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**T 11 IU i si&vi. v;-' Jill I 112 l,
By J. B. & A. W. LATIMER.
VOL. XIII.
She enfant.
UkiLed every Saturday Homing
T i: K M S ;
ONI, YEAVl........igtl.no.
“IX MONTIIS*...... 75C.
KatesofAdvcrtisiiig.
Oce inch cue ia-ei timi...... $ 1 00
y ucli subsequent insertion... 50
One inch, one muntil....... .. 2 50
One inch, three months...... .. ti Of
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One inch, twelve months..... 10 to
On» quarter column, one month..... 0 00
One qnnrter Column twelve months 3o 01)
One half column, one month........ 10 0
One half column twelve months - 00 00
One column one. month............ 13 00
One column t velve mouths ioo no
All lulls fur advertising are due at
any time upon presentation after
first appearance of advertisement.
AiULrss nil letters to The Lrn m:in- I.vnn -
ten-dent, or J. E. A A. W. L vTUlER,
Proprietors.
LAW CARDS.
T. D. Hihoht win, F. A. Bu n
HIGHTOWER & Bl SIS,
AUoriieys at Law,
Lumpkin, Georgia
Ji.n. 1, 188-L
WKLLIlOltS F. CLARKE,
AtU i i cy ut I aw.
Lumpkin, Georgia.
Will practice in Stewart Com ty.
Special at tenth-in given to collections.
Lum| kin, Gn , May 5. 18S3.
K. G. SIMMONS
A t TO it x i :y at l aw,
AMEFUCU3, GA.
Will pra.-tjye in mH the counties o!
This Judicial Circuit, in the Supreme
Court id tl.e State of Georgi i, and
in flu District Court i f ihe United
£latas, and in all other courts by
special.ci ntnu-L july 23-81.
KBSI 3 AL GAELS
W. A. GREGORY,
Physician & Surgeon,
Lumpkin, Georgia.
Oct,20 ly
A. E. & W. P. CARTE!?,
Practlci isg Plmieiaus,
LUMPKIN, - GEORGIA.
Office South Side Pubhe t quuie
Oct 20 ly
J. A. THORN'ON J 1 L,
Practical Dentist,
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA.
Will do all kinds uf Dental Work
in n neat and snl stnntia man er.
Office up stairs iu the Cuba House.
Opeitifing days: Thursdays, Fri¬
days ami Saturdays.
Oct.23-1 v
LUMI KIN HOTEl
JOIIIV YAKimOUGII,
PllOPIilKTOlL
This old and well-known Hotel is
still open to the public and offers su¬
perior inducements to travelers and
drummer*. M ith an experience ot
20 years the Proprietor thiuks he
knows how to look nffer the comfort
of his guests. Table famished with
the best the market affords Polite
attention and reasonable charges.
Stock fed at 25c t er meal each.
Lumpkin. Ga., Sept. 1, 1883. If
l ivery and Feed Stables,
LUKPKIN, GEORGIA
A. F. HOLT, PROP.
Tie 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 Lumpkiu and
Cuthbert, leaving Lumpkin Friday, cverj
Monday, Wednesday and
returning same days and making
connections with morning and even¬
ing train. Only skillful drivers em¬
ployed. SttgfCasb in advance will be lequir
ed for passage and packages,
|®-Drovers will find a 1 irge and
Commodious lot for their stock.
A. F. HOLT.
Lumpkin, Sept. 1st, ly
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1884.
Reverie.
“He that doth not smoke, bath
never kti-nvu great, sorrow, or else
deuyeth himself the softeth comfort
that the heart doth know.”
That quiescent, dreamy, half-som
uoleut. condition which steals insen¬
sibly upou one who is just emerging
from, or has passed the acute and
painful stages of a terrible, inflam¬
matory attack, seems peculiarly fa¬
vorable to the creatiou of those
strange and weird forma and evaues
ceut images which thickly people
the realms of the imagination at 6uch
times.
