Newspaper Page Text
VOL. I.
To the needs of the tourist, commercial
traveler and new settler, Hostetler’s Stom
ach Bitters is peculiarly adapted, since it
strengthens the digestive organs, and
braces the physical energies to unhealth
ful influences. It removes and prevents
malarial fever, constipation, dyspepsia,
healthfully stimulates the kidneys and
bladder, and enriches as well as purifies
the blood. When overcome by fatigue,
whether mental or physical, the Weary
and debilitated find it a reliable source of
renewed strength and comfort. For sale
by all Druggists and Dealers generally.
The Ideal Tonic and Exhilarine.
French Wine Coca.—The natives of
South America regard the Coca plant as
a divine gift and speak of it as that heav
enly plant which satisfies the hungry,
strengthens the weak and makes men
forget their misfortunes, etc. Men of sci
ence, poets, scholars, divines, lawyers,
physicians and others devoted to much
•study and thinking, speak of it as the
“intellectual beverage" as the mental ex
hilaration and activity produced by wine
Of Coca is truly wonderful Many of the
most celebated physicians in the world
who have thoroughly tested the French
wine of Coca say: We regard this as the
perfection of nervines, the purest
tonic, the best invigorator, the king of
remedies against dyspepsia, and anemia,
the restorer par excellence. The best
remedy in the world to cure mental and
physical exhaustion, all chronic and was
ting disease, dyspepsia diseases of the li
ver, debility of the nervous system, gas
tric irritability, constipation, sick head
ache, gout, etc. Specific for. neuralgia
and nervous headache. Its action in neu
ralgia is rapid and pleasant, relief being
experienced in a short time." Ask your
druggist for a pamphlet which will give
you convincing proof of the great merits
of the French Wine Coca. For sale by
druggists •
Dn J. S. Pemberton & Co., Atlanta,
Ga., sole Proprietors.
A f° r The -Lives of all
A P^r/TlIiStbe Presidents of the U S
The largest, 1 andsomest best book ever
sold for less than twice our price. The
fastest selling book in America. Im
mense profits to agents. Ail intelligent
people want it. Any one can become a
successful agent. Terms free. Hallett
Book Co., Portland, Maine.
A ‘D-ni ria Seild six cents for 1 )0S '
sL JL 1 IZit/tage, and receive free, a
costly box of goods which will help you
to more money right away thau anything
else in this world. All, of either sex,
succeed from first hour. The broad road
to fortune opens before the workers, ab
solutely sure. At once address, True &
Co., Augusta, Maine.
TURNER and CHAMBERS,
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA
—Dealers in—
General Merchandise,
Are still at their old stand on Pome
ft root, ready to sell you goods as cheap
or cheaper than anybody If you want
anything in their line, give them a trial
and they think you Mill trade.
Vfo. wpuld say to those owing ns that,
WE MUST HAVE
What is due us, 4 Ye have indulged
you as long as we can and we now want
©nr money.
IF YOU ARE
o-oiira-
“WEST,
NORTHWEST,
-pr-
southwest,
IBIS STTH/E
Your Tickets Bead via the
N. e. & St. L. R’Y
The Mackenzie Rouie.
The Firsi-clios ana Emigrant Passengers
FAVORITE!
Albert B. WreuD, W. I, Bogers,
Pas. Agent, Pas. Agent,
Atlanta,Ga. Chattanooga, Tenn
W. L. DANLEY,
Gen , Pas, & Tkt. Agent,
Nashville, Tenn •
From the Atlanta Constitution.
Amending the Constitution.
We print elsewhere another let
ter from Judge William Reese rel
ative to the necessity that exist for
amending the constitution of 1877
and we commend it, as we com
mended those that have preceded
it, to the serious attention of our
readers and to the iieople of Geor
gia. The ground upon which Judge
Reese bases his argument in favor
of the amendment of the organic
law of the state have been fully and
clearly set forth in his communi
cations, and we do not hesitate to
say that he has fully justified his
position. In the letter which we
print to-day, Judge Reese devotes
his attention to the effects which
the provisions of the constitution
of 1877 have on the trial of impor
tant causes and the administration
of justice. Those who are familiar
with the methods of procedure in
our courts will conclude that Judge
Reese has drawn the matter very
mildly, for the clumsiness of the
law which the constitution lias set
in motion is notorious.
