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HEARS'!' S sr.M)A v AMERICAN. ATLANTA. OA . SUNDAY. 1)E( EMflER
1913.
Undraped Posing
Causes Stir in Paris
Cabinet Minister’* ex-Wife Seen in
Artistic “Studies” by Lead
ers of Art World
lelirutioii < 1 mi test
Members o
lie'll
in 11 istory ul
Slate < \»urt
Ueeeive Veneration
;iinl
IVaise
( I
.\ ssi »eiat ion.
Attend and
f Attorneys.
tuna: Watkins* is the new head of
the Atlanta Uar Association, being
elected with a prolonged round of
beers at the annual banquet of th**
organization held at Hotel A ns ley
Saturday night
The officers elected with him vvei*
Marion Smith, first vice president;
Sam D. Hewlett, second vice presi
dent. and John Y Smith, reelected
secretary and treasurer.
Lowry Arnold. Charles W Smith
and Hollins Randolph were elected as
ihe three new members of the execu
tive committee to serve with Shepard
Bryan and E. M Underwood. who hold
over.
Scintillating with brilliant oratory
and brimming with wit and good
'•heer, the banquet proved the great
est in the history of the association.
The assembly hall of the hotel was
axed to its capacity, there being 22f>
guests, nearly a hundred more than
have ever attended a previous han
't uef.
Arnold Toastmaster.
Reuben Arnold, president, acted as
toastmaster, but his efforts to hold
the speakers down to the four-minute
mg the year, and this had been-speed-
iI> disposed of lie declared.
The fact that Ceoigla iudges bore
a reputation for fairness was com
mented upon hy Robert C Alston.
“Strike from the pages of Georgia
history the names of the lawyers, and
there would be hut few pages that
would not he blank,” he declared.
“There lias never been one of our
State Judges accused of unfairness,
and this st>eaks well for oljr bar.
“Nowhere can a higher standard be
found than exists among the Atlanta
lawyers. And the men re*ruited from
their rank and awarded judgeships
have exemplified the fact that a. com
plete spirit of fairness exists. Not
only in the hearing of evidence, but
in the consideration of our bills of
exceptions, have our judges displayed
absolute fairness There is not a
man among us here but who knows
.that in each particular < ase handled
hy him no has received the most sin-
< ere judgment on the part of our jur
ists.’
Tobacco Crop Slow;
Banks Get Extension
PARIS. Lee. 6.-A social sensation lit*
De.en caused here hy the undraped plas
tic poses by Mariam Valentine I»eSalnt
Point, the divorced wife of a French
<abln't minister, granddaughter of the
Marquis LesLians r>eCes«iat. and a de
ftceridant of 1he poet and historian, \a-
rnartlne
The spe.cta< le wa s given in her huge
studio. No. 19 Avenue PeTourville, In
the Champs I>eMars quarter borne
three hundred invitations were «ent out
to leading men and women in the liter
ary’ ami artistic world. There was not
a single refusal
Madame LeKaint F’oint, who is known
as Madaine Valentine, has a petite fig
ure. pale blue eyes and a mass of chest
nut hair. Hhe Is alao a writer of books
and plays, as well as a talented painter.
Young Belmont May
Have to Tell Income
rule proved futile, as in each can
the crowd demanded more from each
one.
Present were the members of the
Pulton County Bar and many mem
bers of the Supreme Uourt and the
<”ourt of Appeals. The impressive
love, dignity and respect in which
rh‘*se Judges were held by the great
throng of attorneys was forcibly im-
• • cessed by others than lawyers in
attendance, and drevv remarks of
commendation and congratulations on
u* high standing of the Georgia bar.
The speakers were Judge I’endle-
*n. of the Fulton County Superior
Court; Judge Russell, of the Court of
• p*M-d.Is. Judge Marcus W. Baker, of
Supreme Court; John Y. Smith, I
tvtar\ of the association; Burton
S dt\ Sfepard Bryan; R. C. Alston,
! sjdetu oi State liar Assocln-
ii Judge J. H. Lutnkln and R. C.
<*lton, who spoke as a representa-
ive of the young attorneys.
Judge Pendleton Speaks.
Judge Pendleton spoke on “the
.oubirs of a Judge.” and the esteem
'■i which the veteran chief Justice of
the Fulton County Superior Court is
held could not have been better illus
trated than in the ten minutes of ap
plause which greeted him. Judge
Pendleton made a heart-to-heart talk,
yet his Jocular Jabs at the Court of
^peale drevv laugh after laugh
“I like the Court of Appeals, but
they do act funny sometime,” lie said.
