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LEGAL NOTICE
Southerners Spend Afternoon With Beduin yet Oat, Ashdod is named
QW •# D J rr • r i • city of Phi,i8tin «
Sheik on Bond lour m Israel
Kir-
for
city of Philistine pentapolis
n«ar which it was built less
than four years ago. It already
them
Ml OCT*
charter
Mas
INC.”
Rr
Tha ob)»ct of Mid CoryorsUoo u
pecanlary fila to ItaaU and stock-
tbaro-
nd to
Tha
principal office or place of
MMneea of said corporation shaH be
Felton Comity. Georgia, but saJd
ation ■b«ii hare the right' to
branch offlcaa or places of
tha
Tan
par ralue
which
mount
comffloo
capital with
-
whteh the oorpocatlon ahaU begin
&SS3 Thr ~
^mSuiOlUC. VtTmOWtRS FRAY
to be Incorporated under tha name
and style aforeaald^and^ to be granted
tha charter with all
a^otiSM^
rights.
law
Bldg
me.
, re stated
bean presented to the
*lo * hr Court that said
Is within the purrlow and
of tthe laws of Oeorgls.
all requirements of law hare
r ossnpiled with and that the
the pro peed corporation Is
me of any other existing
registered In the records
nut of Stats;
IT IS. THfcREFORK, considered
ordered and adjudged that the said
corporation Is hereby created under
the name and style of "LEW tNTUt-
INC.**, with all the rights.
powers, and prtrUsM*
and petitioned for and wt
_
.dtloned for and with all rights,
powers, and privileges which ars now
or may hereafter be permitted to
stroller corporations under the laws
of the State of Georgia.
This tbs 7th day of June. I960.
Jeeee W. Wood.
Judge, Superior Court
Atlanta Circuit
June 17, 34, July 1, •
LEGAL NOTICE
of DAVID S. riSEV
PARKS and MARGA
all of 1501 Atlanta
Sayings Building, Atlanta 3,
impectfully shows:
Petitioners desire for thtemcelves,
their aaeocUtes, and successor*. to be
Incorporated under the name and
atyle of
"MUItMIC INC.."
for a period of thirty-fire (38) years
with the .privilege of renewal as pro
vided by Taw.
Tha principal office of the corpora
Uoo ahull be in Fulton County. Oeor-
t tha corporation shall have
lit to establish branch offices
of business elsewhere,
and without the State or
to buy.
develop
ind lend
and de
such bust-
approved by tha
and to be granted
rights and prlvi
or may be here-
pssa w
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Weinberg
and Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Parver
of Atlanta, are currently m&k-
’ ing a two-week viait to Israel
as participants in the first offi
cial Israel Bond Delegation from
the Southern Region of the
United States.
The 20-member group, repre
senting eight Southern states, is
meeting Israel’s top government
leaders and inspecting develop
ment projects aided by Israel
Bond investments. Mr. Wein
berg is the 1960 Cash Chairman
of the Atlanta Israel Bond Com
mittee.
The Southerners began their
visit investigating the problems
of developing the vast Negev
desert, comprising the southern
two-thirds of Israel. They spent
an afternoon with Sheik Audeh
Abu Muamer, 34-year-old chief
of the Azame Beduin tribe,
whose encampment in the heart
of the desert lies a few miles
from Beersheba.
In the Sheik’s long black goat
skin tent, the delegation mem
bers sat cross-legged on low
cushions on the carpeted ground.
They were joined by the Beduin
tribesrrten garbed in robes and
desert “kefiahs” (flowing head-
covering against sun and sand.!
While his guests sipped small
cups of strong black Arab coffee,
Sheik Audeh spoke to them
through an interpreter about the
problem of water in this hot
arid region. He told them that
three consecutive years of
i corpor
for In cash, foods, or service*, as th*
Directors may elect, and upon major
ity vote of the stockholders the out
standing common shares of stock may
be increased up to the maximum al
lowed herein, or decreased to the
minimum allowed herein.
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray that
this application for charter be grant
ed and that they be Incorporated un
der the aforesaid name with all the
rights, powers, and jprivilagas herein
above set forth and such others as
may be now or hereafter allowed to
corporations of like character under
the laws of this State.
PARKS A KISKNBKRG
By: David S. EUenbeH
Attorneys for Petitioners
ISM Atlanta Federal Savings Bldg.
