Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 26, 1912, FINAL, Page 18, Image 18

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18 Real Estate For Sale. Real Estate For Sale A BIG CORNER LOT The secret of a successful real estate venture is to obtain a large amount of frontage. Then, when your land increases in value so much per front foot it amounts to something. We are offering the corner of Washington and Fair streets, 192 1-2x227, for $30,000. This figures up about $155 a front foot. An increase In value of $50.00 a foot would amount to nearly SIO,OOO profit—a substantial sum of money. Is such an increase to be expected? Trinity church paid $3lO a toot for the corner of Washington and Trinity. The property we offer is unencumbered, and we can make easy terms. It is one of those rare opportunities that occasionally confront a buyer. FORREST & GEORGE ADAIR Inman Park Home for Sale House finished April 1, occupied by owner since that time. On account of health, will sell at cost. Corner lot, 60-foot front, 150 feet on side street to alley in rear. Two-story, 7 rooms—reception hall, butler's pantry, bath and lavatory. Servant’s toilet, large basement. Combination fixtures, furnace heat, gas water heater, Miller Milwau kee galvanized iron wire screens, steel garage, cement driveway and chicken runs. Lower floor consisting of reception hall, parlor, ■with handsome Rookwood fireplace; English effect dining room. But ler's pantry, kitchen and servant’s toilet. Finished In old ivory and mahogany. Stairway and hall same finish. Fottr upstairs rooms in natural wood and mahogany. Four large closets and large bath and toilet. Extra large basement. Furnace room has cement floor. All birch doors. j This house will have to be seen to appreciate. Built for a home, not to sell. Also for sale, 40 Orpington chickens, Dixie Poultry Farm stock, Louisville, Ky., consisting of 1 pen Buffs, 1 pen Blacks, 1 pen Whites; 1 cockerel and 5 pullets White, 2 cockerels and 2 pullets Black, 18 Whites, Blacks and Buffs 8 weeks old. Will sell all or part to any one customer —prefer to sell al! together. Also large Brindle Bulldog, excellent watch dog; fine breed. Also Burroughs combination, portable Parlor Pool and Billiard Ta bla. Can be put up and takc-n down in 5 minutes; complete, with balls, cues, etc. —used only 3 weeks, cloth not even soiled. Just the thing for a Christmas gift for the young folks. Also 1910 5-passenger Ford Auto; newly painted in August; good running order—complete, with extra tubes, tools, etc. If you are wanting to buy any of the above mentioned, will be glad to show same. No reasonable offer refused. Will sell house fur nished or unfurnished. If Interested, phone Ivy 5914-J. TT/'A'D CAIL? HILLIARD STREET, CORNER rv iv on H pittman place. T/~V T TAT T LARGE LOT, 117x105 feet; has 5 111 fl I \ I houses on it, with good, steady rent J x 1 j • returns. Price only $9,000. n!L\/AP\CT TAT? THOS. R. FINNEY, Sales Mgr. yy 1 I V FL 12 Auburn Avenue. A BARGAIN I HAVE FOR SALE an 8-room house which will sell for $3,000. Will take part pay in good vacant lot. This is the biggest bargain in Atlanta, SI,OOO in cash will handle it. TELEPHONE M. 221. SOME SELECTED HOMES VEDADO WAY— Just off Ponce DeLeon avenue; two-story, eight rooms; hardwood floors, furnace and large lot. $8,500. Easy terms. PRADO, ANSLEY PARK —Eight-room, modern home, lot 75x200. $8,500, on easy terms. MORELAND AVENUE LOTS—Opposite Druid Hills. $2,500 cash. Restrict tions as to building line and value of house, which insures select neigh bors. CLAUD E. SIMS CO. 718 Empire Building. Bell Phone Main 2539. an- 1 " 11 .' ULU- Jl JL L..— FOR SALE BI BIG CORNER LOT. GR FC FC IXI R ( A NP THREE-ROOM HOUSE). 