The evening call. (Griffin, Ga.) 1899-19??, June 12, 1899, Image 3

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Application for Charter GEORGIA— Spalding County. To the Superior Court of Said County: The petition of S. Grantland, Douglas JJo\ d, J- W. Mangham, Jos D. Boyd. J. J. Mangham, W. J. Kincaid, James M. Brawner, G J. Coppedge, John IL Dierck sen, Henry C. Burr, J. E Drewry, B. N, Barrow, of Spalding county, of said State, and R. W. Lynch, of Fayette county, and 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 lie 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 sfeid c irporation 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'a=ses 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 sh ill have 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 tor 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 ad<'~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 oilier 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. f’ar. 6. The principal office and place of business will be in Griffin, said State and said courty, but petitioners ask the right to establish offices at other points, wl ere 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. Q TATE OF GEORGIA, O Spalding Counts’. 1 hereby certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the original petition for in corporation, under the name and style ot “The Spalding Cotton Mills,” filed in the clerk’s office of the superior court ot Spai ing county. This May 17th, 1899. Wm. M.Tn mas, Clerk. TO THE EAST. sa v i: i> 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 15.50 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 1 Atlanta to New York 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 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 ( LEMENTS, i T. P. A., No. 6 Kimball House, Atlanta <GEORGLL rycay Schedule Effective April 1,1 -99. DEPARTURES. bv.Grilßn daily for Atlanta... .6:08 am, 7:30 am. 9:5-5 am. 6:13 pm Macon and Savannah 9:44 pm Macon, Albany and Savannah 9:13 am Macon and Albany v3> pm ' arrolltonfexccpt Sunday>lo:loam, 2:l’ pm ARRIVALS. Ar ' 'laily from AtUnfa....9:l3 am. 5:30 pm. s-,20 pm, 9:44 pm ■ Savannah and Macon 6:08 am ■ Macon and Albany 9:55 am ■ savannah, Albany and Macon 6:l3pm ■ ’ arrollton (except Sunday) 9:10 am, 5:20 pm K lor further information apply to B it. J. Williams, Ticket AuL Griflin. I KEtD - Agent. Griffin. I Th!" n- 59*"’ Vice President, I t l 4- Gen. Supt., I J ci! I , NTON - Traffic Manager. I • tiAH.K, Gen. Passenger Agt, Savannah. PERIL MADE THEM FRIENDS I h»* \\ il l iNtM lierdeil Together rr a Forest Fire. An im i h nt <>f forest fin s in the hill: of tin Descanso neighborhood, in south ' 1 1 i.’;■-; .i ’ , .. t. ~ c, ,i,i . ship that common peril brings about among beasts as well as among men. After the flames had completed theii work of destruction and spread a pall over the hills a rancher went forth among the charred stumps and smoking brushheaps to look for a number cf cat tle and colts which he feared had been hemmed in by the fire. He went across gully ami ridge in his search, until at last he saw his stock some little dis tance ahea i. ‘ Be was more than astonished upon coming up to the group to find not only his cattle and colts, but a deer, three wildcats, a coyote and several rabbits, all alive and apparently in no fear of him. They watched his approach with indifference, the timidity gone from the big eyed deer, no venom in the wild cat’s purr and honesty shining in the gray coyote’s face. The rabbits sat on their haunches as meek as the pets of children. But the poor coyote was in pain, and as the farmer came close the erstwhile robber of the roost dragged his helpless hind quarters toward the man in mute supplication. The legs of the animal had been frightfully burned. The rancher was in no mood to make friends of such strange creatures, and took .through the -in- Idoring brush, th- deer going along with the cattle, the rabbits hop ping along at the rancher's heels, the wildcats slouching along behind, and the coyote, unable to follow, whining a pathetic appeal for succor When the burning field was passed, the deer broke into a run for the distant bills, the rab bits were away like a flash, and the old defiance and snarling leer came back to the wildcats, who scorned to make a shew’ of haste. They walked slowly out of sight.