The Carroll free press. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1883-1948, June 13, 1884, Image 1
V
YOL. I.
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, JUNE 13, 1884.
NO. 30.
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CARROLLTON, GEORGIA
•—Dealers in—
General Merchandise,
Are still at their oltl stand on Koine
street, ready to sell you goods ns cheap
Ol 1 cheaper than anybody If you want
anything in their line, give them atrial
and they think you will trade.
We would say to those owing us that
WE MUST HAVE
What is due us. We have indulged
you as long as we can and we now want
our money.
IF YOU ARE
GOING
"WEST,
NORTHWEST,
—OE—
SOUTHWEST,
BIB STTE/E
Your Tickets Bead via the
N. C. & St. L. R’Y
The Mackenzie Route.
The First-class and Emigrant Passengers
FAVORITE!
Albert B. Wrenn, W. I. Eogers,
Pas. Agent, Pas. Agent,
Atlanta,Ga. Chattanooga, Tenn
W. L. DANLEY,
Gen.Pas.& Tkt. Agent,
Nashville, Teun.
Debt Paying.
I speak as to wise men; judge ye what
I say.—1st Corint hians, 10th chapter, lo
th verse.
In compliance with brother Ka
gan’s request, and by your permis
sion, I will write a short article up
on the subject of tardiness of debt
ors, or rather by way of suggesting
to creditors, what I consider would
be a judicious and scriptural course
to pursue in the collecting of debts.
My suggestion, however, will only
apply to those, who profess Christi
anity and belong to some one of the
various denominations in this coun
try. Let the creditor after he has
borne with his tardy debtor, as long
as he feels .willing to, let him tell
his debtor, and if the debtor fails to
give satisfaction, it then becomes a
matter of grievance. For what cred
itor is not offended at a persistent,
tardy debtor, who refuses to pay a
just and honest debt ? Let the cre
ditor then take the course given by
our Saviour in the 18th chapter of
Matthew, take one or two brethren
and go and labor with the tardy
debtor and if he still refuses or fails
to give satisfaction, then tell it to
the church of which the tardy
debtor is a member, and if the
church decide he is in fault, let the
church exclude him, for no church
should tolerate or fellowship a
member, who obstinately refuses to
pay his just and honest debts. Af
ter his exclusion the creditor can
take the course laid down in the
law. St. Paul says in 1st Corinthi
ans, 6th chapter: Dare any of you
paving a matter against another,
go to law before the unjust or un
righteous and not before the saints?
Is it so that there can not be found
among you one wise man, who
shall he able to decide between his
brethren, but brother goeth to law
with brother, and that before un
believers ? Nay already it is al
together a defect in you, that ye
have lawsuits one with another.—
Why not rather take wrong? Why
not rather be defrauded? Nay, hut
ye yourselves do wrong, and de
fraud, and that your brethren, (New
Revision.) I understand Paul to
teach that it is fraud in anyone to
refuse to pay his just and honest
debts, if this he true surely no
church can afford to stultify herself
so far as to fellowshipfraud. It is also
wrong for a brother M ho is a credi
tor to go to law with his brother be
fore unbelievers, and he subjects
himself to the same censure of the
church. Paul says we have wrong
ed no man, ive have corrupted no
man, M'e have defrauded no man.—
Our Savior said “whatsoever ye
M ould that men should do to you,
do ye even so to them; for this is
the law and the prophets. This ap
plies to creditor and debtors alike
with equal force. The Prophet Mi-
cah says, “What doth the Lord re
quire of thee, but to do justly, and
to love mercy and to M'alk humbly
with thy God?” “Finally breth
ren, whatsoever things are true,
whatsoever things are honourable,
whatsoever things are lovely, M’hat
soever things are of good report; if
there be any virtue, and if there
be any praise, think on these
things.” Philip 4th chapter, 8 verse.
J. O. R. Word.
A Normal Music School at Shiloh.
Ed. Times.—While this article is
not exactly the kind literature Min
ted for a country weekly, its im
portance to the people of Carroll
county is sufficient to ask its pub
lication.
