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By J.jg. & A. W. LATIMEIL
VOL. XII.
UH fuiUpnuURt.
P i: bUshed every Saturday Morning
- T E K >1 S :
<) IN lh ........
- »ix Moiyrm*...... 7-no.
Bates'ofAdjrei'iisiuff.
Oao inch one inrfeitfA... .'i.'.....f$ 100
Eneh mbsfqoeut in»*rtion.. 60
Ons rneb, o»® month...... ... 2 50
One inch, three months. fY’” . 5 0Q
One inch, six months... 7 yo
One inch, twelve months....... . 10 00
One quarter coljufln, one month..... 6-00
One quarter column twelvemonths 06 00
On* half column, one month... It) o
One half column twelve mouths -60 oo
Oaa column one mouth 15 00
One eolumn twelve months.....—. 100 t;0
All bills fur advertising tire due at
any time upon proscutatioir after
first appearance, of advertisement.
Address all tetters to Tub Limi-kin Ixjjj»
rwuxKT, or J. 13. A A. V. LVmiER,
Proprietors.
LAW CA1D3.
m i" : 1
T. D. Hiugh TOWER, F. A. Bush
HIGliT0WT.lt & !H Nil,
Attorneys at Law,
Lumpkin, Georgia
Jau. 1, 1884.
WELL1S011N F. CLARKE,
Attorney at Law,
Lumpkin, Georgia.
Will practice iu Stewart Cuiirty.
Special attention given to collections.
Lumpkin, Ga., May 5, 1883.
E. G. SIMMONS
ATTO RN EY AT DAW,
AMETUCUS, GA.
Will’prajtice in all the counties of
Tins Judicial Circuit, in the Supreme
Court of the State of Georgia, and
in tbs District Court of the United
States, and in all other court-, by
special .contract jiilv 23-81.
MEDICAL GAELS
W.A. GREGORY,
Physician & Surgeon,
Lumpkin, Ceorgia.
Oct.20-ly
J. E. & W. P. CARTEL’,
Practicing Physicians,
LUMPKIN, - GEORGIA.
Ofiice South Side Public Square.
Oct20 ly
J. A. THORNTON ,JR.,
Practical Dentisr,
L.C M l'KlIS, <V EOIMJIA.
Will do all kinds of Dental Work
in a neat and substantia manner.
Oct.23-ly.
LUMPKIN HOTEL,
JOIIIV YAKBUOUGH,
JHlfcOl’liX IdXVlt.
This old and well-known Hotel is
still open to the public and offers su¬
perior inducements to travelers and
' drummers. With experience ot
an
20 years the Proprietor thinks he
knows how to look after the Comfort
of his guests. Table furnished with
tLe best the market affords. Polite
attention and reasonable charges.
Stock fed at 25c cer meal each.
Lumpkin, Ga v Sept. 1,1883. If
H *100 >1UU COLLARS LUJjM110 A ’
Wo can guarantee the above amount to
good, active, energetic
AGENTS!
Ladies as well as gentlemen, make a success
in the business. Veiy little capital required.
Wo have a household article as salable as
flour.
It Sells Itself.
It is used every <lay in the family. You do
net need to explain its m-rds. There is a
rich harvest fur atl-wlx* embrace this golden
opportunity. It casts you only ono cent to
learn wTmt our business is. Buy a postal
Card and write to us nuil we will solid you
our prospectus ai d luii particulars
FREE!
Ami we know you vdli derive more good
tbnn you Lave any iiita of. Our imputation
as WirSSK&SSS? a anti »iRl»ess plainly and
a postal give your
O'O.
Marion, Ohio
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1884.
AFFEOTS-OF FAILING.
Thu Bad Boy’s Pa Sports a Trotter.
‘Whew.’ said the groceryman, as
tho bad boy came in and backed up
against tho stove, when a strong
smell filled tho air aud counteracted
the smell of decayed eggs, ‘you hav¬
en’t gone to work in the livery sta¬
ble again, have you?’
‘No, hut it is about' the same. I
am taking care of pa's trotter, aud
it’s mori. vverk than running a whole
livery stable, ‘cause you havo fo rub
a trotter about all the time, in one
place or another, and blanket- him,
and bod him down and treat him like
a baby,’ said the bad boy, as ho took
a leather trotting boot out of bis
coat packet aud sat down by the
stove to punch a hold in.the strap.
