Newspaper Page Text
An ordinance to prevent the spreading
of diseases through the keeping and ex
posing for sale of second hand and cast off
clothing, to provide for the disinfection of
such clothing by the Board of Health of
the City of Griffin, to prescribe fees for
the disinfection and the proper registry
thereof, and for other purposes.
Sec. Ist. Be it prdained by the Mayor
and Council of the City of Griffin, that
from and after the passage of this ordi
nance, it shall be unlawral'for any person
or persons, firm or corporatioh to keep
ana expose for sale any second hand or
cast off clothing within the corporate lim
its of the City of Griffin, unless the said
clothing has been disinfected by the Board
of Health of the City of Griffin, and the
certificate of said Board of Health giving
the number and character of the garments
disinfected by them has been filed in the
office of the Clerk and Treasurer of the
City of Griffin; provided nothing herein
contained shall be construed as depriving
individual citizens of the right to sell or
otherwise dispose of their own or their
family wearing apparel, unless the same
is known to have been subject to conta
geous diseases, in which event this ordi
nance shall apply.
Sec. 2nd. Be it further ordained by the
authority aforesaid, "That for each garment
disinfected by the Board of Health of
Griffin, there shall be paid in advance to
said board the actual cost of disinfecting
the said garments, and tor the issuing of
the certificate required by, this ordinance
the sum of twenty-five cents, and to the
Clerk and Treasurer of the City of Griffin
for the registry of said certificate the sum
of fifty cents.
Sec. 3rd. Be it further ordained by the
authority aforesaid, That every person or
. persons, firm or corporation convicted of
a violation of this ordinance, shall be fined
and sentenced not more than one hundred
dollars, or sixty days in the chain gang,
either or both, in the discretion of the
Judge of the Criminal Court, f>r each of
fense. It shall be the duty of the police,
force to see that this ordinance, is strictly
enforced and report all violations the
Board of Health.
Sec. 4th. Be it further ordained by the
authority aforesaid, That all ordinances
and parts of ordinances in conflict here
with are hereby repealed.
An Ordinance.
Be it ordained by the Mayor and Coun
cil of the City-of Griffin that from and
after the passage of this Ordinance:
Bec. Ist. That it shall be unlawful for
any person to damage, injure, abuse or
temper with any water meter, spigot, fire
plug, curb box, or any other fixture or
machinery belonging to the Water Depart
ment of the City of Griffin; provided that
a licensed plumber may use curb service
box to test his work, but shall leave ser
vice cock as he found it under penalty of
the above section. »
Sec. 2nd. It shall be unlawful for any
consumer to permit any person, not em
ployed-by them, or not a member of their
family, to use water from their fixtures.
Sec. 3rd. It shall be unlawful for any
person to use water from any spigot or
spigots other than those paid for by him.
Sec. 4th. It shall be unlawful for any
person to couple pipes to spigots unless
paid for as an extra outlet.
Sec. sth. It shall be unlawful for any
person to torn on water to premises or add
any spigot or fixture without first obtain
ing a permit from the Water Department.
Sec. 6th. It shall be unlawful for any
person to allow their spigots, hose or
sprinkler to run between the hours of 9:00
o’clock p. m. and 6:00 o’clock a. m., for
any purpose whatever, unless there is a
meter on the service. Spigots and pipes
must be boxed or wrapped to prevent
freezing; they will not be allowed to run
for that purpose.
Sec. 7th. The employes of the Water
Department shall have access to the
premises of any subscriber for the purpose
of reading meters, examining pipes, fix
tures, etc., and it shall be unlawful for any
person to interfere, or prevent their doing
so. A
Sec. Bth. Any person violating any of
the provisions ofthe above ordinance shall
be arrested and carried before the Criminal
Court of Griffin and upon Conviction shall
be punished by a fine not exceeding one
hundred dollars, or sentenced to work on
the public works of the Cityof Griffin for
a term not exceeding sixty days, or be im
prisoned in the city prison for a term not
exceeding sixty days, either or all, in the
discretion of the court. ‘ t
Sec. 9th. The employees of the Water
Department shall have the same authority
and power of regular policemen of the
City of Griffin, for the purpose of enforc
ing the above ordinance.
