Newspaper Page Text
THE LUMPKIN INDEPENDENT o* §
By 4. B. & A. W. LATIMER’.
VOL. XIII.
Itht $ntWpnuUut.
€ ' ""*' ■----- -- -■ ■■'- ' —
Pa Wished every Sittrtlay Morning
THH-MtS s
ONEi YKAIt .. . . . .
MT months .. TfV-V
Rate* or Atlvcftlsingi
One inch one iueoi tion............$ 100
Each subsequent insertion.... 50
One inch, o*e month........ tO
One inch, three months....... cn
One inch, six months.........
On. inch, twelve mouths . 10 ob
On. quarter column, one month..... «O0
On. quarter coinrun twelve Ihbhtks i)9 00
On. half column, one month:.. 10 0
On. half celamn twelve months ,... CO 00
Ob* fettbtmn one month:;. ii.. inoo
One oolumn t iclve months..., ... itticb
All bills for advertising are due at
any time Upon presentation after
first appearance of advertisement:
Address all letters to The Lonmin Lillis'
Vendest, or J. B. 4 A. W. L VTIMEfi,
Proprietors.
LAW CARDS'
L.__af»..i..a-auujL !;
T. D. HiuabTuWER, F. A’. Bush
HIGHTOWER & BPH,
Attorneys at Law,
Lumpkin, Georgia
Jan, 1, 1884.
WELUfOUN F; GLA11KE,
Attorney fit Law,
Lumpkin, - Georgia.
Will practice iti Stewart Cotit ty.
Special attention given to collections.
Lumpkin, Ga., May 5, 18S8.
E. G. SIMMONS
ATTO K N Et AT L. AW (
aMericus, GA.
Will’practice in nit the counties
This Judicial Cirenit. in the
Court of tbe State of Georgia, and
in th* District C«nrt of the United
States, and Ih alt Other court.*, by
apecial.coutroct. julyS8-8l.
MEDICAL GAELS
\V. A. GREGORY,
Physician & Sukgeon,
Lumpkin, Ceorgla.
0ct.ao-ij
J. E. & W. P. UARTEtt,
Practicing Physicians,
LUMPKIN, - GEORGIA.
Office South Side Public Square.
i * *0ct 20 ly
J.A.TIIOimOJiJH.,
Practical Dentist,
LUMPKIN, GEOIUSIA*
Will do all kinds of Dental Work
in a neat and substantia manner.
Oct.23-ly.
LUMI KIN HOTEL,
JOHN YABBUOUGII,
PBOPKIETOB.
This old and well-known Hotel is
■till open to the public and offers su
pefior inducements to travelers and
drummers. W ith an experience of
20 years tbe Proprietor thinks lie
knows bow to look-afler the comfort
of his guests. Table furnished with
tbe best tbe market affords. Polite
attention and reasonable 25c charges.
Stock fed at cer tneal each.
Lumpkin, Ga., Sept, i, 1883. tf
$100 DOLLARS A WEEK « i
tfo can guarantee the above amount to
good, active, energetic
AGENTS!
Ladies as well as gentlemen, make a success
in the business. Very little capital required.
AVo have a household article as salable as
flour.
it Sells Itself.
It is used every day in the family. There You do
net need to explain who its oerits. embrace this is a
rich harvest for all golden
opportunity. It costa you only ono cent postal to
learn what out business is. Buy a
card au<l write to ns and we will send you
our prospectus at d lull particulars
F R E El
And we know you will derive mote good
than you have any idea of. Oilr reputation
as a mauufaeturing company is luch that
We cun net afford to deceiee. Write to us on
a postal and give your address plainly and
receive full particular*.
BUCBEYEM’F’GOO.
Marion, OHIO
MARCH 8, 1884,
V -
A Man Who Hever Drinks a
Drop, Yet is Never So¬
ber an Hour.
