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Georgia, Fulton County.
To the Superior Court of said County:
The petition of Richard Cheatham and
Edgar Cheatham, of said County, and G.
L. Winn, of Coweta County in said State,
respectfully shows
1. That they desire for themselves, their
associates and successors, to be incorpo
rated under the name and style of
CHEATHAM INVESTMENT COMPANY,
for a term of twenty years, with the
right of renewal at the expiration of
that period, as provided by law.
2. That object of said Company is pe
cuniary gain to its stockholders.
3. That they desire the capital stock
of said Company to be ten thousand dol
lars, divided into shares of one hundred
dollars each, with the right to increase
the amount of said capital stock, from
time to time, even up to fifty thousand
dollars, by a majority vote of the then
outstanding stock; and, a similar right
to decrease the then capital stock, from
time to time, even down to the original
amount of ten thousand dollars.
4. That they desire the right to issue
said stock either as preferred or as com
mon, or as part preferred and part
common, and upon such terms and con
ditions as the board of directors, or a
majority of the stockholders may deter
mine; and to sell said stock for money
or its equivalent taken in other property
at a fair valuation; or to exchange said
stock for services equivalent in value, or
for other shares or stock in other com
panies taken at a fair valuation. They
desire the right to commence business
when ten per cent of the capital stock
shall have been paid in.
5. That the principal business of said
Company shall be to
(a) To do a general brokerage, com
mission and agency business. To act as
sales, buying and exchange agent for
all persons, firms and corporations which
may employ them for such purposes. To
act as stock brokers, traders, dealers and
agents; and, buy, sell, negotiate, ex
change, pledge and deal in and with all
kinds of stocks, shares, bonds, securi
ties, property—both realty and personalty,
choses in action, mines and minerals,
patents and patent rights, and, products—■
agricultural and manufactured.
(b) To act as promoters and agents for
promoters of enterprises; to buy, sell,
deal in and handle all sorts of options,
leases, contracts, titles to property, obli
gations and evidences of indebtedness,
securities, commercial papers, and all
other sorts and kinds of property.
(c) To act as fiscal or other agent in
the issuance of shares of stock, deben
tures, bonds, certificates and other obli
gations; to issue, sell, hold, deal in and
k deliver any stock, and securities of any
government, State, corporation, firm or
individual. To vary its investments, to
make advances upon money held in trust,
to issue on commission, sell, or dispose
of any and all kinds and classes of in
vestments, and, to act as such agents
for such remuneration as may be agreed
upon.
(d) To make loans, advances, guaranty
of payments, sign bonds, buy, hold and
deal in real estate and other kinds of
property.
6. The principal office and place of
business of said Company shall be in
Atlanta, Georgia, but they desire the right
to establish branch offices or agencies
elsewhere in this or any other State or
Country to carry out the purposes of the
Company.
7. They desire the right to borrow
money and secure financial aid and back
ing, by mortgaging, pledging or selling
their properties; or, by issuing bonds
thereon, and adopt the methods and
plans usual and adaptable to the financial
management of an active business; and,
to enable them to carry out the plans
and ideas of the Company as the enter
prise develops and makes advisable.
8. They desire all the rights, privileges
and powers which are incident to corpo
rations of like character as well as the
ones above specifically set out.
Wherefore, petitioners pray that after
the legal requirements relating to the
granting of charters shall have been com
plied with, an order be passed incorpo
rating them under the corporate name
aforesaid, with the rights, powers and
privileges above prayed.
E. H. FRASER,
Attorney for Petitioners.
Filed in office this November 9, 1909.
ARNOLD BROYLES,
Clerk.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
COUNTY OF FULTON.
I, Arnold Broyles, Clerk of the Superior
Court of said county, do hereby certify
that the foregoing is a true and correct
copy of the application for
charter of Cheatham Investment Com
pany, as the same appears of file in this
office.
Witness my official signature and the
seal of said Court this November 9, 1909.