Iu the dim and mellow light of a
quiet winter evening, we were reclin¬
ing upon our pillow, dreamily watch¬
ing Ihe filmy rings of azure smoke
as they lazily ascended from the cra¬
ter of our old meerschaum. At first
the tinv rings that stole out from tile
glowing ash, were dense aud steely
blue, but. as they widened upward,
they faded into grayish white ; their
sinuous edges breaking into thou
sands of wrodlnng, curling, ringlets,
while the parent rings were reeling
and rolliug, uncoiling, unfolding, ad¬
vancing. retreating, contracting, ex
i audiug iu iutiuite fautt.stic eouvolu
tions oi uncanny imagery ; until
their iritiicato and interfusing lines
diffused 111 mrelves and were absorb
ed tuto the ciicumarubient air. Tile
eye would become coufussd in trying
to follow each tiny whirl,as it would
become evolved and spring upward
to become dissolved in the inixtrica
Ide tn»zus of that miniature cloud.
O-ie can almost see in miniatun
the domination of that mighty cosmic
law, by wliicll tne nebulous matter
pervading space wa« drawn togather
into one vast concentric orb of whirl
iug atoms, wh cli began slowly to ic
volve and acee erate tl ir speed as
they con 1< use, nutil the sun was
formed, » so'itary, incandescent mass
if matter of immvasur..ble magtii
tude. He sees at in'orvals succes¬
sive lings thrown off’, which whirl,
condense aud form themselves into
glowing planetary orbs, which as
they cool, become fit habitations for
organic beings, lik a oil u Aim a Mater,
earth. S'ltiii- g ant orbs are yet uu
cooled, aud for a million years will
roll and burn with undiiuishcd"heat,
suns to their families of satellites.
Otaers have cooled, become the
abodes of ecnliejt beings, passed
through the smile age, and now lie
cold and lifeless in the embrace ot
di at a. Our twin sister orb, the
Moon, is one of these, where ever
lasting silence sits supreme and holds
her court within a lifeless world.
Wh.it may uot be evolved from thy
somnific realm, Sublime Tobacco!
—Ed Independent.
!»
Father and Son.
‘Saladin!’
Saladin paused' and his attitude
was one to charm the eye of artist
■m t the soul of poet. One lithe leg
was already swung over the top of
the fi nee, clinging theieto by the
firm bent knee. Below the other leg
--the left one it had intended to
have left with the other one, right
soon, but fur the voice that hailed
him back. Chestnut brown, and shod
with lusty stone-bruises, were tbe
nnsaueiaied feet. Under the tower¬
ing rim of the torn straw hat Sala
din glanced with eyes that gleamed
less with defiance than more with n
distressful consciousness that he had
been caught up in the very moment
of his triumph. H« turned, and
knew bis father, and him he answer¬
ed iu that expressive monosyllable ol
bis native tongue :
‘Fay !'
‘Back to thy haunt, false fugitive !
Ha! Bend to thy task, aud ply the
greas-ed saw with many a muffled
wleeze, till high the severed hickory
piles the woodbhed floor, lest with a
pliant skate strap I pursue, aud raise
the fur along thy trunnt spine. Ha,
thou rebellions child of mine, wnat
bid’st thou underneath that recreunt
jacket ?’
For a moment Saladin struggled
witb his emotion, and strove to look
as though he had nothing under hie
jacket. But a large sized tomato
,can is too obtrusive ip its rotundity,
A Weekly Newspaper, Published ia the Political, Social and Agricultural Interests of Stewart County.
and too definitely pronounced in its
platform to escape public attention,
even when close buttoned under the
snug fitting garmeture of a boy of
eleven years. With a despairing
sigh he said :
‘Can full o’ worm8.’
The skate strap fell from his lordly
father’s nerveless grasp.
‘Fisbiu’ worms ?' he asked ; ‘han
nem toomy 1’ Which, by interpreta¬
tion, is hand them unto me.
He ook the can and stirred up the
menagerie with a stick.
‘Vurlet..’ he said, ‘where keepest
thou thy rod an 1 lines?’
Saladin pointed to a gloomv corner
of the wood-shed, and bis worthy
father scooped the tackle in.
‘Where, thou truant villian, where
urn they bitin’ best?’
'Right in the slough, just below
the second bridge,’ Saladin seid.
‘Now, by my halidame, aud did 1
enjoy not an afternoon’s sport myself
I were worse than an infidel; and
thou, Sir Sluggard, if there be one
small stick not sawn asunder when
I hie me home—see thou to it.’
