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Jiy J. B. & A. W\ LATDILR.
VOL. XIII.
(Hit' ^mUpmtrnt.
J v !ished every Saturday Morning
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Kalesol AdvertiMiijr.
*
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Each subsequent insertion.....
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One inch, flii'ce months ............. 5 if
One inch, six months. ............ i 00
On. inch, twelve months..... ..... 1 »
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One quarter column twelve men A a 35
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One half eelitum twelve mouths (10 On
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All bills for advertising are due at
any lime upon presentation nftn
first appearance of advertisement.
Address all letters to The Lcmkin Inde¬
pendent, or J. 1>. A A. W. L vTJJIEli,
Proprietors.
LAW CARDS*
T. D. timoiiT. wer, F A. Lush
HIGHTOWER ABISH,
Attorneys at Law,
Lumpkin, Georgia
Jan. 1, 1884.
WELLBGltX F. CLARKE,
Alien cy r.t I lw,
Lumpkin, Ceorgia.
Wilt practice jn Stewart County.
Special attention given to collections.
Lumpkin, Ga., May 5. 18t-3.
E. G. SIMMONS
ATTOitMIYAT LAW,
amehicus, ga.
Will pra tice in all tho counties o!
This Judicial Circuit, in the Supreme
Court of the Sta'e of Georgia, and
in the District Court <4 :he United
States, and in ail other court.’, by
special .contract. jn ly 23-81.
MEDICAL GAELS
W. A. GREGORY,
Physician & Surgeon,
Lumpkin, Ceorgia.
Oct.20-ly
J. E. & W. P. CART IT,
Practicing Physicians,
LUMPKIN, - GEORGIA.
Office South -Side Public Square
Oct 20 lv
J. A. THRRN VO> JR.,
Practical Dentist,
I.l M PKIN, <7IX)If fa IA.
Will do all kinds of Dental Work
in a nmt nr.d ml slantin mni-.i er.
Office up-stair-tin the Cuba House.
Op.erafing days: Thursday s, Fri¬
days and Saturdays.
Oct.23-lv.
LUM 1 KIN IIOTEl
JTOIIIV YAKBItOlJGII,
r BtJI'KI 10TO11.
This old and well-known Hotel is
still open to the public and otters su¬
perior inducements to travelers and
drummbrs. W ith an experience of
20 years the Proprietor thinks tie
knows how to look after the comfort
of his guests. Table furnished with
the best the market affords Polite
attention and reasonable charges.
Stock fed at 25c ter meal each.
Lumpkin, Ga., Sept, j, 1883 tf
Livery and Feed Stables,
LUKPKIN, GEORGIA
A. F. HOLT, PROP.
The undersigned is prepaired to
furnish the public with any kind of
team desired at reasonable prices.
HACK LINE
I will also run a Fine, Comforta¬
ble Hack between Lumpkin and
Cutbbert, leaving Lumpkin every
Motidqj’ r ‘f> > Wednesday am 1 Friday,
reto .nneetions -‘une days und making °
wn> ■ .
52*3*
.„
v
_
I commodious lot for ^
Lumpkin, Sept. Lstf iy E01,T -
V
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1834.
Antioch’s Contribution to
Georgia Scenes.
* KTlocn, April 12th, 1884.
Messrs. Editors Independent :—
An I oli 1 how woe begone are we !
having fatten prey to laconic anitnad
version. We noticed ilia former
i^ ur an osfensive discription / (in
moujorandi) ... of , last Court _ An
out at
Strange indeed far^tlnvlit
tie tilings of thiSFWRrth ; and niosi
wonderfully strange is he, who is eu
flowed with the almost super- natural
| metonymy, that bv oue stroke of the
P™ Just T tees ... G-.lirt* in their earnest
and ordely settings, aie made to rep
resent wild scenes, menageries, mix
i | ups, and mu ifih tips, conglomerated
confusions ; and end with a circus
hyperbole: most wonderful; this
teat of paralogism So quixotically
equipoised.
Well now, according to our phre¬
nological vision, it takes a certain
amount of electricity (or animal mag
netism) to electrify the imagination
to Mich marvelous feats ; aud a cer¬
tain am unit of brains, to support
the I atte.vy, that geneia'es tlie elec¬
tricity. Now what puzzles us' (and
wy pray f >r a philosophical present¬
ment) as to what amount of brains
were use.) to get up that beautiful
simile : must have been of huge pro¬
portions of three in one.
