The evening call. (Griffin, Ga.) 1899-19??, June 06, 1899, Image 3

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Application for Charter GEORGIA— Spaldiko County. To the Superior Court of Said County The petition of S. Grantland, Douglas Boyd, J. W. Mangham, Jos D. Boyd. J. J, Mangham, W. J. Kincaid, James M, Brawner, G. J. Coppedge, John 11. Dierck sen, Henry C. Burr, J. E Drewry, B. N Barrow, of Spalding county, of said State, and R. VV. Lynch, of Fayette county, ami’ L. F. Farley, of Pike county, of said State, respectfully shows: Par. 1. That they desire for themselves, their associates, successors, heirs and as signs, to become incorporated under the name and style of “The Spalding Cotton Mills,” tor the term of twenty years, with the privilege of extending this term at the expiration of that time. Par. 2. The capital stock of the said cor poration is to be One Hundred Thousand Dollars, with the privilege of increasing the same to Two Hundred Thousand Dol lars when desired. The said stock to be divided into shares ot One Hundred Dol lars each. Par. 3. The object of said c rrporation is pecuniary gain and profit to the stock holders, and to that end they propose to buy and sell cotton and manufacture the same into any and all c’asses of cotton goods, of any kind and any character, as the management of the said corporation shall choose, having such buildings, ware houses, water tanks, etc , as they shall need in the conduct of the said business, and the said corporation :1: ill have this right to sell such manufamurvd goods in such manner and time as they see fit, and shall make such contracts with outside parties, either for the purchase or sale of cotton, or for the purchase or sale of cot ton goods, as they shall deem to the inter est of said corporation Par. 4. They desire to ado t such rules, regulations and by-laws as are necessary for the successful operation of their busi ness from time to time, to elect a board of directors and such other officers as they deem proper. Par. 5. That they have the right to buy and sell, lease and convey, mortgage or bond, and hold such real estate and per sonal property as they may need in carry ing on their business, and do with such property as they may deem expedient. Par. 6. The principal office and place of business will be in Griffin, said State and said county, but petitioners ask the right to establish offices at other points, where such seem necessary to the interest of the corporation. They also ask the right to sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded, and to have and use a common seal, and enjoy such other rights and privileges as are incident to corporations under the laws of the State of Georgia. Wherefore, petitioners pray to be made a body corporate under the name and style aforesaid, entitled to all the rights, privileges and immunities, and subject to the liabilities fixed by law. SEARCY & BOYD, Petitioners’ Attorneys. 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 Spalding Cotton Mills,” filed in the Merk’s office of the superior court ot Spal ing county. This May 17th, 1899. Wm. M. Th (MAS, Clerk. TO THE EAST. SS.-6.00 SA VICO BY THE SEABOARD AIR LINE. Atlanta to Richmond |l4 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- folk 18.05 Atlanta to Philadelphia via Wash ington 18.50 Atlanta to New 5 ork via Richmond and Washington 21.00 Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, Va and Cape Charles Route 20.55 i Atlanta to New Y'ork via Norfolk, Va , and Norfolk and Washington Steamboat Company, via Wash ington 21.00 I Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, Va., Bay Line steamer to Balti more, and rail to New York 20.55 Atlanta to New Y’ork via Norfolk and Old Dominion S. 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 ind Boston are s.”> less than by any other all rail line. The above rates apply from Atlanta Tickets to the cast 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 Schedule Effective April 1, 1899. DEPARTURES. Lv. Griffin daily for Atlanta... ,H:08 am, 7:20 am, 9:53 am, B:13 pm Macon and Savannah 9:44 pm Macon, Albany and Savannah 9:13 am Macon and Albany c-3) pm Garrolltonfexcept Sunday 110:10 am, 2:15 pm ARRIVALS.