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fierald and Advertiser.
NKWNAN, FRI DAY, MAR.
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR.
Faithful Old Horse Grieved for Mate.
Lawronceville News* Herald.
That dumb animals form strong and
lasting attachments for each other, has
Build a Monument to Southern Women
Judgc A. D. I'rrcmun in Atlanta Journal.
1 note with great pleasure that some
member of the General Assembly of
South Carolina has introduced a bill to
appropriate money with which to erect
a monument in honor of the women of
the South who served and suffered and
sacrificed during the War Between the
States.
I trust this movement will prove an
inspiration to the Confederate veterans
of Georgia, and their sons, to erect one
to honor the Georgia women of that
period.
While J do not condemn the plan pro
posed in South Carolina, for it should
be done that way, if it cannot be done
by voluntary gifts. But certainly the
voluntary plan is better, as being more
complimentary to the one, and more
sel ('-respecting to the other. A monu
ment erected by taxation cannot speak
so tenderly of love and gratitude as
one erected by free and voluntary gifts.
And in this connection it should be re
membered that these women and their
daughters did not push this matter
aside and thus withhold their time, ef
forts and money, and then go to the
General Assembly and ask for necessa
ry appropriations. No. they first gave
themselves to this work ; and the re
sults of their labors and sacrifices are
evidenced by the marble shafts that
grace so many of our public squares.
The 20th day of April, 1909, will soon
be upon us, when the veterans of the
various camps will meet to honor our
dead. What more propitious time will
they ever have to discuss this matter,
and appoint committees to raise the
necessary funds? Surely the veterans
and Lhier sons will not wait longer to
discharge a duty so imperative, and
yet so pleasant.
Kvery veteran should feel chagrined
and humiliated when he passes a monu
ment in honor of the Confederate sol
diers, and when he reads of the erection
and unveiling of others, and his atten
tion is thus called to the fact that not
one lias been erected to honor our noble
women who sacriliced and suffered as
did the soldiers.
This is a reproach, and shall we bear
it longer by refusing to do that which
justice and gratitude demand from us?
Will not the press, the mightiest
power to bring tilings to pass, espouse
this movement, and cease not the agi
tation until Hie monument erected pro
claims the work accomplished?
Should the writer live to see the 2(ith
of April, 1909, he will urge the Coweta
veterans to approve the monument by
the adoption of suitable resolutions, and
the appointment of committees to
commence the work. Will not the vet
erans of each county take similar ac
tion then? if this movement meets
the approval of enough camps to give
hope of success, then this fact, should
he known to all, for encouragement
and inspiration. To that end it is sug
gested that each camp send informa
tion to our commander-in-chief, Gen.
Clement A. Evans, and he could give
it to the public.
dray horses have been constantly
workecl together, and used in draying
merchandise and coal from the railroad
depots here. During these years the
ownership of this team has changed
hands several times, hut it has been
kept constantly busy at the same work
by all the different owners. A few
weeks ago Mr. T. L. Williams, who iB
engaged in the livery business here,
purchased the horses from Mr. C. U.
Born, and they were aontinued in the
same class of work in which they had
been used for so many years, until a
short time since, when one of them be
came so disabled by disease that he
was taken out, and a mule substituted
in his place. “Old Jim,” the stricken
member of the combination, did not
take kindly to the separation from his
ancient mate, and, when the time for
hitching up for the daily work arrived
it was necessary to tie him hard and
fast in his stall, so as to prevent him
from forcing the mule out of his old
place and taking it himself. When the
mule was first led to the wagon pole to
be hitched, “Old Jim” p’romptly ran
up and shoved him out of his place, and
stood there waiting to be harnessed
himself, and it was necessary to halter
and tie him in a stall to get him out of
the way.
When the new team was driven off,
out of sight, he became absolutely
frantic, and squealed, kicked and
groaned so that he became a regular
and unbearable nuisance in the stable,
and Mr. Williams was forced in self-
defense to have him turned loose and
let him follow the wagon, which he
did, regularly from day to day, until he
finally became too feeble to walk.
When the new team started out in
the morning, “Old Jim” would prompt
ly take position by the side of his old
mate, where he would remain as regu
larly as if lie had been hitched, though
he was loose and free to roam at will,
and when he became too feeble to keep
up there, would drop behind the wag
on, and follow on as best he could.
But “Old Jim” is out of trouble now,
as his lifeless form was carted to the
potter’s field last Thursday morning,
where he is enjoying about the first
rest that has come to him in a decade
Get Out of Debt.