‘Well, by gum, that beats me,’said
the groceryman, as bo put on his
spectacles aud looked at the boy,
and held his nose as the horse
fumes came fresh from tho stove.
‘Only two weeks ago your father fail¬
ed, and now he keeps a trotter, aud
he is a member oi the church, too, in
good standing, and prays regularly.
I swow, I have lost confidence in ev¬
erybody.’
‘O, you don’t have to worry about
pa,’said tho boy, as he buckled the
trotting hoot around-his own aukle,
and kicked his ankles togather to see
if it would hurt if he interfered. ‘Pa
knows his business. Times were
never so good 7 in i ur family as they
have hem since pa failed, unless it
was that times when he was selling
stock in the silver mine. Why, pa
is lull ol fun at home* aud ma she
laffs, and pa gets her anything she
wants lie bought her a diamond
lace pin last week with four big dia
moods as big as hazel nuts. But ma
isn’t going to wear it bore at home,
where people think pa is busted, 'uul
ma is going to wait until they go of!
traveling and parelizo people at the
hotels. But I spose pa has more fun
with the trotter than you cun shake
a stick at. yo paid n torrihlo price
for the horsa, cause he was learned
to trot without pulling ou tho lines.
Pa goes out on the road and when
any body tries to pass him he lets the
rains lay on the dash board of the
cutter loose, and pa sorter shut his
eyes as though ho was sweetly sleep¬
ing, aud tho horse just paws tho
snow. If anybody comes along of our
churclj, pa begin to sing a hymn like
he was happy, aud the trotter goes
for all that is out. Some of 'em think
pa’s mind is affected by his failure,
and that his head is weak, but they
don’t want to fool themselves much
on pa. A man who can settle with
his creditors for ten cents on tho dol
iar, and-stand them off for the ten
cents, and put his money in bonds,
don't need much sympathy.’
‘Wftll, I guess your pa will pull
through. But what is this I hear
about you and your chum hanging
arouyd ihe police court? I beard
that you and him mafde up a purse to
pay a fellow's fino, and save him
from going to the house of correc¬
tion. You fellows will get to mix¬
ing witti thieves, and the first thing
you know, you will get pulled by the
police, and saltpeter won’t save
aud the groceryman looked wise^aa
though lie had saved two boys from
ruin by his sage remarks.
‘Well, sir, if wo hadn’t happened
down to the police court, that morn¬
ing, that hoy would have been ruin
of correction, and the policeman led
the boy yut, and as be passed me I
thought his face was familiar, and as
J knew the cop’s sister, he let me go
to the sla'ion and see the boy. lie
used to live where we did before we
came here, and bis folks were rich
then, but bis father failed and Lis
mother died, and the boy never
learned to do anything, and he has
been Tor a year walking around from
town lo town, eating when anybody
offered him a meal, and going with¬
out when they didn’t. ‘Totber
be struck this town, and he was
gry and he didn’t have ambition
to even e o and l.e 8 .
, of bread,and be stood loaning
| a policeman “ ! r ° n fenC tools f nun t0 in . frC 7,’ The "7
'Weekly K . .7 .. ——r— : <
A Newspaper, Published B iatlxe . Political* SoGi»l,an& Agricultural Interests of Stewart County.
tion was chilled opt of him, and Lo
didn’t make a ay defense at too charge
cf vagrancy, an*was going to be
sent up with thieves and drunkards
when we happened to ace him. 1
tell you, it don’t nfake any difference
how rich a boy’s father is, every boy
ought to leara to do some kind of
work, because the thus., npiy* come
when ho will have to work or starve.
Wall, ho was tickled to see mo, and
cried some, and said when he got
out of jail he guessed he would go
and drown himself, ’cause ho wasn’t
no good, and he talked about his
mother dying, until it broke us all
up, and then we paid his fine and I
took him up to our house, and gavo
him some of my c'pkbes, and we tried
all the evening to think of some
work ho could do, but ho never
learned to do a thing when his pa
was rich, except to walk down town
and back, I aever saw a boy so
helpless. I happened to think that
when wo were little boys wo nsrd to
go in bis lira's kitchen on halting
days, and they would givo us sorao
dough to mix, and I asked him if ho
renumbered it, and ho said he did.