Now criticism is not condemned,
but a little paraphrasing is not out
of order iu tiiis case “The bench
an empty box ; the stand an up turn
ed barrel,” that’s so—and we admit
it is quite a c n'rast with cushioned
seats, and marbeled top stands, over¬
arched with guilded letters jus civile
He ., y«t upon this barrel head, rest¬
ed the Code oi Georgia, wide open us
the man of our council, (an I we
might s iv egotistically ) over it re
dined to I uNnecd heads, whose ca
noun at the bane measures at least
j! wtnty three proportion illy large
equipoised on either side
wiih justice—liberty : Iu front ol
that rude, stand stood a lower—a
high tower thundering down iii
coarse gntend acc nts, but truly
sublime in gran lure an eloquence —
‘'The law as it is written.” On the
right stood iu restless position a
Young bush, we think of the “Lo
cust” variety, Imt come to stay, good
timber, good far barbed fencing, it
yon plant the right eud down, and
if you plough a mule agiu it once,
he'll turn ten feet off before lie 11 go
there agin. On the left, stood »
Little-Jolin—not a D-o-tu i j >hn —
Littlejohn was to keep the tower in
position. We think his name was
spelled wrong, should have been
B i g John, and some body else will
think so if he is permiUd to talk
lawyer much. Interspersed promia
cuonsly stood the plaintiffs, defend¬
ants, jurors, witnesses and attend
■•mis, together with the High Deputy
Sheriff and the poor lailijf mat was
to die that day. The mule, case be
ing in order, it was first, called
you could have heard a pin droped,
pei feet silence reigm d, every specta¬
tor was anxious to hear and knew
the result. Buie ni si was an uwn.sual
proceeding in our court, many doubt
fans thought it mennt to bungiustan
ter. Well the bailiff, announced,
ready. The young lawyer after taking
many uneasy positions appealautly
iu searcii of papers or documents in
which gnilt «as written to condem¬
nation, sided up, arid whispered over
tiie barrel head. “We dismiss the
case.” Some of the boys said “be had
lost Lis tbunibpnper.” The crowd
catching tiie news were disorderly
for a few minutes, some of them put
ou their huts, while the court (iu
sympathy) did hold concerted action,
with the defeated parlies reducing
cost ; but the bird had flown or flew,
aud we are told did alight on anoth
er mule, for soon he was teen per
forming a kind of circu.tons drive
with a mule, seated back with con
jsiderable pomposity. This was the
circs, aud if there was any menage¬
rie attached, the High Deputy S.,
certaiu'y represented the giraffe,
over-looking the crowd ut the mule
bailiff, aud tbe young luwyer, tbe ga¬
zelle with both horns knocked off
'
ready to emerge from sight into an
empty box if need be. Furthermore,
Antioch Court can show some stub
A Weekly Newspaper, Published ia the Political, Social and Agricultural Interests of Stewart County.
born facts, upon the face o its Rec¬
ord, altuist universally till Litigation
that has a beginning here, ends here.
No Appeals to Superior Court, no
prisoners in j til, no expense Vo the j
county taking cate of ourselves, tax
ation without, representation, is not
just, mighty big fight about that
oucc, but we don’t mean to throw
the tea over board, we’ll Ante, Pro-
bo no Publico.
Now Mr. Editor, as represented in
vour published exposition, the infer¬
ence given to the Public, is, that tbe
l’eop’e of Antioch are behind the
Times : as this is a Progressive Age,
would it apt be charitable in you to
missionary a few tx.Ua copies of your
valuable paper among them, to en¬
lighten and tiring them abrest up, or
could you exert tie same amount of
good to surrey y ur own surround¬
ings, up turn all the barrels with
both heads out, and bring y< ursolves
ablest—down, an I alme with Ihe
Antioch folks. Two roads to pro
grass, right way, and wrong way,
think of it, and be assured your most
prayerful attention is —in belmif
of this Court in its Eniugs and Rat
loeossions. J. C ANTIOCH.
---—------ “
Adam Was a Fortunate Man.
