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THE CAUCASIAN TL ESI).\15, SIPT. 2:1, 1913. i)r. E. G. Allen. O (ire ill Iii ,oultie IBuilding. Dr. Allen is a gratiuatc of both schools anitl c-artis a iul! Iitic of hoileopa thic r tlids. Sp( rial atteintion to PRIO)VIStIN 1AiliKET Q uotatlions t:allr'ully Revised and C(orrc(ield. LA_ . i"--er" l): Ti re compoundl 9) l-2e; 1ute lard I -i 12. 'lomr ' and 1oual. 1,'1. : 1;, 0lii lalte l. (.0) so.' OL( 0 ('1 .),..-o ); xira fancy I 3.25; C( mconun 8,.5.; sa ..ks 10s less. Mi,;L- lSanamiard 2i4-lb slcks 47tr; CrIiam Si-lb) sacks e51c; cl e l eal iln wotid $i. 10. (lil'S -I(tr barrel 81.50: Fledstuffs. (t) IS_--Per bushel 57c. Co)RN- P.r bushel $1.00. IANS--Per 90--lb. sack $1.35. UCHOPS-P'er sack $1.65. HAY--Per ton: Arkansas $12.50; timothy $20.00, alfalfa $22.50, Mexi cain nativI alfalla $23.00. Sulru and Molasses. SUGAIt-Standard granulated per lb. 5 1-8c; choice Y. C.C. c. MOLASSES-Choice 30c; primne 32c; common 25c; pure sugar ho-9e 45c. Coffee. COFFEE--Per lb.: Fair 17 1-2c; medium 17c; better grades 20e. Dairy Products. BUTTER-Country, good to choice 15e; fancy creamery 35c; 1-lb bricks 38e. CHEESE-Daisy, per lb. 18 1-2c. Chickens and Eggs. CHICKENS-Per doz.: Hens $5.00; fryers $4.00; broilers $3.00. TURKEYS-Per lb. 15c. COCKS, guineas and culls $2.00. OUCKS-Per dozen $3.00.. EGGS-Per dozen 23c. Eseulents. CABBAGE-Per lb. 3c. ONIONS-Per lb. 2 3-4c. POTATOES--Per bushel: Califor nia $1.25; Minnesota $1.15. NAVY BEANS-Per lb. 5c. Fruits and Nuts. APPLES-Por bbl. $5.50a5.75; per box $2.00a2.25. ORANGES- California Valencias per box $4.00a4.50. LEMONS-Per box $6.00a6.25. W-ALNUTS-Per lb. none. PEANUTS-Raw hand picked per lb. 7 1-2c; roasted le higher. - RAISNS-Per box $1.75. - ALMONDS-Per lb. 19c. COCOANUTS-None. BRAZIL NUTS-Per lb. 13c. PECANS-Per lb. 16c.. Lost in Caddo Parish, La. A certain promissory note dated Nov. 12- 1912, signed by II. P. Dance, made payable to the order of W. E. Seay for the sum of one Andred and twenty-four and 20-100 dollars, with. eight per cent per annum in terest thereon from maturity, Dec. iit, 19M2, and providing for te$ per cent of principal and interest as at torney's fees in case of suit. The said note was endoesed by W. E. Seay and transferreu. to the under :signed owner. FRANK L. LEVY. Shreveport, La., Sept. 12, 1913. Caucasian, Sept. 14, 1913. How to Order Patterns. Patterns described in the Caucas i~n are supplied by the May Manton ;Paittern Company, Greeley Square, New York City, and Masonic Tem i:.:le, Chicago, Ill. Forward order with name and address to the New Yprk or Chicago office with 10c for eadh pattern. They will be mailed direct to you. I:: HUMPHREYS' -These -remedies are scientifically and : ref:: ly prepared prescriptions; used for miauyyears by Dr. Humphreys inhis private pra~ ie,.aand for nearly sixty years by the Peo lwith satisfaction. iaoal Book mailed free. I ;mwa Congeution, Infammantoas........ S oams.. Worm rever....................... ..... 0 uI6. Crying and Waketainess or Intan.ts. !' f3arrea. or chndren and Adýlts...........2a S(.wase. Colds. Broneul. ...... .......26 8 Tootihe.e Faceache, Neuragira............2 S aiache. Sick adche. Vertigo.........25' SO 99ppepIndigestion. Weak Stomach..... 5 12 eeoarencougm tnegus............ss I Anu, rp..lt...................2s u.a. . . ....2 5 SEVERE CRITICISM FORHOUSE:RULES Minnesota Man Quits Powerful Commillee as Result, HOUSE TOO BIG TO REFORMI Minority Members Complain Because They Have So Little Voice In Shap ing Legislation-More Freedom of Debate and General Privileges Are Greatly Desired. By ARTHUR W. DUNN. Washington. Sept. 22.