Newspaper Page Text
No Mere ly,
B Ua Potash,
Or any other Mineral Poison.
It Is Nature** Remedy, made exclusively
from Roots call Herbs,
,
It is perfectly Harmless.
It is the only remedy blows to tho world
»tiat Isas ever yet Cur.-d contauioua Mood
lotion in ail it* staffs*.
It cures Mercurial Rheumatism, Cancer,
gerofula.asd other Stood diseases heretofore
considered incurable. It cures any disease
caused from impure blood. It Is now pre¬
scribed by thousands of the best physicians
,n the United States, as a tonic. We append
the statement of a few:
•* I have used s - 8* 8. from on patients convalesc-
a™*”- w from fever and measles with the
“"sav
Bremen, Ga.—W illie White was afflicted
wltli ecrorula seven years. I prescribed S. S.
•** “ d ^ he u ft f 5!
d.
RicBMONP, Va, Deo. 15, 1885.—I have taken
♦hree bottles of Swift’s It acts much Specific better fo^secondary than
blood poison. other pot-
•* or any .
Formerly of Sussex Co., Va. »
Ark., writes 9. i• is na.jug composed some of. Knowledge I safely as to
what S. S. the remedy for can
recommend It as all skin dis¬
eases, it matters not what the name may be.”
We have remedy, a book driving and Its a history from of this
wonderful world, which will convince euros, that all
over tho is and which will you
ill we tav application. true, No family wo should mall be
tree without on it. We have another on Contagious
Blood Poison, sent on same terms.
you knowingly.
Wot sale by all druggists.
Tax Swift Specific Co.,
Drawer 3, Atlanta. Ga. A ,
New York, 756 Broadway.
London, Eng., 35 Snow 1
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
; EOflGIA—S palding County.—To all
■ • wit >m It may concern: .1 ,J. Mathews
haying, in proper form, applied to me for
permanent letter! of administration on the
estate of Josejtbene cite all Padgett and singular late of tho said credit- conn
ty.this is to
or* and next of kin of Josephene Padgett,
to be and appear at my office within the time
a dewed by law, and show cause, if any they
c in, why permanent Administration should
not be granted adgett’s to estate. J- J. Mathews on Jose-
pht.ncT Witness hand and official signature,
day my of 1888.
this 31st E. August, W. MAM MOND, Ordi
$3,00 nary.
/ORDINARY’S OFFICE— Spalding Coux-
ty, Gbobgia, has applied Angust29th, for letters 1888.—James
R. Ellis tome of Ad¬
ministration on the estate of Jim Thrash, late
of said eonnty, deceased.
Let all persons concerned show cause before
the Court of Ordinary of said eonnty, at my
office in Griffin, on the find Monday in Oc¬
tober, 1888, by 10 o’clock, a inwhy such
lexers should not be granted.
$3.00 E.W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
i YRDINARY'S / OF JiUE—8p.vi.niso CoUN-
\ ty, Geouoix. Ang. 29th. 1888.—D. P.
Eider as Exccu.or i.i ...u lu»l will of John M.
Coleman, deceased, has applied to me for
leave to sell the lands of deceased for pur¬
pose of paying the debts of deceased and
for distribution among the h irs, to-wit;
about one hundred and fifteen acres of the
South half of lot No. lt‘2 in Union district
adjoining lands of Malaicr, Bales and others.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary, n! ray cilice in
Griffin, on the first Monday in October next,
why an order should not be passed authori¬
ng the Rale of said land.
$6.00 E. IV. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/ORDINARY’S OFFICE—Spalding Coin.
F. V/ tv, Georgia, Aug. 29th, 1888.— S. A. and
M. Scott hare applied to me for lettersof
Administration, of Wm. de bonis non, on the estate
Let Scott, late of said countv, deceased. be¬
all persons concerned show cause
fore the Court of Ordinary of said comity, at
my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
Octolier, Mich letters 1888, should by ten not o’clock, granted. a. m , why
be
$3.09 E. W. IIAMMOND, Ordinary.
/ ORDINARY’S OFFICE—Spalding Cotix-
V/ty, Georgia, Aug. 29th, 1888. — F. M.
Scott has applied to me for letters of admin¬
istration on the estate of Nancy Scott,lute of
said county, deceased.
