The evening call. (Griffin, Ga.) 1899-19??, June 09, 1899, Image 3

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Application for Charter GEORGlA— Spalding County. To the Superior Court of Said County: The petition of 8. Grantland, Douglas Boyd, J. W. Mangham, Jos D. Boyd,.]. .1, Mangham, W. J. Kincaid, James M. Brawner, G. J. Coppedgc, John H. Dicrck sen, Henry C. Burr, J E Drewry, B. N Barrow, of Spalding county, of sai l State, and R. W. Lynch, of Fayette ■ • inty, 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,” lor 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, wl'.h the privilege of increasing the same to Two Hundred Thousand Dol lars when desired. The said stock to be divided into shares oi One Hundred Dol lars each. Par. 3. The object of said corporation 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 sl; dl h ive the right to sell such manufactured goods in such manner and time as they see fit, and shall make such contracts with outside parties, either lor 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 aby • 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 neel in carry ing on their business, and’do with such property as they may deem expedient. Par. 6. The principal ofbe? and place of business will be in Griffin, said State and said county, but petitioners ask the right to establish offices at other points, w’here 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. 1 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,” tiled in the clerk’s office of the superior court ot Spal ing county. This May 17th, 18’Jl). Wm. M. Th mas, Clerk. TO THE EAST, ga.oo nav i:i> BY THE SEABOARD AIR LINE. Atlanta to Richmond $1450 Atlanta to Washington 14 50 Atlanta to Baltimore via Wa king ton 15 70 Atlanta to Baltimore via Norfolk and Bay Line steamer 15.25 Atlanta to Phil ilelpl. i via N >r- foik 18.05 Atlanta to Philadelphia via A ington Atlanta to New 5 ork v: : Ri hmond and Washington 21.00 Atlanta to New York via Norf ;k, Va and Cape (iiarli - R into 20.55 Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, Va , and Norfolk and Washington Steamboat Company, vii Wash ington 21.00 Atlanta to New York via Norfolk, Va., Bay Line steamer to Balti more, and rail t > New York 20.55 Atlanta to New York via Norfolk and Old Dominion S. S. Co. (meals and staleroom included) -.’0.25 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 ami Boston are s‘l 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 South rn States Passenger Association, via the Seaboard Air Line, at $3 less than by any other al! rail line. For tickets, sleeping car accommoda tions, call on or address B. A. NEWLAND, Gen. Agent Pass Dept WM. BISHOP CLEM ENTS, T. P. A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta — Schedule Effective April 1, ISW. DEPARTURES. Lv. Griffin drily for Atlanta... .6:08 am, 7:30 am, D: ■•'> am. 6:13 pm Macon and Savannah t>:44 pm Macon, Albany and Savannah 9:13 am Miieon and Albany ■ 11 pm *’arrollton(except Sunday >10:10am, 3:15 pm ARRIVALS." Ar-Griffin daily from Atl mtn... .9:13 n , n< 5 ; :jo pnii g.oQ p n)i 9:44 pm Savannah and Macon . .6:08 am Macon and A1bany............... ■> ~ a m ■ avannah, Albany ami Macon 6:13 pm ' arrollton (except Sunday) 9:10 am, 5:30 pm l or further information apply' to R. J. Williams, Ticket A to, Griffin. L. Re>o, Ascrit, Griffin. Tui £<mn, Vice President, r n ' /?• Kline. Gen. Supt., '•- H. Hinton. Traffic Manager. • a. matlk, Gen. Passenger Airt, Savannah. AM.Xt i’i'LW BATTLE. s ; a wicked encounter between a MAN AND A BEAR. _ ‘ r it Ended In a < llnch and a Roll. , 1 Doh ii a Snow < overeil Mountain' Side—A < lone In Which the J Man Jiibt lAenpe.l with Ilia Life. , To roll down a snow covered moun tain side tightly clasped in the embrace ’ of a grizzly bear is an experience few men pa-H through and live to tell. But that is what happened to Prank Leaky of Fresno, ami when it was all over ho had only a few scratches and bruises and a big bearskin to show as signs of ‘ his terrible encounter. “It was the wickedest fight I ever 1 got into, ” said Frank when telling of his experiences, “and I have been in a good many, going out hunting in tho Sierras every winter, as I do. , “This big tight happened up in the ; Whitney country. It was just a few miles east of the Minarets and in the 1 spot where a fellow is always pretty sure to find big game. “It was pretty late in the afternoon, and I was all alone in camp, as the I other Loys had not returned from a deer hunt they started on in the morning. “I had been dozing in the tent all ■ day, but came out to have a look at the sky. As I glanced along the top of a bluff a few