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PAGE FOUH THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN, SUNDAY MORXINCi, JANUARY 17, 1913 ( l Arizona Republican's Editorial Page l H .... i "" .'.- . The All.'"lia liel'llhhcilll AI51ON IM'lil.lSHIMi COMpXNV. The only Caper iii il.'iia Published Every 1'ay lii Hi" ear onl Menihii; I'lipd m I'liactiW 1 'Wight H. Heard... Charles A. Slaulfer. earth V. ":i t.- .1. W. Si..- ii I'ti-sMenl iumI Matiayr Iiiisiiies Manager . . . AsM-lalit lltlMlni'SH Mioi:ih r Eililc'l' Exclusive Mi tiiiiik sse, lal.-.t IV.'is IMspat.'hes. I 'I t 7, c, C'lti.-r Sc. end iin.l Vil iins Streets. J "m.-i . .1 al l!i- I 'eMail lie .mi Hi. '.'niv Arizona, us Mall Matter of til.- Second I 'lass All.ii ,V Wani Kopresciilamcs. N.-v rk '"- Hi llli:-u t. U HulMing. Chi. W Oil ice, Advertising H. iii. 1 1 Mi; A'Mlc".s all . oiiiiiiiini. :itl"lis to THE AKIZONA. Itli PI'PI.ICAN. Phoenix. A i iy.i'tiH. f .7a TELEPHONES: Pnaness office t'ltv Valilor , "'. SI HSi'lIII'Th 'N KATES I'aily, one month, in a.lvame Daily, three numlhs. in advance I'aih. six iiii.iiIIis. in advance T 'silly, out' vrar. in a, Ivan, v Snndavs "illy. I'V mail StNDAY JIOIiXINil, JANUARY IT. J!5 Do not make evil i;ains: evil ains, are coiiivalcnt to losses. Ilesiod. The First Week At the dill of the first week of the lcgislalive session, the favornbU' im pression the people generally enter tained of the personnel of that body lias been greatly strengthened. There lias been no manifestation of a tend encv in any quarter toward extreme radicalism." I'snaliy at. the beginning of a session there are many members, their pockets bulging with bills, fever ishly awaiting the first opportunity to throw thefn into the hopper. Very few bills have so far been introduced, two of them of an emergency clia rac ier, one other under a mandate by a constitutional amendment. Most of tlu' others have been designed to cor rect minor, but palpable, defects in existing laws. One bill, relating to the taxation of mines, has been presented; but in this, as in others of the more important, subjects that will be presented to the legisla ture, the members are proceeding, with careful inouiry, not as to what any body wants done, but as to what, in the opinion of the people of recognized judgment, is the best for the state, that should be done. There is an air of business and prac ticality about both houses that was sadly lacking in the first legislature and in mast of the territorial legisla tures. There is, moreover, a dispo sition toward "the strictest, but not parsimonious, economy a determina tion that the public money shall not be frittered 'away. It seems to be the purpose, so far as the legislature can control the departments of the state, to lop off useless expenditures for help and for trips about the state of a more or less junketing character of which there has been so much complaint in the past. None of the members seem to be oc cupied with the notion that they have come to Phoenix to have a pleasant time at! -f? a day, but that they have come for constructive; work and to remove from the state, at least a part of tlu; obloijuy in which it is held in the east, and to make it a more invit ing place for capital which a new.statc so much needs. Municipal Clubs While we are nut familial' in detail with the Mil of Senator Cami'licll fir the establishment of municipal Hubs, we art' aware that it involves also the establishment if social renters, whose utilily is everywhere being acknowledged. People ate apt to live loo much within themselves, within their fam iliis, williiii circles of relatives, w ithin neighbor hood cliques, or within social sets, with the result that society becomes , divided into clans, ami, what i.s still worse, these clans are merged into classes, bringing nearer and neater a split in society. We neeil places where people of different ideas may meet and exchange them anil submit (hem to u tempering process where Ihey may lie made neither too hard and brittle nor loo soft and yield ing As to the social centers' feature of Hie Mil there will likely lie no dispute among the members of (he legislature. I The municipal club idea, which we believe con templates only social centers lor the larger towns, we believe lias sprung from the ashes of the saloons of Arizona. The best that, could ever be said of Ih'j saloon was that it was the "poor whii's club," the one place where any man, denied access lo other nightly .or daily meeting places, could go and mingle his ideas with those of his fellows; where he could find warmth and fellowship; where he illicit find newspapers, and, occasionally, current magazines, mid where, If he chose, he could engage in forms of recreation as harmless as one may find in well organized and more or less exclusive clubs. It