_-St,
A strange creature, who goes by
the namo of ‘Prof. Asa 'i; Green’ has
been in Louisville for several days
trying to arrange for a series of lec¬
tures before the schools, He is, in¬
deed, a most slhgular niafi, Slid is
peculiarly afflicted. In statUhl he is
about 5 feet 6 ihches, with shaggy
brown hair and a mottstaSbe of the
same color, which seems to be mak¬
ing strenuous efforts til get fltJwn bis
throat. His eyes are bleared and
■teem starting from their sockets,and
Ihe highly colored nose and face, tho
feverytlilhg exprUssicfa of bis mouth, in fact
about him, bears tbe im¬
print of a confirmed whisky drinker
Nature has so far Carried out the il
lttstratieu Cf a toper as to nuke him
stagger and sttltnble along When bo
walks, and his Voice is Us thick and
husky as that of a titan suffering
from the tremths. If put upou trial
before 100men unaetjnitinted with
bira, 99 out of the number would be
willing to swettr that he was beastly
drunk, and had been so for d Con¬
siderable period.
The professor, while keenly sensi¬
ble &f this affliction, is not nt nil sen¬
sitive about it, ttnd talks ffeely on
the subject. He wits born bear Troy,
0., 87 years ago, and since bis birth
has been afflicted in the tnunner
abote described.
His (ttrittts were pour and he re¬
ceived little or nb edtibaliobj but
evcH in eurly youth showed eViden
See Of being possessed of genius. The
first thing which brought hint into
notice was his wonderful memory
Ho could listed to a sermon or lec
tttre, and then repeat it word
word as it had been originally de¬
livered. Upou one occasion bo at¬
tended nine lectures on nine codsec
tiVe nights, and then rftpbdtfed each
one of them from memory. As ft
sort of test last night a gentleman
read a column from a paper to him,
and hC repaeted it without tbe slight
est hesitancy, and witbottt so ffiueh
as transposing a sentence. When it
was suggested that bis eonditi n
must cause him no end of trouble,
he replied i
‘Well, I should say It flees. Just
as likely as not if 1 venture out on
the street some policeman will ar¬
rest me for drunkenness. I was
taken tip once iu Cincinnati and put.
in the stntion house to sober up.
When I was brought before court in
the morning I was as drunk as on
the previous night, and they remand¬
ed me to jail to sober up. This was
repeated every morning for five days.
They even put a guard over me m
the station house to see that I did
not get anything to drink before
they would believe my story. I nev¬
er touched a drop of intoxicating
liquor in my life, and even do not
drink Coffee or tea.’
A Blizzard in Dakota.
A Dabotn paper thus describes the
approach of a blizzard on February
28rdi “until about 4^ p. m., the day
was sonny, pleasant, and with a tem¬
perature as mi.d os spring. Thu
streets were filled with people, and
the lad’es were promenading in the
enjoyment of the ethereal pi'Muess.
-uddeuly, and without tho slightest
warning, a solid white Wall of frost
and snow appeared in the north wont.
It seemed as though the bluff in that
direction had suddenly shot upward
to a height of a thousand feet, so
solid aud compact did this icy wall
appear. In a second of time the
storm burst with appalling (Ury, and
the windows, which had by tbe at¬
mosphere become clear of frost, were
heavily coated With clingliog snow
on the outside and benVy frostod
particles on tbe inside. The air grew
terribly cold, and was darkened by
flying frost and snow. The high
walls of the hotel directly opposite
were not be seen. All objects were
bidden by the flying and rapidly
driven enow. People on the streets
sought shelter, and the stores were
temporarily fierceness used for protection from
the of the howling blast.
Darker grew the atmonphere, to such
an extent that business in the office
cured. was stopped until lights were pro-
A Weekly i?§Wspaper, Published la the Political, Social and Agricultural Interests of Stewart ount^r.
BferyUs Ark—A Blood. Talk of thb
Cincinnati is . inundated. Two
ybilng men, Gaston and Victor
stout yodng folio Wert of the typh otie
sees so often among the poasautry of
Britainnv, but with features that
show refinement and education—are
Standing at o»9 of the tipper win¬
dows of a building I hat has not yet
succumbed to the flood. But its
time of destruction is close at hand
Alrett ly the walls ate crumbling, and
in a few moments the noble edifice,
but yesterday so proud and stately,
will Lave gone down ih the general
Vtlih. The youhg then know this.
Their cheeks ore blanched. They
know that soon there will begin for
• hem a struggle with death which
can fcnd 8nly in defeat. The lips of
Victor move, but the Words they are
utteriug are rendered inaudible by
the roar of the waters. His compan¬
ion shunts to him :
‘What are yoa doing?’
‘Praying for tiiy parents. My death
will kill them. They live in Coshoc¬
ton.’
U also have parents,' says GtMdh;
‘They live In Akron. Include them
iu your prayers. ■
Victor nods his head.
