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THE LUMPKIN INDEPENDENT O’
KyL B. & A. W. LATIMER.
COOL. XIII.
t • . T"
h She imkpnuUut.
£u v !ished every SaVor&aJr Morning
TEIiM H :
ON 1% vi#-Airs........*1.50.
»-rsc Montits...... 75C.
Bates ofAdvertising.
On. inch tine iurei tion........ $ 1 QO
.
Each Knbsiquent insertion..... 50
On* inch, one month........ to
One inch, thi-ce months........ c-f
On* inch, six months..........
One inch, twelve months....... 10 10
One quarter column, one month 600
One quarter column twelve months 35 00
One half column, one mouth.. . . 10 0
One half colamu twelve months..... *50 00
One column one mouth... 15 00
One column t .velve mouths 100 00
All bills for advertising are due at
any time upon presentation aflei
first appearance of advertisement.
Address all letters to The Lcm’KIN Indk
T-enhem, or J. E. A A. W. LITJMKH,
Proprietors.
LAW CARDS.
T. D. Huron t. web, F. A. Bush
HIGHTOWER & BUSH,
Attorneys at Law,
Lumpkiu, Georgia
Jun. 1, 1884.
WELLBORN F. (’LA Ii K E,
Attorney at i aw,
Lumpkin, Georgia.
Will practice in Stewart Com ty.
Special attention given to collections
Lumpkin, Ga., May 5.1883.
E. G. SIMMONS
attorney at law,
AMERICUS, GA.
Will pra dice in nil the comities o!
This Judicial Circuit, iu the Supremt
Court of the Stale of Georgia, arid
in the District Court of :hc United
States, nnd in ail other court.-. In
Bppcial .contract. jnlj23-8l.
1CEDI3AL GARBS
W. A. GREGORY,
Physician & Suijgeon,
Lumpkin, Ceorgia.
Oct,.20-ly
J. E. & W. P. CAUTElf,
Practicing Physicians,
LUMPKIN, - GEORGIA.
Office South Side 1'iibhc Square.
Oct2()-ly
*J. A. TIiOKN VOX JR.,
Practical Dentist,
LUMPKIN, UEOUGIA.
Will do all kinds of Dental Work
in a nent nnd sulstr.utia manner.
Oct.23-Iy.
LUM1KIN HOTEL,
JOHN YAKBHOUGH,
• FBOPIIIKTOII.
This old and well-known Hotel is
still open to the public and offers su
perior inducements to travelers and
drummers. W itb an experience ot
20 years the Proprietor thinks be
knows how to look after the comfort
of his guests. Table furnished with
the best.tbe market affords Polite
attention nnd reasonable charges.
Stock fed at 25c t er meal each.
Lumpkin, Ga., Sept. 1,1883. tf
Livery and Feed Stables,
LUKPKIN, GEORGIA
A. F. HOLT, PROP.
The tndersigDed is prepuired to
furnish the public with any kind of
team desired at reasonable prices.
HACK LINE
! Will also ran a Fine, Comforta
Lie Hick between Lumpkiu aud
Uuihbtrt, leaving Lumpkin every
Monday, Wednesday aud Friday,
returning same days und making
connections with morning and even¬
ing train. Ouly skillful drivers em¬
ployed.
Gash in advance will he lequir
ed for passage and packages.
#@rDrovers will find a 1 ’rge and
commodious lot for their stock.
A F. HOLT.
Lnmjikin, Sept. 1st, ly
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, APRILS, 1884.
Items of Interest.
‘Jumbo’ is the tuiRghalivefname of
town reci utly incorporated in Tex
as.
Over forty Methodist churches in
Philadelphia pay their pastors less
than $1,000 per year each.
Mr. W. H Montague of Boston
possesses the bullet which killed
Geu. Warren at Bunker Hill.
The grand horse total to Germany
is by the last return.2 417,138 ; that
of Anstro-Hungury, 3 400,000.
Instead of flogging bad boys, the
teachers in souse of the schools in
Scotland dose them with castor oil.
Prussia gives her Deputies $3.75 a
day ; Saxony nnd Baden, $3 ; Bava¬
ria, $2 50. The Hanae towns give
nothing.
Tue Mexican government is im¬
portuning Flemish people to intro¬
duce into that couutiy the cultiva¬
tion of fl iX.