it; not now pertinent to say that some men visited the "poor man's club" without harm to them and with possible benefit. But the most of such clubmen were made the worse lor their attendance. How ever, it was a place lo go, and it is now no nioie forcv i r. J ; lit man. being a gregarious animal, will fore father somewhere where he can meet his fellows, and we can think of no better place than the munic ipal club, around which will be thrown some official lcrulutinii and which, at tlie expense of the munici pality, will afford means of entertainment and rec reation which arc found in the more pretentious clubs. We believe the municipal club will raise the level of citizenship and intelligence in any eoni lnuiiit.v. Without them other clubs will be formed whoso proceedings Ahid practices will be more or less sui reptitiotis and, perhaps, illegitimate. Such clubs may become even rendezvous foi the blind pig or the Mind tiger, or both. Tite municipal club should be every man's club, v here be can go in su'h dress as he chooses, to meet his fellows, smoke his pipe or cigar, 'read the papers and broaden his mind and broaden the minds of all with whom he comes in contact. It should ba tlic club of the workingnian, the merchant, the pro fessional man. All of them will be the bcPci for, the gelling together. A Soft Drink The Republican is in receipt of a coiniuunka -ti-in from a Chicago conccrn which is engaged in Ik" manufacture of temperance beverages, a purveyor to dry territory. It is preparing to inundate Arizona. Tlie couimunicat ion encloses an editorial from th's paper dealing Willi the now burning subject of "two per cent," in which something more than u doubt was raised regarding its excellence. The writer is of Hie opinion that we had had some experience with the wrong kind of "two per cent," the "other lclol'.v's" kind, which we are assured is quite different from the kind witli which he proposes to slake the Ari zona thirst. Since the editorial whiili incited this communi cation was written a bill has been introduced in the lcjTisl.it in e which bars ' two per cent" ami all othi r beverages which' contain even as mm h as one anil one-hall per cent alcohol, so thai, it becomes a law, our Chicago concern for the relief of drouth stricken Arizona will have to remodel its turunda. The communication graciously permits this paper to tel! iis readers all about the means that havu been prepared fur the alleviation of ' their discom forts, "provided no bill is rendered i-.r advertising." We cannot now, lor obvious reasons, avail ourselves of this privilege, and ii the bill which is now i end ing should become a law, we could not do y.o without inclining severe penalties. Rut, with or without I he law, with only the prohibition amendment in force, we believe that all "two per cent" is as effectually barred from the hlatc, as "Old Crow," "Hennessey XXX" or any of the otiier wi ll recognized exhilaranls. LITTLE JAMES (Concerniny the Widespread Effect of Some Recent Legis'ation) "1 ain't inn. h ir a Sin iker." sez My l'avv. " don't care nnihin' I'er Trrbacker. which has had a Xawsawtin' .ffeck in me jist I. think of it ever sence was turned Inside Out wunst behint tl i IS.'irn when I was a iioy. Tint when they try to slop me b l-egislashun. it revives th' llankcrn fer to Smoke which I bad before I ever tride it, which was 'most Soocide on my l'art. Kver sence th' Onnerblc Lady Uo:n Apachy. Ogmented by Pi'ivil James Ooodwm. not a bil through savin' it was a l-YHoiiy to smoke in th' fapitle or the Lobby, I been most Ked fer a Smoke, an' I'm nervous from Hibolieyin' th' law. r can't eet nuthin' an' th' smell of Trrbacker Smoke makes me sick, but I got to assert my Fiiles as a Amerrvcan Siti.en even if t'i' Conner's jury finds 'at my Deth was Doo to Nick erleen. "Of Coarse, wun don't tialto go to th' Caoitle to defy this here law from th' Wiles of Apachy. He mite smoke in th' secloosluiu of his home, but fer lb' Attempt to Prohibit it in th' Lobbies which they ain't nobody knows where they is. 'When th' Legis lacher is in Seshun. th' Lobbies is everywhere under lh' Bloo Sky of Arizony. Th' Onnerble Lady from Apachy niehbe thought 'at a Lobby was a Kind of Annty-Koom like lh' Knlrance to a church. , but if she had come to see me. I could 'a' lole her Oitfrunt. When th' Legislacher is in Progrous th' Lobby gits widespred like a Messjoan Itevolushi'u or th' War in Yurrup. Wunst I seen a Lobby in a Dark Alley where a feller handed a Ix'gisl.iter a Hunch of Bills an' Kemarkt. 