Sec. 10th. All ordinances and parts of
ordinances in conflict of the above are
hereby repealed.
"An Ordinance.
Be it ordained by the Mayer and Coun
cil of the City of Griffin, That from and
after the passage'ot this ordinance, the fol
lowing rates will be charged for the use of
water per year:
1. Dwellings: .>
One t-inch opening for subscribers’
use onlys 9.00
Each additional spigot, sprinkler,
bowl, closet or bath 8.00
Livery stables, bars, soda founts and
photograph galleries 24.00
Each additional opening 6 00
2. Meters will be furnished at the city’s
expense, at the rate of SI.OO. per year
rental of same, paid in .adwaee. A mini
mum of SI.OO per month will be charged
for water while the meter is on the service.
The reading of the,/meters will be held
proof of use of water, but should meter
fail to register, the bill, will be averaged
■from twelve preceding months.
3. Meter rates will be as follows:
7,000 to 25,000 gals, month. .15c 1,000
25,000 « 50,000 " “ 14c “
50JJ00 “ 100,000 “ “ 12c ••
100,000 ’* 500,000 " 10c “
500,000 “ 1,000,000 “ “ 9c ••
The minimum rate shall be SI.OO per
month, whether that amount of water has
been used or not
A, Notice to cut off water must be given
to the Superintendent of the Water De
partment, otherwise water will be charged
for full time.
5. Water will not be turned on to any
• premises unless provided with an approved
Stop and waste cock properly located in
an accessible position.
6. The Water Department shall have
the right to shut off water for necessary
repairs and work upon the system, and
they are not liable for any damages or re
bate by reason of the same.
7. Upon application to the Water De
partment, the city will tap mains and lay
pipes to the sidewalk for $2.50; the rest
of the piping must be done by a plumber
at the consumers’ expense.
A Bat With » Beak.
The wise one was explaining to the
other that the bat cannot see in the day
time. It was in the basement of a but
ter, eggs and chicken place en Washing
ton street.
“You tsec,” he said, as he stuck his
finger close to the wide open eyes of the
bat, “he can’t see a thing. Now watch.’’
He jabbed his finger into the eyeball
of the unsuspecting little victim, which
at once threw up its wings and hopped
to the farther end of the perch.
But the wise man was not satisfied.
He wanted to demonstrate his know!- '
edge still further. •
“No, he can’t see a bit,” he said,
jabbing his finger the second time into
the staring eye.
“See,” he said, as he repeated his
demonstration.
The bat in the meantime was flap
ping its wings excitedly and trying to
grope its way to safety. z
“That’s a peculiar thing about owls
and bats,” the wise one went on, “that
they can see only in the'nighttime.
Now, you just watch for yourself.”
Again he tortured the frightened night
bird.
By this time the worm turned. The
bat fought back, and by a quick move
ment caught the torturing finger in its
beak. The wise man jerked his hand
away, and with a loud “Ouch!” put
the digit into his own mouth to suck
the blood.
“Yes, I aee,” said his friend.—Chi
cago Journal.
French Local Paper*.
The French local papers are the
merest rags, conducted in many cases
by people who appear to be totally
ignorant of everything that goes on out
side their own department The result
is that the most extraordinary state
ments appear. In a paper local to the
Riviera there once appeared the an
nouncement:
“Cowardly attempt on the life of a
president. Mr. Jamesson has been ar
rested for the attempted assassination
of M. Johannes Burg, the president of
the Transvaal republic.” This was at
the time of the Jamieson raid.
This same paper recently noted the
arrival of “Lady Killarny” on the Ri
viera and added that “Lady Killarney”
was a daughter of the Prince of Wales
who had married an Irish nobleman of
high rank and had been obliged to re
nounce all her royal rights in order to
do so. This was why she did not go to
the same plape as the queen er the
Princess of Wales. ‘‘Lady itillarney”
was the Duchess of York.
