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Application for Char tor
GEORGIA— Spalding County-
To the Superior Goikl of Said County:
The petition of 8. Graatland, Dougfas
Boyd, J- W. Mangham, Jos D. Boyd. J. J.
Mangham, W. J. Kincaid, James M.
Brawner, G. J. Cofipedgc, John 11. 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, s o 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, 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 objec t of said 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'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 shall have the
right to sell such manufuciurul goods in
such manner and time as they see lit, and
shall make such contracts with outside
parties, either for the purchase or sale oi
cottou, 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 aJo”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 oi
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 ot
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 ami immunities, and subj
the liabilities fixed by Jaw.
SEARCY & BOYD,
Petitioners’ Attorneys.
Os ATE 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,” filed in the
clerk’s office of th® superior court ot Spal
ingcounty. This May 17th, 1899.
Wm.M.Tii mas, Clerk.
TO THE
EAST.
<><» 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 5 irk vi 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 t > New York 20.55
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
15. A. NEWLAND,
Gen. Agent Pass Dept.
WM. BISHOP CLEMENTS,
T. P. A., No. G Kimball House, Atlanta
GEORGIA.
R’yea y
Schedule Effective April 1,1899. J
DEPARTURES.
Ev. Griffin daily for
• a... .G:(i8 am. 7:20 am, 9:ssam. I'“'
Macon and Savannah ....... 9:44 pm
Maeon, Albany and Savannah 9:l3am
Macon and Albany P ,n
*’arrollton(except Sunday >10:10 am, 2:15 pm
ARRIVALS
Ar. Griffin daily from
Atlanta... .9:13 am. 5:30 pm, 8:20 pm. 9:44 pm
savannah and Macon .0:08 am
Maeon and Albany 9:55 am
savannah. Albany and Macon i>:l3pm
' arrollton (except Sunday) 9:10 am, 5:20 pm
lor further information apply to
R. J. Williams, Ticket A»r, Griffin.
~ J *°- L. Reio. Agent. Griffin.
•
Run' Ki -TNE. Gen. Supt..
j Button, Traffic Manager,'
CHARLIE’S INFAMY.
: 1 lie liinte’s A»i<i«lllnir Cruelty to Hie
L Hrhle.
' j Hum is a certain Chicago bride who j
V recently decided that her husband was i
an unfeeling brute and went home to
mother tor a peculiar and unusual rea
son. The mother was awakened jnst be
fore <lawn one morning last week by a
sound of sobbing and weeping outside
her own sleeping room door. Iler hor
ror and astonishment at discovering her
only daughter in the depths of apparent
desolatif n and despair can well be im
agined.
“Charlie was cru-u-u-el to me,”
wailed the bride of a month or there
abouts mournfully, “and so I came
home. ”
“But what did Charlie do—the
wretch!” inquired the mother, ready
to blame the husband on general prin
ciples. To this question, however, the
bride returned no answer save bitter
weeping. Then the mother, feeling that
the.case was beyond her, administered
a nerve restorative ami awoke the
bride's father.
“Now, my child,” began this indi
vidual, speaking with the authority of
one who had settled all her difficulties
from the time she could walk, “tell me
immediately what that wretch of a
husband of yours has done and he shall
suffer for it whatever it is.”
The bride's ardor cooled perceptibly.
Her voice was almost steady as she be
gan her story.
“Well,” she commenced bitterly,
her eyes flashing at the remembrance of
her wrongs, “Charlie was out very late
last night, and I thought I’d get up
and—and—say something to him—
when he came home. I had thought
that so long as Charlie was going to be
so late home I'd—l’d fix up my com
plexion a little. So, when Charlie got
into bed in the spare room, I just for
got everything but him and went in
there. And—and”—bitter sobbing
again—“l forgot all about the beauty
mask I bad on and went right in with
it upon me. And”- a perfect paroxysm
of tears half drowned her words at this
point—“ Charlie must have thought I
was a ghost, and he threw a pillow at
me.”—Chicago Inter Ocean.
FIGURES WITH FINGERS.
Origin of the Ko man Numeral Meth*
<»d of Counting.
Hold your hands up before you, palms
outward, thumbs at an acute angle. Be
gin on the left. Little finger I; little
finger and ring finger II; little finger,
ring finger and middle finger III; all
the fing-ers-of the lefthand IIII; and
the hand and thumb at an acute angle
form V. In place of the 1111 yon may
use the fourth finger from the left, still
holding the thumb at an acute angle,
and you have IV.
Now pass to the right hand. Holding
the thumb and the hand at the same
angle as before we have VI; by using
the index ami the middle finger we get
VII. while the thumb and the three
large fingers make VIII.