Lei all persons concernod show cause be¬
fore the Conrt of Ordinary of said county,
at my office in Griffi, on the first Monday in
October, 1888,by 10 o’clock, a. m , why
inch 13-00 letters shooldijot HAMMOND, be granted. Ordinary
E. W.
xRDiNARY’S OFFICE, Spalthnj COu.v-
V/ sy, Georgia, Sept. 3d, 1888.—N. M.
Col fins, adtninis.r itor of Elizabeth Huff,
has applied to me for leave to sell a house
and lot on Taylor street, near Sam Bailey
Institute, belonging to estate of deceased,
late of said county.
Let all persons concerned show cause be
(litheCourt of Ordinary of said county
tiny office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
October, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why
snch $3.C0 leave should E. \V. not HAMMOND, be granted. Ordinary.
/ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Cohn
\J ty, Georgia, Sept. 3d, 18S8,—N. M.
ed Collens, Robert administrator has with applied the will to annex¬ for
of Brown, me
leave to sell fifty acres of land, more or less,
near Brust ey, in Akins district, said county,
belonging to the ‘estate of said deceased,
rite of said county.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at
ray office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
Octolier, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why
such 13.00 leave should pot HAMMOND, ba granted. Ordinary,
E. W.
/ORDINARY’S OFFICE.-SpaldingCoi 1888.—John O. n-
v/ tt, Geobgia, Sept. 3d, of ad¬
8tewart has applied to me for letters the
ministration, with will annexed, dft es¬
tate of Mary F. Ilaynes,late of said county,
deceased. be¬
Le tall persons concerned show cause county,
fore the court of Ordiaary of said
at my office in Griffin on the first Monday
n October, 1888, by ten o’elock a. m., why
such letters should not HAMMOND, be granted. Ordinary.
*3.00. E. W.
ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spaldingi Couk-
* 3d, 1888.— he rc-
ty, Geobgia, Sept. to set apart a a
nof the commisssoners J. N. I*
ir’a support out of the estate of en«
-to Georgia A. Henley and her mnior
ldren, haa been made and filed m this
oe. Let all persons show cause, if any
y have, toitfiin the time ret prescribed apart and by
, Why same should not be
le the judgment IIAMMOND,Ordiaary. of the conrt.
100 K W.
peace.
Wtn.is bn,t wiM wares in he^ieag hugs
Uem taginJ' d hCart! v hy ia th
° wertt
Whin IV hen all i° so U thUS near m above, ? <in a U. below passion's unchanging stare end jest
Arc heaven and rest!
- C. vr. Willis m Youth’* Corapiuiion.
The "Slicing Trocess" It, China.
Owing tc the absence of wagon roads
and railway's the Chinese depend upon the
overs, canals and the ocean along the
coast for nearly all their carrying. Any
interruption to the immense traffic and
travel of tlieso waterways would prove
very serious. It is from this condition
of affairs that piracy is considered one of
the most heinous offenses. For this
crime death by the slicing process is tho
penalty. The slicing mode of execution
rivals any of tho fiendish tortures'prac¬
ticed upon captives by our North Ameri¬
can savages. There are degrees even in
this devihsiiness. There are deaths by
8, 10, 20, 50, 100, l,000slices. Thecoo-
demned person is fastened to a cross, and
tnen the executioner commences at the
eyebrows and cuts away such portions of
the body aa will not produce sudden
death by shock cr bleeding till thero ia
little more tissue to hack at, when lie
opens the chest and tears out the heart.
I was told by an Irish gentleman in
the Chinese imperial customs that he
once witnessed the slicing execution of a
noted pirate, and he described it as hor¬
rible beyond imagination. Another gen-
tleman had been present when a poor
woman had been sliced to death because
her husband had died suddenly, and she
had been tortured into a confession of
having poisoned him. At other times
she had stoutly denied any knowledge of
the cause of his death. I^jrever, she
had been condemned to this Horrible
death, and sho met her fate with a resig¬
nation and bravery which astonished
those who saw it. The American whe
was present described it as a most horri¬
ble sight, and one that returned to him
in fearful dreams.—San Francisco Chron¬
icle.
Tlio Journalist and tho Publisher.