We reproduce here in brief the
changes which Judge Reese sug
gests. With these before him, our
readers can study the matter for
themselves and form their own con
clusions—though it is but fair to say
that the results have not been over
drawn in the slightest particular.
Judge Reese would have the con
stitution amended so as—
1. To strikeout the provision as
to the introduction of and action on
local and special bills.
-• To fix the limit of the biennial
session to eighty days, with no pow
er of extension, and at the same
time reduce the time to be devoted
to legislation.
3. To restore to the governor, sub
ject to the approval of the senate,
the appointment of judges of the
superior courts and solicitors.
4. To extend the term of the gov
ernor and heads of the departments
to four years, with a disqualifica
tion for re-election to the next
term on the part of the governor.
5. To increase the number of sen
ators to eighty eight.
G. To restore the provisions of the
constitution of 1863 as to the selec
tion of jurors for the trial of civil
and criminal cases.
All these matters are important
and some of them are of vital im
portance. Apart, however, from
all other considerations, it is worth
Avhile for the people of a great and
growing commonwealth to meet in
convention at stated periods in or
der to take note of their condition
and necessities as a political socie
ty. Only in this way can a writ
ten constitution be made elastic
enough to meet the requirements
of the times.
Buttermilk
In warm summer weather many
persons feel an irresistible craving
for some thing sour, and often grat
ify this desire by a free indulgence
of pickles or vegetable made acid
with vinegar. This demand for
acids indicates a deficiency in the
secretions of the stomach, and the
demand for an artificial supply is
a natural one, but vinegar is not
the best substitute. Lactic acid is
is one of the chief agents that give
acidity to the gastric juice of the
stomach in health. This is the qc-
id of spur milk, and, therefore, one
of the best summer diet drinks that
we can use is buttermilk. It satis
fies the craving for acids by giving
to the stomach a natural supply,
and at the same time furnishing
in its cheesey matter a good sup
ply of wholesome nutrition. A
man wili endure fatigue in hot
weather better on buttermilk than
on any diet drink he can use,
Crops for Drained Swamp.—A
muck swamp when drained
makes excellent grass land, and
produces heavy crops of hay. Tim
othy and red-top succeed best on
such land and a dressing pf lime
will be very useful. To drain a
swamp, find the direction in which
the fall lies, and.cut a main ditch
through it at least three feet deep
and four feet wide, scattering the
muck taken out of it evenly over
the ground, or else throwing it in
to a ridge upon one side, so as to
make a solid road through it.—
Cross-drains should then be made
at least two feet wide and as deep,
as the irmin drain, and it will b6
well to run a drain at thejfoot of the
high land at the head of the swamp
to cut'off any springs thatmay flow
from it. Care should be taken burn
ing'off the fallen timber lest the
swamp muck may be set on fire, in
which case, in dry weather, the fire
will smoulder a long time and dp
considerable injury.
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, JULY 4, 1834.
From the Philadelphiu'Record.
Blaine’s Religion.
Following is the Ritter written
six years ago by Mr. Blaine to
an old college friend:
Washington, March 10 1878.—
My Dear Friend: I agree with you
that the charge of my being a Cath
olic is very provoking. Considering
the motive that inspires it, and
very exasperating when I see it
connived at, if not in fact origina
ted, by men who sat with me in
Presbyterian Bible-class when I
was a student and you a professor
in Washington College. The char
ge is part and parcel of the tactics
of the Cameron gang to rob me of
the Pennsylvania delegates, when
in fact, four-fifths of the Republi
cans in the State desire my nomi
nation. My ancestors on my father’s
side were as you know, always iden
tified with th Presbyterian church,
and they were prominent and hon
ored in the old colony of Pennsyl
vania several generations before the
Camerons blessed Scotland by leav
ing it. But w’hile thanking you for
what you have done to my Pitts
burg friends right on this question,
I wili uever consent to make any
public declaration upon the sub
ject and for two reasons: First, be
cause I abhor the introduction of
anything that looks like a religious
test or qualification for office in
a republic where perfect freedom
of conscience is the birthright of
every citizen; and second, because
my mother was, as you well know,
a devoted Catholic. I would not for
a thousand Presidencies speak a
disrespectful word of my mother’s
religion, and no pressure will draw
me into an avowal of hostility or
unfriendliness to Catholics, though
I have never received and do not
expect any support from them.
