Newspaper Page Text
* WANTS OF THE WORLD.
AGENTS WANTED—Maleand Female.
. * High Class Hosiery Concern requires few more
intelligent and ambitious representatives to canvass
fine line of hosiery to better classes; sold only through
our agents (no stores); liberal commissions; makes
permanent, profitable business; no free samples; ex
perienced agents, men preferred.
KROSS-KNIT MANUFACTURING COMPANY,
_ 176 E. 127 St., Dept. JA, New York, N. Y.
Mon Wanted —To prepare for Railway Mail, Customs and
Postoffice examinations. Preparation free. Write for
Schedule showing Spring examination places.
Franklin Institute, Dept. P —7l, Rochester, N. Y.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Civil Service Employees are paid well for easy work;
examinations of all kinds soon ; expert advice, sample
questions and Booklet 866 describing positions and tell
ing easiest and quickest way to secure them free.
Write now. Wasiiington Civil Service S chool ,
Wash in gton,D._C-
Farmers' Names Wanted— Send us the names and ad
dresses of six farmers who read papers and 10 cents, and
we will mail you 20 pretty flower post cards, no two
alike, and our good farm and home paper for four mos.
write Southern Agriculturist, Dept. RP, Nashville,Tent'
v • —■
ing, seeking, sorrowing and He open
ed His arms wide and said, “Come
unto me, and I will give you rest”;
rest from the fears of an angry God;
giving a revelation through Himself
of God, the tender, loving Father.
GEORGIA—FuIton County:
To the Superior Court of said County:
The petition of F. M. Loveless, D. W.
Morrah and W. C. Wells shows:
1. That they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and assigns
to be incorporated under the name and
style of GEORGIA REALTY AND IN
VESTMENT COMPANY, for a period of
twenty years, with the privilege of re
newal at the end of that time.
2. The principal office of said corpora
tion and its place of doing business shall
be in said State and County.
The capital stock of said corpora
shall be $7,500.00, all of which has
Bpa subscribed for, and 20 per cent, of
been already paid in. Said
divided into seventy-live
■L>ar value O' SIOO.OO each.
\l .jJjPlre, huw. .*r, the privilege
said capital stock to any
■ exceeding $150,000.00.
Select of said corporation is
and gain to its raem-
HPro that end, petitioners desire
corporation shall have the
■t to buy, hold, sell, rent, lease, mort-
Be and otherwise acquire or dispose
estate in this and other counties
H f this State, and also in other States;
Bo build, construct, repair, or remove
■houses, dwellings, and other structures
■on any lands owned or lawfully con
trolled by said corporation; to buy, sell,
■ transfer, assign and hypothecate real
■ tions, and real estate securities of every
Wr kind; to issue bonds, execute its own
r notes, bills and other evidences of in
debtedness for the purpose of raising
money or securing existing indebted
ness; to act as agent for others in rent
ing, managing, selling or exchanging
real estate; and to do all other things
necessary, proper or convenient to ef
fectuate the above powers.
5. Petitioners further desire said Com
pany to be vested with all rights, pow
ers, privileges and immunities conferred
by law upon corporations of similar
estate purchase money notes, tax
character in this State, and especially
those of having succession for twenty
years, of having and using a common
seal, of contracting and being contracted
with, of suing and being sued, pleading
and being impleaded, and of making by
laws for the government of its affairs
not in conflict with the Constitution and
laws of the State of Georgia, nor of the
United States.
HINES & JORDAN,
Attorneys for Petitioners.
Filed in office, February 9, 1910.
ARNOLD BROYLES,
Clerk.
STATE OF GEORGIA —County of Ful
ton:
I, Arnold Broyles, Clerk of the Supe
rior Court of said County, do hereby cer
tify that the foregoing is a true and
correct copy of the application for char
ter of Georgia Realty & Investment
Company as the same appears of file
in this office.
Witness my official signature and the
seal of said Court this 9th day of Feb
ruary, 1910.