And his sire was gone; gone with
his rod, his hooks and lines, bis
bait. As his hurrying feet carried
him out of sight, Saladin smiled, a
melaucholy, bitter, yet withal, a joy¬
ous smile.
An’ if ho find not tha ice at the
second bridge frozen clear to the
bottom,' he said, ‘an’ it be not still
thicker at the first bridge, an’ if
he find a hold in the ice iu all that
land whereto I have seut him, then
may these yearning eyes of miue
ne’er gaze upon the back of me neck
again ’
A nd turning to the wood, ile, nr.d
picking out all the hard, tough,
knotty sticks tossed them with a
boy’s generous impulse over the
(i nco into the yard of a poor neigh¬
bor. ‘They wii] steal our wood any
how,’ muttered Sat a din, ‘and heaven
knows it iH light that f should save
them the sin, and pick out the hard
ones.’
And as with many a rhythmic
wliee saw, wh.-e saw, he savu d the
i asy slicks, the boys heart, ever slow
to harbor malice, softened and melt
ed in tl e Ureas', as he thought of
the old geutleman trying to cut
holes in ten foot ioe wiiLi a pocket
knife. Verily, the man emptietli
ashes against the north wind who
thinkctu thal- he getteth a loug way
ahead of even a very small boy.—
Burdette, in Hawk-eye.
'•*
How to Attain Old Age.
The Psalmist David a’lowed sev
enty years as the natural duration
of life, Pythagoras placed the limit
at eighty, L union's hygienic philos¬
opher, Dr. R'chardson, gives us tec
more, while Flonrens believed that
mau ought to live one hundred years.
There is uo doubt that the physi
ological limit of human life has been
slightly increased in the present Cell
tury, and a hundred years later it
may be found that old ago comes on
more slowly and gently. For, with
the increased uncertainly of a future
life, human energies are directing
themselves with greater earnestness
toward solving the problems of a
more h. althful and longer terrestrial
existence.
OH nge is part of the life-history
of the organism. There is that in
the child at birth which determines
very mrrly when old age shall ap¬
pear. Senility is a failure of nutri
lion. We can only delay its appear¬
ance by living a life which puts no
undue strain on the orgauinin, aud
by furnishing it with the easiest
means of working. We cannot ex¬
pect to accomplish this end simply
by cutting off certain deleterious
supplies. If one would live long, let
him especially take care of his “mas¬
ter tissues”—the muscle and nerve_
when young. This means rational
exercise of body, and a well balanc¬
ed cultivation of mind. Brain work¬
ers live long, brain and muscle work¬
ers longer still. No oue has yet giv¬
en better advice for the retarding
a ff e ^ au did Christopher Hufe
IubiI, a century ago. Let those who
desire old ag n , study him, and put
D0 trust iu distilled Witter —Medical
Rx-or#
Clippings for the Curious.
Clans rose in Scotland in the reign
of Malcolm II., in 1008.
The Western Indians believe that
fl> ofis follow red sunsets.
Englishmen wore petticoats and
stomachers iu early days.
In Louisiana the Japanese persim
mon is grafted in the native tree,and
the fruit is as large as tomatoes.
There ere 209 known varieties of
cherries, sixty of apricots, 239 of
peaches, 1,037 of pears and 297 ot
plains.
The calico and printed goods made
in Lowell in 1883 would twice encir¬
cle the earth at the equator aud then
all wpu'.d uot be used to do it.
Ancient wine jars were made with
a pointed end and set iu places espe¬
cially prepaied for them iu the collar
or pressed down into the soft clay.
It is said that all the inlets on the
Jersey coast are gradually moving
southward. The laud cu the south¬
erly side washes away aud new laud
is made in the same proportion ou
the northerly side.
Some person of a statistical turn,
and a disposition to add new terrors
to doa'h, has estimated that one in
every 5000 is buried alive. This
cheerful observation was made in a
paper recently read before the French
academy of medicine.
There are supposed to be about
1,000,000 species iu the animal king¬
dom. O. beetles alone, over 100,000
species aro known, and the whole
number of iusects is set at 500.000.
Of the higher auitrials there are 1200
mammals, 7500 birds, 2000 reptiles
aud 10,000 fishes.
----- —
A Heavy Load.
Something had occurred to irri¬
tate Thomas Hampden, and Le was
uttering a volley of oaths, when his
employer, coining nearer, asked
quietly :
'Dms it do you any good to swcai?’
