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Application for Charter
ygOKCiIA SPALDING CoUSTY.
To the Superior Court of said county -.
The petition of John Wallace and H. J.
Wing Spalding County, Geo, E. Clarke
an d Howard V. Robinson of Algona,
lowa, respectfully shows;
Ist. That they desire for themselvei,
their associates, successors and assigns to
become incorporated under the name and
style of THE DIXIE CREAMERY CO.,
for the term of twenty years, with the
privilege of renewing at the end of that
time.
2nd. The capital stock of the corpora
tion is to be Ten Thousand Dollars, divided
into shares of 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 Rutter, Cheese and other Milk
Products ; buy and sell poultry, eggs, and
other farm products, fruits and 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, and also
to act as general or speeial 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 and 'o do 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.
sth. That they may have the right to
buy, lease, bold 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 with 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 ami subject to
the liabilities fixed by law.
ROBT. T. DANIEL,
Petitioners’ Attorney.
Q TATE OF GEORGIA,
O Spalding County.
1 hereby certify that the foregoing is a
true copy of the original petition Jor in
corporation, under the name and style of
•‘The Dixie Creamery C 0.,” filed in clerk’s
office of the superior court oi said county.
This April 12th, 1899.
W.M. M. Thomas, Clerk.
TO THE
ZE-ZASOZ 1 .
g 3.00 SAVED
BY THE
SEABOARD_AIR LINE.
Atlanta to Richmond $1450
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-
folk 18.05
Atlanta to Philadelphia via Wash
ington 18.50
Atlanta to New York via Richmond
and Washington 21.00
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
Va. and Cape Charles Route 20.55
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
Va , and Norfolk and 'Washington
Steamboat Company, via Wash
ington 21.00
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk,
Va., Bay Line steamer to Balti
more, and rail to New York 20.55
Atlanta to New York via Norfolk
and Old Dominion 8. S. Co.
(meals and stateroom included) 20.25
Atlanta to Boston via Norfolk and
steamer (meals and stateroom in
cluded) 21.50
Atlanta to Boston via Washington
and New York 24.00
The rate mentioned above to Washing
ton, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York
and Boston are $3 less than by any other
all rail line. The above rates apply from
Atlanta. Tickets to the east are sold from
most all points in the territory of the
Southern States Passenger Association,
via the Seaboard Air Line, at $3 less than
by any other all rail line.
For tickets, sleeping car accommoda
tions, call on or address
B. A. NEWLAND,
Gen. Agent Pass Dept.
WM. BISHOP CLEMENTS,
T. P. A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta
%p;yco./
Schedule Effective April 1,189!).
DEPARTURES.
1. Griffin daily for
Atlanta... .6:08 am, 7:20 am, 9 :5 r, anl , H:l3 pn ,
Macon ami Savannah ’
Macon, Albany and Savannah ’.9 : l3am
Macon and Albany
< arrolltoniexeept Sunday)lo:lo am, 2:15 p ln
ARRIVALS.
Ar. Griffin daily from
Atlanta... .9:13 am, 6:30 pm, 8:20 pm, 9:44 pm
Savannah and Macon 6:08 am
Macon and Albany 9.55 am
Savannah, Albany and Macon 6:13 pm
1 arrollton (except Sunday) 9;10 am. 5:20 pm
For further information apply to
11. .1. Williams, Ticket Airo, Griffin,
L -Agent, Griffin.
John M. Eoan. Vice President.;
i- iY 1 .?• IVi.inb, Gen. Supt„
K H Hinton. Traffic Manager,
~• 1 H aile, Gen, Passenger Agt, Savannah.
Help Wanted.
or female. I want good agents sat
isfied with slu.oo a week for about four
hours work each day ■ this is no joke
inclose 12 cents in stamps for agent's
2, and begin at once-time is nTney
l(im m\? J* CM3ART Novelty Meo. Co,
mlO-101l West Ave, Buffalo, N. Y.
Dept,
LOST A BIG I'OUTL.VE.
, THE STORY OF A NERVY BLUFF IN A
> GAME OF POKER.
' 'Hie Southern Colonel llnd the Eu.l
ern Pluuifer Sliced I p Properly, hut
LoM < onlidence In 111. <>»vn llnud
nt the Wrong Moment.
