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Hl® PETITION FOR CHARTER.
IMwORGIA. Chattooga County.—
Bp The Superior Court of said
Khe petition of John M. Berry of
Spai Georgia, and John;
. B. Rainey, of
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■Fthe FARMERS’ ,
■ ■ I " : ’ til*’ ['"’l' . WWW
WThat the prim-ipa: 'Wt
; company is to 1»> 1H
||F of Lyeriy. Slate and coun-1
(ffesaid, but petitioners desire
■right to establish branch of
within this State or elsewhere,
the holders of a major
||||fld the stock rnay so determine.
Hird. The object of said cor-,
|||||Ktion is pecuniary gain to it-
H and its shareholders.
Kjurth. The business to be car
■taftknU corporation is that
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‘Sr? '* Hpnooinu and ♦ ••rtilizer
WEiio iiau.i’inu' of
fl W, o C.l- <■ a: 1
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right to act as
HHrepresentatix es of other
of corporations of this!
states in anything pertain-
any of said business.
The capital stock of said
Bffion shall be five thousand
IH£obo.Ott) dollars with the privil
increasing the same to twen
** * $211,000.00) dollars by
vote of the stockhold
flers7 said stock shall be divided in
flto shares of one hundred ($100.00)
" dollars each. Ten of the
amount of capital tflhe employed
by them has paid in.
Sixth. desire the
right to sue and be sued, to plead
b and be impleaded, to have and use
fla common seal, to make all neces- ,
ky by-laws and regulations, and
other things that may be nec
■Hkry for the successful carrying
>'”.H of said business, including the
Krht to buy, own and sell real es
flrate and personal property suit
| able to the use of the corporation,
I and to execute notes and bonds as
r evidence of the indebtedness incur
red, or which may be incurred, in
Kiuct of the affairs of the
ion, and to secure the same
gage, security-deed, or other
lien, under existing laws,
h: They desire for said
ation the power and au
to apply for and accept a
nts to its charter of either
substance by a vote of a
of its stock outstanding
nlan nab f r\T* Oil-
rat the time. They also ask for au
thority for said incorporation to
wind up its affairs, liquidate and
discontinue business at any time
it may determine to do so by a
k vote of two-thirds of its stock
■standing at the time.
p Eighth: They desire for said in
corporation the right of renewal
when and as provided by the laws
that it have all
lights,
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Br ' ' ' : ' '*"■ '-’inir
with the pow
ders. privileges and immunities here
in set forth, and as are now, or
flpay hereafter be, allowed a corpo
fltion of similar character under 1
fl- laws of Georgia.
|B JNO. D. TAYLOR, J
A Attorney for Petitioners. (
«ORGlA—Chattooga County.
John N. Rush, Clerk of the Su-
Court of said County, do
[hereby certify that the above and 1
foregoing is a true and correct co
py of the application for charter of c
It W-. A ...... R
the FARMERS’ GIN COMPANY as
the same appears on file in this
office.
Witness my official signature
and the seal of said Court, this the j
third day of February, Nineteen I
Hundred Thirteen.
J. N. RUSH,
Clerk of the Superior Court of]
Chattooga County, Georgia.
Elected
Succeed when everything
la nervous prostration arjA
weaknesses they are th®»-preme I
remedy, as thousands I
MH O- k. ~:-i ... ■
MEREDITH AS A CHILD.
When Only Two Year* of Age He Had
an Air of Superiority.
As is generally the case with an only
child. entirely in the so
ciety George Meredith
bad some
i' bis
1 re<‘r y p.l a’>d
S' ! SUS *"» ’ ' '
X ■ ‘.ark and
F '••• spoil.-I by his
u!.r»e love
1 _ fl before t.e read..-! his
There is still living
well remembers
MVnti at the age of two
was about 1830-1. and
relates of his visit:
up to the large front draw
BFin, where 1 found the boy and a
who must have been his mother.
The boy did not seem to care much
: about playing with me. and I was
rather shy. He brought me his toys
and picture books to see, and I was
; mightily pleased, I remember, with a
• horse and cart (not like the many
cheap ones that I had seem, a beauti
! ful. lifelike white horse, and the cart
of superior make, and as George drew
it along it made music as the wheels
went What I remember of the
child's^ Is somewhat hazy
a boy and blue ribbons
• h<- was .er
.1 on
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fIF Review.
watches.
