The Lumpkin independent. (Lumpkin, Ga.) 1872-1924, September 08, 1883, Image 1

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THE LUMPKIN INDEPENDENT. By BENJAMIN W. KEY. • VOL. - hr ^mUprmcrt. e PoV.ish.ed every Satuxlaj iiorning II v BENJAMIN v. KEY. r E II »i S : > 1. V10AK ....... #1.50. x MtW'i'lIAi..... "T-rU.'. iau* toils. e E. G. SIMMONS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, AMElUCGu. GA. Will pra -lice in all the counties oi his Judicial Circuit, iu the Supreme Court of the State ot Georgia, and in tin District Court of die Unite t Slates, and in aH other courts In spcciul.c utaact juu2:i-81. B- F- HARRELL Attorney at Law and 0 8. (uinmissioner. Will practice in all the Courts of tho Chat tfth <x'hce ru< 1 Sonth Western Circuits aud Ai any Court in rieergia «nd Alabania. Ad¬ vice to tdministratois, l ie uo.rs aud Guar dmtiK. ijouvcyamiug and Collections a soeciftlty. .pijice.ni.er Q. A- Hnd.jl A Co... No. lib Bread StrAt, COLUMIU’S. GA f*p2:t-1882 WKLLB01LN F. CLAliK?, Attorney at l.a\v, Lumpkin, Georgia. Will practice in Stewart County. Special attention given to collections. Lumpkin, Ga., May 5. 1883. L LON i 1)1* Mr LI-STEI?. Attorney at Law, Cusseta* Georgia Will practice in the Courts of the Cbattabo >cbee Cirrort anti in Steve art Superior Court. Spt cial atten¬ tion given to collections. Cusst ta* Ga.. May 6, 18 3 MEDICAL CARD. e J-1- A F- CAR'I EU, llirvmg iissarifttaii thsmselv#*. itgeUWr in the pruatia# of Medicuie in its vitrieos htnuahei* rrvyoit full solicit Ine patronage ot all. Tile sonic- partner of tli# above firm feels gn et.il to tha public (or their liberal patronage m Mi# past and ask that it be cont nued. ’■ A. GAMMLLL l’liORItl f.TO It OF BROAD STREET STABLES. 170, 178 and 180 Broad Street, CTM.T1BUS, GA. I wil keep ou hna«I during the season a splendid lot y>f h»r\t s and mules to suoplv the trade. Parties desiring stock will find ii to their iu e»t lo give me n call. Dec lfit h-1882 6m. MONZY LOANED, AT 8 PEfl CtNiT# riECURIDBY MGRTGAGEsGN FAEMH EXPi NS Eg £ GUT. FOR PARI ICULARS CALL ON It. F. WATTS May 26H.-1883 FEEE INSURAN 02 , Insure your dwellingN, Fnrnitnre, Merebaudist. Gin Hon«ee, and other . property. None bat first class Com panics represented; Rate* low. J. B. Richabdson, Agent. . ftepf. 2k»b*l881.tf $72 iS£jr&5Js!7^:t LW« tbepuUw k#u Capital not needed We will BWSMSS:^; start yott womeu, boys amlgirls No on* tail to maL'caormoua olltl o™^ lmv ♦n Wg ing Money ftroaco •rigi. taw. Address msclo True last, Co., fiasily, Augusta, and jt Maine. Mux 24tb-iS8J-tf. LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1883. THE BAD BOY PUTS UP A ‘ JuBCNEISPA ASDMA. ‘Hello,’ said the pincers limn to the bai? boy, as he eattu-in looking sick at heart, and ail broke up, *U«w is your muscle this morning ?’ ‘Ail right (Hough,- said the b j\ wi 4 h a look of inquiry, as though wondering what was coining next, •wu, ?• •On, nothing inly I was going to griud th. hatchet, and some kuiv-'S and things, this morning, aud I nought maybe you would like to go out in the shed and turn the grind stone for me, to develov yunr inns cies. * luining u griudstoue is lit healthiest th ug a boy call do.’ That is all right ettongh,’ said the bad bo',as lie took up a sweet crack er, ‘but please tul e a good look at ine. Do I i«.)i: lik - a grindstone boy? D.»] re.-ciwbie a good liu'e Ivy that c..a't ‘no end goes i IF and lur s a g imlstoiie half a da ' f. r some i d d'lflit, w ho |i i.'n him by g.ving him a liutiillul ( f gfi en currants, .or tell ing him ho will b- a ntau some day, and th. boy goes . IF one ">iv, wi (•me back, while the good man goes the other way, with a sharp scythe, and a ibu.