Adam missed a gn at many vexr
tious of s, irit that are common to
man ot this day.
Adam never had to maintain a
$15,000 appearance on a $700 in¬
come.
Adam never liv d next door to n
man who was trying to learn to play
on an nceordoon.
Ad un iiuv.,r had to fasten one of
his suspenders with a shingle nail
aud the other with a hair pin.
Adam never got to the depot just
in time to see the rear end ot the
rtar car disapp.ar arouud the water
tank.
Adam never fell over a rocking
eliusr while groping around in tin
dark after the bottle of paregoric.
Adam never had to rock the era
die while Eve ran across the street
to borrow a cup of sugar f om a neigh
bor.
Adam never had to keep the baby
while Eve went, out with a deteriniu
ed cast of continuance to reform the
world.
Adam n°ver sat tip til 5 o’clock in
tho morning to g< t the returns from
an election »,nd to at l ist learn that
the otbtV fellows bad carried it.
Adam never came honie at a Very
late hour from the Lodge lo dis
cover that he had left the latch
key in a pocket of his tier pair of i
pants
Adam never hid tight bureau
drawers, at which he was struggling
to come out suddenly and set him
down with such vehemence ai to
knock foursquare feet of plastering
off the ceiling.
Adam never had a neighbor’s calf
to reach over tbe line fence into Lis
w
premises bn a wash day and chew
off all that. part, of his other shirt be¬
low ihe enacting clause.
Adam never went down town trv
iog to remember an injunction to get
a wash-board, a pound of soap, a ball
of tape, a paper of hairpins, two
yards of pink mosquito netting aud
a mouse trap.
She Expressed It V ery Well.
A young lady on a lake Shore
train was airing, for the benefit of a
female campanion, her ideas of bfe
in general and her boarding school
knowledge of foreign languages in
particular.
‘Now, ray dear malrm,’ she said,
‘I bulk ve the single state is the state
par excellence for a young lady,
Tne idea of a young woman marry
ing a ruan, tying bet-self down to one
person and doing her drudgery? Il
is simply preposterous, you’ll never
| catch me throwing myself away in
that style. Just look at the trou¬
bles a married woman has with ser
vants, grocers, butchers, the dinners,
the carpets, the beds vhy, it is
trouble and nothing but fa-cable
trouble all libitum, ad infantum.
You don't catch me marrying a man.’
-e-WB—
Never kick a man when be is down
It is cowardly. Never kick a man
when he is up. It is reckless.
The Proposed Railroad to
Lumpkin.
The Enfattla liulltlin ot last Satnr
day has the following : The inter¬
e st now being taken iu the proposed
nu l ro ad between Eufaula and Lump
Rj u> Ga., j s 8l) earnest, sincere and
well grounded, that, it.begins to look
tike the road will be an accomplish
ed fact at. no distant day. Of the
value and importance of the road to
both cities and those living along the
hue, there is but one sentiment. and
it is that it will greatly enhance the
commercial interests of both cities
and greatly increase the value of
lauds in Stewart and Quitman conn
ties, Ga., and he a great saving ol
tini”, labor and money to the people
of those counties. Say what you
will, hut. railroads are the greatest
devices for devc'oping the resources
of a country ever adopted. Such ac¬
tion on the subject has already been
taken in Lumpkin as to indicate the
spirit and desire of the people of
Stewart, and the movement on foot
for giving the enterprise a ‘send off,’
will, we think, result in the organi
zuionof a company and the can¬
vassing of tho county to ascertain
the amount -if money that caii be
raised. We give our hearty and cor
dial endorsement to the following
paragraph clipped from the George¬
town colutnu ot the Cuthbort Enter¬
prise, of 17 1 b iust:
‘We fuel great interest jn the wel¬
fare of our neighboring county, Stew
art, aud we are satisfied that with
the proper amount of effort they can,
in a short time, hear the whistle of
the locomotive iu the corporate lim
its of Lumpkin. Start out good, ac¬
tive, energetic and enterprising nvui,
with z at aud determination tn work,
ana let them impress it upon tho
maid of every citizen of Stewart conn
tv, E ifi’itla, till I those iu Q litm.in
who could be bonefitted, that the
railroad is an bsolute necessity, an I
wo are satisfied every wide awake
mail who knows his own interest will
cuhtr.bnle to the enterprise. The
good that will result from it is incal¬
culable. As to the road being a suc¬
cess, financially, if l uilt, it cannot be
disputed, as it will be a road of 25
or 30 miles iu length through a rich
and fertile country. Stewart is a
large, thickly populated, and fine cot
ton county. Why defer building the
road longer ? If it is built capitalists
would soon move in, and Lumpkin
would become a city that the people
of Southwest Georgia Wollld be
proud of. Do not tire in well doing,
hut let the building of the road be a
certainty.’