Big games on the Mississippi river
steamers, where poker flourished at its
best, were by no means the only in
stances wherein fortunes were made
and lost on the turn of a card. The rec- i
ord of the game wherein Pete Welch,
a noted eastern plunger, met Colonel
Wallace of South Carolina is regarded
as one of the stiffest battles on the green
baize ever fought in any land. Wallace
was very wealthy, a heavy slave owner
and an extremely lucky man at cards. j
He was, as every southern gentleman
was and is, perfectly honorable, and Ihh
victories were the admiration of his
friends. Pet,' was a gambler by pr<
sion, had plenty of money and was full
ot nerve; so a battle between the two
was certain to be of absorbing interest.
When Colonel Wallace heard that
Welch was coming to meet him, he
calmly replied he would be ready. He
said he had a limit fixed, and, if the
gambler went beyond that, he would
drop out and let the money go. Welch
came on, the colonel was notified and
the date set for the game. It was to
take place in a club where no games
were supposed to go on. The colonel
drove to town, met the enemy and a
number of friends, had drinksail around
and the two men sat in for a single I
handed game. They commenced at SIOO
jack pots, and at first the colonel’s luck
stuck to him. He won steadily, but the
gambler was game and met him.
At last the tide turned, and the cards
began to fall to Pete. He won until all
the gold in front of Wallace passed to
his side of the table. Wallace became
fierce and took all kinds of chances, los
ing his head in a manner, drinking
heavily, while his opponent coolly play
ed his hands for all they were worth.
When Wallace had passed in his last
stack, he pushed back bis chair and said
his pile was gone. Then he said:
“Welch, you’ve got an even $30,000
there if you will count it. I brought
that much with me, and I may have
been foolish 1 believe if I had more I
could get it all from you in half a dozen
hands. ”
“I ll gladly give you a chance, colo- j
nel. Perhaps some of your friends here ’
can accommodate you?”
Nobody spoke. The colonel rattled on
the table.
“Welch,” he said when the silence
got oppressive, “I have no more ready
cash, but 1 have property that is as
good as gold any day right here in this
town. I never did it before, but I will
play you 24 of my best slaves against
$59,000. The negroes are worth fully
that amount, as these gentlemen will
testify. The slaves are the best in the ;
state, but if you think the value too
high wo can arrange it otherwise. Will
you finish the game?”
“If these gentlemen say tho slaves |
are worth that much, then fix your pa- |
pers while I count this money. I never
like to turn my back to a good thing.’'
Everybody got up and took a drink
on the new game. When the papers
were arranged, the players got a new j
deck of cards, and there was not a word ,
passed while the cards were being shuf
fled. The sky was to be the limit until
the $50,000 was reached. Wallace's
sporting blood was up, and he seemed
determined to lose all quickly or get it
back in the same swift gait. He took
desperate chances in drawing and ac
cepted foolish bets.
Tin 'nd was drawing near Welch
was d ling, and bad shuffling on the i
previoi. - bands had left considerable
money in the pot. Welch was ahead on
the winnings. The colonel looked at his
band and opened the pot for SI,OOO.
Welch stretched his eyes and then
looked at his hand. He raised it SI,OOO.
Without raising his head the colonel
raised back $2,000, and Welch saw it.
Ib.WHnt SI,OOO better, and the coh ml
stopped raising. The players were less
excited«than any of the other men in
the room. Pete took the cards and asked
the colonel:
“How many ?”
“Two cards,” ho said.
“None here,” put in the dealer.
The colonel took the two cards and
looked at them quickly. Then he stuck
them behind the others. “I’ll start this
on $5,000,” he said. Welch looked at
his hand again and took the bet. He
went $5,000 more. The colonel raised
another $5,000. Welch saw it and
raised another, and the colonel raised
still another $5,000.
“Well, I’ve got just SIO,OOO hero you
can have if you can get it, ” said Welch,
and he tossed in the chips. The colonel
studied his band.
“I’ve got only $5,000,” he said,
“and I think you’ve got me, even if it
is a bad thing to say.”
With that Wallace tossed the cards
on the table, and Welch took the pot. It
was a clean case of bluff on Pete’s part,
as the cards subsequently showed. The
colonel had held up a pair of jacks, his
openers, and an ace. On the draw he
caught an ace and a seven of diamonds.
Welch had only a pair of fives to start
with, and he kept them with the rest
of the hand. Wallace thought he was
bluffing, but lost his nerve at the wrong
moment. When the game ended, the
colonel had barely $4,000. He bought
back two of his slaves that were lost,
and the 22 went to Welch. They were
sold in the town a month later.—Ex
change
Not Hit Style.
