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The Arizona Sentinel from Yuma, Arizona • Page 4

Location:
Yuma, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION OF THE Inyo Gold Company. Know all men by those Presents that we, The underpinned, are citizens of the I nited State Of America, and do hereby associate ourselves together for tiie purpose of forming it corporation tinder the laws of the Territory or Arronu, and to Unit end adopt tbe tollow Ing ai tides of incorporation, to wit: AlcTICLK I. The names of the incorporators am V. Jiunes, .1. 1.

Flint. J. O. cannell, Geo. lashcr and 0.

11. idaman. and Urn name of tiiecoruorntiou shall be tin- Inyo bald Company, The principal place in which the business cf Mini cuiporaiion is to bo transacted in ine Territory ol jirizuuu is ut Yuma, Yuma county, Arizona, and the principal plate of business of said corporation outside el the Territory of Arizona shall be the City of A County of l.os Angeles, Stale of California, anil at which said last named place meetings of the Hoard of Directors of such corporation may be hold, and the corporation may have such branch offices, either within or without the Territory of Arizona, as may be established by the Hoard of Directors. article it. The general nature of the business proposed to be transacted by this corporation is as follows, to wit: To purchase- lease, bond, locate or condemn or otherwise acquire, own, hold, exchange, tell, or otherwise dispose of, or pledge, mortgage, hypothecate and deal real estate, fiaiichiscs and any and all kinds of personal property, mines, mining claims, prospects, placer ground, oil, oil lands, mineral lands, gas, asphalium.

petroleum, electricity, electric power, water, water rights, coal and coal lands, salt and salt mines or lit- posits, borax deposits und machinery, and to work, n.ine, explore, operate and develop the game; to establish, operate and maintain Knit plains, saw mills, quartz mills, concentrating und cyauiue plants, hydraulic und sluicing works, well drilling machinery and apparatus, storage tanks, refineries for metals, minerals and oils, assaying plants; und to eict-t, operate and maintain gas and gas works, electric lighting and power plants, water power; to construct, operate and maintain canals, ditches, flumes, pipelines, resei voirs and waier tanks; to construct op-crate and maintain tramways, street railways, railroads, wagon roads, stages and ttage iftics; to erect and conduct hob-Is, lodging and boarding houses, restaurants, storehouses, stores and other buildings and to do general merchandise business; to own, sell, handle and control letters patent, trade marks mid inventions; to buy, sell and hypothecate shares of capital sUick of other corporations; to borrow money and execute notes, bonds, mortgages, or deeds of trust as evidences of uch Indebtedness and to secure the same; to accept notes, bonds, mortgages, pledges or other evidences of indebtedness rrom indiiduais. or other corporations, and to exercise in respect of all such bonds, mortgages, notes, pledges, or other evidences ot indebtedness, and any securities and obligations, and any and nil rights, powers and privileges of individual owners thereof, including the right to vote any shines of stock so held by it to the same extent that a natural person might or could do; and in gen-rmltodoall tilings necessary and requisite to the proper conduct of the business of tills corporation in the Territory of Arizona and the State of California and elsewhere, not in-vonsistent with the laws of the Territory of Arizona and the laws of the United States of America. auticlk m. The authoiizcd capital stock of this corporation shall be Five Hundred Thousand Dollars divided into Fifty Million (50,000.000) shares of the par value of One Cent tie) eacn. Said capital stock shall be paid into this corporation either in cash or by the sale and transfer to it of real or personal property for the uses and purposes of this corporation at such time as the Board of Directors may, by resolution, direct, authorize and accept, and such payment, for which shares of Jhe capital stock of this corporation may be issued, and the capital stock so issued -hall thereupon and thereby become and be fully paid up and and in the absence of actual fraud in the transaction the judgment of the directors as to the value of the property purchased shall be conclusive.

