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THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Friday, April 8, 1966
LEGAL NOTICE
COURT OK
STATK OF GEORGIA
TO THE SUPERIOR
COUNTY OK FULTON
SAID STATE AND COUNTY.
The petition ot ROY O.
CAROL N. BRANTLY of 1934 Kollln
wood Dr , S. E., Atlanta, Georgia, and
JAMES K. BRANTLEY of 2035 Memor-
la] Drive, S. E., Atlanta, Georgia, res
pectfully shows.
Petitioners dealre for themselves,
their associates and successors, to be
Incorporated under the name of
‘‘EXECUTIVE MORTGAGE A
INVESTMENT COUP ”
for a period of thirty five years with
the right to renew at the expiration
of said time.
The object of said corporation Is
pecuniary gain to Itself and its stock
holders. The general nature ol the
business to be transacted is that of en
gaging in the buying and selling of
mortgages and promissory notes, dis
counting same, making loans on both
real and personal property, brokering
loans of all types and charging a fee
therefore. Petitioners desire the right
for said corporation to deal with all
types and kinds of contracts and pol
icies of insurance, to act as agents for
others in the sale of insurance policies,
to act as insurance brokers, and gen
erally to deal with Insurance contracts
and policies of all kinds and descrip
tions in every proper and legitimate
manner according to the usages and
customs of the business. The buying,
selling, exchanging, leasing, subdivid
ing and improving real estate, with all
the usual and necessary services for
Itself and others; the construction,
erection, repairing and remodeling of
buildings and structures of all types
for Itself and others.
3.
The principal office or place of busi
ness of said corporation snail be in
Fulton County, Georgia, but said corp
oration shall have the ri<*ht to estab
lish branch offices or places of busi
ness elsewhere, both within and with
out the State of Georgia.
4.
Th" capital stock shall be FIVE
HUNDRED shares of common stock
with a par value of TEN DOLLARS
per share, and the minimum amount
with which this corporation shall
be"ln shall be FIVE HUN
DRED DOLLARS.
5
The corporation reserves the right
to accept cash, prooerty or services
as payment for stock.
6.
Your petitioners show that the pro
posed corporation name Is not the
nam° of anv other corporation on
file in t K " office of Secretary of State
Of r'-nr~1a.
WHEREFORE, petitioners prav to he
Incorporated nnd«r th" nam" and stvle
aforesaid and that thev b" "ranted
this c^artor with all the rights, pow
ers and privileges herein sot forth
and a” ''♦*''■***«* allowed hv i*»w.
nrRnfvE AND ERFFMAN
p,. c v'sslev B. Burdine
42R Title Bide,
jo "—or <; t ., S. W.
AUGa. 30303
524-RR97
ORDER
•Tho w'tMn rind foro^oln'* aonllcatlon
fo** a charter havin'* boon
an-* r and Jf a*>n«aring
th*'* sa«d annllratlon Is l''' T tt»rnatelv
wHh«n tho nurvlow and Intention of
<h" s of thn Cfafo of G^or^la. and
it further anoearinc from the certifi
cate of the Secretarv of State tMt the
name of t 1 *" proposed corporation is
not the name of anv otb«r existing
corporation registered In the records
of the ^ecrotarv of State, and it fur
ther appearin'* that the applicants have
comnlied w*th all provisions of law
relatin'* to th« grantin'* of charters;
l' r » c HEREBY ORDERED AND AD
JUDGED that said application he and
tho s^m' is herobv eranted. and that
the pefitionors ho and thev are herobv
IpoorrA'A-M'-*'* ••oripr tnn m « and stvle
o' EXECUTIVE MORTGAGE A IN
VESTMENT CORPORATION for a per
iod of Thlrtv-flve years, with all the
ri**hts. powers, privileges and immun-
lt»oc whch a r n sot forth «0 col,I
t«*«on. as well as those now or here
after allowed to corporations ot like
character by the laws of the State of
Georgia.
