Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
¥ ‘:'; o
T
PR/ \""" :
|
e ——
' - (SR .‘:f !
| e |
: /o h .
. i]?' s
!\"\. -t '
COFFEE
e Reily-Taytor O
'NPORTERS £ ROASTENS
Siw Ominans ULSA
The Luzianne Guarantee:
If, after using the contents
of a can, youare not satisfied
in every respect, your gro
cer will refund your money.
THIZ7 ] ,3\\\ NINTE
[UZIANNE coffee
‘The Reily~Taylor Company, New Orleans
make Bic MONEY
'Your spare time is very valuable if working on our Special Agency
proposition, Many are making big money aollcldgg new and renew=
al subscriptions. We pay liberal commissions. he work is pleas
ant and you are building a permant business for yourself,
We Want Live Representatives in Jasper County.
Write today, giving reference, for complete details to Circulation Dept. Desk F
THE WAY PUBLISHING COMPANY, Chamber of Commerce Bldg., AW& GA.
PETITION FOR CHARTER.
GEORGIA,—Jasper County. :
To the Superior Court of said county:
The petition of H. B. Jordan, C. H.
Jordan and L. K. Jordan, all of said
State and County, respectfully shows:
Ist: .
That they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and as
signs, to become incorporated under
the name and style of “JORDAN
LUMBER COMPANY.”
2nd:
The term for which petitioners ask
to be incorporated is twenty years,
with the privilege of renewal at the
end of that time. :
3rd:
The capital stock of said corpora
tion is to be $15,000.00 divided into
shares of SIOO.OO each.
4th:
More than ten per cent. of sald
capital stock of $15,000.00 has already
been actually paid in; and petitioners
ask the privilege for said corporation
to accept as its fair market value
property in addition to money in pay
ment for its said capital stock, and to
issue shares at said fair market value
for such property delivered to the
proposed corporation. ;
sth:
The object of the proposed corpora
tion is pecuniary profit and gain to its
stockholders. Petitioners propose to
carry on a general retail and whole
sale lumber business, together with
all kinds of building materials; enter
ing into contracts to build and erect
houses and other structures; acquir
ing either by lease or otherwise and
selling timber and timber lands;
sawing timber into lumber and to
otherwise handle, and to do anything
usual, necessary and proper pertain
ing to or connected with the aforesaid
business and including the business of
saw-milling.
6th:
The principal office and place of
business of the proposed corporation
will be in the City of Monticello, said
| ALWAYS
FOO L'gg
PSR
ACRIM
e st t)
COOPER'S JEWELRY STORE
MONTICELLO, GEORGIA
“It Shore}y
s Good™™-
good, old Luzianne. There's cheer
in its very aroma-—spunk and go
to-it in every swillow. You'l
like Luzianne. Buy a can foday
‘and, if you don’t agree it goes
farther and tastes better than any
other coffee at the price, tell the
grocer and he will give you back
exactly what you paid for it, with
out argument. You simply can’t
go wrong on Luzianne. Ask for
profit-sharing catalog.
State and County; but petitioners ask
the privilege of establishing branch
offices anywhere in Georgia as de
termined by the corporate authorities
of said corporation.
Wherefore, petitioners pray to be
made a body corporate under the
name and style aforesaid, entftled to
the rights, privileges and immunities
and subject to the liabilities fixed by
law. :
This the 22 day of January, 1917.
GREENE F. JOHNSON,
Attorney for Petitioners.
GEORGIA,—Jasper County.
I, R. L. Davis, Clerk of the Superiot
Court of Jasper County, do hereby
certify that the above and foregoing
is a true and correct copy of the peti
tion for incorporation of the JORDAN
LUMBER COMPANY, now on file in
this office.
Witness my hand and seal this thg
22nd day of January, 1917. X
R. L. DAVIS,
Clerk Jasper Superior Court.
e el e
;CAN YOU FIGURE THIS OUT?
Four Young People Embark on the
| Sea of Matrimony and Puzzle
Their Neighbors.
Cleveland.—Read this twice:
It's a happy coincidence and a dou
ble wedding. Rose Bernsteln was
married to J. H. Schulman. At the
same time and place Hattie Schulman
became the bride of J. M. Shulman.
No, it wasn't brother and sister mar
rying each other, yet 'twas a brother
and sister wedding,
Hattie Schulman and J. H, Schul
man were related (notice the division
of “s” and “h” by “¢”) and the sec
~ond bridegroom, J. M. Shulman (it's
minus the “c”) became the brother
in-law of J. H. Schulman and the hus
band of J. H.'s sister.