AUTICLK IV. The time of the commencement of this corporation shall be the date of tiie tiling of these articles of Incorporation in the office of the Secretary of the Territory of Arizona, and the termination thereof shall be twenty-tivc'ycars thereafter, with the privilege of a renewal of the said term for an additional period of twenty-tive years, should the corporation by proper resolution so decide'. AKT1CLK v. The affairs of this corporation shall be conducted by a board of live directors and the following-named persons shall constitute the Board of Directors until their successors are fleeted: W. S.

residing at lxs Angeles, California; J. 1 Flii.t, residing at los Angeles, California; .1. O. Scnnnell, residing at Los Angeles, California; Geo. Lasher, residing at Los Anneles, California, and O.

Vidaman, residing at Los Angeles, Cal. Thereafter the Board of Diicctors shall be elected from among the stockholders at the time and in the manner which may be provided by the By-Laws of this corporation. ARTICLE VI. The highest amount of indebtedness or liability, direct or contingent, to which this corporation is at any time subject shall be Three Hundred Thirty-three Thousand.Thrce Hundred Thirty-two Dollars ($333,332.00) ARTICLE VII. The private propert3' of the stockholders of this coriKiration shal be exempt from corporate debts of any kind whatsoever.

Jn witness -whereof, we have hereunto set onr hands and seals this day of April, W. S. JAMES J. O. SCANNELL O.

P. WJ DAMAN GEO. W. LASHER .1. P.

FLINT State ok California. fSEALl (SEAL I SEA Iij SEAL ISKAI.j County of Los Antreles. i On this Wth day of April, in the year A. D. V.V2.

before mo, Wiseman Macdonald, a Notary Public in and for the State and county aforesaid, residing therein, duly commissioned and sworn, personally appeared W. S. James, J. P. Flint.

O. P. Widanian, J. O. Scannell ond Geo.

W. Iisher, known to me to be the persons, elescribed In, whose names are subscribed to, and who executed the annexed instrument, and they acknowledged to me that they executed the same for the and considerations therein expressed. In -witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my official seal, at my office in the said State and county, the day and year last above written. J. WISEMAN MACDCNALD, (seat.) Notary Public.

My commission expires May 21, 1SKM. Recorded at request of J. W. Dorringion, at 2:15 p. April 21, A.

D. 1P02. C. P. CP.ONIN, County Recorder.

Territory or Akizona, 1 Countyfof Yuma, i hb- C. P. Cronin. County Recorder in and for the Counts of Yuma, Territory of Arizona, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a true, full and correct copy of the Articles of Incorporation of the "INYO GOLD COMPANY filed for record this elay, and' as appears of record in Book "3" of Bonds Agreements, page et records of Yuma count aforesaid. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set unhand and affixed mv official seal, this 21th davof April, A.

D. KV2. (seal) C. P. CKONIN, County Recorder, Yuma County, Arizona; crntorv.

First publication April 30, 1P02. Eat Youp fleafs at the I California Restaurant Tom Duck Proprietors. 9 33E- Good Cooks, Attentive, Obliging a Waiters, First Class Fare. -aec Fresh oysters served in any style Fish and Game in season. a I Meals 25- 35 and 50 cents.

Board 9 by the week, $5, $6 and $7. 9 Cor. Main and Second Streets. 9 Notice for Publication. Homestead Enuy No.

3908. Department of the Interior, Land OWce at Tucson. Arizona, May 27. 1902. Notice is hereby given that the following nam! settlor his filed r.otio of his intention Til make commutation final proof in support of hit claim, and thnr proof will bo made before theClerk of tho District Court at Yuma, Arizona, on Saturday, July 12.

191)2. viz: Seward V. Knout, of'Yuma. Arizona, for the B. 4 S.

Sec. 15, T. S. R. 21 G.

S. It. B. M. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation nf said land, vis: Kdward E.

Bulch. James R. Harbolt. William Prewitt mid George D. Scott, all of Yuma, Arizona MILTON R.

MOOKE Firl pnbl-'-uiiem M.i 2 The figurative phrase, A green old picturesque and suggestive. It likens us to trees, which, instead of being bare and leafless in age, are still vigorous, and giving leafy shade and shelter. What a contrast between this helpful and beautiful old age and the old age that is like the withered tree with only here and there a leaf to show that life lingers in the trunk. How can this useful and attractive old age be attained The first essential is to keep the stomach in a condition of sound health. It is not the quantity of food we eat but what we digest and assimilate which nourishes the body.