For instance. Judge Broyles held that
when an officer put his hand behind u
nan, felt under his coat and discover
ed a pistol, that the man was guilty of
violating the law. I thought so. too,
but the Court of Appeals thought I
otherwise and reversed it. They held
that It was an illegal search. But 1
can’t agree with them.”
Judge Pendleton used as an illus
tration the comparison of a Decatur
street negro with a Peachtree street
white man, which brought laughter
from the crowd, and an impamioned
retort from Judge Russell. Turning
the words from a jocular reference to
a serious consideration, he pleaded for
the day when the humblest wretch of
Decatur street would receive tlie same
justice as the most esteemed white I
man. This in turn drew cheers from 1
ihe banqueters.
Reuben Arnold Lauds Bar.
Judge Baker added to the com
parison w ith the declaration that he !
had agreed with Judges Broyles and
Pendleton, and there w ere half a dozen
men in the hall who wanted to ex
press an opinion.
Reuben Arnold congratulated the
members of the association on the
high standin^of the Atlanta bar. Rut
one complaint had been received dur-
•LEXINGTON, KY, Dei-. f>. The
United States Treasury Department
to-day extended for thirty' days the
loan of $375,000 made to three l^ex-
ington banks from the national crop
moving fund. The request for the
NEW YORK. Dec 6.—Raymond
Belmont, son of August Belmont, will
have to appear in the Supreme Court
and tell from what sources he de
rives his income, if Justice Gieberich
decides in favor of an application
made to-day by Edith Lorraine Bel
mont. She is the actress wife of Ray
mond. having married him £ year
ago.
Mrs. Belmont js suing her husband
for separation. Her attorneys want
to know who gives Raymond money
and how much he is receiving The
young husband is said to be in Eng
land at present The trial of the sep
aration action was adjourned for two
weeks, to permit the court to pass on
the new application.
Mother Fears Arctic
Explorer Is Dead
extension w.*- made because the to
bacco crop the principal product of
Centra I and Eastern Kentucky, is be
ing moved slowly. By granting this
request the Government averted any
danger of currency shortage in this
section. About 3.000,000 pounds of
tobacco will be handled altogether In
Kentucky, Louisville having also
benefited from the Government
loans.
127 True Bills Fouud:
Deputies Kept Busy
BIRMINGHAM. Dec. 6.—Deputy
Sheriffs of Jefferson County are be
ing kept busy serving the writs is
sued by the recent grand jury, there
being 1_7 true bills in the last partial
reports. ,
This work is being added! :o by a]
large number of warrants being
sworn out by Conrad YV Austin, for
mer Chief of Police of Birmingham,
against men whom lie allege* hang
around gambling places, the charges
being vagrancy.
It is estimated that the grand Jury*
which Carted its work in September
returned nearly 600 true bills.
CHICAGO, Dec 6 —University of Chi
cago friends of Ernest DeKoven Lef-
fingwell, a student at the Midway In
stitution, fear he has lost his life on his
Anal dash for the North Pole. A tele
gram was received yesterday at the
university from I^efflngwell’s mother,
who is in Pasadena, Cal
She telegraphed she had not heard
from her son since August 25, and that
he was to have returned from Point
Barrow, Alaska, by November 1.
In the spring of this year Ijeffingwell
joined the Steffansson expedition. He
had promised his parents that this would
be his last Arcthc trip.
4 Priests, Brothers
Of Bride, Officiate
GIVEN 3
WIFE
YEIRS
T. J. Scott, Convicted Traveling
Salesman, Taken to State
Prison in Virginia.
Indian Woman Gives
Teachers Home Site
HILTS;DEFENSE
Two Hundred Acre, To Be Used
for Colony for Those Need
ing Rest.
Cousin of Dr. Knabe
How Dead Woman Rose in/
Medical World.
KICHMOND, Dec. «.—T. J. Sco t,
the Lithonia (Ga.) traveling sales
man who was convicted of bigamy -n
Danville, Va., and given three years
in the penitentiary, has arrived at
the State prison in this city and will
be assigned to work on the roads
early next week. Meanwhile he will
occupy a ceil in the prison near, sev
eral members of the Alien gs-ng. who
are serving long terms for their part
in the Hillsville tragedy. .