Now join the two V’s made by the
thumbs, inverting one. and we have X,
or 10. Then use the X with the last lit
tle finger before it and it will give IX.
The combinations following X are ob
vious. The forefinger of the left hand,
with the thumb at right angles, make
a perfect L; the little finger of the left
hand curved toward the thumb makes
C, the initial of centum (100), and so
on with the hundreds. Now join the
two thumbs with the forefingers, or
two V’s inverted, and you have the
hieroglyphics complete. —Philadelphia
Times
II Hair Turned 11l nek.
There have been several instances of
a man’s hair turning from white to
black. ( >ne of the most notable perhaps
was that of an engineer in the fire de
partment of Louisville. His age was
65, and he was on duty during a tre
mendous fire for 15 consecutive hours.
The spray was constantly flying from
the hose, ami he became, inconsequence
of the lowness of temperature of the
atmosphere, covered from bead to foot
with ice. He wore a skullcap and a
helmet on the top of that, so that hie
head was the warmest part of his body
and not at all exposed, though his eye
brows and whiskers became wet and
were frozen stiff. The afternoon after
the exposure his hair, which had be
come gray eight years before and had
for three years been white, turned per
fectly black. —Louisville Post.
A Willing- Slave.
A pretty saying of an army officer is
reported by an exchange. He married
in 1865 the daughter of a man whose
whole heart was in the cause of the
southern negroes. The marriage has
been a very happy one. “Were yon so
much interested in the slavery question
when I knew you?” asked a college
friend, who had not seen the officer for
30 years.
“Yes, but I didn’t talk much about
it. ” was the reply. “But after I met
my wife's father I became a strong
abolitionist, and very soon after I met
her I became a slave Detroit Free
Press.
lie Differed From Iler.
She—l see that si me doctors have de
cided that paralysis is a consequence of
overuse of the parts affected.
.
in that connection, my dear,
wbi'i you know yon are free from pa
ralysis of the tongue.—Boston Courier.
In ancient times and among inland
peoples the possession of a salt spring
was regarded as a special gift of the
gods. The Chaonians in Epirns had one
which flowed into a stream where there
no fish and tin; legend was that
Heracles had allowed their forefathers
to have salt instead of fish.
The income t.:x in India is levied on
all incomes of £33 ami upward, and
then only one man in 700 comes within
its scope.
LOVE'LL SHOW the wav
•When the ole worl I .. g|noroy en the
.Mi’i't b.«'U■,’i - ' i,
; When it * <'in.B <•/. d.-rlc in <; i time en iz lone
some cz nt night,
jit -.•’('mb <'/ if a Hi; <• ;>vht a kinder Ktrug
glin through
When youthink o’ •« me *»!«•■ frit mi you know’ll
When you think nbout the dark ts o’ thu
times that uster be,
En gazin at the future all is lonesome that you
see,
There's one time v hen your mind gits on to
happy thoughts awhile,
En that’s when ineni’ry shows you that old
sweetheart s happy smile.
So I jist don’t keer h..w b mly past er future
looks to you,
You’ll alius tint! somehow the skies'll turn
from gray to blue.
You’ll alius find them lightin up, don't keer
how dark the day.
En when they light you’ll alius find it's love
that shows 1 he was.
—Edward Singer in Cleveland Plain healer.
HE KEPT THE SEAT.
But It Wan Worth What the Other ‘
Man Paid For It.
A man who had not been to church
for a very long time, says a London ex
change, finally harkened to the persua
sions of his wife and decided to go. He
got the family all together, and they
started early. Arriving at the church,
there were very few people in it and
no pew openers at hand, so the man led
bis family well up the aisle and took
possession of a nice pew.
Just as the service was about to be
gin a pompous looking old man came
in. walked up to the door of the pew
and stood there, exhibiting evident sur
prise that it was occupied. The occu
pants moved over and offered him room
to sit down, but he declined to be seat
ed. Finally the old man produced a
card and wrote upon it with a pencil-
“I pay for this pew. ”
“He gave the card to the strange oc
cupant, who. had he been like most
people, would have at once got up and
left. But the intruder adjusted his
glasses and with a smile read the card.
Then he calmly wrote beneath it:
“How much do you pay a year?”
To this inquiry the pompous old gen
tleman, still standing, wrote abruptly:
“Ten pounds. ”
The stranger smiled as though he
were pleased, looked around to compare
the pew with others, admired its nice
cushions and furnishings and wrote
back:
“I don't blame you. It is well worth
it. ”
The pompous old gentleman at that
stage collapsed into his seat.
No I)en<lhendM There.