-: Ar. Griffin daily from Atl nta... .9:13 am. 5:30 pm. 8:20 pm, 9:41 pm savannah and Macon <•, <»« am Macon a.id Albany ...<|jg Savannah. Albany and Macon 8:13 pm arrollton (except Sunday) 9:10 am, 5:20 pm For further information apply to K- Wir.UAMa, Ticket *trr, Griffin 1 , J ,r >. Reid, Agent, Griffin T»mn’ Vicr ‘ President,; ' H . E P P- Kline. Gen. Supt., “• H. Hinton, Traffic Manager. • Haile, Gen, Passensrer Agt, Savannah.' THE HORSE IN BATTLE. .9 Evi- Hin n Hilly W 01111<I< <1 He L "Hl li v to llcnisiiii Stmiding*. L Av< -ter in cavalry horse partakes of the hopes and fears of battle just the ~ same a- his rider. As the column swings 1 into line ami waits the horse grows , nervous over the waiting. If the wait is spun out. he will tremble and sweat ’ and grow apprehensive. If he has been . six months in service, he knows every 1 bugle call. As the call comes to ad i vance, the rider can feel him working : at the bit with his tongue to get it be tween his teeth. As he moves out, he ■ will either seek to get on faster than ‘ he should or bolt. He cannot bolt, how ( ever. The, lines will carry him forward, , and after a minute he will grip, lay back bis ears, and one can feel his sud den resolve to brave the worst and have : done with it as soon as possible. A man seldom cries out when hit in ’ the turmoil of battle. It is the same with a horse. Five troopers out of six, when struck with a bullet, are out of their saddles within a minute. If hit in the breast or shoulder, up go their hands, and they get a heavy fall ; if in , the leg or foot or arm, they fall forward * and roll off. Even with a foot cut off by a jagged ' piece of shell a horse will not drop. It > is only when shot through the head or lu-art that he comes down. He may be fatally wounded, but hobbles out of the fight to right or left and stands, with , drooping head, until the loss of blood brings him down. The horse that loses his rider and is unwounded himself will continue to run with his set of fours until some movement throws him out. Then he goes galloping here and there, neighing with fear and alarm, but he will not leave the field. In his racing about he may get among the dead and wounded, , but he will dodge them, if possible, and in any case leap over them. When he has come upon three or four other rider less steeds, they fall in and keep togeth er as if fcr mutual protection, and the “rally” of the bugle may bring the whole of them into ranks in a body.— Public Opinion. PLAINT OF A MILLIONAIRE. 5o Fun In Life For a Man Who Haw Acquired Enormous Wealth. What is the smallest income on which a man may live in New York? was the question I asked today of a noted bank er. whose income cannot be less than $100,900 a year. “Well, ”he replied, “my household expenses alone amount to $25,000 a year, and I do not see how I possibly could live on less than that.” Then a reminiscent smile began to cross his countenance, and, heaving a little sigh, be said: “But the happiest time of my life was when my wife and I and two children lived here on $2,500 a year. After all, happiness doesn’t de pend on the amount of a man’s income. “1 was quite intimate with William 11. Vanderbilt when he was considered the richest man in the country. I met him one day in Fifth avenue and said to him that he ought to be the happiest man in the world. ‘I am not,’ the great millionaire replied. ‘My health is shat tered, and all the money I possess can not restore it. I cannot, even drive cne of my fine bvrses. It is painful for me to sit down. My only possible exercise ■ is for me to walk down the avenue. I i receive threatening letters daily, and j my nerves are so unstrung tbit I am i constantly afraid that some assassin I will waylay me. I am overrun with people who want to get money. lam the nm-t wrenched man in New Y’ork, and 1 tell you that after a person has accumulated enough to secure him against poverty and gratify his reason : able v nts ' t,-ry dollar in addition is I a burd ,i and weighs him down.’ I Philadelphia Ledger. Ilouiance of Slani'w Groat Peak*. Siaiu’H greatest mountain range is I tile Sam Roi Yawt, or the 300 peaks. I A quaint legend which explains their origin is s< t fortli by the Siamese geol ogists as follows: “It appears that one Mong Lai and his wife once inhabited the neighbor hood (they were - giants), and each promised their daughter in marriage, unknown to the other, to a different suitor. At last the day of the nuptials arrived, and Chao Lai and the Lord of Mleang (.’bin (China) both arrived to claim the bride. When the horrified fa ther found how matters stood—having a regard fcr the value of a promise, which is not too common in the east— he ent his dangher in half so that nei ther suitor should be disappointed. “Chao Lai in the meantime, on find ing that be had a rival, committed sui cide, and the peak of Chao Lai is the remains of his body. The unfortunate bride is to be found in the islands off Sam Roi Yawt, the peaks of which are the remains if the gifts which were to be made to the holy man who was to solemnize the wedding, while Kaw Chang and Kaw King, on the east side of the gulf, are the elephant and buffalo cart in which the presents were brought. ” He Was Acquitted. Here the voice of counsel for the de fense thrilled with emotion. “Gentlemen of the jury,” he cried, “you cannot believe the prisoner to be the cool, calculating villain tho prose cution would make him out to be! Were he cool and calculating would he have murdered his wife, as he is ac i cased of doing? Would he not rather [ have spared her in order that she might , be here at this trial to weep for him 1 and influence your verdict with her tears?” ( Only the thoughtless think lawyers i do not assist the ends of justice.—De [ troit Journal. i Bicycle Admonition. "Bredren. ’ said the bicycle parson, “guide youah spiritual bikes in dis y> re wo Id so dat you all won’t scorch in de nex’. ” —Baltimore American. • 1 lie 11.-M l.:;ld Phum. • “When I wa- .. ■ -ng fellow, 1 was a drr-am< r. ” said a L, m volent citizen, j “I thought tin: my ;rt atc-t pleasure would be to give money to the poor and live a life of ,-imple, unworldly devo tion and gentl. iie-' That was when I was about 20. “At 25 I camo into some money rath er unexpectedly. The first thing I did was to give a dinner. I got tip\v - the first time in my life 1 hail a fight with a waiter and marly punched his eye out. I was arrested and had to be bailed out by my lawyer. The waiter sm-d me for damages, and I was so angry with him and myself and the downfall <>f my great ideals that I refused to c< <mpr. mise as my lawyer advised. The waiter lost most of his savings in fees ami ex penses, and his family came wailing 1 • ask me to pay his doctor’s bills and help him get a position and they would drop the suit. “I came to my senses and did more than that for them. Myoid ideas, modi fied and modernized, took hold of me again, and while I am a hard headed business man today most of my friends are poor people. But my first use of money shows how flimsy the pedestals of most ideals aie and how foolish it is to say what we would do if we could. ” —New Y’ork Commercial Advertiser He Told the Lawyer. Lawyer S. is well known for bis un comely habits. He cut. his hair about four times a year and .e rest of the time looks decidedlv ragged about the ’ ears. He was makir a wi; ne-is describe a barn which figure in his hist ease. “How long had the barn bet n built?" i “Oh, I don’t know. About a year I mebby. About nine months p’r aps. “But just how long? Tell the jury how long it had bean built. ’ “Well, I don’t know exactly Quitij a while. ” “Now, Mr. 8., you pa-s for an intel ligent farmer, and yet you can t tell me how old this barn is, and you have lived on the next farm for ten years. Can you tell me how old your own barn is? Come now, tell us how old your own house is, if you think you know. Quick as lightning the old farmer r plied; “You want to know how old my house , is, do ye? Well, it’s just about as old as yon be and needs the roof seeing to about as bad. ” In the roar that followed the witness | stepped down, and Lawyer S. didn't i call him back. -London Globe. “‘Ark, the ’Ernld Angell Slug.’