Kansas City packed 55,000 more
hogs than Cincinnati during the win¬
ter. Cincinnati bud wore water and
mil si*, though.
Fruucis Radoux, who receutly died
at the uge of 94 years, taught school
in Port'and, fie., fir fifty years.
Longfi l.ow was one of his pupils.
Mexico has seven cities of over
30,000 population, of vbich the Cit
of Mexico lias 300,001 inhabitants,
Pueblo 200,000 and L*en 120,000.
The next fl lod is expected to lake
place at Montreal. ’Ihe huge snow
banks along the St. Lawrence are be¬
ginning to melt, and file riyer grows
higher every boor.
A petroleum district was recently
discovered near Baku, in Asiutic
Russia. Its area is 1,200 square
miles, and but three miles cf it. have
I een explori d so fir.
The money expen l. d by Am-ri
i cans for tha purchase of pictures in
j | Brunei, within the Inst twenty year*
nr Hints to 2(10,000,000 francs, which
i irt f q, ;a | i„ $10,000,000.
| A hoive in u Scotch colliery, which
nnd to he abandoned a while last
mouth on account of damage to tbe
sbuft, was found alive after three
weeks’ fast, and is expected to live.
The eity of Manchester, England,
now has water reservoirs covering
844 acres, whose mains measures
G43 miles, and they supply 20,000,
000 gallons to 900,000 people daily.
The cost thus far has been £3,352,
000 .
Long Island fishermen are excited
over the frequent appearance of late
of a number of whales off the coast.
Oue was chased a distance of twenty
utiles the other day, but without suc¬
cess. The men arc, however, iu
readiness for another bnut.
Wild dogs are terror zlng the
country about Cedarvillo, Kansas,
t hey are more ferocious aDd moro
difficult to kill than wolves. They
have recently killed two lurge steers,
uearlv wiped out three flocks of
sheep, and eaten two litters of pigs.
Pasteur’ says concerning vivisec¬
tion : ‘N«ver would I have the eottr
age to kill a bird ter sport, but when
it comes to experiment.'! I have never
been troubled by the slightest scru¬
ple. Science has the right of plead
ing the sovereignty of the purpose.’
Berlin has one drug store to every
inhabitants ; Breslau one to
every 13.000, an I Cologne one to
every 11,000 A Chicago writer ex¬
presses surprise at these figures, for
his is a large German city, yet it rnp
ports a drug store for every 1,500 in¬
habitants.
There are supposed to be nbont
1,000,000 species iu the animal kiug
deat. Of beetles alone over 109,000
species are known, and the who’e
number of insects Lset.it 500.000.
Of tbe higher animals there are 1,-
200 mammals 10,000’fishes. 7 500 lards 2,000 rep
tiles and
, w _ r ___
About 5 o’clock last eveurng a
young lady rushed breathlessly into
her home on Wnlnnt street nnd sat
down iu a chair completely
ed.
‘Why, what’s the matter ?’ asked
her mother iu the greatest alarm.
‘Oh,’ said the young woman when
site had recovered her breath, ‘I
escaped it. Another oae of
horrible ted sunsets to-night.,
j red PhPitdeffifiin is so trying to my
Coll.
A Weekly Newtuaper, Published ia the Political, Social and Agricultural Interests of Stewart GiuntjK
A Social Lesson.
Yoang Spoonogle never knows
when to leave when bn Calls oil a
young lady; he likes tbe sound of
his own voice so well that he talks
on and on, while tbe poor girl grows
light-headed with the tax on her
strength, and wishes the mantel
piece of Elijah would fall on the tire
some caller.
There is a young lady on LnFay
ette avenue who nude up her miud
to give Spoonogle a lesson. So, last
Sunday night, when he called, she
was as cordial as possible up to 11
o’clock. Then, having had a four
volume historv of Spoonoglo’s life,
wiih an extended account of his in¬
fluence in politics and business, she
began to gel dizzy and have a ring¬
ing in her eats. At that moment
her yt ung brother rushed into the
room and said hurriedly : ‘Pa wants
tbe morning papers, si 1'
'Look iu tbe vestibule, Willie,’ she
answered gently ; ‘I think I beard
the boy leaving them Borne hours
Ago.’
Spoonogle never took the hint, but
drawled on about the roller skating
riuk and what a figure he cut on
skates. Tbo next interruption was
#
from the head of the house, who en¬
tered, briskly rulibiug his hands.