hundred feet from the camp I saw something dark moving about. “That was enough for me. I got my rifle and started right after it. The kind . of game I was going after didn’t con i’ corn me at all, but I really didn't ex pect bear, at least such big cantanker ous bear. “Taking a roundabout way through the snow, 1. soon reached tho top of the bluff and began to crawl along care fully in order to get a good resting shot and note erne upon my game too sud denly. “Finally! caught a close view of a big dark body moving behind a clump 1 of bushes. It. was so large that for a moment 1 thought I had been stalking a cow and was ready to kick myself. Then a long drawn sniff and a deep growl told me it was bear I was sight ing. Instantly 1 was all excited with interest ami strained every nerve to get the beast in line and so planta bullet in the right spot. The bear, however had ‘ a mind to keep his eyes on me and kept moving about as he peered between the branches of the brush. “Suddenly one. of the horses down in the camp neighed loudly and attracted the bear’s attention. As the bear turn ed and exposed his side I fired. Down wi nt the bear like a bag of wheat, and 1 thought my rifle ball must have gone clean through its brain. Without stop , ping to consider whether my shot, had really been fatal, I rushed forward. As 1 stooped down to see where the ball struck, the bear jumped up. and then I knew I had only ‘creased’ it—that, is, just grazed its head or spinal cord and knocked it senseless for a moment. “Before I could swing my rifle for ward to get in a shot the bear had knocked it out of my hands and was right on top of me. Somehow I man aged to draw my knife and get in a few jabs that did no damage. The bear i hugged me tighter and tighter, and I kicked harder and harder and jabbed I wildly with my knife. Then we both roll' d on tho ground, and the bear tried to bite my face, but I kept off his fast clawing Blows by hugging tightly against him. I jabbed and jabbed as we rolled over and over, and the bear’s fact and claws w re pretty badly cut and one of his eyes was put out of ser vice. The snow all around was torn up and st (tiered with blood. “B .-el knew it we were just on 1 the t 'iif the bluff, and an almost vertii. ' wall of .-now lay just below us . for ovt. i hundred feet to the bottom. •’Tiii • frightvm-d me more than the bear, fcr I knew what it meant, but be fore I could think of doing anything wa ' va re o'. ei tli • edge and rolling down at lightning sp. ed. “It could not have taken more than a few sec< nds. but it seemed to me like years. Now 1 was on top of the bear, I and m>w underneath. Snow filled my eyes ami cars, and I was scratched and wounded and bumped until I thought ' my end had come. ( “It seems to me that I kept striking at the bear as we rolled, or rather shot, downward, for we were going at the ■ speed of a cannon ball. Then there WT < a sudden bump while 1 was on top, and the i car gave aim an of pain ami let go of me. 1 “That gave me hv chance, and I dive my knif" into his Ju-art. “The skin measured over seven feet. I found out while we were cutting him up that when he struck th" rock at the but: 1:1 i f the hill he shattered his spin" It was just a piece of luck that the bear struck the rock and not my self.”— San Francisco (’all. Short Sighted. MtLubberty Owld Uncle Moike Duffy is out ov his moind intoirely 1 Mrs. McLubberty—Phot makes y. z say tin t ? McLnbi erty- Phwoy, he's been afth er makin will an I’avin iveryt ing he’s ogt in dim wi rtuld to his heirs, not kapin hack !■ r himsilf as much as a quarter's wort’ av anyt ing. T ink av ut, Bavin himsilf pinniless at hi-age, in case he should doie'. His Position. “Now, bow do you stand on this question?” asked the man who had in dulged in a long dissertation. “Exactly as I stood years ag war n it first came up.” answered Si-mit. r Sorghum “It's been so long that 1 for get just exactly how I stood, but I haven’t changed my mind a bit, sir; . not a bit. "—Washington Star. 1 Some of 4b e cod lines used in the fish ing industry measure 7,00(1 fathoms long, or about tight ordinary miles, having 1.6 1 ho .'.;s, th- whole costing, in .