Wonderful Feats That Ara Performed
by Modern Machinery.
The rapidity with which watches are
nowadays manufactured has been
made possible by the Ingenious ma
■ cbinery designed within recent years
for the making of ail parts of a watch.
The speed various
111 Ie
marvelous. brass
steel are cut into ribbons
and punched out into wheels at the
rate of 10,000 a day from each punch
ing machine Workers drill the thirty
one holes In the roof of the watch as
fast as they can count.
Brass wire glides into a machine
that measures off the length of a part,
turns it, puts a screw thread on each
end and actually screws It In at the
rate of 2,000 a day.
The screws are of such tiny size
that fifty gross of them may be put
,in a woman’s thimble, while of others
there are a thousand gross to the
pound.
Balances are cut from the solid steel,
ground down, worked up and drilled
with their twenty-five screw boles
apiece at the rate of 100 wheels a day
from each machine.
Wheels have their teeth cut. a couple
of dozen at a time, some with from
sixty to eighty teeth, at the rate of
1,200 wheels a day from each machine.
—Harper’s Weekly.
The Phyeietype.
This Is an English Invention for mak
ing pictures by impression of leaves,
ferns, lace, feathers and various other
objects. It defends upon the chemical
action of a fine powder. The object of
which a representation be made
Is placed upon pressed
the means
U . ■: t ?
visible upon
sprinkling per
the |>
graphic stone, zinc or aluminium, thus
producing records from which any
number of copies can be taken.—Chi
cago Heeord-Herald.
Economy and Consolation.
Her discovery In its way was not
less than eixxthsl.
•‘lt is so easy to save when yon
know bow!" she exclaimed. “Oh. so
easy! Do I wish to save $25? Very
well. I go down town and And some
thing I would like that costa $25. and
then I don’t buy it Nothing could be
simpler."
She did not deny, however, that her
method involved a sacrifice.
“But if the sacrifice is too painful."
she went on to explain. “1 go and find
something my busband wonld like that
costs $35 and don't buy that!”—Puck.
Knew Her Hubby.
Mother—ls your letter to your bus
band ready to mail?
Married Daughter—lt’s all done ex
cepting the postscript telling him to
RPOfi HIP mnro mnnnv
send me some, more money. I’m look
ing for
ous?"
“Indeed. I do.”
“You must have kissed the wrong
girl."
“I know 1 did.”
“Her brother handed you a wallop?" I
“No; she married me" Houston I
Poet
Sign of Popular Affection.
you indignant when people
.. by y our
,4
CATCHING
I Cunning Trap That Made the Savage
Brute Helpless.
Traps for wild animals are not neces
• sarily of steely The author of “The
i Journal of Nomad” de
scribes a hyena trap that is simple and
i effective:
I “Close to the station at this place I
> found a novel form of hyena trap—a
I round piece of dried ox hide as hard as
i a board, three feet or so in diameter, in
■ which a very small hole, no larger than
i an apple, had been cut. Radiating from
; this hole were cut a series of V-sbaped
i pieces. The trap was set as follows: A
i hole was dug in the ground about one
1| foot deep and six inches in diameter.
Into this bole a piece of meat was
placed. Then the ox hide plate was laid
over the place containing the meat, the
two holes being one over the other,
i The ox hide was then pegged down
i with wooden pegs in three or four
i places.
“The hyena, on finding the bait forc
ed bis heed through the small hole in
the ox hide to obtain it the cuts in the
hide giving way sufficiently for that
: purpose. The beast seized the meat but
on trying to withdraw his head had to
i use considerable force, which naturally
> drew the pegs that held the ox hide to
the ground, the result being that the
i poor brute had a collar securely fas
tened around his neck which he was
quite unable to get rid of.
“He could not run or walk, and even
bad he been able to go any distance en
cumbered by such an obstacle would
have been brought up short in the first
patch of bush or grass he encountered.
He was now at the mercy of the Indi
i vidual who had set the trap, and could
: be put out of the way quite easily."
I I
ENDED THE COMEDY.