1 have from Profs. E. T. Pound
of Barnesville and J. AV. Denning-
ton of Atlanta, a proposition to
teach a Normal school at Shiloh, du
ring the coining season. This
place has been selected with the
view of accomodating all who may
wish to tent on the ground instead
of hoarding. The school M’ill last
some three or four w’eeks and the
tuition will be about five dollars.—
Instruction M ill cover the whole
ground of musical theory, together
with voice culture, by Prof. Den-
nington, who is probably the most
learned vocalist in Georgia.
Now let me say to the people of
Carroll, Haralson, Heard and other
adjoining counties, that this oppor
tunity cannot be overestimated.—
Never before have M’e had such a
golden opportunity to learn music.
In this Normal, instruction will be
furnished all classes, from the be-
giner to the more advanced teach
er. Our teachers need it; and un
til they arc better qualified for their
M’ork, we can hope for but little im
provement in our music. Do let
me urge upon all the importance of
this enterprise. Give it a push.—
Give it your patronage, and I guar
antee you will never have cause
to regret it. For any further infor
mation, address Prof. E. T. Pound,
Barnesville, Ga, or the writer, J. A.
Roberson, Burwell, Ga., Carroll
county.
A Call for Young Men.
In all ages and at all times there
has been a steady demand for sen
sible, hard-working young men. In
these days of dudes and kid glove
nonsense, however, the supply is
far below the demand, and instead
of young men with honesty, intelli
gence and industry in their heads,
M e find a large number who are
striving constantly after social ef
fects and puny honors that are as
shallow as the sentiment tha^
prompts their attainment. ' When
a man is worth money and desires
to loaf it is all right for him to be
a fool, if he pleases, and loll around
languidly like a most approved
aristocrat. He has money, he must
live, and he pays his way. But for
a young man in moderate circum
stances, to say the least, it is in bad
taste indeed to ape the aristocratic
idea, and it is fatal, to all interest
national and social, to have them
M’aste their time on style, fashion
and foolishness.
Such men are puppets, to be
knocked about as the will of their
superiors may indicate. It is also
to be deplored that the majority of
young men M’ho go astray in
this vain race for fashion are nin
compoops and numbered among
the foolish ones who are capable of
better things. It is therefore all
the more lamentable to see brains
and muscle going to the M’all for the
lack of proper advice or direction,
If our young men of brains could
only be made to see jthat worldly
success depends on the forming-
early in life, of sound business prin
ciples, and their constant rigorous
observance, the good things of this
life M’ould be more evenly distribu
ted among men, and there would
be more domestic happiness and
solid social enjoyment for ali.
As it is the grand results reaped
from sobriety, enterprise,brains are
enjoyed only by the sensible few 7 ,
and so long as young men blindly
folloM’ the bent of foolish indul
gence and petty pleasures this
hardM’orking feM r Mill continue to
gather unto themselves the golden
sheaves of success. A man cannot
be a man and a dude at the same
time. A poor man cannot wear
kid gloves and promenade the
street. There is no character in
loafers and hangers on. AY hat the
age and the nation want is charac
ter, time-tried and fire-tested; and
to character labor and snap the na
tion M’ill deliver her M’ages, because
the laborers of the people are al
ways worthy of their hire. AA T ake
up, young man ! Go to work and
make your mark.
4
Atlanta Constitution, Tuesday:
Most Atlanta people know that
when Gen. Alfred Austell died he
left as one of his heirs,a son M’ho
lacked quite a number of years of
being of age. He is now only 6 years
old and is said to be the richest boy
of his age in the State, having $150-
000 as his share of the estate left by
the stern old banker who built
up such a princely fortune
during his lifetime. AVhen
the General died Mr. Swann, his
son-in-law, was appointed guardian
for the little boy, a proceeding
which at the time appeared to give
satisfaction all around, and the bond
M as accordingly made.JFor reasons
M’hich appear to Mrs. Austell to be
sufficient she has now instituted a
suit to set aside the appointment.
The case is set for trial to-day be
fore Judge Calhoun. An effort is
being made to have the contest
abandoned and it may be success
ful.
Gen. Toombs refused to subscribe
for the purchase of Alexander H.