—San Diego Union. MONKEY AND BOY. They Were Fqunlly Concerned In Ihe Jp 1 Deliven . In the pictur, sque little town of Law remebnrg. Ind., there used to lie an old stone building that was used as a jail. It could tell many a strange story of the persons it deprived of liberty, but would, if it were wise, be silent con cerning one incident that proved to be a joke on itself. Among the boys, of the town was a half witted lad who was particularly incorrigible, and whose constant com panion was a little monkey, who at tended him as faithfully as Mary’s little lamb. One of his mental weaknesses was known to be a confusion of the ideas cf mine and thine, and after one very considerable theft the local Sher lock Holmes found footprints of Jocko, the monk, in regions from which the missing articles had disappeared, and so the boy was arrested. There was no law for imprisoning the monkey, so he was not ‘'pinched.” The boy was a model prisoner for several days, but was sud denly seized with a desire to have his monkey with him. So earnestly did he beg for this that the good natured jailer had Jocko brought to the cell. That night the lad, who was supposed to be without intelligence, began clawing out the mortar around one of the largest stones in the outer wall. He could not do much with his blunt fingers and weak nails, but the monkey immediate ly began imitating him. The long claws of the animal soon loosened up enough mortar to enable the boy to pull the stone out < f the wall, and before morn ing both boy and rnenkey had disap peared Cincinnati Enquirer. Speechless With Itn«e. "Stn ---motion, ’’says Darwin, “in terrupts die steady flow of nerve force t the muscles.” This prevents tin proper working of those muscles which are used in speaking; hence the stum ■ bling and incoherence of the speech. | “The voice sticks in the throat,” to use I the words of Virgil. In some case; I speech is for a short time impossible, ai is seen where a person is said to be ■‘speechless with rage.” The hoarseness of the voice is due partly to the fad that passion causes an overaction ol all the organs, partly by the fact that for generations harsh and fierce sounds have been made use of to terrify oppo nents in quarrels, and so have come tc be associated instinctively with anger. Possibly the fact also has its influence that the utterance of sounds such as those rett rr< d to is in some way cr the other a relief to the feelings. IclldW New York. We know of no city in all this land, not excepting Hoboken or Jersey City, which is less national in its feelings, its ideas and its aspirations than New York. It has never yet done anythin;, really national. There was not public spirit enough in the well to do Hasse: of the town to ev.-n build the pedesta of the Liberty statue. The same classes waited years and went begging all ovei the country to raise a fund for the Grant monument—a duty which, ii 1885, they claimed as their peculiar jrivLepe. But New li. rk is New Voik- There is none like it, nor shall he til our summers have deceased. It is yel low and it continually doth l ark. - VVasbir/ton Post. Irving to Fix a Limit Mrs. Gofrequent—How old do y< t take Mr. Mixwell to be? Mrs. Nexdore —From his general be havior I should estimate his age to b about 150. When a woman looks a him now, he doesn't think she’s in lov. with him.—Chicago Tribune. We exaggerate misfortune and hap i piness alike We are never either s< i wretched or so happy as we say we are. 1 —Balzac. Theatrical companies in Mexico haw t,, ■ y i fim i‘- th” ’ IJ ot produce Uh pita. s auu ine-.d. 1, SELFISHNESS. n We Nearly liianiirr It In Oilier.. hut tn Our.el ><■>. Is Probably the 1 : ): i - falltilO i- faults is that upon the absence of which we most pride oursi-lve-. and that at the it same time we notice most readily in i. others. In some of us it is pride, in r others gossiping The list is long, and 11 We know it without going into details, h but that which we do not seem to real g ize is that the very most common fault of us all as a mass is selfishness. n We do know that nearly every one is we meet is selfish, but we seldom dis t cover bow selfish we are ourselves tin i- less shown by a sudden touch of deep regret. Most of us discover, for in n stance, that we were selfish in refer y ence to some dear friend dead, but we e stop right there, and while we regret !, the past and shed useless tears over tbs >f lost chance we do not make any new h discoveries—namely, that we are selfish e to our living friends—ami while we I- think that they are being unfair, un fl kind, to us we forget to bo generous ti ourselves, to look beyond the frown, >f the hard word, the selfish act or neglect, n and see what it is that causes all this, e to see what strain our friend is bearing d and share it in so far as patience, gener e ous forbearance, will lighten it. f Think bow selfish most of us have been in time gone by, how quick words e have gone out to hurt hearts already d hurt, when from us at least that partic e ular cross friend had a right to hope g for better things. >- Do not make a very close examina e tion of things in general and see whether d you are not yourself more selfish than a are your friends, and remember that eriisity in this world is e to have patience with other in their - “selfishness, ” for in half the cases at I least it is pain or worry, not real in k tended unkindness at all.