-[Special.l Two Minnesota men recently severely criticised the methods of the house of representatives. Mr. Anderson carried his resentment so far as to resign fror the ways and means committee, the most important committee in the house, in order to emphasize the fact that mi nority members of that committee have no voice in shaping legislation. Mr. Lindbergh was more mild, but his crit icism was none the less severe. lie said in beginning to discuss the cur rency bill that as he had only an hour he did not want to be interrupted. "'Any member can get an hour to dis cuss a personal grievance," he said, "or any trivial matter, but only an hour is allotted to discuss the most important measure that has come before con gress. The house is growing in dis favor because it takes weeks to consid er trivials and runs the time short when matters of importance are con sidered." House Cannot Reform. The house has gone beyond the period of reform because it has increased its size every ten years until it has become so unwieldy that it must be run on the close corporation plan. The lead ers long ago saw that the larger the house the more power was given to that select few who were leaders and took control of legislation. There were no more severe critics of the methods of the Republican congress than the men who are now running the -Demo cratic congress. When they came into power they found that the only way to manage the large body was to take control by the same old methods, using the party whip and drastic rules just as their predecessors had done. It is the way to accomplish results, but it affords cause for criticism by those who want more freedom of debate and gen eral privilege of making amendments Value of a Citizen. When the house passed a resolution paying $6,000 to compensate an Italian family for the loss of a man's life Congressman Austin of Tennessee be came indignant "I want to protest," he said, "against what has been done before. Here you pay $6,000 for an Italian, but this house has fixed the value of a citizen's life at $1,500 and even as low as $500 in paying claims for lives lost while on government work, and often that is all that a wid ow with several children has to sup port herself and orphans." Each a Poet. No one suspected that Congressman Esch was a poet until Congressman Adamson sprung it on the house in ad vocating a light on Navassa island, West Indies. It seems that on-one of the trips to Panama the Wisconsin congressman turned loose seven stan zas on the rock called Navassa. and now the Georgia congressman has em balmed them in the Congressional Rec ord, and it is very good poetry that Esch turned loose about the lonely rock in the Caribbean sea, which is now the site of a United States light house. Down to Fighting Weight. Minority Leader Murdock in discuss ing the currency bill said something about the Progressive party and ex pansion of the currency. "Judging from the news from Maine," interrupted Glass of Virginia. "the Progressive party is chiefly in fa vor of contraction." "The Progressive party has just got down to fighting weight," retorted Murdock. Pooh Bahs In Finance. Congressman Mondell claimed that under the Glass bill the secretary of the treasury became the Pooh Bah of finance. "Didn't you vote for the Vreeland Aldrich bill," asked Chairman Glass. "which made the secretary of the treas ury the sole dispenser of $500,000,000 of currency ?" "A very different proposition," re plied the Wyoming man. "In other words, that was your Pooh Bah and not my Pooh Bah." Two Sides to It. Senator Nelson of Minnesota rather surprised the senate by asserting that there were two sides to the matter of speculation in farm products. He de clared that the farmers thought that it often brought them higher prices. It gave them two markets, the millers and the speculators. "I am interested in the farmers," said Nelson. "These people who are foolish enough to bet on baseball or gamble in wheat and cotton are a set of gamblers. Even if part of the wheat buyers are nothing but gamblers I -have no objection if the farmers get a little better price for their wheat." M'en from the cotton states claim that the s.eculators on the exc.anges contronries so as to injure the cot -top -e ROY A.