That was the only thing he could do.
So I went down to tho bakery and
told the baker that I had a friend
who didn’t know anything on earth
but to mix dough, and I wanted to
•get a job for him. IVell, sir, it hap¬
pened that one if the bakers was off
on a drunk, and the boss said to
bring my friend in, and I took tho
boy, and impressed upon his mind
that ho must act ns though* he had
been brought up on dough, and
kuow all about it, and I told him
dowu there, aud the baker gave him
a job, and ho caught cm so well the
baker is going to give him twelve
dollars a week after next week. O,
dear, but he could sling dough. Now
this shows what a little thing will
save a hoy, 'out it was a narrow es¬
cape, and every boy should learn
something. Seems singular, don’t
it, that the only thing thut boy knew,
by which he could earn a living, was
something lift learned when ho was
playing in childhood, in his mil’s
kiichen. Say, I wish I was an ora
tor, and could go around giving lec
lures, liko Ingersoll and Beecher. I
would hulk to boys and girls entirely,
and I would show them that they
were the biggest fools ou earth to
neglect to learn a trade.’
‘Yes, that is all right, but what do
you know, hv which you can tarn a
living?’ asked tho groceryman of the
bad boy, thinking ho had him.
‘Me,’ said the hoy, indignant at
the idea that ho didn’t know any¬
thing. ‘I could do a dozen different
things that I have learned. I cbuld
coino Into this grocery and double
your business, by keeping it clean,
giving full weight, Creating every-'
body kindly, keeping good groceries
instead of poor ones, and wearing a
clean shirt and a smile instoad ol a
dirty shirt and a frown, as you do.
L could—’
‘That will do, you can go,’ and tho
groceryman let the boy out and clos¬
ed the grocery to go to dinner, while
the boy went to the burn to feed his
pa’s trotter.
Pithy Advice.
Keep your head cool, your feet
warm and subscribe for your local
newspaper.
Don’t spend more than you can
borrow, and don’t borrow more than
you can pay promptly!
Don’t kindle the .fire with kero¬
sene unless you are prepared for a
lamWfaircr than this.
If you are angry at a man count
fifty before speaking; if he is a great
deal bigger than you count four hun¬
dred and sixty.
Don’t blow in your gun to see if it
is loaded, unleto you want to get
your name ir. the papers and your
family is well provided for.
• Be satisfied with tho world as you
fiml it, rememder that you are only
a tenant here and may not find your
self as well suited when you move.
Don’t brag about the achievements
of your ancestor. A great ancestor
in the grave is poor capital of itself
for a men to go into business on. And
beside, our ancestors had their faults.
Even Adams’ record is not as clean
as we would like it to be— Middle
town Transcript.
—- -dt......4----- —*•
Jf^QX YET.
Not yet, my friend,- not yet J
Ito -path-lit wail ‘ ,
.
-'Till the radiant sunlight f
i’loods the world from its golden gate.
Night is dark but uioyu is near ;
"Wait for day, that makes all things clear;
Just wait, ray fliond, just Wait
<t Tot noon, my frifcnd, y«t soon
Tho change will Como ;
T'ao morn of life goes quickly by,
And noon and night como gently on,
And through the portals gleaming white ;
Me stqe the stars of Hod's own light;
Yet wait, my l'riead,.yet wait.
—By Cdict E. King
---
Our State Capitol.
Tho.capitol commission has select¬
ed a plan fo^ our uew capitol. Mr.
Post, the New York architect, made
a full report, confirming the accura¬
cy of the various estimates, or at
least their correctness in the main,
and concurred with the commission
in it3 opinion that the plan present¬
ed by the Chicago architects, EJ
brook and Burnham, was the best.
The design is something like tho
federal capitol at Washington in its
general appearance. The structure
is Corinthian in style. It has four
stories, topped with a parapet wall,
and from the centre rises a large
dome, its altitude reaching 240 feet
and making an imposing appearance.
The trimmings are to be of marble,
including the parapets, base of dome,
cornices and facings. White brick
work is to be tho back gronud.