This 28th dav of March, 1966.
s RALPH H. PHARR
Jud‘*e. Superior Court
Fulton County
Apr.1,8,15,22
LEGAL NOTICE
APPLICATION FOR AND
ORDER GRANTING CHARTER
STATE OK GEORGIA
COUNTY OF FULTON
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT
OE SAID COUNTY:
The petition of VINCENT R. VAL
LES, whose post office address Is
1464 Willingham Drive, Atlanta, Geor
gia, LARRY I). LEWIS, whose post of
fice address is 1038 W. Peachtree St.,
N. \V.. Atlanta, Georgia, and ALVIN
N. SIEGEL whose post office address
Is 1038 W. Peachtree St., N. \\\, At
lanta, Georgia, respectively shows;
1.
That they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and as-
•lgns v to be incorporated under the
name and style of
SKOTCH KLEEN INDUSTRIES, INC.
for the term of thirty-five (35) years.
2.
The principal office of said birslness
shall be located In Fulton County,
with the right and privilege of es
tablishing branch offices and places of
business elsewhere, both within and
without the State of Georgia.
3.
The object of said corporation Is
pecuniary gain to itself and Its dtock
holders.
4.
The general nature of the business
to be transacted by said corporation
•hall be to operate a general business
In purchasing new and used equip
ment, metal, wood and materials of
•very kind and character; manufac
ture, construct, remodel or Install all
types of automatic, semi automatic
and manual vehicle washing machines
and all types of manufacturing and
to do all and everything Incidental to
carrying on said business.
The Capital Stock of said corpora
tion shall be $50,000.00, divided Into
live thousand (5,000) shares at the par
value of $10.00 each, ail of which shall
be common stock. ^
The amount of capital with which
this corporation shall begin business
** if?®?'?** the capital shall be
paid into the corporation In money,
property or a combination of the two.
, 7.
To acquire and pay in cash, stock*
or bond* of this corporation or other
wise real and personal property. The
good-will rlghta, assets and profits,
and to undertake or assume, in whole
or any part thereof, the obligations or
liabilities of any person, firms associ
ation or corporation.
8.
To issue bonds, mortgages, deeds to
secure debt, other indentures for the
purpose of securing any obligation of
said corporation.
9.
Said corporation shall be authorized
to issue stock for any consideration,
either money, property or services,
which Is at least equivalent to the
full par value of the stock so to be
issued. The valuation of any property
or services for such purpose will be
fixed by the Director of the Corpora
tion and such method of valuation
will be conclusive.
10.
The corporation shall have the pow
er to amend, alter, change or repeal
any provision of its Charter in form
or substance upon the vote of two-
thirds of its outstanding common stock,
and all rights conferred upon stock
holders, directors and officers herein
and granted subject to this reserva
tlon.
11.
Applicants desire that the said corp
oration shall have and enjoy all
the privileges, rights and powers en
umerated in Chapter 22 18 of the Corp
oration Act of 1938 of the Code of
Georgia, and as the same may be here
after amended, and all of the powers
and privileges, enumerated therein all
made a part thereof to the same ex
tent as If the same were enumerated >
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 corporation.
SIEGEL A LEWIS
By: ALVIN N. SIEGEL
Attorney for Petitioners
same were enumerated herein. In ad
dition, the corporation shall have the
following specific powers:
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 ob
ligations or liabilities of any person.
Firm, Association or Corporation;
to Issue Bonds, Mortgages, Deeds
to Secure Debt and other indentures
for the purpose of securing any obli
gation of said Corporation; and the
power to do anything whatsoever that
may be deemed necessary; proper,
useful or Incidental to carrying on its
business.
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
petitioners 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.
SIEGEL A LEWIS
By: Samuel Appel
Attorney for Petitioner
GEORGIA, FULTON COUNTY
ORDER
The within and foregoing application
for Charter of SEYMOUR WEISS, et
al, havin'* beon examined by me; and
IT APPEARING, that the application
is leeitimatelv 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
corporation registered in the records
of the State of Georgia.
IT IS HERREBY ORDERED, that
sakj application is hereby granted and
gSld corporation Is hereby created
under th" name of
COSEY CORPORATION
with the powers therein sought and
the privileges and Immunities provided
bv law to corporations of similar na
ture.
This the 7tb dav of March, 1966.
s' RALPH H PHARR
Judge. Superior Court
Atlanta Circuit
Mar.18,25,Apr.1,8
Legal Notice
GEORGIA, FULTON COUNTY
ORDER
The within and foregoing application
for charter of VINCENT R. VALLES,
LARRY D LEWIS and ALVIN N.
