The evening call. (Griffin, Ga.) 1899-19??, April 19, 1899, Image 3

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Application for Charier , COVNTV. GEOh-'l£ ; Court of said county To Uw ? u P“f John Wallace and 11. J. Thepetmo 01 .. ' county, Geo. E . Clarke \Vi n g of »P al .. Robinson of Algona, an d Howard v. 9how3; lowa, resi’J*', l^/ desire for themselve’, Ist, That successors and assigns to lheir assocw ’ ted under the nnme an( j become tteon DIXIE CREAMERY CO., I ! ty the term of twenty .years, with the I privilege of renewing at the end of that I The capital stock of the corpora- ' ig t 0 be Ten Thousand Dollars, divided into shares ot Fifty Dollars each. Peti tioners ask the privilege of increasing said capital stock to Twenty Thousand Dollars. 3rd. The object of said Corporation is pecuniary gain and profit to its stock holders and to that end they propose to buy and sell and convert and manufacture milk into Butter, Cheese and other Milk products ; buy and sell poultry, eggs, and other farm products, fruits ami vegetables and such other articles and products of every kind and character that they desire and deem profitable; having and main taining a cold storage and refrigerator and ice plant and conduct the same and sell product and out-put of the same, ami also to act as general or special agents for other persons or companies in selling or hand ling any articles or product, and to make contracts to acts as such agent, and to ex ercise all other powers am. :o 3 > all other things a person may do in carrying on or appertaining to the business they desire to conduct 4th. That they may have the right to adopt such rules, regulations and by laws for their business and government of the same as they may from time to time deem necessary to successfully carry on their business. , . , 15th. That they may have tnc right to buy, lease, hold and sell such real and personal property as they may need in currying on their business; and may mortgage, pledge or bond the same as they may see proper. That they may have the right to sue or be sued, plead and be im pleaded. 6th. The principle office and place of business will be in Griffin, said State and County w-ith the right to have branch stations or creameries anywhere in said State. Wherefore petitioners pray to be made a body corporated under the name and style aforesaid, entitled to all the rights, privileges and immunuties and subject to the liabilities fixed by law. ROBT. T. DANIEL., Petitioners’ Attorney.. QTATE OF GEORGIA, O Spalding County. I hereby certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the original petition for in corporation, under the name and style of “The Dixie Creamery C 0.,” filed in clerk’s office of the superior court ot said county. This April 12th, 1899. Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk. LAUNDRY. For the convenience of my patrons I have opened a branch Laundry at the second door below the Griffin Banking Company, which I will run in connection with my old business on Broad street. I will superintend the work at both Laundries and guar antee satisfaction. 1 HARRY LEE. Ordinary’s Advertisements., QTATE OF GEORGIA, O Spalding County. Whereas, A. J. Walker, Adm nistrator of Miss Lavonia Walker, represents to the Court in his petition, duly tiled and en tered on record, that he has fully admin istered Miss Lavonia Walker’s esta e. This is therefore to cite all persons con el, kmdred and creditors, t>> show cause, if any they can, why said Adminis trator should not be discharged from his administration, and receive letters of dis mission on the first Monday in May, 1899. .1. A. DREWRY, Ordinary. February 6th, 1899. TO THE ZELA-ST. H 3.00 SA VIM) BY THE SEABOARD_AIR LINE. Atlanta to Richmond sl4 50 Atlanta to Washington 14 50 Atlanta to Baltimore via Washing- ton 15.70 Atlanta to Baltimore via Norfolk and Bay Line steamer 15.25 Atlanta to Philadelphia via Nor- . Atlanta to Philadelphia via Wash ington 18.50 Atlanta to New York via Richmond and Washington 21.00 Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, 5 a. and Cape Charles Route 20.55 Atlanta to New Y'ork via Norfolk, sa, and Norfolk and Washington Steamboat Company, via Wash- i ugt -n 21.00 At. anta to New York via Norfolk, \a, Bay Line steamer to Balti more, and rail to New Y'ork 20.55 Atlanta to New York via Norfolk and Old Dominion S. S. Co. (meals and stateroom included) 20.25 At. ant ato Boston via Norfolk and steamer (meals and stateroom in cluded) 21.50 Adanta to Boston via Washington and New York 24 00 rate mentioned above to Washing “■n. Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston are $3 less than by any other rai ‘ ‘’ n ?t. y he above rates apply from tickets to the east are sold from m '-t ad points in the territory of the -puthern States Passenger Association, , ia the Seaboard Air Line, at $3 less than b y any other all rail line. >r tickets, sleeping car accommoda “ .'ns, call on or address B. A, NEWLAND, BISHOP CLEMENTS) 1 ’ 1 ■ A -> >•'». 0 Kimball House, Atlanta HIGH LIFE. IN GOTHAM. p A Scorch In.-. i «,f the Uni- ' Ariit and l<n HabHuex. i, T h.- W. d..if ■?.-♦•.ria hotel is a great ti inple of Mamnion. Y..u go thereat i, any time :;i. I i ’.:•■ only things yon hear I '•* about are millions. You see million aires <3 all sort-, i'at and lean, young e * and old. Yon hear them, at the bar or t gathered around tables, talking “mar gins and of trusts and of millions. . Everybody seems, around the Waldorf 1 at least, to be money mad. The bellboys t - won’t look at a tip less than sl. In the I I case an egg costs as much as a square | meal. Cigars at $1 apiece are quite the e ordinary thing. You can spend a , month s salary on a dinner for four, ( , and wine at sls per bottle is not at all ; exorbitant. I The place is crowded all the time by J 1 the wealthiest visitors to Manhattan from all over the world. Yon are told in awe inspiring whispers that there .' are suits of rooms costing $250 per day. ? Y'ou are shown the safe which at this , very minute holds $7,000,000 worth of ‘ • valuables belonging to guests. And ■ you’ll see millionaires eating with their ; i knives, ami you’ll hear dowagers tell- . ■ ing their triends “I done it’’ and “I ’ seen her.” Money, money, money' The continual elevation of it is nauseating. ' There is something sordid in all the , Waldorf-Astoria splendor. Tlie atmosphere of the Waldorf-As- 1 : toria is reeking with vulgarity and all 1 unhealthiness. AH these millionaires 1 are nothing, after all, but a horde of * gamblers. And the women, so far as i one sees them, seem to be oppressed by their wealth. If there is anything more | horrible than the high Gotham life in which everyman and woman every day f i is sentenced to evening dress after 6 ' o'clock, where is it? , zY distinguished man of letters said to me, after a view of the Waldorf-As- 1 toria case in the evening, where you ' have to reserve your table in the early afterneon, “The trouble with these h people' is that they have no souls. ” And ’J most of them haven’t. They live solely for the senses. They are to be pitied rather than envied. —Exchange. i THE HEADSMAN. t Tie Vned the Sword and Not the As a Prior to 14*3. lam inclined to think that prior to c 1483 the sword and not the ax was r usually employed as the ■weapon for I j judicial decapitation and that a block' c was dispensed with, the victims receiv- f ing their doom “meekly kneeling upon their knees,” and in this opinion I am fortified by the concurrence of an emi- s nent clerical historian. This learned * writer agreed with me that the ax did t not become the “regulation” lethal im- r plement until after the rough and ready j “heading” of Lord Hastings on the Tower green, when he was summarily ( dispatched by order of the protector, j Gloucester. j In this instance, according to the f chroniclers, the victim's neck was ( stretched upon a piece of timber then j in use for the repair of the adjacent <■ church of St. Peter ad Vincula, prob- ( ably a “putlog.” part of the scaffold- . ing which, we read, “conveniently lay . in the way. ” Contemporary accounts seem to indicate that the executioner j straddled over the prone body, and from ] this position I infer that the decapita- * tion was effected by the tool known as an adz. the cutting edge of which is , at a right angle to ami not in a plane u with the haft. 1 may add that the only contempo- f rary reference I have come across of the ( use, or proposed use, of an ax and f I block !’