When the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition are. diseased the food eateiTis only digested, there is loss of nutrition and the body loses strength and vigor as a natural consequence. vThis loss of strength makes itself apparent in physical, languor and weakness and lack of interest in affairs follows close on loss of energy. When once the grip on active life is loosed it is only a few steps to doting senility. Dr.

Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. It enables the perfect digestion and assimilation of food, and as a result the body is. properly nourished and is made strong in the only way in which the body can be made strong by the nutrition extracted from food. No medicine can make strength. All strength must come from food.

So-called "strengthen ing medicines are for the most part stimulants, which are particularly injurious to those of advanced years. There strength in stimulants. There is no strength in anything food, the nutrition derived from which in the form of blood eveo' tissue of the body. Containing no alcohol, neither opium, cocaine nor any narcotic, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is the ideal medicine for persons of all ages who are weak lifM 111 School Notice.

Notice is hereby given that the quarterly meeting of the board of school examiners for the purpose of examine ing applicants for teaohers' certificates will be held at the public school house in Yuma on the first Monday in June, June 2, 1902. A. Frank, Probate Judge and ex-Offieio Superintendent of Public Instruction of Yuma Arizona Territory. First pub. April 30.

td Notice to Creditors. Estate of C. W. Thomas, Deceased. Notice is hereby given by the undorsigned, executor of the estate of C.

"VV. Them as, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit tli3m with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice, to the said executor, at the office of Peter T. Robertson, attorney-at-law in the town of Yuma in said Yuma county, the same being the place for the transaction of the business of said estate. Dated at Yuma, Arizona, May 24, 1902. C.

E. Mack, Executor of the Estate of C. W. Thomas, deceased. Peter T.

Robertson, Attorney for Executor. First Pub. May 28, 1902. (4t.) Mining locations, conforming; to the nv mining laws, for sale at the through inadequate nourishment. "Have purchased some of your valuable medicine of L.

Spencer, of Blackstone, Va and it has helped my wife so much that we do not know how to praise it enough," wntes Air. tctor L. Hayden, of Blackstone, Nottoway V'a. "I cannot express my gratification in words. 1 also had been suffering from indigestion so badly that I could not work more than half the time, but now can work every day and eat anything I want.

Why? Because I took Dr. R. V. Pierce's Gulden Medical Discovery. It Hps put new life and energy in me, restored my health and made a man of me once more.

I used to weigh 170 but had gotten down to 144, now am back to 160 and will soon be back at my old weight if nothing happens. Your medicine has done it all. 1 cannot thank you enough for your advice, and think if it had not been for your medicine neither my wife nor myself would have been here many years. By the help of Providence and Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery we think we can stay here a good man' years.

You can use my name any time or place you wish, to let the people know what Dr. Pierce's medicines have done for myself and wife." "When'l wrote to you for advice, I was feelirg very miserable with not simply one ailment but general debility," writes Mrs. Martha Jones, of Claremont Surry I purchased a bottle of Golden Medical Discovery ami also one of Favorite Prescription and a bottle of I soon began to in prove and continued taking them, until I wis feeling so will I discontinued. That was last spring, and I continued feeling as well as could be expected ofan old lad' seventy-three years of age. The hot summer was hard on me and I commenced" to feci the effects of it.

In September I went on a visit, was taken sick, and had what the doctors called bronchial fever and cough, it was next to an impossibility to raise the frothy mucus. When 1 was able to get to the steamer I came home in a very weak condition. I immediately commenced taking the Golden Medical Discovery and Favorite and now after four weeks have passed since I came home I am so well I can help my daughter about the house. I have so much faith in your medicine I feel that the number of my days have been prolonged by it. I think no medicine equal to yours for old people.

It makes their declining days easy and cheerful. I would say to the aged especially, take Dr. Pierce's medicines, they will help and cure also." Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery." The only motive for substitution is to enable the dealer to make the little more profit paid by the sale of less meritorious medicines. which will bo mora valuable than Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Advisor, containing over one thousand larne pages and more than TOO Illustrations.