Farmers’ Union News.
We are everlastingly tired of hearing
the farmer advised to “get out of debt, I
been strikingly demonstrated in this j and stay out,” especially when the I
city recently, and in such a manner as fountain-head of this advice is from a j
to attract the attention of the general class that lives off of debt. These get-
public. out-of-debt preachers, or a majority of
For a number of years a pair of large them, live by the debts the farmers
make, and advice from them; is lit
tle short of obtaining money under
false pretenses.
Talking about the farmer getting
out of debt. Let the nation, the State,
the county and the municipality get
out of debt, and then, and not till then,
will the farmer get out. I hate debt,
and wish it was possible for our people
to get out, hut I know they cannot, and
also know that the source from whence
the advice comes knows we cannot.
Why, God bless you! my horny-handed
brother, if everybody were out of debt
we would have no money-making bank
ers.
Is it any worse for the farmers to
make a debt, individually or collective
ly, than it is for the merchant or mu
nicipality? Certainly not. If debt is the
dirse you advisors claim it is, and I
think you are right about it, why in the
Tom Walker don’t you get your munic
ipality, your county, your State and
nation out of debt? You are the crew
who are making them, and not the far
mer..
“Get out of debt!” The dickens!
How? There is not enough metallic
money in existence to pay interest for
twelve months on all debts, national,
international. State, county, municipal
ity and individuals, if it all fell due on
the same day and had to be made by
an actual delivery of dollars and cents.
CURES
Mr. Gunter—“And what looks more
awkward than to see a woman stepping
off a street car?”
Mrs. Gunter- “I can tell you.”
Mr. Gunter—“What?”
Mrs. Gunter—“A man washing
di shes. ”
Dainty, Delightful,
Toilet Preparations
THE DOCTOR’S QUESTION.
Advises Against the Use of Harsh
Purgatives and Physics.
A doctor’s first question when con
sulted by a patient is, “are your bow
els regular?” He knows that ninety-
eight per cent, of illness is attended
with inactive bowels and torpid liver.
This condition poisons the system with
noxious gases and waste matter which
naturally accumulates, and which must
be removed through the bowels before
health can be restored.
- Saits, ordinary pills and cathartics
may be truly likened to dynamite.
Through their harsh, irritating action
they force a passage through the bow
els, causing pain and damage to the
delicate intestinal structure which
weakens the whole system and at best
only produces temporary relief. The
repeated use of such treatments causes
chronic irritation of the stomach and
bowels, hardens their tissues, deadens
their nerves, stiffens their muscles and
generally brings about an injurious
habit which sometimes has fatal re
sults.
We have a positive, pleasant and
safe remedy for constipation and bow
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” ’\all Orderlies are very pleasant
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e, cause nau-
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time without
1 the drug-
ition and
nether acute or
pecially good for
ns or old folks.
., and 12 tablets,
Co., Newnan, Ga.
Why He’s a Bachelor.
Now York Tribune.
“Why should I marry, Sadie? I
know man without woman is theoreti
cally incomplete, but he can make him
self uncommonly comfortable in his in
completeness.”
This was the reply of a well-known
bachelor to a married friend who re
proached him for his persistence in the
single state.
“There is one thing, ” he went on,
‘‘that a man really does want a wife
for—to have a companion who can un
derstand and sympathize with him in
the interests that till the chief place in
his life, but owing to the present sys
tem of educating girls, that’s the one
tiling that it’s almost impossible to
find. 1 can’t see why, since it’s gener
ally admitted that'the object of a girl’s
existence is to marry, those who have
her education in charge don’t try to
make her an intelligent and capable
partner of the man to whom her desti
ny is ultimately to be linked.
“Parents apparently know only one
way to educate their daughters. They
see that they become acquainted with
a multiplicity of subjects and acquire
a surface knowledge of the great ques
tions of the day. The result is that
when young women are launched into
society their one great anxiety is to
conceal their ignorance. Some of them
to attain this end assume a profound
knowledge of matters whereon they
have formed the most erroneous and
Partial opinions, while others seek
safety in assenting to any view of any
subject put before them. Under these
circumstances a man might have daily
intercourse with the woman who had
been specially created as a helpmeet
for him without having a suspicion
that she was one with whom he could
ever have a thought or feeling in com
mon. If the subject were chosen as the
object of her special training and edu
cation, on that one subject, at least,
she would be able to hold her own, and
when she met a man whose life inter
ests resembled her own each could rec
ognize the other as the companion
needed to make life complete.”