1V -A-* •*-* A V JC# NEAR G. W. ADAIR SCHOOL Tenth R— — * Ward; fine lot, 54H by 159; now having Lp A T I Az K°°d three-room house. ADD TW(> JL> I_V 1 I ROOMS AND YOU HAVE A $3 500 HOME. OUR PRICE NOW FOR LOT PAK/T O A KT AZ AND THREE-ROOM HOUSE ONLY $l - IVI r A 1N Y 750. IT’S a bargain, buy IT Ail Improvements down. 811 EMPIRE BUILDING. REAL ESTATE. RENTING. LOANS. Phones 159*. WILLIAMS-HARTSOCK CO. REAL ESTATE AND BUILDERS. FOURTH NATIONAL RANK BLDG Phone 2106 Main. A DANDY NEW ONE on Moreland avenue, close to Druid Hills, we are lust . .. e . o T p ’ < ‘ t J nB ,h ® Pettiest home on the street. The number is 292 This lot If,J®® f ««t baß * frontaae of 50 feet. Listen! Furnace heat, hardwood floors, front and side porches, exposed ceiling beams, dressing mirrors, beautiful mantels butlers pantry combination gas and electric fixtures, east front walls tinted, fine hardware. This is a beauty and Is sure to sell Terms easy * LOOK AT THAT NEW HOUSE WE ARE BALDING ON RLXIWiWW' HT~ It is west of West Peachtree, fronting south; lot Is elevated about five feet above sidewalk, six rooms, hall and bath, tile floor in bath, front and side porches, hot air heat, plenty of closets, large furnace room, good neighborhood hardwood floore. Lot fs 150 feet deep. This place is getting better every d£v' Will sell you this on easy terms Will tint walls to suit your own taste ' ’’ ——' ii .... YOU BUY THIS LOT. IT will make you some money by spring. One of the prettiest in Inman Park; 1-2 block from cars; 2 blocks to stores, sub-postoffice churches schools, etc.; level and fertile, 50x192 to 15-foot alley. Price onlv $1 400 cash, on easy terms. A good place for a nice home or an investment. WILSON BROS. PHONE M. 4411-J. TOl EMPIRE BLDG SEMI-CENTRAL BUSINESS PROPERTY HOUSTON and Irwin streets; two-story, brick, just completed; two storerooms below, beautiful 5-rooni apartment above - nine store lots: building rented for $l,lOO per year. Rogers' and Jacobs on opposite corners, with plenty of other business houses in the vicinity, showing the demand for business propertv in this section. This is a bargain. Will trade for part money and property of nearly any character; will sell outright, will sell cheap. Was bought a few months ago bj a speculator to hold but needs his money for a later and more profitable invest ment. There is exactly one hundred per eent in this proposition within five years. Au ideal place for trust funds or widow’s money. EDWIN P. ANSLEY Second Floor Realty Trust Building. Bell Phone Ivy 1600 THE ATLANTA GEOKGLAJN AND NEWS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1913. Railroad Schedule. ■ PREMIER CARRIER OF THE SOUTH" ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF PASSENGER TRAINS, ATLANTA. The follow-Ing schedule figures are pub lished only as Information, and are not guaranteed: No. Arrive From—l No. Depart To— -2 C'cinnati.2:ssamj 36 N. Yorkl2:lsam 35 N. Y0rk..5:00 am 2 J'ville.. 3:05 am 13 Jaxville...s:2o am 20 Col’bus. 5:20 am 43 Was’ton 5:25 am 13 Cincl 5:30 am 1' Sh’port.. 6.30 am 32 Ft. Vai. 5:30 am 2s .Jaxville. 6:50 am 35 B ham.. 5:45 am •17 Toccoa.. 8:10 am| 7 Cnooga 6:40 am 26 Heflin.... 8:20 ami 12 R’mond 6:55 am 29 N. York. 10:30am] 23 K. City. 7:00 am 3 Chat'ga 10:35 am 16 Brim-’k 7:45 am 7 Mac0n...10:40 am! 29 B’ham.. 10:45 arn 27 Ft. Vai..10:45 am i 38 N. Yorkll:01am 21 Col’bus..lo:so am; 40 ChTttq 12:00 n n 6 Cinclll:loam 6 J’ville. .11:20 am 29 Col’bus.. 1:40 pm 30 C’bu5....12:30 pm 30 B’ham... 2:30 pm- 30 N. York 2:45 pm 40 8’ham...12:40 pm ; 15 Cnooga 3:00 pm 39 Ch'lotte. 3:55 pm 39 B’ham... 4:10 pm 5 J'ville4:sopm *lB Toccoa. 4:30 pm 37 N. York. 5:00 pm; 22 Col’bus. 5:10 pm 15 Bruna’k. 7:50 pm 5 Cincl.. . 5:10 pm 1 .Tack’ville.B:lopm 28 Ft. Vai. 5:20 pm 11 R’mond. 8:30 pm! 35 Heflin.. 5:45 pm 24 K. City.. 9:20 pm | 10 Macon. 5:30 niu 16 C’nooga. 9:35 pm' 1 C’cinati 8:30 pm 19 Col’bus..lo:2o pm i 44 Wash’n. 8:45 pm 31 Ft Vai..10:25 pm 24 Jaxville. 9:30 pm 14 Cincl11:00 pm | 11 rfh’port.ll;lo pm $6 8’ham...12:00 ngt i 14 J'xville ILlOpm Trains marked thus (•) run dally, ex cept Sunday. Other trains run daily. Central time. City Ticket Office. No. 1 Peachtree St. i. e* Legal Notices, STATE OF’ GEORGIA—County of Fulton. To the Superior Court of Salo County: The petition of American Sumatra To bacco Company, a corporation, respect fully shows: 1. That it was duly incorporated by order of this court on the 12th day of February, 1910, and thereafter duly or ganized in accordance with the provisions of the laws of this state, and has since been in the active conduct of Its business tn accordance with the provisions of its charter. 