper an TTitlTT* year. j In fact everything usually* kept in his linKj)£.5ii^iij|:."'^«iiU cSvefiJu ^ccluiqge «iv<*. . Address alt letters to , for all i.in-1- oi* }iroduce at iil.vrai j.jiy;*.-. Ail I AiW anddiort Price of daily SB) a year; SD for six! Tin: satcedav evening, host profits. Give me a trial, I mean business and am bound.to sell. „We bar«94qgtd mouth's. ’ J .11. EkTIT-L,' 3 Whitaker Street,-Sayaunah, Ga. Lock Box Philadelphia, Pa Office, 726 tjainsou street the services of Mr. R. G. Jones, who will fake gr«it pleasure in Waiting upon his •friends and acquaintances. ■*