Said the editor to the new reporter:
You must learn never to state a thing
as a fact until it has been proved a
fact You are apt to get us into libel
suits. Do not say, ‘The cashier stole
the funds;’ any ’ l’he cashier who is al
leged to have stolen the funds.’ That’s
ail. Oh, get something about that First
ward social to-night.”
And this is the report turned in by
the young man who heeded the editor’s
warning:
”It is rumored that a card party was
given last evening to a rumbei of re
puted ladies of the First ward. Mrs.
Smith, gossip says, was the hostess,
and the festivities are reported to have
continued until 11 :30 in the evening
The alleged hostess is believed ‘ t o bo
the wife of John Smith, Called
high-priced grocer.
There is an evaporation from the body going- on continually, day and
night, through the pores and glands of tile skin. This is nature’s way of
maintaining the proper temperature of our systems and preserving the soft-
n , -s and flexibility of the skin, and so long as the blood is free from impur
ities no trouble will result. When, however, the blood from any cause
becomes infected with humors and acids, these too must be expelled, and
coming in contact witli the delicate fibres and tissues with which the skin is
so abundantly supplied they produce irritation and inflammation, and the
effect is shown "y Eczema, Acne, Tetter, and skin affections of various kinds.
These impurities and humors get into the blood through a deranged or
inactive condition of the system ; the members whose duty it is to carry off
tlie waste and refuse matter of the body fail to properly perform their work,
and this impure, fermenting matter is left in the system to be absorbed by
the blood. The skin is not only affected by poisons generated within the
system, hut poisons from without,
such as Poison Oak, Poison Ivy,
Nettle Rash, etc., enter through the
open pores and glands, and so thor
oughly do they become rooted in the
blood that they are ever present,
or return at certain seasons of each
year to torment the sufferer. Salves,
washes, lotions, etc., cannot cure skin
diseases. True, such treatment re
lieves some of the itching and dis
comfort, and aids in keeping the skin
clean, but it does not reach the real
cause, and at best can be only palli
ating and soothing. A thorough
cleansing of the blood is the only certain cure for skin diseases. S. S. S.,
a gentle acting, safe blood purifier, made entirely of vegetable ingredients
of the forest and field, is the proper treatment. S. S. S. goes down into the
circulation, and neutralizes the acids and humors, thoroughly cleansing and
purifying the blood, and curing skin affections of every kind. It supplies
to the blood the fresh, nutritive qualities necessary to sustain the skin and
all other parts of the body, and rids the blood of any and all poisons. S. S. S.
cures Eczema, Tetter, Acne, Salt Rheum, Poison Oak and Ivy, Nettle Rash,
and all other skin troubles, and cures them permanently by removing every
trace of the cause from the blood. Special book on Skin Diseases and any
medical advice desired furnished free to all who write
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA,'
I have used your S. S. S., spring and fall,
for the past two years, with the result that it
entirely relieved me of a form of Eczema
which my doctor was unable to cure. My
arms, lower limbs, and, in fact, the biggest
portion of my whole body was affected, and
when I first began S. S. S. the itching, etc.,
was worse, but I continued the remedy with
the result that the dry, itching eruption en
tirely disappeared. I think a great deal of
your medicine, and have recommended it to
others with good results. It is the best blood
medicine made, and I can conscientiously
recommend it for the cure of all blood and
skin affections. CHAS. HORSTMAN.
Wheeling, W. Va.
You cannot afTord to take chances with “any old
preparation, for, remember, thene
tteles when scientifically prepared, are helpful
heaply made of delete-
but
and beautifying
rious ingredients are terrifically harmful \\\
ly recommend this line of articles manufactured by
the oldest and largest manufacturer of Toilet
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E. BURNHAM’S HAIR AND SCALP TONIC
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E. BURNHAM’S GRAY HAIR RESTORER
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E. BURNHAM’S HYGIENIC SKIN FOOD.
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hulld np tissues, nourish and strengthen the muscles
free the sklu from tines, blemishes, blackheads
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E. BURNHAM’S COARSE PORE LOTION
For refining the skin wlien coarse and porous.
E. BURNHAM’S CUCUMBER CREAM.
An excellent itreimrutIon for softening,
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E. BURNHAM’S AROMATIC ASTRINGENT
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For blenching nnd purifying the skin and removing
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E. BURNHAM’S TAN and RRECKLE LOTION
Will remove tan aud freckles and keep the skin
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Makes any shade of hair lighter by a single applica
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Address
E. BURNHAM
The Best Fertilizers for Corn
That the yield of corn from the average farm can be greatly in
creased by intelligent and liberal fertilization has been repeatedly
demonstrated. Large crops of good corn result from preparing the
land well, using the right kind and quantity of fertilizer, good seed
and proper cultivation. a
Virginia-Carolina
Fertilizers
will greatly “ increase your yield per acre ” of corn or any other crop.