Scott takes his fate philosophical
ly, sod has yet to utter a word of
complaint regarding the treatment
accorded him by the pr»on official*.
He will be put to work on a rood
camp in the southwest section of the
State, and if he behaves properly he
will get considerable time off
Scott’s first wife and several chil
dren reside at Lithonia. The second
wife, whom he married in Chatta
nooga last fall following a brief court
ship in Asheville recently became
the mother of a child which will bear
Scott's name. Her first husband com
mitted suicide. She has a 6-year-old
boy by the first husband. She is from
Kentucky.
Scott was well known in Atlanta
and other Georgia cities, and was a
member of several fraternal organ
isations . He traveled for a St. Louis
shoe house and was making his head
quarters temporarily in Danville
when the Georgia wife learned that
he had married again.
L. R. Norton, a Lithonia attornev,
appeared in behalf of the Georgia
wife when Scott faced trial in Dan
ville, Scott pleaded guilty and threw
himself on the mercy of the court. He
is 35 years old.
Art Works Demanded
Of Millionaire Clark
SHELB YVILLE, IND., Dec. 6 —
The trial of Dr. William B. Craig,
charged with first degree murder, in
connection with the death of Dr.
Helene Knabe at Indianapolis, was
adjourned at noon to-day until Mon
day. with Miss Augusta Knabe,
cousin of the dead woman, on the
stand.
In strong German accent, Augusta
Knabe, the only living relative of the
dead woman in America, probably the
State's last witness, testified of her
cousin coming to America seventeen
years ago from northern Germany
and taking up her first work as a do
mestic in an Indianapolis hom^, when
she could not speak English.
Tells of Success.
Witness detailed her cousin's rise
in life to the position in the medical
profession she occupied at her death.
She told of seeing her cousin and
Dr. Craig frequently together. She
said Dr. Knabe introduced Dr. Craig
to her on the street in 1908. Later
she met Dr. Craig on the street and
told him that her cousin wanted to
leave the city. According to the wit
ness Craig replied, with a sweep of
his hand, “Oh. she won’t go away.”
This w f as about two years before
Dr. Knabe’s death. Augus-ta said
Craig and her cousin acted as
though they were good friends; that
they tool*: automobile rides.
Was Beautiful Woman.
She described her cousin as "well
developed, a pretty form and remark
ably beautiful hands.”
When she identified her cousi. ’s
blood stained kimono, she shrunk
from the first sight of it and burst
into tears.
Adjournment until Monday pre
vented the defense making its pro
posed motion that the Jury be in
structed to acquit.
MUSKOGEE, OKLA., Dec 6 —Mrs
J. A. Wood, a Cherokee Indian wo
man of Muskogee, who owns several
hundred acres of land on Brushy
p . Mountain, eight miles southeast of
nBlaieS | Muskogee, has donated 200 acres as
a site to establish there a club colony
for school teachers, which shall be
come a sort of home for those teach
ers who are out of employment and
have broken down in the service,
Mrs Wood proposes that the teach
ers who are in active work shall con
tribute small amounts annually to
build the clubhouse in which the
teachers may live, and she has given
$100 in addition to the land to start it.
Slayer Surrenders
After Nearly 6 Years
Annual Feast Dec. 20
Of Atlanta Chi Phis
IiOS ANGELES. Dec 6.—In s suit on
file to-day the United States District
Court Is requested to summon Eli P.
Clark, a millionaire land holder of Los
Angeles, upon a date yet to be set, and
require him to show cause why he
should not deliver twelve paintings to
l^rank McKay, trustee for the bankrupt
a ^£? no * rn of Tomlinson-Humes, Inc.,
of Chicago.
- 1 IiriiPi a * nt *5F s arft to the work
of Y\ it l*m Hogarth, and comprise the
Industry and Idleness” series.
Mistake to Suppress
The eleventh annual dinner of the
Atlanta members of the Chi Phi Fra
ternity will be held at the Georgian
Terrace December 20 at 7 o’clock.
Among the distinguished members
who will be present are Governor
John M. Slaton, former Governor Jo
seph M. Brown, Judge Ben Hill. At
torney General Felder and Judge
John C. Hart.
“Bob” McWhorter, of the Univer
sity of Georgia, is a prominent ac
tive member who will be there. The
dinner will be informal, and invita
tions are extended to all Chi Phis
who are in Atlanta at the time
Genevieve Clark
To Be Housekeeper
WASHINGTON, Dec. 6—Speaker
and Mrs. Champ Clark heve taken a
house on Massachusetts avenue
which will prove one of the centers
of official society this winter.