Ono thing, I fear, must always place
journalism at a disadvantage, compared
with other professions, such as law, art,
medicine, teaching and engineering. By
the very nature of thp cas^, the writers
for the daily press c^, have little inde¬
pendent actioy. of '/peaking roughly, and
speaking tho pres3 as wc find it now
in New York, and the other large cities
of tho United States, the publisher is
everything; the writer is nothing. The
most journalist gifted and tho most enlightened
der, and, in must of necessity write to or-
who very many instances, the
man gives the order is tho person
whom aa enlightened and patriotic spirit
would least willingly obey. This appears
to bo unavoidable. Tho man who lias
created, bought or inherited a news¬
paper must either control or lose it. It
is his; he is the master; no power on
earth can nullify his right, and yet he
may be a person singularly unfit to
wield such an organ.
The newspaper is often a mere ap¬
pendage to other enterprises, which the
owner deems far more important, and to
which the journal bears the combined
relation of coiv and cow bell, feeder and
advertiser. But the newspaper belongs
to him; and all who write for it are, and
must be, his obedient servants.—James
Parton in The Writer.
An Automatic Medicine Dispenser.
An American manufacturer of sugar
coated piils added to the attractions of an
exhibit of his product in London an in¬
genious piece of mechanism, which
might have been intended to represent
the pharmacist of the future. It was in
the form of a cabinet provided with a
series of knobs or buttons, each inscribed
with tho name of some malady for which
a remedy might be asked. The customer
puts a coin into a slit and presses tho
button calling for the remedy ho requires,
when immediately a drawer flics out con¬
taining the article sought. This auto¬
matic dispenser of course makes no mis¬
takes. If tho customer accidentally
presses the wrong button, lie alone i3 re¬
sponsible for tho error. Is this really
what wo are coming to?—Scientific!
American.
Honey Plants.
All flowers, whether wild or cultivated,
aro visited by the industrious bee for
honey, and it is not easy to say from
what species it derives the most of its
sweets Orchards in full bloom are me¬
lodious with their hum, and later on the
fields of buckwheat are extraordinarily
attractive, so much so, indeed, that honey
made principally from this plant is readily
distinguished from that made earlier from
fruit blossoms, white clover, etc., which
is more highly esteemed on account of its
finer color and quality.
Warner’s Log Cabin’ Remedies—
old fashioned, simple compounds,
used in the days of our hardy foro
fatheie, are ‘'old timers 11 but “old re
iable.“ They comprise a Remedy.'’ “riarsapar
ilIa‘-‘ “Hops and Buchu
‘Cough and Consumption Remedy/’
“Hair Tonic,“ “Extract/* for Exter
nal and Internal Use, Catarrh, “Plasters/ and Liv 1
“Rose Cream‘“ for
er Pills.“ They are put np by H.
H. Warner k Co., proprietors of
Warnei ‘s Safe Remedies, and prom
ise to equal the standard value of
those great prep arm .one. All drug
gis’s keep them.
PARK
WORMS.
good YOU gifts, and it’s hard are work: hustling think around for your share of the world’s
of sor.vthing else.
This constant work will tell sometin --—perhaps it has already—
and nervousness, sleeplessness, neuralg’ and rheumatic aches and
pains are part of the “good gifts” your hustling has won.
If you are that way, let us give you a prescription—no charge
for the prescription, though it will cost a dollar to have it filled by
your druggist
H PAINE'S
CELERY COMPOUND of.
Si*. Urn aawnttrar to dlttBttoa*.
All druggists keep it. It will strengthen your nerves, tone up
your whole system, and make you bless us for prescribing this great
nerve tonic. B« rare to g« the genuine, prepared only by WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO.,
Boriiaftoa, Vt.
IF. M. Holman ■& Co.
-HAVE FRESH—
Magnolia Hams, *
Cooked Corned Beef 12£ c. per lb. Blue Fish, better than fresh Mackerel
Sweet Water Flour. Water Ground Meat. All grades Sullivan’s Tobaccos
And the
BEST LINE OF CIGARS IN THE CITY.
H. w. HassBikis, Boots
LEATHER AND FINDINGS.
3a Hill Street, GRIFFIN, GA
I offer at anil BELOW COST an excellent lot of LOW COT Gents’ anti Ladies
Shoes H. VV. HAS8ELKUS.
This space will be oc¬
cupied soon by a New
Buggy Company.