I heard a good story that comes from
a little town in the northern part of
the state Among the members of the
Methodist church at that place is an
old railroad conductor who has been
retired from the business for ten years
or more. During the morning service
at his church not many Sundays ago
the old railroader was called upon by
the minister to assist in taking up the
collection- -one of tho stewards who
usually helped in that work being ab
sen t.
The retired railroader started down
the aisle with the contribution basket
and passed it around like an old hand
at the business. Everything passed off !
smoothly until he came to a good old
brother who had nodded himself fast
asleep, and just as he was about to pass
by him he was suddenly overcome by
the force of habit acquired in his rail
road days. Giving the sleeping brother
a dig on the shoulder with the basket,
he blurted out
‘ Ticket, please!”—Ohio State Jour
nal.
Two Dear Seat®.
Sarah Bernhardt, while in London
dropped into a bookseller's shop onu
morning. “I sold her quite a pile of
books,” said the proprietor, “and shs
seemed pleased. As she was going out
she took hold of my pencil and asked
me something in French which I did
not understand. Seeing that I failed to
catch her meaning, she looked about on
the counters, then, quick as a flash, she
took up a volume of one of the very
best sets of Scott, bound in tree calf,
opened it at the very center, wrote
something quickly, calmly tore out the
leaf, handed it to me, smiled, and went
out. ”
The astonished bookseller looked at
the leaf and discovered that Sarah had
written a pass for two to her perform
ance that evening! Magnificent, but it
was not a cheap entertainment for the
bookseller.
The One He Miaaed.
“I was elected by the votes of eight
different nationalities,” declared an
east side aiderman as he. tucked his
thumbs in the armholes of his vest and
struck an attitude.
“That so? What were they?”
“Irish, German, Polish, English,
Italian, French and Greek-’
“That's only seven. ”
“What the deuce was theotber nowl
There were eight sure. "
“Americans,” suggested a reporter.
“That's it. Couldn't think of them to
save me.’’—Detroit Free Press
Poor BuftineMA.
An old gravedigger who lived in a
village at the foot of the Grampians
was one day complaining about the
dullness of times.
“Man, John, is trade that bad wi'
ye?” said a sympathizing neighbor.
“Bad!’’ returned John, bringing his
staff down with an impatient gesture.
“I havena buried a leevin sowl this sax
weeks.
During the middle ages, when the
aristocracy of Florence and Venice was
so tyrannous to its dependents, mur
der was considered as a small crime
and poisoning was so -killfully effected
that many people lived almost entirely
on boiled eggs.
In the river Llam>. .:i . i-> islands
of floating sand are -mui tim- -.- <-u.
I.A I RAPPED Hl KG LAR
I THE r ICEIV PREPARED BAIT WAS
EAGE.RLY TAKEN.
It Cont <lu- liig<o>ioitx Mnu Who !»<•-
vl»<ol the Sclienu. 1(4100 or *SOO, aud
It < out the Biiriclnr Four Year*’
Time.
“Os course, " said the retired burglar,
“a man in my business is always on
the lookout for traps and most of ’em
he can circumvent without much trou
ble. But men go to a lot of trouble and
expense to lay traps, and sometimes
they get up something that is new and
effective. I suppose that any man go
ing into adwelling hon ■ would be sure
to look over the bureaus and dressing
j tables in the sleeping rooms. It was
this well known prof<-ssional habit no
doubt that ha<l suggested tho idea of a
trap I came across once, which a man
| had had built with a view to catching
anybody that might -tend in front of
the bureau in his r>>
“1 imagine t'ict tin - mm must have
been visited beL ■■ :.nd been very much
irritated by it. because he never could
have gone to all the trouble and ex
pense he did jnst for mere protection—
there was clearly some feeling in it. It
was a. handsome room, promising look
ing from its richness, and when 1 turned
my light on the bureau, where I went,
naturally enough, to begin, I was not
disappointed. There was a glitter of
glass and silver in the bullseye, and as
I swept the light along it struck a
pocketbook that didn’t glitter mu - h,
but that looked fat and comfortable,
and a watch that did shine, and, take it
altogether, it made me think that here
was the home of a man that didn’t
have to work nights to make both ends
meet. And so I set my lamp down on
one end of the bureau it made me
laugh, actually, to think that there was
so much good stuff there that I had to
shove something one side to make room
for it —and put my bag down on a chair
that was there and began cleaning the
things off.
“I’d just put the silver hairbrushes
in the bag and had turned around to
the bureau again to pick up the pocket
book and the watch when I heard, or it
seemed as though I felt, a little click,
and just the faintest touch of a jarring
or yielding under my feet, and the
next instant, a long time before I could
jump or do anything whatever, a piece
of the floor under my feet about three
feet square dropped out from under me,
and down I went.