The household presiding genius is
to be Miss Genevieve Champ Clark,
their attractive debutante daughter,
who will apply the principles pf mod
ern domestic science t- the servant
and housekeeping problems.
One of the first entertainments to
be given in the house will be on New
Tear’s Day, when Mies Clark will bo
presented to society.
Maddox
Washi
SPARTANBURG, Dec. 6.—Sulli v ^
Hughes shot and killed John Crain
lin, a negro, at the store of j n
Irvine, at Enoree, 24 miles from j .
city, on February 22, 1908. A Cor,
ner's jury at the time declared Hue ,
was responsible.
Hughes disappeared and was i
heard of until to-day. when, after L
ing a fugitive for nearly six years vL
came to this city and voluntarily '
rendered to Sheriff White. He «•
Brings Good News From locked Mp in the county jail. His mo
° tive in surrendering has not been tol
ngton—Praises Georgia
Senators’ Work.
Robert F. Maddox, back from his
trip to the East, gave Atlantans to
understand Saturday that if the work
of Georgia’s Senators in Washington
and the friendly attitude of other
powerful men had any effect in the
ultimate settlement of the mat;nr,
then a regional bank in Atlanta was
assured.
One of the influential men who has
pledged himself to Atlanta as the site >
for one of the banks is Secretary Mp. j
Adoo, according to Mr. Maddox, and j
McAdoo will be a member of the Na- |
tional Reserve Board which will have
the say when it comes to decide upon
the locations for the banks.
“I went pretty thoroughly into the
situation while I was East, said Mr.
Maddox. “One thing that impressed
me was the great work Senators
Smith and Bacon are doing for Atlan
ta, and for the State at Ijrge, so far
as that is concerned
“They are largely responsible for
the sentiment in favor of Atlanta j.s I
one of the regional bank cities. If we
get it, too much credit can not be j
given them."
GIRL MAKES $222 AS FARMER
POCAHONTAS. ARK., Dec. 6 —Thor
ough demonstration of what can be pro
duced on a small piece of ground In
Randolph County has been proven by
one of the small girls of the Girls’ Can
ning Club of the county. Lena Balts,
one of the prise winners in the county
contest, and who made a good showing
at, the Hot Springs State Fair, has made
a net profit of $222.15 from one-tenth
of an acre of ground.
A wonderful assortment
of Portable Electric and
Gas Lamps from $4 to )2fi
Brass and Iron Andirons
from $3 to $55,
Queen Mantel and Tile to.
56 W. MITCHELL *T,
Big Land Opening
m t rtf o | Pastor Says Cooking’s
Puppy Love,’ He Says. Qur Bigge J st Business
LAWRENCE, KANS„ Dee. 6.—“The
suppression of puppy love has been
one of our greatest mistakes," sai.i
Professor William A. McKeever, head
of the department of child welfare In
the University of Kansas, in a lec
ture to-day.
"Boys and girls must have a chance
to make love," he said. "Puppy love
is an expression of heart hunger
which has an important Influence
upon the nature of boys and girls. ’
CINCINNATI, Dec. 6.—In a sermon
to-dav in the Universallst Church, of
Walnut Hills Rev. A B. Beresford,
with "Sense and Sentiment in Life," his
topic, said: . , . .
"Cooking is the biggest single busi
ness in America. The American house
wives spend $14,000,000,000 annually for
food Ten per cent of this is wasted
before it reaches the dining room table.
Women spend 90 per cent of the money
man earns.”
76,000 Acres of Agricultural and Fine Fruit Lands Thrown Open
One of the Most Wonderful Opportunities For Those Who
Are Land Hungry” Ever Known in the History of
Land Openings—a Proposition that will Probably
Never Again be Equaled.
ACT NOW—This Is Your Opportunity—Registrations Accepted by
I
MILWAUKEE, WIS., I Jet-. A.—When
Miss Marie Georgina Stehling, a mu
sic leacher, decided to get married,
there was no scarcity of pastors to
perform the ceremony.
She has four brothers in the priest
hood. and they a’ had a part in the
ceremony which united her and Nich
olas Wahlen, Jr.
