Newspaper Page Text
THE VALDOSTA TIMES, SATURDAY, MARCH IQ. 1906.
GEORGIA — Lowndes
Said
TATE
County:
To the Hon. Philip Cook, Secretary
..of State:
| The petition bf H. B. Peeples,
[ Joseph A. Alexander, N. T. Peeples,
; and J. W. E. Powell, residents of
Nashville Georgia, and of R. D.
Stevens, W. Coley, J. F. Lewis, J.
G. Stevens, Jr., S. M. Varnedoe • selves, their associates, successors
and W. H. Griffin, residents of the ■ and assigns, to become a body cor-
STATE OF GEORGIA—County
Lowndes.
To The Superior Court
County:
The petition of F. A. Duncan,
Marion Curry and E. R. Barber, all
of said state and county, respectfully
shows:
1st, That they desire for them
city of Valdosta, said state and coun
ty, respectfully shows:
1. That they desire to form a
railroad corporation, pursuant to the
provisions of the Acts of the General
Assembly of Georgia, approved De
cember 20, 1902.
i 2. The name of the railroal com
pany for which petitioners thus seek
Incorporation, Is to be the Valdosta
(Sb Nashville Railroad Company, the
^ame not being the name of any ex
isting railway corporation in the
State of Georgia.
r 3. The Jength of said road, as
nearly as can be estimated, will be
thirty miles.
I 4. Said road will run from Val
' dosta, Lowndes county, Georgia, or
some point near thereto, in a north-
| ward direction to Nashville, Georgia,
through the counties of Lowndes and
. Berrien; The principal places, from
1 which, and to which, it is to be con-
| structed being just above mentioned,
r 6. The amount of the proposed
, capital stock is $300,000.00, in shares
| of $100.00 each, all of said stock to
I be common stock, of equal dignity.
( 6. Petitioners desire to be incorpo-
i rated, as aforesaid, for and during
j the term of ninety-nine years.
7. The principal office of the
proposed corporation will be in the
city of Valdosta, said state and
county.
8. Petitioners do intend in good
faith to go forward, without delay
to secure subscriptions to the capital
stock, construct, equip, maintain and
operate said railroad.
9. Petitioners show that they
have given four weeks notice of
their intention to apply for a charter
by publication, according to law.
Wherefore, they pray to be incor
prorated under the laws of this state.
H. B. Peeples,
Jos. A. Alexander,
N. T. Peeples,
J. W. E. Powell,
J. G. Stevens, Jr.,
R. D. Stevens,
W. Coley,
J. F. Lewis,
S. M. Varnedoe,
W. H. Griffin.
GEORGIA—Lowndes County:
Before me, D. S. Wilson, of said
County, an officer of said state, duly
authorized by law to administer
f baths, personally appeared W. H.
'•Griffin, J. F. Lewis and W. Coley,
three of the petitioners, who on
oath say that the names subscribed
to the petition to which this affidavit
Is annexed, are the genuine signa
tures of the persons named therein,
and • that the facts stated in the pe
tition are true, to the best of depon
ents’ knowledge, information and be
lief.
J. F. Lewis,
R. D. Stevens,
W. H. Griffin.
Sworn to and subscribed before
me, this the 6th day of March, 1906.
D. S. WILSON,
N. »>. L. C. Ga.
FOLETSHOKEMCMt
Oures Goldss Provonts Pneumonia
porate under the name and style of
Valdosta Wood and Fuel Company.
2nd. Petitioners aBk to be incorpo*
rated for the period of twenty years,
with the privilege of renewal at the
end of that time.
3rd The capital stock of said cor
poration is to be one thousand dol
lars, divided into shares of one hun
dred dollars each, all of which has
been actually paid in. And petition
ers desire the privilege of increasing
Bald capital stock from time to time
to a sum not exceeding five thousand
dollars, and they likewise desire the
privilege of decreasing the capital
stock, similarly, not below the origi
nal capital of one thousand dollars.
4th. The object of the proposed
incorporation is pecuniary gain and
profit to its stockholders. Petition
ers propose to carry on a general
wood and fuel business at wholesale
or at retail, to purchase, sell and
deal generally in wood, coal and oth
er fuel, and to do all other acts usual
and necessary in the conduct of such
business.
6th. Petitioners desire to be em
powered to buy, hold and sell and to
make improvements on real estate;
to receive, and make and execute
deeds and mortgages to the same;
to take and give mortgages, deeds,
or other liens allowed by law to se
cure debts, to borrow and lend
money, and to exercise all other
rights, powers and privileges that
may be incident to and necessary in
carrying on said business.