■ r indicting capital punishment ( prior to this tragedy, is in one of the f Pas’ -n series of letters describing the t peril < an unfortunate captive of Jack ; Cade s rebels (A. D. 1450), a generation f before Lord Hastings was so clumsily , hacked to de itli. Notes and Queries. j 1 ) nit-r im n Speech. r The faults of .American speech, ac- ] cording to an authority on the subject, f originate in the primary school. The j child is m t taught the meh die value of ] his phrase l . He is allowed to use the , throat instead of the tongue, and the . Mow of speech becomes, therefore, halt- ( ing and guttural. j “Educate your alphabet and you will find your language as mellow as any of i the family of Latiuin, "is the advice j given. “Your i’s are throaty, your m’s , are too labial, your s’s are too hissing. , I your c s are not soft enough. When you , can train your scholars to emit these and ; the other consonants within the pitch, ; using the tongue, instead of the throat , for their emis.-ion, then you will see that ; for rhythm and sonority your English ; language may be compared with the ] Tuscan, the Roman, the Spanish and ] the Provencal. ’' . . i 1 I he < 'ocai ne Habit. zl well known chemist states that a 1 surprising number of well to do young j ladies have taken to buying the various , forms of doctored up coca extracts (co cain* in large quantities, also phe- ] i na< ■ tim- and various bromides, because ] “they make <ne feel so nice and hap- ; p> It is needle-s to say that such ( practii ■ - ate exceedingly risky. Per- ( baps, however, they are preferable t‘» : another extremely foolish trick—that L of sniffing chloroform dropped "U aj ; handkerchief, with the object of pro- i du< ing a pleasant, dreamy lan“Uor. - I 1 New Y. rk Telegram. Injured Innocence. “That, sii ’’ exclaimed the indignant m■■reliant, “is what 1 call a gratuitous ' falst hee.l. “ “It s nothing of the kind,” replied i t lie un.-i rnpulous salesman. “I get a salary and a commission for telling that fal-eh>« d. ” —Washington Star. One liar Better Than Two. A w> ]l known professor asserts that the - -t iio'ivals f sound can be 1 ’ I, - • . di to -.’.isb' d with one ear than with i.oth A TRAPPED BURGLAR THE NICELY PREPAKED BAIT WAS EAGERLY TAKEN. it Coat the Inx;«‘iUoiiM Mx«n Who De t laird Ihe Scheme or IRSOO, and It ( <»Rt (he Bn ruin r I'our I ears* | lime. “Os course, ” said tin-retired burglar, “a man in my business is always on the lookout for traps and most of 'em he can circumvent without much trou ble. But men go to a lot of trouble and expense to lay traps, ami sometimes they get up something that is new and effective. I suppose that any man go ing into a dwelling house would be auro to look over the bureaus and dressing tables in the sleeping rooms. It was this well known professional habit no doubt that had suggested the idea of a trap 1 camo across once, which a man had had built with a view- to catching anybody that might stand in front of the bureau in his room. “I imagine that this man must have been visited before and been very much irritated by it. because he never could have gone to all the trouble and ex pense he did just for mere protection there was clearly some feeling in it. It was a handsome room, promising look ing from its richness, and when I turned my light on the. bureau, where I went, naturally enough, to begin, I was not disappointed. There was a glitter of glass and silver in the bullseye, and as I swept the light along it struck a pocketbook that didn)t glitter much, but that looked fat and comfortable, and a watch that did shine, and, take it altogether, it made me think that here was the home of a man that didn’t have to work nights to make both ends meet. And so I set my lamp down on one end of the bureau—it made me laugh, actually, to think that there was so much good stuff there that I had to shove something one side to make room for it -and put my bag down on a chair that was there and began cleaning the things off. “I'd just put the silver hairbrushes in the bag and had turned around to the bureau again to pick up the pocket book and the watch when I heard, or it seemed as though I felt, a little click, and just the faintest touch of a jarring or yielding under my feet, and the next instant, a long time before I could jump or do anything whatever, a piece of the floor under my feet about three feet square dropped out