New Music House.
-I! o)I-
Brawner, Deane & Co.
f -t(o)J-
One floor of our Book and Music Store to be stocked with Pianos and Organs from a
large number of leading makers.
BEST INSTRUMENTS 1 EASIEST TERMS!
ipT GET OUR LOW PRICES BEFORE BUYING.
26 and 26 1.2 Hill Street, : : GRIFFIN, GA.
ang25d&w
Shipment Finest Teas,
CRACKERS, ALL SORTS, 15c. lb.
HAMS, BONELESS SHOULDERS, ETC. FINEST
FLOUR ON THE MARKET.
t° nJ
G. A. CUNNINGHAM,
GRIFFIN, : :: GEORGIA,;
Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi
Spalding Counly,
by the G eorgia Bureau cf Immigiation
all parti es having land for sale can cx
the sale by plating their property
Full* p ar’kulars in Tigard to the be mo ob
uabie lands in this county can
by addressing biro sieve. A lull
houses a cd lands and lets t f all deun
RANKIN HOUSE
COLUMBUS. GEORGIA.
Leading Hotel In The
Under New
C. B. DUY, Proprietor.
wptlSdlm
S ff. MANGHAM & SONS
GRIFFIN, : CEORCIA
-JOj-
Strongest Companies,
Lowest Kates,
Prompt Settlements
New Advertisements
TO ADVERTISERS
A list of 1000 newspaper* divided into
STATES AND SECTIONS will be seut on
applieotiou—FREE. To those who want their advertising to
medium tor thorough pay
wc can offer no better
and effective work than the various sections
of our Select Local List.
GEO. P. Advertising ROWELL & Bureau, CO.,
Newspaper Spruce street, New York.
10
e»
Griffin , Ga.
Griffin ia the liveliest, pluckiest, moat pro
grunjve town in Georgia. This i» no hyper-
bollcal description, a* the record of the (act
five years will show.
During that time It haa built asd put into
most successful operation a *100,000 cotton
actory and la now building another with
nearly twice the capital. It has put up a
a*ge iron and braes foundry, a fertiliaer fac¬
tory, an immense ice and bottling Works, a
saah and blind factory, a broom factory
opened np the finest granite quarry in the
Uuited State*, and has many otter enter¬
prise* in onu-mplation. it lias secured
another at!road ninety miles long, and while
ocatcu on the greatest system ia the South,
the Central, has secured connection with It#
important rival, tlicE^t Tenusssee.Vlrg.ma
nd Georgia. It has just secured dtsect inde¬
pendent connection with Chattanooga and
the West, and has the President of a 'oai ib
railroad maiding here and woik.ug
to its ultimate completion. With
t* five white and three entered
churches, it is now building a fill,0K> new
Preibytcriau church ft ha* increased U»
population by nearly oav fifth. It hn* *»t-
raefed around iU border* fruit grower* f ;o«n
nearly every State in the Union, uutsl it is
now surrounded on nearly every side by cr¬
ab ar da and vineyards. It is the hujte " f <bc
rape and Us wine making capacity has
doubled every year. It ho* successfully
inaugurated a system of public wshno’s, with
a seven years curriculum, second to none.
This ia part of the record of a Lalf decade
aud simply shows the progress of an already
admirable city, with the natural advantage*
of having the finest climate, summer and
winter, in the world.
Griffin is the county seat of Spalding
county, situated in west Middle Georgia, with
a healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150
feet above sea level. By the census of 1890, it
will have at a low estimate between 8,000 and
7,000 people, and they r.re all of the right
sort—wide-awake, up to Ibo times, ready to
welcome strangers and anxious to secure de¬
sirable settlers, who will not be any less wel¬
come if they bring money to help build np
the town. There Is about only one thing we
need badly jnst now, and that is a big hotel •
We have several small ones, but their acoom.
modations are entirely too limited for our
business, pleasure and health seeking gnests.
If you see anybody that wanted good loca¬
tion for a hotel in the South, just mention
Griffin.
Griffin is the place where the Gwrvis
N*ws is published—daily and weekly—the
nest newspapor ip tho Empire State of the
Georgia, Pte-EC enclose stomps in sending
for sample copies.
This brief sketch will answer July 1st
1888. By January 1st, 1880, It will have to be
changed to keep up with the times.
