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Hy J. Ii. & A. W. LAT3MEU.
VOL. Nil.
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fist gtuUvnubtit.
.-•D bUfchec. every Saturday Morning
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any time upon presentation afUi
find appearance of advertisement.
Address all letters to Tiie I.cj max Jsius
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LAW CiRDS
!?!!!?
T. D. Hiuqht. wsb, F. A. Bumi
HIGHTOWER k Him
Attorneys at Law, '
• Lumpkin, Georgia
Jun. 1, 1884.
WELLBORN F. ( LA 11 UK,
Attorney at l aw,
Lumpkin, Georgia.
Will practice iu Stewart Com tv.
Special attention given to collections
Lumpkin, Ga., May 5. 1888.
E. G. SIMMONS
A 1 TO !l N EY AT L AW,
americub, ga.
Will practice in all theconnt'es o
This Judicial Circuit, in the Supreme
Court of the State of Georgia, and
in the District Court- of -he United
Slates, and in all other court-, by
special .contract. j illy 25-81.
1EEDI3A L QAKD 3-__
W. A. GREGORY,
Physician & Surgeon,
Lumpkin, Georgia.
Oct.-20-ly
J. E. &. W. P. CARTE!*,
Practicing Physicians,
LUMPKIN, - GEORGIA.
Office South Side Public Squaie
Oct 20 ly
i. A. THORNTON J1L,
Practical Dentist,
LUMPKiJf,
Will do all kinds of Dental Work
in a mat and fulbtantia man nor.
Oct.23-ly.
LU31PKIN MUHSCHOO]
The Session »f 1883 84 w i'l open
on Monday, 10: h of September. The
Principal earnestly solicits a liberal
pntromtge from Lumpkin and Stew
art and adjoining counties. You can
not find a better school in South
West Georgia. Terms as heretofore.
Board iu good families at satisfacto¬
ry rates.
J. F. TATE,.Principal.
Sept. 8tf
$100 DOLLARS A WEI!
Wo can guarantee the above amount to
good, active, energetic
AGENTS!
Ladies ns well tin gentlemen, m.-!:o a success
in the busings. Very little capital li qun ed.
We have a hou.-choM artiela as salable as
Hour.
It Sells itself.
It is used every day ia the aerif-s. family. 'There You do
net need to explain its is a
rico Xumrait for all who embrace tins go:duo
opportunity. It cv>sts only one cent to
K-uni wi;ut our busiu i*. J5uy u postal
«utu uuR write to nj* uun .ve viii send you
our prospuetUf* as <1 full |uiniculurs
FREE!
And we know Ten will -derive more pood
than muBBfiurturing yua haveauy i.iea of. Our r. putution
im » rimipuny is sueh
we can u*t afford to decisive. W rite, lo us on
a receive postal lull and particulars. give your address plainly and
r BUCKEYEM’F’GCO.
Jlurion, Ohio
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, FEBRUARY 16, 1884.
BISHOP PIERCE.
On Monday last wan celebrated
the golden wedding of Bishop
(h'or<r<! F. Pierce, one of H.>e.njj$t
notable figures in our*local history.
The celebration took place at the res
idenccofhis son, in Sparta,where lhs
kindred and friends assembled to of¬
fer him and his devoted wife their
sincere congratulations. The people
of Georgia, and indeed of the whole
South, irrespective of denomination¬
al lines, unite in their congratula¬
tions Mid good wishes, and pray that
the eloquent divine and his compan¬
ion may he vouchsafed many more
years of life and usefulness.
Bishop Pierce was born in Green
comity,in this State. Febonry 3,1811.
He was gratnaterl at Franklin Col¬
lege), Athens, in lh29, and afterward
began the study of the law, but sub¬
sequently .changed his mind, and
was admitted on trial into the Co r
gia conference in tins city in 1>31.
With the exception of the year 1834,
when lie preached in Charleston,
8 C, lie devoted himself to ministe¬
rial work in Georgia, until 1830,
when be was made President of Wes
leyun Fi-m tie College in Macon. Din¬
ing his stay here he edited with Mr.