—Philadelphia a Times. t OUR JAWS NEED EXERCISE. Lack of Mastication ( nuMc* Dyspep sia and Teeth Troubles, i Mastication is rapidly becoming a lost art, and, although wo have become - hardened to the fact that three-fourths ] of the dyspepsia is due to this cause, it . might surprise some of us to know that f the early decay of the teeth and diseases t of the gums are occasioned by this same . lack of maxillary exercise, e A disease of the gums, called Rigg’s disease, which is every day becoming i more common, is caused almost entirely by the want of proper mastication. - Twenty-five years ago this trouble was - not considered of any importance by e the dentist on account of its rare occur s rence. e Today it is given more care than the e decay of the teeth, as he is frequently - consulted by patients who have a full set of natural teeth which are quite loose e in the jaw. Aside from this they are o sound and healthy, and after a certain v development in the disease nothing can s be done to help them. -1 By lack of exercise the blood which should nourish both the bones and the s gums is not carried to the part, nor does e the blood carry sufficient material to the r teeth; hence the enamel formed is de t fective, and early decay results. Fre e quently, too, the mechanical develop t ment of the jaw is arrested by this same t want of motion. t Most of the food among the better 1 class of people today is cooked so as to require very little mastication, and the s consequence is that the muscles have h become flabby, the jaws slender and the e processes for the attachment of the .- muscles almost obliterated. Boston i- Globe. Obedience of Order®, A naval commander in the reign of , Queen Anne was ordered to cruise with 0 a squadron within certain limits on the 0 coast of Spain. Having received infor h mation timi a Spanish fleet was in Vigo i- beyond his limits, ho resolved to risk i. his personal responsibility for the good of his country. He accordingly attacked > a and defeated the Spanish fleet with un ig common gallantry. When he joined the i 0 admiral under whom he served, he was j 3 ordered under arrest, and was asked, ■t if be did not know that by the arti ,f cles of war ho was liable to be shot for ,1 disobedience of orders. ; a He replied with great composure ). that ho was very sensible that he was, 0 but added, “The man who is afraid to risk his life in any way when the good ■0 of his country requires it is unworthy l 3 of a command iu her majesty’s service. ” , e —Nuggets. Whnt He Fonnd. “I’ve opened about 3,000,000,000 I oysters in my day, ” said the old oyster .' man who sells you the real genuine un fattened ami unspoiled “salts, ” a penny ’y apiece, in the shadow of one of the big market buildings, “and I have never ’, found a pearl in one yet. “But I’ve found something just as good as pearls,” he added with a wink. 1 “I have found four nice paying tene ,r incut houses and good balances in eight |e savings banks. There is a good deal in an oyster shell besides pearls, young man, if you will look close.’’——New c York World. The Sensible Girl. . "No," said the heroine of the “smart” novel, “I can never bo your wife. ” “But why?” wailed the stricken man. u "Because, ” she replied, “you do not converse in epigrams.” —Philadelphia North American. ie 1‘ It is an easy thing to be a milhonaira c in Berlin A yearly income of over $9,- 000, repr« —’ ntiug the interest on 1,000,- 000 marks, is the qualification for that >• title, which is < :;j‘-yc II y 2,002 Berlin >c ers. 3. Garlic came from A-m and has been used sine ■ the taim- lime- It formed ’ part <’t Lie diet >.! ii'.' Israelites iu Egypt .mi V.u- Us. .1 I.) Luek and Ro man Micrs mm Ail lean [ . asauta ON THE OPf.i. TRAIL. This , I’IV < nn,l the hung sky. Like a 1 tent aror. ml It,. Too ' r nn; : ! • it" f.-ol at hom», Too r.inpt t 1 nj oim.t it Since I v.as ever a s -> .bond, A \ aunml-foot .■nd rover. Oh. give me the width of the skies to roam When my earthly <i . < are over! Let to- out where worlds tin: milestones are. Win r.- the unresting on walkmy way - " .f, «!- re a ni .ii • lliow r-.oni To travel his old tlmu highway! And when the journey N done God grant That on*- lone Inn I nd me Where I may enter and greet but her And chi:, the door behind me! —Arthur J String, r in Ait lee's Mag . line A LAKE PILOT’S LEG. ■ Row It Solved : lie Myntery of the Wreck of n Stenin I'ropeller. “Wo are never amazed when vessels go aground and are wrecked on Luke Erie during the gales that are common on that treacherous water, for we ex pect such thin: ti-n.” said a lake skipper, “but wh> n mn- is grounded on a clear day ami wrecked mi a course as clear as the day in the hands of a pilot that knows the ground like a book we naturally wonder a little and want to know the whys and wherefores. Such was the case of the propeller Susan E Peck that went agiound