In some cases remarkable results have been obtained.
Mr. C. W. Caruthers of Sumpter County, Fla., writes: “Words
cannot express the value of your fertilizer. 11 is really so far ahead
of other companies’ goods, that it would not pay anyone to use other
brands, were they given free and put in the field. 1 can prove what
I say to be a fact. I made a test on five acres. I used on one half
the land your fertilizer and on the other half another company’s fertil
izer, same grade; the land received the same cultivation every time.
I kept a correct account of the amount of money I got off each half
.K 0 ? ^3°° wore front the land on which I used Virginia-Carolina
do tiljzer than / did off the other half. I got four times as much
corn from the land on which I used your fertiliser.”
Write today to nearest office of the Virginia-Carolina Chemical
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Almanac, full of the most valuable and unprejudiced information for
planters and farmers; or ask your fertilizer dealer for a copy.
Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co.
Soles Offices
Richmond, Va.
Norfolk, Va.
Columbia, S. C.
Atlanta. Ga.
Savannah, Ga.
Memphis, Tenn.
Sales Offices
Durham, N. C.
Charleston, S C.
Baltimore, Md.
Columbus, Ga.
Montgomery, Ala.
Shreveport, La.
The Largest Manufacturer In the World of Hair
Goods nod Toilet Requisites.
Wholesale Retail
67-69 Washington St. 70-72 State St.
CHICAGO, ILL.
For Sale by
JOHN R. CATES DRUG CO.,
Successor to Huffaker Drug Co.
DR. M. S. ARCHER,
Luthersville, Ga.
All calls promptly filled, day or night. Disease
of children a specialty.
DR. F. 1. WELCH,
Physician.
Office No. 9 Temple avenue, opposite puhli
' ’Phone 234.
Things the
FARMER
NEEDS
We sell Texas Red Rust-proof Oats,
Ditching Boots, Ames Shovels,
Shoes, Hats, Overalls, Tobacco,
Sugar, Coffee, Flour, and everything
else needed at home or on the farm.
Come to see us, and we will trade with you.
M. C. FARHER
& Company
PETITION FOR CHARTER. to own and operate farms, or to lease same to otli-
GEORGIA—Coweta County: / er 2’ , ...... ,
tv .1, . o,... r- , ., , . 7. In addition to the rights and privileges con-
° in stud county : The peti- I ferred on corporations under the laws of Georgia
tionofH. p Woodroof. D P. Wood roof and Mrs. I petitioners pray : (a) That said corporation may
I . L Woodroof, all of saul State and county, re- [ at any time, upon a vote of the holders of two-
speeHully Bhows . . : thirds of its capital stock, discontinue business,
1. 1 hat they desire for themselves, associates, i cause its assets to be collected and sold, and after
successors and assigns to be incorporated for the ; paying the liabilities of the corporation, distribute
term of twenty years, with the privilege of re- | among its stockholders entitled to receive the pro-
. ceeds. (b) That said corporation may at any time,
upon tlie vote of the holders of two-thirds of its
capital stock, apply for and secure amendments to
DR. T. B. DAVIS,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office—Sanatorium building. Office ’phone 5 I
call ; residence ’phone 5—2 calls.
W. A. TURNER,
Physician and Surgeon.
Special attention given to surgery and diseases
of women. Office 19M; Spring street. ’Phone 230
K. W. STARR,
Dentist.
ii work. Patronage of the pub-
He solicited. Office over Newnan Banking Co.
WOODROOF SUPPLY COMPANY.
2. The object of said proposed corporation is pe
cuniary gain to its stockholders.
3. The principal office and place of business of
said corporation will be in the city of Newnan,
Coweta county, Georgia; but petitioners desire
the right to establish such branch offices and
places of business as they may from time to time
deem advisable.
4. The amount of capital stock is to be FIVE
THOUSAND DOLLARS, divided into shares of
One Hundred Dollars each, with the right and
privilege of increasing said capital stock, upon a
majority vote of the stock, from time to time, to
an amount not exceeding Five Thousand Dollars
in the aggregate.
5. All said capital stock of Five Thousand Dol
lars has been actually paid in.