'That ain't a High price fer a Mool if he only don't throw up his Tale and Kick over the Traces at a very Crilticle mon ent when we need a Strong Pull.' "When the Lcrislacher's in Seshun they's Lob bies in all th- Hotels which don't b'long to th' Hotels uu' wasn't Planned by th' Arkytecks a tall. I mensliun these here matters jist to show how wide was this here leso!ashun which was got up bv lh' nnerble l,ady from Apachy. It, amounted 'most ,o a Probishun of stnokin' anywheres in Feenix. an' fer that matter, anywheres in any Arizony Town, fer Ihevs Legislatif Lobbies in Tooksoon an' Pres ent t an' everywheres. "Whenever a Legislator an' a Outsider meets together in the name of LcKislasiitui. lh' chanst is 'at theys a Lobby, an' they can't be no Smokin' without a Vilashun of th' Apachy Slatoot. Put on sieh Ocashuns they's Lible lo be a Vilashun of til her Stalools." LITTLE J A MLS. THE TITANIC MEMORIAL In the gloom "of a rainy evening, as the Staten Island ferry boat creeps on through mist to its slip on the south tip of Manhatl-ni Isianil, ti p veilaheail is suddenly f'ierced as if ny a huge green eye. Olowing in pure, aquamarine, like an enormous jewel, it points Ihi way until the gray veil lifts and the softened profile of the lower city, its illuminat ed towers rising like fairy castles into the clouds, looms near at hand. The boat glides into its slip, and its passengers file ashore, unmindful of the marvelous beauty of the softened city of light and its great eye of gleaming beryl. A stranger lin gers to ask a question. "That light V The Titantic Memorial, sir." On a tall building dedicated to the needs of sailors stands this modern Pharos, erected to a tragic memory. Each night its bright glow guides the sailor within the port, whether he be fleshly come from the perils of the deep or plies the familiar routes of harbor voyages. Above the cold white glitter of a thousand arcs, the yellow gleam of millions cf incandescent "bulbs, the deep ruddy beam of the harbor lights, the winking of the channel buoys and the changing red and green shafts tf shipping shines the deep, phosphorescent glow of the Titantic Memorial a symbol of safety and a monument to sentiment. Winfiolil sr. Thompson in Harper's Magazine. NOTICE OF PRIVATE SALE OF REAL ESTATE Pin the superior court ok this STATE OK ARIZONA, IN AND FOR MARICOPA COUNTY IN THE MATTER OK THE ESTATE OK ROSARIA LEON MARTINEZ. Deceased. No. Rt'JS. NOTICE IS HEREKY OIVEN That id pursuance of an order of the above! entitled court, made in the above cn- titled matter, mi the f.lli dav of .Ian-! nary, 191a, the undersigned, as admin istrator, will sell at private sale to the highest bidder for cash, tlic following described real estate: - An undivided One-half Pi) interest in and to the Northeast Quarter (',4) of Section Twenty-Six (16). in Township One 11) North, Range Two CI) East, tiila and Salt River Rase and Meridian, in Maricopa County, Arizona. The sale will be made on or after January r.tb, I'll a, subject only lo the confirmation of said sale as by law pro vided; ami bids will be received at the office, of Alexander & Christy, ".11 Fleming Podding, City of Fhocnix, State of Arizona. APoI.oNIO MARTINEZ, Administrator of the Estate of Rosaria Leon Martinez. Deceased. Dated January !Hh, 1313. Ni iTICE Pursuant to (be provisions of Chapter 111. Title XXVI. Civil Code. Revised Statutes of Arizona, Pit:!, entitled ".luiaes and .lurrors." notice i.s hereby given that I have this day received from the Clerk of the Hoard of Supervisors and filed in my office a duly certified copy of the list of persons qualified to serve i.-is jurors ii .Maricopa County. State of Arizona, and that 1 nave tins day notified the County Recorder of Maricopa County and the Chairman of the Hoard of Supervisors ot Mari copa Coiintv, State of. Arizona, to attend at the court room in ine rui- rior Court in the court house of Maricopa. County, or which such court is day, January 1S. M: the room in held Moll- , at the hour of 1 : 00 P. M.. f"r the selecting the names of serve as grand and trial Witness my hand and niirt this lllh day purpose of persons I" jurors, the seal of of January, products of all kinds and descriptions. To purchase or otherwise acquire Mtnl to sell or otherwise dispose of milk, eggs and other dairy and farm products of all kinds anil descrip tions. To construct, maintain and oper ate refrigerating plants and cold storage warehouses and to do all things necessary or incident to the purposes as herein set forth. To purchase, take, on lease, or otherwise acquire, any mines, mining rights, and metalliferous land, and any lntciest therein, and t exploit, work, exercise, develop, and turn to account the same. To crush, win, get, quatry, smelt, calcine, refine, dress, amalgamate, manipulate, and prepare for market, ore, metal, and mineral rub.stances of all kinds, and lo carry on any other metallurgical operations which may seem conducive lo any of the company's objects. To buy, sell, manufacture, and deal j in minerals, plant, machinery, imple ments, conveniences, provisions, and