from under me, and down I went. “But I didn't give up, by a long shot. I was an ablebodied man. and my hands 'were free—my lamp being then on the corner of the bureau and my bag on the ibair —and 1 wasn't go ing to give it up yet, if I was going down a trap. The trapdoor was hung on hinges on the side farthest from the bureau, and I laughed to myself as I put up my hands and thought how easy it was to grab on to the edge of the solid floor running along just in front of the bureau and haul myself up. Truly it seemed like a waste of money, all the expense this man had been to to put in the trap without guarding against the chance of escape from it by just this means, and I already imagined myself climbing out as I threw up my hands, which I did before I'd dropped much more’n half of my length below the level of the floor, gripping that firm edge very tightly. I was going to make sure of that. “And I got it all right, but in about a millionth part of a second I became conscious of the fact that it wasn’t stopping me at all; I was carrying it down with me. It was the front edge of another trap cut in the floor under the bureau, hinged at the back and held up in place by a spring just strong enough to keep it in position. I held on as hard as I could, but if I had had iron fingers and steel muscles I couldn’t have held on after the trap had swung down straight. 1 went down like a ton of lead, and the m xt minute I found my self sliding through a smooth board tunnel not much bigger’n enough to fi t me slide comfortably, and the next minute I’d been shot into a box or room about seven feet square through an other trap in the top of it that closed flush after I came through. “Now, there was a situation for you. Me in a square box of hard pine, ap parently in the cellar of the house, no opening in it anywhere and my bag with all my tools in it up there on the chair by the bureau and me down therewith nothing, not a blessed thing, to work with. But while there’s life there’s hope, and I never should have th ught of such a thing as giving up if I could have had a chance. But I didn’t. I hadn't been in the box two minutes before there was a slide pushed back up near the top on one side, and a man looked in. It was the boss of the shanty. And in five minutes the police were there, and then I found they had a door in this box big enough to get a man out of. “I have even other traps aselatwrate, but none more costly. He had to cut his carpet, to begin with, around the traps in this room. Os course that didn’t cost anything much, but it spoiled his carpet, and then the cost of the traps ami the time contrivance, whatever it was, that was attached to the main trap that let me stand on it for a min ute or two before it dropped, and then the shoot and the box and the whole linsiness couldn’t have cost a cent less than S4OO or SSOO. It cost me four years time. ” N-w Y'ork Sun The Honeymoon. An early Anglo-Saxon custom, strict ly followed by newly married couples, wa- that of drinking diluted honey for 30 days after marriage. From this cus tom < omes the av< ,rd honeymoon or hon eym* >nth p..r:- 11S wl.o d n’t know enough co come in out f the wet ,;te not likely to be th .ill ' f the e-r* for any length of time. -Detroit J ~nrual. .MIDWAY LOCALS. Midway, April 19,—R v v. A. B. San ders filled Lis regular appointment here I Saturday and Sunday. Marvin King and Mr. Swint, of Or i chard Hill, attended preaching here Sun ’ day. George Head and Miss Emmagene, visited Miss Annie Biles Sunday. Whit Oxford visited Miss Annie Wel den Sunday evening. Fred Gardard, alter -pending a few days in Augusta, returned to his home near here Thursday, One of our school girls is all smiles this week. I wonder what about? Mr. and Mrs. J, It Lindsey visited friends near here Sunday. Miss Eula Chapman, of Brushey, at tended preaching hti Sunday. I know that Whit (’ -iford is sorry that it rained last night. Albert Futral, of Griffin, spext Sunday with home folks. W. J. Futral nd II well Welden went to Griffin M a "Made in the United States Only a «!iort time ago English man tifaclurers were much agitated bacatise of an invasion of their territory by articles bearing the mark, "Made in Germany. ’ It was le-lieved to be im peratively necessary that «>rne way should be found to »litit