-kie at the softness of the buy ? You arc mistaken in rue I have passed he grindstone period, and you wii. have to pick up aiiotln r sard me baa u< v« v done encuiur work. Not any grindstone for Ht u ilcry, if you plcnsc ’ 'You arc getting too smart,’said i lie gr- ci ty mau.au he charged a pound of sweet crackers to the boy’s faticr. ’Y u don't have to turn tlie gr ids one if you di.p't want to ’ That's wlmt I thought,' says the boy as he takes a handful of lim ber rios. ‘You grindstone sharps, who are always laying for a fool boy to give i -.ffy to, a ul get him to break Ins back, don't play it fine enough. You la-ar mi too hiir-i ou the gnu 1 s'ciie. I have nan tin- time \\’nn a man c ou id get me to turn i griid . (in-- for him till tin cows come (i-me, bj making me be’i ve it was fun, and by t« Hiug mo bo rr n-r sow u boy that, seemed to throw so much mho intr grindstone as did, but I bi 0 fouud that such men are hypo J ciits. They inveigle a b..j iuto thur ] tiesf. like the spider does the fly, and at first they d( n’t lieiir on bald, but jiisl let thp blade of the nxe or set tile • one!' thi grindstone, and they make a hoy believe he i- a bigger Ulan than o’.d Grant. I he , bet Inin be will get tiled, and lie bets that lie can turn a grindstone as long as any¬ body, and "lien the boy has got ms reputation at stake, then they begin j to bear on hard and tbe boy gets tir I e 1, but he holds out, and when the are ground le .Wye be : s as fresh . as a daisy, when be in tired , enough to dit. Such ttiejj do more to teach boys the hollowness of the ! world and its tricky features than ttnyfliing, aad .hey fetch hoys to know who arc foes. No; sir, the beet war is to hire a grown person to turn the grindstone. I remember I turn-. ed a grindstone four hours for a far mer once, and when I got through lie bh id I could go to tbe spring und drink all the water I wanted f„r nothing. He was I he tightest rn .n ! I ever saw. Why tight ! That man was tight enough to lpild kerosene.’ That’s all right. Who wanted you lo turn grindstone, anyway ? But what is it about you pa and m i being fHined out of the church ? I hear that they si-andihze l themselves b rnbly last Sunday.’ ‘WU vousee V me and f mv { chum b , nt llt K,nd‘v j b .“T think 1 .ft S y t Z*U 1 Nh Ml M -t M Z Zti forworkuoonSuxdav L Yn iL see it ev didn’t to m, ehn’ houdi y because mas new bonnet badn come, and Monday and lues day it rained, aud tbe rest of the week was so muddy no one called, ^ ^ “bd out early and got th*. daily paper, and on Tuesday ..Kbo^ my chtira be h' ot (to paper , ^ ^ watched when they were reading it but they did not notice the date. «*»,„„ ^ bon w, ” ^ouesday we j ut Tuf.s lay paper off tbe steps and ^a said t bat A Weekly Newspaper, Published ia the Political. Social and Agricultural Interests of Stewart County. it w-na I mote than T^esJuv but m i she got the paper of the day be f <re and looked atr the date and said i se-uvidso to her but she guessed t’lry trad lost a day somehow. Tburs day ws got Wednesday's paper on the steps, and Friday we rung in i Thursday‘s pnpet, nod Saturday my j chum be got Friday’s paper on the steps, and wa said she guessed she] would wssh to-morrow aud pa sai 1 ! he believed he would hoe in the gar deii and get the weeds out no it would look better to folks when the' went by Sunday to church. Well, Sunday morning came aud with it j Saturday’s daily paper, aud pa glunc ed it over as hi pot on his overalls aud wmt out iu hu shirt sleeves a hoeing, in the; front garden. Ami] and my chum helped mu carry water to wash. She said it seemed like tho o ig*-st week she ever saw but wliin w« brought tho oft er, and took a pmte ot pickles to the hired girl that was down with the muims, we got in the bushes and waited f r ti e cur tam to rise. It wasn’t long before folks began to g . to church and you’d dole laughing to see them all stop in front of whets ma was washing and look tv h r, and then go on to where pa was hotting weeds and stop and look at him, and then drive on. After about a dozen teams had pass¬ ed I beard ma ask pa if he kn w who is dead, as there must he a funeral somewhere Pa had just hoed into a bumble bee’s nest, and said lie did uot know of,any that was dead, but knew some that might to