Pendleton, the Southern Ladj's Hook
a publication which our older rend
ers will re' if. He wa-> chosen Pres¬
ident u f "jiuuij ih.iliege in 18-4 , and
nel I that position until he was elect
ed bishop at the general, con erenee
held in Co.umbus, Ga , in 1854 For
some thirty years now he has held
the great office of bishop, and has
borne aloft the banner of the church
with dignity, ability and unflagging
zeal and courage.
Our eutciprising contemporary,
the Atlanta Con si Hut ion, published
an interview with Bishop Pierce,
from which we bt-g to make ( lie or
i«u extracts, and to call the atten¬
tion of thoughtful lueii io Ins ul..fi¬
ance. The Bishop say s;
‘The uegrus are entitled to elcim n
titry education the same as the whites
trorii the hands of the Sfia'e. It is
the duty of the church to improve
the colored ministry, but rather by
theological training than by literary
education. In luv judgment high¬
er educated so ca'led, would he a
positive calamity to the negroes. It
would increase the friction between
the races, producing endless strifes,
elevate n-rrro aspirations far above
the station he was created to fill, and
resolve the whole race into a polift
cat faction full of strife, mischief and
turbulence. Negroes ought to be
taught that the respect of the white
race can only be attained by good
character and conduct. Their well
doing and well-being all right mind¬
ed citizens desire, and would rejoice
in. Agriculture and all mechanical
pin suits are open to them, and in
them they might find lnciativc em¬
ployment. Iu these directions they
might support their fiimi’ies, get
property and became valuable citi¬
zen. If negroes were educated, in
i-r mnrnage in tirno would breed
trouble, but of this I see no tenden¬
cy now. My conviction is that ne¬
groes have no right in juries, !<-gis
latui'fcs, u- in public offices. Right,
involves character and qualification
The appointment, of any colored
intiii to i.flica by the government is
an insult to the Southern people,
and-provokes conflict and dissatitfac
lion, when, i f left as they ought to
he, ill their natural sphere, there
would be quiet, and good order.
The whites can never tamely and
without protest submit to the intru
sion of colored men into places of
trust and profit and responsibility
There never can be stability ami
good order except when intelligence
and virtnro preside and direct the
affairs of the country The negro
onght to bt protected in till his right
property by t h« righteous udminis
of the laws. He is entitled to
•
■
Fespecfc and kind . cousideratioD . ft!l
in
hjg i nibuitB untl wants, while be him
self is iudu. irious ami upright and
well behaved.’
The remarks of the Bishop on Mor
ale equally striking. The
i-u-«r «v«
-
‘I explained to the Bishop tho pro¬
visions of the Cullom bill, now be
fore the Senate, which proposes tho
A Weekly*Newspaper, Published ia the Political, Social and Agricultural Interests cf Stewart County.
abolition of the Territory of Utah, its
government by a commission which
should enforce the law, and the re¬
markable attitude of 'deflator Brown
who would allow Mormonism loshield
itself under the cloak of religon,
which would defy interference, and
which the Senator would only attack
through an open Bible.’ To all this
Bishop Pierce listened with interest
and said:
‘Mormonism can never bo reached
through legislation. It must be reach
ed for the crime thut.it is by the
strong arm of justice. Bigamy is
just as foul in Utah as it is in Geor¬
gia, aud a bigamist should not re
cieve any more consideration in oue
place than the other. Abolish the
Territory. That Congress line a
right, to do. It iv only wLen it be
comes a State that it can tube its
place as a soverign community. Bui
a commission of deto mined and dis¬
creet men an charge of the Terri to
rv. Punish sius of impurity just as
they are punished all over the Chris¬
tian world. Aim the commission
with plenary authority. Missionary
effort might very properly- aid the
secular authorities, hut one tiling
should not be lost eight of, and that
is that the evil must not be merely
talked about, but extirpated.’
The Bishop does not, it, will be
seen, concur will) our senior Senator
in Ins view on Mormonism. No
man has had a better opportunity
than lie lo study the problems of life
in this country. He hits traveled
from the Atlantic to the Pacific, 1ms
mingled with the people of all class¬
es, understands the varied spring of
human action, and his conclusions
on the vie-w of polygamy may be
safely accepted, as they may be
on the snbj ct of divorce laws, which
he con letnus in emphatic language.
Iclrgraph anil Messenger.
----—---
The Editor aud the Surgla’*.
Once upon o time on editor awoke
in the night to find a burglar hunt¬
ing through all the pockets of bis
clothes.
