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Petition for Incorporation.
GEORGIA— Mitchell County.
To the Superior Court of said County:
The petition of A. T. Jones, W. A.
West, H. T. Barnes, and H. H. Jones,
all of said eonnty, respectfully shows:
1. That they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors, and assigns
to become incorporated under the name
and style of “SALE CITY GINNING
COMPANY.”
2. The term for which petitioners
ask to become incorporated is twenty
years, with the privilege of renewal at
the end of that time.
3. The capital stock of said corpora¬
tion is to be Four Thousand Dollars
(4,000.00), divided into shares of Twen¬
ty-five Dollars each. Petitionser, how¬
ever, ask the privelege of increasing said
capital stock, from time to time, to not
exceeding, in the aggregate. Twenty
five Thousand Dollars.
4. Ten per cent, of said capital stock
of Four Thousand Dollars has already
been paid in.
5. The object of the proposed oarjxw
ation is pecuniary profit and gain to its
stockholders. Petitioners propose to ac¬
quire, erect, own, stud operate ootton
ginneries, for the ginnery of long mid
short staple cotton, aud grist mills, saw
mills, and other nulls and machinery
that can be profitably operated in con¬
nection with said imtckiBcry specifically
mentioned. Petitioners propose also to
buy and sell and otherwise deal in cot¬
ton, cotton seed, oorn .and their products, of
and to carry on the business ware¬
housemen, and to engage in other busi¬
ness of a similar nature to those men¬
tioned or that may be carried on profitably
in connection with those mentioned, and
to act as general and special agents for
other persons and companies engaging
in any of said business, and to exercise
the usuid powers and to do all usual,
necessary, and proper acts which pertain
to, or may be connected with, the busi¬
ness mentioned.
6. The principal office and place of
business of the proposed corporation will
be in the Town of Sale City, in said
county. to be made
Wherefore petitioners pray
a body corporate, under the name and
style aforesaid, entitled to the rights,
privileges, and immunities, mid subject
tolthe liabilities, fixed by law.
This June 4. 1904.
Sam S. Bennet,
Attorney for Petitions.
GEORGIA— Mitchell County.
Office of the Clerk of Superior Court.
I, S. E. Cox, do certify that the fore¬
going is a correct copy of the petition
for incorporation of the Sale City Gin¬
ning Company now on file in my office.
Witness my official signature and seal,
tins June 4, 1904. S. E. Cox,
Clerk Sujierior Court.
PETITION TO SELL LAND.
GEORGIA—Mitchell County.
To the Hon. W. N. Spence, Judge of
the Superior Court of said county:
The petition of C, R. Nesmith shows:
1st, That he is guardian of Erma
Ulma Nesmith, having been heretofore
duly appointed as such guardian in said
county. sell for
2nd. That lie desires to rein¬
vestment at private sale the following
property, the same being a part of the
estate of the said ward, to-wit: That
house and two town lots in the town of
Pelham, said state and county, lying on
the south side of Barrow Avenue in said
town and known as lots No. Three
(8) and No. Four (4), Block No. 16, ac¬
cording to survey of Thrupp and Avenue Thrupp,
said lots facing on Barrow 200
feet, more or less, and extending back
south 200 feet, more or less.
3rd. Said land pays very little profit
and is a source of expense In the form of
taxes, etc.
4th. Petitioner desires to invest the
proceeds of said sale in certain other
lands in the town of Pelham, Ga., which
will yield a greater annual jirofit and be
a better and more profitable source of
income.
'5th. Petitioner shows that notice of
intention to make this application for lias
been published once a week four
weeks, as required by law.
C. R. Nesmith.
Sworn to and subscribed before me,
this 11th day of May 1904.
C. M. Bawls, Notary' Public.
GEORGIA—Mitchell County.
After four weeks notice, pursuant to
section 2546 of the Civil Code, a petition,
of which the foregoing is a true and
correct copy, will be presented of to the
Hon. W. N. Spence, Judge the Su¬
perior Court, at his office in Camilla,
Ga., on the 4tli day of June, 1904.
C. R. Nesmith,
Guardian Erma Ulma Nesmith.
Notice of Local Legislation.
GEORGIA— Mitchell County.
Notice is hereby given of an intention
to apply at the next session of the Gen¬
eral Assembly of the State of Georgia
for the passage of a local or special bill,
the title of which is as follows:—“An
Act to Prohibit the Sale of Spirituous,
Vinous and Malt Liquors and Intoxi¬
cating Bitters and Ciders in the County
of Mitchell, except as in tills Act pro¬
vided: to regulate, amt central the sale
thereof tluough the medium of dispen¬
saries, one to be located in the town
of Camilla, also one in each of the sev¬
eral incorporated towois in said county',
to establish and perpetuate a board of
commissioners for the management of
Kuch dispensaries, and to prescribe their
powers and duties, and for other pur¬
poses.” This Gth day Jline,
of 1904.
Notice to Contractors.
County.
By resolution it was ordered that ad¬
for bids to build a new jail
published as follows:
Sealed proposals will be received by
Commissioners of roads and revenue
Mitchell county, at the office of the
in the court, house at. Camilla,
up to and including the eleventh
of July, 1904.