‘Good morning— good morning,’
be said cheerily. ‘Ha! Spoonogle,
you’re out early. Well, ‘early bird,'
etc. It’s going to be a fine day, from
present appearances.’
Spoonogle was dazed, but he con¬
cluded the ohi man had been drink¬
ing. nud sat hack with a ‘come one,
como all, this rock shall fly from its
firm base as soon as yours truly’ aii
that Was decided and convincing.
A half hour passed, and tbe moth¬
er hurried in.
‘Dear me, I'm late,’ she laid, as
she entered. ‘I smelled - the cuff-t¬
an hour ago and knew breakfast was
wsiting, but—oh 1 Good morning.
Mr Spoonogle?’
Then the sweet yontb took the
hint and drawing himself together he
got oat into the hall uud opened tbe
front door just as the hired girl rang
a bell and the small boy yelled
‘breakfast’ over tha barristers .—De
trait Fi re Press.
Barbinicai Theory pf Sneez¬
ing.
There is, perhaps, no individual
who doss not now eujoy the luxury
of a rtie. z-j dailv. We say ‘now’ ad
visedly, for from the beginning, if
wo may believe those who ought to
know, it was not always so. Accor
ding to the learned Iiabbi, Eliezer,
it was originally intended that men
should sue. zo once. When man’s
first disobedience brought death into
the world.it was ordained that sneez¬
ing should be the means aud agent
of dissolution. When a man’s time
came, be was to sneez'*, and in
snei z : ng, yield up tbe ghost. And
this was the happy aud easy mede of
exit from this world for many gener¬
ations. The patriarch Jacob, howev¬
er, reflecting that so summary a
call afforded n« time either for spir¬
itual preparation, or tbe settlement
of worldly affairs, besought the Lord
that he might be exempted from this
law. After long supplication und
‘wrestling’ with the Almighty, bis
prayers were hoard. He sue*zcd aud
did Dot die.
It may be questioned wheather
Jacob acted wisely in thus bringing
about so important a change, for it
life ended with a sue.-ze, what an
amount of pain and Buffeting might
be "P ared ns ’ B,,d whttt ft si,u P Ie retn
woulJ n»Aj to band to all
vvll ° tbiuk ‘ life not wo, tk ,iviu S’’ A
P itU!h of 8nuff would dotbu busi “« 88 -
Jacob’s contemporaries did not take
! this view of thiuga. They regardea
' the change us a decided benefit, and
,,]) the princes of the uuiverre, when
j ihev heard of it, ordered that for the
future sneezing should be accom¬
panied wi’h thanksgiving for the
preservation of life and earnest
wishes for its prolongation.
A Teire Haute, Ind., man employs
his divorced wife as a servant girl,
nnd her neighbors say she has ti bet¬
ter wardrobe titan when she was his
wife.
mwT,
Rest is not quitting
Tbe busy career ;
Itest is the tilting
Of self to one's sphere.
’Tin the brook’s motion,
Clear without strilu ;
Fleeting to ocean,
After this life.
'Tis loving ami serving
l’he hiuhoit and best;
'Tis onward, unswerving,
And this is true rest.
—Goethe.
A Picture of Georgia Repub¬
licanism.
There has been, as is well known,
a State convention to the Itopnbli
cans of Georgia called to meet in
this city on the 9‘h of April, to se¬
lect delegates to tbe national conven¬
tion at Chicago, and to do such oth¬
er things as may be necessary to re
organize the party in Georgia.
Iu many counties alleged conven¬
tions of the party have been held,
which have been the scene of the old
order of strife, multiplied ten fold in
ubsurdity and folly, as it were, if
such were possible. These conven¬
tions and the primary meetings
which preceded them, if any such
there were in fact, have been run ex¬
clusively by negroes of divers hues
and divers degrees of vice. If any
respectable white man, who was not
either a present or prospective office¬
holder under the Federal govern¬
ment, has been pre.-ent at any one
of these conventions or meetings, tbe
fact has escaped our notice. We
would be glad to hear that one such
was present at any convention or
meeting The whole affair has seem
ed to degenera'o into a disgusting
scramble among impecunious negroes
to-get to the State or a district con
vcn'iou in the hope to be able to bor
row emugh money to get buck home
That, a great, party should be rep¬
resented iu a great State by such
material is absurd and disgusting in
the extreme, and it- were far better
that all effort to have anythiug of n
party in Georgia ware abandoned,
than t ) put what few respectable Re¬
publicans there are in the State in
tbo false attitude they are placed by
i he antics of these negroes who as
sumo to lend where they are not fit
to follow.— At. ant a National.