The Work of a Single Hair.
In the base of (hscappol at Wash
ington is the enginery by which the
House, the Senate and the commit
tee rooms are warmed an! ventilat¬
ed, and the gas lighted by electri. ity.
It is altogether a big apparatus, con¬
sisting of three immense fans, four
engines and eight boilers, with the
neeossury ’ appliances fur regulating
the temperature and moisture of the
air supplied to the nation’s legisla
tors. The instrument which tells
whether the ail is too moist or too
dry is operated by a single human
hair. A perfectly dry air is put ul 0;
saturated air, that is, air carrying all
tbe moisture it will hold, is put at
100. A dial with a hand like that of
a clock represents the different de¬
grees from 9 to 100. Thu human
hair absorbs moisture like a rope,
and, like a rope, becomes shorter
when wet. The difference in length
between a hair six inches iong wheu
wet atid the same hair when dry is
made to represent the hundred de¬
grees of moisture on the dial, ard
tho hand or pointer moves backward
or forward as the moisture in the
an- varies. If it becomes too dry
more steam is thrown in ; if too
moist, less steurn is allowed to os
cape, and thus tbe atmosphere for
t |j e nation’s statesmen is regulated
uud kept at the.healthful point,which
is uboul 50 .-Boston Herald.
• *<
Imitation Oysters.
_
■The most singular thing that I
saw in ,, laris, . , said . , a gentleman , .
v, turned from Europe, ‘was artificial
oysters, that is, meat tlohe Up ill a
patty or a potpie, but an imitation
of the real bivalve and lit to serve
raw. Aud as far as their looks go
you would say at once that they
were genuine American oy sters, but
wheu you came to eat oue the dif
feictice would he pl'eceptible at once
H«w *hey are trade and what is used
111 manufacture is a mystery I
did not solve, but it is certain that a
gieat deal of money is made by the
producers. The usual price is five
c- nts each, aud sometimes in the
secon lclass eating house they ai‘e to
be had for three cents, though they
are uat. apt to be fresh at th.it price.
You order a plate on the half shell,
aud when ihe waiter brings them to
you they look as nice as those you
get in the best New York places. If
you are not a good judge of oysters
you will eat them with your wine
and go awry without asking any
questions.
‘ihe only thing genuine about them
is tho shells The manufacturers buy
sec >ud baud shells from restaurant
keepers at a small expense, and, with
a sort of paste, fasten the spurious
oyster in its place. Only one-half a
shell is used for the purpose, and in
that shape tbe fraud oysters are pack
ed on shelves iu boxes. Olliers, to
be served without, the sheila, are put
up iu cans containing twenty-five or
one hundred. Tiie dealers iu real
oysters urge the saloon keepers to
break up their shells an fast as their
contents are consumed, and oven pay
the cooks aud waiters to pound them
to pieces.
•Do we have any manufactured
oysters iu this country' asked the
reporter
‘Not that I know of. I do not
think they have got to that yet.
Wl ac, is more, I do not think it
would pay, that is, just at present;
but we cannot tell what we will conic
to if any more oil is dumped iu (he
bay and rivers. At present the fin
est oysters are two or three cents
apiece, an 1 I should say they could
not be imitated and sold tor that
price.’
How a Ho r 4 of Cattle Were
Savod.
‘One of tho bravest thinis I saw in
my travels,’ said a passenger from
the west, ‘was a cowboy stopping a
entile stampede. A herd of about
six or eight hundred ha 1 got fieight
ened at something, and broke away
pell-mell, with their tails in the air
and the bulls at the Loud of the pro¬
cession. But the cowboy did not
get excited at all when ho saw the
herd were going for a high bluff,
where they would certainly tumble
down into the canyon and bo killed.