SPECIAL
HIGH QUALITY
LOW PRICE
FOR THIRTY DAYS WE ARE OFFERING
Best Modern Expert Dental
Work at Lowest Possible
Prices—GUARANTEED
!l(iw to Assisi llic
Professional Service
i Hat is Rendered You
requires considerable fore-
nought on the part of your
physician as to what drugs will
ease your pain and bring about
your rapid recovery.
So much depends upon the pre
scription. that you do your phy
sician an injustice unless it is
tilled exactly as he ordered It
We work so closely with your
physician, that you can unhesi
tatingly trust us to carry out
the results of his diagnosis.
Prescription compounding is out
specialty, and in it we oxer
Don’t take any chances—let uf
fill your prescriptions.
Our stock of drugs is loe
most complete in the city
We are always prepared to
fill any prescription, no mat
ter how rare the drug called
for may be
EDMONDSON DRliti CO.
Prescription Specialist
11 N. Broad St.. 106 N. Pryor St.
Crown and Bridge Work
Porcelain or
Gold-Faced
To Suit
$15 Gold
Dust Plates
$8 Set
of Teeth
Crown and
Bridge Work
™ th 50c
$10
$ 5
$ 3
Filled
Painless
Extraction
EXAMINATION
and
up
50c
FREE
DR. E. G. GRIFFIN’S
Gate City Dental Rooms
24 1-2 Whitehall Street, Over Brown & Allen’s
Telephone Main 1708. Lady Attendant
Established 23 Years
Both Drs. E. G. Griffin and S. A. Griffin Per
sonally in Charge
Best $8 Plates
Fit Guaranteed
v
Made Same Day
ONLY $5
:DIX=
THE TRUE VALUE OF
PRECIOUS STONES
The value to the buyer rests not upon what
a thing costs, but upon what it is worth.
No specific rule can be made for the buyer’s
guidance in the purchase of Precious Stone Jewelry.
The least shade of color, touch of imperfection
or lack of proportion influence the value so greatly
that only an expert can fix the value. The funda
mental feature of the Harry L. Dix, Inc., business,
as we have outlined it, and which we steadfastly
maintain, is this:
That a man need not to be able to know a
good piece of goods from a poor one, or a genuine
stone from an imitation, that he shall be offered
choice only from the best at a plainly marked
price of real value.
That he shall have the unreserved warranty
of the Dix Corporation with any purchase he may
make, that his decision shall be made easy by con
fining it—if the purchaser so desires—to style and
design—matters of taste not requiring technical
knowledge.
HARRY L. DIX, Inc.
Diamond Merchants and Manufacturing Jewelers.
208-9-10 Candler Building, Atlanta, Ga.
Mail,
jnri [nil b o ^ dl ^ tx> Classifications given below—gnd If you are weary of the drudgm
^ Y 8agt ‘ ° r * a,ary ° r from renting someone else’s land, with the cost of living soarit*
° r I fr ? m , anv cause yofl hare failed to realize the freedom and independence that you iiai*
longed fm why don t you send In your Application for Registration In this great Land Openlnq NOW
You have everything that makes life worth living. 0 GAIN P ’ nuw
Y , ,n . the Missouri Osarks, about. 4 hours’ ride by rail southwest of St. Louis (thf
ind !n[ frill? ?l%Wl t i F IH,t l anCe .i n ,he Sta,rs) - there's a Tr «ri of 76,000 Acres of agriculture
JJmJ* TWf* 11 iffih* t f« t *£? , ’J» een t 4 hr /°v Wn i°E E *' It s a11 high land- riot an acre of swamp.land In the
JT' M,s iY! url 2, zark , Frui k B . e J t wlfh a 8011 remarkably adapted to the production
of tne finest fruit, both in quality and color. Besides growing many kinds of fruit in abundance, adj*
cent lands are now growing as high as 65 bushels of com per acre, and fine wheat, oats, alfalfa and
fgher staple crops. The climate Is most healthful and invigorating- typhoid, malaria and ague arc prar
tlcallv unknown ini1 rlipm IQ an ainnt A a nan nf £ 1 . . ....
ally unknown, and there Is an abundance of exceptionally fine spring water, and besides swells sunk
♦o a depth of from to l.>0 feet find an unfailing supply of pure water. Ponds and cisterns are ea-i*-
made and an ample annual rainfall of 42 inches keeps them filled
Why Has Development Been Delayed?