6th. The principal office and place
of business of said corporation will
be in the city of Valdosta, in the
county and state aforesaid.
Wherefore, petitioners pray to be
incorporated under the name and
style aforesaid, and that they, their
associates, successors and assigns,
be entitled to the rights, powers,
privileges and immunities usually
granted to corporations under the
laws of the state of Georgia, and
subject to all of the restrictions
and liabilities imposed by law.
WILCOX & PATTERSON,
Attorneys for Petitioners.
GEORGIA—Lowndes County:
I, R. T. Myddelton, clerk of the
Superior court in and for said coun
ty, do hereby certify that the fore
going is a true and correct copy of
the original petition for charter of
file in this office. This February
26th, 1906.
R. T. MYDDELTON, Clerk.
ENDLESS POLITICAL
POWER
ROOSEVELT WANTS
DEFENSES.
Yn» adrim, how to obtain i»t*ntm trade nmrk*|
ropjrrlghtt,etc., ( m ALL COUNTRIES.
Easiness direct vAtk Washington saves time
money and often the patent.
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.
Girlhood to
Wom&iiRood
Marks a period in the lives of many girl*
which isfu 1 of the greatest dingers, and the
responsibility of her health, perhaps her life,
rests with the parents. Young girls just
budding into womanhood should do given G.
F. P. (Gerstle’s Female Panacea) every
month for at least a year, it assists Nc'nre
to establish regular healthy periods, and
, hundreds cf mothers follow this course,
their daughters entrring womanhood
.. „....... . s strong, healthy and free from many of the
flfSyif \i i\iJrj dangerous troubles v/hich afflict their sex.
/¥K| G. F, P. (Gerstle’s Female Panacea) is and
Hrx has been so continuously successful in the
v\.treatment of female diseases that we are
~" able to sell it under r.n iron-clad, monev-back
guarantee to accomplish its advertised purpose, or refund your
money. No fairer proposition could be made oy any concern, or bv
it any physician, and no other female remedy is so guaranteed, oroi-
fers you relief at so little risk of expense.
The Plans are Being Laid for a Polit-
ical Organization More Powerful
Than has Ever Before Been Known
—Blacklist for Members of the
Armstrong Committee
New York, March 7.—The fact has
just developed that planB are being
worked out which, if successful, will
result in one of the most powerful
political organizations ever known in
this part of the country, the purpose
of which is retaliation upon the mem
bers of the Armstrong insurance in
vestigation committee and any mem
ber of the New York legislature
who votes In favor of any law recom
mended by the report of that com
mittee.
Every effort was made to keep se
cret! the fact that there was any po
litical significance attached to the
dinner of the life Insurance under
writers of New York last Wednesday-
night at the Savoy at which Paul
Morton president of the Equitable so
clety, was the principal speaker, and
which was attended by 60 or more
of the most prominent insurance
agents of New York. It has just! be
come known, however, that immed
iately following the dinner 50 of the
general agents held a meeting and
organize! themselves into a political
‘endless chain.”
The platform edopted was that the
‘endless chain” organization do ev*
erything possible to defeat the mem
bers of the Armstrong committee
whenever they should come up In fu
ture for’ election to any office, and
also take a blacklist of all members
of the legislature who should vote
to enact Into law the recommenda
tions of the Armstrong committee
limiting new business and cutting
down the commission of agents.
Each of the fifty agents who enter*
ed the "endless chain” pledged him
self to get twenty other agents to Jol"
the chain, on condition that each of
the other twenty agents should
pledge himself to array at least tweri
ty more agents against the commit
teemen and the members of the leg*
islature on the blacklist.
By the process it was designed to
get Into a political organization ■ all
the Insurance agents In the state, to
the number of many thousands. It
was figured out that the fifty men
would get in one thousand in the
first chain, that the one thousand
could get in twenty thousand in the
Second chain and the twenty tbous
and could get in four hundred thous
and agents and friends in the third
chain.
“It is to be a perpetual organiza
tion." said an agent who had been
askel to become a member of the
second chain, “and there will be n
lineup in all ports of the state against
everybody who assists in the work of
limiting new business or cutting
down commissions.”
Always Liberal to Churches.
Every church will be given a lib
eral quantity of L. ft M. paint. Call
for It.
4 gallons Longman & Martinez L.
& M. Paint mixed with three gallons
linseed oil, will paint a house. «
W. B. Barr, Charleston, W. Va.,
writes: "Painted Frankenburg block
with L. ft M.; stands out as though
▼arnished.”
Wears and covers like gold.