• mm ■
The Lost Rivers of Idaho.
One of the moat singular features
in the scenery of the Territory of
ldabo is the occurrence of dark,
rocky eba-ma, into which large
streams and creeks suddenly disap¬
pear and are never more seen. Tbe
fissures are old lava channels pro¬
duced by the outside of tbo molten
mass cooling and forming a tube,
which, on tbe fiery stream becoming
exhausted, has beeu loft empty,while
the roof of the lava duct, having at
some poiut fallen in, presents there
the opening into whict the river
plungen nnd is lost. At one place
along the bunks of the Snake, one of
these rivers reappears, gushing from
a cleft high up iu the basaltic walls,
where it leaps a cataract in the tor¬
rent below. NYbere this stroam has
its origin, or at what point it is swal¬
lowed up,is utterly nukuown, though
it is believed that its sources are a
long way np in the north country.
BeshUs becoming the channels of
liviug streams, these lava conduits
are frequently found impacted with
icc masses which never entirely melt.
Was It a Boy or a Girl.
Mrs. Mill cal iy —Good morning*
Mrs. O’Hollibaa—Good rnarun’,
Mrs. Mu cahy
Mls bow 8 th ® ° uld
0
Mrs. O’ Holliban—Och purty well’
thankee, Mrs. Mulcaby, but dhrunk
agin last night, though,
Mrs. Mulcaby—Och dear, dear,
the poor mail!
Mrs. O’ Holliban—Did you hear
t be news aliont the incruise in Mrs.
McCarthy’s family, Mrs. Mulcaby?
Mrs. Mulcuhv— Oi did not. NVnz it
a bve «r a gnrruil? Holliban—Twaz
Mrs O’ Mnlcnhy—Naytbei? fiayther.
Mrs.
Mrs. O'Hollihau—Nuytber; twnZ
twins.
Mrs. Mulcaby—Wall, wall, wull! —
San Francisco Wa 4 p.
Bearls of Thought.
H dred stirreth op strifes, bnt love
eoverath all sins.
Travelers change their guineas,dot
their characters.
The future des'iny of the child Is
always the work of the mother.
Good-will, like a good name, is
got by many actions, and lost by one.
To persevere in one’s duty and be
silent is the first answer to oalamny.
Those who have known real grief
seldom seem sad.
The sunshine of life is made up of
very little beams, that are blight all
the time.
Those who excel iu strength are
not most likely to show contempt for
weakness.
In the lives of the saddest of us
there are bright days like this, when
we feel as if we could take the great
world iu our arms.
Siucority is to speak as we think,
to do as we pretend and profess,
to perform and make good what
we promise, and really be what we
wonld seem and appear to be.
Never go back. What yon attempt
do with all your ftrength. If the
prospect be somewhat darkened, put
the fire of resolution to your soul,
and kindle a fl cue that nothing but
death can extinguish.
There appears to exist a greater
desire to live long than to live well.
Measure by in >n’« desires, he cmcot
live long enough ; measure by his
good deeds, and he has not lived
enough ; measure by bis evil deeds,
and he has lived too long.
When you meet with great and
unexpected offers of friendship, re¬
ceive them respectfully, but with u
moderate degree of caution ; endeav¬
or to ditcover if they flow from a
warm heart and a silly head, or from
a designing head a cold heart; knav¬
ery and folly are often hardly to be
distinguished.
Askud Him.
‘Bob,’ said a gentleman to a newly
employed servant, ‘run down to the
steamboat landing and ask the Cap¬
tain of the ‘High Horse' whit time
the boat leaves.’
Bob hurriedly departed and the
gentleman busied himself in making
Arrangements for a journey. After
awhile, Boh, pufftug and blowing re¬
turned.
‘Did yon ask the Captain?’
‘Yes. sab.’
'What did be say?'
‘Doan’ know, sah. Didu’ wait ter
heab, hut I tola him wbnt yir said.
Jes thought yer wanted mo ter ax
him.’
‘You ignorant scoundrel. I ought
to break your head.’
‘Whut’s de matter wid yer, boss?
