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T H F. SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Friday, August 8, 1958
LEGAL NOTICE
STATE Of GEORGIA,
COUNTY OF rULTON.
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT
Or SAID COUNTY:
The petition of SIDNEY PARKS,
MAROARIT MILLER and DAVID S.
tlSENBRRO, all of 1802 Atlanta Fed
eral Havings Building, Atlanta, Geor
gia, respectfully ahowa to the court
aa follow*:
1.
Petitioner* desire for themaelve*,
their associate* and succeaaors to be
Incorporated under the name and style
ROSE MFO. CO. INC.,
for a period of thirty-five years with
a right to renew at the expiration of
said time.
2.
The object of said corporation Is
pecuniary gain and the general nature
of business to be transacted la that of
manufacturing, designing, assembling,
buying and selling furniture and furn
ishings of every nature and descrip
tion. Including the right to own and
apply for trademarks, patents and the
like; to act aa agent, aa well as to
appoint agents, and to operate such
other business as may be authorized
by the Board of Directors, Including
the right to borrow and loan money,
secured and unsecured and to deal In
real estate In every particular.
The principal office or place of busi
ness of said corporation ahall be In
Pulton County, but said corporation
shall have the right to establish
branch offices or places of bualnes*
elsewhere.
4.
The capital of said corporation shall
bo represented by 100 shares of com
mon stock at no par value. The corp
oration shall begin doing business with
not less than Five Hundred (8800.00)
Dollars paid In capital.
WHEREFORE, tiie petitioner* pray to
be Incorporated under the name and
style aforesaid and to be granted the
charter with all the rights, powers and
privileges herein set forth, and all
others allowed by law.
PARkS & KISEN11ERG
By:
David S. Elsenberg
Attorneys for Petitioners,
1502 Atlanta Fed. Sav. Bldg.,
Atlanta 3, Georgia
ORDER
The within and foregoing petition
having been read and considered, and
ll appearing by the certificate of the
Secretary of State that the name of
the proposed corporation la not the
name or any existing corporation In
the records of the Secretary of State,
and It further appearing that the said
petition and application conform to
the existing laws of this State;
NOW THEREFOR E. It Is hereby
ordered and adjudged that the prayers
of the petitioners be and are hereby
granted and that they be Incorporated
under the name and style
ROSE MFC,. CO. INC.,
with all the rights, powers and privt-
legea permitted to similar corporations
under the taws of the State of Geor
gla.
This 4th day of August, 195H.
JESSE M. WOOD
JUDGE, SUPERIOR COURT
FULTON COUNTY
(ATLANTA CIRCUIT)
Aug. I, IS, 22, 24
LEGAL NOTICE
STATE OF GEORGIA.
COUNTY OF FULTON.
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
SAID COUNTY.
Tho petition of MAURICE J. GOLD
SMITH, 1142 Brlarcllff Rd., N. E.
ROBERT H. GOLDSMITH, 128S Briar-
dale Lane, N. E., and JEROME M.
GOLDSMITH, 1302 Bernadette Lane,
N. E., all of Atlanta, Georgia respect
fully shows;
1.
Petitioners desire to obtain a chart
er for a private corporation under tho
name of
CRICKET OF BROADVIEW, INC.
for a period of thirty-five (35) years
with the privilege of renewing at the
expiration of that time.
1.
The general nature of the business
Is that of owning, maintaining and
operating ladteo ready to wear placet of
business, handling the merchandise of
said business either at retail or whole
sale; to buy and sell real and personal
property which may be needed In the
operation of the business; to mortgage,
lease and deal In real and personal
properties of all kind; to buy, sell and
own shares of stock or bonds of other
corporations; to Issue debenture bonds
under such terms and conditions as
Us Board of Directors may deter
mine; to borrow and loan monies for
such purposes as may be necessary In
the operation of said business: to act
as trustee or escrow agent under such
terms and conditions as may be de
termined by Its Board of Directors
and to have such other and further
rights and powers and to enjoy all
of the privileges enumerated In para
graphs 22-1827 through 22-1870 of the
Code of the State of Georgia and all
of the other powers and privileges
enumerated In Chapter 22-18 of the
Code of Georgia and all of said powers
and privileges enumerated therein and
any amendments to said chapters
which may be made In the future are
which may have been made and
hereby made a part hereof In the
same extent as If same were incorpo
rated herein.
3.
The amount of the capital with
which said corporation shall begin
business shall be a minimum of Two
Thousand ($2,000.00) Dollars, In cash
or other assets, each share to have a
par value of One Hundred ($100.00)
Dollars, with the privileges of Increas
ing the capital stock to the sum of
Seventy Five Thousand ($75,000.00) Dol
lars.
4.
Petitioners desire the right to In
crease or decrease their stock within
the authorised limits by vote of the
majority of the outstanding common
stock and to have the further right
to issue fractional shares of stock.
5.