You know that when u herd like thut
gets to going they can't stop, no mat
or whether they rush to dr at h or
not. Those in the rear crowd tluse
ahe ad, and away they go. I wouldn’t
have given a dollar a head for that
herd, blit tbe cowboy spurred up his
mustang, tn ide a little detour, came
in right in front of the held, cut
across their path at a right angle,
and then galloped leisurely on to
the edge of the bluff, halted and
looked around at that wild mass ol
beef coming right towards him.
He was cool as a cucumber, though
I expected see him killed, and was
so excited I could nor speik. Well,
sir, when the leaders had got, within
a quarter of a ruilo of him 1 saw
them try to slack up, though they
could not do it very quick. But the
whole herd seemed to want to stop,
and when the cows and steers in tbe
rear got about where the cowboy
had cut across their path I was tur
prised to see them stop and com¬
mence to nibble grass. Then the
whole herd st ipped, wheeled, stag¬
gered bucK and went to fighting for
a chance to cat where the rear guard
was. You see, that cowboy had open
a big bag of salt he had brought out
from the ranch to give the cattle,
galloped across the herd’s course
and emptied tho Lag. Every critter
sniffed that lino of salt, and, of
course, that broke up the stampede.
But I tell you it was a queer sight
to see that cuss out there on the
ur’ge of tho bluff quietly rolling a
a « if hE ' d
be rolling under 200 tons of beef , in
about If raid's‘Pain a minute and^half.’— [Okica
go Tad'}
Terms $ 1.50 Per A nmiin.
A Little Nonsense.
Two for assent : The girl and her
father, when it c-omes to a matter o’
money .—New YorkJourrtal.
It is the feeblest moustache, ns
well as the sickliest child, that gets
tho most fondling. —Boston Trans
cript.
‘Of what did you stlt” they pon+idt
ed the doctor?’ ‘Well,'I don’t know
exactly, but I suppose it was purge
ry .’—Louisville Courier Journal.
It is said that blood will tell. But
if it will tell its circulation it is very
different from some of our esteemed
contemporaries. —Philadelphia Call
Chicago oalis itself ‘the world’s
centre.’ Yery true, except that the
‘s’ is printed a little too far away
from the ‘c’ in Centre .—N Y. Com
menial Advertiser.
Bismarck was advised by his phys¬
icians to take iron for his blood, but
he did not follow the advice. He
was afraid that it might, be made of
America) pig iron .—Philadelphia Cali
‘Politicians on Ice’ G the startling
caption of an editorial in the New
York Journal. We sincerely hone it
was the undertakers who put them
on ice .—Philadelpnia Chronicle Bar
ala.
A French astronomer is trying to
attract the attention and shekels of
American showmen by announc'ng
that he has discovered a white rain
bow.—New York Commercial Adver
I iser.
A Western gossip writes ; -Maple
sou ha« side-whiskers and a chronic
flush. Patti is short—’ This is alt
wrong. It is Mapleson who is short
while Patti is Hush .—-New York
Graphic.
‘Give ns an honest count,’ says tin
New York Herald. By all means,and
send over a few honest Barons and
Lords, while you are about it, tor
the poor American girls.— Iloilon
l Commercial Bulletin.
A Philadelphia man is being pa
V a led among the physicians on ac¬
count of tile very feeble, action of his
heart. They ought to meet some of
our tenement house landlords .—N
Y. Commercial Advertiser.
‘Have you seen my new Jersey?'
inquired tho city daughter of her
father from the rural regions, who
was visiting her. ‘No, is it a bull or
a heifer?’ bluntly asked the stock
loving farmer .—Lincoln (Neb) Capi
tal.
In Iceland the nights are six
months long, and wheu a young mat.
hears his girl’s father go down and
whang the furarce at about half past
ten weeks, he begins to think that it
is about time to go. — Detroit Free
Brest.
Masonic Perils.—‘No,’ said Fits
kins, ‘I don’t think I shall evei try
to join the Masons. It’s too danger
ous.’ ‘Dangerous! flow?’ ‘Oh, you
see, we In ar about so many murders
in the first, second and third degrees
that I don’t care to try it .’—Marathon
Independen ’.