Don’t pay $1.50 a gallon for linseed
oil, which you do in ready-for-use
paint.
Buy oil fresh from the barrel at 60
cents per gallon and mix it with L.
ft M.
It makes paint cost about $1.20 per
gallon. Sold by B. F. Whittington,
Valdosta.
TP***
Go to vour dealer and buy a bottle of G. F. P. (Gerstle’s Female
Pan/.coa), use it r.> directed, rn.l if you can honestly say you have not
beer*benefited, r.turn the empty bottle and rr-t your money.
THIS GU.ARA'iTcE authorize an / drupgisi to re
fund the pi rebate price of a bottle of CT. F. P.
. CGerstie s Female Panacea) to any woman who
* tries it and Is not benefited by ita use.
* E. D. Hewn, < fCaruoille. Fla., wye: “My
Savannah Bank It Moving.
Savannah, March 7—The National
Bank of Savannah this afternoon be
gan moving from its present quarters
Into its new home in the ten story
j sky-scraper. The bank will be ready
.tor business in its new home tomor-
1 row morning. The move was made
without a hitch, the valuable papers
and cash surplus being transported
In good order.
President 8ends Special Message to
Congress in Which he Points Out
the Lesson of the War in the Far
East—Japan Ports Were Defended
and Her Fleets Were Free to 8eek
the Enemy.
Wbshingtofc, March .6.—President
(Roosevelt went a message to con
gress yesterday accompanying plans
for coast defense prepared by a Joint
board of srmy and navy officers, In
which be emphasized the necessity
for further defense works In this
country The. president calls special
attention td the recommendation
that the entrance to Chesapeake bay
be added to,the list of places in the
United States to be defended,
says the insular possession cannot
be longer neglected If the United
States desires to hold them.
Defenses are recommended for Ma
nilla bay, Pearl harbor, Guantanamo,
Guam, San Juan and Honolulu, be
cause of their strategic locations,
Defenses are recommenced for en
trances to the Panama canal. The
President says:
“The necessity for a complete and
adequate system of coast defease is
greater today than twenty years ago,
for ‘the Increased wealth of the coun
try offers more tempting inducement’s
to attack and a hostile fleet can
reach our coast In a much shorter
period of time The fact that we now
have a navy does not In any wise di
mlnish the Importance of coast de
fenses. On the contrary that fact
emphasizes their value and necessi
ty for their construction It Is an
accepted naval maxim that a navy
can be used to strategic advantage
only when acking on the offensive
and it can be free to so operate only
after our coast defense Is reasonably
secure and so recognized by the counT
try. It was due to the securely de
fended condition of the Japanese
ports-Hfertumtepanese fleet was free
to seek out and watch Its proper ob
jective—the- Russian fleet—without
fear of interruption or recall to guard
its home ports against the raids by
•he Vladivostok squadron. This, one
of the moat valuable lessons of the
late war in the east. Is worthy of
serious consideration by our country
with its extensive coast line, Its
many Important harbors, and its
many wealthy manufacturing coast
cities.
'The security and protection of
our interests require the completion
of the defenses of our coast and the
accompanying plan merit’s and should
receive the generous support' of the
congress.”
Doctors are Puzzled.
The remarkable recovery of Ken
neth Mclver, of Vanceboro, Me., Is
the subject of much interest to the
medical fraternity and a wide cir
cle of frienJs. He says of his case:
"Owing to sevore Inflammation of th’
throat and congestion of the lungs,
three doctors gav© me up to die,
when, as a last resort, I was Induced
to try Dr. King’s Now Discovery and
I am happy to say, It saved my life.”
Cures the worst coughs and colds,
bronchitis, tonallitls, weak lungs,
hoarseness and lagrlppe. Guaranteed
a’ A. E. Dimmock’s and W. D.
Dunaway’s drug stores. 50c and$l.
Trial bottle free.
Torture by 8avages.
j “Speaking of the torture to which
j some of the savage tribes in the
Philippines subject their captives,
reminds me of the Intense suffering
I endure! for three months from in-
flammat n of the kidneys,” says W.
M. Sherman, of Cushing, Me.,
“Nothing helped me until I tried .... .
Electric Bitters, three bottles of forms of stomach weakness and trou- |
which completely cured me.” Cures bles that A. E. Dlmmock gives a I
liver complaint, dyspepsia, blood dis* \ signed guarantee that the remedy 1
orders and malaria; and restores will cost nothing unless It cures. !
the weak an! nervous to robust Each box of Ml-o-na sells for 50 :
health. Guaranteed by A. E. Dim- cents, and is Invaluable to anyone I
| mock and W. D. Dunaway, drug- who suffers with indigestion,
gists. Price 50c.