Tho domo will be disconnected
from the other ft-ails, Tho building
will front 330 feet ou both Washing¬
ton and McDonough streets, the
main entrance being on Washington
street, and at the side it extendi
1G0 feet on Mitchell and Hunter
streets. Washington street is on
tho west side. The dome measures
75 feet across at tho base of it and
225 feet around tho base, 'ilio ro¬
tunda is 50 feet across. The base¬
ment. of the capitol is 12 feet high,
and the stories l'isitfg one above each
other arc to bo respectively 17, 18
and Hi feet high. Tho height of the
lcpreseutative and senate chambers
is each 42 feet and of the supreme
court room and stale library each 39
feet.
There are four entrances, one on
each side of the square, l’ho main
front on Washington Btrcet is fifty
live feet wide, leading to a broad
portico resting on six marble col¬
umns carved aud polished and adorn¬
ed with our coat of arms. The
ground floor, all abovo the lot sur¬
face, will have iu it the machinery
and material for heating and rooms
for storage. The first floor above
the basement has tho offices of the
and state bouse officers,
secretary of stat.o, treasurer, comp
ttollWr general, gtc. Tho governor’s
rooms will bo on tho right of the en¬
trance. The second story above the
basemont will contain the legislative
chambers, supremo court room aud
library. Tho third floor above the
basement has tho gal lories of tho
legislature and the committee rooms.
The representative chamber is on
Washington street over the chief en¬
trance, and tho centals is on tho Mc
Donougb street side. All tho mott
orn conveniences of lighting, heat¬
ing, elevators, etc., will be used, and
the whole concern will he fire proof.
After going up tho steps to the
first portico, there is a vestibule in
an entrance and a forty foot corri¬
dor. From this the four vast wings
are approaohed by tour lateral corri¬
dors, tho two shorter ones forty feet
wide, and tho two longer seventy
feet wide. Tho junction of these
corridors i3 the base of dome with a
fifty feet rotunda connected with the
corridora,by a sixteen feet door. The
dome is two hundred and twenty
feet clear, and has balconies at points
the topmost up ono hundred and
eighty feet. The walls are eighty
live feet high. The top of the dome
can be ascen led.
An architect will bo solected un¬
der the law, and it will be a nntural
thing te pick Mr. Edbrook to carry
out his own plan. The next ques¬
tion is to select tho material, and the
commissioners will not use Georgia
stone or marble or brick unless they
can get thorn as cheap as outside
material. They arc determined
~- -— I ' p - - '3— ~*-----
pay nothing in excess to home folks.
Bids will be a.lverfiscd for after the
specifications are properly arranged
by the architect. It is estimated
that work will be commenced in four
or five months.
-—-------
Eccentric Suicides.
Lou-is Walters, of Akron, while in¬
toxicated, cut a hole iu tho ice aud
drowned himself.
A DoKalb county, Tenn., man cut
a tree until it was ready lo fall, and
then lot it crush him.
A San Antonio man cut his throat
because a lottery ticket ho had pur¬
chased proved a blank.
Mrs. Thomas 1'axton, of Howard
Lake, Mian., killed herself because
she was married against her will.
Mrs. Joseph Wagcnhauser, of
Youngstown, Ohio, cut her throat on
account of the death of her son.
After injuring her knee in jump¬
ing a rope. Jane Becker, aged thir¬
teen, of Reading, hung herself from
a bedpost.
While suffering from inflammato¬
ry rheumatism, Mrs. Benjamin Wat
sc u, of Bloomington, Ill., threw her¬
self into a cistern and was drowned.
Mrs. Ann Stump, of Columbus,
Ohio, poisoned her pet dog, fearing
it might outlive her. Remorse at
tho deed caused her to kill herself
with strychnine.
Lemuel Whisten, near Enterprise,
tied a halter around his neck and
hitched himself to his wagon. He
then scared the horses and made
them run. Wkisten’s young wife
had died but a few weeks before.
Henry F. Millward shot himself
after participating in a mock trage¬
dy at Springfield, Ohio. Rome weeks
ago Millward, assisted by a bundle
of friends, constructed a dummy out
of a'number of towels and pillows,
and laid- it on a bed iu the Arcade
hotel in that city. Tho room was
carefully davuened, aud the dummy
covered with a sheet. A pasteboard
head with grotesquely painted fea
tures was attached to tho body, so
as to bo in plain sight when the
sheet should be removed. When all
was ready, the report was circulated
through the city by the jokers that a
drummer Lad committed suicide at
tho hold. The report attracted hun¬
dreds of citizens, including the coro¬
ner, who wero piloted up to the
room one by one. Millward killed
himself iu the same room.