6. The particular business proposed to be trans
acted is to do a general mercantile business; to
buy and sell all kinds of merchandise and com
modities, farm supplies, tools, vehicles, live stock,
cotton, cotton seed, and any and all kinds of per
sonal property, including stocks and bonds in oth
er corporations; to buy and sell land; to own and
operate store-houses and warehouses, for the pur
pose ot carrying on its own business and for the
purpose of cairyingon the business of a ware- 1
houseman; to act as agent, factor or broker in
its charter, w hether the same be fundamental
otherwise, (c) That said corporation may borrow
an 1 lend money, and secure the same by mortgage,
pledge, deed of trust or otherwise, and receive
like security from others indebted to it.
8. Petitioners pray that this corporation be in
vested with all the rights, privileges and immuni
ties incident to and granted to corporations under
the laws of Georgia, and especially those set out
in Section 1852 of the Civil Code of Georgia and
amendments thereto.
And your petitioners will ever pray, etc.
R. O. JONES, Petitioners’ Attorney.
Filed in office this Feb. 25, 1909.
L. Turner, Clerk S. C. C. C.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
I. L. Turner, Clerk of the Superior Court of said
county, do certify that the foregoing is a true
copy of the petition filed for charter of the Wood-
ROOF Supply Company, now of file in this office.
Witness my hand and seal this 25th day of Feb
ruary, A. D. 1909. L. TURNER.
Clerk S. C. C. C.
Notice of City Bond Election.
CITY OF NEWNAN—Cowf.tA County. Ga.:
Be it Ordained by the Mayor and Alder
men OF THE City of Newnan, Thnt an election
shall be held in the city of Newnan on the 17lh day
of April, 1909, at which election there shall bo sub
mitted to the qualified voters of said city the
question whether bonds shall be issued by said
city for the purpose of improving and enlarging
the.Public Schools of said city, the amount of said
bonds to be SIXTEEN THOUSAND DOLLAK.S
The said bonds, when issued, shall bear date
July 1, 1909, and bear interest from their date at
the rate of 5 per cent, per annum, the interest to
be paid semi-annually on Jan. 1 and July 1 of each
year.
The principal of said bonds shall mature and bo
paid as follows: $2,000 in 1912; $2,000 in 191.'-
$2,000 in 1916; $2,000 in 1918; $2,000 in 1920; $2 000.
in 1922; $2,000 in 1924; $2,000 in 192(1.
The interest to be paid annually shall be as fol
lows: $800 in 1910: $800 in 1911; $.800 in 1912; $700 in
1913: $700 in 1914; $600 in 1915; $600 in 1916; $500 in
1917; $500 in 1918; $400 in 1919; $400 in 1920; $300 in
1921; $300 in 1922; $200 in 1923; $200 in 1924; $100 in
1925; $100 in 1926.
To meet the maturity of principal the following-
amounts shall be raised each year as a sinking
fund; $1,000 in 1910; $1,000 in 1911; $1,000 in 1912;
$1,000 in 1913; $1,000 in 1914; $1,000 in 1915; $1,00(>
in 1916; $1,000 in 1917; $1,000 in 1918; $1,000 in 1919-
$1,000 in 1920; $1,000 in 1921; $1,000 in 1922; $1 ooo’
in 1923; $1,000 in 1924: $1,000 in 1925.
Notice of said election shall be given by publish
ing this ordinance thirty days before the day on
which the election is to be held in The Herald and
Advertiser, the newspaper in said city wherein
the Sheriff’s advertisements for the county of
Coweta are published.
Those voters who are in favor of issuing said
bonds shall have printed upon their ballots “For
Bonds," and those opposing the issuing of said
bonds shall have printed upon their ballots
"Against Bonds.” Feb. 15, 1909.
M. G. KEITH, Mayor,
C. B. GLOVER, Alderman.
E. G. COLE, Alderman,
J. T. SWINT, Alderman,
W. S. ASKEW, Alderman,
H. C. ARNALL, JR,, Alderman,
W. J. MURPHEY. Alderman,
D. ,W. BOONE, Alderman,
T. M. GOODRUM, Alderman.
E. D. Fouse. City Clerk.
PETITION FOR CHARTER.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
To the Superior Court of said county : The pel i-
JiBoone, of said Coweta countv, ,1
w -Stripling, of the county of Fulton, said State'
and M. B. Mooney, of said Coweta county re?
spectfully shows—
1. That they desire far themselves, their asso
ciates. successors and assigns, to be incorporated
for the full term of twenty years, with the privi
lege of renewal at the expiration of said time un
der the name and style of
BOONE-3TRIPL1NG COMPANY.