out the Ger man made articles. Now, however, it appears that in manufacture, (he Tui ted States are giving Great Britain more concern than Germany. The Teuton is making the doll heads and the painted toys for" the world at “ru inous” prices; but the Yar.kce is mak ing railway locomotives, and steel bridges, and lathes for turning iron, and structural iron and steel, and pig iron, and tools, at prices which seem to defy European corn petition These . are articles which represent big trade. One locomotive bought from the I’nit ed States represents in value n whole train load of Christmas toys bought! from Germany. It is the American ' competition, therefore, which the En-i, glishman has rune! t<> fear. And of late the Americans have sue needed in capturing from British com petition a considerable amount of ’ trade in lines which the British have believrd themselves able to control ab solutely. Not only are American goods going to countries formerly sup plied by British firms, but they are actually going into the British Isles in ( competition with local manufactures j We recorded not long ago the receipt I by an Alabama firm of a large order for iron pipe, to bo delivered in a Scotch city. Ordinarily that pipe should have been supplied by the Bir mingham in Warwick, and not the Birmingham iu A'abarn r. And then | we have noted, from time to time, the shipment of locomotives to England from Philadelphia. Only a few weeks ago a Philadelphia firm bookid a large order for engines for the Great Eastern Railroad of England, which bad been secured in competition with leading English firms The Americans had i agreed to build and deliver the engines ] in about one fourth the length of time 1 that the English firm riquired Only ' a day or two ago we told id how an Amtrican company had c rnpletid a ‘ contract for a large steel bridge for the I; British government, to be creeled in j I Egypt, it> five weeks, when ibe best I time that an English firm iould do I the iob in was one venr. Many of 11 j e 11 nj >. nt ir tv. i k h io \V aIo h , > • which wertj once runr.ii g d«y arid night, are now shut down an 1 the tin j [date is being made in America. These are ail straws showing which 1 way the wind is blowing We are I ; beating our frier d-, the Brilirh, ini manufacturing. We are taklog tiade 1 from their very doors As c“mp< titors 'hey have us to fear, rather than the ' Germans. It is to be Imped that the , rivalry will c.mlinue to b , a- I, , Beresford said the other day, a fri nd- ' ij one—Suva:. I. ill News For Diabetes use Stu- : art’s Gin and Biichu, Schedule Effeetiv, April 1. 1“'Z». DEPARTURES. Lv. Griffin daily for Atlanta am, 7:30 am. 0: am. 013 pm I •Maeon and Savannah .... . > t 4 pn i .Macon. Albany and Savannah.. kl.ian. I Macon and A1bany............rtiipml • arrohtoniexcept .Sunday 10:1'1 am, t’:L'> pm ’ ARRIVALS. Ar. Griffin dally from Atlanta,. - »:13 am, S:U) pm. R. 20 pm. te.44 pm Savannah ami Maron '-"-am I .Macon and Albany 9.. V, am I Sai annah. A man> and Ma<-on »: i:ipm ' < arrollton icxcept f-unday 9:lu am. pm I F< r further information apply to I It. .I. Williams. Ticket Air’. Griffin | J to. L. Rnro, Agent. Griffin. John M. Egan, Vice President, Ism It. K line. Gen. Supt.. E. 11. Hinton. Trade Manager. J,c. Haile, Gen. Passcnv r Avt. Savannah. [ Vj 111 Rpl i • Ki'-d YY.tt Have Always Bought, and which haw been ■1 use for uv-'F 30 years, has borne the signature of ' __ and lias been i;m;!e under his per- ( /P , sonal supervision since its infancy. ’ " : Allow no one to <l»'c<’ive yon in tiii-. All Counterfeits, Imitations anti Substitutes are but Ex periments that trifle with and endanger the health of Int'nnts .