You are at liberty to show this to
the gentleman who urged you to
write to me. Many thanks for your
kind invitations, but I can hardly
promise myself the pleasure of a
visit to western Pennsylvania this
spring. You know, however, that a
large part of my heart is in the
^lonongaliela Valley. Always sin
cerely your friend.
J. G. Blaine.
Dr. James King, Pittsburg.
Humorous.
“I’m right in with you,” as one
cog-wheel said to the other.
The author of the saying that
“you must always take a man as
you find him” was a consta
ble.
Never mind, sonny, the rain
makes hoys grow,” remarked a
tramp the othei day, when lie took
a silk umberalla away from a lad
in the midst of a rain storm.
“But are you sure she’ll accept
you ?” ashed Duffix of Frink, who
was about to “pop.” “Accept me ?
Y on bet she will! She’s like my
clothes ready-maid!”
A burglar who has climbed up to
a garret window on a ladder is ar
rested by a voice shouting, Hello,
there, what you want ?” “May I
ask you for a glass of fresh water ?”
Do you buy your music by the
sheet?” inquired a young lady of
deecon’s daughter. Oh, no, she re
plied: “I always wait until Sunday,
and then get it by the choir.”
When a young woman is in' love
she turns to the poet’s corner first
on picking up a paper. After she
is married she turns first to the ad
vertisements of the dry goods stores.
From the Monday Mail.
Altogether Correct
It is a matter of profound regret
that the walking match craze ever
took possession of our people. We
do not here condemn the sport it
self, or the men engaged in it, but
the fact that it is turning thousands
over to betting and gambling. Not
only men, but boys in alarming
numbers are betting on the results;
and what makes it worse it is
done openly, as if it )vere all right.
Nothing of such general demora
lizing effect lias happened in a long
time in Atlanta. We hope for the
sake of public morals, all good
people will cease to encourage the
walking match, It is certainly cau
sing great moral harm. We mean
no reflection upon the young men
engaged in walking, but we appeal
also to them to stop a business that
is causing such evil.
No man, no woman lives or has
j ever lived who can ever begin to
! guess his or her own untried capac
ity, ft is as immeasurable as the
universe. Trust it as you trust God
and launch yourself unflnchingly
upon its vast possibilities*
More unshed tears swell beneath
the eyelids of gentle woman than
ever wet Rer cheek.- Lamartine,
What an Old Man would Do if He
Were now Young.
He would marry a clever, re
spectable, good-looking intellectual,
healthy, well connected young wo
man, and love her and serve her
with the utmost fidelity, as long as
life should continue her to him as a
wife. If any fool does not under
stand the sense, and duty and pleas
ure of this, upon the naked sugges
tion, he would not understand the
argument in support of it, and I
therefore pretermit it.
He would try, in an humble,
modest way, to do the will of God,
and in his relations to all men, lov
ingly to “work righteousness.”
Hj? would by some honest means
—for cash or credit—by purchase,
gift or inheritance, own a “tract”
of land in Georgia, or threequar-
ter sections in Alabama—not less
than two hundred and forty. Here
he wouls fix his earthly home for
the whole term of his natural life,
and, having plain, substantial
houses, and commodious out houses
and shelters, with one hundred and
fifty acres of open land, besides or
chards, garden, patches, lots,etc., he
would begin to cultivate his farm.
This farm he would divide into
three equal fields, of fifty acres each
and eight hands, and give them
four good mules and a yoke of oxen
to cultivate it with.
Fie would plant one thousand
walnut trees. Twenty or thirty
years hence, their yield of nuts and
timber would be worth a large
sum.
He would plant five acres in fig
trees, and learn how to dry, pre
serve, and pack the figs into boxes
for market. After a few years, the
proceeds would be a profit of a
thousand dollars annually.
He would plant five acres in
scuppernong grape vines. In a
few years the wine would be worth
several thousand dollars annually.
He would cultivate five acres in
sugar cane, and manufacture his
own syrup and molasses, and a
little surplus.
He would cultivate five, acres of
cabbage with the plow, and use
them in making slops for milk cows
and to fatten hogs. This, with plen
ty of turnips, sweet potatoes (none
are half equal to the yam) and hay,
would always secure milk and but
ter in abundance.