— The capital stock of said corporation shall he-
TWENTY-FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS all of
which has already been paid in, and said capital
stock is to be divided into shares of One Hundred
Dollars each. Petitioners desire, however the
right, by a majority vote of the stockholders of
said corporation, to increase its capital stock,
from time to time, to any amount not exceeding
One Hundred Thousand Dollars, and to issue
common stock, preferred stock, and bonds, as may
be necessary.
3. The object of said corporation shall be pecu
niary gain and profit to the stockholders thereof
4. The business to be conducted by said corpora
tion shall be that of a general mercantile busi
ness, and the purchase and sale, either or both at
retail and wholesale, of any and all kinds of mer
chandise, articles and commodities, and to buy and
seR, either or both, at wholesale and retail, anv
and all kinds of personal property, and buy, hold
and sell real estate.
5. Your petitioners desire that said corporation
shall have the right to contract and be contracted
with; to sue and be sued; to have and use a corpo
rate seal; to make and adopt by-laws binding on
the members of said corporation, not inconsistent
with law; to buy, hold and sell any and all kind:
of md and personal property, including stocks
and bonds of other corporations; to execute such
conveyances and acquittances, and receive and
hold such evidences of debt and securities, and to
do such other acts as may be necessary to carry
on the business of said corporation. Also, to on-
umber real and personal property; lend and bor-
ow money; issue and sell bonds, and secure same
by mortgage or deed of trust on any or all of its
assets, to secure any loan it may obtain, by mort
gage, deed, transfer or pledge of any,of its assets,
both real and personal; and to have all the pow
ers, rights and privileges enumerated in Section
1852 of the Code of Georgia of 1895, as well as all
other powers and privileges incident to corpora
tions of like character.
6. The principal office and place of business of
said corporation shall be in the city of Newnan, in
said county of Coweta and State of Georgia, but
petitioners desire the privilege of establishing
other offices and places of business at such place
or places in said State or elsewhere as they may
desire.
7. The affairs of said corporation shall be vested
in and managed by a board of directors, and duly
appointed or elected officers.
8* At the corporate meetings of shareholders
each shareholder shall be entitled to as many votes
as he owns shares in said corporation appearing in
his name on the books of said corporation.
9. Petitioners desire that subscriptions to the
capital stock -vf said corporation may be paid in
money, property, or services, as may be deter
mined by the directors or stockholders of said cor
poration.
IQ’ Wherefore, your petitioners pray that af
ter this petition has been filed and published in.
accordance with law, that the Court grant the
proper and necessary order or judgment of incor
poration, and that this petition, together with said
order or judgment, be recorded as required by
law, and that petitioners be incorporated as
prayed for. W. C. WRIGHT.
Petitioners’ Attorney.
Filed in office this J^eb. 25, 1909.
L. Turner, Clerk S. C. C. C;
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
I, L. Turner, Clerk of the Superior Court of said
county, do hereby certify that the foregoing ap
plication for charter in the matter of Boone-
Stripling Company is a true and correct copy of
the original application or petition, as the same
appears of file in my office.
VVitness my hand and the seal of said Court this
Feb. 25, 1909. L. Turner,
Clerk S. C. C. C.
Petition to Amend Charter.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
To the Superior Court of said county : The peti
tion of Huffaker Drug Company respectfully
shows—
L That your petitioner is a corporation, hereto
fore incorporated and chartered by said Court, and
by the order or judgment of said Court of data
Feb. 12, 1907.
2. Your petitioner shows that it desires an
amendment to its said charter changing its corpo
rate name from Huffaker Drug Company to
JOHN R. CATES DRUG COMPANY.
Wherefore, petitioner prays that after tha
publication of this petition, as required by law*
that the necessary order or judgment be granted
amending said charter as prayed for.
HUFFAKER DRUG COMPANY.
_ T By its President: John R. Cate.
W. C. Wright, Petitioner’s Attorney.
Filed in office this 24th day of February, 1909.
L. TURNER, Clerk S. C. C. C.
GEORGIA—Coweta County :
I. Lynch Turner, Clerk of the Superior Court of
said county, do hereby certify that the foregoi?:
application for amendment of charter of Huffaker
Drug Company is a true and correct copy of sai<
application or petition, as the same appears of file
in my office.
Witness my hand and the seal of said Court thk-
Feb. 24. 1909. L. Turner.
Clerk S. C. C. C.
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