Suddenly Gaston niters a cry.
'Look I’ says be.
Victor raised histieact. Coming to
ward them is a beautiful girl. She
is drowning. Gaston shrieks again,
'll is Beryl!’ he erics. ‘Beryl Hop¬
kins, my betrothed!’
As he shouts tbe name to Victor
the winds bear his voice to the girl,
And She leBoghiSee her lover. With
tlld sight all her strength sflerha to
tettltn. 'Thank God !’ she exclaims
Hi drtrJon todes. ‘t ertn saAd yofl,
although i Hlysolf mtist dlo,’ and by
a mighty effort she plunges one hand
her.oath the waters. Iu a moment
it n-appears, grasping something
fthitb, as she sinks bc-ueath the wa¬
ters, the noble girl hints through tllS
window at which Gaston and Victor
are stunding.
* 4= * * * *
Five minllteg later the buil.ling
has sunk beiiekth tbo seething tof
rent, but Gaston otld Yictof nrb Safe
—Anatifig sefliifely dowu tbe stream
in a craft which no storm, however
severe^ can wreck. Gaston sits in
its stern, guiding its course, while
Yictor Bleeps peacefully uadel' tho
bulwarks.
She had thrown tliCtfl her over¬
shoe.— Chicago Tribune.
The Proper Time for Rising.
The proper time to rise is whon
sleep, properly so-called, ends Doz¬
ing is not admissible from any rea¬
sonable or healthful point of view.
The brain falls into the slate we call
sleep, and the other organs of the
body follow it. True sleep is a state
which consists in the sleeping or rest
of tho severe! parts of tbe organism.
Sometimes one and at other times
another part of the body as a whole
may bo the least fatigued and so be
the first to awake, or tbe most ex¬
hausted, and, tnerefore, the most
difficult to arouse. The secret of
good sleep is—the physiological con¬
dition of rest being established—to
so work and weary the several parts
of the organism »s to give them a
proportionally equal need of rest at
the same moment. Tbe cereotum
or mind oigan, the sense organs, the
muscular system and - the viscera
should all be ready to sleep togethei,
and do far as may be passible) they
should be equally tired. To wake
oarly to rise, this fair and equal s'art
of tbe sleepers should be secured ;
and the wise self-maneger should
not allow a drowsy feeling of the
Consciousness or weary senses, or an
exhausted muscular sJBtCIn, to bo
guile him into the folly of going to
sleep again when once bis conscious¬
ness has been aronsed. After a very
few days of self-discipline, the man
wbo resolves not to ‘dose’—that is;
to allow some sleepy pltrt of his body
after bis brain has once awakened—
will find himself, Without knowing
how, an ‘early riser '—London Ldn
cot.
The money losses along tho Ohio
from Pittsburg to Cairo, will reach
the enormous amount of
The Printer’s fcoints.
An Arab came to the rivor side
With a donkey bearing an obelisk ;
But he would not try to ford the tide,
For he had too good au *
—Boston Globe.
So he camped *11 niglit by the river side,
And remained till Ihe tide had ceased to
swell.
For he knew, shoUld the donkey from life
subside,
He would never find its ||
—falem Sunbeam.
In the morning he sought to lord the tide,
Wien the donkey stopped of tho wutel
to quaff,
The rider fell off, let the obelisk slide,
Thus affording a newspaper V
—Borne Sentinel.
Bnt iu the »ve, when the tide was loiV
And the sun hud set oil tho vegetatWii;
He htirri d up the mule and hiiide it go,
Nor was lie stopped by an ?
—Pittsburg Commercial Gazette.
Soon they reached their journey's end,
The mule was frisky under the lnsli,
And v, hile the girls looked brightly on
The mule and master cut it,
■ -rUa'd-ct$hi& Ei:y;n!ig
And when the man got off the mule,
He looked so charming and so grand,
Each girl a leap-year piiviloge took
And begged him to accept her ^sg~
Science and Religion;
Ifl tbo Course of a paper on ‘Reli¬
gious Retrospect and Prospect,’ pub¬
lished in the Popular Science Month¬
ly, Mb. Hebbert Spencer makes this
very preguant remark :
‘Those who thins that science is
dissipating religions beliefs and sen
tirhefitB seetfl inmtVure that whatever
of mystery i§ taken from the old in¬
terpretation is added to the new.