Rut Nnw a Th! M i L *L S0 * naturtl one—Previous Lack of Railroad Transportation
"1. f a M^souri Southern—runs right through the 76.000 Acres and about 70% 0'
to w thln 8 ^_miles of the Railroad. So now the next step Is to get the peop 1 #
unu>uaY’»nH Purpose 7 6.000 Acres Is being included Lp this most remarkabl* And veu
hi THE HISTORY OF "rniiMTDv** ^ Quite j«8ltlve will never again be equaled
HE™ ■; H' S J0i Y OfTnft COUNTRY. The disposing of this Tract will, of course, very naturally
f ue value of the remaining Lands contiguous to the Missouri Southern to many times what •
FPmT h r\ e Tv eet l W °. h wlU ?K Ut w 1 ! 1 " °£ en J n * and settlers. Then again, there’s our NEW TownsU* of
,,01) k Missouri Southern Railroad adjoining he big 3,000-Acre Orchard There
SLS? 5,0 S? business and Residence Lots in Fruit City, but none of the Lots will be Included In thi*
IM. ° n, 1 T° m ,ho . U nu ‘i 8S k'' T. a HALF MILLION DOLLARS from the SALE of fhev
©PENING But th W " 0t k * y b ® * Lot offered for SALE until ON and AFTER the DAY ef ii-
‘These’’ Circumstances Make Possible “Your w
Opportunity
*0 a™ P™. 0 ‘ A iaii JnV 1,6 d 1 !* ld «S lnt0 o* 0 °0 Farms a* follows: 3.6IH) 10-Acre Faima. *>"
’ »i°° k 4 aaa cre * arnis - 80-Acre Farms and 50 160-Acre Farms. The Opening will
beside* the 5,000 separate Farms, a 3,000-Acre Orchard, consisting of 2,500 Acres of Apple".
and 200 Acres of Grapes, which is NOW being Developed. Improved and Equipped
* J. C °A l °/ a ^ OU ’ F0 J JR hun DRED THOUSAND DOLLARS. Tt will be one of the larpe.t
JLr Tt . !\! ,h !» y * a V/ 1 flnest Orchards in the world. Now it dogs not follow, ho'
l * r : * har the first 5.000 Applicants will secure the 5.000 Farms, because the last Applicant has ju«: m
It A.) • pp * rtua i!y a » t^e fir?’ and the first as good as the last, but remember, there will be only ONI
Application accepted for EACH Contract Included in the Opening, and no more; this being the case arc
Applications now coming in by the hundreds. It will behoove you to reach us with your Application before
° r ‘he Contracts have been taken, for we will have to reject all excess Applicatons and return 'tie
Applicant s money.
i*/'JL every Application is ACCEPTED for this Land Opening will secure elthsr s Farni
or too Shares of Orchard Stock, but no Application will be accepted unless the Applicant pay* the small
Registration Fee of $15.00. This entitles every Applicant, whose Application is accepted by us, to ONt
Contract *nd a Full-Paid-Up Certificate and also further includes the preparing and delivery of ’ r
l A ? 8tract to ,/ ou lf secure the Land, nr Ihe preparing and delivery of the
Stock Cert fleate to you. if you secure the Stock. Remember, that the Deed and Abstracts are held ii
I’Yr.r’ k h L£ ,( L Col 2 ny Trust & Havings Rank, of Chicago. Illinois, and that they Certify even Full
Paid-Up Certificate that goes out to each Applicant, in order to Insure them against an over-sale o
Contracts.
T ou will be given ? Warranty Deed and Abstract to the Land, which means that, you will he th*
sole and undisputed possessor of that particular Tract of Land. Moreover, while we are very anxlou*
to have every one who gets a Farm move on it, you are under no obligations to do so. You don’t h«v»
to live on it. Improve it or do anything with It unless you want to Tf you get 100 Shares of Orehar
Stock there will be no further assessments, because the Stock Is Fully Paid and Non-Assessable. Ynr
frill simply own 100 Shares of Stock In what promises to he one of the most complete, the best eaolpper
■nd biggest paying Fruit and Orchard Enterprise this country has ever seen. All Units will be dispose-
of on I)ay of Opening as our general printed Literature provides, copies of which will be sent *c*
Immediately upon receipt of your Application Blank and Remittance or upon request
Opening To Be At Fruit City-
Attend
-You Don’t Have To
B P€lll,l< i b . e hrid #! Fruh City and occur as soon after the
Ptnvomani, „ "i ~ , - ■ — - v^.*j »■*' vrwui an nuun ai if) MIC (’losing Of ROgiACTStiOTIO I— -
rangements can be made. The date of same will be announced at least 30 days in advance, at
"*** Bimvuiiieu ai iearn ou uays in itiww
t me Plots of the Land ami Orchard will l>e mailed to each aocepted Applicant. From the App’ln
tlons are now coming in. th-’ date of Opening can not be far distant.
be on the ground on Onenlng day or send anyone to represent you poles* yt*
SSJv 1*1 I f0r ,h ,1|P »l*»btest favoritism shown to anyone. ALL have an equal eppertonlty
and besides, you NOW KNOW in advance that, you will receive either a 160, SO, 10. 20 or 10 Acre Farm
Or 100 shares of Orchard Stock.