lx-, and ma shv did not ask any foolish questions any more. After about twenty teams had stopped, m i she got nervous and ask -d I) aeon Smith if he sav. any¬ thing green; lie said «>mething ub'..ut d •seeru’iou and drove away. Dea¬ con Brow n asked pa if he did not ibink he was setting ;i bad exmcple bi-tore his boy,but pa said lie thought li would be a food one if the boy could oid> be hired to do it. Final ty ma got ma t and t( ok the tub b' - hind the house where they couM not sec her. About 4 ’’clock that after noon we saw a d*..Z"U of oui congre gution headed by the minister tile in to our yard and mv chum and I knew it was time to fly, so we got ou lll, ‘ hack steps where we could Hear Pa met them at the dcor,- expecting some bad news, and when they, were seated, tint she came in and lemark ed it was a very nnb-aitiiy tear, and it s'ood pe.op'e in mrh«l to meet ihe.r l-.tter end. None of them sat d a word until the. elder put on his specs and said it was a solemn occasion,' and ma she turned pale and wonder et ^ wbo it coul j be and pa says, ‘H 1,1 't keep us in suspense ; wuo it dead?’ and the elder said no one was d-ad, t-ut they called as a duty they oweJ the emue to take action on lb m for working on unday. Ma »hd feinted away and they threw a pitcher of water down her back and p» sai l he guessed they were a pack of lunatics, but- they nil swore it was Sunday and they sav/ma washing * n<J l'« (,llt hoeing »« they went to I church, and they had called to take action os-them. Than the?e was a k w minutes low conversation I could not eutch, and then we henrd pa ki«k his : chair over and say it was more D - ^ks of that darned boy, then we knew it was time to a-'jouru and I’ was just getting through the buck | ft-ncc as pi reached me with a barrel stave and that’s what makes me limp some.’ That . was real , mean tn you boy>, . , said tbe grocery man. ’It wi.i be bird for yotvr pa and ma to explain that matter. Just think how bud they rnu.t feek’ ‘Ob. I don’t know. I remember bearing pa and Uncfe Ezra telling b « w «bey fooled their father once, ,ind « ot bi “ to go to mill on 8»nday and J,, pa said he would defy anybody \ tfJ hjm 0B the d ^ f t , )e etk £ ^ ^ # ^ ^ .. w |. . . y , df . uj f ° , [ b° om y ™ too* ettu a gla-« cutt r ot ano cider go, and auu went me «#«».*to blv .® efc eder, only « ecu s a glass, ltW t ' s P‘ ,UMT ** clri " k > oon T a j(j er i n o T was wade of sour apple*. —Peck' * Sm. ’ HE CAME ^ PAY. The editor »t with his head in his hands Amt Bis elbows at rent on hia kaees ; '• He was tired of (he am-incmaing On his time, and he panted for ease. Tbe clamor for ropy was .connd with h,lt “ ;r * "aitha , , dollar to The heart ot Emanuel Jones?’ Just then o- th# stairway a footstep was heard And a mp-a-tap load nt tho door, Aud the 11. ok wring hope that had long been deterred Blazed up like a beacon oi.ee more ; And there entered a man with a cynical smile That was fringed with a stubble of red, lYho remarked, as he tilted a sor.y old til# To the back of i n average head : ‘I have come here to pay’—Here the editor ■cried : ‘1 ou'ra as welcome as flowers in spring ! Sit down in this easy arm-chair by my side Aud excuse mo owh le while I bring A Unions do dashed with a little old wi e, And a dozen figure of tho best. * * * Ah ! here we are ! This, J assure you, is fine ; Help jour elf, most desirable guest.’ The visitor drank, with a relish, und amoi ed Till bps fa -e wore u satisfied glow. Aud the editor, beaming with merriment, joked In a joyous spontaneous flow ; Aud then, when the stack ot refreshments was gone, His p,u st took occasion to kr.y, In accents dis'orted somewhat by a yawn, •My errun 1 up here is to pay'— But the generous scribe, with a wave of the band, Tut a stop to the sp ech of his guest, Aud Brought iu a melon, tho finest ibe land Ever bore on its generous breast ; And the visitor, wealing a singular grin, Seize 1 the h avh st half of t o fruit, Aud the juice, a# it ran in u stream from his chin. Washed the mud of th# pike from his boot. Then, mopping his face nn a favorite sheet VI tell the scribe bail laid careful y by, The visitor lazily rose to his fett With the dmiriest kind of a sigh, And ho said, a. th# editnr sought his ad¬ dress In his books to discover hi. due ; ■I came here to pay—my respects to the press, And to borrow u dollar of you !’ — Ttfc Ordury. A Mother’s last Letter. Of the thousands who real in the Guz lte the report rf the Clarksville WXocut,OB8 • ,10ne <:,ln bave f, ’ r « oUen th “ t0uub,DK letter wriUeu to * 6wn « Tnumte’ Johnson a few days befor« a ' {ttt,, ‘ d,iy 11 Wttb from bi8 motb - •r, over whose humble homo brood ed the desolation ol the impending fate o, her son, who, though a blood¬ stained criminal iu the eyes cf tho law, was not less dear to her whose had looked upou him tor the last time. She had received his own letter, writes : ‘If I .could see you one time more, how glad I would be!’ ‘But’—and who cun depict the agony the simple worda cost their heart broken author !—‘My darling boy, the time is close at baud when you will know your doom YoQ asked me to forgive you.’ Ask such a moth¬ to forgive'her son—that mother who with streaming eyes replies : ‘Yes; my dear, if I could take your place I would do it.’ Who doas not believe this? Who doss not fowl that this poor woman would gladly have mounted the gallows that her boy might be snved-snd for what? To plunge once more in crime? What of that to her? ‘ • " 118 „ be not , ber ® 0n t( who;n , she wrote m her , sweet, stmple ’ ^ way^The ard 18 I ul1 of roses and other flow ’ lc would ,oob « O0<1 lf were bere> , B,U he w “ Uot tb Nev ‘ !re *’ ‘ W f be l ® b « there «gatn And bon * h tb ° entM f U,# y “ d a “ d dod tbo 8WG0t flow - ’ the cherries W , ,th *«'%'**» , had r.pened~‘the [though nicest you ever saw,' she writes not for a moment could tbe demon auguish gnawing a t thi* fond ■*©>«“•««"# 'But, d „ ar r canQot 011 ; oy aT , yt hino. You are never out of mv mind ’ No of death pthouc’i • . - v It . nfm—t vy- falotv. >io»tt»—no w mfier, even "in iu<u i uvful hour, he forgot hi« own doom , lud thought only of her. who « htr •» ho f k ****">*. ' sat . . 1 * 1 “ e ’ >*> asbos of a grief uuutteralile, of a de votion nntathmnable, and wept and graved and prayed ns only a mother can weep and grieve and pray I No wonder that he even pleaded that her last letter might be printed, that the world aright know how good and noble she wae, that the world might see her as she appeared to him,whose erraut. footsteps bad led him into crime, aud was breaking her bear! 1 'The childr i n all send their love to you. Johu is a good boy to work Galny and Nun have to work all Ou¬ tline. John does all the plowing. Lydia talks a g,eat deal about you. Maud grows some.’ How tender and 1 >ving ! Criminal, murderer, though he wds, that bereft household he Was ouly the absent -and loved one ; and in her grief the mother could thus write. She felt that hu would find consolation in their childish, affec¬ tionate reraembrauce. She could Ih’uk ... ot _ all „ tins , . and then add in words gt fttid y eloqueut iu their aim plimty, aud fi.ied with teudernoss and the agony of du.spair : ‘I want you- to write ma one more letter. This may be the last one 1 cun over write to you Don’t torget to pray, Jimmie. You knowhow well I love you, and I never got tired waiting ou you when you were sick. You don’t know how bad I felt when I heard you was sick and I could not be with you. Now, my darling boy, trust .in God and don’t grieve 'any more about, mo. E ly wan’s to write. All the love to you that a mother can have. Write my dear boy, if you can.’ Every iiue of this letter bus moist¬ ened eyes with tears. Every line appeals to the sweetest sympathies in human nature It is the very sub¬ limity of grief. It is the heart speak¬ ing. No one who did not feel as this humble, God-fearing woman felt could write as she wrote, in that last letter to the one btiug sh«" moBt fondly lovid—to the one being who least deserved a mother’s lore and prayers and tears. An Editorial Box. The r ffice o f the Milwaukee Jour¬ nal ia next door to an undertaker's .