ARNOLD BROYLES,
Clerk Superior Court,
Fulton County, Georgia.
the translated Bible to strange tribes,
had enriched with valuable knowledge
the Royal Geographical Society, and
had honored the humble place of his
birth, the Scottish kirk, the United
Kingdom and the universal missionary
cause.
The old minister sleeps beneath the
trees in the humble place of his la
but men remember his work be
cause of what he was to that one boy
and what that one boy was to the
world.
“Only a boy!”
PATIENT ENDURANCE.
Paul shows us the demanded nature
of our faithfulness; it is patient endur
ance. We are so impatient. How of
ten do we lose our patience. The
grace of God can hold us still. Just
keep on keeping on. Error will not
always shackle men. Listen to the
spirit of this little poem: it will bless
you.
“Though the day looks kinder gloomy,
An’ your chances kinder slim!
If the situation’s puzzlin’,
An’ the prospects awful grim,
An’ perplexities keep pressin’,
Till all hope is nearly gone,
Jus’ bristle up an’ grit your teeth,
An’ keep on keepin’ on.
“Fumin’ never wins a fight,
An’ frettin’ never pays;
There ain’t no good of broodin’ in
These pessimistic ways—
Smile just kinder cheerfully
When hope is nearly gone,
An’ bristle up an’ grit your teeth,
An’ keep on keepin’ on.
“There ain’t no use in growlin’
An’ grumblin’ all the time
When music’s ringin’ everywhere
An’ everything’s a rhyme—
Jus’ keep on smilin’ cherfully
If hope is nearly gone,
An’ bristle up an’ grit your teeth, -
An’ keep on keepin’ on.”
Incarnate that sentiment in your
heart and with one long, steady pull
in the service of God, you will Win af
ter a while. I read a story of a man
who was building a great temple. He
used an old blind horse to the machine
which pulled the stone from the quar
ry and the same old horse to the wag
on which carried the stone up to the
building. When the temple was com
pleted in all its glory the man took
the old horse from the stall one day
and led him up to the structure, took
the scales from his eyes and said, “See
what you have done?” The old horse
said, “I never knew I did that.” It
was the long pull of faithfulness to his
master that completed the temple.—
The Gospel Foorum.
I?
DOES IT PAY?
For many years Matt Daly had been
a criminal, anarchist, drunkard and
yeg. For sixteen years he had not
spent six months in any one place
without spending part of that time in
jail. Spent twelve years of his life in
the penitentiary. His whole life now
is given over to God to help other men
to a better life. How did this great
change come about? On the fifth day
of April, 1908, he came to the Bethel
“bread line” to get a free breakfast,
but the only way he could get that
breakfast was to stay after he had eat
en and listen to the preaching of the
Gospel. The Gospel he heard led him
to accept Christ as his personal Sav
ior, and consequently he became a
new man. Instantly, under the influ
ence of God’s Spirit, “old things passed
away and all things became new.” II
Cor. 5:17. Does rescue mission work
pay ? —Exchange.
To Prevent Blood Poisoning.
Every parent is a doctor and must treat
the simpler maladies of his household as
well as his domestic animals. Simple in
juries sometimes lead to blood-poisoning.
For festering cuts, bruises, old sores,
chronic ulcers, boils, carbuncles, bone
felons, burns, poison oak and many other
ailments, parents will find “Gray’s Oint
ment” an ever-helpful and efficient friend.
In thousands of homes all over America
and in foreign countries Gray’s Oint
ment has been the valued friend and
helper of parents for more than half a
century. Get a 25c box at your druggist’s,
or if you have never used it, send your
name for a small free trial box, which
we will gladly send postpaid to demon
strate its value. Address, Dr. W. F.
Gray & Co., 805 Gray Building, Nashville,
Tenn.
Dr. Chas. R. Phelps, of Roberts, Mass.,
writes: “Gray’s Ointment is my main de
pendence in cases of carbuncles, and un
healthy granulations, ulcers and blood
poisoning.”