things capable of being used in con nection with metallurgical operations, or required by workmen, and others employed by the company. j To construct, carry out, maintain,, improve, manage, work, control, and superintend any reservoirs, water courses, aqueducts, wharves, f enuices, ' sawmills, crushing works, hvdraulic works, electrical works, factories, warehouses, ships, and other works and conveniences which may be ne cessary, directly or indirectly, in con nection with any of Hie objects of the company, and to contribute to,, subsidize, or otherwise aid or take 1 part in any such operations. ' To carry on the business of cold storage and warehousing and all the business necessarily or impliedly in cidental thereto: and to further cany on the business of general wareboiis-j ing in all of its si vera) branches; to. issue cerliticates and warrants, ne- cotialiie or otherwise, to persotis , warehousing goojls with liie company.! and to make advances or loans upoiij the security of such goods or other wise; to manufacture, sell and trade i said 1! I.".. .Seal) JAMES MILLER. JR.. Clerk of the Superior Court of Mari copa County, State of Arizona. goods usually dealt in by ware-1 in housemen: to construct, purchase,! take en lease or otherwise acquire! any wharl, pur, dock or works, cap- preferred stock of the par value uf One Hundred Dollars ($1001 a share. The entire stock is to be paid up ! within ten years from the date of j filing hereof with the corporation commission in property, casn orsei iccs at their fair valuation. j ARTICLE V. ' The names and places of residence land post office addresses of the in corporators are as follows: ' (jeorge 11. Proctor, Oranite Springs. Westchester, County, New York. I t'.eorge If. Proctor, Jr., Granite Springs, Westchester County, New , York. I ARTICLE VI. The time of the commencement of the corporation shall be the day tileso Articles are filed in .accordance with law. and the termination thereof shall be twenty-five (2,1) years there after, witli privilege of renewal as provided by statute, i ARTICLE VII. 1 The affairs of this corporation shall be conducted by a hoard of dirctcors, and the following named shall con stitute tlie board of directors until their successors are elected: Georgo li. Proctor, Oranite Springs, Westchester County, New York. George II. Proctor, Jr., Granite Springs, Westchester County. New York. Thereafter the board of directors shall be elected at the annual stock holders' meeting to be held on the second Monday of Jar nary, of each year, commencing; with the yenrPU". The number of directors to consti tute the board !;hall be fixed by the by - la vvs. ! ARTICLE VIII. , The directors have power to adopt and amend by-laws for the govern ment nf the corporation, to fill vac ancies occurring in the board from any cause, and to appoint an Execu I live Committee and vest said com I mittec witli all the powers granted ! the directors by these Articles. A di i rector need not be a stockholder. ARTICLE IX The highest amount of indebted ness, direct or contingent, to which the - corporation shall be subject at anv one time shall be Six Million l-" - -i-M-M-Mii-)rii-innnrinAAjuLfui.r There, is no reason for any doubt about the title to your property if it is protected by a Guaranty Title Policy as. issued by the Phoenix Title and Trust Co. 18 North First Avenue Hire a lituo salesman at The Re publican office. A Want Ad will see more customers than you can. CERTIFICATE OF iritORPORA TION OF GRANITE SPRINGS COMPANY KNOW ALL MEN HV THESE PRESENTS: That we, the under signed, have this day associated our selves together for the purpose of forming a corporation under and pur suant to tlie laws of the State of Arizona, and f"r thai purpose do hereby adopt Articles of Incorpora tion as follows: ARTICLE I. The name of the corporation shall be GRANITE SPRINGS COMPANY ARTICLE H: The principal place within the Slate of Arizona in which the business of said corporation is to be transacted is Phoenix, Maricopa County, Arizona. The corporation may have such other offices, either within or without the State of Ari zona, as may be from time to time established by the Board of Direc tors, and at these offices meetings of the stockholders and of the Hoard of Directors may be held. At all meetings of the incorporators and stockholders, voles may be cast either in person or by proxy duly authorized ill writing, and at all meeting! of the stockholders each stockholder shall be entitled to one vote for each share of stock stand ing in liis name at the close of the transfer books prior to such meeting. ARTICLE HI. The general nature of the business proposed to be transacted is as fol lows: To acquire water by purchase, de velopment or otherwise; to construct reservoirs or water towers, erect pumping