Do.
Do attach as much importance to
your mind as to your body.
Do bo natmal; a poor diamond is
better than a good imitation.
Do observe ; the faculty of obser¬
vation, well cultivated, makes practi¬
cal men aud women.
Do, at least once in a whilo, reflect;
most things, if worth consideration
at all, look different upon reflection.
Do avoid causes t>f irritation in
your family circle ; do reflect tl.al
homo is tho place in v^hich to be
agreeable.
Do, if a man says he loves you, try
to find out what ho means by it ; a
good many men lovo themselves
when they imagine they are loving
you.
• Do, if you hear a scandalous story,
even from your bosom friend, forget
it; try to remember only what is to
the credit of othors.
Do bo exact in money matters ;
every debt you incur moans loss to
some ono, probably to some one less
able than you to bear it.
Do cultivate Ihe habit of listening
to others ; it will make yon an inval¬
uable member of society, to say noth¬
ing of the advantage it will be to you
when you marry ; every man likes to
talk about himself; a good listener
makes a delightful wife.
Do speau intelligibly, and not ns
if you had pebbles in your mouth ;
and do remember that your nose was
given you to breath through and not
as a vehicle of sound.
Do bo contented ; ‘martyrs’ are de¬
testable ; a cheerful, happy spirit is
infectious ; you can carry it about
with you like a sunny atmosphere.
Do be strictly truthful ; do avoid
exaggeration ; if you meat n mile,
say a mile, aud not a mile and a
if you mean ono, ray one, and not
1 dozen. —New York Mail Express.
Terms $1.50 .Per Annum.
BRIGHT BITS.
The New Orleans Picayune says
that piety cannot be measured by a
long face. Nor by a long purso.
People who persist in traveling
barefoot around a pewly carpeted
hod room often find themselves on
the wrong track.
A smart young naan picked up a
flower in tho ba lroom after all tho
f'• >y : ‘Its the last rose of some her.
There are some marriages which
remind us of the poor fellow who
said, ‘She couldn’t get any husband
and I couldn’t get any wife ; so we
got married.’
Don’t you think, young man, that
just because it is leap year you are
going to be snapped up right away.
The gir’13 want a chance to look be¬
fore they leap.
A Country Editor says if as many
people knew how to pay tboir sub¬
scriptions as well as they know how
to run a newspaper, editors would
have an easier time of it.
John L. Sullivan has been compli¬
mented in California by having a
brand of cigars named for him. It
was first tried on a favorite whisky,
but it knocked ’em cut too quick.
‘The Man whoso business so occu¬
pies his mind that ho can’t be civil
to people he meets, should either
have more mind or less business,
aud most folks don’t care which it is. 1
Merchant Traveler.
Amaturo tenor .just from Paris )—
‘And have you never heard of Goun
ard’s'Creprusonly?’ Unmusical young
lady—‘Oh dear! No,how dreadful! is
it anything liko spinal meningitis?’
-Life.
Mamma, where’s papa gone to? ask
ec] a little girl one day. ‘He’s gone
up town to earn snore bread and but¬
ter far you darling. ’ ‘Oh mamma, I
wish ho would sometimes earn buns,’
sighed the child.
One ought to be careful wbot he
says even about tlio dead. A for¬
lorn widow, sitting by a blazing fire,
sighed, ‘Pool George! How he did
liko a good fire! I hop they have
‘cm where he’s gone.’
‘I can marry any girl I please,’ he
said, with a self-satisfied expression
of countuenancQ. ‘No doubt,’ she
responded, sarcastically, ‘but whai
girl do you please?’ They don’t
speak now.
Charles Delmonico loft a fortune
of five million of dollars. His busi¬
ness was very careful managed. A
second pat of butter was always
charged extra, and never under any
circumstances did ho givo bread
with one fish ball.
An Exehauge, relating the case
of a man frozen to death, says: ‘A
bottlo of whisky not far from the
prostrate form told tho story of tho
causo and affect.’ Poor fellow, be
frozo to death before ho oould reach
the bottle.— Transcript.