Another French local paper of equal
standing once announced that “Lord
Balfour, president of the Liberator club
and son-in-law of Lord Salisbury, ” had
been imprison®! by.“ Sir Gladstone” in
the Tower bf Lepdon. —London Graphic.
Swallowing Salt Water.
Ono of the most beneficial features of
a sea bhth is the salt water inadvertent
ly swallowed by bathers. It is a won
derful tonio for the liver, stomach and
kidneys. In many cases it will cure
biliousness when all drug preparations
have failed. It is peculiarly effective in
ordinary cases of indigestion, disordered
stomach and insomnia, and has been
known to produce excellent results in
many cases of dyspepsia.
> Clean sea water is full of tonic and
sedative properties. It won’t hurt any
body. Indeed, two or three big swal
lows of it would be of positive benefit
to nine bathers out of ten. It is not of
course a palatable or tempting dose to
take, but neither is quinine nor calomel
You seldom if ever see an old sailor
Who is bilious or dyspeptic or a victim
to, insomnia, and why? For the reason
that an ocean of good medicine spreads
all about his sky, and he doses himself
copiously with it whenever his physical
mechanism becomes the least bit Re
ranged.—Washington Star.
The Humidity Meter.
The amount of moisture present or
the humidity of the air is determined
by a comparison of dry and wet bulb[
thermometers. They are jiofh ordinary
thermometers, but the bulb of the latter
is covered with muslin that is wet. In
the latest form of instrument the ther
mometers are mounted on arms carried
by a shaft that is rotated by a crank
which is geared to the shaft The mo
tion of the shaft rotates the thermome
ters in vertical planes and causes the
water in the muslin to evaporate more
or less rapidly, according to the amount
of moisiure in the air. This evaporation
lowers the temperature of the thermom
eter, and from tables constructed after
long experiments the degree es moisture
can be determined by the difference in
temperature between the two thermom
eters. —E. J. Prindle in Popular Science.
<
Washing la Hard Water.
It is difficult to wash our hands clean
with hard water, because the soda of
the soap combines with the sulphuric
acid of the hard water and the oil of
the soap with the lime and floats in
flakes on the top of the water. Sniphate
of lime consists of sulphuric acid and
lime. It is difficult to wash in salt wa
ter because it contains muriatic acid,
and the soda of soap combines with the
muriatic acid of the salt water and pro
duces a cloudiness.
He Knew Leter.
“It is a pretty name,” the impres
sionable traveler murmured. “But tell
ae. wijy do. they call you Manita?”
There was an arch smile cm the sav
age maiden’s face.
“ Evidently, ” she said, as she signal
ed to her .brothers, who were concealed
in the bush with clubs, “you do not
know our faverite food. ” —Harlem Life.
J He Knew Him. z
Boy—Mr. Smitters wants to kpow if
you’ll lend him an umbrella. Ho says
you know him.
“You may say that I do know him.
He will probably understand why you
didn’t bring the umbrella. Boston
Transcript.
am—?,, rr gaffrr.
Crctacecna Sea Serpents. I
in the latter port of the menozoic aga
there Was a great inland, ocean, spread
ing over a large part of the present con
tinent. The lands then above water
were covered with a flora peculiar te
the times and were inhabited by some
of the animals which later distinguish
ed the cenozoic age. In the seas were
reptiles, fishes and turtles of gigantic
proportions, armed for offense or de
fense. There were also oysterlike bi
valves, with enormous shells, three or
four feet in diameter, the meat of which
would have fed many people.
In time this great ocean, swarming
with vigorous life, disappeared. Moun
tain ranges and plains gradually arose,
casting forth the waters and leaving the
monsters to die and bleach in tertiary
suns. As the waters remaining divided
into smaller tracts they gradually lost
their saline stability. The stronger mon
sters gorged on the weaker tribes until
they,.too, stranded on rising sand bars
or lost vitality and perished as the wa
ters freshened. In imagination we can
picture the strongest, bereft of their
food supply at last and floundering in
the shallow pools until all remaining
mired or starved- It would be interest
ing to know how much of the great
cretaceous ocean forms a part if any of
the vast oceans of today.—Popular
Science.