*\Vbut means this unseemly intni
ai.in ?' asked the editir, rising upon
it is elbow.
‘I urn in search of money,’
die hurgiitr, as he turned the last
pocket inside out, ‘hut, id is! I fear
1 have got into the wrong house. I
have found nothing but a bit of tt
it-rt 1 pencil i.nd a ticket to a umgieitl
gift show. Wish your permission, I
will retire p.s J came.’
‘One moment,’ said the editor. ‘I
do riot think you are a subscriber to
my paper. Allow me to call your at
teutiou to its superior features. Ali
tiie local news—a carefully-selected
misciliapy—impartial editorial dis¬
cussions of the leading questions—
household department that wi'l de¬
light your wife—a religions depart¬
ment that will direct the wav wind
slens of the wicked to the straight
and narrow path—no objection) ble
advertisements inserted, and only $2
a year strictly in advance. I skull
he glad to enter your name on my
list. You doubtless know that every
man should support his local press.’
‘I am glad you have called my a‘
ti-ntion to this matter,’ said the l.ur
glur ‘an 1 I will subscribe. Here are
two dollars and my address on the
bureau. Y'ou are a mun of business.’
‘Yes,’ replied the editor. ‘I never
miss an opportunity to.push trade.’
‘Nor I either,’ mini the burglar,
‘and therefore I will steal the $2. I
have just paid you for subscription.’
And "pocketing ilio bill, the bur¬
glar climbed out of the window and
slid down the iigbtuing rod.
--| || »> >.e»
Some idea ot the magnitude of
the business of raising sweet scent¬
ed flowers for their perfume alone
may be gathered from the fact that
Europe and British India consume
about 150,000 gallons o ( handker¬
chief perfumes yearly ; that tho Eng¬
lish revenue from enu de cologne is
$40,000 annually, and that the total
revenue of other perfumes is esti¬
mated at $200,000 annually. There
is o.-ie great porfume distillery at
Cannes. In France, which uses
yearly 109.000 pounds of acacia flow¬
ers, 140 k 000 pounds of rare flower
leaves, 32,000 pounds of jasmine
blossoms, 20,000 of tube rose blos¬
soms aud an immense quantity of
oilier material.
Tho Way Oi Tho
I heard ail old farmer talk one day.
Telling his listeners how
Xu the wide new country far nway
TVe rainfall follows the plow,
‘As fast as they break it up, yon see,
And turn the boerl to tho sun,
As they open the furrows deep and free,
And tho tillage is begun.
‘The earth grows mtllow, and more and
[mor)
It holds and sends to Uic sky
A tr.oi.tur .it never had before,
When its face was hard and dry.
‘And so, wherever tHo plowshares ran
The clouds inn overhead,
And the soil that works and lets in the sun
With water is always fed.’
1 wonder if Iluit'cl 1 fanner knew
The half of his simple word,
Or guest ed the message that,heavenly true,
Within it was hidden and heard ?
It hi: ou my ear by chnnie that day,
But the gladness lingers now,
To iliiuk it iaaiway-B God's dear way
That the rainia Hollows the plow.
— A. I). 'J'.; Whitney,
Itema of Interest.
Tom Thumb's mother, Mrs. C u
thia Stratton, is dangerously ill at he.
homo in West Haven, Cona.
Carrie Wilcox, a huulsoiiie girl, of
Bradford, Pit, has renounced Chris
tianity to marry a Hebrew.
Ex-United States Senator William
H. Barn urn, of Connecticut, Las re¬
covered from a dungeons illness.
Count N u-islti, the mined gambler
who blew out his bruins at Monte
Carlo recently, lost 100,000 francs iu
a niuglo night.
Among the in mutes of tf.e ‘Old
People’s Home’at Chicago, are Josia
Mansfield's grandmother otul Gm
tdu’a mothcr-iu law.
Henry George was indeed a roll¬
ing stone—first a printer, then a re
porter and editor, and finally the
owrtoi of the San Francisco Post.
Mr. E livard McPherson, who was
former clerk of the House of Ropre
aeritativoR, is to be the clerk of the
Republican congressional committee
The Denvei'(C.)l .)Idler Ocean says:
"Dennis Keaitiey lias found his level
He is selling pies at a haliforuia
health resort. Pies at a health re
sort!