* Two turns brought me from the crowded highway along which cab and j omnibus were speeding toward Lon- | don's center of attraction to the quiet street in which fire and food awaited me. As I made the second turn I saw, i through the murk of a mid Decern tier . evening, three figures pressed close ' against the area railings—surely my own area railings. And through the I murk came in a treble bawl the sound of “Peace on earth, good ’ill ter m n. ’ The area door opened with a H uu “Now, then, bo off with ver! Id i smack yer 'eds if I could get near yer. Makin that noise! Now, then!” “Garn! Want yer airy window broke?” said the biggest of the tri. , pulling himself up by the railings and resting his chin between the spikes. As I entered at the gate they scurried i away in fear and trembling, and cook, i distracted, slammed the area door. A \ minute later a want of discoid came ; down the street “ ‘Ark, the 'erald ungels sing." —Academy. Where Coleridge Was Wanting:. Coleridge has a lamentable want ct voluntary power. If he is excited by a I remark in. company he will pour forth ' in an evening, without apparent edfortH what would furnish matter sot a hun dred essays. But the moment that he is from preordained deliberation his pow ers fail him, and I believe that thers are times when he could not pen th< I commonest notes. He is one of these minds who, except in inspired moods, | can do nothing, and his inspirations are J all oral and not scriptural. And when : he is inspired he surj asses, in my opin- j ion. all that could be thought or imag i ined of a human being.—“ Charles Lamb and the Lloyds,” by E. V. Lucas. The Hri<l«e of Lio vim. The largest bridge in existence is not, as one would imagine, the work of some famous English or French engineer. This bridge,comparatively little known, was constructed long ago, in China, in the reign of the Emperor Keing Long. It is situated near to Sangang and the Yellow sea, and measures not less than eight miles and a half. The Bridge of Lions, as it is called, is supported by 300 immense arches and its foundation is 21 meters underwa ter. On each pile of this wonderful bridge is a marble statue of a lion, three i times larger than life size. The coup | d’ceil of these 300 enormous lions, each ! one supporting an arch, is stupendous ' in its magnifieance. A New < oin mod It j. “John has 5 oranges. James gave him I 11, and he gives Peter 7 ; how many has ’ he left?” Before this problem the class recoiled, i ( “Please, sir,” said a young lad, “we I always does our sums in apples " 1., n I , don Tit-Bits. V Wovunn** Answer. She (confidinglv 1 fil l like a j<r- ‘ feet wreck. Her Dearest Friend i svmpathizinglv : ' —You look it. New York Sun. r Spain ha- greater mineral resources 8 than any other country in Europe, in- ' eluding iron, copper, zinc, silver, anti- i im.ny, quicksilver, lead and gyp>nm Some naturalist- an-of the opinion | „ that the whale was once a land animal, i g and that it wa- I • -d to take to water , a ; u means of prob, ctiou a Chinese wedding. Ever thins Connretrcl XV > li (tis Cere nioniCH l« D<-ck«-<t In lied. The Chinese place a significance upon every color, and in connection with a Wel ling red obtains a deep rooted, mysterious importance, the next bridal color in value being gold. At a be trothal the bnd> groom elect sends hia sweetheart a pair of bracelets fastened together with a piece of red ribbon or cord. The I ride ,<mi bridegroom drain tw wine cups at the wedding, which are also connected by a red cord. In northern China the attendants wear tall felt hats and each bat has a red feather stuck upright in it. The attend ants abo carry the wedding presents. A sedan chair liars the bride herself. In s uth Chin.i a se ; ih -most wonder fully gilded is used by the wealthy classes, ami it i-deci rated with what appears at first sight to be brilliant in laid stones, but which are in reality the glossy leathers of the kingfisher. A handsome cloth of glowing red with trimmed border is also thrown over the chair. In the case of the pn ,rt .