^tablisbment, and there is usually a coffi “ ^ on the sidewalk waiting to be used. It is related that a man came to the Journal office to have a fuss with the editor over something that mid been said in tlfe paper, and he was pretty mad when ho accosted tho general business mantfgcr, Mike Kraus. He spoke of desiring blood, und expressed a desire to gallop all over the manly frame of the editor and offered to chew a few reporters. Mr. Kraus stood iu the door, and pointing to the box on the sidewalk he said : ‘How would that St yotr T It may be a little small, but we have larger ones,’ aud calling the under taker, who was ou the sidewalk, Kr ius said : ‘Measure this man. please.’ The undertaker took out a tape-lino and came forward, and the man with the hot box, who was be ing measured for a cold box, began to fed small. Just then the editor Net man, came do wnet.ii*, and Mike said : ‘See ! ere, Neiman, here is a man in a hurry to whip somebody, ha^ a n I don’t know but you w, 11 to let me have that coffin that was made for the South o juiu Side mue man man, who wuo was going to cotpe in this afternoon to whip us. He can wait.' Neim.n looked at the man who wanted to fight and said to Mike : ’You must ,n! ‘ ke on « for tbis m8n - Tbe South SiJe man will U here at 4 o'c’ock and I make it a point never to die ll PP 0lnt a Neivnan,: turning to the man who had cornel for a fight, ‘couldn’t you get along J without a fight till Saturday? are a little mowded now,’ and man rested bis cane on the coffin! toft *to of “» be dtdn t want to fight, any bow,-but he di<! think that article in Si "ISA S \Y<ntt .i Terms $1.50 Per Annum. The Pl?l Polks. Not long sincere were at a olnb house where duck shooters Were sit¬ ting around the ,stove during the evening, smoking aud talking, and the bubject of tbe^troutment of some towurdsjpurents came up. Speakia of some person who had been unkind to lus father or mother, a young man who waa preseut, who has one of the grandest fathera.that a young man ev^r had, smoked a.moment in si¬ lence, his eyes flashing firs and then said, ‘I ll tell you boys, there ought to lie a hanging in this'eountry. A young man who illtreats his parents by word or deed, ought to be hung till he is dead ’ Our young friend may have expressed himself strong¬ ly, but his remark ? will find au echo in many an honest heart. The man who can treat bis old father and mother in any manner that will cause their hearts to feel tired, has got something wrong about him. Old people should constantly bt made to feel that they are distin gu ; 8Ued gUPste llBll c y e ry care that it is possible to lift from them by * son should be lifted willingly, and with a 'eeling that he is.doing it as he would play when he wa«|a child. It should be a pleasnre. When the fathers and mothers become so old that they cannot take as active a part in the affairs of life as they'once could, they should fe«i*tbat their children^are not anxious for,them to di», but auxious. to have them live a long time without pain or care und be happy all the time. The specta cle of an oid muu.or Woman, even with no relative on earth, in fi poor house, is sad enough, but to see an 1! fat!:* ■ and mother in Is • , who have worked hard^luriug a iwug life, in a poor house, wh«m eons aud daughters are living iu luxury, is enough to make cue think of a vigi¬ lance cutmnine*.