-".m: cases. C-’OO or £3OO. Hl UOII OE 1.1 NA TICS. ASANE MAN’S EXPERIENCE IN AN IN- SANE ASYLUM. , the Time He Got Throogili IBelßg Fooled by the He Hynih to DlMtruM Eien the Super intendent of the Inwtitntl«>n. “I never km w until I w rit out t California this time that imam peopb' have a powerful si-nse of Icnm r said a Washingtonian who recently retnrm d from a trip to the coast "I confess that I've always found a morbid -. it : in terest in going through noted in-am asylums, and sol armed my •■■■ls with the proper credentials in San Fimm-isco and went np> to Napa county to have a look over the splendid asylum forth" insane there. Inasmuch as I want'd ; • see a few things without the att. ntii n of a guide, 1 didn't present my letters, but just rambled around the beautiful. Spacious grounds for awhile. I hadn’t spent three minutes examining the ex traordinarj’ rose gardens in fr. nt of the main asylum building before a tel’, slender young man, well dressed and exceedingly well groomed, emerged from a clump of oleander trees ami ap proached me. “Taking a look around, eh?" said he to me. “ ‘Yes,’ I said. ‘I only arrived here a few minutes ago, and I'm taking tip liberty of nosing about without . official guidance. ’ “‘Well,’ the tall yon :g man said, pleasantly, ‘I don't supp' se I fall out of the classification “official guidance, seeing that I am the assistant superin tendent here, yet I should be plea-?d to show you about and at the same time try not to place any restraint upon y by my awe inspiring presence.’ “Well, the young chap’s maun, r was so pleasant and winning that I could only thank him for his kindness, and we started over the grounds. We hadn’t gone far before a middle aged man, also well dressed and well groom ed, appeared some distance in front of usdown th" gravel walk, and he 1-1. oned to my companion. The young man excused himself courteously ami went up to the middle aged man. The two conversi d earnestly together fra few miiintes, ami then, linking arms, what do they do but coolly walk off, leaving me standing there in the mid dle of the gravel path, a good deal non plused. “‘Surprised over tho way they de serted you?’ said a voice right back of me. ‘Yon mustn't mind a little thing like that, though. Both of those men are as crazy as loons.' “I turned around, and there, stand ing behind a hedge about ten feet to my rear, was a little old gentleman, neatly dressed in black, and with a quizzical smile on his features. “‘Surely,’ I said, ‘yon cannot mean that that rational speaking, pleasant mannered young man who was conduct ing me about the grounds is 1 rest of his wits?’ “‘Mad as a March hare,' repeated the old gentleman flatly. ‘lncurable case. Harmless, but incurable. The man that he went off with is also a very sad case —very. Thinks he is the Maharajah of Bludblml. or something like that. But yon mustn’t mind 'em. Lots of visitors are taken in the same way. If you care to, I'll just show y. n around. 1 ain one of the board of visit ors of this institution and just happen to be here in mv unofficial capacitv to day. ’ ■‘Much marveling over what the old gentleman told me, 1 fell in with him, and wo rambled around the huge gera nium arbors, and finally entered th" enormous glass building where the cul tivation of violets is carried • n. “‘Nice array of flowers, isn’t it . the old gentleman inquired of me. wav ing his hand a' the beautiful beds violets in bloom Tam not inordinately vain, my friend. 1 hope yon will under stand, and yet I cannot but congratu late myself upon the introduction of this violet raising feature hero, for I myself was responsible for it ami only succeeded in having this hothouse c.m etructed after enormous exertions witii the authorities of the institution. ’ “I congr.'tulai"J the old gentleman upon the result of his labors and was just about to ask him to take me into the main building ami intr •dm- m- to the superintendent when he suddenly 'xensed hints. If, ,-ayin .. that he had left his spectacles on a bench in the gardens and would be back directly. I waited for him for fully ten minutes, but as he did not return I started on out of tin- glims building “‘You didn’t really exp ct him back?’ I beard a voice say, and then a pleasant faced man, dri das a la borer and canying a watering p n, came fr> m behind a group of palms He spoke with a Scotch I rogue. “ ‘The old gentleman you were with is very bad up here,’ said the mar. with tho watering pot, touching his fore head. ‘He’s been here for 2’l years, and he fancies he owns the place. lam the head gardener here, and he tri. s his best to run me. But he don't -no, sir, he don't. He can’t. No crazy man can run me. ’And the S< tchman w- nt d wn the length of the raised violet bed-, wa tering the plant ; “1 passed out of the glass building and started for the entrance to the main building there to present iny !■ tt. rs As I was about to walk up the steps to the entrance a man with side whiskers and rather a sharp, piercing eye walked up to me. “‘Yon have busine-s here?’he in quired of me in a rather sharp tone. Well 1 ..At b" might be aimth< r of 'em, and -o I kept right on. He fol low. in np the stairs ami into the him. II w: th<* .p. I‘intenden’ Ha ence in t ’ * • W 1 i ii. .t tar AUTHORS* MANUSCRIPTS. .So ’ For I:*l I•: -n, to Re.tH I . ii i»i .