machinery, laying of wa ter mains, pipes, uates, valves and hydrants, to furnish and sell water lo manufactories, private corpora tions aiid individuals for fire protec tion, manufacturing and domestic use, and collect payment or rentals for the same. To establish and maintain nil in stitution or institutions for tlic treat ment and care ot the sick, and lo establish and maintain a school or schools lor the training of nurses for the earo of the sick. To buy and sell holi Is, restaurants ami boarding houses: to manage and conduct lioiels. restaurants, cafes and boarding-houses, and to lease and hire tlie same; to build and construct hotels, apartment and other buildings, and generally lo do and perform ev erything necessary for the aforesaid purposes. To prepare for publication, print, electrotype, bind, sell, and distribute and generally ileal i'i magazines, newspapers, paryphlcts, books anJ publications of all kinds and to en gage generally in the business of job and book printers. Miokbinders, sta tioners, ngravers and electrotv pcrs. To apply for, purchase or other wise acquire and to dispose of copy rights in the United States and else where. To pttrchase or otherwise acquire and to sell, either as principals or agents 'and as freely as natural per sons might or could do, hooks, maga zines, music, newspapers and publica tions of all kinds and descriptions, stationery and stationer's supplies and generally to carry on the business of wholesale and retail booksellers and stationers. To manufacture, buy, sell find gen erally deal in butter, cheese, oleo margarine, and butterine and flairy. connection Willi the business of the company; and generally to carrv on and undertake any business under taking, transaction or operation oom- monly carried on or undertaken by : vv arehousemeii, and any other busi ness which may from time to time j seem to the directors capable of be ' ing conveniently carried on in con ' necliim v. itli the above or calculated ; directly or indirectly to enhance the value of or render profitable any of t th company's properties or rights. To establish, maintain, and conduct I schools, colleges and oilier institu tions ot learning; to purchase or otherwise acquire land for the pur pose of the erection of buildings; to erect and construct buildings for the use of such schools, colleges, and other institutions of learning. To establish maintain and conduct places of public and private enter tainment of all kinds; to purchase or otherwise acquire land for the pur Pose of the erection of buildings; to erect and construct buildings for the use of seen places of public and pri vate entertainment. To construct, equip, improve, repair. and maintain all works and means of transiortation and communication in eluding railways, tramways, omnibus lines, tunnels, subways, telephone lines, and telegraph lines; to enter into any contracts for or in relation to the construction, equipment, im provement, maintenance, and repai. of such works. To conduct the business of farm ing and slock raising in all its branches; to buy and sell and gener ally deal in farm and dairy products of all kinds and descriptions: to buy, sell, and otherwise deal in live stock of all kinds and descriptions and to do all things necessary or incident to the purposes as herein set forth. Tlie foregoing clauses shall be con strued both as object and powers', and it is hereby expressly provided that tlie, fonvgoing enumeration of specific powers shall not be held to limit or restrict in any manner the powers of the corporation. In gen eral, to earry on any other business in connection with the foregoing, whether manufacturing or otherwise, and to have and to exercise all the powers conferred by the laws of the Statn of Arizona upon corporations formed under the act hereinafter re ferred to. ARTICLE IV. The authorized amount of capital stock of this corporation shall le Ten Million Dollars $l'i,iMii.i,iirm.iii), divid ed into Fifty Thousand (.".((.omi) shares of common stock of the par value of One Hundred Dollars (SlOti) a share and. Fifty Thousand Cii'.iMMD shares ot ' Dollars (Sfi.lMifliOii.Cti). ARTICLE X. I The private property "f the stock j holders and officers of the corpora Ition shall be exempt from all corpor jale debts of any kind whatsoever. ' ARTICLE XI. In furtherance and not in limita tion of the powers herein set forth, said corporation shall have tlie right and power (a) To manufacture, purchase or otherwise deal in, hold, own, manage, sell, pledge, transfer, or otiietwise dispose of, goods, wares, merchandise j and properly of any and every class and description. (b) To acquire, the good will, rights and property of any person, firm, association or corporation, and to pay for the same in cash, the stock of this company, bonds or otherwise, and