Sthephens’ residence as a memo
rial hall, “because,” he said, “I
want the people of Georgia to buy
the property, and when they do I
will endow it with euough to make
it such a college as little Aleck
M ould like to see if he were alive.”
It is a little singular that sq.many
of our public men are so near an
age. Blaine was born in 1830. Alli
son in 1829, AVindom in 1829, Gar
field was younger than any of them
having been born in 1831. 8am Ran
dall M’as boan in 1828; Senator Ed-
muds was born in the same year!
Conkling came into this umvorthy
world in the same year too. Alli
son AVindom and Randall are not
gray, but Edmumds looks like a
man of 80. He is bald headed, his
beard and what is left of his hair is
white, he has the dyspepsia and he
is stooped prematurely old in every
M ay. Conkling was also born in
1828. Logan has never told his age
and gets angry when any one
talksabout it. He cannot be far from
60. Sam Cox was born in 1824.
Grant in 1822.
The Country' Editor.
The country editor has a har<
time of it He is the reporter, book
keep, mechanical-superintendent,
business manager,collector,mailing
machine, and solciting agent of the
estaplishment. His work is hard
his receipts are small and his cred
itors are numerous. In a small
toM’n an editor has to steer his
course so as to avoid giving offense
to different circles of society, the
religious denominations, the busi-
coinmunity, and the rural popula
tion. If an influential old farmer
wants/i three-column notice of his
new barn, it must appear or the
editor may lose a hundred subscrib
ers. Patchwork quilts, big beets and
phenomenal eggs also clamor for
space in the columns of the country
paper. In the course of time the ru
ral scribe becomes either jocose op
morose, but in either frame of mind
he continues to make friends who
demand free advertising, and en
emies M’ho work against him.
The country editor is always get
ting ready to abandon journalism
for something else hut he rarely
carries out his threat. He generally
dies in harness. In some wild com
munities editors occasionally meet
M’ith rough treatment. Sometimes
they are driven out of the county,
and when other methods of getting
rid of them fail, they are sent to the
Legislature. The city editor gets
a good deal of fuu out of the coun
try editors work, but the man w ho
bears the burden regards it as a se
rious business. And in the best
sense it is serious. The little local
weeklies scattered all over the
country are in their way potential
factors of civilization. They devel
op their localities, bring their re
sources before the public, and in a
manner educate their readers.—
They are always on the side of the
churches, the schools, progress and
reform. Men M’ho live and die
working for such objects are public
benefactors and deserve a substan
tial reward.
From the Cartersville American.
Dr. Felton for the Legislature.
After numerous and urgent re
quests from all classes of the best
citizens of Bartow county, Dr. A\ T il-
liam H. Felton has consented to
allow hisf, name presented to the
people as a candidate to represent
them in the next Legislature. He
will not enter into a contest or
scramble for the office. It is a
response to calls from the people
that he will allow his name to be
used. He is not, in the common
meaning of the term, a candidate.
The office has sought him and he
simpiy yields to the almost unani
mous call of his constituency.
AVhilc M’e have always been and
always expect to be in favor of
organization and unity of action
in politics, and, while we have here
tofore honestly opposed Dr. Felton
in his contests against the organiz
ed Democracy, M’e feel willing to
bury the dead issues and personal
differencecs of the past and unite
once more with those of the other
side who are also willing to forget
personal prejudice and join us in
trying to advance the common
good of the M’hole people.
Eye Service.
Upon going into an office. I saw
tM’o boys at work addressing envel
opes—or rather, one M’as at work,
M’hile the other, with his pen in his
hand, M’as looking out of the w’in-
dOM\
Their employer M’as seated
near by; and when he caught my
eye he smiled.
“Which * of those tM T o
boys is the better workman and of
the most value, do you think?” he
asked in a low voice.
“The one at work, I suppose,” I
rejoined.
“No, sir; the lad M’ho is looking
from the M’indow now does so be
cause he thinks there is no harm in
it—does it, yon see, under ray eyes.
On the other hand, while my eyes,
is on them, the other boy is the
most industrious, but I find in my
absence he does nothing. So you
see he adds deceit to fault. I
would not trust him ont of sight.”
“ It seems to me neither of them
is worth very much.”