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
* D. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
WOODBURY, : : GEORGIA.
unpt attention given to all business
W ill p_____________„ practice in all the Courts, and where
ever bnsiccss calls.
1ST Collections a specialty. apriklly
HEADQUARTERS and Protective
Leak’s Collecting Georgia.
Agency of
GRIFFIN, ------- GEORGIA.
S. G. LEAK, Manager.
ir®" Bend your claims to 8. G. Leak aud
correspond only with him at headquarters. for
Cleveland A Beck, Resident Attorneys
Griffin. may0d&w8m
HENRYcTPEEPLE8r
ATTORNEY AT LAW
HAMPTON, OKOSGIA.
Practices, in all the State and Federal
Courts. octOdtfewly
JNO. «f. HUM?,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
QBIFriK, QEOBGIA.
Office, 31 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. 11
Vt Lite’s Clothing Store. mar22d<fcwly
I>. DISMU**. s. H. OOLU.Vg
DISMUKE A COLLINS,
LAWYERS,
GRIFFIN, GA.
u Jice.first room in Agricultural Building
.-stair*. uiarl-dAwtf
THOS. R. MILLS,
TTORNEY AT LAW,
GRIFFIN, GA.
Will practice in the But* and Fedeiai
C-mrte. Office, over George A Hartnett’s
s >rncr. nov2-tf.
os D.snvisr. easr. t. davici,
STEWART A DANIEL,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
().,o: George A Hartnett’s. Griffin, Ga.
Will practice ia Uie State anl Federa
woorie. i*nl.
C. S. WRIGHT,
WATCHMAKER and jeweler
GRIFFIN, GA.
Hill Street, Up Stairs over J. H. White
r., A Co.’s.
Guardian’s Sale.
By virtue of an order granted by the Georgia, Court
of ordinary of Spsldiug oonnty, 1888,1 will sell
granted at September bidder, before term the court bouse to
the highest said county in Griffin daring the le¬
door of
gal hours of sa'e, on the first half Tuesday in Oe-
tober next, oi.e undivided interest in a
house and lot la the city of Griffin, on the
corner of Solomon and Sixth street*, contain-
ing one acre more or 1 ms, known aa the
Nall place. Well improved, verr convenient
to business and quiet—desirable Terms cash. propevtjr.
gold for distribution.
LEILA E. LAMAR,
Guardian of James and A. S4. Nail
P'.fH •
_ __
Farm and House and Lot For Sale.
A302>* acre farm in 3 mites of Griffin. Ga.
80 acres in woods, 120 in splendid state of
cultivation, cleared of stomps and reeks, fix¬
ed for improved farm mac binary. sold Machin¬ with
ery, stock, corn and fodder will be
farm if wanted. All ready for business anoth¬
er year. Also, a huge roomy house and two
acre lot ifl Griffin. Ga, For particulars ad-
,u 5 sats? to .............
of wtte&fcsk the Court Boose, tn the e»,
scribed Spalding County, Georgia, tte I
property, to-wit.
Tin. following described jj
That tract or pare*! of ten.
in the third district of
then f’the, now Fpald
and No*. distinguished 47, 7#and te L si, ,
■m)4 as 79, and a!*e 75 each to .
acres, acre* 1
west corner of lot No. Ti, also fiO •
Tl-s.
’NNf NM*- -
by land Iran!;
north then knows m the Job..
fondant* Levied February 4th, lM,m
on and sold as the property > xy or aoo
ptsu* Schaefer, surviving partner utaerof of i A, i
Schaefer * btetosg Oo., to satisfy* «mf ortgagefitoi *
from Superior ■ou.H C in tori
of WaiterT. Milter?*, Adolphusfkhato
surviving lVmtnU, John partner Gossett of A. and C. otters, Schaefer I 4H
sion lc:-ai!jf notified. The shore p,---..* „
sold in lots or parcels. -tetfitoff.
Also, t the tame time and place, erttl be
M.:d ail that tract tr parcel of laud situated
Ijir.g totaalty and Monroe, txteg in then the second Kke district ftpa of or.