At Conway tho saloou law went in¬
to effects at midnight. A fashionable
ball was in progress, and just ad 12
o’clock a man ascended the platform
aud said: ‘Fellow citizen, the saloons
are opened.’ Three minutes after¬
ward not a man was in the hall.
The loss of a mother is always felt;
even though her health may incapa'*
itato her from taking any act''' 0
iu tho cares of her fan>R», still she is
a sweet rallying-point, around which
affection aud obedience, and a thou¬
sand tender endeavors to ploase.con
oentrate; and dreary is tho blank
when such a poiut is withdrawn: it is
like that lonely star before us, nei¬
ther its heart nor light arc anything
to us in themselves, yet tho shep¬
herd would fool his heart sad, if ho
missed it when ho liftod up his oyes
to tho brow of the mountain oovr
which it rises when the sun descends.
Do avoid whispering ; it is as bad
as giggling ; both are to bo condemn
od ; there is no excuse for either ono
of them ; if you have anytning to
Bay, say it; if you havo not, do hold
your tonguo altogether ; silence is
golden.
Love your neighbor. If he keeps
a dog that howls at the moon do
make harsh remarks about him, but
borrow him to go hunting and
get to bring him back again.
NO. 52.
lit SIX ESS DIRECTOR Y 4
M. CORBETT*
DEALER IN
flmsliiiw, Cliieals,
PEEFUM3EY, FINE SOAPS,
Fancy and Toilet Articles.
,Cct.I6-ly »
CORBETT HOUSE*
M. OOBBOTT, Prop.,
IjTJMPKIN. * GEORGIA*
Evert/ Attention Given to the*Ac
commodaiion <C - com/ort of Guests f
Oct. 16-1
E. M. SHE RAM*
MANUFACTURER OF
PLANTATION WAGONS 9
Plow Stocks, Etc,
Blaclsmithixq & Wagon REr.umxa.
Oct. 20 ly
A. II. SIMPSON,
DEALER IN
Groms,HaitaE
STAPLE DRY 80093, SHOES, &C
Coffins, Burial Cases, Bedsteads,
Chairs Etc.
W. W. STOKES,
Dealer In
Family & Fancy Groceries,
CANNED eOODS, TOBACCO,
Cigars and Staple Dry Goodsi
Oct 16 ly
W. A. GREGORY,
DEALER IN
Fancy & Family Groceries*
GAf^ED GOODS, GQ^FEGTJON
ARIES, STAPLE DRY GOODS*
Tobacco, Gigars, Snuff, Tinware Eto.
Oct. 20
M. M. & W. II. GMFFIS,
—DEALERS IN—
Family Groceries, Wife
BE3E, WINES, TOBACCO, CIGARS.
SrLENniD Billiard and Pool Tables.
^SfNorth Side Public Square. “
w. a. esiLis*
DEALER IN
Family Groceries,
Plantation Supplies,
Country Produce Etc<
South Side Public Square.
Lumpkin, Ga. Jan. 1,1883.
FIRE INSURANCE.
Insure your dwellings, Furniture,*
Merchandise, Gin Houses, and other
property. None but first-class Com¬
panies represented. Bates low.
. J. B. Richardson, Agent*
Sopt.2*th-1881-tf.
Siierai & Miller,
—DEALERS IN—
COFFINS, CASKETS AND
Burial Cases
Can furnish any style of COFFIN
wanted at,reasonable prices,
fiSTTllepository at Shebam’s Saora.
Lumpkin, Ga., Sep 1,
SURLF/S CARRIAGE
And Blacksmith Shops.
Having purchased the above well
known Shops from Mr. D. W. Surlea
I am now prepared to manufacture
to order any kind of Wagons or Bug¬
gies that may ba wanted. Skillful
mechanics aro employed and the best
of material will be used in all work.
Special attention given to repairing,'
and all work promptly attended to.
Terms Cash.
O A. SURLE3.
Lumpkin, Ga, Feb. 1, 1884.
Globe Cotton Planter
The Best Now In Use 1
Call and see its perfect work.
S. S. EVERETT, AgetrL
Lumpkin, Ga. Jan. 2G.