•> 1 > • ii. t'm . : : >1" g" - rouud . f the • 1 ry • tFri 1 .ur- : t.al- o or-: .r;e d by f’> e:y <no • v- ... or.: Jif knew it ■ J I . . > p.i-t.-d two of (he leaves I- rht r V. ry o;. iy. Wo do hot think i f reading tnrougb a half ar a quarter ’ "' ■ t nat are -.nt us. It ''■ ''' -1: t t.. o’f a mipnte to dis- card what one knows he doesn’t want. It is an old saying that i<ie does not ti d to eat a wh ?• j t to learn wh ther it i- t . ..ted. It would b a revelation to some of thes>- writers to see how fast an expe rienced and c<: . ientions editor can, at ■ times, go thratg 1 a !: : pile of essays, st rii - or peer 1, The title is often j enough, and bt on! say, “We don’t ! want an article n th: • subject. ” The next article begins wit:, a page or two of commonplace introduction, and that is thrown aside in half a minute's im sp. cti.m with out t ’rui. g more than the mxt page. 7 t 1 .gins with a platitude—"’. • that «tnfl The first ve:.-: vs tins next poem has false meter and is tc--ed aside. The next begins in sob" >lgirl style, with “dove” and “love;” it is not r> id through. Os the next the editor reads ten lines It is simply a dull descrip t: a y-r- 1:1 :u a I v . 1 next pot in b( gins in a fr. sh : way, .-terns to be constructed according to ■ ■ r ’■ -. is pretty g It is put , one side to see if other better poems • will crowd it out. The next is a story, i The first page is promising, but tho sec ond si: -ws a coarse strain, and the read- j ing stops there. Ten articles are decided upon, and with sufficient g I judgment, in ten ; minutes, f r a minute to a manuscript is often twice as much time as it needs. It does net take that long for a dealer to stick an in a skewer in a smoked bam, draw it out and smell of it. Not one article in a dozen perhaps needs t-> be read through.—New Y'ork Independ j ent. '. C’"S AS HOODOOS. They Keep Pettier* % way From Man y Part* of the World. Nothing i trate the importance of small things than the large role which is now at tributed to the mosquito in the etiology of scree of the most serious and wide spread diseases to which the human race is sul ject. It is truly said that what ! prevents the successful colonization of . many tropical countries ami what throws the greatest obstacle in the way | of civilization of and good government | in vast regions of central Africa is not climate, not distance from home and ■ not unfriendliness on the part if the I natives The obstacle is malaria, and ■ now we find that the prevalence of ma i laria. so far as man is concerned, de pends on the m< squito, and that this p"stilent little insect, in addition to ir- 1 ritating and annoying, is the means by : which the poison of malaria is propa ' gated and distributed. Fcr yt rs back botanists have known the important part played by birds in the seatt- ring of seed and of insects in the distributi n of the pollen of plants, ami it - "iiis not unlikely that patbol j ogists will have to recognize in a much larger degn ■■ than has till lately been i done the large part taken by’ the subor | dinate forms ■ f life by which we are ! surrounded—■■■ns cattle, our horses, our dogs and cats, our flies, our mosquitoes', and perhaps even our fleas—in dis- ■ tributing disease from man toman, and, i as is stated in regard to the mosquito ■ and malaria, in deciding whether the j extension of our empire over great areas of the glol;e’s surface shall be possible or not. —Hos] 1 tai. Pa net nn (ion. What a great difls r< nee in the mean ing of a sentence a misplaced comma can make! Take the following, for ex j ample: "James, my husl and is a very sick i man.” “Jarm s, my husband, is a very sick The following bit-of p. averse punc tual!. 11 was perpetrated by an English compositor. What the anther meant to say can 1 e ascribed by a rearrangement of.the punctuation marks: “C.esar entered on his head; his hel met ea bis feet; armed sandals upon his br< w; there was a cloud in his right hand; his faithful sword in his eye; an angry glare saying nothing, he sat down." Pittsburg Chronicle - Tele- ■ graph. ■ Goy r'an-keN' Lantern. It has I ecu settled beyond a doubt that the identical lamp which Guy Fawkes carried in poking about in the cellar of the Louses of parliament, when j he intended to blow them up, is now in existence. This lantern is in the Ash '■ molean museum at Cambridge. Guy Fawkes was carrying this lantern when ho was arrested. The history of the lantern Las now Letu fully established | and it must take its place among the most celel rated exhibits in the museums of the world.