“But I didn’t give up, by a long
shot. I was an ablebodicd. man, and
my hands were free—my lamp being
then on the corner of tho bureau and
my bag on thr- ihair -and I wasn’t go
ing to give it up yet, if I was going
down a trap. The trapdoor was hung
on hinges on tho side farthest from
the bureau, and I laughed to myself as
I put up my hands and thought how
easy it was to grab on to the edge of
the solid floor running along just in
front of the bureau and haul myself up.
Truly it seemed like a waste of money,
all the expense this man had been to to
put in the trap without guarding
against the chance of escape from it by
just this means, and I already imagined
myself climbing out as I threw up my
hands, which I did before I’d dropped
much more’n half of my length below
the level of the floor, gripping that firm
edge very tightly. I was going to make
sure of that.
“And I got it all right, but in about
a millionth part of a second I became
conscious of the fact tnat it wasn't
stopping me at all; I was carrying it
down with me. It was tho front edge
of another trap cut in the floor under
the bureau, hinged at the back and held
up in place by a spring just strong
enough to keep it in position. I held on
as hard as I could, but if I had had iron
fingers and steel muscles I couldn't have
held on after the trap had swung down
straight. I went down like a ton of
lead, and the next minute I found my
self sliding through a smooth board
tunnel not much bigger'n enough to
let me slide comfortably, aud the next
minute I’d been shot into a box or room
about seven feet square through an
other trap in the top of it that closed
flush after I camo through.
“Now, there was a situation for you.
Me in a square box of hard pine, ap
parently in the cellar of the house, no
opening in it anywhere and my bag
with all iny tools in it up there on the
chair by the bureau and me down
there with nothing, not a blessed thing,
to work with. But while there’s life
there’s hope, and I never should have
thought of such a thing as giving up if
I could have had a chance. But I didn’t.
I hadn’t been in the box two minutes
before there was a slide pushed back up
near the top on one side, and a man
looked in. It was the boss of the shanty.
And in five minutes the police were
there, and then I found they had a door
in this l«>x big enough to get a man out
of.
“I have seen other traps as elaborate,
but none more costly. He had to cut
his carpet, to liogin with, around the
traps in this room. Os course that didn’t
cost anything much, but it spoiled his
carp< 4, and then the cost of the traps
and the time contrivance, whatever it
was, that was attached to the main
trap that let me stand on it for a min
ute or two before it dropped, and then
the shoot and the box and the whole
than S4OO or SSOO. It cost me four
years’ time. ’’ New Y'ork Sun.
The llonej moon.
An early Anglo-Saxon custom, strict
ly followed by mewly married couples,
was that of drinking diluted honey for
30 days aft»r marriage. From this cus
tom comes tin* word honeymoon or hon
ey month.
th>- wet >in- n.-t lilo-Iy to
I !•: ■ i>-Lgtb
of tir. • Detroit Journal.
o
jCASTORIfI
■ c TOBIA l The KiniS You Have
“I Always Bought
; Lit'.:’ tj!';'’ liICFOXI li
j;i t •;!;,? St/wtths and Dowels of | BeaFS tllG f «
I Q . /C/.w*
” j Signature Z V
Ili i .oaiolcsDijest!en,€hecrful- ■ X »Z lAF
e ncssandJkst.Containsneither > * *'
\ Opium. Morphine nor Mineral. jE
:i Act Narc otic. ■ Mt \lI
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lion, Sour Slonuch.r larritoea, iS I
Worm ffivu!;':.).;:, i.-.vrish- | If C F 51fl F
ncss ami Loss ’LI-i.r. i-Y g y?
T.lCSimile bonob o• r « g e . vr
I n.li’Dl !Rrb r -‘,
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unless the blood is strengthened and
sweetened.
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B) is the
discovery of Dr. Giliam, the Atlanta
specialist on blood diseases, and he used
B. B. B in bis private practice for 80 years
with invariably good results. B. B. B
does not contain mineral or vegetable
poison and is perfectly sale to take, by the
infant and the elderly and feeble.
The above statements of facts prove
enough for any sufferer from Blood Hu
mors that Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B )
or three B’s cures terrible Blood diseases,
and that it is worth while to give the
Remedy a trial Ihe medicine is for sale
by druggists every where at |1 per large
bottle, or six bottles for $5, but sample
bottles can only be obtained of Blood
Balm Co. AV rite today. Address plainly,
Blood Balm Co., Mitchell Street, Atlan
ta, Georgia, and sample bottle of B. B. B.
and valuable pamphlet on Blood and
Skin DiseasesXwill be sent you by return
mail.