Surgery on Snakes.
Snakes in captivity, it seems, some
times find difficulty in getting rid of
the skin which is shed every year, and
an Australian diamond snake in the
Bombay museum appeared likely to
succumb. It was quite blind and re
fused all food.
A European sympathizer therefore
pressed the native snake keeper into
service to hold the snake, and himself
with a pair of sharp pointed scissers
performed the delicate and risky opera
tion of clipping away the membrane
which adhered to the eyes.
J. M. Phipson, editor of The Journal
of the Bombay Natural History society,
performed a far more dangerous opera
tion a couple .of years ago. His patient
was a large hamadryad, or king cobra,
the most vicious and poisonous of all
Indian snakes, and a most powerful
creature to boot. Mr. Phipson gripped
the king cobra round the neck, and a
native literally held on for his life fur
ther down, and when the reptile’s
struggles were over a third man, armed
with a surgeon’s scalpel, removed eight
layers of membrane from each eye.—
Sketch.
Gladstone’s
His persuasive witchery of eloquence
will be poorly understood by generations
to some, says The Atlantic. It is not
found in the word, the jjhsase, ttie argu
ment or the thought. It came for the
most part from the spirit that warmed
the breath es the man, sounded in his
voice, looked out of his eyes. It was
personal to him, and largely part of the
moral qualities that seemed to be his
greater distinction. No man of his day
has had such power of persuasion as he.'
It may not be toe bold to say that no
man of any time has surpassed him in
that power. Yet he was never logically
strong His argumentative writings, the
most carefully and deliberately com
posed, show defects of reasoning that
are marked. From controversy with an
antagonist like Professor Huxley he was
sure to come with wounds. Yet his
masterful influence over minds of every
class is a certain fact. It was once said
by somebody that “GladstonecouldpdF
suade anybody to anything—himself
included,” and the epigram carries no
doubt a significant truth.
Pressure of the Sea.
There are spots in the ocean where
the water is five miles deep. If it is
true that the pressure of the water on
any body in the water is one pound to
the square inch for every two feet of
the depth, anything at the bottom of
one of the “five mile holes” would have
a pressure about it of 13,200 feet to ev
ery square inch. There is nothing of
human manufacture that would resist
such a pressure. That it exists there is
no doubt. It is known that Hie pressure
on a well corked glass bottle at the
depth of 800 feet is so great that the
water will force its way through the
pores of the glass. It is also said that
pieces of wood have been weighted and
sunk in the sea to such a depth that the
tissues have become so condensed that
the wood has lost Tts buoyancy and
would never float again. It could not
be even made to bum when dry.—Chi
cago Chronicle
An Arizbna Hair Cat.
“Doesn’t it disturb you when they
have a shooting scrape next door?” ask
ed tho tenderfoot who was undergoing
an Arizona hair cut.
“Disturb nothin!” answered the bar
ber. “It gener’ly makes it easier.”
At this juncture the shooting began
at Red Mike’s saloon next door. The
tenderfoot’s hair rose on end, and the
barber trimmed it as expeditiously as if
he were shearing a hedgehog.—Chicago
Tribmia.
He Has Been There.
Little Elsie—Here in this book it tells
about the tree of knowledge. I wonder
what kind of a tree that can be?
Little Horace—l guess it must be a
cherry tree. Whenever you climb up
into one of them, you always know bet
ter than to do it again if you get caught
—Cleveland Leader.
Blplomatlc.
Dutiful Sen —Yes, mother. I know
Miss Golightly is both extravagant and
lazy, but I’m engaged to her.