Nebber seed de like in my life. Man
kuiu’ do wbnt he’s tole lessen er
white man cusses him. No wooder
ditr's so much tribulation in de coun¬
try when de white folks is so lull o'
fanity .’—Arkanmw Iravellcr
He Couldn’t Wait.
-
They are not vary rigid in court
formalities in Colorado, so to Bpeak
‘I don’t see the prisoner any where,’
said the judge at the B me Valley
session, as he braced up from a little
judicial nap preparatory to sentenc¬
ing a horse thief to death. Where
is he, Mr. Sheriff?’
‘I’m blessed if I know," said that
functionary, who bad been absorbed
in collecting a horse race bet from
the clerk.
‘Was be a big, red-beaded man
with a scat on his cheek T asked tbe
fireman of the jury, who was shuf¬
fling cards for another deal.
‘That’s him,’ said the sheriff, who
Imd been looking around under the
benches without success.
•Why then,’ continued the fore
man, ‘about half nu Lour ago he —
cards, gentlemen—he asked me to
step ont and take a driuk, aud —I
see yonr raise—and when I showed
him 1 held a flush, he said,
time, then,’ und aalsed oat.’
‘The devil you say,’ tbuudered
houor. ‘However, bo’ll probably
in town again nest week to see
circus, and some of yon fellows
remind tbe sheriff to shoot him
lmnd—save lots cf trouble.
court will now adjourn for
ney’s chicken fight.’— San
Pod ,
Terms $ 1.50 Per Annum. -
Bright Bits.
Mexican editors do not care libou*
an extended circulation. The fewer
subscribers they have the fewer times
(hey areshot all
Denmark has beeh sending tis 2,
000,000 heads of cabbage. If there
is aiiything rotten in Denmark we
shall probably soon And it ortt.
‘Is it a crime to be a woman ?’ asks
Lillie Deverenux Blake If it is, let
its all join in Mr. Dan McQuinuis’
favorite toast : ‘Success to crime ’
livery hen roost in a large section
of Louisville was robbed a few nights
ago. There seems to bo considera¬
ble activity in ‘the Reptfblican party
in the SoUth’ just now.— Courier
Journal.
Tb§re is a good deal in the ‘move¬
ment cure,’ after all. Witness the
young man who has been cured of
paying attentions to a yonug lady by
means of a sudden movement of hei
pa’s fool.
Ninety-one wills deposited in the
Berlin Royal Court over fifty years
ago are still lying there unopened
and without claimants. This ought
to be worth something to Myra
Gaines Clark.
A Philadelphia confectioner has
two big cards in his window. On
one is insenbod 'Girls Wanted,’ and
the other ‘Taffy.’ He evidently knows
how to capture the girls.— Philadel¬
phia Call.
The Spanish editiou of a medical
almanac, about 140,000 copies, was
lost by the foundering of a vessel,
and what the merry realms of Me
phistopheles tbe Spanish people are
to do for weathei ne,don't know.
‘Aunt Jane,’ said an exasperated
wife, ‘I wish it was a custom for wo
men to trade husbands as it is for
men to trade horses.’ ‘Why, my
dear ?’ ‘Because if it was, I'd cbeni
some woman dreadfully befori. sun¬
down.’
‘Are you having much practice
now ?' asked an old Judge of a young
lawyer. ‘Yes, sir ; a great deal,
thank you.’ ‘All, I'm glad to hear it.
In what line is yonr practice partic¬
ularly ?’ ‘Well, sir, particularly iu
• conomy .’—Merchant Traoeler.
l’Lilosopher John asks with inno
cent frankness, ‘How much milk
wonld yon get from a cow if yon
didu't feed her?’ The quantity of
milk you get from tbe modern cow,
John, depends more on the wa‘er
and the chalk yon use than on the
feed the cow has.
A news item states that ‘tbe hose
of Mrs. Brant was broken into dur¬
ing her absence, and robbed of $800
worth of jewelry, clothing eind other
property.’ Tbe only explanation of
this qneer statement is that Cither
Mrs. B. is a Chicago lady, or the
printer has left ‘u’ out o f hose.— Not
ristou-n Herald.
‘Let me dream ngain ‘So yon
were arrested rnd fined yesterday
for being drunk nnd diftofdefly; here
you ate again to day tor the same of
fensc!’ Prisoner (who has been pump
ed on): ‘Yes, Judge, but. can you or
rest a man twice on the same charge?’