‘Shaving costs so much, week in
aud week out,’said an Up town man
to his wife, -that I have determined
to buy a razor and shave myself.*
‘If you do get one. George,’ pleaded
the wile, ‘promise me it shall be a
dull one, so you won’t cut yourself.’
—N Y. Commercial Advertiser.
Little Joe—‘Pa what is a para¬
graphic?’ Editor—‘A paragraphist,
my child, is a philcs'pher who tells
great truths in a crisp and enter
taining way.’ Little Joe—‘Mr. Sniggs,
who writes those short things in tie
BungtoWn Bugle calls himself a j ar
agrapbist. Is he om?’ Editor—‘No,
my son; he is only a fool >—Phila
delphia Call.
■---
Why He Can't See Berlin. —-Mr.
Smithors ate seven pieces of steak
and nine muffins for breakfast the
other morning and then announc¬
ed to tbe boarders that ho had made
all his arrangements to spend tho
slimmer in Europe,
•Pity you wouT bo rtble to visit
Berlin,’ u-marked tho audacious Bum
bloi
‘Why, I will be able. I propose
t-pending two weeks there,’answered
Mr. Smitbers.
,Oh,no you won’t’ retorted Bumble.
‘They won’t Germany. allow an American hog
to enter
There's blood on the moon.—
Balchd,
NO. 0.
business' i>irrxT ory (
=2*
M. CORBETT,
DEALER IN
» 1 •*4
PERFUIOP.Y, FIND SOAPS,
Fancy ami Toilet;Articles.
Cot, 16 -ly
CORBETT HOUSE,
M. COKlJETT, Jf*jro]>.,
Lumpkin. - Georgia.
livery Attention Given to the Ac
couunodat ion <4 com fort of Guests (
Oct.l -I
E. M. 8HEHA1T,
MANtTFACTtfRElt OF
PLANTATION WAGONS,
Plow Stocks, Etc.
Biaclsmithino & Wagon Kepaiiuxo,
Oct.20 ly
A. H. SIMPSON,
DEADER IN
n
1 i
STAPLE DltY GOOdS, SHOES, &C
Cofans, Burial Cases, Bedsteads*
_____Chairs FS c.
W. W. STOKES,
Dealer In
Fanny & Fief Groceries,
GAfiKEQ‘80&5$, TOBACCO J
Viijetrs oud Staple Dry Goodsi
Oet, If. ly
W. A. GREGORY,
DEALER IN
Fancy & Family Groceries*
GAINED ARSES, OOtUSjGQNfFCTiQN'
STAPLE DRYGOODS,
Tobacco, Cigars, S.nuff, Tinware EtCi
Oct 20
ill. IS. & W. I!. GRIFFIS,
—DEALERS IX—
FanilF Groceries, Wittes,
B£EK, WINES, TOBACCO, CIGABS;
Splendid Billiard and Pool Tables.
^©"North Side Public Square,
W.S. GILLIS
DEALER in
Family Groceries,
Plantation Supplies,
Country Produce Ptc*
South Side Public Square.
Lumpkin, Ga. Jan. 1,1883.
*
FlSS INSUEAN E
Insure your dwellings, Furniture*
Merchandise. Gin Houses, and othei
property. None but first-class Com¬
panies represented. Hates low.
J. B. Richardson, Agent.
Sept.2ath-18Sl-tf.
Slieram & filer
DEALERS 1ST—
COFFINS, CASKETS AND
Burial Cases
Can furnish any style of COFFIN
wanted at reasonable prices,
S&r Repository at Shek.vm’s Shofs;
Lumpkin, Ga., Sep 1,
SI RLE’S CARRIAGE
Anti Blacksmith Shops.
Having purchased th'e above well
known Shops from Mr. D. W. Snrles
I am now prepared id manufacture
to order any kind of Wagons or Bu«
oifS that may be wanted. Skillftrf
mechanics are employed and the bes£‘
of matori il will lie used in all work.
Special attention given to repairing!
and fill work promptly attended ti>.’
Terms Cash. - ----
O- A. SURLES.
Lumpkin, Ga,Feb. 1, 1834.
Globe Cotton Planted
The Best Now In Use!
Call and see its perfect work.
S. On. S. EVERETT, A&tih
xrampfciiq Jatt, W’