A Telegraphic Dialogue That Closed
With the “Wires" Down.
Two telegraph ojierators were seated
in a downtown recently when an
athletic young an exceeding-
ly pretty were plac
a the
who were by side in a
position girl. As is the
custom wishing
discuss a
one tioj||d|
to the
tree
r.-: ' W -u.1.-r
her'.'
fl
Bet fl
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■
11 1 B‘. ■ , -Sv.<'Ais/j4.: J
either
Y’: t v -<”: .
«|
• 'This suck :m<! I b
him. with the divorce
band safe mover by trade
fresh little boys."
Something happened to the
about that time, and all communie®
I tion censed.—Kansas City Journal.
i 1 Star Distance.
r ’ Miles are useless in measuring as
• I tronouilcai distances. They have to
- | use the rate of light—lSl a
in covering tbe
&& ' -SjW-j
$&/• J ■
the
years must light travel"
to leach our little world from
1 ’ suns. They might even have
hundreds of years
ago. and yet we should still ‘‘see’’
them, so vast are their distances. In
the year 1877 a new star suddenly i
shone forth in the "Swan.” but many i
did not know that the star really
into existence hundreds of
light did not
earth seen by
K7 Atneri an J
fl
certain who fllfl
the
lip him
gown When lie sfll'.-X,-.’'<
into the lion-.- .
, J" t y J
3 - -
“Thera atp t
-wßb'afe* W ; Ak
■
I
x.? 4 ..^v y r
who i
above the
Malicious. |
Gladys—l refused Fred two weeks!
ago, and he has been drinking heavily ’
since. Ethel—lsn’t it about time be
stopped celebrating?
• - Answered.
sA>o! teacher- WhatMtfarm papers
father gon qf the
a- Kirs® -
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iVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY,* FEBRUARY 13, 1913.
VILLAGE LIFE IN EGYPT.
r Crude Mud Houses, the Roofs of
Which Are Garbage Dumps.
Egyptian village life is quaint and to
s i teresting, says the Wide World Mua-
- zine. The bouses are crude, one stoned
1 i structures of sun baked mud, with n|fl
; sibly a couple of tiny square holes
1 j in the wall for ventilation.
i Each home consists of a single room?
i absolutely devoid of furniture, one or
s two drinking jars and cooking utensils
» being usually the only articles to be
» seen. The roofs of these hovels are
I' thatched with cornstalks, and for some
l I unaccountable reason all the house
s bold rubbish is dumped on the roof!
. i For this purpose a ladder may fre
i quently be seen reclining against the
1 side of the house. From a distance a
» village is apt to look like an immense
. rubbish heap. These nrimltive erec
-1 tions are inhabited solely by the fella
f bin, as Egyptian peasants are called.
In some of the Arab villages the ar
-1 rangements for sleeping are even more
i unconventional. Huge cuplike stme
s i tures made of mud are built out in the
1 open, away from the houses, and into
t these the babies are frequently placed
> during the day. and often the entire
: j family sleep in them at night. The idea
> is to escape the numerous snakes and
> scorpions which abound during the
- great beat of the summer.
j. , ~
t POISON IN ITS AIP.
I Java’s Valley of Death, Where Life
Cannot Exiet.
The Valley of Death is on the island
i of Java It is the most remarkable
j natural example of an atmosphere
loaded with carbonic acid gas in ex
istence. It has never been fully ex
plored because of the danger of re
maining more than a few moments tn
its poisonous atmosphere.
1 Approached through an opening be
tween the hills, it is seen to be an oval
I shaped valley about half a mile across,
i It is about thirty-five feet deep. The l»t-
i tom is hard and sandy, without vegeta
| tion and strewn with large stones. The
■ ■ surface Is covered with the bones of
II animals, birds and human beings.
> Explorers seldom venture beyond the
» borders, though the deadly air does not
• immediately affect human beings. This
’ I ja because the carbonic- acid gas, being
than the atmosphere, settles to
|j||flbottom of the valley. Dogs and
He thrown into It fall senseless in-
and die in a few minutes. No
Hw or fissures are visible or the
valley, and It is thought
bonik’s are near the base ot
"‘r,’’ ' 'V H,rn -
. ®.'"r a Taillight, and bfl-X
Has tiyinu hw besfl: .