Judge : ‘Certainly not, Prisoner :
‘Then lemuro go, Judge, this is the
same old drunk !’—Life
G >ofi Adv-ce. —‘Are you sick?’ ask
ed tbe old phySici ur of his eldest
son. who appeared dispirited aud ill
ut ease;
‘Not exactly,’ said the young man,
‘only an eastern botna has drawn on
me unexpectedly for $400,’
‘How ofteu h'ave I cauti.rtfed yon,’
said tbs atlgry father, ‘not to expose
yourself to a draft /—Indianapolis
Scissors.
Pi.rrote are qneer creatures, aud,
like monkeys, sometimes seCm like u
v«-’y burlesque upon humanity. C'n*
South Amerrican bird had nnfofun
fttely learned on shipboard the habit
j of Profane language. The male, a
j little ashamed of h > creature’# pro
| fanity, undertook a cure by dousing
it with a bucket of water at each of
fense. Polly evidently imbibed th*
reproof, for dnriftg n gale, when it
heavy sea broke oter a hen cotfp,
and deluged hens and cotfk* pvetn
tltOronghly, she marched up to the
dripifing fowls aud screamed out,’
lfc.cn swearing again, hdiitf ijcT — liar
fr rs Hmjn il'C,.
NO •* O
—a
BUSINESS blHECTORYi
M. CORBETT,
DEALER 15.
in . —;
S f f
PEEFUK 3 RT, HUB. SOAPS,
Fancy anil Toilet Article#;
Cet;lt>-ly
CORBETT HOUSE ♦
M. COmiETT, Prhp.;
Lumpkin. - Georgia;
Every At ten ttoH. (liven to the Ac¬
commodation «t* comfort of O acute i
Oot.l -1
E. M. SHERAM,
MAST’FACTUREF. OF
PLANTATION wagons,
Plow Stocks: Etc;
BncLsMiTm.No k Wagon Repairing.
Oct. 20 ly
A. II. DEADER SIMPSON;
IN’
STAPLE DRY GOODS, SHOES, &C
Coffins. Burial Cases, Bedsteads,
Chairs E c,
w. \v7st0kes^
Dealer In
Family & Fauci Groceries,
CANNED-GOODS, TOBACCO,
Cigars and Staple Dry Hoods.
Oct iU ly
W. A. GREGORY,
DEALER IN
Fancy & Family Groceries,
CANNED GOODS, GONfECTION*
ARIES, STAPLE DRY GOODS,
Tobacco, Ciciahs, Snuff, Tiswabk Eto.
Get .20
M. M. & W. H, GRIFFIS,
- DKA T.EIIS IN—
Family Groceries, Wildes,
BEER, WINES, TOBACCO, CIGARS
Splexdid Billiard and Pool Tablbs.
^jav-North Side Public Square.
W.S. GILUS,
DEALER is
Family Groceries,
.
Plantation Supplies,
Country Produce Etcs
South Side Public Square.
Lumpkin, Ga. JaD. 1,1883.
FIRE INSfj&ANE t
Insure yonr dwellings, Furniture, -
Merchandise. Gin HoM5s, and other
property. None but first class Com¬
panies represented. itflfes Ibvi.
J. B. P.ictTARDsox, A’gefif;
Sept.2,th-1881-t£.
Slieram & Miller,
- U&.VLEliS IX—
CASKETS AN 1 *
Burial Cases
Can furnish any style of COFFlSf’
wanted at reasonable prices,
teS*Repository at Sh-erxm’s Shoph.
Luuipkiu, Ga., Sep 1,
SUM'S CARRIAGE
Anil Blooksttitk Shops.
Having purchased the above well
known Shops from Mr. t>\ W. Sur’ci
I am now prepared to manufacture
to order any kind of Wa<* 05># or Buo-'
qtks that mat ho wanted. Skillful
mechanics are employed and the beet
of ffiaferi d will be used in alt Work.
Special attention given to repniriug,
and all work promptly attended to.
Terms Cash.
C A. StTRLfcS.
Lumpkin. Ga, Feb. i , 1884.
1
-r
Globe Cotton Plantei’
The Bast Now in Use!
Cult atid see its perfect Work.
(i. S. EVERETT, AgrtL
tiuift; V.u, Ga. J tn. ’JW,