First. For the fumisliing of all labor
material with cell work and,
Second. For the furnishing of all la¬
and material without cell work, ex¬
repairing and replacing of old cells:
a new county jail on a lot in the
of Camilla, County of Mitchell,
of Georgia, to be selected by' said
of county' commissioners in ac¬
with plans and specifications
be on file after May 19th, 1904, in the
of the Ordinary at Camilla, Ga.
The building to be two stories high,
45x60 feet in size, constructed of
stone, terra-cotta and steel.
The first floor will contain rooms for
office and cell rooms. The second
floor will contain rooms for jailer and
rooms.
Payments to be made as follows; 20
per cent, when the second floor is reach
ed, 20 per cent, when the walls of the
building are completed, 20 per cent,
when the roof is completed;
the building is let, without ceil work. If
the building is let with cell work, tlie
above payments will be changed to 15
per cent, with 20 per cent, when
work is on the ground. The
to be paid when the building is
and accepted by said Board or their au¬
thorized agent.
Each bid must be accompanied by' a
certified check for ten per cent, of
bid payable to said commissioners, as
guarantee that in case the bid is
ted, lie will enter into contract at
bid, and give a good and solvent
by or through a surety bond
ant homed , to do business in the state
Georgia in an amount double his
within twenty days after the contract
awarded him, and on his failure to
ply with these terms, the said cheek
revert to and become the property
said county of Mitchell as
damages.
The right to reject any and all bids
nevertheless reserved by said Board
County Commissioners of Mitchell
ty.
T. R. Bennett, )
J. Wyatt Adams* j
W. Everett, 1 L. H.
J. A. G. B. Wood, Joiner, j [
Petition for Incorporation.
GEORGIA—Mitchell Comity.
To the Superior Court of said County:
The petition of A. R. Patrick, M. It.
Freeman and Z. J. Arthur, all of
state and county, respectfully shows:
1. That they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and assigns,
to become incorporated under the
and style of the “CAMILLA
CO.”
2. The term for which"
ask to he incorporated is twenty' years,
with the privilege of renewal at the
of that time.
3. The capital stock of the corpora¬
tion is to be Fifteen Thousand Dollars,
divided into shares of One Hundred
Dollars each. Petitioners, however, ask
the privilege of increasing said capital
Kt<xdi from time to time to an amount
not exceeding Thirty Thousand Dollars.
4. Petitioners show that Ten Thous¬
and Dollars of said capital stock lias al¬
ready been actually paid in.
5. The object of the proposed corpo¬
ration is pecuniary profit and gain to its
stockholders. Petitioners propose to
carry on a wholesale and retail mercan¬
tile business, buying and selling for cash
on credit, dry goods, clothing, boots
and shoes, notions, hats, and any' other
generally carried in a stock of
general merchandise; groceries, hay,
cotton-seed, fertilizers; wagons,
furniture, harness, saddles;
hardware, glassware, crockery, etc:
lumber, lime, brick and cement ; horses
and mules; and to buy and sell for cash
or on credit any' other article of goods
and merchandise usually carried in a
general store not specifically mentioned
herein as may be profitably handled and
sold in connection therewith; acting as
general or special agents for other per¬
sons or companies in selling or liandling
any articles or class of articles appropri¬
ate to a general mercantile business, or
conveniently connected therewith, and
to make contracts to act as such agents,
and to exercise the usual powers and to
do all usual, necessary and proper acts
wliich pertain to or may be connected
with the business of dealers in the arti¬
cles named; to buy and sell and to hold
real estate incident to and necessary to
the conduct and profitable management
said general, mercantile business above
outlined.
6. Hie principal office and place of
of the proposed corporation will
be in the town of Camilla, said county'
and state.
Wherefore petitioners pray to be made
a body corporate under the name and
style aforesaid, entitled to the rights,
privileges and immunities and subject to
the liabilities fixed by law'.
This May 27, 1904.
Ernest M. Davis,
Petitioners’ Attorney.
GEORGIA—Mitchell County.
I, S. E. Cox, Clerk of Superior Court
of said county, do hereby certify that
the above and foregoing is a true and
correct copy of petition for charter this
day' filed by A. R. Patrick, M. R, Free¬
man and Z. J. Arthur, as appears of rec¬
ord in this office. S. E. COX, C. S. C.
Notice of Local Legislation,
Notice is hereby given that an applica¬
tion will be made at the June session of
the General Assembly of Georgia, 1904,
to pass an act, entitled as follows:
“An Act to repeal and Act to amend
an Act establishing a new charter for the
town of Camilla, Georgia, approved Oct.
24, 1887, so as to add to Section 26 of said
Act, the following proviso, tow'it;—Pro¬
vided, that said Mayor and Council shall
not have power and authority to issue
any license to any persons whatsoever,
to sell ardent spirits, malt liquors, wines,
ciders, or other intoxicants, within the
corjxirate limits of said town, except up¬
on tiie written consent of two-thirds of
the Bona Fide resident freeholders of
said town owning real estate within the
corporate limits of said town. Approved
September the 2nd, 1889.