\DAIR OF DIXIE ik latls ill a Lecler to Prof. Cottrell! How lie Planted and Cultivated in Acre of Cor1. \I i ilt li i o ' Ihi l l. ('t r . of 1 . 1liaur i f IxI .'. r1- ip rid .ed i'tfro tiii t t( o ni rli-i ntnl' i (' sland Lill'j u'l, ~ Ii i, lli.: i ) r, ilot'ii Cot itroll I r1, c iv l your leItti asli hi \ 1 r, aits 1. I.ni hiltr lt ) of a, r illn p(1r li iu l I i i f~ ,l• 14 llul- i hi lit l [4 i li ,i I ',' in li ll . I litsI tiiutlluh Ii(' l iuii well vwith ilt uln.U pltl -w and iiddle l tlSter, 4l 1 intc it , h ro s a. l t t ll aitlap rl. W\ ni I \vit in i ptlant my uuArn I larrovvd it h hllds !lil wvili ai uiulli v.at ,'. Ili[ n t i ,ltened Ihlm bed viilh ,i Il-imnch lizzatvl \winig sweepli, llten ilaltlod in Ihe stunt fartow. My lirst tilltivaliun was \vhl n lli i corn Va botld S iolln ts hih. I Ian a. lili valnr fnir limets in , .1w \\- and mlln thin ild il i1 aiuiiit 12 orI 15 inlwr s i1i irl. lhavinl it lo one ,salk ii a hill. .\l ni l six (lays alt sli'ailtis I r itu l around my iriin with a I -in'ic luzzatrd wiing sweep. Tlh n I pill, 31(1 pounds of raollon see i meal (Ili te c i'r , p ll lii it oil Ol4 silde 1 ol li(' row I{owni it) the swoop furrow, and loun put iit Ii middlles iut wi ith a 2i-inch iizzliard winl_ swoopi at one liin li fhe iro\v. I Ihel lit. it stand alutiot 8 l or I I days.. Tlihen I ran around i witlh I he sa elii little 16-ici'h seoop and puil 300 poidts lmorl e of l i on si u ,i aiii on it, putl. Iin i it ion the olllte sidel of tlie coin. I pulled the suckirs off and unt two IIIiifurrows oin the middl to wrap~ the fertilizer up) andi lhin ran one fur ioiw with a 21-inch buzzarid wilng swveept. This work was done .jusl abiout. tlihe int Ilhe corn began to tassel i ouI.. I also workied lhis same nie in oill iin 1911. 1 put out about 25 2-hoIrse loads of Iarinyard mannuie in 1911. but did not put anything oi it ini 1912 but, t oil n btseed meal. Mly falttier is a very tine corn raiser. Ht1 raises seed corn for sale ['very yeari. He sold somudthing over .5(101 bushels last year selected by hand. I forgot to tell you the kind of land and when planted. The land is mixed sandy Red River land and I p)lanted about March 20. Sincerely youtrs, ROY ADATR. Tooth Pulled by Locomoti\e. It is reported in the Chicago Sun day Tribune: that George Sullivan, a railroad brakeman living in Soull Boston, ihas solved the dentist prohb lem. His new idea is simpleO and in expensive. Hlere it is: XWhen hiik tooth aches he hitlhes the ndrl of a copper X wire to the tooth and Ilh o1liter end to a locomioltive. And then- Tool! Toot! Full speed ahead and the toothl is out. Sullivan, who brakes for the New York, New Hax en & Hartford, hit ul)pon this new way of pulling teethl when he had the1 toolhache Friday and his boss would not let hinm off to go to the dentist. The pain beo came so intense that he finally hitched a wire to the tooth and tried to pull it out, but hlie was not strong enoutgh., 11i enlisted the services of a couple of switchmen, but they were not equal to lihe emnergency.9 At lasI in despair Ithey hitched the loose end of thlie wire to a switch en gine, tied Sullivan to a telegraph pole and in a jiffy the tooth was trailing along behind the engine. Louisiana Negro State Fair. Times-l)emocrat Sept. 22: The Louisiana Negro Slate Fair opens Ioday at the Fair grounds for a week. It commemorates the half century which has passed since emancipation, and is designed to show the progress which the race has made in Louisiana in its fifty years of freedorm. The time selected for tlhe fair is opportune and should assure many exhibits and a large attendance. It has the good will of the white peo ple of Louisiana, for never have the relations