This great work is acnt FREE an receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing ONLY. Send 31 one-cent stamps for the cloth-bound volume, or only 21 stsmpa for fho book in paper-covers. Or. R. V.

visit DR. JORDAN'S greut! MUSEUM OF AHATOHY 051 MARKET SAN FHANCISCO, CAL The Anatomical iluseum In the Wor.d. OrraifMt attraction in the City. A wonderful tlohtjor vltltort. W'aUnceii, or miy contract by the oldest SnertnMst mi tho Vnrin Coast.

Jjta.bll3lied Sa years. OR. JORDAN PRIVATE DISEASES Younir xnou and mlIdIo nsreel men who tire nnirfVrliii' from tho eH'ccLi of youthful IiidU- I creuuiis or excesses in maiurcr years, wervimsutiu piirMcai I intuit one v. T.onl iliiii.liutiil in till Itscnmnli. cations; SpcrmjUori-Ijeen, Irtiiloi'- ritiea, ii-cr, Jt ttl Vrl mitlnnr.

etc. My a cnnililitntlnii of remettips, of groat po or, the Doetnr lia-iSonrrjuicMl Km that It will not only ulfurd iratnt-diatn r-lii but permanent I cure, the Doctor does imt claim tuperfi.rtu mlrncles, but is well known to bp a fair and I Fqiiiire Physician und Surgeon, rtemluenl In liiSMpeciiUty IJiMi'iifcp ox Plvii. i thiiroutrhly from the system without the use of ilcrrurj i Triiio lilted bv an Exnert. Itndlcnl run- fur JCuitf lire. A Quick and radical cure far rJo.

Kl-nre mid FJfalxc, by 1 jjr. joruaji 3 special painless memoes. EVEUT 97 AX annlvlnirto will receive I our honrxt oplnUm of blsconiplHliir. He will Quarnntre a POSITIVE CURE in I ever; case wc unctrrltikc. Cons'i'tatloii FltKK and Ptrlctly private.

CHARGES VERY REASONABLE. Treatment personally or by letter. Write for Rook. OF 3I.4KRI.lftI?. JfAiLKD Fhke.

(A valuable book, for men.) tall or write OR. JORDAN 1051 Marks! S. F. mORE LIVES ARE SAVED Dr. King's New Discovery, Consumption, Coughs and Colds Than By All Other Throat And Lung Remedies Combined.

This wonderful medicine positively cures Consumption, Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Asthma, Pneumonia, Hay Fever.Pleurisy, LaGrippe, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Croup and Whooping Cough. WO CURE. NO PAY. rice 50c. $1.

Trial Bottle Tree, i other I I K'fch useful, Is always: received vrKh appreciation. You cannot make a present PIERCE, Buffalo, N. Y. Ordinance No. 5.

Relating to the passage and publication of Ordinances, the proor thereof and the time when they take effect. lie It Ordained by the Common Council of the Town of Yuma: Section 1. The original ordinances of the Common Council shall be deposited with and kept by the town clerk. Section 2. Unless otherwise ordered, by the Common Council, all ordinances passed by the Common Council shall take effect on and be In force from and after their passage by the Common Council and their publication in some weekly or daily newspaper published in the town of Yuma as provided in section 3 of Chapter VHI of Title 11.

of the Revised Statutes of Arizona. Such publication maybe proven by the certiileate of the town clerk or the ex parte aflldavit of the editor of the newspaper in which such publication is made. Section 3. Tho Common Council may by resolution entered upon its minutes designate the newspaper in which the publication of public ordinances shall be made. Section 4.

A certified copy under the hand of the town clerk, and the of the town, of any ordinance or resolution contained in any of the books of the town of Yuma, deposited in the otllcc of the town clerk, or of any ordinance or resolution, public or private, deposited in his office, shall be received as evidence thereof. Section 5. This ordinance shall take effect on and be in force from and after its passage and publication in three consecutive issues of thp Arizona Sentinel, a weekly newspapca published in the town of Yuma. Such publication may be proven by the certiileate of the town clerk or the ex parte aflldavit of the editor of said newspaper. Passed May 20th, lOOi K.