Or, rather, we may say that transfer¬
ence from the olie tb llie other is ac¬
companied by increase ; since, for an
explanation which has rt seeming
feasibility, it substitutes Itn explana¬
tion which, carrying ns back only a
certain distance, there leaves us in
presence of the avowedly inexplica¬
ble.’
1 bill is a IrerJ blear and compact
statement of a great truth. If wo
throw away the theological explaua
tion of the mystery of man’s being
and destiny, there is uono other to
Seek or be found. We give up the
problem as insolvablo by tbe human
tliifid, tthd the mystery becomes more
profound dud ittotb baffling and more
distressing.
Tbe fA.-diionab'e ngnof ieisiiJ is sim¬
ply a confession of inability to solve
the great enig'iita cf existence, it
says we do not know and cannot
Oiid tbe key, and therefore it is use¬
less to hunt for it.
Bnt the human mind is so Consti¬
tuted that it can never give up the
quest. If the reason is baffled tho
imagination insists on coming in to
carry forward the exploration.
Accordingly, instead of supplant¬
ing religion, science is making reli¬
gion all the more necessary as a re¬
lief and a refuge from the torture of
futile attempts to solve with the rea¬
son what the reason cannot grflsp.
Men may not care so much for theol¬
ogical dogma, but they will cherish
religious sentiment the morb Cal’efUl
ly. -They will not be content to live
like the beasts that perish,
aspiration and without hunger foi;
spiritual tood, and they will not be
able to do so .—New York Sitn.
HoNEsey, The Best Policy. —A
prominent Austin lawyer is the hope
fill father of a boy who steals every¬
thing he can 'ay his hands on. A
few days ago tbe father said angrily
to bis son :
You have been Bteitlitlg apples
and things from ihe grocery on tbe
corner. What is all this stealing go 1
Ing to come to V
'1 don’t know, pa. All 1 know is
what tbe grocery man saidi’
‘What did ho say ?’
'Nothing, except that I came by it
honestly, and that you and me would
meet some day itt the penitentiary.’
— Texas Siftings.
A celebrated physician sayo* that
when pneumonia attacks tlie steady
sqUiuC drinker, oho who carries reg¬
ularly his pint to a quart of whisky
daily, the treatment comes exclusive
ly under the dominion of tbe
taker, ns the first case of recovery
ha* yet to be reported;
Gems of Thought.
Time is the old justice that exam¬
ines all offenders.— Shaksfieare.
All plnces that the eye of Heaven
isits are to a wise man ports and
happy havens.— Shdlsfieare.
A virtuons name is the precious
only good for which queens end
peasants’ wives must contest togeth¬
er.— Schiller.
True feeling is a rustic vulgarity
the flirt dees not tolhrittej she couiits
itS healthiest and niast honest maci
Testation all sentiment .—Ik Marvel.
Fame confers a rttnk above that of
gentlemen and of kings. As soon
as she issitoff her patent of nobility;
it mattols hot if the recipient be tlie
son of a Bourbon or of a tallow-chan¬
dler .—Bulwer Lytlon.
Speaking truth is like writing fair,
and comes only by practice } it is
je§s ii iliatter of will than of baLii •
rtntl I doubt if any occasion can be
trivial which permits the practice
and formation of such a habit.— Bus¬
kin.
Whatever sludy tends neither di- 5
rectly nor indirectly to tilalie ils bet¬
ter men and citizens is tit best but a
specious and ingenious sort of idle¬
ness, dnd the knowledge we acquire
by it only a creditable kind of ignor
ance, ndlblog more.— Bolinghroke.
The rtcible Inind may be clouded
by adversity, but cannot be wholly
concealed; for true merit shihes by a
light of its otth, dnd, glimitiering
through the reDts and crannies of
indigence, is perceived, respected
and honored by the generous and
the great.
Human bnlhgs in tflofflehts of pas¬
sionate reprdach and denunciation,
especially when their anger la on
their owfi account; HI© flfever so
wholly IH the right that the person
who has to wince cannot possibly
protest against some unreasonable¬
ness or unfairness iu (heir outburst.
—George Eliot.
Perseverance is not always an in
ducat ion of great abilities* An in
difforeut poet is invulnerable to a
repulse, tbe want of sensibility in
him btllhg wltflt a itoblo sfllf-Confi
denoe Was iu Milton. These exclud
ed suitors continue, nevertheless, to
hang tlicir garlands at the gate, to
anoint tile dbor-post, nhd even kiss
the very thbekhdld of her home,
though the Muse beckoiis them not
in.— Wordsworth .