‘Yes, sir,’ was the quick reply. ‘It
lets off the slenrn ; so I feel butter.
I don't n.can any hurt by it.’
‘But y< u do hurt by it.’
‘How ?’
‘Iu the first place y>u hurt your¬
self most of all by sinning against
God. Then you hurt my feelings,
and set a bad example to others I
shouldn’t like to have uiy boy with a
man that talks as you do.’
‘You shouldn't ?'exclaimed Hamp¬
den, blushing, ‘I wouldu’t hurt such
a boy as yours any sooner than I'd
cut my hands off I’ve heard a great
ileal about him. Clear grit, every¬
body says, and I like his loons. Ain’t
afraid of work, I know. He’ll make
his way in this world.’
‘Aud make his way to a better
world than this, I hope, when he
gets through here,’ said his father
seriously. ‘I behove ha tries to do
what is right.’
‘He ain’t none of your saints, is
he, Mr. Wilson ? No offense, I hope,’
the speaker hastened to add. ‘But
you see he don’t look like one.’
‘What does ho look like ?’
‘Like a wide awake, plucky boy,
ready for’anything that turns up.’
‘Should - you think’ any better of
him if you should hear him swear ?’
‘Can’t say that I should,' was the
honest answer. ‘The fact, is, I don ’l
suppose swearing does me any real
good, but, you sec, I’ve got used to
it. Tell you what, though, I wouldn’t
let my old mother hear mo. I’ve al¬
ways been good to her if I Laveu'l
done right iu other things. You
needn’t be afraid of my swearing be¬
fore your boy, neither, unless I for¬
get what I’m about. It’s mean busi¬
ness, no mistake. I wish I hadn’t
got in the habit of it. If boys knew
what was best for them they’d steer
clear of lying, swearing, tobacco and
liquor. Yus, sir, they would. I know
all about it. I've tried all but lying,
and likely it’s no thauks to me i
haven’t tried that. I never see no
place where ’( would do me any good
in the long run.’
‘Then swearing, liquor and tobac¬
co have done you good, have they ?’
The man thus addressed hesitated
a moment, und" then said :
‘No sir ; I won't tell a lie about it
They’vo kept me at the foot of the
hill all my life. They make a pretty
heavy load, aud a man can’t climb
very well if he has them on hit back,’
Ths Pour Truths.
There was ouce an old monk who
was walking through a forest with a
scholar by his side. The old mau
suddenly stopped and pointed to
four plants that were close at hand.
The first was just beginuiug to peep
above the ground, the second had
rooted itself pretty well into the
earth, the third was a small shrub,
while the fourth aud last was a full
sized tree.
Then the monk said to his youug
companion : ‘Pull up the first.’
The boy easily pulled it up with
his fingers.
‘Now pull up the second.’
The youth obeyed, but not so eaff
b
‘And the third.’
The boy had to put forth all his
strength aud use both arms before
ho succeeded in uprooting it.
‘And now ’ said the master, ‘try
your baud upon the fou th.’
Butlo! the trunk of the tall tree,
grasped in the arms of the youth,
scarcely shook its leaves, aud the
lifctio follow found it impossible to
tear the roots from the ear'll. Ihen
the wiso old monk explained to his
scholar the meaning of the four trials.
‘This, my son, is just what hap¬
pens with our passions. When they
are very young aud weak or.e may,
by a little watchfulness over self and
the help of a litile self-denial, easily
tear them up ; but if we let them
cast their roots deep down into oui
souls, then no human power can up
root them—the almighty hand of the
Creator alone can pluck them out.
For this reason, my child, watch
well your first impulse*-.’
An Astonished Cat.
Gautier, the French writer, bad a
cat which slept on his bed nights, on
ihe aim of his cliair daytimes, fol
lowed him when he walked, and al
ways kept him company at meals
One day a friend left his parrot in
Gauiter’a charge during bis absenoe.
The poor bird sat disconsolate on
the top of his stand, while the cat
stared at the strange sight. Gautier
followed her thought, and read there
clearly :
‘It must be green chicken.’