S. Patterson, Mayor. Attest: (Seal.) J. j. Rkoondo, Town Clerk.

First publication May 21, 1002. tOME TO THE SENTINEL OFFICE lor Job oi k. sa-iMaeiion assured. TERRITORIAL- PRISON -OF ARIZONA. Proposals for Supplies for Twelve Months, From July 1, 1902, to June 30, 1903 OFFICE OF BOARD OF CONTROL, Phoenix, Arizona, May 7, 1902.

Sealed proposals will be received at the office of the Superintendent of the Prison at Yuma, Arizona, up to and including Wednesday, June 25th, 1902, for furnishinff supplies to the Territorial Prison at Yuma, Arizona Territory, in such quantities as may be required (more or less) for the fiscal year commencing July 1st, 1902, and ending June 30th, 1903. Bids must specify the brand, size, quality, number and other distinguish-1 ing features of the articles proposed to be furnished. Bidders may make proposals to furnish any or all of the articles in the lists furnished by the Secretary of the Territorial Prison, but bids for articles" in different subdivisions must be separate and under separate cover. Proposals must be sealed and addressed to the Secretary of the Board of Control at Yuma, Arizona, and endorsed "Proposals for furnishing to the Territorial Prison," and with the name of the sub-division in which the article bid for is included. All bids must be triplicate, with a copy of the call for bids attached to each bid.

All proposals must be accompanied by a good and sufficient bond in the sum of ten per cent 10 per cent) of the total bid, with two sureties, conditioned that if said bid shall be awarded to a bidder he will enter into a contract within ten days, with bonds in amounts to be fixed by the Board. All supplies must be of good quality and subject to inspection and approval of the Superintendent of the Prison. All bids should be based on the delivery of full weight at the Prison and no charges for containers. Payments will be made monthly, as provided for by Act No. 22 of the laws of 1901.

The Board of Control will open bids on Thursday, June 26th, 1902, at 10 a. in. at the office of the Superintendent of the Prison. Yuma, Arizona, and all bidders are invited to be present. A complete list of the articles required will be furnished upon application by the Secretary of the Prison, Yuma, Arizona, or the Secretary of the Board of Control; Phoenix, Arizona.

i The Board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. The following list, contains the estimated quantity, name and present contract price of the articles on which bids are called for: PROVISIONS. 100,000 lbs Beef, fresh, full front and hind quarters, of equal weight, first-quality 6.25 (Kept in cold storage not less than five days before delivery) Foi'e-quarters. Hind-quarters, less loin. 1,000 lbs Bacon, medium, per cwt 10.49 lbs Beans, No.

1 pink, per cwt 2.98 15 Cases condensed milk (Eagle Brand) per case. 7.24 6,000 lbs Coffee, green (Salvador No. 1) per cwt 10.34 100,000 lbs Flour, Capitol Mills, per cwt 2.294 Arizona Flour. 10,000 lbs Dried fruit, in 1001b sacks of 501b boxes First-class Apples, per cwt First-class Peaches, per cwt 7.90 First-clasa Raisins, per cwt 7.40 5,000 lbs Lard (Cudahy or Dodd's) per cwt 8.59 10,000. lbs Onions, per cwt.

1.875 300 lbs Pepper, black, ground in 2olb cans, per cwt. 14.00 100,000 lbs Potatoes, Irish, per cwt 1.45 3,000 lbs Rice (Island No. 1), per cwt 6.40 8,000 lbs Soap, laundry, in lib bars) per cwt N. C. 5,000 lbs Salt (Salton table, in 101b sacks), per cwt 1.18 5,000 lbs Sugar (beet granulated), per cwt 6.44 300 Gal.

Syrup or Molasses, 5 Gal. can, per Gal 364 500 lbs Tea, Japan, fired, No. 1, per cwt 29.75 200 Gal. Vinegar, cider, triple strength, per Gal. .254 1,000 lbs Smoking Tobacco Duke's Mixture) per cwt 38.40 1,000 Chewing Tobacco (Battle Ax), per cwt 38.00 3,000 lbs Rolled Oats, per cwt 3.39 3,000 lbs Corn meal, per cwt.