ARNOLD BROYLES,
Clerk Superior Court Fulton County,
Georgia.
First Aid to the Injured.
Hundreds of deaths occur every month
from simple injuries which are at first
considered trivial; a pin scratch becomes
infected and blood poisoning or erysip-
follows. Festering wounds, cuts,
bruises, old sores, chronic ulcers, car
buncles, boils, poison oak, sprains, etc.,
should be promptly treated with “Gray’s
Ointment.” It is the best insurance
against blood poisoning and erysipelas.
Every injury, no matter how simple,
should be treated promptly, don’t wait
until it is too late. Get a 25c box of
“Gray’s Ointment” for your medicine
shelf. If you do not know its value
write for small trial box which we will
gladly send free, postpaid. Address, Dr.
W. F. Gray & Co., 805 Gray Bldg., Nash
ville, Tenn.
Mrs. E. E. Jackson, of Mt. Jackson, Va.,
writes: “Please send me one box of Gray’s
invaluable Ointment. I have used it in
my family for 15 years, and have not
found any ointment equal to it.”
10 EASTER POST CARDS 10c
Send 10c for 10 high grade Easter Post Cards. We send
quality cards notquantity. 28 cards for 2 5 cents. Write
today.* Kansas Post Card Co,, Dept. 453 Topeka, Kans.
THE LADY FROM ALABAMA.
(Continued from Page 3.)
whistle of the suburban car changed
the tide of her thoughts.
“Ships!” she mused, thinking of the
human souls it bore, “ships that pass
in the night!”
“Go ahead, Elbert,” her father was
saying, as her thoughts flashed back
to the room. He turned to his read
ing, and Elbert bowed himself out.
Miss Churchill walked away from her
pose by the conservatory door, behind
her father’s wicker chair, and glanced
carelessly at the bronze and gold
mantel clock. It struck the half-hour
faithfully.
“Seven thirty,” observed Von
Bulow, reaching for “The Fruit of the
Tree,” with a well-bred yawn.
“Cigar time, isn’t it .father?” asked
Rose.
He gave her a beatific smile and
laid the evening paper in a shaky
pyramid by his chair.
“What have you in your supply
closet, pet?” he asked, tentatively.
She named his favorite brands.
“There is a box of ‘Aristocrates’ un
der the table, governor,” Von Bulow
volunteered. “Will they do?”
Mr. Churchill nodded. He selected
a cigar from the box that Von Bulow
held out, as old Elbert returned with
the step-ladder.
“Mind the chandelier, Elbert,”
warned Von Bulow. “Don’t smash
into the windows with that battering
ram.”
Old Elbert straightened himself a
little indignantly. Mr. Churchill
smiled at Rose as she sank down In
a much-worn arm chair near him.
“Have a cigar, Von Bulow.”
“Thank you, father.” Von Bulow
watched Elbert, warily, as he un
strung the step-ladder and drew the
legs apart to make the desired
height. The old servant tested his
weight on the first step, and, with the
curtain tucked under one arm,
mounted.
“Be sure —” began Von Bulow, but
Rose stopped him with a decisive ges
ture.
“Do give Elbert credit for having a
little sense, Von.”
Von Bulow retired to “The Fruit of
the Tree.”
Old Elbert adjusted the curtain
nicely and peered into the outer
darkness as he descended the ladder.
“Miss Junia gitten’ off de cyars,” he
announced dramatically, “wid one,
two, four of dem childen from de Or
phan ’Sylum, sho as I am er libben.
Humph! she act like dis residence
ain’t nuffin but er hotel fer pore white
folks. Marse Christopher,” he added,
with the familiarity of an old servant,
“Ise s’prised, suh, dat you ain’t seen
proper to put er stop to sich goings
on fore now.”
“Why should I, Elbert?” Mr.
Churchill answered indulgently, with
a slow, mysterious smile; “they are
court ambassadors in disguise, of the
grandest kingdom ever founded.”