SIEGEL having been examined by me;
and
IT APPEARING, That the applica
tion Is legitimately within the purview
of the laws of the State of Georgia;
and
IT APPEARING, From the certifi
cate of the Secretary of State that the
name of the proposed corporation Is
not the name of any now existing
corporation registered In the records
of the Stat" of Georgia,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, That said
corporation is hereby created under
the name of
SKOTCH KLEEN INDUSTRIES, INC.
with the powers therein sought and
the privileges and immunities provided
vided by law to corporation of sim
ilar nature.
This the 18 day of March, 1966.
s| RALPH H. PHARR
Judge, Superior Court,
Atlanta Circuit
Mar.25,Apr.l,8,15
LEGAL NOTICE
APPLICATION FOR AND
ORDER GRANTING CHARTER
STA1L OF GEORGIA
COUNTS OF FULTON
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
SAIL) COUNTY:
The petition of SEYMOUR WEISS,
GEORGE COUCH, JR., and GEORGE
CUUcH, SR. whose post oftice ad
dresses are 836 Jumper Street, N. E.,
Atlanta, Georgia, respectively shows:
1.
That they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and as
signs, to be incorporated under the
name and style ol:
COSEY CORPORATION
for the term of thirty-five 135) years.
2.
The principal office of said business
shall be located in Fulton County, with
the right and privilege of establishing
branch offices and places of business
elsewhere, both within and without
the State of Georgia.
3.
The object of said corporation Is
pecuniary gain to itself and 11s stock
holders.
4.
The general nature of the business
to be transacted by said corporation
shall be that of the general operation
of a restaurant with the right to sell
and dispense beer and other malt
beverages; in accordance with the law.
5.
The Capital Stock of said corporation
shall he $50,000.00 divided into Five
Hundred (500) shares at the par value
of $100.00 each, all of which shall be
common stock.
6.
The amount of capital with which
this corporation shall begin business
shall not he less than Three Thousand
($3,000.00) Dollars, and all the capital
shall be paid Into the corporation in
money, property or a combination of
the two.
7.
Said corporation shall be authorized
to Issue stock for anv consideration,
either money, property or services,
which is at least equivalent to the
full par value of the stock so to he
Issued The valuation of anv property
or services for such purposes will he
fixed hv the Director of the Corpora
tion and such method of valuation
will be conclusive.
R
The corporation shall have the pow
er to am n nd. alter, change or repeal
any provision of its Charter in form
or substance upon the vote of three-
fourths of its outstanding common
stock, and all rights conferred upon
stockholders, directors and officers
herein and granted subject to this
reservation.
9
Applicants desire that the said corp
oration shall have and eniov all the
privileges, rights and powers granted
In Chapter 22-18 of the Corporation
Act of 193R of the Code of Georgia,
and as the same mav hereafter he
amended, to the tame extent as If the
APPLICATION FOR AND
ORDER GRANTING CHARTER
STATE OF GEORGIA:
COUNTY OF FULTON:
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
SAID COUNTY:
The Petition of MORRIS ELKAN,
JONAS NOVAK and PHILIP TARA-
TOOT, whose Post Office address is
627 Peachtree Street, N. E., Atlanta,
Georgia, hereinafter called applicants,
bring this application for the grant
ing of a charter for a private corp
oration, and show to the Court the
following facts:
1.
They desire for themselves, their
associates and successors to be In
corporated for a period of thirty-five
(35) years, with the right of renewal
thereof, as provided by law, under
the name and style of:
E. N. P. INVESTMENT CO.
2.
The principal office and place of
business shall be located in Fulton
County, Georgia, with the privilege of
establishing branch offices and places
of business In such other places as
may be determined.
3.
The purpose and object of said corp
oration is pecuniary gain and profit
to its stockholders.
(a) The general nature of the busi
ness to be transacted by said corpora
tion is that of an investment com
pany for the purpose of investing the
capital and surplus of said corpora
tion in real, intangible and personal
property, of every kind and character,
and including any interest therein.