'.•/« 1, ||| -f ' ‘
’ j
dear motheWß
Rnain till 1
the evenings.
iTnd as the train sl " wl >^»’^ h O y f v
the station the guard
Fltx-Tomklns nearly
insinuated a_tlp—
fl A the Cnlti-d
th-
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ja&sK mi‘e
Safe - - , fl
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BL,
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divonW
keep his rn>roJr’
■^§Bl«y ,T Rhe ' uil 'g ner present
divorce?'”
a tightwad.” - Houston
Two Good Ideas.
Scptt-Ifs a good idea when angry to
count ten before you speak *_•♦*
True: also wben ••touched” to cmSM,
thousand before you lend BofllV
Transcript
Discontent Is the
IjM * IndTT.i'V
J Rm CT (X *•— ’*•” *• • •——A 1
A § LICGETTAw«/rXvERt.
H X WWTE rriHHtNKSok thmucW
a Jr Have
the in
I CT J
I
Liggett Myers Duke’s Mixture makes a jfe
great pipe smoke—and rolled into a cigarette £
nothing can beat it. t;
It is the favorite smoke of thousands of tjJ
W men who want selected, pure, Virginia and
North Carolina bright-leaf tobacco.
If you have not smoked Duke’s Mixture,
made by Liggett Myers at Durham, N. C. gj
—try it at once.
Each sack contains one and a half ounces of
X tobacco thatisequal to any scgranulatedtobacco
S| made—and with each sack you get a book of
, cigarette papers FREE and
A Coupon That u a Dandy.
These coupons are good for many
valuable presents —such as watches,
■Ta cameras, jewelry. furniture, razors,
ch * n ‘’ etc
A* a special offer, during Feb
ruary an d March only, If
gl we * en d you our illut-
r\ \ trated catalog of preaente
VI If FREE - Justsend us your name ’'j
,n d a dd reM on * postal ?
■3l \ from Mixtv.t may ba L
Wfi 1 niorladwith lags from HORSE SHOE. r j
rayvaZjynL. \ J. t.. Tinsley s natural leaf. i t
\ GRANGER TWIST, cougont
Ml from FOUR ROSES tIA tm doobla f A
\ uugon). pick plug cut. pied- » <
£4 UMWIMDr MONT cigarettes, clix 11
CIG A RET lES and oihgy itgs 90 9 *
X HMted by us
Premium D«pt
st lou »- m °_
tures
avoids
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Item-,..
an
American W
d —— —_^fl___l
i mk raft 1
» wWMBr
‘ 1913 coral
Be Managed By H. G. >■ ‘
fl( n 3 s ‘ r tr. e Atlanta Oamcefl
of Commerce.
flanta. . I'ialA
JJjflL b,, ' n K outlined so- !!..> vufls
Jf'S;'"".' conte.-,ie in •'Georgia,
of ano'iu r big annual
as that which took place
fl^ ir> f,a ’e capito! here
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’•» "■‘V- I.- aireadv
a '• afia "“ this
fll .
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-
by these UM*
fl- good that pas: jfl
- d :Ji
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t, W ' < .!#
ARr Al
not only how
to the acre, but how to farm
ness like way.
During the year just past, 69 Geor
gia boys made yields of over 100
1 bushels of com to the acre. The three I
i high prises winners lasb year were as ‘
follows: Byron Boltop of Screven,'
Lcounty, 177 59 bushels, prize fine!
KjXheron mare; C. of
county. 170.62, flize. H. G,
pWnngs in "ate College
BL G. Payne
B JH
A .
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S-t , tII I' I' 'II.M
fc-jlrX fl '
iabam.i ami i-n .
-i" -ima'l "I la!' I'
! departmeul of
all the Southern states have waicli-
■ed Mr. Worsham’s experim 1 I
with this new cotton eagerly am,
with optimistic expectancy. ?i<>v
that he has been successful in his
work, nothing but praise comes to
him.
It is generally conceded that he
has inaugurated a new era in >• >t -
*>n culture and that his accon p ,sli
fl-nts will be J
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Motion Song—
drill, 1J
School Bell