Atlanta 1, Georgia
JA. 5-3965
o a d ■ it
The within and foregoing applica
tion for a corporate charter having
been read and considered, and It ap
pearing that said application la legiti
mately within tha purview and In
tention of the laws of this State, and
It further appearing from the certifi
cate of the Secretary of State that
tha name of the proposed corpora
tion la not the name of any other
existing corporation registered In the
records of the Secretary of State,
and It further appearing that thte
applicants have compiled with all
provisions of law relating to the grant
ing of charters:
fr IS HERKBY ORDERED AND AD
JUDGED, that said application be and
the same la hereby granted, and that
the petitioners be and they are here
by Incorporated under the name and
style of
"MUItMIC, INC.,"
for a period of thirty-five (S3) years,
with au of the rights, powers, privi
leges, and Immunities which are set
forth In said petition, as well as those
now or hereafter allowed to corpora
tions of like character by the laws
of the State of Georgia.
This ISth day of June. 1960.
Vlrlyn B. Moore,
Judge, Superior Court,
Fulton County
(Atlanta Judicial Circuit)
June 14. July 1, g, II
ISRAEL BOUND—Members of the first official Southern Israel Bond delegation ready for the flight
to the Middle East.
drought have caused great hard
ship to his people, who live from
flocks of sheep, goats, and
camels and also do some farm
ing. He said, “Without rain we
could not find enough grazing
for our animals and the crops
we planted did not grow." Help
from the Israel government had
prevented a catastrophe, the
Sheik said, but the tribe was
still in bad shape.
Sheik Audeh noted that if the
pipeline to bring water from
the Jordan River to the Negev
had been completed it would
have saved the situation. (Israel
is now laying a 108-inch con
crete pipe to carry water from
the Jordan in the north nearly
100 miles to the thirsty Negev at
a cost of approximately $100
million.) The Sheik said he and
other Beduin tribes in the area
would benefit greatly from this
water supply. “We want to live
in houses with electricity but
we cannot do it without water, ”'
he said.
In answer to the Southerners
questions about Beduin educa
tion, Sheik Audeh said that
twelve years ago formal school
ing for Beduin youth was vir
tually unknown. “Desert and na
ture were 6ur teachers,” he
stated. Now each Beduin en
campment has its own school
and youngsters are eager to
learn, he said.
The Beduin host told his guests
BY HENRY LEONARD
that once his people had to
travel as much as 150 miles by
camel or dopkey through the
desert to get medical attention
but now an Israeli doctor and
mobile clinic makes regular
visits each week to the encamp
ments, and emergency medical
service is less than fifteen min
utes away.
Instead of the primitive farm
ing methods used by Beduin for
centuries, the Azame tribe now
has modern tractors and plows
provided by the Israel govern
ment along with instructors to
teach the tribesmen how to use
them, the chief reported. Sheik
Audeh said his tribe had pro
gressed more in the past twelve
years since the establishment of
the State of Israel than it had
in the past 300 years.
On the drive back to Tel Aviv,
the Israel Bond leaders passed
through the Lachish Develop
ment Area. A few years ago,
the Israel government laid a
pipeline to bring irrigation water
here from the North. Up to then,
Lachish had resembled the de
sert conditions in which the
Beduin live, and what Sheik
Audeh had told the group about
water became apparent as they
travelled along the modern high
way past lush green fields of
wheat, cotton, sugar beets and
peanuts. Stretching off in the
distance were dozens of farming
villages with clusters of neat
white houses.
The delegation members
stopped at Kiryat Gat, a new
cty built in the center of the
Lachish area. It was named for
the Philistine city of Gath men
tioned in the Bible, and is lo
cated near the remains of the
ancient settlement. Modem Kir
yat Gat contains the schools,
clinics, and factories which pro
vide services for the entire de
velopment area.
On Israel’s southern coast,
the group inspected the new
city of Ashdod, another link in
the chain of projects aimed at
has a population of 5,000, which
is expected to climb to a quar
ter of a million within 10 to 15
years.
A giant electric power station
at Ashdod, Israel’s largest, sup
plies current to a large section
of the southern part of the coun
try. In its growing industrial
zone, a number of enterprises,
including a $20 million rayon
factory, provide employment for
the recent immigrants who have
made their home in the new
city.
Ashdod is slated to become
Israel’s second largest port. Ne
gotiations for a World Bank loan
to construct the harbor are in
their final stages. Planned as
the sea outlet for Israel’s land
locked capital city of Jerusalem,
the harbor at Ashdod will also
handle exports of raw materials
from the Negev, such as Dead
Sea potash and bromine, phos
phates, and copper from King
Solomon’s mines.
On the evening following the
Ashdod trip, the Southerners
were briefed on Israel’s foreign
policy by Nahum Astar of the
Israel Ministry for Foreign Af
fairs. Mr. Astar is the former
Israel Consul in Atlanta.
WILL GO SIR—
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