Teacher—One should be thoughtful
in dispensing favors. For example,
suppose your father, Johnny, was in a
■ crowded street car and two ladies, one
old and the other young, got in, which
1 of them would he give his seat to?
Johnny— Guess you don’t know dad.
1 H< wouldn't give it to either.—Boston
Tianscript
CARLILE is a TUTOR
JAN AMUSING ANECDOTE OF THE
GREAT AND GLOOMY MAN.
He Unit n I'rown I'hm Terrified nnd
<i I nuccli That Startled lll» I’npilH.
‘1 III* liny tbe Itoukei < nun* to School
■ A uni n»t His Will.
A writer in The Scotsman has un
earthed an amusing anecdote of Thomas
Carlyle as a country “dominie, ” for
the accuracy of which be vouches. It
was told in 1853 by a Cupar Fife law
yer and provost who had been one of
Carlyle’s pupils at Kirkcaldy, to the
writer and Hugh Miller, The’interest
of this gentleman’s reminisceno s of
his schoolmaster was heightened bv his
| utter unconsciousness that his old do
minie was the Thomas Carlyle who was
then beginning to be known to fame.
The old gentleman described the older
race of Scottish schoolmasters as always
during school hours wearing their hats
—at least keeping their heads covered—
and many of the boys, viewing the pe
culiar angle at which the hat stood up
on the head and how near it came to the
eyebrows, could conjecture if the sav
age mood were to be that day predomi
nant.
“But my teacher,” said the provost,
“a strict and gloomy disciplinarian
with the name of Carlyle, never wore
his hat in the school, and indeed his
brow was so overhung with dark threat
ening that no extra expression to alarm
us was needed from his luni hat! He
I did not thrash us either very often or
I very severely, but we had a fear that,
if provoked, he would go great lengths
iti punishment. 1 have seen his mere
scowl hush at once the whole school.”
Hugh Miller here interposed by ask
ing, “Did your teacher ever burst into
a strange laugh in school?”
“That is a very odd question, ” re
turned the provost. “Why do you ask?
But now that I remember, he had at
times a very extraordinary laugh that
made us all stare. It had a train of
queer chuckling which exploded in a
succession of loud and deep guffaws that
shook his whole body and displayed all
his teeth like the keys of a piano. Hu
then clapped his hands on the book he
held against his knees. Yet none of us
never knew at what he was laughing.
He had a grim smile in reproving pupils
and a habit of tapping their heads with
his knuckles as he told them that the
I heads would never be worth the price
( of bats or the charge of a barber, though |
: mammas and aunts had that morning !
combed, kissed and blessed them, as if I
they were teeming with the sublimest
inventions and designs!”
The provost saw that Hugh Miller
and some other guests were listening
eagerly, and he proceeded :
“One morning, a few minutes before
the school hour, when most of the pu
pils had arrived, and, as rain was fall
i ing, they had gone into the school, a
■ donkey, which had broken loose from
i its tether on a grassy spot near, was en
j tering the playground. Bill Hoed and I
I were so far on our way, and Bill, who
| was a stout and frolicsome lad—the
I ringleader in many sports and tricks—
rushed to mount the animal and began
to guide and force it into the school.
“With desperate spurring the donkey j
was induced to carry its rider over the
! threshhold, and what a reception both
of them got from the juvenile crowds!
Bags of books were at once fastened to
the tail and around the neck of tho ass,
and so busy wera Bill and half a dozen
companions in urging the animal to a
canter around tho school and to ascend
the short stair of the master’s desk that
they did not notice how time was speed
ing, and before they could remove the
i stranger Mr. Carlyle appeared.
“ We expected a tremendous explosion
of wrath, but he burst into a roar of
laughter—such a roar, however, as, in
stead of tempting us to join in it, pro
duced a sudden and complete hush, and
that roar was renewed again and again
when the ass, withdrawing its forefeet
from the first step of the desk stair and
turning round, took a pace or two slow
ly toward the master as if to salute him.
“ ‘That,’ exclaimed Carlyle, ‘is the
wisestand best scholar Kirkcaldy has
yet sent mo. He is fit to be your teach
er.’ He tapped the donkey’s Mead as he
i M. 'Tht ■’ -
something here far more than in the
skulls of any of his brethren before me,
though these skulls are patted in fond
admiration by papas and mammas, and
thoughthat far grander headpiece meets
only with merciless blows.'