2.90 CLOTHING AND BEDDING. 200 Pairs blankets, 72x80 (Yosemite) per pr 1.74 0,000 Yards Prison Stripes Cotton, per 100 yds 20.00 4,000 Yards Canton Fannel, heavy unbleached Eller- ten, per 100 yds 10.90 75 Suits Citizen Clothing, per suit 4.90 10 Doz. Citizen Shirts, calico, perdoz 4.95 10 Doz. Citizens Hats, per doz 10.35 150 Doz. Handkerchiefs, red bandana (Martha Washington), per doz 04 25 Doz.

Hats, convict, per doz 7.65 1,000 Yaids Sheeting, unbleached (Pequot per yard 062 250 Doz. Socks, per doz 5875 500 Yards Bed Ticking (Am-oskeag XX, or Hamilton A per 1275 500 Yards Toweling, linen crash (Steven per yard. 092 3,000 lbs Mattress Moss, per lb 0.95 LEATHER AND FINDINGS. 3,000 Ft. Upper Leather, per sq.

ft 204 .224 2,000 lbs of Sole Leather per lb .289 .329 250 lbs Brass Shoe Nails, patent, per lb 244 50 lbs Iron Shoe Nails, per lb 074 200 lbs Channel Shoe Nails, per. lb 134 100 lbs Hungarian Shoe Nails, per lb 084 STABLE SUPPLIES. 25 Tons Rolled Barley, per cwt 1.14 50 Tons Alfalfa Hay (baledfr per- ton 10.84 25 Sets of Horsehoes, assorted sizes, per lb 1. .059 LUMBER. 10,000 Ft.

pine or redwood, clear or surfaced, assorted sizes and dimensions, per 1000 ft N. C. 15,000 Ft Oregon pine, rough assorted sizes and di- mensions N. C. 5,000 Ft.

Flooring, 1x4, T. assorted lengths N. C. 20,000 Shingles, clear redwood, per N. C.

5,000 Ft. pine, common, as--sorted sizes and dimensions N. C. PAINTS AND OILS. 200 lbs color in oil, lib cans, assorted, per lb .179 4 Bbls.

Mineral Paint, unprepared 500 lbs Pioneer White Lead, per lb .087 100 Gals, raw Linseed Oil, in cases, per Gal 849 150 Gals. Renowned Engine Oil, in cases 434 150 Gals. White Star Valve Oil, in cases, per .824 300 Gals. Boiled Linseed Oil. .889 500 Gals.

Coal Oil, in .264 50 Gals. Turpentine 89 CONTINGENT. 5 Gross Matches, in cans, per gross 284 30 Bbls. Portland Cementr per lb N. C.

200 lbs Manila JRope. per lb .134 100 Bbls. Lime, per cwt N. C. 3,000 lbs Broom Corn, best, per cwt 10.00 3 Tons of Blacksmith Coal, per ton 25.40 1,000 16-candle-power Incandescent Lamps (Edison's) each 224 HARDWARE.

6 Doz. Saw Files, assorted, ner doz 80 25 Doz. Bastard Files, from 3 to 16 inches, per doz. 2.75 10 Doz. Mill File3, from 3 to 16 inches, assorted, per doz 25 Doz.

Half-round -Files, from 3 to 16 inches, as per doz 3.50 30 Doz. Pick Handles (hickorv) 2.00 5 Doz. Cell Locks (Romer Co. per doz 19.75 5 Boxes Charcoal Tin, 20x 28, XX per box 16.00 2 Boxes Charcoal Tin, 20x 18, XXX per box 22.00 10 Doz. Washoe Picks, per doz 7.50 10 Doz.

Ames long-handled Shovels, perdoz 12.24 2 Bundles Galvanized Iron No. 28, 24x84, per hundred 6.68 2 Bundles Galvanized No. 28, 30x96, per 6.G8 2,000 lbs American Bar Iron, per lb 045 500 lbs Pick Steel, per lb. .0875 100 lbs Solder, half and half, per lb 22f By direction of the Board of Control, E. J.