I ®* n ■ S«nd - * n 'y*ur-Application-Now-By-Mail-And-Get-Your-Money-B8ck-Any-Tlme-WHhln-tt
Days-lf-After-Fuller-Investigation-You-Wlsh-To-Withdraw. Literature fully explaining the “Big Openlnfl.
as above stated, will ^*e sent you immediately upon reoelpt of vour Application Blank and Remittance
It con be very safely predicted that there will he far mnre Applications than there will be Contrao*
ror, therefore, we w-ould advise that you send in your Application NOW if you are Eligible, or else voi
arc Haile to he TOO LATE, for as slated, there will be but ONE Application accepted for each t'ontrac
Included in the Opening ami no more. You can pay ihe $15.00 all in cash or at the rate of $3.00 pc
month.
m direct to The’ Railroads Unimproved Land Association,-using the Applies :
luank Below for -hat purpose. All Remittances will be duly acknowledged and • Receipts covering ■
promptly mailed as set forth in the Application Blank BELOW.
Respectfully,
THE RAILROADS UNIMPROVED LAND ASSOCIATION, Chicago. Ill
APPLICATION BLANK
4CT MW—Hejislratlons tccegled BY M»IL. rhe FOLLOWING »re ELIBI8LE and CM REGISTER
onn' a,1, nr 40 m Anrn of uSd. ( “* n or *"»*»' 0,er 21 <* »*'• »''° <><*» 1,0
An, widow. regardless of age, who does not now own orer 40 Acres of Land.
vim'bam° vel ' ’ ' ears of agp - ' vl) " does not non <"’.n over 40 Acres of I •
Land owning 77 C'™ 1 *,™ 110 "’ !l ‘ a ' 1 «m Eligible to Register in .vour Bit
z/sssnt ..m is srr &
required t* pay you on* oaniJ <5,1,1,le t . nie to ONE Contract and guarantee that I will n8t *”!
the Opening P and* tha? I w i ll RF nifSp 1 ta V » K r^l? ,raUo1 ' Fee of * 15 00 elther betorf or in att JJ
or 160 Acre T*a t iin.l n.H B f E „? U, ? E T0 R£ CEIVE at the Opening, either a 10. 20. 40, W
Assessable Orchard St<£k 'ln !h? f , hc ^rilfd 76.00° Acres, or 100 Share* of Fully FaJdandM* 1
LARS alto further InclinUa n <, 1eR i rr d.OOu-Acre Orchard—and that the FIFTEEN D° L
the Land nr the ■reaarino T anf1 d<5,,ver y of ihe Deed and Abstract to me, If I a* 0 ' 1 '
It is fiml'er uTl f, .n', "J the st0( * Certificate to me. If 1 secure the Stock
tion It does not innasT am *« rf * ( *d that if after a thorough investigation of this Fropo«
Application. ] have the nriViij!? '^trable. or if for any reason T wish to withdraw
af'er date of m.iiline M i P 'nn^fT " f n ?,V fyi J ,g vnu lo ,,,a: effect any time within 30 d*.s
• have remitted n S i^ f„ r ,hil n L a ''°V V al ’ 811,1 yo " wni nro'optly refund th* full * rT,# ^ n ,
Immrdiitely refund th. full 7 hire' remil'ted. m '' A ">
X ame
City giatc •
Street or R. F. D No
. # A*«
Married or Single *,-1 , ^
Widow or Orphan Occupation.
Do you own over 40 Acres of Land? (WRITE PLAINLY)
NOTE:—This ApplIcatlo^RlV^T u’' - tru | 1 »Tulijr answered ^11 the above questions’ •
■ re properly filled in Only ONE ?» ot RECOGNIZED unless ail of the above q- ‘■stiofli
ONE Application can he made in any ONE NAME
vnu nau n >u. *
■vfs»