between the races been more friendly than at present, ýnd never have tho colored people been in a better position to display the progress they have made and are still making. A MPeasure Framned in the Public Interest. The Commoner for September: The administration currency bill involves three fundamental princi ples. First: The notes issued must be issued by the government and not by the banks. Second: The issue must be con trolled by public servants and not by the banks. Third: The emergency currency issued must be issued through State banks as well as through national banks. The bill as prepared observes these three requirements. The right of the government to issue money is not surrendered to the banks; the control over the money so is sued is not, relinquished by the-gov ernment; and national banks are not givcn a monopoly of the benefits flnwing from the issue of these Cm 'rtI I ncX' 4401es. Th reg'ioj'nral reserve hanks wvi I I1.('0e 444 groat4 adva4tta-Le- to. busi 1' "4 Iirc reae1\4' bank w4il II e a (444141444'14'141ial cnl44r4 and4 this ('T.i'tl4(4 viIl 14' 44444'1 n44'44'4 " to1 l144e' I1 1114 l1 au th 1 ýI4'ý1 lard' 1citie ('44'IF !:('1Il1~ to, reachc~l till pubiilic through~i~t h("1'1 144 44:4414 1144' Jr44(i 4)I (' 144(41h4nk4 wl vIls I4'gi444i i '4'54'4'X4 I441lk5 -''0111 IX'v flit ther1 4'i ' n'54 ('V I 4441 is 1 4'4Ii lX XXII:~( 411)' ;1 14 XXIII 44 414 1 4\X44 44 4a4ki' 4144442 I li44 pres4' nI Ias't i ;i'xi'x' . (44414441444c4 ill U.14'l4 far \ 1(r( ;( ;i nlil'( n lil li 6 jla. ·sir s.· Llvcr\ In\· no rcr r llral (itf cto y 11th)c Ill' I'r('si41('4 ill thli'e ood wolik il XXiiril he Ii Ils lgag4' by writ ino g I44 his 54'1141441' 11rgilg th14144 Inp5414144( I14ll' Prsiden4t in Ihis good4 )'H'441ls. E)1 ile I1oal iii ( eisl le41' ion (Ilopulpa of1 Nit l Louiisiana. lIne 441 1m,444 1sia444, 144I 4arish1of (;d 4144: 114e I itc known I 14:11i. th4444 lis (aiy 44'f4ir4 444', I':4444''5444 II4'u4Il4'y, a1 444 flaI". p1441 iI amt:444 4' f 1r t arish 44 Caddo 444, S l 4o41isiana444 5XV)l. os444 414154' mufle4s are4 14'r4''lo41 5441 's4'4i144', res'id14'441 o41 sai4 Par44ish a444d pIl41 ', who44 i44 I e 14(' ile of'~ 4 '0 (41 114' 14 44ll4'1sig.114'4I :1114Ž51iig XViiI i0i' )54' 414 '144144 14o 4444', no441 y, t14a41 avX4ili44g II 144s'4444'es 441 I144' Con1stitutio1 a4444 Idaws o41 th44 EFlat o4 14L4ou44isia4444 reŽ144 the41 h~ave~ l44'44ed an444 4'44145ti4t4d I44'44454'IX' 44444 do4 by these~4 prs ('4 Is l'444'4a4 d 1(4441 it451 44(4Ž 1140 54'] v4', 44s WeiI as su44'1 01e 14' er[44 oo544'e w( 4 ith 114444, 11414 a1 'o4(pora4 11ion 4441d 14o44y ('orpora444te 44 4d 14ave4 ad41p4(d an 44d ord~ained4 as their c'har' ier' m4444 act of inco:4rporatio the4114. fol lo)wing12, 1(4-wit: AIITICLE I. The name and title of this cor porat ion shall be the Home Con struct(.ion Company of North Louis iana, and under said name and title it shall have and enjoy succession for a period of fifty years from the late hereof unless sooner dissolVed uider the provisions of the laws ,i' the Slate of Louisiana: and shall have power and authority to sue and be sued; to make and use a corpor ate seal and the same to use, break, alter and amend at pleasure; to hold, receive, have, purchase, in prove, alienate, convey, sell, bor row, lease, pledge, mortgage and hypolhecalte, or otherwise acquire ior dispose of property, real, per sonal and mixed: to name and ap point such olicers, directors, agents and milanagers or employes as the interests or convenience of the cor !oral ion may require: to make and establish b)y-laws, rules and regula Lions as may be deemed necessary and proper, and the same to change rnd alter at will: and to do any and all other acts and things permitted by law as shall he necessary and proper to carry ouit the objects and ipurlposes of the corporation. ARTICLE II. The domicile of this corporation is her'eby