BENNITT, Secretary. First publication May 21, 1902. 5t -ryE WILL SEND THE VALUE OF One Dollar and Ten Cents (81.10) in booklets by mail for ten cents, (cash or stamps), containing twenty-seven pen and ink photo-reduced sketches of Washington life. Queen Victoria knighted Sir John Tenniel for similar artistic work in London. The Sentinel has a sample of this work.

NUTSHELL PUBLISHING COMPANY. 1059 Thin! Avenue, Now York. ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION OF THE Pacific Registry Company. Know all men by these presents that we, the undersigned residents of the City of Los Angeles, County of Los Angeles, State of California, have this day associated ourselves together for the purpose. Of organizing and conducting a corporation under the lows of the Territory of Arizona, and to that end do certify the following: That the name of.

said corporation shall be the Pacific Registry Company and its principal place of business shall be the City of Yuma, County of Yuma, Territory of Arizona. It may also maintain uch branch offices, either within or without said Territory of Arizona, as its Board of Directors may at any time desij? note. at which said branch offices meetings of said Board of Directors ond stockholders maybe held and any or all of Its corporate business may be transacted. n. That the purpose for which this corporation is organized and the general nature of its business is to engage in a general insurance brokerage business; to negotiate for, buy.

deal in or otherwise handle policies of insurance of every kind character ond description, issued by other persons or corporations, and to carry on the general business of an insurance or underwriting agency; to purchase and acquire, out of its surplus profits, shares, of the capital stock of this corporation: to acquire, own, handle, buy, sell or otherwise control real and personal property of all and every character incidental to conducting the business of thi corporation; to do any and all things necessary or Incidental to the proper conduct of such general insurance brokerage business, in said Territory of Arizona and, elsewhere, not Inconsistent with the laws of the United States or said Territory of Arizona. HI. That the capital stock of this corporation shall be 810,000, divided into 10,000 shares of the par value of One Dollar eachJ That the said authorized capital stock shall be divided into two classes, to wit: Preferred. Capital Stock and Common Capital Stock, that is to say, there shall be 52000 of authorized Preferred Capital Stock and 8S00O of Common Capital Stock. That said Preferred Capital Stock shall be preferred, not only in the payment of dividends-as hereinafter provided, but nlso in the distribution of the property cf said corporation which shall remain after the payment of all It debts upon its dissolution or upon the expiration of its term of existence.

The said Preferred Capital Stock shall be entitled to be paid, from and out of the surplus profits of said corporation, an annual, semi-annual or quarterly dividend, not exceeding 10 per annum upon the par value of the said Preferred Stock, prior to any payment of dividends upon the said Common Capital Stock, and if in any year the surplus proUt-Jof the saidacorporation are insufficient to pay such dividend, the same shall be cumulative and before any dividend, is declared or paid upon the said Common Capital Stock, for any time, year or years, the said Preferred Capital Stock shall receive it annual, semi-annual or quarterly dividend, tor all such year or years, before the payment any dividend or dividends upon said Common Capital Stock; it being the intent that Mich preferred stock shalL have its dividends, as herein provided, before any surplus profits are divided amongst the holders of the Common Capital Stock; and at the dissolution of said corporation or on the expiration of its said term of existence, the holders ot the said Preferred Capital Stock shall receive the par value thereof from the property ot the corporation, together with any dividend or dividends that are then unpaid, before the holders of. the Common Capital Stock shall receive any sum or sums from the property of said corporation. The amount ot such dividends to be paid upon said Preferred Stock and the time or times of or such payment, shall be determined by Ihe directors of this corporation prior to the issuance thercot or parts thereof and shall be set forth in the certificates representing the same and the rate specified in the said certificate or certificates, not exceeding 10 annually or 2H quarterly, shall have the same force and effect as though it were named herein. The said Preferred Capital Stock shali not participate in the profits of the said corporation beyond the amount of the aid dividends-to be determined as herein set forth. This corporation shall have the power to purchase the said Preferred Capital Stock, from the owner or owners, or holder or holders-thereof, at any time after the expiration of two-years from the issuance of the said Preferred Capital Stock, at such times and in such amounts as the said corporation may elect, upon the payment by the said corporation to such owners or holders of the said Preferred.