“He then gave some hard taps on
Bill Hood’s head, and would not allow
him to dismount, but for a penalty or
dered him to ride up and down the
school for an hour, while those boys
who had been most active in helping
Bill to go through tho farce bad to
march in pairs before and behind the
perplexed looking ass. He did not re
quire the other scholars to attend to
their several school lessons, but silently
permitted them to stand as spectators
‘ of the grotesque procession. Then he
: himself, seated within his pulpitlike
desk, surveyed Bill and his company.
“I have not for years thought of this
! scene,” continued the provost, “but it
’ has now come back to mo freshly, and
, 1 remember that my old master bad a
c very strange laugh. I don't know what
C has'become of him, nor indeed have I
3 heard of him since I left Kirkcaldy
school.”
9
f So Open Date*.
“You have an elegant and spacious
6 home,” said the pastor, "You have
:- books, a piano, a daughter who can
sing and play and everything to make
home alluring. Why don’t you throw
your house open si.nie evening in the
II week for the benefit of the homeless
’ young men? Y u might save many a
8 one from the club ami the saloon.
® “Young men.-” slid the wealthy
member. “Theie s one of them v
con.es to my le u- tlx (
week What are • n t _.i. ... about,
doctor?”—Chicago ITU «ue
GEN. BHAFTEI S LESSON.
It . 1« <1- till. o<-<-n. ■ That H«
Learnr I tn Ueci.le For Himaelf.
H re is i »t< tv that 1 the Cleveland
Leader proffer about General Shafter,
It centers about his salient, trait of be
ing pugnacious, just as all current and
will invented ane< dotes of “Fighting
Bob" Evans revolve arotHid some in
candescent bit of profanity. But the
story run- thus, as the general is made
to tell it:
“Once, when I was a boy at school —I
wasn’t more than 10 or 11 years old at
the time—our ft ■-In r called up the
class in mental arithmetic and began
putting qi stious, beginning with the
pupil at tin head of thu row and going
down to\v,i;.i the to t, until someone '
could give the correct answer. I stood
somewhere in ar the middle, and next
below me was a boy who was three
years older ami conscb-rably ahead of
me in the various studies that we had.
“ ‘How much are 13 and 9 and 8?*
the teacher asked.
“While one aft' r another of the boys
and girls aln 1 i f me guessed and
failed to get it i i;'ht I fig; red out what
I thought the answer ought to be. The
question had almost got to me when I
heard the big boy jvst below me whis
pering, apparently to hiniselt, but loud
enough for me to hear, ‘29, 29, 29.’
“Finally the pupil above me failed
to answer correctly, and then it was my
turn.
“ ‘Well, Willie,’ said the teacher, ;
‘let’ssee if you know theanswer. Come,
now, be prompt.'
“I cocked my head up proudly on one
side, cast a triumphant look at those
who had ‘fallen down' on the problem
and said, so that everybody in the
schoolroom could hear me:
“ ‘ Twenty nine I’
“ ‘Next. How many are 13 and 9
and 8?
“ ‘Aw!’ said the big boy below me, j
With a look of supreme contempt at the I
rest, of us, ‘3o!’
“That was what I had figured it to 1
be myself, and when the teacher said
‘correct’ I wanted to fight.
“I didn’t assault him, but I made up
my mind right there and then to depend
on my own judgment in the future, and
ever since then when I have had any
thing to do and had figured out what 1 j
considered the best way to do it I have
gone ahead, remembering, when people
criticised or tried to throw me off thu
track, how that big boy made a fool of !
me in the mental arithmetic class. ”
SETTLED THE BORE.
■ An Abrupt Termination io a Rebtau- ;
rant t'oa verwat ion.
Hon. Joseph Chamberlain, when on
his fiist visit, to this country several
years ago, was taking a chop and a
glass of ale in a Washington restaurant
one afternoon, and a man around town ‘
who is somewhat noted for his forward- I
ness, not to say his freshness, was din- ■
■ ing in the same room, and he recognized
! the English parliamentarian. He walked
■ over to Chamberlain’s table, and, quite
i uninvited, took the opposite seat. With
; in the space of five minutes he was tell
i ing Chamberlain wiiat a third rate out
, fit he considered England to be. The
[ man’s talk, needless to say, was in very
’ rank taste. Chamberlain adjusted his
I monocle firmly and looked at tha ob
trusive chap amusedly.