—Peck V Sun. mm Sunny Thoughts. Willy sayings are as easily lest as the pearls slipping off a broken string, but a word of kindness is seldom spoken in vain. Jt is a seed which, even when,dropped by chance springs np a flower. Life is too short to be worrying an to who likes you and who does wot Press on through the shadows that hang over these low grounds to the bright moutitaiu tops over youder, where job will not have an enemy. Sometimes God guruers th* dew of Hf 0 , hold* tiny precious drop* m rP g e ry e to form some sudden shower uf nu . rcy , whicll „hull save from utter i mrrentl es8 the parched, arid soul iu itB B , a8on of burning need. --- m i n 10 ™ dues not remain full even ^ oi ' 24 hours At the moment when the whole of the hemisphere ot the moi p which is turned toward the “ art h is illuminated by the sun the UCOf,n is said to be full. Obviously t ‘b* 8 P llase niust be of very brief da ration, jast as it is 12 o’clock only at instant when the hour and min ute hands are together poised over ^2 o’clock mark on this dial. “ T"’’*'*'*' ** 1,J , ,--. *>, “ * ™ " ee ® ct of eburcb w ° rk - 0 bn «w a br .° tber who >s clerk of two courts f f “ PapCr Clerk ° f / b0tt, ; do/ fiU P e |’ v * 80r8 flu ; 8 U80 u, P a ,IC ’ < * ? P,n ‘ ed f generally. And yst £* *. ^ 7 , “ ^ ^ ln tbe pT8y,r the / mae titi£rs lurch and onterprJ* do his nnrt nlwavs in i Lm ove r y ^ ‘ ~BM F ' Va -—■* — A lady says her husband will sit! \ on a barbed wire fence all tbe after noon to see a base bad match and | «•«« never to move church a muscle, he cau’t but sit in when cusl be j J a . iornd pe v for fifteen minutes with-J but wiggling all over the seat his position fort, times. j ~T~’ "* 1 •" .,--- A . heolch a P #r ' ,ou s '* ul «»m<«rh»t ••to-H-Dj-«* tort *a.tor, »tot b« pat an enemy ui ins mouth to steal away his brains, but that Ibe ‘toruush » oJ pro- 1 --- jeatinot A titlicr ■©t ( conscion- - NO. 29. ■ W. II. WILLIUS, Assignee of A. T. FORT We have still on hand n good stoek of General Merchandise, consisting of Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing, Hats, Boots, Shoes, Etc. SILK AND SATIN GOODS FOB . TRIMMING. TABLE LINEN, TOWELS. ElO ^©-Examine oar goods before buy* ing elsewhere. IN DRESS GOODUJ We offer Black & Cojpred Cashmeres Alpaca other D <r«t ruble Fabrics, at low prices. Our figures run from 8 to 28 cents per yard for the cheap¬ er Drees Goods. Hosiery, Hoop 8birts, Notions, Trim# miuga, Hamburgs, Laces, Buttons,. CLOTHING. To close onr Ready Made Clothing we offer great inducomenta ia this lire. - nits formetly sold at $*25 now offered at ISO*. A full line of othef kinds of Clothing at proportionate} priyea. TICKINGS For Feather Beds aud Matt ressefi, Extra Quality at low figures. BOOTS att<l BiHOES At Rock Bottom Prices. A Splendid lot of Boots and Shoes. Good mat* rial and well made in every respect. HARDWARE, A good assortment that musk Ihs sold that mnst be sold and you will find it to your interest to see ©a* 1 goods and prices. In offering Crockery we put Cup# and Saucers *t 25 cents per set an l other things in proportion. A few Jugs .vet left. Y’uiegar and Syrup at the Lowest Market Prices. \ W. II. WILLIAMS, Assignee of A. T. Fokt. Jnly let, 1883. W.S. GILLIS, 1'KAI.KJI IS FAMILY GROCERIES. Plantation Supplies/ Country Produce Etc • # South Sid* Publio Squares Lumpkin, Ga. JaD, 1,1883, TY IVTjU UkT not, and life dure is sweeping hot by, Ijgo die X ore you sonu tains mighty and sublime leave h hind to conquer time. SCO n. week in yoae rnni town. $l> outfit ire*. No ri-U. Every¬ thing furnish new. yon iwerythingi Capital «oi r»qgjf*d, JJany nre makin wiu- j' 4 fortunes I^.diiis mats ns much as men, and hoys j'oii and giiis bnsinefs make great' pay. tiaa-i «r, if w nt at which you erfn mat e great jaiy all tho time, write for par¬ ticulars to ii. ItaxctTl A Ou., Portkou', Maine. Alar. 3#th-18)M-tf. GIN AEGNCY! undersigned CfWnNIAL is Agent for th* Celebrated GIN and the DANIEL PRATT GIN. Parties wishing tobuy a Gin will* find it their interest to call upon inn a. Lumpkin before going elsewhere. For terns or any information apply to ».’& EYERETr Agenr. Lumrkin. Ga., June 9, 1883. W AkJ.Ljto T Rt>* P iacr l. are *»w,vrtm tbrir eamiap TV! t >aw «*d in tia* become wwl».y ;thm» who «t, tSL/Sl numov. We waut many met*, women, bov# uS to ltt th tJ rwn 5?'^ tttSSRIli 1 ’" a .•.'©«•«• /jgjfll f ' r ‘J (ivsiw H-rJ Wa*