2. That it desires to amend its charter by incorporating therein the following provision: That whenever an election of one or more directors of the company is held by the shareholders at any lawful meeting thereof, the shareholders shall be entitled to cumulate their votes in the following manner: Each shareholder shall be entitled to a number of votes equal to the number of directors to be elected, multiplied by the number of shares of stock which he. holds, and shall be per mitted to distribute such votes as lie pleases among the candidates, or to cast them all for one candidate if he so chooses, and those persons shall be de clared elected directors who shall re ceive the highest number of votes so east; provided, that nothing herein shall be construed to alter or change that provision of the original charter of the company which entitles the holders of the pre ferred stock to elect a majoritj- of the board of directors in case of default In the payment of dividends on the pre ferred sttock to the amount of fourteen (14) per cent, and to continue to so elect a majority of said board from the time such right becomes operative until, but only until, such time as all accrued and unpaid dividends on the preferred stock shall have been paid up. as particularly set forth in the original charter of the corporation; and provided further that it shall be within the right and power of the shareholders to provide by by-laws that the preferred and common stock may be required to vote separately, and until default shall be made in the payment of dividends on the preferred stock to the amount of fourteen (141 per eent, what number of directors may be voted for by the holders of the preferred stock and what number may be voted for by the holders of the common stock, and by-law to limit the right of each class of stocks as to the number of directors for whom they may respectively vote; provided that after default as aforesaid, the limitation upon the hold ers of the preferred stock shall not de prive them of the right to elect at least a majority of the members of said board until the default Is removed as aforesaid; and to provide by by-law how the by laws providing for the foregoing llinita tions may be altered, amended or changed. The cumulative voting herein allowed to apply to the voting for such directors, either before or after the oc currence of a default as above set out, as the holders of the preferred and com mon stock may at the time be entitled to vote for under the provisions of the original charter and of such by-laws on this subject as the shareholders may have heretofore adopted or may here after adopt. 3. That It is provided In the original charter of the corporation that this char ter may be amended by and with the consent of the holders of not less than two-thlrds In amount of all the capital stock then outstanding, expressed at a meeting of the shareholders held In ac cordance with the provisions of the by laws of said corporation, at any time and either In form or in substance. 4. That at a meeting of the share holders duly held in accordance with the r revisions of the by-laws of this eorpora lon, at which meeting all of the pre ferred stock and all of the common stock of the corporation was represented, either In person or by proxy, a resolu tion was duly and unanimously adopted authorizing this application for an amend ment to its charter to be made. Wherefore, Your petitioner prays that when It has complied with the law for such cases made and provided, this hon orable court will pass an order amend ing Its charter in the manner and to the extent as hereinbefore set out. ANDERSON, FELDER. ROUNTREE & WILSON. Attorneys for I’etitioner. Filed In office this the 12th dav of No vember, 1912. F. M. MYERS, Deputy Clerk. STATE OF GEORGIA—FuIton County. I, Arnold Broyles, clerk of the superior court of Fulton county, do hereby certi fy that the foregoing is a true and cor rect copy of the application for an amend ment to the charter of the American Sumatra Tobacco Company, as the same appears of file In this office. Witness my' official signature and the seal of said court, this the 12th dav of November, 1912. ARNOLD BROYLES, Clerk Superior Court, Fulton County,’ Ga. GEORGIA—FULTON COUNTY. To the Honorable Philip Cook, Secretary of State for the State of Georgia: The petition of O. F. Harper, residing at Atlanta, Ga.: .1. 