“To be sure,”came the immediate
ansM’er, “a boy M’ho attends to his
dnties at all times Mould be best;
put a boy M’ho renders eye service
merely, who cannot be trusted to
work without watching, is not to
be tolerated.”
The man who said this had seen
much of the world; hjef knew w’here-
of he sppke, ajid perhaps some of our
young readers M ill profit by his
words.
Repentance without amendment
is like coutinually pumping with
out stopping the leak.
A Sudden Rise.
When the Federal Wilson made
his raid into Alabama, his foraging
parties M’ere out in every direction
as the column moved on. One of
them called at a farm house in
search of meat, and finding a likely
steer on the premises, the farmer
M’as offered $3 in greenbacks for
the animal.
Gentlemen that ar ? steer is wuth
a good deal mor’n that, he replied,
as he looked the party ov6r; but
seein it’s you I reckon I shall have
to sacrifice sumthin.
One of the Federals was trying to
catch the animal, when the farmer
suddenly cried out:
Gentlemen, beef has gone up over
a hundred per cent, in the last five
minutes! You can’t have him for
less’n ten dollars.
The Federals hadn’t time to ask
why the market had changed so
suddenly, for, a troop of Confeder
ate cavlary, M’hich the.old man had
been first to sight, came charging
out of the M’oods, and in the riot
which took place the beef question
was run out of sight down towards
AVilson’s lines.
The AA r orld says it is “unfortunate,
if not disgraceful, that every effort
to secure Alexander H. Stephens’
home “Liberty Hall” with a view to
its preservation as a public memor
ial should have failed. The State
could have bought the place for a
small sum of money.” Alas! hoM’
soon are we forgotten M’hen M’e are
gone!”—Augusta Chronicle. Gush
and bosh. The State neither needs
nor wants Mr. Stephens’s old home
It has no power to invest in the real
estate of departed statesmen. The
constitution makes no provision for
that sort of business. Besides all
this, what consideration is there
that makes it any more a duty to
make a “public memorial” out of
the house of Mr Stephens than out
of those of Jenkins, Cobb, Johnson
Hill and the other dead statesmen
of Georgia?—Macon Telegraph.
AV ashing ton, May 30.-Gen. Lee,
at the close of the M ar, received in
numerable offers to engage in com
mercial enterprises. Insurance
companies, rcilroads, and many
large corporasions at the South
M’ere anxious to pay him any sala
ry he might demand soley for the
use of his name, without any labor
on his part, or incurring any res
ponsibility M’hatever. A committee
of Englishmen, with the Duke of
Sutherland and Me. Beresford
Hope at the head,offered him in fee
a splendid estate in one of the mid
land counties of England, coupled
with a guarantee of an income of
£5,000 a year as long as he lived.
He gratefully declined all of these
offers, and accepted the presidency
of Washington and Lee University
at a salary of $3,000 a year. Here
he earned his living as the hard
est M’orker in a hard M’orking facul
ty in training the youth of the
country up to the very hour of the
paralytic stroke which immediate
ly preceded his death.
Gen. Lee left three eons. They,
too, received many offers of a sim
ilar kind, and likeM’ise declined
them. Tm’o of these sons are uom’
prosperous planters fn Virginia.
The third succeeded his father in
the presidency of AVashington and
Lee University, and has filled the
position with credit for the last
thirteen years.
The true American spirit shines
in Gen. L’sexample the spiricwhich
prompted AVashington and his
Generals M’hen they retired from
the public service enriched only
with the recollection of their great
achievements, and ccorning to
make merchandise of their fame.
Columbus, Ga., June 5.—A spec
ial from AVest Point says that a dis
astrous fire occurred in that place
last night. The fire broke out at
about 11:15 o’clock in Charslon &
Cq’s store and spread rapidly, de
stroying five barrooms, one grocery
store, the newspaper office, one
general store, several shoe shops,
and other buildings. Among the
losers are G.. AV. Edwards, J. N.
Jones & Co., M. J. Longshire, L. C.
Haralson & Co., AV. C. Bailey, G. T.
Mitcham, M. D. Rowe & Co., G. & L.