fixed in the City of Shrevep)ort, Caddo Parish, Louis iana. where all legal process shall bie served in the manner provided by law. ARTICLE III. The objects and purposes of this corporation are hereby declared to be to buy, sell, lease and improve real estate, urban or rural, wherever situated in the State of Louisiana or elsewhere; to build houses,, stores or otlher buildings or improvements thereon, and the same to sell or lease on such terms and conditions as the officers and directors may de termine, and approve; and generally to do and perform every act neces sary and incident to conducting a general real estate improvement and development business, with the right to construct., acquire and ope late such plants, machinery or other facilities for the manufacture of materials useful and necessary in improving such real estate as may come into its possession. ARTICLE IV. The capital stock of this corpora tion is hereby fixed at two hundred thousand ($200,000.00) dollars, to be divided into four thousand shares of the par value of fifty ($50.00) dollars each, which shall be divided into two classes, namely, common stock and preferred stock. The capital stock as herein authorized is fixed at one hundtlred thousand ($100,000) dollars of common stock and one hundred thousand ($100,000) dollars if preferred stock. To the preferred stock there is hereby pledged the net earnings of the corporation as security for the payment annually of a dividend of eight per cent upon the preferred stock paid for and is sued and as part of the corporate charter it is stipulated that out of the n&t earnings of the corporation for each year of its existence there shall be set aside as segregated by this pledge an amount qudI to eight per cent of the full amount of pre ferred stock paid for and issued, which said sum shall be declared LOUISIANA I STATE . FAIR NOVEMBER 5-12 INCLUSIVE 1913 $25,000 IN PREMIUMS AND PURSES GREAT AGRICULTURAL AND LIVESTOCK FAIR BALLOON RACES DAIL,LAUTOMOBILE RACES NOV.9 & IZ,HORSE RACES 5 DAYS TIHAVIU'S WORLD FAMED RUSSIAN BAND -35 PIECES - 6 SOLOISTS HORSE SHOW LAST 3 NIGHTS IN THE COLISEUM BAND CONCERTS IN COLISEUM FIRST 5 NIGHTS * * GOOD SHOWS ON THE GLADWAY * * 'FREE -EVERY NIGHT-FIREWORKS DISPLAY ADMISSION DAYs,50 CENTS * 'AT NIGHT AFTER 6 P.M. iO EXCURSIONS ON ALL RAILROADS WRITE FOR CATALOG FREE. LOUIS N. BRUEGGERHOFF, SECTY. o,, l, l sh i , ckx, i tll . sa, it. t o ,SIl-k shitll noil parlic' ip l, in Ilre prolits of ithe corporation in excess of said eilIht per cenl annual divideins nor shall tthe shares of preferred stock entille Ie hIolderl s thereof i vole at thii Imc'iting.s of lthe c'orllporatlion, except at mictlings called forl thle pulrpose Iof almndling or chalnging the char Ier of IIe c'orlporation or io consiildr its dissolil ion, and theni only on Ihose pallrticuilai' subjects. Tihe hold ers of conrnlon stock shall not pa, licipale in IIh divisions of ihe profits of the corpor'altion until after IhIere shall have been set. aside foril piaymenl to the holders of preferred stock the aforementioned annual dividend of eight per cent. Each slhare of common stock shall enlill,' Ihe holder tlheteof Io one vole it. all meetings of I.I1 corporation, to be cast inl Iperson by the holder therenof or by proxy. The corporation is all Ihorized to begin business when tin tIhousand ($10,000.00) dollars of thle capital stock is subscribed alnd paid for. The capital stock shall be paid for in cash or' the same may be is sued at not loss than par in paymenit or exchange for prolperty or rights actually received or purochased by ihe corporation or the same may be) is mitd fully paid for money ad vanced and for such other valuable consideration or services as the board of directors may determine,! pirovided that no stock shall be is -und untlil the consideration. heliere f or shall- have been received by thel' cor1porataioin. No Itransfer of stok ,tall affect or be binding upion lihe c,;lporalioIl unless mlado upon its books at. its ollice in the City of' Slhreveport ,and then only on sur render of the certificate thereof, plrovided further that no stockliold :r shall transfer' his stock until hlo has paid all indebtedness due the corporation, and provided that saidl corporation shall have a lien and pl'ivilege upon said stook to the ex-: Lent of its said indobtednoss. ARTICLE V. ril~l-. . . . . . . , . . o . 