TheStrenu-
ousLife
Results in Stomach Troubles and
Physical Breakdown—A. E. Dim-
mock Offer* Simple Remedy.
The strenuous life of modern times
forces people to rush through their
meals hastily, hurrying from the ta
ble in the mad rush after the al
mighty dollai.
The result is Incomplete digestion.
inflamation of the walls of the stem*
ach and lack of secretion of the
gastric juices, ending in chronic
stomach trouble and nervous break
down.
How much better It woul 1 he to
eat more slowly, cure the stomach
trouble wnh Ml-o-na, and soon
gain perfect health. The headaches,
sleeplessness nervous troubles, pain
after eating, specks before the eyes, j
backaches, n.elancholly and gloomy j
foreboding would be soon overcome j _
and perfect health and strength j ■
would be restored. | ft
tdlabe is Ml-o-na in curing all ;
Machinery
FOR SALE BY
Valdosta Foundry
& Machine Co.
VALDOSTA, OA.
PROMPT .*. SHIPMENTS.
Machinery at Ticknor, Georgia.
FOR PROMPT SHIPMENT.
One 10x16 Filer and Stwell Twin Engine Feed,
for wire cable. Good condition.
One 40-Inch Flier and Stowell Edgar with
three 20-Inch Inserted aawi. A1 condition used
only short time.
One No. 65 Corel Saw Qununer. Practically
One Butterworth ft Lowe Lath Machine and
Bolter combined. Fair condition.
Machinery at Fairfax, Georgia,
FOR PROMPT SHIPMENT-
Two 70 H. P. Atlas Ret Tub. Boiler*. U*ed
•bout two years and 8 months
Machinery at Jasper, Florida.
Twp 60 H. P. Return Tubular Bollera.
Machinery at Waycress.vGa. ~
One 8x12 Frick Engine and Boiler on steel
wheels. Used only short time.
Machinery at Bakers’ Mill,j l Fla.
Six Cylinder Boilers.
One 60 H, P. Side Crank Engine.
One Slab Conveyor, 30-foot pan. 500 feet 3-4
chain. Rigging complete.
AT VALDOSTA.
One 10x24 Rhode Island Locomotlre.
One 22x28 Side Crank Engine.
One 14x18 Side Crank Engine (Wormer.)
One 12x18 Side Crank Engine (Lane ft Bodloy)
One 12x16 Center Crank Engine (Ames.
One 12x14 center Crank Engine (Watertown.)
One 12x16 Side Crank Engine (Taylor.)
All Sizes of Small Engines.
One 12x20 Filer ft Stowell Steam Feed.
One 10x16 Wilkins Steam Feed.
One 8x12 Beck Steam Feed.
One 7-lnch Shot Gun Feed.
One Gardner Duplex Pm, 214-in. Sue.; 2-inu i.
Disc.
One 30-H. P. Atlas Return Tubular Boiler.
Four 20-H. P. Return Tubular Boilers.
One 25-H. P. Internal Fired Boiler.
All Slzos and Kinds of Small Bollera.
Two 6 In. Deep Well Pumps.
400 feet 30 pound Rail.
One Swing Cut-off Saw.
One Saw Hammerer’s Anvil.
One Home-Majle Stave Machine.
One Circular Resaw.
Large lot Circular Saws.
Large lot Iron Pulleys. All sizes.
Large lot second hand Belt.
WOULD IT PAY YOU
TO
Buy a Planer?
-HF
BARGAINS
FOR QUICK SALES.
One 15zl0 Inch No. 44 Berlin Planer and
Matcher. Used about 2 years.
One 20x12 Inch Benjamin Machine Co’s.
"MONEY MAKER” Sizer In perfect order.
One 15x6 Inch Frank Planer and Matcher. A
good job shop machine.
One 24x6 Inch Frank Planer and Matcher.
Medium light pattern for a small pla-1.
One 14x4 lu. H. B. Smith Planer and Matcher
Overhauled and In good shape.
One 24x6 In. Tar Heel Planer and Matcher,
brood frame.
One 6 In. Williamsport Outside Moulder. Ready
tor use; In good shape.
Write us for detailed zpecifieationsTand pri
ces on any Machine you can use.
Castings,
Columns,
Lintels,
Sills,
Ventilators,
Grate Bars
Etc.
OUR LIST IS CHANGING DAILY.
Write us for what you want. We make a specialty of
trading in Second-hand Machinery.,
vousness or weak stomach.
■ ■■■
IMA F
VALDOSTA, - - GA.
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