The Golden Age for November 18, 1909.
> s impossible to be well, simply im-
FJ fl iLJ' »/ / possible, if the bowels are constipated,
€ Waste products, poisonous substances,
must be removed from the body at least
Ask your doctor about Ayer’s Pills, gently once each day, or there will be trouble.
laxative, all vegetable. Heknoivsivhythey The dose of Ayer’s Pills is small, only
act directly on the liver. Mass’ one pill at bedtime. All vegetable.
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MA RY I? A QI? ™ E WORLD’S BEST
BABY MEDICINE (Liquid)
Cures all Bowel Complaints—Makes Teething Easy
25c and 50c a Bottle, all Druggists, or BABY EASE COMPANY, Atlanta
$75 to $l5O PER MONTH
Easily made selling our magnificent New County Colored Map of the
I United States and World. Absolutely up-to-date. Beautiful as a picture.
Easy to sell. Big profits to agents. Low price and exclusive territory.
A Bonanza for hustlers. THE HUDGINS COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga.
SIT FROST PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS
/f ■ GUARANTEED TO SATISFY PURCHASERS, JU
/S»n FROM THE ORIGINAL CABBAGE PLANT GROWERS. *j|
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\\ The Earliest , WAKEFIELD. The Earliest A little later FLAT DUTCH. If
\\ Cabbage Grown. •‘"7" 2d Earliest. Flat Head Variety. than Succession. Largest and Latest Cabbage. J 1
"" '' TRADE MARK COPYRIGHTED _ ’
| Paid in Capital Stock $30,000.00. Established 41 Years.
We grew the first FROST PROOF PLANTS in 1868. Now have over twenty thousand
satisfied customers. We have grown and sold more cabbage plants than all other persons in the
Southern states combined. WHY? Because our plants must please or we send your money back.
Order now; it is time to set these plants in your section to get extra early cabbage, and they are
the ones that sell for the most money.
We sow three tons of Cabbage Seed per season Plants, Fruit trees and ornamentals. I I
Write for free catalog of frost-proof plants of the best varieties, containing valuable informa
tion aboutfruit and vegetable growing. Prices on Cabbage Plants:—ln lots of 500 at 81. CO; 1.000 to
5.000 $1.50 per thousand; 5.000 to 9,000 81.25 per thousand; 10,000 and over SI.OO per thousand, f. o. b.
Youngs Island. Our special express rate on plants is very low.
Wm. C. Geraty Co., Bex 57 ' Youngs Island, S. C.
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A NEW FERTILIZER
CHEAPEST ANO BEST —A GREAT DISCOVERY
By a new process of burning oyster shells and using a burner that will
supply potash, the cheapest high grade fertilizer is made. It reclaims worn
out lands if applied broadcast two months ahead of ammoniated goods.
Will make the same crops as high grade fertilizer. Will sweeten up sour
lands. Price $7.00 per ton, f. o. b. factory, Young’s Island, S. C. Charleston
freight rates on fertilizer apply. Write for circulars.
E. L. COMMINS, Sales Agent :: Meggetts, S. C.
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I Wil I raismf
■ ft ILBJI B W W DAYS TRIAL |
I THIS FAMOUS SPOTLESS WASHING MACHINE
Reduces “wash-day” to “wash-hour.” Write us a postal card to-day
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m It comes right to your depot without any trouble on your part. Try
w \\ it for 30 days, give it the ftardrsi kind of a test and then if not satisfactory
a/ [| \\ send it back to us by freight and we will pay
||! 11l I \ the charges both ways.
K STOP SERIOUSLY TO THINK
If you could imagine a fairer oiler than
v\ this. Could we make it if the Spotless
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_ if SPOTLESS CO., Inc.,
165Shockoe Square,
@ RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
THE SOUTH’S MAIL-ORDER HOUSE.
15