11. Garner, residing at Atlanta, Ga.; E. S. Mansfield, resid ing at Atlanta, Ga.: R. M. Eubanks, re siding at Atlanta. Ga., and J. R. Garner residing at Atlanta, Ga., respectfully shows: They desire for themselves, their asso ciates and successors, to be incorporated under the name of "THE AMERICAN MUTUAL RELIEF ASSOCIATION," for the purpose of carrying on the business of an industrial relief association supply ing medical attention and drugs to its members during sickness. The stipulated premiums, advance assessments or dues for which are to be regularly payable and collectible weekly or bi-weekly, and the policies or benefit certificates’for which are not to provide for the payment of any death benefit, nor for the payment of any benefit for disability caused by Ac cidental Injury or by illness, other than that they are to provide for the attend ance of the association’s physician dur ing illness, and also for the supply by the association of the necessary drugs prescribed by the said physician. Said corporation is to have no capital stock. The principal offices of said association are to be located at Atlanta. Fulton coun ty, Georgia, but the privilege Is prayed to establish branch offices and transact business at other points in this state and elsewhere Petitioners do intend in good faith to go forward without delay to organize said association. They pray that they mav be incorporated, under the name aforemen tioned, under the laws of Georgia govern ing mutual industrial Insurance compa nies, with all the rights, powers and priv ileges accorded by said laws to an asso ciation or a company organized upon the plan and for the purpose herein above stated. O. F. HARPER. J. H. GARNER. E. S. MANSFIELD, R. M. EUBANKS, J. R. GARNER. GEORGIA— Fulton County. Robert Pitts vs. Mamie , itts. Superior Court. To Mamie Pitts. Greeting: By order of court you are notified that on t ie 6th day of November. 1912. Robert Pitts tiled suit against you for divorce, to tb»| January Papers from ‘My OP Town’ Always in Demand HOME NEWS THE BEST The traveling man hurrying to the station stopped at the corner and put down his grips. "Wait a minute,” he said to his com panion. "I want to get a paper from ' home. Got the ’Frisco Examiner?" Sam Wasserman, who provides the news from home for thousands of wan derers afield, passed out the \ paper from bis news wagon uptown and took the nickel. Just behind the traveling man came a swarthy organ grinder, who let his monkey climb over the news wagon while he negotiated in broken English for the latest issue of L’Arado Italiano. Behind him came a decrepit workman who dug a nicke' from a dirty tobacco sack and held it out in silence. Sam passed over The Weekly Freeman, from Dublin, tor the old man was a regular customer and always wanted that paper and nothing else. All Want News From Hom*. "They all want the news from home,” said Sam. “The Atlanta papers are al! right on the big news, but, of course, they can’t carry all the little stuff about home folks that a man finds in the pa per from his oivn home town. There was a guy used to come bj r here every month or two and get a little paper from lowa, and he wrote me a piece of poetry. I stuck it up on the wagon, and lots of folks read it: When I’m on the road and tired, and there’s nothing in the mail; And trains are late and business dull, and it’s hard to make a sale, The thing that rests my weary brain and drives away my frown Is the gossip in the paper from my own home town. Don’t talk to me of China, or the trou bles of the czar; I’m tired of the gunmen and the Bul gar-Turkish war; - I want to see who's married, who's dead, who’s up or