Thereupon she jumped from his
writing table, crouched flat, with
head low, back stretched out at fuff
length and eyes fixed immovably on
the biid. Parrot folio we I all the
movements, raised his feathers, shar¬
pened his bill stretched out his claws,
and evidently prepared for war. Thr¬
eat iay still but Gautier read again
in her eyes :
‘No doubt, though green,the chick
en must be good to eat.’
Suddcmfy her back was arcbeband
with one superb bound she was on
the perch, when the parrot screamed
out :
‘Have your breakfast, Jack ?’
Pussy was almost frightened out,
of her wits. She cast an anxious
glance at her master, leaped down
and hid under the bed, from which
no threat or curess could bring her
out for the day.— Our Dumb Animals
Ilis Loving Wifu.
He had tried to cross the track to
get some peanuts for his wife, aud
when the train stopped they com
menoed picking him off the running
gear, while the widow commented
on his constituent elements. ‘There’s
his poor spine! Keep his dear legs
and arms together, if you can! If
that’s his poor, dear stomach under
the wheel, don’t pull on it! It was
always weak. Oh, dear!’ and she
burst into a torrent of tears. ‘Any¬
thing vve can do for you, ma’mn?’
inquired a sympathetic bystander.
‘If you would please hand me his
poor deir right leg.’ moaned the
widow', I would be much obliged.’
And when they brought it to her
neatly donb up in a paper, she went
into the pocket aud extracted the
wallet with a fresh burst of sobs
‘Put it back with the other,’ she
p'eaded, ‘and oh! if yon find the In art
that loved me so look in the pocket
and boo if the watch was injured.’
They made her comfortable, and
aud when the down train came the
conductor waited 15 minutes over
Terms $1.5*0 Per A nmiiii-.
time while she figured on the station
clapboards whether she should put
the money the cempnny woo’d pay
her for her loss into a fsealskin
sacque or an India shawl. — Drake's
Irauelers’ Magazine.
A Little Nonseuse.
Father—‘I never imagined that
your studies would cost me so much
money.’ Student—‘Yes, aud I don’t
study much either.’
‘Yes,’ she said, ‘I always obey my
husband, but I reckon I have some¬
thing to say about what Lis com
mands shall be .’—Boston Post.
A large Newfoundland dog is kept
at one of the New York milk depots,
doubtless to rescue persons who
may chance to fall into the water.
‘I’ll teach you how to tear your
pants !’ said an irate parent swing¬
ing a strap. T’U teach you.’ ‘Don’t
hit ?ne, pa ; I know how already.
Just look at ’em !’
Sam, how do you expect to get
that mule along with a spur only on
one side?’ Sam—‘Well, boss, if I
gits dat side to go, ain’t de udder
one bouu’ to keep up ?’
How does it happen that so many
clergymen recommend patent medi
cin«s? Physician.—Probably because
the underpaid clergy can’t afford to
hire a doctor ,—Philadelphia Call.
At the taihr’s—‘I want a mourn
ing costume ; I have just lost my
uncle.’ The tailor brushes away a
tear. ‘Well, why that tear?' ‘Be¬
cause you lose only an uncle, whilst
I lose a customer .’—French Fun.
A young Russian Nihilist named
Boleslansmahamkiewiez has been ar¬
rested for throwing a dynamite bomb
Foolish youth. He ought to have
thrown his name. It would have
been deadlier than the bomb —Graph
‘Doctor,’ said the grateful patient,
seizing the physician’s hand, ‘I shall
uever forget that to you I owe
my life.’ ‘You exaggerate,’ said the
doctor, mildly ; ‘you only owe me for
fifteen visits ; that is the point which
I hope you will not fail to rtmsm
ber.’
The Philadelphia Press says : ‘It
Philadelphia there is a funeral every
hall hour the year round.’ It might
also have added that Philadelphia
has mere doctors than any other citv
in the Utiio.i, and better advertising
rates for obituary poetry .—New Or¬
leans
‘I notice that the ballet girls most
!y wear smiles when they come upon
the stage,’ said old Mr. Squaggs to
his wife, who had insisted on accom¬
panying him to the theatre. ‘It
shows that they think they ought to
wear something,’ she snapped, and
he said no more.— Somerville Journal.