“Pull her down, Elbert,” coached
Von Bulow, as he turned over a leaf.
And Elbert bobbed his gray head
and drew down the heavy green
shade, shutting out the street-world
for the night. But he muttered as he
left the room:
“Court ambassadors!”
*
THIS WILL INTEREST MANY.
F. W. Parkhurst, the Boston pub
lisher, says that if any one afflicted
with rheumatism in any form, neu
ralgia or kidney trouble, will send
their address to him at 704-35 Carney
Bldg., Boston, Mass., he will direct
them to a perfect cure. He has noth
ing to sell or give, only tells you how
he was cured after years of search
for relief. Hundreds have tested it
with success.
The Golden Age for February £4, ISI6.
it A cough, just a little cough. It may not!
S *7l f All/y/i amount to much. Or, it may amount to I
V' ///c vy ( )(// g everything! Some keep coughing until the I
J lung tissues are seriously injured. Others I
Ask your doctor about Ayer's Cherry Pec - stop their cough with Ayer’s Cherry Pec-1
toral. If he says, “Take it,” then take it. toral. Sold for seventy years. How I
If he says, “No,” then don’t, long have you known it? |
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN
Advanced students in our Model Office Department earn from SI.OO to $2.00
a day while going on with their course; no other business college offers this
opportunity. Positions guaranteed under very reasonable conditions. Special
proposition to first reply from each town; mention the name of this paper.
Write today for big free illustrated catalog. We also teach by mail.
Draughon’s Practical Business College
ATLANTA, GA.
j GOLD! GOLD!
+ Every one wants the largest returns for their money. Many have - ►
4* *"■
£ no great amount of money to invest, and hence cannot by big farms or - >
T large business blocks in cities, nor railroad bonds or bank stocks. **
| The Largest Profits
X - ►
+ is made from investment In good mining property, and gold property - ►
is most profitable of all, when one can get something good and reliable. * ►
+ $25 will buy 100 shares of Stock in the Gold Bullion Mines Company ’ *
lof Arizona, a rich proven property. 1,00 shares can be bought for
$250. -
- ►
This stock will be worth 50 cents a share —just double its present ’ ►
price—on and after April Ist, and cannot be bought for less. It was
15 cents until November loth, when it was increased to 25 cents, so that
X those who bought prior to that date have already doubled their - ►
4 • " -
4 money and it will be worth more than three times as much on April Ist «►
+ This is valuable property and will be worth several times its present
price by the end of the year.
1 Send application with checks or write for information to W
X
i
X E. B. MOORE, Secretary and Treasurer
X 623 Lesfntr Bldg. Los Angeles, Cal.
♦ Mention this paper. **
4 -►
4 + 444 444444.4444 4444444444444444444444444444-4. *
IV V ; DERIVED FROM XI
PINE
I Astyptodyne I {{C^^
||f| Merits first place on the medicine shelf of 1
111 relieves sore throat, tonsillitis and coughs. I, i
As a Spray styptodyne is not a com* fl
■ For colds, laryngitis, and coughs. I : V;I oil.TpZptly
¥ 1 V tfe P checks inflammation, suppu* K
HH . * , . ~ B fl ration and relieves pain. It |
For cuts, burns, bruises, ulcers, and all | will be found invaluable for ft
S inflammations. jev y disease of the skin, 1
I® Ac? 5» r\ 1 ,r/a [1 jt§t H irritation or inflammation of I
111 A.S a, 3aive I-V.‘ ithc nose. threat or lungs. I
f§g§ l’or croup, bronchitis, and pneumonia. fl wound, burn or complaintof I
Act Snan B:|||l fl any nature whatever, whera K
fg OUOJI R,. |p| fl prompt healinn is desired OX I
1 For the complexion and hai Mj pain is to be relieved. ’p
The Astvptodyne preparations are on sale 1 B I
§ at all drug stores. If g^.y^YKE
The Burgess Commission Company I j
Exclusive Distributors for S. C. aud Ua. Gj§B
15