L. Croft, and J. AV. Brantley. The
houses burned M’ere valued ; at $30,-
000, and were generally well in
sured.
He lives most M’ho thinks most,
feels the noblest acts the best.
Our grand business is, not to see
what lies dimly at a distance, but
to do what clearly at hand.
Old papers for sale at this office
50 cents a hundred.
From the Philadelphia Hines.
A Law Office Dialogue.
“I have almost made up my mind
to become a lawyer.”
“Indeed? AVhat qualities do you
possess ?”
“Frankl y?”
“Yes, frankly.”
“Well, I am studious, I have an
excellent memory, a good reason
ing facutly and a love for the philos
ophical. At college I took honors.”
“Superb! Forty years ago you
might have acheived celebrety at
the Philadelphia bar. But have
you a turn for tricks? Can you
measure everything by the stan
dard of a fee ? Could you become an
adept at defeating justice by fram
ing excuses to have cases put off for
months and years, after having
SM’orn to delay no person’s cause ?
AVould you broM’beat witnesses?
Have you a command of ‘billins-
gate ?’ AVould you use the court to
further your own schemes or grat
ify your own feelings ?”
“AVhy, no!”
“Then go Texas and raise com'S.”
Includes a Moral.
“Ah! old man how are you com
ing on ?” said one young man to an
other on the street.
“First-rate. How’s yourself?”
“Good! By the way, I believe I
borrowed a dollar of you last week,
and I might as M’ell return it.”
“Borrowed a dollar of me ?” he re
plied in affected surprise. “I had
forgotten all about it.”
AVell—er—er—I M’as under the
impression that it M as you I bor-
roM’ed it of, but must have made
a mistake.”
Ah—er—come to think about it
I do remember of lending you a dol
lar last M’eek.”
But his friend had got mixed
M’ith the croM’d and M’as out of hear
ing.
The moral of this is, dear reader,
if a man says he OM’es you a dollar
take his M’ord for it and don’t put
on style, or'you may lose your mo
ney.
The laM’yers M’ho have the case
of the bank robbers in Augusta
in charge, hope to save them from
punishment on ‘technical’ grounds
A\ T e mention this fact to show hoM*
hard it is tosecuro the punishment
of the most outrageous law’-break-
ers in the courts of justice, so-called,
as M’ell as to show why it is that
the tendercy is so strong in some
communities to call for the surely
avenging hand of Judge Lynch
Telegraph and Messenger.
A new way of backing letters is
to put the State first, the post-office
next and the person to M’hom the
letter goes last. This seems to
facilitate matters, as the State and
post-office is the first thing needed
for the mail agent and the name of
the person to M’hom the letter is di
rected is M’hat is needed by the
post-master M’hen the letter preach
es its destination.—Athens Banner.
Old Uncle Piowgit and his wife
M’ere holding a sort of love-feast the
other night recounting old times.
As the worthy couple sloM’ly pre
pared to retire they M’ent over the
days gone by in a highly entertain
ing manner.
u Do you know, ’Riah, I feel just as
young as I ever did?” said Uncle
PloM’git exuberantly.
“So, do I, Enoch,” drily respond
ed Aunt ’Riah.
Then a thought suddenly occur-
ed to Uncle Piowgit, and M’heeling
on his heel he cried out:
“Last in bed blows out the light!”
and made a plunge forJ the side of
the couch His wife, though taken
by surprise, was nothing behind
him in sprightliness, and their aged
heads met about the middle of the
bed M’ith a startling thump. Aunt
’Riah doubled up on the floor, and
Uncle PloM’git, rubbing the top of
his head, muttered, “AVhat two
fools M’e be anyhoM’!”
Nothing like stenography has
been inveuted for taking a states
man doM’n. AA T hen the speaker con
tradicts himself the short hand re
porter sliows him up. That is why
careful liars revise their speeches
before they go to the printer.
Gentlemen, don’t be so hard on
your mother-in-laM’. AVerepitnotfor
them you M’ouldn’t have your good
wives.
To relieve heartburn, mix a little
corn meal in water; allow the meal
to settle and drink the Ma
ter. Or eat a bit of poM’dered char
coal. These M’ill often relieve when
magnesia or chalk fail.