Can you figure it out? Oh, well,
anyway, four young people, three of
the same name, embarked on the sea
of matrimony, with Rabbi Wolsey at
the helm,
Notify us when you have a visitor.
g Sy £k :
=gl
When Buying A Watch Buy |
A Good One.
It will give you good service, abso- =
lutely correct time, therefore the :
Greatest of Satisfaction.
i
Such watches are priced so reasonably at |
this store, that really you should think of
purchasing no other kind, g
Come In and See Them. g
South Bend, Elgin, Waltham, Illinois and §
various other makes. S E
DRt R T R BRI R N
i (L J
s ) h BY Ito C n i L
O e Y <
are planaing to lnvade e3d colonise
It sounds like & war bulletin, but it
fsn't. It merely means that about fifty
members of the u'd Rosicrucis,
sald by members to be the oldest se
cret mystic organization In the world,
have arrived here as the advance
guard of a large body of colonists.
They are taking advantage of the
640-acre homestead law to estabiish
themselves in this section of the
try, Practical co-operative methods
will be followed in the development of
the colony.
The ancient and mystic order is said
to have been established In Egypt in
the reign of Thotmos, 1540 B, C., and,
devoted to the study of philosophy,
sclence and the arts, as well as re
ligion, It has a membershfp of 6,000,
000, including some of thp world's mas
ter minds, such as Lord Bacon and
Bulwer Lytton. It claims. to possess
sclentific knowledge which is revealed
only to members, v
JUGGLER CANNOT USE EGGS
He Found He Would Lose Money by
Breaking Hen Fryit in His
Theater Exhibitions,
ee ' !
Chicago.—~*Great L'Eggo,” the ma
giclan, who does the “famous egg
trick” In vaudeville, packed his trunks
this week and walked out of the bill
at a local continuous show., The high
price of eggs drove him to it. ‘
The illusionist breaks 18 eggs at
every performance. AS long as he was‘
“doing two a day” it wasn't so bad.
But when-he learned that he had to‘
appear at seven daily turns he got out
his pencil and this is what he found:
Eighteen eggs a performance, mul-?
tiplied by seven performances, totals
126 eggs; seven days, total of 882 eggs,
at 52 cents a dozen, the current price,
$38.22. Figuring his weekly salary at
S4O, less 10 per cent booking fee,
would leave him $2.22 loser on the
week.
Girl Dances on False Feet.
Baltimore, Md.—Little Grace Riven,
four years old, romps and plays, and
even daances, the same as other chil
dren, although she lost her feet in
n street car accident some time ago.
‘irace has artificial feet, and with her
plack and confidence she has learned
to ddnce and to use the artificial feet
almost as well as if they were natural.
Proper Place for It.
Patience—l'm going to get.- Bob a
necktie for his Christmas,
Patrice-~Where yon think.yow’ll get
it?
“Around his neck, of course.,”
il }’/v{' AN : : .
prvense g%l SO \F
£ . .8 Howtoßeduce
,3;’%\ ,
,/’, A b i :}’4/& ; f‘lf,M, :,; ,’ ,;*é“, j,\u’_u .
e ~ Your
| MR N ‘ ~,sz;% ' : .
i i Ml F 'l' c t
e, Fertiizer Cos
Leading Southern farmers will tell you that 400 pounds of
SWIFT'S RED STEER BRAND FERTILIZERS will make from
20 to 50 gounds MORE LINT COTTON PER ACRE than other
brands of fertilizer. Even at 15c per pound, every 10 pounds more
lint ger acre reduces your fertilizer cost $7.50 per ton. Figure this
out for yourself. You can prove it this year by using SWIFT’S.
The reason is that SWIFT'S FERTILIZERS are_alwa¥s made
from highest aruaht_y and highest-priced materials, skilfully com
pounded, double mixed and thoroughly cured.
The difference between SWIFT’S and other fertilizers WILL
ALWAYS SHOW UP AT THE SCALES. = - . .
This same increased production applies to. all other crops. '
BUY' NOW |
- SWIFT'S FERTILIZERS, RED STEER BRANDS
4 “It Pays to Use Them’’ . '
: : Manufactured by o .
SWIFT & COMPANY, ¢erriuizer works) ,\ .
~ Factorles: Atlanta, Ga., Savannah, Ga., xlbany, Ga., Mouitrie, Ga.
| Haon REPRESENTED BY | :
JORDAN & CO.