He would cut his ditches on a
perfect level, draw the dirt on the
upperside, fill up low places, use
the ditches for guide rows and to
protect the bottoms from inunda
tion, and he wonld manure the hill
tops.
He would manufacture ten tons
of compost, at a cost of not more
than one ton of guano, or any pop
ular superphosphate, possessing in
value to crop and soil, twice the
value of the single ton of commer
cial manure. In another article he
will tell something about how to do
this.
He would read the Bible, pray
and play with the children com
fort and encourage his wife, be
just and liberal to his laborers,
avoid political prejudices and the
bitterness of party strife, and as to
the corrupting, demoralizing
diabolism, of religious sectarianism
he would try to forget that human
nature is capable of it.
Cremation.
Southern Asia the original home
of cremation, is also the region
where it is celebrated with the
greatest pomp and splendor. In
Siam, when any famous mania cre
mated, a magnificently decorated
building is erected specially for the
occasions, and vast sums are ex
pended ill making the whole spec
tacle as georgeous as possible. The
ceremonies observed at the crema
tion of the late Regent of Siam may
serve as a fair specimen of those
customary op such occasions. Im
mediately upon his death, in
March, 1883, his remains were in
closed in a vast urn of costly mate
rial, several yards in height, which
was placed in a large room opening
upon the courtyard of his palace,
whicR stands on a creek flowing in
to the river that traverses the cap
ital. Bands of native priests, re
lieving each other in turn, kept re
peating prayer night and day in
the death chamber, around which
were displayed all the orders ancl
decorations by the (Jead man In his
lifetime. Twelve months after his
death the urn and its contents were
carried in state to ft Kind of temple
created for the purpose, where the
cremation was performed in the
presence of thousands of spectators
Including the King himself and his
entire court.
Clippings For The Curious.
The silk worm will eat only mul
berry leaves, and if they are wet he
loses his appetite.
A horse wearing shoes weighing
sixteen pounds, in the course of a
mile lifts 24,000 pounds.
A druggist states that there are
many people who become as infat
uated with ether as others are with
gin, brandy, whiskey or wine.
San Francisco has a Chinese doc
tor whose income nets him $70,000
’a year. He is a druggist as well as
physician, and as the drugs are all
imported by him from China his
profits are enormous.
According to Pliny, there is an
Indian plantcalled Achgemenis, the
root of which, when made into lo
zenges, and swallowed in wine du
ring the day, torments the guilty
all night, and constrains them to
confess their crime.
Among fishes there is one called
the sharpshooter. He has a long sy
ringe ont of which he shoots a few
drops of water at flies and gnats
tha lie peacefu lly on the green ver
dure. Deliberately he loads his
gun and fires, and if he misses his
aim he shamefacedly crawls back
into the mud.
Some letters of Horace Walpole
just published for the first time,
give strange pictures of the Lon
don of his day. A” favorite morn
ing diversion was to pass under the
heads of newly hung criminals at
Temple Bar, where people made a
trade of letting spy-glasses at a half
penny a look. Another fashionable
amusement was seeing prisoners
flogged at Bridewell Hospital,
where men and woman w'ere
brought one by one to the whip
ping post.
A French periodical, La Culture
gives the following simple method
for testing the purity of water. In
an ordinary quart bottle, three parts
filled with water dissolve a spoon
ful of pure white sugar, cork it well
and put it in a warm place. If at end
forty-eight hours the water becomes
turbid and milky there can be no
doubt of its impurity, but if it re
main limpid it may be considered
safely drinkable.
Ther is a wasp that lives in sand
burrows, the only animal except the
horse that sleeps standing. It
catches spiders, caterpillars and
butterflies, but instead of eating
them once paralyzes them by a
blow in the neck and drags them
to his little hole in the sand. You
may select his food and place it
before his hole, and he absolutely
refuses to touch it. The choicest
morsel he indignantly rejects if
presented in the way of alms or
8’Uts.
Puff Seekers.
A country editor urges his breth
ren to “bounce the puff-seekers.”
This would be a step in the right di
rection, and give the colonels a long
peaceful rest. A gentleman is suffi
ciently honored by the oldfashion
title of “Mr.” The puffery and
snobbery complained of is by no
means confined to the country press,
many city dailies bear their full
share of the blame. If all the dis
tinguished military heroes, all the
rare and radiant belles of the'“beau-
tiful and accomplished” type, all
the “able and eloquent” orators,
and “brilliant” statesmen and pa
triots who crowd the columns of
the country newspapers could be
gathered into one company, they
would form an assemblage so dis
tinguished as to throw all the fa
mous soldiers, sages and beauties
of the world’s history into oblivion.