Notice of Local Legislation.
GEORGIA—Mitchell County.
Notice apply is hereby given of an intention
to at the next session of tho-Gen
eral Assembly of the State of Georgia
for the passage of a local or special bill,
the title of which is as follows: “An
Act to amend an Act, entitled: An Act
to establish the City' Court of Camilla,
in and for the County of Mitchell, to de¬
fine its jurisdiction the and ’powers;' to pro¬
vide for appointment of a judge
and other officers thereof, to define their
powers and duties, and to abolish the
present City Court of Mitchell County,
and for other purposes, approved De
cember 15, 1897, so as to provide that
the judge and solicitor of said court
shall be elected by the legally' qualified
voters of the county instead of being ap¬
pointed by the Governor, by tiie and with
the advice and consent of Senate.”
This 24th day' of May', 1904.
Horse Colic and Its Cure.
One of the most fruitful causes
of colic is the too common habit
of allowing horses to partake of
large draughts of water im¬
mediately after finishing a feed
of oats. There is no surer way
of generating an attack of colic
than this, the reason being that
when a large quantity of water is
thus imbibed it has the effect of
carrying with it out of the stom¬
ach and into the intestines some
of the freshly eaten grain. This
grain, being still in a raw and
undigested condition, its effect
when it reaches the intestines is
to give rise to irritation and in
flamation which are the immedi¬
ate cause of the colic. In deal¬
ing with cases of this kind the
most obvious course to adopt is
to take precautions to prevent
the animals fiom drinking large
quantities of water under the cir¬
cumstances justreferred to, When
an animal falls a victim to an at¬
tack of colic, the best thing to do
is to administer a dose consisting
of one ounoe of laudanum and
two ounces of sweet spirits of
nitre, along with half a pint of
whiskey in some hot water. Very
often simple cases of colic yield
to the administration of a couple
of ounces of cooking soda, diluted
with water, and given as soon is
the first symptoms of the attacks
are noticed. Should the admin¬
istration of this cooking soda fail
to give the desired relief, no time
should be lost in following it up
with laudanum and spirits of nitre
already suggested.—Home and
Farm.
___
Revolution Imminent.
A sure sign of approaching revolt and
serious trouble in your system is ner¬
vousness, sleeplessness, or stomach up¬
sets. Electric Bitters will quickly dis¬
member the troublesome causes. It
never fails to tone the stomach, regu¬
late the kidneys and bowels, stimulate
the liver, and clarify the blood. Run
down systems benefit particularly and
all the usual attending aches vanish un¬
der its searcliing and thorough effec¬
tiveness. Electric Bitters is only 50c
and that is returned if it don’t give per¬
fect satisfaction. Guaranteed by all
.druggists.
flY STAND
Is at the Depot .
am here to furnish to the Public
Brick, Rough and Dressed Lumber
At prices that are Fair.
See me and save money. I carry a nice, new line of
GROCERIES.
My motto shall be:
“Fair Dealing and Prompt Service/'
Command me and your goods shall be delivered
at your door.
Phone 42. J. F. Clark.
niG fcSTvftMI
'
m Ttt£ world: i
W
BRONLHOOA
> When you get run-over by an “Auto” apply
DR. TICHENOR’S ANTISEPTIC
Then sit down and watch the wounds heal
Does it like magic—No pain, no suppuration
Good also for COUG, CRAMPS and INDIGESTION
lOc 50c and $1.00 a bottle
It you catch cold from the breezes, use
U l, BRON-CHO-DA Cures C0UGH3 25c -colds bottle and S0RE throat
—-- a
SHERROUSE MEDICINE CO., Mfrs. and Props., New Orleans, La.
HUNTER, PEARCE & BATTEY,
§§ Cotton Factors. Over 30 years experience, g§
Expert Handlers of — -
Sea Island
As well as "
Upland Cotton.
Liberal cash Advances against consignments.
Money loaned to_cotton shippers on Approved se¬
curity.
Large dealers in
Sea Island and Upland Bagging,
Sugar Cloth, Twine and Ties.
WRITE FOR TERMS,
126 East Bay St. Savannah, Ga.
Klint River & Nortli-eastern Ry. Co.
Effective February -Itli 100-5, 10i30 a. m
No. 3 No 1 Daily Miles Miles No 2 Daily No i
A. M. STATIONS P M
10 30 0 Lv Pelham Ar 25 4 10
10 40* 1 ACL Junction 24 4 00
11 05 6 Cotton 18 3 18
11 10 2 Riley 15 3 13
11 13 1 Hinson 13 3 10
11 23 n Florida 11 3 00
1135 2| Akridge 9 2 50
1150 2 Sale City 6 2 35
12 00 1 Jonesboro 1 2 25
12 10 2 Tuton Junction 0 2 15
12 20 3 Port Arthur 3 2 10
12 30 3 Ar Tichnor Lv 0 2 00
Connections: No. 1 Pelham Ga., Atlantic Coast Line
No, 2 Tichnor GaGeorgia.Northern Ry.
J. W. Byrd, Geh. Man. D. M. Rogers, Gen. Sn P t