near Her point and was lost with a $20,000 cargo. “The captain of the Susan E. had sailed successfully hundreds of times between Point Pelee and Bar point and in all kinds of weather, and this time be had a wheelman who was known from one end of the lake to the other as one of the most expert navigators in the lake business. lie had been lying up a long time, for the very good reason that owing to an accident to one of his legs that leg had to bo amputated to save his life. The Jost member was re placed by an artificial leg, and then the pilot was ready to take his post at the wheel again. His first service after his misfortune was this trip of the Susan E. Peck, and he ran her aground. “The puzzle to everybody was how it was possible for the propeller, han dled by a man of such skill and experi ence, on a straight course only 40 miles long ami with every sailing condition favorable, to leave her course. The pilot was the mosi puzzled and astounded person of all. He soon got another ves sel, and this one he ran iu such an er ratic manner, but fortunately with no disastrous result, that he was compelled to give her up, and his usefulness as a pilot was gone. He and others went to investigating to see if they could dis cover what was wrong with bis sea manship. “After awhile they discovered what they believed was the trouble. In the pilot's artificial leg a great deal of steel had been used in the joints and other places. Sitting close to the binnacle, aa he did while steering,'this steel derang ed the compass so that it threw the wheelman way off his reckoning led to the wrong piloting that had wrecked the Susan E. Peck and endan -1 gered the other vessel that the wheel man navigated subsequently. This was what they argued, and to demonstrate the correctness of the theory the pilot took charge of a vessel without wear ing his false leg. Everything worked to a charm. The mystery of the Susan E. Peck was solved, and the pilot was re ' stored to bis old place in the confidence ' of Lake Erie skippers and vessel own ers.’’—New York Sun. „ .. South America’® Suicide Wind. In Brazil and other parts of South America tho natives know and fear a certain condition of the air which they , call “suicide wind. ” It is not a superstition, but an actfkil condition of tho atmosphere which 1 seems to drive tho people to madness, and during its continuance self inflict ’ ed deaths are numerous. Criminologists and scientists all over the world are interested in this peculiar 1 atmospheric influence, which is indi cated by a soft, moist,- warm air that 1 settles heavily on the earth. 1 Tii" climatic condition known ns the "snicido wind” is greatly dreaded in that part of the country. Statistics prove that suicides and oth er crimes occur together or in waves as 1 they are described. 1 Tin- Moral I» Plain. "Once upon a time,” says the Houtz dale (Pa.) Journal, “a man got mad at the editor and stopped the paper. In a few weeks he sold his corn at 4 cents less than the market price. Then his ■ property was sold for taxes because he didn’t read the sheriff’s sale. He paid $lO for a lot of forged notes that had , been advertised two weeks and the pub , lie warned against them. Hethen rush ; ed to the printing office and paid several s the editor sign an agreement that he was to knock him down if he ordered his pap' r to bo stopped again. ” Wanted a Chance. , A Scottish preacher who found his ’ congregation going to sleep one Sunday before he fairly began suddenly stopped and exclaimed: “Brethren, it’s nae fair. Gie a mon half a chance. Wait s till I get alatig, and then if I nae X’orth listening to gang to sleep, but dinna gang before I get commenced. Gie a mon a chance. ” An 1-2 xpert. "Do you carve?” “I should say I did I" “Ami what are your specialties?" 1 "Sausage and omelets. ”—Cleveland ’ Plain Dealer. It is a sober truth that people who Jive only to amuse themselves work harder at the task than most people do in earning their daily bread. —Hannah I More. 1 In the sixteenth century fencers held tho sword in their right baud and a dagger in the left to w.;id off blown. ICASTORIA | For Infants and Children. ASWRM i The Kind Vou "a™ I Always Bough! A\c”cLV'c Prcpar.dixiforAs- ■ J i si ii? i't.S lheFoodar, IRegula- g j? i;...! :..Lwi.,cf_ | Be ars the / . 7£i-‘?-nE« I " I Signature Z/I u Prutnci”’’ Digestion,Checi ful- u neither S P ®i f Opium. Morphine nor Mineral, pi vl ft- 5 NOT NAHCOTIC. g’’ u 1 I \Ar /s-X.5,-LzJ Iff 1 Su ' tft .tv hi v ■ ■■ * 4 i B I ti M Irß o i pl mp USd , Apcrfi l H-’t-t ’’ ipa- HI ■ jz tioii, Sour .Go-; !< l! ’lu>ca, |HI Ib/ I Worm:--.( ■■ svuiso. \ft F* bSlin*' ; ucss .'...1105J Cl Hi M’. || W* gUs UVl‘l T. .tnule Si mj'-m A! ■»-. ■ ya NT) HR. « ’ •- g " • SOkt O CXACT COPY.OF WRAPPER. |® IB #Li ’ ’■ - - TMC I.TMTA UH . GMt-'ANV. t4»’ W IY. Free to All. 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