. MONTICELLO, GA. | ‘ - .
THE MONTICELLO NEWS
an ¥ g
¥ 2
3 @
“‘I
~ 4 "‘\,;-.
* ¢ : '
. '@ o i «
W %‘g
A
v g
% K | H
2:: o fly’”” " ’,‘_,"
AR N NE S g
2k LY
Freddie Welsh is one of the shiftiest
and hardest to hit persons in the fight
game. He fights not only with his
fists but with his brain, :
To a friend who recently asked why
the “dancing champeen” did not stand
up once in a while and take a lacing,
Freddie replied that he must win—for
three reasons: >
“I must win for three reasons,” he
said smiling. “One is Mrs, Welsh and
the other two are the two little
Welshes.”
The photograph shows the “three
reasons,” as they recently appeared
on the sands at Los Angeles.
Elusive Heirlooms,
Little Esther went to visit her aunt
Harriet for the first time. When she
returned she remarked that her aunt
was always busy.
“What ‘does she do, dear?’ queried
the mother, “to keep her so very busy ?""
“Why,” said the little girl, “she
spends all day long in hiding her sil
ver in fifty different places so the bur
glars that she is sure are coming can’t
find it.,” :
“Good!” exclaimed the mother.
“And,” continued Esther, “she
spends all night hunting for it and
gathering it into one pile in case of
fire.””—Youth’s Companion.
Human Nature Phase.
“Human nature,” says Col. Paul Gra
biel, “is subject to strange frailties, and
every now and then you meet a man of
great natural ability who would un
doubtedly make a success in life if the
Lord had given him half the persist
ence he gave the lowly mosquito,”—At
lanta Constitution. ;
PPR SVe ER STe 3 - g=t
PAY $90.00 A TON
LRI TPO SR
: o — ; o A
" That is what the dairymen and live stock owners of -
Holland and Denmark are paying for our own Georgia
Cotton Seed Meal, delivered to them.
When it is worth that much to them, abroad, how
much more should it be valued here at home, where
after feeding it, with roughage, to dairy.cows increas
ing their milk yield, fattening cattle for slaughter, and
giving strength to work stock, it is still worth 85 cents
of every dollar spent for its original cost as fertilizgr. ¢
The war has made feed for animals, as well as hu
mans, higher in price, and the indications are that it
will continue so. In writing on this subject Dr. A. M.
Soule, of the Georgia State College of Agriculture says:
“The farmers of the South are peculiarly fortunate
for there is available Cotton Seed Meal (for feeding
purposes) containing from 37 to 42 per cent of protein,
or at least four times this essential element (protein)
as corn.”
It is Protein in all feeds that make it most valuable.
g Keep' Cotton Seed Meal in the South to make more
~ milk, fatten our cattle, strengthen our stock, and enrich
our soil. ,
Ask :ho Ol MIII man In your town for a FREE copy of the
booklet: “MINIMIZING BOLL WEEVIL DAMAGE BY PROP
ER CULTIVATION AND FERTILIZATION, or write direct to
COTTON SEED CRUSHERS’ ASSOCIATION or GEORGIA
» ATLANTA, GEORGIA - ®
Canada’s War Loss 68,290,
Ottawa, Ont.—Canadian casualties
from the opening of the war to Decem
ber 31, a period of 29 months, total
08,200, :
This is made up of killed, 10,854;
died of wounds, 4,010; died of sickness,
484 ; presumed dead, 1,108; wouaded,
48,454; missing, 2970. The casualties
in 1915, when Canada had only one di
vision at the (front, totaled 14,453.
During the last year, with four divis
ions, casunities totaled 53,27. :
Hardly the Thing.
&Why did ,she break the engage
ment?" »
“Seemed he mailed her a Jove letter
in one of those envelopes with a glass
front.,”—Louisville Courier-Journal.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1917,
Tame Performance.
“Did the speaker make much of an
fmpression on you?”
“No." &
“But I understood he threw some
mud.”
“Well, if he did, it was free from
bacteria und guaranteed not to ‘soil the
clothes.”—Birmingham Age-Herald.
Money No Object.
The judge was passing sentence on
a very defiant-looking culprit.
“This is a sad case,” his honor said.
“You, who remained honest until you
were forty, have tarnished your pame
and dishonored your family, all for the
sake of three miserdable dollars.” Y
“Please be fair,” said the prisoner. '
“Was it my fauit there were so few?”