'IThe corporate powers of tlhis cor poral ion are hereby vewsted in and shall ibe exercised by a board of di rectors composed of three stork holders, provided that no person shall be eligible as a director who is not the owner of at least one share of the common stock of the corpor ation. The officers of this corpora tion shall be a president, a vice president and a secretary-treasurer, who shall be elected annually by the board of directors from among their owa number. The first board of di rectors shall be Lazarus Wise, Chas. A. Bartsch and Jules Levy, wih Lazarus Wise as president, JulI.s Levy as vice president, and Cha:les A. Bartsch as secretary-treasurer. "'lie said officers and directors shall held office until the first Monday in tic'ober 1914, or until their succ,'s sars are elected and qualifies. On the first Monday in October 19fi and rnnually thereafter a board of di rectlors shall be elected, unless said day shall be a legal holiday, when the election shall be held on the first secular day following, and the directors so elected shall hold office until their successors are elected and qualified. Ten days prior notice of said election shall be given, either by publication in one of the newspapers published in the City of Shreveport, La., or by written notice by mail addressed to each holder of common stock at his last known place of address as shown by the books of the corporation. Only one method or mo(de of notice shall be required. A majority of votes cast shall control the election. The board , of directors shall elect or appoint such other officers, agents, em-' ployes, servants or clerks as it may deem necessary for conducting the business of the corporation. fix the compensation and term of service, with the right to dismiss them at the board's pleasure; and the said board shall have the right to fix and determine the salaries of the sev eral officers herein, provided, and shall have the power and authority to establish branch offices of the I )irl)<litll tl il i s:lI'il I)tlI0 llitu 'v ilt t ,he Slate of Lilisitna or ,lsewher, O, lside of Il, y Ilily, of S1 hri ep\( r(( ;IS ill its (opinion Ihit h bl sin ,ss mll i 'll- a justify aildl retuitre. ;an shall li_ (Il(lorurli for I the I ransac li (i of libusi n.ss: "an..' rit , in t-.i board of d1i retlors shall he fillIed l hby il rrlairl in< di rctors. All (oinlrrlts for the purclhlas,, sale. lease,. mortgag or otherw ise na((luiring (or disposing of real estate (or rights theirein mIist hIe siglned((i by ht h th prllesiderl alndl the sor Il la ry-I reasirrer. ARTICLE VI. At all mietings of thie slockhold rcs otf lthe c(lorporali in, except. as oltr oi\vise prov\idedtl herein, eacih shalre of stoik shall entitle Iihe holder thereof, ,iliter in ier'soi or by proxy, to one vote. aiil a mlajoir itsy of votes cast shall cointrol; and L.e days prior nor)lice of such m(e,.t ings shall ]be ; givii by w ritlen no lice mailers 1h each stockholder of ltrecord or by publli(tion ill i iin's tpaper published inI tle City of Sihrevepolrt, La. ARTICLE VII. No stockhiolhder of this Icorporation shall tbe liable for any of the acts, faullts ori conirclItats of tihe same for aniy greater atiiount than the 1unpaid bialance, if any, due on liis capital slto, k, alul ilO iniforilities ill organizalionii sliall hav Ie thie e(ff ect iof r ,endering;il this charter