But the evil alluded to is too ri
diculous for serious discussion. It
is not a part of journalism, but
merely one of its blemishes.
Senator Thomas F, Bayard is
the fourth member of the family of
Bayards to serve in the United
States Senate. James Asheton
Bayard, grandfather of Thomas F.,
was elected from Delaware to the
Senate in 1805 as a Federalist and
served until 1814. The son. and
namesake of this man—the father
of Thomas F.—was elected Senator
in 1851, and served until 1863. Rich
ard H. Bayard, the uncle of Thom
as F,j served nine years in the Sen
ate—from 1836 to 1845. Thomas F.
Bayard has been a Senator con
tinuously since 1869.
The Maine Farmer says that the
present improved process of getting
the flour from the hran lessens the
value of bran^for feeding purposes
as much as they have improved the
flour.
Scandal, when it has truth in it, is
like a grease spot on new cloth, but
when there is no truth in it, it is
like a splash of mud, which will
come off easily when dry.
From the Savannah Morning News.
Lithographic Art in Savannah.
The new lithographic press which
has just been erected in the Morn
ing News Steam Printing House
deserves notice from its being the
only press of the kind in the South
and the largest size in use. In ad
dition to the many perfecting ar
rangements used on other machines
the Campbell Printing Press and
Manufacturing Company have ad
ded many improvements of their
own, which make it a splendid
and almost perfect piece of
mechanism. Its register is so accu
rate that the most elaborate work
in any number of colors can be
printed with the utmost, precision.
This is truly remarkable for so
large a machine, and would have
been considered an Impossibility a
few years back before steam pow
er was adjusted to this kind of work.
If Sennefelder, the father of the
art, could come amongst us once
more he M ould be agreeab’y sur
prised at the immense increase and
M’ouderful resources of .his discov
ery; at the time he first printed
from stone, we are told that he
could only take impression 10 or 12
inches square and used a vertical
pressure of many tons which as of
ten as not smashed? the stones in
stead of printing from them. This
press takes a stone 32 by 46 inches,
and enables ; from 2 to 100 copies
(according to size) of a piece of
work to be printed at one impress
ion thus reducing the cost of pro
duction to a minimum. The mam
moth and complicated machine
M’eighs nearly eight tons, but runs
as smoothly and almost as noise
lessly as the useful and udiquitous
sewing machine. Although the
Morning News Steam Printing
House has always considered itself
in a position to handle any quanti
ty of color or commercial M r ork
that might be entrusted to it, this
new machine trebles its facilities,
and it is not claiming too much
M hen it says it could do all the
lithographic w r ork required by
Georgia., South Carolina, Florida
and Alabama.
The Morning News managemeut
M’ill be happy to show this press
and its other facilities for printing,
book binding, etc., to any of its
friends and patrons who M’ill favor
the establishment with a visit.
Walterson’s Photograph of Blaine.
Mr. Blaine is the type of all that
is bad and all that is bold in the
party of which for years the real, he
is now both the actual and the nom
inal chief. He is a man, a&itisa
party, without conviction and with
out restraint. He is a man, as it is a
party, thoroughly unprincipled, ag
gressive, revengeful and flexible.
He is a man, as it is a party, of a
varied, many-colored woof, capable
of extreme generosity and brutal
selfishness, ‘all things by turns and
nothing long.” In the middle ages
he floruished as a memberjof the
Condotteri. There was a time M hen
in Spain he went by the name of
“Gil Bias,” and he is still remem
bered in Italy as “Fra Diavolo.” In
his veins courses the lightning
blood of the Arabs. In his person
ality, he is a cross between a Cor
sican and a Yankee. All that is
emotional in the republican charac
ter, all that is domineering in repub
lican instincts, all that is grasping
and conscienceless in republican
aims and methods is fittingly and
fully reproduced in this briiliant ad
venturer, who has aroused within
the bosom of his political associates,
despite the danger, a species of
blind adoration and forced from
unwilling and frightened rivals
their submission and homage.