‘KiHflitj «***.■ *» * MwW now
county, Georgia, totoit, tot No. 8ft, end '
iteat [vart of tot No. 79 * filch lies north of ! ' c
Zio,. road, containing3711-10 T. seres, b '
od-north and by by J. Kills C, and the Corbin j
east Geo btewart,
Zi<m road.iind west by land* of ■ /
place, (raid lands former!
lire place,but lately
»» V»M o I 'V > vs#* wvwi w* WWW w
ofj. of Edwin D. Boyd Bates vs. J.C, Co. King, J. C. and King, one W.L I
A v*.
Ison, fled tenant to posatnion, legate; few. *’
■old Also, dwcliing" at the same and place, will be
a Story frame 1
ing and the ism the «mo is
cd, being aliout of land to Orr’a dia-
ty trtet, bounded BpaUUng BiSft »ridpro»«
1 on
west south by Wm. ‘ ;i
by
of J, •Ato*rV
issue, of
or
McLean, liedT a* -j,*!
’
sold Alto, 25 at the of same ppipi mat
.
NoTah am* IMrWf?
or iet
county.G property
«xsv
mortgage h to
Court in tow * ‘ »H»p ankston f* 4
Cook, W. Bankston, transferee, tenant w, 1 to#, **
noUflcd. •,
Also, at the esme tits: *fi'ti
sold a certain piece ut -ua
thirty No. 115 In (30) the acres, fourth being district a part of I
County, Georgia, bounded oa the _
Jack Crawley, south by P. Cham bless, i
by P. L. 8tarr, west by land* of W T
Taylor. Levied on aud sold ua tho j
of W . T. H. Taylor, to satisfy one n
, tenant in |
lid aiBw. »,-u.« time and place, will 1
f.fty acres of land in the first district i
dreUlct and county, bounded north 1
of J, F. Davis, east by ian lot J.O.
and south by land of J. O. Norton
ton. J. O. Norton, tenant to
gaily notified.
at the sums time and plane,'
property* the ________ Justice Court . of the j
issued from
district G. M. of Bpaiding County
of Benjamin Brother* A tw.WiWri
W.E.Uecrge, tenant to]
notified. . „-
Also, at the same time and placa, ’
sold filly of land, more or ‘
acres
by land of Jacob H. Akin and north I
of Aif. Wellmaker and John Bonn. ,
ou and sold *s the property of the estate«
Nancy L. Payne, by virtu* to a ft to iwui
from Hickey Spalding Akin J. Supcrtor 0. Pajnte, Court administeator to favor *...
v*.
of Nancy L. Payne, principal, H. memiSm, C, fttaar
W. W. Orabhaand 8. C. Grubb#,
Jolm F. Payne, tenant ia p;**e»«k», fftuo. legally
notified.
R. e, CONNELL, Sheriff, 8.C.
ORITFIN
LIGHT AND WATER CO.
Application For Charter.
GEORGIA— Spujdiso Corxrt. ■m
.... Jrawner, A. ------------
State and County, their suoocaaow and as
signs, shows that they have entered into aa
assoc ration under the name and style of
“Griffin Light and Water
Company”:
that the object of Midi—
and operate Electric light__
Gas Works and Water works,;
thereof, in the City of Griffin,__„
vicinity and e-mduet other testae**____
appertaining .* they may see proper, with
power to purchase and hoid property, real
nn*i personal, to uieandbe sued, and to exee
r ise all ]>owers usually conferred on corpora¬
tion* of similar character, aa may be consis¬ SB
tent with Ihc tew* of Georgi*- 8eid company
is to have its ; lace to burineaa to Mid coun¬
ty. The capital stock of ^ said company tos^g shall ■
r iib PnvU to to
f'iOtWO, in shsrtj o« ooo JiUBwrfo determined tt0.urs
to be called in provided, as may be that setd oa by
the directors, until company at west
shall not commence business
ten per cent, to shall the capital board rUxkis to paid toes to.
Saia company have a not
than three, nor more thaa live dire
shall elect from their number a
•nd such other officers at. they may think
best. Said board of directors shall continue
in office until their mtooeesora are elected.
their application and that they and fewr Me
l essors be incorporated exceeding for tv and ' during '
term of not
privilege of renewal at the -_ r
twenty years, for the purpoaoe
set forth. Ac. And BECK your petiite* CLE’
pray. «
I certify that the foregoing to a
tract from the minutes of Spalding:
, 'Vlig