Prince Albert Victor, the son oi
the Pri.ce of Wales, though a very
nice young man, is thought by bre
fellow students at Cambridge to be
a dullard.
Mr. Watterson, of the chief news
paper of Kentucky, is now in Wash
ington and is engaged in tho pus
time of moulding stute'-meu out cf
the raw material.
Lieutenant Rhodes’ berefit fund,
collected by tho Boston Post, is dos¬
ed. It amouuts to $2,001. The
fund for the Gay Head Indians
amonn's to $3,251.
Friends of Jefferson Davis say
that he h*s determined not to at
tempt to make nr.y more public
speeches, and that ha has lately
given evidences of failing in heahli
rapidly, the change from mouth to
month being very perceptible.
Captain Ikin' Boy ton, the celebra¬
ted swimmer, is to be married on St
Valentine’s Day in St. Patrick’s
Church, Chicago, to Miss Mary Con¬
nolly, daughter of Cornelius Connel¬
ly, of that city. They will make thoir
home iu Now York.
El vlahdi is not y et at the gates of
Egypt. Suakim, which is still held
by the Khedive’s forces, is about 890
miles south of Cairo. Khartoum is
500 or GOO miles southwest of Suit
kirn, unci tho garrison and inhabi¬
tants are iu ^critical, if not hopeless,
position.
Ex-Congressman Singleton claims
that th3 Democratic delegations
from twenty-one States in Congress
arc in favor of holding the party’*
national convention iu Chicago
This, ho thinks, settles the matter,
as tho members of the national com
mitteo will not bo likely to oppose the
wishes of their Congressmen.
The classes in carpentering which
were recently establish in a Cieve
land public school have proved not
to interfere with the regular studies,
and ihe boys have not only develop
ed a taste for hard work,but by their
standing show that training the
hands is au actual help in other
school work.
Hayti is enjoying (he fruits of her
independence iu a now civil com mo-
tion, which is nothing if not bloody.
President Salomon having gottoa
tho better of his rivals, his partisans
are butchering persons of tho oppo
site faction in the most approved
West Indian fashion. Twenty-one
persons were recently shot at Mira
gane, forty-seven at Jacmel, and fif¬
ty-two at Petit-Guava.
Hero are some names that still
cling to various parts of Philadelphia:
Beggarstown, Fishtown, Garden Hill
Hwamppoodlo, Goosctown, Coal Dus
ter, S.noky Hollow, Punch Bowl,
Sleepy Hollow, Death Flat, Dulburg.
Edaria Row.. Hall's Half-Acre, Irish
town, Point noPoiut, Tartlcbnrg,
Plesantvilie, Tho Snip, Bed Bug
Walls, Candy Row. Physijk laxo,
Sharkers’ alley, Pndmnddlo luue.
A Maine man bought his daughter
a tuelodeon recently. Because she
could not loam to play well iu a
week ho swapped the instrument for
a cow, but the latter not giving mils
enough to suit him he killed it for
beef. The beef was kept too lung
before he got a customer to snit him
and has spoiled on his bauds. It
isu’t safe to mention ‘meiodeon’ to
him.
- maaSBt* ----
Bits of Science.
Australia carries off the palm in
the production of useful trees. One
famines a good substitute*for butter,
another has seed from which a meal
is ground tthich is good for food,
and another from its pods produces
a mess of fibres which, lilts cotton,
cuu bo used to stuff mattresses and
cushions.
A professor in (be University of
Upsala offers to freeze any person
who wilj, volunteer, depriving them
of all appearance of vitality,_and to
bring ilit-ui round again at the expi¬
ration of two years without injury.
No one has consented to tho experi¬
ment, and it is proposed to try it up
■ in s me condemned criminal.
There is a good deal of testimony
;o provr that birds and insects disao
pear Rom localities about to be af¬
fected with epidemic disea-e. More
attent|on should he paid by medical
uii n ta the collection of meteorologi¬
cal information and collateral data
during tie prevalence of epidemics.
It is. nearly a virgin field for scien
t : sf?
Professor Finches, of Munich, has
obtained from distilled coal a white
ctyilalline powder, which seems to
poises many of tho properties of
qntiine, only it assimilates more
1 -caidily with the stomach. It rema’ns
to bo seen whether it is as effective
agjiiust malaria, and i? less injurious
in its influence upon the head and
hekring.