—Loudon Mail. ( liildren'n Sleep. Growing children cannot too careful i ly be enjoined to get plenty of sleep. 1 The boy 1 r girl who has lessons to learn must waken early after a good night’s rest, and thia is insured only by punc tuality in retiring. Eight o’clock is a good bedtime for all young pe.ople un der 15 and should be insisted upon by Professor Bryce made a tad slip in ' his book on Fouth Africa. He accuses j the Boers of abusing the English by i speaking of thini usually as "rotten eggs. " whereas tbe Transvaal phrase is root neck, "red mik,"and applies to i the British complex. :i | Ir. : •: .' ■ 1 .I, t :ud CtC i ing I, Urn y -,r 1 jCASTORM TiSTORII ! Tf >e Kind You Have 551 Always Bought AVe(?etab!ePrcparaticairorAs- B J Y,, ? H luigihcSiomfidisaittlßowelsof Beal’S tllC #. A ‘——- I Signature z/J H Promoics Digestion,Cheerful- i nessandßesLContoinsneither ? r Opium. Morphine norMifieral. S Cl Not Nahcotic. * Mm. if** U 5 ’•_? J-.’. / ■Z<W//ZyAf .V/A.'TA '. ' il t t /'ft I iff a ' Y ft Hl b y’ ! ’> - < ,| p r-. •ct COPY C-F v.’."‘: ‘ :-tn. : ■. g p r; ' - Free to All. Is Your Blood Diseased ■Thousands of Sufferers Frem Bad Blood Permanently Cured by B. B. B. 11 . (o) I 1 Zonderftil Merits ot Botanic Blood Balm B. L>.B, -or Three B’s, Every Reader of the Morning Call may Have a Sam ple Bottle Sent Free by Mail. I Cures Deadly Cancer, Scrofula, Boils, Blood Poison, Bumps Pimples, Bone Pains, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores on Face, Catarrh, Rheumatism and Broken-down Constitutions. —— - (<») Everyone wh a sufferer from bau i [ blood in any form should write Blood i ■ B;ilm < "ip my : r . - •.mpb !,■ ttle o! j \ their famous B. B. B,—Botanic Bloi d : Balm. B. B. B. cures because it literally drives the prison oi Humor (which product ; blood diseases.) out of the blood, bones and i i body, leavir; the fl' .sh as pure as a new ‘ ■ born babe’s, and leaves no bad after effects. No one can afford to think lightly of i Blood Diseases, The blood is the life— ; thin, bad bl- «1 u nfit cure it ■ It. You mu-t get the blood out of your Lames and I body and strong hen the aystern by new, fresh blood, and in this way the sores and ulcers cam rs, rheumatism, eczema, ca tarrh, etc., are cured. B. B. B. docs all > j this for you thoroughly and finally. B B. ) i B. is a powerful Blood Remedy (arid not a t mere tonic that stimulates but don’t cure) ‘and for this reason cures when all else tai:-. No one can tell how had blood in the system will show itself, In one person it c will break out in form of scrofula, in 1 another person, repul v< res on the face t | or ulcers on the leg, started by a slight • I blow. Many persons show bad blood by a bn iking out of pimples, -ores on tongue or lips. Many persons’l.7iod i- -o bad that it breakes out in terrible cancer on ■ the face, nose st -machor womb. Cancer r is the worst form of bad blood, and hence , I cannot be cured by cutting, liecause you j j can’t cut out the bad bl<»od; but cancer j and all or any form of bad blood is easily 1 and quickly removed by B. B B. Rheu • | matism and catarrh are both caused by r ■ bad blood, although many doctors treat i j them as local diseases. But that is the 8 ; reason catarrh and rheumatism are never j j cured, while B. B. B. has made many 3 ; lasting cures of catarrh and rheumatism. Pimples and sores on tbe face can never ■ be cured with cosmetics or salves because | the trouble is deep down below tbe sur- AFP IRQ ND The Wonderful • lylVripfl, Blood Purifier.... Cures absolutely Rheumatism. Scrofula, Syphilis, Old Sores, Constipation, Gout, and Ail Diseases caused by impure Blood .... IO STAY CURED Africana Has Never Failee s Ina single instance out of the hundreds treated. Therefore, we oft. to the public with entire confidence, and are willing to u:i . : ‘ the most desperate case on which other so-called infallible ■ have failed. Africana is made altogether from herbs, is p,”.. harmless and yet is the most powerful and surest remedy ever 1 covered for the above named diseases. Write for further part •■a‘ ■ • testimonials, etc. i Africana Co., Atlanta? 3a. T tI.C "■ by ukiiiii x. .. .iu-1 driving the baa bl ‘id out of the body; in this way your pimples and unsightly blemishes are cu red. People who are predispose! to blood . disorders may experience any one or all of the following symptoms: Thin blood, the vital functions are enfeebled, constitu tion shattered, shaky nerves, falling of the I hair, disturbed slumbers,general thinness, and lack of vitality. The appetite is bad and breath foul. 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