Capital Stock, the par value of the same together with whatever dividend or dividends may remain unrald thereon at tho time of such, purchase, provided however, that notice of such, intention to purchase shall be given, to suoh. owners or holders of said Preferred Stock, at least sixty days in advance of the time of such, purchase by written notice addressed to each, such owner and mailed to his last known post-office address as it appears upon the books of this corporation. All subscribers for of owners of such Preferred Capital Stock shall, by taking and holding same, be held to agree to the several provisions herein contained respecting the issuance of such Preferred Stock and their rights-aud privileges pertaining thereto, and to the right and power of said corporation to purchase such Preferred Stock upon the terms and in the manner and at the times herein provided. That all of said Capital Stock, whether Preferred or Common, shall be forever non-aasess-able, and each certificate issued shall state upon its face the number thereot and the fact that It is forever non-assessable. IV.

The existence of this corporation shall be deemed to commence at the date upon which, its Articles of Incorporation are filed with the-County Recorder of the County of Yuma, Territory of Arizona, and the duly certified copy filed with the Secretary of said Territory. It shall terminate twenty-five years thereafter, subject to renewal before such pursuant to the laws of said Territory. V. The affairs of this corporation shall be con ducted by a board of three directors and the following-named shall constitute said Beard ot Directors until their successors may be duly elected: Eugene P. Walton, George A.

Corbln and P. Reynolds. Thereafter said Board of Directors shall be elected from among the said stockholders as the By-Laws of this corporation may provide. VI. The greatest amount of Indebtedness or liability, either direct or contingent, to which thls-corporation shall at any time subject itself VII.

The stockholders of this corporation ami thair private property sha.L be forever exempt from all corporate debts and liabilities-VIII. For the purpose of electing directors, and that only, what is known as the cumulative system of voting is hereby adopted. In wjtness whereof, we have hereunto set our hands and seals this Slst dav of March. 1902. EUGENE P.

WALTON SEAL W. P. REYNOLDS seal STATE OF CALIFORNIA. I County oy Los Asc klep. On this 31st day of March, in the year one thousand nine hundred and two.

before me, Omar H. Hubbard, a Notary Public in and for the State and County aforesaid, residing therein, duly commissioned and sworn, personally appeared Eugene P. Walton and w. Reynolds, known to me to be the persons described in, whose names are subscribed to and who executed the annexed instrument, and they acknowledged to me that they executed the same for the purposes ond considerations therein expressed. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed mv official seal, at my office in the said Covuty and State, the day and year last above written SKALf t)MAR H.

HUBBARD. Notary Public in and for the County of Los Angeles. State of California. My commission expires June 15, 1903. Recorded at request of pioneer Investment Trust Company at 9 o'clock a.

April 5. A-D. 1802. C. P.

CRONIN. County Recorder. Territory of Arizona, County of Yuma, I. C. P.

Cronin. County Recorder in and for the County of Yuma. Territory of Arizona, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a ull, true und correct copv of the articles of incorporation of the Pacific Registry Company, as it appears of record in book "3" of. Bonds and Agreements, page et records of Yuma county, aforesaid. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and seal of office, this 25th day of April, A.

D. 1S02. (Seal.) C. P. CRONLV.

County Recorder, Yuma County, Ari2ona Territory. Filed and recorded in the office of the secretary of the territory of Arizona, this 7th day Of April, A. 1902, at ISAAC T. STODDARD, Secretary ot Arizona. First publication April 30, 1902.

Notice for Publication. Homestead Entry, No. 3624. Department op Tns Interior. Land Office at Tucson, Arizona, May H.

Notice is herebv iiven that the following named settler has filed notice of his intentit to make final Droof in sunnort of his claim, ai that s.iid proof will be made before the ci rc or the District Court at Yuma, Arizona, on Saturday, June 28, 1902. viz: Henry E. Farmer, of Yuma. Arizona, for the E. Sec.

12, T. 9 R. 21 G. S. R.

B- and M. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivate of said land, viz: James Cunningham. Walter Webster. Lea Morris and Andrew F. White, all of Yuma, Arizona.

MILTON R. MOORE. Register. First publication l..

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Pages Available:
8,720
Years Available:
1872-1911