• classes red is also the prevailing Liidal color, mi l a chair of ordinary carved wood, paint ed a bright red, is used. Ab ve the do r of the chair a kind of charm is placard ed or hung upon a red cloth. The. chair itself is sent by the bride gr< ,mi, an .m panied by what corresponds to cur I■< st mau. This functionary brings with him a litter written in yellow or gold tipi n red paper, praying the lady to enter and take her place. Men dressed all in red and carrying red parcels containing the presents fall into the procession. Other bearers carry boards and banners, inscribed in golden letters upon a red ground. These ban ners tell the pedigree of both parties. Behind tho bearers come the other at tendants, with long poles, on which are hung very handsome lanterns. Tho bride’s veil is of bright crimson hue and her dress regai gold and scarlet.— Wide World. JACK HORNER. The Rich I’lum That He Extracted I'roiii That < hri»tiuns Pie. For the benefit of those who are not quite little folks Agnes Carr Sage, in Lippincott's Magazine, tells tho origin and history of some famous nursery stories and rhymes, among them “Tho Pleasant History of Jack Horner,” con taining “His Witty Tricks and Pleas ant Pranks.” for so it is set forth in a very old chapbook, carefully preserved in the Bodleian library. It appears that this worthy was stew ard to an abbot of Glastonbury. The good abbot learned that his majesty Henry VIII had seen fit to be indignant because the monks had built a kitchen which he could not burn down. Now, a king's indignation was dangerous and must be appeased. Therefore the abbot sent his steward, Jack Horner, to pre sent the sovereign with a suitable peace offering. It took the form of a big and tempting looking pie, beneath the crust of which the transfer deeds of 13 man ors were hidden. But Master Jack had an eye for the profit of No. 1, and on the road ho slyly lifted the crust and abstracted tho deeds of the Manor of Wells. On his return, bringing the deeds, ho plausibly explained that they- had been given to him by the king; hence the rhyme: Little Jaek Horner Sat in a corner lot the wagon). Eying his Christinas pie : He put in his thumb And pulled out a plum (the title deed), Raying, “What a bravo 1 y am 1 ' Town Xnmen. The Cleveland Leader says that a man registered in a local hotel tho other day, giving his place of residence as Sleepy Eye, Minn. Half an hour later another guest registered from Painted Post, la. The clerk paid no especial attention to this, but when the next mau to regis ter boldly wrote “White Pigeon, Mich.,” after his name, both the clerk and tho bookkeeper began to get inter ested. While they were talking about the queer names that had been given to some of our western towns-, a dignified looking man stepped up to tho office, whirled the register around, and scrawled “Horseheads, N. Y.” S iiperla t IveM. Dr Johnson says in his “Grammar of tho English Tongue:” “Tho com parison of adjectives is very uncertain, and, being much regulated by coramo diousness of utterance, is not easily re duced to rules.” Then he quotes passages from “Para dise Lost, ” in which these words are found, “virtuousest, ” “powerfullest, ” and a passage from “Samson Agonistes" which contains the yord “famousest.” Surely Milton had an ear.—Notes and Queries. MnnU-ipal JenloaxleH. New Yorker—-You are a stranger hi re, I presume? Chicago Mun (haughtily)—l am from the great city that New A’ork is jealous of. New Yorker—Ah! Ami how are things in dear old Lunnon!—New Y’ork Weekly Xew Wn> to Get Rich. An Arkansas contemporary records a queer case of financial irregularity. It appears that a young man down there swallowed a copper cent by mistake and a doctor made him t ough up $2. —Chi- I cago Times-Herald. Slit- Dili. “ Sis.-y, ” said the fresh y uug man, : “does your mother know you’re out?” “Oh, yes, ” replied the fair one, “and | she gave me a pi nny to buy a monkey. I Art- you for sale?”—Philadelphia North : American. I.vcelx That of a W ouiun. ' Wife (reading the paper) —The gi i raffe has a tongue 1- item s long Hu i i .md—Aren't x n ; .o ois? —New i York Wmld. aaMMMm'nriMi inn „ JCASTORIA £ASTOR|A | Ttie Kind You Have : .1 Always Bought AWdetable Prepare ;onfor As- B * jii s’.milatmg fhcFoodctvJßcgula- ■ # |ij tiag the Stoiwhs and Bowels of ■ i i ~ ' 11 Signature /A‘; ’ ' IVotnoicsDigeslionXiK’erful- Jr ./ iL’ ncssandßest.Contaii'GnciUter * Opiutn.Morphinc nor Mineral. $1 L'l #j\ \f < NOTNARCO-HC. g /uVF ZW. . 1. 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