(b) As an incident to carrying oirt
said investment business, the said
corporation shall have the right to
acquire, purchase, own, hold, improve,
sell, convey, dispose of, operate, de
velop, lease, mortgage and encumber
any real, intangible and personal
property of every kind and nature,
including stocks and securities of
other corporations, and to loan money
and take securities for the payment
of all sums due the corporation, and
to sell, assign and release such so
curities.
(c) Said corporation shall have the
right and privilege to enter Into a
copartnership or joint venture with
anv other Individual, firm or corpora
tion.
4.
The maximum number of shares the
said corporation shall he authorized
to issue shall he five thousand (5.000)
shares of common stock with a par
vnliro of ONE HUNDRED ($100 00)
DOLLARS each, or a fractional part
thereof, which shares shall have pro
portionate fractional voting rights and
the right to receive proportionate
fractional dividends.
The corporation shall have the
power, from time to time, and with
out amendment upon a majoritv vote
of th" outstanding stock, to Increase
and decrease its capital stock, within
the minimum or maximum limits
hereln-hef or" provided In this appli
cation for Charter
5.
The amount of capital with which
th" corporation "ill bo'dn business
,«h*»11 h" FIFTY THOUSAND ($S0 000 00)
DOLLARS to he paid In. either In
pror>"rtv or cash, or oth"r assets or a
combination of either cash or prop
ertv.
6
The shares of stork of said corpora
tion mav b" Issued for anv considera
tion whether money. property or
services and ran h« issued In exchange
for leases. Includin'* th" transfer aod
assignment thereof. sales controls,
plants and eoulnment. and anv other
real or personal property or eposes Ip
aefinn useful or neressarv )r> the pros
erntion of the business of the corp
oration.
Th" valuation of anv pronertv or
sendees for such purposes "’HI he d".
termlned hv the 1nro**porators or d!
rectors of the corporation as t*>e rase
mav he and «»zrh m rt t>*od of valuation
shall be conclusive and binding.
7
Annllcants d"stn» fhat 1*»n said corn-
oration shall have and eniov all the
privileges r1"Ms and nw”s enu»u"e-
uta-t in rsint«r *** is fv. 0 Corp
oration Art of 1Q3R of th« Cod« of
Georgia, and as the same may he here-
As We Were Saying
By ROBERT E. SEGAL
(A Seven Arts Feature)
When Robert Clinton Weaver
received his Ph.D. in economics
from Harvard in the depression
year of 1934, he couldn’t possibly
have imagined that a third of a
century later, he would find him
self boosted into the job of Sec
retary of the new Cabinet De
partment of Housing and Urban
Renewal—the first Negro to be
come a Cabinet officer.
In a significant sense, Bob
Weaver is well-equipped for his
high position. As administrator
of the Housing and Home Finance
Agency, he has been through
managerial war. Moreover, it is
doubtful that President Johnson
could have selected a man better
equipped as h<; sifted the 300 or
so names proposed for the chal
lenging role. (One possible ex
ception; Dr. Robert C. Wood, who
won his Ph.D at Harvard 10 years
after Bob Weaver did and now
leaves the directorship of MIT’s
Political Science Department to
serve as Under-secretary of
Housing and Urban Renewal in
Washington alongside Dr. Wea
ver.)
But once these judgments have
been recorded, certain doubts are
bound to plague us. Bob Weaver
has long been enmeshed in the
bureaucracy of the Housing and
Home Finance Agency. H’s work
has been pretty much confined to
the economics of housing, to fi
nancing construction, to achiev
ing habitation for people in pub
lic and private units with great
care given to the fine print
lawyers tack on to the bottom of
the documents.
By contrast, most thoughtful
Americans will now look to the
new Cabinet department for am
elioration of a host of pressing
problems far beyond the impor
tant range of housing: water sup
ply in an era of mounting urban
populations and frequent
droughts, air pollution at a time
when 75,000,000 autos increase in
number at a rate of almost 5%
a year, electric power in a period
haunted by the great blackout,
transportation problems drama
tized by the recent New York
transit strike costing our economy
nearly a billion dollars. The list
is open-ended. What of the fight
against urban poverty? What of
after amended, and all of the powers
and privileges enumerated therein are
made a part hereot to the same e\
tent as if the same were enumerated
herein.