down; In the place I’d love to be right now, my own home town. Y’es, the sheet may be a punk one, and the headlines rather tame, But it’s got the news of folks I know, and calls them all by name; It tells of Jones’ brand-new house, and the twins of Mamie Brown— Oh. there’s real news in the paper from my old home town. He Sells Them All. “Sure, we sell papers all the way from Mexico City up to Tacoma, from way up in Maine down to Key West. ‘Every town, every city,' is my motto. Got regular customers for lots of them, too. There’s drummers who come by every Legal Notice?. term, 1913, of said court. Y’ou are required to be and appear at the January term, 1913, of said court, to be held on the first Monday in January, 1913, then to answer the plaintiff's complaint. Witness the Hon. W. D. Ellis, Judge of said court, this Sth of November* 1912. ARNOLD BROYLES, Clerk. 11-6-19 THE HOUSE you will build, buy or rent will not be a modern home unless it i s wired for Electricity. Ii Southern California affords more opportunities than any other area in the world. WHY? Because it has proven its possibilities in a thousand ways. The pioneer work is done. The chances to follow proven lines are unlimited. The es- I sentials are: Climate, land, water, power, transportation I and markets. Southern California has them all. You Will Want To Know All About This I Marvelous Country THE NINTH 1 ANNIVERSARY NUMBER OF THE LOS ANGELES "EXAMINER" will be issued WED NESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1912, and will be the greatest edition of its kind ever published, giving you every possi ble information about this famous land. It will tell you about its farming possibilities, its poul try, its fruits, its walnuts, its oil production, its beet sugar industries, its live stock, its cotton, and, in fact, anything and everything you may wish to know about Los Angeles and the marvelous country of which she is the metropolis. The information will be accurately and entertainingly iset forth, and aporopriatelv illustrated. The proposed opening of the Panama Cana! turns all the eyes of the world on this region. This special edition will be mailed to any addrass in the United States | or Mexico for Fifteen Cents per eopy. As the edition Is limited, and so as not to disappoint anyone, an early -•quest with remittance Is desirable. Remember that some of your friends may not see this announcement. Use the coupon below and see that they get' a copy. F -ltu- , Los Angeles, Cal. ] Enclosed please findcents, for which you will / s please send the Ninth Anniversary number of your paper to I i the following names: ■ j Name Street J 1 ( '' < City state ■' Nam* Street | I City... State ! | _ - - ----- -u-.-.- Los Angeles Examiner LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Sunday and buy their home papers for the whole week back. I save them for those fellows. Sometimes a man gets a paper from home when he’s been away a long time, sees a headline on the front about, somebody he knews, and stands there reading until the cop asks him to move on and quit blocking traf fic. "Queerest thing I ever saw hap pened last month. Man comes up and buys a Los Angeles Herald. He runs his eye down the paper while I’m mak ing change for a dollar bill and all of a sudden he lets out a groan and turns all white. He kind of steadies himself against the wagon. "‘What’s the matter, friend?’ I asks him. He points to a little headline in the paper. “ 'My baby's dead,’ he says, kind of choking up. ‘l've been off my route a week and the telegrams must have gone wrong.’ Big Business in Foreign Papers, “No, we can’t handle the little county papers, of course. It would take a wagon as long as from here to the city hall. But most folks are satisfied with the papers from the nearest big city in their state. Sunday is the big day, of course. I sell 275 New York Ameri cans every Sunday, and they’re on all the news stands, too, which cuts into my business some. It doesn’t seem to matter how old a paper from home is, if a man wants to buy. They’ll take anything they haven’t seen since they left. But sometimes a feliow comes by here and wants this morning's St. Louis sheet. When I ask him if he thinks they send papers by airship, he looks foolish and buys yesterday’s. “There’s a big business in foreign pa pers in Atlanta, considering what a small foreign population we’ve got. I sell fifty Greek papers, The Atlantis, every day. I handle five Italian pa pers, but they’re all published in New York. There are four Jewish sheets on my wagon and they all They’re printed in Yiddish, you know. There's two Swedish papers, and they sell, too. One of them is the Nordstjernan, which means ‘North Star,’ and the other is the Swenskl Amerkanski Posten. I don’t try to say that one. There’s a good demand for the English weeklies and Lloyd’s News, and I sell two Irish, two German and five negro papers. “Foreign languages? Yes, I speak sou German, Spanish and profane. Here comes an old fellow foi La Domenico del Carriere. That’s a Dago paper, and he buys it every day.’ NEW RECORD ISSETFOR OHIO RIVER NAVIGATION PITTSBURG, Nov. 26.—0hi0 river pack et owners have had fourteen months of uninterrupted navigation, which is the longest continuous period on the river within the memory of river men. GOMPERS BETTER. ROCHESTER,' N. Y„ Nov. 26.—Dr. Charles D. Camp, attending physician of President Samuel Gompers, of the American Federation of stated today that his patient was rapidly im proving. ATLANTA AUTOISTS TURN FIREMEN AND SAVE FARM HOUSE If Grover Kaiser, Otis Westley and three other young Atlantans want a job in the fire department, Chief Cummings is ready to put them on the list. The quintet formed a volunteer organization yesterday afternoon and succeeded in making the well known fjre fiend give up in despair. The five young men were motoring out Peachtree—road when they discovered a small country home on fire, with the family rushing around and yelling for help. They jumped from their car, formed a bucket brigade between house and well, climbed the roof, and saved the house. Then they came back to town, grimy and toil-stained, but conscious of a good deed well done. Here’s the Ymungest Marathon cmho. ~"uiMmi i riiiir Winner • v Il ® A' ■ Jwx:. ; Thomas E. Harris, of 61 Cleburne avenue Atlanta, is only six years old. His pic ture bears out our statement that he’s a handsome, manly little fellow. And his ownership of a Georgian Marathon Racer proves that he uses good judgment in the selection of his fun-making possessions. Thomas wanted a Marathon Racer. Old er members of his family would have been glad to buy one for him, but they are not for sale. For The Georgian controls the sac . tory’s output for this section. And we want to give them away—not sell them. So he investigated our plan for free distri bution of these little ears to live boys and girls, found it mighty easy, and now ex periences the joy that comes to all red blooded people in the ownership of a prized possession that has been EARNED. Hundreds of other boys and girls are duplicating his experience. But the Held is not crowded. There’s room for other hundreds. Any boy or g‘rl can eas'ly earn a Marathon Racer. Send us the coupon today.We will tell you how to get a car without cost. Marathon Racer Department THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN 20 East Alabama St., Atlanta, Ga. Please send me instructions telling how I may secure one of ihe Georgian Marathon Racers without money. Name Age Address City State Sample Cars are on display at The Georgian office, 20 East Alabama street. You are cordially invited to come in and try this new and popular Car. TIEDEMAN NOT TO SEEK RE-ELECTION AS MAYOR SAVANNAH, GA.. Nov. 26.—u a George W. Tiedeman, telegraphing fro Baltimore, where he went to con«i it with his wife, has advised J. „ Carson, chairman of the committee pointed to take up the matter of hj running again, of his decision not to make the race to succeed himself. The telegram to Chairman Carson suggests the names of others win, migl , t be prevailed upon to make the r.iee a the representative of the administra. tlon forces. Major W. W. Willi is mentioned, among others.