The principal office of the corpora
tion Is to be located In the County of
Fulton, State of Georgia, but petition
ers desire the privilege of establish
ing branch offices in places of busi
ness elsewhere.
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray that
an Order be granted Incorporating
them, their associates, successors ana
assigns, under the name aforesaid with
the powers and privilege* herein pray
ed tor, together with such other
powers and privileges as may be neces
sary, proper or Incident to the con
duct of the business for which peti
tioners are seeking Incorporation, and
OFF THE RECORD—By Nathan Ziprin
Letter From a Lady
IN THE LIGHTER VEIN—by Jacob Richman
AJP
A SHRINE NEAR HOME
On returning from a brief va
cation, I found on my desk a let
ter from Anita Engle, whose
column “A Mother in Israel” has
caught fire in the Anglo-Jewish
press of this country both be
cause of its human interest con
tent, feminine touch and fine
literary style. A native of Cana
da and now a citizen of Israel,
Mrs. Engle is to have her first
book published by the Hogarth
Press of London, one of the lead
ing publishing houses in the
world.
I could think of no better way
to resume my column than by
sharing the following letter with
my readers.
The Letter
Well, I’ve finished it! Finished
what? The BOOK!!! That book!
It's been hanging over my head,
day and night, for a year and a
half. Every time I wrote a col
umn for you, Mr. Ziprin, I had
a guilty conscience. I felt as if
I was leading a double life,
writing about casual things and
saying nothing of the one thing
that was absorbing my mind.
I didn’t want to mention the
book until I had finished it, and
it seemed as if I could never
bring it to an end. It was just
my luck, that the first time I
should have been commissioned
to write a book, it was on a sub
ject so meaty that it really re
quires a dozen writers and his
torians and poets to do justice
to it. And it has never been
written in English before. That
is one of the many astonishing
aspects of this altogether aston
ishing story.
But to begin somewhere near
the beginning. The book I am
referring to deals with Sarah
and Aaron Aaronsohn, of Zich-
ron Yaacov, and their espionage
organization “Nili” which en
abled the British to defeat the
Turks in World War I. The
ramifications of the subject are
unbounded, for it goes right
back to the beginnings of mod
ern Palestine, yet the trends
and the ideas which they repre
sented are still struggling for
expression in Israel to this day.
Hardly a week passes without
the newspapers carrying some
item which has a bearing or the
subject in some way.
The story is living history in
another sense. So much of it was
tucked away in the memories,
and the letters and diaries of
people who are still living. It
was pure detective work to track
these pople down, and to un
earth what I needed from un
der the accumulations of 40
years and more.
Actually, I feel like Rip Van
Winkle emerging from a long,
strange dream. I’ve almost lost
my contact with the present, and
no one who is under 60 is of
any interest to me. I’ve become
quite a connoisseur on the way
people age. The differences are
astonishing. Some people at 65
have minds and memories as
fuzzy as cotton batten. Others at
79 are as crisp and fresh as
young people—with the advant
ages, of course, that their opin
ions are infinitely more valu
able. When they make a state
ment, they have the authority
of experience and history to back
them.
Very interesting, this business
of compressing the essence of
living history into a set num
ber of words, but very difficult.
There were times when I simply
couldn’t make any progress.
as may be allowed to private corpora
tions under the terms of the Act of
January 28th, 1938, authorizing the
chartering of corporations.
And your petitioners will ever pray.
SAMUEL L. EPLAN,
Attorney for Petitioners
1017 William Oliver Building
Atlanta 3. Georgia.
ORDER
The foregoing petition of MAURICE
J. GOLDSMITH, ROBERT H. GOLD
SMITH, and JEROME M. GOLDSMITH
to obtain a Charter for a private corp
oration under the name of
CRICKET OF BROADVIEW, INC.
having been presented to the court,
and the same having been examined,
and It appearing to the undersigned
Judge of said court that the applica
tion Is legitimately within the purview
and Intention of the Laws of this
State, and It furthr appearing by cer-
Uftcate of the Secretary of State that
the name of the proposed corporation
Is not the name of any other exisUng
corporation registered In the reords
of said Secretary of State:
IT IS ORDERED AND ADJUDGED
that said application be and It Is
granted and said applicants, their asso
ciates, successors and assigns, are here
by Incorporated at prayed In said pe
tition and a Charter Is granted unto
CRICKET OF BROADVIEW, INC., with
all the rights, powers, privileges and
immunities as prayed In said applica
tion and as authorised by the Laws
of this State.
Dated this 9th day of July, 1958.
RALPH H. PHARR
Judge, S.C.A.C.
July 18, 25, Aug. 1, I
My family suffered with me
every inch of the way. As my
10-year-old David said to me,
when I told him that I had fin
ished the book; “Thank good
ness! It was coming out of my
nose already!”