WHEREFORE applicants pray that
they be Incorporated under the name
and style atoresaid, with all the rights
and privileges herein set out, and
such others as are now or may here
after be authorized b> law, and ap
plicants further pray that their ap
plication be granted.
si CHARLES W. BERGMAN
Attorney for Petitioners
1029 First National Rank
Building
ORDER
The foregoing application for the
formation of a corporation to he
known as E. N. P. INVESTMENT GO.,
having been presented to the Court,
and it appearing that said application
is within the purview and intention
of the Statutes of the State of Goor
gia; and it appearing further that the
applicants have conformed with the
provisions of law relating to the
granting of charters; and it further
appearing bv certificate of the Secre
tary of the State that the name of the
proposed corporation is not the name
of anv other existing corporation reg
istered in the records of said Secre
tarv of State
IT IS ORDERED AND ADJUDGED
that the said application is h"rebv
created under the nam" of F N P.
INVESTMENT CO., and said applicants,
their associates, sirccessors and assigns
are herebv Incorporated as praved in
said application, with all the rights,
powers. privileges and Immunities ns
praved In said application and ns
authorized hv the Law of this State
This t^o 2*th dav of .hn . 1966.
s' LUTHER J ALVFRCON
Jud«*e, Superior Court,
Fulton County
Mar.18,25,Apr.1,8
urban crime?
And what of the pathology of
Megalopolis — that 500 mile
stretch of sausage-linked com
munities from Boston to Arling
ton, Va., glutted by a population
of 38,000,000? Here one in every
five Americans scratch and rush
and compete" and scramble to
make a living. Here the popula
tion density is 700 per square
mile as compared with the na
tional average of 51. Here, as
Wolf Von Eckardt has written in
“The Challenge of Megalopolis,”
people are “paying the price of
poor planning in urban renewal,
in highway construction . . . and
in the damaging cost of urban
sprawl and the erosion of human
values.' 1
The challenge of Megalopolis
clearly indicates that this nation,
now nearing that point when one
in every 10 of its people will live
in the cities and, when some of
our great cities will r-*quire a
land expansion of 100%, needs—
desperately needs—a federal gov
ernment department to help on
all city problems and not on
housing alone.
For the physical facts of over-
urbanization are bad enough; but
the psychological * aspects are
bleaker still. The sharp d srrep-
ancy between the wealth of high-
rise apartment dwellers and es
tate owners with the hunger and
hurt of the millions of edv fam
ilies with incomes of $3000 or
less annually tells much of the
growing sense of frustration.
What are we really doing to up
hold the hands and lift the spirits
of the poor in our cities” We have
4.000.000 on Aid to Dependent
Children; yet Americans are
spending 50% more for food for
their dogs and cats than is sp'mt
for food for human babies. We
talk in terms of millions of dol
lars to conduct anti-povertv pro
grams when we know well that
the need is for billions. And since
it w'll not be long before our
Gross National Product will top
one trillion dollars a year, we
w'll have to learn to appropriate
billions, rather than millions to
help the impoverished.
Two years ago, the World
Health Organization of the United
Nations declared: “After the
question of keepmg world peace,
metropolitan planning is probably
tho most serious srngle problem
faced by man in the second half
of the 20th century. “A look
around the world suggests that
other nations recognized the n n cd
to tackle urban problems long
before the United States found
those problems breathing down
Uncle Sam’s neck England got
its New Towns Act two decades
ago; Holland is nearly 30 years
ahead of the United States in
some phases of metropolitan
planning
But we limp along. Tho fight
over legislative reapportionmont,
paced bv Senator D’rksen: the
slow mobilization against urban
crime; tho deterioration of edu
cational plants in the hearts of
our cities attest to the painful
need to get cracking.
In appointing Bob Weaver.
President Johnson said: “No man
is going to have a more difficult
and challenging job—and no man
is going to l>o better able to leave
a mark on generations of Amer
icans to come — than the man
who takes this vital task.”
The President has been right
quite often. This time, he surely
is.
LITTRELL
ACE HARDWARE COMPANY
“Your hardware super-market.”
626 Glen Iris Dr. N.E. (Cor. North Ave.)
TR. 6-0290
Atlanta, Ga.