Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, May 28, 1913, Page 7

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Hunt For "HUNTS” No Lie on the Can No Lye in the Can Peaches Apricots Hawaiian Pme Apple Pears Cherries Pure Food Store W.P, Plllans & Co. PHONE 93 _m— Lakeland, Polk coun!y, Florida; but the corporation shall have the right to establish branch offices within and without the State of Florida, as de. sired. $0TICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY LAKELAND FURNITURE AND HARDWARE COMPANY. Notice 18 hereby given that the ondersigned incorporators intend to 2—Nature of Business, aply to the Honorable Park M.| Tho general nature of the business Trammell, governor of the State of|to be transacted by the corporation florida, at Tallahassee, Florida, on}shall be to buy, own, lease, hold, the 14th day of Jume, A. D. 1913, !mortgage sell, or otherwise encum- for letters patent on the DNDOM:! ber real estate. To buy, own, sell, charter of the LAKELAND I'URNLI rent or lease all kinds of furniture, TURE AND HARDWARE COM-|furnishings and fixtures; all kinds of PANY, hereto attached. hardware; all kinds of crockery, and E. H. YOUNGS, JR. |chinaware, and #ny and all kinds of F. T. HOUSER. werchandise generally handled or F. A. GRETHER. Lert in hardware stores and furni-! Articles of Incorporation of the Lake.| ture stoces; to buy, hold, sell, mort-| land Furniture and Hard- caze, or lease any and all kinds of) ware Company. pe ; to receive on con-! We, the undersligned, do hercby as| sivnment for sale on commission or gociate ourselves’ together for t}'c othi 1s of personal prop- purpose of forming a corporation for| cr o1l thing pofit, under and by virtue of thv‘mw*flr_v for tie proper conduct ol laws of the State of Florida, and do th tereby adopt the following charter. 1—Name and Location, or to do any and woresnid 3—Capital Stock. The capital stock of wne corpora The name of the corporation shaiij tion shall be forty thousanl be The Lakeland Furniture and|dollars® (§10,000.00), to be dividel Hardware Company, and the princi- lmlo four hundred (400) shares of pal place of business shall be atithe par value of one hundred dollars business, The Services of Artist, Your Printing to the and News Job Printing Lakel — e THE EVENING TELEGRAM, TAR s s mn e e e 1$100.00) per share, to be paid In loney or in property to be used in the conduct of the business of the corporation, a just value of whica property shall be agreed upon by ilie incorporators at a meeting called for that purpose. Said corporation shall bave the right to increase its capital stock to any amount, not to cxceed one hundred thousand dol- lars ($100,000.00) when so desired Ly the majority of the stock. by the majority of the stockholders owning a majority of the stock. 4—Term of Existence. This corporation shall continue for a term of ninety-nine years, unless sooner dissolved according to law. 5—Officers. The officers of this corporation shall be a president, a vice presiden:, a secretary, a treasurer and a board of directors that may consist of not| less than three or more than seven| persons as the stockholders or board of directors may desire, and such other officers as the stockholders may elect or the board of directors may appoint. The secretary and treasur- er may be one or more persons, and the officers herein named may hold any of the offices established by ths stockholders or the board of direc- tors. The annual meeting of said | corporation shall be held on the sec. ond Monday in January in each year, but this date may be changed by the by-laws. In the election of of- ficers each stockholder shall be en. titled to one vote for each share of stock owned by him and sald vote may be cast in person or by proxy, evidenced by written authority s.gned by the owner of the stock. No person who is not a bona fide stock- bolder shall be eligible to hold any office of the corporation enumerated in this charter but any person chosen by the board of directors may hold any office established by tho stock- kclders or the board of directors. Un- tii the officers shall be chosen at the first annual meeting and duly quali- ficd, the business of this corporation (ghall be conducted by the following officers, to-wit: E. 1. Youngs, Jr, shall be the 3 president. F. T. Houser, shall be the vlvei president. | F. A. Grether shall be the secretary ' and treasurer. E. H. Youngs, F. T. Houser and| I A. Grether shall empose a board of directors. Tho majority of the directors shall constitute a quorum. ; ELAND, FLA., MAY 28, 1913. t of Liabili The highest amount of llublmy or indebtedness to which the corpora- ticn may at any tirae subject ltaelt shall be an amount equal to the amcunt of stock at that time sub- geribed. 7—Seal, The said corporation may have » geal bearing whatever words or de- sign said corporation may desire, which said seal shall be kept in the custody of the secretary of the cor. poration. 8—Subscribing Incorporators The names and rcsidences of thej ... bison, believed to be part of & | incorporators of this, 1arge herd, were stampeded by John the! Laduc, & French-Canadian trapper, subscribing incorporation, together with i FINDG BUFFALO HERD Canadian Trapper Surprised 15| Near Arctic Circle. Discovery of the Animals In Far Northwest Confirms Theory of Hunters of Their Existence In Rocky Wilds. Edmonton, Alberta.