’ Mother —Well, tomorrow’s her birth
day. Give heir a silver thimble, and
she’ll break the engagement—Jewelers*
Weekly, ■ ; ' •
The spiders that spin webs are in an
infinite minority compared with those
which do' not. Ground spiders, as the
■pin spinners are called, abound every
where and depend on agility and swift
ness of foot to catch their prey
, I
TROUBLE all the way uA
BOU *il * Ch iud‘ v D t W wJ <,W '*‘
The nurse adjusted the bandage on the
patient’s head in one of tho wartta of a big
hospital up town and then she said:
“Now you may tell me how it happened
day,”ho began, 'hoi went Into a store
and told the man I Wanted to buy a straw
hat. He picked up one, put Man my head
and he says, ‘That’s tho hat you want,’
just that way. I said I would ll v e to look
at others. He said ho had others, but In
sisted on my taking the one he had put
on my bead. I asked him if there was
anything the matter with that hat, and be
said no, but it was the one he picked out
for me as soon as he saw .me name in
*lt’s Hobson's choice,* he paid. ‘Whose?’J
says. ‘Hobson's,* he says. I said I didn't
know him. Thun ho raid everybody was
saying it. Said it was a fad or something
like that, and if I wanted to be ‘strictly
tn it’ I would trike the hat and if miybody
said anything to mo about it I shcald say
it win Hobson’s choice and the drinks
would be on the other fellow. So I paid
him $1.50 and went uway under tho new
bat.
' * When I was going up the steps at Park
place station, I met an acquaintance, who
says, ‘Where did you get it?’ I wanted to
be sure he meant the hat, and I says,
‘Where did I get whatf’ ‘The shed,* ho
says. That throw mo off. I asked him
what he meant, and be pointed to the
headpiece and says: ‘That. You look like
a calf under a new shed,* he says. ‘That’s
one of Hobson's,’ I says. ‘Which is?* he
says. *Ths hat is,* I says. ‘I didn’t know
Hobson was in tho hat buslneA,’ be says.
‘Which one of them?' I-says. Then he
laughed and poked me and says,'Which
one are you talking about?’ ‘-Honest,* I
says,‘it’s Hobson’s.’ ‘lf it’s Hobson’s,’
he says, ‘you’d better take it back to .him
and tell him to give you your old one. *
‘Youdon’t seem to know about it,' I says,
and then I told him about how everybody
was talking about Hobson. He looked at
mo and says, ‘You’d bettor tako some
thing for it.’
“A«nd then I says, ‘All right, come on,’
and we went into tho first place and wo
stood there quite awhile, and when we
went out I found it had cost mo about sl,
and he hadn’t paid anything.
“So I left him and came on up town,
thinkingall tho way up. Two men were
on the seat in front of mo. I couldn’t hear
all they said, but one of them remarked
as his station was called that ho s’posed it
was Hobson’s choice.
“Thon I looked at my hat to see if it
was all right. It seemed as if it was too
small, but I put it back and wqnt on to
Forty-second street, where I got off and
went into a lunch place, where I met an
other acquaintance. Pretty soon he says,
‘That was a brave thing for Hobson to
do.’ T said ‘Yes.’ ‘You heard about it?’
he says. * Yes,* I says, ‘and it has cost me
$2.50, and you will please sell your gold
bricks to somebody else,* I says. ‘Don’t
take me for a fool aM the tfme,_’ I says.
‘You must be crazy, ’ he says. *’l got no
gold brick,’he says. * I’m talking about
the bravo man who sunk his ship in the
harbor.’ ‘What’s his mdae? ’ I says. ‘Hob
son, ’ he says. Then I got up and took my
hat from the peg and' showed it to him
and I says, ‘Do you see the hat?’ Hp said
‘Yos.’ ‘Well,’ I says, ‘that’s Hobson’s.*
He looked at it ond'says: ‘Why don’t you
wear your own hat? What are you doing, ’
he Says, ‘wearing Hobson’s hat?’ And
then I hit him, and when I camo to I was
here. ’’ —New York Sun.
The Question of Diet.
An article by Sir Henry Thompson, en
titled “Why Vegetarians?” in The Nine
teenth Century is an exhaustive treatise
on the subject of diet. He demolishes the
theory ot vegetarians that they are total
abstainers from flesh products, as in their
use of milk, butter and cheese they in
dulge in highly concentrated proteld con
taining food of animal origin, to say noth
ing of eggs, which contain the material ot
the developed chicken. There are few
vegetarians who confine their diet abso
lutely to productions of the vegetable king
dom.