to hold or in any man ner dispose of the whole or any part of the property so purchased. (c) To conduct in any lawful man ner the whole or any part of the bu siness so acquired, provided such bu siness is within the authorization of the Husincss. Corporations Law, and to exercise all tho powers necessary or convenient in ami about the eon ducting and management of such bu siness. (d) To buy. sell, lease, hold or improve real estate, fixtures and per sonal property so far as the same may be necessary or convenient or advantageous in connection with the conducting of the general business of the corporation. (e) To apply for, obtain, register, purchase, lease or otherwise acquire, and to hold. use. own, operate and introduce, and to sell, assign, or otherwise dispose of any trademarks, tradenames, patents, inventions, im provements and processes based in connection with or secured under letters-patent of the United States, or elsewhere. (f) To use, develop, grant licenses in respect of, or otherwise turn to ac count any such trademarks, patents, processes and the like, or any such property or rights, provided always that the terms "use" and "operate" shall not he deemed to include ant business except such as is permitted by the Husincss Corporation law. g) To purchase, acquire, hold and dispose of the stocks, bonds, and se curities of any corporation, domestic or foreign, including the slock and bonds of this corporation and issue in exchange therofor its stock, bonds, or other obligations, and, while own er of any such slock, bonds or other securities to possess and exercise hi respect thereof, all the rights, powers, and privileges of individual owners or holders thereof, and to exercise any and all voting power thereon. (h) To guarantee tho payment of bills and notes, and the payment of MOTOR TRUCKS Are not luxuries The horse is not being replaced with out reasonDo you Know the reasons as applied to your own business? A saving in delivery costs surely inter ests every merchant Phone 519 Mc ARTHUR MOTOR SERVICE BROTHERS dividends or interest on any shares, slocks, debentures or other securities issued by, or any other contract or obligation of, any corporation when ever proper or necessary for tlie bu siness of tlie corporation in the judg ment of its directors; and provided the required authority be first ob tained from tho board of directors for that purpose. U) To lend and advance innncv or give credit to such persons and on such terms as may seem expedient, and in particular to customers and others having dealings with the com pany, and to give guarantees or be come security for any such persons. (j) To do all and everything ne cessary, suitable and proper for the accomplishment of any of tho pur poses or the attainment of any of tlie objects or the furtherance of any of the powers hereinbefore set forth, either alone or in association with other corporations, firms or individ uals, and to do every other act or acts, thing or things, incidental or appurtenant to or growing out of or connected with the aforesaid business or powers or any part or parts there of, provided the same be not incon sistent with the laws under which this company is organized. (k) The corporation shall have power to conduit its business in all iis branches, or any part thereof, in any of the. states, territories, colonies, and dependencies of the I'nited States, in the District of Columbia,, and in any and all foreign countries, and to have one or more offices therein, to hold, piirchti.se, mortgage, and convey the real and personal property without limit as lo amount, ill any such state, tcnitoiy, colony, dependency, district or foreign or other country, but always subject to the laws thereof. IN WITNESS WHEREOF we have hereunto set our hands and seals this th day of October, P'H. C.EORdE II. PROCTOR, OEOROE II. PROCTOR. JR. State of New York, Couufy of New York, ss: On this -th day of October, 1HH. before me personally came Heorse II. Proctor and George II. Proctor, Jr., I" me known and known to me to be the individuals described in and wh" executed the foregoing instrument, and they severally duly acknowledg ed to mc that they executed the same. JOSEPH E. SMITH. Notary Public. (Seal) N. V. County No. 37:11. N. T. Register No. W-MZ. My Commission Expires .March ."I, 1915. Out-Of-Town People Visitors in Phoenix, as well as tlie people living mi lliis coiiniiuiiiiy. ace eoi dially invited to lot, tlie Phoenix National L5ank serve them in any hank n of financial matters. The hank is conveniently located in the center of tlie city and its equipment and facilities are unsurpassed. Our officers and employes are always pleased to he of assistance and you" will find that the service we render is courteous, painstaking and accomo dating. The Phoenix National Bank