—Fifteen Ameri- amount of capital stock subscribed| sald to be the first white man to by each, are an follows: E. H. Youngs, Jr., Lakeland, Flor- ida, $19,750, 19733 shares. F. A. Grether, Lakeland, Florida, $12,750, 127% shares. F. T. Houser, Lakeland, Florida, 75 shares, $7,500. In witness whereof, the under- signed incorporators have hereunto set their hands and seals this 12th day of May, 1913. K. H. YOUNGS, JR. (8eal). F. T. HOUSER. (Seal). F. A. GRETHER. (8eal). State of Florida, County of Polk. Before me, C. M. Clayton, & notary public, State of Florida, this day per- sonally appeared E. H. Youngs, Jr., F. T. Houser, and F. A. Grether, to me known, and known to be the per- sops who signed the foregoing char- ! ter and who have described in same, and severally acknowledged before me that they executed sald articles for the uses and purposes therein ex- pressed. In witness whereof I have here. unto set my hand and officlal seal this 12th day of May, 1913, C. M. CLAYTON, Notary Public, State of Florida. My commission expires on the 6th day of July, 1916. JOHN S. EDWARDS, Attorney for the Corporation. AR O SRS UPHOLSTFRI¥G AND MATTRESY MAKING Ola Mattresses made over; cushion of all 'kind made to order. a postal card. _Arthur A Douglas 416 8. Oblo Btreet. Prop penetrate the Hay river country, in the hinterland of Alberta. He has come to Edmonton with a two-years’ fur catch from the territory several hundred miles beyond the Arctic Cir- cle. The feeding ground of the buffa lo, which he reports to be as wild as those which roamed the western plains in territorial days, is between the Peace river and the Beaver hills. The discovery is of importance, as it cenfirms the beliet of naturalists that a herd of buffalo exists some- where in the unknown north. Laduc, who has lived north of the fifty-fifth parallel all his life, is emphatic in the statement that he has not con- fused his find with the musk ox or the wood buffalo, seen occasionally inside the Arctic Circle, Laduc's (npplng operations, during the two years' stay in the far north, extended over more than three hun- dred square miles of territory. From Peace River Crossing he paddled his canoe up the Peace river to the mouth of the Cadotte river, tramping then across the country to the Clear hills. He put out a line of traps and made good catches. Afterwards he jour- neyed to the west of the Beaver hills to about forty miles from where the Hay river rises in the Three Hay lakes. Here is the story in his own words: “I was making a long trip over the country to the north and west of Beaver hills in the summer of 1912. The Beaver hills consist of a short range, reaching an altitude of two thousand feet. Beyond there is a long stretch of rolling prairie. Though it did not look good to me for fur, | explored for miles around, coming ! upon the buffaloes .on my way out. There were fifteen in the herd and they were feeding in a coulee as 1 went over the ridge. “The animals stampeded the mo- ment they sensed me; but 1 saw enough of them to convince me they were real buffaloes. Later in the win- ter, fully forty miles from where 1 saw the buffaloes the previous sum- mer, I came upon tracks which _must ha.ve been made by a large herd | There were many hoof prints in the hard snow. “The tracks were right in the Besr i ver hills, not a great distance from the end of my line of traps. Although I watched every time I went over that i part of the territory, I did not see the animals again. When I return to the inorth, in a few weeks, I hope to ob tain more tangible evidence of the disy covery of the herd.” Widely known explorers, including Seton, Allen and Hornaday and big game hunters from various parts of the world, who have been through the hinterland, believe there are wild baf !faloes in the district, and from time ! to time Indian trappers have come cut with tales of a large herd. 8o fam, Laduc is the first man to say he saw the animals. AT FIVE HE SEES THE WORLD Ragged Urchin Makes Himself a8 Home With a New York Auto Party. New York.—While several autome bile parties were dining in Muller's hotel, a small boy, his clothes tora and his face and hands dirty, wam dered into the dining room. | “Belong around here?” a man aske< the lad. | “Not on your life. Live at 508 Fuz street,” replied the urchin. “Where'’s your father?” “I should worry about. him Be's home."” The boy sald he was Louis Shapire, five years old, and that he had left hiw ihome, five miles away, in the morm- ing for a day's outing in Van Cor® 1andt park. On his way home he do cided it was time to get something 49 eat. UNIQUE WILL IS CONTESTED One Daughter of Clgarmaker Father Was of Unsound Mind at the Time. ' New York.—Louis Ash, a agarme- ker who died recently, provided in his will that it his daughters would no@ agree on the equal division of his M- brary the books should be weighed and thus equally apportioned. The odd provision is one cited by Mrs. Amanda Chase, who, decluring her father was not of sound mind, is con= testing a codicil to the will which ‘p,i\m $25,000 to Mrs. Nathalle Maye another daughter, cutting off Mre. | Chase. Killed by Kick of Ostrich, An ostrich aftacked a shepherd of Btolslake, Orange River Colony, a few days ago, and kicked him so severeli that he died & few hours later. s Are Yours When You Bring I Office YOU get your work done by people who know--who will not let some foolish error creep into subject it to th Our plant turns out ten papers of stat closest attention to the small bon badge, 0 us to secure and successfully ¢ for the bigg e amused comment of discrimina ting people. your work that will make your printed matter ineffective, and perhaps newspapers every week--two of them being 51xteen-page wor For Printing--a Line or a Volume-- arry out our large contracts. er work naturally enables us to do the smaller work better. e-wide circulation; bat this does not mean that we do not also give the k. An order for visiting cards, or for printing a rib- ¢ 2 hundred circulars, is given the same careful consideration that enables And, having had to fit up We Are At Your Serbice THE LAKELAND NEWS JOB OFFICE KENTUCKY BUILDING

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