“Now, we’ll take England in thu
matter of great men, ” said Chamber- I
lain’s uninvited table mate. “Where
does England cut in in tho matter of
great men nowadays, anyhow? England
has got Gladstone, of course, but ha
was born about 110 years ago, and he’s
a back number. I’ll just ask you, Mr.
Chamberlain, a fair question, What
really great man, what noted character,
has England produced, say, within the
past 50 years? Answer me that, sir!”
"With pleasure,” said Chamberlain,
permitting his monocle to fall into bis
lap and taking his hat and cane from
thu rack. “Great man, mo. Noted char
acter, Jack the Ripper. 1 bid you good
afternoon. ” —Washington Post.
Iloiiiestic Repartee.
She had put on her hat and gloves
and was moving toward the door, when
he looked up from his newspaper and
asked:
“Where are you going?”
“A husband with good sense never
asks his wife where she is going.”
“But I suppose a woman with good
sense has the right to ask her husband
where he is going?”
“A woman with good sense never
does anything of the kind, because if
she has good sense she never marries, sa
she has no husband. Ta, ta!”
nd it never dawm d on her that
had called her.--l an idiot, —IVarson’i
Weekly. /
Hlh Enviable l ot.
Mr. Pitt—Since your friend Blinkini
married Mr-s Bonds he has been lead
ing tho life of a dog.
Mr. Penn—l’m sorry fur him.
“I’m not.”
“Don’t you sympathize with him?”
“Not at all. He has nothing to do
but eat, sleep and amuse himself. It'i
i the life of a pet pug dog he leads.” —
Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph.
k Once Too Often.
“ What's all this excitement about?”
“Nothing worth mentioning. Man
• j got knocked down.”
“Accident?”
“Not exactly. One ot these men who
. always catch hold of you and push you
' ! out r.f their way when you happen to
3 meet them at a crowded • orner grabbed
1 the wrong man just now. That’s all.”
—Chicago Tribune.
Tbe SwmpiclouK Mother.
M I Admire a baby and the mother al
‘ ; ways looks pleased. Admire her dog
und she glares at you. Maybe the reason
' ' fol- t is that she is quite sure you do
"lnotwi-h to steal the baby, but isn't
e I alt s«'th r certain’. uardihgi y >ur atteo
wuereLte dog is t m trued.— Ex
IB I
EPw QT fl D i A fl
■ ■ ■ W W
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in use for tm-r 30 years, has borne the signature ot
:m<l has been made under his p< r
> sonal superv isioii since its inf im-t.
•x-i.z. /y, ‘ . Allow'no on<‘to <h’< <-iv c you in thia.
Ail Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are bill I x
pcriunents that trille with anil ciKlaugcr the health oi'
Intents and Children —lAperience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
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Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural slceji.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s !’ri< • ;!.
ceimu. CASTORIA A
>7 Bears tho Signature of
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I
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n '
t n shattered, shaky nerves, falling of the
hair,disturbed slumbers, general thinness,
and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad
and breath foul. The blood seems hot in
the fingers and there are hot flushes all
over the body. If you have any of thesi
symptoms your blood is more or less di
eased and is liable to show itself in some
firm ' f sore or blemish. Take 11. 11. 11.
at once and get rid of the inward hunr '
before it grows worse, as it is bound to do
unless the blood is strengthened and
sweetent l.
1! itanie Bio 1 11 , m > 15. B. B) is the
discovery o; Dr. Giliam, the Atlanta
specialist on blood diseases, and he used
15. B. B in Lis private practice for 110 years
with invariably good results. 15. B. B
does not contain mineral or vegetable
poison and is perfectly safe to take, by the
infant and the elderly and feeble.
The above statements of facts prove
! enough for any sufferer from Blood Ilu
: mors that Botanic Blood Balm (15. B. 15.)
or three B ■■ cures terrible Blood diseases,
and that it is worth while to give the
Remedy a trial ihe medicine is for sale
: y irugg it- - V rywiu ••• ul |] pcr
bottie, or six bottles for $5, but sample
bottles can only be obtained of Blood
Balm Co. Write today. Address plainly,
Blood Balm Co., Mitchel] Street,Atlan
ta, Georgia, and sample 1. >;tie ■ 1 15. 15. 15.
and valuable pamphlet on Blood and
Skin DiseasesJwiU be sent you by return
mail.