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THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Friday, January 10, 1958
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The Golden Wedding
By ALFRED SEGAL
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Reading material in vocalized Easy Hebrew, and also material for
advanced students may be obtained through your local Hebrew
Organization or by writing tOA, Brit Ivrit Olamit, P.O.B. 7111,
Jerusalem, Israel.
Published by Bnt lv.it Ol-tmit
I attended a golden wedding
party recently. The ancient bride
groom of the occasion ran the
show, though it had been .pro
duced by his children. It was a
rare experience among golden
wedding bridegrooms who have
very little left to say after they
have been married 50 years. (For
that matter, how much has any
fresh, new young bridegroom to
say?)
This one’s vanity was out to
show that he wasn’t really as old
as his being a golden wedding
groom might suggest to people.
The newspapers of his town al
most daily print the washed-up
looking pictures of golden wed
ding couples, and readers look at
them sadly, thinking, oh, what it
all finally comes to!
He was going to show off to
all his kinspeople as a couple that
has tried to stay young and fresh
looking even to their golden wed
ding day. lie told me: “We’ve
made a fairly good Jewish life of
all the 50 years and to keep on
being Jewish that way is to share
something of the youthfulness of
immortality, you might say. “Jew
ish life sure is immortal.”
He explained that since Judaism
never dies people who share of it
can themselves manage to feel
forever young; though he has his
own ideas of what being Jewish
is. For instance: He believes that
to have brought up children to
righteousness is to be a good Jew
who leaves the best of inheri
tances, even if he isn’t loaded with
stocks, bonds and cash.
Well, there was the golden
wedding dinner, and that done,
the bridegroom himself stood up
at the table. He said he wished
to make a report which he had
written . . . the story of his mar
ried life and how it all began and
what he thought of it now.
You see, he had been a news
paper reporter through all his
LEGAL NOTICE
STATE OF GEORGIA;
COUNTY OK FULTON
To The Superior Court of Said County:
Mrs. Bessie Taffel, Mr. Louis Taffel,
•nd Miss Shirley Taffel, hereinafter
called applicants, brlnx this applica
tion for the granting of a charter for
a private corporation and show to the
court the following facts:
1.
They desire for thomselves, their as
sociates and successors to be Incorp
orated for a period of thirty-five (35)
years, with the right of renewal there
of, as provided by Law, under the name
and style of:
LARRY REALTY COMPANY, INC.
2.
The principal office and place of bus
iness shall be located In Fulton County,
Georgia, with the privilege of establish
ing branch offices and places of bus
iness In such other places as may be
determined.
3.
The applicants are residents of and
their post office addresses arc:
Mrs. Bessie Taffel—1656 Merton Rd.,
N.E.
Mr. Louis L. Taffel—1656 Merton Rd.,
N.E.
Miss Shirley Taffel—1656 Merton Rd.,
N.E.
4.
The purpose and object of said corp
oration Is pecuniary gain and profit to
its stockholders. The general nature
of the business to be transacted, and
the corporate powers desired are:
(a) To Invest Its funds In property
of all kinds, both real and personal,
and In particular relating to lands and
buildings.
(b) To acquire. Improve, manage,
work, mortgage, encumber, sell, ex
change. dispose of, turn to account
and otherwise deal In all classes of
real and personal property of every
nature whatsoever. In all counties of
the State of Georgia, all States of
United States and Its territories.
(c) To acquire and pay for in cash,
stocks or bonds of this corporation
or otherwise real and personal prop
erty, the good will, rights, assets and
profits, and to undertake or assume,
in whole or any part thereof, the
obligations or liabilities of any person,
firm, association or corporation.
(d) To issue bonds, mortgages, deed
to secure debt, or other Indentures for
the purpose of securing any obligation
of said corporation.
5.
The maximum number of shares the
said corporation shall be authorized to
Issue shall be Ten Thousand (10,000)
Shares of the common stock of the par
value of ten ($10.00) dollars or a
fractional part thereof with the
ability to Increase the amount of
capital stock through the Issuance and
sale of either common or preferred
stock to an amount not to exceed $150,
000.00. the preferred stock, if issued,
to have such par value and to have
such rights, preferences and privileg
es as may be determined by the af
firmative vote of two-thirds of the
common stock then outstanding.
The amount of capital with which
the corporation will begin business
shall be five thousand ($5,000.00) dol-
Britisb Columbia Party Seeks to Ban
Religious Bigotry Among Members
VANCOUVER, B. C„ (JTA)—
Aiming at anti-Semitism within
his own party, Noel Murphy,
president of the British Columbia
Social Credit League, announced
this week that he will place be
fore the next annual meeting of
the League a constitutional
amendment barring racial or re
ligious bigotry.
The step is believed to have
been motivated by an incident at
the League’s recent provincial
lnrs paid In cash and other assets.
7.
Applicants desire that the said corp
oration shall have and enjoy all the
privileges, rights and powers enumer
ated In Chapter 22-18 of the Corpora
tion Act of 1938 of the Code of
Georgia, and as the same may be
hereafter amended, and all of the
powers and privileges enumerated
therein are made a part hereof to the
same extent as If the same were enu
merated herein.
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray an
order to be granted Incorporating
them, their associates, successors and
assigns, under the name aforesaid,
with the powers and privileges as may
be necessary, proper or Incident to the
conduct of the business for which pe
titioners are seeking incorporation,
and as may be allowed for private
corporations under the terms of the
Act of January 28. 1938, authorizing
the chartering of corporations.