void or ex posinji any silockholder to any fur thir liabilily lhani Ihe unpaid al anlle, if anl due bJy hlinl fort sto(k `subscribeJd. ARTICLE VIII. This (charltir iiay i Ilh l iliged, atl tri(.l1 or( ;aliiminll l , o I. thisi chorpora lion dlisol\ved I, cilosnt,' of wo thirds of ill the slcik hieirof at na nl i ngl< i .allit for 1I111 purpose af ter len days nolice ini wvril.inlg miailed to ei.h of the0 sltokholders heohh . A..IUFI(LI:, IN. \\ e1'h'n 'er bthis 4'44'14 :,ralti s shtial 144 )issoi', ,'d Ily li milation 41 4 other-i wise, its affairs shall he liqriiidated iby tIhre'e 4o4 niiss1i, 4es I 4to ble ts lected by the slI kholdIhrs at, ile neeling at which the resolution for' the dissolul.io1 of the cloporation shall have, be1en adoplted. In leir eventl of the death, resiglation or removal of any of lhe said liquida Iors, the others shall a l without appointing a successor. In witness whereof, lth parlies have signed this insltrumnenl, in irie presence ofI me, nol, ary, and P. C. Butler and A. A. Lellhsen, com pe tent witnesses, on this thl, 22nd day of Sep temter A. i). 1913. LAZA RUSl WISE. C. A. lIAlITSCII. Atlest: J I;LES LEVY. P. C. BUTLER. A .A. LIEROSEN. EMEIISON BENTLEY, Notary Plublic in and for Caddo Plar ish, State of Louisiana. State of Louisiana. Parish of Cadl do: I hereby certify that I have this day examined the above and f)or1 o Sing c hater and at' of i14ncorporatlion of the Home Con tru li(on Comp))lany of North Louisiana, and fin ing nlothing therein 'ontrary to theI Conitilution and laws of the State of Louisiana, I hereby approve the same. Thus done alndl signen, this 22nd (lay of Septe nhe' A. . 1913, at my Otfice in the City of Shr'e\porl, Caddo Parish. Louisiana. W. A. MABRY, D)istriect Altornyv F'irst Judicial Dis ticit of Louisiana. Endorsed: Filed and rleco'rded(( Sept.22, 1913., S. O. WILLIAMS, D)eputIy Clerk and ('ex-Officio De'put.y Recorder. Slate of Louisiana, Parish of Canl do: I heri'eby c(ertify that the above and foregoing is a trlu and (enrrect., copy of the original a't, as teh same now appear's on file and of record in I my office. Given under my hand and seal of office this 22nd (lay of Sep tember 1913. S. O. WILLIAMS, Deputy Clerk and ex-Officio Deputy Recorder. Sept. 23. Estray Nollie. Tront Shreveportl, a)out) Sijtl elt cut on 1o0 sine of neck, appa ruff, about 12 or 1: . years ) Ili: no I oa or otheir marks. htie owner of sail anilal is orlerIed, to p)rove o ner ship or pady e ss-, or :sai horsl. ' xill be sold at front of Poythress gro (erIy store, Jewella, La., oni S,. ur day, the 25th day of (Otlo)l)r 1913, beltween the legal h)lrs of sales, ;by the cily marshal, accordin,,g Io law. L .C. BLANCIIARI), tily .JIdge. Caucasian, Spl. 21, 1913. Murff T Thurber ATTORNEYS AT LAW 521 Commercial National Bank Bldg. Long Distance Phone 709 WILL PRACTICE IN TIlE STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS Shreveporl, La. W. A. 'labry CIVIL LAWIYER DISTRICT ATTORNEY FIRST JU DICIAL DISTRICT Office: Court House Long Distance Phone No. Gil J. i. Foster R. D. Webb Foster (. Webb ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW 508 Conmmercial National Bank Bldg. CuIuberlanld PI'ihone. WIVLL PRIACTICE IN ALL STATE ANI) FEIII)EiIAL COt JITS. W. l.SHEEN P. A. BLANCIIARID Sheen & Blanchard0 Attorneys and Counsellors at Law Office in Continental Rank Bldg. Will Practice in All Slate and Fed eral Courts Continental Bank&TrusttCo. Shreveport, Louisiana CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $375,000.00 RE SO URCES $1,850,000.00 0 SOMETHING NEW IN TIME DEPOSITS We Issue a Gold Coupon Bond Certificate which you do not have to renew, nor do you lose any interest. WE PAY 4% INTEREST Compounded Four Timnes a Year on Savings Deposits. NEW BUSINESS SOLICITED (ornwI's Dakery MAKER OF Snowflake 0 Bread and "Cakes 721 TEXAS ST. BOTH PHONES 471 SRIY EPORT, LA.