A SellQttlboy on Coi'HS.
Corns are cf two kinds—vegetable
and animal. Vegetable corn grows
in rows, and animal corn gruwa on
toes. There are several kinds of
corn. There is the unicorn, the
capricorn, pop-coni, corn dodgers,
field corn, aud the corn, which is the
corn your feet feel most. It is said,
I believe, that gophers iike corn, but
persons having corns do not like to
‘go fur’ if they can help it.
Corns have kernels, and some
Colonels have coma Y’egetable corn
grows on tho ears, but animal corn
grow on tbe feet, at tbe Other end of
the body. Another kind of corn is
the acorn) this • grows on oaks, but
there is no hoax about the corn.
This aCorn is a corn with an indefi
nite article added. Try it alid see.
Many a man, when ho has a com,
wishes it was an acorn.
Folks that have corns sometimes
send for a docior, and if the doctor
himself is corned, probably he won’t
do so well as if ho isn’t. The doc¬
tor says corns are produced by tight
boots and shoeB, which is probably
the reason why, whon a tildtl is tight;
they say he is corned.
If a farmer manages Well) to can
get a godd deal df Corn on an acre,
but I know of a farifier that his the
Horn that makes the biggest acher on
his farm. The Digger crop of Vege¬
table corn a man raises the better
ho likes it, but the bigger crop
animal Cofn he raise* the better he
does not like it. Another kind
corn is the corn dodger. Thb way
it is made is very simple, aud it is
folloTVs—that is If you warit to
You go along the street and Oiest
man you know has a corn, and
rough character ; then you slop
it. aud see if you don’t have
to dodge. In that way you will
oat what acorn dodger
Terms $1.50 ter Ahmmi.
Srigiit Bits.
‘What shall I call my deg ?’ ashed
Xenas. ‘If he was mine I would
call him home and keep him there,’
replied Obudiab .—Boston Sttit
This sbrWs what we shall come to
if woman suffrage becomes a general
law ; ‘A bill for taxing bachelors,
lawyers and other animdls, 13 fcfend
fag in the Wyoming Ttrrilory Legis¬
lature;’
The repot t from the treasury de¬
partment that 'the one dollah hotOs
are exhausted and the twos will last
btit a feW days longer’ sounds like
an echo from au editorial sanctum.
— Lowel. Courier.
* A Vermont man has a hen 39
years old. The other day a hawk
stole it, but after an hour came back
with a broken bill and three claws
gone, pat down the hen and took an
old rubber bedi iu place of it.— Bos¬
ton Post.
Mural Halstead wrote three edito¬
rials opposing the rise of the Ohio
river, and it kept rising. Then Mc¬
Lean, of the Enquirer, urged it to
rise higher, and it began to fall. This
shows tho power of the Cincinnati
press .—Boston Post.
. ‘Yea,’ said Tew in us, 'Byraesmon
key bits a peculiarly disagreeable
way of makiug himself unpopular.
f. a trzt:“« s , w Xs”“‘
other day and asked the scientist in
Charge lots of questions about bota¬
ny and he couldn’t answer .’—Boston
Post.
The old tramp who waC ft ‘A Mich¬
igan sufferer’ last summer will go on
the road this spring as an ‘Ohio flood
Sufferer.' He thought oileb he would
have to appear as a ‘Java earthquake
sufferer;’ but tbe floods have fortu¬
nately rendered this rather far-fetch
ed ii use unneccessary .—Norristown
Herald.
When P
A swell who had been paying de¬
voted attention to a rich banker’s
daughter finally interviewed the old
gentleman on the subject, says the
Merchant Tfatellfep. After a few
preliminary remarks, he said :
‘I love your daughter, sir, a id
want to marry her.’
‘Ah, is that so ?’ replied the father,
looking at him sharply oter his
glasses.
‘I’ve hpard yott have some very
extravagant liitljilS; and some as bad
as they are extravngaiit.’
‘I’ve not been a saint, sir, but
when I am married and brought un
der the tender influence of a good
and loving woman I shall reform.’