Mrs. Bessie Taffel
Petitioner
L. Taffel
Petitioner
Miss Shirley Taffel
Petitioner
ORDER
The within and foregoing application
for charter of
LARRY REALTY COMPANY, INC.
having been examined by me; and
IT APPEARING. That the application
Is legitimately within the purview of
the laws of the State of Georgia: and
IT APPEARING. From the certificate
of the Secretary of State that the
name of the proposed corporation Is
not the name of any now existing cor
poration registered in the records of
the State of Georgia.
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED. That said
application Is hereby granted and said
corporation is hereby created under
the name of
LARRY REALTY COMPANY', INC.
with the powers therein sought and the
prlviliges and immunities provided bv
law to corporations of a similar na
ture.
This the 18th day of December, 1957.
Claude D. Shaw
Judge, Superior Court,
Atlanta Circuit
D«c.27,Jan.3,10,17
convention when one speaker de
livered a sharply-worded anti-
Semitic address, denouncing
“Zionism” which, he said, was
responsible for all the present pol
itical ills in the world. Not one
delegate at the convention took
exception to the speech.
Later, however, the anti-Sem
itic sentiments were denounced by
Solon Low, the party’s leader in
the Dominion Parliament at Ot
tawa, Premier W. A. C. Bennett
of British Columbia; and Premier
E. C. Manning of Alberta. Mr.
Murphy’s plan for a constitutional
amendment barring bigotry is be
lieved to have as its goal the clar
ification of the League’s official
stand against racial or religious
bigotry.
Israeli Vessel Gives
Emergency Medical
Aid in Mid-Atlantic
NEW YORK—(JTA) — The Is
raeli passenger liner S. S. Zion,
which docked in New York last
Friday with 300 passengers from
Haifa and Naples, made two
emergency medical pick - ups in
mid-Atlantic within three hours,
the American - Israeli Shipping
Line, agent for the Zim - Israel
Navigation Company, owners of
the vessel, announced here today.
The S. S. Zion, commanded by
Capt. Bernard Berkowitz, launch
ed life boats yesterday afternoon
to take on an injured Swiss sea
man of the Swiss-owned Liberian
freighter Corcovado off the Azo
res. An hour later, the Israeli
vessel again switched course to
take on a Greek sailor of the
Panamanian freighter Canopus.
The sailor was suffering from
perforated ulcers. The Zion has a
fully-equipped and staffed hos
pital bay.
adult days and as reporter he felt
he should write the whole story
of the 50 years ... as accurately
as people expect of a good report
er. He said in his story: Yes, it
all started Up There where, as
all the people around the golden
wedding table well know, all mar
riages are arranged by the angels.
He had put his story in dra
matic form with three angels who
were the committee of arrange
ments Up There and who told
how they had fixed it all up 50
years ago.
His angels said that they felt
they had done a fair job 50 years
ago, considering all that has hap
pened to a lot of other marriages
in the meantime. They were
happy to be the very first mar
riage angels ever invited to a
golden wedding, 50 years after
they had started it.
He went on to report his wed
ding day. He had to work late
at his job that day and had to
run ten blocks all the way to
his wedding to be there on time.
He stopped on the way to buy a
clean collar for his wedding. Well,
so the story went and, finally the
golden bride and the golden
groom got together to talk it all
over at their 50th anniversary
table.
The Bride: Yes, it took a lot
of work and worry, It seems.
The Groom: I guess that’s the
main thing of staying married . ..
to work and worry for the kids.
The Bride: There’s really noth
ing else worth while is there,
after all?
The Groom: Yes, that makes
the whole good story of our 50
years, though we did have our
differences. How many times you
bawled me out . . . How many
times you accused me of causing
the zippers in your shirts to stick,
even when I was doing my best
to open ’em up! Blaming it all on
me!
The Bride: And the way you
wash the dishes . . leaving
smears on the plates! And all the
pipe ashes you’ve scattered over
the carpets.
The Groom: But it all comes to
this happy ending!
The Bride: Yes, that’s the whole
story ... the best happiness of
all is in our children with all
the blessed worrying we did on
account of them.
The Groom: I guess that’s the
whole story . . .the whole story
of this golden wedding. All that
holy worrying!
The Bride: But that really isn’t
the whole story, really! After our
kids were grown up we started
worrying divinely for the grand
children.
The Groom: Yes, sure! There’s
no end of the blessed worrying in
married life. First for our three
children and then we start it all
over again for the seven grand
children.
The Bride: I guess we should
be making a wish for all the sev
en ... a lovely moment for mak
ing good wishes!
The Groom: What’s the best
wish to make for them.
The Bride: Let’s wish that they
grow up to be decent people in
the world . . . Jews who live their
lives by the teaching of their re
ligion . . . good people who stand
as high as Sinai.
The Groom: I guess that’s our
whole story. At this golden wed
ding hour it looks fairly succes-
ful for us.
Well, that was the report writ
ten for his golden wedding by the
bridegroom. Pretty good story, I
guess. You may be asking, who’s
this guy?
My reply: The golden bride is
Mrs. Rose Segal, the groom, Alfred
Segal, who is the person who
writes this column.
SUtUY.l ON D E D
TERMITE
CONTROL
SINCE 1901
FREE INSPECTION
TR 5-4541
WORLD'S LARGEST
i
GROWING
TOGETHER
Over our 30 years in this specialized
savings field, we have made loans to
buy or build more than 25,000 homes
which have built a “city” with over
75,000 population. Our savings
members have earned rich dividends
through this tremendous development
of our area. Businesses have grown and
thrived. Our members, all part own
ers in this institution, can look with
pride on the “city” they have built.
FedevaX Sairin gst
and.
Loan Association
Main Offica: 103 SYCAMORE ST. • DECATUR, GEORGIA
Branch Office: 541 CANDLER ROAD