Tho first discovery of prehistoric
min fin has recently boon made in
Frtinca. Tlioso mines are flint ones,
as-i situated in miocenn strata near
M«r de-Barrc-z. Several picks ci
stag’s antlers with other human rel¬
ied have been discovered on the an
cicht floor of the excavation. Here
and there the marks of ihe picks of
neolithic man are still visible on the
walg of the workings.
l»-c-oa>---
A Woman’s Economy.
‘Nothing for dinner?’ a.sked a
Park strret gentleman the other day
whet ho went homo and found his
wif-tewing and a cold Lite set out
for him.
‘I’m so busy, dear,’ murmured the
good woman.
‘Shw I see,’ remarks 1 her htisdand.
Thya he took Ilia hat, weut down to
the Woman s Exchange and had a
hot lunch—hot rolls, hot meat-pie,
coffee and a delicious pudding.
‘An excellent meal,’ he said plaes
ufitly, as ho laid down tho etiange
for it.
•It ought to be good,’ replied the
lady cashier; ‘your wife baked that
pie and made tiie rolls and the pud¬
ding; she is such a good cook that
we keep her busy sending iu lunches
all the time.’
‘You might have knocked me
down with a feather,’ he said r.fter
i wards to his confidontal friend, ‘I
thought wo were getting a good
many new things up at the house,and
that Sue was awful economical, and
here she’s just been starving it out of
me. Well! well! It takes a woman to
practice economy—at some other fel¬
low’s ?xpcnse!’—IWiwiV Free Press.
Terms $1.50 Per Annum.
Bright^ Bits.
A private ‘secie'ary.’—The one in
which the bottle is kept .—Boston Star
David Davis bus a remarkable di¬
ameter, but he’s not quite so thick
as Damon and Pythias were.
When a boiler explodes from a
scaroitj of water it is a case of
‘thought it r,a3 leaded .'—New York.
Journal.
If eggs keep on getting much high¬
er in price millionaires will wear
them as shirt studs .—Philadelphia
Chronicle.
In the instruction hour.—-Officer :
‘Who invented gunpowder ?’ Re
emit: ‘Most likely'an artillery man.'
—German Joke.
A married woman snys that her
husband used to rave over her bs
fore ninrringo. Now be only raves
at her .—Boston Teapot.
Registers in the horse-c,ar9 do not
warn the vehicle, bnt they make ii
hot for the dishonestj conductor.—
Boston. Commercial Bulletin.
Ihc Wctr.au's Journal thinks that
whisky does unspeakably more harm
among men than corsets do among
women. One thing is clear at least;
both whisky and corsets make those
who use thorn tight.
‘Is it possible, Miss, that you d*>
not know the names of some of your
best friends?" inquired a gentleman
ot a lady. ‘Certainly,’ sbe replied ; ‘I
don’t even know what my own will
be a year hence.’
A reporter asked a Chinaman if bs
expected to marry, The wicked
heathen made answer : ‘Me mailee?
No sir. Malice no funnee ; blettc
funne single man, alio feamo Meiican
man .'—Free Press.
To kill cockroic’jc8,take one pound
of beeswax, two ounces of best shel¬
lac, melt together, and when at a
temperature of 312 drgrees add one
ounca of Paris green and pour it;
your roaches.— Life.
A news items in ?n fxchenge is
headed : ‘A Fortune Found in a
Jam Pot,’ A small boy generally
finds misfortune in a jnn pot ; but
not. until after he has found the jam.
- Norristown Ilera’d.
‘Johnny,’ said the editor to his
hopeful, ‘are yon in the first-class nt
school?’ ‘No,’ replied the young¬
ster, who had studied the paternal
sheet, ‘I ntn registered as second
class male matter .’—Boston Commer¬
cial Bulletin.
In Dakota.—‘John, have you look¬
ed at the thermometer lately ?' ‘Yes,
only half an hour ago.’ ‘What was
it ?’ ‘Twenty-three degrees below
zero.’ ‘What a fraud that Weather
Bureau is. Old Prob said it would
bo cold to day .’—Philadelphia Call.
A Vermont woman who has just
had the mumps says sbe hopes to
gracious she will never hav6 to go
through such an experience again.