The Empress of Austria can set
type. — Ex. We have been fortunate
enough to obtain a proof sheet of a
dozen ‘society’ items set by the Em¬
press, and present herewith a speci¬
men of bhr composition : ‘The Beau¬
tiful mnMp Krowc&ie. wqo Dresses
icjth snch exsejlen; taste* is visiting
ho.i f"iend Lulie Ja.wbro&eski!’— Nor¬
ristown Hcra'd.
Never lend your step ladder. ‘Mr.
McFarland, of Chicago, having a lit¬
tle job of painting, borrowed a step
ladder from his neighbor, James
Burns. Whilo he was using it the
step-ladder gave way, and McFur
land fell, breaking one of his ribs.
Instead of being grateful for the loan
of the ladder, ho brings suit against
Burns, charging him with causing
the accident by lending an unreliable
article, aud placing the damage done
to his jib ut $2,500 ’
Doctor —‘Have you got the better
of the ague yet ?’
Patient.—‘No, sor. Me and me
wife ia as bad ns iver, sor.’
Doctor—‘Did you get that whis
key and quinine I prescribed ?’
Patient.—‘Yis, sor ; but it did uo
good at pH, at all.’
Doctor.—‘That is strange! You
took it according to the directions, I
suppose ?’
Patient.—‘Yis, sor; ye know a
man and his wife are one.’
Doctor.—‘What has that to do
with it?’
Patient.—‘Well, you Ree, sor, be¬
in' as we are one flesh, I tuk the
whiskey and gave Biddy the quinine.’
•— Phihiilelp'iia CM
NO. LO-.
BUSIIS ESS DIRECTORY,
M. CORBETT-,
DEALER IN
DimsJMiciMS, Mull
PERFUIORY, FINE SOAPS,
Fancy and Cot.ie-iy Toilet’Articles;
CORBETT HOUSE;
M. COUS3ETT, Pl op.,
Lumpkin. ■ Georgia-.
Every Aite'nrifm Given to the Ac^
commodai ion <(? comfort of Guesti'f
Oct.l -1
E. M. SHERAM,
MANUFACTURER OF
PLAXTATHW WAG8X&
Plow Stocks, Etc.
Blaclmiithinc, & Wagon RepaiiuxcA.
Oct. 20 1£
A. H. SIMPSON;
DKA_J2R IN
Family
STAPLE m COCOS, SHOES* &G
Coffins- Enrial Cases, Bedsteads^
Chairs E c.
W. W. STOKES,
Deader In
Family k Fancy Groceries,
C-ANMEDtOOOOS, TOBACCO-,
Cigars anil Staple Dry Goods.
Get lU ly
W. A. GREGORY,
DEALER IN
Fancy & Family Groceries;
CANNED GOn'tSjOONFFCTION
ARIES, S 1 APLE DRY GOODS,
Tobacco, Cigars, Snuff, Tinware Etc;
Get 20
M. M. & W. Si. (.itilTIS
—PEA LEJtS IX—
Fail? Gfooeries, Wildes*
BEER, WINES, TOBACCO, CIGARS
Splendid Billiard and Pool Tables;
-North Side Public Square.
W. 8. OSLLIS
DEALER in
F amily
Groceries,
Plantation Supplies,
Country Produce Etc*.
South Side Public Square.
Lumpkin, Ga. Jan. 1,1883.
PIES INSURANCE
Insure your dwellings, Furniture,
Merchandise. Gin Houses, and other
property. None but first-class Coni"
panies represented. Rates low.
J. B. Ricuaedson, Agent.
Sept.2*th-18Sl-tf.
Sltei am & Miller,
-DEALERS IN—
C 0 FF 1 XS, CASKETS AXI?
Burial Cases
Can furnish any stylo of COFFIN
wanted at reasonable prices;
fi«5“Repository at Suerasi’s Shops;
Lumpkin, Ga., Sep 1,
SIRLE’S CARRIAGE
And Iflacksiuitli Shops.
Having purchased the above well
known Shops from Mr. D. W. Surletf
I 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 rnateri il will be used in all work.
Special attention given t,o repairings
and all work promptly attended td;
Terms Cush.
O A. SIT RLE S.
Lumpkin, Ga, Feb. 1,1884.
—
Globe Cotton Plants
The Bust Now Iu Use!
Call and see its perfect work;
iiuiUi'kini S S. EVERETT, Ago*!*
Ga. Tati; 28: