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IHl 80DTHI1N 18IABLITE
Friday, Sept. 27, 196i
LEGAL NOTICE
APPLICATION POP AND OR Dm
•BAHTIN# CHARTIR
GEORGIA. FULTON COUNTY
To tha Superior Court of Mid Coun
*r-
The petition of BLAISE J. DAN-
TON*. MBS. LILLIAN S. DANTONE
and SABAH M. RINALDO, aU of wboee
poet office addreM la 1041 Forayth
Street, N. W , Atlanta 3, Georgia, raa-
pectfully allows:
t. Pelltloners dealre for themselves,
their associates and aucceeaora, to be
Incorporated under the name of
“PEACHTREE COIN INVESTMENT
COUNSELORS, INC.”
for a period of thirty-five (Ml years,
with all the privileges of renewal given
to similar corporations by law.
S. The object of said corporation la
pecuniary gain and profit.
I. The principal office of the corp
oration snail be In Pulton County,
Georgia but the corporation shall have
the privilege of establishing branch
offices and places of doing business
elsewhere, both within and without
the 8tate of Georgia.
4. The corporation shall have one
-class of stock, which shall be common
stock with a par value of |100 per
share
share. Each
shall have equal
voting rights, together with pre-emp
tive rights. The corporation shall be
authorized to have Issued and out-
standlng at any one time a maximum
of S00 shares of such common stock
of $100 par value.
I. The minimum capital with which
this corporation will begin business
win bs |1,000
6. The general nature of the business
to be conducted by this corporation
shan be to carry on research, Inves
tigation and study In the field of
numismatics; to Issue publications of
interest to coin collectors; and to con
duct advisory services for persons In
terested In collecting coins. Petitioners
also desire that they have all the
rights, powers, privileges and Immun
ities which are now conferred and
whloh may hereafter be conferred
upon Nmllar corportlons by and under
tea laws of the State of Georgia.
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray for
an order incorporating them under
the name and style aforesaid, with
all the rights, powers, privileges and
Immunities herein set forth and such
additional rights, powers, privileges
and immunities as may be necessary,
proper or Incident to the conduct of
the aforesaid business, as may be In
herent in, or allowed to, like corp
orations under the laws of the State
of Georgia, as such laws now exist
nr mav hereafter exist.
GKRSHON RUDEN A SCHWARTZ
Attorneys for Petitioners
7M Healey Building
Atlanta S, Georgia
JA 4-4991
ORDER
It appealing that the foregoing pe
tition is within the purview and In
tention of the laws of Georgia and
further by certificate of the Secretary
of State that the name
"PEACHTREE COIN INVESTMENT
COUNSELORS, INC.”
Is not the name of any other existing
corporation now registered with Its of
fice,
IT IS ORDERED that petitioners be
, Incorporated under the name, terms
and ooadjtjont contained In the fore-
Hoinff petition.
This 17 dav of September, 1963.
CLAUDE D. SHAW
Judge. Superior Court,
Atlanta Judicial Circuit
9ept.Sy,OcM,!!,lt
LEGAL NOTICE
APPLICATION FOR AND
ORDfR GRANTING CHARTIR
STATE OF GEORGIA)
COUNTY OF FULTON)
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF SAID COUNTY:
The petition of KENNETH G. BURN-
STTNE, JAY H. WEISS and BURTON
R. LEVY of 160 Central Avenue, S. W.,
Atlanta, Georgia 30303 respectfully
shows to the Court ss follows:
1.
The petitioners desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and assigns
the privilege of Incorporating for a
period of thirty-five (SS) years, with
the privilege of amendment and re
newal thereto, under the name and
style of "SOUTHERN BOND AND
MORTGAGE COMPANY, INC."
X.
The principal office and place of
business shall be In Atlanta, Fulton
County, Georgia, with the privilege of
maintaining branch offices elsewhere
la accordance vrlth the law.
3.
The object of Mid corporation Is
pecuniary gain to itself and Its stock
holders.
4.
The general nature of the business
or businesses to be transacted by the
corporation Is to purchase, sell, assign,
promissory notes, real estate mort
gages, chattel mortgages; to act ss
broker for purchases and Mies of the
afore mentioned Items and to do what
ever la necessary In the general busi
ness of mortgage brokeraging and In
the mortgage company and allied lines:
lend and borrow money of every kind
and nature, on such terms and con
dltlons, and on such security, real or
personal, as Its Board of Directors
Shall determine; to draw, make, accept,
endorse. Issue, discount, purchase or
otherwise acquire promissory notes,
drafts, bonds, stocks, debentures and
other negotiable or transferable Instru
ments, and to secure same bv mort
gage, deed of trust, or otherwise; to
purchase, take, own, hold, deal In.
mortgage, or otherwise encumber, and
to lease, sell, exchange, transfer or In
any manner whatsoever dispose of real
property; and generally to engage In
any and all tvpes of buslnem In con
formity with the laws of the State of
Georgia, and to all and everything In
cident to carrying on Mid business
8.
The maximum authorised capital
stock of the corporation shall be 100
shares of common stock without par
value. #
The amount of canltal with which
the corporation shall begin business
shall not be Ism than Two Hundred
($100) Dollars ?
The stock may jie Issued and dis
posal of for such considerations In
money, prooerty or eerricee as may
be fixed from time to time bv the
stockholders at a»v stockholders'
meeting or by the Board of Directors
frornttaUto tuna when acting under
reneral or soectal authority granted
by the stockholders
Pettthmers desire that mM corp
oration shall bavsanjbe rights and
powers and be »« **•■"£
tattoos fixed by the Corporate Act of
let’s be
by HARRY FLEISCHIRAN
Notional Labor Service
Institula of Human Relation!
Mitzvah Corps
Ten lucky teen-aged boys spent
last month In Puerto Rico. Spon
sors of their month-long trip
were the National Federation of
Temple Youth and the Social
Program Administration of the
Puerto Rican Commonwealth,
two organizations cooperating in
programs to help Puerto Ricans,
both on the island and on the
U. S. mainland. The “Mitzvah
Corps” (in Hebrew, mitzvah
means commandment to do a
good deed) were selected for
their fluency In Spanish, and as
signed to replacing flimsy village
shacks with hurricane -proof
homes of reinforced concrete.
The Government supplied mater
ial and engineers, but villages
provided their own labor, and
help from ten husky youngsters
was welcome indeed. In their
spare time, the vistors managed
to teach English, introduce pop
ular American sports and lead
group singing. Back at home, the
month of international living will
be put to year-round use. Each
young traveler will head up
weekend projects for teenagers in
his own synagogue, lending a
hand of help and friendship in the
Puerto Rican neighborhoods in
their own home towns. Here’s a
splendid way to win new amigos
right at home!
Black Cargoes
In 1562, Captain John Haw
kins, by purchase and kidnap,
acquired three hundred Negro
slaves in a private raid on
Guinea. When Queen Elizabeth
heard of Hawkins’ venture, she
said “It was detestable and
would call down vengeance from
heaven upon the undertakers.”
Hawkins went to the Queen and
showed Her Majesty his profit
sheet “Not only did she forgive
138, as amended from time to time
Insofar M the provisions of such Act
sre applicable to the CorporaUon here
by sought to be chartered.
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray lo be
Incorporated under the name and style
aforeMld, with all rights, privileges
and Immunities herein set forth, and
such other as are now, or may here
after be, allowed a corporation of sim
ilar character under the laws of Geor
gia.
JACOBS A JACOBS
Marrls Jacobs, Attorney for
Petitioners
160 Central Avenue, S. W.
Atlanta, Georgia 30303
SH—080
ORDER
The foregoing appllcaUon having
been presented, read and considered
and it appearing to the Court that this
peUtlon seta out the required declara
tions under the law and la permissible
under the laws of this State, and that
the certificate of the Secretary of State
as required by law having been pre
sented to the Court and there appear
ing to be no reason why application
should not be granted.
IT IS ORDERED that the prayers of
the petitioners be and the same are
hereby granted, and the petitioners are
Incorporated under the name of
"SOUTHERN BOND AND
MORTGAGE COMPANY, INC.’
This 18th day of September, 1963
(s) CLAUDE D. SHAW
Judge. S. C. A. C.
him,” notes Mannix, “but she
become a shareholder in his
second slaving voyage.” This is
one of the basic observations of
a remarkable and fascinating
book, BLACK CARGOES: A
History of the Atlantic Slave
Trade, 1518-1865, by Daniel P.
Mannix and Malcolm Cowley
(Viking, $6.95).
The book reveals how some
black African chiefs cooperated
with whites in enslaving other
Africans. Almost all slave trad
ers were “morally degraded be
yond redemption . . . The guilt
rests not wholly on the white
race, or partly on the African
kings and slave merchants, but
beyond them ... on the appar
ently inexhaustible capacity for
greed and numbness of heart
and the inflation of suffering
that survives in the nature of
man.”
Progress?
“Enlighten the people general
ly,” Thomas Jefferson wrote to
his friend du Pont de Nemours
in 1816, “and tyranny and op
pressions of body and mind will
vanish like evil spirits at the
dawn of day.” In those days, not
everybody agreed. For instance,
in 1828, school trustees in Lan
caster, Ohio, denied permission
for the use of a schoolhouse to
debate “whether or not railroads
are practicable” because “If God
had intended his creatures to
travel at the frightful rate of fif
teen miles and hour, He would
have said so in the Gospels.”
How much better are we today?
In California, a songbook was at
tacked this year by would-be
censors because it contained a
song called “Swing the Shining
Sickle.” This “Communist propa
ganda” turned out to be an
American harvest ballad written
in 1897. And in Alabama, the
Jacksonville News attacked a
first-grade reader, Our New
Friends, published by Scott Fores-
man and Co. The reader included
a story about squirrels storing up
nuts for the winter. That, the
News approved. But the story had
an “objectionable and destructive
lesson” about a squirrel named
Bobby who played all the time ■
and wouldn’t store nuts. Instead,
when winter came, the cold and
hungry Bobby, observing the
Redbird getting nuts merely by
tapping the door of a birdhouse,
decides to do likewise. Asks the
News: “Have you ever heard or
read about a more subtle way of
undermining the American sys
tem?” The first-grade reader,
says the paper, is “a threat to the
spiritual, moral and patriotic
strength of Alabama children.”
Wow!
BY HENRY LEONARD
wants that it should b« by Freud
A Farmer’s Daughter Is New
President of B’nai B’rith Girls
WASHINGTON—This Is about
the farmer’s daughter who was
elected president of B’nai B’rith
Girls.
She is eighteen-year-old Judy
Elaine Smith from Salt Lake City,
a dark-haired and bouyant col
lege freshman.
Judy was elected head of the
largest Jewish teen-age girls
movement last week at its annual
convention.
She lives with her parents on
a 30-acre poultry farm on the
outskirts of the city. There are
30,000 chickens to be cared for.
“But chores are strictly domes
tic,” she says. “The hen house
and I have never been on very
good terms.”
Judy dislikes eggs and chick
ens make her sneeze.
She is the first girl off the
farm to become head of B’nai
B’rith Girls in its 35-year history.
She’s been active in the move
ment since she was fourteen.
“The B’nai B’rith Youth Or
ganization is really the center of
outside activity for the Jewish
boys and girls In my hometown,”
she reports. An older brother,
Niel, had been active in the boys’
group.
Judy, who begin her studies at
the University of Utah this month,
has some firm convictions about
the role of a Jewish youth or
ganization.
“It should be an adventure in
living, with the kind of group
experiences that help you to dis
cover and understand what Ju
daism is about and how to apply
it to your own life.
“My friends in BBYO are eager
to live Jewish lives. But many
aren’t quite sure how to go about
it. The BBYO program has an
educating influence here."
During her one-year term of
office Judy will do a lot of trav
eling throughout the United States
and Canada visiting BBG chap
ters.
She comes from a B’nai B’rith
family. Her father, Harry Smith,
and her mother, Marjory, are ac
tive in the parent organization
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