For two whole weeks she hasn’t been
able to jaw her husband or to let cut
a single neighborhood secret. Aw
ful martyrdom !—-Burlington Free
Press.
A doctor obligated himself to cnn
a tnua’a wife, but failtd. ‘You said
you would cxre her,’ exclaimed the
indignant husband. ‘Yes, I said so.'
‘Well, why didn’t you ?' ‘Why, ray
dear sir, because she died. If she
hadu’t died the chances are that she
would have lived '—Arkansaw Travel
er.
An Arbitrary Arrest.
A Gentleman who desired to make
a few Dollars in cash without going
to the Trouble of Breaking into a
Bank. Entered a Stable and took
away a Horse. However, as ho went
his way with the Animal ho was
overtaken and placed under Arrest,
and when brought into court he cried
in a voice of Lamentation :
‘This, then, Oh! Judge, is the
boasted Freedom of a Free Country!
A Peaceful trawler ia Arrested as he
Travels a Peaceful Highway 1 I even
had a Family Bible strapped to my
Saddle!’
‘Had you read your Bible more
and strapped it loss you might not
have Appeared here,’ answered his
Honor. ‘Whi'o you Complain of the
loss of your Liberty you forget the.
man who complains of the 1 S3 of his
Horse.’— Detroit Free Press.
NO. 51.
BUSHS ESS I> 311 ECTORY,
M. CORBETT,
BEALE It IN
Dims,Mil EQAFS, T
PEEFUM3EY, FINE
Fancy and Toilet Articles.
Cot.l8-ly
CORBETT HOUSE,
M. CORBETT, Prop.,
Lumpkin. - Georgia.
Mvery Attention Given to the Ac¬
commodation «C comfort of Guests}
Oet.l -I
E. M. SHERAM,
MANUFACTURER OF
PLANTATION WAGONS,
Plow Stocks, Etc.
Blaclsmitbiso & Wagon RrrAiiuxa.
Out.'20 ly
A. II. SIMPSON,
I)EA_,Elt IN
Family GroceriesMire,
STAPLE m GOODS, SHOES, &G
Coffins, Burial Cases, Bsdsteads,
Chairs E c.
W. __
W. STOKES,
Dealer In
Faiily k Fancy Groceries,
CANNED GOODS, TOBACCO,
Cigars and Staple Dry Goods.
Ot-t 16 ly
W. A. GREGORY,
DEALER IN
Fancy & Family Groceries,
IA53MO G0333, OONFECTiOM
ARIES, STAPLE DRY GOODS,
Tobacco, Cigars, Sxtjit, Tinware Etc.
Cct 20
N. M. k W. II, GRIFFIS,
—T/EALKBS IN—
Family Grieras, Win,
B3EB, WINES* TOBACCO, CIGARS.
Splendid Billiard and Pool Tables.
Side Public Square,
w.s. onus 9
DEALER IN
Family Groceries,
* 9
Plan t al i on Supplies,
Country Produce Etc.
South Side Public Square.
Lumpkin, Ga. Jan. 1,1883.
FIRE INSURANCE,
Innnre your dwellings, Furniture,
Merchandise. Gin Hon»es, and ether
property. None but first-class Com¬
panies represented. Rates low.
J. B. Richardson, Agent.
Sept.2-*th-1881-tf.
Sheram & Miller,
—DEALERS IN—
COFFINS, CASKETS AND
Burial Cases
Cun furnish any stylo of COFFIN
wanted at reasonable prices.
tfe»“Repository at Sheuam’s Shops.
Lumpkin, Ga., Sep 1,
SiRLE’S CARRIAGE
Aud Blacksmith- Shops.
Having purchased the above wcll
knowu Shops from Mv. D. W. Surle3
I am now prepared to manufacture
to order any kind of Wagons or Buo
qies that may bo wanted. Skillful
mechanics are employed and the best
of matorid will be used in all work.
Special attention given to repairing,
and all work promptly attended to.
Terms Cash.
C- A- SURLE3.
Lumpkin, Ga, Feb. 1, 1884.
Globe Cotton Planter
The Best Now Iu Use 1
Call and see its perfect work.
8. S. EVERETT, Agent.
Lumpkin, G i. .T in. 20.