Try what forgiveness Mill do
before you resort to punisment.
To learn much we must learn a
a little at time and learn that well.
CARROLL FREE PRESS.
PUBLISHED EYEEY FBIDAY.
EDAVIN R. SHARPE, Publisher.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One copy one year, $1.25
One copy six months, 65
One copy three months, 40
CLUB RATES:
Ten copies one year, $10.00
Twenty copies one year, 820.00
PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS CARDS
3DR. X. XT. CHEXTETT
AVould inform his friends and the public
generally that he is still in the practice
of medicine. Special attention given to
chronic diseases. Office Carrollton Ho
tel.
lOSErn L. COBB. FELIX X. COBB.
COBB & COBB,
Attorneys and Counsellors at LaM*.
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA.
Prompt attention given to all bus
iness intrusted to us. Collections a spe
cialty. Office in court house.
Dr. J. AV. HALLUM,
CARROLLTON - - - - GEORGIA.
Has his office, in number 2, Mande-
ville brick building. He makes a specialty
of OSTETRICS and DISEASES OF
AVOMEN and CHILDREN. Call on
him. Consultation free.
r. c. McDaniel,
3DELTTIST,
CARROLLTON, - GLA-.
Is now inserting full sets of 28 teeth for
$20, half set 14 teeth, $10. Partial sets
and fillings cheap in proporton. Satis
faction guaranteed in every case. Office
in Mandeville building.
DR. J. E. COLE,
CARROLLTON, GA.
Is devoting most of liis time and atten
tion to surgery and surgical diseases, and
is prepared for most any operation. His
charges are reasonable.
The Harnett House,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
Is conceded to be the most comforta
ble and by far the best conducted hotel
in Savannah.
Rates : $2,00 Per Day.
M. L. HARNETT.
JOHN B. STEAVART
AVishes to say to the public that he i«
still prepared to do all kinds of
PH0T0GBAHDM and FEBB0TYPIHG
in the latest style and at reasonable pri
ces. Also keeps on band a fair stock of
Frames, Cases, Albums, Etc.
Copying and enlarging a specialty-
can make ali sizes from locket to 8x10
inches. Remember that two dollars will
buy a line, large picture framed ready
for your parlor, at my gallery, Newnan
street, Carrollton, Ga.
MILLINER Y.
MRS. M. A. WILSON
I4?ceutly of LaGrange, having located
in Carrollton for the purpose of engaging
in the millinery business, asks a share of
public patronage.
ISTIEW O-OOIDS.
Her stock, a part of which has just
been received, is new-, and she respectful
ly asks the ladies and those wanting any
thing in her line to call and examine.
r\ CAT TAfor the M orking class. Send
VTUJjJJiO cents for postage, and we
Mill mail you free, a royal, valuable box
of sample goods that M ill put you in the
way of raakin g more money in a feM' days
than you ever thought possible at any
business. Capital not required. AVe M’ill
start you. You can M’ork all the time or
in spare time only. The M’ork is univer
sally adapted to both sexes, young and
old.* You can easily earn from 50 cents
to $5 every evening. That ali M'ho M-ant
M’ork may test the business, M'e make
this unparrelled offer; to all M ho are not
well satisfied we M ill send $1 to pay for
the trouble of M'riting to us. Full par
ticulars, directions, etc., sent free. For
tunes M ill be made by those who give
their M’hole time to the M ork. Great suc
cess absolutely sure. Dout delay. Start
now. Address Stinson & Go., Portland,
Maine.
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
same—a matter af paramount considera
tion in buying property in the present
day. The renting out of lands and the
collection of rentals in kind, or other
wise, constitutes a part of the business
of the agency, as M’ell as, the collection
of claims and adjustment of over due pa
per. Executors, guardians, trustees, and
all M ho occupy fiduciary relations, Mill
find it profitable to confer with this office
in reference to the management of es
tates,&c, A long experiene in this line ena
bles me to ofler my services to the public
M’ith confidence, and I promise only a
reasonable charge for services rendered.
Office with S E GroM-, Esq , in the Court
House, SEABORN N JONES,
Attorney at Law,