Although taking care of a
family and running a household
are supposedly a handicap to a
woman writer, I don’t know
how I could have got through at
all without my husband and the
two boys. When they came home
for lunch, and found me in a
state of frenzied frustration, be
cause nothing was emerging,
they packed me off to a kibbutz
for a week, to see if I couldn’t
do better away from home. It
worked fine, but after a few
days at home, I relapsed again.
“Boys, what am I going to do
now?” I asked them, and I real
ly was desperate, for I had only
another six weeks before the
contract expired. They love giv
ing me advice, especially David,
who can’t imagine how I ever
managed my life before he was
born. They decided that I must
work at night, when there would
be no interruptions like the
milk man, and so on. That meant
sleeping in the morning, which
pleased me a lot. I hate the first
hours of the day. But who was
going to give their father break
fast? He catches a 7 a.m. bus to
Haifa, for schools start at 8 in
Israel, and it was expecting too
much that the poor man should
make breakfast and the 10
o’clock snack for the three of
them.
Jonathan, who, (between our
selves) is remarkably lazy, rose
to the occasion. He would get
up and make breakfast, and
make sandwiches for all of
them. And so he did, for the
next month, while I worked
flat out, accomplishing more in
one night than I had been able
to do in a week by day. They
used to go to sleep and leave
me typing and wake up in the
morning and find me still typ
ing. But I stopped this, on
David’s advice.
“Try to finsh just a little be
fore Abba (Daddy) gets up” he
told me in one of his confiden
tial little chats before going off
to bed. “I could see on Abba’s
face that it upset him.”
The Southern Israelite staff is
proud of the fact that we first
introduced Miss Engle to Ameri
can readers on a regular basis.
For several years, she wrote as
our exclusive if highly under
paid columnist from Israel. Her
warmth and keen interpretation
of every-day life in Israel soon
won her hundreds of admirers.
We are happy that her material
is now distributed to a wider
audience through Seven Arts
Features and that her book will
Soon be off the presses — TIIE
EDITOR.
The rabbis of the small com
munities of Russia used to make
semi-annual trips to the neigh
boring farms and villages, in
order to bring religious instruc
tion into the homes of their rus
tic constituents, and to help
them solve the little perplexi
ties in their private affairs.
These visits were well-appre
ciated by the Jewish villagers,
who generously awarded their
spiritual leaders with the pro
duce of their land; and they con
stituted to many a minister the
chief source of revenue.
There is a story of a rabbi who
visited a rural patron in the
month of “Elul” (September),
just a few days before “Rosh
Hashonah”. The countr yman
gave the ecclesiastic visitor a
royal reception and assigned
him to the largest and airiest
room in his homestead.
Three o’clock in the morning,
the guest was aroused from his
slumber by the heavy footsteps
of the host Opening his eyes,
he beheld, to his horror, that the
countryman, with a lighted can
dle in one hand and a long,
flashing knife in the other, was
advancing straight toward him.
It was quite plain that he was
going to kill him.
“What are you going to do?”
cried the divine, in terror.
"I am going to slay you,”
stated the tiller of the soil in a
calm and indifferent manner.
“What for?" demanded the
terrified man. “What evil have
I ever done you'’”
“Well, explained the country
man, “It’s this way. You see,
city folks this month go to the
cemeteries and entreat the holy
men buried there to intercede
in their behalf before the Al
mighty to grant them a happy
and prosperous New Year. But
I, living in this deserted place,
lack this advantage. So I wanted
to slay you and bury you in my
backyard in order that I, too,
might have the grave of a
FRANCE ISRAEL SIGN
MILITARY ALLIANCE
TEL AVIV, (AJP)—An abso
lute military alliance between
France and Israel is in the off
ing, it is reported here by reli
able sources.
0
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SYSTEMS
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E
ARTHUR WASSER
Business
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408 PEACHTREE ST., N.E.
’zadik “within easy reach.”
(From 372-page book, ‘'Laughs From
Jewish Loro"—Hebrew Publishing
Company, 77 Dalaneay St., NYC)
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PIEDMONT FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
Insured Savings
Each Saver lias the protection of
an INSURED ACCOUNT up to
$10,000.00, by the Federal Savings
and Loan Insurance Corporation.
Savings received on or before the
11th of August earn from the 1st
of August.
Modern Home Financing
Your Association specializes in
the Modern Plan of financing
homes—to buy, build or refi
nance—by the Monthly Payment
Direct Reduction mortgage loan.
OFFICERS
E. A. Barton
President
William W. McNeal
Vice President
Edwin L. Sterne
Sec. and Attorney
E. G. Merritt
Treasurer
Mrs. Mildred H. Bridges
Assistant Sect’y.
Inquiries are cordially invited and
will receive immediate and friend
ly attention.
NORTHEAST PLAZA
directors
E. A. Barton
Robert M. Holder
William W. McNeal
E. G. Merritt
Samuel A. Miller
Carroll Schoen
Edwin L. Sterne
E. A. Yates, Jr.
3363 Buford Highway, N. E.
Atlanta 6, Georgia
Melrose 4-7355