‘I’m glad to hear that; it would
be unpleasant for your wife if you
didn’t. Were you aware, sir, that,
when I give you my daughter, I give
you with her $25,000 in United
States bonds ? $25,000, sir 1’
‘I was not aware of that-, sir, bnt
it would make no difference to me.
Pecuniary considerations do not en¬
ter into my calculations at nil. sir.
LoVe is of far more importance, sir.
and it is a wife, not a bank account,
I am looking for. Money is mere
trash, sir.’
‘Don’t give yourself away, young
man, don’t give yourself away. I,
said when I gave you my daughter,
I’d give you the money ; but, you
see, I’m not going to give yon my
daughter, and that changes the as¬
pect of affairs very materially. Good
morning. Call around after yon
have been reformed about 15 years.’
A Terrible Kicker.
‘Please, air,’ said the bell boy to a
Texas hotel clerk, ‘number forty says
there ain’t no towel in his room.’
‘Tell liittt to tlse one of the window
cUrtaiuS.’
‘He eayS; ttit); there ain’t ni> pll
lers:’
‘Tell him to put bis coflt, iltid vest
tinder his bfead.’
‘And ‘Suffering he wants f> 'pitched of water.’ tbe
Cyrus! But he’s
worst kicker I ever struck in my life.
Carry him up the herse pail.’
‘He wants to knotV if be £atl have
a light.’ blame him! this
‘Here Give him
{“S™ , a " I S , i“heli , bavo it Wed only
on ono side, or turned ever?’— Sift
ings;
NO. 2 .
BUSINESS DIBEUTORYi
M. CORBETT',
DEALER IN
|]MMeiliciis,G&iic!ili I
PERFUMERY, FINE SOAPS,
Fancy and Toilet Articles;
fcot'.lG-ly
CORBETT HOUSE)
M. CORBETT, Prop.,
Lumpkin. - GiidimiA.
Every Attention Given to the Ac
comm oda tion «C comfort of Guests f
Oet.1 -1
E. M. SHERAM,
MANUFACTURER OF
P!.A\TATI#\ WACMSi
Plow Stocks, Etc.
Blaclsmthino & Wagon Repaibino.
Oct.20 ly
A. H. 8IMPSON i
DE.V^Ell IS
Groceries, HarM, ^H@ES,
STAPLE DRY GOODS, &G
Coffins, Burial Cases, Bsdsteads,
Chairs E c.
W.W. STOKES *
Dealer In
, & GrocBTieg,
CANNED:GGG8S, TOBACCO j
Cigars and staple Dry Goods:
Get IS ly
W. A. GREGORY,
DEALER IN
Fancy & Family Groceries*
CANNED GOQQSj GGNFECTION
ARSES, STAPLE DRY GOODS,
Tobacco, Cigars, Snuff, Tinware Etc:
Oci.20
M, M. & W. 11. GRIFFIS.
—DEALERS IX—
BEER, Family WINES, Groceries, TOBACCO, ffiisiiss,
CIQARS.
Splendid Billiard and Pool Tables.
jr@-North Side Public Square,
W.S. GILUS 9
DEALER IN
Family Groceries
Plantation Supplies,
Country Produce Eta
South Side Public Square.
Lumpkin, Ga. Jan. 1,1883.
FIRE INSURANE.
Insure your dwellings, Furniture;
Merchandise: Gib ttbileeS, itiicl otheb
property. None but first-class Com¬
panies represented. Rates low.
J. B. RtcttAnbSoN; Agent;
Sept.2-*th-I881-tf.
2
Mm & Miller,
—DEALERS IN—
S ’
COFFINS, CASKETS AND
Burial Cases
Can furnish any style of, COFFIN
wanted at,reasonable prices;
aSy-Repository at Sherasi’s Shops.
Lumpkin, Ga., Sep 1,
SIRLE’S CARRIAGE)
And Rlacksmith Shops.
Having purchased the above well
known Shops from Mr. D. W. Surles
1 am now prepared to manufacture
to order any kind of Wagons or Bug¬
gies that may be wanted. Skillful
mechanics are employed and the best
of Material will be uted in all work.
Special attention given to repairing,"
aud all work promptly attended to.
Terms Cash.
C' A. SURLE3.
Lumpkin, Ga, Feb. i, 1884.
Globe Cotton Planter
Tbe Best Now Ini Use!
Call and see its perfect work:
S; S. EVERETT, Agent’
Lumpkin,' Gj. J art.