“.nd Children—Experience against ExjM-rinient. What is CASTORIA Custoria is a substHiite for C.i tor Oil, Pan goric, I>i ct>. ami Southing Syrups. It is Harmless ami Pieasnnf. It contains iieiiher Opium, Morphine nor oth. <• Narco; ■ substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroy:- Worms ami allays Feverishness. It <-urcs Diarrlnea and Wind Colie. It relieves 'Teething Trouble's, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates ihe Stomach ami Bowels, giving healthy and n- ’tir-tl b The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA al. Ecars the Signature of The Kind You Have Alwavs Bov°.k In Use For Over 30 Yc"' THC CENTAUR COMPANY, TV MURRAY '.TRFfT Nr w YOR*, / VKBBS^snsBBSSSKKHKKBBHSBBSStBSSSK^A^z r - v-/ Free to All. Is Your Blood Diseased (■>) Thousands of Sufferers From Bad Blood Permanently Cured by B. B. B. ■ — (O) To Prove the Wonderful Merits oi Botanic Blood Balm B. 8.8. or Three B’s, Every Reader of the Morning Call may Have a Sam ple Bottle Sent Free by Mall. —— —4o)— Cures Deadly Cancer, Scrofula, Boils, Blood Poison, Bumps Pimples, Bone Pains, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores on Face, Catarrh, Rheumatism and Broken-down Constitutions. —(u) Everyone who ii- a .sufferer from bad blood in any form ahoubl wri’e Blood Balm Company lor a raniple bottle of their famous B. B. B,— Botanic Blxd Balm. B. B.J’>. cures because it literally drives tl'■ [i ■‘-on i.l Hum r (w hich or luc.< blood diseases) out of the blood, lames and ! body, leaving the flesh as pure as a new born babe's, and leaves m> bud after effects No one can afford to think lightly of Blood Diseases, The blood is the life thin, bad blood w n't cure it.-'■lt. Y'ou must get the blood out of your liones and body and streng hen the system by new, fresh blood, and in this way the sores and ulcers cancers, rheumatism, eczema, ca tarrh, etc., are cured. B. B. B. docs all this lor you thoroughly and finally. B B B. is a powerful Blood Remedy (and not n mere tonic that stimulates but don't cure) and for this reason cuies when all eise fails. No one can tell how bad blood in the system will show itself, In ,ne per- nit will break out in form of scrofula, in another person, repulsive sons on the lace or ulcers on the leg, started by a slight blow. Many persons show hil b’ .od by a breaking out of pimples, sores on tongue <>r lips. Many persons’ blood is so bad that it breakes out in terrible cancer on the face, nose stomach or womb. Cancer is the worst form of bad t.lood, and hence cannot be cured by cutting, because vou can’t cut out the bad bhx.d; but, cancer and all ' >r any form >f bad blood is easily and quickly removed by B. B. B. Rheu matism and catarrh aie both caused by bad blood, although many doctors treat them as local diseases. But that i. the reason catarrh ifnd rheumatism are never cured, while B, B. B. has made many lasting cures of catarrh and rheumatism. Pimples and sores on the face can never lie cured with cosmetics or salves taicause the trouble is deep down below the -'ir- i —(j JBZ.I' YOLT l i JOB PRINTING DOIS’K A J The Evening Call Office, face in the blood. Sfrkc abb w where tt.e i 1 ■ • . i. ~ •■ d Jie l y taking B ii B. and diivmg the ban bhxxl «>ut I the body, in this way your pimples and unsightly blemishes are cured. People who are predispoßtd to blood disorders may experience any one or all of the f blowing ymptonis Thin blood, the vital functions are enfeebled, constitu tion shattered, shaky nerves, falling of the hair, disturbed slumbers,general thinness, and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad and both foul. The blood seems hot in , the fingers and there are hit flushes all I over the body. It '. ii have any ot these items you i more or I eased and is liable to show itself in some form ! s<>re or blemish. Take B. 8.8. i at once and get rid of the inward humor 1 before it grows worse, as it is lx>und to do :lun.iw the blood is strengthened and sweetened. Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. Bj is the . discovery ol Dr. GHiam, the Atlanta specialist on blood disea-es, and he used B. 8.8 in his private praeiice tor lib years with invariably good results. B. B B docs not c ontain mineral or vegetable poison and is perfectly sale to take, by the infant and the elderly and fr-eb'e. The above statements of facts prove enough for any sufferer from Blood Hu mors that Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B ) or three B’s cures terrible Blood diseases, 'an ! that it is worth while to give the j Remedy a trial ihe medicine is for sale ■ by druggists every where at fl per large bottle, or-ix bottles for sls, but sample . Ditties can only be obtained of Blood ■ Balm Co. Write today. Address plainly, Bho n Bai.m Co., Mitchell Street,Atlan ta, Georgia, and sample bottle ofß. B. B. and valuable pamphlet on Blood and • hkin D;s< i-e-“w ill 1.-e sent you by return ■ mail.