To this practice Sir Henry Thompson
opposes the argument that no form of
vegetable nourishment has been discovered
upon wiilch It Is possible to rear the young
mammal, in which man i» included. He
wishes to be informed why an animal that
is born into the world es carnivorous par
ents, which is solely dependent for its ex
istence upon animal food—milk—should
suddenly adopt a vegetable diet, and at
what age.sueh a change should be made.
In the matter of food Sir Henry Thomp
son denies that there is any reason for ex
clusive forms of diet. Considerations of
age, personal habits, occupation, climate
and surroundings should be the determin
ing factors in governing a choice of food.
All fads that ignore this principle, wheth
er they take the form of exclusive adher
ence to a flesh or vegetable diet, are not
conducive to the maintenance of health
and physical activity.
Not That JeOltnon.
A party from Philadelphia and other
Pennsylvania towns was 'being escorted
through the capitol yesterday by a guide
who evinced an earnest effort to show the
strangers all the points es interest. They
had passed through the, rotunda and Stat
uarir hall and had made their way to tho
east corridor of the house.
“Here,” said the guide, “is perhaps the
most perfect statue of Jefferson in the
world” —
“Are you certain that is Jefferson?” in
quired a blond of 20 as she gazed intently
at the statue.
“Yes, ma’am, that’s Jefferson all right,”
replied the guide.
“My, how he has changed since I saw
him,” the blond exclaimed.
“Since you saw him,’,’ ejaculated the
amazed guide, turning to the girl of 20.
“Why, yea. I saw him last winter at
the Chestnut Street theater in ‘Bip Van
Winkle, ’ and he didn’t look Mt like this. ”
The girl did not s'mile. She seemed as
serious aa a» undertaker. The guide felt
embarrassed. The silence that prevailed
for a moment was gently broken by the
gisL who earnestly and with
a low voice inquired:
“When did he die?’’
But the guide had moved on and he
made no reply.—Washington Times.
A New Phrase.
But speaking of people who are not as
intelligent as the law allows, I heard an
old colored woman use an expression tho
other day that was new to me and to pat
that it would bo Interesting to know its
origin. She had a young girl with her,
and «nne especially stupid remark of the
girl’s had annoyed her. She looked at her
in disgust.
“Will,” said she, “you certainly ought
to be tapped for the staples.”—Washing
ton
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Facsimile Signature of B I gs
I Thirty Years
mwwiHUwSilpiin-rqQ|i:
EXACT COPY OF WHAPPER. S
, „r... th.c.nt.u. so.mht, new yok« tree.
SHOES, - SHOES I
IN MENS SHOES WE HAVE THE LATEST- STYLES—COIN TOES,
GENUINE RUSSIA LEATHER CALF TANS, CHOCOLATES AND GREEN
AT $2 TO $8.50 PER PAIR.
IN LADIES OXFORDS WE HAVE COMPLETE LINE IN TAN, BLACK
AND CHOCOLATE, ALSO TAN AND BLACK SANDALS RANGING IN
PRICE FROM 75c TO $2.
ALSO TAN, CHOCOLATE AND BLACK, SANDALS AND OXFORDS IN
CHILDREN AND MISSES SIZES, AND CHILDREN AND MISSES TAN LAC*
SHOES AND BLACK.
■
WE HAVE IN A LINE OF
SAMPLE STRAW HATS.
—" ---■ m.".. 11 '■ 111 l IB
—GET YO UK —
JOB PRINTING
DONE
The Morning Call Office.
. —Z — ~ 888
We have just mpplied our Job Office with a complete line of StaUonery
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way or
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS
STATEMENTS, IRCULARB,
■
ENVELOPES, NOTES,
■ I
MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS
CARDS, POSTERS*
DODGERS, E-bU., BTU
We c~ry tuf'xat iue of FNVW J'FES w.i jT»<e : this trad*.7
Aa attraedn. FOSTER of axy size can be issued on short notice.
-Our prices for work of all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained reg
..
any office in the state. When you want job printing ot'Jazy [description give
call Satisfaction guaranteeu.
'i -' I
ALL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.
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3