The Boston Herald, one of the
ablest of the bolting Independent
journals, says: “The objec
tion to Mr. Blaine is that he is an
unprincipled and dangerous dema
gogue, M’ho represents in an emi-
inept degree, the aims and methods
in government and in politics
which the conscientious voters are
determined to have reformed. The
party deliberately challenged the
fealty of its best members, and re
buffed the Independents, when it
nominated him. It must now pay
the penalty of its indiscretion and
‘audacit.y.’ ” The leading Inde
pendent Republican papers ail over
the country are, if possible, more
outspoken than the Democratic
press in denouncing Blaine and his
antecedents, and their influence is
potential not only with thousands
of Republicans, but with the large
number of independent voters who
are rather inclined to the Republi
can side.
Orme the Atlanta ticket agent,
who shot himself not long ago is
getting well.
NO. 33.
CARROLL FREE PRESS.
PUBLISEED EYEBY FEU) 1Y.
EDWIN R. SHARPE, Publisher.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One copy one year.
One copy six mondis,
One copy three months
club rates:
Ten copies one year,
Twenty copies one year,
PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS CARDS
IDIEt. I. InT. CHENE?
Would inform his friends and the public
generally that lie is still in the practice
of medicine. Special alien t-on given to
chronic diseases. Office Carrollton Ho
tel.
TOSEPII L. COBB. F£LxX N. COBB*
COBB & COLB,
Attorneys and Counsello.s at Law.
CARROLLTON; GEORGIA.
Prompt attention given to all bus*
iuess intrusted to us. Collections a spe*
„“ialty. Office in court house.
Dr. J. W. HALLUM,
CARROLLTON - - - - GEORGIA.
Has his office, in number 2, Mande-
ville brick building. He makes a specialty
of OSTETRICS and DISEASES OF
WOMEN and CHILDREN. Call on
him. Consultation free.
rTc mTdaniel,
DDiEnSTTIST,
CARROLLTON, - GRAT
IS now inserting full sets of 28 teeth for
§20, half set 14 ^eetli, $10. Partial sets
and fillings cheap in proporton. Satis
faction guaranteed in every case. Office
in Mancleville building.
XXEt. J. F. COLE,
CARROLLTON; GA.
Is devoting most of his 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.
ggg 3 ’* Rates : $2,00 Per Day.
M. L. HARNETT.
81.25
65
40
$10.00
$20.00
JOFIN B. STEWART
Wishes to say to the public that he is
still prepared to do all kiuds of
PH0T0GBAHDTG and FEEE0TYPING
in the latest style and at reasonable pri
ces. Also keeps on hand a fair stock of
Frames, Cases, Albums, Etc.
Copying and enlarging a specialty—
can make all sizes from locket to SxlO
inches. Remember that two dollars M ill
buy a fine, large picture framed ready
for your parlor, at my gallery, New nan
street, Carrollton, Ga.
MILLINER Y.
MRS. M. A. WILSON
!R.ecently of LaGrange, having located
in Carrollton for the purpose of engaging
in the millinery business, asks a share of
public patronage.
IsTDEW GOOIDS.
Her stock, a part of Mhich 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.
n AT Tbfor the working class. Send
U’UJ-lUlO cents for postage, and we
Mill mail you free, a royal, valuable box
of sample goods that will put you in the
way of making more money in a fen* days
than you ever thought possible at any
business. Capital not required. We will
start you. You can work all the time or
in spare time only. The work is univer-
sally adapted to both sexes, young and
old. You can easily earn from 50 cents
to $5 every evening. That all M'lio want
M'ork may test the business, we make
this unparrelled offer; to all M'ho are not
well satisfied we M ill send $1 to pay for
the trouble of writing to us. Full par-
tieulars, directions, etc., sent free. For
tunes M ill be made by those who give
then- whole time to the work. Great suc
cess absolutely sure. Dont delay. Start
noM*. Address Stinson & Co., 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 hi the present
day. The reuting out of lands and the
collection of rentals in kind, or other
wise, constitutes a part of the business
of the agency, as well as the collection
of claims and adjustment of over due pa
per. Executors, guardians, trustees, and
all M'ho occupy fiduciary relations, will
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 offer my services to the public
M'ith confidence, and I promise only a
reasonable charge for services rendered
Office M-ith S E Grow, Esq , in the Court
House. SEABORN N JONES,
Attorney At Law
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